summary: jack gets injured on his shift and youâre there to help him get stitched up, making it impossible for him to ignore the soft side you bring out in himâ especially when it makes his heart rate jump alarmingly high.
content: just a whole lot of fluff, reader is a resident on robbyâs shift and jack has a capital c crush, iâm talking down astronomically bad, cursing, lots of cheesy banter between robby and jack bc i couldnât help myself, reader is described to be upbeat and positive, very sunshine x grump coded, also the reader wears bright colors and patterns from time to time [sorry if thatâs not your jam it just has to be that way for the plot, you get it], mentions of a brief altercation, mentions of blood and stitches, bad medical terminology [donât yell at me i tried my best]
word count: 3.5k
authorâs note: ok so hi this is my submission for the A DOCTOR A DAY event! but it's also a request from the lovely and talented @letsgobarbs so I thought I'd put them together and make this bad boy. thank you loops for the extraordinary idea, and thank you to my lovely babies, @clubsoft @ananonymousaffair and @letsgobarbs for putting on such an incredible little event! very very excited to see all the entires! my assigned dialogue was, ânothing defines a man like love that makes him soft.â and the color i got was green!
A reoccurring psych patient, and an elbow straight to the eye, landed Jack a seat in his own emergency department.
âIâm fine,â his voice came out with a twinge of annoyance, and a profusion of frustration as he side-eyed Robby from across the room.
But he was indeed, not fine. He was annoyedâ borderline lividâ at the current situation.
He should be on his way home, not sitting in an open treatment room with blood trickling down the side of his face.
It was completely unintentional, just an unstable patient throwing limbs in an effort to avoid an IV. What he thought would be his last case of the day, was now the reason for his friend making jokes at his expense, while Jack waited to get his brow sutured up so he could finally go home.Â
âYeah Okay. Whatever you wanna tell yourself.â Robbyâs voice filled the room as he gathered supplies for the simple procedure.
âIf Gloria found out you got a work related injury and walked out of those doors without somebody clearing youâ on my shift? Sheâd have my neck.â
âWhatever, just make it fast.âÂ
All Jack could think about was how last nightâs shift felt like the longest one heâd worked in a while. Taking a hit straight to the face was just the cherry on top of a dreadful night. The comfort of his bed was starting to look unbelievably far away as his presence at the hospital persisted long after it was supposed to.
âWhatâs the rush? You got a hot date I donât know about?â Robbyâs expression was a little too amused for Jackâs taste, as he placed a pulse oximeter on his finger.
âYeah actually, her name is a breakfast bagel from Calâs and 7 hours of uninterrupted sleep.â Jack stared down at the contraption sitting on his pointer finger, almost chuckling to himself at Robbyâs commitment to care.
âA pulse ox? Youâre really serious about this whole Gloria thing huh?â
âYeah sheâs been on my ass lately. Plus you got hit pretty hard, gotta make sure you donât go down on us. Your risk for a heart attack is only going up with your age.â The smug curl of Robbyâs lips as he pulled at the latex of his glove, made Jack instinctively roll his eyes.
Before Robby could start stitching, Danaâs voice carried into the room as she passed by the open door, âRobby, weâve got a motorcyclist coming in. Multiple open fractures, severe blood loss with trauma to the head, and a possible pneumothorax, about 3 minutes out.âÂ
Robby shot Jack a knowing look as if to say, sorry buddy, duty calls.
âOh câmon, youâve got this in three minutes.â Jack was desperate to get out of the hospital and on his way home. He was right, they both knew Robby was more than capable of lacing up two or three quick stitches before he was needed on the incoming trauma.
âAs much as I would love to sit here and miss potentially the best case of my day to be ridiculed by you, Iâm gonna have to make your fucked up eyebrow somebody elseâs problem. Donât worry, Iâll leave you in good hands.â
The sudden smirk Robby shot his way, had confusion clouding Jackâs mind. It wasnât until the smug attending was calling out your name, that Jack understood the motive behind Robbyâs words.
âOh, you have to be kidding me.â The murmured annoyance from Jackâs lips sent Robby chuckling.
The laugh was no doubt caused by the memory of a shared confession over a couple of beers not more than three weeks ago.
Jack and Robby went out for drinks on their day off. It was a regular occurrence, but that specific night was a little different, because that night, Jack let it slip that he thought you were pretty.Â
The men were sat side by side at the bar, recounting some of their best cases of the week, when Robby brought up your impressive intubation record.
Jackâs comment on your abilities had Robby stunned into a quick moment of silence.
âPretty and she knows how to clear an airway.â
It was a subconscious declaration of affection from Jack, spoken into his glass as he took a sip of beer.Â
A meek confession that Robby clung to, because heâd always noticed itâ the way Jackâs stare lingered a little too long on you in those fleeting minutes when your shifts overlapped.
It was impossible for him to miss his friendâs not-so-subtle flirting when you were around. Heâd been patient, waiting for Jack to bring it up first.
âJust your type.â
Robbyâs words met Jack in the same way, stumbling off his lips and into his glass before taking a swig.
You were one of Robbyâs residents. One of his favorites actually. A phenomenal doctor, always one step ahead of everyone else and charting your own course without having to be told what to do, it made Robbyâs life a whole lot easier. What didnât make Robbyâs life easier? Watching his best friend dance around his undeniable attraction to you. He knew better than anyone that Jack had been out of the game for a while.
In fact, he hadnât seen him show interest in anyone until you came along. Over the three months of shy smiles and round-about compliments paid to each other in passing, you and Jack's interactions had become impossible for Robby to ignore. He'd even tried bringing them up multiple times to see if Jack would admit to having a crush on you, only for him to jokingly brush it off every time.
âYou could ask her out, you know?â Robby kept nursing his drink, trying to look nonchalant because the moment he put too much attention on the topic, he knew Jack would shut it down.Â
âYeah, weâre not doing this.â
And there it was, right on cue. Shut it down, and brush it off, like he did every time.
âOh come on Jack. Sheâs great, youâre great, I see the way your demeanor changes when she's around.â
âOh does it now?â Deciding to indulge in Robbyâs incessant need to meddle in his lovelife, Jack fed into his friendâs accusation with raised brows and chuckle on his lips.Â
âYeah you get a little softer.â
âAnd, what makes you think Iâm not just tired after a long night of people griping at me.â
Robby let a brief blanket of silence fall over the two of them before adding one final thought to the conversation.
âNothing defines a man like love that makes him soft.â Robby smiled as he said it. He knew Jack would give him a hard time for saying something so introspectively cheesy, but he also knew it would resonate with him whether Jack chose to admit it or not.Â
âIâm sorry?â Jack nearly choked on his IPA at the abnormally poetic words leaving Robbyâs mouth.Â
âDid you just pull that right out of your ass or what?â He was giving Robby a hard time, but couldnât deny the truth hiding in the statement.Â
That night he went home and lost more sleep than usual thinking about youâ playing out past conversations over and over again in his mind, just to hear you say his name, or to see the captivating curve of your lips. The visions kept him up, even if it was just glimpses of you in his memory.
Robby didn't bring up Jack's comment about you after that night.
A few lingering stares and silent chuckles slipped from him when he watched the two of you interact, but he decided against bringing up that specific conversation. He knew Jack would just dismiss him, and keep to his stubborn reservations when it came to you, so he didn't push.Â
This was the first time Robby took a chance, venturing into the territory of Jackâs confessed feelings. The timing was impeccable, with him needing to find someone else to do Jackâs sutures. He couldnât pass up the opportunity to force the two of you to be alone in a room together.Â
âWhat can I say? I like watching you squirm,â a low giggle remained on his lips as Robby aimed his words at Jack, just before you appeared in the doorway.
âHey, whatâs going on?âÂ
Soothing with a gentle glimmer of energy, your voice flooded the room in mellow twilight and shimmering stars, hitting Jackâs ears in a way that instantly made his face heat up.
âDr. Abbot here, took an elbow straight to the face first thing this morning. I was gonna stitch it up, but they need me on the incoming trauma.â Robby barely looked your direction as he spoke, but Jack couldnât take his eyes off you, only a few feet from him, watching from the doorframe.
âThink you can handle it?â Robby glanced over at you as he joked, a grin stretching across his face.
âIâve got it covered, boss.â You matched his playful tone, and the whimsical change of your voice made Jackâs eyes divert to the ceiling becauseâ fuck Robby for doing this to him.Â
âMake sure to keep an eye on his vitals, he took a pretty hard hit.â Robbyâs voice carried from down the hall as he walked out of the room, leaving you and Jack alone.
You took to the space in front of Jack.Â
Your body slid so effortlessly next to him, that he had to fight not to adjust his position under the sudden nervousness of having you so close.Â
Drawing a quiet breath at the feeling of your thigh resting next to his, he sat still on the edge of the cot. You were on his right side, your left leg gently pressed against him as you leaned closer toward his body to get a good look at his face.
âDamn thatâs bad. Someone really had it out for you this morning, huh?â Your fingertips barely touched his temple as you examined his forehead. An audible swallow pushed down his throat at the contact.
He didnât know what was more embarrassing, his bodyâs immediate response to your touch, or the fact that heâd nearly been taken out by a patient, and you were the one witnessing him in such a vulnerable position.Â
âYeah well, he had a really effective defense response. I'll give him that.â
Thank god his voice didnât betray him. His words came out clear and concise, despite the fluttering in his chest at your body right next to his.
Then you laughed.Â
He really loved your laugh. In fact, he went out of his way to make jokes just to hear it. It was soft, but rich. The kind of distinctive, infectious sound you could hear in a crowded room ten years later and know exactly who it belonged to.Â
âWell, Iâm sorry you had to be on the receiving end of it.â
The laughter fizzled from your voice and was replaced with genuine concern as you cleaned his brow. The gentle passes of gauze against his forehead made his mouth go dry, only because he knew it was your fingertips behind the motion.
âSomebodyâs gotta take one for the team.â His response was quick as he focused on the words leaving his mouth, trying not to think about the way your hands were working so carefully to take care of him.
Your presence made him nervous enough, but your touch? He couldnât get a handle on the distraction of your fingers on his skin, even if there was a veil of latex and gauze in between.
You bent further forward into his body, the warmth of your thigh pressing harder against his as your hands carefully angled his head where you needed it, fingertips underneath his jaw, and at his temple. He forced his stare to the floor out of fear that looking into your eyes would send him straight into cardiac arrest.
Looking down at your shoes, he memorized the pattern of your laces to keep himself from thinking about the mildly intoxicating scent radiating from your body. Heâd never been this close to you beforeâ close enough to get a whiff of something fresh and so distinctively you.
Maybe it was your shampoo, or laundry detergent? Perfume perhaps?
Shoes. Back to your shoes. It was the same pair of white sneakers you wore most days, but the green socks peeking out at your ankles made him grin. A subtle smile that he was sure you wouldnât notice as you prepared a needle at your fingertips.Â
You always wore a pop of color, something to bring your own personal style into the doldrum of the ER.
It was something he shouldnât have noticed; the patterned shirts you sometimes wore under your scrub top, the red hair tie you left on your wrist every so often, the memorable collection of colorful socks you constantly sported with your tennis shoesâŠ
The subtle excitement of your accessories matched the bright charisma you brought into the building every time you walked through the doors. You appeared every morning like his own personal ray of sunshine, equipped with an irresistible laugh, sweet smile, and lime green socks.Â
âAre you feeling okay?â His sock induced trance was broken at the sound of your voiceâ abrupt and concerned.
âYeah, Iâm good.â His eyes peered up only to notice your stare fixed on the pulse ox resting on his finger.
He almost forgot about it entirely, busy with the distraction of your proximity taking over his entire being.
âYour heart rate is just really high.âÂ
Of course it was.Â
His heart was nearly beating out of his chest from the moment Robby called out your name earlier.Â
âIâm fine.â He tried to move his hand further from your view, hoping to brush it under the rug, and get a move on with the mortifying interaction.Â
âAre you sure? If he hit you hard enough to break skin maybe-â
âI promise. Iâm fine.â He pulled out a tone in his voice that people usually didnât argue with. It was a deep, commanding timbre that he had perfected over the years. It came in handy when he had an especially combative patient, or in this case an extremely beautiful woman hounding him for an incredibly humiliating confession as to why he couldnât get a grip on his bodily reaction to her presence.Â
âWhatever you say, Dr. Abbot.â Finally giving up the fight, you let a spirited air back into your words. Jokingly dismissing your concern, and trading it in for weary trust as you let him convince you that he was okay despite his alarmingly high heart rate.Â
âBut if you go AFib on meâŠâÂ
âI wonât,â his voice still held the same robust sound as he looked you straight in the eyes.
âJust stress.â He looked at you as he spoke, and the desperation in his eyes contradicting the tone of his voice.
His stare was tender, and almost pleading while his words spread through the room, sturdy and sure.Â
âOr adrenaline or something⊠Iâll be fine.â He didnât look away as he continued explaining the reason for his quickening pulse. You found it slightly unnerving, and undeniably endearing as he kept his eyes fixed on yours for far too long. His words began to trail quietly, slowly losing their robust momentum.Â
Jack was in a complete daze. He made the mistake of looking up into your eyes, and now he was stuck, getting lost in the all too familiar color, illuminated by the concentration in your gentle stare. He was enamored.
âWell Iâll be quick so you can get out of here.â You reached down to grab some supplies before bringing your hands back up to Jackâs face, finally starting to suture his brow.Â
âAlthough Iâm sure Robby wouldâve been done by now.â Your eyes zoned in on his injury, while Jackâs stare stayed trained on your face.Â
âEh, Iâm glad youâre here and not him.â His voice was amiable and subdued, dripping with a delicate sound youâd never heard from him before.Â
âWhyâs that?â Still watching the careful work of the needle threading at his forehead, your eyes narrowed in focus, as the question formed on your lips.
âIâd have to deal with his smartass jokes. Plus, heâs too perky in the mornings.â
âAnd Iâm not?â
He wanted to laugh at your question. Of course you werenât too perky in the mornings. You werenât too anything. You were perfect.Â
âI donât mind it when you are.â Your movements paused for a split second when the words left his mouth in that same strange, fragile tone.
You could feel his eyes watching- peering up, as you tried your best to keep your attention on your hands.
He felt you stop, internally panicking that heâd said something wrong, he kept talking.Â
âI just- youâre different.â The words stumbled out, losing a bit of their fragility as they tripped over each other in an effort to reassure you.Â
Your brows furrowed slightly at the word and Jack was convinced heâd just dug a deeper hole to bury himself in.Â
âDifferent?â The one word question left your lips as they struggled to withhold a smile.Â
You were amused at the way Jack was fumbling over his words.
It was rare to catch him in such a flustered state. You chalked it up to the fresh wound heâd just received, and his abnormally high heart rate that he really should be paying more attention to.Â
âPleasant.âÂ
Then you stopped. Longer this time. It mustâve been at least 30 seconds that your fingers paused their threading, as you glanced down at the pulse ox between sutures. Sure enough his heart was racing again.
110 bpm.
You would be concerned about his inevitable descent into a questionable cardiac rhythm if it werenât for the way his eyes were fixed on yours. His stare was so deliberate, you could feel your own pulse quickening underneath the growing heat of your skin.Â
âPleasant? How so?â
112 bpm.
âYou just have this way of making everyone happy. Itâs subtle. Youâre always smiling and positive, but itâs never performative, itâs just who you are.â
A warmth spreads through your body at the compliment, rolling like waves as each of his words washed over you, completely enveloping you in a state of coy flattery.Â
âYouâre just easy to be around.âÂ
The heat threatened to reach your face, as he continued talking. His words were nearly a whisper with his voice floating up to you, low and smooth.Â
âI like being around you.âÂ
115 bpm.
You open your mouth before youâve even decided how you want to respond to Jackâs innocent confession, then unexpectedly, a voice thatâs not yours fills the room.
âStill not done in here?â Robby came barreling into the room. His presence was loud and boisterous compared to the sheepish exchange taking place between you and Jack.
He stopped a few feet into the room. Seeing your body so close to Jackâs, with your hands still working at the injury on his forehead, and your eyes locked on each other, seemed to make him apprehensive about continuing into the room, like he was interrupting something.
âJesus, let the man go home.â His chuckle echoed around you as he decided to come closer, inspecting your work.Â
âThat was fast. What happened to that being the best case of your day?â Jack piped up from underneath your touch. He was careful not to move his head as he aimed his question at Robby, eyes averting to the man standing next to you.Â
âYeah, it went south pretty quick.â Robbyâs voice finally found a level close to silence, as he watched in concentration while you tied off the last stitch.Â
âYou need some help there? I could send in one of the medical students-â He joked looking over at you. He knew you were quick. The way you were taking your time, being overly methodical with Jack, was out of character for you.Â
âVery funny. Iâm done.â You softly glared over at Robby as you took a step back, pulling your gloves off.
âSee what I mean about the smartass jokes?â Jackâs eyes were on you, still holding a lingering softness from your unfinished conversation just moments prior.Â
âOh so I leave you two alone for a few minutes and you just use it to talk bad about me?â Pretending to be offended, Robby scoffed at the notion of you two discussing his comedic timing, watching as you and Jack just stared at one another.
âSomething like that.â
Your response was hidden behind a smile while you and Jack stayed submerged in a brief moment of smitten eye contact and unquestionable curiosity, before you made your way to the open door.
âIâm gonna get back out there. Try not to take anymore elbows to the face Dr. Abbot,â You joked before taking a single step into the hallway, turning your back for a split second to look at him one last time.
âand Iâll see you tomorrow.âÂ
With that, you were already halfway down the hall, onto the next patient.
Robby stared at Jack with a goofy smile forming on his mouth as your absence left the room silent.
âDonât.â
The single word snapped from Jack as he brushed past Robby, leaving the room before he could be hit with his friendâs smug confrontation.
He left for the day, but not before stopping by the triage desk on his way out, purposefully walking past you just to get one last glimpse of your smile for the day.
summary: a glimpse into a slow cozy day with you and your growing little family
word count: 1.8k
content warnings/tags: 18+ only, girl dad!Robby, toddler fic, mentions of unspecified age gap, reader is pregnant, cozy & sweet fluff, husband!Robby & married goodness, introspective moments (thoughts of self doubt and internal struggle), parenting themes, jealous Robby with a splash of protective tenderness, soft domesticity vibes, light baseball discussion
a/n: my first ever fic for the Pitt & Iâm so grateful getting to write it for the A Doctor A Day Writing Challenge [ #5 âtell me the truth, am I losing you for good?â + black] thank you so much @letsgobarbs @clubsoft & @ananonymousaffair for hosting this! And a sweet extra thanks to @jolapeno for cheering me on & giving me the push to post this
Robby didnât believe his days could ever look like this. Soft warm spring light fills a cozy living room. The faint sounds of the Pirates game is on the tv -
And his daughter happily takes his full focus.
Her toys litter the carpet with no regard for any foot traffic and frankly, Robby doesnât care that much either.
Your little girl is happily engrossed with the toddler hospital checkup playset Abbot got her this year for her birthday. Sheâs been obsessed with it, barely knows what sheâs doing, but Robby canât tear his eyes away from her.
Especially now as she readily tries to fix her Winnie the Pooh bear lying ready for examination on the pull out countertop.
Her face scrunched up in deep concentration looks exactly like yours as her chubby little hands clumsily put on the stethoscope.
âWhatâs your diagnosis, doc?â Robby asks her while he slowly sits up to move closer to her.
âSick.â She quips simply, and his lips twitch amused.
âDid you check his heart? Make sure heâs okay.â He gently touches the center of the stuffed bearâs chest. Immediately his daughter, instead of using the stethoscope, leans down to press her ear against his chest.
Robby canât help it, he laughs.
âGood, thatâs a good start.â He reassures her.
Gently, he moves the colorful child sized stethoscope to sit on her properly. She eagerly roams the diaphragm all around the fuzzy bearâs tummy, diligently searching for something with it.
âTry to find the heartbeat.â He tells her patiently.
Robby then makes the familiar heart beat thump himself with a hum. Her eyes bloom surprised, becoming little bright stars.
Sheâs so smart, so damn quick. Immediately her sharp gaze flickers up, realizing itâs him making the noise and not the bear.
So stubborn, a trait she definitely inherited only from you and not an ounce from him, his daughter shoves the poor bear away and stomps towards Robby where he sits on the edge of the couch, opposite to where you sleep.
Seven months pregnant again and peacefully napping, lightly snoring even though you swear you donât, youâre the picture of ease and steal Robbyâs heart all over again.
When his little girl eagerly arrives at his side, Robby reminds her to stay quiet to make sure you get to rest.
Bubbling with curious eagerness, his daughter nods then presses her tiny hands against his face, checking for a fever the same way he does when sheâs sick.
Robby feels as if his heart just might melt from his ribs.
It seems like only yesterday she was keeping you and him awake at all hours of the night as a newborn, so tiny in his arms as Robby went through singing two lullabies to get her to sleep. Now his baby is readily growing as her own little person, bright and curious.
âCheck my heart.â He says with a watery grin while she tries listening to his chest.
Then, as if remembering something, she perks up and scurries back to the playset. His eyes perk up seeing her grab an otoscope and hurry back to him.
A burst of pride swells in his chest.
âPapa, say ah!â Gathering a composed sternness, he holds back a laugh while his daughter uses the toy otoscope, used to examine the ears, to check his throat.
But listening to his little girl, he does as told and she peeks inside examining him with the toy.
Then she makes a face, scrunched up and confused.
âWhat?â He questions curious now.
As caring and sweet as his daughter is, Robby knows exactly how mischievous sheâs becoming. The smirk and tiny giggle she gives, he knows sheâs up to something.
âWhat dâya find, doctor?â He asks her again. She pays her father no mind and grabs a pack of play bandaids from the kit.
Wearing the most amused smirk she hurries back to him, the colorful stereoscope bouncing against her neck. Determined and with a firm step, his daughter arrives before him.
Patiently she then places one of the bandages on his lips. Her diagnosis? For him to stay silent.
âAll done!â She announces bright, giggling proud, like sheâs made the most hilarious inside joke.
Robbyâs lips fight hard against a grin and the bandaid. He moves to take it off when his daughter spots him.
âNah uh, papa! Rest.â She says with a firm head nod, he blinks stunned at her.
âBossy⊠definitely your kid.â Your warm sleepy voice emerges. Gently you sit up from your nap, shoving away the small blanket.
You look so fucking god in his old black penguins hockey t-shirt, especially with your belly growing more and more. Slowly sitting up, you reach for him. Like youâre the extension of him, effortless and without any question, Robby gently draws you towards his side letting you now rest your head against his thigh.
âMama!â Your daughter cries happy and loud, sliding towards you on the couch.
âI help papa!â She declares.
âGood job, sprout. Youâre the doctor of the family now.â You playfully poke her nose.
She giggles triumphant. Robby then watches his little girl throw her small body over your tummy, hugging you and the baby as much as she can.
âSissy, I help.â Sheâs been eagerly announcing everything to her little sister once she learned the baby could hear everything.
You finally glance up at Robby grinning at him. Noticing the bandaid on his lips, you gently peel it away before your daughter notices.
âYeah you do, baby. Youâre already such a good big sister wanting to take care of everyone.â You gently tell her through a yawn.
Robby wonders if this moment could shatter at any moment, like itâs too pure and good for him, too precious to believe itâs his.
But when your hand moves to rub his arm, your touch grounds him.
His eldest daughter suddenly squeaks happily, and you snicker. The baby must have kicked.
âYour baby sister is playing kickball in my tummy. Gonna give us a check up now too?â You offer, sitting up more. You now lean against Robbyâs shoulder, and he happily welcomes your warmth.
Your daughter now babbles scurrying to the playset and grabs a random wooden spatula that somehow managed to sneak into her toy collection.
Deeming that important to her care, your little girl scurries back and presses her face against his black shirt.
âSissy, no kick mama.â She orders.
You burst out laughing, and Robby covers his with a quick cough.
âI think sheâs got the making of a good physician already,â you tell him.
âHer bedside manner could use some work.â Robby snorts, and you snicker.
Top of the 5th inning and Pirates are still tied zero to zero against the Astros. His daughter now yanks the playset closer to the couch allowing Robby to examine more of the tools.
Heâs always been impressed by this thing. Itâs rather accurate, makes him appreciate whoever made it.
âThey even got the right buttons on the EKG machine, itâs pretty crazy.â He says messing with the toy set.
âI donât know what kind of kid would want to be playing with this and not legos or barbie dream house or something else.â He lets the comment slide out a bit low.
Robbyâs already torn when he thinks of his little girlâs future - if sheâll end up wanting to practice medicine or not. If that colorful stethoscope she wears will one day match his, black and professional.
A quiet sigh escapes you letting your hand rub his back now.
âShe plays with both⊠plus I think she likes knowing she gets to pretend to be a grown up and help people like you.â
He lets your words sit gently and decides not to keep digging into this tangled topic.
âI still canât believe thereâs even multiple syringe and scissor options.â He chuckles, changing the subject.
âMight as well have included some clamps and blood bags.â Robby adds and then picks up one of the toys.
It takes him a moment to realize he's been rambling out loud mindless thoughts about this damn toy set for the game to be in a new inning now.
Youâve gone quiet now, and his eyes flicker down to you leaning against his chest.
âAlright,â he begins with a sigh.
âTell me the truth⊠am I losing you for good?â He means it half jokingly.
Robby still canât believe how lucky he is to have you, his absolutely gorgeous sweetheart. Heâs holding his breath still, waiting any minute for you to wake up and realize you got stuck married to an old man like him.
Hell, just last week Robby had to calm himself down when the cashier had no fucking shame flirting with you, even as you wear Robbyâs ring on your finger and have his second baby growing in your belly.
Itâs almost as if a part of him is waiting to fully lose you, let you slip away from his fingers.
Your hand curls against his face now, rubbing against his bearded jaw as you draw him closer.
You place the softest kiss on his lips.
âNot at all,â you tell him gently. âIf anything you hook me in more and more, Robinavitch. Youâre stuck with me.â
A warmth collides in his chest like an unleashed sea.
Robby smirks, humming content as he places a kiss against your head.
âLove ya, kid.â He warmly tells you, sliding his arm around you.
And he does.
He adores you so damn much, didnât think it was possible to love you any more but you love to prove him wrong.
His eldest daughter, now bored with the doctor's playset equipment, currently sits on the carpet floor fiddling with a colorful whale toy.
The pirates, now up to bat, suddenly hit a home run. Even through the tv, the ball is sent flying with a solid whack.
Robby cheers appreciatively, and your daughter immediately perks up eagerly scrambling to him with excited eyes as she bounces holding onto his arm.
âPapa, good?â She asks, picking up the excitement from the game.
âYes baby girl, very good.â He grins.
âSee,â you pat his leg affectionately, âNo need to worry about her.â
âYouâre gonna play baseball for the Pirates right, sprout?â You ask your daughter.
âYup!â She says bright, probably not even realizing what sheâs agreeing to as her focus stays on the TV.
That makes him laugh.
Heâs never felt older and younger all at once, like a multitude of lifetimes has collided into him a beautiful cosmos shining bright.
All his girls together right before him, and heâs never felt luckier.
Robby wants to carve out this moment forever, letting it crystallize around him and soak in this warmth. One he wants to embrace and never let go.
Jack Abbot x F!Reader - Best friends to lovers!!!!!!!
11.1k || All my content is 18+ MDNI || CW: quickly resolved angst; patient death; coding that veteran for two hours; reference to DUI; suicidal ideation; discussion of Jack's injury; reader wants marriage and kids (I know this is not everyoneâs fave or something everyone wants, but I needed it for the storyline so Iâm sorry if it's not your thing); reader and Jack are idiots; reference to Shenâs wedding;Â reference and allusion to sex; allusion to masturbation; reader is briefly held hostage with a knife to her neck and gets a very light cut; mention of drugs generally; mention of demerol; blood; no use of y/n or related
This is for the A Doctor a Day event hosted by @ananonymousaffair, @clubsoft and @letsgobarbs. Thank you for hosting such an awesome event! My prompt was "You are the very beating and pulse of my heart" and my color was black!
Summary: A message from your college ex changes everything.
AN: I love best friends to lovers. I love when they're so god damn blind to each other's romantic love and interest. I love when they do things that are so beyond what best friends (generally) do. Also for the record I do think people of opposite genders can just be platonic best friends. I challenged myself to stay under 10k and lost, but I was really close so I'm taking it. For some reason I really ended up struggling with this and don't really love or even necessarily particularly like how it came out in the end. I'm just very unsure about it. Could not articulate why to save my life. I hope it ended up coming out and reading okay. I really appreciate you taking the time to read and hope you enjoy!
You met Jack Abbot on the first day of your intern year, night shift.
He was an R4, but with the way he carried himself and practiced and the fact that he was older, you assumed he was your attending. You were both drawn to each other immediately. For both of you it was pretty much love at first sight and interaction. Neither of you could explain why if asked. It just was. By the end of your first twelve hours knowing each other you were in love with each other.Â
Not, of course, that either of you told the other that. Because there was no way the other would feel the same. So instead you became best friends, almost instantly. Like after two weeks everyone had noticed how close you were. People hadnât started assuming you were together at that point but they were assuming it was heading in that direction.Â
Your reasons for not telling each other were slightly different then. For you, you were new and an intern to Jackâs R4, were quite sure Jack was not interested in you like that and, even that early on, having him in your life as a best friend was better than losing him and not having him in your life at all. For Jack, he was an R4 and you were an intern, plus he was older than you and missing a foot, he truly believed you werenât and would never be into him like that and, as it was for you, even that early on, having you in his life as a best friend was better than losing you and not having you in his life at all.
And for a while you really were just best friends. But then over time you both seemed to greatly expand your definition of best friends. And after a while you were doing almost everything a couple did except for kissing and having sex and admitting feelings and saying you loved each other. To you and Jack though, it was all just being best friends, all things best friends did.Â
The true beginning of that expansion was the first time you spent the night at Jackâs house, about three months after you met.Â
Jack is confused when he sees you sitting at the hub eating the other half of the granola bar youâd started and not finished last night. Itâs strange because he just assumed you guys would grab breakfast so why would you be eating. âArenât you off?â he asks you as he walks up to where youâre sitting.
