Richard Cabral & Emily Tosta // Johnny âEl Cocoâ Cruz & Leticia Cruz // Mayans MC (01x07)
«Yeah, well, I fucked up things pretty bad with her. Iâm trying to fix that»
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Richard Cabral & Emily Tosta // Johnny âEl Cocoâ Cruz & Leticia Cruz // Mayans MC (01x07)
«Yeah, well, I fucked up things pretty bad with her. Iâm trying to fix that»
Richard Cabral & Emily Tosta // Johnny âEl Cocoâ Cruz & Leticia Cruz // Mayans MC (01x06)
Johnny âEl Cocoâ Cruz & Leticia Cruz Mayans MC: «It runs in the family» #MayansFX @richardcabralofficial @emilytosta
My Game
description: your plan was simple: learn how to play pool from steve, beat eddie, collect your hundred bucks. you forgot to account for eddie's ego, or what happens when you make him jealous.
pairing: jealous!eddie x you (fem!reader)
tags: jealous!eddie, bestfriend!reader, friends to lovers, possessive!eddie, smut with plot, competitive flirting, jealousy as foreplay, reader actually beats him and he takes it serious, he takes you out back to pay, pool game to back-alley sex pipeline, voyeurism (ish), public smut, condescending praise, dom!eddie, sorry i'm ovulating
TW: NSFW (18+) minors do NOT interact!!!!, PiV, unprotected
WC: 3.6k
A/N: requested by @eddiemunsonspantschain HOPE YOU LOOOOOVE IT :D here's a quick smutty bedtime story for all of my lovely freaks. i have something super exciting cooking up after this one...so stay tuned ;) reblogs are always appreciated <33 as always, love you all! muah muah
You relied on Eddie in many ways. Guy problems? He was the first one you'd call if a date went sour. Work drama? The second you got off, you'd pace around his trailer, explaining the usual bullshit as he sat on the couch, chiming in when necessary.
Somewhere along the way, the line between "best friends" and... whatever this was had gotten a little blurry. You couldn't remember exactly when it happened. Maybe it was the fact that you had a drawer at Eddie's trailer for spare clothes, or that he never knocked before walking into your apartment.Â
Hell, even the rest of your friends had long since given up trying to figure it out. Robin had stopped correcting strangers when they assumed you two were dating, Dustin had started referring to you as "Eddie's girl" just to watch the two of you sputter, and Steve swore you were both "the dumbest almost-couple" he'd ever met.
The funny part was, neither of you ever denied liking the other. You just... never actually admitted it, either.
So life carried on in that weird in-between, where lingering touches lasted a little too long, late-night drives felt suspiciously like dates, and neither of you was brave enough to ask what any of it meant.
In many ways, Eddie was the best friend you could ask for. But the one thing you hated? He was a cocky bastard when it came to anything competitive.Â
Any game night, whether that's something as simple as Uno or arcade games, he thought he was the best. Though, to be fair, he was. Which is why, after one fateful 1v1 of pool at the Hideout, when he conned your ass like a fool and beat you out of a hundred bucks, you needed revenge.
So, naturally, your pride wouldn't let him teach you how to play, oh no. Instead, you decided to ask Steve. Steve wasn't someone in the group you were particularly close to.
But, beyond him, your options to teach you how to win at stupid bar games were Robin, who was as agile as a baby deer, or Nancy, who could care less about you and Eddie's billiard feud.
Steve looked up from where he was wiping down the windshield of his BMW in his driveway, rag slung over one shoulder. "You want me to do what?"
"Teach me pool."
He blinked. "...Pool."
"Yes, Steve. The game. With the sticks."
"I know what pool is."
"Good. Then we're making progress."
He laughed, tossing the rag over the hood. "Since when have you been interested in pool?"
You crossed your arms. "I'm interested in beating Eddie."
"Oh."
"Exactly."
A grin slowly spread across his face. "...I'm in."
The Hideout wasn't open yet, save for a handful of regulars nursing beers before the evening crowd rolled in.
Music crackled quietly through the speakers while Eddie hauled cases of liquor behind the bar, already halfway through complaining to Gareth about a distributor screwing up another order.
"You know what they gave us?" Eddie scoffed. "Light beer. We don't even sell the shit."
Gareth shrugged. "People drink it."
"No, they most certainly do not."
Then the front door opened, so Eddie glanced over automatically. You walked in first with Steve following close behind.
His eyebrows pinched together. "...What the hell?"
Steve waved toward the bar. "Yo."
Eddie nodded slowly. "Harrington."
Then his eyes landed back on you. "What're you doing here? Thought you worked today."
"I did."
"And now?"
You smiled sweetly. "I'm learning."
"...Learning what?"
Steve answered before you could. "Pool."
Eddie glanced between the two of you, raising one finger accusingly. "...From you?"
Steve looked genuinely confused by the question. "...Yeah?"
"You know how to play?"
Steve frowned. "Dude."
"What?"
"I've been playing forever."
Eddie stared for another second before scoffing to himself.
"...Whatever." Then, he disappeared into the back, huffing something under his breath.
For the next forty-five minutes, Steve proved to be a surprisingly patient teacher.
"No, loosen your grip."
"I'm trying."
"I know, but you're choking the cue."
"I'm not choking it."
"You absolutely are."
He stepped behind you. "Here."
His hands lightly adjusted yours on the cue. "Relax your shoulders."
You exhaled.
"There."
You lined up another shot and missed. "Oh, come on!"
"You looked better."
"I looked better?"
"That's half the battle."
Across the room, Eddie slammed a rack of glasses onto the shelf harder than necessary, causing Gareth to look over.
"...Everything alright?"
"Fantastic."
"You sure?"
"Mhm."
He dared another glance; Steve had crouched beside you now, pointing toward one of the corner pockets.
"If you bank it off this railâ"
Eddie shook his head and continued polishing the same glass he'd already finished.
"He's practically climbing inside her personal bubble."
Gareth followed his gaze to Steve's arm, which reached across yours to point toward the angle.
"...Looks like he's just showing her."
"Mhm."
"You jealous?"
Eddie barked out a laugh. "Of Steve? ...No."
"Exactly."
Gareth watched him continue scrubbing the spotless glass.
"...You're polishing air."
"I know."
"...You wanna go interrupt them?"
"No."
"...Looks like she's laughing."
"I can see."
Steve said something that made you laugh again, a little louder than the last time.
Eddie's jaw ticked. "He's not even that funny."
Gareth snorted. "You realize you've been watching them for like twenty minutes?"
"I have not."
"You absolutely have."
"I've been working."
"Eddie."
"What?"
"...You've poured the same guy three refills without him asking."
Eddie froze and slowly looked toward the older regular sitting at the bar. The man raised his fourth full beer.
"Thanks, Munson!"
"...Shit."
By the end of the lesson, you actually sank three balls in a row.
Steve pointed at the table dramatically. "There it is!"
"I did that."
"You did."
"I actually did that."
"Told you."
You grinned. "You are officially my favorite Harrington."
"There aren't exactly many of us."
Still smiling, you turned toward the bar. "Eddie!"
He looked up immediately. "What?"
Your grin somehow got even bigger. "Rematch."
The entire bar seemed to perk up. Eddie leaned against the counter, folding his arms.
"...You sure?"
"Oh, I'm positive."
"You just spent an hour getting coached."
"So?"
"I don't know..." A slow smirk tugged at his mouth. "Sounds a little desperate."
"It sounds like I got tired of losing to someone whose entire personality revolves around a pool table."
A chorus of quiet "oohs" erupted from the regulars. Eddie placed a hand dramatically over his chest.
"That's hurtful."
"You'll survive."
He pushed off the bar, grabbing a cue from behind the counter. "Same bet?"
You scoffed. "I'm not giving you another hundred dollars."
"Coward."
"I'm being financially responsible."
"Chicken."
"I'm smarter than you."
"Doubtful."
Steve quietly stepped backward. "YeahâŠI'm gonna head out."
"You probably should," Gareth agreed.
"You created this monster."
"I absolutely did."
Eddie twirled the cue once in his hand before pointing it at you. "You've got one shot, sweetheart."
You stepped closer until only the pool table separated the two of you. "I only need one."
His grin faltered for just a second. Not because of the challenge, lord knows he loves a challenging woman. But because you'd wandered close enough that he could smell your perfume.
You caught the slight pause in his usual bravado, eyes quickly darting across his face. Then Eddie recovered first, spinning the cue between his fingers with that infuriatingly cocky grin.
"Ladies first."
"Oh," you smiled, taking the cue from his hand just slowly enough for your fingers to brush against his, "I'm gonna enjoy wiping that smug look off your face."
His eyebrow quirked up then. "...We'll see."
The first break went to you.
You leaned over the table, tongue poking against the inside of your cheek the way Steve had told you not to do because it apparently made you overthink your shot. The cue cracked against the rack, sending the balls scattering across the felt.
One dropped, then another, causing a grin to spread across your face.
"Oh, that's gotta sting."
Eddie clicked his tongue. "Beginner's luck."
"You've been saying that for the last three games."
"And eventually I'll be right."
"I've won one."
"You've won almost one."
"I was one ball away."
"You still lost."
You rolled your eyes, circling the table as you looked for your next shot. "God, you're insufferable."
"And yet, here you are."
"Only because watching you lose is going to heal something in me."
Eddie laughed under his breath, leaning his hip against the edge of the table while you lined up your cue.
"Careful," he mused. "Harrington tell you to keep your elbow up?"
You didn't look at him. "He did, actually."
"Hm."
"And to follow through."
"Mhm."
"And to stop gripping the cue like I was trying to strangle it."
Eddie made a face. "...That sounds like something he'd say."
"It worked."
"So did cheating."
You looked up. "I wasn't aware lessons counted as cheating."
"They do when they're from the enemy."
"The enemy?" You snorted. "Steve?"
"He knows what he is."
"Oh, does he?"
"Mhm."
You laughed quietly, taking your shot. The cue ball kissed the side of yours just enough to send it into the corner pocket, causing it to disappear with a satisfying clack.
Your jaw dropped. "I meant to do that."
"No, you didn't."
"I absolutely did."
"You looked surprised."
"I was surprised by how well I did it."
"Sure."
You pointed the cue at him. "Don't ruin this for me."
"I wouldn't dream of it."
The game continued like that, each shot somehow accompanied by another jab, another smug remark, another excuse for the two of you to drift closer as you circled opposite ends of the table.
"You scratched."
"I was distracted."
"By what?"
"You talking."
"I wasn't talking."
"You exist loudly."
"I do not."
"You absolutely do."
You nudged him lightly with your shoulder as you squeezed past him. He didn't move, not even an inch.
"You know," you muttered, looking up at him, "most people would step out of the way."
"I'm not most people."
"So I've noticed."
Instead, he leaned down just enough that his shoulder bumped yours back.
"Figure it out."
"Oh, you're the worst."
"Sure I am.â
You huffed dramatically before ducking around him, though not without your arm brushing against his on the way by.
A few turns later, you found yourself stuck behind him as he leaned over the table, studying an angle that frankly looked impossible.
You waited, but he simply didn't move. "Eddie."
"Mhm?"
"I can't see."
"I'm thinking."
"You've been thinking for like two minutes."
"It's called strategy."
"It's called stalling."
He looked over his shoulder. "I don't stall."
"You absolutely stall."
"I am visualizing."
"You are making shit up."
Finally, he straightened, only to find you standing much closer than he'd expected. For a second, neither of you stepped back.
Then you smiled. "My turn."
He cleared his throat and took a step aside. "Be my guest."
You bent over the table, carefully lining up your shot. The cue slid forward, clack, and another ball dropped.
Behind you, Eddie let out an exaggerated sigh. "I knew Harrington was a bad influence."
You glanced over your shoulder. "Oh my God."
"What?"
"You are unbelievable."
"I'm serious."
"No, you're not."
"He spent one afternoon with you and suddenly you're running tables."
"I'm hardly running the table."
"You're certainly trying."
You rested both hands on the cue, smiling to yourself. "You know..."
"What?"
"...If I didn't know any better..."
Eddie lifted an eyebrow.
"...I'd say you're jealous of Steve."
Eddie's smile stayed exactly where it was. Only this time, it didn't quite reach his eyes.
"Jealous?"
"Mhm."
"Of Steve."
"You've mentioned him..." You pretended to think for a moment. "...What? Eight times since we started?"
"I have not."
"You've called him the enemy."
"He is."
"You accused him of cheating."
"He was."
"You've insulted his teaching."
"It wasn't that good."
"I've made more shots tonight than I have in the last six months."
He clicked his tongue. "Coincidence."
You laughed. "You're jealous."
He held your gaze for a long moment, twirling the cue lazily between his fingers before shrugging one shoulder. "...Maybe I was."
Eddie looked almost as surprised by his own answer as you were. He scratched the back of his neck, looking away with a quiet scoff.
"I mean..." he muttered, trying and failing to sound casual, "guy's got his hands all over you. Kinda weird."
Your heart did a slow, traitorous little flip. "So that's what this is about?"
He looked back at you. "I don't like people assuming they can get all cozy with you."
"Steve was teaching me."
"I know."
"You've practically climbed all over me trying to fix my stance before."
"That's different."
"How?"
"'Cause..." He gestured vaguely between the two of you. "...It's me."
You couldn't help it when a grin spread across your face. "Oh, wow."
"What?"
"You really don't hear yourself, do you?"
"Oh, shut up."
You laughed outright this time, and Eddie couldn't stop himself from smiling back, shaking his head as he pointed the cue toward the table.
"Take your shot before I remember why I like beating you so much."
You stepped up beside him, your shoulder brushing his as you passed.
"I'm starting to think you don't like beating me nearly as much as you pretend you do."
For the first time all night, Eddie didn't have a smartass comeback. He just watched you lean over the table, trying very hard not to notice how unfairly pretty you looked when you were concentrating.
The game stretched on longer than it should have, every shot laced with your growing confidence and Eddie's sharpening edges.
But in the end, you sank the eight-ball clean, right into the corner pocket with a decisive thunk that echoed through the bar like a victory bell.
The regulars let out a low chorus of approval. Eddie stared at the table for a moment too long, cue still gripped tight in one hand, before his gaze lifted to yours.
That cocky smirk was still plastered on his face, but it had gone tight at the corners.
You leaned on your cue, flushed with triumph and just enough adrenaline to push. "Hmph. Steve must be a good teacher after all," you said sweetly, tilting your head.Â
Something dark flickered in Eddie's eyes. He set the cue down with deliberate calm, then crossed the space between you in two strides. His fingers wrapped around your wrist, lifting it with a gentle yet firm grip.Â
"Alright," he said, voice low, "that's enough."
He tugged you toward the back hallway, past the storage room and out the rear door into the narrow alley behind the Hideout. The door slammed shut behind you, cutting off the muffled sounds of the bar.Â
"Eddieâ" you started, but he spun you around, pressing your back to the rough brick before you could finish. His body crowded yours instantly, one thigh slotting between your legs as his free hand braced beside your head.
"You think this is funny?" he growled, mouth hovering inches from yours. His breath was ragged. "Parading Harrington in here, letting him put his hands all over you while I watch?"
"He was teaching me," you breathed, even as heat pooled low in your belly. God, he was jealous. Really jealous. It shouldn't turn you on this much, but the way his grip tightened on your wrist sent a shiver straight through you.
"Sure, doll. Teaching." Eddie's other hand slid down your side, bunching your shirt up roughly until his palm met bare skin. "Laughed at his shitty jokes. Let him stand that close." He leaned in, lips brushing your ear. "You know exactly what you're doing to me, sweetheart."
You arched into him. "Maybe I do."
That was all it took. His mouth crashed into yours, all teeth and tongue and pent-up frustration. You kissed him back just as fiercely, fingers threading into his curls and tugging hard enough to make him groan against your lips.Â
He tasted like cheap beer and that stupid cinnamon gum he always chewed, and underneath it all, that unmistakable Eddie scent that always made your head spin.
His hand shoved under your waistband without preamble, fingers dipping between your thighs to find you already slick. A low, satisfied rumble vibrated in his chest.
"Fuck. This wet for me, or were you thinking about his hands the whole time?"
"Yours," you gasped as he circled your clit with two rough fingertips, pressing just right. "Always yours, you idiot."
"Good answer." He nipped at your bottom lip, then spun you again; face toward the wall this time.
Your palms braced against the cool brick as he yanked your jeans and underwear down in one impatient motion, just enough to bare you to the night air. The sound of his belt buckle and zipper was obscenely loud in the quiet alley.
He pressed against your back, hard and hot, one hand sliding up to wrap loosely around your throat.
"You don't get to tease me like that and walk away," he murmured, lips against the shell of your ear. His cock nudged at your entrance, thick and insistent. "Gonna fuck the thought of him right out of you."
Then he thrusted in deep, one smooth stroke that punched the air from your lungs. You moaned, the sound echoing off the bricks as he filled you completely. He didn't give you time to adjust. Just pulled back and drove in again, setting a punishing rhythm that had your toes curling in your shoes.
" Eddieâfuckâ"
"Yeah, say my name." His grip on your hip tightened, rings digging in as he angled deeper, hitting that spot that made sparks explode behind your eyes. "Louder. Let the whole damn alley hear who you belong to."
You did. Gasping it out between thrusts, voice breaking as pleasure coiled tighter and tighter. He reached around, fingers finding your clit again, rubbing in tight, relentless circles while his hips snapped against your ass.
"Such a brat," he panted, teeth grazing your shoulder through your shirt. "You were so cocky before. What happened, huh baby?" He punctuated each word with a thrust, grinding deep on the last one until you were trembling.
The orgasm hit you like a freight train. You clenched around him, crying out as waves of heat crashed through you. Eddie followed right behind with a choked groan, burying himself to the hilt and spilling hot inside you, hips stuttering as he rode it out.
For a long moment, the only sounds were your ragged breathing and the distant hum of traffic. Then he eased out slowly, careful despite the raw edge still humming between you. He tucked himself away, then turned you gently, pulling your clothes back into place with surprisingly tender hands.
Eddie rested his forehead against yours, thumbs brushing your flushed cheeks. "You okay?" he asked.Â
You smiled, still catching your breath, and tugged lightly at one of his curls. "I'm okay."
"You sure?"
"Mhm."
He searched your face for another second anyway, like he wasn't entirely convinced until he saw the smile tugging at the corners of your mouth. Only then did his shoulders finally loosen.
"There you are," he murmured.
"There I am?"
"You disappeared for a minute."
"I think I had a good reason."
He snorted, ducking his head with an embarrassed grin. It was strange seeing him like this.
Five minutes ago, he'd been all confidence and smart remarks, and now he suddenly looked like the same guy who got flustered whenever Wayne asked if the two of you were dating.
You brushed an imaginary speck of dust from the shoulder of his jacket. "So..."
"So?"
"...Does this mean I finally get to stop pretending we're just friends?"
His eyes met yours again. "I'd really appreciate that."
You laughed quietly. "I've gotta admit, Munson. I was starting to think you were hopeless."
"Oh, I was."
"You were."
"I mean it." He leaned back against the brick wall, slipping one hand into yours.
"I don't think I realized just how bad I had it until today."
"The pool lessons pissed you off that bad?"
He nodded. "When I saw Harrington behind you..." He let out a quiet laugh, shaking his head at himself. "God, I was so irrationally pissed."
You raised an eyebrow. "Really? I couldnât tell."
âShut up.â
"He was just teaching me pool so I could beat you and get on your nerves." You bumped his shoulder. "Which, by the way, worked beautifully."
"Yeah, yeah."
"You were glaring at him like he keyed your van."
"He was standing way too close."
"He was showing me how to bank a shot."
"Didn't need to be all..." Eddie gestured vaguely with his free hand. "...Harrington about it."
You laughed. "What does that even mean?"
"You know."
"No, I actually don't."
"All..." He sighed dramatically. "Perfect hair. Nice smile. Hands everywhere."
"His hands were on the cue."
Eddie gave you a look. "Mostly."
You couldn't help laughing. "You're unbelievable."
"I know that now."
"You knew it then."
"...I did."
"So why were you so grumpy?"
He was quiet for a second, rubbing the back of your hand with his thumb.
"Because I kept thinking..." He shrugged, almost embarrassed by himself. "'What if she realizes she likes him better?'"
You blinked. "...Steve?"
"Sounds stupid out loud, doesn't it?"
"A little."
"Thanks."
"Eddie." You laughed, giving his hand a squeeze. "You really thought I was gonna fall for Steve Harrington because he showed me how to hold a pool cue?"
"I wasn't exactly thinking rationally."
"Clearly."
He groaned, dropping his head against your shoulder. "Can we pretend I never admitted any of this?"
"Absolutely not."
"Figured."
love me a good dom!eddie what can i say
also, the taglist is being really funky. i'm sorry if it's not tagging everyone pasted, i've been messing with the tags every time but tumblr likes to play games sooooooo
if you wanna be notified when i post, don't be shy and turn those post notis on ;))
taglist:
@a-villain-vying-for-attention @fapqueen @sadgirl-bee @bowie-frommars @milescrypt @bitterestwillow @lnnn1n @youngbrokefab @ludachrissy @sisteramycatherine @izzycstairs @britttzy267 @eddiemunsonsimpp @powerpuffedbjtch @sariahs-stuff @cciessuzi @lilyquinnmunson @julxsxx @kozume-ko @obsessed-eddie @doomdabss @leelei1980 @hexqueensupreme @ches-86 @plaidamoosette @bobiverses @meadows-of-asphodel @whitakerstorm @brrrainst3w @serendipdipity01 @hypersexytoptobottom @m-art000 @walleloveseve @camsmunson101 @flavorfullsteve @peachpuffs25 @micheledawn1975 @whitakerstorm @cciessuzi @blackqueenie-18 @ggdawgg @velvetdimond @enne02  @ludachrissy @izzycstairs @abbysleftbicepp @britttzy267 @ssculker @eddiemunsonsimpp @powerpuffedbjtch @kylorensbaby @raeyas-ghost @gunnersaurusrex @mortalselfprojected @lilyquinnmunson @this-issam @acrloved @foxygrll @ghoulishjewels @sespe08 @emily-robert @revesephemeres @laraabarett @kylorensbaby @fanficrebloggy @roxypixiechic @munsonsvixen
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Just what I neededâanother high-level disaster I have no business being part of.
i just really like you
Pairing: Jack Abbot x Fem!Reader
Summary: At a wedding, Jack canât help but feel so lucky to be the one who gets to take you home.
Tags: tooth rotting fluff, partners also being friends, smut!, rough sex, unprotected sex, dirty talk, light dom/sub, brief mention of âdaddyâ, reader and jack have a happy healthy relationship, idk man itâs joyful and fun
WC: 2.8k
Authorâs Note: Iâve been wanting to write shorter blurbs here and there to keep my lovely readers fed in between my 20k nightmare fics.
ââââ
Jack Abbot was normal. He was fine. He was definitely not seething watching you dance with friends. The problem with dating the hottest woman in existence was that he couldnât exclusively monopolize your time. He barely knew anyone at this wedding, it was your friendâs wedding.
She had too many sisters to have you as a bridesmaid and in the comfort and secrecy of your bedroom you had whispered to him that you just didnât have it in you to be in so many weddingsâmost of your twenties had been spent traveling around the country to be in friendsâ weddings.
Now, he was watching you in a gorgeous plum dress dancing around barefoot with girls youâve known for over a decade. Some of their husbands were tolerable. Your best friend and her husband were here. Most of the time Ted was fine. Drunk Ted cared a lot about golf and Jack, drunk or sober, couldnât give a shit.
When P!nkâs âSo Whatâ ended you meandered back over to Jack and to his surprise (and delight), collapsed in his lap.
âIâm sorry,â you mumbled. âIâm a little tipsy.â
âSo I see,â he replied, lightly pushing your hair back away from your face. Your nice hairdo had long since come unraveled and kept falling in your face.
âI like you so much,â you said leaning into him.
âYou donât love me?â He asked with a smile on his face. You snorted.
âOf course I love you. But I also like you.â
âThanks?â
âI donât think all my friends like their husbands,â you whispered a little too wet in his ear. He had to resist the urge to push you away to wipe it off.
âWhat makes you say that?â
âTake me back to the hotel and Iâll tell you,â you said laying your head on his shoulder. It definitely didnât look comfortable, largely speaking to your exhaustion. You had been dancing and jumping with your friends for multiple hours.
âCâmon, babe,â he said shifting your legs off his lap.
âUgh,â you groaned standing again. âI need to tell Claire goodnight.â
âIâll get our stuff,â he said.
The send off had been a few hours ago, before the elderly relatives had left. Now, it was just a fun party with friends. He loved watching you light up and enjoy being around your people. He loved his people, but they were far more subdued than yours.
Across the dance floor you approached your friend who threw her arms around you with heartfelt but drunken balance and coordination. It made his heart swell, watching how happy you were. Fuck, he loved making you happy. All he wanted in life was to make each day just a little easier; he wanted to do his best to make you happy.
By the time youâd extricated yourself from your friendâs embrace and made your way back to him, Jack had a hold of your purse and coat. He also had already dug your ugly Birkenstocks out of your purse so you didnât have to put your heels back on.
âFuck youâre so good to me,â you said, holding onto him while you slipped the shoes on.
âWell if thatâs all it takes,â he replied, helping you into your coat.
He kept a hold of your bag when walking out to the parking lot. Just like his mother taught him, he held the door open on the rental car and shut it gently behind you. When he got into the drivers seat, you had dug your water bottle out of your purse.
âUgh, Iâm already sobering up,â you complained.
âSo you donât want drunk fast food?â
You gasped dramatically. âDo you kiss your mother with that dirty mouth?â
Jack laughed and grabbed your hand as he turned out of the parking lot heading back to the hotel.
âWhat did you mean earlier about your girlfriends not liking their husbands?â He asked pulling into a greasy fast food joint. It rarely mattered which one as the point was disgusting food.
Once the French fries and chicken and burgers had been acquired, Jack pulled into a parking spot towards the back of the lot. One of the first things you both discovered youâd had in common was growing up in small towns. It meant that you both had fond memories of idling car conversations and the occasional makeout. Even now, a long away from your teen years, you both adored your post party ritual.
âSo,â you began, curling your legs up. âAbigail, not technically my friend, but sheâs a good time. Was talking to me about how glad she was that her husband couldnât come and that was fucking bonkers to me. Why would you marry someone you donât like?â
âYou would be sad if I couldnât come?â
âSure, I like spending time with you. Itâs not like it would ruin it for me, I basically barely hung out with you tonight, but itâs fun coming back and kissing you before dancing to Pitbull songs with everyone.â
âI think thatâs a compliment,â he laughed.
âBut seriously!â You said nudging him. âI like being around you. Itâs fun. Youâre just as fun as my friends.â
âEven though I canât dance with the energy of a drunk college girl?â
âEven then,â you laughed. âHear anything good with the spouses?â
âTed likes golf,â Jack sighed.
âGod heâs so boring,â you laughed. âBut she needs boring after the shit head she used to be married to.â
âDo your friends think Iâm boring?â
You scoffed. âNo, they think youâre a crazy adrenaline junky, not boring. Did you notice the groomâs sister had a fucking weird speech?â
For the next hour you both sat in the car, eating food that would clog your arteries and gossiping about the wedding. It was life giving and comforting in ways you never wanted to lose. Youâd had this with friends but Jack was the first man youâd ever dated who wanted to do stupid shit with you. He wanted to go to weddings of people he didnât know. He wanted to sit in a slightly too heated car talking shit about speeches. He wanted to do nothing and everything with you.
âWhatâs that look?â Jack asked.
âI dunno,â you sighed. âI just really fucking like you.â
âYeah?â
âMm-hmm.â
âI really fucking like you, too,â he said. âEven if you dance like a baby giraffe.â
âFuck off!â
When you both got back to the hotel, Jack helped you search for the various pins hidden somewhere in your hair.
âYouâre so pretty,â he said mouth at your bare shoulder.
âAre you trying to get in my pants, Dr. Abbot?â
âYouâre not wearing pants,â he said, bracketing your body against the counter of the bathroom. âYou are, however, wearing a gorgeous dress Iâve wanted to peel off with my teeth all night.â
âYour teeth, huh?â You asked making eye contact with him in the mirror.
âGod Iâve wanted to touch you so bad all night,â he whispered in your ear, pressing a soft kiss right near your hairline.
âYou look so good in that suit,â you grumbled, pushing your ass back against his groin. âKept coming back to kiss you so everyone knew you were mine.â
Jackâs eyes fluttered closed as he buried his face in your neck. Being wanted by you was intoxicating. Knowing that you coveted him as much as he coveted you was more than enough to turn him on. He could feel the ghost of your cunt clenching around him. It had been two weeks since he last fucked you. Both of your jobs had been hectic.
But now, in the privacy of the too expensive hotel room, he had you at his mercy.
âLook at me baby,â he said softly against your ear, relishing in how you shivered against him. âAll mine, right?â
âOnly yours,â you breathed. âIâve missed your hands.â
He ran his hands from your thighs up your dress to cup your tits. The strapless dress was held up by tape and some intricate ties in the back. He pulled the tape off your chest gently and then yanked the fabric down under your tits, bra and all. You looked so good. In the dim light of the bathroom, he drank in your heedy gaze.
âBeautiful,â he said attacking your neck again.
Having you in his bed for so long, meant Jack knew just how to kiss you and play with your chest to make you soaked. Itâs like he had a cheat code to turning you on. It helped that most of the night had been subtle foreplay between you both. During dinner his hand was definitely too high on your thigh but he couldnât bear to move it.
âFuck, baby, take me to bed. Itâs cold as shit in here,â you groaned.
âAnything for you,â he said. âHow hard do you want tonight?â
âRough,â you replied.
He wove his fingers through your hair, close to the roots and pulled. He drug you back into the main room and tossed you on the bed face first. Holding you down with one hand on your upper back, he slowly pulled the zipper of your dress down.
âLook at this sexy body,â he said. âAll for me.â
You wiggled a little as he unhooked the strapless bra with one hand. It had taken him nearly a year to master, but it was one of his most used bedroom skills. Letting you go, he pulled off the dress harshly, taking your underwear with it. Then you were face down on the bed, naked and already dripping for him.
You had arched your back, preening under his gaze. With a sharp smack to the meaty part of your glute, he watched you jump and settle back into your skin. A few more spanks and he quickly shoved his fingers inside you making you gasp.
He loved all the noises and movements you made during sex. For the duration of your relationship, he had been making a running catalog of how to get you to do a sound or movement. While he harshly fingered you, enjoying the way you squirmed under him, he began unbuckling his belt and pants.
âFeel good, baby?â
âFuck me, please,â you panted against the comforter.
Shoving his pants down just low enough let out his dick, he pulled his fingers out of you and rubbed your wetness along his cock. Just the smell of you was sending him over the edge. He made sure to clamp down on your hips tightly, hoping to leave a bruise for you to enjoy, before careening his hips into yours aggressively.
There was a grunt as the air was knocked out of you. For a moment he paused, enjoying how you felt. Your cunt always felt so fucking good against his dick. You were so warm and wet and you clenched so beautifully when he spanked you. As much as he loved to be the one furiously fucking you, he also loved having you in charge.
He always enjoyed feeling your nails rake down his back. He was desperate to feel you closer against his skin, so while he had your hips pinned to the bed, he quickly ripped off his button up and undershirt so he could wrap his arm around your neck and pull you up against his body.
Once he felt you against his chest, he began to thrust ferociously against your cunt. He loved how it fluttered and the grunts and groans you released as he harshly pounded into you.
âFuck, baby,â Jack growled harshly. âYou feel so good. Made for me. Carved for my fucking dick, isnât that right?â
âJust for you,â you said breathlessly.
You were clutching onto the bicep his had wrapped around your neck (more so your chest than neck, but it had the same effect). He felt you meeting his thrusts sending shockwaves through both of you.
âI love it when youâre rough with me,â you heaved against his assault. âHarder, please.â
Your tone was always so breathy and almost whiny when you got worked up like this.
âAnything for my naughty girl. Do you like this dick pounding into you. Does it feel good to have someone treat you so meanly?â
âFuuuck,â you groaned arching against his grasp more. âYou feel so good inside of me.â
âYou make me so fucking crazy, pretty girl,â he hissed against your ear. âWatching you tonight was like my own personal dream. The prettiest girl in the world dancing and jumping but always coming back to me. Canât be without me can you?â
âNo, I canât,â you whined as one of Jackâs hands roughly kneaded your tits. âYour hands are so good.â
âRub your clit for me, baby. I want to feel you cum on my dick. Iâm going to fuck you so hard you canât walk tomorrow.â
âYes please,â you mumbled. He felt one of your hands leave its iron grasp on his arm. âYou fill me up so good.â
Jack felt himself getting close so he pulled out and finished taking off his pants. Getting his prosthetic off quickly was a hard fought for skill, but he managed to push you flat on the bed covering your body with his own before slipping back inside of your warmth.
He wrapped his arm around your throat again and grinned at how you moaned wantonly.
âSo pretty when youâre being used by me.â
âPlease,â you managed.
âProp your hips up, baby,â he said getting on his knees to allow you room.
The harsh sounds of him slamming into you filled the room while he kept whispering debauched things in your ear:
âYouâre made for me and only me.â
âUsing you feels so sweet.â
âAre you going to cum on my dick?â
âIâm so fucking deep, baby.â
âIâm going to make you cum so hard.â
He was so focused on making sure you came, he didnât noticed how you turned your face.
âPlease, daddy, harder,â you moaned.
His hips stuttered and to control himself, he bit into the muscle of your shoulder. He almost felt guilty for how hot he found your cry of pain to be.
âRub your clit and say it again,â he mumbled against your skin.
Your hand snaked underneath your body, and gasping under his assault you said,
âHarder, daddy. I want to feel you cum inside me.â
âFuck, baby,â he groaned.
He was so close when he felt the tell tale flutters of your cunt against him. He nearly wept with relief you finally were close enough for him to say,
âCum on my dick, pretty girl. Show me how good I make you feel. Milk me. Milk daddy.â
You cried out as you tensed and gasped underneath him. He made sure to keep moving as you clenched against him until your shaking thighs collapsed. He continued his furious pace until he felt himself orgasm. It felt like he came forever. When he finally collapsed and rolled over next to you, he chest was heaving.
âDaddy, huh?â He asked.
âI donât know where it came from,â you laughed. âBut you clearly liked it.â
âSurprise for me, too,â he huffed. He pulled you against him, reveling in how your naked skin felt against his.
âYouâre sweaty and hot,â you grumbled, nuzzling your face against his chest. It was said like a complaint but you werenât moving away.
âSo are you,â he laughed. You tweaked his nipple.
âIâm fresh as a daisy.â
He laughed and kissed the top of your head. âWant to shower first?â
âYes please,â you said. âWill you keep me company?â
He snorted and nodded.
The accessible bathroom had a removable shower chair that he used while he waited for you. Unlike the shower at home, it wasnât big enough for Jack, his shower chair, and you. So he watched as you tied your hair up and quickly rinsed off. He noticed your wince when you gently cleaned your vagina.
âDo you want me to check it?â He asked a little concerned.
âNah, just sensitive. You did a good job.â
âWow, did I get an A-plus in sex?â
âFuck off,â you laughed.
While Jack showered, you began working through your nighttime routine. You took off whatever make up hadnât been sweated off during the wedding or the following sex and washed your face. By the time Jack got out, you were brushing your teeth.
Before leaving the bathroom you kissed him and said, âI love you.â
âWuv yew,â he said with his toothbrush in his mouth.
Using his crutches, he made his way back to the bed, pulling on a pair of clean boxers before sliding into bed with you. Like you always did, you slept on the side farthest from the door. It was one of the many things that lingered from the war. Jack wanted to be between you and anything unexpected.
He pulled you against him, in the dark, enjoying how warm and soft you were.
âA good night,â he mumbled.
âAnd good sex,â you said.
He laughed and closed his eyes, feeling so much love and affection for you leaking out of his chest.
âHey,â you said after a while. âYou awake?â
âHmm?â Jack asked sleepy.
âI just really like you.â
Jack laughed softly. âI really like you, too.â
ââââ
I love tumblr because somehow I can end up being mutuals with a celebrity (someone that wrote a fic that I loved)
đ»đŒđ·đžđ”ïžđčđșđđ
Some flowers for anyone not feeling their best today
â Time passing isnât an apology. (via letsbelonelytogetherr)
Elowen. (M.Diaz)
Pairings: Mateo Diaz x fem!reader
Summary: While working in the ER you meet a woman with dementia who ends up becoming family after playing matchmaker between Mateo and you.
Word count: 4.6k
âËàż tina's note đđËâ This is more reader and Elowen found family with a sideplot of reader x Mateo (I'm sorry) but it is the first time in a long time I sit down and write over 4k words at once we're so back! Also, this does get sad towards the end so beware
Elowen Muller was already a known patient in the ER when you started working there. She came in at least once a month no matter how much her family tried to keep her out of there, sometimes it was because of a medical complication, sometimes her dementia made her get into accidents and sometimes it was nothing at all but she would insist she felt like she was dying.
She had, for some reason, taken a liking to you on your first week working there and even through the episodes where she couldn't remember her name the fondness to you peaked through.
"Hey, psst" She called on your third day working at the pitt "Sneak me a soda and I'll give you one of these" She showed you one of those candies old people always had yet you never saw in the stores "Come on, I'll give you three"
"I'll see what I can do" You nodded.
Later when you'd gotten confirmation that because of her sugar levels she was not allowed to have a soda you brought her a box of sugar free juice and she'd given you the dirtiest look she could muster she mumbled something about young people not respecting their elders and you'd walked off containing your laughter as she still sipped on her juice greedily.
Then Mateo came into the picture, you had already been working there for a year, Elowen was still coming in regularly and the first time she saw him she'd let out a whistle and whispered shouted to you "That one's mine" Mateo had just laughed and continued his work.
The first time she decided she was going to get you and Mateo together, there were several revelations during her episodes, was on one of her visits because of dehydration. She was in observation while hooked up on an IV and completely stable, her family had just stepped out 10 minutes before to get lunch when the alarms started blaring, she was coding.
You rushed in alongside Robby, Princess and Mateo to find her sitting on her bed looking completely fine. When Robby approached her to check up on her vitals she put her hand up and stopped him "You are not touching me"
"I'm sorry Mrs. Muller, we need to make sure you're okay, this machine here told us you had lost your pulse" Robby explained "If you're not comfortable with me looking you over then maybe one of our female staff can check you up?"
But then you took a step closer and for the first time in a while she gave you an annoyed look "No, you can't touch me either"
"Mrs. Muller" You tried "We need to-"
"Why are you always here? Don't you have a man or something?" You saw Robby's eyebrows shoot up in amusement before slipping out of the room deciding you three had it under control as Mrs. Muller didn't seem to be in any immediate danger.
"No I don't, too busy making sure my patients don't die on me actually so would you please let us do out jobs?" You asked, she shook her head.
"None of you are touvhing me, only him" She pointed at Mateo and Princess and you tried not to laugh when you realized what was happening "You can come here and check me everywhere handsome"
"All yours Nurse Diaz" You gave him a teasing smile, he looked taken aback.
"Do you have a girlfriend?" Mrs. Muller asked once mateo started checking her vitals.
"No ma'am"
"Oh there's no way no one has snatched you up!" She grabbed a hold of his bicep, Mateo kept working as if that was a normal thing, or maybe he just wanted to get it over with "I would but my husband would get real jealous, nowadays I only get to see and not touch"
"Well then careful he doesn't catch you right now" Princess told her, she waved her off.
"Look, you do't have a girlfriend, she doesn't have a man and god knows she needs a little sugar you should give her some" You raised your eyebrows at her words, Mateo choke on nothing and Princess bursted out laughing "Yes, yes, you two would be perfect"
You left the room after confirming she was okay and making her promise she wouldn't pull on any wires anymore and Princess rushed away no doubt to tell everyone in the nurses station about your interaction with Mrs.Muller.
"So" Mateo spoke first "About that sugar"
You laughed "She's something alright. That was the first time she didn't let me check on her by the way"
"She got a new favorite" He smirked smugly.
"You tell me if you still like that idea tonight after she's made you come in five different times because she was bored or wanted a soda she can't have"
That night when it was time to go home after your shift Mateo found you by your locker "Hey"
"Hey" You were so tired all you wanted was to go home, take a shower and have dinner in bed while watching New Girl.
