Born Too Late Prologue:
"Are We Still Friends?"
Pairing: DBF!Michael âRobbyâ Robinavitch x Reader
Summary: Before your 12-hour shift from hell, there was a time when Michael quite literally ran into you at a cafĂŠ like it was a meet-cute from a 2000s romcom. It was a curious arrangement you had with him: Meet on Thursdays to rant about your jobs (you didnât have one, but he didnât need to know that). Trying to balance unemployment, as well as an unreliable roommate, and a somewhat estranged relationship with your stepfather of course takes a tole on you. Who better to be an outlet than the man at the cafĂŠ?
Warning(s): Heavy Age Gap [Reader is in her mid-late 20s], Past Maternal Death, Discussion of Child Death, Minor Religious Themes, Oral sex (f receiving), P in V sex, Unprotected Sex, and Inevitable Medical/Social Work Inaccuracies.
Heyyyy guys. So, in honor of Season 2 coming out, I have written a monster of a prologue showing the missing scenes prior to the main series. I honestly adored getting to do some deeper dives into the relationships and characters (both original and canon) that give a little more context into the story. It also is a good CYA because none of us know how the new attending comes into play yet (yes, she makes a cameo in this part). I also might have gotten too into the fandom, because I now get to work as a medical receptionist đ đ! In a family clinic, not an ER (maybe Iâll have the mental capacity someday lmao). Anyway, thank you to anyone who reads, and letâs hopefully have a great 2026 đ
Also, I present a meme that I created considering the news of Tracy Ifeachor not being in season 2 came out just after I finished my series:
The Concept of Heather Collins leaving in my universe of The Pitt right after her ex-boyfriend slept with the new social worker whoâs in her 20s
âYour therapist deserves death by lethal injection.â Was what you said to Jack Abbott when you saw him for the first time in three months.
It was six-thirty in the morning on a Tuesday, and you both were at the cemetery. It was your motherâs birthday, and you and Jack made an unspoken pact to only visit her together on two days: Birthday, and Death Day. You visited her on your own, but only if you were in a crisis and wanted to talk to someone who wouldnât talk back.
Jack hummed, leaning against his car as you approached him. âShe could only do seven today this week. Did you bring the flowers?â
âI thought you said youâd get them?â Your voice was annoyed, but your heart stilled at the thought.
He brought his phone out, showing you your texts. Of course, two nights ago, you agreed that you would be the one to bring flowers since he did so last time. Sighing heavily, you pinched the bridge of your nose.
âIâm sorry; itâs been tough this week.â
Not exactly a lie, but not exactly true.
âItâs alright.â Jack tucked his hands in his pockets. âShe never liked getting gifts anyway.â
Your desire to not have a debate outweighed your desire to say something. Nodding, you both treaded through the cemetery until you found your motherâs grave. Maybe it was your fault for not going out of your way to see Jack before this, but you were never that close to him.
âHowâs life been for you?â He asked as you walked on the gravel road.
âNot bad.â You responded dryly.
âJob hunting going okay?â
There it is. You sighed to yourself. Where you were distant from him, he was still your stepfather. Pursing your lips, you said. âItâs been going. Itâs shit finding a job after graduation.â
âThe one at the old folksâ home wasnât so bad.â
âYou didnât have to work there.â You smiled tightly.
âSeemed pretty tranquil.â
âThatâs a big vocab word for you.â
Okay, you were being a bitch; but to be fair, he kind of was too. Also, it was early in the morning and you would have to be reminded that your mother, one of the only people you believed to truly understand you, was dead.
SoâŚmaybe not an excuse, but an explanation.
Jack took it in stride, laughing. âIâm not smart, but Iâm not an idiot.â
âYouâd be surprised how many of them are morons.â
That made you smile; just a little. The two of you finally made it to the grave in silence, standing above it. Your mother was younger than Jack, but not by much. Sheâd tease him about being a predator, and you both expected him to brush it off, or make a crude joke; but no, those were the only times youâd ever see Jack Abbott blush in embarrassment.
You tried to keep your gaze on her gravestone, as if you could communicate with her by burning your eyes into it. Still, they moved to Jackâs hands beside you, fiddling with his wedding ring. He never took it off, at least never in front of you.
Sometimes, selfishly, you hoped he would. Just so that he would move on, find someone else, and forget about you. It would be easier just to never talk to him again than have to check in once in a while because he still felt some responsibility for you.
But, you didnât wish that on your mother; for you to be the only one mourning her.
So, you and Jack continued to stand above her grave for a few more minutes, silently conversing with her. When it was over, you both broke with âI love youâ to her.
The walk back to your car was more awkward than on the way to the grave. It was quieter, the only sound being the early breeze and the birds starting to sing.
âListen,â Jack sighed. âI know you hate this, but if you really need work-.â
âIâm good.â You stared ahead.
