fandom: all for the game
pairing: jean moreau/jeremy knox
title: julien baker - appointments
word count: 15.5k
!!warnings: explicit depiction of an eating disorder!!
AO3
Jean Moreau has spent his entire life being punished for wanting.
Years of abuse and torture told him that the price of wanting was not worth what would happen to him if someone found out. He wanted to play Exy, his parents sold him to the Moriyamas. He wanted his sister, she was sold off the same as he was but the difference between them is that Jean bears a body full of scars and Elodie is nothing but a memory. Jean wanted to bond with his team and prove himself worthy of their time and his newfound title, they took his sixteen-year-old body and tore it apart like wild animals. All because Riko told them to. Mindless puppets that exist only to fulfill his demented whims, to defile and destroy Jean.
He didn’t even know that he wanted Kevin.
Riko figured it out before Jean ever could. The lingering looks, the softness in him that he swore he kept hidden, the way that Jean orbited Kevin like a lost and lonely moon doomed to circle a planet that could never love it back. So he took Jean and broke him every way he knew how. Blades, water, heat, rope, shoved him into some of the darkest parts of the Nest and left him there until he stopped crying out for help and then some.
if i can't taste your lips just let me taste blood
pairing: bakugou katsuki/kirishima eijirou
summary: work studies are meant to be educational, not fatal, but bakugou and kirishima are trapped with a growing puddle of blood and no way to get out
genre: hurt/comfort, whump
word count: 2.6k
warnings: blood, hospitals, bakugou trying to articulate emotions
title from: we are the dirt - it's never enough
AO3
When Kirishima came to it was with a lot of confusion and pain. The first thing he noticed was the searing pain emanating from his abdomen that blurred and subdued his other senses. The second thing he noticed was that it was really dark.
Dark to the point where he wasn’t sure if he was opening his eyes at all, unable to figure out where the hell he was or how he got there.
The pain, however, was very clearly not a fixture of his foggy and disoriented brain. It kept getting worse, the burning sensation reaching all the way down to his feet. In the haze of pain he couldn’t pinpoint any actual injury, only able to tell that there was something really heavy pressing down on his midsection.
The whine he let out was involuntary, but if he was alone he was going to make as many pathetic noises as he wanted.
Only, he wasn’t alone.
“Kirishima? Kirishima, are you awake?”
That was Bakugou’s voice, but Bakugou never called him by his name, and especially not with the worry that currently saturated his tone.
Kirishima grumbled and tried to push the weight off him. It was so heavy, borderline crushing him but he couldn’t get it to move. What he assumed were Bakugou’s hands swatted his away from whatever was pinning him down.
“Fucking hell, would you stop that?”
Kirishima squirmed again, trying desperately to get even a little bit of the weight off him. “There’s something on top of me-”
“Yeah, that’s me. You’re bleeding.”
“Hmm? Sorry,” Kirishima floundered until his fingers connected with Bakugou’s wrist, looping around the limb. “You can stop, I’m alright.”
“What the fuck? No. You’re fucking bleeding everywhere.”
Bakugou’s face came slightly more into focus as Kirishima’s eyes adjusted to the darkness. He kept looking between Kirishima’s abdomen and his face. He looked worried, and if Kirishima didn’t value his life he would dare say that Bakugou was scared. He was still in his hero gear, the stupid theatric spikes framing his head, a distinct trail of blood marring his features as it trailed down his face from his hairline.
“Are you hurt?” Kirishima couldn’t help but ask.
“What? No.”
“You’re bleeding,” Kirishima supplied helpfully.
Bakugou narrowed his eyes and turned back to the wound, applying more pressure. “Not as much as you.”
Swallowing the whine in the back of his throat, Kirishima decided to actually start a conversation with his friend. He had no idea how long they would be there and he wasn’t into spending that uncertain length of time in tense silence with Bakugou. “What happened?”
“Work study. Big villain attack so Endeavour sent us out as backup. One of ‘em cornered you in here so I came to tell ‘em to fuck off but you were on the ground and when I exploded the asshole, the fucking ceiling caved in.”
“At least I’m not stuck in here by myself, hmm? That would be unfortunate.”
It was supposed to have been a joke, something to lighten the mood between them but Bakugou’s expression remained firm as he offered no reply.
“How bad is it?”
Bakugou paused, the silence hanging heavily between them. “It’s fine, you’re gonna be fine.”
Kirishima just hummed. “You’re a terrible liar.”
Dark spots peppered his vision and he was beginning to realise how tired he felt. He knew Bakugou was fighting a losing battle.
“I’m not fucking lying, okay? You’re going to be fine.”
“It’s okay, Bakugou. Can I just ask you to do something before I die?”
“You’re not going to die, you asshole. Fat Gum is going to come for you, you know he’d never leave you here.”
The exhaustion was creeping in with the tingling sensation in his arms and legs. He was so cold. He had half a mind to ask Bakugou to set off some explosions and hopefully warm the air. But they were trapped with potentially limited oxygen and Bakugou was too smart to ever risk that. “Is he going to be fast enough? You said there was a villain, he’s probably too busy.”
“Shut up!” Bakugou snapped, his expression and tone immediately softening as the harshness registered. “You’re not dying today. Or tomorrow. Or any day that I’m alive to see. I won't let you.”
Kirishima closed his eyes, letting himself imagine what it would be like to die with Bakugou by his side. A cruel part of his chest tightened as he imagined asking Bakugou to hold him before he passed out.
The taste of blissful unconsciousness lay heavy on the back of his tongue as he spoke. “Will you stay? I don’t wanna go alone.”
“You’re not going fucking anywhere, and I’m not gonna leave you.”
“I think I’m dying, Katsu.”
Kirishima could see the way Bakugou flinched at the use of the nickname. He would have apologised for being so informal but he was tired and he didn’t have the energy to be sorry for trying to feel close to Bakugou in his last moments.
Perhaps the reaction had been to the idea of Kirishima dying, but that seemed less likely. Bakugou was persistent in reminding everyone that he didn’t care about anything or anyone other than becoming number one. Kirishima had always admired his determination but right now he just wanted to pretend that Bakugou cared about him.
Falling in love with Bakugou Katsuki was probably the dumbest decision of Kirishima’s life but he would never live to regret it. Not while Bakugou stayed with him, trying to staunch the flow of blood from a wound that was likely severe enough to render Bakugou’s efforts useless.
The older boy didn’t look at him. “You’re just delirious from the blood loss, you’ll be okay.”
“Why are you being so nice to me?”
“Because you’re fucking bleeding out!”
“Yeah,” Kirishima mumbled with the limited energy he had left, “but why is it suddenly a big deal? You've said repeatedly that you don’t care about anyone else.”
“I lied,” Bakugou hissed through his teeth, his jaw clenched with such force that Kirishima was worried the bone would shatter under the pressure.
Kirishima’s eyebrows pinched together in confusion. Well that made no sense.“Why would you lie?”
“Because I love you, goddamnit! So you’re going to stay awake and we’re going to get out of this and go on a date or some shit, but we can only do that if you stay awake, okay?”
Oh. Kirishima tried to speak, but his tongue felt like a lead weight in his mouth that he couldn’t lift no matter how hard he tried. The fog was pressing in on him much harder now.
Bakugou’s voice was muffled by the fog as he spoke again. “Fucking say something. I just confessed my feelings for you, you don’t get to fucking ignore me now.”
Kirishima was aware that he should be worried by the way it was taking more and more of his energy to keep his eyes open, but he couldn’t find the strength to care about anything other than the fact that Bakugou just said he loves him.
“Kirishima?”
“No- No, fuck, no, Kirishima you have to keep your eyes open!” Kirishima hadn’t even noticed they’d fallen shut, but he couldn’t seem to open them again, despite how much he wanted to stare into Bakugou’s red eyes forever.
Kirishima could feel something tapping on his cheek, shaking his shoulder. Bakugou’s voice was so broken and raw when he spoke his plea. “Kiri, please.”
That’s weird, Bakugou never says please.
As the last shreds of consciousness left him, Kirishima swore he could hear muffled yelling somewhere close to his head, he couldn’t make out the words.
But it didn’t hurt anymore.
-
Kirishima didn’t expect to wake up.
It was as simple as that.
He had been bleeding badly enough that Bakugou hadn’t even let him look, and had seemed genuinely worried and afraid for his friend’s wellbeing. So at that point, waking up was a feat on its own.
Waking up without being in excruciating pain was something else entirely. He just felt floaty and not real. But he definitely wasn’t dead because he was uncomfortable and the lights behind his close eyelids were way too bright.
“I would try to send you back to the dorms but I know you won’t listen to me even if I erase your quirk and drag you kicking and screaming out of here,” Aizawa’s gruff voice said from a place Kirishima couldn’t pinpoint. There was a lot of aural input that just dissolved into directionless static.
“I’m not leaving him.”
That was Bakugou’s voice, with its hard edge and underlying fire. It cut through the haze of Kirishima’s lingering unconsciousness, it didn’t have the same fuzzy edge to the syllables that Aizawa’s voice had.
Aizawa must have clicked his tongue before speaking again in his monotonous drawl. “You need to rest too. That concussion isn’t going to go away on its own.”
“It doesn’t matter,” Bakugou bit back.
“Then, pray tell, what matters more than your health?”
“He does.”
He wanted to fight against the stupor, to reach out and smack Bakugou upside the head. His friend was concussed, and chose not to rest, in favour of keeping a bedside vigil. At this point, it was the only thing that was convincing Kirishima that he didn’t hallucinate what Bakugou said before he passed out.
Not that it made much sense.
“Kirishima would want you to take care of yourself.” Kirishima is going to shake Aizawa’s hand the second he can muster up the energy to do so.
“Kirishima also wanted to die of blood loss and traumatise me instead of just staying awake, so I’m not going to listen to what that asshole wants.”
“You know as well as I do that the doctor said he probably won’t be coherent until tomorrow morning even if he does wake up tonight. I can drive you back to the dorm and pick you up before visiting hours.”
Kirishima could practically hear Bakugou shaking his head. “I’m not leaving him alone.”
“He won’t be alone. Fat Gum and I will be here all night.”
Bakugou’s next words were haunted, hollowed out to fit an emotion Kirishima had never heard from the older boy. “He asked me to stay with him.”
“And you did, you saved his life,” a third voice added. Kirishima was cognizant enough to be able to recognise it as being his mentor.
“Go to bed, Bakugou,” Kirishima mumbled, scrunching his eyes up tightly as consciousness fully came back to him. He wished someone would turn the light off.
“Kirishima?” There was too much noise in that moment for Kirishima to figure out who had spoken, but he suspected that all of them had something to say about his return to wakefulness.
He tried to lift his hand, hoping to cover his eyes from the bright lights of what was undoubtedly a hospital room, only to find it pinned in place.
Opening his eyes to the onslaught of light revealed that his hand was being firmly held in Bakugou’s. Okay, forget his previous claims, he was definitely dead. Or, at the very least, having the best dream of his life.
Kirishima groaned. “You guys are loud.”
“Sorry, kid,” Aizawa said in his usual grumble. His chair was the furthest away from Kirishima, sitting all the way in the corner of the room. He looked the same amount of disheveled as he usually did but his posture held a weird tension that Kirishima wasn’t sure he had ever seen before.
“How are you feeling?” Fat Gum asked, he was out of his hero suit which, to Kirishima, looked very odd.
“Pretty okay, all things considered,” Kirishima said, directing his gaze towards his friend.
Bakugou was the most noticeably different. His hair was scruffy and matted with blood, a stark white rectangle of gauze taped to his forehead, a few little strips holding a cut on his eyebrow together. He didn’t speak, but he didn’t let go of Kirishima’s hand either.
Feeling particularly spontaneous, probably due to the bucket full of pain meds that were undoubtedly currently in his system, Kirishima gave Bakugou’s hand an experimental squeeze.
Bakugou stiffened but the tension quickly left his body as he squeezed back, turning to meet Kirishima’s eyes and give him a soft smile.
Their exchange was silent but they said all they needed to.
I heard you.
I love you too.
Kirishima tried to adjust himself, to get a better look at Bakugou’s injuries. Only to promptly collapse back onto the hospital bed as pain blasted through all of his senses.
“Idiot,” Bakugou hissed.
“Take it easy,” Fat Gum said, “you were in surgery for a long time, you don’t need to be pushing yourself.”
Still trying to breathe through the pain, Kirishima opened one eye to look at the pro hero.
“Surgery?” he managed to grit out from between his clenched teeth.
Fat Gum’s eyes softened as he looked at his mentee. “We found you both not long after you lost consciousness, but you were in rough shape. You’re going to need to take it easy for a while.”
Kirishima groaned. “That sounds boring.”
“Not as boring as an extended recovery period because you refused to take care of yourself,” Aizawa chided.
“True,” Kirishima said. “What time is it?”
Fat Gum was the one to speak this time. Bakugou stayed remarkably silent. “A little past midnight, you spent six hours in surgery and we’ve been waiting for you to wake up for about two hours now.”
“And Bakugou isn’t in bed?”
“Nope. We tried but he won’t budge. Better to let it happen at this point.”
Kirishima rolled his head to the other side, narrowing his eyes at Bakugou and the older boy’s stony expression. “Go to sleep.”
Bakugou met his gaze with his usual stubborn fire. “You first.”
“If you stay, will you sleep?”
Bakugou nodded.
“Aizawa-sensei, can he stay?”
Kirishima had expected Aizawa to argue, but he was just met with a soft “okay”.
Whether it was the cocktail of medication or the trauma his body had suffered, tiredness hit Kirishima like a wave. As his blinking slowed down, he swore he saw a soft smile grace Bakugou’s lips before his other hand reached up to brush Kirishima’s hair out of his face.
“Goodnight, Kirishima.”
Kirishima just hummed, too tired to speak.
-
Kirishima woke up the next morning with Bakugou wrapped around his arm that was free of tubes and wires, snoring softly.
Carefully picking up his other hand and ignoring the presence of the IV in the crook of his elbow, he began to thread his fingers through Bakugou’s messy hair. The older boy didn’t stir, a true testament to how exhausted he really was, especially considering on any other day Kirishima could breathe sideways and Bakugou would all but leap to his feet.
Instead, Bakugou’s hold just tightened slightly as he mumbled something in his sleep.
A quick glance around the room told Kirishima that Aizawa was asleep in his chair in the corner, his face buried in his capture scarf, surprisingly sans his usual yellow sleeping bag. Fat Gum was nowhere to be seen but judging by the empty chair with a blanket on the seat and jacket draped over the back, he couldn’t be far away.
There was a weird bliss to the quiet atmosphere of the hospital room. The soft morning light filtered in through the window as opposed to the harsh lights of the night before.
The pain meds took away from the discomfort of being in a hospital, and with Bakugou clinging to him like he was the most important thing in the world was something Kirishima could easily be convinced was a dream, a fantasy conjured by his unconscious mind.
fandom: all for the game
pairing: jeremy knox/jean moreau
title: julien baker - favor
word count: 7.2k
!! warnings: suicide attempt, discussion of suicide !!
AO3
Jeremy sends Jean a text when he’s leaving Lyon.
Just a quick: “hey, u up?”
Because Jean is at home sleeping off the migraine he woke up with. He insisted he would be fine after a nap so Jeremy is heading back to the lofts to see if that is true or if he needs to take Jean to the medical centre and get him a slip to get out of classes for the day without Rhemann coming down on his head. With a gentle and fatherly pat because Rhemann doesn’t know how to be firm when it comes to Jean. Something about his fearful wild animal tendencies and Jeremy is pretty sure Rhemann hasn’t gotten over Jean expecting him to strike him with his own racquet.
He’s a nice guy, he doesn’t want his players to fear him. So he sent Jeremy off without much hurrah and well wishes for their ex-Raven.
Cranking on his radio, Jeremy throws his car into reverse and pulls out of the parking lot and heads off along the familiar route that will take him to Jean.
Something in his chest squeezes thinking about it but he shakes his head, wet hair and all, and forces himself to tighten all his muscles in groups and relax them completely. One of the few things from his therapist’s bag of tricks that he actually remembers to implement in his life. Usually when he can’t sleep.
But it works and he cruises along the path he could map out in his sleep. He sings along to a song he knows and with the window rolled down he’s sure a few bystanders shoot him weird glances as he passes but he doesn’t look so he’ll never know.
He pulls up to the lofts and parks his car, taking a minute or so to finish the song that’s playing. He wonders if Jean can hear him from inside, maybe off-key singing is his alarm clock today.
Letting himself into the apartment, Jeremy tries to be a bit loud so that he doesn’t surprise Jean. He dumps his keys into the brass bowl Laila found at the flea market and they clang loudly, metal against metal. He doesn’t bother toeing off his shoes because there’s no one around to see and Jean won’t tell.