âI am, but I just got a text from my neighbor that the AC in my apartment building is broken and wonât be fixed until this evening so Iâm just gonna hang here.â You shrug. âMaybe work, maybe try to catch some sleep in the on-call room and then head home and pray itâs working.â
It has been disgustingly hot and humid the last week or ten days and being in your AC-less apartment on the fifth floor during the day was simply not happening. Youâd rather be at the hospital getting shitty sleep in the on-call room or working.Â
âWasnât this last shift our sixth straight night on?â Jack asks, with a raise of his brows.
âIndeed it was,â you sigh. âPretty irritating because I would just like to go sleep. But what can you do? Iâm not going home to sleep in this heat.â
âYeah. No, youâre not.â Itâs short, somewhere between disbelief and concern. âYouâre not staying here either. Go grab your shit. You can crash at my place.âÂ
âReally?â
âNo, I just said it to be a dick and take back the offer when you agreed.â Jack gives you a pointed really? look. âYes, really. Now go get your shit before we both end up getting pulled back into something.â
âYou donât have to do that Jack, Iâll be fine. I wouldnât want to intrude like that.â You shake your head at him a little.Â
âI know I donât have to offer, but you need to get some real sleep. I know you know that. Youâll make yourself sick. And youâre not intruding, you know that too.â Jack tilts his head at you.
âAw,â you tease him a little, âare you worried about me?â
Jack rolls his eyes at you. You both know he is and that he does worry about you and that you worry about him. Thatâs what best friends do. âOkay, stay here then.â He shrugs.
âNo, no. Iâll take you up on it if youâre still offering,â you say quickly.Â
âI am.â
âOkay, let me grab my stuff.â You get up and head to the lockers, grab your things and make your way over to Jack.Â
Once youâre out of the Pitt Jack turns to you as you walk towards your guysâ favorite breakfast spot. You havenât discussed going there but itâs just unspoken at this point. âWhy didnât you just ask? How many times now have I told you youâre welcome at my place whenever? Open door or whatever. Itâs not like youâve never been to my place and donât know I have a guest room.â
You shrug as he opens the door for you. âIt felt like there was a difference between come over whenever and spend the night, or whatâs our night, at my place.â
âWell thereâs not,â he tells you as you slide into a booth sitting across from each other. âIâm telling you that now.â
Once you finish breakfast the two of you head to Jackâs place. Like Jack said, youâve been to his place before.Â
âYou should take my bed,â Jack says once youâre at his place and both of you have set all your stuff down. âThe guest bed mattress is really not the greatest. I need to replace it but nobody ever sleeps on it so I just havenât gotten around to it.â
Youâre thrown for a second at the prospect of sleeping in Jackâs bed. Even without him. âItâs alright, I donât mind. My cheap mattress at home isnât really the greatest.âÂ
âNo seriously, youâll probably wake up hurting.â He gives you a firm look. âJust let me take it.âÂ
âOh, yes, because if itâs going to hurt the person who sleeps on it, the best idea is surely to give it to the older of the two of us.â You give him a look.Â
âDid you just call me old?â Jack says in mock offence.Â
âNo, I just said you were older than me.â You soften a little. âI can tell your hip and back are hurting after six straight Jack.â You both know youâre right. This shift in particular he could really feel his hip and back compensating as his prosthetic caused him a little more pain than usual. âSo just let me take the guest room.â
That makes Jack blush a little and you feel bad. You hadnât meant to hit a nerve or make him self-conscious. âHate than you can tell, but alright. You wanna shower before?âÂ
âIf you donât mind.â
âWouldnât have asked if I did. Youâre going to have to use mine though. I donât have any shampoo or whatever in the spare. And Iâll leave you a shirt and some boxers on my bed so you donât have to get back into your scrubs.â He says it so casually, like heâs totally unaffected by it when he is in fact very, very affected. The thought of you in his clothes has him hardening. And the thought of wearing his clothes makes you feel warm and start to get slick between your thighs.Â
You clear your throat. âThank you.âÂ
Jack nods, flick his head to tell you to follow him and you do. He steps into his bathroom for a second and then comes back out. âFresh towel and washcloth on the counter for you. I found a spare toothbrush too. Clothes will be on the bed. Shout if you need anything.â
Itâs not until youâre in Jackâs shower squeezing some of his shampoo into your hand that you realize youâre going to smell like him at the end of this. You get even slicker between your legs at the thought and spend the entire shower telling yourself to stop thinking about him as anything other than your best friend. It doesnât really work.Â
And getting dried off and into Jackâs clothes does nothing to help the matter. His black shirt is oversized on you and he said boxers but he really meant boxer briefs which make you feel far closer to him in a way.Â
You find Jack sitting on his couch reading. âHey. Thank you for the shower and clothes.â Jack looks up at you and has to carefully control his reaction. Heâs glad youâre far enough away that you donât see the way his jaw clenches at how unbelievably hot you look in his clothes. It makes him feel possessive in a way he knows he shouldnât. Heâs also glad heâs sitting far enough away that you canât see the bulge in his pants that starts to grow.Â
âOf course.â
âIâm going to try and get some sleep. Wake me whenever you need me to leave.â Jackâs not waking you up. As far as heâs concerned you never need to leave. âAnd I hope you sleep well.â You give him a shy nod and turn to head back to the guest room.Â
âSleep well,â he calls after you.Â
From then on, going to each otherâs places after work slowly became a thing. By the end of your intern year it was far more common for you to end up at Jackâs place or him to end up at yours after work. Sometimes youâd spend what was your night at Jackâs, sometimes you wouldnât. He only spent the night at yours once when you both fell asleep on your couch. You didnât have a spare room and no way were you making Jack sleep on your couch and you knew heâd never accept your bed with you on the couch.
And then one day about a year and a half after meeting and being best friends both of you were clearly sore from your run of shifts and Jack floated the idea.Â
âYou wanna just sleep in my bed with me? Itâs far more comfortable. And big enough so we donât have to like⊠be particularly close or anything.â It takes a lot for him not to tack on âunless you want.â
âOh.â His offer catches you by surprise. It feels like it should mean something, but best friends sleep in the same beds, right? Itâs not that big of a deal. âYeah, sure. That would be nice, thank you.âÂ
After you both shower you and Jack slide into his bed, staying respectfully at the edge of the side of the bed each of you is on. You wake up much closer, about a foot between you, and both of you have to fight the urge to snuggle into the other and try to use this opportunity to express your real feelings for each other.
After that, sleeping in the same bed became your usual thing. It opened up staying at your place more often after a while when you slowly started sleeping closer together since you had a smaller mattress. And before either of you knew it you had a drawer at Jackâs place and he had a drawer at yours, both of you had your toiletries in the otherâs shower and on the otherâs bathroom counter. It happened so naturally neither of you truly realized the implication for a while, and when you did you convinced yourselves that it was something best friends did.
You also convinced yourselves that getting ready in the bathroom together at the same time, bumping into each other and being close and Jack sometimes shirtless and you sometimes in just a bra and pants or shorts was something best friends did. And you wearing Jackâs clothes just because you liked to, not because you needed to borrow them, without asking him and wearing his shirt and boxer briefs to bed because they were comfortable was a best friends thing. So was Jack sleeping in just a pair of pajama pants and eventually just his boxer briefs in the same bed as you. Laying in his lap with your head on his chest cuddling or him snuggling up to you after a bad day as you watched a movie together was also just something best friends did.Â
And then Jack had a really bad day.Â
âJack,â you say softly, moving your head down to try and get him to look at you as he keeps doing compressions. âWe have to let him go.â Both you and Jack are sweaty, as are most of the people in the room with you. Youâve been coding the patient in front of you for two hours now.Â
âNot your call to make,â he pants out. But itâs laced with anger and frustration. âYouâre an R3 and Iâm the attending. Itâs not your call to make. So either keep running the code or get out.â Itâs pretty close to snarled and makes you grimace. You and everybody in the room know that Jackâs anger and frustration isnât truly at you.Â
Jack knows youâre right but he canât bring himself to stop. Because itâs unfair. Itâs so fucking unfair.Â
âJack. Look at me.â He doesnât stop compressions but he does lift his eyes to yours after a few seconds. âYou know that Iâm with you and just as aggressive as you. You know that if I thought for a second there was even the slightest chance of us getting him back I wouldnât be telling you we have to let him go.â You nod at him, watch his jaw clench. The protective eye glasses heâs wearing might fool others into thinking thatâs whatâs making his eyes shiny but you know better. âHeâs gone, Jack.âÂ
He just looks at you for another minute as he does compressions before he finally stops, panting hard. You both look up at the monitor. âAsystole,â you say quietly. You try to be quicker than Jack but arenât and Jackâs the one to confirm with his stethoscope and you shut the monitor off.Â
He pulls it away and puts it back on his neck as he speaks and glances at his watch. âTime of death 06:57.â
Jack is silent as he pulls his gloves, trauma gown and glasses off, tossing them in the biohazard bin before walking out. You tell everyone thank you before doing the same as Jack and walking out of the trauma room, head on a swivel as you look for him even though youâre pretty sure you know exactly where he is. Itâs all but confirmed for you when you donât see him in the immediate vicinity.Â
It is confirmed when you step out onto the roof. You hate it when he stands on that side of the railing, it always scares the shit out of you because you always worry one day heâs going to do it. And if he was, today would likely be that day. Youâre one of three people who work at the hospital other than Jack who knows that when it hit midnight seven hours ago it became the anniversary of the day of his injury. So yeah. With the significance of the day and the fact that you just coded a veteran for two hours, if he was going to do it, today seems like it could be the day.Â
âYou know youâre not allowed to leave me,â you call to him as you walk closer. Jack doesnât say anything. âSeriously.â You reach the rail right behind him. âWhat the fuck am I gonna do if you jump?âÂ
Jack lets out a heavy sigh. âItâs unfair. Itâs a fucking joke. Surviving over there to come back and be taken out by a drunk driver. Just like that.â He snaps his fingers as he says it. âWhat the fuck is the point? Of any of this anymore?âÂ
âIt is unfair. And itâs pretty fucking cruel of the universe to have this happen ever, but especially to have it happen and put it in front of you today.â You let out a long breath. âAnd I donât know what the point is either sometimes, or I lose sight of it. But I think the point is all the ones you can and do save and help, Jack. And if you jump then you canât save or help anyone else. Civilian, service member or vet. You canât teach others, pass on what youâve learned. Every student and resident who comes through here would be worse off.âÂ
Jack knows youâre right. Some part of him wants to almost be mad at you for the way that youâre right and know what to say. Heâs not though. He looks back at you a little to acknowledge he heard you. To tell you that youâre right and he knows it.Â
âWill you come here, please, Jack?â
He gives a little shake of his head and lets out a shuddery breath before he turns and ducks under the rail so heâs standing right next to you. You turn into him and give him a hug. Jack returns it tightly and you can feel how hard he swallows. You know the last place he wants to show any further emotion is here so you pull out of the hug.Â
âLetâs get out of here.â You grab Jackâs hand and start walking. Jack follows and the two of you only drop hands once someone else gets on the elevator with you.Â
You guys manage to get out fairly quickly and unsurprisingly end up at Jackâs place. You take turns showering before crawling into bed together, both exhausted and ready to just pass out. You roll on your sides and look at each other. You know Jack needs to let some emotion out and you consider going to sleep in the guest room so he can be alone but the thought of him being alone today, especially after that code, makes you sad.
âJack?â you say his name softly. He raises his eyebrows at you. âI know the real question you went up there looking for an answer to. Why were you the one to survive? And Iâm not going to pretend to know the answer. I know this might be selfish of me, but I just want you to know that Iâm really glad you were the one to survive.â
Jackâs mind spins. He canât believe you knew that was the question. He can in a way, because itâs you and you always seem to know but part of him still canât comprehend someone caring for him and knowing him how you do. And he wishes more than anything in the moment that he could kiss you. But he canât. And he canât risk losing you. His mind also spins trying to answer the question, why him, why did he survive over there, why does he survive over here? And it spins like it always does on this day, scenes of this day all those years ago playing in the background of his mind constantly.
He shakes his head a little at you, eyes glassy. He really didnât want to cry. âYou can come here, if you want, Jack.âÂ
Jack nods this time and slides over to you. You pull him close to you and wrap your arms around him as he buries his face in your neck and lets himself cry. You run your hands through his hair for the first time without even realizing it and keep doing it. Scratch at his scalp sometimes, play with the curls at the nape of his neck. You wish you could pull his head from your neck and kiss him, tell him you love him and have him know you mean it as more than just a friend.Â
After that it became your guysâ normal. Cuddling together in bed, sleeping tangled up together or you on Jackâs chest or him on yours or with him as the big spoon or you as the big spoon, you running your hands through his hair, something you discovered relaxed him immensely and helped him fall asleep.Â
Neither of you really dated over the years, not as such. It was just another thing that made everyone think you were already together or heavily in denial. As an intern and resident you didnât really have the time, and it just wasnât how you wanted to spend your free time at that point in your life. Jack theoretically had the time but he just didnât want to put the effort into it really. He was content with you, even non-romantically. As you were with him. You did want more though, you did want to get married and have kids one day. With someone. You knew it would never be Jack and that if you wanted that you were eventually going to have to get over Jack and go try. You just never really brought yourself to.
Occasionally over the years each of you would pick someone up at a bar or somewhere and have some casual sex. Sometimes it turned into a bit of a friends with benefits situation and youâd see the person more than once. That was all more common for you. Jack wasnât super into casual sex or friends with benefits. You went on a couple of dates to appease some friends and try to get over Jack. He did the same to try and get over you. Nothing ever went anywhere.Â
People of course noticed how close you and Jack were. The way you always seemed to walk in and out of work together. The times youâd come in wearing Jackâs sweatshirt. The reactions youâd both have at times when the other got flirted with, either at work or when everyone went out to a bar or somewhere.Â
Both of you were constantly getting asked if you were together, some people just assumed it. You both always laughed and said no, you werenât, you didnât know why so many people thought that, youâre just best friends. Bets were placed on when you guys would finally either admit you were together already or realize what literally everyone else could tell, that you were both in love with each other, and finally get together as a couple.
A few people bet on it taking one of you to get worryingly sick or injured or otherwise put in danger for the other to admit their feelings. They were proven wrong one night.Â
Your mistake was something youâd done hundreds of times before. Walking out into the ambulance bay by yourself in the middle of the night. Itâs how you find yourself being held hostage and walked back into the ED with a knife pressed against your throat.Â
Sound seems to go. Youâre only vaguely aware of the guy holding you making demands for drugs. Your eyes drag across the floor looking for a single person. One you canât find. He must be in with a patient. You know heâs the only person who would give you any comfort in this situation but a part of you is almost glad you donât see him.Â
You donât want him to see this. Especially if this guy ends up using the knife on you. You really donât want Jack to see that.Â
The scream a patient lets out and the general collective gasps he hears are Jackâs initial clues something is wrong. The chilly silence that follows is another clue and he decides to go look, makes his way to the door of the exam room heâs in. He doesnât know what he expects to see when he steps out but it sure isnât you with a knife pressed to your throat. And yet thatâs what he sees.
Jackâs entire world stops, the vial of medication he was holding falling out of his hand. His eyes find yours immediately. âIâm sorry,â you mouth to him. He shakes his head. Why the fuck are you sorry? is all he can think.Â
Jack walks forward holding up his hands. âWhat do you want?â he asks the guy.Â
âFinally somebody with some fucking sense. Demerol. 150. To start. Then I want all the fucking vials of it and morphine you have with a bunch of needles.â The guy laughs, thinks heâs about to make out.Â
âAnd then youâll let her go?â Jack asks.
âIâll walk her out with me and then Iâll let her go, yeah.â
âFine,â Jack nods at him. âIâll pull your dose now.â The way the guy laughs as Jack walks over to pull some demerol out makes him want to be sick. If something happens to you, anything at all, if you die, Jack swears heâll die with you. Heâd never forgive himself. Heâs eerily calm and steady for how fast his heart is racing but he knows he needs to be calm and focused to get you out of this alive and physically uninjured. He knows the mental injuries are already there.Â
Jack canât quite pin down how sophisticated this guy is. The laughter makes Jack think heâs not very. That he doesnât really know what heâs doing. So Jack tries it, sees if the guy will tell him to show him the vial first and pull it in front of him and make Jack give himself some to prove itâs nothing dangerous first. He takes a vial of etomidate out and pulls a dose, starts walking over to the guy.Â
Thereâs no questioning. No telling Jack to go back and bring it all over and pull it in front of him, no asking Jack if Jack think heâs stupid. Only that fucking laugh that neither you nor Jack will ever forget.
âNeed a vein,â Jack tells the guy as he gets close.Â
âBack of the hand. The one holding the knife. She can watch,â the guy grunts at Jack and laughs as he tightens his grip on the knife and presses it into your neck hard enough to give you little deeper than a paper cut, but deep enough to draw some blood.Â
The sight of your blood makes him want to be sick because, even though itâs only a few drops, you still have a fucking knife against your throat thatâs making you bleed. Jack nods at you but doesnât say anything. Doesnât want to risk pissing the guy off, not with how tight that knife is against your skin. Jack feels the back of the guys hand for a vein to make sure theyâre not all blown. He finds one and so Jack pushes the med and then steps backÂ
âIâm getting the rest now, okay?â Jack starts walking backwards slowly. Itâs the longest onset time of Jackâs entire life but he can see when it starts to hit the guy and heâs already running back towards you as the etomidate renders the guy unconscious. âEtomidate,â Jack shouts at nobody in particular so at least somebody knows what he gave the guy and can deal with him accordingly.
The second the knife drops from your throat youâre stepping forward and Jack is right there to grab you and pull you away from the guy. Jack crushes you to him. âJack,â you whimper as your hands fist at his scrub top at his chest, his arms wrapping around you and holding you tighter than he ever has before.Â
âFuck,â he breathes out, âfuck, youâre okay.â Youâre shaking in Jackâs arms just as much as heâs shaking having you safe and in his as the adrenaline crashes for you both. âLet me see your neck.âÂ
He tries to pull away but you cling to him and follow him. âItâs fine, itâs fine. Just stay, please.âÂ
Jack wants to look at your neck for himself but he knows youâre right that itâs okay for now and you clearly need him like this and frankly he needs you like this too. Safe in his arms.Â
It makes you feel safe. If youâre in Jackâs arms nothing is going to happen to you. You trust him. You know heâs safe, will keep you safe. âPlease stay,â you whisper, voice shaking. âI need you.âÂ
âIâm not going anywhere,â he promises. âIâve got you. And Iâm not letting you out of my sight.â Jackâs voice is shaky like yours. âI canât lose you.â
Everyone who heard that line and the way Jack said it had thought it meant you in fact werenât together but Jack was going to admit his feelings to you and youâd admit yours back and youâd finally be together and holding hands walking in and calling each other pet names. And Jack almost did admit his feelings to you. But then you guys had gotten home and went about your routine and you were so shaken and clingy that he wasnât able to bring himself to tell you and risk losing you, especially when you needed him so much in the aftermath. So it didnât happen.Â
The calling each other a pet name, however, did. But not in the way anyone expected. To you and Jack the word just became a nickname. One that intensified the confusion about what you and Jack were.Â
Youâre standing at the hub charting when you overhear Jack finishing discharge instructions with a mom and her five or six year old daughter as he walks them towards the door. Youâre finally an R4 about two weeks away from starting the attending position you were offered and accepted. Jack is of course still an attending. Your schedules are almost always identical. It was easy to pull off when most people didnât want to work nights and the two of you volunteered to. You both knew it would be staying that way once you became an attending.
âThank you so much, babe!â You watch the mom tell Jack as she hugs him. You bite your lip to stifle your laugh, continuing to watch as Jack remains completely still. âAnd like we talked about if you ever need anything or get bored, hereâs my number,â she giggles as she presses a post-it note to his chest. Youâd be more jealous if you thought for a single second Jack might actually be interested, but he is so clearly not you almost feel embarrassed for the woman. The whole thing is so funny you have to quickly log out and walk away to keep from laughing.Â
The second the mom is out the door Jack tosses the post-it note with a shake of his head. Jack has always gotten hit on at work. Heâs always gotten flirted with everywhere really. He very, very rarely flirts back. But though he may not have put it together, everyone else, yourself included, has noticed that now that heâs truly gone salt and pepper he gets flirted with far more.Â
Later that night around 1:30 a.m. the two of you are at the hub charting together. âCan you take the eight year old with a possible broken arm from a bunk bed fall with the new med student, Cooper? I said I would but I donât think I can handle another mom right now and I would really love to try and get like four bites of literally anything.â
âI suppose for you I can,â you tease him, bumping your hip against his. âI brought us leftovers from last night too. Theyâre in the fridge.â
âI knew I kept you around for a reason.â You scoff in mock offense as Jack logs off his computer. He looks over at you and waits until you look up at him which doesnât take long. âThank you.â He gives you a flash of a smile and then starts to walk toward the breakroom.Â
The opportunity is too good to pass up. After he gets a step or two away you call out to him. âSure thing, babe!âÂ
Jack stops walking and tilts his head letting out a single huffed laugh as he shakes his head and rolls his eyes before he resumes walking. He canât keep the small smile off his face though.Â
A while later Jack finds you again at the hub, just the two of you. You guys chat for a bit until you get called away. âOh,â you turn back to Jack, âcan you remind me to check if my mascara is dried out when we get home. Iâm going to need some for Shenâs wedding.â
Jack smirks at you and you already know what heâs about to say. âSure thing, babe!âÂ
The nickname stuck and it pretty much became your and Jackâs exclusive way of referring to each other. You both ached for it to be a real pet name. People assumed that calling each other âbabeâ constantly would lead to a conversation and so youâd get together within a month or so. Especially because then youâd be an attending. You wouldnât technically be Jackâs student anymore, youâd be equals. But you still didnât get together.
And once you became an attending and had been one for six months or so and nothing happened, people stopped placing bets. Because surely if it was going to happen it would have already.Â
A year after you became an attending you started to notice it more than you had before. It felt like most of your patients were children with their parents or newlyweds or recently engaged or celebrating their 50th wedding anniversary or pregnant. Marriage and kids were frequently on your mind. But you still couldnât bring yourself to put yourself out there and try to find someone.Â
You talk about it casually with a couple of people at work, that you think youâd like marriage and kids one day, and the interest in you and Jack is renewed and bets start getting placed again.Â
And one day, six years after you met, it finally happens.
You and Jack walk into his place after your shift. You unsurprisingly had to stay late so itâs 9 a.m. or so, your guysâ evening. It wasnât a bad shift in the scope of things, but it wasnât the easiest shift youâve ever had either.Â
Jack keeps semi blackout curtains in his living room and pulls them closed while you grab a drink for yourself and a beer for Jack from his fridge without even asking if he wants one. You donât turn any lights on. The curtains dim the room, but you can still easily see each other.
He sits on the opposite end of the couch from you, leaning into the corner of it and putting the thigh of one leg on it as he tilts his body towards you so that you guys can see each other. Manspreading like always. If only he knew how insane it drove you. You hand him his beer and then settle back into the same position, and if only you knew how insane your legs being relatively spread open drove him.Â
âI guess at least nobody died,â you mutter before taking a drink.Â
Jack nods slowly as he finishes swallowing. âWeâll take the wins where we can.â He tilts his head at you. âDidnât see much of you tonight.âÂ
âIt was busy. I think we kept hitting our free moments at different times. Itâs not like I was ignoring you.â You give him a knowing look, confused about why heâs even commenting on it. Itâs something that just happens sometimes.Â
Heâs commenting because he missed you, quite a lot today for some reason, and especially because he saw you on your phone a decent amount at the beginning of your shift, more than you usually are, and you seemed happy. Of course he wants you to be happy, but he wants to know why. Why you werenât using that time to come see him and let him make you happy. Heâs hoping the explanation isnât another man.Â
âYou seemed to be in an awfully good mood at the beginning of your shift.â He tries to keep it light, like itâs just something he noticed and not him trying to probe for information.
âEh. My college ex boyfriend texted me.â You roll your eyes. âIt was random more than anything.â
He swallows hard. Fuck. It was another man. âOh,â Jack draws the word out, âis that who was making you smile down at your phone until about midnight tonight?â He smirks at you like he isnât internally seething with jealousy.
You roll your eyes again but this time at Jack. âHe sent me the most ridiculous opening line and it was funny, so it made me smile, yes.âÂ
Jackâs jaw sets and he takes a drink of his beer so that he doesnât grind his teeth loud enough for you to hear. âYou sharing or?â
Thereâs the faintest hint of snippiness in his tone that makes you narrow your eyes at him slightly. Jack knows all about your college ex, how he decided he didnât want to move with you for medical school and then again for residency potentially. It broke your heart at the time but things still ended amicably all things considered. You figure the snippiness is related to Jack disliking him.
âHe asked if I went into cardiology because, and I quote âyou are the very beating and pulse of my heart.ââ You start laughing as you finish saying it. Jack hardly even laughs, he just rolls his eyes and shakes his head, shifts to sit straighter on the couch so heâs looking at the black TV in front of him and not over at you. âOh come on,â you nudge his thigh with your foot. âIt was funny.â
Jack takes another swig of his beer and pulls his lips down, shrugs slightly. âWorked on you enough that you memorized it.âÂ
You choke on the sip of your drink you just took, coughing a little. Jack glances over at you for a second just to make sure youâre okay.Â
âWorked on me? It didnât fucking work on me. He sent it to break the ice, babe.â You furrow your brows and shake your head at him, looking at him with a mixture of disbelief and confusion.Â
âWell you liked it enough to remember it and keep talking to him.â He already knows youâre going to go see this guy and probably get into a relationship and thatâll pretty much be the end of your best friends relationship as you know it now.Â
You scoff at him. âI found it funny enough to remember. Thereâs a difference.âÂ
âOkay,â he sings, clearly not believing you and you just shake your head at him. You both take sips of your drinks. Even with Jackâs kind of strange behavior the silence is still comfortable. âSo whyâd he text you after all this time? Itâs been like what? Ten years?â
You shift on the couch and pull your legs up to your chest. âHe moved to Pittsburgh. Asked if Iâd be interested in seeing him.â
Jackâs head snaps over to you. âYou are, arenât you? Youâre going to see him?âÂ
His gaze is so intense it feels like itâs pinning you in place. âYeah.â You shrug. You donât get why this is such a big deal all of the sudden. You need this. You need to move on from Jack. You need to try and have the rest of the life you want, even if itâs not quite how you pictured it. You and Jack would still be best friends and some things might change, but itâs not like everything would change or suddenly youâd just stop hanging out because you got married and had kids.
Jack scoffs at you now. âWhy?â Thereâs a bite behind his tone. Heâs not sure if you have a real reason or if itâs just to reconnect. You squirm under his gaze for a second before you have to look away as you give him another shrug. Thatâs the confirmation he needs. âBull-fucking-shit, you absolutely have a reason.â You let out a breath and occupy your mouth with another sip of your drink. âFine. Then look me in the eye and tell me you donât have a reason.âÂ
You sigh and look back at him. You swear he almost seems mad with how serious he looks, lips pressed in a line, still staring at you with that same intensity, eyes slightly narrowed. You know youâre going to have to tell him because you canât lie to him. As in you couldnât bring yourself to do it and also he would know the second it came out of your mouth.Â
âItâs stupid,â you admit, âitâs stupid and I know it and a big part of me doesnât care. But youâll think itâs stupid too. Think Iâm stupid for even considering it.âÂ
âHey.â Jack shifts on the couch so heâs turned towards you again, features softened. âYouâre not stupid. I know you far too well to know that if there is one thing in this world that you are definitively not, itâs stupid. If itâs a stupid idea, yeah I will tell you that. âÂ
You look down at your hands. You know youâre going to have to tell him eventually. If you end up doing it then itâs going to come out. âWhen we broke up we made this stupid pact together that we both thought was just a funny joke at the time. We said if we reached the age we are now and werenât married or in a serious relationship weâd get married and have kids together.â You pause for a second and swallow. âNeither of us are married or in a serious relationship. So you knowâŠâ
Jackâs jaw falls open a little as his head lolls forward. Adrenaline floods his body so fast he grows cold in seconds, stomach churning. He canât lose you. Not like this. If you dated the guy and fell back in love with him that would be one thing. But this? No. And actually, no in general. He canât lose you. He canât watch you marry someone else and have someone elseâs kids. He knows you really want marriage and kids and he wants that for you, just selfishly only with him. It gets harder to breathe as some actual panic starts to seep into him.Â
He lets out an incredulous laugh. âYouâre actually fucking considering this?âÂ
Tears sting at the back of your eyes. You know heâs not laughing at you and you know heâs not truly judging you but his reaction still hurts in a way you didnât expect it to. All you can do is nod at him.Â
Jack laughs again, running a hand through his hair and shaking his head. âFucking why?â
âBecause Jack!â He shrinks back slightly, eyebrows raising at your response and the emotion he thinks he hears in your voice. âBecause I want to share my life with someone romantically! Because I want to get married and have a house and have kids! I want that life. And Iâm not getting any fucking younger.â
âOh my fucking god,â Jack scoffs. Heâs nearly at a loss for words. âHow can you say that? You havenât even been looking for someone! You donât date and I know youâve been asked out plenty of times. And donât give the excuse of being too busy because we both know thatâs not true anymore.â He shakes his head at you and looks pissed. âDo you even fucking love him?âÂ
You shrug. You have absolutely no justification for why you donât date other than because youâre in love with Jack. So you donât even really try to justify anything. âI havenât been, no, but Iâve still always wanted that stuff and this kind of fell in my lap and so maybe itâs a sign. And as for loving him⊠yeah. No. Kind of? I donât know anymore. Would he be my first pick? No. But heâs nice, he treated me well and heâll be a good dad I think. And maybe now that weâre both grown up there will be more of a spark there.â You knew Jack would think it was a stupid and bad idea but you didnât know heâd react quite this strongly. In part youâre not sure why he cares so much. Heâs your best friend. He should want to see you happy and living the life you want. And this is a way for you to at least be living the life you want and to be happy enough.