"I uhâŠ" He fidgeted with the straps of his backpack "Do you wanna go have dinner with me?"
You turned with a raised eyebrow "You really asking me out right now?"
He chuckled "Doesn't have to be anything fancy, some burgers and fries in the car? I can drop you off home afterwards" He knew you walked home every night, you lived only a few streets away from the hospital and found out pretty quickly that taking your car actually made the commute longer than walking because of the traffic.
"You know what? Sure, but only if we go to that place on Main with the cheesy bacon heart attack inducing burgers"
He chuckled but nodded "Completed with potato wedges and all"
Neither of you called it a date, but down the line when you were asked about your first date you always referred to that night.
You two grew closer over the next months, sometimes you'd meet him in the morning with a coffee at the beginning of your shift, other times you'd go out for dinner after and whenever you had a free day and swore all you wanted was to stay at home and enjoy the peace and quiet of living alone you still found yourself texting him to come over.
Mrs.Muller still tried to set you up whenever she was around, one time when she'd said something that made you laugh full on she'd said "You have good teeth, you'd be worth a lot if you were a horse"
Her daughter had gasped "Mom!" And apologized extensively but Mrs. Muller hadn't relented.
"See that?" She'd asked Mateo "Good teeth genetics, for your future kids"
Safe to say while you and Mateo laughed at the absurdity of the situation her poor daughter looked like she'd rather be anywhere but there.
Eventually, one day, years after, when you and Mateo were already together, Mrs. Muller came in for a complication with a past pneumonia. You hadn't been on shift when she came in and she hadn't been lucid at all that night, but when she woke up in the morning to you checking her vitals it had been as if her dementia was simply an exaggeration.
"Dear, how's Mateo? You two find a place yet?" You'd told her two months ago on her last visit about your plans for moving in together, Mateo didn't have a shift that day.
"We haven't" You replied "Actually, we decided to move into my place since it is closer to the hospital. At least until we find a house in our price range we like or save enough money for something better"
"You see, back when my Ernie and I bought our house there was barely anyone in the neighborhood so it was all real cheap" She proceeded to tell you all about the early stages of her marriage while you updated out her chart, thankful that it was a slow enough day that you could stay without Robby chewing you out for it like he so often did with Samira.
Later when you excused yourself, her daughter Rosie followed you out of the room with teary eyes "That was the most lucid she's been the whole week, you should know when we leave here she talks about you and Mateo constantly for at least a week, and sometimes she has these moments of clarity where she shares all these wonders about the two of you" Your expression softened, you'd come to really enjoy Mrs.Muller's company even though you always hoped she wouldn't end up here again soon "Thank you, for all the care, you truly are one of the best doctors I've ever met"
"You don't have to thank me" You hugged her "She really makes my job a lot easier even when she's being stubborn"
That afternoon, an hour before your shift ended, Elowen Muller coded. You'd been scared and had pulled all the stops to bring her back and just when you thought she was gone she'd responded, opened her eyes and with a raspy voice daid "Sorry everyone, I dozed off" You don't think you've ever felt the way you did that night and when you got home after your shift you cried to Mateo about how scary it had been.
After that scare you had approached Rosie and asked if you could visit her mom when she got out of the hospital and that's how you found yourself doing regular visits to her house, Elowen Muller became somewhat of your grandma as they adopted you into the family. When Mateo proposed and you kept it quiet from the hospital staff, because you rarely shared anything about your relationship with them and you weren't planning on saying anything until you sent out the save the dates, Mrs.Muller outed you.
It was during the med students first shift, Mateo had been tending to her alongside Cassie and Javadi and Mrs.Muller had been particularly quiet until the end when she asked Mateo to get closer and then whispered loudly to him "That one's making eyes at you, be careful" and pointed at Javadi who looked mortified.
Then before they left she'd called out "Tell your fiancee to come say hi before I leave!"
"She's really rooting for you guys huh?" Cassie smiled warmly at Mateo, she was probably the one person in the hospital who had seen the most about your relationship since you two often babysat for her.
"From day one" Mateo replied with a big smile.
"Sorry, he has a fiancee?" Javadi asked once he was gone.
"Girlfriend" Cassie replied giving her your name "But I wouldn't be surprised if they get engaged soon"
That same day, a little later, you popped into her room when you had some free time to say hello, Javadi was in there again, this time with Princess.
"I heard you were in here, couldn't let you leave without saying hi"
"Oh sweets! Come in, come in here and show me that ring again" Your eyes widened a little, there was no way she was outing you in front of Princess, surely the entire floor would know about it before shift was over now "Have you seen it yet? It's not as pretty as the one my Ernie got me, but it is gorgeous" She asked princess who shook her head "Well go on, show them"
You chuckled nervously "I don't wear it while working"
"You need to wear it on a chain, or pin it on your scrubs! I saw that in Greys"
"So, I guess congratulations are in order?" Princess said when you walked out of the room, you smiled and nodded sheepishly "You better let us know the date with plenty of time so we can find someone to fill in!" She pointed at you and walked away surely to let everyone know.
"Congrats" Javadi smiled awkwardly.
"Thank you" You replied.
Mateo found you approximately 5 minutes later "Mrs.Muller let it out huh?" You winced, he laughed "Hey the chain idea wasn't that bad, maybe I need to get you one of those next"
After you and Mateo got married Mrs.Muller's health had started declining and she had more bad days than good, still, even when she didn't fully remember you, that fondness she had for you hadn't disappeared and you saw it in the way she'd fight every doctor when they tried to check on her during a particular bad day except for you, or when she would only trust you to put her IV in.
One day when you arrived for your shift in the morning you found Mrs.Muller in a white coat walking bed to bed asking patients all sorts of questions while holding a notepad and a pen.
"Should we stop her?" You asked Dana who already looked busy even though the shift had just started.
She waved you off "She's just conducting a survey" And showed you a paper that was left in the counter of the nurses station earlier "About everyone's favorite soda and least favorite spot in town I think"
Her writings were barely words, mostly scribbles, but you could make out the words Sprite and Dr.Pepper every few lines alongside some misspelled street names. A couple minutes later you overlapped with a patient you needed to check on and Mrs.Muller's questionnaire towards them, the older woman nodding and scribbling into her notepad as you spoke to your patient who assured you they were fine with Mrs.Muller being there, thankfully. When you were done and moved to your next patient she followed, that repeated for about three patients more until she declared she was bored and stopped Mateo to take her to her room because she'd forgotten her way.
On her next visit to the hospital after a particularly nasty fall on a bad day she'd been snappy with everyone included you. And as you asked her daughter the regular questions you had to ask every time a new patient came in she jumped into the conversation "I'm pregnant" She announced.
She was 85 years old and very much not pregnant, but you still let her continue and asked in an amused tone "Yeah? Who's the father?"
She stared at you with a straight face and let out "Your husband" At the same time as Mateo was walking by making him poke his head in.
"Oh hi Mrs.Muller, how are you doing today?"
"Pregnant with your baby apparently" You huffed a chuckle watching Mateo look completely lost.
"At least the child will have good hair" Mrs.Muller grumbled before getting distracted with the beeping of the machine next to her.
"I'm so sorry" Rosie apologized, you waved her off with a smile.
When you found out you were pregnant was around the same time as Mrs.Muller had been put in an elderly care facility, Rosie not being able to car for her mom full time anymore as her dementia got worse and her siblings all living out of state, so your visits to her were fewer and most of her care was handled by the facility in their state of the art clinic so she no longer came into the ER as often.
When you were in your first two trimesters you visited her at the facility as much as you could, but as you reached your third trimester anything other than work seemed like too much of a hassle, so with a heavy heart Mateo and you had decided it was best if your trips to see Mrs.Muller stopped for the time being.
You were eight months pregnant on one of the last times you saw Mrs.Muller in the ER, your body was achy, your feet swollen and your mood completely soured from the overstimulation of carrying a baby at 8 months pregnant while working on a busy emergency department, but that day Mrs.Muller's visit had brightened your day with her not even realizing it.
You weren't in charge of her case, but you still stopped by to check on her even though it was one of those bad days where she didn't remember you at all. You'd been standing to the side sipping out of a smoothie reading her chart when she spoke "You should suck in your gut darling, you look fat"
Everyone in the room turned to you with horrified looks, recently you cried for less. In fact, just earlier today you'd cried because Whitaker had asked you to clarify what one of your notes said on a patient chart because your writing wasn't too neat and yesterday you'd teared up when Langdon complimented Mel on her stitches but didn't say anything about yours.
But instead of crying like everyone else had expected, you bursted out laughing, full laugh that had you clutching your belly and wiping good tears away "I needed that Elowen, I really did" Mrs.Muller had no idea what you meant or how you knew her first name but she ignored you as you walked out of the room wiping tears away.
"Hey, hey, what happened?" Mateo worryingly rushed to your side when he noticed the tears.
"Nothing" You gasped for air, laughing that much while 8 months pregnant? Not for the weak, but again, nothing really was these days "Good tears I swear, oh my god"
"Baby talk to me" Mateo still looked worried "What's going on?"
"SheâŠ" You pointed at the room and bursted out laughing again "Oh my god"
"Okay, breathe please"
You laughed some more and then finally took a deep breath and stopped enough to be able to form a full sentence "She told me I looked fat"
"Oh no" Mateo frowned.
"She's laughing about being called fat?" Santos asked confused from where she was standing charting behind you "She cried last week when I told her the part in her hair was not straight"
"You said that in a really mean tone"
"As opposed to that mean little old lady called you fat in a good tone?" She questioned.
"She's just confused" You waved her off.
By the time your baby girl made it to the world Mrs.Muller was in hospice care, Mateo and you contemplated it, your plan was to not take your baby out farther than your backyard until she was at least three months old, but based on what you'd heard from Rosie around the time your baby was a month old, Mrs.Muller might've not make it until then, so you decided you'd visit.
Rosie greeted you at the entrance, it was only her there that day with her mom, she didn't push to hold the baby or touch or anything, just watched with the same fondness you saw in her mom and congratulated you both. Mrs. Muller was having a good day she told you, that morning when she woke up she'd been told about your visit with your little one and she'd been excitedly waiting for you to arrive.
When she saw you walk through the door, Mateo holding the carrier and you tired but glowing in front she beamed "Oh my darlings" She clasped her hands "Look at you!"
"Hi Mrs.Muller" You smiled with teary eyes, your hormones were still all over the place and seeing her look so fragile in that bed killed you.
"Come here" She motioned, you did "You look amazing, how are you doing?"
"Tired" You admitted "But we wanted to come introduce someone to you"
Mateo took a step closer and lifted the carrier up for you to pull the baby out "Hi Mrs.Muller"
"Hi my love" She smiled at him then saw the tiny baby in your arms "Oh my goodness"
"Would you like to hold her?" She nodded and you adjusted her in her arms safely keeping a hand close so you could help in case of an emergency.
"Look at you" Mrs.Muller cooed "You're so beautiful, you look just like your daddy"
Mateo smiled proudly, it was true, that weird statistic about girls always looking like their dad for some weird reason had been true in your case "Would you like to know her name?" He asked.
Mrs.Muller nodded and you two looked at each other before you softly said "Her name is Elowen Diaz"
Mrs.Muller looks up at you both with teary eyes and you nod "She wouldn't be here if it wasn't for you" Mateo told her "I had been eyeing the pretty doctor for days thinking I had no chance with her until you started playing matchmaker and I decided to risk it"
"You've been for every stage of our relationship it only seemed right for our girl to be named after you" You added.
"Oh take her before I drop her" You could see her arms shaking from emotion and Mateo, the protective dad he had become even before she was out in the world, didn't think twice before picking her up and nestling her in his arms, one technically because they were so big and she was so small but the other one was there too for extra security "You two are going to be the most wonderful parents to that little girl, she's so luck to have you"
"And we're lucky to have you" You said, she motioned for you to get closer so she could hug you.
When you were in her arms she whispered "I'm so proud of you two"
She passed away a week later, it happened in her sleep and she hadn't been in any pain. For the funeral you got Cassie to babysit as a repayment for all the times you and Mateo did for her and went to celebrate the life of a wonderful woman and say goodbye.
You heard stories from a lot of different people, Elowen Muller had been an exceptional woman who had impacted the life of everyone she'd connected with. When she was younger she'd been a special ed teacher, after she retired from teaching she decided to pursue her childhood dream of working in a zoo, except she didn't just go and volunteer at one, she found an underfunded rescue center and started campaigning for them, she volunteered all her free time to animal conservation and spent the rest of it alongside her family.
She had 3 kids, 2 daughters and a son, and 7 grandkids, all grown up with their own lives yet they still found time to visit her as much as possible. When the service ended you met up with Rosie and her siblings who had also adopted you into their family after hearing so much of you from their mother.
"Thank you for coming" Rosie smiled "I'm sure she's real happy you made it today"
"We wouldn't have missed it" Mateo replied for the both of you since he knew you were too emotional to speak, your whole body weight was resting on him as he held you by his side "We're going to miss her"
"Yeah" Rosie pulled an envelop out of her purse "She left this for you"
Back home, after saying goodbye to Cassie and making sure that Elowen was safely asleep in her bassinet, you took the baby monitor and sat outside with the envelope in your hands.
"I don't know if I'm ready for this" You admitted.
"You don't have to open it right now" Mateo kissed the top of your head.
You took a deep breath "No, I think we should" In the letter you could see a neat handwriting, probably Rosie's
My Dears,
If you're reading this letter, that means I'm gone.
And now that I've gotten the dramatic movie line out of the way let's do this.
I want to start by thanking you for taking care not only of me, but my family as well. All those hospital visits where you had to tend to me, you were also helping my family, those extra blankets and pillows never went unnoticed. Neither did the words of encouragement and all the support you had for my children and I through all the hard times.
I know I wasn't all there all the time, as much as I would've liked it, my sickness made it impossible. However, the times I was there, I got to see your beautiful love flourish. I'm glad you took the risk and decided to try it out, it takes one look at you both to realize how perfect you are for each other.
It was the highlight of my last years to see you two fall in love, from those 'secret' looks you threw each other's way (yes, I saw them, I think everybody did, you're not good at hiding) to seeing you hold hands for a second in the hallway while passing through on your way to another patient all the way to your wedding and (hopefully I'll still be there to see it) the birth of your baby.
To the best nurse ever, never lose that beautiful gentleness you have for others, it is one of your biggest strenghts, but don't let anyone use it as a weakness. Take care of our girl and the little one on the way as well like it is your full time job. (I'm sure you already do but it doesn't hurt to remind you)
To my favorite doctor, never lose sight of who you are, keep working hard but don't let your ambition consume you, take the time to stop and look around. Let our nurse take care of you and never stop loving him with as much passion as you do now, savor every moment with your little one, they grow up too fast.
I'm so proud of the people you've grown to be, you will be the best parents ever. Never lose sight of what is the most important thing in your life, each other, your family. I know you don't owe me anything, but I would really love it if you mentioned me once or twice to your girl, let her know a crazy old woman was the one who pushed her parents to get together maybe.
Don't miss me too much, know I'm having the time of my life with my Ernie and telling him all about what he missed with our family, including you three. It became a tradition after my first grandchild that every one of them got a knitted blanket, I obviously couldn't make one for your baby but I enlisted the help of Rosie with it and by the time you read this she should have it ready along with a few other things I would like you to have, call her, she'll have it all for you.(Rosie here: yes I will, call me)
It is a pity that we didn't have more time together, but I appreciate the universe for putting you in my way, until we see each other again.
With love,
Elowen Muller.
Both of you cried while holding each other for a while, until Elowen woke up and cried to be fed. After you got the blanket and box of things Mrs.Muller had left for you (a bunch of toys and trinkets she'd collected for her grandbabies over the years and kept in her home) Elowen slept in that blanket every single night. When she was old enough to ask how Mateo and you met you told her all about Elowen Muller, the 6 year old rated version of it, the wonderful woman she'd been named after. Although you didn't see the Muller family that much anymore, Rosie had been to every birthday party and you kept up through social media still.
Ok ok ok, I saw a tiktok the other day of a woman giving birth ON THE SIDE TOF THE ROAD because her contractions and everything came so fast. How do you think Bucky would react to this kind of thing? While he probably has med training from being in the Army/Avengers he's still also just a man worried about his wife and baby? Please please pleaseeee make me cry!
i saw a video like this the other day too! #new fear unlocked
-------
The first contraction hits while youâre still laughing.
It folds you in half mid-sentence, steals the air right out of your lungs, turns your spine rigid as your hand clamps around Buckyâs forearm. He goes still immediately, all humor draining from his face as he watches you, blue eyes sharpening into something alert and searching.
âHey,â he says softly, already moving closer. âTalk to me, doll. Whatâs that?â
You try to brush it off, because it canât be time yet, itâs too soon, youâve got weeks, youâve got plans, but then it hits again, harder, sharper, a deep, pulling ache that makes your knees buckle.
Bucky catches you before you can even think about falling.
âOkay,â he breathes, voice steady even as his hands tighten around you. âOkay, thatâs not nothing.â
The next ten minutes are a blur of movement. He gets you into the car, one hand braced behind your head so you donât hit the doorframe, the other gripping yours like heâs afraid youâll slip away if he lets go. Your hospital bag gets tossed in the backseat, your phone forgotten on the kitchen counter, and then heâs behind the wheel, engine roaring to life.
He's too calm.
Itâs the kind of calm that comes from years of training, from missions where panic gets people killed. His breathing is even, his voice low and controlled as he glances between the road and you, counting the seconds between your contractions like itâs second nature.
âBreathe with me,â he murmurs, squeezing your hand. âIn through your nose, slow. Iâve got you. Youâre doing good.â
But underneath it, buried deep where he hopes you wonât notice, is fear.
Real, gut-deep fear.
Because youâre not supposed to be screaming in pain ten minutes into the drive. Youâre not supposed to be gripping the seat so hard your knuckles go white. Youâre not supposed to be gasping out, âBucky, somethingâs wrongâthis is too fastââ
And then your water breaks.
It soaks through your leggings, warm and sudden, and Buckyâs head snaps toward you so fast itâs almost violent.
âOkay,â he says again, but this time itâs tighter. Thinner. âOkay, thatâsâokay.â
He presses harder on the gas.
The hospital is still fifteen minutes away when you cry out, a broken, desperate sound that rips straight through him.
âI need to push.â
The words hit him like a gunshot.
For a second he freezes.
Because he knows what that means. Heâs been through enough emergency scenarios, enough battlefield triage, enough late-night briefings with medical teams to recognize it instantly.
There is no way youâre making it to the hospital.
âShit,â he breathes, already scanning the road. His grip on the steering wheel tightens, vibranium fingers digging into the leather hard enough to crease it. âShit, okay, okayâhang on, baby, justââ
Another contraction hits you, and your entire body curls forward with a sob.
Thatâs it.
He swerves the car onto the shoulder without hesitation, gravel crunching under the tires as he slams it into park. Heâs out of the driverâs seat before the engine even fully dies, sprinting around to your side, yanking the door open.
âLook at me,â he says, dropping to his knees beside you, his hands cradling your face. His voice is firm now, commanding in a way youâve only heard on missions. âHey. You stay with me, okay? Iâve got you.â
Youâre crying, shaking, terrified, and he hates it.
He hates that youâre in pain. Hates that this isnât safe and controlled and planned the way it was supposed to be. Hates that he canât take it from you, canât carry it the way heâs carried everything else.
But thereâs no time for that.
Another contraction hits, and you scream.
Heâs all instinct now, controlled precious of a soldier in combat. He helps you shift, supporting your back, guiding your breathing, murmuring constant reassurances even as his heart pounds so hard he can feel it in his throat.
âYouâre okay,â he keeps saying, over and over, like he can make it true just by repeating it. âYouâre okay, Iâve got you, youâre doing so goodââ
You cling to him, nails digging into his shirt, your forehead pressed to his shoulder as your body takes over.
âBucky, I canâtââ you sob.
âYou can,â he cuts in immediately, voice fierce. âYou can, you are. You hear me? Youâre doing it right now.â
His metal hand braces your thigh, steady and unyielding, while his other hand grips yours, grounding you through every wave of pain.
He talks you through it.
Every breath. Every push.
His voice is the only thing keeping you tethered until you both hear the cry.
Tiny, unmistakeable and entirely mad at life.
Everything stops.
For a moment, the world goes completely, utterly silent.
Buckyâs hands tremble as he lifts your baby, his breath catching hard in his chest. Thereâs blood, thereâs chaos, thereâs the distant sound of cars rushing pastâbut none of it matters.
Because your baby is crying.
Because youâre here.
Because you both made it.
âHey,â he whispers, voice breaking in a way youâve never heard before. âHey, Iâve got you⊠Iâve got youâŠâ
He places the baby against your chest with hands that are suddenly so, so gentle, like youâre both made of glass, then he looks at you.
Really looks at you.
Your tear-streaked face, your exhausted smile, the way youâre already reaching for your baby like nothing else in the world exists.
His throat tightens.
âYou did that,â he says softly, brushing your hair back with shaking fingers. âYouâGod, you did that, sweetheart.â
His forehead presses against yours, eyes slipping shut for just a second.
Relief crashes over him so hard it almost knocks the breath out of his lungs.
He laughs then, hysterically, as he cups the back of your head, holding you both close.
âWe gotta work on your timing,gâ he murmurs, voice thick with emotion. âCouldnât wait for the hospital, huh?â
But his hand never stops trembling.
And neither does the way he keeps looking at you, like he almost lost everything.
Like heâs never going to take a single second with you for granted again.
Busy Woman ! â Jack Abbot
pairing â jack abbot x fem!reader
summary â jack has seen you leave a trail of broken hearts and bad dates, and heâs determined to prove to you that youâre looking for love in all the wrong places.
warnings â 12.6k words. age gap (jackâs around 50; readerâs a 4th year resident, so 20s), attending/resident power dynamic; mentor/mentee relationship, idiots in love maybe?? yearning!jack, jealous!jack, jack âiâll pay for itâ abbot strikes Again!!!! hurt + comfort (one instance of jack being an ass, but he smooths it over during the same shift - they canât stay mad at each other), mild angst, patient death, jackâs leg - reader helps him adjust the prosthetic and takes care of him during a long shift, canon-typical medical scenes and probably lots of inaccuracies (iâm an english major reddit is my best friend) ; on-page patient death, reader performing compressions, reader DATES DATES and may be unprofessional (affectionately she just wants to find love and her entire life revolves around the hospital who can blame her), readerâs written to have hair she brushes and can pin up, she also gets on her toes to kiss him but that can be ignored i just liked the image jack basically bribes her into a date, no smut but theyâre So very much thinking about it, rushed-ish ending i think?
notes â wrote this in a slump it took so Unbelievably long and iâm not even sure i like it but i wanted to post something before i give up on writing anything ever again!!!!
It was midnight and a peds nurse was lingering by the ambulance doors, and Jack knew that he wasnât meant to be there. Lewis was his name, maybe, but Jack couldnât even be sure of that â and knew he had no reason to be sure of it, because the guy wasnât meant to be there. Running the ER in the middle of the night, with all of the dayâs patients handed off, and the nightâs still finding their way through triage, was difficult in itself, and he didnât have the energy to also babysit Ryan-or-Lewis-or-whoever hovering there like a little boy waiting to be picked up from school.Â
âIs he meant to be here?â Jack asked, closing the space toward the desk where Lena was pointing something, jutting his thumb in the direction of the guy.Â
Lena flattened a printout on the desk with two fingers, hardly sparing him a glance.
âHim. Peds. Why is he there?â he tried again.
âCouldnât tell you,â she said, but the corner of her mouth had flicked up, proving that she was simply choosing not to tell him.Â
âHeâs off his unit,â he said. He knew he sounded just slightly silly stating the obvious.
âSeems so.â
âSend him back, then,â Jack drawled, incredulous, hands finding his hips. âThereâs enough shit going on here.â
âYou send him back,â she retorted, amused just slightly. âIf youâre so concerned.â
Jack looked up at the ceiling, shaking his head as his hands went to rest on his hips. When he looked back down, he found you walking toward the nurse and it suddenly made complete sense.Â
He let out a sigh. âThis has to be a joke.â
His eyes, as they did more often than was appropriate, caught on you, hair coming down loose from where youâd pinned it, the scrubs lopsided at one hip, riding lower than where theyâd started at the beginning of the night. You turned to say something to the guy quickly, and the movement caught the slip, your scrub top moving up half an inch, and Jackâs eyes went there before his brain could tell him that was wrong, some groove in him that noticed you before it noticed anything useful. He had a second of pure, unhelpful distraction before his brain reminded him that he was an attending and had things to do.Â
âI actually think itâs funny,â Lena said, shrugging.
Of course it had something to do with you. He shouldâve figured it out the second he saw the guy standing there with his hands in the pouch of his scrubs, rocking heel to toe like the floor was just too exciting to be standing on. Nobody loitered around the ambulance bay at midnight for good reason. People came through those doors bleeding or they didnât come through them at all, and this guy had shown up with nothing wrong with him, except maybe a case for some lovesickness.Â
âIâm gonna make this stop,â Jack said, already pushing himself away from the nurseâs station.
Lenaâs eyes widened slightly. âDonât say anything that gets you sat down with HR.â
âShe can goddamn try me,â he said, and went. Also because Jack was fairly sure you would never report him to HR.Â
He crossed the floor and caught the tail-end of your conversation as he closed in.
â â just tell me when youâre free, thatâs all Iâm asking,â the guy was saying.
You were already half-turned, already gone as you waved a hand loosely beside you. âI donât know, I just donât think we should try again.âÂ
Jack blew out a breath, standing a few feet short of you, your back facing him. Why was he not surprised? Heâd been keeping tally without meaning to, and he knew that was embarrassing. There was the radiology fellow whoâd started hand-delivering films that very well couldâve gone through the system; the travel nurse whoâd washed through in six weeks and left the floor faintly weird in his wake; the anaesthesia resident who now took the long way around the department if he saw you at the end of it, as though he were a dog whoâd learned the fence was electric. And now this one, apparently, Peds with his whole hopeful heart hanging out in Jackâs department.Â
âYouâre so sweet for coming down here,â you practically crooned at him, shifting on your heels, eyes flicking down to the form in your hand. âBut I really do have a whole long night ahead of me, and I know my answerâs not gonna change, so I wonât make you wait around for it, okay?âÂ
Jack fought the urge to roll his eyes when you said the words with the upward lilt of a woman sending a toddler back to his mother. He wanted to laugh a little when he saw that the guy had taken it standing up like it was a gift.Â
The hell of it was that Jack understood the man. He understood every last one of them because he stood next to you fifty hours a week, had been doing so for three years, and whatever the department thought of him after his consistent therapy, he was not carved out of stone.Â
Jack was afraid that if he hadnât been your attending these last four years and a little younger, wearing his heart on his sleeve, heâd have been eating out of the palm of your hand.Â
You gave the guy a there-there pat, and it was only then did his eyes land on Jack, who he probably knew was your fucking attending. You turned then, and immediately said, âOh, Dr. Abbot, Iâve got the guy in sixâs labs back, the potassium ââ
âMhm.â Jackâs hands came up and landed on your shoulders before youâd finished the sentence, squaring you off the spot where you stood and turning you bodily back toward the floor like you were a gurney.Â
âIt is four-point-nine, but the EKGâs good, so I was gonna recheck in ââÂ
âLetâs recheck it now,â he said. He kept you moving, his palms broad through the cotton of your scrubs, steering you a few feet till your own feet caught onto the idea.Â
You grumbled something under your breath, and once heâd stopped you right in front of six, you turned to face him with your brows raised.
âSay something?â he asked, tipping his chin down.
âYou seem like youâre mad at me,â you said.Â
âHuh. I do?â He let go of your shoulders â noticing, distantly, the exact second his hands came off and suddenly felt too empty â and reached past you to pluck sixâs chart off the tray, more to have something to do with them than needing it. âYouâre right. You should recheck in ten minutes.â
âYouâre mad at me,â you said again, crossing your arms over your chest.Â
He blew out a breath, and suddenly felt just a little silly at getting worked up over a nurse by the doors when there was a large, glowing board behind him full of names that needed his complete, undivided attention.Â
You were a senior resident, after all, four years deep, one of his sharpest â youâd treated the guy in six, hadnât you, youâd flagged it and called for the EKG and made the right call on the recheck before heâd even asked, all while dismantling some manâs hopes. Somehow, your mess and competence ran on the same current. You never let the first touch the second. Heâd have loved, some nights, to have an excuse to be mad â a missed lab, a blown line, anything he could write up and point at â and you kept declining to hand him one. All of this meant he was left with this vague swampy irritation, and Jack wasnât the sort of mentor who liked to hound upon that.Â
âNo, sweetheart, I just love it when you get random men hanging around the department,â he settled on saying, feeling his shoulders visibly loosen a fraction.
You winced, eyes darting over to the emptiness in front of the doors now. âSorry.âÂ
âYouâd say it wonât happen again, but we both know better.â He shrugged. Then, he reached out his hand â he wasnât sure why, except that it just happened naturally â and patted you once on the shoulder, then on the second turned you to face the curtains leading to your patient. âDoctor up.â
And you did, the loose, embarrassed shape of you being replaced in the space of a single breath, being replaced by something Jack had watched grow into you over the years and still hadnât quite gotten used to.Â
Trauma called it in nine minutes later, an MVC, unrestrained driver, GCS dropping in the field. Jack was working on a laceration in four when he heard the crackled warning, and by the time heâd looked up out the curtains, you were already moving, gowned and at the head of the bay calling out assignments like youâd been doing this for a decade.
âI need two units O-neg before he rolls in,â you said, voice pitched high enough to carry without yelling, cutting clean through the perpetual noise of the department. âSomebody get me a second eighteen-gauge ready, and I want an ultrasound in here.â
Donnie and Mateo were already moving, and so were the people around you, falling into your orbit like the room had easily reorganized itself around your voice the second it went up. Jack stood by the curtain, gloves from the lac still on, and found he couldnât make himself move just yet.
The doors banged open. EMS wheeled the stretcher through fast, calling out vitals over each other, and you were already on the patientâs side before the gurney had fully stopped moving, hands moving on his neck, chest, eyes scanning his pupils in a matter of ten seconds. He began walking over, catching your voice as you called out your reads as someone hung the blood and someone else prepped the ultrasound wand. âPage neuro now.â
âOn it,â Mateo said, already moving.
You had both hands on the patient, running the primary survey quickly, confirming, checking, discarding possibilities out in short, clipped sentences Jack recognized as the sound of your brain running six steps ahead of your mouth. Sweat had started on your hairline. You called out for OR to be on standby, eyes flickering around the room and landing on Jack. âOR, please,â you said, aimed at him, brows going up.Â
âOn it,â Jack said, because there was no way he was going to let you be wrong about needing something and didnât make sure you got it.
The next six minutes went by fast and loud, in bursts and then suddenly quiet, the room narrowing down on functionality. You stood at the center of it; you called it and ran it. You got the man upstairs stable enough that Walsh didnât sound worried for one second, and that was a compliment from her.Â
Jack watched the whole thing from four feet back, arms crossed, and chipping in when your brain had snagged. He was feeling a heat in his chest helplessly and entirely unprofessional, it was always present when he was able to see, in real-time, how far youâd come from your first day of residency when your hands were a second too slow on the central line and how your voice would pitch up at the end of every read, asking for permission every time instead of stating it like a fact, eyes finding him across the room each time, checking.
There was none of that left in you now, he realized, had done so a long time ago. He thought, watching you now, that this was the closest thing heâd let himself do to falling in years, standing uselessly riveted as he watched a woman heâd taught outgrow the need for him in real time, and finding that instead of the loss heâd expected to feel when the day finally came, all he felt was warm and terrifying and too much like pride.Â
When the room had started clearing out, he watched your mouth drop open as you let out a heavy breath, eyes going over to him. The second he watched you realize he was still there, your face shifted, the relief turning into something sharper.Â
âWhy didnât you jump in?â You crossed the floor toward him in four hard strides, gloves already peeled off and balled tight in one fist, snapping the second one free with a motion that looked terrifyingly like it wanted to be aimed at him. âHis pressure tanked for thirty seconds and you just watched.â
âYou had it.â
âYou didnât know that,â you said, voice going up an octave, adrenaline still thrumming through you, hands coming up the gesture at the blood-streaked floor. âI couldâve missed something. Youâre the attending, Jack, youâre supposed to catch if I missed something ââ
âI wouldâve,â he interrupted, stepping in close enough that you had to tilt your head back to keep glaring at him properly. âThe second you needed me, I wouldâve stepped in. I wasnât gonna take it from you before you did.âÂ
âYou canât gamble like that with a patient ââ Your chest was rising and falling fast, gloves now crushed in your fist, and he could see the fear catching up now that everything around you had gone quiet enough to let it, something that looked more like fear of yourself than for the patient. âWhat if Iâd frozen â?â
âI knew you wouldnât.â He reached his hand out, thumb catching a smear of the blood at your jaw youâd accidentally smeared on yourself, wiping it off carefully with the pad of his thumb, and felt you go still under it. âYou donât trust my judgement?â
âYou know I do. You just couldâve said something.â
âI couldâve. He dropped his hand from your jaw only to catch your wrist instead. âDidnât wanna interrupt you being brilliant. Kinda liked watching it happen.â
Your mouth opened, surely to let out some unnecessary retort, and died there when he pressed one slow stroke of his thumb against your wrist, raising a brow.Â
âRelax,â he said, voice going rough as he leaned in a little, forcing you to meet his eyes properly. âJust take the win. Thatâs an order.â
âNow you wanna give orders,â you mumbled.
He barked out a short laugh, letting go of your wrist. âOnly when youâre being stubborn for no reason.â  Â
It was sometime during the second year of your residency when heâd started catching your drift. It had started with a random Friday shift. Heâd seen you at the station, elbows on the counter, telling Lena something conspiratorially. Jack was meant to be reading a chart but couldnât help how his ears had perked up. Anything to get through the shift, he supposed.
â â no, but he was perfect on paper,â you were saying, âkept his house clean and everything. He told me he kept his plant alive for six years ââ
âSo, what happened?â Lena said flatly, like she already knew what you were going to say but wanted to hear anyway.Â
âHe wanted to take me bowling on the second date,â you said through a sigh. âI know how it sounds, but youâve gotta hear me out ââ
âIâm genuinely not going anywhere.â
â â for the first date, bowlingâs fun. But he took me to a nice dinner the first time, he set a standard, and then the second date he goes bowling, which means the effortâs already ââ You created a little downward slope with your hand. âAnd if itâs already sliding on date two, whereâs it at on date two hundred? I can already see my marriage with him and itâs bad.â
It seemed you had a criteria, Jack learned then. It was proven even more when heâd heard you talk about your other failed dates, seen them, and learned â without ever wanting to â what they were, to an extent.Â
He knew you couldnât stand a man who ordered for you without asking. He knew youâd written off a fellow for the way he talked about his mother, and another one â an accountant, a rare specimen who had no clue what an EKG was â over a text message youâd read aloud to Ellis in a voice of complete horror, though Jack had never caught what it actually said, only your face while you read it. He knew you gave people precisely three dates, that this was a rule you held if the first and second date went well, three apparently being the magic number at which a person could no longer hide the demon they were going to turn out to be (your words).
He knew, too, that you only allowed one kiss after the first date, if even that. It was never up for negotiation, no matter how beautifully the night had gone, for you never wanted to end up âemotionally overdrawn on an account you hadnât even opened yet.â
He knew you a man lost real points if, over the three dates, if it involved drinks, he ordered the same one. He knew a man gained them, silently and instantly, for being able to sit in a lull without narrating his way out of it, and that you considered this the single rarest trait in modern dating.
He knew you were looking for something you had no name for and would recognize on sight, which struck him as a hell of a way to run a search.
Heâd have told you, if you asked, that he tuned most of the station chatter out as a matter of survival, for while he enjoyed the occasional gossip, he couldnât very well absorb everyoneâs business. And that was true about everyoneâs business but yours, apparently, because yours came in clear.
Your business he retained against his own better judgement, and he realized â once, during a slow shift â that he couldâve drawn you a better map of your taste than you seemed to carry yourself. He couldâve told you, if you asked, exactly the kind of man whoâd finally clear your bar, and exactly why he had yet to show up.Â
It was almost nice, some nights, watching you try anyway. The ER was a place where everyone was kept tethered to the world by a thread, and everyone who worked in it long enough to develop some version of the same calluses. Jack had grown his years ago, and he wore them invisible, occasionally aching, and had come to terms with it being permanent.
Love, for Jack, had stopped being a real noun before youâd shown up, somewhere between things he used to want and things heâd decided werenât for him anymore.
You still believed in it. Youâd watched this place take everything soft out of grown men twice your seniority and somehow walked through the same fire hopeful, still convinced, against every scrap of evidence, that somewhere there was a person worth all that hoping.
For that reason, he had decided to not interrupt your endeavors, not until now, when he noticed you during hand-off before your night shift with him started, in front of Robby, of all people.Â
While Jack loved Robby like a brother, he had a documented, department-wide, actuarially reliable seven-week expiration date on every woman he charmed out of this building. Heâd heard intra-departmental gossip about him. There was, Jack was fairly sure, a running joke about it that predated your residency by years.Â
He knew you definitely were not finding love in his best friend. But Jack felt the buzzing in his mind go quiet and mean watching how you with him.
You laughed at something and Jack lost, for one humiliating second, the thread of what heâd walked over to say. It happened sometimes, more than heâd admit to anyone. Ordinary noises out of you hit him somewhere in his chest before the better part of him flagged it as a problem, and he had to physically clear his throat before finding his footing again.Â
â â Italianâs always good after pulling a double,â Robby was saying. âBut I do love some microwave ramen, too, when Iâm missing my med student days.âÂ
âOh, so your standards have been raised being chief?â you said, and Jack could hear the smile and wariness in it.Â
âFor sure ââ
Jack let out a huff, something resembling a laugh, as his feet planted him between the two of you. He was close enough that his shoulder nudged yours and you had to step back to keep your balance. He felt your weight land for a second against him with a satisfaction he had no, absolutely no business feeling for something so small. So childish.
He turned to Robby, spreading his hands wide, mock outrage. âMy resident.â
Robby looked mildly amused, unbothered, so Jack added, before he could respond, âGo home before I report you to HR.â
âYouâd do that to me?âÂ
âIn a heartbeat. Have some shame.â Jack kept his shoulder where it was still angled half in front of you, an old, unexamined instinct keeping the line drawn even though Robby had already backed off.
He tipped his head toward the doors, toward the gold light coming up in them, the day shift draining out around you both. âThereâs a whole rich life waitinâ for you out there.â
Robby just smiled and pushed off the counter, giving you a small wave before he left.
Jack turned to you then, brows furrowed. âSeriously?â
You let out a short laugh. âWork hard, play hard?âÂ
âSoundinâ a lot like a frat brother right now. Never have those words been said in an ER,â Jack said.Â
âI wasnât actually going to do it,â you said, rushing the words out with something more honest in them. âFor the record. I know what â heâs got a reputation.â You picked at the counter. âI was just talking to him. Heâs funny.â
Jack had to recalibrate for a second. âYou were talkinâ sweet to him.âÂ
âI talk sweet to everyone.â You lifted a shoulder, completely unbothered. âYou should try it sometime.â
He rolled his eyes at that. He reached over for your cup of coffee sitting between you â closer to his elbow than yours â and drank a sip, eyes going up to the ceiling at the sheer volume of syrup youâd decided you needed in your bloodstream today. âThe hell?â he muttered, turning the cup slightly as if that would help. âAre you trying to embalm yourself?â
âGive it back.â
âIn a minute.â He took a second sip, slower this time, and watched you over the rim of the cup. Then, he set it back a few degrees off how youâd had it, just to see your jaw tick.
You pulled the cup back in, thumbed it around until the lid faced you again, and drank from it without breaking your explanation. âIâm offended you think Iâll get wine and dined by the chief attending.â You tilted your head. âGive me some credit here. I wonât be his seven weeks.â
âHuh.â He rubbed the back of his neck, which was warm. âWell, good. Donât think heâll clear your bar anyway.â
âSee, you get it,â you said, pointing a finger at him. âAt least someone around here does.âÂ
âYes, maâam,â he said, tipping his head slightly forward that even he hadnât realized that he had shifted the distance just slightly. âBetter than most.â
Your eyes widened slightly at that, and Jack took that as his cue to step back, clear his throat, as he jerked his chin toward the board.