âItâs been months, and I just want you to-.â
He placed his hand on your shoulder, stopping you in your tracks. âCan you let me finish?â
You didnât say anything.
Jack took a deep breath. âI donât want you to hate your job, or get burnt out a week into it, but weâre short staffed with social workers at the hospital.â
You bit your tongue. To be fair, it was hell trying to find something in social work. The senior center was boring to you, you didnât have great experience with childrenâŚ
The hospital only seemed reasonable, yetâŚ
âI hate handouts, but Iâll think about it.â
âItâs not a handout; itâs using your resources.â
You hummed, giving a smile that said it all: âSure, totally.â
To Jackâs credit, he was a lot like you: wouldnât let go of shit even when it was probably for the best. âI interned at the same time with one of the day shift attendings at PTMC. Years later, he ends up working there, and I need a job after Iraq. How do you think I got it?â
Sighing, you said. âPoint taken, Iâm an asshole.â
He shrugged, fighting a smile. âOnly sometimes.â
Snickering, you went to your car, calling back. âHave fun at therapy, old man.â
âHey,â he called your name. âwould you want to get breakfast after my session? Iâll buy.â
If you werenât in a mood, maybe you wouldâve said yes. But, alas, you were still somewhat grumpy after the exchange, so you settled on.
âI was gonna meet Kimi at Big Dog, actually.â You said half-heartedly. âShe wanted to talk to me about something.â
He hummed. âI get it. Howâs she doing?â
You smiled genuinely. âItâs Kimi.â
 âBoyfriend trouble?â
âI mean, she broke up with Trent last week. Letâs see if she takes him back by the end of this one.â
He chuckled. âCanât wait to hear about it. See you around?â
âSee you around.â You waved, getting into your car. You pulled out of the cemetery and onto the road, driving to Big Dog Coffee. Of course, Kimi wasnât going to meet you there, she probably wasnât even out of bed yet. You knew it was her day off, so there was no way sheâd be up before lunchtime.
When you arrived, you breathed in the sweet air of cappuccino, cinnamon, and a pleasant array of scents. It was always peaceful whenever you walked into the cafĂŠ, even if it was a bit like now. The line, while not outside the door, was long. Still, despite all the two things that happened to you that day, you were patient.
You ordered your favorite hot drink and stood in the designated area where people would pick up their orders. Â After spending some time looking at your phone (and quickly regretting it because of seeing two separate engagement posts), the barista called your name.
You picked up your drink with a quick âthank youâ, and just as you turned over your shoulder, a man ran into your side, causing your drink to fall out of your hand.
âWhat the hell?!â You gasped, looking up who was dumb enough to crash into you.
A man old enough to be your father shook his head. âI am so sorry, I wasnât looking where I was going-.â
âYeah, no shit.â You huffed. It wasnât even seven yet, and you already visited your motherâs grave, got into a minor argument with your stepfather you barely saw, and now had your favorite, overpriced drink knocked out of your hand.
All anyone could do in a time like this was try not to laugh because that would be inappropriate.
The man in front of you wore a polite smile, as if trying to feel you out. âIâll buy you another one-.â
âNo.â You answered, sobering up but mirroring his smile. âIâm good.â
He shrugged with an âOkayâ, and yet, something inside of him possessed him to say. âWell, it doesnât look like any got on you, so at least you wonât have to remove your shirt and check for burns.â
It should have creeped you out, what he said. Still, you had been around doctors before (your stepfather, other social work cases, and what happened to your mother), and you knew what they sounded like, even in the wild.
So, you laughed; both from what he said, and the look on his face soon after where you thought he was going to die on the spot after realizing what he just uttered.
âI guess.â You shook your head. âIt didnât get on you?â
When he realized you werenât going to rip him to shreds, he chuckled. âNope, Iâm clean. Really, Iâm so sorry.â
You shrugged. âIt was an accident; youâre probably running late.â
âNot at all. Whatâd you order?â
You absolutely had no idea why you were trying to make conversation with this man who appeared to be in his early fifties, with a beard that fit his face, and with dark circles under his eyes no amount of concealer could get rid of. No, it wasnât because you were afraid of him and felt like you had to.
Dare sayâŚyou wanted to.
Fortunately, he mustâve felt the same, because he responded. âCoffee, straight black.â
You hummed. âNeed to wake up?â
âYeah.â He chuckled. âYesterday wasnât so great and I decided I need a pick-me-up.â
âWhat was so horrible about yesterday?â
You couldnât tell if you were still talking to him because you were a nosy bitch, your innate social worker attitude to play pseudo-therapist, or just because you felt something when talking to him.
âIâm an attending physician.â He answered. âItâs doctor who is kinda the-.â
âI know what an attending is.â You smiled tightly.
He mirrored your grin again, more so out of embarrassment. âSorry.â
You shrugged. âI did an internship at Mageeâs, so I kind of got a good idea.â
Hell no were you going to say, âMy stepdad is an attending too!â like you were bragging to the other kids at school.