âSo what, youâre going to fucking settle? Settle for the guy who broke your heart? The guy who couldnât be fucking asked to move maybe twice for you so that you could do what you dreamed of? The guy who allegedly loved you but not quite enough to make any sacrifices for you?â Jack tilts his head at you. âBabe you deserve so much better. So much fucking better. Donât do this to yourself. Donât even consider it further. PleaseâÂ
âI think maybe I would be enough for him now. He reached out. Remembered. That has to count for something, right? And I want it Jack.â You shrug at him. Youâre a little upset. Not with Jack, just with everything else. With what you donât have. With the way you struggle about whether you really want marriage and kids without Jack now that youâre really thinking about it. âI want that life and I feel like Iâm running out of time and yeah, I havenât been looking so thatâs on me, but still. You can want something and still be okay with not having it. But if the opportunity arose, if it just kind of fell in your lap⊠you know?â
âI know,â Jack whispers before speaking at a normal level. âI just want you to be with someone who you are enough for. Because you are enough. You are so much fucking more than enough.â Jack nods at you, hoping it will help drive his words home. âHe doesnât deserve you. Any fucking part of you. He doesnât deserve another second of your time. I know you wonât be happy with him. Not truly. You would be settling and you know it. But you donât have to settle. You donât. You still have time. You can still have the life you want, just with someone who really makes you happy. Who you really want to live that life with. You still have time to find that person. Your person. So donât do this to yourself. Please.â
Your heart aches. You know and love Jack so deeply, heâs the one you trust with every secret and part of you. You wish that you could tell him you already found your person. You already found the man who makes you really, truly happy. You already found the man you want to live your life with. That youâre staring at him.
âJack, we have to be realistic. When am I going to go find that person? With what time? And where? Itâll take me forever to find someone.â You let out a short breath. âAnd then after I do find them itâs at minimum a year of dating, an engagement, then a wedding, then wanting time as just a couple before kids. I donât have that kind of time. I have a couple of years at best.âÂ
âYouâre giving yourself an artificial timeline.â He shakes his head. Heâs not getting through to you. âYou could still go find them. Or at least do this all, marriage and kids, with someone better.âÂ
âWho, Jack?â You laugh exasperatedly. âWho the fuck is that? Iâd still have to find them. At least I know him. Thatâs better than jumping into this with a stranger. Who the fuck else do I know that I would do this with?âÂ
Thereâs a silence as you and Jack stare at each other.Â
And then Jack raises his eyebrows and tilts his head at you quickly, just a one second or two flash.Â
It hits you.Â
âJack?â you whisper. You need him to say it. Because thereâs no fucking way.
He swallows hard. âPlease just donât do it with him.âÂ
âJack.âÂ
âMe.â He rushes the word out, taking a few heavy breaths. âYou could do it with me.âÂ
You stop breathing for a second as you look at him, expression unreadable in a way that makes him incredibly self-conscious, blush creeping up his neck to his ears and cheeks. Youâre stunned. Beyond stunned. While your body is still and youâre silent your mind is running a million miles an hour screaming seventy things at once. Thereâs no way he means this as a romantic thing. He just has to be volunteering himself because he thinks heâs at least better than your college ex.Â
The breath you take in thirty seconds later is still shocked. You lick your lips quickly and open your mouth to say something, but then close it when you canât think of anything. This happens a couple of times before Jack speaks again. Heâs quite sure he knows what your reaction means. That youâre trying to find a way to turn him down nicely.Â
âI know Iâm not him and Iâm sure I have much less to offer than him.â You stare at Jack as he speaks, bring a hand up to cover your mouth. âAnd I know that I come with baggage and that Iâm older and that Iâm missing a piece of me, literally, but I just think, no I know I could make you happier than he could.âÂ
Youâre silent for a minute. You process what he says but your brain doesnât formulate a reply to it because you need to know exactly what Jack means. You move your hand from your mouth and rest it to the side of you.Â
Your voice is surprisingly even, just like your body is still. You havenât given into the trembling you can feel coming yet. âIs that⊠Would you want that? Or would it just be a pact kind of thing to you?â Youâre still not convinced heâs thinking about this the same way you are. Youâre convinced heâs just offering to take the place of your ex in the pact, not that heâs in love with you like you are with him.
The way you gloss over what he said hurts. He tries to hold onto some modicum of hope that all of this will get figured out and he wonât lose you but itâs getting hard.Â
Jack lets out the saddest laugh youâve ever heard by anyone ever. âOh no, I want that. Iâve wanted that for a long time. Wanted you. Iâve been in love with you since that first day. The first day I met you. And Iâm sorry if knowing it would be really real for me ruins it and makes me not an option. But even if itâs not me you should still find someone better than him.â He shrugs and looks away from you.Â
âAre you being for fucking real?â He nods, still looking down. âNo, Jack.â You move down the couch so that youâre sitting right next to each other, you with your legs crossed facing Jack whoâs still turned into the couch so that he could see you. âLook at me.â He forces himself to look up at you. âAre you serious right now? Do you mean it? You want me? Youâre in love with me? Like more than platonically?âÂ
Jackâs heart breaks because itâs not the declaration of love heâd hoped you give him in return.Â
âYes.â He nods at you, gives you the eye contact you sought, as intense as always even with his glassy and somewhat defeated looking eyes. âI want you. Iâm in love with you. Iâm in love with you like I want to marry you, I want you to be my wife and me to be your husband, I want to give you my last name, I want to confuse the fuck out of everyone on night shift with two Dr. Abbots, I want you to be the mother of my kids, I want to get you pregnant, more than once maybe, I want to grow old holding your hand and kissing your lips and making you laugh. I want you. Iâm in love with you. I love you. I have always loved you.â
You swallow hard, the trembling finally hitting your entire body. âWhy did you never say anything or make a move?âÂ
Your lack of real response to everything he just admitted confirms it for Jack. You donât feel the same way. You donât love him like he does you. Thereâs not going to be any saving this.Â
âBecause I knew youâd never reciprocate and if I said anything or made a move it would make things awkward and if it didnât totally end our friendship it would have at least changed it significantly. And having you in my life like this, as my best friend, like you have been for the past six years was so much better than not having you in my life at all and being tortured seeing you at work.â Jack sniffles a little. âBut then you started talking about marriage and kids with this guy and I know you want that life and that if you were even considering this pact you were either going to do it or probably start seriously dating and looking for someone. And so I sat here and realized Iâd lose you either way. If I admitted my unrequited love Iâd lose you. If you do it with him or go find someone to have that life with we obviously wouldnât be able to continue how we are and so youâd slowly slip away and Iâd lose you. So I figured I might as well throw it out there so that if nothing else you know that you are enough for someone. So much more than enough. And you shouldnât settle for anyone who thinks differently.âÂ
You look at Jack for a few seconds and then you laugh. Hard. Because you cannot think of how else to react in the moment and Jack fucking Abbot is in love with you and youâre in love with him and you both have been forever and youâre both fucking idiots.Â
The sound is a knife through Jackâs heart.Â
You quiet your laughter and smile at Jack. He canât quite believe it because it would be so out of character for you but Jack assumes youâre about to make fun of him. What else could you do?
âKnew Iâd never reciprocate? Unrequited love?â You let out a few giggles this time. âJack Abbot I have loved you every day for the past six years. I fell in love with you the day we met too. I am in love with you. Romantically. I love you.â You laugh again, a few tears slipping down your face, not from the laughter but the other emotions the laughter is just audibly louder than. âYouâre sitting here talking about me going and finding my person and Iâm trying not to fucking lose it because Iâm sitting here fucking staring at my person so sure you would never reciprocate. Youâre the one who makes me happy. The fucking happiest. The happiest Iâve ever been.â You take a breath and look at Jack, laughter leaving you and watery smile pulling up on your face, eyes the brightest Jack has ever seen them even in the relatively low light. âYou are the one I want that life with. Marriage and kids. I said he wasnât my first choice. You know who fucking is? You, Jack. You. Itâs always been you. Iâve always loved you, too.âÂ
âMe?â Thereâs no fucking way.
âYeah, Jack. You!â Youâre beaming at him.
âYouâre being for fucking real now?â He loosely mimics what you asked him earlier. A tentative smile pulls onto his face. Heâs still struggling to believe that you love him. âYouâre in love with me?â
His smile widens and he rests a hand on your thigh. He has to be sure you understand the reality of him though. Or what he thinks the reality of him is. âBut Iâm-â
âOh, donât even start with the Iâm older and missing a piece of myself and have baggage. Iâve got some baggage myself. And I know you fucking know that.â You give him a pointed look though your smile remains. âI donât care how old you are. And itâs hot quite frankly. I mean you are in general but you being older. The salt and pepper drives me fucking insane. Hardest day of my life was when you got enough gray for me to really notice. I had to go back to my place alone after shift and damn near burned out a vibrator over it, I mean jesus fucking christ, I set a personal record, Jack. Your age is hot. Youâre hot. And handsome. Unfairly so.â You grow a little more serious to address the last point Jack had brought up earlier, rest one of your hands over his on your thigh and your other hand on his knee. âAnd yes. Youâre missing a piece of yourself. But that doesnât matter to me Jack. And I know what you think but itâs not unattractive, it doesnât make you less desirable. And it certainly doesnât somehow make you less of a man, Jack.â
His head is spinning. At all of. The whole situation. Him professing his love. You professing yours. The fact that youâre in love with each other. That you both want to get married and have kids. His brain glitched out for a second at almost burned out a vibrator and set a personal record all because you were thinking of him. And the way you read him like a book when all he said was he was heâs missing a piece of himself and reassured him perfectly, textbook example of a reason why he loves you.Â
Jackâs eyes search yours as he beams with you now. He laughs, and he understands why you laughed. A few tears slide down his face, just as happy and emotional as you. âWeâre fucking idiots.â
You laugh with him and nod. âTotal fucking idiots.â
âWe could have had all those years together. Why did you never say anything?â Jack asks, his free hand covering your hand on his knee. Youâre both still so in shock and processing that kissing each other or continuing this conversation with you straddling him or somehow being closer than you are now hasnât come to the forefront of either of your minds.Â
âSame reason you didnât. Having you somehow was better than not at all. And I mean, Jack,â you let out a flustered laugh, âyou have to know like everyone wants you. You could have anybody you wanted and so I never thought youâd want me.â
âHey. Listen to me.â Jack grows more serious though a soft smile remains. He shifts so that he can hold your face in his hands. Heâs held your face like this before, many times, but not like this. This is different. You know you love each other. And while Jack is still your best friend and will always be your best friend, heâs your partner now. Your lover. Your future husband. Your future childrenâs father. And the same is true for Jack. You are and will always be his best friend, but youâre his partner now. His lover. His future wife. His future childrenâs mother. And so Jackâs holding your face like that. Like youâre his, in every sense of the word. âThere is not a single human being on this entire fucking planet who I want more than you. Not a single fucking one. And there isnât one thatâs better for me. Youâre the only woman I see anymore. Youâve been the only woman I see for a long time. You are the only one I want and the only one for me, Babe.â
You grin at the nickname and how it really is a pet name now, how it suddenly holds even more meaning. And you nod at Jackâs words, relish in how they warm your heart and make you feel so needed and wanted and loved. You know he means them. With his entire being. You bring your hands up and wrap them around Jackâs wrists as he holds your face, thumbs rubbing soft circles on the inside of his wrists.Â
âYou are the only one I want and the only for me, Babe,â you repeat to him. You bite your lip and giggle again and it goes straight to Jackâs cock. Now that you can say it you canât help yourself. âAnd I canât wait to marry you one day.â
âOh yeah?â He smirks, confidence back in full force, seductive without even really trying. âYou want it to be soon?â Jack tilts his head and leans his head in a little closer. You both know youâre fucking finally about to kiss.Â
âCould be tomorrow as far as Iâm concerned.â You wink at him. Itâs kind of a joke but also not really. Youâd marry him tomorrow. âBut I do want to wait on kids. I know weâve been dating in a sense for effectively six years, but I want time for us to really be a couple together. Just the two of us. We have a lot of time to make up for.â You look down at Jackâs lips and tilt your head opposite his, lean in even closer expecting him to close the gap.Â
But instead he pulls away, making your face furrow. âSeriously?â Jack asks.Â
âTo which part?â Your confusion at his question and at his pulling back is clear in your tone.
Jack lets go of your face and you let go of his wrists. He stands, confusing you further until he pulls at the fabric of his scrub pants on one leg and sinks onto one knee. âJack.â Your breathing picks up and tears hit your eyes.Â
âIâm sorry I donât have a ring right now. But I will buy you whatever you want-â
âI want whatever you pick out, Jack,â you interrupt him.Â
He huffs a laugh. He loves you so much. You would interrupt his proposal for that. âOkay. Iâm sorry I donât have a ring right now. But I will pick you out one and weâll get wedding bands on our way. I want to do life by your side forever. I love you.â Jack takes in a breath. âWill you marry me? Tomorrow?â
You nod as you start laughing. âYeah. Yes! Of course Iâll marry you, Jack. Tomorrow.âÂ
You and Jack are beaming at each other again as he starts to laugh with you, standing back up and holding his hands out for you. You take them and uncross your legs, let Jack help pull you up. He pulls you close, so that youâre flush against him. And after six years, you both finally get what you want as you tilt your heads and lean in and kiss each other.Â
The first kiss is soft, a lingering expression of love that has the two of you breathless as you focus on feeling each otherâs lips and the electricity it seems to send through you. The second kiss is a little more, turns sucking on each otherâs bottom lips are taken. The third kiss is where things really escalate and before you know it you and Jack are standing in front of his couch properly making out, tongues in each otherâs mouths, Jackâs arms sliding around you to keep you close, one forearm running parallel up your spine and holding the nape of your neck, your hands finding Jackâs hair and running through it, scratching at his scalp and occasionally tugging.Â
âWeâre going to have to go to a different state though,â you laugh against his lips when you finally break apart for air.Â
âWait, what?â His question is a little breathless from kissing and he pulls away a bit so that you can look at each other properly.Â
You nod. âPennsylvania has a three day waiting period after you apply for a marriage license. It almost fucked up Shenâs wedding.âÂ
Jack looks back at you, right in the eyes as usual. âTomorrow we fly to Vegas. Elope.âÂ
You raise your eyebrows and pause, waiting to see if he says more or changes his mind or anything. When he doesnât you bite your lip and nod. Heâs probably not even aware of how loved it makes you feel to know heâs ready to marry you tomorrow. Just like that. But then you being ready to marry him tomorrow makes him feel the same. âSounds like a plan, Dr. Abbot.â Jackâs pupils dilate even more, his hands sliding down your sides and back to grab your ass. âGet your laptop or my iPad, we can book the plane tickets now.â
Jack doesnât move. âYou know youâre going to be Dr. Abbot in less than 48 hours.â The realization has you taking a shallow breath in and subconsciously pressing yourself against Jack even harder. âAnd we can book later, in a couple of hours.â
You raise your eyebrows slightly. âOh? Why the delay?â
I hope it was okay! I love hearing your guys' thoughts and comments, and I appreciate your likes, reblogs and replies so so much!
Although I'm struggling with how I'm feeling about the above, if there was any level of interest I could probably be persuaded to do a smutty part two because I do love some first time together smut and already have some ideas. So let me know if that's something you might like to see! ETA: Part Two can be found here!
Thank you again for reading and all your support! â„ïž
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It was a well-known fact that you always clocked in after Jack Abbot.
Not because you meant to. At least, not exactly.
It started one night during your first week on night shift. Youâd been cramming for exams all day, convinced you could fit in just one more practice block before your shiftâjust one more. But you dozed off somewhere around question 43, mouth open against the back of your textbook, a puddle of drool collecting around what once was a diagram of the cardiac chambers.
You sprinted in at 6:45pm, flustered and un-caffeinated, only to find Jack already there. Leaning against the nursesâ station with a cup of coffee like heâd been born in that spot, annoyingly calm and smirking like heâd seen this coming.
"Cutting it close, Dr. L/N," heâd said, not even looking up from his chart. "Careful. Thatâs how habits start."
He was right.
At first, you were apologeticânervous and over-eager, all stammered greetings and shuffled charts. Jack didnât seem to notice you beyond the bare minimum, and you chalked that up to his status, his seniority, his general aura of donât talk to me unless someone is actively dying.
But things changed. Somewhere between covering for each other during rounds, tagging out on disaster admits, and a running tally of how many times you each got paged during a single trauma night, familiarity set in. You became colleagues. Then reluctant allies. And somewhere along the lineârivals. Enemies, depending on who you asked and on how bad the night was going.
One time, you were both elbow-deep in post-codes, barely functioning off stale coffee and mutual spite, when he passed you a chart and muttered, "Try not to kill this one with your bedside manner."
You took it without looking up from the board above you. "I'll match your emotional range and we'll both be fine."
You were never late, but it soon became a silent game. He always beat you at it. Whether it was by five minutes or five steps, you never let yourself get there before him. A superstition, maybe. A routine. A rhythm. And because you liked to keep him on edgeâjust to get a reaction out of him.
Seeing Jack colored with shades of affect, even if it was playfully annoyed, was fun. It made him predictable, addictive, a full 180 from his usual stone-cold demeanor. Heâd scowl, grumble something about professionalism, and still let you win half the time. It became a kind of game, and you were very good at it.
Now as a senior resident awaiting board licensure, it was practically tradition.
He was already at the nursesâ station, sipping black coffee like it was fuel and he was a half-full tank, eyes scanning over charts. His voice cut through the hum of bedlam as you approached. "Late again, Dr. L/N. At least you're consistent."
You flipped him off without breaking stride. "And yet, somehow, the hospital hasn't burned down yet. Miraculous, wouldn't you say so, Dr. Abbot?"
He raised a brow, the faintest smirk pulling at the corner of his mouth. "Not even ten minutes in and already have our claws out, do we?"
"Oh, Jack," you pouted, "this is just foreplay."
"Ah, is that what you call passive-aggressive incompetence now?"
"Bold of you to assume itâs passive," you fired back, picking up an iPad and scanning through your list of patients for the night. "Or that Iâm incompetent, considering I actually round with patients instead of brooding in corners like a gargoyle."
"Gargoyle?" he echoed. "Iâm flattered youâve been staring long enough to come up with nicknames."
"Please," you scoffed. "Your aura of gloom is visible from space. NASA actually filed a complaint saying it was interfering with their ability to conduct research."
Jack paused for a beat, gaze flicking over you more intently than usual. "Did you eat before your shift?"
You eyes were glued on the iPad, your only response a single head bobble "no."
He didnât like that. Robby could tell from the way his jaw flexed slightlyâbut he said nothing. Just hummed under his breath and looked back at his clipboard.
Robby had been watching through his glasses the entire time, arms crossed and eyes narrowed like a dad wrangling in two over-caffeinated siblings. He blinked at the two of you, then sighedâlong, theatrical, the kind of sigh that said he had survived more codes than he could count but this was titrating his patience.
"You two ever gonna kiss, or just keep trying to murder each other with sarcasm?" He took his glasses off to bury his face in his hands with a groan.
Jack didnât look up, turning the page over on his clipboard. "I prefer homicide. Cleaner paperwork."
"Honestly, I'd take an explosive diarrhea case over having this conversation," you muttered, half to Robby, half to yourself, rubbing at the bridge of your nose like the words might erase Jack from your field of vision.Â
Robby would be remiss if he didn't catch the way neither of you clocked his kiss and make up comment. He stared at you both, mouth frozen in a half-smile that said he couldnât decide whether to laugh or launch you into separate time zones. He gave it two full secondsâlong enough to confirm that you were both still hopelessâbefore shaking his head in defeat.
"I think," Robby hummed, patting both of your shoulders like a tired camp counselor, "to be so dumb must be nice."
You and Jack had the same unimpressed expression locked and loadedâscowls sharp and identical, contempt trained squarely on Robby, both of you about to mouth off in perfect sync.
He walked off before either of you could open your mouths.Â
â
By 3am, the fatigue and hunger were chewing holes in your composure.
Too many admits. Not enough staff. Shen being chronically unbothered. Myrna threatening to murder her wifeâwhen you and Jack turned to ask if she had a wife, matching expressions of disbelief already locked in place, she looked at you deadpan and asked, "You wanna get hitched?"
And alwaysâalwaysâJack.
Fucking Jack.
With his clipboard full of passive-aggressive notes in that damn attractive calligraphy handwriting.
His tone clipped like a warning and welcome all at once.
And his black scrubs making him look like the grim reaper of constructive criticism and deconstructive mental undressing.
"Patient in six?" you asked.
"CT just came back. Small bowel obstruction. Classic presentation, apparently."
You glanced his way. "Told you it wasnât just post-op gas."
Jack didnât miss a beat. "And yet, you were already quoting discharge guidelines to the new intern before radiology even called back."
You shot him a look. Walsh would be proud of you for that one. "I was outlining possibilities. Itâs called methodical thinkingâmust not be a concept youâre familiar with."
He grinned, lazy and unbothered. "Chaos works for me. You panic without bullet points."
You rolled your eyes. "Youâre the only attending I know who thrives in complete chaos and calls it a âmethod.â"
"And youâre the only resident I know who color-codes her trauma alerts."
The edge of your lip curled. "Thatâs called being prepared."
He gestured vaguely. "Itâs called being uptight."
You arched a brow. "Spoken like someone who thinks organized is a four-letter word that starts with 'f' and ends with 'k'."
He leaned in, voice dropping just slightly. "Spoken like someone who secretly enjoys cleaning up after my messes."
You blinked once. Then grinned wider. "One day, your beloved chaos is going to bite you in the ass."
He tapped your chart as he walked past. "I guess itâs a good thing youâve already alphabetized the first aid supplies for me."
â
By 3:20, the storm hit.
Lightning cracked the sky. Power flickered. The backup generator hummed to life with a groan. You should've brought an extra jacket to keep in your locker but it would end up disappearing anyway. Jack was in the hallway already, flashlight in hand.
"ORâs shut down. Weâre triaging manually. You good?"
You nodded, biting your tongue. This wasnât the time.
You worked side by side in the makeshift command center. Tension simmered beneath the quiet coordinationâuntil a grabby frat-boy type from bay four decided he didnât like being told to sit still and wait.
It happened fast.
He flung the tray off his bed, sending instruments clattering across the floor. You instinctively raised your hand to shield your faceâjust as a stray scalpel nicked the back of your hand, slicing a sharp, shallow arc. The pain didnât register immediately. Jack did.
He was on the guy in an instant, stepping in front of you, voice low and lethal. "Sit. Down." The words came out all but minced.Â
Security had already been called, but Jack looked like he wanted to break the guyâs face just for breathing in your direction. He didnât even turn back to you until the orderlies dragged the patient away.
Then his hand was cupping your elbow, his voice much softer. "Let me see it."
You hissed as he inspected the cut. "Itâs not deep."
"Youâre bleeding on my chaos," he muttered, guiding you gently to an empty room.
You snorted through the blossoming pain. "Told you my color-coding wasnât excessive."
He grabbed a suture kit, pulling gloves on with the kind of care you usually saw him reserve for crics and broken ribs. "Hold still."
"Bossy."
"Only when someone I like gets stabbed in the hand."
Your breathing hitched. "Like, huh?"
Jackâs attention was fixed on your hand. "Donât make it weird."
You smiled, watching him thread the needle, so close, so focused. "Wouldnât dream of it."
The quiet that followed wasnât heavy. Quite the opposite. It felt warm. Easy. He worked methodically, hands sure, touch gentle, eyes flicking up every few seconds to check your expression like it mattered more than the wound. As he cleaned around the cut and prepped the lidocaine syringe, you both said it in unisonâ
"Slight prick and a burn."
You laughed under your breath, both at his expression of surprise and your synchrony. "God. That phrase is ingrained in my soul. I think I said it to a grapefruit during my 5th year."
Jackâs lips twitched. "I said it to a patientâs plush raccoon once."
You watched his hands move with steady precision, stitching you up like he had all the time in the world. The storm outside cracked again, but neither of you flinched.
"Make sure I donât scar, Doc," you teased, settling in as he prepped the suture. "I need these hands to make magic and miracles happen. Might even become a hand model if this whole medicine thing doesnât pan out."
Jack didnât look up, but you caught the twitch at the corner of his mouth. "Iâll do my best, maâam. But if you end up on a billboard somewhere, I expect royalties."
You snorted. "In your dreams."
Jack didnât say anything at firstâjust gave you a small, private smile like he was tucking something away in the back of his mind. Like he was keeping it just for himself.
And this time, when you looked at him, he didnât look away.
For a few minutes, the raindrops tapping against the windows were the only sound that filled the empty space. Jack didn't speak. He just kept his gaze on your hand, now bandaged, resting on the edge of the tray table like it had never been hurt. You watched him watching you, your heart thudding quietly in your throat.Â
"You always take care of your disasters this nicely?" you mumbled.
He smirked. "Only the pretty ones."
You didnât speak of it.
Not until later, when the lights came back and the halls emptied and you were alone in the break room.
You noticed it as he leaned against the counter, scrubs rumpled, hair even more so. His scrubs were black, as alwaysâjust rumpled enough to prove he'd been moving all night, just fitted enough to be infuriating. You took a sip of water, eyeing him from across the break room table as you both took a seat. Something about the way the fluorescent light caught the curve of his jaw made the words slip out before you could stop them.
"Do you own anything that isnât black?" you asked, voice light with sudden curiosity. "Or is your off-duty wardrobe just a series of increasingly gothic-toned hoodies that match your work-wear?"
Jack glanced up from his coffee, one brow arched. "It hides blood."
You stared. "You really donât let anyone in, huh?"
He didnât answer right away, just sipped his coffee and stared out at the empty hallway beyond the break room.
Finally, with a shrug that didnât quite match the weight behind it, he said, "Youâre one to talk."
That made you laugh, but it came out softer than expected. "Guess weâre both pretty terrible at normal."
Jackâs lips twitched. "Normalâs overrated."
You leaned back in your chair, legs stretched out in front of you, the tips of your sneakers barely brushing his. Neither of you moved.Â
Suddenly, Jack got up and yanked open a small drawer by the coffee machine and pulled out a sad-looking granola bar, handing it to you without meeting your eyes.
"Eat this."
Your brow furrowed, suspicious. "Seriously?"
"You havenât eaten since yesterday," he muttered, brushing it off like it didnât matter. Like he hadnât noticed.
You stared at the wrapper, then at him. "You really had that locked and loaded?"
He didnât answer. Just crossed his arms and stuck the bar out at you further. "Itâs chocolate. Donât make me regret it."
Instead of prying further, your hand reached out slowly and took it, eyes still narrowed, studying him like heâd just burnt out a fuse in your brain.
Silence washed over you again. Occasionally filled by the sound of you munching on your granola bar and taking measured sips of your coffee. After a few minutes and one crumpled granola bar later, you caught Jack sneaking a glance at you over the rim of his cup.
You didnât say anythingâjust raised a brow.
He looked away like he hadnât been watching you at all.
But the corner of his mouth betrayed him.
The words crept out of your mouth carefully. "Do you think..."Â
Jack looked up, gaze intent.Â
"Nevermind," you stopped yourself.Â
He leaned in closer, the space between you shrinking into something almost unbearable. Not quite touching, not even brushingâbut the air thickened under the weight of his stare. That kind of eye contact that felt like it could crack glass. Steady. Searching.
You let the quiet spool between you like a thread someone might tug, if they were brave enough.
"It's rude to start things you don't intend on finishing," he stated simply.
You blinked, still caught in the current of that look, then leaned in a littleâalmost like you were about to whisper a secret. Jack mirrored you without hesitation, like it was instinct.
Your voice was barely above a murmur. "Do you think..."
He waited, gaze steady, maybe even a tinge of hope if you squinted.
"...that the real reason you thrive in chaos is because it matches your personality?" you deadpanned.
Jack exhaled sharply, the ghost of a scoff tugging at his mouth. He sat back, shaking his head. "Unbelievable."
You grinned, eyes bright and playful. "What? I finished it."
"Barely," he muttered, but he was smiling too.
A few beats passed. You both sat in the lingering quiet, the kind that settled in only after long shifts and half-spoken things.
Then he leaned inâjust a littleâmirroring what you'd done earlier. You furrowed your brows, curious.
He lowered his voice, almost conspiratorial. "Do you think..."
You leaned in too, expecting something real, something heavy.
"...that you secretly enjoy being wrong? Because, statistically, itâs seems like your favorite hobby."
Your jaw dropped to let out a puff of air, baffled by his audacity, and pushed his arm. "God, youâre insufferable."
He chuckled under his breath. "And yet, here you are."
You gave him a sideways glance, lips quirking. "I will admit that itâs in my top five favorite hobbies. But it still doesnât beat âannoying Jack Abbot.â That oneâs undefeated."
Jack shook his head, eyes warm and lips softened in a grin. "Youâd miss me if I ever stopped letting you win."
Your only response was a coy smile. You nudged his foot with yours beneath the table, and he glanced down at the contact. He nudged back, subtle and sure, like he didnât want the moment to end just yetâthen looked back up at you. Something passed between the pair of youâunspoken, tentative, curious.
The room fell quiet again, comfortable this time. Neither of you moved to leave.
Until Jack's phone buzzed.
He glanced at it, then cursed under his breath. "Room seven. It's that kid who demanded to speak to the 'head doctor' because I wouldn't give him dilaudid for a tension headache."
You raised a brow. "So... a normal Friday?"
"Basically."
You watched him go, expecting a quick de-escalation. Room seven. You knew who that was. Height rivaled only by his ego. Frat letters drawn across his bare chest like illiterate war paint. Barked at nurses like he owned the floor. The kind of guy who made everything someone else's problem, backed by daddyâs legal team and a two-semester record of hazing infractions.
Jack had said heâd handle it. He always did. Especially with these types. It was like they were on a rotationâevery Friday night, a new brand of uninhibited pre-frontal cortex, privileged chaos.
But then you heard his voiceâJackâsâsharp and too loud from down the hall. A clatter followed, unmistakable. Tray to tile. A chair scraping. Then another crash. A shout that definitely wasnât Jackâs.
You were already moving.
By the time you rounded the corner, the frat boy was mid-lunge, fury twisting his face as he hurled a tray toward Jackâs head like he was reenacting some half-remembered bar fight. Jack ducked, barelyâbut he was boxed in, too close to the wall.