âAlright, time to work. Stop the play,â he said, trying to get his voice the right level. âGo look at chest pain on three.â
âSo bossy,â you said, but you were already turning around to go to three.
Well, thatâs what he was, wasnât he? For some reason, he had to remind himself that.Â
It was what he had to remind himself as his hands hovered your trembling ones as you tried to pump air into Mrs. Foleyâs lungs, knowing she was already gone â had been for a while now, if he was honest â longer than it took you to admit. He knew it, heâd grown the grim ability to recognize when a body stopped being a patient and being someone you were performing compressions on for the familyâs sake, for your own need to have done everything.Â
Heâd let it run anyway, because you hadnât accepted it yet, and heâd wanted to give you that extra minute to arrive at it on your own.Â
Mateo had come up to Jackâs side, snapping his gloves off, the sound of it overshadowed by your own heaving.Â
âShe has to call it,â he murmured. âYou want me to ââ
âNo.â Jackâs eyes, he felt, could not move away from your distress. âIâve got her.âÂ
Mateo looked at him for a moment longer than the moment warranted, and then he stepped back and let Jack be. You were still going, your compressions had gone harder, faster, less like genuine medicine and more like you were pleading with Mrs. Foley herself now. Sweat had gone to the hair at your temple. Your jaw was set in a clench Jack recognized all too well, and for a moment, Jack wished that he didnât have to be so acutely tuned into watching what the job did to others, the same way it did to him.Â
He stepped in behind your shoulder, close, and brought his hand down over yours where they were locked on the old womanâs chest.
âLook at the clock,â he said quietly into your ear.
âOne more round ââÂ
âYouâve done plenty.â He pressed, gently, until your hands stilled under his, and felt your entire body resist it. âYou know she was gone before we couldâve even done anything ââ
âSheâs been my patient for years ââÂ
Jack knew then that while you may have been an excellent doctor, his senior resident that had bloomed under his mentorship but still couldâve gone without him and done just the same, it wasnât a good feeling to wonder if the job would dim you the way it had him.Â
âI know.â He kept his hands over yours with enough pressure so as to not let you drive them down again. âThatâs why itâs yours to call. But youâve gotta call it, Doctor.â
Your breath hitched as you turned your neck to face him, and there was a pool brimming on your lashline that you kept at bay, nodding. Your hands under his stopped straining upward, and he felt the exact second you accepted it, for it moved through your shoulders and down your spine and left you a little smaller standing there, the fight trickling into the moment after, which Jack always thought was worse.Â
âTime of death,â you said, forcing your voice back into the procedural tone, âoh-three-forty-one.â You peeled your gloves off finger-by-finger.
His hand found the small of your back after taking the minute, leading you to the little family consult room with the boxed tissues and fake ficus with a couch that had absorbed more bad news since longer than you or he had worked there. He shut the door with the flat of his hand and let the floorâs noise cut to a hum through the drywall.Â
You stood in the middle of the room with your arms crossed, holding yourself, and stayed silent.Â
Jack propped himself against the table, arms folded, as he breathed out a small sigh through his nose. He knew you werenât a talker after the bad ones. Some residents came out of a loss with their mouths running, narrating it into something survivable, and some went quiet and small and had to be waited out, and you were the second kind. So he waited.
You broke it eventually, like he always knew you would have. âIâve got a butterscotch she gave me seven months ago in my locker still,â you murmured, craning your neck so you were looking at the ceiling. You wiped under your eyes with the heel of your hand roughly.Â
âThink Iâve got one, too,â he murmured, wincing as he tried to shift his weight.Â
It had been building up for the past few hours, a hot ring of wrong down below the knee where the socket had gone slick and furnace-warm because it was past hour fourteen, when heâd sweated the fit and never changed the liner because thereâd been no window that wasnât already accounted for. He shifted his weight off it, trying again, and reached down to thumb the release, breaking the seal.Â
He let out a short, punched out sigh as he pulled himself down onto the chair behind him, one hand balancing himself on the table. âSorry,â he gruffed out, jaw clenching.Â
Your eyes flickered down to the prosthetic limb he was balancing against the pole of the table and you were already moving before he could finish apologizing. You never asked if he needed a hand. Youâd learned sometime during your second year that asking him gave him a chance to say no, and youâd quit handing him that chance sometime during your second year, so now you just came. You went down on one knee at the pole of the table.
âDonât say sorry,â you mumbled, eyes not meeting him.
His jaw stayed tight and he didnât fight it, fight you. That was a formality and you both knew it, a thing he did with his shoulders and not his hands, but he watched the top of your head and thought â like he always did, each time, and never said out loud â there was no one else on godâs green earth heâd let do this in the way you did. Not the prosthetist, who did it clinically. Not the VA, who did it tired. You did it each time like it was nothing and everything at once, as though this something not worth remarking on.Â
He very badly wanted to thank you, despite how small he always felt when you did this. He wanted to tell you that you were, without question, better at this than anyone who was paid to do it.
Your fingers found the socket and went for the liner because you knew the fit went bad and the sweat before it went bad anywhere a person could see, knew heâd have to run it slick and furnace-hot than spend the fourteen minutes off the floor. You rolled it back with the flat of your thumb, easing the trapped heat out of it, and he felt the pressure of the ring of raw below his knee and had to clench his jaw to not let the relief show on his face. You spared him anyway by keeping your eyes down where theyâd been.
âYouâll strip your skin doing this,â you said conversationally, the roughness still present in your voice from the code. âYou know that. You keep running it past twelve and one of these nights itâs cellulitis and Iâm admitting you.âÂ
âIf only I could be so lucky.â
He ducked his head slightly, a part of him wanting to catch the reaction, and he saw how one corner of your lip was barely turned up.Â
You thumbed a line of red where the socketâs edge had bitten in, checking it, and your touch went careful around there. âThis is new. The edge is catching higher than it was.â
âWent to a new liner last month,â he said, voice low. âNot broke in yet.âÂ
âThen you break it on your days off. Not on a fourteen hour.â You finally looked up at him, shaking your head with this flat, fond expression heâd come to realize was your favorite way to look at him. âYouâd write me up for less.âÂ
âIâd write you up for a lot less,â he agreed, thinking back on the time youâd fought him tooth-and-nail over staying through a migraine, refusing, point-blank, to hand off a soft rule-out chest pain at eleven when the migraine had started very visibly began creeping up on you.Â
Heâd caught you before youâd said a word about it because youâd begun squinting at the numbers and pressed the heel of your hand against one eye for a moment too long between patients, thinking nobody was watching. He was, he realized, always watching you in some way.
âGo home,â heâd said quietly, catching you by the elbow outside the curtain. âThatâs not a request.â
âIâm fine.â
âYouâve got a migraine.â
âIâve got a job.â Your jaw had clenched, stubbornly, and Jack had thought that even if heâd put all his strength into it, he wouldnât have been able to unclench it for you. âIâm not handing off a chest pain because my head hurts. This guy has waited long enough for a bed. Iâm not the priority here.â
Heâd wanted to tell you that you were, actually, that you were exactly the priority, and watching you white-knuckle forms with your pupils blown different sizes from pain scared him more than any board full of critical pains ever had. But heâd just pulled down the light two notches, told the nurses to shadow elevenâs discharge, and put a bottle of water and two Tylenol on your desk without a word. And thank god, youâd taken the Tylenol and finished the shift standing up because sitting made the room tilt worse, and only taken on non-critical cases. Youâd refused until the end that you shouldâve gone home three hours earlier. Â
Now, you huffed something that was nearly a laugh, your first real once since the code, and went back to setting. And Jack sat there with his arms crossed in the dark with your hands on the worst-guarded part of him and the door shut against the whole floor, and thought about how he believed nobody deserved you. People were vile and sucked and cut in line and let doors swing shut behind them, and you handed out three dates to men who wrote sonnets in your voicemail and couldnât clear a bar youâd never once lowered for anyone. Heâd thought, more nights than he liked to admit, that these people had no idea what they were auditioning for.Â
His eyes snagged on you because there was nothing else in this small room worth looking at. There was still salt dried in your lashline from the code. You were a wreck and you were fixing his leg anyway, still half-shaking from a woman you couldnât save, and it hadnât occurred to you to stop and put yourself back together first. It never did. Jack had seen the care run out of you before you ever decided to spend it.Â
âIâm sorry about Mrs. Foley,â he said.
You shook your head, face still angled down, thumb pausing mid-motion. âIâll be okay,â you murmured, lifting up one shoulder. âI just hate that she couldnât get here sooner.â
âYou did nothing wrong,â he said plainly. âFamily said sheâs been feeling off for two days now.â
âI know.â Your voice cracked, betraying the flatness you were trying to present. âDoesnât make it easier.â
You lifted your head for a moment, then, looking at him with a sad smile he knew you were painting on to get him to stop talking.
He nodded stiffly, tipping his chin down. âAlright. Finish my leg and weâll run this floor together.â
Up in radiology a few nights later, Jack had gone himself to sort out a reading that had been sitting long and heâd cornered a tech and got what he needed and was already halfway out the door, jacket sleeves still rolled from the last set of compressions, when he saw the guy standing off by the light boxes.Â
Younger. A resident, he supposed, in scrubs a size too crisp for someone whoâd actually been on the shift long enough to earn wrinkles in them. Heâd been watching Jack the whole time â Jack could feel it, the itch of being observed â shifting his weight heel to toe against the linoleum floor.Â
âSomethinâ on my face?â Jack said flatly because he really did have to get back to the floor.
âYouâre â sorry, youâre Dr. Abbot, right?â
âLast I checked.âÂ
The guyâs hand came out of his jacketâs pocket, and there was a piece of folded paper in it. Jack looked at it like it was a spider, hoping â no, praying â it had something to do with work.
âCould you give this to her?â the guy asked, and Jackâs hope died, as he stepped closer. âThe senior resident on your shift. Sheâll â sheâll know who itâs from.â
âYouâve got to be kidding me,â Jack murmured, brows pulling in together. âYou ever heard of texting, kid?âÂ
âI did,â he said, and Jack could practically feel the heat radiating off of him. âShe stopped answering, so I figured, maybe on paper, sheâd actually ââ
âTake the hint,â Jack grumbled, snatching the paper out of his hand. Then, as he turned to the door, he said, âYou know I work in the ER?â When the guy only nodded quickly, he added, âYou know she works in the ER?âÂ
âI â yeah. Obviously.â
âThen you know she doesnât need this.â He held up the paper between him and the guy. âSheâs got enough on her plate without some guy too chicken to call her handing me a note like Iâm her mailman.â
The guy opened his mouth, nose scrunching at Jackâs words, but nothing came out.Â
âYeah.â Jack was already walking, note tucked in his pocket, done with the conversation. âTry calling next time. Or donât.âÂ
The guy looked at least a little sheepish, a little ashamed, and Jack thought good, he should feel ashamed. He wasnât sure what the protocol in dating was now â heâd been just a little rusty and out of the stretch for a stretch of years he preferred not to count in single digits â but he was fairly certain that whatever the rules had curdled up to, this could not possibly be inside them.
He rode the elevator down with the note in his pockets, and he could feel the small stiff square of another manâs hope pressing over the outside of his thigh.Â
He found you at your desk, hands running restlessly through your hair as you spoke into the microphone, charting. The words were coming out of you bluntly, mechanic and after saying the same variation a thousand times over. There was a pen behind your ear youâd forgotten about and the residue of a lab value gone blue across the back of your hand where youâd scrawled it hours ago and never washed off.
He stood there for a second before you noticed him, and thought â not for the first time and with the same low irritation he always felt about it â that he had no earthly business being the man this got routed to.
Jack leaned down so his head hovered beside yours, scanning your work on the screen, close enough that his shoulder nearly brushed yours, head tilted to read your screen at an angle that had nothing to do with actually needing to see it.Â
âThe man wants an espresso martini?â he asked, furrowing his brows as he read over your notes, right by your ear.Â
You jumped just slightly and swivelled on your stool to face him, then back at the screen. âShit â Jack. Announce yourself.â You scanned the words on your notes, shaking your head and already backspacing. âNo, that was me talking to myself. Stupid mic picked it up.â
âLong as itâs just the one,â he drawled, staying there in your space a little longer, watching the side of your face instead of the screen now. âThose things sneak up on you.â
âSpeaking from experience?â You turned on your stool to face him fully, chin tilting up to meet his eyes, something playful and a little challenging in it.Â
âIâve got a couple decades on you. Everythingâs snuck up on me.âÂ
You held his gaze a little longer, then looked away first, tongue coming out over your lips for a second. He took a small satisfaction in not being the one who blinked first.Â
He blew out a breath through his nose, remembering, with reluctance now, what heâd actually come here to do. âSpeaking of sneaking up.â He pulled out the note from his pocket. âI got something to deliver to you ââ
You furrowed your brows when he handed it to you. âSecret admirer?â you asked jokingly.Â
He barked out a short laugh. âNothinâ secret about it. You ignoring some radiology fellow?â
You grimaced, opening the note and scanning over the words quickly. He couldâve left, but stayed instead and watched you read it. The frown only pulled deeper, and he saw your eye twitch once as you scanned the words.
Against his better judgement, he murmured, âThat bad?âÂ
âUh â no, itâs okay.â You shrugged stiffly.Â
âHuh,â he breathed out, studying you outright now. âWonder what youâre doinâ to these guys to get them so wound up.â
You chuckled, mostly to yourself. âWouldnât you like to know.â Â
His chest tightened at that. It was unfair how you could make anything to him sound like something heâd been waiting to hear. He swallowed. âSuppose I would.â
âThat an offer, Dr. Abbot?âÂ
âMight be,â he said, shrugging one shoulder.Â
You laughed â surprised, the tension in your shoulders breaking slightly â and shook your head, folding the note back up. âYouâre ridiculous. Well, thank you for getting it to me. Iâm sorry he bothered you with this ââ You swivelled, placing the note on your desk before picking up your phone. âThatâs really weird.âÂ
âThatâs one word for it,â Jack said, and left it there, because youâd already turned and had your phone in one hand and the microphone in the other. The small furrow was back between your brows, and heâd learned there was a point past which pushing you got him a brighter, smaller version of whatever you were covering.Â
He drifted toward the far end of the station where Mateo was crouched at the crash cart running his palm along the drawers, checking seals, restocking and checking the fact of it on slower nights like this.Â
âShe okay?â Mateo asked, snapping the drawer, seemingly having caught the interaction.Â
âOh, you know.â Jack leaned a shoulder into the wall, arms crossing. âThe belle of our ball. Canât clock in without collecting a proposal.â
Mateo huffed. âShe loves love.â
âThat she does.â Jack watched you across the station, the phone lit against your ear now. âDonât know why she keeps doing that to herself, though.â
âSheâs an optimist.â Mateo clicked a seal into place, then moved down the cart. âThinks someoneâs gonna turn out different.â
Jack hummed, then, because the question had been sitting low and unlovely for a couple hours, he asked, âYou two give it a run ever?âÂ
Mateo turned his neck to look up at Jack. âMe and ââ He jutted his thumb behind him to vaguely gesture at you. âHer?â
âMhm.â Jack kept his eyes on you. âYouâre close.â
âNah.â Mateo went back to the cart, shaking his head as he chuckled softly. âI donât think Iâd pass a single one of her tests. Besides, I got my eye on someone.â
âApparently I donât make the list either, I guess,â Jack murmured.
Mateo laughed through his nose, eyeing Jack with something new now. âYou want to?âÂ
Jack caught it, reaching his palm and smacking it against Mateoâs curls with no force. âNo. Now, do your job.â
âI am ââ He laughed through the words, eyes scanning over Jackâs stiffened posture now. âItâs good you donât, then. Couldnât handle her anyway.âÂ
âSure, I could,â Jack said immediately.Â
Mateoâs head turned again, lips curving upwards at Jackâs words, and he felt momentarily blindsided by his own mouth, entirely too honest for something that had started as a joke.Â
âSure, you could,â Mateo teased, drawing out the words.
âShut it.â Jack grabbed a box of gloves off the cart and set it down two shelves lower than it needed to go, purely to do something with his hands that didnât involve reaching for Mateoâs collar. âWasnât a real question.â
Couldnât handle you? As if he didnât know, without having to think about it, that you took the stairs two at a time instead of the elevator when you were annoyed and needed somewhere to put your extra energy, or that youâd started drinking your coffee black on nights a patient reminded you of someone, syrup and cream abandoned, like sweetness felt wrong to have that shift. As if he hadnât noticed, months ago, that you hummed the same four off-key notes from a jingle neither you nor Jack could place when a chart was boring you to death, or that you double-checked every single IV line now, ever since one bad mistake in your first year. He could very well handle you, he simply hadnât been given the chance to do so.
Most of the time, Jack was fine with watching your love life play out in 3D. More often than not, he knew theyâd never work out. You were just too good for anyone who came sniffing, and there was a grim comfort in that, in knowing the fellows and the nurses would wash through and out and leave you exactly where he found you, three feet down the counter from him, close enough to keep.
Tonight the comfort wasnât coming. Mateoâs accidental interrogation had rubbed Jack wrongly, somewhere he had yet to fully locate yet, and was sitting in his chest like a splinter he kept forgetting was there until he turned the corner over the night, saw you, and noticed it was there. He shouldâve let it stay as nothing, but his brain had apparently decided three hours later was the correct time to relitigate the whole exchange, turning it over at odd intervals between patients like a tongue worrying a chipped tooth.
It was the bad sort of slow in the ER, the sort that let his brain fill up with things heâd have no time for on a real night. Ellis had wandered over to your desk with two energy drinks and placed her arms loosely beside your computer.
Jack was distantly aware he had misplaced labs to hand back to you because theyâd gotten lost in the system, and he told himself that was the whole reason his body had started moving in your direction.Â
âI got a rundown from Marge,â Ellis said, dropping into an empty stool beside you. âApparently he wrote it out of the OR.â
âYouâre joking,â you muttered. âI donât understand it.âÂ
Jack stood there with the labs in his hand, close enough to hear it.Â
âIâm still wondering if I should respond,â you were saying, half into your hands. âIs this romantic? This oneâs never happened before.â
Ellis laughed slightly with you, and the two of you had built one of those small pockets that slow nights sometimes allowed, thirty seconds of being people instead of clinicians.
Jack set the labs down at the edge of your keyboard harder than he meant to, the papers slapping flat against the desk, and both of you looked up at him like heâd grown two heads. Fuck â had he? It sure felt like he was operating off of whatever chemical cocktail his brain had whipped up for nights like this, some ugly little compound of jealousy and exhaustion. He was fairly sure if you pulled his labs right now theyâd look like a man in the middle of a bad reaction to something not yet figured out in the scientific world.Â
âLabs on eight got lost.â His palm stayed on the sheet for a few seconds too long, some instinct telling him to keep his hand on something solid before the rest of him did something stupid. âYouâll want to recheck the trop.âÂ
His eyes cut, against every ounce of better judgement he had left, to the note still folded in your hand, the same one heâd carried down like it was radioactive, the same note that had clearly done something for you that four years of Jack standing next to you clearly hadnât. An unreasonable, low feeling creeped up behind his ribs at the sight of it, hot and out of proportion to a piece of folded-fucking-paper.Â
Ellisâs smile went uncertain as he felt her gaze snag on him.Â
You blinked up at him, and whatever had been sitting easy in your face a second ago curdled itself away, the corners of your mouth retreating. He knew this same retreat, had watched you recalibrate your muscles, swiftly, built to be unreadable against anyone who hadnât spent four years learning your face.Â
His stomach dropped and heat climbed up the back of his neck, jaw tightening on its own. He hated that his body had learned to answer you the way it answered a motor alarm. He hated more that some raw, cornered part in him â still smarting about Mateoâs offhand comment and sore from that folded note â felt it wasnât soothed.
You blinked up at him, and the laugh faded off your face, and you said, easily, warm, âYeah â course. Iâll get right on that.â
He shrugged up one shoulder, lips pressing into a thin line. He turned, already walking away. âWhenever thereâs a gap on your social calendar, I guess.â
He heard the small silence that opened behind him, and he could practically imagine you and Ellis looking at each other. Then, he heard you push back from the desk, the stool wheels catching, and your footsteps coming after him like heâd known they would, because you were the last person to let something like that go.Â
âHey.â You fell into step beside him, voice pitched low, still giving him more benefit than the doubt had earned in the last ten seconds. âWhat was that about?â
âNothing.â He tilted his neck up slightly to do a quick scan of the board, some stubborn muscle in his neck refusing to let him meet your eyes. âGot a department to run.â
âAnd youâve been running it great. You just became weird right now.â He could feel you working it over beside him, shifting on your feet as you toed the line between resident and the hard-won territory neither of you had ever named. âJack.âÂ
âYou want to laugh about your shitty dates, thatâs your business,â he said instead of letting it go, sounding too far from the man whoâd had his hands hovering over yours an hour ago, watching you put in a chest tube, telling you that youâd done well. âDo it a little quieter. This is an ER, not a lunch table.â
His words stopped you for half a step. Jack kept walking, an ugly, cowardly momentum carrying him three more steps before you caught back up.
He heard you recalibrate your voice in real time when you said, âI was charting on a slow shift,â carefully. âYouâve made worse jokes when itâs even more busy. Whatâs this about?â
âItâs about you treating this place like itâs your dating pool and not your place of work.â The words came out much uglier than he meant, and he didnât have it in him to call them back. âItâs not professional. It reflects on the department. Reflects on me. Somebodyâs gotta say it, and apparently thatâs me, since you clearly enjoy it too much to stop.âÂ
You stopped walking altogether this time. He turned to face your stillness whole, then, and found your eyes narrowed at him, looking like youâd been hit from a direction you hadnât been completely guarding against.Â
He let out a breath, fingers going up to his forehead to wipe at sweat that wasnât there. âIâm just saying what ââ
âIâm sorry,â you said, voice going level and courteous, as you nodded quickly. âYouâre right. Youâre my attending, it reflects on you. Iâll keep my personal life out of work.âÂ
âThatâs not ââ he tried, but you were already turning away, shoulders squared and chin level, professional armor snapping into place just like heâd told you to. It should have made him feel better to watch you take it so cleanly, to not make a big deal out of it. All it made him feel was like something had been surgically removed from him.Â
âStop ââ he tried again, to your back now, and the sentence died somewhere between his teeth and the air. That was okay. There was no end to the sentence that didnât sound worse than the beginning anyway.Â
He blew out a sharp breath through his nose, standing in the middle of the floor with his hand still half-raised toward you, fingers curling back into his palm when he realized you werenât there to reach. Jack felt, distantly, uselessly, like the only thing standing still in the entire building.Â
âGreat going,â he heard Lena say, trailing past him, a tray tucked against her hip, not even breaking stride. âYou got rid of the one entertainment weâve got around here.â
His shoulders stiffened, and he caught up with her in three steps, jaw working around words that wanted to spill out defensively and came out simply tired. âItâs not entertainment if she keeps getting hurt,â he grumbled. âSheâs not a show. Stop treating her like one.âÂ
âDidnât look like she was the one getting hurt tonight,â she said, rounding a corner and leaving him standing there.
Jack let out a low groan, running a palm down the lower half of his face, and dropped his hand only when heâd scrubbed enough friction into his jaw to feel it sting a little, which was at least a sensation heâd chosen, at least tonight. He stood there a second longer, staring at nothing in particular. His hands found his hips on reflex.Â
âFuck,â he muttered to himself, and dragged both hands back through his hair, gripping once at the roots before letting go.Â
He rolled his neck, felt it pop unsatisfyingly, and pushed off the wall he hadnât even realized he was leaning against. His leg fucking ached, the burn starting behind his knee. He ignored it like he always did and started walking anyway, jaw still held tight, hands shoved deep into his pockets like he could physically hold himself together with the seams of his own black scrubs.
It was by the lockers after hand-off that Jack saw you next. Both of you had conveniently managed to work over-time; he because there was nothing to get home to, and you â heâd heard through the grapevine â because one of your patientâs little sister was coming in toward close, and you simply wanted to talk with her instead of handing the situation off to one of the day residents.
Usually, nobody had asked you to stay when you did. Most times, there was no version of staying that showed up in your favor; he and Shen were gone, so there was no attending grading you on it; no hours that counted. It was just for a kid who was going to get bad news from a face sheâd seen before, so you cost yourself hours of sleep you most definitely needed to be the soft spot for a strangerâs little sister, and hadnât mentioned it to a soul, and he knew you wouldâve been embarrassed if he brought it up.Â
He found you using the little mirror inside your locker to apply some kind of pink-tubed gloss with one hand while the other ran its fingers through your hair. Jack pursed his lips, eyeing you from the doorway, because he was pretty sure youâd done something different to it in the last ten minutes.Â
âLook nice,â he tried, biting the bullet and walking toward his own locker. âGoinâ somewhere?âÂ
You caught his eyes in the mirror instead of turning around. âJust breakfast,â you said, and there was none of the earlier lilt in it, the warmth that youâd always aimed at him gone functional. You capped the gloss with more force than it needed and dropped it into your bag.Â
Jack stood there a second too long with his hand over his own locker without opening it. Heâd expected â and he knew he was more optimistic than usual for doing so â your easy back-and-forth, his slip-up from earlier forgotten. He wasnât sure what to do with the quiet or you not looking at him properly, hairbrush working through your hair in short strokes.Â
Heâd saved around thirty lives tonight, and that was what he was good at. He was not good, and had never claimed to be good, at the aftermath of hurting a person heâd have put his own body between a stretcher and wall for, without meaning to, over something that had never been about the radiology fellow at all.Â
He opted out of opening his locker and chose instead to lean his bicep against the locker, eyeing you in front of him. âMad at me?â he murmured.Â
You let out a short breath, shaking your head, and he tracked all your micro-expressions through the mirror. âOn the clock?âÂ
âWell, weâve both been off it for a while now,â he said, watching the shape of your mouth in the mirror, waiting for it to give something away. It didnât. âBut no. Asking as your ââ He stopped himself, because âfriendâ seemed not to be the honest word though it was the first one that popped up. âOff the clock. Whatever I am to you right now.â
You set the hairbrush down on the little shelf with more care than the moment needed. âItâs okay, Jack,â you said, shaking your head.
âDonât think it is. Try again.â
You watched him for a second in the mirror, then you turned.Â
âItâs just embarrassing,â you said, and the words came out smaller than anything heâd heard out of you in years. You crossed your arms over your chest. âI respect you and I hate that youâd think for one second I donât take this place seriously.â Your voice cracked on the last word, just barely, and you pressed your lips together. âSo, yeah. Itâs embarrassing to have my attending confirming Iâm exactly what people think I am.â
He was shaking his head before you could even finish the sentence. âNobody thinks ââ
âYou do,â you said, voice rising slightly. âSo, off the clock, Iâm embarrassed, and tonight, Iâm going to be your resident. Because I agree with you. Itâs been unprofessional of me to keep dating within the hospital ââ You threw your arms up halfway by your side, and you let out a short laugh that came out dry and wrong. âAnd I hate that youâve probably been thinking it for four years.â
âI havenât,â he said too fast. God, heâd come here to make tonight better for you, not to make you re-evaluate all your years working with him. âSure, I thought it was none of my business how you spend your good nights off. Didnât stop me from thinking they didnât deserve âem.âÂ
You rolled your eyes. âYouâre just saying that now âcause you feel bad.â
âWish it were that simple,â he said, and chose to leave it unelaborated because it wasnât that simple and he had no intention of explaining exactly why. âHalf the time, you know itâs not gonna work out. Youâre breaking my heart by making me watch you break yours.âÂ
You blinked, and he watched the fight loosen out of you by inches. âItâs just a free breakfast, Jack. Nothing to get your heart broken over.âÂ
Jack let out a huff through his nose, mouth opening to say what, he didnât know. âIs that all? âCause I can get you free breakfast for the rest of your life.âÂ
You laughed, disbelieving, through your nose, some of the nightâs weight finally cracking off of you. âYouâve got a weird way of apologizing.âÂ
âJust to my favorite resident.â He pointed his index finger at you, lazy, and pushed himself off the lockers. His shoulder blades left a faint dust-print on the metal where heâd been leaning. He thumbed in the combination without looking at the dial â muscle memory, years of the same locker â and the door swung open with a rusted squeak. He pulled out his bag. âSo?âÂ
âSo what?âÂ
âYou ditch the fellow.â He slung the bag up over his shoulder, close enough now that he caught the tail-end of the perfume youâd lightly spritzed over yourself. âI buy.â
You looked at him for a second too long, lips pushing to one side, as though you were gauging whether this was a bit or not, another line heâd tossed and wanted to let die on its own. He stood there, jaw set and features relaxing to show you he did mean it, more than he wanted to admit, if he was being honest with himself.Â
âYouâre serious.âÂ
âDo I look like Iâm not?â He nodded once at your locker, your bag sitting on the shelf. âGrab your stuff. Weâre going.âÂ
âFine,â you said finally, reaching over and zipping your backpack all the way before throwing it over one shoulder. âCan you drive? Iâve been taking the subway.â
âWhy?â he asked drily. âYouâve got a car.â
Jack realized, as he watched you slide in across from him and folding both hands around the coffee before it was all the way poured, that heâd never once been on a date where the woman had no idea it was one.Â
It wasnât lost on him what that made him, a man old enough to know better, letting a thing be one thing on his side of the table and another thing entirely on yours, saying nothing to square the difference. But heâd meant what heâd said, and he was going to feed you.Â
You ordered a short stack, eggs, hash brown, decaf on loop. She wrote it down, definitely having heard worse from better.
âThanks for the treat, Jack,â you said when Dina left, bringing the rim of your cup to your lips. âDonât think I couldâve done another breakfast to let him down gently.â
âWe have to make some changes to your lifestyle,â Jack replied, voice rough, as he eyed you.Â
âOh, yeah?â you murmured. âWe?âÂ
âWell, I did have to deliver a note to you today. In all my life working here, thatâs never happened.âÂ
You laughed around the rim of your cup. âIn my defense, I donât think anyoneâs wrote me a note out of an OR either. Thatâs a first for both of us.â
âGlad we share the experience.â
Dina came by with a pot and topped you off without being asked, and placed the food in front of you. Jack watched you reach for the salt before your fork had even touched the eggs, shaking it twice over the plate.
âYouâre gonna give yourself a stroke by forty.â
âYouâre gonna give me a stroke right now if you comment on my food.â But you set the shaker down after the third shake, which he noticed and had to bite back a smile.
Dina dropped his plate in front of him â bacon, eggs, no pancakes â and you were reaching for it with a piece of your fork before sheâd even finished setting his fork down. He gave you a faux-frown, picking up his fork and, without looking, spreading a piece of your hashbrown off the opposite plate in trade. He wasnât sure when the two of you had started stealing bites and sips off of each otherâs stuff, only that itâd started somewhere and calcified into something neither of you mentioned.Â
âRude,â you said, mouth already full.
âLearned it from you,â he muttered, nudging his plate an inch closer to your side of the table, which you took full advantage of.Â
Dinaâs radio crackled through something twangy and close-to-familiar behind the counter, competing with the clatter of a skillet somewhere in the back, the whole place smelling like batter and grease soaked into decades of countertop, syrup that had dried a hundred small amber rings nobody had ever fully scrubbed off.Â
âIâve never been here before.â You absentmindedly cut the hashbrown in half as your eyes raked over the place. âThis a regular spot for you?â
âSince before you joined,â he said easily, but his brows furrowed as he realized heâd been coming here alone for years. He was in the same booth when he could get it, ordered the same order, and it struck to him only now, watching you eat your hashbrowns, how much smaller and less lonely a booth felt with you taking up the other half of it. âUsed to be the only quiet I got on some weeks.âÂ
You hummed. âAnd now?â
âGuess the quietâs pretty negotiable.â He shrugged. âI can go without it.â
You smiled down at your plate, something easy working at the corner of your mouth. A thread of syrup had gathered at the seam of your lips â you hadnât noticed, too busy considering his answer â and before heâd cleared the impulse with the rest of himself, his thumb was already moving, catching it at the corner quickly, no different than when he swiped under your lashline for salt after a bad night.
You stayed still, having gotten used to his hands somewhere during your residency.
âYouâre a mess,â he said, wiping his thumb off on the paper napkin folded under his elbow.Â
âYouâve got coffee on your scrub top,â you said, eyes flicking down to his chest. His brows furrowed and he looked down, and you were right. âPot, kettle.â
Heâd been about to say something else, he couldâve sworn it, but had lost every word of it watching you smile so unguarded, free enough to let him look at you. He had to reach for his coffee just to have something to do with his hands.Â
When the check came, folded in its little plastic tray, you both reached for it at once. Your hand landed flat over his knuckles. Neither of you moved it for a second, for his hand stayed exactly where it was, broad and unmoving under yours, and something unspoken passed through the two inches of fornica between your faces as he raised a brow at you. He slid the tray out from under you slowly.
âSaid Iâm buying,â he said, shaking his head slightly.
The drive back had been quieter than the one there had been. It was nearing ten in the morning, and he knew both of you had stayed up longer than intended, especially for two people who had to clock back in in a shorter amount of time than he deemed plausible to reset completely.
Heâd cracked the window down an inch, and the air coming through carried the smell of wet pavement and the sound of a garbage truck grinding its gears three streets over. Your neighborhood, he was learning, woke up slow; there was a paperboy on a bike, a guy in scrubs different from yours locking up his own car after a shift that wasnât at the PTMC, and Jack drove through it with two fingers loose over the wheel. Neither of you had bothered with the radio.
Youâd gone somewhere billowy around your third cup of decaf, all the sharp edges of the night replaced with something looser and sleepier, and you gave him directions in a voice gone thick from exhaustion as you were likely starting to feel it behind your eyes.Â
He pulled his car along the curb and let it idle, one shoe braced against the floorboard, watching the numbers of your building.
âGonna sleep?â he asked.
âGonna try.â You were already working the bag strap over your shoulder, hair falling loose out of the knot youâd put it up in at some point at the diner, strands of it catching the early light. âIâve got no idea how you do this then take SWAT calls.â
âYouâd be able to do it, too, if I put you on the field.âÂ
You mumbled something, letting your head drop against the window for a second, before picking itself back up. âStop threatening me, Jack.âÂ
He watched you fight your eyelids, his mouth pulling up at the corners at the sight. âCâmon. Get inside before I gotta carry you up.â
You snorted, half-hearted. âYou canât. Youâd throw your hip out.â
âTry me.â He was already rounding the hood before youâd gathered your bearings, boots loud on the quiet street, and you let out another laugh and let him get there first, too tired to argue about who gets to open what.
He walked you up the cracked path, palm settling at the small of your back, and you leaned back into it, half your weight given over without you noticing it.Â
At the door, you fumbled with your keys out from under a granola wrapper and a capless pen, missed the lock twice, and gave up trying on the third. You turned to face him instead with your back against the frame and your bag slowly sliding off one shoulder.
âThank you,â you said, words coming out loose and filtered by the exhaustion even as you tried to meet his eyes head-on. âFor the â everything. The explanation. And the breakfast.âÂ
Jack felt his lips curve up, fingers flexing at his sides. âAnytime.âÂ
âAnd for driving me there â thank you. And for the drive back.âÂ
âUh-huh. You gonna go inside?â he said, voice going quieter as he looked down at the ground, at how the toes of your shoes were almost touching. âOr keep thanking me until you fall asleep standing up?âÂ
You cocked your head to the side, your lips moving upwards into a fuller smile. His own mouth curved as he shifted on his feet slightly, closing the barely-there inch between his shoes and yours.Â
âJack?âÂ
He hummed, and you went up slightly onto your toes before heâd finished deciding what to do with you. Or maybe heâd moved in first, or maybe there was no real order to it at all. His mouth found yours somewhere in that uncertainty, slowly despite it, because heâd already worked out every version of this moment and this one had simply appeared in front of him.
His hand came up to cradle the side of your jaw, thumb settling into the soft hollow just beneath your ears. Your skin was warm despite the cold snap in the air, much softer than heâd let himself imagine, and he felt the exact second your breath caught against his mouth, a small stutter that made his fingers curve around your jaw, index resting against your cheekbone.Â
He kept it slow, it was the only thing he had any real control over right now, the pace of it instead of the fact of it. He used what little he had left, dragging his mouth against yours, like he could somehow make up for four years of nothing by refusing to rush the first thirty seconds of something. His other hand found your waist, and his palm felt how your back curved into him, the hitch of your ribs on an inhale, and he pressed you back the last inch against the doorframe more to ground himself.Â
Your fist found the front of his canvas jacket, dragging him in the last stubborn space heâd been too careful to close himself, and a sound came out of his chest that embarrassed him a little. He felt you smile against his mouth, and his entire body felt warm at having been caught enjoying this entirely as much as he was.Â
He tilted his head so his forehead pressed against yours and pulled his mouth away. His lips jutted out slightly, feeling suddenly empty and unwilling to put the full distance back between the two of you.
Your eyes were still shut, and you were breathing unevenly. âThank you,â you murmured.Â
He huffed a short laugh, and in it, realized how breathless he, too, was.Â
You tipped your chin back up, already chasing him.
Jack felt the want knot up inside him, greedy and unreasonably leaning back in to meet you halfway before the rest of him had caught up and made him stop. He made a small sound in his throat and pinched his eyes shut, letting you get right up to the edge of it, breath already tangling with his, wanting so badly to just let it happen, before his finger came up between you, pressed light against your bottom lip to stop you a hair short. It was more for his own sake than the words he remembered you telling someone years ago ringing in his head.
âAh-ah.â His voice came out rough with want, entirely at odds with his actions. âYour rule. Only one kiss after the first date. Iâm trying ââ he exhaled hard, almost dramatically, ââ trying real hard here to make it to the second.â
âHuh?â Your eyes peeled open. âThis was a date?âÂ
âBest one youâve had Iâm guessing, with the way youâre breaking your rules.â His finger stayed right where it was, and he watched your eyes struggle to focus, still glassy from the kiss. He could feel the warm huff of breath breaking unsteady against his fingertip, could feel your mouth soft and parted underneath it, waiting on him.Â
You pressed a peck against his finger instead, your mouth barely dragging against his skin as a shy smile formed behind it that he felt more than saw. âMaybe.â
âWell, good.â He smiled, despite himself, and pushed himself off your forehead, opting instead to press his lips there. âGet some sleep,â he murmured against your hairline, lips lingering a little longer there. âMight be able to get a full seven hours.âÂ
âWill you?âÂ
âDoubt it.â He pulled back enough to look at you properly, thumb tracing a line along your cheekbone â his touch feather-light, tracking the exact curve of it, memorizing the route â before he made himself drop his hand entirely, fingers curling loosely at his sides because suddenly he had no idea what to do with them without you under them. âKinda got a lot on my mind now.â
âYeah?â You bit back a smile, still not quite steady on your feet. âAnything you wanna share with the class?â
âNot a chance.â He bent a fraction and hooked two fingers under the strap of your bag where itâd slid down to your elbow, dragging it slowly back up to your shoulders, knuckles grazing your arms the whole way. âYouâll find out. Eventually.â
He forced himself to step off the mat â one step back, then the second, putting real distance between you now â forcing ease into his expression that he definitely wasnât feeling. He stopped a few feet away from you anyway, unable to fully commit to walking away, watching you stunned and still in your doorway, mouth a little kiss-soft. He felt so completely helpless and pleased at the sight. âText me when youâre up and Iâll get to planning date two.âÂ
You raised a hand into a wave, fingers curling in the air.
âBye, Jack,â you said, and his name came out of your mouth softer than you probably meant it to, smooth and cushy the way it never sounded on shift.
He lifted his chin up at you once and made himself turn, finally, finding the path back to his car. He made it to the curb before he looked back again, and you were still standing there, one hand braced on the door, watching him go with an expression he was sure he was going to think of the entire drive home.
Ohhhh how perfect!!!