He pulls a can of coke out of the fridge and rips into it, happily gulping down the tingly carbonation as he quenches his thirst in a way that Jean would not approve of. He leans against the counter and fingers through the sticky notes and scribbled lists. He still can’t make out Cat’s handwriting even after knowing her for so long.
It’s mostly just groceries and a menu for the coming week, he guesses, so Jeremy discards the information as nothing important and proceeds down the corridor once he’s finished his coke.
He sidles up to Jean’s door and lifts a hand to knock. He doesn’t do it particularly hard but it’s still loud enough that it would wake Jean up if Jeremy’s elephanting around the apartment didn’t already.
“Jean,” he tries. “How’re you feeling?”
After a solid forty-five seconds of no response, Jeremy knocks again. “Did you take some Tylenol after the girls left?”
Still nothing.
Jeremy goes to open the door, twisting the knob and finding resistance in the form of something very solid and heavy. It takes a few shoulder-to-the-door thrusts but Jeremy clears enough space for him to wriggle in and find that Jean had pushed his dresser up against the door.
Casting his gaze across the room he finds Jean curled up in bed, looking as if he’s sleeping with his back to Jeremy. But there’s no way he’s actually asleep because he’s a light sleeper and Jeremy just made a hell of a lot of noise just to get into the room.
“Jean?” he asks again. “How’s your head?”
Silence.
Something sinks from Jeremy’s chest to his feet at record pace.
“Jean?”
He’s up against the bed now and he reaches out an arm to wrap his hand around Jean’s shoulder and give him a soft shake.
“Wakey wakey.”
He shakes him harder.
“C’mon, you’re really starting to freak me out.”
Jean doesn’t move. He doesn’t grumble or lift a hand to push Jeremy away. He just lies there in the same position and that’s when Jeremy realises he’s too still.
He knows from sharing a room with him enough that Jean is a fitful sleeper, addled with nightmares he won’t talk about and insists don’t come for him in the dark. But they’re there and he wakes easily. Something is very wrong.
Jeremy shakes him again.
Nothing.
He sticks his hand under Jean’s nose, heart in his throat as he waits to feel the brush of air that never comes.
There’s a snap in Jeremy’s brain.
“No, no, no, no, no,” he mutters, voice climbing in pitch as he grabs Jean under the arms and pulls him from the bed. “You don’t get to do this to me!”
Jean’s limp form hits the ground hard and Jeremy tries to be gentle as he puts his head down but he’s shaking all over and he can’t feel his fingers.
This time he hovers his face over Jean’s nose and mouth and splays a hand on his friend’s chest. Begging to feel something, anything, but there’s no movement.
“Fuck!”
He knows what to do, he audited a health class in his first year at USC and maintained his first aid certification after that. It’s a useful skill but not one he thought he would ever have to use. Not here. Not now. Not with Jean.
Locking his fingers, one hand over the other, he pushes the heel of his palm against Jean’s sternum and pushes down hard.
He makes it to thirty compressions and pulls his hands back, leaning down and positioning Jean’s head appropriately. Tilted back so that his tongue isn’t blocking his airway, jaw forward, he checks in Jean’s mouth but finds no obstruction. He doesn’t know why but Jean isn’t breathing and something in him tells him that it’s all his fault.
Taking a deep breath and pressing his lips over Jean’s he pinches the backliner’s nose and pushes the air from his lungs into Jean’s twice before rising again and resuming compressions.
There’s a pop as Jean’s rib breaks under his palms. Then another.
His eyes burn and the tears that haven’t started to fall are making it hard to see. Watery and warped, light catching but Jeremy can still see Jean’s slack face and his unmoving chest and he wants to throw up but nothing will come.
“Not you too,” he begs. “I can’t lose you too.”
The tears fall.
They splash on his hands as he starts sobbing, breath catching and choking him. He breathes for Jean again. He presses down again. Rinse and repeat. But this isn’t shampoo, this is Jean’s life and Jeremy’s scared he’s fighting a losing battle.
He should call an ambulance, maybe they can help, but he can’t stop, if he stops he will fall apart and Jean will die. He’s not sure he could even type out the right numbers right now, between his drowning eyes and trembling hands, buttons are probably beyond him.
“Come on, Jean. Come on!”
He breathes for him. Two breaths ripped from his lungs and handed to Jean on a bloody and mangled platter. He would tear himself to ribbons if it just meant that Jean would take a breath.
And he does.
Jean’s chest hitches under Jeremy’s hands and he convinces himself he imagined it but it happens again and suddenly Jean is moving, pushing Jeremy away and curling up on his side.
He wheezes a few times before throwing up unceremoniously into a puddle at Jeremy’s knee. It soaks through Jeremy’s jeans but he doesn’t even care. He falls back onto his heels and gasps around ugly sobs as they break free from his ribcage and force their way up his throat.
A few seconds pass and Jean rolls away from Jeremy, onto his back with his arms at his sides but his eyes are open and he’s breathing heavy.
“Fuck you, man,” Jeremy says, voice strained and cracking from crying.
Jean doesn’t say anything but he looks at Jeremy with those cold gray eyes and enormous black pupils.
“I’m calling an ambulance.”
His voice is raw and rough when he speaks so quietly that Jeremy almost misses it. “Why didn’t you let me die?”
—-
Jean picks at the hem of his shirt while he waits for Jeremy to fill out the paperwork the nurse gave him. He’s being discharged today after three days of being cooped up in the psychiatric ward under a two-person-twenty-four-hour observation period. They got him into therapy, he didn’t talk much. They gave him medication, he reluctantly took it. He spent the days wishing he had succeeded.
Something has been eating away at him for the days since his attempt. That Jeremy had been the one to save him. Maybe he should have planned better because Jeremy hasn’t said a word to him since then.
Cat and Laila swung by on the first day before he was moved upstairs to bring him some clothes and fuss over him. Cat cried and held him like he was going to slip through her fingers in an instant and Laila kept a stony expression betrayed only by her red eyes. Jeremy stuck around until Jean was admitted to the ward and visitors were no longer allowed. But he didn’t speak, he just sat in the chair next to Jean’s bed and typed on his phone for hours.
An apology burned on Jean’s tongue but he didn’t have the strength to voice it, it would be a lie to say he was sorry when he didn’t regret it. He only regretted Jeremy finding him.
He knew about Noah and he still went through with it because his pain outweighed his reasoning. He didn’t think far enough ahead, couldn’t imagine Jeremy finding him. Somehow in his mind it was a victimless crime. He would find peace and his friends would find life unburdened.
When Jeremy stands up and hands the clipboard back to the nurse he gives her one of those fake smiles he’s so good at and it makes Jean’s stomach twist. Jeremy’s eyes are so dead. Moreso than when they are vacant, like when he talks about his family, there’s something there behind brown irises but something has killed it and Jean fears that it was him.
He knows it was him.
The nurse comes over and talks to the two of them, explaining things that went over Jean’s head because he is too busy trying to catch Jeremy’s eye. There is a tense set to his shoulders and he fidgets with his car keys in hand. Once the nurse leaves he picks up Jean’s duffel of clothes and sets out of the room and down the winding path of corridors.
They stop at the hospital pharmacy and Jeremy picks up Jean’s prescription before setting off wordlessly again, expecting Jean to follow him. And he does, he trails listlessly after his partner with a sick kind of gnawing in his chest.
Jeremy guides him out of the hospital and into the parking lot, to the second level where his car is parked. He unlocks it with the fob and puts Jean’s duffel in the trunk, maybe a bit too roughly to be dismissed but whatever words Jean has for him die in his throat when he sees the half-blank half-apocalyptic look on Jeremy’s face. So he climbs in the passenger seat and buckles himself in and hopes the drive goes quick.
More than anything he wishes he was dead right now. It would save him from the tense air and the pain of surviving.
“Kevin’s plane lands in five hours,” is the only thing Jeremy says for the whole drive home.
Guilt closes off his throat and he claws at his skin. Kevin knows. Kevin knows that he broke his promise and he’s coming to punish Jean.
He didn’t want to be here. He didn’t want to make everyone worry. He didn’t want to destroy whatever light Jeremy had left in his eyes that he fought so hard to keep after his brother died. But he did and now he has to deal with the fallout.
He needs to apologise to everyone, Jeremy especially, but he can’t find the strength to say anything so he just stays silent.
They pull up to the lofts and Jeremy gets out of the car and retrieves Jean’s bag and Jean just numbly follows after him and up the stairs to the apartment.
Cat is cleaning in the kitchen when Jeremy opens the door and she drops whatever dishes she was washing in the sink and comes flying over to the two of them and wraps her arms around Jean’s middle, burying her face into his chest.
After a little while she leans back and smacks him on his arm. “You scared the shit out of me!”
Jean just blinks down at her owlishly, apology stuck on his tongue and he can’t force it between his teeth.
He makes words happen eventually but it’s not what his friends need to hear from him, just, “I’m going to go lie down.”
“I took your door off of its hinges,” Cat says as she lets go of him and steps back. She has a fierce look in her eyes that tells Jean she doesn’t regret it for a second. “If you’re going to stay here we have to be able to make sure you’re safe. No compromises.”
“Okay,” Jean says lamely and lifts a hand to pat Cat on her head. That gesture makes her smile softly but there’s still an expansive sadness to her features.
“Laila is in the shower but I’m sure she would love to see you when she’s done,” Cat explains as Jean drops his hand.
He doesn’t say anything and just keeps looking at his small backliner friend.
“Maybe later,” she says eventually. “There’s leftovers from lunch in the fridge, or I can fix you up something else if you’d like.”
“I’m not hungry,” he says as he steps around her and walks to his bedroom.
True to Cat’s words, his door is leaning against the wall of the hallway and the hinges are bare. It’s not ideal but it’s Jean’s price to pay for failure.
He takes off his shoes and dumps the laces he was handed back upon discharge on his nightstand, not having bothered to rethread them. He just lies down in his bed and folds his hands together over his stomach as he stares up at the ceiling.
There’s a lot to contemplate but his thoughts are a blurry mess of pain and regret so he just stares and thinks of what he will say to Kevin when he arrives. Maybe he will have to beg for the striker’s forgiveness. Kevin deserves at least that much for promises broken.
Laila doesn’t come to see him when she’s done in the shower, probably still too wound up to face him but Jean doesn’t mind; he doesn’t know what he would say to her if she came.
Cat comes by after a short while with a plate of food. She sets it down on Jean’s nightstand next to his discarded laces before plonking herself on the end of his bed where she sits with her legs pulled up to her chest and wraps her arms around her knees.
“The team is really worried about you,” she says after a bout of silence. It is probably hard for her to figure out what to say to him without ruining his fragile mood. The team is a neutral topic for the most part because there’s less guilt there. They have enough backliners so his absence wouldn’t be felt too deeply.
Jean wants to say that their worry is misplaced but his words fail him so he just lies there, mouth shut but he digs his fingers into the tender spot where one of his broken ribs is and drinks in the pain it elicits.
“Cody will want to talk to you when you’re feeling up to it. They’ve been tearing themself to shreds for days about it. Everyone’s really worried, especially Rhemann, he’s making us all see a counsellor with USC and really emphasising that we can always call him. Jeremy’s been staying at his place for the past few days,” she says. “Hopefully it helps, he’s not been himself at all.”
Jean had noticed that. The eerie silence and stiff set to his mouth. Something in Jeremy was broken, probably irreparably by Jean and just the thought of it made Jean’s heart crack.
It’s guilt. Swelling up inside of him until he can’t breathe. The therapist in the psych ward made him write letters to everyone he’d hurt with this but he’d scribbled them all out in frustration. Maybe he needs to try again, write something for Jeremy to tell him how badly he didn’t mean to hurt him like this because he wasn’t strong enough to put a voice to it.
The silence smothers everything.
Cat sat and talked to him for a bit longer, about recent drama in the group chat and at practice. She just barely touched on the sombre mood of the team lately before backtracking and trying to act like she hadn’t said anything. She is walking on eggshells, desperate to not make Jean feel bad for what he did but also wanting to make him feel like he was wanted more than he knows by everyone.
It’s hard. There’s a lump in his throat.
“Xavier sprained his ankle the other day so you’ll have someone to sit with during practices while your ribs heal. He is not impressed at being sidelined again but he should have thought about that before going too hard.”
She mentions how they withdrew from the game on Friday as a means of giving the team time to acclimate to the news and Jean’s absence. Jean thinks it was a monumental waste of effort, they could have taken home another win but instead they were all at home twiddling their fingers.
Cat eventually gets up and leaves Jean to his own devices, probably to check on Laila and Jeremy, making sure that everyone in the house is okay and not just their basket case.
Jean dozes a little and wakes up when the front door shuts heavily. He rubs the heel of his palm into his eye and blinks slowly as he sits up.
At some point Jeremy had left and come back with a guest in tow. The last person Jean wanted to see now stands in his doorway, dark hair ruffled and green eyes wide, chess piece on his cheek.
Standing up Jean braces for a punishment that never comes.
Instead Kevin crosses the bedroom and wraps him in a bone-crushing hug that makes Jean’s busted ribcage light up like a Christmas tree. Jean’s arms hand limply at his sides as his fingers tingle with the pain shooting down all of his limbs from his middle and he can feel Kevin shake.
“You promised,” Kevin whispers in a dreadfully torn voice after a few long silent minutes.
“I’m sorry.” It’s Jean’s first apology for the whole ordeal and he finds himself shocked at how deeply and truly he means it. He is sorry. He’s sorry he did it, he’s sorry he hurt Jeremy, he’s sorry he broke Kevin’s promise, he’s sorry he scared everyone, he’s sorry he destroyed his friends’ trust in him. He’s sorry.
“I can’t lose you,” Kevin murmurs into Jean’s shoulder, holding him for dear life. Suddenly Jean is back in the nest after the last time he tried to leave this world with Kevin plastered up by his bedside, begging him to live and making him promise he wouldn’t cut his life short.
But the walls are white and there’s a window above his bed and Jean is older now, Kevin too, but somehow they’re both still teenagers, both still grieving themselves and each other.
“I’m sorry,” Jean says again. This time he brings his arms up to wrap around Kevin in turn.
—-
Kevin sleeps on the floor of his bedroom that night.
They don’t have an air mattress or anything so he sleeps on some blankets with a cushion from the couch as a pillow. He doesn’t complain, just lies down next to Jean’s bed and tries to get comfy on the hard floorboards.
Jeremy sleeps at Coach Rhemann’s house again. Jean’s chest aches, the heaviness in his heart outweighing the pain of cracked ribs shifting with every breath.
They lie in the darkness for a while before he speaks softly. “Why’d you do it?”
Jean doesn’t dignify his question with a response, pretending to be asleep even though he knows Kevin knows better than to believe that.
“Jean,” he tries again.
“I don’t know.”
Kevin huffs and Jean can hear him roll over, able to see the frustrated crease to his forehead even in the dark with his back to him. “You can’t just do that and not know.”
Moments pass in uncomfortable silence, Kevin’s gaze in his direction an unbearable weight. “I was hurting,” Jean says finally.
“Who hurt you?” Kevin asks. There’s something in his tone Jean can feel but not place. Anger, maybe? No, it’s too cold. Fear?
Does Kevin spend every moment afraid that Jean will take his life? Has Jean just reinforced this fear tenfold?
“No one hurt me.” It’s both the truth and a lie at the same time. The nest hurt him, Riko hurt him, the Master hurt him, Grayson hurt him, Zane hurt him, Kevin hurt him. But no one hurt him this time. No one did anything to him, there were no blows, no bites, no fists in his hair, and yet he still caved to the pressure. He would never escape the nest, not even across the country on the sunshine court with the California sun beating down on his face.
He would always be in that dark room with Riko’s hands around his neck.
“I don’t believe that.”
“It’s the truth.”
“Something had to have happened. You were doing so well.” There’s a shift in the mattress as Kevin sinks into the end of it, behind Jean’s back.
He wants to bite back that Kevin only knows what Jeremy tells him, only knows a far too positive view of the world. Only knows a lie.
Jean rolls over and tries to look at Kevin but can’t make out more than the implication of form so he leans over and flicks on the lamp at his bedside. In the soft yellow light, Kevin’s wide eyes are impossibly green. There’s tears hanging unshed in them, the light reflects off of them gathered in his waterline.
Leaning forward, Jean crowds his space. “The nest happened.”
Kevin leans in closer too, his hand lifts to stop a few inches from Jean’s face. “Can I touch you?”
No burns on Jean’s tongue but he can’t bring himself to say it, instead he opens his mouth and “yes” falls out.
Kevin’s hand on his cheek is soft as he cradles Jean’s face. His eyes are searching Jean’s expression, anything to latch onto in the quiet dark.
“Can I—?” Kevin asks, not finishing his question. Jean nods anyway.
Kevin’s lips on Jean’s are softer than his fingertips. Jean scrunches his eyes shut against the pain such contact pulls forth from his battered body, nothing physical, entirely untouched.
