Looking Forward
Companion Piece to in retrospect
Pairing: Dr. John Shen x Reader
Rating: Mature
Length: 5.6K
Notes: Can I interest you in some more parentified eldest daughter falling in love with a man with some fucking whimsy
Warnings: Angst; fluff; complicated family dynamics; reader has named sisters - no physical descriptions; parents being dicks; implied sex scenes; reader's age is unspecified, but she and her sisters are all adults; not beta-read
Summary: Every Thursday, John comes right to yours after his shift. The two of you shower together, eat breakfast, and as you start your workday, John goes to bed. Itâs the day that you typically have the fewest meetings, which gives you time to have a working lunch with John. You block off an hour at the end of your day so that the two of you can go for an early dinner, and you walk with him to Dunkin, then to the Pitt for his shift before getting yourself home.Â
Itâs your favorite day of the week.
âIâll text when Iâm headed homeâand donât forget, Joeyâs coming over for movie night.âÂ
You bite your tongue as Lisa eyes you across the kitchen. You know that sheâs waiting for you to make a face, sneer or roll your eyes, but you keep up a carefully constructed mask of neutrality.Â
âSounds like fun. John and I will be going out, so youâll have the place to yourselves.âÂ
Lisaâs snorted laugh is closer than her previous statement, and you only have a half-second to brace for her peck on your cheek before sheâs rounding out of the kitchen.Â
âHave a good day,â You call after her, âAnd have fun with that boy!âÂ
âI knew it!â Is Lisaâs only reply before you hear the apartment door open and close. You consider for a moment, eyes unfocused as your fingers smooth along the side of your steaming mug of coffee.Â
You know that you ought to loosen up: Lisaâs a grown woman, months out from graduating from college. Besides, Joeyâs stuck around longer than you thought he wouldâcertainly longer than the last few boys Lisa brought aroundâŠMaybe you should lend him the benefit of the doubtâ
The sound of the front door opening again draws your focus, and you lift your phone, feigning distraction.Â
âWhatâd you forget?â You call out.Â
âTo kiss you good morning.â
Johnâs voice makes you smile, and youâre setting your phone down before you even finish the email that youâve been drafting.Â
âHey,â You greet, giving John the space to shrug off his bag and toss his empty Dunkin cup into the trash. âI thought you were gonna text when you got here.âÂ
âI caught Lisa as she was coming off of the elevator, she let me in.âÂ
âSneak.âÂ
John smiles, cupping your cheeks and drawing you in for a warm kiss. You let yourself lean into him, curling your arms around his middle and sighing as he gives you one more peck. John dips his head, burying his face in your neck, the prickle of his stubble sending tingles down your spine. You smooth your palm up his back, over his dark scrubs, then up to comb through the hair at the base of his neck.Â
âHow was your shift?âÂ
âLong.âÂ
âOh yeah?âÂ
âMm.âÂ
âYou wanna talk about it?âÂ
âNn-nn.âÂ
âOkay,â You murmur. Another two, three questions crowd behind your lips, but you force them down. Johnâs been dealing with questions all night, anything that you wanna know isnât important enough to bug him with now.Â
â...Time is your first call?â He mumbles.Â
â9:30.âÂ
âGood,â He straightens up. âPlenty of time.âÂ
You donât ask him what for. You just let him tow you down the hall.Â
Since your appendix removal five months agoâsince you and John began seeing one another againâthe two of you have built up a consistent routine.Â
Every Thursday, John comes right to yours after his shift. The two of you shower together, eat breakfast, and as you start your workday, John goes to bed. Itâs the day that you typically have the fewest meetings, which gives you time to have a working lunch with John. You block off an hour at the end of your day so that the two of you can go for an early dinner, and you walk with him to Dunkin, then to the Pitt for his shift before getting yourself home.Â
Itâs your favorite day of the week.Â
It feels the most like you imagine life with John would be like if you were married. You shamefully think about it that way on a weekly basis, but you havenât been able to bring yourself to broach the subject with him.Â