Love it love it
đ€
One Day at A Time
Summary : Despite not being able to get drunk, Bucky goes to an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting and meets you.Â
Pairing : Bucky Barnes x reader (she/her)Â
Warnings/tags : meet cute? alcohol addiction and recovery, AA meetings, relapse, cravings, mentions of trauma, brief mention of violence, hurt/comfort, flangst, emotional support, brief mention of food. I think this would be set around FATWS time. (Let me know if I missed anything!)
Word count : 7.1k
Note : As someone who struggles with substance abuse and is now four years sober, this one is special to me. Enjoy!
The first thing you noticed about Bucky Barnes was that he looked like he had already decided to leave.
He walked into the church basement, shoulders broad enough to make the folding chair look like it was gonna collapse at any point during the meeting, one gloved hand wrapped around a paper cup of coffee he didnât seem to have drunk yet. He wore a baseball cap, a jacket too thick for the weather, and the smile of someone who had survived the end of the world only to be defeated by fluorescent lighting.
You noticed because you were looking at the door, debating whether or not to leave.
You did consider running out and sobbing into the sidewalk, but that seemed overdramatic. So maybe you should just laugh nervously and say you forgot to feed your nonexistent cat. For whatever reason, though, you remained, knee bouncing, palms sweating. Your mouth tasted like pennies. Every time someone said âone day at a time,â your brain whispered, sure, but there are so many fucking days.
The circle was small, just ten people. Twelve if you counted the man asleep near the radiator and an elderly woman named Marie, who was knitting. The coffee was bad and the biscuits were stale. The walls were decorated with cheerful little posters about honesty and surrender and hope, which made you want to peel your skin off because honesty was hard, surrender sounded humiliating, and hope felt like a last resort people offered you when they had run out of practical advice.
Then the chair beside you scraped.
You looked over.
The man at the door had now approached you.Â
Up close, he looked simultaneously worse and prettier, too, which was annoying. He looked tired, probably not attributed to a single bad night but to years stacked inside him. He had clear blue eyes and dark stubble. His left hand stayed in his pocket. His right hand still held the coffee like a prop.
âSeat taken?â he asked.
You blinked at the twenty empty chairs around the circle. âNo,â you said.
He managed a smile before you sighed and moved your bag.
He sat down.
Neither of you really spoke for the rest of the sharing. A man named Dennis talked about hiding vodka in a mouthwash bottle. Marie talked about walking past the same liquor store six times and going home crying but sober. Someone laughed and another cried. The last person said they were ninety days clean and the room clapped.
You clapped too, but it was a second late.
The man beside you didnât clap. He looked at his hand instead, like he had forgotten what applause was for.
When the meeting leader asked if anyone new wanted to introduce themselves, the room went quiet in that gentle, expectant way that made you want to crawl into the carpet.
You stared at your shoes.
The man beside you exhaled.
âIâm James,â he said.
Every head turned.
His voice was rough around the edges. He sounded like he was confessing a crime instead of a name.
âHi, James,â the room said.
His jaw flexed. He hated that. You could tell immediately.Â
He looked down at his coffee. âI donât know if Iâm supposed to be here.â
Nobody interrupted. Nobody corrected him.
His thumb rubbed once over the rim of the paper cup. âI canât get drunk.â
Your eyes flicked to him.
He said it like a punchline without the mercy of being funny.
âI used to be able to, a long time ago.â His mouth tightened into a flat line. âThen things changed, and my body changed. And now alcohol doesnât do anything,â he looked down, almost disappointed in how much he was disappointed by his own inability to get buzzed. âI can drink the bar dry and still feel every second of my life perfectly.â
You stopped breathing a little.
âIt made me angry,â he admitted, quieter. âI was angry I couldnât have that. I never cared about fun or the parties.â He gave a humourless laugh. âI wanted the off switch, and when it didnât work, I hated myself. I hated that that has been taken from me.â
Something in your chest folded. Which one was he? Was your first shameful thought. In a world of superheroes and gods and aliens and people disappearing for five years and then coming back, you really didnât have the time to memorise names of every Avenger by heart.Â
His eyes stayed down.
âSo, no. I donât know if I count. I donât know if this is taking up space from people who need it more. But I know I keep thinking about it, keep trying to find something thatâll do what it used to do. And I know that probably means I shouldnât be alone with the thought.â
Then Marie, still knitting, said, âYou count.â
James looked up.
The meeting leader nodded. âYouâre welcome here.â
You felt a little sting behind your eyes.
Fuck, it shouldnât have been that moving. It should not have mattered that much. He was a stranger in a church basement with untouched coffee and a voice like a bruise. But there was something so painfully familiar about wanting oblivion and being ashamed of wanting it, about standing at the edge of yourself and wishing there was a button, a bottle, a burn, anything that made being alive more bearable.
The meeting moved on, and you decided not to speak.
You were proud of not crying until the end, when everyone stood and started stacking chairs. People exchanged numbers while stirring powdered creamer into coffee. The world did not change. Nobody looked at you and said, we know what you are, or pointed at your throat and said, liar.
You grabbed your coat and made it halfway to the stairs before his voice found you.
âHey.â James stood a few feet behind you, hands still in his pockets.
You considered pretending you hadnât heard him. Maybe you could be rude. You considered leaving and buying the smallest bottle you could find and telling yourself it didnât count because it was only small
Instead, you said, âWhat?â
His eyebrows lifted slightly.
You winced. âSorry. That came out mean.â
âItâs okay,â he said. âIâve heard meaner.â
For some reason, that made you almost smile.
He stepped closer, careful like you were a wounded animal that might bolt. âFirst meeting?â
You looked at the stairs. âIs it that obvious?â
âA little,â he said.
You huffed. âGreat.â
âIâm new too.â
âI know,â you chuckled dryly, âyou spoke.â
âYeah.â
âI would rather be shot.â
He looked at you for one long second. Very dryly, he said, âItâs overrated.â
A startled laugh escaped you before you could stop it, and his gaze brightened so subtly you almost missed it.
You leaned against the stair rail, suddenly too tired to keep standing like a real person. âIâm not like you.â
James tilted his head.
Your fingers tightened around your coat. âIt works on me.â
His face changed, eyes more attentive than just pity. Â
You swallowed. âIt works too well on me.â
You didnât know why you said that, but you hated how small your voice got. You hated how much the truth could make you feel naked, and saying it out loud made your whole body ache for a drink with such vicious clarity that you had to grip the rail harder.
James didnât look away.
You laughed once, but it broke wrong. âYou wanted the off switch, I get that. But mine works fast. It works so well that I start thinking maybe Iâm only good when Iâm drinking. I think maybe the best version of me is the one that canât feel anything. Or remember anything. Or ruin anything because Iâm not really there.â
His teeth clenched, but he stayed quiet.
âAnd then I get sober,â you said, unable to stop baring your soul to this stranger. âAnd everything is worse.â
Your eyes burned. You looked down immediately, furious at yourself.
âI donât know why Iâm telling you this.â
âBecause I told you first,â he said.
Your throat tightened more.
He shifted his weight, and for the first time, you noticed the way he held his left side still, like he was always aware of the space his body took up. He looked like he had spent a long time making himself smaller for other peopleâs comfort and had never quite learned how to stop.
âIâm Bucky,â he said.
You blinked. âI thought you said James.â
âI did.â
âSo you lied at AA?â
His mouth twitched again. âJames is my name.â
âSo Bucky is what?â You managed a chuckle, âA nickname?â
âTo some people.â
âDo you like those people?â
He paused, before looking down, âIâm trying to.â
You looked at him properly, at the tired eyes, the gloved hand, the too-perfect posture. You could see grief sitting on him like a cloud. You didn't know him or his life, but you knew enough about wanting to be someone else.Â
You gave him your name.
He repeated it once, like he was trying to get it right.
For a moment, neither of you said anything. Behind him, the meeting leader laughed with Marie near the coffee table as someone dragged a bin bag out of the kitchen. The basement smelled like burnt coffee, wet coats, old wood, and the possibility that maybe you could come back here.Â
Maybe this terrible room could exist again next week. Maybe you could still exist next week
Bucky nodded toward the door. âYou got somewhere to be?â
You almost lied, but you shook your head.
âMe neither,â he said. âThereâs a diner around the corner. Coffeeâs bad, but itâs not this bad.â
âYou asking me out?â You tilted your head.
He just shrugged, as if duh. Why wouldnât I want to ask out the pretty girl whoâs also struggling with life, like me? âYeah. I mostly like the pie.â
You narrowed your eyes. âWhat kind?â
âI donât know. Pie kind.â
You managed a smile. âThat is such a man answer.â
He looked vaguely offended. âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â
And there it was again, your accidental laugh. You could feel him noticing it, not in a smug way, but like he was relieved there was a sound in you that was not pain.
You should have said no and gone home.
You should have taken the bus and white-knuckled your way through the evening and called it a victory if you made it to bed without stopping at the shop on the corner.
But Bucky stood in front of you like a man who understood the shape of a craving, even if his body refused to let him drown in it.Â
You were opposite tragedies meeting in the basement.
And you didnât want to be alone.
Same terrible coffee.
So you pulled your coat on properly and said, âFine. But if the pie is bad, Iâm leaving you there.â
Bucky smiled and climbed up the stairs next to you, opening the door like a true gentleman, because apparently your standards were that low.
Cold evening air rushed in, and he said, âFair.â
You stepped outside together.
For the first time all day, feeling sober didnât feel like a punishment.
Bucky fell into step beside you, close enough to be there, far enough away to be respectful, and when your hands shook in your coat pockets, he pretended not to notice.
You loved him a little for that.
Not love-love. Just the strangest beginning of it.
â
A year later, you were sitting in the same basement where you met him.
The church still smelled faintly of old wood, overbrewed coffee, rain-damp coats, and whatever industrial cleaner someone used on the floor every Tuesday evening. The chairs were arranged in the same uneven circle as always, but there were more rows now. Nobody here had ever managed to make a circle properly, and maybe that was appropriate. Recovery was not exactly known for pretty geometry.
You sat three chairs away from the radiator now.
Now your coat was folded over your lap. Your coffee was cooling between your palms. Your breathing was almost steady.
The dog tags around your neck shifted when you leaned forward.
You saw them slip out from beneath your sweater, the familiar feeling of them falling against your chest, warm from your skin. They caught the basement light for a second, dull silver flashing against the knit you were wearing, and the man beside you noticed.
He was new, you could tell.
New people had a look to them. Sometimes it was fear or anger. This man was sitting with his shoulders held too high and his hands wrapped too tightly around his cup, staring at everything except the people in the room.
His eyes flicked to the tags.
âYou serve?â he asked.
You looked down.
For one stupid second, your fingers closed over the metal before you could stop yourself. âNo,â you said. âMy boyfriend did.â
The man nodded, still looking at the chain. âOh.â
âTheyâre his,â you added, tucking them back beneath your collar as if you had been caught showing a memory too intimate. âHe gives them to me while heâs away at work.â
âAt work?â
âYeah.â
You managed to say it with a straight face, which was honestly heroic of you, considering Buckyâs âworkâ very rarely involved conferences or meeting rooms. His work included Captain America showing up at your apartment three days ago with that charming, apologetic smile that always meant, Iâm very sorry, but Iâm about to borrow your boyfriend for a classified and incredibly stupid mission.
You had rolled your eyes, and Sam did have the decency to bring him back in one piece
You looked down and added, âitâs for safekeeping.â
After all, that was what Bucky called it too.
He had stood in your kitchen two mornings ago with his duffel bag by the door and his boots not quite tied, looking too handsome for a man who was leaving you for a couple of days. His hair had still been damp from the shower, tucked behind one ear, darkening the collar of his shirt. He smelled like soap and coffee and the lavender shampoo you bought for yourself, which he continued to deny using even though you told him he could. He had been quiet all morning.
He washed his mug even though you told him to leave it. He checked the lock on the window he had already fixed months ago. Eventually, he found you by the counter when you were pretending to look for something in a drawer you had already opened twice. His hands came to your waist from behind, and he folded himself around you without a word. His chest pressed to your back, chin resting against your shoulder. For a minute, he simply held you there in the kitchen, reluctant to leave.
You covered his hands with yours.
âYouâre doing the clingy thing,â you murmured, not at all complaining.
His mouth pressed to the side of your throat, not a kiss at first. Then he did kiss you, his stubble rubbing against your skin.
âMaybe I just like holding my girl before work,â he said.
âWork,â you repeated, dryly, âAs if youâre dealing with team building exercises and doing trust falls with Captain America.â
âI would rather be shot.â
âBucky.â
âWhat? Iâve been shot before.â
âYouâre banned from making those jokes before nine in the morning.â
He hummed, amused, and turned you in his arms so your back was against the counter and he could look at you properly.
His thumbs slipped under the hem of your sweater, just enough to touch skin. The intimacy of it made your chest ache. You had lived with him, slept beside him, showered with him, kissed him breathless against this exact counter, and still there were moments where his hands on you felt new.
He bent his head and kissed you.
It was meant to be a goodbye kiss. It became sweeter, heavier. His body pressed yours into the counter, careful of his strength even when the kiss deepened and your hands found his hair. He made a sound when you tugged, more breath than voice.
âYouâre going to be late,â you whispered against his mouth.
âProbably.â
âVery professional.â
âNever claimed to be.â
His metal hand stayed at your waist. His right hand came up to cradle your jaw, thumb brushing your cheek as if he could smooth the worry out of your face. He kissed you once more, lingering, then pressed his forehead to yours.
âIâll call when I can,â he said.
âI know.â
âMarie has your number?â
âYes.â
âFood in the fridge?â
âYes.â
His eyes searched yours. âYouâll eat?â
âBucky.â
âSorry,â he said sheepishly at his worry.Â
You wanted to tease him more, because that was easier than saying please donât go. So your fingers tightened in the front of his shirt.
Bucky took the dog tags from beneath his own shirt and lifted the chain over his head. Your throat tightened before he even touched you. âBuck.â
His eyes softened at the name.
It still did that to him, even after a year.
Buck.
You had been saying it for a while now. At first by accident, then on purpose, then so often it became part of your life. You said Buck when you needed him to pass you a mug from the high shelf, a whiny Buck when he stole your side of the bed and pretended he hadnât. You had gasped Buck when you woke up from a dream with your heart trying to claw its way out of your chest.Â
The name had started in the diner, if you were honest.
That first night after AA, when he took you for pie because neither of you were ready to go home alone. Bucky had sat across from you with the menu in both hands, frowning at the pie section as though it was a tactical document.
You had not known yet whether you were allowed to joke with him. Whether he would flinch or he would shut down.Â
âI remember it being less confusing than this,â he said. âThereâs too many options now.â
It would take him three months to admit the last time he had pie there was 1944.
You lifted your eyebrows. âYouâre panicking.â
âIâm assessing my options.â
âYouâve been looking at the word âcherryâ for almost a full minute.â
He had looked back down, gravely. âMaybe I like cherry.â
You squinted, then decided. âYou donât.â
âYou donât know that.â
You managed a smile.âI know everything.â
That was the first time he smiled at you properly, and it changed his whole face.
You remembered staring at him across that sticky table and thinking, oh, that is pretty.
Later, he walked you home in the rain.
He didnât ask if he could or assume he should. He just stood beside you outside the diner, hands in his jacket pockets, and said, âIâm going this way.â and it just happened to be the same as where you were going.
So you let him walk you home.
A week later, he saved you a seat. A month later, he was going out for coffee with you every other day. Two months later, he fixed your broken window latch and stayed for dinner.
Four months later, he kissed you in a supermarket car park because you had called him crying from the frozen food aisle after the shop rearranged itself and put the wine where the pizzas used to be. He had come so quickly you were sure he must have run part of the way. He found you with your basket on the floor and your hands shaking, and he stood between you and the aisle like his body could block out the whole world.
You cried because you wanted a drink. Then you cried because he came. Then you cried because he looked at you like none of it made you difficult to love.
He kissed you after he got you outside, so gently, his hands hovering until you grabbed his jacket and pulled him closer, like he had been waiting months to be allowed to want you like this.Â
After that, Bucky became yours all at once.
Your meetings became his meetings, and his nightmares became your 3 a.m. tea in the kitchen. Your cravings became walks around the block with his metal hand at the back of your neck. Your bad days became less lonely.Â
There were mornings where you woke up with his face buried against your stomach, one arm heavy across your hips, his hair a disaster against your bare skin. There were evenings where he cooked badly and you ate it anyway because he looked so proud and because he kissed the back of your shoulder while you washed the dishes. There were nights where the two of you ended up tangled on the sofa with a film neither of you watched, his mouth moving slowly along your neck while your fingers slid under his shirt, both of you laughing between kisses.
It wasnâtalways easy, but it was worth it.
So when he gave you the tags, standing in your kitchen with the mission waiting downstairs, it seemed like a little too much.
He slipped the chain over your head. The tags settled against your chest, cool for half a second before your skin warmed them.
âFor safekeeping,â he said.
You tried to smile. âTheyâre metal, Buck. I think theyâll survive your l work trip.â
His thumb touched the chain. âItâs not about them surviving.â
You looked up at him.
His voice dropped. âItâs about me coming back for them.â
Oh.
Bucky kissed your forehead, then your mouth, then the corner of your mouth when you tried not to cry. He was so careful with you when he left, like one wrong touch would make both of you admit how much you hated this. Heâd been gone for daytrips before, but four days seemed unbearable now.
âIâm proud of you,â he murmured.
Then he kissed you again, and for a few seconds you forgot the whole world beyond his mouth. His hands were firm at your waist, yours around his neck, the tags caught between you. He kissed you until you were breathless and clinging, until Sam honked downstairs and Bucky muttered something unflattering about him under his breath against your lips.
You laughed. He kissed the laugh out of your mouth.
Then he left.
At first, you were fine.
You made breakfast, answered messages, and washed the mug Bucky had already washed, only because it gave your hands something to do. You wore the tags beneath your sweater and touched them whenever you passed the mirror. You went to work and came home. Then ate leftovers standing in the kitchen.
The first night without him was always strange. Then the hours stretched.
The refrigerator hummed too loudly. The upstairs neighbour moved around too much. Your phone stayed blank for too long, and every time it lit up and it wasn't him, disappointment scraped through and you felt childish.
You watched half a film and absorbed none of it.
You opened the fridge, then closed it. Opened the cupboard, then closed it.
Checked your phone, no message.
The next day was the same.
By nine, you were bored. By nine-thirty, you were restless. By ten, your mind had started to tilt.
It was jarring how quickly it happened. No one warned you about it properly, or maybe they did and you had not believed them, but the craving arrived out of nowhere because you were bored.Â
You were putting away a clean plate when you thought about the shop on the corner. Then you were gripping the counter so hard your fingers hurt.
You are alone. You are bored.
Nobody would know.
The tags felt too heavy. You pulled them out from beneath your sweater and held them in your hand, the chain slipping between your fingers. Buckyâs name was pressed into your palm, and you stared at it until the letters blurred.
âIâm fine,â you said out loud.
Your voice sounded odd in the empty kitchen.
You put the tags back under your sweater and changed into pyjamas. You brushed your teeth and got into bed. Five minutes later, you got out of bed. You checked your phone. You opened your messages with Bucky and looked at the last thing he sent before takeoff: Be good to yourself for me.
You threw the phone onto the bed.
Then, somehow, you were putting on shoes.
When you thought about it later, that felt frightening, how blank you were. It wasnât exactly a blackout, because you remembered every moment, but there was a strange sequence to it, as if your body had become a machine built for one purpose: Shoes, coat, keys, stairs, and corner shop.
The bell above the door rang. You told yourself you were buying milk.
You did buy milk. In fact, you carried it to the counter with both hands like evidence of innocence, and then your eyes moved to the tiny bottles behind the register.Â
You could leave. You should leave.
You heard yourself ask for one.
The man behind the counter reached back.
You almost said, nevermind. You didnât.
The bottle was cold when he passed it to you, but it was small enough for your brain to start building arguments before you even reached the door.
Itâs little. Itâs one. Itâs not like before. I have been good for a year. I can stop after this. I just want to know I can.
The walk home felt unreal as the milk knocked against your leg.Â
At your door, your hands shook so badly you dropped your keys. you put the milk in the fridge and took the bottle out.
You placed it on the kitchen counter.
You stared at it.
Then you walked away. Then you came back. Then you picked it up. Then you put it down again.
Your whole body was hot and cold at once. Your thoughts were moving too quickly to hold. Buckyâs dog tags rested against your chest beneath your sweater, and you kept touching them, pressing them hard into your skin as if it could bring willpower.
âI wonât drink it,â you whispered.
Then you opened it.
Then you drank.
And alcohol worked on you with humiliating ease. It hit your empty stomach like warmth pretending to be mercy. For a few minutes, missing Bucky became manageable. You stood in your kitchen with the bottle empty in your hand and hated how much relief you felt
Then the relief curdled into horror. Your stomach dropped and skin prickled. The empty bottle looked terrifying in your hand, stupid and catastrophic. You sank to the kitchen floor.
The tiles were cold beneath your thighs. The dog tags swung forward when you bent over, clinking once against the empty bottle still in your fist.
You cried with your whole body, in ugly, breathless sobs that hurt your ribs and scraped your throat.Â
You almost called him. You saw your hand reach for the phone.
Then you saw him in your mind, answering because he would always answer if he could. You imagined his face changing when he heard your voice, hearing the guilt he would somehow make his own, because Bucky had never met your pain he didnât try to carry.
You couldnât do it.
You rinsed the bottle instead. You stood at the sink with the water running and realised what you were doing and hated yourself so violently you had to grip the counter again.
Evidence.
You were rinsing evidence. You were going to get rid of it, as if this was something to hide from a parent or a teacher or a boyfriend.
You threw the bottle in the bin. Then you took it out. Then you put it back in. Then you sat on the floor until the kitchen light started to feel too bright.
You didn't sleep. Or if you did, it was full of waking.
By morning, your mouth tasted sour and your eyes were swollen.
By night, you were in the basement, a year later.
Marie was talking about her daughterâs wedding. She had her knitting in her lap, a pale yellow scarf growing slowly between her hands, and she was describing the open bar with a detail that made you want to crawl out of your own skin.
Usually, Marie made you feel safe. Tonight, she talked about champagne flutes, toasts, ginger ale, and smiling for the photos.Â
The dog tags were hot against your chest.
You shifted in your chair.
The new man beside you was staring at his coffee again. The meeting leader nodded gently as Marie finished.
âThank you, Marie.â
Everyone said thanks, and the leader looked around the circle.
âAnyone else?â
You stared at the floor. No.
Your heart began to pound so hard you felt it in your throat.
No, no, no.
Still, apparently your body was on autopilot now, because you opened your mouth before you were ready. âIâmââ
Your voice broke so bad that several heads turned at once.
You stopped as heat rushed into your face. You said your name.
The room answered, like it always did.
You could not look at anyone. You looked at your coffee instead, at the small tremors moving across the surface.
âMy boyfriend and I met here,â you said, and the words came out thin.
You swallowed hard and tried again.
âMy boyfriend and I met here. In this room.â Your thumb moved over the raised letters stamped into the tags beneath your sweater.Â
Your breath hitched.
âHe doesnât know I drank last night because heâs away.â
The basement seemed to go still around you.
You let out a broken little laugh that was barely laughter at all. âI was just bored and spiralling and IâŠâ You shook your head, tears spilling hot down your cheeks now, impossible to stop. âI got a little bottle.â
Your fingers curled around the tags.
âIt was only a little.â
You knew better than anyone that it never was a little.
â
After the meeting, you cried into Marieâs shoulder in the church hallway until your throat hurt.
You wished you had done it in a dignified way when other people were trying to help you. You cried with your whole face pressed into her cardigan, both hands in the wool while she held the back of your head and kept murmuring, âOh, sweetheart,â like you hadnât done something unforgivable, as if you were not disgusting. As if you were just a person who had fallen and was still, somehow, worth helping back up.
She didnât tell you it was fine.
She only walked you around the block twice in the cold, one arm linked through yours, talking gently about calling Bucky, about honesty, about how a slip didnât get to eat the whole year unless you fed it the rest yourself.
By the time you got home, you were almost an hour late.
Your eyes were swollen and your face felt tight from drying tears. Buckyâs dog tags were still tucked under your sweater, pressing against your chest.
You opened the door, expecting darkness.
Instead, the kitchen light was on.
Bucky turned from the counter.
He was still in grey sweats, hair damp from a shower he had clearly taken too quickly. There was a smear of frosting on his thumb, and on the counter beside him sat a small, lopsided cake from the grocery store, with too much white icing and little piped flowers around the edge.
Across the top, in blue gel writing, slightly uneven and very obviously done by him, were the words:
ONE YEAR!
Your body went cold.
Was it supposed to be the one year anniversary today? You⊠hadnât been counting. Your boyfriend, had, apparently
Buckyâs whole face lit up when he saw you.
âMission got called short,â he said, so proud and so happy it hurt to look at him. âHappy one year sober, sweetheart.â
You stared at the cake.
The keys were still in your hand. Your coat was still on. You didnât move, didnât blink properly, didnât breathe right.
Bucky kept smiling for a few seconds, but then his smile faltered. âBaby?â
You couldnât answer as blue icing blurred in front of you.
Three full minutes passed, maybe less, maybe more, you didnât know. You only knew that you spent every second of them staring at that little cake like it had been made for someone who had died last night.
You didnât even realise Bucky had been walking towards you.Â
One moment, he was standing behind the little cake, his smile slowly disappearing as he watched you fail to answer him. The next, his hands were on you.
You flinched so hard the keys slipped from your fingers and hit the floor, but Bucky didnât let go. His flesh hand closed gently around your upper arm while his metal one came to your face.
âHey,â he said gently. âHey, look at me.â
You couldnât. You stared somewhere around his shoulder instead, hardly aware of his thumb brushing beneath your eye, wiping away a tear you hadnât felt fall.
His eyes moved across your face with alarm. âAre you hurt?â
You shook your head.
âDid something happen today?â
You shook your head again
âDid someone touch you?â
âNo,â you managed, but the word was barely there.
Buckyâs shoulders loosened by a bit, but the worry certainly didn't leave his face. His eyes dropped quickly over you anyway, ever so aware of blood, bruises, torn fabric, any danger. There was none.
Bucky looked over his shoulder at it, then back at you.
âOh,â he said quietly. You didnât know what he understood. Maybe he thought the anniversary had overwhelmed you, or maybe he thought you were crying because he had remembered, maybe he thought you were happy.
His hand slid from your cheek to the back of your neck. He drew you closer, slow enough that you could have resisted, but you didn't understand what he was doing until your forehead struck his chest and his arms folded around you.
Bucky cradled you against him, metal hand across the back of your coat. His other arm wrapped around your head, his palm cupping your skull as he tucked your face beneath his chin.
You stood stiffly inside his embrace, hearing his heartbeat as your hands remained hanging uselessly at your sides.
Bucky rubbed his palm over your back. âItâs okay,â he murmured, kissing the top of your head. âWhatever it is, itâs okay.â
It wasnât, and he had no idea.
You couldnât seem to pull enough air into your lungs. Every breath caught halfway, and your body refused to complete it. Bucky must have felt the change because his grip tightened, holding you together while your knees began to feel like cooked spaghetti.
âEasy,â he whispered. âIâve got you.â
Your fingers finally curled into the front of his shirt. You clutched him with both hands as if the floor had opened beneath you and he was the only thing left at the edge.
Bucky bent with you when you folded.
He lowered you both to the kitchen floor without ever taking his arms away, one knee touching the tile before he settled against the cabinets and pulled you fully into his lap.
A sound finally came out of you. âI-Iâm sorry.â
Bucky startled, but only for a second.
You buried your face against his throat, the apology coming again before you could breathe. âIâm sorry. Iâm so sorry.â
âShh.â
âIâm sorry, Buck, Iâm sorryââ
âShh, sweetheart.â
He held the back of your head while you began to sob. There was no dignity left in it now. You cried so violently that your body jerked against his, words breaking apart between gasps while Bucky gathered you closer. âIâm sorry.â
âI know.â
âI ruined it.â
Buckyâs hand paused against your hair.
You felt the second he understood that this wasnât an overwhelmed anniversary reaction. âWhat happened?â he asked.
You shook your head against him.
His lips pressed to your temple. âTell me.â
âI canât,â you hiccupped, âYouâll hate me.â
Bucky pulled back just enough to look at you. His hand remained behind your neck, supporting your head when you tried to turn away. The excitement was gone, but fear remained.
âI wonât,â he said.
âYou donât know.â
âI know I wonât hate you.â
Fuck.
Fuck. Fuck. Fuck.Â
You talked before you could think. âYou were gone, and Iââ
Your voice collapsed. Bucky waited, one arm around your waist, his thumb moving through the damp hair at your neck, while you tried to force the words past the pressure closing your throat.
âI drank.â
It came out abruptly.Â
Bucky went still beneath you.
âLast night,â you gasped. âI bought one of the little bottles and I drank it. I drank the whole thing.â The confession tore itself out of you all at once. âI rinsed the bottle. I was going to hide it from you.â
Buckyâs face changed, but instead of disgust, it was recognition.
He knew how a craving could take over your body. He knew what it was to want an off switch badly enough to hate yourself for reaching for it.
âItâs okay,â he whispered.
You recoiled inside his arms. âNo, itâs really not.â
âItâs okay.â His hand tightened against the back of your head. âItâs okay. Iâve got you.â
âI ruined the whole yearââ
âNo.â
He didn't need the details explained to him. He understood every humiliating little ritual because addiction had taught him the same language, even if his body no longer let alcohol answer him.
âI wore your tags,â you choked out. âWhile I did it.â
Your hand flew to your chest, gripping the metal through your sweater hard enough for its edges to bite into your palm.
Bucky caught your wrist. âDonât.â
âI shouldnât have them.â
He gently pulled your hand away from your chest, but he didnât take the tags. He only folded your fingers around them more carefully, covering your fist with his own.
âI didnât keep anything safe,â you managed.
Bucky dragged you back against him before you could see more, tucking your face beneath his chin. His palm spread across your back as you broke open in his lap.
âItâs okay,â he repeated into your hair. âItâs okay.â
You shook your head violently, and he kissed your temple.
Itâs not that what happened did not matter. It did. You both knew it did.
But he knew what you were convinced of: the certainty that one mistake had poisoned everything that came before it, insisting that because you had fallen once, you might as well stay on the floor.
Bucky knew better than to let that voice speak alone.
âYou should be angry.â
His arms tightened, pressing his face against your hair and breathing through it.
âI shouldâve called you.â
âYeah,â he whispered, voice breaking. âYou shouldâve.â
You flinched.
Bucky immediately drew back enough to cradle your face between his hands. âBut I know why you didnât.â
His thumbs moved beneath your eyes, wiping away tears that were replaced almost immediately.
He knew what shame did, and how it convinced you isolation felt like mercy.
âI thought youâd hate me.â
He shook his head. âNever.â
It was the only reassurance he gave you because it was the only one you could believe.
Bucky pulled you against him again and let you cry until there was nothing graceful left in your chest. He held you through every shaking breath, his mouth pressed to your hair, murmuring the same words whenever your apologies started again.
Itâs okay. Itâs okay. Iâve got you.
Eventually, the strength went out of your body. You sagged against him, exhausted, your fingers still trapped around the dog tags between your palm and his.
Bucky stayed on the kitchen floor with you until your breathing slowed.
Then he carefully shifted you from his lap and stood, bringing you with him. Your knees nearly folded, but his hands were already at your waist, holding you upright before you could fall.
âGo shower,â he said.
You frowned. âWhat?â
âGo take a shower,â he repeated kindly. âPut on something comfortable. Iâll make tea.â
You stared at him when his hand slid around the back of your neck, drawing you forward until his forehead rested against yours.
âIâm gonna be here when you come back,â he said.
âYou promise?â
âYeah.â
âYouâre not going to leave?â
âNo.â
âYouâre not going to throw the cake away?â
His eyes flicked toward it.
âNo,â he said after a moment. You nodded, though you didnât entirely believe him.
Bucky kissed your forehead and let you go.
â
The shower took longer than it should have. You stood beneath the water until it ran lukewarm, scrubbing the dried tears from your face, replaying the conversation again and again until it turned into comfort.
When you eventually returned to the kitchen, wearing Buckyâs shirt and a pair of pyjama bottoms, two mugs of tea sat on the table.
Bucky was standing over the cake with a butter knife in his hand and an expression of intense concentration usually reserved for dismantling weapons.
You stopped in the doorway. âWhat are you doing?â
He glanced at you, then back at the cake.
The blue icing was a mess.
Bucky had scraped away most of the word YEAR. There were deep trenches in the white frosting where he had smushed the letters together, dragging the gel across the surface with very little artistic skill.
ONE YEAR! had become:
ONE DAY!
The exclamation point was still there, slightly crooked.
You stared at it.
Bucky put down the knife.
âI figured we celebrate this instead,â he said.
Your throat closed. âOne day?â
He shrugged, suddenly looking uncertain. âThatâs what they say, right?â
One day at a time.
But there were so many fucking days.
But there was only this one now.
You managed to walk yourself to the kitchen and threw yourself into his arms.
Bucky caught you, his arms closing around your body. You buried your face against his chest while he kissed the top of your head.
âIâm still proud of you,â he whispered.
You shook your head.
His hand moved down your back. âThatâs okay,â he murmured. âIâve got enough for both of us.â
Later, he cut two uneven slices.
The cake was too sweet, the tea had gone cold, and the blue icing stained your tongues. Bucky sat beside you, his thigh pressed against yours and his metal hand resting open on the table.
When midnight passed, his fingers closed gently around yours.
One day.
You had made it through one day.
âend.Â
General Bucky taglist pt 1:
@hotlinepanda @snflwr-vol6 @ruexj283 @2honeybees @read-just-cant  @shanksstrawhat @mystictf @globetrotter28 @thebuckybarnesvault @average-vibe @winchestert101 @mystictf @globetrotter28 @boy--wonder--187 @scariusaquarius @reckless007 @hextech-bros @daydreamgoddess14 @96jnie @pono-pura-vida @buckyslove1917 @notsostrangerthing @flow33didontsmoke @qvynrand @blackbirdwitch22 @torntaltos @seventeen-x @ren-ni @iilsenewman @slayerofthevampire @hiphip-horray @jbbucketlist @melotyy @ethereal-witch24 @samfunko @lilteef @hi172826 @pklol @average-vibe @shanksstrawhat @shower-me-with-roses @athenabarnes @scarwidow @thriving-n-jiving @dilfsaresohot @helloxgoodbi @undf-stuff @sapphirebarnes @hzdhrtss @softhornymess @samfunko @wh1sp @anonymousreader4d7 @mathcat345 @escapefromrealitylol
They shall speak now⊠(2)
Summary: You are a wedding crasher.
Pairing: Mafia!Bucky Barnes x fem!Reader
Warnings: wedding crashing gone wrong, mafia au, cocky/sassy reader, flirting mafia style
A/N: Very slightly inspired by the movie âWedding Crashersâ. Only the idea of crashing weddings.
Catch up here: They shall speak now⊠(1)
âIâŠI,â you nervously stammered. His gaze was too intense to hold, so you looked away. âI didnâtâŠuhâŠyou looked boredâŠandâŠâ
âSoâŠâ He repeated. âWho are you to decide that I can do better? Do I know you? Have we met before?â His smirk deepened when you shyly tugged at the hem of your dress.
âNo! We should go. Iâm sorry for interrupting.â You hiccupped, nervously staring at your hands. "SorryâŠuh...sometimes my brain is slower than my mouth!â You exclaimed, springing to your feet. Ready to go for a sprint.
Bucky grinned wolfishly. His voice was a little rougher when he said, âThat so? We never met, and you still came to my rescue. How did you know I was bored to death?â
âShe was joking,â Nia jumped in. You were staring at Bucky, and she feared youâd end up being his next meal if you looked at him for a little longer. âWe are leaving. Sorry for the trouble.â
Your friend tried to drag you away, but two bulky guys blocked your path. âShe stays,â Bucky said, leaving you trembling. âA woman saving me from a boring life deserves a reward."
Nia froze at Buckyâs commanding tone. âExcuse me?â She managed to say. âShe will come with me.â
Bucky laughed at the way Nia protected you. âYouâre a cocky one, I see.â He gave a curt nod, and the men stepped aside.
You still didnât dare to breathe wrong. This man was staring you down after your mishap, and you didnât know how to talk yourself out of the situation.
âLetâs go,â Nia said, but you remained rooted to the spot. Buckyâs gaze was still on you, and his eyes told you not to move an inch.
âYou look like you're planning an escape route.â He joked, his mouth curving upward. âMaybe I should call security back. What do you say?â
âMaybe Iâm planning to escape,â you admitted. âI just ruined your wedding ceremony, and you look like someone hiding a gun in their pants.â
He laughed, following your eyes. You were shamelessly staring at his crotch, and he couldnât hide the glint in his eyes.
âThere she is. I feared we lost her.â
You blinked. âWhat?â
âThe cocky woman who told me I could do better.â His eyes narrowed thoughtfully. He recalled your words and hummed. âYouâre the only person who told me the truth about the bride and this wedding.â
âThat wasn't honesty; it was more like random thoughts escaping my mouth without permission."
âThat wasnât an accident nor random. You wanted to save me from an awful, boring marriage. Youâre my savior.â
Nia crossed her arms, trying to look tough. She hid the chill running down her spine when looking at Bucky. âSir, she apologized. Can we pretend this never happened? Y/N can be impulsive; sometimes she speaks before she thinks. We love her for it.â
Bucky ignored her completely. He set his eyes on you and wouldnât back down now. How could he? He stopped the ceremony for another woman.
âWhat did you mean?â
You really didnât know. âI was thinking you looked stunning in that suit. My brain short-circuited, and then I said what I said. No offense. You looked like you wanted to swallow glass before marrying that woman.â
âThat so?â He cocked his head, searching your face.
âFine!â You said, throwing your hands up. âYou looked miserable. A handsome man like you should look happy on his wedding day, not like someone twisted your balls.
Bucky laughed. âNo one twisted my balls, doll. No one would dare try.â
âYou looked like you wanted to be somewhere else. I know that feeling. Sometimes you must do things that make you miserable. Your wedding shouldnât be one of these things,â you murmured. âIâd understand if the bride looked miserable. Her dress was a mess.â
âY/N, donât.â Nia winced. She was wringing her hands, silently praying to get out of the church alive.
âSheâs flashy but pretty. Maybe youâre more intoâŠuhâŠmen?â
âWow,â Bucky said.
âWhat?â
âNo one's ever said that to me before.â
âReally?â
âNot to my face.â
You giggled. âSoâŠis it true?â
Bucky laughed. âNo.â
âAw, thatâs a shame. I have a cute cousin. Heâd be your type,â you said.
âI already found someone whoâs my type,â he replied, earning a disappointed whine from you.
Nia looked between the two of you suspiciously. âOh no.â She muttered under her breath.
âWhat?â You asked, looking at her.
âHe likes you...â
Busy Woman ! â Jack Abbot
pairing â jack abbot x fem!reader
summary â jack has seen you leave a trail of broken hearts and bad dates, and heâs determined to prove to you that youâre looking for love in all the wrong places.
warnings â 12.6k words. age gap (jackâs around 50; readerâs a 4th year resident, so 20s), attending/resident power dynamic; mentor/mentee relationship, idiots in love maybe?? yearning!jack, jealous!jack, jack âiâll pay for itâ abbot strikes Again!!!! hurt + comfort (one instance of jack being an ass, but he smooths it over during the same shift - they canât stay mad at each other), mild angst, patient death, jackâs leg - reader helps him adjust the prosthetic and takes care of him during a long shift, canon-typical medical scenes and probably lots of inaccuracies (iâm an english major reddit is my best friend) ; on-page patient death, reader performing compressions, reader DATES DATES and may be unprofessional (affectionately she just wants to find love and her entire life revolves around the hospital who can blame her), readerâs written to have hair she brushes and can pin up, she also gets on her toes to kiss him but that can be ignored i just liked the image jack basically bribes her into a date, no smut but theyâre So very much thinking about it, rushed-ish ending i think?
notes â wrote this in a slump it took so Unbelievably long and iâm not even sure i like it but i wanted to post something before i give up on writing anything ever again!!!!