Jean feels Kevin’s tears fall against his own cheeks before he pulls back. Kevin freezes, opening his eyes, lips parted with the memory of Jean.
“I— I can’t do this,” Jean finally says.
He doesn’t know what he’s done to force Kevin to do this. Coerced him with the precipice of death to connect their lips for the first time because they were almost torn apart forever and Kevin doesn’t know how to process his emotions. This is Jean’s fault yet again, he is the bomb that detonates every relationship he has, even one that is already a wreckage like him and Kevin.
Kevin retreats, his expression shuttering. “Okay. I’m sorry.” He heads back to his spot on the floor and Jean flicks off the lamp and turns his back to Kevin again, but his fingers trace his bottom lip for what feels like hours before he falls asleep.
—-
The others try to pretend they’re not actively on suicide watch but unless they’re sleeping, either Cat, Laila, or Kevin is sitting with him. But never Jeremy. He had once told Jeremy that as his partner, he is meant to be underfoot but Jeremy seems to be spending as much time keeping Jean as far away as possible. More than arms’ length. He still comes over to the apartment but doesn’t speak to Jean or acknowledge his presence between watching him with those big brown eyes that make Jean’s heart seize in his chest.
There’s something in Jeremy’s gaze that Jean can’t quite read but he tries not to think about it. It keeps him up at night.
Jean has to go back to classes tomorrow morning but he apparently has an out if he’s willing to sit in Coach Rhemann’s office. Which he doesn’t want to do because he’s still wary of the older man, especially his reaction to Jean’s unforgivable behaviour on Wednesday. Kevin flies back to South Carolina before dawn tomorrow after two days in LA, having determined that Jean is alive and safe for now. As best he can manage anyways. Jean knows he wants to stay longer but Kevin knows when he is not wanted, even if Jean yearns to reach out for him regardless.
“Jeremy,” Jean starts when it’s just the two of them sitting in the living room, Jeremy with an LSAT guide in his lap that he’s pretending to be really interested in.
“Yes, Jean?” Jeremy answers in a tone that is too polite to be anything but a farce. It makes bile sting in the back of Jean’s throat.
“Are you mad at me?” he asks.
“No, Jean,” Jeremy says before turning the page in his guide and lapsing back into silence.
Jean doesn’t know whether or not Jeremy is lying to him because Jeremy doesn’t lie to him but at the same time Jean doesn’t believe him. It seems like Jeremy can’t stand to be around him yet can’t stand to be apart either. They’re some fucked up idea of partners right now and Jean wishes he could just undo everything and go back to the way they were.
He misses Jeremy. He misses having his partner. Kevin is a poor substitute for the connection they’ve built here.
Above all else, Jean wishes he was dead.
—
The next morning Jean sees the outside of the apartment in the form of the gold court. He is sidelined from practices until his ribs heal but Cody still crushes him in a hug the second they see him, ignoring how he gasps in pain.
“What the fuck, man? I’m glad you’re okay,” they say.
Trying to breathe around the pain in his chest, Jean brings up a hand to awkwardly pat them on the back. “I’m okay,” he affirms even though he doesn’t feel it. He knows it’s what they need to hear.
“I just—” they lean back and look up at his face. He can’t see his own expression but he wonders if it’s stony or everything in his mind is laid bare. “When Jere called Laila and she told us you were in the hospital I was so worried. Never,” they point an accusatory finger into his chest just above his heart, “do that again. Got it?”
Jean just hums and lets Cody hug him again, squeezing them back and putting his head atop theirs. Which seems to help their mood.
“Are we having a cuddle pile?” Xavier asks as he walks over to the defense line’s lockers, eyes inquisitive as they search Jean for any sign of ailment. Jean isn’t sure what he finds but there’s a worried set to Xavier’s expression that does not go away.
“Please no,” Jean pleads as Cody finally lets him go.
Cat sighs from further down the line. “He’s got busted ribs, guys. Handle with care.”
“Jesus,” Xavier says, leaning against the locker behind him. It’s now that Jean spots the bandage on his ankle and the crutches under his arms. Sprained ankle, Cat had said, it looks bad. “Did Jeremy do that to you?”
Jean cringes at the accusation but he doesn’t defend Jeremy. It’s the truth after all. Jeremy broke his ribs saving his life no matter how badly Jean wishes he hadn’t. He just didn’t realise how much the team knew about what transpired on Wednesday morning. Did Jeremy tell them about how he found Jean unresponsive and had to breathe and pump his heart for him? Do they resent Jean for putting him through that like Jeremy himself seems to?
“Accidents happen,” he says finally and Xavier’s eyes don’t leave his face.
“Glad to see you up and about,” he says after a few beats of silence Jean didn’t know how to fill. “Sitting out of practice with me then?”
Jean just nods.
“We’ll make the best of it.”
And Jean believes him. Xavier smiles brightly at him and claps him on the shoulder before turning and heading back to his own locker on the dealers’ line.
Jean is treated to a lot more pats on the back and a few—albeit gentler—hugs as the rest of the team fills in and they all get a good look at him. He doesn’t imagine it felt like a short time for them between now and when they saw him last if they were all as worried about him as they seemed to have been. Jean doesn’t know what to do with the emotions that stirs up.
While the rest of the team gets changed and heads to the court, Jean and Xavier get relegated to the bench with the coaches. Jean doesn’t miss the way Coach Rhemann’s gaze lingers on him but tries to brush it off although the weight of it makes him shiver.
They make it a solid fifteen minutes into the practice before Rhemann finally comes over to Jean with a quick “walk with me.”
There’s no option but to follow instructions so Jean stands up and trails after him.
Once they get far enough away from everyone else, halfway to the locker room, Rhemann stops and turns to Jean with an expression that is all kinds of torn open. He puts his hands on Jean’s shoulders and levels a look at his backliner. Jean can see his smile lines and the start of crow’s feet when they’re up this close to each other.
“Are you okay?” Rhemann asks, voice dripping in the same concern everyone else has regarded him with. Everyone except Jeremy who has been uncharacteristically cold, but that’s Jean’s fault so he cannot hold it against his captain no matter how much it hurts.
Jean nods. “I’m okay.”
Rhemann sighs. “Say it like you mean it.”
“I’m sorry.”
“Don’t apologise,” he cuts in. “Just promise me it will never happen again.”
“I—” Jean starts. “I can’t do that, Coach.”
Sighing again, Rhemann moves one of his hands to pat Jean on the cheek. “There’s a lot of people around here who care about you too much to see you do that to yourself, kid.”
Jean just nods. His “yes, Coach,” numb on his tongue.
“You’re giving me grey hairs.”
Jean doesn’t understand that part. He looks up and the coach has plenty of silver hairs peppered in at his temples. Most of them, at least there since before Jean transferred.
“Sit with me,” Rhemann says and gestures to the bench nearby before sitting and patting the space next to him. Jean obediently follows his orders. “Can you make me a different promise?” he asks.
“I’ll try, Coach.”
“I told everyone else this but you weren’t here for it so I’ll repeat myself. You can always contact me if you’re struggling with anything. I’m here to help, so let me help. I don’t care if you’re just lonely and need someone to talk to and feel like you can’t go to Jeremy, or Cat, or Laila, or anyone else on the team. I want to hear from you before it gets to that point from now on.”
Jean wants to tell him that his concern is misplaced, but he can’t find the words to do so. Truthfully he yearns for Rhemann’s approval and to see him so upset over something Jean did makes him ache. He wants to do better. He needs to do better.
“I’ll try, Coach.”
“Thank you, Jean,” he says. “Have you had much contact with your therapist since it happened?”
The hospital set Jean up with a psychiatrist as well as video appointments with Dobson every day he was there. He didn’t have sessions with her over the weekend but she texted him to check in and reminded him that they have an appointment for 10am today. When he will be in the library with Travis between classes. “Yes, Coach. We have a session today.”
“Good to hear it. You can regroup with Xavier now, thank you for talking with me.”
Jean stands up and takes a few steps before stopping and turning around to face his coach again. “Is Jeremy okay, Coach?”
Rhemann rubs his palm on his thigh before speaking. “To be honest, he’s really struggling. Maybe sit down and have a talk with him today, okay?”
“Yes, Coach.”
Making a shooing motion with his hand, Rhemann waves him off. “Hurry back, I know Xavier wanted to speak with you.”
Jean just nods and heads back in the direction of the court.
He finds Xavier easily, the co-captain not having moved from the bench the entire time Jean was gone. He looks up upon Jean’s re-entry and smiles at him. “How was your talk with dad?” he jokes.
“Insightful,” Jean says.
“Good.”
Jean sits next to Xavier again and stares through the plexiglass at the court. Jeremy misses the ball that is passed to him and it bounces away from him until Pat scoops it up in his net and passes it to someone on his own team. He glances over at Xavier’s crutches. “How’s your ankle?” he asks.
“Better than it was when I twisted it. The swelling’s mostly gone down now.”
“That’s good,” Jean hums.
They lapse into silence once again.
Until Xavier breaks it with a “why’d you do it?”
The same question Kevin asked him. The same question Jeremy wouldn’t.
“I don’t know.” There is no way to explain it that could ever make sense, just the overwhelming need Jean had to die. He was tired.
“I get that,” Xavier says. “Y’know, I tried it too. Ages ago now, but I was in a really dark place when I was fifteen.”
That revelation is a shock to Jean, Xavier has always seemed so sure of himself, so unshakable. “What?”
“Yeah.” Xavier leans back and crosses his injured foot over top of his other. He doesn’t look at Jean as he speaks. “Took a bunch of pills and went to bed. Woke up the next day and had a killer headache for two weeks. Never told anyone, though. Until now.”
“Why’d you do it?” Jean turns his question back on him.
“I guess same as you, I don’t know. I can try to blame it on any number of things, parents didn’t accept me, a friendship breakup with my best friend, a budding eating disorder. All true and all factors but somehow they didn’t really cause it, just kinda helped it along.”
Jean doesn’t know what to say.
“I guess what I’m saying is that I’m always here to listen. And that I get it a bit more than you might think. I’m sure everyone’s given you this spiel already but maybe it’ll make a difference coming from me now that you know this.”
“Thank you,” Jean says, his voice small. He can’t bear to look at Xavier.
“Anytime.”
—
Jeremy is sitting alone in the living room, barely looking at his open textbook and Jean takes that as a sign to make amends or at least try to patch up the chasm that has opened up between them. “Can we talk?”
“I’m a bit busy right now,” Jeremy says without looking up, “maybe later.”
“Please?”
Jeremy puts his textbook down and looks at Jean.
“Please,” Jean says again.
“Okay.” Jeremy sits up straighter and gives Jean his attention but he looks like he’d rather be anywhere else. It’s now that Jean notices the dark circles under his eyes, has he been sleeping? Is he having nightmares? Is it yet another thing that is Jean’s fault? “What is it?”
Jean wants to throw up into his hands and show it to Jeremy as proof that the guilt is eating him alive, but he doesn’t. Instead he asks, “how are you doing?”
“I’m good,” Jeremy says with a soft smile that isn’t fooling anyone.
“Tell me the truth.”
“Jean.” Jeremy taps his fingernail on the cover of his LSAT book. “I swear I’m good.”
The lie stings but Jean swallows it. “You’re not angry with me?”
“I’m not angry with you,” he lies again.
“Coach Rhemann said you were having a hard time.”
“I’m better now that you’re home and doing better.”
Jean wants to tell him that he is not doing better, that he still wishes he was as dead as he was before Jeremy found him and pulled him back from the edge, but he doesn’t. He bites his tongue and smiles and nods. It feels like a knife twisting in his gut.
Jean tries to be the one being honest in this conversation and he’s overdue for an apology for his hand in Jeremy’s current foul mood so he offers up a measly, “I’m sorry if I scared you.”
It hurts to say because it’s such a weighted sentence but it simultaneously doesn’t feel like any measure of enough to atone for his sins. He put Jeremy in an impossible position and made him relive the worst thing to ever happen to him. He poked and prodded at Jeremy’s wound until it was open and bleeding again and then he just left it and expected it to suture itself closed. Jean is a terrible friend and he needs to amend it before it kills him.
Jeremy waves him off. “Water under the bridge.”
Jean knows he’s lying. He’s on the fence as to whether or not Jeremy knows that Jean knows he’s lying. He would be upset with Jeremy if he wasn’t so upset with himself. He wraps an arm around his middle and pokes at a tender spot, relief coming with the spark of pain. He turns and walks to his bedroom where he sits on the bed for what feels like hours, hoping Jeremy will come to him.
He’s undone so much progress, it used to be that they never lied to each other and now Jean isn’t sure that Jeremy has told him the truth at all since he swore at him while kneeling in a puddle of vomit with tears streaking his face.
—
Standing in the bathroom, Jean stares at his bruised chest in the mirror and pokes a long finger into the purple mottling of his skin. It’s tender and his breath catches if he pushes hard enough but it helps to clear his mind.
He lines up his thumb with the one on his right side and pushes inward until he can’t help but gasp.
“What are you doing?”
“I–” Jean says, startled as he whirls to the now wide open door that had only been ajar a few seconds ago. Jean hadn’t seen his approach in the mirror.
Jeremy crosses the room and snatches Jean by the wrist, ignoring how he flinches. “Don’t do that.”
“Leave me alone.” Jean shrugs off his touch and yanks his shirt down to cover the bruising. He can’t handle Jeremy pretending he cares, not now. Not when he’s ruined everything and made Jeremy hate him in the same way he hates Kevin for making him stay alive.
“No, I won’t.”
“What do you care?” Jean bites, tucking his arms behind his back and stepping away from Jeremy until the small of his back hits the sink. He can’t go any further but he’s still within Jeremy’s armspan. He knows Jeremy won’t lift a hand against him but he still prepares for a blow that never lands.
Jeremy steps closer, hands outstretched like he wants to touch Jean. “I won’t stand by and let you hurt yourself.”
Jean recoils. “It’s none of your business.”
“Yes it is,” Jeremy takes Jean’s hand and holds it to his chest. Jean can feel his hammering heart beneath his skin. “I’m your partner.”
“I didn’t think we were anymore,” Jean admits slowly.
Jeremy honestly looks floored as he turns his stunned expression to Jean. “Why wouldn’t we be?”
“You haven’t wanted anything to do with me. I destroyed our friendship.”
“You didn’t destroy anything,” Jeremy says. “I was just trying to cope, Jean.”
“You wouldn’t talk to me.”
“I was scared you hated me for saving your life!” Jeremy’s voice climbs to almost a yell but as soon as it’s past his lips Jeremy drops Jean’s hand and retreats from his space. Offering him some chance at escaping this conversation that has him cornered.
“I did and I still do,” Jean’s voice drops to a whisper, “but I want you in my life.”
Jeremy’s eyes are wide and honest. It’s his turn to bear his soul. Raw and bloodied from grief. “I’m sorry, Jean. After losing Noah like I did, finding you like that was a bit much for me. I didn’t mean to shut you out when you were hurting too.”
Jean’s eyes fall to the floor, too scared to meet Jeremy’s gaze.
“Jean?” Jeremy tries, reproachful.
“I’m so sorry.” Jean wants to cry but the tears won’t come, his eyes just sting as he stares at his socks. They’re blue and yellow.
“Just, can you do something for me?”
“Anything,” Jean vows without lifting his head.
“Can you make a new promise, this time with me? Don’t kill yourself, Jean. I know it’s selfish but I can’t lose you too, not at all but especially not like that.”
In shock, Jean looks up at Jeremy who has laid himself bare in this bathroom, his hand extended, palm upturned as if begging Jean to take it.
“Promise me you won’t do it.” He’s years away looking at Kevin as he begged him of the same thing. He broke that promise but there’s something in Jeremy’s haunted brown eyes that makes him want to keep this one.
time passes slower in the flicker of the hospital light
fandom: all for the game
pairing: jeremy knox/jean moreau
title: ethel cain - nettles
word count: 4.2k
AO3
Laila’s phone rings at 11:38pm.
Jean knows this because he checks the clock as she picks up the phone with a forced cheery “Hello, Laila Dermott speaking.”
They were just about to head to bed, Jean having been pinned to the couch by Jabberwocky in his lap for the entire duration of the two and a half hour movie the girls had put on. Some German silent film that was exceedingly long but still entertaining despite its time taken. The dialogue was easy to keep up with as the text screens were few and far between.
“What do you mean?” Laila asks, her voice hollowed out and shell-shocked. That makes Jean pause where he is folding up a blanket to hang over the back of the couch.
Cat sits up straight, blinking sleep out of her eyes. “Babe?”
“No, I don’t understand. What do you mean he’s in the hospital?” Laila is pacing now, back and forth, too fast to be casual.
“Who’s in the hospital?” Cat asks, smothering a yawn. “Is your uncle okay?”
Laila looks over like she’s only just remembered there are other people in the room. She looks moments away from tears even in the dim light of the TV glow. “Jeremy.”
“What?” Jean asks in a whooshing breath like he’s been punched. The air knocked out of his lungs.