Itâs justâthings have been going so well. Youâre afraid of upsetting the apple cart. The whole appendix situation has really slowed you down. Itâs not a matter of healing; you were diligent about following the surgeonâs instructions to the letter. But getting that sick? Realizing in hindsight that you shouldâve gone to the hospital way sooner instead of pushing through bout after bout of sicknessâitâs made you so much more conscious of how you spend your time, and effort; of the arguments and conversations that you choose to chase, and which ones youâre willing to let go.Â
Thoughts of a life with John arenât something youâre going to just drop, but itâs a conversation that you canât bring yourself to start. If you met a version of yourself from five months ago, the old you wouldnât recognize who youâve become.Â
Youâre starting to think that may be a good thing.Â
--Â Â
Itâs Lilahâs midday text that shatters your sense of calm.Â
11:58 AM parentals incoming.Â
A half dozen questions pop into your headâWhy? When? For how long? Where are they going to stay? Are they going to want to see you? Will they have time?Â
Youâre staring at your phone for a few harrowing moments when you hear:
âIâm starving.â
Johnâs voice makes you jump about a foot in the air. Wellâalright, not quite a foot, but high enough that you bash your left knee into the kitchen table, rattling your water glass and your laptop.Â
âMm,â You groan, gritting your teeth as you steady your glass, nudging it away from your tech.Â
âYow, that sounded like it hurt.â
âDid.âÂ
âYou okay?â John is kneeling beside you before you can answer, turning your chair toward him. The heat of his palm bleeds through the fabric of your pant leg, rolling it up. His hands smooth over your calf, then brush over your knee.Â
âDidnât break any skin,â He comments, then tips his chin up toward you, a smile curling his lips. âDid you forget I was here?âÂ
And it takes you a moment, because John looks good on one kneeâbut your throbbing skin anchors you back to the present.
âNo! No, of course I didnât forget,â You insist. âI was justâI was focused, you caught me off-guard.âÂ
âSorry, baby.â John tips his head forward, pressing a kiss to your knee before rolling your pant leg back down. âLunch smells good. Whatâre we having?âÂ
âSalmon with a tofu curry bake.âÂ
âMm. Youâre too good to me.â John straightens, drifting over to the fridge. You take the opportunity to pick your phone back up, replying to Lilah: [12:03 PM]Â Do you know when?Â
Lilah [12:03 PM]Â not a clue, generalissimoÂ
[12:04 PM] Did they text you?
Lilah [12:04 PM]Â lisa didÂ
You puff your cheeks out, eyes darting to a Teams message that pops up on your laptop, then back to your phone as you swipe out of your chat with Lilah and into the sisters group chat. The last message is from Lilah, one of the many reels that she goes out of her way to send over text because neither you nor Lisa spend nearly as much time on Instagram as she does.Â
[12:04 PM] Please share any information about mom and dadâs visit here.Â
Itâs a moment before two chat bubbles pop up in unison.Â
Lilah [12:04 PM] đÂ
Lisa [12:05 PM] I was going to tell you later
âYou want a diet coke?âÂ
âUhâSure,â You offer John a quick smile. âThanks.âÂ
Lisa [12:06 PM] Theyâll be here next week I donât know exact dates or anything just that theyâll be around
And thatâs on par for your parentsâinfuriatingly so. Theyâd never been planners, either one of them. Hell, theyâd never had to be. They eloped rather than plan a wedding; crashed with your dadâs parents for two years after marrying, as no one was pushing them to find their own apartment; kept you in a deathtrap of an antique cradle that they found someone throwing out for the first five months of your life, until your maternal great-grandmother stepped in and bought them a real one (and if a woman that was born during the Great Depression considered a cradle to be dangerous, you know that it had to be bad).Â
They could barely be bothered to keep on top of your schedule when you were young, let alone Lilah and Lisaâs when they were old enough to have one. You learned early on how to coordinate the three of youâgetting to school, overlapping afterschool with activities, walking home together, making sure homework was done. Lilah got good at forging your parentsâ signature, signing her and Lisaâs homework when it was required, or filling out permission slips for field trips.Â
So for Lisa, the golden child, to be the one told that your parents would be âaroundâ next weekâŠWell, you aren't mad. Youâre just disappointed.