It was midnight and a peds nurse was lingering by the ambulance doors, and Jack knew that he wasnât meant to be there. Lewis was his name, maybe, but Jack couldnât even be sure of that â and knew he had no reason to be sure of it, because the guy wasnât meant to be there. Running the ER in the middle of the night, with all of the dayâs patients handed off, and the nightâs still finding their way through triage, was difficult in itself, and he didnât have the energy to also babysit Ryan-or-Lewis-or-whoever hovering there like a little boy waiting to be picked up from school.Â
âIs he meant to be here?â Jack asked, closing the space toward the desk where Lena was pointing something, jutting his thumb in the direction of the guy.Â
Lena flattened a printout on the desk with two fingers, hardly sparing him a glance.
âHim. Peds. Why is he there?â he tried again.
âCouldnât tell you,â she said, but the corner of her mouth had flicked up, proving that she was simply choosing not to tell him.Â
âHeâs off his unit,â he said. He knew he sounded just slightly silly stating the obvious.
âSeems so.â
âSend him back, then,â Jack drawled, incredulous, hands finding his hips. âThereâs enough shit going on here.â
âYou send him back,â she retorted, amused just slightly. âIf youâre so concerned.â
Jack looked up at the ceiling, shaking his head as his hands went to rest on his hips. When he looked back down, he found you walking toward the nurse and it suddenly made complete sense.Â
He let out a sigh. âThis has to be a joke.â
His eyes, as they did more often than was appropriate, caught on you, hair coming down loose from where youâd pinned it, the scrubs lopsided at one hip, riding lower than where theyâd started at the beginning of the night. You turned to say something to the guy quickly, and the movement caught the slip, your scrub top moving up half an inch, and Jackâs eyes went there before his brain could tell him that was wrong, some groove in him that noticed you before it noticed anything useful. He had a second of pure, unhelpful distraction before his brain reminded him that he was an attending and had things to do.Â
âI actually think itâs funny,â Lena said, shrugging.
Of course it had something to do with you. He shouldâve figured it out the second he saw the guy standing there with his hands in the pouch of his scrubs, rocking heel to toe like the floor was just too exciting to be standing on. Nobody loitered around the ambulance bay at midnight for good reason. People came through those doors bleeding or they didnât come through them at all, and this guy had shown up with nothing wrong with him, except maybe a case for some lovesickness.Â
âIâm gonna make this stop,â Jack said, already pushing himself away from the nurseâs station.
Lenaâs eyes widened slightly. âDonât say anything that gets you sat down with HR.â
âShe can goddamn try me,â he said, and went. Also because Jack was fairly sure you would never report him to HR.Â
He crossed the floor and caught the tail-end of your conversation as he closed in.
â â just tell me when youâre free, thatâs all Iâm asking,â the guy was saying.
You were already half-turned, already gone as you waved a hand loosely beside you. âI donât know, I just donât think we should try again.âÂ
Jack blew out a breath, standing a few feet short of you, your back facing him. Why was he not surprised? Heâd been keeping tally without meaning to, and he knew that was embarrassing. There was the radiology fellow whoâd started hand-delivering films that very well couldâve gone through the system; the travel nurse whoâd washed through in six weeks and left the floor faintly weird in his wake; the anaesthesia resident who now took the long way around the department if he saw you at the end of it, as though he were a dog whoâd learned the fence was electric. And now this one, apparently, Peds with his whole hopeful heart hanging out in Jackâs department.Â
âYouâre so sweet for coming down here,â you practically crooned at him, shifting on your heels, eyes flicking down to the form in your hand. âBut I really do have a whole long night ahead of me, and I know my answerâs not gonna change, so I wonât make you wait around for it, okay?âÂ
Jack fought the urge to roll his eyes when you said the words with the upward lilt of a woman sending a toddler back to his mother. He wanted to laugh a little when he saw that the guy had taken it standing up like it was a gift.Â
The hell of it was that Jack understood the man. He understood every last one of them because he stood next to you fifty hours a week, had been doing so for three years, and whatever the department thought of him after his consistent therapy, he was not carved out of stone.Â
Jack was afraid that if he hadnât been your attending these last four years and a little younger, wearing his heart on his sleeve, heâd have been eating out of the palm of your hand.Â
You gave the guy a there-there pat, and it was only then did his eyes land on Jack, who he probably knew was your fucking attending. You turned then, and immediately said, âOh, Dr. Abbot, Iâve got the guy in sixâs labs back, the potassium ââ
âMhm.â Jackâs hands came up and landed on your shoulders before youâd finished the sentence, squaring you off the spot where you stood and turning you bodily back toward the floor like you were a gurney.Â
âIt is four-point-nine, but the EKGâs good, so I was gonna recheck in ââÂ
âLetâs recheck it now,â he said. He kept you moving, his palms broad through the cotton of your scrubs, steering you a few feet till your own feet caught onto the idea.Â
You grumbled something under your breath, and once heâd stopped you right in front of six, you turned to face him with your brows raised.
âSay something?â he asked, tipping his chin down.
âYou seem like youâre mad at me,â you said.Â
âHuh. I do?â He let go of your shoulders â noticing, distantly, the exact second his hands came off and suddenly felt too empty â and reached past you to pluck sixâs chart off the tray, more to have something to do with them than needing it. âYouâre right. You should recheck in ten minutes.â
âYouâre mad at me,â you said again, crossing your arms over your chest.Â
He blew out a breath, and suddenly felt just a little silly at getting worked up over a nurse by the doors when there was a large, glowing board behind him full of names that needed his complete, undivided attention.Â
You were a senior resident, after all, four years deep, one of his sharpest â youâd treated the guy in six, hadnât you, youâd flagged it and called for the EKG and made the right call on the recheck before heâd even asked, all while dismantling some manâs hopes. Somehow, your mess and competence ran on the same current. You never let the first touch the second. Heâd have loved, some nights, to have an excuse to be mad â a missed lab, a blown line, anything he could write up and point at â and you kept declining to hand him one. All of this meant he was left with this vague swampy irritation, and Jack wasnât the sort of mentor who liked to hound upon that.Â
âNo, sweetheart, I just love it when you get random men hanging around the department,â he settled on saying, feeling his shoulders visibly loosen a fraction.
You winced, eyes darting over to the emptiness in front of the doors now. âSorry.âÂ
âYouâd say it wonât happen again, but we both know better.â He shrugged. Then, he reached out his hand â he wasnât sure why, except that it just happened naturally â and patted you once on the shoulder, then on the second turned you to face the curtains leading to your patient. âDoctor up.â
And you did, the loose, embarrassed shape of you being replaced in the space of a single breath, being replaced by something Jack had watched grow into you over the years and still hadnât quite gotten used to.Â
Trauma called it in nine minutes later, an MVC, unrestrained driver, GCS dropping in the field. Jack was working on a laceration in four when he heard the crackled warning, and by the time heâd looked up out the curtains, you were already moving, gowned and at the head of the bay calling out assignments like youâd been doing this for a decade.
âI need two units O-neg before he rolls in,â you said, voice pitched high enough to carry without yelling, cutting clean through the perpetual noise of the department. âSomebody get me a second eighteen-gauge ready, and I want an ultrasound in here.â
Donnie and Mateo were already moving, and so were the people around you, falling into your orbit like the room had easily reorganized itself around your voice the second it went up. Jack stood by the curtain, gloves from the lac still on, and found he couldnât make himself move just yet.
The doors banged open. EMS wheeled the stretcher through fast, calling out vitals over each other, and you were already on the patientâs side before the gurney had fully stopped moving, hands moving on his neck, chest, eyes scanning his pupils in a matter of ten seconds. He began walking over, catching your voice as you called out your reads as someone hung the blood and someone else prepped the ultrasound wand. âPage neuro now.â
âOn it,â Mateo said, already moving.
You had both hands on the patient, running the primary survey quickly, confirming, checking, discarding possibilities out in short, clipped sentences Jack recognized as the sound of your brain running six steps ahead of your mouth. Sweat had started on your hairline. You called out for OR to be on standby, eyes flickering around the room and landing on Jack. âOR, please,â you said, aimed at him, brows going up.Â
âOn it,â Jack said, because there was no way he was going to let you be wrong about needing something and didnât make sure you got it.
The next six minutes went by fast and loud, in bursts and then suddenly quiet, the room narrowing down on functionality. You stood at the center of it; you called it and ran it. You got the man upstairs stable enough that Walsh didnât sound worried for one second, and that was a compliment from her.Â
Jack watched the whole thing from four feet back, arms crossed, and chipping in when your brain had snagged. He was feeling a heat in his chest helplessly and entirely unprofessional, it was always present when he was able to see, in real-time, how far youâd come from your first day of residency when your hands were a second too slow on the central line and how your voice would pitch up at the end of every read, asking for permission every time instead of stating it like a fact, eyes finding him across the room each time, checking.
There was none of that left in you now, he realized, had done so a long time ago. He thought, watching you now, that this was the closest thing heâd let himself do to falling in years, standing uselessly riveted as he watched a woman heâd taught outgrow the need for him in real time, and finding that instead of the loss heâd expected to feel when the day finally came, all he felt was warm and terrifying and too much like pride.Â
When the room had started clearing out, he watched your mouth drop open as you let out a heavy breath, eyes going over to him. The second he watched you realize he was still there, your face shifted, the relief turning into something sharper.Â
âWhy didnât you jump in?â You crossed the floor toward him in four hard strides, gloves already peeled off and balled tight in one fist, snapping the second one free with a motion that looked terrifyingly like it wanted to be aimed at him. âHis pressure tanked for thirty seconds and you just watched.â
âYou had it.â
âYou didnât know that,â you said, voice going up an octave, adrenaline still thrumming through you, hands coming up the gesture at the blood-streaked floor. âI couldâve missed something. Youâre the attending, Jack, youâre supposed to catch if I missed something ââ
âI wouldâve,â he interrupted, stepping in close enough that you had to tilt your head back to keep glaring at him properly. âThe second you needed me, I wouldâve stepped in. I wasnât gonna take it from you before you did.âÂ
âYou canât gamble like that with a patient ââ Your chest was rising and falling fast, gloves now crushed in your fist, and he could see the fear catching up now that everything around you had gone quiet enough to let it, something that looked more like fear of yourself than for the patient. âWhat if Iâd frozen â?â
âI knew you wouldnât.â He reached his hand out, thumb catching a smear of the blood at your jaw youâd accidentally smeared on yourself, wiping it off carefully with the pad of his thumb, and felt you go still under it. âYou donât trust my judgement?â
âYou know I do. You just couldâve said something.â
âI couldâve. He dropped his hand from your jaw only to catch your wrist instead. âDidnât wanna interrupt you being brilliant. Kinda liked watching it happen.â
Your mouth opened, surely to let out some unnecessary retort, and died there when he pressed one slow stroke of his thumb against your wrist, raising a brow.Â
âRelax,â he said, voice going rough as he leaned in a little, forcing you to meet his eyes properly. âJust take the win. Thatâs an order.â
âNow you wanna give orders,â you mumbled.
He barked out a short laugh, letting go of your wrist. âOnly when youâre being stubborn for no reason.â  Â
It was sometime during the second year of your residency when heâd started catching your drift. It had started with a random Friday shift. Heâd seen you at the station, elbows on the counter, telling Lena something conspiratorially. Jack was meant to be reading a chart but couldnât help how his ears had perked up. Anything to get through the shift, he supposed.
â â no, but he was perfect on paper,â you were saying, âkept his house clean and everything. He told me he kept his plant alive for six years ââ
âSo, what happened?â Lena said flatly, like she already knew what you were going to say but wanted to hear anyway.Â
âHe wanted to take me bowling on the second date,â you said through a sigh. âI know how it sounds, but youâve gotta hear me out ââ
âIâm genuinely not going anywhere.â
â â for the first date, bowlingâs fun. But he took me to a nice dinner the first time, he set a standard, and then the second date he goes bowling, which means the effortâs already ââ You created a little downward slope with your hand. âAnd if itâs already sliding on date two, whereâs it at on date two hundred? I can already see my marriage with him and itâs bad.â
It seemed you had a criteria, Jack learned then. It was proven even more when heâd heard you talk about your other failed dates, seen them, and learned â without ever wanting to â what they were, to an extent.Â
He knew you couldnât stand a man who ordered for you without asking. He knew youâd written off a fellow for the way he talked about his mother, and another one â an accountant, a rare specimen who had no clue what an EKG was â over a text message youâd read aloud to Ellis in a voice of complete horror, though Jack had never caught what it actually said, only your face while you read it. He knew you gave people precisely three dates, that this was a rule you held if the first and second date went well, three apparently being the magic number at which a person could no longer hide the demon they were going to turn out to be (your words).
He knew, too, that you only allowed one kiss after the first date, if even that. It was never up for negotiation, no matter how beautifully the night had gone, for you never wanted to end up âemotionally overdrawn on an account you hadnât even opened yet.â
He knew you a man lost real points if, over the three dates, if it involved drinks, he ordered the same one. He knew a man gained them, silently and instantly, for being able to sit in a lull without narrating his way out of it, and that you considered this the single rarest trait in modern dating.
He knew you were looking for something you had no name for and would recognize on sight, which struck him as a hell of a way to run a search.
Heâd have told you, if you asked, that he tuned most of the station chatter out as a matter of survival, for while he enjoyed the occasional gossip, he couldnât very well absorb everyoneâs business. And that was true about everyoneâs business but yours, apparently, because yours came in clear.
Your business he retained against his own better judgement, and he realized â once, during a slow shift â that he couldâve drawn you a better map of your taste than you seemed to carry yourself. He couldâve told you, if you asked, exactly the kind of man whoâd finally clear your bar, and exactly why he had yet to show up.Â
It was almost nice, some nights, watching you try anyway. The ER was a place where everyone was kept tethered to the world by a thread, and everyone who worked in it long enough to develop some version of the same calluses. Jack had grown his years ago, and he wore them invisible, occasionally aching, and had come to terms with it being permanent.
Love, for Jack, had stopped being a real noun before youâd shown up, somewhere between things he used to want and things heâd decided werenât for him anymore.
You still believed in it. Youâd watched this place take everything soft out of grown men twice your seniority and somehow walked through the same fire hopeful, still convinced, against every scrap of evidence, that somewhere there was a person worth all that hoping.
For that reason, he had decided to not interrupt your endeavors, not until now, when he noticed you during hand-off before your night shift with him started, in front of Robby, of all people.Â
While Jack loved Robby like a brother, he had a documented, department-wide, actuarially reliable seven-week expiration date on every woman he charmed out of this building. Heâd heard intra-departmental gossip about him. There was, Jack was fairly sure, a running joke about it that predated your residency by years.Â
He knew you definitely were not finding love in his best friend. But Jack felt the buzzing in his mind go quiet and mean watching how you with him.
You laughed at something and Jack lost, for one humiliating second, the thread of what heâd walked over to say. It happened sometimes, more than heâd admit to anyone. Ordinary noises out of you hit him somewhere in his chest before the better part of him flagged it as a problem, and he had to physically clear his throat before finding his footing again.Â
â â Italianâs always good after pulling a double,â Robby was saying. âBut I do love some microwave ramen, too, when Iâm missing my med student days.âÂ
âOh, so your standards have been raised being chief?â you said, and Jack could hear the smile and wariness in it.Â
âFor sure ââ
Jack let out a huff, something resembling a laugh, as his feet planted him between the two of you. He was close enough that his shoulder nudged yours and you had to step back to keep your balance. He felt your weight land for a second against him with a satisfaction he had no, absolutely no business feeling for something so small. So childish.
He turned to Robby, spreading his hands wide, mock outrage. âMy resident.â
Robby looked mildly amused, unbothered, so Jack added, before he could respond, âGo home before I report you to HR.â
âYouâd do that to me?âÂ
âIn a heartbeat. Have some shame.â Jack kept his shoulder where it was still angled half in front of you, an old, unexamined instinct keeping the line drawn even though Robby had already backed off.
He tipped his head toward the doors, toward the gold light coming up in them, the day shift draining out around you both. âThereâs a whole rich life waitinâ for you out there.â
Robby just smiled and pushed off the counter, giving you a small wave before he left.
Jack turned to you then, brows furrowed. âSeriously?â
You let out a short laugh. âWork hard, play hard?âÂ
âSoundinâ a lot like a frat brother right now. Never have those words been said in an ER,â Jack said.Â
âI wasnât actually going to do it,â you said, rushing the words out with something more honest in them. âFor the record. I know what â heâs got a reputation.â You picked at the counter. âI was just talking to him. Heâs funny.â
Jack had to recalibrate for a second. âYou were talkinâ sweet to him.âÂ
âI talk sweet to everyone.â You lifted a shoulder, completely unbothered. âYou should try it sometime.â
He rolled his eyes at that. He reached over for your cup of coffee sitting between you â closer to his elbow than yours â and drank a sip, eyes going up to the ceiling at the sheer volume of syrup youâd decided you needed in your bloodstream today. âThe hell?â he muttered, turning the cup slightly as if that would help. âAre you trying to embalm yourself?â
âGive it back.â
âIn a minute.â He took a second sip, slower this time, and watched you over the rim of the cup. Then, he set it back a few degrees off how youâd had it, just to see your jaw tick.
You pulled the cup back in, thumbed it around until the lid faced you again, and drank from it without breaking your explanation. âIâm offended you think Iâll get wine and dined by the chief attending.â You tilted your head. âGive me some credit here. I wonât be his seven weeks.â
âHuh.â He rubbed the back of his neck, which was warm. âWell, good. Donât think heâll clear your bar anyway.â
âSee, you get it,â you said, pointing a finger at him. âAt least someone around here does.âÂ
âYes, maâam,â he said, tipping his head slightly forward that even he hadnât realized that he had shifted the distance just slightly. âBetter than most.â
Your eyes widened slightly at that, and Jack took that as his cue to step back, clear his throat, as he jerked his chin toward the board.
âAlright, time to work. Stop the play,â he said, trying to get his voice the right level. âGo look at chest pain on three.â
âSo bossy,â you said, but you were already turning around to go to three.
Well, thatâs what he was, wasnât he? For some reason, he had to remind himself that.Â
It was what he had to remind himself as his hands hovered your trembling ones as you tried to pump air into Mrs. Foleyâs lungs, knowing she was already gone â had been for a while now, if he was honest â longer than it took you to admit. He knew it, heâd grown the grim ability to recognize when a body stopped being a patient and being someone you were performing compressions on for the familyâs sake, for your own need to have done everything.Â
Heâd let it run anyway, because you hadnât accepted it yet, and heâd wanted to give you that extra minute to arrive at it on your own.Â
Mateo had come up to Jackâs side, snapping his gloves off, the sound of it overshadowed by your own heaving.Â
âShe has to call it,â he murmured. âYou want me to ââ
âNo.â Jackâs eyes, he felt, could not move away from your distress. âIâve got her.âÂ
Mateo looked at him for a moment longer than the moment warranted, and then he stepped back and let Jack be. You were still going, your compressions had gone harder, faster, less like genuine medicine and more like you were pleading with Mrs. Foley herself now. Sweat had gone to the hair at your temple. Your jaw was set in a clench Jack recognized all too well, and for a moment, Jack wished that he didnât have to be so acutely tuned into watching what the job did to others, the same way it did to him.Â
He stepped in behind your shoulder, close, and brought his hand down over yours where they were locked on the old womanâs chest.
âLook at the clock,â he said quietly into your ear.
âOne more round ââÂ
âYouâve done plenty.â He pressed, gently, until your hands stilled under his, and felt your entire body resist it. âYou know she was gone before we couldâve even done anything ââ
âSheâs been my patient for years ââÂ
Jack knew then that while you may have been an excellent doctor, his senior resident that had bloomed under his mentorship but still couldâve gone without him and done just the same, it wasnât a good feeling to wonder if the job would dim you the way it had him.Â
âI know.â He kept his hands over yours with enough pressure so as to not let you drive them down again. âThatâs why itâs yours to call. But youâve gotta call it, Doctor.â
Your breath hitched as you turned your neck to face him, and there was a pool brimming on your lashline that you kept at bay, nodding. Your hands under his stopped straining upward, and he felt the exact second you accepted it, for it moved through your shoulders and down your spine and left you a little smaller standing there, the fight trickling into the moment after, which Jack always thought was worse.Â
âTime of death,â you said, forcing your voice back into the procedural tone, âoh-three-forty-one.â You peeled your gloves off finger-by-finger.
His hand found the small of your back after taking the minute, leading you to the little family consult room with the boxed tissues and fake ficus with a couch that had absorbed more bad news since longer than you or he had worked there. He shut the door with the flat of his hand and let the floorâs noise cut to a hum through the drywall.Â
You stood in the middle of the room with your arms crossed, holding yourself, and stayed silent.Â
Jack propped himself against the table, arms folded, as he breathed out a small sigh through his nose. He knew you werenât a talker after the bad ones. Some residents came out of a loss with their mouths running, narrating it into something survivable, and some went quiet and small and had to be waited out, and you were the second kind. So he waited.
You broke it eventually, like he always knew you would have. âIâve got a butterscotch she gave me seven months ago in my locker still,â you murmured, craning your neck so you were looking at the ceiling. You wiped under your eyes with the heel of your hand roughly.Â
âThink Iâve got one, too,â he murmured, wincing as he tried to shift his weight.Â
It had been building up for the past few hours, a hot ring of wrong down below the knee where the socket had gone slick and furnace-warm because it was past hour fourteen, when heâd sweated the fit and never changed the liner because thereâd been no window that wasnât already accounted for. He shifted his weight off it, trying again, and reached down to thumb the release, breaking the seal.Â
He let out a short, punched out sigh as he pulled himself down onto the chair behind him, one hand balancing himself on the table. âSorry,â he gruffed out, jaw clenching.Â
Your eyes flickered down to the prosthetic limb he was balancing against the pole of the table and you were already moving before he could finish apologizing. You never asked if he needed a hand. Youâd learned sometime during your second year that asking him gave him a chance to say no, and youâd quit handing him that chance sometime during your second year, so now you just came. You went down on one knee at the pole of the table.
âDonât say sorry,â you mumbled, eyes not meeting him.
His jaw stayed tight and he didnât fight it, fight you. That was a formality and you both knew it, a thing he did with his shoulders and not his hands, but he watched the top of your head and thought â like he always did, each time, and never said out loud â there was no one else on godâs green earth heâd let do this in the way you did. Not the prosthetist, who did it clinically. Not the VA, who did it tired. You did it each time like it was nothing and everything at once, as though this something not worth remarking on.Â
He very badly wanted to thank you, despite how small he always felt when you did this. He wanted to tell you that you were, without question, better at this than anyone who was paid to do it.
Your fingers found the socket and went for the liner because you knew the fit went bad and the sweat before it went bad anywhere a person could see, knew heâd have to run it slick and furnace-hot than spend the fourteen minutes off the floor. You rolled it back with the flat of your thumb, easing the trapped heat out of it, and he felt the pressure of the ring of raw below his knee and had to clench his jaw to not let the relief show on his face. You spared him anyway by keeping your eyes down where theyâd been.
âYouâll strip your skin doing this,â you said conversationally, the roughness still present in your voice from the code. âYou know that. You keep running it past twelve and one of these nights itâs cellulitis and Iâm admitting you.âÂ
âIf only I could be so lucky.â
He ducked his head slightly, a part of him wanting to catch the reaction, and he saw how one corner of your lip was barely turned up.Â
You thumbed a line of red where the socketâs edge had bitten in, checking it, and your touch went careful around there. âThis is new. The edge is catching higher than it was.â
âWent to a new liner last month,â he said, voice low. âNot broke in yet.âÂ
âThen you break it on your days off. Not on a fourteen hour.â You finally looked up at him, shaking your head with this flat, fond expression heâd come to realize was your favorite way to look at him. âYouâd write me up for less.âÂ
âIâd write you up for a lot less,â he agreed, thinking back on the time youâd fought him tooth-and-nail over staying through a migraine, refusing, point-blank, to hand off a soft rule-out chest pain at eleven when the migraine had started very visibly began creeping up on you.Â
Heâd caught you before youâd said a word about it because youâd begun squinting at the numbers and pressed the heel of your hand against one eye for a moment too long between patients, thinking nobody was watching. He was, he realized, always watching you in some way.
âGo home,â heâd said quietly, catching you by the elbow outside the curtain. âThatâs not a request.â
âIâm fine.â
âYouâve got a migraine.â
âIâve got a job.â Your jaw had clenched, stubbornly, and Jack had thought that even if heâd put all his strength into it, he wouldnât have been able to unclench it for you. âIâm not handing off a chest pain because my head hurts. This guy has waited long enough for a bed. Iâm not the priority here.â
Heâd wanted to tell you that you were, actually, that you were exactly the priority, and watching you white-knuckle forms with your pupils blown different sizes from pain scared him more than any board full of critical pains ever had. But heâd just pulled down the light two notches, told the nurses to shadow elevenâs discharge, and put a bottle of water and two Tylenol on your desk without a word. And thank god, youâd taken the Tylenol and finished the shift standing up because sitting made the room tilt worse, and only taken on non-critical cases. Youâd refused until the end that you shouldâve gone home three hours earlier. Â
Now, you huffed something that was nearly a laugh, your first real once since the code, and went back to setting. And Jack sat there with his arms crossed in the dark with your hands on the worst-guarded part of him and the door shut against the whole floor, and thought about how he believed nobody deserved you. People were vile and sucked and cut in line and let doors swing shut behind them, and you handed out three dates to men who wrote sonnets in your voicemail and couldnât clear a bar youâd never once lowered for anyone. Heâd thought, more nights than he liked to admit, that these people had no idea what they were auditioning for.Â
His eyes snagged on you because there was nothing else in this small room worth looking at. There was still salt dried in your lashline from the code. You were a wreck and you were fixing his leg anyway, still half-shaking from a woman you couldnât save, and it hadnât occurred to you to stop and put yourself back together first. It never did. Jack had seen the care run out of you before you ever decided to spend it.Â
âIâm sorry about Mrs. Foley,â he said.
You shook your head, face still angled down, thumb pausing mid-motion. âIâll be okay,â you murmured, lifting up one shoulder. âI just hate that she couldnât get here sooner.â
âYou did nothing wrong,â he said plainly. âFamily said sheâs been feeling off for two days now.â
âI know.â Your voice cracked, betraying the flatness you were trying to present. âDoesnât make it easier.â
You lifted your head for a moment, then, looking at him with a sad smile he knew you were painting on to get him to stop talking.
He nodded stiffly, tipping his chin down. âAlright. Finish my leg and weâll run this floor together.â
Up in radiology a few nights later, Jack had gone himself to sort out a reading that had been sitting long and heâd cornered a tech and got what he needed and was already halfway out the door, jacket sleeves still rolled from the last set of compressions, when he saw the guy standing off by the light boxes.Â
Younger. A resident, he supposed, in scrubs a size too crisp for someone whoâd actually been on the shift long enough to earn wrinkles in them. Heâd been watching Jack the whole time â Jack could feel it, the itch of being observed â shifting his weight heel to toe against the linoleum floor.Â
âSomethinâ on my face?â Jack said flatly because he really did have to get back to the floor.
âYouâre â sorry, youâre Dr. Abbot, right?â
âLast I checked.âÂ
The guyâs hand came out of his jacketâs pocket, and there was a piece of folded paper in it. Jack looked at it like it was a spider, hoping â no, praying â it had something to do with work.
âCould you give this to her?â the guy asked, and Jackâs hope died, as he stepped closer. âThe senior resident on your shift. Sheâll â sheâll know who itâs from.â
âYouâve got to be kidding me,â Jack murmured, brows pulling in together. âYou ever heard of texting, kid?âÂ
âI did,â he said, and Jack could practically feel the heat radiating off of him. âShe stopped answering, so I figured, maybe on paper, sheâd actually ââ
âTake the hint,â Jack grumbled, snatching the paper out of his hand. Then, as he turned to the door, he said, âYou know I work in the ER?â When the guy only nodded quickly, he added, âYou know she works in the ER?âÂ
âI â yeah. Obviously.â
âThen you know she doesnât need this.â He held up the paper between him and the guy. âSheâs got enough on her plate without some guy too chicken to call her handing me a note like Iâm her mailman.â
The guy opened his mouth, nose scrunching at Jackâs words, but nothing came out.Â
âYeah.â Jack was already walking, note tucked in his pocket, done with the conversation. âTry calling next time. Or donât.âÂ
The guy looked at least a little sheepish, a little ashamed, and Jack thought good, he should feel ashamed. He wasnât sure what the protocol in dating was now â heâd been just a little rusty and out of the stretch for a stretch of years he preferred not to count in single digits â but he was fairly certain that whatever the rules had curdled up to, this could not possibly be inside them.
He rode the elevator down with the note in his pockets, and he could feel the small stiff square of another manâs hope pressing over the outside of his thigh.Â
He found you at your desk, hands running restlessly through your hair as you spoke into the microphone, charting. The words were coming out of you bluntly, mechanic and after saying the same variation a thousand times over. There was a pen behind your ear youâd forgotten about and the residue of a lab value gone blue across the back of your hand where youâd scrawled it hours ago and never washed off.
He stood there for a second before you noticed him, and thought â not for the first time and with the same low irritation he always felt about it â that he had no earthly business being the man this got routed to.
Jack leaned down so his head hovered beside yours, scanning your work on the screen, close enough that his shoulder nearly brushed yours, head tilted to read your screen at an angle that had nothing to do with actually needing to see it.Â
âThe man wants an espresso martini?â he asked, furrowing his brows as he read over your notes, right by your ear.Â
You jumped just slightly and swivelled on your stool to face him, then back at the screen. âShit â Jack. Announce yourself.â You scanned the words on your notes, shaking your head and already backspacing. âNo, that was me talking to myself. Stupid mic picked it up.â
âLong as itâs just the one,â he drawled, staying there in your space a little longer, watching the side of your face instead of the screen now. âThose things sneak up on you.â
âSpeaking from experience?â You turned on your stool to face him fully, chin tilting up to meet his eyes, something playful and a little challenging in it.Â
âIâve got a couple decades on you. Everythingâs snuck up on me.âÂ
You held his gaze a little longer, then looked away first, tongue coming out over your lips for a second. He took a small satisfaction in not being the one who blinked first.Â
He blew out a breath through his nose, remembering, with reluctance now, what heâd actually come here to do. âSpeaking of sneaking up.â He pulled out the note from his pocket. âI got something to deliver to you ââ
You furrowed your brows when he handed it to you. âSecret admirer?â you asked jokingly.Â
He barked out a short laugh. âNothinâ secret about it. You ignoring some radiology fellow?â
You grimaced, opening the note and scanning over the words quickly. He couldâve left, but stayed instead and watched you read it. The frown only pulled deeper, and he saw your eye twitch once as you scanned the words.
Against his better judgement, he murmured, âThat bad?âÂ
âUh â no, itâs okay.â You shrugged stiffly.Â
âHuh,â he breathed out, studying you outright now. âWonder what youâre doinâ to these guys to get them so wound up.â
You chuckled, mostly to yourself. âWouldnât you like to know.â Â
His chest tightened at that. It was unfair how you could make anything to him sound like something heâd been waiting to hear. He swallowed. âSuppose I would.â
âThat an offer, Dr. Abbot?âÂ
âMight be,â he said, shrugging one shoulder.Â
You laughed â surprised, the tension in your shoulders breaking slightly â and shook your head, folding the note back up. âYouâre ridiculous. Well, thank you for getting it to me. Iâm sorry he bothered you with this ââ You swivelled, placing the note on your desk before picking up your phone. âThatâs really weird.âÂ
âThatâs one word for it,â Jack said, and left it there, because youâd already turned and had your phone in one hand and the microphone in the other. The small furrow was back between your brows, and heâd learned there was a point past which pushing you got him a brighter, smaller version of whatever you were covering.Â
He drifted toward the far end of the station where Mateo was crouched at the crash cart running his palm along the drawers, checking seals, restocking and checking the fact of it on slower nights like this.Â
âShe okay?â Mateo asked, snapping the drawer, seemingly having caught the interaction.Â
âOh, you know.â Jack leaned a shoulder into the wall, arms crossing. âThe belle of our ball. Canât clock in without collecting a proposal.â
Mateo huffed. âShe loves love.â
âThat she does.â Jack watched you across the station, the phone lit against your ear now. âDonât know why she keeps doing that to herself, though.â
âSheâs an optimist.â Mateo clicked a seal into place, then moved down the cart. âThinks someoneâs gonna turn out different.â
Jack hummed, then, because the question had been sitting low and unlovely for a couple hours, he asked, âYou two give it a run ever?âÂ
Mateo turned his neck to look up at Jack. âMe and ââ He jutted his thumb behind him to vaguely gesture at you. âHer?â
âMhm.â Jack kept his eyes on you. âYouâre close.â
âNah.â Mateo went back to the cart, shaking his head as he chuckled softly. âI donât think Iâd pass a single one of her tests. Besides, I got my eye on someone.â
âApparently I donât make the list either, I guess,â Jack murmured.
Mateo laughed through his nose, eyeing Jack with something new now. âYou want to?âÂ
Jack caught it, reaching his palm and smacking it against Mateoâs curls with no force. âNo. Now, do your job.â
âI am ââ He laughed through the words, eyes scanning over Jackâs stiffened posture now. âItâs good you donât, then. Couldnât handle her anyway.âÂ
âSure, I could,â Jack said immediately.Â
Mateoâs head turned again, lips curving upwards at Jackâs words, and he felt momentarily blindsided by his own mouth, entirely too honest for something that had started as a joke.Â
âSure, you could,â Mateo teased, drawing out the words.
âShut it.â Jack grabbed a box of gloves off the cart and set it down two shelves lower than it needed to go, purely to do something with his hands that didnât involve reaching for Mateoâs collar. âWasnât a real question.â
Couldnât handle you? As if he didnât know, without having to think about it, that you took the stairs two at a time instead of the elevator when you were annoyed and needed somewhere to put your extra energy, or that youâd started drinking your coffee black on nights a patient reminded you of someone, syrup and cream abandoned, like sweetness felt wrong to have that shift. As if he hadnât noticed, months ago, that you hummed the same four off-key notes from a jingle neither you nor Jack could place when a chart was boring you to death, or that you double-checked every single IV line now, ever since one bad mistake in your first year. He could very well handle you, he simply hadnât been given the chance to do so.
Most of the time, Jack was fine with watching your love life play out in 3D. More often than not, he knew theyâd never work out. You were just too good for anyone who came sniffing, and there was a grim comfort in that, in knowing the fellows and the nurses would wash through and out and leave you exactly where he found you, three feet down the counter from him, close enough to keep.
Tonight the comfort wasnât coming. Mateoâs accidental interrogation had rubbed Jack wrongly, somewhere he had yet to fully locate yet, and was sitting in his chest like a splinter he kept forgetting was there until he turned the corner over the night, saw you, and noticed it was there. He shouldâve let it stay as nothing, but his brain had apparently decided three hours later was the correct time to relitigate the whole exchange, turning it over at odd intervals between patients like a tongue worrying a chipped tooth.
It was the bad sort of slow in the ER, the sort that let his brain fill up with things heâd have no time for on a real night. Ellis had wandered over to your desk with two energy drinks and placed her arms loosely beside your computer.
Jack was distantly aware he had misplaced labs to hand back to you because theyâd gotten lost in the system, and he told himself that was the whole reason his body had started moving in your direction.Â
âI got a rundown from Marge,â Ellis said, dropping into an empty stool beside you. âApparently he wrote it out of the OR.â
âYouâre joking,â you muttered. âI donât understand it.âÂ
Jack stood there with the labs in his hand, close enough to hear it.Â
âIâm still wondering if I should respond,â you were saying, half into your hands. âIs this romantic? This oneâs never happened before.â
Ellis laughed slightly with you, and the two of you had built one of those small pockets that slow nights sometimes allowed, thirty seconds of being people instead of clinicians.
Jack set the labs down at the edge of your keyboard harder than he meant to, the papers slapping flat against the desk, and both of you looked up at him like heâd grown two heads. Fuck â had he? It sure felt like he was operating off of whatever chemical cocktail his brain had whipped up for nights like this, some ugly little compound of jealousy and exhaustion. He was fairly sure if you pulled his labs right now theyâd look like a man in the middle of a bad reaction to something not yet figured out in the scientific world.Â
âLabs on eight got lost.â His palm stayed on the sheet for a few seconds too long, some instinct telling him to keep his hand on something solid before the rest of him did something stupid. âYouâll want to recheck the trop.âÂ
His eyes cut, against every ounce of better judgement he had left, to the note still folded in your hand, the same one heâd carried down like it was radioactive, the same note that had clearly done something for you that four years of Jack standing next to you clearly hadnât. An unreasonable, low feeling creeped up behind his ribs at the sight of it, hot and out of proportion to a piece of folded-fucking-paper.Â
Ellisâs smile went uncertain as he felt her gaze snag on him.Â
You blinked up at him, and whatever had been sitting easy in your face a second ago curdled itself away, the corners of your mouth retreating. He knew this same retreat, had watched you recalibrate your muscles, swiftly, built to be unreadable against anyone who hadnât spent four years learning your face.Â
His stomach dropped and heat climbed up the back of his neck, jaw tightening on its own. He hated that his body had learned to answer you the way it answered a motor alarm. He hated more that some raw, cornered part in him â still smarting about Mateoâs offhand comment and sore from that folded note â felt it wasnât soothed.
You blinked up at him, and the laugh faded off your face, and you said, easily, warm, âYeah â course. Iâll get right on that.â
He shrugged up one shoulder, lips pressing into a thin line. He turned, already walking away. âWhenever thereâs a gap on your social calendar, I guess.â
He heard the small silence that opened behind him, and he could practically imagine you and Ellis looking at each other. Then, he heard you push back from the desk, the stool wheels catching, and your footsteps coming after him like heâd known they would, because you were the last person to let something like that go.Â
âHey.â You fell into step beside him, voice pitched low, still giving him more benefit than the doubt had earned in the last ten seconds. âWhat was that about?â
âNothing.â He tilted his neck up slightly to do a quick scan of the board, some stubborn muscle in his neck refusing to let him meet your eyes. âGot a department to run.â
âAnd youâve been running it great. You just became weird right now.â He could feel you working it over beside him, shifting on your feet as you toed the line between resident and the hard-won territory neither of you had ever named. âJack.âÂ
âYou want to laugh about your shitty dates, thatâs your business,â he said instead of letting it go, sounding too far from the man whoâd had his hands hovering over yours an hour ago, watching you put in a chest tube, telling you that youâd done well. âDo it a little quieter. This is an ER, not a lunch table.â
His words stopped you for half a step. Jack kept walking, an ugly, cowardly momentum carrying him three more steps before you caught back up.
He heard you recalibrate your voice in real time when you said, âI was charting on a slow shift,â carefully. âYouâve made worse jokes when itâs even more busy. Whatâs this about?â
âItâs about you treating this place like itâs your dating pool and not your place of work.â The words came out much uglier than he meant, and he didnât have it in him to call them back. âItâs not professional. It reflects on the department. Reflects on me. Somebodyâs gotta say it, and apparently thatâs me, since you clearly enjoy it too much to stop.âÂ
You stopped walking altogether this time. He turned to face your stillness whole, then, and found your eyes narrowed at him, looking like youâd been hit from a direction you hadnât been completely guarding against.Â
He let out a breath, fingers going up to his forehead to wipe at sweat that wasnât there. âIâm just saying what ââ
âIâm sorry,â you said, voice going level and courteous, as you nodded quickly. âYouâre right. Youâre my attending, it reflects on you. Iâll keep my personal life out of work.âÂ
âThatâs not ââ he tried, but you were already turning away, shoulders squared and chin level, professional armor snapping into place just like heâd told you to. It should have made him feel better to watch you take it so cleanly, to not make a big deal out of it. All it made him feel was like something had been surgically removed from him.Â
âStop ââ he tried again, to your back now, and the sentence died somewhere between his teeth and the air. That was okay. There was no end to the sentence that didnât sound worse than the beginning anyway.Â
He blew out a sharp breath through his nose, standing in the middle of the floor with his hand still half-raised toward you, fingers curling back into his palm when he realized you werenât there to reach. Jack felt, distantly, uselessly, like the only thing standing still in the entire building.Â
âGreat going,â he heard Lena say, trailing past him, a tray tucked against her hip, not even breaking stride. âYou got rid of the one entertainment weâve got around here.â
His shoulders stiffened, and he caught up with her in three steps, jaw working around words that wanted to spill out defensively and came out simply tired. âItâs not entertainment if she keeps getting hurt,â he grumbled. âSheâs not a show. Stop treating her like one.âÂ
âDidnât look like she was the one getting hurt tonight,â she said, rounding a corner and leaving him standing there.