You made a face, but not an unpleasant one. âWorse, social work. What made you think pathology?â
âI donât know,â he settled. âjust something about you.â
âŚWas he meaning to be obvious about hitting on you, or was he doing the thing older men do where he pretends to âjust be niceâ but heâs hoping to get lucky?
Your superpower, from trauma and your profession, was hyper vigilance, so usually you were good at figuring out what-.
âIâm sorry,â he shook his head, laughing awkwardly. âI shouldnât have said that.â
âYeah,â you played it straight. âmaybe you shouldnât stereotype people in your profession.â
His entire face dropped. âI didnât mean-.â
âIâm messing with you.â You only realized how crazy you probably looked switching up on him. So, you stuck your hand out to try and preserve whatever dignity you had left. You gave him your name.
He smiled, shaking yours. âYou shake hands.â
âUsually people tell me their names after that.â
âA black coffee for Michael!â The barista yelled despite him being within earshot.
He hummed, taking his coffee off the counter. âAsk and you shall receive, I guess.â
âI guess.â You chuckled.
He smiled at you, and maybe you were delusional, but you felt like it was longer than it should have been before he straightened himself and said. âWell, it was nice meeting you, but I gotta go.â
âThought you said you werenât running late?â He teased.
Oh yeahâŚI did. You backpaddled as best you could. âI mean, Iâm not. I work at Beatty Point Village so itâs a bit of a drive butâŚyou know.â
And so, the lying began. Except, it was only a lie because you didnât work there at the time.
He nodded. âSenior center? Sounds exciting.â
You snorted. âI think we might have an Elvis impersonator today. Bet working as an attending is boring.â
âAbsolute snooze fest.â He said sarcastically, walking backwards out the door. âHave a nice day!â
Michael didnât give you time to wish him one before he left. WellâŚthat was an awkward yet nice interaction? Sighing, you went back up to the counter to order your second favorite drink (the one that wasnât so overpriced).
It was decided then that you would spend the rest of your time in the cafĂŠ on your phone on LinkedIn, looking for a job. If you were going to be doing something agonizing, you might as well do it in a pretty place.
A few hours later, and after clicking âApplyâ to several jobs you didnât even like, you were ready to go home.
Yet, when you stood up, something gleamed in your eye. On the floor, was a little pendant. Bending down, you picked it up.
A normal person wouldâve left it on the ground or given it to the baristas. Then, there was you; you slipped it into your purse without a second thought, and you left.
You still donât know why you did that.
When you got home, you were greeted by Kimi lying on the couch, scrolling on her phone. She glanced up at you. âYouâre up early.â
âSo are you.â You snorted.
She shrugged. âCouldnât sleep.â
âTrent kept trying to call me.â
âWhy donât you just block him already?â You asked.
âHe always does this.â she explained. âRadio silence the first few days, fills my answering machine the next, and then an apology two weeks later. Iâm not gonna take him back though; weâre done. What were you doing today?â
You pursed your lips. âItâs my momâs birthday.â
That was enough for her to put her phone down and open her arms. You smiled and sat down, letting her pull you into a hug.
âYou okay?â She asked.
âI had to see my stepdad,â you sighed. âand I forgot to bring flowers.â
âDamn. When was the last time you saw him?â
âA few months, I think.â
She nodded. âWanna make mimosas and watch a movie?â
You laughed. âItâs not even noon.â
âDidnât know you liked watching movies after lunch.â She hit back.
Shaking your head you said. âIâll make popcorn, but thatâs it.â
âYouâre no fun.â She whined. âSo, you were at the cemetery for a few hours?â
âNo.â You stood, walking to the kitchen. âI went to Big Dog and tried job searching. A guy bumped into me and made me drop my drink.â
âAsshole. Give me his address.â Kimi commanded. âIâll burn his house to the ground.â
âKimberely, I donât think the principal of your school wants one of his teachers to be charged with arson.â Your straight tone didnât match your amused smile.
âThatâs why Iâm just a sub.â She bragged.
Rolling your eyes playfully, you decided not to tell her more about Michael. Itâs not like there was anything to tell.
So, the day played out like usual, and so did the next one, and then the next one. Everyday felt the same; wake up, apply for jobs, then get emails starting with âWe regret to inform youâ from jobs you had forgotten about.
It was on the fourth day you decided to go back to Big Dog to at least treat yourself for your noble efforts of seeking employment.
You went in the afternoon this time, and it wasnât as packed as the morning you went in, so you managed to get a small snack without anyone bumping into you. Sitting at a small table, you pulled out your laptop. The moment you did, who would walk through the door than Michael.
It felt different seeing him. To be fair, there was no initial hostility from him bumping into you, so that added onto it. He walked hands in his pockets up to the counter, ordering. He seemed to not have as much weight on his shoulders that day; at least, not as much as there was when you last saw him.