The scent of salmon and curry curls around your nose, pulling your focus to the plate being set in front of you. You straighten up, brow furrowing as John reaches out, saving the powerpoint that youâve been working on before lowering the lid of your laptop halfway.
âI was gonna do that.âÂ
âI got it. Besides,â John sits down beside you, thigh pressing against yours, âYou made it, I plate it. Teamwork.âÂ
âThank you.âÂ
âYou could get even luckier.âÂ
âOh?âÂ
âOh yeah. Play your cards right and I might even do the dishes.â
âOpting in for dish duty? Wow,â You smile. âSomeone slept well.âÂ
John shrugs a shoulder, pushing the tofu curry around to release some of the heat.Â
âI always sleep better when Iâm here.âÂ
It takes you aback as you watch John as he tucks into his food. You want to ask why he thinks he sleeps betterâcomfier bed? Softer sheets?Â
Selfishly, you hope itâs you.
--Â
By 4:28, youâre dressed for date night, and half-hunched over your bed, hurriedly putting the finishing touches on the presentation thatâs been driving you up the fucking wall all day. You can hear John in your en suiteâthe spritz of his body spray, the crank on and off of the faucet, the creak of the hand towel holder, and then the click of the light switch.Â
Your heart ticks up in your chest as Johnâs hand lightly rubs your lower back.Â
âHowâre we doing in here?âÂ
âI need one more minute, hon,â You mumble.Â
âAlright.â
Johnâs flopping onto the bed a second later, making your laptop jostle slightly beneath your fingertips. You roll your eyes a touch, pointedly jabbing the backspace key to undo the typo from the mattressâ bouncing. You can feel John watching you, but you're determined to focus solely on your work. The sooner you finish up, the sooner you can give John your full attention.
Itâs a futile effortâJohn shifts slightly on the bed, and your gaze flickers between him and work.Â
âYouâre going to get wrinkled,â You warn.Â
âJust the back of me.âÂ
âThat doesnât bother you?âÂ
âNah. The back of my clothes are none of my business.â
You try to tamp down your amusement, but a smile spreads across your lips before you can stop it.Â
You sigh, âAll set,â as you save Group B RFP_V7_Final_FINAL to the appropriate sharepoint folder before shutting your laptop down. âI just need to put my shoes on and throw on some lipstick, and then we can go.âÂ
You straighten up, expecting John to do the same, butâbut heâs still laying on the bed, watching you. Youâre about to ask whatâs wrong, what heâs waiting for, if heâs changed his mind about being wrinkledâ
âYou look so pretty.âÂ
Thereâs an almost dopey smile on his lips as he says it, one that sends a flurry of butterflies through your stomach.Â
âWell, you know me,â You look down, picking a piece of lint from your shirt, âI like to make an effort.âÂ
âAn unwrinkled effort.âÂ
âYes,â You laugh, âNow come on.âÂ
John sits up, and you take a step back to let him standâbut his hands grasp your hips, guiding you closer.Â
A few months ago, you wouldâve wriggled out of his grip, reminded him that youâre already running late for your reservation. Now, you rest your hands on his shoulders, dipping your head obligingly for the kiss that he leans up for (secure in the knowledge that the restaurantâs policy is to hold your table for fifteen minutes after the reservation time).Â
Johnâs hands wander lower, hooking around the backs of your thighs and squeezing gently.Â
âScrew dinner,â he mumbles against your lips, and that makes you lean back with a giggle. âCome on, youâve logged off, weâve got the place to ourselvesâŠâ He cranes his neck, lips skimming across the skin bared by the sweetheart neckline of your shirt. And youâre tempted, butâ
âWe wonât be alone for long,â You warn. âLisa has thatââ Donât call him âthat boyâ again, donâtâ âShe has Joey coming over. Besides,â You curl your hand around his jaw, tipping his head up to meet your eye, âYou still need to eatââÂ
âYou know Iâll eatââ
âDinner!â You laugh, shoving his shoulder before finally twisting out of his grasp. âCome on, weâre running behind.âÂ
--Â