Cat stands up from the couch and quickly crosses the space between her and Laila. She holds out a hand but Laila doesn’t take it. She lets it drop, understanding that it’s not what her girlfriend needs right now. “What happened?”
“Okay, okay. Thank you, Annalise. Can we come and see him now or do we have to wait for visiting hours?” She pauses, holding a finger up in Cat’s direction. “Visiting hours. Okay, we’ll come by as soon as they open. Please stay with him for now and let him know that we’re thinking about him. Thank you, Annalise. Bye.”
She hangs up the call and drops her arm, phone dangling in her slack grip. She looks over between Jean and Cat with a haunted expression. Bad news, Jean guesses and his heart clenches. “Jeremy crashed his car.”
“What?!” Cat squawks. “Is he okay?”
Laila looks grim when she speaks. “He’s broken a few bones but he’s in surgery now.”
A noise tears its way up Jean’s throat and it sounds like he’s being torn in half with it. The girls look over at him where he’s still frozen with the blanket in hand. “We have to go to him,” he says.
Laila turns a forlorn expression on him when he says that. “Oh, Jean, we can’t. We’re not family so we have to wait for visiting hours which don’t start until 8am.” She lifts a hand to pull a lock of hair out of her face but Jean can see that she’s shaking. “We can show up first thing tomorrow morning but for now we have to leave him with his family.” Even she cringes at the thought of leaving him in such heartless company.
“They hate him and yet they’re the only ones who can see him, make it make sense,” Cat mumbles, stamping her foot and flexing her hands from fists and back again, frustration rolling off of her in waves.
“It’s not fair,” Jean says simply. “I am his partner. I need to be with him.”
“The Wilshires don’t care about what you need, or what he needs. They’ll be too busy doing damage control for their spotless reputation to care about him,” Cat says. She makes a cutting motion across her neck and pulls her mouth taut. “Bastards, the lot of them.”
“It’ll be okay,” Laila tries but she doesn’t convince anyone. “Annalise said she’ll stay with him and she seemed pretty torn up so hopefully that’s enough until tomorrow.”
“Did she say how it happened?”
Laila shakes her head. “No, just that the blood tests showed no drugs or alcohol. He was sober.”
Realisation dawns on Jean and something must cross his features because Laila turns a careful look on him. “He was too tired. He fell asleep at the wheel.”
Laila sighs and Cat starts to cry. Laila wraps her up in a hug and holds her close. “They’ve been running him ragged for months.” She doesn’t say the next part. This is their fault.
Jean finally sets down the blanket he’s folded and unfolded a million times by now with anxious hands. “We should have made him stay.”
“They wouldn’t have allowed it,” Laila says, shaking her head. “You know that as well as I do. Don’t go down that path.”
But Jean can’t help it. He’s brought so much darkness down on his friends since his move to California, and if the Ravens’ fans hadn’t retaliated against his very existence when the Ravens were disqualified from the season, then there would be no reason Jeremy had to go back home on weekends. This is his fault.
“I’m going to bed,” he says much too quickly.
“Are you going to be okay?” Laila asks him, holding up a hand to keep him from walking past her.
Jean nods, not trusting his voice.
But that doesn’t satisfy and Laila doesn’t drop her hand, instead raising an eyebrow at him and repeating herself.
“I’ll be okay,” he lies.
The Trojans have always been too good at letting Jean have his space so she concedes and bids him goodnight and watches him walk down the hall and to his bedroom where he firmly shuts the door behind him.
He can’t breathe quite right and that is not remedied by taking his clothes off and switching into something looser and more appropriate to sleep in. He’s just stuck. There’s nothing he can do about it right now but there’s no world in which he is getting to sleep tonight. Not while Jeremy is laid up in hospital as consequence of a crash Jean isn’t entirely sure he didn’t cause.
So Jean gets into his bed and pulls the covers over himself and curls into a ball, ready to count down the hours until morning.
—
Jeremy is thrust into consciousness to the sound of metal creaking.
He blinks groggily until he realises he’s not in his bed, nor on the couch at the lofts or the strikers’ bench in the locker room. He’s waking up in his car, to a faceful of airbag smeared with blood. There’s dust in the air clogging his lungs and he can’t quite take a full breath because every time he tries there’s a sharp stabbing pain in his right side.
“Fuck,” he says when he realises the state of where he is.
The front of his car is folded in on itself, munted on the trunk of a tree that is also caving to the carnage and tilting towards him, leaves fallen on his smashed windscreen. That’s not good. The entire passenger seat is a mess of crumpled dashboard and broken glass and deflating airbag.
He feels around the cup holder in the centre console for his phone only to come up empty and with searing pain shooting up his arm and down to his fingers from his elbow. It could have been flung anywhere in the crash and he’s in no shape to be sticking his arm wildly around in the dark when he suspects something is broken.
Fuck. He crashed his car. His mom is going to kill him.
He opens his mouth to call out for someone to help but the motion sends excruciating pain through his head and the taste of blood floods his mouth. He spits out red onto the airbag in front of him and moans in pain.
It’s not safe where he is. He knows that much but his every attempt to move is met with blinding agony. He’s not sure what hurts worse but he knows he can’t save himself like this. He should still be in town, someone must have heard, someone must be coming to help him.
He can’t die here all alone in a city of 3.8 million.
The sound of metal on metal is still there so the car is still moving somehow and Jeremy can’t move his leg to make sure his foot is not on the accelerator. Maybe the tree is falling.
As the airbag goes down more and more, Jeremy finally gets some wiggle room. Not that he can make much of it because he’s so sore he can’t tell where his limbs are just that they hurt.
He can’t piece together how he got here. Just that the last thing he knew he was leaving practice and bidding Xavier goodbye as he got into his car. He must’ve been on his way home, if he was on his way to the lofts someone would have noticed his absence by now and his phone would be ringing. Unless it was completely destroyed in the crash, which is always a possibility knowing Jeremy’s luck.
It’s just him and a tree so maybe he swerved to avoid hitting something, or, the more likely answer, his exhaustion had caught up with him and he fell asleep at the wheel. Many months of being run into the ground would end with him well and truly in the ground if his mother had her way.
The metal gives a threatening creak as a branch falls on the shattered windshield. The tree must be caving in.
Jeremy needs to get out of this car now.
Popping his seatbelt out of the buckle, he fumbles with clumsy fingers for the latch on the door and pulls as hard as he can. The door pops an inch or so open before catching on itself and holding steady. Pushing on the door with his good arm yields no results. He tries to throw his body against it to pop it open but he can’t get enough leverage when he can barely move.
But he has to.
Trying his best to ignore the ever present agony, Jeremy tries to move his entire body so that it’s pushing against the door. He makes contact with his shoulder and has to stop to catch his breath. The pain makes him dizzy but he can’t stop. He tries again, and again, throwing himself against the door until the resistance pops and he’s falling.
He hits the ground hard and unlocks more pain than he’s ever felt in his life. For a few seconds he can’t see, there’s just a swirling mass of black in his vision until he blinks a few times and it clears. His right leg is still half-pinned in the footwell and Jeremy has to tug on it to get it free. It hurts like a bitch and he finds blood soaking into his now-ripped jeans. Something is definitely broken in his leg, there’s no way it’s just bruised. His last college season and he wouldn’t get to play the rest of it.
On his elbows and one knee he drags himself across the damp grass and away from the car just in time for the metal to give one last warning creak before there's a screech and the tree falls on the car, bending the roof so that if he were still in the driver’s seat he would be dead or at least not far off of it.
He’s half-collapsed on the grass when he hears the sirens. Propped up on his elbows he waits for help to come. Although he doesn’t want to risk a relapse, he really hopes they have good drugs. His current state is rapidly becoming unbearable.
The vehicles pull up and Jeremy can’t make out which is which past the headlights but he sees a flash of red. He hopes it is the side of a firetruck and not the light of a police car.
“Sir?” someone calls. “Are you okay?”
His head is rapidly growing in pressure so he’s not sure if he actually calls out in response or just imagines it but it is not long until his strength leaves him and he doesn’t feel the contact with the grass.
—
8am comes both too slowly and far too quick.
Between Jean and the girls he’s not sure they got any sleep last night as they pile into Laila’s car. He watches from the backseat as Laila soothes Cat’s bouncing knee with a hand.
“He’ll be okay,” she says but even Jean can tell she doesn’t believe her empty assurances.
The drive to the hospital is sombre and no one speaks. There’s no words that feel adequate for what they’re experiencing right now. Jean watches the world pass by through the window and wonders if Jeremy is awake yet. He feels sick just thinking about it.
Surprisingly, he isn’t thinking about the season, about a benched captain, just about Jeremy and how he cannot bear to lose him. Jean wouldn’t survive it. He knows that with the same certainty that he takes in breath.
As the hospital comes into view, Jean suddenly feels ill. Shaky and nauseous and he doesn’t know how he’s going to get out of the car and face Jeremy. He could be crude and mean about Jeremy’s failings to keep himself safe but Jean doesn’t care about that, he just wants to make sure that Jeremy is okay. He needs to verify with his eyes that Jeremy hasn’t disappeared overnight.
Someone would have called them if he’d died, right?
That thought makes Jean want to peel his skin off and he doesn’t even realise he’s gripping his throat until Cat leans over and grabs his wrist.
“Where’s your mind?” she asks as Laila makes yet another lap of the parking lot.
Jean can’t find his words, his tongue feeling numb and clumsy in his mouth. “Someone would have told us if he died, right?”
Something horrifically miserable washes over Cat’s face before she buries it. “Yes, they would have. He’s not dead, Jean.”
He looks close to it when Jean is finally allowed into his room.
He’s by himself because the ICU only allows two visitors at a time and Jean had waved off the girls’ offers to have one of them go in with him. He sorely regrets that now that he can see Jeremy.
Buried in a sea of white, Jeremy has an arm in a sling, bandages as far as the eye can see, and a tube down his throat. It’s the tube that is Jean’s undoing, the idea that Jeremy can’t even breathe on his own has the breath in Jean’s lungs evaporating and he’s drowning he’s drowning he’s drowning—
Thumping himself on the chest he stuns his lungs into taking a stuttering gulp of air but he still feels unmoored. There’s countless cuts on Jeremy’s face and his exposed skin. Little red lines littered across him, more plentiful than his freckles.
Jean feels like a gutted fish as he sits down next to Jeremy and takes his hand in his own. Jeremy’s hands are smaller, Jean’s fingers long and scarred. Jeremy’s skin is soft despite everything, though the scabs are rough and scratchy against Jean’s touch.
He examines the scrapes along Jeremy’s palm and knuckles, the way one of the cuts loops around the tip of his pointer finger. Like he’d touched broken glass on purpose.
Jean sits there in silence, holding Jeremy’s hand and just staring at the bedsheets. He can’t look at his face, it’s too much, the mechanical hiss of the ventilator is already present with every artificial breath, Jean doesn’t need to look to know it’s there.
“You are a fool,” he says finally to Jeremy’s unlistening ears. He doesn’t say anything back, unable to defend himself. “You should’ve slept over.”
He can imagine Jeremy’s defeated expression and his mumbled “I know,” but he’s met with only silence. And the hiss.
“You are a fool,” Jean repeats, hoping this time Jeremy will reply. He doesn’t. He can’t. It’s only Jean in this room with his ghost.
Finding some bravery, he tries to catalogue Jeremy’s injuries based on what he can see. The sling on his right arm, no cast but soft tissue injuries can be worse in the long run, the thick bandaging on his hip and leg, a break, the bandage around his hairline, something unspeakable because Jeremy is not awake. Not breathing on his own.
Jean rubs his free hand down his face, fingertips tugging at the sensitive skin under his eyes as he etches out a groan. He hasn’t slept and here he is, sick to his stomach over Jeremy. How he wishes he could just see those big brown eyes looking back at him.
How cruel for a face born to smile to be so still.
He leans over and rubs his thumb across Jeremy’s eyebrow. “Wake up, captain,” he says. “I don’t know how to do this without you.”
How he wishes he could switch their places. Jean is meant to be the one injured, meant to be the one claimed by darkness. Jeremy is meant to smile and gush and live.
But Jeremy doesn’t wake. He stays sleeping. Stays still.
Jean cannot bear it any longer, he stands abruptly and bids his captain goodbye and takes off out of the ICU like hell is on his heels.
—
There’s a persistent beeping to his left and something scratchy in his nose. He tries to lift a hand to scrub it away but finds himself in a world of pain at the attempt. His eyes fly open as he gasps, flinging his gaze wildly around the room and coming up with white and sterile.
He’s in the hospital. Every sensation is so far away and floaty that Jeremy knows in an instant that he is high. Which is four years of sobriety down the drain and an onslaught of guilt he can’t breathe through. His breath catches and doesn’t make the trek between mouth and lungs and he starts to choke.
“You’re awake.” His attention is drawn to the chair next to his bed where his mother sits in her scrubs, typing away on her phone. She seems supremely uninterested in and unphased by whatever has happened to Jeremy.
His throat is like gravel when he speaks, stiff around his hiccuping sobs, “what happened?”
“You crashed your car,” his mother says, looking down her nose at him. “Why are you acting out this time?”
“I don’t understand,” Jeremy gasps. “I wasn’t high.”
“No,” she muses. “The blood tests confirmed that, much to my surprise.”
He can’t get a word out, his chest stuttering and struggling, his ribcage lit up like the Fourth of July fireworks reflected in Jean’s eyes. He’s crying now, tears flowing. Nothing makes sense. He’s in so much pain and yet he’s on drugs. He’s high but not relieved. He’s in hell, but it’s just the hospital.
He crashed his car, not hard enough to make his mother care but hard enough to ruin everything.
“I was coming home from practice,” he says as the memories catch up with him. Tapping out a rhythm on the steering wheel along with a song playing, with the window down so the cool night air would keep him awake. And then nothing.
“You broke your femur,” his mother says in lieu of an explanation.
“What?”
“You won’t be able to play that pesky sport of yours anymore. More time for you to commit to your studies,” his mother says, finally putting her phone down and turning her gaze on Jeremy. God, how he wishes she hadn’t. He shrinks under the impossible weight of her eyes.
“What else?”
“What else what?”
“What else is broken?” Jeremy asks, a hair off of begging. He can’t move his right leg and it’s thickly wrapped in bandages. His right arm is in a sling. He needs to know the damage.
“Three of your ribs,” she says. “You dislocated your elbow. And two days ago you developed a brain bleed that required surgery. You worried everyone for the entire eleven hours, Annalise refused to go home.”
And yet here she sits, nonplussed.
“How many?”
Mathilda sighs and crosses her legs. “You know how I hate it when you don’t use full sentences. Be specific, Jeremy.”
“How many days have I lost?”
“Four.”
“And my friends?”
Mathilda makes a displeased expression and waves her hand as if sweeping them away. “They’ve stopped by.”
Jeremy sinks into silence, thinking of the days gone and friends left behind. Of his cold mother and how she has probably barred them from visiting. Of his family that holds nothing for him but contempt, not being able to care for him even now.
“Now if that is all,” Mathilda says, checking her watch, “I am due for surgery.”
“That’s all,” Jeremy mumbles, staring down at his hands in his lap.
“Look at me when you speak.”
He lifts his eyes to face her and speaks as clearly as he can. “That is all, mom. Thank you.”
“Go back to sleep, Jeremy,” his mother says as she gets up to leave, it’s the closest she’s ever sounded to a caring mother but Jeremy knows it for the callous dismissal it is.
Once she has left he resigns himself to lying there and wallowing but with whatever drugs he has on board to combat his extensive injuries, he is sucked back under not long after Mathilda leaves.
—
When Jean visits Jeremy in a lull between classes on Tuesday he is surprised to find Jeremy sitting up.
He rocks to a dead stop in the doorway when he realises Jeremy is awake. He’d been off of the ventilator since yesterday but the nurse he spoke to said he likely wouldn’t wake for a few more days. Yet here he was, smiling up at Jean like nothing was wrong except for everything.
“Jean!” Jeremy says.
Jean can’t find his words. He wants to say “hi”, or “how are you?”, or “I’m glad you’re awake”, but instead he just says “you should have slept over.”
Jeremy cringes at that but offers a small “I guess.”
It’s Jean’s turn to wince as he finally steps further into the room, motorcycle helmet tucked under his arm. “How are you feeling?” he asks, hovering next to the chair he’s now not sure if he’s welcome to sit in.
“Sore, mostly. Tired.”
“I think you have slept enough.” Jean doesn’t mean for the bite in his words to come out but Jeremy shrinks under it nonetheless and it rips something in Jean’s chest clean in two. He’d spent the past four days sick with worry while Jeremy was unconscious and he doesn’t quite know how to articulate that in a delicate way. So he comes across as cold, which he never wants to do with Jeremy.
“I know,” Jeremy says. “I sure am glad to see you though.”