He mustâve felt your eyes on him, because his soon trailed over to you, and he smiled.
âHey,â he said your name, approaching your table.
âHi.â You greeted, somehow feeling at ease when being approached by a grown man. âHave a better shift?â
He nodded. âBetter than a few this week. What about you?â
You shrugged. âThe Elvis impersonator cancelled.â
Michael winced. âYou had it worse than I did.â
âEh, at least I didnât have an old lady confess to murder this time.â
âWell, now I gotta hear this.â
You tilted your head to the empty seat across from you. âYouâre more than welcome to.â
It felt strange how easy it was to talk to him. Blame it on your own anxiety, blame it on Covid fucking everyoneâs socialness, but you werenât one to talk to strangers in cafes. There was just something about him thatâŚmade him so interesting to you.
Still, he hummed, sitting down after a moment of pondering. âSpill.â
Sitting up, you began. âSo, Mary-Anne was honestly the most popular girl there, she was super sweet. Like, you picture the textbook old grandma, and that was her. Iâm reading to her one night, this old murder mystery or something, and she says, âMen donât scream the way they do in moviesâ. So, Iâm thinking sheâs just talking to talk, but when I tried to keep reading, she told me in great detail how she lured her abusive husband out into the woods when they lived in Montana and killed him.â
âNo, she didnât.â Michael shook his head, chuckling.
âPeter DiMaggio. Look it up and youâll find a missing personâs case in Hamilton, 1961.â You grinned as if you were the one who killed him.
He nodded. âI believe you. What happened to Mary-Anne?â
âShe passed away the next night.â
âOkay, youâre bullshiting me-.â
âYou just said you believed me!â You laughed.
âWell, maybe I donât now.â
You wondered if it weirded him out how effortless the conversation fell between the two of you. He must have; you didnât even want him to confirm how old he was, and you didnât want to confirm yours either.
âA doctor who doesnât believe patients?â You joked. âDonât know if Iâm really that surprised.â
âWoah.â He smiled. âBad experience?â
âNot really, just a shitty joke.â You tried to shrug it off. âWhat happened at your shift the other day?â
He thinned his lips. âNothing really.â
âNow whoâs bullshitting?â You smirked. âYou donât have to tell me something traumatic justâŚsomething.â
Michael rose his brows, leaning back in the chair and then sighing, defeated. He reached around his neck, pulling an empty chain out of his shirt. âI lost my medal a few days ago. I thought it mustâve fallen off when I bumped into you, but when I came back the next day, no one found anything. Itâs not a big deal in the grand scheme of things, but it still threw me off.â
You furrowed your brow. âWhat was it?â
Immediately, your hand went into your purse. Once you felt the sharp points prick your fingers, you dug it out and held it in the palm of your hand. Michaelâs face fell into the perfect mix of shock and relief.
âI forgot about it the second I found it.â You began. âI shouldâve given it to the baristas. Iâm sorry, I didnât know it was yours.â
He took it, holding it in a way where you knew it was holy to him in more ways than one. âIâŚI thought it was gone forever. Thank you.â
âNo,â he stopped you. âit means a lot. Seriously, I bumped into you last week, and here you are, finding something that means the world to me.â
You were feeling bold and stupid. âHow about you buy me the overpriced drink you knocked out of my hand?â
âŚThat was easy. You thought.
Michael didnât come back until both of your drinks were made. The time alone only settled in the strangeness of this entire situation. Yes, sometimes life was all about having good conversations with people without it leading to anything.
âŚSo why did you want it to? He was reasonably attractive, and so far, very kind to you. Still, you were always the voice of reason with friends who were getting with older men.
âIt doesnât matter if he said he loves you.â You told your old sophomore year roommate when she was thinking of dropping out of college to move to California with a man who was forty-five. âYouâve only known him for three months, you donât know anyone out there, and thereâs probably a reason heâs not with someone his own age.â
You managed to convince her. But there you were in that cafĂŠ in Pittsburgh years later, having coffee with a man most likely older than the ones you begged your friends not to date.
Nothing would probably happen, that was your rationalization.
âOkay,â you sat up straighter, smiling once he came back to the table. ânow I have to hear why itâs important to you. If you want to tell me, that is.â
He didnât take his eyes off the medal. Heâd taken out a pair of glasses from his bag and put them on to get a better look as he tried to reattach the star to the chain.
FuckâŚwhyâd he look even more attractive?
âI lived with my grandma when I was really young; until high school, I think.â He said as if you were interviewing him for a job. The more he spoke, the more you could hear the strain in his voice. âShe made me go to service every Saturday and said a prayer every morning. She didnât even give me this for a birthday or anything; just found it in a drawer when I was eight.â
It was such a simple story, but one you knew carried an immense weight.