Youâve been working on being present. As a chronic overthinker, your mind is constantly combing through potential plans, opportunities, outcomes, pivots. You donât like being caught off-guard.Â
But this visit from your parentsâthis sparse bit of future knowledgeâis putting a serious hitch in your efforts to live in the moment. Time and again throughout dinner, your fingers itch to reach for your phone, to check on whether Lisa has added any details to your group chat. If push came to shove, you could just reach out to your parents yourselfâŠBut you also know that they answer Lisaâs messages far more frequently than they answer yours.Â
Youâre not covering off on your distraction well enough. There are a couple of lulls in your conversation during dinner, moments where you realize that John is waiting for you to reply, or to answer a question. You manage to fill in when it does happen: feign that youâre considering an answer, or that the restaurant noise swelled, and you just missed what he said.Â
The two of you finish dinner with enough time to stroll through the park toward the Dunkin hand in hand. When your phone buzzes in your pocket, you reach in and pull it out automatically. The message makes your stomach swoop. A date, a time. And the place?Â
Your apartment.Â
A moment later, the information is joined by Lisaâs âSorry đŹ.â
âEverything okay?â
You shove your phone away and smile up at John, fibbing, âFine. Just Lisa checking in.âÂ
Johnâs never met your parentsânever made it to Thanksgiving. You havenât brought up his meeting them since the two of you got back together. You donât know when your parents will be in town again; as it is, you havenât seen them in almost six months. Butâwell, you should introduce John to them, shouldnât you? Youâve met Johnâs mom, absolutely adore her. Hell, you have more consistent communication with her than you do your own.Â
You pull a deep breath in through your nose. You can do this. Youâve pitched ideas to your boss, to clients. You can justâpitch this dinner to John.Â
You clear your throat and start in.
âSo, Lisa actually let me know that my parents are going to be in town next week. Given the timing of the visit, I doubt theyâll be around for the holidays, so I was wondering if you wanted to meet them this time around. I think itâs been an appropriate amount of time, I mean, cumulatively, weâve been together for ten and a half monthsââÂ
âCumulatively?â
You push past Johnâs amusement:
âI know that meeting families is a big step, but youâve already met Lisa and Lilahâand theyâll be there as well. Iâm not sure what theyâll want to do just yet, but Iâm assuming itâll be some sort of dinner.âÂ
â...Thatâs your conclusion? No âin summaryâ?âÂ
Your stomach twists at the tease; your feet slow, unbidden, grip slackening around Johnâs hand. He only gets a half-step ahead of you before he turns to look at you, bringing you both to a full stop. The sigh John lets out makes you want to recoil, but heâs stepping fully in front of you before you can make a move.Â
âIâm doing it again, arenât I.âÂ
You hesitate before you give a small, dejected nod.Â
âIâm sorry,â John murmurs.Â
âItâs okay.âÂ
âNo, itâs not.â John raises a hand, using it to tip your chin up. âIf it upsets you, it isnât okay. I know your relationship with your parents is a bitâŠTricky. I shouldnât have joked.âÂ
âThanks. And you can say no to dinner,â You hurry to add, âWe donât have to decide this right now. I know itâs a much shorter notice window than I typically like to give.âÂ
John pulls his lips inward, biting down, and you canât help but smile yourself.Â
âAlright, take that one as a freebie,â You sigh.Â
âIâm sorry, baby,â He laughs, âItâs just cute when your corporate-isms sneak in.âÂ
âYeah, yeah,â You grumble, hooking your hand through the crook of his elbow and steering him around. âCâmon, letâs get you your Dunkin. Canât have you yawning on your patients.âÂ
â...What nightâs the dinner?âÂ
âFriday. I understand if you canât get off work.âÂ
âIâll check. Can I let you know by Monday?âÂ
âCourse you can,â You insist, squeezing his arm gently. âMonday is perfect.âÂ