“It is nice,” Jean pauses and Jeremy levels a quizzical gaze at him, “to see you awake.”
“Are you saying I’m not a sleeping beauty?” Jeremy asks though his cheer is an easy facade to see through. “Please, Jean, sit. You’re making me nervous.”
“I do not want you to sleep ever again,” Jean admits as he sits in the rickety plastic chair. He misses Jeremy’s hair. It’s covered by a bandage but even he knows that underneath the white was shaved for surgery. He wonders how Jeremy feels about it but he doesn’t ask.
“I promise it won’t be like that,” Jeremy says quietly, his eyes dropping to his lap. He leans back to the elevated head of the bed and Jean watches some of the tension bleed out of him. How much pain is he really in and would he tell Jean the truth if he asked?
“Do you need more pain medication?” Jean queries a little bluntly, judging by the way Jeremy’s face goes vacant for a split second.
“No, no, I’m fine. The doctors took me off the morphine once I was awake enough to request, and I guess it’s just starting to wear off.”
“Surely it is not compromising your sobriety if you’re hurt.”
“It’s okay, Jean. It’s what I want.”
Jean cedes to Jeremy’s will easily although he is apprehensive about Jeremy suffering out of fear.
“Cat and Laila will be happy to know that you’re awake,” he says.
“When do you think they can come and see me? I think practice lets out too close to the end of visiting hours but I’d like to see them.”
Jean nods. “I will text them.”
“Thank you.”
“Was your mother cruel?”
“Unspeakably so,” Jeremy admits. “But that’s enough about me.” He scooches over in the bed as best he can although it ends with him a little closer to the edge and panting with pain, eyes screwed shut.
“Why would you do that?” Jean asks, bewildered. He rises from his seat to put placating hands on Jeremy’s shoulders. “Should I go get a nurse?”
“No, no,” Jeremy waves him off with his good hand. “Climb up here with me.”
“I will hurt you.”
“No you won’t,” Jeremy says. “I trust you.”
It takes a little more coaxing but Jeremy finally convinces Jean to perch on the edge of the bed, one leg hanging over and the other pressed alongside Jeremy’s.
Jeremy leans with his head on Jean’s shoulder and takes his hand in his. “I’m glad you came.”
“I’m glad you’re awake.”
Jeremy hums softly before lapsing into silence. Jean wonders if he’s fallen asleep but to check would surely wake the striker up so he stays put. Until a quiet word is uttered, “stay.”
fandom: all for the game
pairing: kevin day & jean moreau
title: lucy dacus - triple dog dare
for @z0mbie1uvr
word count: 2.0k
!! warnings: eating disorder, vomiting !!
AO3
Kevin looks like shit.
That’s what Jean notices when he catches up with him on the court. They’re at the finals that Jean never thought he’d make it to alive when he lost his place with the Ravens. Foxes vs Trojans, a rematch for the ages.
But something’s off with Kevin. Even fully suited up he looks gaunt. The circles under his eyes are dark like bruises and he’s definitely lost weight since they last saw each other.
“Are you okay?” Jean asks in French after he intercepts a pass from Kevin and flings the ball up court to Nabil.
“Fuck off.”
The vitriol doesn’t phase Jean. “Are you ill?”
“I’m fine.”
Jean loses track of him in the game. They make it to 2-2 before Jean gets a good look at him again. He’s dragging his feet and he doesn’t seem all there, but he plays like he was born to do it, he was after all.
Normally he would write it off but this is Kevin and Jean can’t just switch off the part of his brain that still cares for him. He shouldn’t be playing if he’s sick, next time he gets a chance he will urge Kevin to get subbed out.
The Foxes need Kevin so he’d never agree but Jean has to try.
Kevin takes off as Neil grabs the ball and he makes it further than the shorter striker in Neil’s ten steps due to his long stride but Jean is on his tail right up to the pass.
Jean’s racquet misses the interception and the ball is swept up by Kevin who doesn’t take a step and just sends it.
The goal lights up red and Jean swears under his breath. Kevin got the upper hand on him yet again and tips the score in favour of the Foxes. Shame burns deep in his chest. He’s supposed to be Perfect Court but he can’t even keep a handle on Kevin playing with his non-dominant hand. He’s an embarrassment to the Trojan lineup if he lets the Foxes take the win here.
Maybe it’s just the pressure getting to him. He wants to strike himself with his racquet, give himself something tangible to hold onto and motivate him to be better but he knows his coaches will riot and he can’t disappoint them.
Kevin’s goal pulls the score even.
As he straightens up, Kevin staggers a little like he’s off balance so Jean puts a hand on his shoulder to steady him. It’s the Trojan way after all. Can’t have the Foxes accusing him of tripping their golden boy.
Kevin sends him a look that is not at all the venom Jean had been expecting from his mark. But he didn’t thank him either.
Jean starts the trek back to the far-fourth line only to hear a heavy thud behind him. Turning around reveals Kevin in a crumpled heap. He swears again and falls to his knees, reaching for Kevin.
“Kevin,” he tries. “Are you okay?”
He is met with silence from Kevin and the squeaking of sneakers on the floor behind him.
“Kevin?” This time the striker groans and tries to pick himself up off the ground. He gets to his elbows before Jean puts a hand on his shoulder and keeps him there. “You just fainted.”
“No,” Kevin grumbles, breathless. “I’m good.”
“Are you stupid?” Jean asks. “Stay down.”
A pair of shoes skids to a stop near them. “Kevin!”
Jean casts a lethal look over his shoulder, readying to snap, but he finds Neil on the other end of his awaiting malice and cedes to him. The game has been called to a stop behind him, everyone standing around with wide eyes. Jean didn’t hear the whistle.
“I’m good,” Kevin repeats.
“Shut up.” He turns to Neil. “Is your nurse coming?” Jean knows her name, he lived in her guest room for a month and a half, still he doesn’t say it. She is a stranger to him.
“Yeah,” Neil says. “Kev, you good?”
Kevin pushes against Jean’s hand but Jean is stronger and presses him to the ground. “I tripped.”
“You lost consciousness,” Jean snaps.
“No, I didn’t.”
“Still,” Neil starts. “Better to let Abby get a look at you. You might have hit your head when you went down.”
“I didn’t.”
“Kevin,” Abigail says as she catches up with the players. “That was a nasty fall, are you feeling alright?”
“I tripped,” he maintains.
“That’s not what it looked like from my angle,” she says, kneeling next to Kevin. She pulls out her penlight from her breast pocket and shines it in Kevin’s eyes. “Are you lightheaded at all?”
“No,” Kevin says a little too quickly. “Maybe.”
“When did you last eat?”
“Lunch.”
“No, you didn’t,” Neil butts in, crossing his arms. “You were napping, Andrew and I went to the dining hall without you. And you didn’t eat anything after that.”
Abigail hums thoughtfully. “Let’s get you off the court for the rest of the game and get you something to eat.”
“I can play.”
“No, Kevin,” she says. “And that’s final.”
“It’s the finals.”
“I don’t care.”
Kevin grumbles something that sounds positively rude but he gives in and Jean allows him to sit.
As soon as he gets upright he sways and groans, lifting a hand to his face.
“Dizzy?” Abigail asks, her voice soaked in empathy.
Kevin just nods.
With the help of Jean and Neil, Kevin gets to his feet and stumbles off court, Jean stalking behind him with a fire in his eyes that bore into the back of Kevin’s head. He’s clued in to what’s going on and he’s not happy for the replay.
Kevin had his issues with food in the Nest. He would push his meals around his plate or permit himself to eat the chicken breast and not the green beans. Sometimes he would not eat at all and claim he had a headache and lie down in Josiah’s office while the Ravens ate. He lost a shocking amount of weight between the Raven’s sixteen-hour days and his refusal to eat full portions, and even collapsed at practice.
That’s when Jean found out the extent of it, the way his bones protruded even under his armour, too tall and too skinny, unable to keep his head up amongst the physical demands of Raven life.
The master had been downright cruel about it.
Jean remembers the bruise on Kevin’s temple that took two and a half weeks to fade completely.
He started eating more after that. Not full servings, but more than he had been. Eventually, like the bruise, his issues seemed to fade into oblivion, he grew stronger, and Jean could stop watching him at meals.
So as soon as Abigail gets Kevin situated in her office on the bed with a granola bar and leaves him, Jean turns his fury onto the striker.
“You can go,” Kevin says.
Jean grabs his chin in an iron grip. “Tell me you’re not that stupid.”
This close he can see the hollows under Kevin’s eyes, the way his browbone protrudes more than it used to and his cheekbones and jaw are more defined. He wonders how long this has been going on and how long his team has turned a blind eye.
“I don’t know why you’re so peeved.” Kevin pushes Jean’s hand away but Jean surges back and stays in his space.
“You’re not eating.”
Kevin meets Jean’s eye with an unwavering scowl. “What gave you that idea?”
“You just fainted on the court and you look like shit. How much do you weigh?”
Kevin spits at him. “Fuck you, I don’t have to put up with this.”
He tries to climb up from the cot but falls back heavily when he realises his legs aren’t strong enough to hold him. Jean grabs his wrist and holds it firm.
“How much do you weigh?”
Not enough for his height. Not enough for an athlete. Not enough to be healthy.
“Enough.”
“Bullshit.”
Kevin seethes, “what’s it to you?”
“I refuse to turn a blind eye to this,” Jean says. He won’t do wrong by Kevin, not again.
“Why?” Kevin bites. “You did in the Nest.”
Jean flinches. “No, I never did. I saw it all and I could do nothing.”
“I’m fine.”
“Then eat the bar, Kevin.”
Kevin picks up the bar from where it fell on the small cot and studies it for a moment before putting it down again. “I can’t eat, I’m nauseous from passing out.”
Jean could always tell when Kevin lied.
“I thought you tripped.”
His face goes completely blank, like every emotion he’s ever had was wiped away with a cloth. It’s scary to look at Kevin and not be able to read him. Finally, he speaks, “I’m not eating that,” he says.
“You will, or I’ll tell the nurse that you’re starving yourself.”
“I’m not.”
“Then eat the bar.”
In a frustrated huff Kevin tears the bar open and takes a bite. He immediately freezes and chews once, then twice, and stops.
“Swallow it.”
Kevin glares at him but does as he’s told.
“Again.”
It takes ten-odd minutes but Kevin finishes the bar. He crumples up the wrapper and throws it at Jean who just sidesteps and lets it fall to the floor. “Very mature.”
“Fuck you.”
“Fuck you too.”
“I’m going to the bathroom,” Kevin says.
Against his better judgement, Jean lets him go.
Kevin is gone for a minute, maybe two, in the single stall bathroom next to the nurse’s office. The door is a garish orange and Jean misses the gold court. Jean waits outside until he hears muffled gagging and a splash.
“Fuck off,” he mutters under his breath before trying the door handle.
It doesn’t budge but he throws his shoulder against it hard enough for something to pop and the door swings open. Kevin is hunched over the toilet with his fingers down his throat as he brings up bile. He hasn’t eaten anything but that bar and it probably came up with the first heave.
Jean grabs Kevin by the shoulders and hauls him to his feet.
“What the fuck are you doing?!”
Kevin turns a sour look on him before wiping vomit off of his chin with the back of a hand. He doesn’t look at all ashamed that he was caught. “That was locked,” he says pointedly.
“What the fuck were you doing?” Jean asks again.
“Why the fuck do you care?” Kevin snaps, trying to shake off Jean’s touch and failing.
Jean’s grip turns bruising. He won’t let Kevin get away with this. This is not the Nest and he is not powerless anymore. “I will tell your father.”
Kevin’s eyes go wide. “You wouldn’t dare,” he says, voice a hollowed out gasp.
“I’m not going to let you kill yourself.”
This time he successfully shrugs out of Jean’s hold and backs up until his back is to the wall. “Don’t be stupid, I’m not going to die.”
“You will.” Jean’s voice drops to a desperate plea. To Kevin, to himself, to a God that’s never once listened, to the mother who died and left her son with no one but Jean to keep him upright. “You will.”
“Fuck off, Moreau.”
Jean grabs him by the back of his uniform and drags him out of the bathroom and back towards the court. The game has resumed without the two of them and the activity in the stadium is a cacophony that Jean can’t really hear himself think over but he knows what he needs to do. He marches Kevin over to where the Foxes’ coach and subs are gathered at the court door.
Wymack is in a heated conversation with one of the nameless Fox freshmen when the two of them approach but he looks up as Jean shoves Kevin into his space, his arms shooting out to steady his son. “Kev,” he says. “Is everything okay?”
“I caught your striker throwing up what Abby gave him to eat.”
Wymack looks between Jean and Kevin, confused. “So? He’s sick.”
“On purpose.”
The look that crosses Wymack’s face for a brief flash is apocalyptic before he schools it to something more neutral. “Kevin?” he asks.
fandom: all for the game
pairing: kevin day/andrew minyard
title: ethel cain - tempest
word count: 11.1k
!!major character death, suicide, substance abuse!!
AO3
Neil squawks as Kevin sets out in a hard pace. He has to walk twice as fast to keep up with Kevin’s long strides. “Kevin!”
Lifting a hand, Kevin waves him off. “Pack up. You’re wasting my time.”
It’s at least midnight by now and Neil has not scored a single shot on Andrew who stands bored in his goal. Neil looks back at him with an exaggerated gesture, something along the lines of “help me” and Andrew just offers a casual shrug, arms propped up on his oversized racquet.
He doesn’t interfere with Kevin’s petty grievances, he only steps in when Kevin is in danger. And he hasn’t quite figured out if Neil is one, and he has said as much to Kevin, but he’s testing the waters.
Kevin turns on the shorter striker, eyes blazing. “Prove to me that you want this.”
fandom: all for the game
pairing: jeremy knox/jean moreau
title: paramore - thick skull (julien baker version)
word count: 4.9k
AO3
With the roar of the crowd in his ears, Jeremy turns away from the goal he just scored. Someone claps him on the shoulder with an excited “nice!” and Jeremy is only kind of sure it’s Ananya.
That score just tipped the game in their favour, 6-5. Only the bulk of this half left to go, and Jeremy’s veins are singing with the confidence that he and Ananya can maintain the lead if not pull it further out from under Arizona’s feet.
Amongst the cheering around him comes more agitated shouting closer to him. On the court.
A red card goes up with a whistle.
Jeremy looks around quickly and just sees a swath of bodies coming together towards the other end of the court.
“Medic!” He hears someone yell.
Heart picking up pace, Jeremy does another sweep of the growing cluster of players, looking for a head peaking out around the 6’3 mark. He rakes his eyes back and forth, can’t find Jean’s head so he looks for his number, finds nothing.
As Jeremy comes closer he, perhaps a little abrasively, shoulders through the players on this end of the court and they part easily, muttering among themselves. No one pays attention to him.
And then he sees it.
Jean.
On the ground.
He’s pulled his helmet off and there’s blood on his forehead that he’s clutching, eyes screwed shut as Cat kneels next to him.
“What happened?”
“Asshole checked Jean into the wall,” Cat seethes. “Unprovoked.”
Jeremy picks up Jean’s helmet for a cursory inspection and finds a crack in the plastic on the same side that Jean is now bleeding. “Are you okay, Jean?”
Jean swears in French but doesn’t open his eyes, still cradling his temple. Jeremy kneels on his other side.
“Can you open your eyes?” he asks.
Dropping his hands, Jean lifts his head and blinks his eyes open. They’re the same steely grey even as a drop of blood collects on his top lashes, weighing them down before forcing Jean to blink hard and set it in motion down his cheek.
“Jeremy,” someone says from behind him and as Jeremy looks over his shoulder he sees Davis standing there, clutching his medkit. “Can you please move?”
“Sorry, sorry,” he says, scooting further to the side.
Davis joins them on the ground and quickly pulls his gloves on. He fishes out a pad of gauze to press to Jean’s temple after he inspects the wound for a brief second. “Hold it,” Davis says and Jean obediently puts his hand in place.
He shines his penlight in each of Jean’s eyes and makes a satisfied noise. “Do you know where you are?”
“Home game.” Jean looks down at the stripe on the floor. “First-fourth line.”
“Good, good. And can you tell me your name?”
“Jean Moreau,” he says, his accent noticeably more pronounced. It sends a shiver up Jeremy’s spine. From tailbone to the base of his skull it tingles.
“What day is it?”
“Friday.”
“Good.” He holds up an index finger. “Can you follow my finger with your eyes, not moving your head?”
He sweeps his hand up and down and side to side but Jeremy can’t tell how well Jean did from this angle. The new furrow in Davis’ brow says a lot however.
“How many fingers am I holding up?” Davis asks, holding up three fingers.
“Four.”
“And now?” Davis still holds up three.
“Two.”
“You’re definitely off the court for further notice.”
Jean appears to be feeling pretty poorly as he does not argue.
Davis straightens up and zips his kit closed. “Can you walk?”