âYou still practice?â You couldnât help but ask.
âThinking about it.â He sighed, finally getting the star back onto the chain and slipping it around his neck. âI barely know anything about you.â
You hummed. âWhat do you want to know?â
He shrugged. âI donât know. Do you have any siblings?â
âNot that I know of.â
âWonât ask anymore.â
âNo, itâs-.â You stopped yourself, laughing from nerves. âI was obviously an accident. My mom and I were close until she passed away a few years ago, but she married this one guy I donât really talk to.â
You felt like it was too much to say. Was it because it was, or because it was the first time in a while you told someone? Was it weird you still felt empty yet whole at the same time whenever you talked about her?
âIâm sorry to hear about your mom.â Was his response. Appropriate and predictable, but it sounded genuine. WellâŚhe was a doctor; probably a good one if you had to go off from what you knew about him.
âI like talking about her.â You smiled.
He mirrored it, not saying anything right away. Nobody ever talks about the silence within conversations; how peaceful it is just to exist. It didnât matter that you only knew him as the man who bumped into you at a cafĂŠ like it was a damn romcom from the 2000s. You were just beginning to know who he really was.
âHow old are you?â He asked.
And there was the question. The question where you vowed you wouldnât lie. So, you told him the truth. Michaelâs eyes grew only minimally, but his whole body tensed.
âI was definitely out of college by then.â He stated.
You asked him. âHow old are you?â
âFifty-one.â He was in the age range you assumed he was, so it wasnât that much of a shock. When you didnât react in any way, he asked. âWhat are you getting out of this?â
You furrowed your brow. âYou came up to me?â
âLook IâŚâ He sighed. âI donât want to make you uncomfortable. I donât want you to think I have an ulterior motive or anything. Iâll get up and leave right now if you ask.â
Tilting your head, you decided to turn the tables. âDo you have any friends outside of work?â
âWife, husband, kids? Anything like that?â
 âOkay, weâre in the same boat.â
âWhatâre you getting at?â
You leaned forward. âAlmost all of the friends Iâve made in high school, college, and grad-school have either gotten married, moved states, or just stopped talking to me. The only person I consistently speak with is my roommate who is like an annoying little sister thatâs in a shitty on-and-off again relationship. Iâm just saying, if or when one of us just needs to ventâŚsometimes itâs better to do it with someone who only knows you.â
Compelling argument on one hand. On the other, sweet baby Jesus and the grown one too, you were lonely.
He turned his head to the side. âSo, we just rant to each other. Thatâs it?â
You nodded. âYeah. We could meet on our days off, then take as long as we need.â
âWhen are your days off?â
And thatâs how perhaps your strangest relationship started. Your decided date would be Thursdays at eleven. That day, you both still spoke for hours even with the uncomfortable introduction.
You told him stories about coworkers that frustrated you (fuck you Robyn, you know what you did), and elderly residents that were both weird but kind at the same time (Mr. Carter said he would beat other âsuitorsâ with sticks if they were ever mean to you. A win is a win?).
Michaelâs were more eventful. The other day, he went from consoling a drunk teenager who crashed his fatherâs car, to then pulling a horsefly out of a womanâs ear. He talked about the other doctors and students too.
Dana wasnât a doctor but the charge nurse and ran the ER simultaneously like the Navy but also a gentle daycare. Javadi was the youngest, being twenty years old but extremely bright. McKay was passionate but could be impulsive. And Mohan was smart as a whip and would spend a lot of time getting to know the actual patients.
âI think youâd like her.â He said.
You took a sip of your drink. âYeah, just tell me when sheâs working and Iâll break my arm.â
He laughed, not even bothering to hide it.
You went home feeling happier than you had in months.
The one or two friends you had left in Pittsburgh took notice, and you did your best to keep it vague as possible. (âIâve just been going to a coffee shop a lot; getting things done.â âYeah, I met someone there.â âNo, itâs nothing serious. Just nice to have someone to talk to.â)
Kimi though, for how unassuming she could be, immediately knew.
âThis the same guy who ran into you?â She asked as you both ate dinner the night after your first âofficialâ meeting with Michael.
You nodded. âYeah, he got me a drink because I found his medal that fell off his chain.â
She shrugged. âI mean, if youâre fine being a sugar baby, then get it.â
You snorted. âWeâre just talking.â
âNinety percent of sugar baby work is just being a therapist.â
âYou speaking from experience?â
âI had friends who did.â She pointed her fork at you, grinning. âNever knew youâd be one of them.â
Shaking your head, you played with your food. âHe wonât pay for anything, and heâs also being my therapist.â
âYou talking shit about me?â
âOh, hell yeah, Kimberly.â
Job hunting was another monster that hid itself in the depths of your mind. You miraculously got an interview out of the hundreds of applications you sent out.
You thought it went well, but just the next day, you were welcomed with an email, informing you the position had already been filled.