--Â Â
Itâs going to even out, you know that, but having a Thursday without John around feels so empty. You know that itâs for a good reasonâheâs swapped a shift and is pulling a double so that he can be at dinner with your family tomorrow. Youâre warmed by the fact that heâs willing to do that for you, you are.Â
But the overthinking, panicky part of you is worried. Heâs working a double for this. What if he comes to dinner, itâs awful, and he decides that the effort wasnât worth it?Â
You talk yourself off of a ledge multiple times that day, often reaching for your phone, opening his messages, and stilling while your mind cycles through what you ought to text.Â
You settle for a message around one, when the two of you would typically be sitting down for lunch.Â
[1:03 PM] Hope your shifts havenât been too hellish. Doordash should be dropping off food for you in five minutes. Can they leave it with the charge nurse if you canât get it?Â
Youâre setting your phone down when it buzzes, and you fumble with it, lifting it again and eyeing the incoming call. You bite your lip, steadying yourself before answering:Â
âHello?âÂ
âHey.â He sounds tired, and it kills you a little. Heâs tired because of you.Â
âIâm not interrupting you, am I?â
âNah, I just stepped out to the ambulance bay to get some air. Whatâs this about Doordash?âÂ
âUhâYeah, I. I mean, obviously weâre not in our usual groove, but I wasnât sure what youâd be able to do lunch-wise, so I packed up your portion and sent it over.âÂ
John huffs softly on the other end, and you relax a touch. You know that sound, can practically picture the smile on his lips.Â
âYou didnât have to do that.âÂ
âWanted to. How are you doing over there?âÂ
âItâs, uhâŠItâs alright. Some of the day shift is a little tense.âÂ
âTense how?â
âItâs just a different vibe than Iâm used to. IâllâOh, hang on.âÂ
You hear a few words exchanged distantly on the other end, coupled with a, âThatâs me,â and a, âThanks, man.âÂ
âGot the food,â John reports, âI hate to cut the call short, but Iâm gonna run inside and chow down before I get pulled on to another case.âÂ
âNo, yeah, of course, go!â You insist.
âThank you for lunch.âÂ
âYouâre welcome.âÂ
âIâm excited for tomorrow!âÂ
You push out a shaky laugh. âJesus, John, donât jinx it.âÂ
âWhy do people keep saying that to me?âÂ
âJustâgo eat your lunch before it gets cold.âÂ
âI will. Love you.âÂ
âLove you, too.âÂ
You wait for John to hang up before you lower the phone from your ear, eyeing the notification from Doordash that your package has been delivered. You open up the app to tipâand snort a laugh when you spot the proof of delivery: a photo of John holding the bag and phone with one hand, and giving a thumbs up with the other.Â
He does look tiredâthe bags under his eyes are heavier than youâre used to seeing. But heâs grinning from ear-to-ear. You smile, taking a screenshot before returning to the tip window. You pull in a deep breath, hold it for a count of four, and then let it out slowly.Â
Itâs going to be fine. Johnâs going to enjoy his lunch, youâre going to enjoy yours, and tomorrow is going to be great.
--Â
âDo you think thereâs enough food?âÂ
You ask it with complete sincerity, but Lilahâs withering glance from across the living room tells you that she thinks itâs a dumb question
âDo I think the professional-grade charcuterie board, spinach puffs, pigs in a blanket, and fruit crostini are enough for the six of us?â She drawls, eyes sweeping across the side table that youâve meticulously arranged. âGod, no. You need at least five more appetizers.âÂ
âLilah,â You huff, turning from her to adjust the slight wrinkle that formed when you set the plate of crostini down.Â
âItâs way too early for you to be this wound up,â She adds, âTheyâre not even gonna be here for, like, another half hour. Maybe an hour."Â
You tut, turning and leaning over the coffee table, adjusting the flowers in the vase there carefully.Â
âWhy does everyone insist on trying to jinx my evening,â You grumble before adding, âTheyâll be on-time,â More loudly.