Jean nods and tries to stand but his arms won’t hold his weight for long enough for him to get to his feet and he falls heavily back on his ass. He grumbles something Jeremy can’t make out.
“That’s okay. Jeremy, Cat, can you help him to my office?”
“Of course,” Cat says as cheerfully as she can manage while still having an undercurrent of worry for her other backliner. She quickly reaches for Jean as Jeremy slots himself into Jean’s other side, arm around his waist and the other guiding Jean’s arm over his shoulder.
Together they heave him to his feet despite both being shorter than him and they follow Davis’ purposeful stride towards the court door. They can see the rest of their team gathered in worry on the other side, Laila among them because she tweaked her wrist two goals ago. She’s still cradling it in an icepack but she’s on her feet up at the plexiglass now, eyes wide.
Jean drags his feet but keeps up for the most part, head hung and gloved hand still pressing gauze to his hairline.
“Just a few steps, yeah?” Jeremy asks, making sure to shoulder as much of Jean as possible, seeing how close Jean is to losing the strength he needs to keep himself upright.
They almost make it off court but Jean’s feet catch and he starts to fall, taking Jeremy and Cat to the ground with him.
On his hands and knees now, Jeremy looks over and his stomach bottoms out.
Jean is jerking violently as he lies on the court floor. His arms are pulled into his chest in semi-fists as they shake. The tremors cover his whole body, head thrown back and eyes partially lidded but rolled up to the whites. He’s making horrible half-grunting half-choking noises.
“He’s seizing!” Davis declares and drops to his knees next to Jean, pressing a button on his watch. He fiddles for a half-second before he frees Jean’s throat guard and tosses it away. It skids across the wood before coming to a stop as it taps Jeremy’s knee.
The other nurses bolster their way onto the court to help Davis but Jeremy is too numb to move out of their way, just locked in place and staring at Jean as he convulses.
Cat has a hand clapped over her mouth, eyes impossibly big. She’s shaking too, but not as forcefully, with barely-repressed sobs of horror. “Jean!” she gasps.
“I’m timing it,” Davis supplies hastily. If Jeremy dares look away from Jean he will likely find him looking frantically between his watch and Jean’s quivering body.
It is the longest two minutes of Jeremy’s life.
To kneel there helplessly while Jean’s frame is wracked with a seizure was something Jeremy had never imagined. Watching the spasms of his limbs, the jerky movements of his head, listening to the grunts and groans that bounce off the plexiglass walls of this much-too-large space.
His jaw is clenched so tight Jeremy is worried he'll crack a tooth.
Horrific. If Jeremy were to describe it in a single word.
There’s so much happening, Jean is still shaking, and yet there’s nothing Jeremy can do. Nothing anyone can do, Davis is just checking his watch and waiting for it to end. It feels like it never will.
The seizure tapers off after not much longer, thankfully. Jeremy’s heart is simultaneously in his feet and his throat. Jean’s thrashing gentles and eventually stills and he stops making those horrible choking noises but his chest rises and falls.
The nurses ease him onto his side, so that he’s facing away from Jeremy. What he wouldn’t give to just see his face right now.
“Two minutes and four seconds,” Davis supplies, his eyes on his watch.
“Thank you,” Rhemann says, not looking up from Jean. “Jean?”
After a few seconds Jean groans and it’s perhaps the most beautiful noise Jeremy has ever heard.
“Jean, it’s Nurse Davis. You’ve just had a seizure.”
Jean groans again and mutters something that definitely doesn’t sound like English and if it’s French it is dreadful but Jeremy wants to bathe in the sound of it because Jean is conscious and he is speaking. Jeremy doesn’t have to understand what he’s saying to appreciate that he’s no longer seizing.
His stomach still twists uncomfortably, not quite over the anxiety of seeing his friend like that.
“Jean?” Davis asks again. “Can you hear me?”
Jean grumbles something in affirmative but Jeremy can’t make it out.
“You’ve just had a seizure. The ambulance is on its way.”
That makes Jean move but Coach Rhemann is quick to place a hand on his shoulder and hold him in place. Jeremy doesn’t even remember him coming onto the court, but he’s here now. “Don’t move. You’re okay.”
Jean mumbles something that sounds unsurprisingly like “no hospital.”
“You had a seizure,” Rhemann says, imploring some of his Coach Voice that doesn’t leave room for argument and Jean will always abide by. “You need to go to the hospital. Make sure you’re alright.”
“I’m okay,” Jean says. The terrible thing is he probably believes it. Jean makes it his business to always be okay, never need help from anyone, no matter what the reality is.
Jeremy gently eases closer to Jean and kneels on the ground behind him, placing his racquet down. “Jean, you’re not okay,” he says in a small voice that doesn’t even really sound like him.
“Jeremy?” Jean slurs and once again tries to move.
He places his hand on Jean’s shoulder and pats it twice. “I’m here.”
Jean visibly relaxes, the tense set to his shoulders melting at Jeremy’s touch. It makes something new inside of Jeremy twist. “I’m okay,” he promises.
Jeremy wants so badly to believe him.
It doesn’t take much longer for the paramedics to arrive with a gurney. Coach Jimenez directs them onto the inner court where Jean finally convinces Davis to let him sit up. The paramedics’ presence shuffles Jeremy and Cat further away but neither of them leave completely. They watch as the paramedics take Jean’s pulse and blood pressure and check his pupils, asking him questions he stumbles his way through before they are helping Jean–with the assistance of Coach Rhemann–onto the gurney and tossing a thin white blanket over his lap as they strap him in.
Jeremy catches his eye and Jean just looks dazed and completely out of it so the younger man doesn’t give him any sort of communication through the look.
Rhemann lifts his hand from where it sits on Jean’s shoulder to turn to Jeremy. “I’ll be riding with him to the hospital,” he says. “Why don’t you go and change out and bring Jean’s change of clothes with you?”
Jeremy feels a protest rising in his throat but it fizzles out at the hard edge in Rhemann’s gaze. “Okay, Coach.”
“He’ll be okay,” he says.
Jeremy just nods.
He feels detached, floaty, as he walks to the locker room and picks up his change of clothes and peels out of his uniform. He showers at record-breaking speed, rivalling even Jean’s fastest time. He basically just wets his hair and gives his entire body a cursory scrub with the soap before rinsing off and towelling semi-dry before getting dressed.
He grabs Jean’s clothes and packs them into his bag before slinging it over his shoulder and heading back out into the stadium to check what the plan going forward is.
Meeting up with Laila and Cat at the edge of the court has Jeremy sent off with promises to keep them updated as Coach Lisinski is currently arguing that the rest of the game should be called off after Jean’s seizure as none of the Trojans are in the headspace to compete.
–
When Jeremy arrives at the hospital he finally checks his phone and sees that he’s missed a whopping eight calls from Kevin who must have been watching the game, a couple dozen more messages he doesn’t yet open, and a few texts from Rhemann, the most recent of which giving him a room number he can find Jean at.
He takes the elevator this time, content not to waste time on the stairs if it isn’t necessary. Flicking Rhemann a quick “on my way up”, Jeremy shoves his phone deep into the pocket of his shorts and adjusts his grip on the bag slung over his shoulder.
He finds Jean’s room easily enough on the neurology floor. The other bed in the room is empty so Jean at least is afforded some privacy. He is curled up on his side in the hospital bed, uniform now gone and replaced with a white hospital gown with tiny blue spots. There’s electrodes on his forehead and wires running to a machine Jeremy can’t read.
“Jean,” he breathes, unable to find the words to say anything else.
Jean looks up at him before quickly dropping his gaze. Rhemann, however, gets up from his seat at Jean’s bedside and walks over to clap a hand on Jeremy’s shoulder. “They’re holding him overnight and he’s going to get an MRI as soon as the machine is available.”
“Thank you for keeping an eye on him,” Jeremy says and his coach just gives him a weary smile.
“Anytime,” he promises and Jeremy knows he means it. “Now that you’re here, I’m going to go to the bathroom. You’ll be okay here?”
Jeremy nods and takes his now-vacated seat next to Jean as Rhemann slips out the door and down the corridor. “How are you feeling?” he asks.
“Sore,” Jean says, folding his arms tighter across his chest, tucking his hands into his armpits. He looks impossibly small like this. Jeremy can’t imagine how much his muscles must hurt after they locked up like that.
“I’m sorry, that sucks,” Jeremy replies. “Did you at least get to see that goal I scored before it happened?” He can’t say the word, that’ll make it too real. He switches his attention back to the goal. “It was pretty impressive if I do say so myself.”
Jean presses his lips together and shakes his head. “I don’t remember much of the game.”
That puts a painful pang in Jeremy’s heart.
“That’s okay, we can watch it when you’re feeling better.”
“Not for two weeks,” Jean says solemnly and at Jeremy’s confused expression, only then does he elaborate. “Concussion.” The way it sounds in Jean’s accent is intoxicating.
Jeremy sucks his teeth in sympathy. “Ouch.”
Jean winces when Jeremy’s phone gives off a series of fox yips as he struggles to pull it out of his pocket and shove it to his ear fast enough. Jean has his face in his hands by the time Jeremy can let out a breathless “hello?”
“Is Jean okay?” comes Kevin’s stiff and worried voice.
Jeremy sighs a sound of fondness before replying. “He’s okay. We’re at the hospital now.”
“Do they know what caused it?” ‘It’ is a weighted word as it seems Kevin is just as unwilling to call it what it was. ‘Seizure’ burns on his tongue along with the sting of bile.
“Not yet,” Jeremy admits truthfully. “He’s next in line for a scan and hopefully they figure it out. I’ll text you the results as soon as we know them.”
Kevin doesn’t thank him but the next words out of his mouth give Jeremy pause. “I have to go, my flight to California is boarding soon.”
“You’re coming here?” Jeremy asks, a little incredulously. Jean looks up at those words, “Kevin?” he mouths. Jeremy nods. Maybe he should’ve checked those texts Kevin sent him after all.
“I just watched Jean collapse on live TV, of course I’m coming. Clearly I cannot trust you to keep him safe.”
The accusation stings but Jeremy swallows it. “Okay, let me know when you land.”
“Will do. Bye, Jeremy.”
“Bye.”
Rhemann comes back at the same time a nurse does. She apologises for the intrusion but says that it’s time for Jean’s MRI and neither Jeremy nor Rhemann are willing to stand in the way of confirmation that Jean isn’t going to just keel over and die so they wait in Jean’s room while he is wheeled away.
–
Once Jean’s MRI results come back clean and a doctor puts four staples in the split at his hairline, Jeremy and Rhemann are ushered out and told to leave him to rest. Families only overnight, they say and Jeremy wants to argue so badly he’s beside himself. But Rhemann puts a hand on his shoulder and pulls him towards the door. “You can see him tomorrow,” he says.
Jeremy still wants to argue. But he doesn’t, he follows Rhemann on the winding path of corridors eventually out to the parking garage. He drives his coach to his house on the assurance that Adi will take him to pick up his metal deathtrap tomorrow morning. He bids Jeremy goodnight and tells him to get some rest.
He makes the drive back to the lofts in eerie silence, having cut his radio off in a flash of overwhelm.
The lights are still on when he pulls into the only available park.
Cat and Laila are sitting on the couch with Jabberwocky in Cat’s lap sleeping when Jeremy finally enters the apartment. They look up at him as he steps through the door, Laila’s eyes are red-rimmed and Cat’s expression is pained. Laila has a brace on her wrist now and she cradles her arm to her chest.
“Any news?” Cat asks in such a hurry her words almost trip over each other.
“MRI came back clean. He’s staying for observation tonight but I can pick him up at nine AM tomorrow morning.”
“And the, uh,” Laila starts. “Seizure?”
Jeremy presses his lips together and shakes his head. “They don’t know what caused it, they think it was probably just the concussion—which is severe. But he hasn’t had another one so he’s looking lucky.”
“If he was lucky he wouldn’t have had one in the first place,” Cat says. “God when we see White Ridge again I’m going to check that guy so hard he never walks again!”
Laila puts her good hand on Cat’s thigh and rubs her thumb back and forth as Cat deflates. “Obviously, I won't, but I’ll think about it really hard.”
“Kevin is on a flight here right now. I’m picking him up from the airport at uh,” he double checks the most recent text message from the other striker, “five forty-five AM.”
Laila rakes her eyes over him. “Then we better all go to bed so you can get some sleep. You can use Jean’s bed.”
“I’ll take the couch.”
That gives Laila pause. “Are you sure?”
Jeremy bites his tongue and gives her a smile neither one of them believes. “I’m sure.”
Accepting Jeremy’s choice, Laila gets up and heads over to the linen cupboard and pulls out a few blankets, draping them across the back of the couch. “Goodnight, Jeremy,” she says as Cat stands up and follows her down the hall to their bedroom.
Jeremy flicks the light off and gets settled in to sleep but sleep does not come. Every time he closes his eyes it’s to the sight of Jean convulsing, his locked limbs, his clenched jaw, the whites of his eyes. It’s enough to make Jeremy’s stomach roil and a sweat to break out on the back of his neck. So he lies awake, staring at the ceiling and listening to Jab snore until his alarm goes off at five.
Getting ready takes him all of ten minutes so he stares at the dark hollows under his eyes in the bathroom mirror while the tap runs the last remnants of toothpaste down the drain. He looks dreadful, and he feels it.
The drive is at least mostly peaceful at this hour except when someone in a blue pickup truck cuts him off as he is about to pull into the airport so he has to do a lap in agitated silence before coming around to the entrance again and making his way to the short-stay parking lot.
He makes it to Kevin’s gate with time to spare so he finds an open seat and flicks the floozies group chat a message he really should have sent last night.
Jeremy (5:33am): heyy guys jean is okay he stayed at the hospital for the night
Jeremy (5:33am): im picking him up at 9
It doesn’t take long for his phone to buzz where it sits in his hand. He opens the chat back up.
Cody (5:34am): YAY i haven’t been able 2 sleep. 2 much worrying about our boy
Cody (5:34am): glad he’s okay :)
He types out a quick reply.
Jeremy (5:34am): me neither. running on fumes
It’s a monumental admission but he’s so exhausted that he doesn’t think twice before hitting send. Cody views the message but doesn’t reply. Jeremy hopes they’re getting some sleep.
He sits in silence on his phone until someone comes to a stop in front of him.
Looking up he is met with Kevin’s pinched brow and piercing green eyes. “You haven’t slept,” he says matter-of-factly.
“Neither have you,” Jeremy bites back and judging by the way Kevin flinches, he’s right.
“How’s Jean?” Kevin asks.
“He’s okay. The MRI was clean and he hasn’t had another seizure. They just kept him overnight for observation. I’m picking him up at nine.”
“Do they know what caused it?” Kevin sets off towards baggage claim and expects Jeremy to follow him, which he does after he throws himself to his feet so fast he gets lightheaded.
“Not exactly. They know it’s not a bleed or swelling, so it’s probably just because of his concussion.”
“Unfortunate for him but good news nonetheless,” Kevin muses. He seems callous to Jeremy but he doesn’t know the relationship between him and Jean well enough to judge him on that—only that Jean refuses to talk about Kevin and as his partner, Jeremy respects that. “He would look strange without hair.”
It catches Jeremy so far off-guard that he chokes on a startled laugh and starts coughing. Kevin pounds him once on the back between his shoulder blades and Jeremy takes an exaggerated wheeze.
The humour dies when he thinks of even the possibility of Jean needing brain surgery and all of a sudden he’s sick to his stomach.
They pick up Kevin’s luggage and if the Fox notices Jeremy’s sour mood he does not comment and instead lets himself be led to Jeremy’s car where he happily takes up in the passenger seat.
It’s still too early to go and get Jean so Jeremy drives the two of them back to the lofts where they get situated on the couch so Jeremy can watch the Foxes game from last night. They are finished with that game and onto an old Trojans one and by the time the first half is almost over, Jeremy checks his phone and sees that he has twenty minutes to get to the hospital to pick up Jean.
He leaves Kevin with the game running and a “I’ll be back soon,” before he’s off into the bustling morning traffic and headed to the hospital.
–
Jean’s aversion to confined spaces means they take the stairs up to the second floor, pausing for a few minutes at the landing between floors so Jean can grip his head and swear under his breath. Jeremy offers him a hand and they take the last flight tethered together at an even slower pace.
Looking incredibly unsteady, Jean follows Jeremy to the door where the striker opens the door and leads him inside. Cat is bustling around the kitchen now with Laila sitting at a stool at the counter with a mug of coffee in her hands. Kevin has dozed on the couch, head tucked into his chest and arms crossed, game playing the final highlights before the video runs out.
Jeremy turns back to see Jean wrinkle his nose and massage his temple. “Are you okay?” he asks.
Jean just grumbles. “Too much.”
“You can go lie down in your room if you’d like. I have to wake you up every two hours, right?” Part of Jeremy doesn’t want to let him go because he knows the horror stories of someone with a concussion going to sleep and never waking up but on the other hand Jean looks one stiff breeze from toppling over.