Jack let out a low groan, running a palm down the lower half of his face, and dropped his hand only when heâd scrubbed enough friction into his jaw to feel it sting a little, which was at least a sensation heâd chosen, at least tonight. He stood there a second longer, staring at nothing in particular. His hands found his hips on reflex.Â
âFuck,â he muttered to himself, and dragged both hands back through his hair, gripping once at the roots before letting go.Â
He rolled his neck, felt it pop unsatisfyingly, and pushed off the wall he hadnât even realized he was leaning against. His leg fucking ached, the burn starting behind his knee. He ignored it like he always did and started walking anyway, jaw still held tight, hands shoved deep into his pockets like he could physically hold himself together with the seams of his own black scrubs.
It was by the lockers after hand-off that Jack saw you next. Both of you had conveniently managed to work over-time; he because there was nothing to get home to, and you â heâd heard through the grapevine â because one of your patientâs little sister was coming in toward close, and you simply wanted to talk with her instead of handing the situation off to one of the day residents.
Usually, nobody had asked you to stay when you did. Most times, there was no version of staying that showed up in your favor; he and Shen were gone, so there was no attending grading you on it; no hours that counted. It was just for a kid who was going to get bad news from a face sheâd seen before, so you cost yourself hours of sleep you most definitely needed to be the soft spot for a strangerâs little sister, and hadnât mentioned it to a soul, and he knew you wouldâve been embarrassed if he brought it up.Â
He found you using the little mirror inside your locker to apply some kind of pink-tubed gloss with one hand while the other ran its fingers through your hair. Jack pursed his lips, eyeing you from the doorway, because he was pretty sure youâd done something different to it in the last ten minutes.Â
âLook nice,â he tried, biting the bullet and walking toward his own locker. âGoinâ somewhere?âÂ
You caught his eyes in the mirror instead of turning around. âJust breakfast,â you said, and there was none of the earlier lilt in it, the warmth that youâd always aimed at him gone functional. You capped the gloss with more force than it needed and dropped it into your bag.Â
Jack stood there a second too long with his hand over his own locker without opening it. Heâd expected â and he knew he was more optimistic than usual for doing so â your easy back-and-forth, his slip-up from earlier forgotten. He wasnât sure what to do with the quiet or you not looking at him properly, hairbrush working through your hair in short strokes.Â
Heâd saved around thirty lives tonight, and that was what he was good at. He was not good, and had never claimed to be good, at the aftermath of hurting a person heâd have put his own body between a stretcher and wall for, without meaning to, over something that had never been about the radiology fellow at all.Â
He opted out of opening his locker and chose instead to lean his bicep against the locker, eyeing you in front of him. âMad at me?â he murmured.Â
You let out a short breath, shaking your head, and he tracked all your micro-expressions through the mirror. âOn the clock?âÂ
âWell, weâve both been off it for a while now,â he said, watching the shape of your mouth in the mirror, waiting for it to give something away. It didnât. âBut no. Asking as your ââ He stopped himself, because âfriendâ seemed not to be the honest word though it was the first one that popped up. âOff the clock. Whatever I am to you right now.â
You set the hairbrush down on the little shelf with more care than the moment needed. âItâs okay, Jack,â you said, shaking your head.
âDonât think it is. Try again.â
You watched him for a second in the mirror, then you turned.Â
âItâs just embarrassing,â you said, and the words came out smaller than anything heâd heard out of you in years. You crossed your arms over your chest. âI respect you and I hate that youâd think for one second I donât take this place seriously.â Your voice cracked on the last word, just barely, and you pressed your lips together. âSo, yeah. Itâs embarrassing to have my attending confirming Iâm exactly what people think I am.â
He was shaking his head before you could even finish the sentence. âNobody thinks ââ
âYou do,â you said, voice rising slightly. âSo, off the clock, Iâm embarrassed, and tonight, Iâm going to be your resident. Because I agree with you. Itâs been unprofessional of me to keep dating within the hospital ââ You threw your arms up halfway by your side, and you let out a short laugh that came out dry and wrong. âAnd I hate that youâve probably been thinking it for four years.â
âI havenât,â he said too fast. God, heâd come here to make tonight better for you, not to make you re-evaluate all your years working with him. âSure, I thought it was none of my business how you spend your good nights off. Didnât stop me from thinking they didnât deserve âem.âÂ
You rolled your eyes. âYouâre just saying that now âcause you feel bad.â
âWish it were that simple,â he said, and chose to leave it unelaborated because it wasnât that simple and he had no intention of explaining exactly why. âHalf the time, you know itâs not gonna work out. Youâre breaking my heart by making me watch you break yours.âÂ
You blinked, and he watched the fight loosen out of you by inches. âItâs just a free breakfast, Jack. Nothing to get your heart broken over.âÂ
Jack let out a huff through his nose, mouth opening to say what, he didnât know. âIs that all? âCause I can get you free breakfast for the rest of your life.âÂ
You laughed, disbelieving, through your nose, some of the nightâs weight finally cracking off of you. âYouâve got a weird way of apologizing.âÂ
âJust to my favorite resident.â He pointed his index finger at you, lazy, and pushed himself off the lockers. His shoulder blades left a faint dust-print on the metal where heâd been leaning. He thumbed in the combination without looking at the dial â muscle memory, years of the same locker â and the door swung open with a rusted squeak. He pulled out his bag. âSo?âÂ
âSo what?âÂ
âYou ditch the fellow.â He slung the bag up over his shoulder, close enough now that he caught the tail-end of the perfume youâd lightly spritzed over yourself. âI buy.â
You looked at him for a second too long, lips pushing to one side, as though you were gauging whether this was a bit or not, another line heâd tossed and wanted to let die on its own. He stood there, jaw set and features relaxing to show you he did mean it, more than he wanted to admit, if he was being honest with himself.Â
âYouâre serious.âÂ
âDo I look like Iâm not?â He nodded once at your locker, your bag sitting on the shelf. âGrab your stuff. Weâre going.âÂ
âFine,â you said finally, reaching over and zipping your backpack all the way before throwing it over one shoulder. âCan you drive? Iâve been taking the subway.â
âWhy?â he asked drily. âYouâve got a car.â
Jack realized, as he watched you slide in across from him and folding both hands around the coffee before it was all the way poured, that heâd never once been on a date where the woman had no idea it was one.Â
It wasnât lost on him what that made him, a man old enough to know better, letting a thing be one thing on his side of the table and another thing entirely on yours, saying nothing to square the difference. But heâd meant what heâd said, and he was going to feed you.Â
You ordered a short stack, eggs, hash brown, decaf on loop. She wrote it down, definitely having heard worse from better.
âThanks for the treat, Jack,â you said when Dina left, bringing the rim of your cup to your lips. âDonât think I couldâve done another breakfast to let him down gently.â
âWe have to make some changes to your lifestyle,â Jack replied, voice rough, as he eyed you.Â
âOh, yeah?â you murmured. âWe?âÂ
âWell, I did have to deliver a note to you today. In all my life working here, thatâs never happened.âÂ
You laughed around the rim of your cup. âIn my defense, I donât think anyoneâs wrote me a note out of an OR either. Thatâs a first for both of us.â
âGlad we share the experience.â
Dina came by with a pot and topped you off without being asked, and placed the food in front of you. Jack watched you reach for the salt before your fork had even touched the eggs, shaking it twice over the plate.
âYouâre gonna give yourself a stroke by forty.â
âYouâre gonna give me a stroke right now if you comment on my food.â But you set the shaker down after the third shake, which he noticed and had to bite back a smile.
Dina dropped his plate in front of him â bacon, eggs, no pancakes â and you were reaching for it with a piece of your fork before sheâd even finished setting his fork down. He gave you a faux-frown, picking up his fork and, without looking, spreading a piece of your hashbrown off the opposite plate in trade. He wasnât sure when the two of you had started stealing bites and sips off of each otherâs stuff, only that itâd started somewhere and calcified into something neither of you mentioned.Â
âRude,â you said, mouth already full.
âLearned it from you,â he muttered, nudging his plate an inch closer to your side of the table, which you took full advantage of.Â
Dinaâs radio crackled through something twangy and close-to-familiar behind the counter, competing with the clatter of a skillet somewhere in the back, the whole place smelling like batter and grease soaked into decades of countertop, syrup that had dried a hundred small amber rings nobody had ever fully scrubbed off.Â
âIâve never been here before.â You absentmindedly cut the hashbrown in half as your eyes raked over the place. âThis a regular spot for you?â
âSince before you joined,â he said easily, but his brows furrowed as he realized heâd been coming here alone for years. He was in the same booth when he could get it, ordered the same order, and it struck to him only now, watching you eat your hashbrowns, how much smaller and less lonely a booth felt with you taking up the other half of it. âUsed to be the only quiet I got on some weeks.âÂ
You hummed. âAnd now?â
âGuess the quietâs pretty negotiable.â He shrugged. âI can go without it.â
You smiled down at your plate, something easy working at the corner of your mouth. A thread of syrup had gathered at the seam of your lips â you hadnât noticed, too busy considering his answer â and before heâd cleared the impulse with the rest of himself, his thumb was already moving, catching it at the corner quickly, no different than when he swiped under your lashline for salt after a bad night.
You stayed still, having gotten used to his hands somewhere during your residency.
âYouâre a mess,â he said, wiping his thumb off on the paper napkin folded under his elbow.Â
âYouâve got coffee on your scrub top,â you said, eyes flicking down to his chest. His brows furrowed and he looked down, and you were right. âPot, kettle.â
Heâd been about to say something else, he couldâve sworn it, but had lost every word of it watching you smile so unguarded, free enough to let him look at you. He had to reach for his coffee just to have something to do with his hands.Â
When the check came, folded in its little plastic tray, you both reached for it at once. Your hand landed flat over his knuckles. Neither of you moved it for a second, for his hand stayed exactly where it was, broad and unmoving under yours, and something unspoken passed through the two inches of fornica between your faces as he raised a brow at you. He slid the tray out from under you slowly.
âSaid Iâm buying,â he said, shaking his head slightly.
The drive back had been quieter than the one there had been. It was nearing ten in the morning, and he knew both of you had stayed up longer than intended, especially for two people who had to clock back in in a shorter amount of time than he deemed plausible to reset completely.
Heâd cracked the window down an inch, and the air coming through carried the smell of wet pavement and the sound of a garbage truck grinding its gears three streets over. Your neighborhood, he was learning, woke up slow; there was a paperboy on a bike, a guy in scrubs different from yours locking up his own car after a shift that wasnât at the PTMC, and Jack drove through it with two fingers loose over the wheel. Neither of you had bothered with the radio.
Youâd gone somewhere billowy around your third cup of decaf, all the sharp edges of the night replaced with something looser and sleepier, and you gave him directions in a voice gone thick from exhaustion as you were likely starting to feel it behind your eyes.Â
He pulled his car along the curb and let it idle, one shoe braced against the floorboard, watching the numbers of your building.
âGonna sleep?â he asked.
âGonna try.â You were already working the bag strap over your shoulder, hair falling loose out of the knot youâd put it up in at some point at the diner, strands of it catching the early light. âIâve got no idea how you do this then take SWAT calls.â
âYouâd be able to do it, too, if I put you on the field.âÂ
You mumbled something, letting your head drop against the window for a second, before picking itself back up. âStop threatening me, Jack.âÂ
He watched you fight your eyelids, his mouth pulling up at the corners at the sight. âCâmon. Get inside before I gotta carry you up.â
You snorted, half-hearted. âYou canât. Youâd throw your hip out.â
âTry me.â He was already rounding the hood before youâd gathered your bearings, boots loud on the quiet street, and you let out another laugh and let him get there first, too tired to argue about who gets to open what.
He walked you up the cracked path, palm settling at the small of your back, and you leaned back into it, half your weight given over without you noticing it.Â
At the door, you fumbled with your keys out from under a granola wrapper and a capless pen, missed the lock twice, and gave up trying on the third. You turned to face him instead with your back against the frame and your bag slowly sliding off one shoulder.
âThank you,â you said, words coming out loose and filtered by the exhaustion even as you tried to meet his eyes head-on. âFor the â everything. The explanation. And the breakfast.âÂ
Jack felt his lips curve up, fingers flexing at his sides. âAnytime.âÂ
âAnd for driving me there â thank you. And for the drive back.âÂ
âUh-huh. You gonna go inside?â he said, voice going quieter as he looked down at the ground, at how the toes of your shoes were almost touching. âOr keep thanking me until you fall asleep standing up?âÂ
You cocked your head to the side, your lips moving upwards into a fuller smile. His own mouth curved as he shifted on his feet slightly, closing the barely-there inch between his shoes and yours.Â
âJack?âÂ
He hummed, and you went up slightly onto your toes before heâd finished deciding what to do with you. Or maybe heâd moved in first, or maybe there was no real order to it at all. His mouth found yours somewhere in that uncertainty, slowly despite it, because heâd already worked out every version of this moment and this one had simply appeared in front of him.
His hand came up to cradle the side of your jaw, thumb settling into the soft hollow just beneath your ears. Your skin was warm despite the cold snap in the air, much softer than heâd let himself imagine, and he felt the exact second your breath caught against his mouth, a small stutter that made his fingers curve around your jaw, index resting against your cheekbone.Â
He kept it slow, it was the only thing he had any real control over right now, the pace of it instead of the fact of it. He used what little he had left, dragging his mouth against yours, like he could somehow make up for four years of nothing by refusing to rush the first thirty seconds of something. His other hand found your waist, and his palm felt how your back curved into him, the hitch of your ribs on an inhale, and he pressed you back the last inch against the doorframe more to ground himself.Â
Your fist found the front of his canvas jacket, dragging him in the last stubborn space heâd been too careful to close himself, and a sound came out of his chest that embarrassed him a little. He felt you smile against his mouth, and his entire body felt warm at having been caught enjoying this entirely as much as he was.Â
He tilted his head so his forehead pressed against yours and pulled his mouth away. His lips jutted out slightly, feeling suddenly empty and unwilling to put the full distance back between the two of you.
Your eyes were still shut, and you were breathing unevenly. âThank you,â you murmured.Â
He huffed a short laugh, and in it, realized how breathless he, too, was.Â
You tipped your chin back up, already chasing him.
Jack felt the want knot up inside him, greedy and unreasonably leaning back in to meet you halfway before the rest of him had caught up and made him stop. He made a small sound in his throat and pinched his eyes shut, letting you get right up to the edge of it, breath already tangling with his, wanting so badly to just let it happen, before his finger came up between you, pressed light against your bottom lip to stop you a hair short. It was more for his own sake than the words he remembered you telling someone years ago ringing in his head.
âAh-ah.â His voice came out rough with want, entirely at odds with his actions. âYour rule. Only one kiss after the first date. Iâm trying ââ he exhaled hard, almost dramatically, ââ trying real hard here to make it to the second.â
âHuh?â Your eyes peeled open. âThis was a date?âÂ
âBest one youâve had Iâm guessing, with the way youâre breaking your rules.â His finger stayed right where it was, and he watched your eyes struggle to focus, still glassy from the kiss. He could feel the warm huff of breath breaking unsteady against his fingertip, could feel your mouth soft and parted underneath it, waiting on him.Â
You pressed a peck against his finger instead, your mouth barely dragging against his skin as a shy smile formed behind it that he felt more than saw. âMaybe.â
âWell, good.â He smiled, despite himself, and pushed himself off your forehead, opting instead to press his lips there. âGet some sleep,â he murmured against your hairline, lips lingering a little longer there. âMight be able to get a full seven hours.âÂ
âWill you?âÂ
âDoubt it.â He pulled back enough to look at you properly, thumb tracing a line along your cheekbone â his touch feather-light, tracking the exact curve of it, memorizing the route â before he made himself drop his hand entirely, fingers curling loosely at his sides because suddenly he had no idea what to do with them without you under them. âKinda got a lot on my mind now.â
âYeah?â You bit back a smile, still not quite steady on your feet. âAnything you wanna share with the class?â
âNot a chance.â He bent a fraction and hooked two fingers under the strap of your bag where itâd slid down to your elbow, dragging it slowly back up to your shoulders, knuckles grazing your arms the whole way. âYouâll find out. Eventually.â
He forced himself to step off the mat â one step back, then the second, putting real distance between you now â forcing ease into his expression that he definitely wasnât feeling. He stopped a few feet away from you anyway, unable to fully commit to walking away, watching you stunned and still in your doorway, mouth a little kiss-soft. He felt so completely helpless and pleased at the sight. âText me when youâre up and Iâll get to planning date two.âÂ
You raised a hand into a wave, fingers curling in the air.
âBye, Jack,â you said, and his name came out of your mouth softer than you probably meant it to, smooth and cushy the way it never sounded on shift.
He lifted his chin up at you once and made himself turn, finally, finding the path back to his car. He made it to the curb before he looked back again, and you were still standing there, one hand braced on the door, watching him go with an expression he was sure he was going to think of the entire drive home.
Ohhhh how perfect!!!
Love it love it
đ€
Three Years
Pairing: Andrew "Pope" Cody x Reader
Summary: You and Pope have loved each other since you were teenagers. And then he went to prison, and cut you off. No apology, no explanation, nothing. Just a sledgehammer to your heart and utter radio silence.
Three years later, he's out, and he wants you back.
Warnings: 18+ Minors DNI: Swearing, Mentions of drugs, Mentions of violence, Alcohol use, Gun use, It's Animal Kingdom there's a little bit of everything, Character death (not a main/canon character), Vague descriptions of mental illness (it's Pope), Smut!! Unprotected pinv (wrap it up guys!), Loss of virginity in a flashback, Brief Craig/Reader (they're besties though), Age gaps/timelines might be a little wonky but oh well, Mentions of abuse (readerâs dad is a bad man), Please let me know if I forgot anything!
Author's Note: I hope you guys enjoy this one! I wanted to experiment with flashbacks, and then this exploded out of my brain. Special thanks to @flowersforbucky for proofreading and dealing with my indecisiveness on the pictures and layout because she is the best!! Please let me know what you think!!
Word Count: 21k
-
The bar is dimly lit. Sticky. Loud.
The guy sitting across from you has nice eyes. Pretty, even. Theyâre a light blue, crinkled a little in the corners and looking at you with something like adoration. You try to appreciate it, you really do, but all you can see is naivety. Maybe youâre too cynical. More likely too damaged. Whatever.
You prefer brown eyes, anyway.
Warm brown eyes looking into your own. Large fingers tucking your hair behind your ear. The ghost of warm breath against your lips and a small curve of a shy smile as he leans closer and closes the distance between you-
You blink, and force a smile.
The guy across from you, Ethan or something, clears his throat. âSo, do you wanna maybe-â
A beer hits the table, loud enough to make the man - though you should really call him a boy, with that collared shirt and combed hair and those innocent eyes - jump nearly a foot in the air.
âMove it, pal.â
Craig Fucking Cody stands above you, and you bite back a groan.
The boy stammers, pales at the sight of the gigantic, tattooed man beside you, and takes maybe a full twenty seconds to stammer out his next words.
âI-IâŠare you herâŠâ
âOh yeah, Iâm her husband. Fresh outta the psych ward and everything. Now beat it, before I smash your head against the table.â
The boy bolts like Craig set the booth on fire, and you glare up at him.
âI was on a date.â
Craig laughs, like you were genuinely joking. âNot exactly your type.â
âYou donât know what my type is.â
âPretty sure I do. I shared a wall with your type for most of my life.â
You clench your jaw. âWhat do you want, Craig?â
He sits across from you, all friendly familiarity, and smiles. âI need your help.â
âI donât do jobs anymore.â
He raises his eyebrow, and glances pointedly towards Ethan in the corner of the bar, trying to save face by ordering himself another drink.
âI told you, that was a date.â
âCâmon, donât lie to me. You think I donât know when youâre working an angle?â
You narrow your eyes a little. âOkay, fine. I donât do jobs with the Codys anymore.â
Craigâs smile falls a little.
Burning rubber in your nose. Panic in your throat. The shriek of the tires drowned out by your own voice as you grab frantically at the wheel.
âBaz what the fuck are you doing? What are you doing? Turn around!â
Bazâs hand darts out, and he slams you back against the seat so hard your teeth knock together. âItâs too late.â
âWhat the fuck are you talking about? We canât just leave him-â
âWe have to. He was too late. You know the rules. Itâs him or all of us.â
Youâre frantic. Panicked. You even start to yank at your own car door, like you might jump out and run back to the bank on your own two feet, and Baz slams you backwards again.
When he makes it to the house, you punch him in the face before you even get out of the car. He takes it, head whipping to the side like he expected this reaction from you. When you get out, you punch him again. It takes both Craig and Deran to pull you away.
âHeâs out of prison, you know.â
You take a sip of your drink. âGood for him.â
âHe keeps asking about you.â
Yeah, bullshit. âIâll bet he does.â
Craig sucks his teeth, and seems to decide to pick a different battle.
âSo, itâs a good job. You barely have to do anything. We just need your help with-â
âI donât do jobs with the Codys anymore, Craig. Also, I donât know if you realize this, but using my ex as an incentive to help you isnât really boosting my interest.â Ex. Your ex. It still feels so weird to think of him like that.
Because heâs justâŠPope. Andrew Cody. The love of your life since you were a teenager. Even when you were together, âboyfriendâ felt like too simple of a word to describe what he was to you. It was too intense for such a lame title. Too full of a love so deep it bordered on obsession.
And then it was all over. Just like that.
Craig is making a face. You frown back at him. âWhat?â
âItâs my job, okay?â He runs a hand through his hair, flexes his fingers on his beer. âAnd itâs good. Iâve worked my ass off at planning it, and Baz is out, so I justâŠI need it to go well. And it will go well if you help.â
You grip your drink a little tighter. Fucking Craig. Fucking asshole with the terrible decision making skills and good heart. Fuck him for being your friend. For making you care about him. For giving you that look thatâs making you feel like-
âFuck. Fine.â God help you. âFine. Fine. Okay. Fine.â He grins at you, and you glare back at him. âBut I donât want to see Pope.â
Now itâs Craigâs turn to give you a look. âAbout thatâŠâ
-
Your outfit is so fucking uncomfortable you want to die.
Okay, maybe itâs not the outfit. Maybe itâs the anxiety twisting in your stomach so intensely you think you might vomit in the driveway of the Cody house.
Youâve been here since he went to prison. Since you broke up. Not for long - you havenât exactly been in the habit of hanging out by the pool or anything - but whether youâre here for a minute or an hour this damn driveway always whips the memory of that horrible day back into your mind more violently than a slap.
-
âPut me down. Put me the fuck down Iâm gonna-â
âJesus, relax!â Baz throws his hands up, angry and defensive and so very punchable right now. Deranâs got you locked against him, feet kicking in the air like you might be able to land a blow if you just try hard enough. âI had to go! He got held up or some shit, and if the cops caught us the whole family would have gone down.â
âYou just fucking left him there! We could have-â
âWe didnât have a choice. I made a decision. I saved our asses. We knew this was a risk. It always is.â
âFuck you.â
âYeah, yeah. Fuck me.â Baz runs a hand through his hair, and you know heâs heartbroken too but you couldnât give less of a shit right now. His nose is still bleeding from where you clocked him a minute ago. âFuck me for making the hard decisions for this family.â
Rage rises up in your throat again, threatening to choke you as you kick harder. âBoo fucking hoo. You left him! You fucking left him and-â
âCalm down.â Itâs Deranâs voice now. Deran, who sounds choked up and is still holding you locked in a vice grip. The sound of it makes you look up at Craig, whose eyes are shining with tears, andâŠ
Your feet drop back to the pavement, the sound and sight of the boysâ pain deflating you almost alarmingly quickly, and you pat the arm around you in both comfort and reassurance.
âOkay.â You breathe, shaky, and Bazâs shoulders drop.
âOkay.â He repeats, and the sound of his voice makes you grit your teeth. âNow that weâre all calm, we need to figure out what to do.â
-
Heâs in the yard.
Three years later, and heâs just⊠in the yard. Standing there. Staring at you. And what did you expect? That he would drag himself out of a grave? Appear before you in an explosion of fire and blood?
He looks at you. You look at him. He doesnât move an inch.
He looks good. Just as beautiful as the day you lost him. You hate him for it.
âHi.â His voice sounds even lower than it used to. He looks bigger. Like he worked out a lot in prison.
You raise your eyebrows. Something curls deep in your core at the sight of him. Three years later, and you still canât look at this man without feeling a physical reaction. âHi.â
-
âYouâre bleeding.â
You reach up, swiping the back of your hand over your lip and frowning at the smear of red across your skin, illuminated by the moonlight reflecting off the pool.
âYouâre not the only one who can get into fights.â
Andrew Cody looks at you, with those dark eyes that always seems to see through whatever lie you try to tell him or even yourself, but you meet his gaze with the defiance of a teenage girl who really doesnât want to talk about it.
âAre youâŠstaying here again?â He asks, standing still from his spot beside the pool. Youâre on a chair. Your face hurts. Your body aches. You nod.
âSmurf says I can crash for a few days.â In exchange for help, of course. Help with jobs. Connections. Money. You donât mind. Itâs better than being home, or hiding out on the beach again.
He still hasnât moved. âAre youâŠgonna stay in Craigâs room? With him?â
You almost laugh out loud. Craig, big and rowdy and often immature even for a teenager, is closest to you in age. He might be your best friend. He definitely has a crush on you, and youâre almost positive that Smurf is angling for the two of you to get together.
âWhy? Would that bother you?â
âYes.â
You look up at him. He looks down at you. Slowly, almost unaware that youâre doing it, scoot over on your chair to make room, and he takes the invitation. Your heart hammers in your chest.
His hand comes up. Fingers brushing over a bruise on your cheek and eyebrows twitching withâŠ
âStop looking at me like that.â
He doesnât. âLike what?â
âLike you want to kill someone for me.â
âI do.â
âI know.â
Heâs close. His thumb is still brushing over your cheek, and his eyes fall to your lips. You think he might kiss you. You donât think youâve ever wanted anything more.
But thisâŠthis house, as chaotic and dangerous as it may be, is the only somewhat stable thing you have right now. The only safe place to go when things get too fucked up at home. When your petty criminal of a father takes things too far, or debt collectors come banging on the door. Smurf lets you stay here, and Smurf is always working an angle. Youâve told yourself a thousand times that, in exchange for this, youâll go along with whatever plan she has for you.
This is not that plan.
And yet, as his face ducks closer to yours, fingers curling in your hair, you wonder what it would be like. To feel Popeâs lips against your own. To feel his body against yours as he lies you down right here on this pool chair. You think, despite his violent tendencies and episodes of something your uneducated mind can only call insanity, that he would be gentle with you. Like he always is. You donât have much experience with boys, but you think he would make sure that you felt comfortable. Heâd probably kiss you through any nervousness, whisper reassurances into your skin as he peels off your clothing, make you feel safe the whole time and-
His lips brush over your own, and you pull back.
âIâve gottaâŠgo inside.â
He searches your face, and you know that his observant eyes see the want there. Still, he nods, and stays where he is as you pull yourself to your feet.
-
âWe should talk.â
You laugh, humorless, and push past him into the house. You donât get far before you feel his hand on your arm, turning you towards him.
âLet go of me.â
He does, but he tilts his head and furrows his brow in that intense way he has. The familiar sight makes you ache. âWe should talk.â
âI think the time for talking passed somewhere around three years ago, Andrew.â You grumble, and he fixes you with an expression so filled with helplessness and pain that you almost crumble right then and there.
You ignore him, and push your way into the house. Craig whistles at the sight of your too-tight dress and heels, and Deran greets you with a familiar smile.
As you start to plan, to prepare for the day ahead, you donât turn around. You donât look at Pope. His eyes donât leave you the entire time, and itâs almost physically impossible to keep yourself from leaning back against him like you have a million times, over the course of a million similar meetings.
But you donât look at him, and when itâs time to leave, you storm out of the house before he has a chance to catch your arm again.
The job. Focus on the job.
You can do this.
-
You lost your virginity to Craig Cody two weeks after you and Pope nearly kissed by the pool.
You donât know why you did it. Well, you do. Itâs what Smurf wants. Itâs what Craig wants. Itâs what you should want. You and Craig are well matched. You love him in whatever way you do. Heâs your best friend. You know how to keep him in check when he acts like an idiot, and he knows how to make you laugh when the weight of everything feels like itâs going to fucking crush you.
So you had a couple of beers at a party. You grabbed his hand before he could get too wasted. Even for a teenager, heâs already fucking huge. Handsome, too. You know the other girls stare at him. You should feel proud that he follows you like a lost puppy the moment you start tugging him towards his room.
It was awkward. And messy. And nothing like the movies say itâs supposed to be like. You know he tried to make itâŠspecial, or whatever. He was gentle. He asked if you were okay between kisses as he laid you back on his unmade bed and helped you out of your clothes. When he pushed in, youâd gasped and clawed at his back, and heâd mumbled apologies into your neck and waited until you nodded that you were okay, but he still moved just a little too fast. A little too clumsily. It didnât hurt too badly, and it wasnât exactly unpleasant the whole time, but you didnât feel fireworks or any of the overwhelming pleasure you thought you were supposed to.
When it was over, heâd kissed you, and youâd smiled up at him, and then heâd rolled over and pulled you into his chest and laughed.
âThat was awesome.â He breathed, and you nodded. âYouâre awesome. Was itâŠdid you?â
âYeah.â You think you did. There was a minute, somewhere towards the end, when it had felt pretty good. Not the explosion of pleasure youâve always heard about, but thatâs fine.
âAwesome.â He kissed your forehead, and sat up a little. âWanna beer?â
Youâd smiled, heart swelling with affection that should definitely feel moreâŠromantic than it does. But itâs still affection. You still care about him a lot. Maybe this is supposed to be right. âYeah.â
~
Pope Cody hasnât looked at you in a week.
Smurf seems more than happy with you sleeping in Craigâs room. With him wrapping an arm around you when you all sit on the couch together. Heâs even developed a habit of ducking down and pressing a kiss to your cheek when youâre standing in the kitchen, or before he does a backflip into the pool. Itâs fun. You think you can get used to it.
You havenât had sex again. Heâs asked, almost every night, but youâve always come up with some kind of excuse and heâs always responded with nothing harsher than a disappointed smile. And yet, you both stay up almost all night every night, talking and laughing and playing video games like you always have since the day he first brought you to this house. This family.
But Pope wonât look at you, and you canât ignore it anymore.
Because he came home from a job with a black eye and bruised knuckles, and now heâs standing in the yard and Smurfâs chastising him for being reckless is still ringing in the air. He didnât talk. He didnât argue. He just stared at the pool and refused to look at her. At you.
And now youâre alone with him, and everyone has left to go regroup or party or whatever, and he still. Wonât. Look. At. You.
âAndrew.â You rarely use his real name. He tenses, but he doesnât turn around.
âLook at me.â
He doesnât. You snap.
âWhy wonât you look at me?â You grab his arm, and turn him toward you, and he pulls it away.
âStop it.â
âNo.â You grab him again, and this time he catches your arm, fingers around your wrist in a vice grip that is firm but nowhere close to painful. His eyes remain on the pavement.
âYou havenât talked to me since I got with Craig.â You say, and his jaw clenches at your words. You can see his cold expression, now, if not his eyes. Heâs older than you, but his face still holds the smooth roundness of youth. Heâs just as handsome as always. Your heart stutters a little, like itâs supposed to with Craig.
When he still doesnât answer, you shove at his chest. The sudden movement makes him release your wrist, but he doesnât budge. âFucking look at me! Why wonât you at least look at me? Are you seriously this pissed off because I hooked up with him? Stop being an asshole and tell me why youâre acting like this!â
âBecause it should have been me!â He finally snaps, finally looks at you, and the sharpness of his voice paired with the intensity behind his dark eyes is enough to nearly make you stumble backwards. âIt should have been me. You know it should have.â
He looks almost crazed, now, shoulders hunched and fists clenched and feet moving towards you until you take an instinctive step backwards. The movement doesnât stop him. He still comes closer.
âYouâŠyou let him touch you. And kiss you. And do all of the things IâveâŠâ he trails off, and your breath freezes in your lungs, âthe things Iâve wanted to do since I met you.â His eyes drop to your mouth, back up to your eyes, and heâs close. So close. âIt should have been me.â
You donât move back again. You can feel the warmth of his proximity in the chilly night air. Your voice is too quiet to your own ears. âThatâsâŠnot the plan.â
Heâs not breathing regularly. His hands are still clenched at his sides. He looks you over, like heâs trying to fight it, before something finally breaks.
âFuck the plan.â His voice is almost a growl, and you donât have time to respond before his hand is on the back of your head and his mouth is against yours.
The world explodes.
His lips are warm and rough, demanding and desperate and sending fire through every vein and pore in your body. You choke on a whimper, surprising yourself with the sound, and Pope groans in response as his tongue sweeps its way into your mouth. Your hands fly up, curling in the fabric of his shirt before moving up to his hair like you donât know how to touch all of him at once. His own hands move down, lips only leaving yours long enough for him to grab the backs of your thighs to lift you against him before heâs kissing you again.
You donât even register that youâre moving, too caught up in the desperation and the feeling of something hot burning in your core. He presses you against a wall, trails his lips down your throat until youâre gasping for air, before he kisses you again and moves deeper into the empty house.
And then heâs lowering you back onto his bed, crisp sheets smooth against your back, and you barely let him pull away enough to crawl over you before youâre kissing him again with so much need that itâs almost embarrassing.
His rough palms are sliding up beneath your shirt, breath turning shaky at the feeling of your skin against his, and it feels so good you think you might die.
âIs this okay?â He whispers, lips against your cheek, and you nod.
âPlease.â You donât know what youâre begging for, but the sound of it makes him moan as he pulls your t-shirt over your head and trails his mouth down over your collarbone.
His own shirt comes next. You roll on top of him, and kiss and bite down his chest until heâs tangling his fingers in your hair and pulling your mouth back up to his, rolling you both once more until youâre on your back and your hands are fumbling with his belt, unpracticed and clumsy, until he shushes you gently and reaches down to help you with a lingering kiss to your cheek.
âTell me if itâs too much.â He rasps after a while, and you can barely breathe enough to tell him that you will. You settle for a nod, and his rough palm slides over your stomach, up over your body until heâs cradling your cheek.
âIâve got you.â He whispers, and the soft words are almost comical with how hard heâs trembling with restraint. With how dark his eyes are, how intense his touch feels. âBreathe. Iâve got you.â
You nod, and when you smile he smiles back, shy and nervous behind that starved expression, and that one look alone makes you feel like youâre floating.
Itâs nothing like Craig. It isnât like Pope is a whole lot more practiced, or some kind of sex god or anything, but every movement feels so much moreâŠright. He slides his hand beneath your thigh, guiding it around his waist and watching your face as your bodies join together for the first time, and the noise that pulls its way out of your throat barely sounds human.
His breath comes on a shaky exhale, eyes never leaving yours as he searches your face for signs of pain or discomfort, and when he finally starts to move you feel something coiling so tightly in your stomach it almost hurts.
Every slow thrust, every reverent touch, tightens that coil. Every kiss. Every whispered word against your skin as his fingers catch your own and he presses your joined hands into the pillow above your head.
You reach the edge so quickly it shocks you, free hand clawing at his back as you bite down on his shoulder and fireworks explode behind your vision.
The feeling is so intense that, for a moment, you forget where you even are. You forget your own name. All you know, all you feel, is Pope moving with you. Whispering praise and promises of adoration against your lips and throat. When he follows you into oblivion, itâs with a breathless moan of your name.
After, he holds you like youâre the most precious thing heâs ever touched. He traces his hands over your skin. He follows the caresses with his lips. And, when you finally remember how to breathe again, you giggle.
He pulls back from your throat with a raised eyebrow, a smile curling on his own lips, and nuzzles his nose into your cheek. âWhat?â
âI didnâtâŠâ you didnât know it could feel that good. You didnât know anything could feel that good. âIâŠwow.â
He really does smile, now. He tucks you closer to him, barely letting you go as he pulls you beneath the blankets with him and curls his body around yours. Protective. Possessive, even. âYeah.â He murmurs, pressing his lips to the side of your head. âWow.â
-
The future Mr. and Mrs. Franklin need to be convincing. Happy. Overwhelmingly in love.
Your heels click against the dock. It takes years of practice and training from Smurf to keep yourself from fidgeting in your expensive dress. Popeâs eyes are on you, burning holes into your head from behind his sunglasses.
âStop looking at me like that.â
âLike what?â
âYou know like what.â
âYou look nice.â
âShut up.â
The door to the yacht opens, and you donât have time to keep the argument going. Pope slides his arm around you, you grin wide, and he tugs you almost too-tightly into his side.
âWelcome!â The woman on the other side of the door is smiling in that fake and familiar way that people do when theyâre trying to get a whole lotta money from rich people. âMr. and Mrs. Franklin, right?â
âSoon to be.â Pope says, all confidence and practiced casualness. He catches your hand in his, the expensive ring glittering obnoxiously on your finger, and raises the back of your hand to his lips. You giggle like an airhead, tilt your head onto his shoulder, and grin up at him.
âAdorable.â The woman says, too emphatically, and you donât miss the way her eyes rake over your âfianceâ. You shouldnât care. This isnât real. Heâs not⊠yours anymore. And yet, itâs hard to shake off the surge of possessiveness that nearly has you yanking him down and pressing your lips to his.
When she turns to lead you both into the yacht, you try to pull your hand out of Popeâs. He doesnât let you go. You turn to glare, and he offers you a small smile and a squeeze of his fingers through your own.
Fine.
-
âIâm sorry. He refuses to see you.â
âIâŠâ you blink, shake your head, and tell yourself you heard the guard wrong. âWhat?â
âBelieve it or not, even prisoners have a right to refuse visitation. He said he doesnât want to see you.â
You blink again. âThatâsâŠthatâs not true. That canât be true.â
âYou can try again next week, but in my experience youâll probably have the same reaction.â
-
You try again the next week. And the next. You stop sleeping. You stop eating. You wait for a phone call. An explanation. You go to Smurf. You go back to the prison.
Six weeks later, he finally fucking agrees to see you.
You nearly rip the phone off of the wall. He doesnât look right in a prison uniform. He doesnât look like heâs been sleeping. âWhat the fuck, Andrew?â
At your use of his name, his real name, you swear you can see something like relief flicker in his eyes, like the sound of your voice is a drug heâs been deprived of for over a month. Youâre about to keep talking, or even press your hand against the glass like some lame fucking cliche, the sight of his face lifting something heavy off of your soul.
âStop calling.â He says simply, and your heart drops to your feet.
âWhat?â
âStop calling. Stop showing up here. Stop.â
âIâŠâ what? This isnât happening. He wouldnât do this. âWhat? Pope, Andrew, I didnât leave you.â Thatâs almost, almost incriminating. You know that. But it could also mean anything. Youâre his girlfriend, after all. Heâs in prison. Youâve been trying to see him. You havenât left him. The last thing theyâll probably assume is that youâre talking about leaving him to be arrested after robbing that fucking bank.
âI know.â He says simply, and meets your eyes. âI donât care. Leave. Stop coming here. Iâm not going to come see you again.â
You donât know what to say. You donât know how to breathe anymore. This is so fucking wrong and it doesnât make sense and-
He places the phone on the receiver, stands up, and leaves.
Thatâs the last time you see Andrew Cody for three years.
-
âAnd here we have the reception deck. As you can see, the view will be absolutely spectacular, especially when youâre out on the waterâŠâ
Four exits. Three cameras. One, twoâŠ
âIâm so sorry. Is there a bathroom I can use?â You ask brightly, from where youâre hanging off of Popeâs arm. âOr Iâm sorry, the head, right? Like they say on boats.â An airheaded giggle, a practiced bat of your eyes.
The moment youâre around the corner, you whip out your phone and start taking notes and pictures. Exits. Entrance points. Doors to the lower deck where Craig can-
âWe need to talk.â
You actually yelp, whirling around and stumbling on your heels before Popeâs arm shoots out to curve around your middle and keep you from falling over.