âDoubtful.âÂ
âThey will be,â You insist, straightening fully, planting your hands on your hips. âItâs coming up on Lisaâs graduation, theyâll want to do something for her.â
You glance toward Lilah, watch her lips purse into a pout.Â
âYou think so?â She asks.Â
âThey reached out to Lisa first.âÂ
âThey usually do.âÂ
âRight, but coordinating with her on her busiest class day and making plans to come here?âÂ
Lilah scoffs, raising her hand to inspect her nails. âAs if they know itâs her busiest class dayâand they just didnât want to make a reservation.âÂ
âWell, my point stands. Theyâre probably seeing Lisa tonight so that they donât have to figure out coming back for her graduation.âÂ
âHmph. Whatever,â Lilah pushes herself up off of the couch and strolls over to the bar cart. âAt least weâll get it out of the way so that we donât have to fake it at Christmas. Want one?â She asks, holding up a bottle of gin.Â
âThank you, no. And for the record, itâs peach and basil.âÂ
âWhat?âÂ
âThe crostini.â
âWhat did I call it?âÂ
âFruit.â
âAre you telling me peach isnât a fruit?â
âMy point is that the crostini isnât just fruit.â
âJesus christ,â Lilah huffs, turning back to the bar cart. âYa got tonic?âÂ
âItâs in the mini fridge,â You wave to the bottom of the bar cart. Lilah scoffs, crouching down and opening it.
âWhen the heck did you get this?âÂ
âYesterday. I was thinking about the flow of traffic between the living room and the kitchen, this just made the most sense.âÂ
âSix people is traffic?âÂ
âYou know what I mean.âÂ
âUh-huh. Lime?âÂ
âIn the door. Ice trays are at the very top.âÂ
Lilah whistles low, straightening with a cold can of tonic and the limes that you precut that morning.Â
âYou really think of everything, generalissimo.âÂ
You open your mouth to retort, but youâre cut off by a knock at the door.Â
âPour that quickly, you know how mom gets when she sees you drinking,â You warn, rounding out of the living room.Â
âPlease, if thatâs her, Iâll eat your hat.âÂ
âNot one of your own hats?âÂ
âDidnât bring one.âÂ
You smile in spite of yourself, peering through the peephole and brightening when you spot John, his hands behind his back.Â
âHey!â You greet as you tug the door open.Â
âHi,â He smiles, stepping in and shutting the door behind himself. You begin to lead the way deeper inside, but John curls an arm around your waist, drawing you into his chest. You grin, leaning up for a kiss. You smooth your hands up over his shoulders, sighing softly against his lips.Â
âMissed you,â He mumbles.Â
âI missed you, too, hon.âÂ
John gives you one more squeeze before leaning away. âSomething for you, too.âÂ
âMy tupperware?âÂ
âExactly.âÂ
You grin as John pulls the bag out from behind his back, waggling it in front of you.Â
âVery kind of youâOo,â You peek into the bag. âItâs clean, too.âÂ
âOnly the best for my baby.âÂ
âQuit flirting!â Lilah calls from the other room. âIâm going to be grossed out enough when mom and dad are here!âÂ
You roll your eyes, taking Johnâs hand and towing him into the living room.Â
âYou want anything to drink?âÂ
âShe stocked the bar,â Lilah adds, rattling her drink.Â
âJust some water for me for now, thanksâbut Iâll grab it. Anyone else here?âÂ
âNot yet, but Lisa texted the group chat and said she was running behind.âÂ
âShe did?â You frown. âWhen?âÂ
âI dunno, like twenty minutes ago?âÂ
âI didnât see that.âÂ
âYou were drizzling something on the fruit crostini.âÂ
âBalsamic vinegar.âÂ
âYou put balsamic vinegar on fruit?âÂ
âOn the peaches and basil, yes.âÂ
âI love hanging out with the two of you,â John comments as he heads to the kitchen, âItâs like a tennis match.âÂ
You shake your head as John goes, reaching down and adjusting the flowers again. â...Theyâre gonna be late.âÂ
âQuit saying that.âÂ
âNo, Lisa texted,â Lilah insists.Â
âWhat?â You straighten up, rounding to where sheâs looking down at her phone. âJust Lisa?âÂ
Lilah passes the phone over to you. You take it as gingerly as a grenade, reading the text through the cracks littering Lilahâs screen:Â
Lisa [6:08 PM] Mom and dad stopped by after class Grabbing a bite to eat with them before we head over
You blink down at it for a moment before wordlessly handing the phone back to Lilah.