That does not make Jean’s expression look any less irritated. “Yes.”
“Did you get much sleep last night?”
Jean shrugs. “Couldn’t.”
Jeremy stops and eyes his backliner carefully. “Why not?”
“Ravens aren’t meant to be alone. I could not rest with no one watching my back.”
Jeremy’s heart leaps to his throat and he tries to swallow around the growing lump. “I would’ve watched your back,” he says quickly, “but they wouldn’t let me stay.”
“I know, captain,” Jean replies. “It was unavoidable.”
“I’m sorry,” Jeremy says anyway. He doesn’t say that he didn’t sleep either because he knows it would just make Jean feel guilty.
“It is not your fault. I will see you in two hours,” he mutters before stalking off to his bedroom and shutting the door to a crack behind him.
“See you in two hours,” Jeremy repeats to the empty air before going and sitting next to Laila at the counter. He presses his cheek to the cool countertop and closes his eyes.
“Did you even sleep?” Laila asks all-knowingly.
Jeremy just grumbles an affirmative. He doesn’t need words to admit to his failures.
There’s a hand in his hair but he’s looking right at Laila so he knows it isn’t her. Cat, then.
“Go nap in our bed, we’ll take turns checking on Jean,” she says.
“I don’t think I can sleep,” he admits.
“Why is that?”
“I’m scared he’s not okay.”
Cat makes a keening noise in the back of her throat as she threads her fingers through Jeremy’s hair once again. Laila reaches out and puts her hand on Jeremy’s arm.
“He’ll be okay. You said the scans were clean, right?”
“Mmhmm,” Jeremy mumbles. The bright kitchen lights are starting to make his head hurt. He’s critically over-tired and woefully under-caffeinated.
“Then trust his doctors. Trust us. We’ll check on him as often as we’re meant to and we’ll make sure he’s okay. If we get even the slightest hint he’s not, we will wake you up and call the nurses. Okay?”
Jeremy closes his eyes. “Okay.”
He gets poked in the cheek. “Sleep in our bed. Not here.”
“Wasn’t sleeping.” He groans as he picks up his weary body and goes down the hall to faceplant in the girls’ bed.
–
Jeremy doesn’t sleep. He lies in Cat and Laila’s bed with his eyes closed until he gives up and checks his phone and finds that he’s got ten minutes before someone is due to check on Jean. Might as well be him.
When he pads out to the main room he finds Cat and Laila on the couch and Kevin still asleep next to them but now with a blanket tossed over him.
The girls look up at him as he comes closer and Laila flicks him a scowl. “Aren’t you meant to be sleeping?”
Jeremy shrugs. “Can’t sleep.”
This does not appease her. “How long have you been awake?”
Jeremy checks the time on his phone and offers her the truth, “Thirty-two hours.”
“Jeremy!” Cat gasps so loudly that Kevin startles back to consciousness with a groan. “Sorry, Kev,” she says a little belatedly.
“Jeremy, you need to sleep,” Laila says. “We said we would check on Jean.”
“I know. I just couldn’t sleep. I’ll check on him this time and then try sleeping again. I’m just worried about him is all.”
Laila concedes but she doesn’t look happy about it. “Okay, just this time though.”
Jeremy flashes her one of his award-winning smiles and heads off in the direction of Jean’s room. He pokes his head through the door to see Jean flopped on the bed on his stomach, head tilted to the side. Probably not the best posture for his head injury but he looks peaceful.
He leans over and pokes Jean’s cheek until grey eyes shoot daggers at him. “Good morning,” he says cheerily.
Jean just huffs and closes his eyes again.
“Not so fast. You’re due for a concussion check.”
Jean groans but obediently opens his eyes to regard Jeremy coldly.
“Can you tell me your name?”
“Jean Moreau.”
“Do you know where you are?”
Jean pauses and licks his lips. “The lofts.”
“What day is it?”
“Saturday—do we have to do this?”
Jeremy nods. “I’m afraid so. How many fingers am I holding up?”
“Two,” and when Jeremy changes it, “three.”
“Good, good. You’re all good. Is there anything I can get you?”
Jean rolls over onto his back and puts his hands to his face. “Water,” he says. “And ice.”
“On it,” Jeremy says. “Do you want something to eat?”
Jean shakes his head but groans at the pain the movement elicits. “I feel sick.”
“Okay, we’ll try again later.” And he flees the room to the kitchen where he fills up a glass with water and grabs an icepack from the freezer, wrapping it in a dish towel before heading back to Jean’s room.
He sets the glass down on Jean’s nightstand and holds up the icepack in offering. Jean mumbles a “yes” and Jeremy settles the ice over Jean’s eyes. The groan that comes out of him is pure pleasure.
“I’m going to sleep now,” he says. “The girls will be in to check you the next few times. Do you need anything else?”
fandom: all for the game
pairing: jeremy knox/jean moreau
title: ethel cain - strangers
word count: 6.0k
!! warnings: suicide attempt, discussion of suicide !!
AO3
two word prompts
It’s the second night that Jeremy’s mother and step-father are out of town that Jean gets a bad feeling. It’s like a thick film of slime under his skin that makes everything slip and tug painfully. All of it screaming that something is wrong with Jeremy.
So he convinces Cat to come on a ride to Jeremy’s place to check on him. Laila doesn’t join them because she went to bed earlier than them with a headache. It never takes much convincing to get Cat to go out on a ride, so she readily agrees and they suit up and head out of the lofts and down to where their bikes are parked.
They peel out of the parking lot and zip through the streets of LA on the familiar route to Jeremy’s house, the stone in Jean’s gut getting heavier with every corner turned.
He barely has his kickstand out by the time he’s climbing off of his bike and tugging off his helmet. Cat pulls up behind him as he stalks towards the house.
The front door is unlocked but they run into William in the entry.
“Jean, Cat,” he greets warmly. “Jeremy is asleep, is there anything I can help you with?”
Cat smiles and walks over to William and starts talking to him, “Oh, y’know, a captain’s job is never done. We just really need to talk to him right now.”
Taking his cue, Jean takes the stairs two at a time until he gets up to Jeremy’s door. It’s shut but not locked so he opens it easily. The room is dark and for a brief second Jean thinks William was right and Jeremy is just sleeping but he flicks on the light anyways, needing confirmation, and his heart hits the floor.
There’s blood everywhere.
Jeremy is sitting in his bed, his back to the wall with his arms in his lap. There’s massive gashes on his arms from wrist to elbow and they’ve clearly been steadily bleeding for a while. Jeremy’s gold shorts and white USC shirt are soaked with red as well as his beige bedsheets and blue comforter. His head is tilted down like he’s fallen asleep.
Leaping across the room, Jean bolsters his way up onto the bed and takes Jeremy’s face in his hands. “What did you do?!”
He taps his fingers on Jeremy’s cheek until he stirs with a moan, blinking.
“What did you do?” Jean repeats.
Jeremy just groans softly, sapped of strength, before looking up at Jean through his eyelashes. He’s so pale. “Jean?” he asks, confused.
“What have you done?” Jean’s voice is tight and strained, betraying how small he feels right now.
“Go away,” Jeremy mutters, pushing at him weakly with mangled arms. Jean doesn’t budge.
Jean hears when Cat catches up with him by the startled and breathless “Jeremy!” that comes from behind him.
“Call an ambulance,” Jean says, his eyes never leaving Jeremy’s face.
“No hospital,” Jeremy mumbles.
“You’ll die if we don’t.”
“Let me.”
Jean’s voice comes out hollow like he’s just been punched in the sternum, he feels like it. “Never.”
Cat is muttering behind him and Jean catches a few “bleeding” and “self-inflicted” and she prattles off the address so he knows she’s on the phone with 911. The situation is too dire for Jean to feel any sort of relief by it. If he were to take his eyes off Jeremy he would see her pacing back and forth with a pinched expression.
She pauses. “911 says we should use towels. I’ll go get some.”
She isn’t gone long and returns with an armful of fluffy white towels and joins Jean on Jeremy’s bed, handing off one towel to Jean. They wrap them around Jeremy’s bleeding arms and try to maintain as much pressure as possible.
Jean feels sick, he feels like he’s losing his partner and that he should have been there to prevent it. Jeremy has stood between him and himself so many times, Jean should’ve been able to return the favour but he failed. He will always fail.
“I wanted to force her to clean it up but she would just make William do it,” Jeremy says quietly. Jean freezes, his grip tightening on Jeremy’s wrist as he does deathly still.
“Jeremy,” Cat says softly, voice dripping in empathy.
Jean just cuts her off with a “you’re an idiot.”
“I know,” Jeremy says, something unfathomable in his tone.
Jean wraps another towel around the rapidly soaking one he’s already used on Jeremy’s right arm. He’s bleeding too much, too quickly.
“You’re so stupid.”
“Jean,” Cat cuts in, probably thinking he’s being too mean. But Jean needs Jeremy to know that this is the stupidest thing he’s done by far. Dumber than taking the LSAT, dumber than conceding to his mother time and time again, dumber than the cocaine of the past. This is the worst thing he could have possibly done and Jean will never forgive him for it.
Jean ignores her. “Why did you do this?”
Jeremy pauses for a moment, his bleary eyes trailing over Jean’s firm expression. “I miss my brother.”
“Jeremy,” Jean gasps, appalled.
Jeremy doesn’t say anything, but his eyes are closed now. A thin sheen of sweat over his face.
“Jeremy.”
He’s fading.
“You have to stay awake, captain. You have to,” Jean says, choking on his own emotions.
Jeremy mutters something Jean can’t make out.
“Come on, you have to stay awake.”
Jean looks up from the bloodied towels to Jeremy’s face and sees that his head is tilted down again, eyes closed.
Jean lifts a hand to grab his chin in a bruising grip. “Jeremy.”
Nothing.
He’s unconscious. Jean swears in vicious French and lets go.
He and Cat move Jeremy so that he is lying down on his bed, with Jean straddling his waist to hold pressure on his further arm and Cat kneeling on the edge of the bed with the other.
The paramedics don’t take much longer to arrive, their sirens heralding their arrival. William lets them in and guides them upstairs, not having seen the carnage yet. Jean doesn’t notice his reaction amongst the chaos but when he finally gets a glance at William’s face where he hangs back at the door, he looks like he’s going to be sick.
One of the paramedics, the one with a blonde braid down her back ushers Jean and Cat off of the bed and out of her way as she goes to fasten tourniquets above Jeremy’s elbows to staunch the bloodflow. She starts an IV in his neck because he’s torn up his arms.
The other paramedic, a taller man with tan skin and long dark hair tied into a ponytail at his nape fastens an oxygen mask over Jeremy’s nose and mouth. He’s breathing so shallowly that Jean can barely see the movement. His stomach roils.
They get him on a stretcher and painstakingly carried downstairs and loaded into the ambulance. Jean knows Cat wants to stay with Jeremy but there’s only room for one of them to ride with him and she folds to Jean who she knows would tear under the pressure of being separated from him right now.
So Jean uses the rail on the inside of the ambulance doors to pull himself up and into the vehicle, the paramedic with the braid pulling them shut behind him.
Through it all, Jeremy doesn’t stir. The paramedic cuts away his shirt and hooks him up to a machine via stickers on his chest and wires attached to those. His breath fogs the mask intermittently but it’s too slow for anyone’s liking.
Jean can’t help but feel like he’s losing Jeremy and all he can do is watch it happen.
The paramedic wraps Jeremy’s arms tight with thick white bandages. It covers the massacre of his flesh and the bloody mess but it won’t scrape it from Jean’s mind. Every time he blinks he sees what Jeremy did to himself.
Sirens wail the entire way to the hospital, which feels even longer when Jean is staring at Jeremy’s slack face like this. The ambulance jostles with every dip and curve in the road but still Jeremy doesn’t open his eyes.
The paramedic takes Jeremy’s vitals on a steady loop the entire trip even though it must not have been longer than ten minutes to get from Jeremy’s house to the hospital. There’s a permanent frown on her face that gets deeper and deeper with every new number.
As soon as they pull up to the hospital the sirens are cut and the paramedics are moving. They take the brakes off of the gurney and wheel Jeremy into the waiting team of doctors and nurses that whisk him away and direct Jean to the waiting room. The distance feels like a whole world and that tearing sensation definitely sets in. As well as the nausea.
A thick heat in his gut that climbs up his throat and burns the backs of his teeth.
Jean makes it to the waiting room before he’s stumbling for the sign that points to the bathroom and he makes it to the single toilet just in time to noisily throw up everything that could possibly be left inside of him when he feels so hollow.
Gasping around heaves he grips the toilet with white knuckles as he sweats and shakes all over. He’s covered in Jeremy’s drying blood because Jeremy just tried to kill himself and he might yet succeed. That thought alone is enough to make him gag again and dump a stream of bile into the dirtied water.
There’s hot tears running down his face.
He kneels there until he’s convinced he won’t throw up anymore and that his knees will bruise before getting up on shaky legs and heading over to the sink. He rises out his mouth and tries to scrub the blood from his hands and arms and even some on his face that he sees now in the mirror. To be covered in Jeremy’s blood might be the most horrific thing to ever happen to him.
He pools water in his cupped palms until it overflows and then releases it into the drain. He scrubs at his face with wet hands until he’s sure the skin is raw.
Drying off his hands and face with paper towels, Jean makes a few streaks in the blood stuck to his forearms but he needs a better scrub that he can’t get leaning over a tiny sink in a hospital bathroom.
He’ll have to live with the mess; he’s not sure if he can.
When he leaves the bathroom it is to Cat standing at the receptionist desk, desperately trying to get an update or back to see him. She’s also covered in Jeremy’s blood, Jean feels sick again just looking at it. How can someone lose that much blood and live?
After another refusal from the receptionist, Cat finally takes a step back and turns to see Jean where he hovers in her peripheral vision. “Oh, Jean,” she says before crossing the few metres between them and wrapping him in a hug he doesn’t return, his arms hanging limply at his sides.
“There’s no news yet but you should sit, okay?” she says, guiding Jean over to an open seat. “William is outside calling Mrs Wilshire.” She winces. “I’m glad it’s not me.”
“Will she even care?” Jean asks no one in particular.
Cat just squeezes him. “I hope so.”
—
Mathilda Wilshire is a bitch.
This is a well-known fact amongst those who love Jeremy, but it bears repeating. Once Jeremy survives the night she loses interest and pulls every string she has to get him sent to a psychiatric facility just outside of LA. No visitors for the first three weeks, they’re told, and they just have to take it because she’s his mother and she gets final say.
Because isolating your suicidal son from everything he loves works so well to improve his mental health.
So Jean, Cat and Laila and the rest of the Trojans don’t get to see Jeremy until three weeks later when Laila drives the three of them the two hours out to the facility for visiting day.
When they get signed in and sat in a small room with a coffee table and a security guard in the corner they finally get to see Jeremy. He is in a matching set of grey sweats and crewneck and he looks downright dreary. Hollowed out and strung up to dry, isolation doesn’t suit him. His hair is lacking the usual volume and curl, flopped bonelessly over his forehead, but he smiles as radiantly as ever when he sees his friends.
“Jeremy!” Cat cheers as she stands to throw her arms around her friend. Jeremy lets out a soft “oof” as her body collides with his but he wraps his arms around her in turn, leaning down to breathe in her scent, to relish in the relief of her presence.
“I missed you,” he says carefully, holding her tight.
“We missed you!” Cat bites back. “Your mother is a real piece of work for sending you away like this.”
“She’s just trying to help,” Jeremy says.
Cat reaches up to flick his forehead where his bangs part. “No, she isn’t.”
“She’s punishing you for struggling, and that’s not okay,” Laila chips in.
Jeremy just shrugs and untangles himself from Cat’s hold and sits down at the other side of the table. Jean takes this moment to study him. His deep dark circles and sad eyes, the way he sits guarded even with his closest friends. This place is hurting him, not helping him. He fiddles with the wrists of his sweatshirt and Jean catches a flash of red, angry, scarring.
With a frustrated huff, Cat turns and takes up her seat next to Laila, sinking her hand into her girlfriend’s upturned palm on the table.
Jean crosses his legs at the ankle and tries his best to lean back and appear nonchalant despite the anxiety singing in his veins. Three weeks of needing to see that Jeremy is alive are not remedied by seeing him as a shell of his former self. Some part of him is broken and Jean doesn’t know if it can be fixed.
“Can you still play?” Jean asks, rather abruptly.
Jeremy looks ashamed as he works up a response. “I don’t know if I can play anymore.”
“What do you mean?”
“The nerves in my hands are all screwed up, especially my left one.” Jeremy’s eyes don’t leave the surface of the table.
“You will play,” Jean says with certainty. There is no world in which Jeremy doesn’t play, he won’t allow it.