âWhat the fuck are you doing?â You hiss, wide eyes shooting back towards the hall. âNow? Let me go.â
âYou wonât talk to me. I have to-â
âSo youâre gonna fuck up the job? They could be here any second. Youâre supposed to be distracting them.â Heâs lost his fucking mind. Clearly, prison has warped his brain and made him an irrational asshole who-
The click of heels against the hardwood floor. A familiar, professional voice calling out your fake names with too much curiosity and suspicion.
âFuck.â You whisper, and start scrambling to pull away and hide your phone. âFuck.â
In one swift movement, Pope snatches the device out of your hand, slides it into his back pocket, presses you against the wall and slams his mouth to yours.
Like always, even after all of this time, the feeling of his lips against your own sends a jolt of electricity through your entire body.
He kisses you like he hasnât thought about anything else in the last three years. His lips move hungrily against yours, one large hand coming up to tangle in your perfectly-done hair as his body envelops yours until you canât think of anything else.
His tongue traces over your lip, and you open for him instinctively until he groans and changes the angle so he can kiss you more deeply and it feels so fucking good you might-
âOh, Iâm sorry. I didnât mean toâŠinterrupt.â A bright, awkward voice breaks you out of your trance, and you gasp as you wrench your mouth away from Popeâs. He doesnât even turn to the woman, thumb pressing into your cheek as he traces it over your skin like heâs trying to re-memorize the feeling.
It takes a lot more effort than you want to admit to clear your throat and plaster a flustered and embarrassed look on your face. To fall back into the ditzy, wealthy fiance facade. To keep yourself from ignoring her completely and kissing Pope again to chase that euphoric fucking feeling for as long as you can.
âOh geez. Iâm so embarrassed.â You reach up, and pinch Popeâs cheek just a little too hard with one manicured hand, feigning bright affection. âI just canât keep my hands off of him, you know?â
âItâs so nice to see a couple soâŠin love.â A tight lipped, professional smile. Another glance at Pope that has irritating possessiveness curling in your chest again. You donât have a right to feel that way. Not anymore. Not even afterâŠwhatever that was. âWould you two like to continue the tour?â
-
When Craig found out, he punched Pope in the face.
Pope punched him back.
When you lurched forward, prepared to jump between them and stop the bullshit macho display, Smurf had stuck her arm out and pushed you back.
âLet them fight. They need it.â She said, voice even, and kept her eyes on her two sons as they wrestled each other near the pool.
âThis is bullshit. They-â
âYou know,â she interrupts, still not looking at you. âWhen I took you in off the street, I wasnât expecting you to stir up so much trouble.â
You freeze, heart stilling in your chest. She could send you back to your family. Your father. Being thrown out on the street would be bad enough on its own, but Smurf doesnât work that way. If she wanted to really hurt you, she would.
âI didnât mean toâŠstir up anything.â
She looks at you now, assessing. âI believe you.â She hums, and pulls her arm back. âGo break them up now, baby. See if you can fix your mess.â
-
âWhat the fuck was that?â
âA distraction.â Popeâs hands are on the steering wheel. His eyes are on the road.
âAnd before that? Cornering me in the hallway when Iâm trying to gather fucking intel?â
He frowns. His fingers flex on the steering wheel. âItâs been three years.â
âAnd whose fucking fault is that?â
His brow furrows like he genuinely doesnât understand why you would ask that. âTheâŠU.S. prison system.â
âYou know exactly what I mean. Donât be a dick.â
âIâm not being a dick.â
âPull the truck over.â
He does look at you, now, and you can see surprise in his eyes from where theyâre visible over his shades. âNo. Why?â
âIâm walking. Pull the truck over.â
He turns back to the road. One hand drops off the steering wheel, like it might come to rest on your thigh the same way it has in almost every car ride for years, before he catches himself and returns it to its original spot. âYou can barely stand in those shoes.â
âSo Iâll take them off. Pull over.â
âJust let me talk to you. Please.â
âNo.â
His head drops back against the seat, jaw clenching in frustration, and you feel a surge of pride that you still seem to be the only person who can break through his little bubble of stoicism. Yeah, take that asshole. Be as exasperated as you want.
You donât speak to him for the rest of the car ride.
-
Craigâs nose is bleeding. His feet are in the pool. Heâs holding an ice pack to his eye.
âDo you hate me?â You ask, feeling almost childish for the question.
He laughs. Actually laughs, like you just said something ridiculous.
âNah. Couldnât if I tried, I think.â
You frown. âThen why did youâŠâ
He shrugs, takes a sip of his beer, and smiles at you. âI mean, he did fuck my girlfriend. Iâd be a little bitch if I just let him get away with that.â
âIâm not your girlfriend.â
âWell, not anymore.â
âI was never-â
âCâmon. Iâve got a shiner and a broken nose. Donât hit my ego, too.â
You laugh, and shake your head. âYouâre an idiot.â
He holds up his beer in a silent cheers, and thereâs nothing but affection in his eyes as he takes a swig. No pining. No longing. Not even hurt or betrayal. JustâŠaffection.
You smile at him, and your heart swells in that way you once tried to convince yourself was romantic attraction.
âI thought Smurf was gonna throw me out.â
He frowns now, and shakes his head. âShe wonât. And if she does, Pope and Iâll just come with you.â
You smile again. You know it doesnât reach your eyes. Craig leans over, and bumps your shoulder with his own.
âNo matter what, that assholeâs not gonna hurt you again. Youâre gonna be okay.â
âAnd if Pope ever fucks up, Iâll be here. I know Iâm the best sex youâve ever had, anyway.â
You snort. âCraig-â
âEgo, remember? Lemme have this.â
You poke him in the bruised ribs, and he hisses in pain before he laughs again.
You believe him.
-
When you get back to the house, you lurch out of the car before he can even reach for you. You stumble on your heels, kick them off of your feet in the yard, and storm into the house.
âWoah, hey there Hurricane Lady.â Craigâs grin falls the second he sees your face. âShit. What happened?â
âNothing. Hereâs the phone. Itâs got the pictures. Exits. All of that shit.â You want to snap that maybe Craig could have just done this himself, having gotten himself a job there, but you know that he doesnât get access to the same places you just did. âIâm off the job.â
âWhat?â
âSheâs not off the job.â Popeâs voice, from the door, makes you prickle.
âYou donât get to decide whether Iâm on or off the job.â You whirl, and glare. âYou donât get to decide shit about me. Not anymore.â
âJesus.â Deran blows out a breath, eyes on Pope. âYou didnât tell her, man?â
âTell me what?â
âShe wonât let me tell her.â Pope looks frustrated. Pained, even. Like he has any fucking right to be.
âTell me what?!â
âJust tell her.â
âIâve been trying-â
âTell. Me. What?â
âHe cut you off in prison because the cops were coming after you.â Craig says, and the words shut you up. âThey were investigating your involvement. He had to cut ties so you didnât incriminate yourself.â
Oh. Oh.
âPope. Andrew. I didnât leave you.â
âCan I talk to you now?â Popeâs voice is low, and heâs doing the head-tilt thing, and you swear your lips are still tingling from his kiss.
You stare. He stares back. You open your mouth. Close it.
And then you walk into his room.
You donât even need to turn around to know heâs following you. You hear Craig whistle the wedding march behind you, and you flip him off over your shoulder.
Popeâs old room is empty. The bed is made like it always was before.
âBeautiful. So beautiful. All mineâŠâ
He whispers the words into the flushed skin of your neck, reverent and laced with gravel as his body moves against yours like it was made to. You gasp his name, and he groans as he moves faster.
Some party rages down the hall. The sounds of it are distant and inconsequential. All you can hear is his shallow breathing. His whispered promises of love between presses of his lips to any part of your skin he can reach. You love him so much it hurts and youâre going to-
You shake the memory off. Clear your throat. When you turn to him, heâs looking at the bed like heâs remembering something similar. Well, there are a lot of memories like that in this house. In the house the two of you shared later. In his truck. By the pool. In the pool. On the beach. At the-
Fuck.
âTalk. You wanted to talk, so talk.â
He watches you. You watch back, tense.
âThey were looking for a reason to arrest you. The cops thought they might have identified you on that job a few months before. The one at the dispensary.â
You just keep staring at him. He shifts on his feet. âI couldnât tell you. They were listening to everything. I figuredâŠit was the only way to keep you out of prison.â
âThree years.â
Guilt flickers across his expression. Something like desperation follows. His fingers flex by his side. âI didnât know when they stopped investigating you. Just when they stopped asking me questions.â
âThree. Years.â
âI missed you every day.â He moves closer, hesitant, like heâs trying to make sure you donât bolt. âEvery fucking minute. I thought about you all the time. ItâŠit killed me, to walk away like that. I still think about the look on your face. IâŠâ his jaw clenches, and he reaches towards you.
You should pull back. You should slap him, maybe. You know he would let you.
âYou risked the job.â You try. Try to find something to cling to your anger. Your hurt. You missed him so much and all of that pain doesnât just go away with one explanation.
âFuck the job.â He whispers, hand sliding up over your cheek. âItâs been three years.â
And then heâs kissing you. Rough. Hungry. Desperate in a way that makes your knees threaten to give out because holy shit nothing has ever felt as good as Pope Codyâs skin against yours.
For a moment, you forget. You forget to be angry and hurt and painfully confused in favor of tangling your fingers in his curls and dragging him closer to you. He groans, the sound rough and borderline desperate, and his hands drop to your waist, lifting you clean off your bare feet to spin you both until he has you pinned against the wall.
His chest is pressed against yours. His hand is moving down to the hem of your dress, and you think you can feel his fingers shaking as they skate up over your skin and a shiver falls down your spine.
But it isnât enough. This isnât enough. It feels so good that it kills you to pull away. But his fingers are sliding up the inside of your thigh and if they reach their intended destination there wonât be anything in the world that will be able to stop you. To stop him, either, if how hungrily heâs kissing you now is any indication.
Because his kiss doesnât make up for the hours you spent alone, in the house you once shared, staring at a phone that wouldnât ring. How humiliating it felt to cry yourself to sleep with your mind filled to the brim with questions that you would never have answers to.
His mouth is gliding over your jaw, down over your throat, and his grip on your waist is so wonderfully tight and his fingers are so close to where you need him so badly it hurts and-
You shove him away, breathless and flushed and almost shaking with hunger, and his dark eyes have never looked so predatory.
âYouâŠyou canât do that.â You whisper, and he looks like heâs about to do exactly that again at any moment. You hold up a hand, warding him off, and force yourself to steady your breathing. âNo, you donât get to do that. You donât get to just show up again and kiss me like that.â
âIâm sorry.â He starts, expression filled with a genuine pain.
âYou made me think, for three years, that you didnât love me anymore.â
âIâm sorry.â He moves closer like itâs instinct, and you back up a little more into the wall, and he looks like heâs about to drop to his knees before you. âIâm so fucking sorry. I did it to protect you. I promise. I couldnât think of any other way.â
You push past him, and walk out the door.
For once, he doesnât follow.
-
âWhere is she?â
Youâre not here. You havenât come since he got out.Â
âShe doesnât really come around anymore, man.â Craig shrugs, like itâs casual, like your absence isnât digging a hole into Popeâs soul even as he sits here by the pool and you should be here but youâre not and he fucking hates it. He should have apologized to you ten times over by now. You should be here with him.
âShe comes around every now and then. Watches Lena. Grabs a beer with me on Tuesdays and surfs with us if we ask nicely.â Craig leans back, and Pope fights the urge to lean forward and beg for more information. âShe doesnât talk to Baz, though. I think the most Iâve seen them interact is her flipping him off or some shit.â
Yeah, sounds like you.
âSo, you gonna talk to her?â
Yes. Of fucking course he is. Heâll be on his knees begging the second youâre in the room.
But you donât come. You donât show up at the house anymore. You changed your number, and he canât call you. Despite what Craig said, itâs almost like youâve made yourself into some kind of ghost, too far away for him to reach anymore.
When he was in prison, he would fantasize about the day he got out. In most of those fantasies, you were waiting for him at the house. In a good few of them, you werenât wearing much clothing, but that part can be easily attributed to how long he went without seeing you.
Nevertheless, you were there. And he would take you into his arms, and you would smile and tell him you understood why he had to do what he did, and everything would be perfect.
But now, he has to track down your new house. On the beach, and not too far from his new place, but he doubts you know that.
He watches through your window and doesnât even register that it might be a little fucked up of him. He makes sure you get home safe. Waits until he sees you climb into bed and flick off your lights, and often spends a good long while imagining all of the times he would be right there with you. How he would tuck you into his chest, and the two of you would have whispered conversations like you were still teenagers living in Smurfâs house and trying not to be overheard.
He doesnât go to the door. Itâs not the right time. Not yet. It isnât like it has to be perfect, but⊠but itâs been three years. Three years of torture and an isolation that almost killed him. That may have killed a part of him, somewhere deep down where even he canât reach. As badly as he wants to stand on your porch and beg and plead for you to understand, to love him again, he isnât sure he would be able to handle you slamming a door in his face. Heâs not sure he would be able to let you, and that thought alone almost frightens him more than anything else.
Not yet. The job. When Craig brings you in on the job, thatâs when heâll see you. Talk to you. Make you forgive him.
JustâŠnot yet.
But that doesnât mean he canât keep an eye on you, until then.
-
The effort it took to get Ethan the Finance Bro to talk with you after Craig ruined it the first time is almost making this particular job too much of a pain in the ass.
Itâs a little tricky to balance the work you have to put into the boat job with your own plans, but your own jobs are a little less complex than the ones enacted by the Cody boys. Less reward, sure, but itâs safer and easier. Find out a few things about Finance Bro Ethanâs rich dad, get access to an account or two, make a couple of unnoticeable transfers, and bing bang boom. You can afford rent and to fix your car, and maybe even a nice pair of shoes while youâre at it.
Heâs jumpy. You have to smile a little more brightly at him, hold his hand across the table and bat your eyelashes as you insist that your friend from before is just terrible at making jokes, and heâs finally relaxing enough to-
His eyes trail up over your shoulder, and stop.
âLeave.â And thatâs Popeâs low, furious voice. It is dripping with danger.
Ethan looks at you. Back at Pope. You smile, wide and sweet, and refuse to turn around. âIgnore him.â
âDo that, and Iâll cut your ears off.â
Son of a bitch.
âHeâs joking.â
âThree.â
Ethan starts to scoot out of the booth.
âDonât.â You say, jaw clenching and smile still forcefully bright.
âTwo.â
And heâs gone. Just like that. Out the door and ruining your plans completely.
âFucking Codys. Do you have any idea how hard it was to get him to talk to me again?â
âWho was that?â
âI had to bend over backwards to keep him from being terrified after Craigâs bullshit. This bra is so uncomfortable. You fucking-â
His hand comes down on the back of your chair, and he leans closer to you with a deadly and dark expression. You donât flinch. You donât even come close. In all the time youâve known him, in all of his scariest moments, heâs never come anywhere close to harming you. The possibility simply doesnât register in your mind. âWho was that?â
You look at him, deadpan. âMy boyfriend.â It couldnât be farther from the truth, but you may as well piss him off a little.
It works. His jaw clenches, and he leans a little closer. âIâm serious.â
Fine. You give up. âHe was a mark. Iâm on a job.â
âYouâre already on a job.â Popeâs frown deepens, angry eyes moving up to the door again. âThat guy was staring down the front of your shirt.â
âThatâs kind of the point.â You glance down at your low cut top, at the aforementioned uncomfortable bra, and when Pope does the same you can see something twitch in his jaw. Feel his hand tighten imperceptibly on the booth behind you before he looks back up at your face.
âWeâre leaving.â
âNo, youâre leaving.â You correct, irritated, and move to turn away from him.
He catches you, turning you back towards him with a look so intense it makes your heart drop. âCome home with me.â
You pause, knocked off-kilter by his proximity and the desperation in his gaze. He looksâŠdangerous. Like a man in a desert who has been deprived of water for too long, and is starting to lose it enough to follow that water to a bar and ruin her weeks of work.
And yet, itâs annoyingly difficult to care. Not when it would be so easy to bring your hand up, curl your fingers in the soft curls on the back of his neck, and pull his lips down to yours. So, so easy, and yetâŠ
You start to move back, and his hand catches your chin, thumb sliding over your jaw in that familiar and devoted way that always makes your toes curl a little. He saw it. He saw the hesitation. The want in your expression matching his own, and heâs too far gone to let it go.
âCome home with me.â He repeats, soft and close enough that his nose nearly brushes your temple. âWe can do jobs together. Like we used to. You donât have toâŠdo this.â
You spent so long being a team. Being with him. Every job, every move, it was all with Pope and the Codys and while you can do these smaller jobs alone perfectly fine, you wantâŠ
Him. God, you want him. Not just sex, either. Though after three years and the way heâs standing so close you can feel the warmth radiating from him, youâre having a hard time not jumping his bones in the middle of this bar. You want to wake up with him in the mornings again. You want to watch him wash the dishes in that particular and concentrated way he has. You want to sit on the beach with him at night, and talk about everything and nothing until the sun peeks over the horizon.
His nose skates down your cheek. The noise of the bar fades away. Your eyes flutter closed as if of their own accord, head tilting to the side, and he makes a low noise as his fingers leave your face to move down your arm.
âIâm sorry.â He murmurs, lips pressing against the line of your jaw, and your next breath comes as a shaky exhale. His hand slides around the curve of your waist, and the angle of his body above yours is intoxicatingly overwhelming. He kisses your jaw again, a little higher, a little closer to your ear, and you melt. âIâll apologize a thousand fuckinâ times, okay? Just come home with me. Let me show you how sorry I am.â
Your body relaxes beneath his, and you feel his mouth trailing over your skin like he couldnât give less of a shit about the rest of the world around you. Itâs so familiar. So nice. So warm and-
Goddammit.
âStop.â You push on his chest, and he moves back with a genuinely pained expression. âStop it, Pope. You just fucked up a month of work for me. Iâm not going home with you.â
The look on his face would break your heart, if there was anything left of it to break.
You donât say another word.
You just leave.
-
The girl sleeping on the couch is the most beautiful girl heâs ever seen.
Craig brought you here a few hours ago. Said something about you taking on three guys by the beach who were trying to rough him up over weed money. You hit the biggest one with a baseball bat. They knocked you out before Craig could take them down.
Smurf hadnât said much when Craig walked in, eyes bright with lingering adrenaline as heâd placed you on the couch, but sheâd seemed impressed when Craig had explained what happened. Sheâd told him to leave you on the couch for now, and to make sure you didnât get any blood on her furniture. Your face is bruised. Your sneakers are dirty. Youâre wearing a flannel thatâs way too big and has holes in it.
âI think sheâs been sleepinâ on the beach.â Craig says, brow furrowing a little as he looks down at you. Youâre so still you could be dead. Pope wonders what color your eyes are, and then wonders why he wondered that.
âJunkie?â He asks, and resists the urge to brush the hair out of your eyes. Like Julia, maybe. Maybe you know her, wherever she might be right now. Maybe you already have that connection to him. MaybeâŠ
Craig shakes his head. âNah. Not a junkie. I dunno if sheâs homeless, either. I just kinda see her around sometimes. She pickpockets tourists. Seems good at figuring out which ones are the L.A. douchebags.â
Pope frowns. Your face twitches a little, but you donât wake.
âSheâs hot.â His younger brother observes, and Popeâs frown deepens. âAnd badass. You shoulda seen her, dude. She went at them like a fuckinâ demon. She doesnât even know me.â
You look so angelic, curled in on yourself on the couch with sand in your hair and dirt under your fingernails, that he finds it hard to believe.
Hard, but not impossible. Because thereâs something about you, and the bruises on your face that look so much like the ones that often adorn his own, that screamsâŠfighter. Survivor. Protector.
And he hasnât even spoken to you yet, but thereâs something else there. Something deep down and warm and intrinsic that he canât exactly pinpoint but certainly canât ignore.
His.
-
When you wake up, heâs watching you. He knows he probably shouldnât be. He probably looks creepy, or whatever everyone says, but he canât seem to pull his eyes away from the rise and fall of your breathing. The way your face twitches every now and then in sleep. The way your hair spills over the couch cushion. He wants to brush it away, but heâs afraid to wake you.
Your eyes flutter open. Theyâre beautiful.
And those beautiful eyes move dazedly around the room before they land on him, and widen. You bolt up, and hiss in pain as whatever injuries you sustained in that fight no doubt scream in protest.
You look at him. Look around. Look back at him.
Carefully, he passes you the baseball bat from his room. Craig said you had one before. Youâre in a strange new place. It might make you feel safe.
You close your fingers around the handle, and watch him like a hawk as you pull it over to you.
âWhere am I?â He likes the sound of your voice. Even cracked with sleep and shaky with nerves, it sounds as pretty as the rest of you.
âMy house.â He says simply, cocking his head to the side. âCraig brought you here.â
Craig is passed out in his room down the hall. You took a while to wake up. You frown, and rub your head a little.
âWhy did you do it?â The question leaves him before he can think, curiosity lying heavy in his chest. People in Oceanside donât just help other people like that. Not when it could put them in the same state you ended up in.
âThree to one didnât seem like fair odds.â
Pope takes this information, and holds it close to his heart. Keeps it there like a flame heâll never let go out.
You sit in silence for a minute before he speaks again.
âDo you want a sandwich?â
You look up, surprised, and your lips quirk upwards just the smallest bit.
âSure.â
-
The knocking is loud. Very loud. Angry, even.
When Pope opens the door, there you are.
Fuck, itâs like you donât even know how beautiful you are. Heâs always been surprised by that. Sure, you use your looks and pretty smiles to work people on jobs, but when that persona is lowered and youâre justâŠyou, the sight of you could make him drop to his fucking knees.
âYou fixed my door.â
Heâs shirtless. Itâs early. Your eyes drop down to his chest before they fly back up to his face, and he is two seconds away from yanking you into the house and taking you right here in the front hall.
Shit. Three years. Three long, long years of nothing but his hand and memories of you. Heâs devolved into a fucking animal. All he can think about is ripping that t-shirt off of you. Of lifting you onto the table right here and dropping to his knees, hearing the noises he can pull from you when he buries his face between your-
âYou fixed my door.â You repeat, angrier now, and he furrows his brow as he forces himself out of the fantasy.
âYeah.â
âPope, you donât know where I live.â
His brow furrows a little more.
âFine, I havenât told you where I live.â Oh, thatâs what you mean. Right.
âIt was creaking.â
âHow many times have you broken into my house?â
Seven. âI donât know what youâre talking about.â
âAndrew.â
You should know better than to say his name. His real name. The sound of it shoots something molten through his veins, and his hand tightens on the doorframe.
âWeâre broken up. You canât break into my house.â
âWeâre not broken up.â The fact comes easily. Simply. Thereâs no plea behind it. No question at all.
âWeâre broken up. You broke up with me.â
âNo, I didnât. I said stop coming around. I didnât break up with you.â
âWhatever you did, it was three years ago.â
âAnd youâre not in prison.â He wants to ask why youâre not getting it, but he knows that you do. Even if most wouldnât, you know how he thinks. Youâre just being deliberately obtuse because youâre angry. But heâll spend the rest of his life apologizing to you, if thatâs what you need. âIâm out. We still love each other.â
âYou donât know that I still love you.â
He raises an eyebrow. âTell me you donât.â
You open your mouth, like you just might try it, before closing it again and trying another tactic. Heâs always found itâŠcute. The way you try to deflect your feelings like this. And heâll never try to pretend that he doesnât love how easily he can call you on it. There are two things in this world that Andrew Cody is absolutely confident in: jobs, and you.
âYou fucked up my job.â
âYou hate those jobs. They bore you.â
Your eyes narrow, and youâre gorgeous when youâre angry. âI donât have a backup plan anymore. I need the boat job to go well.â
Youâre stalling. You donât want to leave. âIt will.â He raises an eyebrow again. Your eyes drop back down to his bare chest, and it sends a thrill through him. âWant some breakfast?â
âNo.â Youâre still standing here, and he knows you too well to let you leave just yet. The tension crackling through the air, emanating from you and directing itself at him, is so fucking obvious it almost makes him grin.
âCoffee?â
You hesitate. Frown. âFine.â
And with that word, you cross the threshold, and kiss him.
-
Your first job with the Cody family went well. Really well.
Smurf shocked all of them by inviting you in, building up her tests of your skills and your loyalty to the family until she suddenly justâŠmade you a part of it. Sat you down at the family meeting with them and told you what your part in the job would be.
Baz protested. Deran was quiet. Craig, however, was thrilled. Pope is pretty sure his brother likes you a little too much, and he hates the way it makes jealousy and possessiveness curl black and vile in his throat. He hates the way Smurf seems to assess this. The way she watches you keep Craig in line and encourages the two of you to spend time together.
But you did well. Really well.
And then, after dinner, you disappeared.
Pope found you up the street, sitting on a small curve of beach and watching the moon like you were greeting an old friend. Heâd hesitated to join you, like he might be interrupting, butâŠ
âHi.â
Shit. âHi.â
âWanna sit down?â
Yes. So fucking badly. Heâd do anything in the world to just be close to you. âDo you want me to?â
âYeah.â
He hesitates. You look back at him, illuminated by moonlight and so gorgeous it stops the breath in his lungs, and pat the sand beside you.
He sits, and you rest your head against his shoulder. Like itâs the easiest thing in the world.
âAre youâŠokay?â Do you expect him to function correctly right now? Do you expect him to be able to string a thought together? Youâre so warm. So soft. He doesnât have experience with this kind of thing.
âOh yeah.â You hum, fingers curling in the sand beneath you. âI mean, if youâre asking if Iâm upset about you holding an unloaded gun to my head while I pretended to freak out, donât worry. Iâm fine.â You mean it. Smurf would be impressed.
He could cover your hand with his own, right now. You might even let him. You might let him curl his fingers around yours, and even flip your palm to rest it against his. Your soft skin against his rough callouses, pillowed by the sand beneath youâŠ
âSo whatâs wrong?â
You hum, and he feels it vibrate through his shoulder. âI donât know. Smurf, the job, everything just feels like itâs going too well.â
âToo well?â
âThings change. They hurt when they change. Itâs tooâŠgood.â He starts to say something, though he isnât sure what, before you continue. âThatâs why I like coming out here, though. I like looking at the water. Itâs why I slept on the beach when things got too shitty at home, you know?â
He turns his head, and it brings his face so close to yours that he almost chokes. You donât even look up, just keep watching the waves crash on the beach as you continue.
âIt sounds kinda cheesy, but the ocean is soâŠbig. And no matter whatâs going on with me, no matter how bad things seem, it makes it all feel smaller, you know? All that ocean, everything going on beneath the surface, and whatever bullshitâs happening to me just feelsâŠinconsequential. More manageable, I guess.â
Oh God. Fuck. He loves you. He loves you so much.
His hand, knuckles still bruised from some fight he got into earlier this week and already so much bigger than your own, covers yours. You stop picking at the sand, but you donât pull away.
âIâll always be here.â He murmurs, some part of him terrified that youâll jump away from him. He means it. He really does.
And you mean it too, when you turn your palm and slide your fingers through his, and murmur back. âThank you.â
-
Itâs a fucking whirlwind.
You donât know what possessed you. What you were thinking. Just that you are magnetized to this man, and heâs standing there looking at you like he knows every thought in your head and like he loves you more than anything in the world and you canât spend another second without his lips against your own.
He meets you just as hard, hand coming up to grip at the hair at the base of your skull as you walk him backwards into his house. You realize, vaguely, between the blur of lips and teeth and desperate hands, that you havenât even seen the inside of it yet. Even now, itâs weird for there to be any aspect of Popeâs life that you donât know about.
The tour, however, is going to have to wait. Because Pope has you pressed against the counter and you barely have time to gasp his name before heâs lifting you onto it, tugging your shirt up over your head and tossing it aside before ducking down to trail desperate kisses over your neck. You tangle your fingers in his hair, and pull his mouth back up to yours, biting down on his lip until he groans and reaches down to start tugging your pants over your hips.
âBedroom.â You manage, somewhere between a choked moan and a drag of your nails down his muscled back that has him sinking his teeth into your throat.
âThree years.â He replies, the words a starved growl, as he rips your pants and underwear down over your legs. All you can do is nod your understanding and drag his mouth back to yours, hands leaving his face to reach down and tug his sweatpants over his hips.
He pulls back, just enough to press his lips to your ear, and you canât help but whimper when he murmurs his next words.
âTell me you want this.â
You curl your fingers in his hair, pull him closer to you, and barely manage to gasp out a soft confirmation of âI want this, Andrewâ before heâs pushing into you and it is everything youâve missed for too long and it feels so good you might fucking die.
You gasp, and hold him tighter, and he breathes a shaky exhale into the hollow of your throat as he goes very very still.
You make a soft noise, needing more, and he understands immediately because he knows every inch of you better than he knows himself.
âThree years.â He murmurs again, hoarse and apologetic as his hands grip the counter on either side of you. You realize what he means through the haze of lust, and a bubble of laughter tears its way out of your throat. The sudden movement makes him hiss, cursing softly against your throat as his hands fly up to grip your hips. You clamp your lips together in an attempt to stop your giggling, and when he pulls back to look at you he starts laughing too.
And then, still smiling, he kisses you slow and deep, and begins to move. The moment he does, all humor flies out the window, and you gasp as you lock your legs around his hips and scramble for purchase against his back.
Itâs fast and desperate, like he really and truly canât help it, and it is absolutely perfect. Fuck, itâs everything you have ever needed in your entire life and more. You cling to him, wrapped in his arms and burying your face in his neck to try to muffle cries that might wake the entire Strand. He doesnât stop, but his grip tightens as he adjusts his movements to grind deeper, fingers tangling in your hair to pull your head back from his shoulder until you can feel his ragged breaths against the shell of you ear.
âYeah?â He whispers, hoarse and smiling and already wrecked as the force of his movements makes stars explode behind your vision. Then, closer, his nose against your temple and his grip almost bruising on your skin. âYeah?â
You just nod, and hold on for dear life as you fall over the edge with a cry of his name, and he follows right after you with a choked moan of yours.
For a moment, you both just try to catch your breath, wrapped in each otherâs arms with your legs shaking and Popeâs shoulder warm against your forehead. He kisses the side of your head, soft and loving, and huffs a laugh into your hair as he pulls back to press his lips to yours.
âI missed you.â He whispers, and youâre smiling too.
And then, without warning, he hoists you into his arms and starts walking.
âWhere are we going?â You ask, still laughing, still smiling, still blissed out beyond words.
He kisses your forehead, your cheek, and kicks a door open. âBedroom.â
-
Once the initial violent desperation has faded, Pope takes his time with you. He works you apart piece by piece, like heâs relearning every inch of your skin. He kisses every new scar. Every familiar freckle. He makes you forget every word that isnât his name, tells you he loves you until heâs hoarse with it, and you do the same to him. In the confines of his room, in this new house on the beach, you forget about every morsel of pain youâve felt in the past. Every tear youâve shed. Every lonely moment.
At some point, when heâs trailing slow kisses up the inside of your thigh and your fingers are tangled in his curls, you manage to come back to yourself for half a second.
âWeâre not back together.â You murmur, and he looks up long enough to raise a dark eyebrow at you.
âWeâre not.â You repeat, and he gives you another look, this time with both eyebrows, before nudging your thigh further aside. He doesnât speak, and he doesnât need to, because in the next five seconds you completely forget how to form coherent thought.
-
The sun is setting by the time youâre both too exhausted to continue. A few minutes ago, you broke apart long enough to make your way to the shower, where youâd lasted about five minutes before heâd slipped in behind you. You managed to hold back long enough to shampoo each otherâs hair before lathering off had turned into kissing beneath the stream, which had turned intoâŠwell, into you pressed up against the wall, his chest against your back and his teeth buried in your shoulder as your fingers clawed against the tile and your vision turned white for the umpteenth time today.
Now, his fingers card through your still-damp hair, and you wonder vaguely if youâll ever walk again.
âHoly shit. We havenât done that sinceâŠâ you trail off, brain as mushy as your muscles seem to be, and you feel Popeâs proud smile against your forehead.
âThree years and forty nine days.â He supplies, and you canât hold back your giggle. âDay after the jewelry store job.â
âRight.â Christ, it really is a miracle that you survived three years apart when you used to go at each other like coked out bunny rabbits. âForgot about that.â
âI didnât.â
You swat at his chest, and he tucks you closer to him, tilting your chin up to press his lips to yours.
-
For the first time in three years, you wake up in Andrew Codyâs arms.
And heâs asleep. Heâs soundly, completely asleep. Heâs always been a light sleeper, but despite that there are certain circumstances that have been known to knock him out like a log.
Heâs completely out now, arms wrapped tightly around you and deep breaths tickling the top of your head.
There was always so much chaos in your lives. So many things that could go wrong at any moment, so many risks taken every single day. There was Smurfâs manipulations, Craigâs irresponsibility, Deranâs tendency to disappear and worry everyone, Julia being gone, and BazâŠwell, Baz being a raging douche most of the time. All of it was always so much, but right here, right like thisâŠthis was always where you felt safest. All of the insanity would always be a million miles away, blocked out by the circle of Andrew Codyâs arms.
Which is probably why it feels like a physical stab to your chest when you carefully wiggle out of them.
He grunts, one arm reaching out as if searching for you, but he doesnât wake.
You allow yourself one moment to stare at him. One long, aching moment. Heâs so beautiful in the moonlight that he almost hurts to look at.
And then you slip on one of his tshirts, wiggle into your jeans, and disappear out the door.
You donât bother pulling your shoes back on, letting the sand cushion your feet as you wander down the beach, and listening to the waves crash against the shore.
Heâll wake up soon, and heâll find you. And when he does, heâll pull you back into his arms and the two of you will sit on this beach like you used to. Watch the waves and the stars like you used to. Youâll talk, and heâll apologize, and he isnât very good with words but youâll understand him and youâll forgive him. Just like that.
Youâre not ready for that.
So you pull out your phone, and dial the only other number you have on speed dial. The only number besides Pope Codyâs.
âWhere the hell have you been?â Craig shouts into the phone, mirth lacing his voice even through the tinny speaker.
You glance down at Popeâs t-shirt. Plain white. Too big for you. Soft and draped over your body like a flag with his name on it.
Oh well. âYouâre gonna give me a whole lotta shit for it.â
He laughs, and you hear a bottle clink somewhere on the other side of the phone. âSo whyâre you callinâ me?â
âCause Iâm crazy, I guess. Or an idiot.â
âOr both.â
You hum, and bend down to scoop some sand into your palm, letting it trickle between your fingers as it falls back to the earth. Youâre confused, and still hurting, and your heart aches heavy in your chest. In moments like this, youâve always wondered what it would be like to have one of those girl best friends in rom-coms. The kind who would split a bottle of wine with you on the couch and talk for hours about boys with you. That must be nice. You wonder if they really exist, somewhere where life is normal.
Well, you donât have that. You have Craig Cody.
âIâve gotta go off grid for a minute.â You say, and trail your eyes back towards Popeâs darkened house. You have minutes before that light flicks on, and you cave. âWanna get drunk?â
Craig blows out a long breath, and you can almost see him raising his eyebrows and resting his elbows on his knees.
âSure. Where are you?â
-
Pope hasnât seen you in three days.
Deran is the one who called him, frustrated and concerned and grouching about you not being able to handle your liquor.
âItâs weird, dude. The balance is gone. Sheâs not talking him out of shit anymore. Theyâre just kinda ramping each other up.â He hears the clink of bottles. Shouting in the background. Maybe, somewhere, your laughter. âWhatever you did, come fix it. Because your girlfriend is doing body shots on my bar and Iâm not about to get shut down because those two are acting like fucking idiots.â
âI didnât do anything.â Heâs already grabbing his keys. You fell asleep in his arms, for fucks sake. You spent the entire day letting him whisper apologies and promises of love into your skin. He thought you were good. It felt like everything was back to normal, and then you were justâŠgone.
Sure, there was a moment where you insisted you werenât back together, but when that sentence is quickly drowned out by âOh God oh God Andrew please donât stopâ itâs a little hard to let the words sink in.
Heâd searched the beach for hours. Called your phone even when it became blatantly obvious that youâd turned it off. He went to Craigâs house, and his brother wasnât there. You didnât take your car when you disappeared. Heâs been worried sick about you and now youâve been on some kind of bender?
âYou did something.â Deran doesnât seem to be grasping the gravity of this situation. Everything was fine. Why are you still upset? âThey havenât done this kind of shit since you dumped her in prison.â
âI didnât fucking dump her.â He needs to focus on not breaking too many traffic laws, but he senses a few irritated comments coming his way. Annoyed as Deran may be right now, he fucking adores you almost as much as Craig does, and Pope can hear genuine worry in his tone.
âYou should probably look up the definition of dumping, dude. Telling her to fuck off and not talking to her for three years is pretty-â
âJust tell me if sheâs okay.â The words come out harsh. A snap of anger in the quiet car.
âJust get here.â The phone clicks off, and Pope almost throws it out the window.
-
Everything is nice and fuzzy, and youâre having a very fun time.
You donât have anywhere near Craigâs tolerance, nor his penchant for anything stronger than alcohol and weed, so this âbenderâ hasnât exactly consisted of you partying straight through like he has. In fact, it took until tonight for him to pull you off of his couch and tell you to stop wallowing and have fun.
And you had listened. Oh boy, had you listened.
You started at Craigâs house, letting him amp you up and remind you to get angry between shots of tequila.
âHoly shit, just say it. Say it already!â Craig stands, waving the shot in front of your face before shoving it forward. âAre you mad? Sad? Câmon, quit beinâ such a closed book! Who the fuck is that helping?â
âIâm angry!â You take the shot, down it, and sputter.
And then you smash the glass against the wall.
âThere she is!â Craig shouts, enveloping you in a drunken hug, and you let the rage build in the safety of your friendâs arms as you start to giggle like a fucking lunatic.
âGimme another.â
He whoops, lets you go, and grabs the bottle.
And then you went to the Cove, and drank margaritas and let Craig convince you to get angrier. Angry because Pope left you. Because it hurt so bad it felt like a piece of you had broken off, and angry because he showed back up and brought all of that pain with him and just expected it all to be better.
And eventually, you ended up in Deranâs bar, hammered and laughing and trying to remember why you were mad in the first place.
That is, until Pope Cody shows up.
Youâve seen him look scary before, with that furrowed brow and those shark eyes, but now he looks downright murderous.
Thatâs okay. You can be angry too. You are angry.
âWeâre leaving.â He says, simply, wrapping an arm around you before you shove him off.
âNuh uh.â You step back, and his frown deepens.
âDude, lay off. Sheâs just blowinâ off some steam-â
âWhat the fuck are you doing, man?â Pope stands too close to Craig. Looks way too angry. He doesnât get to be mad. He broke your heart. He left you alone.
âWhatâre you doing?â Craig, larger than Pope and already too drunk and coked out to think rationally, matches the furious energy. âYou think youâre cool just walkinâ in here and making her go home?â
Something twinges in your drunken mind. Tells you to step in. To stop this.
But youâre too late.
âMaybe Iâm sick and tired of pickinâ her up off the floor because you did some shit to make her bawl her fucking eyes out.â Craig shoves Pope. Hard. âSeriously man, whatâs the fuckinâ matter with you? You think she deserves this shit?â
Pope punches him in the face.
You just stand there for a moment, drunk and shocked, and it takes a good moment of them brawling and shoving each other into the bar before you realize that you should get in the middle of this.
Someone, some guy who was flirting with you a while back, tries to grab you and pull you away. You slam your elbow into his face, and he releases you long enough for you to leap onto Craigâs back, yanking him away from Pope just in time to feel your back slam into the corner of the bar hard enough to make you lose your grip.
You fall back, feel something smash beneath you, and groan as a bolt of agony shoots through your body. Fuck. Fuck, thatâs gonna leave a mark.
The fight stops. The bar goes quiet.
Hands pull you up, slurred apologies spilling past Craigâs lips in a panic as he sets you on your feet and looks down at you with a horrified expression. Youâve had worse, sure, but the bruise isnât gonna be pretty and you know damn well heâs gonna feel guilty about it tomorrow.