â...You havenât put the chicken in the oven, have you?â Lilah asks.Â
âNo.âÂ
âYou can probably cut the preheat.âÂ
âWhatâs going on?âÂ
You canât bring yourself to look at John as he comes back in. Grabbing a bite, you know what that means. At most your parents will be stopping in for a few minutes, if they stop in to see you at all.Â
âYou called it,â Lilah offers, âTheyâre here to see Lisa.âÂ
âYeah,â You manage, but feel your throat going tight with upset. You clear it twice, pulling a deep breath in through your nose. âOkayâŠWell, Iâm gonna put the chicken in.âÂ
âWhat?â Lilah crows. âGive it up, generalissimo, theyâre not gonna comeââ âNot for them, for us,â You insist, forcing a smile onto your face and looking between John and Lilah. âWeâre all here, we may as well have dinner. The chicken should take half an hour, and Iâll get the veggies on as well, just,â You wave toward the side table. âHelp yourselves.âÂ
You donât give either of them a chance to question your decision, or to argueâjust stride to the kitchen and open the fridge. You can hear John and Lilahâs hushed tones from the living room, but you donât strain to listen. Youâre not sure how well youâd manage to keep yourself together if you had to explain things to John right now.Â
You putter around in the kitchen alone for a few minutes, getting the chopped vegetables into steamers, and the chicken into the heated oven. Youâre setting the timer on the oven when you hear footsteps growing closer.Â
âHere.âÂ
You turn, smiling slightly at the glass of wine Johnâs holding out for you.Â
âThanks.â You take it, knocking it gently against his before leaning against the counter. The each of you take sips, and fall into silence. You reach out, lightly adjusting the collar of Johnâs button-down, then smoothing your hand over his chest. You brace for John to ask if youâre alright, but he doesnât. He just curls his hand around yours and raises it to his lips, pressing a kiss to the back, then holding it against his chest. You canât meet his eye; canât bear the possibility of finding pity there.Â
âChicken should be done in forty minutes,â You report. âHave you had anything to eat?âÂ
âIâll grab a bite. Have you?âÂ
âNn-nn.âÂ
âThen letâs go.âÂ
--Â
Lilah and John keep up the bulk of conversation at dinner. You chime in now and again; chuckle at their jokes; smile when either of them looks at you. You donât insist that Lilah stay for dessert, but you do make her take home plenty of the leftover chicken and vegetables, and pack a separate bag with some additional hors d'oeuvres. You hang back as John and Lilah say their goodbyes, then follow her into the hallway to see her out.Â
âWell, this was a way less awkward evening than I thought it would be.âÂ
You huff at the insistence, offer, âMakes two of us.âÂ
Lilah hesitates, hand on the doorknob, before turning to face you fully again.Â
âYou know why I think they didnât come?âÂ
And you donât want to know, but Lilah presses on:Â
âYou got all of this together in a week. It would take them a month.âÂ
âThey didnât come because I can make dinner?âÂ
âThey didnât come because they donât put any effort in unless they have to. They just take the easy way out, theyâreâŠTheyâre cowards. You have a career, and a good life. It makes them feel like theyâve never worked for anything. âCause they havenât.âÂ
You smile a little bit. âThanks, bean. I appreciate your insight.âÂ
âYeah, well,â Lilah turns the handle, âDonât get used to it.âÂ
âI love you.âÂ
âLove you, too generalissimo.âÂ
âText me when youâre home!â You call after her, only catching her, âYeah, yeah,â as the door closes behind her. You shake your head, scrubbing your hand over the back of your neck as you turn back into the living room. You wave John off as you see him stacking the emptied hors dâoeuvres plates from the side table.Â
âWe can take care of those in a minute.âÂ
Johnâs brows pop up at the insistence.Â
âWho are you and what have you done with my girlfriend?âÂ
You shoot him a chastising glare as you plop onto the couch, raising your hands and wiggling your fingers toward him.