So, just a week after saying you wouldnât take handouts, you texted Jack.
âSorry for being an asshole last week. Has the position been filled at PTMC?â
He texted you an hour later. âI emailed you the application. I canât guarantee an interview, but I think I could pull a few strings. I wonât be as honest as I should if they ask me if youâre nice đâ
You chuckled, staring at your phone.
âMichael?â Kimi asked, sitting on the other end of the couch.
âJackâs helping me get a job at the hospital.â
She hummed. âYou see, thatâs a provider. Thatâs the kind of man I need in my life.â
âJust because you havenât talked to Trent in weeks doesnât mean you can screw my stepdad.â
âWould that make me your step-step mom?â
You threw a pillow at her.
Of course you told the story to Michael the next day, changing details of course. Your stepdad wasnât helping you get a job; he was fixing your car. He wasnât an attending at a hospital; he was a mechanic.
âYour roommateâs something else.â He hummed.
âPlease,â you rolled your eyes. âyou donât know the half of it.â
And you talked for another few hours. Apparently, one of the senior residents at the hospital was caught months ago stealing some of the medications and was currently in rehab.
âIt was just before Pittfest.â He sighed. âHe came back of course, and I was pissed butâŚwe needed all hands-on deck.â
You nodded. âI canât even imagine.â
âI really trusted him, you know?â
You placed your hand on his, only to retract it once you felt his skin on yours and you realized what you were doing. He didnât seem to care and continued.
A week later, you got a call to schedule an interview later that week for the social worker job. You kept it secret from everyone that wasnât Jack; just in case you wouldnât get it. Of course, it almost slipped out when you were talking with Michael.
There was just something about him that made you feel safe.
âYou know,â he began one day. âI saw you in here sometimes when it wasnât our day.â
âYeah?â You drank your drink.
He hummed. âThe coffeeâs good, youâre not the only reason I come here.â
âWell now Iâm wounded.â You teased. âWhyâd you never come in?â
Michael shrugged. âYouâd be in there first. Wouldnât want you thinking I was stalking you or something.â
âWhatâs something else I donât know about you?â He asked.
You snickered. âIâm not that interesting.â
âI feel like Iâve been talking at you the whole time.â He smiled. âI just need to think of what to ask.â
âA lot of guys Iâve talked to just rely on the girl to carry the conversation. They get confused why she doesnât want to talk anymore.â You joked.
Guys my age I went on dates with⌠was what hung above the statement.
âOkay,â he leaned forward. âwhatâs at the front of your mind right now? Like, something that would feel good to get out?â
There were a million things.
âIâm scared of my roommate getting back together with her shitty ex.â
âI got an interview!â
âI feel like Iâm dying at my job.â
Trauma dumping hated to see you coming.
He tilted his head. âWhy?â
âI mean,â you forced a laugh. âItâs obviously not as stressful as yours but I think thatâs the point. Iâm bored, and I feel like Iâm aging with my residents.â
âYouâve got plenty of time to-.â
âAnd youâre starting to sound like them.â
Let it be known that, despite going through years of schooling, you never really perfected keeping your thoughts to yourself.
Still, he did not look offended even for a moment. He huffed, smiling. âYouâve probably heard that a million times already.â
You nodded, avoiding his gaze. âIâm sorry, itâs just exhausting.â
âItâs true though.â He explained. âLifeâs too short to stay somewhere you hate. Find another job first, then quit.â
You did that out of order, but you had the right idea.
The interview came quicker than you could even expect, and you met with a nice woman named Jeanie who worked as one of the night shift social workers. Apparently, âtheoreticallyâ, if you were to work at PTMC, youâd start nightshifts.
It wasnât your best interview, but it sure as hell wasnât your worst. They said theyâd let you know early next week if youâd gotten it or not.
So, the rest of your days were the same; lock yourself in your room for more than half the day watching movies or reading, maybe hang out with Kimi, then sleep. If it wasnât that, then you were at Big Dog with a book.
You found out you got the job when Jeanie called you, and it felt like a weight had fallen from your shoulders. You would start on Friday of that week (which was strange, but you also found out you would be working that weekend).
âYou okay?â Michael asked as you walked around the neighborhood the day before you would begin your job. You both decided it would be better to get fresh air instead of remaining stagnant inside the cafĂŠ.
You were tempted to tell him about your job, but a part of you (the romantic, delusional girl whoâd sometimes create scenarios in her head before she fell asleep) wondered what would happen if he worked at the same hospital.
The chances were low, but never zero. You decided it would be best not to risk it.
âIâŚitâs been a few weeks, but it was my momâs birthday, and I visited her grave.â It also wasnât technically a lie; you were still upset.