You didnât think. Just moved.
"Hey!" you barked, adrenaline surging. You threw yourself at him, coming at him like a freight train and making him fall back onto the bed with a grunt. A nurse hit the emergency call. Security swarmed seconds later.
Jack had grabbed your arm and pulled you backâtight but not painfulâpulling you just out of the fray. "What the hell?"
You glared at him, chest heaving. "Returning the favor."
He didnât let go.
"On-call room. Now."
He practically hauled you down the hall, his hand never leaving yours. You were both silent until the door shut behind you. He pressed his palms to the counter and stared at it like it had personally offended him.
"What was that?" His voice was sharp, unfiltered, pissed in a way you didnât see oftenânot like this. Not when it was about you. "You couldâve gotten hurt."
"So could you." You leaned against the metal bunkbed frame, still catching your breath. "A simple 'thank you' would suffice."
His Adam's apple bobbed, slow, like the movement itself took restraint. His jaw was tight, eyes darker than usual.
"You're reckless," he said quietly.
"Takes one to know one," you laughed.
Jack didnât.
He stepped forward instead, jaw clenched. "You have no regard for your safety and only for that of others."
You took a step back.
"You will go out of your way to treat and protect everyone around you at the expense of your own well-being."
Another step back. Any closer andâ
"Do you understand," he said, each word measured, devastating, "how much I worry about you?"
Your heartbeat was a war drum nowâloud, insistent, thunderous.
"Do you know how much I think about you? How much I plan for the worst every time you throw yourself between danger and someone else without a second thought?" he added, voice cracking just enough to reveal the truth beneath it. Laid bare.
"When you walk into the ER and you haven't eaten since the night before and I can see itâyou're running on caffeine and impulse and whatever scraps of adrenaline are left."
You opened your mouth, but no sound came out.
He didnât stop there. "When you give your jacket to a freezing patient and spend the next six hours shivering without saying a wordâlike thatâs normal."
You swallowed. "It wasnât cold..."
Jackâs voice sharpened. "You forget your umbrella and show up soaked but act like it's fine. Like itâs not freezing. Like you didnât just volunteer to get sick."
Your fingers twitched against your side.
"And when you blow off your own wound care to finish a chart. Or cover a code blue for someone else even though your shift ended twenty minutes ago."
You looked away. His eyes never left you.
He stepped even closer, willing you to look at him. "When you pretend youâre made of steel. And then crack alone in the stairwell when you think no oneâs looking."
It felt like ice cold water had dropped from the ceiling.
"Jackâ" you managed to force out.Â
He held up a hand and turned around, cutting you off. "Please."Â
He couldnât hear it. Not unless you felt the same. Not unless you'd listened, actually listened, for once. Heâd rather bleed out not knowing than survive a rejection he couldnât patch. Just colleagues. He'd switch over to day shift if he had to. Robby could put in a word for him. Temporary, at least until he found a new hospital. Maybe in a different city. Of a different state.
He looked anywhere but you, turning like he meant to leave, like he could walk it off and pretend none of this ever happened.
"Jack, please..." The words came out desperate, begging, pleading for him to stop.
He didn't meet your eyesâcouldn't. "I'll see you at the nurses station."Â
"Oh, for the love of Godâ" You reached forward and yanked him back by his forearm.
And then your lips were on his.
It wasnât clean or careful. It was a crashâyears of tension detonating all at once. He froze for half a second, eyes wide open like his brain was short-circuiting, then kissed you back with everything he had and more. Desperation, disbelief, hungerâit all poured out of him like water breaking through a dam.
Your hands cradled his face, thumbs grazing over the light stubble along his jaw, fingertips brushing the sharp edges of his cheekbones like you were learning him by touch alone. He kissed you like he couldnât stand to stop, and you held him like you werenât going to let him. He tasted like spearmintâsharp and stubbornâthe gum he always carried in his pocket, and behind that, burnt coffee and something so distinctly Jack it made your limbs tingle.
His hands found your waist, your jaw, your backâgrasping like he didnât trust the moment to be real unless he mapped every inch of you with his fingertips. You were pressed chest to chest, and it still didnât feel close enough.
Jack had kissed people before. He had slept with people before. He'd been married, for God's sake. But thisâthisâwas unreal. This was heat and gravity and every inch of restraint heâd stitched into place finally tearing wide open. This was the reason human beings fought in wars. Why people wrote poetry and ruined perfectly stable lives for one perfect, maddening kiss. Why everything else material and immaterial suddenly paled in comparison.
Your hands were in his hair, tugging salt and pepper curls just enough to make him groan, low and wrecked against your lips.
He kissed you like he was trying to memorize the shape of your mouth, share the oxygen in your lungs, the little gasp you made when his thumb grazed the spot behind your ear just right. He devoured everything you gave him and kissed you like a man who had run out of time and patience.
Because he had.
Heâd wanted this too long to pretend otherwise, and he'd sooner die than deprive either of you from this any longer.Â
You pulled back just enough to breathe, your forehead resting lightly against his. Both of you were gasping, eyes locked in the kind of dazed silence that usually followed adrenaline crashes.Â
"Took you long enough, old man," you whispered, lips still brushing his.
Jack blinked once, twice. Like he couldnât believe this was real. Like the thought had crossed his mind a thousand times, but the reality of youâthisâhit harder than heâd prepared for.
"You feel the same?" he asked quietly, in a tone that was more awe than question.
You nodded. "Since before either of us were brave enough to say it."
Jack let out a breath that shook at the edges. "I thought if I let it slipâif I looked too long, said too muchâyouâd shut me out."
"I thought if I admitted it, it would ruin everything."
"It didnât," he murmured, leaning his forehead against yours.
"No," you whispered. "It finally made sense of everything."
Jack blinked again, almost like he hadnât fully registered it until now. His gaze swept over your face, pausing at your lips, then your eyes, as if searching for the lie he couldnât find.
"You really mean that?" he asked, quieter now. Not disbelievingâjust internalizing.
You nodded again, slower this time. "I donât do this if I donât."
Jack let out another breath, but it wasnât shaky this timeâit was solid. Grounded. Relieved. He laughed under it, the sound warm and slightly incredulous.
"You really are impossible," he murmured, brushing his nose against yours.
"And youâre dramatic," you whispered back, smiling.
"Fair," he said. "But youâre still mine."
"Yeah," you said. "I think I always was."
Jack huffed a breath, the ghost of a smile tugging at his mouth. "Careful. You just kissed your attending. That kind of power could go to your head."
You grinned, still breathless. "Please. You kissed me back like your life depended on it."
"Who says it didn't?" he asked rhetorically, so quietly it almost got lost in the air between you.
Your fingers drifted to the back of his neck, fingertips brushing softly along the hairline, anchoring him there. Jack shivered. Not from coldânever from cold.
"Thank you," you admitted. "For taking care of me while I was busy taking care of everyone else."
His grip on your waist tightened, grounding himself, and then he leaned in again. This time it was slower. Less frantic. His lips found the curve of your neck, warm and reverent. You gaspedâquietlyâbut it was enough. He kissed lower, just beneath your jaw, and your hands curled in the fabric at his shoulders.
"Always." The word left his lips like a prayer.
His fingers traced the hem of your scrub top, ghosting up your sides like he was overriding any and all memories of anything else other than you. No dissonance. Just Jack, desperate to feel something real in a world that never gave him space to.
You pressed closer, kissed the corner of his mouth. "You taste like that godawful spearmint gum."
He grinned against your skin. "You love it."
Another scoff. "If throwing myself in front of a raging frat boy was all it took to get you to shut up and kiss me, I would've done it ages ago."
Jack pulled back just enough to look at you, smug. "If you do that again, Iâm going to make you do my charting for a week."
You snorted. "With pleasure."
He didnât argue. Just dipped his head and kissed you again.
â
You woke in the on-call room, a mess of tangled limbs and haphazardly strewn clothes. Your cheek pressed to the rise and fall of his chest. The storm had long passed, but its echo lingered in the hush around you. Jackâs arm was slung low around your waist, fingers drawing lazy, absent-minded shapes against your hip like he didnât know how to stop touching you now that heâd started.
"For what itâs worth, I still think youâre a pain in the ass," you murmured, voice thick with sleep.
His chest rumbled beneath your cheek. "Likewise," he said, but it came out softer than usual.
You shifted just enough to look up at him, your hand brushing gently across his ribs, then settling over his heart. "Donât get used to this."
His brow arched. "This?" If you looked hard enough, you might have seen worry flash across his face.Â
"Me being nice."
Relief painted his expression. He smiled, full and rare. "Youâre the one curled into me like a particularly mouthy cat."
You buried your face in his chest. "Shut up."
His fingers tightened slightly at your hip. "Not complaining. Just saying... I could get used to this."
You looked up again, caught the vulnerability flickering there before he blinked it away. Your thumb brushed his jaw, and you leaned in, pressing a slow kiss to the corner of his mouth, a smile blooming in its wake.
"Yeah," you whispered. "Me too."
â
A few weeks and an undetermined number of shifts later, you walked through the double doors of the ER wearing a black hoodieâoversized and unassuming to anyone else, but unmistakable to anyone who knew him.
Robby and Dana spotted it from a mile away. The frayed drawstring, the hole near the front pocket, the faded cuff seamsâthe one he always reached for when the weather dropped below 60 degrees, too tired to bother, or too raw to pretend. Jackâs favorite and now second most prized possession.
The first being the shirt you wore when you stayed the night for the first timeâoversized and soft, probably older than the first year med studentsâborrowed without asking. He never washed it. Claimed it smelled like you now and he'd keep it that way.
No one said a word.
Except Robby, who walked past and muttered, "Finally." Then, as you and Jack strolled side by side toward the nursesâ stationâstill bickering, now with smiles tucked behind every jabâhe held out a fist to Jack.
Jack bumped it without hesitation.
Robby grinned. "Took you long enough."
"Shut up," you and Jack muttered in unison, but neither of you stopped smiling.
Jack's hand brushed yours between steps, a casual touch that lingered just long enough to say everything he couldn't say out loud in front of witnesses. You let your pinky hook around his for a second before letting goâjust a flash of something soft beneath the usual snark.
"Didn't know we allowed pets in the ER," Dana remarked from her chair before looking up through her glasses. "Or are those lovebirds I hear?"
You smirked. "Weâre just evolving."
Jack raised a brow. "Into better people?"
"No," you replied. "Into slightly better-functioning disasters. I am, anyway. Jackâs still somewhere between disaster and cryptid."
He bumped your shoulder gently before giving you a playful wink. "Speak for yourself. I was already perfect."
You rolled your eyes but didnât argue. A smile crept up like second nature. You'd get him next time.
Robby snorted. "God, you two are insufferable."
You turned just enough to shoot him a smug look. "You love it."
He held up his hands in mock surrender. "I do. But if I walk in on you making out in the supply closet, Iâm blackmailing both of you. With photos."
Jack didnât even flinch. "Make sure you get our good angles."
a/n: this is for â a doctor dayâ which i am so happy to be a part of. it took me some time to think about something cool but i tried my best to work with this prompt. so i really really really hope you enjoy it as much as me. i tried to be subtle about the color cause in my head it means something really bigger.Â
a big thank you to @letsgobarbs @ananonymousaffair @clubsoft for creating this project!!!
prompt: The nights feel dull and tasteless without you, I try to get through them but they seem so endless.
color: pink.
word count: +3k
Everything started with an offer for you to go teach at a hospital in London. You were so excited, it was your dream since medical school and youâve worked hard to experience the things you always wanted. It started small: residency, then you got masters and a doctorate. The job offer wasnât out of the blue, they were watching your every move, gluing to the details of your incredible brain.Â
You loved working at the ED, the adrenaline, the sight of doing something good and to actually do what you loved. You found valuable things there: friends, family and love. You found Jack there. He was your rock, the biggest supporter you could ever get and he couldnât get in the way of you getting what you always wanted. The moment you told him what they offered he knew being selfish would kill him and letting you go would kill him either.Â
The breakup was clean with a lot of tears and feelings. Too many words were said meaning the same thing: you loved him and he loved you more than anyone.Â
âWill you miss me?â You whispered, cuddled with him.Â
âEvery day til you come back to me.â He smelled your hair, pulling you closer.Â
So he let you go, even if meant to put his plans on stand by. The house, the ring, the children. He would wait and so did you.Â
The day you left was the day he lost himself in his own mind. Jack was quieter, more introspective and a little sadder, Robby pointed out for Dana once. He was still capable of doing his job, of course he was. But you werenât there to help him, to make funny remarks about him or to share a candy bar when the chaos finally stopped. You werenât there for him to take you home, in fact, you were making yourself a home somewhere else that wasnât with him.Â
He was terrified of you meeting another person that could easily erase him from your mind. The idea of you marrying someone else haunted him more often than he could admit. He would never forgive himself if the children of another man had the eyes of the girl he couldnât forget - his girl.
You stopped talking to each other as a silent agreement. It was easy to do your jobs if the anxiety of someone waiting for the call or text wasnât on your mind all the time. Suddenly three months became three years and the lump in your throat, the knot in Jackâs chest, got loose.Â
The countless nights you almost called him to hear his voice or text to know how he was doing, if he was eating, sleeping and trying to be a normal person. Jack almost did the same too. He dialed your number and gave up, he wrote you letters and a journal to inform you about how he was dealing with the distance.
You moved on, made friends, got yourself a home with the things you only dreamed off before and got your shit together. You were a really popular name among the medical teaching. You did some impressive research, amazing experiments and innovations on the field, especially on emergency education, the top of your field. Jack watched you from afar the whole time, he read your papers, he watched your online classes, he did everything to keep you close to him. And he waited patiently for you.Â
Pitt was watching you again, they needed someone like you to teach new doctors on the night shift and to take the hospital to the next level, so they offered you another deal.Â
You accepted right away. No questions asked.Â
Your first call was to Robby and Dana, you decided to let them know you were coming back to work at the hospital again. They were really happy, especially Dana for getting her coffee partner back. You thought about texting Jack, but the uncertain feeling if we ever wanted to hear about you again made you tremble with fear, so you didnât. Perhaps he already knew you were coming back.Â
He did.Â
The cold Pittsburg breeze brought back the familiar memories once again. The laughter, the tears, the pain and the comfort. You needed that so bad, you almost didnât feel the moisture on your cheeks and your heavy breathing.Â
Nothing like home, right?
You got into the hospital fifteen minutes before your shift started. You were overjoyed to be there surrounded by so many familiar faces. Princess and Perlah were the first ones to see you, for a fraction of seconds you almost missed their hugs.Â
âYou are so back! Thank God.â Princess held you tighter, shaking you in her arms.Â
âIâm so glad to be back.â They let you go and you went straight to the nursing station, catching Robby and Danaâs attention.Â
âI canât believe my eyes.â Robbyâs words made you blush, embracing them. âWe missed you here, London.âÂ
âLondon?â You questioned him with eyebrows raised.Â
âOnly the best of us came back, Iâm glad you did.â Dana whispered, kissing your temple.Â
âI canât wait to see you making these guys peed in their pants.âÂ
âItâs going to be a pleasure to make them fear me.â Robby gasped, making you laugh a little louder.Â
The nurses joined in for a warm hug and some small talk, even Garcia showed up to see you and you were really surprised to find out sheâs literally dating a girl from the residency. She just mouthed you that you talk more later and moved back to the OR. You really missed those people and suddenly life was so much better and lighter.Â
He was watching everything from the other side of the room. His heart filled with something he couldnât give a name right away. You looked different in his eyes. Maybe your hair, your bone structure, your cheeks. He didnât know. Still the most beautiful person heâd ever seen. You were there, so close to him and he was paralyzed. Frozen in his own world.Â
Jack spent nights imagining how he would react when you come back, how he would take you in his arms and forget the rest about the rest, kiss your face and plead you to not walk away ever again, to make his arms home once more. But you were right there and he lost his ability to move and be a fucking person.Â
You caught his eyes and gave him a shy smile. Not going straight to him, giving the time you knew he was going to need before doing something else and besides, you were so involved with the crew that for a millisecond you forgot about the butterfly in your stomach almost making you throw up there.Â
He wasnât ready to talk to you. Not yet. Jack heard the rumors, he knew youâll be back soon to be in the hospital again. Same shift, same people, different you, different him. He hated the change. At the same time, he needed to have you right over there next to him to make sure you werenât going anywhere far from him. His mind was racing with millions of things and most of them were about you.
By the time the shift started, you were already with the students, talking about your work and what you expect them to do and learned from you. They noticed how smillish and nice you seem just for the way you lead them through the trauma bay introducing one by one to the team. First Shen, who was too energetic by your return to stop talking and then Ellis, who were all sweet and great with everybody else. Bridget couldnât keep her hands to herself, hugging you in all the opportunities she had. And then Jack, he was serious the whole time, shaking the students hands and quickly looking at you.Â
âThis is the night shift crew. If Iâm not around you can always ask them for help. Doctor Shen is the sweetest person here but you donât want to piss him off. Dr. Ellis is an amazing teacher if you want to learn something and Iâm pretty sure you want to, again guys, donât piss her off.â You took a deep breath and looked at him. âThis is doctor Abbot, he is the best trauma surgeon here and if I were you, Iâll try to be nice to him, heâs a surprise box to solve problems and rage Dr. Walsh.â
You tried your best to focus on them, ignoring his hot gaze on your face, reading you microexpressions like it was his newspaper. His presence made you overwhelmed enough to stumble in a few words. They introduced themselves to them and led them to the patients they were looking for at night.Â
Jack liked the new version of you. Confident, smarter, better. Watching you teach was absolutely incredible, you delivered everything without problems, making these kids really think and understand what took him years to do. The more he looked, the more he wanted to take you home and forget about the three years you were gone.Â
âWant a picture, Abbot?â You teased him, leaning against the counter with a tablet in hand.Â
âIf looking at a pretty thing is a crime put me in the fucking jail.â He crossed his arms, locking your gaze.Â
âGood to know your taste hasn't changed.âÂ
âWeâre talking about something really serious and I donât play about anything that revolves around you.â He admitted, coming closer to where you were. âYou were missed around here.âÂ
âI missed being here too.â Your words sounded like a whisper as he was getting closer.Â
âWe need to talk.â Jack held your arm, softly caressing your skin.Â
âAbbotâs pancakes?âÂ
âYouâre still bossy, wow.â He would do whatever you asked. âWhatever you want, gorgeous.âÂ
âAsshole.â You dismissed him, going the other way shaking your head.Â
The next hours felt like youâve never gone away for three years. The crew was the same you remembered but better and your tiredness didnât turn out to be an issue. At 07 am you were pretty awake, the adrenaline was making you excited and you couldnât stop moving around the room.Â
You spent at least twenty minutes explaining about your patients to the day crew before really leaving the ER. It was a great day for you, the familiar taste of doing what you love with people you love made your heart ache with happiness. You were glad to be there again.Â
Jack was waiting for you at the parking lot, hands in his pockets and eyes on you. You approached him slowly, stopping a few steps away. He watched your face with a discreet smirk, shaking his head.Â
He followed you to your car, making sure you were safe enough to drive to his house - the same one you shared for almost two years. The unease on your chest was making you almost throw up in your car. You parked in the driveway, watching the house from the outside for a while. He was still watching you, he couldnât stop himself from that.Â
The small garden you cultivated was still intact, the pink flowers you loved and a few other plants that werenât there before. He took care of the garden religiously for you. That was his way of hoping you come back to him. You walked towards the entrance slowly, capturing the details you missed while away. Jack finally put the swing on the front porch, like you planned on doing to make the house seem more cozy.Â
âI thought it would be nice to sit here sometimes to watch the neighborhood.â He mentioned and opened the door for you.Â
The inside was the same you remembered. The picture frames, the decoration. He changed some furniture but the rest looked the same. He still kept the picture of you two above the fireplace with the same flowers you used to put there. In your heed, when he did those things brought him some hope to believe you were coming back to him.
âYou still buy the flowers?â You asked, turning your face to look at him.Â
âEvery wednesday at the farmers market.â He nodded, walking to the kitchen.Â
Everything looked the same, like you never left. Even the cinnamon smell you absolutely loved lingered in the air.Â
The kitchen was absolutely your favorite place in the house. You got to spend hours sitting at the table doing your shit or just baking whatever came to your head, sipping tea and being loved. Jack had the perfect vision from the living room when you were in the kitchen. He never told you but he had a lot of pictures of you sitting there existing like youâre the only God he believed.Â
He served you some coffee and went back to the other side of the counter, putting the ingredients to do the pancakes you asked. The comfortable silence was pleasant, reminding you of the morning you shared in the same way: him doing the breakfast and you enjoying the view.Â
âHow was London? Last time I heard you were the chief of the trauma department there.â Jack was trying his best to avoid the topic he needed to talk about.Â
âIt was good. Cold, rainy and absolutely no pancakes.â You joked, crossing your arms over the table. âI had a good time, did things I only dreamed of, taught a lot of people and got to travel a bit.âÂ
âYou traveled? Where did you go?â He seemed interested.Â
âI went to visit Greece, did a tour around Italy with a couple of friends, my nephews came to visit me during winter and we went skiing in Switzerland.â You sipped more coffee, smiling at the memories. âI went to a safari, Jack!â Your words slipped in a funny way and he recognized how happy you were. âYou wouldâve loved that.â
âYeah, I can imagine.â Suddenly he stopped in his tracks to finally watch you.Â
You appeared relaxed, leaning against the chair, hair messed in a bun, jacket already off and barefoot. Looking like an absolute dream. Like the love of his life.Â
âI missed you, you know? A lot.â You admitted, looking away from him. âI almost called you so many times and never had the courage to do it.âÂ
âI wouldâve picked on the first ring.â He chuckled, mixing the ingredients trying to not stare for too long. âI wrote you some letters and a journal.âÂ
âYou did?â Jack nodded, making you smile larger. âI may have taken some pictures of things and places that reminded me of you and kept them on an album to give to you. I hope you enjoy the crazy selfies and the endless comments on the people.â He laughed, picturing the scenes.Â
He took his time to finish the pancakes, putting them on the table and sitting across from you with his cup of coffee. The dynamics between you havenât changed at all, he still knew what you needed before you asked and you still read his face with ease.Â
âI thought I had lost you forever.â Jack declared, making you stop. âThe day I let you go was the worst day of my life, I felt so powerless and selfish. I couldnât be the reason you give up your dreams because they were in you before I was present in your life and being the motive of your unhappiness was going to kill me.â You felt your stomach drop. âThe nights feel dull and tasteless without you, I try to get through them but they seem so endless. The night shift sucked without you there, our bed was cold, I barely slept thinking about you.â
âThe idea of you finding somebody else and deciding to marry and have children.â He didnât continue and you held his hand.Â
âJack, I am yours and yours only.â You squeezed his hand. âI spent a few weeks crying before bed, wanting to run back to you. The day I went on that plane I left a piece of my heart with you. The life we were building, the plans, the marriage, the children.â You mumbled with tears, chuckling. âNever crossed my mind doing those things with anybody else. Itâs always been you and itâs always gonna be. Besides, European guys are not that attractive.â His jaw tensed and you burst out laughing. âIâm just messing with you.âÂ
âI hate this.â He rolled his eyes, shaking his head.Â
âWhatever you say, honey.â You winked, giggling under your breath.Â
âDoes this mean we can start over?â He asked, holding your gaze.Â
âAlways, Jack.â You smiled.Â
Thatâs how after breakfast you ended up moving back to your place. The countless boxes with your stuff, bags filled with clothes and your favorite book collection around his living room. You were tired but nothing like the feeling of being home with him. Jack sent you to sleep a while later, finding you curled in his side of the bed, holding his pillow to smell his scent.Â
He enjoyed the quietness of the morning to go through the album you made him. Pink cover with some shells and his name in gold letters. On the first page he found a small note you wrote.Â
âTo Jack.Â
I hope you know I thought about you a lot and these memories are an extension of my endless love for you.Â
Love, your girl.â
He couldn't contain a smile with the note, sighing as he passed to the next pages. The first real picture was you outside the hospital in London, bright smile, fearless, beautiful as ever. The note under the picture made him giggle, flushed. Â
âYou wished me good day before I took this. It was in fact a good day âcause I imagined you with me all the time.â
He kept passing the pages, amused by the great photos and the small remarks that sounded too much like you. His favorite was one of you sitting at the safari cart, wearing a pink cap, caressing a giraffe with one hand and with the other showing the necklace he gifted you a few years ago, the largest smile heâd ever seen, eyes shining and cheeks red from laughing. A look he recognized damn well. What made the picture even better was the small text.Â
âI was in the safari in this. When theguide was tooking the picture the fucking lion roared next to the cart, almost peed my pants. Definitely not like Lion King, Disney lied to us. The cap was a gift from a child at the village I visited, he said it was to protect me and I truly believed in his words. The necklace is to represent you with me there and the giraffe, well, Iâm in love. You wouldâve loved this trip. I want to come back with you. Honeymoon maybe?âÂ
Love, your (not so) wild girl.âÂ
He saw fragments of yourself, a version he was glad you enjoyed while doing the things you loved and still think about him so highly. He didnât deserve you. Jack would never admit that youâre the light of his life, the shining star that guides him home every time he feels lost.Â
You were exactly where youâre supposed to be.Â
In his life, in his home, his bed, laying in his sheets with your favorite pink pajamas, being absolutely his.Â
SUMMARY: Jackâs mouth opened like he might say something elseâsomething honest, something heavy, but the words caught in his throat and never came. Instead, he gave a short, quiet nod, like he was tucking whatever that was into his chest for later.
Creative Event: A Doctor A Day 27, Prompt: "Even though the road to get here was long, at last I am home." (I reworded it to fit a little better sorry x)
Color: Green
PAIRING: Dr. Jack Abbot x f!reader (physician assistant)
WORD COUNT: 7.6K
WARNINGS: Canon-typical things, tension-filled confessions, veteran affairs (I have OPINIONS on the care of veterans and today's political climate/military industrial complex BUT held back from making this political but fuck the government), group meeting/therapy, allusions to PTSD and what comes with being a combat veteran, prothesis/amuptation conversations, religious jokes-ish, smoking, mainly just all angst to fluff, NOT proofread so be kind, movie magic plot, etc.
A/N: This was so much fun to be a part of! This was really cathartic to write as it hits home some, so I hope you all enjoy. Thank you to @fuckoffbard for listening and helping. Thank you for creating this @ananonymousaffair, @clubsoft, and @letsgobarbs!
COMMENTS ENCOURAGED! THEY FUEL ME!
(unofficial) part ii
The clinic lights always tried to mimic the morning light, but it was always too sterile, too awake. There was no natural gradient to welcome you into a new day. Instead, it was the kind of light that made you feel like you hadnât slept enough, and never would, even if you had. Â
You were the first to arrive. It was hard to lose the habit, but it gave you time to review the backlog of missed calls. The quiet preparation was the only time you had to decompress before the day, but the rusted bell rang, knowing you never truly got reprieve.Â
Not many came in this early. Certainly not without appointments. Most regulars were punctual, others late, flustered, avoiding eye contact like the entire hallway and staff were some kind of moral jury.Â
Yet, this man was already looking at you. You turned, and there he was.Â
You were met with an already long dayâs worth of stubble, a jacket zipped halfway, and a UPMC badge dangling low like a relic from a night shift not long ended. His shoulders filled the doorway like he hadnât quite committed to being inside yet.Â
However, you recognized him immediately. Abbot, Jack. Early 50s. Transtibial amputation of rthe ight leg. Two canceled appointments in March. One in April. No follow-up scheduled.Â
His chart was one of those you flagged mentally; he was the kind of patient who only walked through the door once a year, just long enough to keep his services active before disappearing for another twelve-month stretch.Â
Jack cleared his throat, low. âYou take walk-ins?â
You blinked. TechnicallyâŠno. Not this early. Not without calling ahead. Not when it was a physical rather than an urgent medical concern. Yet, your mouth moved before policy could catch up.Â
âGive me a moment to get you checked in.â You nodded, words automatic and practiced. âFirst and last name?â
He looked like he might leave right there. But then he exhaledâjust enough air to say: Okay. Iâll stay.
âJack. Abbot. Had an appointment a while backâŠâ He spoke like his confession would make up for wasted time and resources. â...couldnât make it.â
You hummed, tapping the keyboard, pretending to scroll through the records you already knew by heart.Â
âWell,â You stared, standing. âThird timeâs a charm.â
Guiding him through the narrow hallway, your shoes hit softly on the tile, linoleum too thin to hide the grout lines from the floor beneath. The overhead lights buzzed in that tired, mechanical way fluorescent bulbs always do after too many years and too few replacements. You moved past mismatched wall sconces and half-peeling placards that still bore the faint imprint of a previous tenantâs brass plates.
This place used to be a law office.
You could see it in the layout; the corner turns that led to nowhere, the heavy wooden doors that didnât quite fit the newer hinges. Even the break room still had a long strip of polished wood where the receptionistâs counter once stood. Someone had slapped a rack of patient forms on it. A forced transformation.
Rented-out facility. Government-issued furniture. Nothing quite fit. Everything was too small, too sterile, or too hollow. And somehow, that made it perfect for a VA satellite clinic. A place repurposed by necessity. Like most things touched by war.
Jack didnât make small talk, and you didnât push. Glancing back, you could see the way he moved, shoulders slightly hunched, but still alert. He walked like someone used to being in charge of emergencies, but bone-tired from them, too. Like the ground might shake, but if it did, heâd know what to do. He just didnât want to anymore.
Exam Room One.Â
You gestured him in, and he stepped through without hesitation. The room was small, cold in the way all clinics are. Pale blue walls, a single high window smudged with old tape residue, and an exam table that creaked when he sat on it, the paper crackling beneath him.Â
You picked up the prepared clipboard.Â
âBefore we get started, any changes in your health since your last visit?â
Jackâs mouth twitched like he might say something sardonic, but it passed. He shook his head.
âStill breathing.â He gave a slight nod. No argument. No complaint. Just a quiet readiness, like someone used to being told what to do in a language he didnât bother translating anymore.