You look up at him, reach up to pat his chestâŠ
And puke on his shoes.
You hear him mumble a quiet âoh, fuckâ before heâs shoved aside, and Pope is there. Pope, who is scooping you up into his arms without a word and carrying you out of the bar.
âSorry.â You mumble, and he doesnât respond, but he squeezes you a little more tightly to him and that feels like enough.
He places you down in the passenger seat of his truck, and presses his lips to your forehead before he moves to the drivers side.
Youâre suddenly very, very exhausted. You thunk your head against the window, and close your eyes as the engine starts.
You feel Popeâs hand on your leg, warm and comforting and familiar.
It feels like home.
-
âLook who finally decided to come home.â
Your fatherâs voice is nails on a chalkboard. A skin-prickling, hatred inducing rasp that makes your entire body tense.
âThis isnât home.â You drop your keys on the counter. Itâs not home. It never has been, but now that you have a real home the difference has never been more obvious to you.
You left your home tonight. Left the warmth of Andrew Codyâs arms. He hadnât woken, as exhausted after the job as you were, but heâd hummed sleepily into your neck and tried to squeeze you closer as youâd wiggled your way out of his embrace.
Your father scoffs, and doesnât look up from the TV. âYou think that place is home? You whore yourself out to that psycho Cody and now you canât give half a shit about the guy who raised ya?â
Itâs your turn to scoff. You donât answer. He keeps going.
âYou think that crazy kid loves you? You think youâll get to leave and run off into the sunset with him? The ticking time bomb ainât gonna love you. None of âem are. I know Smurf. Sheâs keepinâ you around because that shithead prefers to fuck you over going berserk and killinâ everyone in the house. They donât give a shit about you. They use you. Sâall youâre good for, anyway.â
That hits you. Harder than it should.
No. No, heâs wrong. Heâs an asshole, and heâs wrong. Andrew Cody loves you more than life itself. Thereâs no question there.
âŠRight? Itâs not like you even know what love is, being raised by this of shit. And Popeâs love isâŠobsessive. You donât mind it. You like it, actually. But-
No. Fucking no. Youâre not letting him get in your head. You canât.
Because thereâs Craig. And Deran. And even Baz, sometimes. Smurf likes you, and she most certainly sees you as a pawn, but⊠but Craig is your best friend. Craig laughs at your jokes. Hugs you so tightly your ribs might crack sometimes. Stays up to talk to you for hours by the pool.
And Pope loves you so much that it consumes him. Even you canât doubt that. The way he looks at you, the way he touches you, the way he kisses you like heâll never be able to get enough. His shoulders relax when you enter the room. His smile is the brightest thing youâve ever seen. You even wake up to him watching you sleep, sometimes, tracing his calloused fingers over your skin with his eyes half-open like heâs fighting sleep just so he can look at you a little longer.
And the last time your father took things too far, the last time you came back with bruisesâŠ
Youâd spent an hour talking Pope down from coming over here. Youâd spent longer convincing Craig and even Deran to stop fucking encouraging him to, to stop insisting that theyâll help him end this asshole.
Thatâs love.
And that gives you the strength, the courage, to move over to your father and lean one hand on the back of the couch, glaring daggers into his eyes.
âThe only reason youâre still alive, is because of me.â It sounds like a fucking growl, so angry and unlike you. âDonât forget that.â
Your father just smiles, like youâre wrong and he knows it. You want to punch him. You want to prove him wrong, and let Andrew kill him.
You walk out the door, instead.
-
He sits you on the edge of his bed, and itâs just like before. Like every time youâve been drunk or even sick since you were kids. He kisses your cheek, asks if itâs okay, and when you nod he pulls your t-shirt up over your head, quickly replacing it with one of his own. Your pants go next, and then he tucks you beneath the blankets of his bed and brushes your hair from your face.
He hesitates to pull his own shirt off, wonders if you might be too drunk and upset to want him near you. You never have before, but heâs realizing pretty quickly that before is more removed from the present than he expected it to be. Three years in prison, daydreaming every day about coming home to you and explaining why he did that he did and having you forgive him right away wasâŠwell, a daydream. He may have been able to lose himself in the fantasy of your unconditional love and forgiveness for three years, but you were here. Alone. Wondering what you did wrong and missing him on a level completely separate from his. He didnât experience any of the confusion. The lack of understanding. The pain that comes with that.
You reach out, and push the hem of his shirt up. He pulls it over his head, a slave to your needs and whims, and helps you unbuckle his pants until heâs sliding into bed beside you and pulling you into his arms.
âYouâre mad at me.â
You tilt your head into his hand, and nod.
His heart breaks, eyes softening and hand smoothing over your cheek as he leans closer and presses his forehead against yours.
âWhy?â He asks, a genuine desperate pain cracking the word as it leaves his throat. âI thoughtâŠI thought we were good.â
You make a soft noise, and lean against him a little more.
He whispers your name, presses a kiss to your cheek, and inhales deep, trying to memorize your scent.
âIâm not good at this. You always tell me.â Another kiss. Fingers curling in your hair. âTell me what to do. Tell me how to make you stop hurting.â
You curl a little closer.
âYou left me.â You finally whisper. âYou promised you never would, and then you left. I worried about you for three years.â
He pulls you closer. Feels tears prickle in his eyes and guilt churn in his stomach.
âI went to the beach, and it didnât feel better, because you werenât there.â Your fingers curl against his chest, right over his breaking heart. âI thought you didnât love me anymore. For three years.â
Fuck. âIâll never stop loving you.â If he holds you any more tightly, it might hurt the bruise on your back. Heâs gonna fucking kill Craig for that, accident or not. âNever.â
And then, quietly, almost a whisper as you drift off but just loud enough for him to hear it and almost die right there, ââŠI donât know if I believe you, anymoreâŠâ
-
The boat job goes well. Really fucking well. Save for Marco cutting a womanâs fucking finger off, everything goes off without a hitch.
And youâre proud. Really fucking proud. Craig was always capable of this kind of thing if he just applied himself, and here you all are. Richer than before and still riding that all-too-familiar adrenaline high.
âGeez, Pope really did a number on you.â You reach up now, poking lightly at his black eye. He flinches, and huffs out a sheepish laugh. You saw this coming when you decided someone would have to beat Craig up, and Pope volunteered a littleâŠemphatically. But still.
âPretty sure heâs got some pent up anger.â He rubs the back of his neck, eyes scanning over you. âHowâs your back?â
You cringe, and resist the urge to rub the still-bruised area. âItâs fine. The hangover was worse.â
Craig looks like heâs about to turn you around inspect the injury himself, but one glance over your shoulder to where Pope is no doubt glaring from across the bar is enough to make him cave with one last guilty look. Heâs apologized maybe a hundred times for the mistake, and youâve forgiven him every time. After all, he didnât mean it, and youâve definitely had worse. âDamn, how bad?â
Your head is pounding, and you just barely managed to make it into the bathroom before the rest of last nightâs tequila expels itself from your stomach.
Not five seconds later, you feel a large hand curl in your hair, pulling it back into a makeshift ponytail while another palm rubs small circles on your back.
âOh, the humanity.â You whimper, pulling back to lean against the wall. You flinch at the movement, and give Pope a miserable look. âChrist, did I get hit by a truck last night?â
âYou broke up a bar fight.â
âWhy the fuck would I do that?â
âIt wasâŠbetween me and Craig.â
You frown, and try to piece the fuzzy memories together. âDid you kill him?â
âNo. He fell back against the bar with you on his back, so Iâm going to.â
Ah, thatâs where the pain is coming from. You look him over, shirtless and beautiful and achingly familiar, butâŠ
âHave you slept?â
He frowns, and looks like heâs fighting the urge to reach for you. âNo.â
Ugh. This is stupid. Bad idea. You should leave. You are not together anymore. You will not-
âOkay. My head hurts. You need to sleep. Back to bed, big guy.â You reach out, and make grabby hands at him, just like youâve done a million times before. Every time you were hungover, every time you were sick, or even one time when you just twisted your ankle trying to dive into the pool.
His smile is so full of adoration and relief that it nearly makes you cry. He doesnât hesitate, moving to scoop you into his arms with a soft grunt of âcâmereâŠâ
He lays you down, and you pull him with you, tugging the covers around you both before tucking yourself into his chest and reaching up to scratch your nails lightly over his back in the way thatâs always made him melt.
âI love you.â He murmurs, warm fingers brushing through your hair. âIâm sorry-â
âShhh. Go to sleep.â You press your lips to his shoulder, and feel him shiver a little at the feeling. âHead hurts, and you need to sleep.â
He takes a moment to speak, but then he nuzzles his nose into your hair and drops his arms down to pull you closer to him. âOkay.â
âIâve had worse.â You smile, and clink your beer against Craigâs. âThanks, though. You did fucking amazing today.â
Your friendâs smile, despite the damage to his face, lights up the entire room. âFuck yeah I did. You did, too.â
âAw, shucks.â You grin, and itâs just like before. Just like when you were kids, riding the adrenaline high together and laughing your way through the car chases and the gunfights despite Pope and Baz and even Deranâs concern. You nudge him, and smile a little wider as you gesture towards the door. âRennâs here.â
He turns, and the way his eyes light up makes your heart swell impossibly more. That, right there. Thatâs how you look at Pope. How he looks at you. That little spark behind his eyes is exactly what heâs always deserved.
âYou two back together?â
âNah. I mean, I dunno. Maybe. WeâreâŠyou know.â
You clink your beer against his, and meet his eyes. âJust donât fuck it up again, okay? Youâll be fine. Donât overthink.â
His eyes trail behind you, to where Pope is most certainly still watching you, and he raises a pointed eyebrow.
You scoff. âShut up.â
-
Thatâs the problem with good things. They always end.
Youâre at the bar, sitting beside Pope like you have after a thousand jobs, and despite your conviction to keep your heart safe you canât help the way it melts when his hand covers yours, large fingers threading through your own.
âDo you wanna go home?â
You hum, and lean into his side despite yourself. It was a pretty big day, after all, and nothing sounds better than curling up in bed with him and sleeping until noon tomorrow.
You open your mouth to agree, feeling his thumb trace lightly over your knuckles, and-
Your phone dings. A specific ringtone. One that makes you feel like an anvil has been dropped into your stomach.
âIâll be right back.â You murmur, and when Popeâs brow furrows you lean forward and press your lips to the corner of his mouth. Not quite a kiss, but close enough that his hand squeezes yours one last time. âJust gotta go to the bathroom, first.â
You leave before he can follow.
-
âYou look like shit.â You greet the old man in the alley with a frown, crossing your arms and standing a good few feet back. He does. Your father, piece of shit that he is, has probably pissed off a debt collector or two again, judging by the bruises on his face and arms. You have no sympathy for the man who once left similar marks on you.
âHeard your psycho boyfriend is outta prison.â His retort makes you grit your teeth. âStill sluttinâ yourself out to the Codys?â
âWhat the fuck do you want this time?â
âJust an exchange. Heard about that boat robbery today.â Fuck. âWouldnât be too great for good olâ Dopeâs probation if someone were to put in an anonymous tip, would it?â
âPope had nothing to do with that.â
Your father smiles, all stained teeth and greedy eyes. âShouldnât be a problem, then.â
âFuck you.â
âHow âbout we make a trade? I donât gotta call nobody, and you help cover my debt.â
You want to kill him. You hate him so much it makes you feel sick. âLike I said, fuck you.â
You turn to walk inside, and the move is a mistake. Fingers close too-tightly on your wrist, and before you know it youâre being slammed against the alley wall with your arm twisted agonizingly tightly behind your back. You bite hard on the inside of your cheek to keep from crying out, and remind yourself to breathe through the pain.
âThought I raised you better than that.â The fingers on your wrist feel like theyâre going to snap it in half. You want to bite something back, preferably something poetically sarcastic, but you canât let your voice betray the pain youâre in. All these years, and you hate that he can still hurt you. âYou got three days, kid. Sure you can spend enough time on your knees to get the money out of the crazy one. Maybe the cokehead, too.â
He lets you go with a shove that makes your cheek scratch against the wall, and you turn to glare defiant daggers as he walks away.
-
âWhere did you go?â Popeâs dark eyes are curious, almost innocent as he reaches up to pull you closer to him by your hips.
You move back a little, and his brow furrows with concern. âI need my cut.â
âYeah. Youâll get it when we-â
âI need it now.â
He stands, and you step back when he looks you over, but youâre too late. He knows you too well.
His hands are on your waist, tugging you close to him, and his fingers fly up to the scrape on your cheek. Down to pull up your sleeve, exposing angry red marks in the shape of fingerprints.
âWhere is he?â He asks, voice dripping with danger, and you try to pull away but he just grips you more firmly. His grip is gentle, and you know he would let you go in a second if you asked, but heâs not letting you run from this. âIs he here?â
âNot anymore.â His fingers are curling around your arm, pulling it up to inspect your wrist. His eyes are almost black, and his jaw is clenched so tightly youâre worried he might crack a damn tooth. âHey, Andrew. Look at me.â
His eyes donât leave the bruises on your arm. âI should have killed him.â
âBeating him half to death caused enough problems.â Piece of shit that he is, your father has one too many connections in Oceanside, and the damage control from when Pope snapped on him years ago nearly got all of you arrested or killed.
Itâs been proven safer to just give him what he wants, and try to keep it as secretive as possible, lest Pope or even Craig try to pound him into the pavement again.
Speaking of which, Pope is still holding you too tightly. You reach up, and turn his face towards yours. âIâm fine. Weâre fine. LetâsâŠâ God, youâre supposed to keep up with this ânot together anymoreâ thing, but âcan we just go home?â
He melts. His eyes soften, and his arms slide around you to pull you closer to him. You feel his cheek against the side of your head, his hand sliding gently up over your back, and you melt too.
âYeah. Yeah, letâs go.â
-
Split lip. Black eye. Ringing ears.
God, everything hurts. That asshole really did a number on you this time.
Bruised if not cracked ribs. A slight limp from where your leg hit weird when you were tossed across the floor. An aching arm that was grabbed a little too hard.
âHoly shit.â Craig. Craigâs voice, as familiar as your own.
âI got hit.â You worked on this lie. Practiced it the whole limping walk down here. ââŠby a car.â As bad as it is this time, it might be the only thing thatâs believable.
âYouâre a shit liar.â Now you know thatâs not true, but your friend is already by your side, holding you up and helping you walk into the house. âIâm gonna kill him.â
Youâve definitely got a black eye. Your lip is swollen and bleeding. Itâs becoming more exhausting to take stock of your injuries than it would be to note what isnât hurting.
âDonât. JustâŠdonât.â You wince on a step, and when Craig huffs and tries to scoop you up you swat him off.
âFuck that. You look like youâre about to keel the fuck over.â He frowns, concern lacing every one of his features. âYouâre not going back there.â
âI hit him with a fuckinâ frying pan.â You mumble, knocking your head against his shoulder. âSo I figure Iâm not welcome back any time soon.â
âSmurf is gonna shit.â He mumbles, and leans you back against the kitchen counter to inspect your face. âFuck, Pope is gonna blow a gasket, dude. How are you gonna explain this to him?â
âI donât know.â You mumble, reaching up to push the hair out of your face. All you want to do right now is see him. To be held by him and to maybe even just lay down in his twin bed and feel him tuck you into his arms. Youâve been with him for a little over a year, now, and it still feels like youâve been dating for a week. Like your relationship is just one never ending honeymoon phase. Even these last few days, helping your father out with his bullshit scam, youâve missed him so much itâs almost concerning.
Fuck.
âBeer, please.â You mumble, and when Craig hands it to you you take a moment to rest the cool glass against your bruised cheek. âI donât know. Iâll tell him I got in an accident.â
Craigâs answer is immediate, lifting your arm to show the bruises in the shape of fingerprints dented into your skin. âYeah, real fuckinâ believable.â
You pull you arm back, panic rising in your throat. âOkay. IâŠgive me a sweatshirt.â
âHeâll just take it off.â
âFuck.â Heâs right. You shouldnât have come here. You should have hidden out on the beach for a few days like you used to, and waited for some of these injuries to fade. Fuck. âIâve gotta go.â
âFat fuckinâ chance.â Craig grabs you, more firmly than usual, and keeps you still against the counter. âYou think Iâm gonna let you walk outta this house while that asshole is still breathing? Look, I ainât Pope, but Iâm not gonna let you into a situation where you could-â
You sense him before you see him. You didnât even hear the door open.
âGet. Away. From. Her.â
Shit.
âShit.â Craig releases you, and takes three large steps back like he might be attacked by a mountain lion.
Pope is on you in a second, one large hand cradling your bruised face, and in a moment you can see in his eyes that heâs not entirely there. That line in him has snapped, like it has on those nights youâve found him in the yard, distant and empty and staring at the moon. When youâve pulled him from fights, and he took a minute to even remember your name. Took him longer to remember his own.
âPlease.â You whisper, reaching up to slide your fingers through his hair and force him to look at you. âPlease be okay about this.â
He doesnât answer you. He just moves his hand over your face, looks at you with those murderous eyes, and presses his forehead against yours.
âWhere is he?â
âPope. Andrew. Please.â Your heart cracks on his name, and he grips you more tightly. âPlease, just take me to bed.â You turn his face to yours, squeeze your eyes shut. âI just wanna go to bed.â
And he does.
One hour later, he leaves that bed. You donât open your eyes. Keep your breathing slow and steady as you feel him kiss your forehead, then your cheek, sliding his fingers through your hair like pulling away from you is physically painful.
But he does, and you feel him stand. You hear him leave.
And you let him.
Two hours later, he walks through the door of Smurfâs house with blood on his knuckles and sweat on his brow.
Youâre waiting for him in the hall.
You look down at his hand. Back up to his eyes.
âIs he dead?â Your voice is quiet. He doesnât look guilty, but he doesnât look away from you, either.
âNo.â
You just nod, and move forward to slide your hand over his cheek. He leans helplessly closer to you.
âNext time you do that,â you murmur, guiding his lips down to your own as his swollen knuckles curl against the back of your borrowed shirt, tugging you closer to him, âtake me with you.â
He releases a shuddering breath, and his kiss is so full of love and devotion that it buckles your knees.
-
A warehouse is a cheesy place to meet. The fact that the asshole brought backup makes it worse. Granted, you brought Pope, Craig, and Deran with you, butâŠwell, theyâre more here for emotional support. And because they wouldnât let you come alone.
When you got home, you told Pope everything. The threats, the money youâve sent him, the amount of time heâs still been able to keep you under his thumb despite how hard youâve worked to break awayâŠ
To your surprise, he hadnât snapped. He hadnât stormed out of his house to find the old man. HeâdâŠ
Heâd kissed you. Heâd wrapped his arms around you, tilted your head back, and kissed you.
You make a muffled noise against his mouth, eyes flying open in surprise before fluttering shut as your body melts into the embrace before your mind can even catch up.
When you finally break for air, still confused but certainly unable to complain, you blink your eyes open again.
âWhat was that for?â
He just kisses you again. Slow. Warm. Wonderful. âIâm sorry I wasnât here.â He whispers, lips moving down to your jaw. Your neck. âIâm sorry you had to be so fuckinâ brave on your own.â
âAndrew, IâŠâ this is a much different reaction than you were expecting. You havenât mentally prepared for it. Your mind is still on the defensive.
He shushes you. Pushes his hands up under your shirt to trace them over your skin. âI love you. You donât wanna be together? Thatâs okay. We can do whatever you want.â He kisses the hollow of your throat, scrapes his teeth against the sensitive skin, and you make a soft noise in the back of your throat that has him tightening his grip on you. âIâm not going anywhere, and youâre not dealing with this alone.â
Youâre not alone. Heâs not going anywhere. Never again.
You believe him. You really, really believe him.
âTake off your clothes, please.â
He smiles against your collarbone, and trails his nose up your throat until his lips are hovering over your own. âAre you sure?â
âPositive.â Youâre already tugging at his shirt, already pulling him down to kiss you, and he meets you with a hunger that feels like a satisfied craving. âI love you. I trust you.â The words are murmured between kisses, ânow please take off your clothes.â
âChrist, itâs like you think youâre Tony Soprano or some shit.â You grumble, feeling surprisingly petulant despite the intensity of the situation. Your father has connections, sure, but you grew up with Smurf Cody. The comparison between the way he operates and what youâre used to is absolutely insane.
Your father is a drunk, and an asshole, and he thinks heâs tough shit. You happen to know what it looks like to actually know what youâre doing. Shocker, that youâre the one who makes the actual fucking money. Even less shocking that he makes most of his income leeching off of you.
Well, not anymore.
âI told you to come alone. You brought your fuckinâ guard dog.â
âYeah, youâre one to talk.â You gesture to the man beside him, the wall of muscle holding the gun and glaring at you like this is a gangster movie and he genuinely believes himself to be the most badass character. âDid you give your Steroid Humunculus his pay already, or is he gonna be banging on your door in a week looking for it?â Youâre guessing the latter, if past experience is anything to go by.
âEnough.â Your father snaps, like he has any authority at all. It makes you furious. âTell the psycho to leave.â
âCall him a psycho one more time, and this time it wonât be him who beats you to a fucking pulp.â
âAre you threatening me, you little shit?â
âLike father, like daughter.â
âI should teach you a fuckinâ lesson-â he starts toward you, only to back up when Pope steps forward. His jaw ticks, fury flashing in his eyes, and you hear the click of something loading in the cavernous room.
It all happens so fast.
In all the times this kind of thing has happened, all of the times heâs made threats, itâs always been diffused. Heâs always held up a gun, maybe loaded it, and said some bullshit until money was tossed his way.
This time, he brought the wrong backup. And that backup panics.
The man raises the gun, and aims it at Pope.
You move before you think, jerking instinctively in front of him and pushing him back, already beginning to move towards the money to end this bullshit. They always point the gun. Always shout a threat. Always shut up when they see the money and-
And then the gun goes off.
-
You wake to an empty bed.
Your first instinct is to reach out to the space Pope usually occupies, hand sliding over the cool sheets like you might be able to pull him out of thin air. Itâs not morning, and the house is silent. If there was some kind of emergency, he would have woken you.
Huh.
The mystery doesnât stay a mystery for long. You shuffle into the yard, and there he is.
Naked. Staring at the moon.
He seemed fine last night. Well, as fine as Pope Cody can be. A little more quiet, maybe. A little clingier than usual, and that would be saying something, but fine.
âHey, handsome.â You hum, casual and sleepy, and move to stand beside him. He doesnât move. He doesnât break his eyes from the night sky. âWhat are we looking at?â
âEverything.â He murmurs, absent, and you can already tell that he isnât here. Isnât entirely inside his own head. Thatâs alright. This isnât the first time something like this has happened, and it probably wonât be the last. At least heâs not smashing anything with a hammer.
âSounds like a lot.â You move to stand in front of him, lifting your hand to brush your fingers through the soft curls on the back of his neck and turn his gaze down to yours. âHow âbout you just look at me instead?â
When his eyes meet your own, still hazy and distant, his breath catches in his lungs. His hand moves up, guiding yours so he can press his cheek into your palm like the touch is some sort of coveted blessing. You smile, soft and gentle, and bring up your other hand to mirror the first and cradle his other cheek.
âYouâre an angel.â The words come out as a reverent whisper. Heâs not trying to flatter you, not trying for pretty compliments, but rather stating a fact. Like he often does, when heâs in this state.
âNot quite.â You press your lips to the underside of his jaw, and you feel a shiver travel through his entire body. âBut I appreciate the compliment.â
Large hands hover over your waist, and his eyes donât leave you. âCan IâŠtouch you?â
You nod, and bring his forehead down to rest against yours as his arms slide around you, tugging you against him as calloused fingers trail up beneath your sleep shirt, the touch just as familiar as the rest of him.
âWill you come to bed with me?â You ask softly, moving your own hands down to smooth over the skin of his chest. âIâm not an overly jealous person, but Iâd prefer to keep this view for myself. Donât wanna share with the neighbors.â
âIâll do anything for you.â
âTell me that again in the morning when I remind you to take your meds, okay?â
He follows you back inside, and allows you to pull him back into bed with you. Allows you to pull the covers up around you both as he envelops you in his arms, and trails his lips along your hairline as he whispers soft words against your skin. You canât make them out, but you wonder from his tone if they might be some kind of prayer.
âI love you.â You murmur, and his arms tighten around you. âEvery part of you. You know that?â
âI donât deserve it.â He whispers, and you pull back to look at him.
âYou do.â You kiss his nose. His cheek. âYou really, really do.â
-
For a moment, you think a car might have backfired somewhere nearby.
Itâs not like you donât know what a gun sounds like. Fuck, with your childhood, you could recognize the sound faster than your own voice. And yet, in this moment, your mind canât seem to keep up. Canât seem to process exactly what just happened.
You feel like you got punched in the stomach. Thereâs an intense, knock-the-wind-out-of-you pressure, and thenâŠ
Your hand comes up to the point of that pressure, to the dull burn, and comes away red.
âFuck.â Your father breathes, and then he starts shouting. âFuck! You idiot! What the fuck did you do?!â
Youâve heard that voice before. When heâs lost an exceptionally lucrative bet. When a deal has gone wrong. Thatâs the tone of a man who is losing his meal ticket, not even close to the tone of a concerned father.
You didnât even get to do your little speech. Your whole âfuck you, I owe you less than nothing and this is the last time youâre getting a cent from meâ speech. You were kind of looking forward to it.
Your whole body feels a little numb. When your knees finally give out, warm arms wrap around you before you can collapse.
âNo. No no no no no!â
Now thatâŠthat isnât concern either. Itâs worse. So much worse. Itâs the realest and most raw fear youâve ever heard.
Thereâs too much blood. Fuck. So much blood. Itâs spilling out between your fingers faster than should be possible. Vaguely, you remember when you were small, and the faucet broke at whatever house you and your dad were squatting in at the time. You were so scared of his ire, of him blaming you for the burst, that youâd tried to hold it together with your small hands until your entire body was soaked.
Andrew Cody is gathering you into his arms, lowering you to the ground, and the pain is starting to slice itâs way through the shock and it is absolutely fucking overwhelming.
âItâs okay. Itâs okay. Iâve got you. Youâre gonna be okay. Look at me. Câmon, y-youâve gotta look at me.â
Your father is still yelling at the guy who shot you. Screaming about the money. Not about you. The sound is loud, cutting through the ringing in your ears, and Andrewâs arms tighten around you.
âClose your eyes.â The words are murmured by your ear. Soft and warm and gentle despite the chaos. When he speaks again, his voice is shaking. âClose your eyes, sweetheart. Itâs gonna be okay.â He rarely calls you that. This must be bad.
When you do, you hear a gun fire, and the shouting stops.
Your eyes fly open, and you try to turn towards the sound of two bodies hitting the floor, but Pope is there before you can move, dropping a gun to the pavement and cradling your face in his hands.
âDonât look at that. Look at me. Look at me, okay? Youâre gonna be okay.â
He shouts for Craig. For Deran. Everything is still in a sharp, dizzy sort of focus.
-
âHoly shit. What happened?â
Craig is hunched over the toilet. Thereâs a bottle of tequila on the floor.
He turns his face towards you, hair messy and cheek resting against his arm. âGo away.â
âNah.â Youâre already sitting beside him, tugging his hair into a ponytail and tying it off.
âMâa fuckup.â He mumbles. âJusâ aâŠdrunk idiot. Deran said.â
You hum, and rub a soothing hand over his back. âDefinitely acting like one.â
âSee?â He tilts his head miserably back into his arm. âEven you say it.â
âShut up. You know thatâs not what Iâm saying.â You move over to the bottle, and take a swig before throwing the rest into the trash. âHey, look at me.â
He does. He looks like he might have been crying.
âYouâre one of the smartest people I know, you know that?â
âYouâre not funny.â
âIâm not lying.â
He looks at you now. Really, really looks at you. âYou gotta stop seeinâ the best in me.â
âToo late. You done puking?â
He grunts, and you reach down to help him stand with a significant amount of effort and bitching that he weighs a million pounds.
And you get him into bed, and even tuck him in, and before you leave to go back to Popeâs room he catches your wrist.
âI love you.â
You stop, and furrow your brow.
âNot in like, a weird way. Mânot tryna fuck you or anything. I donât even know howâŠâ he frowns, and releases you to rub a hand over his face. âI dunno how to say it.â
Your heart swells, in that familiar way, and you laugh a little as you move over and sit on the edge of his bed. âI think youâre telling me Iâm youâre best friend.â
âWell, obviously. Sâmore than that, though. You donâtâŠyou donât think Iâm a fuckup. You actually like me.â
You think back to that kid on the beach, surrounded by three angry assholes and fully prepared to stand his fucking ground. The kid who you were knocked out defending. Who didnât think twice before he brought you back to his home. To the only safe space he knew. Who brought you into his family.
Who loved you like you loved him, and wasnât sure what it meant. Who assumed, as teenagers do, that it might be romantic. Who didnât think twice when he realized that it wasnât romantic, and still pushed his pride aside and kept on loving you. And even now, budding your own ways into adulthood together, heâs drunk and still trying to put into words that he loves you platonically.
âYou have the biggest heart.â You say, honest and raw, and his hazy blue eyes fill with tears again. âEven if you can be an idiot sometimes.â
He swipes his hand over his eyes, and tries to hide a sniffle. He looks young like this. Heâs only in his early twenties, sure, but he looks younger than that. Vulnerable in a way only you ever really get to see.
âPromise you wonât go anywhere.â He mumbles, like heâs nervous to say it.
He smells like puke, and heâs sweaty, but fuck it. You hug him, making sure to flop down on top of him a little so he groans miserably before he wraps a large arm around you to pat your back.
âCanât get rid of me if you tried, jackass.â
-
Craig is freaking out. Heâs in the back of the car, where Pope is still holding you, and heâs freaking out.
Oh, no. That wonât do, will it? You take care of them. You always do. You keep Craig level-headed, and you keep Andrew from freaking out. OrâŠor is it the other way around? Itâs concerningly difficult to think. You feel like youâre floating.
âAlmost there. Almost there. Donât leave me, okay?â God, Andrew Codyâs voice is the best thing youâve ever heard. You want to sink into it, but heâs shaking and you can hear tears in his voice and youâre supposed to fix that.
âDrive fucking faster!â Craig is pushing on your stomach too hard. It hurts. You wheeze, and he doesnât let up. âDeran, the IV isnât working. Itâs not working, sheâs too fuckinâ pale.â
Heâs covered in blood. You canât see Pope, but you think he is too. Everything is tainted a horrible shade of red, and itâs getting really hard to think.
âMâhere.â You try, scratchy and raw. âMâhere. Youâre okay. DonâtâŠbe a dumbass.â
âFuck. Fuck, donât die. Please donât die. Look at me, okay? Look at me.â You try, but Pope is whispering near-nonsense into your hair and trembling so hard itâs almost starting to hurt more than the pressure on your stomach. Still, Craig brushes the hair from your face, and you can see tears tracking their way down his cheeks. âTheyâre all dead, okay? All those assholes are dead. Youâre not going with them, you hear me? Youâre not going with them.â
Thereâs shouting. Thereâs panic. Itâs all fading. Popeâs lips are warm against your skin, and the sound of his voice is soothing andâŠ
-
âI love you.â
The words are whispered into your hair, so soft that you almost donât hear them through the haze of sleep. But youâre awake, now. He doesnât know it, but youâre awake.
You blink, and feel his fingers trace slow, warm patterns over the bare skin of your back.
âI love you.â He whispers again, just as low and just as quiet.
You shift, and he goes very, very still.
âHi.â You whisper, pulling back, and he looks fucking terrified.
ââŠHi.â
âYou just said you loved me.â
âIâŠthought you were sleeping.â
You reach up, and turn his face to yours. Feel soft curls between your fingers.
âHow long have you been telling me you love me when Iâm asleep?â
Heâs silent. He doesnât look away.
âAndrew?â
ââŠa while.â
You smile, and the way his eyes spark at the sight makes your heart melt. âI love you, too.â
His hand flies up almost too fast, cradling your cheek and brushing his thumb over your cheekbone as he stares into your eyes with an intensity that makes your blood tingle in your veins. âYou do?â
âYeah.â How could you not? How could he not know? âOf course I do.â
-
A sharp sting brings you back, this time. You think someone might have hit you.
âFuck, thank God. You looked likeâŠshit, okay. Pope, let her go. Youâve gotta let her go, man.â
âWhere were you?â Heâs whispering against your cheek, and heâs out of his mind. Shit, heâs really out of his mind. His arms are still around you, and heâs speaking like he used to when things got really bad. When whatever was in his mind snapped, and it would take you hours to bring him back to you. âWhere did you go? Donât go. Take me with you.â
Every instinct, every cell in your body, tells you to fight. To stay here. To be here with him. To make this better.
But youâre losing time, and heâs not letting you go.
âDonât touch her.â Lips on your temple. Your cheek. Arms tight around you. âDonât touch her. Donât take her away.â
You try to speak, but convulse instead. The sight of it seems to trigger something, and Craig starts to yank you out of Popeâs arms in such a panicked rush that you whimper as another bolt of agony fires through you.
Andrew holds you tighter. Your mouth tastes like copper. You feel blood trickling past your lips.
âFuck it. Fuck it. Deran, hold him down.â Craig says, and heâs still crying and you should fix that, before he reaches forward and slams Popeâs head against the window. The arms around you go limp as he loses consciousness, and then youâre being lifted out of the car.
âI got you. Itâs okay.â You choke out a soft noise, grab at his arm, and he just tucks you closer to him. âPopeâs okay, too. Everythingâs gonna be fine, yeah? JustâŠjust donât die. Please, please donât die.â
Youâre so tired. You want Andrew. If youâre going to drift into oblivion, he should be here. ButâŠ
-
When you open your eyes, itâs to a cracked ceiling and a heavy, distant pain in your stomach.
You feel the drugs in your system. Blurred and heavy and warm. Tijuana. They managed to get you to Tijuana. And youâre alive. Bullet wound in the gut and all, and youâre alive.
Andrew Cody is beside you, head resting on his hands like he may have been living up to his nickname and praying. When you stir, he does too, red-rimmed eyes blinking open and looking at you like youâre the only other person in the world. There is so much relief in his gaze that the sight makes you feel dizzy.
âHi.â You murmur, hoarse, and reach up to tap gently at the side of his head. âAre you here?â You remember his mumbled words against your skin. The way he needed to be knocked out before he would let you go. He can go so far away, sometimes. But he looks like heâs here now. He looks like heâs your Andrew.
He nods, and catches your hand to press his lips to your palm. His breath shudders on a silent sob.
âI thoughtâŠI thought you were-â
âI think we should get married on the beach.â You cut him off with a gentle squeeze to his hand. âSâthat okay?â
He looks at you, at your stomach, and back at your face like heâs trying to judge how full of painkillers you are. âYou wanna get married?â
âDo you?â
âYes.â Thereâs no hesitation. Not an ounce of it. âBut youâre on-â
âI know. Still want to. I can ask you again when Iâm off them, if you want.â
âI think you should.â He murmurs, but heâs smiling. Itâs a small, hesitant thing. Like he was pretty sure, not too long ago, that he would never smile again. Like heâs already re-learning the expression.
âMm.â You squeeze his hand, and lean your head back against the pillows. âYou wanna marry me?â
âSince I first met you.â
âSoftie.â You turn your head, and furrow your brow a little. âYou never asked, though.â
âI planned it.â He admits, tracing his thumb over your knuckles. âBought a ring.â
âWhen?â
âFive years ago.â
You raise your eyebrows, and say again, âyou never asked.â
âNever found a perfect time.â
âMm. Sorry for stealing your thunder then.â
He squeezes your hand, and brings it up to his lips so he can trail kisses over your knuckles. He looks back up at you after a moment, and his dark eyes are so beautiful. âI killed your father.â
Those four words should definitely make you feel something. Anything. Instead, you just feel a surge of love for the man before you. âOkay.â
âIâm glad I did it.â
âI know.â
And, like he just canât help it anymore, he moves forward and presses his lips to yours. You kiss him back, and wrap your arms around his neck even as the movement makes you wince. Worth it.
âCan we get married now?â You ask, the words muffled by his lips, and he smiles down at you.
âWhen the drugs wear off.â
You frown, and shrug. âOkay. Can we go home?â
âWhen they say you can.â
Hm. âCan we have sex?â
He laughs. Itâs a beautiful sound. âGo to sleep.â
âYouâre no fun.â
âPromise I will be.â He kisses your cheek. âFor the rest of your life.â
âI like where this is going.â
âIâll never leave you again.â
âKeep talkinâ, Cody.â
âWhen we get home, Iâll stock the fridge with that ice cream you like.â
âTake me now.â
The love in his eyes is so beautiful, so pure, so raw, that you know without a doubt that those eyes alone were worth living for. âGo to sleep.â
-
You and Pope rent a house in Tijuana for a while. Thereâs no need to go back to Oceanside. Not yet. Smurf doesnât love it, but she doesnât fight it. It wouldnât be great optics, after all, for her sonâs girlfriend to be recovering from a bullet wound while her father, whom Pope has nearly killed before, was recently found dead in a warehouse.
He fusses over you endlessly. He barely lets you stand on your own, even when youâre fully capable of doing so. You wake up to him watching you sleep more often than ever, and he barely spends more than a minute not touching you.
Itâs nice. Really nice. Kind of like a honeymoon before the honeymoon. Just with less sex due to an annoying bullet wound, and a little more crankiness from you than usual due to both of the former issues.
But you stay up all night on the beach, talking until the sun rises and making out like teenagers. You try to make breakfast, burn it, and get to ogle him from your spot on the counter as he makes it for the both of you. You plan for the future, count down the days until your wound is healed, and justâŠenjoy being happy. No jobs, no strings, no stress.
A little over a month later, you wake him up by rolling on top of him, the familiar pain in your stomach reduced to much less than a dull ache.
His eyebrows raise before his eyes even open, a sleepy smile curling on his lips as his hand trails down your back and your lips move to press teasing kisses down his neck.
âGood morning.â You hum, and he seems more than happy to return the sentiment. âI officially think Iâm healed enough forâŠstrenuous activities.â
He makes a low noise, and kisses you slowly. Hungrily. You grin, triumphant and happy, and feel his hands come up to shift you on top of him, sitting himself up against the wall and-
And pulling back.
You actually whine, chasing his lips with your own, but he holds you firm with a smile so wide itâs almost silly.
âI have another idea.â
âItâs been over a month, Andrew. I challenge you to name one thing better than sex right now.â
His smile grows impossibly wider. He reaches into the pocket of his sweatpants, mischief sparking in his sleepy eyes like he was hoping youâd say something like that, andâŠ
And pulls out a ring.
âOh.â You breathe, eyes locked on the little diamond in his palm. Itâs simple. Beautiful. Perfect.
âBought a new one.â He says, hand coming up to brush your hair back from your face.
You grin. He grins back.
âYou make a compelling argument.â
He kisses you, and you kiss him back.
You suppose you have time for two things today.
i will be leaving a proper reblog with my thoughts on how fucking stunning this fic is later, but for now, everyone go read my babyâs magnum opus RIGHT NOW
pope cody who goes to the emergency room for some stitches, after a ridiculous amount of badgering from deran
as a non-critical, he has to wait hours and hours, which means he passes the time people-watching
one person in particular catches his eye - you. he's pretty sure you're a doctor of some kind, eyes crinkled as you smile at each of the patients you treat.
he sees them all - kids and adults alike - grow visibly more comfortable in your presence
when it's finally his turn, he makes an offhand comment to the nurse, who tells him that you only handle the paediatric cases in the ER
that's no problem.
lena's had a little bit of a cough recently - she caught it at school, and it hasn't gone away with over the counter medication. he promises her $200 at the toystore if she comes with him to the emergency room for a check-up.
you're even prettier up close than from afar. your hands are gentle as you examine lena, diligently checking her temperature and asking all sorts of questions.
pope is very sure to tell you that he's her uncle, but loves her like his own. that makes you smile.
he feels terrible the following month for the little bit of glee that sits in his chest after lena breaks her wrist at school. that's at least two trips to the ER
before long, he's got your entire schedule down, and soon he's 'bumping' into you on nights out with your friends, just so that he can spend more time with you
he argues that it would've happened eventually
oceanside is a small place
he's just hurrying things along.