He hummed. âHow was it?â
âShe was quiet, as usual.â You both snickered, unable to look at one another. âNo, but really, it wasâŚweird. Itâs been years, but I still feel the same way I felt when I was in the hospital with her. Not as intense butâŚyou know.â
âDo you want me to listen,â he asked. âor do you want old man advice?â
âYouâre not that old.â He gave you a look, as if, for the first time, wondering if you were an idiot. You chuckled. âGo on.â
He tucked his hands in his pockets. âYou probably already know this, but it never goes away. Someone so close to you leaving like that. I know itâsâŚI know itâs little things we miss and take for granted; a habit, a favorite, or just even the sound of their voice. IâŚI only got to meet my mom through home videos from the 60s and 70s, and they didnât even have audio. I still miss her.â
âMikeâŚâ You breathed.
âShe died giving birth to me. Iâve made peace with it.â He explained. âBottom line, thereâs nothing wrong with grieving someone for years. It just means you felt so much towards them.â
You couldnât help but ask. âDo you still grieve over your mom?â
âYeah, sometimes. We canât really explain why we miss people we didnât know.â
The tiniest of grins pulled onto your lips as you walked, staring ahead. âMy mom told me that, when we wake up sad with little to no explanation, we were supposed to meet someone that day who would have changed our lives. I sometimes think itâs also to mourn someone who has no one to mourn them. Does that make sense?â
You looked back at him and saw him smiling. He was smiling at you in a way no man had ever done before; at least, towards you. You snickered. âWhat?â
He snapped out of it momentarily but continued to smile bashfully. âJust never thought of it like that. I might need to steal it from you.â
âProbably not the first nor the last time youâll steal a womanâs idea.â You teased.
âYouâd be right.â He learned quickly to never fall for your sarcastic statements.
âI knew it!â You shoved him without thinking.
He huffed with repressed laughter. âSo, whyâre you hanging around me then?â
âYouâre the one man I know who doesnât give me âFuck Meâ eyes.â
Maybe youâd gotten too comfortable around him? Maybe you were so lonely you had forgotten how to speak to people normally; as if you had known them for years, instead of just weeks.
It wasnât cold out, but a chill ran through your body when you realized what you said. His own face had fallen at the statement, and you attempted to backpaddle, still keeping the unserious attitude.
âI mean, thatâs a lie, Iâve known plenty of men I can just be friends with. So, I donât know why I said that, and I think Iâm talking too much-.â
He said your name, and that was enough to stop you. He wasnât smiling, but he wasnât scowling either. âItâs alright.â
âI just donât have a poker face around women.â You both laughed, feeling at ease. He continued. âOn another note, I canât meet next Thursday. I have a family thing going on.â
You shrugged, wondering if that was his way of saying he didnât want to see you again. âNo, I get it.â
âCan we do Saturday?â
Thankfully, youâd gotten your schedule for the next few weeks ahead of time and already knew you wouldnât work Saturday through Monday. Apparently, they were giving you time to adjust to the day shift, which you would do the week after next.
âI have a shift that day, where wouldnât you mind eating at eight at night?â
You rose your brows, answering him then asking. âYou really want to spend time with me after a long day?â
He said it like it was a no brainer. While it left you like a deer in headlights, all you could do was say. âOkay, see you then!â
And you were the first one to leave; it was the first time you had done so. He just wished you a simple âBye!â as you walked away, and that was it.
You never had done night shifts before, even at the senior center. So, it was strange driving to work when the sun was setting. Sure enough, Jeanie was there for you to shadow, and you clung to her most of your shift.
Doing your best to avoid your stepfather, you took to befriending others. Parker Ellis being one of them. A lax, but talented senior resident who you hit it off with right away. She was also the first one to clock that you and Jack were (somewhat) related three hours into meeting you.
âShit, you even lean like him.â
You immediately stood up straight away from the wall when there was a surprising lull in the number of patients. âWhat?â
âAbbott.â She snorted. âI thought I was crazy thinking you were his kid. Niece, maybe, but no way a daughter. You got a fake leg too?â
Trying to play it off, you joked. âNo. You gonna tell anyone?â
Of course she did, but instead of talking behind your back (letâs be real, some probably did), it was a harmless joke brought up once in a while.
Your first shift seemed to be going well; only two car crash victims, and a sex injury. Then, just as you had an hour left, an elderly woman coded. It wasnât the first time you saw death, especially in someone so old; but it still hit you just the same.
You slept until five in the evening when you got home, and spent the rest of it in your room, barely eating.
Second shift, Jeanie was there with you but let you know right away you would be on your own after that.
There was more that night; everything ranging from an impatient frat boy with the flu to a group of twenty-six girl scouts and four troupe leaders coming in from a bus accident.
Seven of them had bloody noses, four had broken bones, two were taken into surgery, and one codedâŚ
âIf you ever need to talk to someone-.â Jack said softly as you both sat in the ambulance bay.