âGood place to start.â
You ran through the intake questions like you always did, but you kept your tone light, measured. You knew better than to fill silence with something unworthy. Especially not with veterans like Jack; men whoâd learned how to hear the things people didnât say.
You moved slowly, on purpose. Youâd learned, over time, that fast hands spooked the ones who carried invisible wounds. As you stepped closer to take his vitals, you noted the small details: the subtle shift of his leg as he adjusted, the way he sat still, like movement required permission now, but his gaze tracked you steadily. Quiet. Present.Â
Different than most.
Most avoided eye contact when you got close. Looked at their shoes. Or the ceiling. Or the floor that looked like it had been washed a thousand times but never once looked clean. Jack didnât. His eyes followed your hands, your shoulders, your breath. Not intrusively. Just like someone trained to read a room for danger. Or maybe reassurance.
You wrapped the cuff around his arm, checking the alignment. The Velcro hissed softly. He didnât flinch.
âBPâs holding steady. Good.â You murmured more to yourself to note. Then, you glanced up at him with a touch of dry levity, âIâll let you keep your driverâs license.â
That got a small exhale of amusement.
Encouraged by the break in tension, however slight, you reached for the stethoscope slung around your neck. The room was cool, and the metal already had that unforgiving chill to it. Out of habit, you rubbed your hands together briskly, trying to warm your fingers before touching him. The stethoscope, however, was another story.Â
You curled the diaphragm in your palm to try and bring it to room temperature, but you knew from experience it would still be cold against skin. Jack didnât comment, just pulled the thin cotton of his shirt up without being asked.
You stepped closer, moving to his left side, and placed the warmed back of your hand against his ribs first as a courtesy, a warning.Â
âThisâll be cold.â You commented apologetically as you pressed the stethoscope against him.Â
Jack gave a small grunt in acknowledgment, but didnât pull away.
The chill made his skin prick instantly. You saw its trail along the slope of his side, pale against old scars and the faded outline of a long-healed abrasion near his flank.Â
âDeep breath in.â You instructed gently. He inhaled. You listened. âAgain.âÂ
The sound of his lungs filled the bell, steady, hollow, the faint pull of old tension sitting low in his chest. You knew what clear lungs were supposed to sound like, and Jackâs werenât far from it, but there was something shallow in the way he exhaled. Something practiced. Measured, like he was holding back.
âAgain.â
He breathed in deeper this time, like he wanted to prove something. You moved the stethoscope slightly, trailing it across the muscle between his ribs.
You were close enough to feel the shift in his posture, how still he went once your hand touched him. Not rigid. Just very aware. Another breath. Another exhale.
âAny shortness?â You asked, moving to his back, your hand brushing the curve of his shoulder blade.
âNo.â He breathed out. âJust tired.â
You let out a small hum in acknowledgment, pressing the stethoscope to the space between his spine and scapula. The hush of his breathing filled your ears again.
He inhaled. You listened. Something shallow in the left lobe, but not worrying. Just tension. The kind that never really leaves the body once it learned the shape of impact. You noted the way his shoulders resisted it, like his ribs had forgotten how to fully trust their own expansion.
You placed the stethoscope lightly to the left of his sternum first, where the apex beat lived beneath the ribs and years. You could feel the rise and fall of his breath under your palm as you steadied yourself. The silence narrowed around you.
His heartbeat thudded into your ears: slow, firm, echoing.
âHeart sounds good.âÂ
Normal S1 and S2 heart sounds. No murmurs, gallops, or rubs auscultated. You knew he knew this.Â
You pulled the stethoscope away gently, but your hand lingered, resting for just a second longer over the center of his chest. You didnât know why you did it. Maybe you just wanted to feel it. Really feel it.
That was the thing about hearts. You could listen all day, but you never really knew what they were holding until they trembled under your palm.
You scanned his chart again, thumb grazing the line that made you pause the first time. Chronic low back pain. No follow-up. Recommend monitoring posture w/ prosthetic use.
Still unresolved. You moved behind him, palm resting lightly between his shoulders.
âYour last visit flagged some lower back strain.â Your tone was neutral, leaving space for more. âFlares up when youâre on your feet too long?â
Jack gave a faint grunt. âSounds like something theyâd put in just to make me come back.â
âWellââ You applied gentle pressure down his spine. ââif that was the plan, it worked.â
He didnât respond, just sat steady as your fingers pressed lower, feeling through the tension under his shirt. When you neared the curve, you slowed, palpating carefully on either side of the spine. You knew where to look, especially with someone bearing the uneven weight.
âItâs important to check for overcompensation.â You continued quietly. âIf the alignmentâs off, youâll feel it in the back long before the leg.â
âIâm fine.â Jack huffed, low.Â
You looked up at him. âDo you ever rest the site? Or let it breathe?â
He hesitated. âSometimes.â
Which meant rarely. You marked that silently.
âThe hospital isnât exactly known for scheduled rest periods.â He spoke, and you could hear the smirk in his voice even if he didnât turn. âIf I sit, itâs to chart. If I stand, itâs to fix something.â
You pressed your thumb a little deeper, just left of his spine, right above the sacrum. He flinched, just a little. The smallest involuntary grunt, like a breath caught the wrong way. You let your hand settle there for a moment. Not scolding. Just noting.
âRight.â
He didnât reply, but you felt the faint shift in his posture. Not defensive. Not defeated.Â
You made the mental note and stepped to the cabinet without a word, retrieving the otoscope. The instrument clicked softly in your hand as you turned on the light. It cast a warm glow between you in the still room, humming faintly as if to fill the space your fingers had just left behind.
âEars, then eyes.â You spoke gently.Â
Jack turned slightly, letting you tip his head the way you needed. Your fingers were light under his chin, at the hinge of his jaw. The otoscope glinted softly as you angled it toward his ear.
But while you worked, Jack watched you. You could feel it, his gaze not just drifting but reading. Like he was still deciding what kind of person you were. Still trying to place you.
âYou new here?â Jack finally asked. âYou donât seem like the city type.â
âBold assumption to make so early in the morning.â You teased, pulling the light back and moving to the other side.
âJust an observation.â
âI was born here, actuallyâŠâ You answered the question you always got casually. â...left for a long time. Transferred back this year.â
âVA brought you back?â Jack tilted his head slightly. You checked his pupils next, flicking the light across his eyes as they adjusted, one at a time. He didnât squint or shy away. Just let you look.
âGod, noââ You cursed. And then, to cover what threatened to leak out around the edges:
ââI just sleep better here. Canât fall asleep without the noise.â
That made the corner of his mouth twitch. âMost people say the city keeps them up.â
âI like knowing somethingâs still moving out there,â You laughed lightly through a huff. âAmbulances, garbage trucks, people yelling outside bars. Need to fall asleep to a world still spinningâŠâ
Jack adjusted his scrub top absentmindedly, the material wrinkled from a long shift and a longer week. The fluorescent lights hummed overhead, clinical, unforgiving, same as the ones he worked under most nights. But here, in this quiet exam room with your back against the counter and your arms folded, something about the hum felt less surgical.Â
âSilence gets loud, yâknow?â Heâd said it like a joke, but you could tell it wasnât one.
You tilted your head, watching himânot with pity, but with that quiet, observational calm some people wore like armor. He recognized it. Carried the same kind of thing into trauma bays.
You nodded, but said nothing. You knew better than to fill the pause.
He gave a faint, humorless huff. âAnyway, thatâs why I stopped in. Better here than my apartment, staring at the ceiling with my ears ringing.â
âSo this is a drive-by enrollment renewal?â You smiled softly.Â
âDonât act like thatâs the worst thing youâve seen in here.â
âItâs definitely in the top ten.â You replied dryly. âRight between the guy who thought 'disability claim' meant show-and-tell, and the Marine who cried when I told him to hydrate.â
Jack didnât laugh, not really, but something in his posture eased, like he was letting himself rest against the moment for the first time all day. Maybe all week. His hand brushed over his knee, fingers tapping a quiet rhythm, restless in that way only people wired for emergency ever were.
He watched you write like he wasnât used to being on the other side of the clipboard. The subject instead of the observer. It wasnât shameful. It was something quieter than thatâŠdisplacement, maybe.
âYou okay over there?â You asked, teasing just a little.
âYeah. Just...weird.â He blinked like youâd pulled him out of a thought.Â
âWhat is?â
âBeing the one getting charted.â He nodded toward your pen.
You smiled faintly. âYeah. I get that.â
He raised a brow. âDo you?â
âHonestly?â You thought for a moment, tapping the pen against your thigh. âI canât remember the last time I went to the doctor.â
That got a real look out of him. Not disbelief, just confirmation. That quiet, private awareness: Of course. You too.
âItâs hardâŠâ You admitted. âWhen youâre used to being the one who knows the systems. Knows what theyâll say before they say it. Harder when you canât picture someone on the other side knowing what to do with you.â
You watched him for another beat, then let your gaze drift to the clock. Not rushed, just reminded. You were still working.Â
The rhythm of the clinic moved on, woke up, even when the air between you had stilled. Somewhere down the hall, a printer coughed. A phone rang and went unanswered. Staff clocked in.
You cleared your throat. âRegardless, everything looks goodâ Iâll send the go-ahead so your enrollment stays active.â
Jack gave a short nod, business-like again. Like a door had been pulled mostly shut, though not all the way.
You stepped away from the counter, your hand brushing the edge of the sink as you crossed the room. He rose at the same time, out of courtesy and instinct.Â
âIâll walk you out.â You held the door open for him.
The hallway outside was waking up, the liminal space between morning chaos and whatever came next. Jack walked beside you, not hurried, not tense. You both moved like people whoâd learned how to conserve energy in sterile places.
You waited until you reached the corner near the exit, the spot where patients usually asked about paperwork or turned around to remember theyâd forgotten something.
Instead, you spoke up, âWe run a group. Off the books.â
Jack glanced sideways at you.
âThursday nightsââ You went on, like you were reciting a neutral fact. ââacross the street, at the church. Itâs in the community room. It's unofficial. No sign-in, no rank, no talking if you donât want to. Just people who prefer the noise.â
Jack said nothing, but you didnât mistake silence for disinterest. He tilted his head slightly, as if trying to figure out the angle. But there wasnât one.
You didnât fill in the rest. Didnât say for people like you. Didnât have to.
He nodded slowly. Like he didnât know what to do with the information, but he understood it wasnât being handed out lightly.
âI know you work nights. It probably doesnât fit your schedule.â You couldnât help but encourage, continue. âBut in case it ever, youâre always welcome.â
Then, you pushed the front door open, holding it just long enough for him to pass through. The morning was bright out there, harsher than the lighting inside. He squinted against it.
âIâll keep it in mind.â He answered finally, voice quiet but deliberate.
As he stepped out, you said, without ceremony, âYou already did the hard part.â
He turned halfway, brow raised. âWhich part was that?â
âWalking in.â You made it sound so simple. Maybe it was. âLetting someone see you before youâre bleeding.â
Jack stood there for a breath longer, the door propped open between you. You were close enough to see the small shift of his jaw, the ghost of tension at the corners of his eyes, like something flickered through him and caught behind his teeth.
He nodded, then he left.
â
The room smelled like burnt coffee and whatever detergent the janitorial staff bought in bulk. One of the folding chairs was broken, so youâd leaned it in the corner, hoping no one would try to use it. Fluorescent lights buzzed overhead, indifferent. Outside the windows, dusk hovered like it wasnât sure whether to stay or leave.
You were halfway through introductions when the door opened.
Late. Not by muchâseven minutes, maybeâbut still, you glanced up instinctively, ready to gently redirect whoever came in. And then you saw him.
Jack Abbot.
He was still in scrubs, jacket thrown over the top, collar slightly wrinkled like heâd wrestled with whether or not to come and only won five minutes ago. His hair was a little longer than the last time you saw him, older somehow, even if it had only been a few weeks.
He hovered in the doorway, one boot inside, the other not. Caught between the hall and the possibility of something uncomfortable.
You felt the shift in the room. The group noticed him how he carried himself. It wasnât just his build. It was the posture. That straight-backed, high-alert bearing you only ever saw in two kinds of people: soldiers and people trying very hard not to fall apart.
You stood slowly. Smiled like you werenât surprised to see him, even if a small part of you was.
âHey.â You were warm. âCome on in.â
Something in Jackâs shoulders eased, just slightly. You turned to the rest of the group, your voice calm, unforced.
âThis is Jack. Heâs joining us tonight.â No last name. No backstory. Just the gesture of arrival. That was enough.
A few nods, murmured hellos. One guy said, âWelcome,â like it was a rule. Jack gave a chin-dip in return.
A man, Martin, shared first, talking about how his daughter stopped calling in March. Two others chimed in with variations of the same wound. The room did what it always did: it stretched itself to hold whatever pain it was given, without fixing it.
Jack didnât speak. He didnât fidget either. He sat still, eyes forward, but not glassy. Listening. Taking inventory. And you watched him. Subtly, out of the corner of your eye, like you werenât waiting for the moment heâd stand and say he didnât belong here because you could feel it.
He looked like he was scanning every word, every crack in the ceiling tile, trying to make it make sense. His eyes occasionally drifted to the door. His hands stayed in his lap, steady, but his foot tapped onceâtwiceâbefore stilling again.
He wasnât unsettled because it was a group. He was unsettled because, for the first time in a long time, no one needed him. No one was coding. No alarms were beeping. No one called Doctor Abbot.
He was just Jack. And that didnât feel like enough.
So, he didnât speak for the first thirty minutes. Instead, Jack sat like he was made of poured concrete: solid, unswayed, unmoved. But the stillness wasnât ease. It was maintenance. A posture that said: Donât look too long or youâll see the cracks.
The others took turns with practiced vulnerability. Another veteran, Lisa, talked about the baby next door who cried at night and how it sometimes made her want to knock on the wall and scream.Â
Someone else recited their weekly mantra about how small talk at the gas station kept them tethered to the world. Every voice added weight and oxygen to the room in that strange way group therapy worked: no one fixing, no one solved, but everyone surviving, together.
You didnât push Jack, but when the lull came, when the air went quiet in that half-second of unclaimed silence, you turned to him. Not a spotlight, not pressure, just an open door.
He shifted, as if preparing to run, though he didnât. His fingers rubbed the side of his leg, slowly. You saw the muscle clench in his jaw before he spoke. âI traded my shift to make it here.â
It came out simple, but the effort behind the words was unmistakable. He paused after that, long enough for it to seem like he might leave it there.
Yet, he exhaled, glanced toward the window, and you could almost see the gears turning behind his eyes, searching for a safer way to say what he meant. Something polite. Digestible.Â
And then he gave up on that, letting his tone drop into something flatter. Colder. Not harshâjust clinical, like he was delivering bad news to a patientâs family through a closed curtain.
âThis isnât a waste of time.â He started defensively, scared to offend your effort. âBut sitting⊠idle like this for something I canât even name⊠feels wrong.â
A few people looked up. He didnât meet anyoneâs eyes now. He kept speaking, as if he didnât let the silence in, he wouldnât be so measured.
âI donât talk about things unless they have names. Symptoms. Patterns. Diagnoses. Thatâs the trade. You name it, we treat it. Thatâs how I work. Thatâs how I stay upright. But thisâŠâ
Jack trailed off again. Then shrugged, a short, tired motion.
â...this doesnât bleed the same way.â He finished.Â
The words didnât land like a dramatic revelation. There was no gasp, no cinematic hushâjust the steady hum of a room that knew the texture of what he meant.
Jackâs fingers stilled against the side of his leg. He looked down at his hands like he half-expected them to be covered in somethingâblood, maybe. Or purpose. But they were clean. Still. Useless.
âI spent my whole career knowing what to reach for,â he said. âChest compressions. Epi. Clamp and cut. Even when it was bad, even when it was too late, at least I could do something.â
He leaned back slightly in the folding chair, the metal legs creaking faintly beneath him. The gesture made his prosthesis shift under his pant leg, and he winced, not in pain, but in awareness.
âBut this?â His voice dropped, vulnerable now. âThis is like watching a code slow down in real time and realizing youâre not the one running it. Youâre just watching the monitor. And the lineâs not flat yet, but itâs close.â
He didnât say what he was thinking, but you could feel it hanging in the air: I traded a shift. I changed my whole night. I said yes to something I barely believe in. And thisâthis silence, this seat, this half-truth I just spokeâis all I have to show for it.
So, the quiet held.Â
Not heavy. Not awkward. Just present. The way it got in that roomâwhen someone finally said something so honest it didnât need embellishment.
You didnât speak yet, either. You just sat with it. With him. The same way heâd done for the last thirty minutes. Like the room itself was trained to carry the weight for a while. He stayed, and that was what mattered.
Finally, Martin, the same man who had spoken first, shifted forward in his seat.
âI get it.â He agreed. âPost service, I became a firefighterâŠAfter I retired, I couldnât go to the grocery store without looking for exits, looking for a problem. Couldnât sit in my living room without wondering what the hell I was doing just sitting there.â
Jack didnât nod, but he didnât flinch either. He just stayed where he was, breathing evenly, like the effort of being in the room was more taxing than a double shift.
Lisa spoke next.
âIt took me a year to figure out I wasnât broken. Just⊠not useful in the way I was trained to be. No one ever tells you how to exist when thereâs no task in front of you.â
Jack swallowed, his throat working hard against nothing. He blinked slowly, then glanced your way, but only for a beat.
The group kept moving, circling. No one tried to fix him. They just laid their pieces down beside his. You waited until the conversation had stretched on, shifted. Until someone made a dry joke about how the snacks were always good, and the weight in the air lightened just enough to carry again.
Only then did you speakâquietly, but clearly to everyone in the room.
âRemember, itâs now always about coming here to feel better.â You didnât pose the sentiment to be questioned. âYou can always come to not feel alone while itâs bad.â
The rest of the session moved on. The others began to speak again, and Jack stayed silent for the rest of it. Not because he didnât want to be part of it, but because that was his part. The kind of sharing that left your bones hollowed out afterward. Like saying anything else would cheapen the breath it took to get that out.
Even after the session, when the folding chairs had scraped back across the linoleum and the regulars had filtered out with their usual half-smiles and murmured thanks, Jack lingered. Not awkwardly. Just unhurried, like his body hadnât yet caught up to the fact that the talking was over.
Lisa was the first to approach him. Extended her hand, firm and sure, and told him where she served. Jack didnât flinch, just nodded and returned the shake.
Someone else, Curtis, Navy, chimed in with a timeline, a base. The names passed like currency. The kind of shared vocabulary that didnât need to be explained.
You were still inside, tossing coffee cups into the trash, wiping down tabletops that had already been clean.
By the time you stepped out into the night, the group was gone. The lot was nearly empty except for your car and one old truck idling at the far end.Â
The sharp chill of early spring hit your neck, and you hunched your shoulders as you reached into your coat pocket. Keys. Lighter. Cigarettes. A ritual, half-forgotten.
You moved toward the concrete steps at the front of the church, letting yourself exhale for the first time all night. You sat, letting the cold seep through your pants.
It was a habit, reallyâstaying much longer than needed. No one around to clock you. No rules left to follow.
You tapped a cigarette out of the pack and slid it between your lips. Lit it with a tired flick of the thumb.
âNow thatâs one hell of a sight.â
You startled. Jackâs voice came from the shadows, dry as whiskey left out overnight.
You turned to see him leaning against the stone railing, just out of reach of the yellow glow from the overhead bulb.
Then, you let out a soft huff. âItâs medicinal.â
âOh yeah?â He nodded toward the cigarette. âWhatâs that treat?â
âEmpathy fatigue.â You deadpanned. âAnd low-grade moral despair.â
Jack laughed, really laughed. Not loud. Not long. Real.
You glanced at him, surprised to see he was still here. Even more surprised by what his presence was doing to your posture, you werenât standing straight anymore. You werenât leading anything. You were just here.
You gestured to the space beside you on the steps.
âCome on then. Youâve already seen me sin. Might as well sit through the confession.â
Jack hesitated, then climbed the two steps and lowered himself beside you. He sat with the same precision youâd seen in the exam room, like even resting was something to be executed properly.
You flicked ash to the concrete. âYou didnât have to wait up.â
âDidnât want to go back yet.â He admitted.
You both looked out across the street, quiet for a moment. He didnât seem rushed now. He was just untethered.Â
âYou know, this is the first time in five years I havenât done a night shift.â
You turned to him. He wasnât looking at you, his eyes were still on the street, jaw set like heâd said too much.
âItâs killing meââ Jack added. ââsitting still. Watching the hours pass without something bleeding or burning or breaking.â
You didnât interrupt. You let the weight of the admission settle.
âYou couldâve gone home.â You said eventually.
âI wouldnât have stayed.â He looked at you then. And you saw it, clear in the way his green-hazel eyes softened; this wasnât just a delay tactic, it was survival. âDonât know what to do with the quiet.â
You offered the cigarette pack, not pushing, just holding it out in case. He didnât take one, but he didnât recoil, either.
Jack scratched his head in thought, looking sideways at you. âI donât mean to unload on you, I know you alreadyâIâm justâ
âDonât worry, I stayed for the same reason.â You cut him off, unwilling to entertain something so wrong. âCompany makes it better.âÂ
You looked at him in the glow of the streetlight, noticing how different he seemed outside the exam room, outside the group. How strange it was, seeing someone become real right in front of you.
His eyes flicked to yours, then, briefly, but steadily. A flicker of something like recognition passed between you.
âYouâre different out here, you know?â
You raised an eyebrow, lips quirking around the filter. âDifferent how?â
âNo clipboard. No script.â
You huffed a little, dragged the cigarette again before flicking ash to the side. âYou say that like Iâve been reading off cue cards.â
âI donât mean it as a bad thing. Justââ Jack leaned back slightly on his elbows, letting the stone of the step press cold against his back. âYouâre quieter. Less⊠containedâwasnât expecting it.â
âWhat were you expecting?â You gave him a sidelong glance.
âNot someone who needs to stay behind.â
That, more than anything, made something ache behind your chest. You looked away. Let the ember of your cigarette burn a little too long.
âWellâŠâ You were gentle with the thought. âNot all of us know how to leave.â
You donât continue right away. Just let the silence sit between you, a low hum of nothing but the wind moving along the street, the overhead lamp buzzing faintly like a broken thought. Yet, Jack knew the thought wasnât through.
â...out here, I donât have to keep anyone uprightâ Youâd never said it aloud, afraid the guilt it would bring, but it was so relieving to admit. â...I donât have to hold my own spine so straight either.â
Jack nodded slowly, gazing forward again. âThat sounds nice.â
âItâs not.â Your tone wasnât bitter, but sometimes honesty read that way. âItâs just true.â
Another car rolled past, headlights stalking across the sidewalk and over Jackâs boots. The beam caught the tired set of his jaw, the way his eyes had sunk slightly into their sockets from too many nights that didnât end the way they should have.Â
Still, Jack looked better in this light. He looked less sharp, less made of stone.
âYou ever try to quit?â He turned his head slightly, demeanor ticking in quiet acknowledgment of your cigarette.
âEver the doctor.â You gave a dry laugh, slow and low. âEvery other week I think about quitting, and then someone tells me they still remember the weight of the body they had to leave behind, and suddenly Iâm outside again with a lighter.â
âGuess I should thank you for staying out here long enough for me to loiter.â
âLoiter?â You echoed, glancing sideways. âYouâre giving yourself a lot of credit.â
He huffed a laugh. âFair.â
The lull between you had settled into something companionable. A mutual endurance, like you were both learning how to be still in the same moment.
Jack shifted, like he had something else on the tip of his tongue but wasnât sure how to give it shape. His gaze dipped to the cigarette now crushed out beside your shoe. Then, to your hands, your sleeves pulled down over your wrists like instinct.
âGimme your wrist.â He cleared his throat.
You blinked, confused. âWhat?â
He held out a hand, patient and palm-up. âYour wrist. Iâm being serious.â
A smile pulled at your mouth before you could stop it. âJack, you trying to hold my hand outside a church?â
He didnât miss a beat. âIâm offering you a free exam. Since you admitted itâs been years.â
You laughed, not quite believing him, even as your heart gave the smallest thud of something unexpected. âYou remember that?â
âOf course I do.â There was a new wave of confidence as he spoke. âA licensed PA, going around telling people to take care of themselves, but too stubborn to schedule a check-up? That stuck with me.â
He flexed his fingers slightly, still holding them out. You let out a long, amused sighâbut gave him your wrist.
Jack took it carefully, cradling it like it was something breakable. His fingers were warm, steady. He glanced at his watch, brow furrowing in quiet concentration.
âYouâre stalling.â You teased.
âIâm being thoroughâ
He kept counting. His mouth twitched like he was holding back a smirk, but when he finally looked up, his eyes caught yours and something shifted in the air between you. It was heavy and new.
âIf Iâm doing your first physical in however many years.â He clicked his teeth. âNo way, Iâm cutting corners.â
The line landed harder than he meant it to. You didnât move. Didnât breathe for a second too long. Neither did he. Then, without fanfare, Jack released your wrist, like he was afraid of making it mean more than it already did.
Jackâs eyes skimmed your face, thoughtful, quiet. Not searching for a reaction, just weighing something. Whatever hesitation had held him off earlier was gone now, replaced by a kind of gentle stubbornness that to you felt more him.Â
Jack lifted his hand again, slower this time, and brought his fingers to your jaw. He said nothing, just let the touch land carefully, fingertips warm beneath the edge of your cheekbone.
His thumb shifted slightly, pressing beneath the hinge of your jaw, then slid up toward the curve beneath your ear.
You didnât move, not because you couldnât, but because you didnât want to. There was nothing performative in the gesture, nothing flirtatious. It wasnât about romance or pretense or asking for more.
It was just Jack, still trying to be useful.
You tilted your head without thinking, letting him trace the side of your neck. His thumb swept slowly beneath your jawline, feeling for your lymph nodes.
His movements were sure, practiced. Not clinical in the cold sense, but precise. Tactile. Like each step in the exam was tethered to something older than routine.
âYou had to do all this in the field?â
Jack nodded, his touch moving to the base of your neck. âEvery day. No machines. Just hands and instincts.â
You heard something shift in his voice with a quiet flick of gravity. That subtle weight people carried when they werenât talking about the past so much as living in it again.
âVitals were all manual. Pulse checks. Respiratory counts by ear. Skin temp by touch. No monitors, no steady beeping to tell you who was slipping.â
Jackâs thumb passed gently along the tendon at the side of your neck, and for a moment, you forgot what the street sounded like. You were suddenly aware of the shape of your body in space, of the parts of you he could feel ticking beneath his fingers.
âAt night we worked in blackout conditions.â He murmured, continuing a ritual heâd never forget. âNo headlamps. No lanterns. Just stars, if we were lucky. Used the North Star to orient when GPS failed. Checked pupils by moonlight. Youâd learn to tell cyanosis from normal by feel, not sight.â
You swallowed, but didnât pull away. His hand was still there, anchored lightly against your throat. Not gripping, not holding. Just witnessing.
âAnd you trusted yourself to get it right?â You asked, not doubting him, but wondering what it had cost.
âYou didnât have a choice.â Jackâs gaze met yours again. And this time, something flickered in it, something bigger than both of you. âWhen someoneâs slipping under your hands, you either learn the difference or you lose them.â
You swallowed againâand he felt that, too.
Jack moved to your collarbone, pressing lightly, checking along the line where lymph nodes would swell. Your eyes flicked up to him at that, but his gaze was steady on your shoulder, his hand still carefully mapping the shape of your body like it was a page he needed to memorize.Â
âYouâre tense.â His fingers paused at the base of your neck.
You let out a breath. âHard not to be.â
Jack pulled back slightly, eyes finally meeting yours.
âCould say the same.â He said.Â
There was a stillness between you then full of something else. A thread tied between memory and presence. Between what heâd once done to save lives, and what he was doing now to feel human again.
You shifted, giving him a small, crooked smile. âThis what you pictured for a night off?â
Jack didnât answer right away. His eyes lingered on yours, thoughtful, like he was weighing how honest to be.
âNot exactly.â He confessed. His hand dropped from your collarbone then, the air between you still carrying the weight of his touch. âBut itâs the best one Iâve had in a long time.â
âMy health that riveting?âÂ
Then, with a faint smirk, Jack returned to himself. âYouâve got a hell of a resting heart rate.â
You pealed with laughter. The grin tugging at the corner of Jackâs mouth softened everything in him.
âThatâs your fault.â
He shrugged.
You sat back a little, feeling your own body again; your neck still tingling faintly where his fingers had been. He hadnât lingered to touch you, not really. Heâd touched you because thatâs how he knew people. Thatâs how he made sense of the living.
And tonight, for once, he wasnât too late.
The streetlight above flickered once, then steadied. The night still buzzed faintly with the sound of spring creeping in, but the world, for a moment, had gone small; just the church steps, the two of you, and the unspoken admission that this, whatever it was, had been needed.
And maybe, you thought, that was what healing sometimes looked like. Not talking. Not explaining. Just letting someone check for signs of life and finding them.
There was a kind of reverence in that. And you hadnât expected reverence tonight.
You rubbed your fingers slowly along the fabric of your pants, grounding yourself with the texture. The quiet stretched again, but softer this time. Less like the end of a conversation and more like the lull before the next thing.
Eventually, you straightened, reluctantly peeling yourself away from the cold stone steps. Jackâs movement followed yours like a reflex;he stood, not with purpose, but with you, shadowing your motion, the way people do when theyâve been through long shifts together. When the silence between them means something understood.
Neither of you said Letâs go. But you both started walking.
Down the worn church steps, your shoes thudding softly on old cement. Gravel cracked beneath your weight as you crossed the narrow lot. It had gone almost fully quiet, just the low hum of the power lines, the wind slipping through the trees like a passing thought.
Your car sat waiting beneath a crooked lamp, light flickering as if undecided. Jackâs truck was parked a few spaces down, dust settling on the hood like it always did when someone stopped moving long enough.
You stopped at your door, keys already out but untouched in your hand. You didnât unlock it. Jack didnât walk past. He hovered there instead, just close enough to share the moment, just far enough to leave you room if you wanted to step away.
He rocked once on his heels, then cleared his throat. It wasnât a nervous soundâjust a nudge. Something that bridged the quiet without breaking it.