âCâmere?âÂ
John sets the plates down and joins you on the couch, drawing you into his side. You sigh softly, curling your arm around his middle and pressing your face into his neck. Johnâs hand smooths over your shoulder, thumb sweeping the strap of your top.Â
âNice flowers,â he murmurs. You turn your head to look, lips twisting at the sight of them.Â
âTheyâre the same bouquet mom had when she got marriedâŠI donât know why I keep getting those ones. Sheâs never mentioned them before, and I doubt she even remembers what her bouquet looked like.â You sigh, tipping your head back against his shoulder. âI am so sorry.âÂ
âWhat are you apologizing for?âÂ
âThis wholeâthis was a disaster,â You laugh. And you mean for it to come out lightly, but it shakes as it leaves you. âYou worked a double for thisââÂ
âHey, hey,â John sits up, twisting to get a better look at your face, âI worked a double for dinner. We had dinner.âÂ
You peer up at John, biting your lips, and he winces.Â
âToo silly again?âÂ
âNo,â You reassure, reaching up and cupping his cheek. âItâs perfect this time.âÂ
John smiles, dipping his head down and giving you a gentle kiss. You nudge your nose against his as he breaks it, tipping your head to the side as his eyes sweep over you.Â
âWhat time is Lisa coming home?âÂ
âShe isnât.âÂ
âOh?âÂ
âNot tonight. She texted. Sheâs crashing at Joeyâs.â Youâd gotten the message midway through dinner, and you hadnât been able to bring yourself to do anything but thumbs up the message. âShe probably thinks Iâm mad at her.âÂ
âAre you?âÂ
âNo! No,â You shake your head. âSheâs not in charge of my parents, they make their own minds up, for right or wrong. And considering the excellent company that they missed out on tonight,â You give Johnâs cheek a gentle, teasing pinch, âIt was for wrong.âÂ
âSo we have the place to ourselves?âÂ
You arch a brow. âSomething on your mind, Dr. Shen?âÂ
âI have an empty apartment, a girlfriend that Iâve barely gotten to see in a week, and a day off tomorrow. I have a lot on my mind right now.âÂ
âCare to share with the class?âÂ
You shriek a giggle as John stands, tugging you up behind him and leading the way to your bedroom.
--Â
Youâre jolted awake by your alarm, and itâs a bit of a wriggle and a twist to loosen Johnâs grasp and shut it off. John groans behind you, and you find him blindly reaching for you.
âSorry,â You murmur, âI forgot to turn it off last night.âÂ
John just grunts in reply, sagging back against the pillows as you cuddle up against him. You rest your chin on his chest, peering up at him. You smile at the sight of his sleep-mussed hair, the lessened appearance of the bags under his eyes. He really does sleep better when heâs here.Â
John pulls in a deep breath, head tipping from side to side before he blinks at you. You lean up, pressing a kiss to his lips, then another.Â
âHey,â You murmur.
âMm.âÂ
âI love you so much.â
âI love you, too, sweetheart.âÂ
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