“I don’t know, Jean. Making a fist hurts,” to demonstrate, Jeremy holds his right hand out over the table and slowly curls his fingers in until he’s breathing ragged just trying to hold it there in a half-fist because his fingers won’t go any further. He lets go of the fist but the tension doesn’t leave his face. “I think I’m done.”
“Kevin was told he’d never play again and he still plays,” Jean says. “You can do the same.”
“I don’t have even a whole season left to recuperate. No professional team will sign me without knowing if I can even hold a racquet.” Jeremy tucks his hands into his lap, hiding them from Jean’s watchful gaze.
“You can.”
“Let it go, Jean.”
“I won’t give up just because you have,” Jean argues. “I’m your partner and I swore to do right by you.”
Jeremy doesn’t reply to that but he shrinks in on himself, which is the opposite of what Jean was trying to do. He’s trying to help but it seems he’s just shoving his own foot in his mouth and biting down on it. He doesn’t want everything Jeremy has worked for for fourteen years to be gone because of one night; one precipice.
So Jean bites his tongue.
The girls update Jeremy on Trojan drama and give him the oversized ‘get well soon’ card that every player, assistant and member of faculty signed. Jeremy runs his fingers over every name with a soft smile but an unreadable look in his eyes. Jean thinks he might be trying not to cry.
Jean doesn’t want him to cry but it would be nice to see something real from him, something aside from this apathy that he’s cloaked in. Jeremy is sitting in front of him but something about him is so un-Jeremy-like and it makes something in Jean twist.
Jean wants to ask him why he did it. A slurred “I miss my brother” in the throes of blood loss will not cut it. But Jean knows now is not the time, nor the place, it needs to be somewhere else, somewhere where it is just the two of them. Then he can ask. He’s not sure if he wants the answer.
The visit ends after half an hour when their time is up but also Jeremy looks like he is about to fall asleep. He’s slow-blinking like a happy cat but his mouth is downturned, in misery or pain, Jean isn’t sure.
“We have to love you and leave you, I’m afraid,” Laila says, standing up from her chair and pulling Cat up by her hand. Jean quietly gets to his feet and watches Jeremy carefully as he does the same. Laila pulls her best friend in for a hug and he is pliable in her arms, propping his head on her shoulder.
“Goodbye,” he murmurs. “Thank you for coming all this way.”
“Anything for you,” she says. “I mean it.”
Cat leans over and ruffles his hair. “Three more weeks,” she says.
“Three more weeks,” he amends and is escorted out by the security guard.
Jean watches him go and aches in all the places that would have touched Jeremy if only he had been brave enough to hug him.
—
Jeremy is discharged on the Monday six weeks after he tried to kill himself. Jean, Cat and Laila are given permission to skip afternoon practice that day to go and pick him up.
On the Wednesday, at 5:30am, Jeremy has surgery to mitigate the damage done to the nerves in his wrists.
On the Monday seven weeks after he tried to kill himself, Jeremy is allowed to return to classes. Laila picks him up from his house before morning practice and brings him along for the support of the team. And his absence has been felt like a crushing blow.
Jean and Cat are already in their workout uniforms for practice at the fitness centre by the time their better halves catch up with them. The rest of the team has yet to start filtering into the locker room but Laila presents her best friend like a prized fish she caught. Jeremy is in a hoodie when Jean sees him, enough to cover his wounds but not to smother the presence of a black brace on each wrist.
Cat all but launches herself at Jeremy when she catches sight of him, wrapping her arms around him so tightly that Jean fears she’s going to put him back in the hospital.
“Jer!” she croons, tucking her cheek into his chest. “I missed you, how are you?”
“You saw me on Friday,” he says, not moving his arms to pat her on the back. Still too sore, Jean assumes.
“The weekend was too long,” she says, tightening her hold on him.
“It’s okay, I like it,” Jeremy replies. The curve of his smile is bright and Jean wonders how long it’ll be until he believes in it again.
Cat and Laila trade off and then, upon release from Laila’s hold, Jeremy is awkwardly standing by the defense line’s bench while waiting for Laila to get changed. The other Trojans start coming in and more than a few of them give Jeremy a clap on the back or shoulder and a “welcome back” or a “we missed you”. Jeremy smiles and makes small talk with everyone, asking how they’re doing and what they’ve been up to in the past seven weeks. But mostly he appears to just be relishing in their presence. He must have felt the separation from the Trojans like a broken bone after being with them for so long.
No one is mad at him but he looks like he’s waiting for someone to start yelling. But they’re Trojans, they don’t care that he missed seven games and the weeks of practice to go along with them, they just care that he’s okay.
Jean steps over and places a hand on Jeremy’s shoulder. “Do you need to leave?” he asks.
A puzzled look crosses Jeremy’s face before he vehemently shakes his head. “No. I’m good.”
The team walk over to Lyon together but as soon as they touch base there, Rhemann is sweeping Jeremy away with a hand on his back and a hushed voice. He’s been particularly worried over the past weeks and Jean knows that he just really needed to see Jeremy with his own two eyes to make sure that he is alright.
Jean doesn’t pretend to understand Rhemann’s obvious affection for his team, the master has warped his perception of how a coach should be. But Rhemann is the man’s antithesis and cares for the Trojans like they are his kids, Jean included. He took news of Jeremy’s attempt on his life particularly hard and Jean can’t help but wonder if that’s what Cody meant when they said they were scared that they were going to lose Jeremy in his freshman year after Noah’s passing.
The thought makes Jean’s stomach flip.
He tries his hardest to get lost in his workout, making amicable chatter with Xavier and the freshmen while going through the motions, but his brain is entirely with Jeremy and whatever he and Rhemann have been talking about for so long.
Jeremy rejoins them with fifteen minutes left of morning practice looking both better and worse for wear. His eyes are red-rimmed but he recovers with an easy smile as his Trojans react to his return with whoops and cheers.
—
It is Friday when Jean is tying Jeremy’s shoelaces for him and Jeremy finally decides to open up. His hands stop, lace looped around his index finger when Jeremy says “can I talk to you?”
“Of course,” Jean replies, continuing with his knot. He pulls it tight and pats Jeremy’s ankle. “All done.”
“Thank you,” Jeremy says, pulling his foot back. “I just,” he sighs, “I don’t know what to do about my mother.”
Jean sits back on his haunches before looking up at Jeremy’s face. “What do you mean?”
“She’s mad at me and I don’t know how to make her understand me.”
Jean blinks slowly and tilts his head; he thinks he looks a little like Jabberwocky. “Does she have to understand you for you to live with her?”
“No,” Jeremy says with a shrug. “I don’t know. I’d like her to try. I’m sick of fighting with her.”
Jean stands up so that he’s closer to eye level with Jeremy and says, “I think she is committed to misunderstanding you at every point.”
This is not the answer Jeremy was anticipating judging by the way he sighs. “How do I even begin to explain to her that I’m not acting out and that the things she says really hurt me? Like how can she not understand that it is unacceptable to tell me that the wrong son died because I failed the LSAT?”
Jean’s blood runs cold. It was no secret that Mathilda said horrific things to Jeremy on the regular but such a thing should have seemed unspeakable, even to her. She had whittled away at Jeremy until he was content to give up on life altogether. “She said what?”
Jeremy ignores him and continues ranting. “I’ve spent my entire life trying to please her and I always fall short. So what's the point in trying?”
“I think the lesson there is to stop trying to please her and just try to please yourself.”Jean pauses. “You don’t have to die because she does not love you, Jeremy.”
Jeremy cringes and refuses to meet Jean’s eye. “I feel like I have to,” he says in a small voice. “She’s supposed to love me because she’s my mom and I ruined it.”
“You didn’t ruin anything. She did,” Jean says, grabbing Jeremy’s chin. He thinks of Coach Rhemann and ‘I don’t deserve what they did to me’ and he knows what he has to say. “Repeat after me: I don’t deserve what she said to me.”
Jeremy flinches. “Jean…”
“Jeremy,” he pleads, hoping the name alone is enough to pull Jeremy back from whatever ledge he’s been on for weeks now.
A tear slips loose from Jeremy’s eye and rolls down his cheek until it pools where Jean’s finger holds onto Jeremy’s mandible. “I don’t deserve what she said to me,” he utters in an impossibly small voice.
Jean pulls him closer, wrapping his arms around his partner and holding him dearly. He can’t tell if that’s him or Jeremy shaking. Maybe both. “Again.”
“I don’t deserve what she said to me.”
“No,” Jean says. “You deserve so much better.”
Jeremy is crying now, grasping onto Jean as best he can with his injured arms.
“Stay here tonight,” Jean says.
Jeremy doesn’t say anything but Jean feels him nod and take a stuttered breath with his heaving chest.
—
Predawn light filters in through the gap in Jean’s curtains. It’s not enough to have been what woke him but it makes it so that it’s too bright to get back to sleep. Everything is masked in a blue glow, the new postcards on his wall, the printout of the article that called Jean “the golden raven”, his shelf with one of his first pottery pieces that survived the kiln—a small slightly lopsided bowl.
He rolls onto his back and stretches his arms above his head until a vertebrae in his upper back pops and the stiffness eases. Closing his eyes, he adjusts his position until he’s facing the wall and tries to go back to sleep.
Sleep does not find him. He lies there for what has to be at least twenty minutes before he’s more awake than not and decides to give up on rest and get coffee brewing. He pads out to the kitchen only to find Jeremy sitting up on the couch with his face scrunched up, looking like he’s trying to breathe through pain.
“Are you okay?”
Jeremy jumps a little at the sudden break in silence, clearly not having heard Jean coming. He stares over at Jean and offers a sheepish “yeah.”
“Are you sure?”
“I’m just,” his breath hitches, “sore.”
Jean walks over to the couch and stares down at his friend, working up a crease between his eyebrows. “When are you due for your medication?”
Jeremy cringes. “Two hours ago.”
“What?” Jean asks, incredulous.
“I couldn’t open the pill bottle on my own,” he says, gesturing with one braced wrist to the little orange bottle on the coffee table.
“Then you should have woken me up.”
Jeremy shakes his head. “I was okay.”
“Until you weren’t,” Jean says, scooping up the pill bottle in one hand and stalking back to the kitchen. He fills a glass halfway with water from the tap before pulling a tray out of the freezer and popping some ice cubes in it. They clink against the walls of the cup. “This says to take with food.”
“I can take it without,” Jeremy says.
“What happens if you take it without?”
Jeremy refuses to meet his eye as he answers, “I get really nauseous, and maybe throw up.”
“Then you will take it with food,” Jean says, already heading to the fridge to find the ingredients he wants. “I will make you a sandwich.”
“You don’t have to, Jean, really.”
“Nonsense.”
Jean pulls everything he needs out and sets to work assembling a sandwich for Jeremy. It’s not much but it’s also far too early to be cooking so it’ll have to do. It doesn’t take too long and soon he’s cutting it on the diagonal and setting the bottle of pills on the plate and scooping it up in one hand, the glass of water in the other. He crosses the short space between the kitchen and the couch easily and sets everything on the coffee table.
He hands Jeremy half of the sandwich and only pulls his hand back once he sees how much pain it causes Jeremy to try and grasp it. His grip is still not anywhere close to where it needs to be but for now Jean is happy to help.
“Hands in your lap,” he says and doesn’t move the sandwich until Jeremy obeys. He sits on the couch next to him and holds the corner of the sandwich up to Jeremy’s mouth watching him take a bite and chew thoughtfully before swallowing.
“It’s good,” he says. “Thank you.” He takes another bite.
They sit like that for a while, until half of the sandwich is gone. Only then does Jean grab the pill bottle. He shakes out the two that the label instructs and holds them out. “Open.”
Jeremy opens his mouth and sticks his tongue out a little. Jean places the pills on his tongue, then leans over to grab the glass of water.
“Hurry up, they taste really gross,” Jeremy mumbles quickly, tongue still out, waving his arm.
Jean presses the cup up to Jeremy’s lips and watches him take a mouthful of water to swallow the pills. He sets the glass back down without looking and with his other hand, brings his thumb up to wipe water from Jeremy’s bottom lip.
Jeremy freezes.
Jean leans in closer to Jeremy and watches as the striker’s eyelids flutter closed and his mouth parts so subtly. “Can I kiss you?” he asks.
“Please, don’t,” Jeremy breathes, their faces only an inch or so apart.
Freezing, Jean sees Jeremy’s eyes open and he immediately leans back, fighting his way out of his captain’s space. He clenches his fists, forces himself to relax, then finds himself clenching them again. hes crossed the line, stepped over the ledge and now he's dangling. “I’m so sorry. I don’t know what came over me.”
“That’s okay, I’m sorry too,” Jeremy says.
“I just really thought this is what you wanted,” Jean admits, a little selfishly. He had assumed his attraction was reciprocated but now, in the early dawn light, he sees he was wrong.
Jeremy closes his eyes again before uttering a soft, “more than anything.”
Jean pauses, unsure of what is expected of him. Jeremy said no and Jean is happy to respect that refusal no matter what, he will not force anything on Jeremy that the older man does not want, but he fears he’s getting his wires crossed.
“I’ve wanted this since the moment I met you,” Jeremy says.
And Jean thinks about an airport, and tousled caramel hair, and failed yoyo tricks, and his heart stutters in his chest. He lifts a hand to press against his sternum and hopefully quell the rapid beating under his breastbone. “Then why?” he asks, voice barely a whisper in the quiet morning.
"I’m so sorry, Jean. I don't want you to feel like you have to because I nearly died. I know I scared you but I don't want to coerce you into something like that."
“You wouldn’t be,” Jean says. “Coercing me, I mean.”
Jeremy sighs at that. “You know, you don’t have to say that.”
“I mean it.”
“Jean—”
Jean holds up a hand, interrupting whatever Jeremy was going to say. “If you say no I will never ever ask you again but I’m confused. Do you want me to kiss you?”
“Yes.” Jeremy nods. “Please, yes.”
Leaning back into Jeremy’s space, Jean takes in a breath of the warm air between them, heated by Jeremy’s own lungs. “For the record,” he says, “this is not me being coerced.”
He watches as Jeremy’s eyes flutter shut once more and he leans in slowly, his eyes closing too, giving Jeremy enough time to back away. But he doesn’t and their lips connect.
It’s soft at first, the barest touching of skin but Jeremy gasps into his mouth and invites Jean to deepen it. His hand comes up to cup the back of Jeremy’s head, fingers tangling in his hair and pulling him closer. Jeremy snakes an arm around Jean’s waist and reciprocates his touch, guiding the kiss as his lips work against Jean’s. It’s slow, meditative and it bleeds all of the tension out of Jean’s posture. He’s wanted this for months but had convinced himself he could never have it, and yet somehow, now he has it.
It’s like a rush as it comes over Jean, setting every nerve ending alight and making his fingers and toes tingle. Now he finally understands what it means when someone talks about fireworks because there’s tiny bursts in Jean’s chest and they’re setting him ablaze.
He pulls back to catch his break and Jeremy blinks up at him. “Are you okay?” he asks.
Jean nods and lets Jeremy surge forward and bring them together again. His hold on Jean isn’t very tight but Jean is more than happy to grab onto Jeremy, a hand on the back of his neck, the other on his shoulder, pulling them close.
They stay there in a tangle for a bit before Jeremy retreats with a gasp not of surprise but pain. “Jean—ah, my arms.”
Jean pulls back immediately, probably too fast judging by the way Jeremy winces and tucks his arms to his chest, cradling them there. “What do you need?”
Shaking his head, Jeremy says, “nothing. The meds will kick in soon. Heat maybe? Does Laila still have the wheat pack in the cupboard from when she sprained her ankle?”
“I’ll have a look,” Jean says as he untangles himself from Jeremy and stalks off to the kitchen with a purpose. He rifles through the cupboards under the sink until he finds two wheatpacks in a drawer. One is a tie-dye rainbow and the other is purple. “Found them, how long do I microwave them for?”
Jeremy hums. “Two minutes?” he guesses.
“Okay.” Jean plops both of them onto the turnplate in the microwave and punches in the numbers. The microwave hums to life and the light turns on as it begins to spin.
When it beeps, Jean fishes out the wheat packs and walks over to where Jeremy is sitting with his arms still in his lap. He places one on each wrist, over Jeremy’s braces and hopes the heat sinks through and into his aching nerves.
Jean helps him eat the rest of the sandwich he prepared and once that’s done he starts up one of the Trojan games that Jeremy had missed while hospitalised and lets him see how his team held up in his absence. Jeremy makes a few comments here and there but by the time the first half has ended, he’s leaning heavily on Jean, his head on Jean’s shoulder, eyes barely open.
“Go to sleep, captain,” Jean murmurs.
Jeremy mumbles something in the affirmative before fully giving in to his exhaustion and medication and Jean counts his breaths until they even out and he’s sure his partner is asleep. He slings an arm around Jeremy’s shoulders to hold him steady and watches the rest of the game.
He misses the final score, too busy with his chin tucked to his chest as he joins Jeremy in sleep.