âYou think that groupâs got space next week?â He asked, his voice shier now, like he didnât want to spook the stillness youâd both earned.
âWe donât do headcounts.â You smiled. âJust chairs. If oneâs open, itâs yours.â
Jack considered that. Nodded once, brows drawing slightly inward with the thought. Then, a faint smile, tired around the edges, but real in the center.
âAlright.â He murmured, agreeable. âMight do that.â
You leaned your weight gently against the side of your car, letting yourself rest into the shape of the night for a breath longer.
âYou know, Jackââ You started confidently. ââyou donât have to wait for Thursdays to talk to me.â
His brows twitched in the faintest flicker of surprise and confusion. The kind he tried to swallow but couldnât quite manage, the suspense too enticing.Â
âI mean, if something comes up.â You smiled subtly. âOr if you need anything. Or just⊠if itâs late, and things are too quiet againâŠ.â
You trailed off and held out your hand, palm open. He blinked once, the weight of your words landing slowly.
 âYour phone. So I can give you my number.â You kept your tone light. Gentle. âIâll type it in for you. Easier than calling the front desk and pretending itâs about a referral.â
Jack hesitated, just for a second, but reached for it. His phone was warm from his pocket. The screen was still open. You clicked into his contacts, typed in your name, and entered your number without comment. No title, no clinic.
Just you.
Before handing it back, you paused with your thumb hovering over the message field, but you didnât text yourself. Didnât give him that easy opening. You locked the screen and gave it back.
âThere.â You said, brushing your fingers against his as the phone changed hands. âIf you want to reach out, you can. If not⊠no pressure.â
Jack looked down at the phone in his hand like it might bite back. The contact glowed softly on the screenâyour name, simple and unadorned.
âYouâre giving me an out.â
âOr an invitation.â You shrugged. âDepends on what you do with it.â
He didnât answer right away. Just thumbed the edge of the screen, eyes distant for a moment. Processing. Weighing.
âYou donât give this to just anybody.â He realized quietly. It wasnât a question.
You tilted your head. âNeither do you.â
Something flickered across his face and spread through his body. The road to something like this was never clean, and it sure as hell wasnât straight, but this? This felt like rest. Or more like something unfolding, slow and tentative, in the center of his chest. A warmth he didnât expect to feel tonight.
Jackâs mouth opened like he might say something elseâsomething honest, something bold, but the words caught in his throat and never came.
Instead, he just held your gaze for a beat too long to be casual. Like he was still cataloging something he hadnât named yet.
Not attraction exactlyâbut something adjacent. Something measured. Careful. Like he hadnât let himself think about hope in a long time, and didnât want to touch it too directly now in case it vanished.
You didnât break the moment either.
Eventually, he stepped back, nodding onceânot goodbye, just a shift in posture. A soft signal that heâd give you your space.
You watched him walk back to his truck. His gait was slower now, less formal than before. Shoulders slightly hunched, but looser. Like heâd left something behind on those steps and wasnât sure yet if that was a loss or a relief.
You stood still until he opened his door.
He didnât look back. But he didnât rush, either.
And when the engine turned over and the headlights swept across the lot, you didnât flinch from the brightness. You let it pass through you.
There wasnât anything to say. Not tonight.
But the air had shifted.
Like something in the dark had turned to face the light again. And maybe next Thursday, you thought, when the chairs were pulled out again and the coffee burned a little on the bottom, maybe thereâd be two people left sitting under the sky.
Still not talking. Still not explaining. But quietly, unmistakablyâstaying.
summary: He hears you are coming back to Pittsburgh for the weekend. Maybe the reunion will wash away the pain thatâs left inside him after your paths divided.
warnings: 18+ mdni! Smut, heavy angst, hurt no comfort, right people wrong time kind of thing, p in v, exes reunion, mentions of suicidal thoughts, ex!fem!reader, neurologist!reader, Jackâs prosthetic leg, reader is nondescript except that she has hair (long enough to frame her face), reader has a nickname, mentions of PTSD & trauma, widowed!Jack, sad people in love, alcohol consumption (a few drinks), protected sex, lots of tears, JACKâS POV!!! English isnât my first language<3
word count: 10.3k+ (BEAR WITH ME OKAY)
an: HI this is my piece for A Doctor A Day challenge hosted by these amazing people [ @clubsoft @ananonymousaffair & @letsgobarbs ]! Iâm so excited to know your thoughts on this pieceđ„č I poured everything I could into this fic, smut, fluff, angst etc and I really want to know what you guys think!
Prompt: "I know you just landed, and I know you're probably busy, but... I'd love to see you?" + Orange
He doesnât remember the last time he ate something; was it the banana Shen forced him to take a bite from, or the granola bar Dana shoved into his hands when she came to take the shift? Whatever, it doesnât matter.
 Jack pushes his fists into the pockets of his cargo pants, his tired gaze moving from the edge of the rooftop to the building in front of him, watching as sunrise hits the streets of Pittsburgh slowly, crawling its way between the cars and the old bricks of the walls.
 He replays the shift in his head, trying to figure out what he missed that led to three code blues. Each case had its own story, each patient had a unique experience, and families begged him to save their loved ones, but he couldnât.Â
 He brings his fists out of his pockets, crossing his arms over his chest as he looks at the peachy sky, watching how another day starts. Some people donât get to see this anymore, he thinks bitterly, some people donât get to start a new day. They are stuck in yesterday while he moves forward as if nothingâs happened.
 He looks back at the edge, he takes a step closer, gazing down at the people who move around, getting ready to battle through another twenty-four hours. He wishes he was this free, to walk down a street without the responsibility of the Emergency department, without the little limp in his leg and reminder of how long it took for the soft tissue of his leg to heal.
 He has been tempted before to jump, but nowadays he does not even have the motivation to do that. He is numb and has been like this for a good six years, worse after the Pitfest casualties. That was a year ago, how time passes in the blink of an eye, like the sunrise he watches daily.
 He throws his head back, listening to the birds chirping. They made a nest a few weeks back, usually coming to their home around the time he walks to the rooftop. They have a life based on instinct, just as he does; he eats, sleeps, goes to work, and then repeats.
 Robby calls him a soulless soldierâ he is just as bad as Jack, if not worse â because most of the time, there is no smile on his lips, and his tone drips with sarcasm.Â
 Pittfest changed everyone, including the ER cowboys more than others. Robby broke apart with Jakeâs withdrawal, and Jack⊠Jack tries to survive, day by day, and shift after shift. He still finds joy in little things; when he saves someoneâs life by his sharp mind, when a procedure is successful, when he argues with Walsh.
 There is still an ache inside him from years ago when his wife died, and it only got worse six years ago, and now? All he is a great doctor and nothing more.
 He says nothing when he hears the familiar footsteps on the tiny rocks of the rooftop, his stethoscope moving against his chest as he shifts his weight on his good leg, sighing in relief when the tension is halfway gone from his knee.
 âHavenât jumped off yet?â Robby leans on the railing behind Jack, looking as the sun rises slowly from behind the buildings, âThought youâd done this time.â
 âWhy? I donât think Iâve managed to get more depressed since yesterday,â Jack replies, resting his elbows on the metal railing behind him, looking from his peripheral vision at Robby who smiles and shakes his head.
 âA trauma came in just a few minutes ago, an attempt or pushed, we donât know but he was the same age as you. Nearly sent me to cardiac arrest,â Robby drops his head on the back of his hands, âYou better not jump, you didnât do it last year, donât do it ever.â
 âItâs exhausting, brother,â Jack sighs, tilting his head back as the sunlight hits his face finally, the warmth of it spreading on his skin deliberately, âComing back here, watching people lose someone they care about, calling us names because they donât know medicine has its limits. And yet, we come back, for what? I donât fucking know.â
 âYou have me, Iâm here, Iâll never leave you hanging all by yourself,â Robby nudges his forearm, looking at his face with a pleading look, âYouâre pushing yourself too hard.â
 âYouâre not lonely,â Jack shrugs, âYou have Collins. Who do I have? Fucking Shen? Iâm living in a loop, man. Every day is the same old same old. I miss my wife, I miss her, there is not a day that I wish I got the help I needed sooner, but even my therapist canât do shit nowadays.â
 âYou are being too hard on yourself, brother,â Robby straightens his back, resting his hand on Jackâs shoulder as they both look up to the sky, âBesides, I might have⊠some news aboutââ
 âWho?â Jackâs ears perk up, his posture growing rigid as he turns his head to look at Robby, âWho?â
 âHer,â Robby says with a small smile, âYour Clementine.â
 âDonât say that stupid nickname,â Jack groans, shaking his head as he takes a step back, resting his waist against the cold metal bars, âShe hated it.â
 âI think she liked it,â Robby shrugs, looking down at his shoes before he starts talking again, âThere is a neurology congress tonight, and apparently a follow-up gala on Saturday night with the Head departments PTMC invited.â
 âSo?â Jack tilts his head at the older doctor, scoffing when Robby raises his eyebrows at him, âYouâre telling me youâre invited to a stupid gala that has nothing to do with me?â
 âFor a medical genius you sure as hell are dumb,â Robby watches as Jack rolls his eyes, âIâm saying sheâs coming back to the city.
 Jackâs heart drops to the bottom of his ribcage. This has to be a cruel joke, it must be. He doesnât know how to react; be happy? Why? The last time you saw each other was to say goodbye. Be sad? He already is for ten thousand different reasons.Â
 So when he looks at Robby with his eyes widened in shock, he knows that he is still deeply into something he has tried to bury for years, ever since he watched you board that plane.
 âWhat?â He sounds so small, like a kid lost in a playground; everything feels natural yet so off, like a distant dream turning into a nightmare in the back of his mind.
 âShe has kept in touch with Dana,â Robby sighs and tightens the grip he has on Jackâs shoulder, squeezing the muscles gently to make sure Jack doesnât get lost in his head again, âDana told me her plane would land around⊠yeah, seven-thirty, eight at most. Which is now.â
 âWhy are you telling me this?â Jack asks, pressing his lips into a flat line, his hands shaking as his chest begins to rise and fall faster. He rests his sweaty palms on the railings behind him, closing his fists around the cold metal.
 âI donât know,â Robby shakes his head, staring into the distance as the sun finally rises into the blue sky, âI just thought you should know.â
 âThanks, brother, now I wonât be able to get a lick of sleep knowing my ex is in the town,â Jack snaps, running a hand down his face as he grits his teeth, all to stop himself from tearing up.
 âI didnât say it toââ Robby cuts himself off with a deep breath before he pats Jackâs shoulder and takes a step back, âTake it easy, man. Iâm gonna go.â
 Jack listens to Robbyâs footsteps; it takes ten large steps to reach the door, and he stops Robby by the eighth one, shocking both him and his friend to his dismay.
 âIs her number still the same?â
 Jackâs voice is shaky like he doesnât trust himself to say it loud enough for Robby to hear, but his friend does, stopping in his steps to glance back at Jack with a small smile.
 âYeah.â
 One, two, and Robby is out of the door, leaving Jack heaving with each breath. Jack dodges the railing and steps on the safe side just to lean over the metal bars, his lips parting as he gasps for air.
 You are back to Pittsburgh, you are in the city he watched you leave, the same city you made so many memories with him in the streets and bars. The same city that he broke your heart in, the very same one you told him you couldnât do this anymore.
 He lets out a shaky breath, reaching for his phone absentmindedly. One call wouldnât hurt, right? It wouldnât tear his heart and break his bones surely. People call their ex-lovers every day, why shouldnât he?
 He opens the list of his contacts, scrolling until he sees your name with a red heart next to it; he didnât have it in him to change the name, nor could he delete your number.Â
 That is why his fingers are trembling over your phone number, trying to make up his mind before he does anything stupid. But luck is not on his side today it seems â not like it ever was â and his finger slips accidentally and presses the call button.
 âFuck, fuckââ he yells, putting the phone against his ear quickly, his hand going to his hip as he starts pacing the rooftop, his heartbeat racing with each beep of the line, âWhat am I doing?â
 He doesnât know if he wants you to pick up the phone or not, he probably does but the thought of talking to you again after the farewell you had makes him anxious. What would he say? Hello? How are you doing? Arenât these too cliche when you are calling your ex?
 The beeping finally stops, and he can feel his heart stopping for a second before it goes to voicemail.
 âHi! Thank you for reaching out, please leave your message and Iâll get back to you as soon as I can!âÂ
 Your voice⊠fuck, your voice is still as sweet as he remembers. He calms down instantly, a tired smile covering his face as he listens to the voicemail repeating itself. You sound so beautiful, so free as if you didnât cry hours in his arms as he pushed you away once more, as if he never happened to you.
 After the third repeat, he remembers he can leave you a message, hoping you still have his number and he isnât just an unknown caller.
 âHey,â he clears his throat, running his free hand through his unruly curls, âHey, um, this is Jack! Yâknow, Jack Abbot? Yeah well urm⊠I heard you are back in town, yeah, Robby said something about a congress youâre attending. I know you just landed, and I know you're probably busy, but... I'd love to see you?"
 Fuck, fuck fuck fuckfuckâ
 He hangs up immediately, his fingers gripping his phone so tightly he thinks it might break. What did he fucking mean heâd love to see you? He is a fucking idiot, a total moron, a dumb piece of scum, but when his phone dings a few minutes as he is near going into a full panic attack, he stops.
 âJack, hi! Iâm exhausted now, but Iâd love to meet with you before my congress! Our usual cafĂš near The Pitt?â
 He nearly drops the phone, opening the text in the blink of an eye, rereading the message over ten thousand times to make sure it is really you. And when he opens the contact, he sees that it is true, you have texted him, accepting to meet up with him, at the cafÚ you usually went to after the night shifts.
 âYes, of course. See you at 6?âÂ
 He presses send and starts pacing again. Waiting for a reply after six years makes him nervous to the point he thinks he might drop dead on sight.
 âSee you, Jack!â
 He sighs in relief when he reads your reply, chuckling dryly as he rereads the conversation, not truly believing how he is going to meet with you again.
 He walks downstairs with flushed cheeks and a heart beating in anticipation. When Robby and Dana see him walking inside The Pitt, he rolls his eyes at them and nods when Dana raises an eyebrow at him in a silent question.
 It is going to be a crazy day for sure.
 He dresses up as best as he can; a navy blue button-up with worn-out jeans and his black sneakers. Which is so⊠not Jack. He feels like he has put on a persona he didnât know he had, his walls slowly building up with each step he takes toward the location.
 He thought walking would be a good idea because now his nerves are making him sweat, his palms growing more clammy with every step he takes.Â
 What will he say? Will he ask about how you have been doing? How you are doing? Do you have anyone waiting for you at homeâ
 The thought makes him shiver, stopping him midway to open the door of the coffee shop. He hates the idea of you with someone, he despises it, he fucking loathes it. Even the image of someone holding your hand makes his eyes tick, and his fingers shake over the glass door, but he has to pull through.
 The bell over the door dings when he steps inside, memories flooding his mind as he looks around, remembering all the exhausted morning dates after the shifts, all the cries and hushed arguments you two had here.
 Bittersweet yet wholesome. He misses the days he could hold your hand, but he gave up as soon as everything got serious.
 He rounds the corner to the spot you would always sit, and when he does, his eyes fall on you. He freezes, hands dangling on his sides as he stares at your silhouette.
 The orange hue of sunset shines through the windows on your face, your hair framing your face just as beautifully as he remembers if not more. Your hand is tucked under your chin, looking down at the marble table, tracing the shapes mindlessly.
 You are ethereal.
 Jack feels his lungs are about to collapse when you turn your head and find him standing there, and he watches how your lips stretch into a soft smile, steading yourself with your palm on the edge of the table as you stand up.
 He licks his lips and glances down for a brief moment to catch the breath you are stealing from his lungs from a few meters away. He looks up quickly, crossing the remaining distance slowly before he stands in front of you, his eyes swimming with various emotions unknown to him â is it love? Longing? Sadness? He doesnât know.
 âHey,â he greets you quietly, hazel eyes locking into yours as he waits with bated breath for you to say something, anything. Instead of talking, you wrap your arms around his shoulders, holding him close as you mumble a âHi, Jack!â Into his shirt.
 Hugging. You are hugging him after years of no contact. He canât think even if he wants to. He wraps his arms around your middle, pulling you close by muscle memory, breathing in your scent as he buries his face into your hair, trying his best to not cry right here and then.
 He lets go of your waist when he feels you lose your grip on him, slowly pulling back to look at his face, and he takes his time memorizing every up and down, every corner of your face.
 He thinks of the days he used to kiss every single inch of your face when you were on rotation and he was getting ready to go to the hospital. He remembers how he used to caress your cheek when you fell asleep on his chest on his old couch during movie nights.
 He also remembers the days you tried to not let your sadness show on your face when brought up his wife again, putting the bricks of the protective wall on top of each other to shut you out.
 âShit, sorry,â you chuckle awkwardly, pulling away and he misses the weight of you in his embrace, the warmth you provide by just existing and breathing the same air as him, âPlease, sit! I know youâll be back in The Pitt in a few hours.â
 âYeah, urm, yeahâŠâ he huffs a slight laugh and walks around you to pull your chair out for you, âLadies first.â
 âEver the gentleman,â you tease him, thanking him as he pushes your chair in when he knows you are secured and smiles at you before he walks towards his own chair and sits down, âWhat are you having?â
 âWell⊠something highly caffeinated,â he shrugs, looking down at the wedding band he is wearingâ
 Fuck, he totally forgot to take it off. Did he though? Did he ever want to take it off or did he think about it but didnât ponder over it, like a passing joke in his head?
 He looks up instantly, finding you already looking at the black ring before you tuck your hand under your chin again, meeting his eyes with a small smile before you look away and gesture for the waiter to come and take your orders.
 âEspresso it is then,â you try to break the ice he notices, but he has already started to fuck everything up again from the very first second. He covers his left hand, nodding at you with a ghost of a smile on his lips while he feels as if he is about to vomit his heart out with how insanely fast it is beating.
 âWelcome, what can I get you?â
 âA cup of tea with carrot cake and,â you look back at him, smiling before you glance back at the waiter, âA shot of espresso.â
 âComing right up!âÂ
 He watches you closely â he is staring but thatâs a creepy way to put it â and he nearly melts when you turn to look at him with the softest smile he has ever seen.
 âCarrot cake? Really?â Jack grins when he watches you grimace, hiding your face in your hands as you look at him from between your fingers, âNever thought Iâd see the day that you will eat a carrot cake.â
 âYouâre insufferable!â You chuckle, resting your chin on the heel of your palm, and he watches these micro movements with such an endearment it makes his heart clench, âItâs just a newly formed habit in the hospital. My assistant brings me tea and her very sweet orange carrot cake every evening. Who am I to say no to a home baked sweet treat?â
 âUnderstood,â he nods and smiles, taking a deep breath to calm himself without making a mess of himself. Your laugh is still the same, even more beautiful than he remembers and it feels so good to be there to witness it again, âHowâs Boston?â
 âOh, you know, colder than here but I enjoy it,â you explain, resting your elbows on the table as you look at him, âThe bars are pretty amazing! Not that I have much time to explore them because of the hospital and applying for a fellowship. But⊠itâs okay, I guess.â
 âWow, youâre thriving,â he grins, biting the inside of his cheek, âIâm so happy for you.â
 âThank you, Jack,â you reach across the table to hold his hand â a habit you had when you were nervous, and he quickly realized his touch grounded you when you needed it the most, âEnough about me, how have you been?â
 âSame old same oldââ
 âDonât do that!â You squeeze his hand, glaring at him before your eyes soften when you notice his defeated ones, âYou know I hate this phrase, Jack. Come on, tell me about The Pitt!â
 He rubs his thumb over your knuckles, running a hand over his face as he notices the waiter coming with your orders to the table.
 You pull your hand back, letting the waiter put down your cups and plate, asking if you need anything which Jack replies with a quick âno, thank youâ before he looks back at you.
 âIâm sure Dana is keeping you updatedââ
 âI want you to tell me,â you cut him off with a soft frown he knows so well, you always gave him this expression when you knew he was dodging the question poorly, âHowâs Robby?â
 âHe is great,â he shakes his head and chuckles, briefly thinking about how his friend has gotten his life together before he focuses on you again, âHe is in a relationship with one of the new attendees, Heather Collins. I donât know if you know herâŠâ
 âDana said something about Robby dating a resident after I left but thatâs it,â you reply, taking a sip of your tea, âBut please tell him Iâm so happy for him. He went through a lot and deserves to have an amazing life.â
 âWill do,â he nods, drowning all the espresso shot in one move, kissing his teeth as he looks back at his ring again.
 âTake it easy, soldier,â you push the carrot cake plate towards him slowly, handing him a fork to eat something sweet, âHow are you doing, Jack?â
 âMe?â He chuckles dryly, trying to come up with a sarcastic reply but when he sees how worried you look for him, âIâm fine.â
 âThatâs it? Six years and you donât have anything to tell me about?â You press the matter, giving him a teasing look but he has none of it.
 âWe had a mass casualty last year, Robby lost his stepson because he couldnât save Jakeâs girlfriendââ
 âThatâs Robbyâs story to tell, Iâm interested to knowââ
 âKnow about me?â He looks at you as if you have hung the stars, as if every moment he spends looking at your face illuminated by the dark fading orange light of sunset doesnât make his heart stop, âWell, I go to the rooftop every day thinking I might jump this time, and when I look down I feel numb, maybe the therapy is working because I canât do it. I see my wife in my sleep, I imagine the life I could have had with her.â
 You take a deep breath at the mention of his late wife â or wife as he always calls her â you take two large sips of your hot tea and he mentally face palms himself at rambling all these shitty thoughts to you.Â
 âYou still go up?â You ask, your voice small and trembling, thinking of all the kisses and fights you shared on that damned rooftop.
 âYeah,â he looks out of the window, his eyes filling with tears before he wipes them quickly, enjoying the cold sensation of his ring over his heated eyelids, âItâs the only place that isnât corrupted by death.â
 âCut it some slack, our first kiss was on that rooftop,â you reach for his hands again, and he hates how easily he calms down from such a soft touch, âI donât think I can ever forget it.â
 âWell, it wasnât an easy trauma, the patient died before we could get our hands on him,â he squeezes your hands, âAnd you were so mad at me for not letting you go for the fourth round of epi.â
 âYou had to shut me up somehow,â you laugh, looking down at your joined hands, âFuck, I was so immature back then.â
 âNo, you werenât,â he caresses the soft skin of your wrist, his hazel eyes locking into yours with sincerity, âYou were hopeful.â
 âWhich was horrible for emergency medicine,â you shrug, âI still am, though. Thatâs why neurology was a great choice. It has death, I still feel the panic sometimes, but they donât die while Iâm operating on them. Itâs such a dick thing to say but⊠Iâm glad Iâm not there to witness it.â
 âI get it,â he takes a deep breath, his eyes moving slowly from your hands up to your neck and face, falling over your lips, âThatâs why the rooftop visits exist.â
 He looks down at his watch before he finds the courage to look into your eyes again, seeing how it is time to go back home and put his scrubs on.Â
 Jack doesnât wanna go, he doesnât wanna leave. He wishes he could stay in this very moment, just in this picture pretending everything is fine and you are back, that he can delude himself into believing he has you back in his arms for an eternity.
 âI totally forgot, my congress starts at eight,â you pull your hands away from him, leaving his palms cold and itchy without yours in them, and he slowly drags his forearms back to his side, standing up to say the word he hates so much again.
 âAre you⊠are you leaving?âÂ
 âYeah, I have toâŠâ you pout, and it takes everything in him not to reach out and kiss you until the pout is turned into a grin, âBut there is a gala tomorrow night. Fundraising and everything, Iâd be in town.â
 âYeah, cool,â he nods, forcing out a smile, standing up after you and waiting for you to say something, anythingâŠ
 âWill I see you there?â
 Yes. Yes. He can make it work. Say yesâ
 âNo, I donât think so,â he curses himself in his head, fisting his hands, nails digging into his palms, âIâm not invited.â
 âOh,â you say, eyes widening as if you have heard the most devastating news ever, fingers rolling the band of your purse as you gaze into his eyes, âWell then⊠this is goodbye I guess.â
 âYeah, yeahââ he gasps when you wrap your arms around his shoulders for the second time in six years again, holding him close for one last time before he wraps his large arms around your back as well, âIâm gonna miss you.â
 âMe too, Jack,â he nearly drops on his knees when he hears you say his name with tears stinging your eyes, âMe too.â
 âGoodbye.â
 He watches you with red eyes as you try to hold back a sob before you reach for your purse to pull out your wallet and pay for the drinks, but he stops you with a hand on your cheek.
 âIâve got it,â it pains him that he cannot lean down and kiss you when you nod and scrunch up your nose in order to keep the tears from streaming down your face, âYouâll be late.â
 You move forward, pecking his cheek slowly, and he marvels at how soft your lips feel against his stubble, and he hopes whoever gets to feel your lips back in Boston worships you the way you deserve â the way he wanted to do but fucked it all up.
 He watches you leave, for the second time, and it ruins him, making a tornado inside him that wrecks the remaining parts of his sanity. You are okay, you are happy, and that is all that matters.
 He inhales sharply before he reaches for his phone, opening his text messages with Robby before he sends a quick text.
 âWill you go to tomorrow's gala?â
 It has been years since anyone had seen Jack in a fucking tuxedo. He thinks the last time he tried one was for his wedding, and after that, he dropped the thousand dollar fabric in the trash.
 But now? He is wearing one, with a white shirt under his black coat and a simple black tie he is trying so hard to fix. He looks in the mirror one last time, running a hand in his hair before he moves out of the bathroom, following the sound of music until he reaches the entrance of the hall.
 He feels out of place immediately. Itâs not him who is supposed to be here, itâs Robby, but he canât lose his last chance of seeing you again. So here he is, grabbing a glass of champagne as the waiter walks past him, drowning the sparkling liquor like water.
 He scans the hall, not finding you anywhere as he moves between people until he reaches the bar, ordering a Double Black Label neat while his eyes wander from one woman to another in hopes of finding you somewhere among them.
 He sips on his whiskey, leaning on his elbows on the barstool as he watches the doctors and CEOs get together in various groups. It is a ridiculous shit show, some people go to the podium to give their speech, some linger and chat, and it seems the only person he is interested in is nowhere in sight.
 He shifts his weight off his prosthetic leg, sitting on the barstool only to stare into the glass he has in hand, swirling the liquid with gentle moves of his wrist.
 It is still too far from him, but he can hear your laughter from a mile away. His ears perk up, and he almost breaks his neck when he turns around abruptly to catch you walking with a couple next to you, conversing casually before you spot him through the crowd.
 He stands up instantly, nearly losing his balance when he sees you are coming towards him, hearing a soft âI would like to introduce you to someoneâ before you lead the couple to where he is standing.
 âThis is Dr. Jack Abbot from PTMC,â he nods, smiling politely at the couple who introduce themselves as well, shaking his hand before the three of them look back at you, âI used to be his resident before I changed to Neurology.â
 Jackâs hand finds the small of your back as he talks with the couple, finding out about their specialty and where they work, how they know you, and how proud they are to be represented by you in this gala.
 âWell, we will take our leave for now,â The male doctor says, shaking Jackâs hand before he shakes yours, his wife doing the same before she pulls you in for a quick hug, and the two of you watch as they walk away.
 âHey, stranger,â you turn to him, beaming at him when he smiles back, your hands coming up to rest on his chest, âFancy seeing you here.â
 âI had to see you again,â he mumbles, his hands caressing a path from your wrist to your shoulders, feeling the bare skin of your arms and skimping down to your sides, resting over your hips with a gentle squeeze, âIt didnât settle right when we said goodbye yesterday.â
 âIt will never settle right, Jack,â you look away from his intense gaze, chuckling when you notice his crooked tie, âYou still havenât learned how to do your tie, or you left it like this on purpose?â
 âLittle bit of both,â he shrugs innocently, his eyes taking in your face; you are so close he can smell the champagne mixing with your perfume, your soft lashes kissing your undereye when you blink, your lips painted in a nude shade of pink, and your hair falls around your face like a curtain leading to the hanging Gardens of Babylon â you look like a goddess compared to him.
 âGood thing you have the right person to take care of you,â you whisper, eyes glinting playfully as you pull on his tie to redo it correctly.Â
 Jack relishes the feeling of your touch on his collar. He feels as if his senses have heightened somehow because he swears he can literally feel every movement of your fingers on his skin through his clothes.
 He looks down at your dress, watching as the classy design clings to your body just the right way, showing off your curves and shoulders in the most perfect way.
 âYou look so beautiful,â he breathes out, letting his hands wander over your back, knowing quite well that he is crossing an invisible line, but he doesnât care now, you are here, back in his arms, exes or not he has the chance to have you all to himself tonight if you take him back for just a few hours.
 âThank you,â he leans down to kiss your forehead when he notices how flustered you get, but his demeanor grows closed off when he notices a man making his way towards you, stepping next to you before he extends his hand.
 âWould you do me the honor and dance with me?âÂ
 You pull back from Jack a little, mouth agape as you look between the man and Jack, but with a little squeeze of his hand on your waist, you give him an apologetic smile before taking up the manâs offer and resting your hand in his palm.
 âOf course.â
 Jack watches from his spot how the man leads you to the dance floor as other people pair up and join you there, the band starts playing the music and to his dismay, he has to be subjected to the sight of another man twirling you around the hall.
 Even if he is seething in his seat, he canât deny how elegant you look with your dress flowing behind you and that smile you give your partner⊠this smile makes his pulse quicken, a warm blush covering the tip of his nose and cheeks.Â
 He watches as the man lies his hand on your waist, pulling you a bit closer, and it makes his blood boil even though he knows he has no claim over you. You are not his lover, not his girlfriend, hell you are not even his resident anymore.
 He canât take it anymore, so as soon as the song ends he drowns the rest of his whiskey and strides towards you, clearing his throat to catch your attention.
 âMay I have your next dance?â Jack asks, his heart hammering against his ribs as he waits for you to accept his offer, and you do, with a bright smile that lights up his world.
 âYes, you may,â you turn around to the man you danced with earlier, âExcuse me, please.â
 Jack tucks you close to him when a new song starts, his hand moving from your shoulders to your hip, the other one holding your smaller hand in his as he sways both of you gently to the rhythm of the music.
 âDid I tell you how beautiful you look tonight?â He leans down to whisper in your ear, smirking when your hand wanders up to his shoulder, cupping the side of his neck gently.
 âOnce or twice,â you chuckle, dropping your forehead on his shoulder as he leans down to breathe in your scent, holding you close until the thoughts of you ever leaving again fade away for a few hours at least, âArenât you supposed to be at The Pitt?â
 âThey donât need me there,â he says, putting a distance between the two of you to hold your joined hands up so you can twirl before he pulls you in a bit roughly, keeping your chest pressed into his.
 âAnd you thought you were needed here?â You ask, batting your eyelashes at him as his smirk widens, his band on your waist moving to your hip to squeeze you in response.
 âAm I not?â He feigns innocence, his tone matching yours playfully, âI could leave now if thatâs what you wantââ
 âI never said you werenât needed,â you donât break eye contact, and it thrills him as if it was six years ago when you danced for the first time at Danaâs wedding anniversary, âBut I know a place if you wanna leaveâŠ?â
 âTempting, very tempting,â he brings your hand to his lips, pressing feather light kisses all over your knuckles, âAre you suggesting?â
 âIt might be the few champagne glasses I had but,â you break away from his grip, interweaving your fingers with his as you tug on his hand gently, âMy room is on the twentieth floor if you are interestedâŠâ
 âLead the way.â
 Your journey to your room is uneventful; you donât have a chance to do anything because you are never alone. Not in the hallway he wanted to press you against the wall, not in the elevator bunch of people jumped into when the doors were about to close, not even as you walked on the floor because one of the doctorsâ rooms was also on the same fucking lane.
 He is trying to act unbothered as you fumble with the key card, trying to open the door while Jack has his hands roaming your back absentmindedly, his touch trembling slightly in excitement.
 He is going to have you again, after all this time, he is going to hold you as if you are his again.
 You push the door open and tug Jack in by his tie, crashing your mouth into his as you press him against the closed door. He gasps into your mouth before he closes his eyes and kisses you back, one of his hands coming up to grab the back of your neck, pulling you closer until there is no space between you.
 You taste like Moet and cherry lip gloss with a hint of Vanilla in your perfume, and your hands feel warm and welcoming, anchoring him to reality because his life had no purpose before this very moment.
 You ground him, just as you have always done, with subtle kisses and tugs and a hidden hunger slowly pouring into your touch. He feels it all; the small skip of your fingers over his tux as they reach to undo the tie, the quiver of your bottom lip as they chase his chapped ones.
 Jackâs entire world has faded, and all he can see is you.
 He guides you further inside the room with slow deliberate steps, careful not to hit something and hurt you in the process. You break the kiss when you reach the edge of the bed, gasping for air before you push him down on the mattress gently.
 He sits without a fuss, his pupils blown out as he watches you take off your heels and slowly straddle his lap, pushing his coat and tie off slowly. Jack doesnât blink, he is afraid of even missing one second of tonight. He wants to remember this forever in caseâŠ
 No. He shouldnât go there now, he has you and that is all that matters.
 Jackâs hand comes up to your face, gently caressing your cheek, his thumb going over to your lips as he traces the edge of them while you work on his buttons, finally taking in the sight of his chest.
 He is so mesmerized by the look of pure affection you have that he doesnât notice you have got him half naked already until you grab his hands and move them to the zipper of your dress.
 âWhat are we doing?â He bumps his nose into you as he asks, leaning forward to unzip your dress. Your hands roam his naked torso, fingers tracing the soft grey hair on his chest before slowly moving down to his soft belly.
 âReliving our best memories.â
 Your answer is simple yet effective, and it awakens a deep ache inside him. He understands, he truly does. Your best memories were the ones where you were tangled under his sheets, limbs resting against each other while your mouths left soft traces of love on each otherâs skins.
 It might not be the best thing to do with your ex, after six years of no contact, but Jack takes what he can because if he doesnât, he will lose himself forever.
 You are the last string that attaches him to this life.
 His lips find your shoulders as soon as he pushes the straps of the dress down, kissing the hallow part of your shoulder above your collarbone, sucking in a red mark on the thin skin before he moves upward to your neck, licking your pulse point as he drags his tongue to your jaw.
 You whimper, you fucking whimper, and it makes his head spin with an intensity he had no idea he possessed. He kisses a path to your lips, breathing your soft breaths while he pushes down the neckline of your dress, pulling back from your mouth only for his gaze to drop down to your chest, breasts covered with a thin strapless bra.
 His brain short circuits when you roll your hips down, grinding against the very painful bulge in his dress pants. His lips part as he huffs out in shock, totally forgetting about his not-so-little problem while he was tasting you.
 âI need you,â he whines, cupping your face in his large palms as he stares into your eyes, âI need you so bad. Please let me have you, please let me pretend I didnât lose you just for a few hours.â
 âYou have me, Jack,â you raise your hands to rest them on top of his, leaning your forehead against, âI need you too.â
 He nods immediately and takes his shirt off completely, watching as you stand up to drop your dress next to your shoes, and for the first time in years, his jaw nearly hits the floor when he finally takes in the sight of your body.
 âFuck,â itâs a slow gasp, but you hear it perfectly, grinning before you dart toward the hotelâs bathroom, coming out with the pack of condoms in hand. He barks out a laugh when he sees what you are holding, âIâm not that young, we certainly donât need a whole packââ
 âHave some faith in yourself, old man,â you grin and watch as he raises his hips and takes his pants and briefs off, his prosthetic leg catching the light of the room. You move to stand in front of his greedy eyes, glancing at his leg before he guides you back onto his lap, âDoes it hurt?â
 âNo, not right now,â he mutters but it soon turns out into a deep throaty groan when you wrap your fingers around his cock, gently stroking him while you bring the condom to your mouth, tearing it open with your teeth, âThat has to be the hottest thing Iâve ever seen.â
 âReady?â You peck his lips, rolling the condom on his cock until it reaches the base, âCause I canât wait any longer.â
 âMe neither,â he pushes your panties to the side, swiping his fingers through your folds, dropping his head on your chest when he feels how wet you are, âYou are soaked, baby.â
 âAll for you,â you whisper as you line his tip with your entrance, slowly lowering yourself as the fat tip breaches your walls, both of you moaning at the contact.Â
 He forgot how warm you were, how world-consuming your body felt, but now that he is feeling it all again, he remembers the nights he lost himself in the sensation of your cunt wrapped around him.
 âYouâre so big,â you wrap your arms around his shoulders, nails digging into his back as you finally take all of him inside you, âFuck, I forgot how good you feel.â
 He canât form a coherent word without looking like he is having a stroke, because fucking hell he might be having one just now. Your cunt is stretched around his cock, and he can feel your pulse around his girth even through the condom.
 âJack,â you whimper his name, grabbing his jaw so you can look into his eyes as you slowly move your hips in circles. He is pretty sure he already looks so fucked out with his lips ajar and eyes glassy with desire while he has to focus on your face so he doesnât come too fast and embarrass himself.
 He reaches around you to unclasp your bra without looking away, short breaths falling from his lips as you begin to move up and down, and he successfully manages to get that thing off you before latching his lips to your nipples.
 He closes his eyes and groans when he feels your walls clenching around him as soon as he swirls his tongue around the tightened bud, his hands moving to grab the back of your thighs to help you move faster.
 He is so close, embarrassingly so, because he has been imagining this for so long. Jack clings to you as you ride him faster, the lewd sound of skin slapping against skin echoes in his head, leaving him panting and dizzy.
 He opens his eyes and finds your head thrown back as you fasten your pace, damp hair sticking to your forehead as you chase your release.
 He is hypnotized by how beautiful you look; his body glistening with sweat and thighs shaking around his hips. He watches closely how you moan loudly when his cock nudges your sweet spot deep inside your core.
 âFuck, fuckâ Iâm gonna come,â he groans out the words, and you nod absentmindedly, leaning down to press your lips to his, kissing him as you grind down harder, urging him to let go.
 âMe too, baby,â you gasp against his lips, your body trembling as the knot in your stomach tightens and in a blink, it breaks, waves of euphoria rushing through your veins as you release around him.
 He hugs you close, snapping his hips up one, two, and three times before he buries his face into your neck, groaning from the depths of his throat as he empties his cum into the condom.
 He holds you as he comes, wanting to carve the memory of tonight into his head so he can remember it until his last breath.
 âJack,â you whisper his name, running your fingers through his curly grey hair, kissing the side of his face as he tries to regain his breath, âThank you for coming tonight.â
 âThank you for giving me a chance,â he replies quietly, gently lowering you on the bed before he hovers over you, pulling his softened cock out of your swollen hole, âItâs been a long timeâŠâ
 âFor me too,â you smile sheepishly, kissing his forehead before you sit up slowly so you can go and clean up, âIâll go to the bathroom and order room service. What do you wanna have?â
 âAnything, Iâm starving,â he smiles, flipping on his back as he watches you walk to the bathroom before he looks up at the ceiling, shuddering as it finally dawns on him what he has done. Sex. With you. After six years of radio silence. After all the arguments, after the farewell you shared at the airport, after him realizing how emotionally closed off he was â is.
 âBathroomâs yours,â you walk back into the room, reaching for his white shirt on the floor, putting it on before you crawl on top of the bed, kissing him sweetly on the lips a few times before lying down and reaching for the phone on the nightstand.
 He turns on his side, kissing your bare thighs before he stands up and walks to the bathroom to get rid of the used condom. Jack splashes water on his face, shaking his head as he looks at his reflection in the mirror.
 Was it a mistake? Probably. But he doesnât regret it, not now, not ever. He will forever cherish every moment he spent and will spend with you for a long time, perhaps forever.
 A deep unsettling sadness fills the pit of his stomach suddenly, and he runs a hand down his face when he remembers you will go back to Boston in a few hours. He wants to do something to keep you here, locked away from the world and its demands â just you and him.
 He cleans up quickly before the tears threaten to fill his eyes, washing his hands and wiping the sweat off his body with a damp towel while he walks to the bedroom, reaching for his briefs.
 âGreasy cheese Burger with extra fries, what do you say?â You ask, pulling back the covers on the other side so he can crawl in next to you, but before he has the chance the doorbell rings, âLet me go get itââ
 âNa uh,â he wraps an arm around your waist, pinning you to the bed before he plants a kiss on your nose, âIâll get it, ainât no way Iâm gonna let anyone see you like this.â
 âLike what?â You sit up on your elbows, dragging your nose against his neck until you reach his lips, not kissing him just hovering while he breathes the warm air that you exhale.
 âAll glowing and pretty,â your lips are practically pressed together, but still he doesnât close the tiny remaining distance, âAnd in a white shirt only. No, this is mine to enjoy.â
 He smirks and pulls back, chuckling when you whine and drop back on the bed as he gets up to answer the door, hiding his prosthetic leg as he pulls in the table before he shuts the door.
 âOh my goodness it smells so good already!â You have moved to the edge of the bed, hands around your legs and head resting on your knees, waiting for him to bring the food to you.
 Jackâs stomach grumbles, making you giggle. He gives you a shy smile before he sits next to you, pushing the table closer to you. He watches as you dig in, taking a huge bite of your burger, moaning at the taste.
 âThat good?â He asks, popping up a few fries into his mouth, nodding as the spices fill his tastebuds, âFuck, yeah. It tastes delicious.â
 It doesnât take long to finish your meal, but the time is filled with teasing and bantering, sharing bites, and saucy kisses while you eat.Â
 What he doesnât expect is to find himself on his side, with one arm under your head after you both finished your food. It feels⊠ordinary like he has done it every day, as if it is a routine. Domestic.
 âWhat happened to us?â He asks like a lost baby, his eyes exploring your face closely; from your lashes to your cheek, down to the soft small hairs on your jaw while he traces a path from your thumb up to your shoulder with his knuckles.
 âMany things,â you sigh, kissing his freckles on his shoulders gently, your hands on his chest as they wander, âYou, me, your⊠your late wife.â
 You reach for his left hand that is touching your arm, pulling it to your face so you can look at the black ring he is still wearing. You twist the metal, and each circle twists his heart.
 He forgot to take it off again.
 âYou were not over her back then,â you whisper, scooting closer to rest your head on the crook of his neck, âI donât think you are now either. We just⊠became something so⊠good in a difficult time.â
 âI loved you,â he replies and hides his face in your hair, smelling your comforting scent before he resumes, âI still do. I fucked it all up. I⊠I wanted you for a lifetime but I wasnât okay back then. I had lost my wife three years before we met and⊠and I tried, yâknow? I tried to let you in, I tried to open up it justââ
 âI know, Jack, I know,â he lets the tears fall when you cradle his face, pulling him close until he is only a breath away, âI wanted to stay there and watch you heal, but you refused to seek any help, and I couldnât watch you slip through my fingers any longer than I did.â
 âIâm sorry I ruined it all,â he sobs, tears streaming down his face. He reaches to mimic your position, cupping the side of your head, âI wish I listened, I w-wish I didnât just⊠give up like a coward. It was not me, I never give upââ
 âYou are not a coward, Jack, look at me,â he forces his eyes open, those bloodshot hazel orbs looking so devastatingly beautiful, âI gave up on you too. I pushed you too hard sometimes, I⊠I got jealous when you would bring up your wife. I was a fucking dick about it, so no, you didnât ruin it alone. I had a hand in it too, a big one.â
 âYou were in the right though,â he kisses the tears that fall on your cheeks, mumbling against your skin as another sob wrecks through his body, âWe were happy together, fuck, how much of an idiot I was to bring up my dead wife when I had you. We couldâve had a future, we couldâve lived together and built a life, but I clawed on the past too hard that I was blinded.â
 âI loved you from a distance for the past six years,â you whisper, pecking his lips gently, âBoston⊠it felt lifeless without you in it. Itâs not the city that holds my heart, itâs just a passing location in life. You made this city shine brighter in the mornings, made the coffee taste sweeter, but at the same time⊠nothing was truly okay here.â
 âIt feels like a distant dream when you talk about it,â he shuffles downward a little until he can rest his head on your chest, âBut we were in love, why didnât it make a difference?â
 âBecause love isnât enough,â he wraps his arm around your waist, holding you tightly as he cries softly into the shirt you are wearing, âSleep, baby, you probably havenât had more than a few hours to rest. Iâll wake you when I have to leave.â
 He wakes up with dread even though you are kissing his head and cooing at him. You are leaving, again. He has to let go of you for the second time, and it fills him with so much agony that his leg begins to hurt.
 âHey, honey,â you angle his head so you can plant a kiss on his lips, grinning down at him as he blinks sleepily, âYou slept like a baby.â
 âHow long?â He grumbles and hides his face into your stomach, âDonât wanna get upâŠâ
 âMe neither,â you reply, and he can hear the pure sadness in your voice, but he doesnât make any move to get up, instead his hands go under your shirt â his technically â so he can grope your waist, âBut my flight is in an hour and a halfâŠâ
 âI slept the whole night?â He ignores your last sentence, sitting up slightly, keeping his weight on his forearm next to your chest, âIâm sorry, Iââ
 âHey, donât be sorry!â You pull him down so he hovers over you, playing with the tiny curly hair on the nape of his neck, âI loved it. It reminded me of the time when youâd fall asleep on top of me after a rough shift. It felt so good to sleep with you again.â
 âI havenât had a good night's sleep until⊠until tonight,â he confesses quietly, leaning down to drop a kiss on your lips, but when he wants to deepen it, you push him away gently with your hands on his chest. He looks down at you, confused and a bit hurt, âWhat?â
 âJackâŠâ he watches you swallow the words down as best as possible, but at the end of the day, you have to utter them somehow before it is too late, âI have to go now, Iâll miss my flight.â
 âI donât want you to go.â
 His eyes water as soon as the words fall from his lips. He truly doesnât want you to go, he needs you here, with him, in his bed, in his clothes. He breathes better when you are with him, he can think, and he can live.
 âI donât want to go either,â you wipe the tears that stream down your face, âBut I canât stay, not when I have a life in Boston. Maybe one day Iâll come back, hell, maybe Iâll come back for my fellowship, but⊠for now, I have to go.â
 âWe can get you a position in PTMC, I can talk to Gloria myselfââ
 âJack,â the way you utter his name breaks his heart into a million pieces, because he knows, deep down he knows he has to let you go. He has been denying it for hours, but in the end, he knows there is no way he can keep you here.
 âIâll drive you there then,â he moves to the edge of the bed, taking off his prosthetic as the tears fall down softly. He begins massaging his leg slowly as you get up and pack your things, still only in his white shirt and nothing more.
 You look strikingly gorgeous; hair unruly, bare thighs, puffy face from all the crying, and he thinks he has never seen something more surreal.
 âWait,â you halt in your step when he reaches for his coat on the floor, pulling out his phone before he takes a quick photo of you.
 âWhat was that?â You chuckle, moving toward your luggage to drop everything you own in it while you see Jack staring at his screen, âBaby?â
 âI⊠I wanted to have something from you to look at later,â he explains, his voice barely above whispers, âFor when I miss you.â
 You suck in a sharp breath, he hears it clearly. But you donât turn around toward him after it, probably shocked to your core by how raw and emotional he sounds.
 After taking out the clothes you wanna wear for your departure, you walk to Jack, standing between his legs as you slowly unbutton his shirt, taking off the fabric before you hand it to him â the last thing you had touched from his belongings.
 He takes it without a word, wearing it before he puts his prosthetic leg back on, trying his best not to break apart at how his shirt now smells like you. He wonât wash this again, he would hang this behind his door so he can smell it daily before he goes to the hospital.
 You get ready in thick silence, an uncomfortable one that you both know will break ten times worse than before eventually, and that it will lead to something far too devastating than anything you have experienced.
 He grabs your luggage, hand reaching to hold yours as he guides you out of the hotel room after you check it multiple times in case you missed something. You walk together, shoulder to shoulder, ride the elevator down by your head on his chest and his arms wrapped tightly around you.
 Jack watches as you check out, smiling and thanking the receptionist before coming back to him with a tired look on your face. He knows how you must be feeling, he feels even worse than you, because suddenly it is six years ago as he watches you pack your bags and ride to the airport together.
 He drives you there himself, muscle memory he thinks bitterly, with his hand on your thigh and your fingers caressing the freckled skin. He doesnât wanna break the bubble you are in, he doesnât wanna believe he is seeing you go again. He can turn the wheel and drive to his place, he thinks about it too, but he knows you are not ready yet, and he isnât ready either.
 He looks down at his wedding band shining under the sunlight. The memories of your tears over this black ring rush into his mind, and he takes a deep breath to calm his racing heart â he isnât ready for sure.
 He wants to say something, anything as he helps you through the airport, but he canât, he doesnât dare to utter a word and he hopes that his actions and eyes are showing what he hopes to say.
 âDonât go,â these are the only two words he manages to let out as you look at him, hearing how your flightâs boarding has started through the speakers, âPlease donât go.â
 âI have to, Jackââ
 âNo, no you donât have to!â He presses his lips together tightly, his cheeks flushed and eyes red, âYou just- just have to stay here, with me, be my Clementine againââ
 âYou still use that stupid nickname?â You give him a watery laugh, cupping his face before you press your lips to his, muffling his sobs as best as you can, feeling how your tears mix together and fall on your chins.
 âYeah, of course,â he kisses you back quickly, like he is in a rush to win a game, an endless competition with no victory, âI know you fucking hate itââ
 âI love it, I love you,â you peck his mouth again, âBut this is where we need to part ways, Jack. Itâs in our faith it seems.â
 âCurel fucking faith,â he bumps his nose into yours, hands clutching your hips so tightly as if you would vanish if he loses his grip, âI love you, too.â
 âReach out to me when you forget to put your ring on,â you step back, letting his hands fall to his sides, âFind me when you donât need to go to that rooftop, Iâll be waiting for you, even if it takes ten or twenty years.â
 And Jack watches you leave again, the same way you did six years ago, from the same spot. He watches you take his heart to another city, leaving him with an empty aching chest for an eternity.
 The next day, he walks toward the same staircase that leads toward the rooftop while twisting his ring, but it is not his late wife he is thinking about; itâs you.
 Today may not be the day, but someday he will find you, he is sure of it.
pairing: dr. jack abbot x day shift resident!female reader
summary: you've been pining for the night shift attending dr. jack abbot ever since you started at the hospital, and when you wake up in his bedâaloneâafter having too many drinks in the park after a particularly bad shift, you finally do something about it.
warnings: 18+ content (minors do not interact!!!), unspecified age gap, smut, piv sex, unprotected sex, come marking, hand job, pussy job, dry humping/thigh riding, big dick/tough fit, tit play/nipple sucking, dirty talk, daddy kink, praise kink, pet names (angel), begging, teasing, aftercare, cuddling and snuggling, drinking and drunkenness (nothing happens while reader is drunk), mutual pining. this fic is inspired by the scene of the doctors and nurses drinking in the park after work in the pitt season 1 finale, but it could take place after any rough shift.
word count: 8.3k
a/n: here's my entry for the a doctor a day writing challenge!! thank you to @letsgobarbs, @ananonymousaffair and @clubsoft for hosting this event!! my prompt was "You are my heaven, my obsession, my prayer and bliss." and my color was orangeâand i'm really happy with how this turned out!! technically this is my first proper jack abbot fic (though i'm sure it won't be the last), so i hope y'all enjoy âĄâĄâĄ
The soft orange light of a spring sunrise filtered into the room behind your eyelids, and for one hazy, wonderful moment, you drifted in the contentment that only comes from the liminal space between sleeping and waking. You were ensconced in warm blankets and the smell of earth and sunshine, and you wanted to live in that moment as long as possible.
Then, an almost gentle throbbing began behind your temple, a headache blooming to life as you slipped further into waking. Unbidden, memories from the night before flooded into your mind and you had to bite back a pained groan.
Youâd had far too much to drink after work. Or, rather, youâd had too many beers for how exhausted youâd been after your particularly long and terrible shift. But youâd been riding high on surviving the day from hell, and it had been a pleasantly warm evening. And Dr. Jack Abbot had been there.
It had felt like some kind of small miracleâto get to share a couple drinks with the med students, doctors and nurses in the park across the street from the hospital. You hadnât been the only one laughing too loudly, as if grasping onto the relief of making it through the day, because the alternative was sinking into the darkness.
Youâd known that if youâd gone home and dragged yourself into your cold, lifeless apartment that you never had time or energy to decorate, youâd have ended up crying yourself to sleep. Instead, youâd accepted the invitation from your attending, Dr. Michael RobinavitchâDr. Robbyâand joined the others for a drink.
The amber glow of the lamplights lining the paths of the park had been welcoming beacons, and youâd felt the weight of the world slowly slip from your shoulders as you accepted a can of beer, letting the conversation flow around you. As everyone talked, sharing stories from the day, things hadnât seemed so bleak.Â
So youâd lingered in the park long after you shouldâve gone home, drinking far more than you shouldâve considering how exhausted you were, and letting your eyes drift to Dr. Jack Abbot far more often than they shouldâve. You couldnât help it, though. Youâd been drawn to the night shift attending ever since you met him at the start of your first day shift.Â
You were Dr. Robbyâs resident, and he was a capable mentorâfirm when he needed to be, and kind when you needed it. Youâd gained a lot working with Dr. Robby on the day shift, and youâd become a much better doctor learning from him and everyone else in the ER.
Yet you couldnât help but be intrigued by Dr. Jack Abbot. Youâd always admired the older, silver-haired doctor, the way he carried himself, coming in as your shift was ending and taking over easily. You always knew your patients were in good hands when you gave them over to Dr. Abbot.Â
He was so competent and capable, and always so calm, even on the busiest nights in the ER. He was like a rock in the middle of a raging, tumultuous storm. Strong and steady. Safe.Â
And you wanted to climb Dr. Jack Abbot like a tree, to live in his strong and steady embrace, to allow his presence to keep you safe and sane. You wanted him to be your safe harborâand to be his, too. You wanted to be the person heâd come home to and slip into bed with, and trust to keep him safe and sane.Â
In the park, under the amber lamplights, your thoughts had drifted to the idea of sliding into bed with Dr. Jack Abbot, curling your body around his beneath warm blankets, and sleeping the entire day away as you lay entwined together. You imagined waking up together, warm skin and gentle hands, soft kisses giving way to something moreâŠ
You hadnât realized you were staring until light brown eyes caught yours and youâd startled back into the moment, heat rising up your neck and blooming in your cheeks. Youâd known you should look away, but you hadnât been able to, not with the electric tension thrumming between the two of you like a livewire.
Dr. Jack Abbot was as calm as ever, holding your gaze for a long moment.Â
His eyes were dark and inscrutable in the dim light of the park, but you noticed a glint in his gaze that made the breath catch in your throat. There was something in his eyes, something like wanting, which had your heart beating harder against your sternum and warmth pulsing between your thighs.Â
Then heâd tipped his can of beer toward you and dipped his head, giving you a nod while a smirk flickered at the edges of his mouth. Something in you had fluttered, low in your belly, and youâd wanted to squirm. Youâd wanted to throw yourself at him, hold his face in your hands and kiss him until you were both panting and needy.
Instead youâd looked away and taken a sip of your beer, wondering if youâd imagined the warmth and hunger hidden deep in his gaze. Youâd told yourself it mustâve been a trick of the dark amber light, the result of too much exhaustion, too much beer, and too many dirty thoughts about Dr. Jack Abbot.
The night had gone on, time unspooling slowly and leisurely the way it never did in the ER, and youâd drifted along on the current of conversation ebbing and flowing around you.Â
Youâd tried not to look back at Dr. Abbot too often, but couldnât help yourself. More often than not, though, you found him already looking at you, that ghost of a smile on his face and that look in his eye that had you questioning your sanity.
At some point, youâd ended up on a bench between Dr. Robby and Dr. Abbot, listening as the men commended the work youâd done in the ER that evening. Their words of praise had flitted in one ear and out the other, even as you nodded along like you were paying close attention.Â
The smile on your face had everything to do with their praise, and nothing to do with Dr. Abbotâs warmth seeping into your sideâat least, thatâs what youâd told yourself.
Your memories got hazier from there. You remembered your cheek falling against Dr. Abbotâs shoulder, and staying there as your eyes slid closed; deft fingers gently prying the half-empty can from your hands; the smell of beer and something earthy, like moss; the deep rumbling of Dr. Robby and Dr. Abbotâs voices as they talked over your head.
You hadnât blacked outâyou hadnât had that much to drinkâbut the rest of the evening was too hazy to make out in your mind. Youâd been so tired from working a 15-hour shift, and the alchohol had only exacerbated your exhaustion, leaving you to fall asleep on Dr. Abbotâs shoulder.Â
You remembered breathing in the smell of him, an earthy scent that reminded you of hiking in the woods on a bright, sunny day. It was the same scent you were surrounded by in the morning light, your eyes still stubbornly closed as a headache throbbed behind your temple.Â
Rolling over and pressing your face into your pillow, you took a deep breath. The fabric smelled so much like Dr. Jack Abbot that it made your head spin with confusion.Â
Even as your mind reeled, your body responded to the scent of him, the memory of his caramel brown eyes. You could perfectly picture the way his freckled arms flexed when he crossed them, his t-shirt sleeves hugging his biceps lovinglyâthe way you wanted to.
Heat cascaded gently down from the crown of your head, coasting down your spine and pooling between your thighs. Even with the slight edge of a hangover at the periphery of your mind, you couldnât help the way your body yearned for the ERâs night shift attending, wanting him so badly it ached.
Your heart and your body wanted Dr. Jack Abbot. You wanted the older doctor who could be your rock, your light in the darkness, your safe harbor. And neither your heart nor your body would settle for anything less.
Your fingers were just beginning to slip down your stomach, trailing toward the needy, throbbing place between your thighs, when the soft click of a door opening sounded beyond the bed. Your eyes flew open for the first time that morning and, for one disorienting moment, you had no idea where you were.
The orange light of dawn was familiar enough, but the bedsheets and pillows looked nothing like your own. Flipping onto your back and sitting up quickly, you ignored the annoying pang of your headache to peer toward the door.
A sigh of relief gusted from your lips when you found Dr. Jack Abbot framed in the doorway, his brow creased with concern as he raked his eyes over you, as if checking for injury or illness.Â
You took the moment to look around the room, taking in the comfortable, masculine decor. Warm wooden furniture occupied the space, with plants positioned around the room in places that you were sure got the most light. A thriving monstera sat in a pot beside the dresser, a goldfish in a glass bowl on top of the wooden ledge.
On the floor next to the open door, there was a camouflage backpack, the only thing that appeared to be out of place. You recognized that backpack as the one Dr. Abbot always wore on his way into work.
Suddenly, your sleep hazy brain caught up and you realized you were in Dr. Abbotâs apartmentâyou were in his bedroom. In his bed.Â
The soft sheets of Dr. Abbotâs bed slid against your bare legs as you brought them up to your chest, his warm, orange duvet draped around your waist. It was the same color as the sunrise that lay beyond the windows, which were half covered in blackout curtains, like he wasnât sure which way youâd prefer them.Â
It was allâall of itâalmost too much for your mind to process. The headache behind your temples pounded a little harder as your body caught up to your sudden change of position, and you winced.
The expression of pain on your face seemed to spur Dr. Abbot into moving.
âYouâre up,â he said, his voice low and soft like he was trying not to startle you. He padded to the bedside table beside you and set down a glass of water. âDo you remember how you got here?â he asked in that same tone, which you recognized as the one he used as patients.Â
You frowned as you watched Dr. Abbot open a bottle of aspirin and shake two pills into his hand. You tried to think of an answer that didnât make you seem like a silly lightweight of a resident as you plucked the medecine from his palm when he held it out to you.Â
A shiver raced down your spine when your fingertips brushed Dr. Abbotâs warm, calloused skin, delightful tingles dancing along your nerves. You attempted to hide your reaction in a shake of your head, answering his question silently. But you couldnât hide the way your shoulders trembled, so you busied yourself with taking the pills.Â
Thankfully, your hand was steady as you reached for the glass on the bedside table and swallowed the aspirin with a gulp of water. The cool water felt like salvation to your parched throat, and you ended up drinking the whole glass before you could even think to stop yourself.Â
When you were done, your found Dr. Abbot watching you, a hint of a pleased smile in the twist of his lips and pride in the glint of his gaze. You had the wild thought that if he looked at all his patients that way, you understood why his satisfaction scores were so high.Â
He took the glass from you, his fingers brushing against yours, the movement feeling more deliberate than before. You were grateful when he turned away to set the glass down, because your shoulders trembled with another shiver at the electricity in his light touch.
âYou fell asleep in the park,â Dr. Abbot explained in a voice that was endlessly patient and calm as he set the glass down. You noticed your phone beside it on the bedside table, plugged in and charging. âYou were so exhausted, we couldnât send you home on your own. My place was closest.â
Dr. Abbot straightened as he gave his explanation, arms crossing over his chest and staring down at you in a way that made you squirm. He didnât look disappointed or disapproving, just concerned. And the knowledge that he cared enough to be concerned sent your heart pitter-pattering inside your ribcage.
âThanks for taking care of me, Dr. Abbot,â you murmured, dropping your gaze to your fingers, which were twisting in the blanket on your lap. âYesterday wasâŠdifficult.âÂ
âJack, please,â he said, his voice almost imperceptibly softer.Â
Your eyes flicked up to him, looking at the silver-haired doctor from under your lashes. His smile was wry and your belly gave a happy little swoopâand that was before you heard his next words.
âYouâre in my bed, you donât need to be so formal.â
It was clear that he meant his words as a teasing kind of joke, but they only succeeded in reminding you that youâd woken up in his bed. Alone. Lamentably alone. The warmth between your thighs stoked higher, until his words fully penetrated your mind.
Your gaze drifted to the other side of the bed, which was still made with military precision. It was clear he hadnât slept there, and you realized that meant he mustâve slept somewhere elseâŠ
âOh god, Iâm so sorry for kicking you out of your bed,â you rushed to say, looking back to Jack with wide eyes. âWhere did you sleep?â
âI got a couple hours on the couch,â he answered, a little bashfully. He seemed eager to move on from the subject as he shifted his weight from one foot to the other. âYou should get some more rest,â he said, unfurling his arms from his chest and reaching for your empty water glass. âYour scrubs are in the wash with mine, they should be done in a bit.â
A memory from the night before surfaced in your mind: Jack standing with his back to you as you swayed on your feet and stripped out of your scrubsâleaving you in only a tank top, bra and panties.Â
Youâd removed your bra and left everything in a heap on the floor before dragging yourself under the covers of his bed, snuggling deep into their warmth and his comforting scent. You were asleep before youâd even heard Jack turn around.
Not only had Dr. Jack Abbot taken you to his home so you would be safe, given up his bed so youâd have somewhere comfortable to sleep, but he was washing your scrubs for you.Â
There was something about the domesticity of it that pricked at your heart. You could so easily imagine throwing your dirty scrubs into the laundry with a load of Jackâs, washing them together, working side by side to put them away in the room you shared.Â
You yearned for the life you picturedâand you wanted it with Dr. Jack Abbot.Â
Before you could think about what you were doing, your hand darted out. Your fingers wrapped around Jackâs wrist as he reached for the water glass on the bedside table. You could feel his pulse beneath your fingertips, strong and steady, if a little fast.
âStay with me.â You hated how small you sounded, the desperate pleading in your voice, but your fingers wouldnât let go. Instead, you squeezed his wrist tighter. âPlease, Jack.â
For a long moment, long enough that you began to think heâd deny you, Jack just stood there. Half hunched over, his hand reaching past you, he stood and looked at you. His eyes stared deep into yours, his brows pulled together over his light brown gaze.
âAre you sure?âÂ
The question was rough and raspy, like heâd dredged the words up from the very depths of his soul. His eyes were bright and intense as he stared at you, his gaze searching your face for any hesitation.
The sound of his voice and the weight of his stare sent your heart fluttering, and your thighs squirmed beneath the blankets of his bed. But you werenât uncomfortable, only eager. You were excited that he hadnât brushed you off and denied you outright.
âIâm sure,â you said, nodding your head for good measure as you began sliding toward the center of the bed, tugging on Jackâs wrist. âI want you to stay with me. Please.â
Jack stared into your eyes for a beat longer, then nodded his head. He flipped his hand around in your fingers and squeezed your wrist before pulling away and giving you his back.
You watched the muscles shift and move beneath the white t-shirt Jack wore across his broad shoulders while his hands undid the button and fly of his dark cargo pants. Before your mind could wrap around what he was doing, he was pushing them down, revealing so much more of his pale, freckled skin below the edge of his navy boxer briefs.
Jack shucked off his pants and sat down on the corner of the bed, removing his prosthetic and massaging his leg for a moment while you watched unabashedly, unable to resist the opportunity to look your fill of the doctor youâd thought about for ages.Â
You wanted to press yourself against his broad back and wrap your arms around him, clinging to his warmth and burying your face between his shoulder blades. You wanted to hold him and take comfort in him, you wanted to be connected to him.
Looking over his shoulder and breaking you from your thoughts, Jack caught your eye and you could see the question in his gaze. His quirked eyebrows were asking again if you were certain you wanted him to join you.
A smile curled the corners of your mouth and instead of answering him with words, you flipped down the corner of the blankets in a clear invitation. He held your gaze for another moment, but when you remained steady and smiling, he pushed himself up and slipped between the sheets.
Immediately, you felt his warmth and you let out a happy little sound while he settled on his back against the pillowsâthe same ones youâd pressed your face into after youâd woken up. You waited until heâd gotten comfortable, his gaze finding yours.
His light brown eyes, looking like warm caramel in the soft, tangerine light of morning, were a wondrous sight. It was a miracle, the way he looked at you in that moment, letting you see the hesitant hope in his eyes.Â
Slowly, as if seeking permission with every tiny movement, you slid closer to him. With a small, flickering smile, he lifted his arm, making space for you, and you slipped into it delightedly, making another happy sound.Â
Your cheek lay pillowed on Jackâs chest, the soft curves of your body pressing into his side. Without questioning the impulse, you slid your leg over Jackâs, hooking it around his thigh and shifting even closer, until you were practically plastered to his body.Â
Contentment settled heavily around your shoulders, and you took a deep breath, letting Jackâs earthy, sunshiny scent fill your senses and comfort you. As you exhaled, your body softened and you snuggled deeper into the older doctorâs chest.
Jackâs arm wrapped around your shoulders, his fingers settling on the bare skin of your arm, and you made another delighted noise. His fingertips trailed lazily up and down your arm, like he was learning the softness of your skin, and he made a rumble in his chest that sounded content.
âAre you comfortable?â he asked, his voice even deeper and raspier than youâd ever heard it.
The tenor of Jackâs voice sent little sparks of desire dancing down your spine to settle between your thighs. He wasnât using the voice he used on his patients anymore, and you couldnât be happier that you were seeing a new side to him, one you suspected few ever got to see.
âMhm, sooo comfortable,â you mumbled, hiding an elated grin in his chest.Â
It was true, youâd never been more comfortable, but you couldnât seem to ignore the restless need in your body. You squirmed a little against Jackâs side, like you were trying to find an even better position, and all the while enjoying the feeling of his thigh pressing between your legs.
A soft, bitten-off whine squeezed from your throat and you shifted even closer to the older doctor, needing more of him pressed against more of you.Â
âJack,â you whimpered, your fingers fisting in his cotton t-shirt while your hips writhed against his side, your body searching for something you couldnât quite grasp.
âYou need something, angel?â Jack asked, a teasing lilt in his voice. When you lifted your head to pout at him, his eyes were hooded, and his mouth was curved into a knowing smirk. âYou need some help before you can settle down and sleep?â
The hint of patronizing teasing in his tone was like a drug, making your mind go hazy and soft while your body melted in his strong arms. Your lashes fluttered as you fought to keep your eyes open, biting your lip while heat flooded your cheeks.
You didnât trust your voice, so you nodded in answer to Jackâs question.Â
Jackâs eyes dipped to your mouth, the warmth in your face cascading down your body until it settled heavily between your thighs. You could feel yourself growing damp, your nipples hardening and pressing against the thin fabric of your tank top.Â
But all you could do was stare at Jackâs mouth, framed by grizzled cheeks and freckled skin. How many times had you thought about kissing that mouth? Too many times to count. And you could hardly breathe when it seemed you might finally get to make your dreams come true.
Slowlyâoh, so slowly, Jackâs hand came up and cupped your jaw, his head rising from the pillows as you leaned into him at the same time. Your mouths were drawing infinitesimally closer and closer like there was some kind of magnetic pull between them.Â
He tilted your face until your mouths were aligned, and then your lips brushed his. Sparks zinged through your body and you sucked in a sharp breath at just that little touch, your exhale slipping from your lips in a keening, desperate sound.Â
Whatever was left of Jackâs self-control seemed to snap, and he crushed his mouth to yours, as if intent on drinking down that needy sound while a hungry groan rumbled in his chest. Another whimper was silenced by his mouth, and you pressed even closer, like you wanted to crawl inside his heart.Â
Your first kiss with Dr. Jack Abbot was hungry and greedy, with an edge of mutual adoration that made you light-headed.Â
Jackâs hands on your body were strong and steady, but for the slight tremor in his fingers, his mouth careful and hot as he explored yours. When his tongue licked into your heat, dragging a moan from you, he huffed a pleased sound, angling your face so he could kiss you deeper, more thoroughly.Â
Your hips rocked against the older doctorâs thigh as you tried to squirm closer, your arms wrapping around his shoulders and clinging to him while you whimpered into his mouth. Jack responded by trailing his hands down your back, curving around your ribs and dragging your body more on top of him.
âOh god, Jack,â you panted, gasping for air while his mouth trailed kisses down the line of your neck. You tipped your head to the side, giving him more access as your wanton moans filled the room. âIâve wanted this for so long, you have no idea.â
The confession spilling from your lips had Jack slowing, and even though you were practically on top of him, he eased back into the pillows so he could catch your eye. The light in the room was shifting from a honey orange to a golden yellow, but Jackâs eyes were still bright and warm like caramel as he stared into yours as he spoke.
âYou are my heaven, my obsession, my prayer and bliss.â
The depth of emotion in his words, the evidence that he felt the same way you did, brought unexpected tears to your eyes and you cupped his face. His silvery stubble was rough against your palms as you surged forward, capturing his mouth in a rapturous kiss.
âYouâre mine, too,â you mumbled against his mouth before pulling away to look at him so he could see the honesty in your gaze. âYouâre my calm, my safe harbor, my happiness and heart.â
âAngel.âÂ
The endearment was rough and ragged, an undercurrent of pleading in Jackâs tone as he wrapped his hand around the back of your neck and pulled you in. He kissed you harder, stealing the words freely given from your lips and locking them away in his heartâjust like youâd done with his.
Emotion swirled in your chest and you nearly sobbed with need at the wet slide of Jackâs tongue between your lips, your mind going hazy as an aching need pulsed between your thighs. A desperate whine built in your throat, your hips squirming clumsily against his thigh.Â
Jackâs hands trailed down your spine, deviating from their path to slide beneath your tank top and curl around your ribs, his thumbs brushing the soft mounds of your tits. You huffed a needy whimper, feeling him smirk against your mouth, before his hands slid lower, his strong grip guiding your body to writhe against his thick thigh.
Your hips rocked in time with his guided movements, grinding your core against him while you whimpered into his mouth. You were so far gone in a pleasant haze of your desire, that you didnât pay attention to what you were saying when you whined, âDaddy, please.â
There was the briefest stutter in Jackâs movements, and then his hands gripped you tighter, his thigh pressing deeper between your legs. Against your lips, his mouth curved into an indulgent smirk.Â
âPlease what, angel? Tell daddy what you need.âÂ
The patronizing teasing tone had slipped back into his voice, and it made your core throb between your thighs, a whimper escaping your lips before you could bite it back. It had been a slip of the tongue that youâd called him daddy, but to hear it echoed in his deep, raspy voice was another thing entirely. It was exactly what you needed.
Your fingers gripped his shirt tighter, your body squirming harder in his hands, rolling your hips and grinding against his thigh while you finally responded to his command.
âNeed you,â you huffed, as if the answer was obvious.Â
A gruff chuckle rumbled in Jackâs chest and his hand slid up your back, thumb skimming the curve of your breast so teasingly, your body chased his touch. Arching your spine, you pushed your tits against his chest, but Jackâs hand kept moving. His calloused palm followed the line of your arm until his fingers wrapped loosely around your wrist.Â
Gently, he moved your hand down his front, over his soft belly, until your palm settled against the twitching bulge in his boxer briefs. He felt so thick and heavy already, even though he wasnât fully hard yet.
âThis is what you do to me, angel,â he rasped, breath ghosting over your cheek, his mouth moving against the corner of your lips. âYou have meâany time, any way you want.âÂ
Your fingers wrapped around his girth through the soft cotton of his briefs, squeezing him gently and learning the weight of him in your hand. You stroked your palm up his length, thumb swiping over the tip and feeling the wetness of his arousal.
Jack grunted, his hips rising up off the bed to buck into your touch and the movement had his thigh flexing and pressing between your legs. You moaned into his stubbled cheek, the sound mingling with his heavy breaths as you stroked his length and rocked against him.Â
âJack.â His name was a gasp for salvation, a desperate plea on your lips that had him shuddering under your touch.
âNuh uh, angel,â Jack chided in an endlessly warm tone, his smile pressed into the corner of your mouth. âDonât stop calling me daddy nowânot when it makes me so fucking hot for you.â
âDaddy, daddy,â you babbled breathlessly into his scruffy cheek, your desire thick in your veins at the teasing command in his tone. âI need you inside me, pleaseâplease, I need you so bad,â you whined, your fingers squeezing his cock through his boxers.
âChrist, youâve got me, angel, just take me out,â Jack rumbled, his hips rocking up against your palm while you worked his length.Â
Not needing more invitation than that, you reached into his boxers and pulled out his cock. He was still hardening and thickening beneath your touch, the velvety soft skin growing taut the tighter you stroked him.Â
Jack groaned at your pleasurable attention, and the sound went straight to the slit between your thighs, your arousal leaking into your panties. You were so drenched, you were certain he could feel it against his thigh, but when you rubbed your pussy against him, he only grunted, his cock twitching in your hand.
âWant more,â you keened against Jackâs stubbled cheek, both your heads tilted to stare down your bodies and watch your hand pump adoringly up and down his length while he grew harder beneath your touch. âWant your fat cock sinking into my needy pussy, daddy, please.â
âFuuuck,â Jack groaned, the edge in his voice almost pained. His hips bucked off the bed as he fucked into your fist, precum beading at the tip and leaking down the side, slicking your strokes. âKeep talking like that, angel, and Iâm gonna blow my load before I even get inside you.â
âBut daddy, we canât have that,â you whined teasingly, laughing softly as you turned your face and pressed a kiss to the corner of his mouth.Â
Then you were pulling away only long enough to shove your panties down over your ass and thighs, kicking them off into the sheets at the base of the bed. Once done, your hand wrapped around Jackâs cock again, greedy for the feel of him, loving the weight and warmth against your palm.Â
Sliding your leg over both of Jackâs thighs, you moved your body until you were straddling his hips, your hand guiding his cock to press between the slippery folds of your slit. Your wet pussy pressing down on the length of his thick cock, your clit bumping against the ridged veins lining the shaft, had both of you moaning.
Jack cupped your jaw and guided your face back to his, his tongue sliding along your plump lower lip and licking lovingly into your mouth. He kissed you deeply, devouring your sounds of pleasure and groaning his own satisfaction like heâd never tasted anything as sweetâand he couldnât get enough.
His other hand slid beneath the soft cotton of your tank top, his thumb brushing over your nipple and teasing the sensitive bud until it tightened into an achy, needy peak. Heat and desire pooled between your thighs, leaking from your pussy and coating his length as you rocked against him.
You broke apart only long enough for Jack to tear off your top, tossing it somewhere in the room you didnât see because you were too busy slanting your mouth to his and greedily kissing him again. Your lips were swollen from kissing, but you couldnât stop, you didnât think youâd ever get enough of him.
It felt like the opposite of standing in the calm center of a stormâyour body was a riot of pleasure and sensation, desperately rocking against the man between your thighs while the bedroom around you remained undisturbed, the light shifting and glowing brighter as the sun rose outside.Â
And Dr. Jack Abbot was still your rock, your tether to the earth, grounding you with the rasp of his calloused hands over your soft curves, his expert fingers plucking and stroking your nipples while his hips lifted from the mattress to grind his hard cock into your cunt.Â
You were so wet for him, so empty and aching, your pussy pulsed against his hard length, your desire coating him from root to tip. A sob was lodged in your throat, your hips working against his thick shaft in increasingly desperate movements.Â
âJack,â you cried, the sound pitiful even to your own ears. You needed him, you needed him more than you needed your next breath. And you knew he could hear it in the ragged edge of your voice as you sobbed his name.Â
Thankfully for you, Jack Abbot was just as much of a competent, capable man as he was a doctor. He heard the anxious wanting in your tone and knew exactly how to handle you. He stroked his hands soothingly over your ribs and down your spine, cooing soft sounds of comfort against your cheek.Â
âTake me inside your sweet pussy, angel,â Jack rumbled, the steel of his order softened in the honeyed warmth of his tone. âLet me feel youâneed to feel your heat hugging my cock.â
âDaddy, yesss, please, can I?â you babbled, burying your face in the weathered skin of his neck. His scent was stronger there, and you huffed greedily, breathing in the smell of sunshine and earth on his skin. It filled your head with amber clouds of comfort.Â
âGo on, angel, youâve got this,â Jack murmured encouragingly, the calm warmth of his voice settling around your shoulders like the coziest blanket. He pressed a kiss to the pulse at the base of your throat, sending shivers down your spine.
âYes, daddy,â you breathed on a exhale, shifting your hips until the tip of his cock caught at the entrance of your leaking hole. Sitting up on your knees, you lifted your hips and guided his cock to line up with your pussy. Then you pressed down determinedly.
A breathy cry burst from your lips when the fat tip of Jackâs cock pushed into your tight channel. He was thicker than anyone youâd taken before, and your heart fluttered against your ribcage in panic, the devastating thought occurring to you that he might not be able to fit.
âOh god, fuck, youâre so big, Jack, I donât know if I canââ
âYou can take me,â Jack said firmly, interrupting your panicked babbling as he sat up to face you. He caught your wobbling chin in his steady hand and guided your eyes to look at him. âYou can take me, angel,â he repeated, ducking his head and looking at you with confidence and pride written in the lines of his face. âYou can do this.â
The belief Jack had in youâeven about something as base as taking his cockâwas enough to have tears gathering in your eyes. Your lower lip quivered and instead of giving in to the spiraling thoughts about how no one else had ever believed in you the way Jack did in that moment, you surged forward and kissed him.Â
You kissed Jack Abbot the way youâd never kissed anyone before. You kissed him like he was your past, present and future, like he was the calm in the storm of your life. You kissed him like he was your safe harbor, the steady dock under your feet and the man who was your home.Â
All the while, Jack kissed you in return, meeting the fervor of your lips with an adoration that had your heart singing in your chest. With every sweep of his tongue and nip of his teeth and pull of his mouth, he exulted your existence and promised devotion for as long as youâd have him.Â
âJack,â you gasped his name, wrenching your bee-stung lips from his as you pressed down further on his cock, incandescent pleasure radiating from where you were joined through the rest of your body.
âFeel so good, angel,â Jack rasped, kissing his way down the curve of your throat and past your collarbone. His mouth left goose bumps in its wake as he trailed kisses down to your chest. âMore, angel, you can take more.â
Jackâs words were muffled in the plush curves of your tits, cupped in his big, strong hands. His head ducked down until his tongue was lapping at their tightened peaks, torturing the sensitive buds while your head tipped back and you moaned. He sucked one of your soft tits into his mouth, tongue swirling teasingly around your nipple.
Your back bowed and you thrust your chest into Jackâs face, your fingers sliding into his curly silver hair and clutching his head tight. A cry of pleasure tumbled from your lips, the sound devolving into a filthy moan as you sank down on his cock, taking half of him inside you.Â
âGod, daddy, youâre breaking me in half,â you whined, your hips writhing in his lap, lifting up and pushing back down for more of the stinging stretch. The pleasure bordered on pain, but it felt so good, you couldnât get enough, pressing even further down on his hard cock.
Jack chuckled, pulling away from your chest with an obscene wet sound, your tit falling from his mouth while he looked up at you. His brown eyes were sparkling with mischief in the bright daylight.
âYou love it, donât you, angel?â Jack teased, in the warm, patronizing tone that sent your belly swooping. âYou love the feeling of my fat cock sinking deep into your pretty cunt, splitting you open and spreading you so wide, huh?â
The filthy words went straight to your pussy, your tight hole pulsing around Jackâs hard shaft while you nodded your agreement. âYuh huh, I love it, daddy, itâs sooo good,â you babbled, your fingers idly twisting in Jackâs hair as you clung to him and pressed your hips down on his thick length.
A small grin pulled across his face and he caught your eye, wrapping his lips around your other nipple and sucking hard enough to wring a squeal from your mouth. Your body bucked on his lap, and it was only his sinewy arm around your lower back that kept you anchored on top of him.
Spreading your knees wider on the bed, you pressed down hard on Jackâs cock until you were fully seated. The full, fat length of him was buried inside you to the hilt, stretching your tight cunt and punching the breath from your lungs.Â
A surprised yelp slipped from your lips at the sudden, overwhelming fullness, but the sound soon dissolved into a deep, dirty moan when the slight sting gave way to scorching pleasure. Your body melted against Jack, his head lifting from your tits to take in the look of ecstasy on your face.Â
âThere we go,â Jack rasped, one of his hands pressing to your lower back, keeping your bodies locked together and still for a moment. âThat wasnât so hard, huh?â he teased, capturing your lips in a playful, nipping kiss.Â
You huffed a laugh against his mouth, and shook your head good-naturedly, your arms tightening around his shoulders as you clung to your strong, steady doctor.
Jack pressed his forehead to yours, his voice lowering to deep rasp. âYouâre taking me so good, angelâyouâre such a good girl.â He brushed a kiss to the apple of your cheek, and it was only then that you realized you were smiling, pleased by his praise. âAre you ok, does it feel good?â
âMm, yes, daddy,â you murmured, sinking into the feeling of having Jackâs thick cock seated inside you, pleasure pulsing from where you were joined. âFeel so good filled up with your cockâyou fill me up so good, I wanna stay right here forever.âÂ
Your mumbled words were half lost to a moan as you rocked your hips gently, feeling his shaft drag ever so gently against your inner walls. It was intense and wonderful and felt so good, you couldnât stop.Â
Jackâs hands fell to your hips, and he gripped your soft curves, helping you grind down on him.Â
âThatâs it, just like that,â he urged, his own hips rolling beneath yours, bringing your bodies together in a delicious push and pull that wrenched a pleasured grunt from him. âFuck, angel, youâre so tight and you feel so fucking goodâso wet and warm. Youâre making daddy feel so good.â
âDaddy, daddy, daddy,â you chanted, lips parted and breaths panting against Jackâs grizzled cheeks as you bounced on his lap. Still, you wanted more, and you knew Jack would give it to you, all you had to do was ask. âWill you suck on my tits, daddy, please?â
âFuck, of course, angel,â Jack rumbled in response, his head ducking down, mouth latching onto a nipple and sucking until your hips gave a reflexive kick. âYa like it when daddy sucks on your tits, angel? Your perfect fucking tits.âÂ
His words were muttered, almost like he was talking to himself, and he didnât wait for an answer before burying his face in your soft mounds. His lips and tongue worshiped your tits, showing you just how much he adored your body.
âYes, yes, daddy, I love it,â you cried, rocking your hips faster, rolling them in a steady rhythm that had your clit grinding against the base of him. The pleasure was building fast in your core, until you were suddenly on the precipice. âPlease, Jack, âm so close.â
 âCome on my cock, angelâfuck, I wanna feel you clench around my fat cock while youâre screaming my name,â Jack rambled in between wet, suckling kisses to your soft flesh. His hands cupped your tits, thumbs stroking maddeningly over your nipples before pinching them roughly. âCâmon angel, give it to me, show me what a good girl you are and come for me.â
âJackâJACK!âÂ
His words and his cock and his hands and his perfect mouth sent you tumbling over the edge of your release, making you come on his cock. Your hips worked furiously as pleasure crashed over you in waves, helpless moans and cries spilling from your lips while Jack held you tight and thrust into you from below.Â
He was hot and hard and everywhere, his thick cock still deep inside you, his arms wrapped around you, his chest and belly pressed against your soft curves. He was the calm in the center of the storm that was your release, and he carried you through it, whispering words of praise in your ear.Â
You were still coming down from the height of your pleasure when Jack rolled you onto your back, his hips sliding between your thighs and thrusting his cock deep into you. It felt so good that you moaned loudly, your arms and legs wrapping around Jack and holding him as he fucked you, chasing his release.Â
âYouâre such a good girl, angel, taking me so well and coming on my cock like such a pretty slut. Fuck, Iâve never seen anything as beautiful as you, never felt anything as perfect. Youâre perfect, angel, so fucking perfectâfuck.âÂ
Jack bit off a groan and pulled his cock from your tight cunt. He stroked himself to completion, his come spilling across your belly and mound between your thighs while you watched pleasure contort his face.Â
He let out a fierce grunt, his shoulders shaking and arms shuddering as he hunched over your body. The hand not wrapped around his cock was gripping your thigh tightlyâlike, for once, you were his rock, his anchor tethering him to earth.
Bathed in the bright golden light of morning filtering into his bedroom, he looked magnificent, and you couldnât help yourself. You grabbed Jackâs face and pulled him down for a kiss, tasting the pleasure from his tongue.Â
His knuckles brushed your bare skin, more come leaking from the tip of his cock and onto your belly. He was covering you in ropes of his come, but you didnât care, not when his lips were moving against yours in a sensual slide, his tongue slipping possessively into your mouth and groaning his pleasure.
With a final pull on his cock and one last kiss, Jack rolled off you, collapsing onto his back and throwing an arm over his eyes while his chest heaved. He was still wearing his t-shirt and you pouted at it.
Still gasping for your own breaths, you slipped your hand beneath the hem of Jackâs shirt and raked your nails through the hair dusting his belly. He let out a shuddering breath, his cock twitching as another drop of come leaked from the tip of his softening length, seeping into the cotton shirt.
If you werenât so limp and satedâand you werenât afraid of making a mess of Jackâs bed with the come slowly drying on your skinâyou wouldâve leaned over and licked him clean. But that could wait for another time, when you both werenât so tired.
Jack settled a hand on the back of yours, stilling your fingers where they were softly stroking his belly and giving them an affectionate squeeze.Â
After a few moments of catching your breath together, he heaved himself up and reached an arm over his shoulders to yank off his shirt. He rolled onto his side and used the soft shirt to clean you up while you giggled happily.
âYou good, angel?â Jack asked, his face hovering above yours, dark caramel eyes searching your expression for anything amiss.
A soft smile curved your mouth and you reached up to cup Jackâs grizzled cheeks, thumbs stroking over his skin. âIâm good,â you murmured, lifting up and pressing a sweet kiss to his mouth. âThanks for pulling outâI canât believe I forgot to tell you to use a condom.â
Jack made a disapproving sound in the back of his throat, but it was softened by the teasing smile on his face. âNot very responsible of you, doctor,â he said in a deep, playful rasp that had you laughing.
âDonât act like you didnât forget, too, Dr. Abbot,â you retorted, batting good-naturedly at his shoulder. He laughed along with you before sitting up and moving to the edge of the bed.
âDo you need anything while Iâm up?â he asked, putting on his prosthetic then standing and tossing his soiled shirt into the laundry. He paused at the foot of the bed to wait for your answer.
Lifting your arms above your head, you stretched languidly in the warm sheets of Dr. Jack Abbotâs bed, smiling like the cat that got the cream as you reveled in the feeling of him watching you unabashedly.Â
It felt like warm, orange flames of flickering heat licking at your skin, his eyes bright and intense in the morning light as they trailed over every inch of your bare skin and naked curves. That adoration youâd felt in his arms was clear in the gleam of his eye and the slightly awed smile on his face.Â
âI could use some more water,â you finally answered, exhaling deeply as you relaxed and settled into the bed. You were eager for him to return so heâd wrap you back up in his arms, and you could snuggle together.
âYou got it,â he rasped, his throat bobbing as he swallowed. Then he wrenched his eyes away from you and seemed to force himself to walk out of the room.Â
While he was gone, you got up and went to the bathroom, cleaning yourself up a little better. When you were washing your hands, you heard a knock on the door before it opened a crack.
âGot you a shirt if you want something to wear,â Jack said, opening the door only enough for his arm to slip in. He hung a t-shirt on the hook by the door and then closed it again.Â
With a smile, you dried your hands and slid the soft cotton shirt over your head. It was plain white like the one heâd had on earlier, but clean, and it smelled like his earthy, sunshiny scent. You took a deep breath of the fabric, your nipples tightening and pushing against the fabric as warm pleasure flooded you down to your toes.
But then you remembered the man himself was waiting for you, and you eagerly exited the bathroom, finding Jack reclined against the pillows on his bed. He was sipping a glass of water, another full glass on the bedside table for you. You picked it up and drank half before setting it back down and climbing into bed.
Without hesitation, Jack lifted his arm and you slid into the space next to him. The two of you settled beneath the blankets together, your head laying on Jackâs chest, his arm wrapped around your shoulders. Your fingers idly traced the veins and freckles of his other arm, brushing through the hair dusted across his skin.
Outside, the soft, suffused orange light of dawn had given way to the bright, blinding light of morning. The sun was still climbing higher in the sky, but you and Jack needed rest.Â
So your bodies relaxed together, laying entwined in each otherâs arms. You drifted to sleep in the calm, still bedroom while the rest of Pittsburgh carried on in the world beyond.Â
From that day on, Dr. Jack Abbot was your rock, your calm in the storm, the man whose arms were your home. He was your safe harbor. And you were his.