He said your name. âI know itâs not the same, but I or-.â
You stood. âI gotta help Jeanie tell twenty-five little girls, four troupe leaders, and two parents that one of them isnât coming home.â
It shouldâve been seen as a victory, only one being dead considering the state of the accident. But it wasnât. You debated quitting but realized youâd rather suffer than be jobless again.
So, you had another shift, and no one talked about what happened the previous one. You were alone for the first time but had a different attending.
Dr. John Shen was younger, but acted just as experienced as your stepfather. The third night wasnât as intense; and he certainly helped.
âYou ever thought about becoming a doctor, Baby Abbott?â He teased.
You shook your head as you walked by him to go comfort a drunk woman who had a stiletto in her cheek. âIf I did, Iâd shove the first thing so far up your ass, no one could remove it.â
âTake me to dinner first.â
That night was more fun; well, you also emptied the coffee pot, so maybe thatâs why you were in a better mood. Such a better mood, you stayed to greet the day shifters.
âGood morning, starshines!â You giggled, seeing two new faces.
The girl with sharp eyes and a pretty smile snorted, pulling her hair into a ponytail. âGood morning?â
You introduced yourself. âHowâre you guys?â
âEh, sleep deprived.â She nudged the boy beside her who had deep bags under his eyes. âHuckleberry here kept me up all night long.â
âItâs not my fault!â He sighed. âThe cat just waltzed in like he owned the place and-!â
âAre you two together?â
You were absolutely going crazy from getting only three hours of sleep.
âNo!â The boy immediately squeaked. âJust roommates.â
âOh my god, they were roommates.â You and the girl said together before laughing.
She pat your shoulder. âTrinity Santos. This is my completely platonic roommate, Dennis Whitaker.â
âNice to meet you.â You told them your name then opened your locker. âWelp, have a good shift!â
And you left. The nights after that werenât so bad. You met a day shift attending before you left one time.
Dr. Baran Al-Hashimi had only been there for a month but already gained a high reputation from others. You could tell; only speaking to her for a minute, you found yourself developing a harmless crush.
âNurse?â She asked when you were cleaning yourself up in the bathroom.
You snickered. âWorse: Social worker.â
âAh.â she cleaned her hands. âDoctors for the soul and psyche.â
âDonât even have a doctorate.â
She shrugged. âYou donât need one. You guys deserve the title even without it.â
You were happy to get some reprieve for the weekend. Specifically, seeing Michael again. True, there were times when you were so busy during the week, youâd almost forgotten about him. But, before youâd fall asleep, youâd think of him.
His voice, his smile, everything about himâŚit comforted you.
Saturday finally came, and you were touching yourself up in the mirror when Kimi barged into your room.
âHey, you wanna go out with my coworkers?â She asked.
âAlready have plans.â You were currently blending your eyeshadow.
 âCool. If your friends ditch you, weâll be at Conleyâs around ten.â You watched her face scrunch up in the mirror. âWhatâs that smell?â
âProbably my perfume.â
You snorted. âItâs the stuff you begged to wear months ago.â
âNo, I didnât.â She denied. âStop gaslighting me.â
She snickered before leaving. âYouâre so weird.â
It was strangeâŚwhy were you putting in so much effort? Surely it would just be like normal where youâd talk to each other about work, maybe something personal. What were you going to tell him now? So much happened, and your job was newâŚHe invited you out to eat, he asked where your favorite place was and didnât try to compromise it.
You kept asking yourself that as you drove to the restaurant. The closer you got, the more stupid you felt up until you were standing outside. You didnât have his number, how were you supposed to know if he was there? What if he had to stay late? What if he stood you up? Maybe you could make the workers feel bad and give you free-?
The sound of your name made you turn around. There was Michael, wearing the same sweatshirt he always wore, hands in his pocket.
âSorry Iâm late.â He apologized.
You smiled. âFashionably. How are you?â
Going inside, you both sat at a table and proceeded to order. It was busier than you thought itâd be, and you wondered if the staff were playing the game âRelated or Dating?â as you and Michael talked.
You realized you didnât care.
He asked you how work was going, and you just told him there was nothing. You asked how his was, and he said the same. So, you both delved into talking about nothing and everything, from childhood stories to fictional ones.
âWhy would you read a book about batshit insane things happening?â You joked, asking in between bites when the food came.
âCatch-22 is not just crazy things happening.â He explained. âItâs a critique on military bureaucracy and the struggle for individual sanity-and Iâm boring you.â
You shook your head, giggling. âNo, I like listening to people talk about things theyâre passionate about.â
âWhat are you then?â He asked. âPassionate about?â
âDo you ask everyone that?â
âOnly passionate people.â
You went quiet, taking time to think. The only one you could settle on was. âPeople not being assholes to each other for no reason.â
âAmen.â He held up his cup before drinking from it. âYou got an example?â
You smiled despite how inappropriate it was. âYou remember Covid?â
âI want to forget it.â You both chuckled.
Shaking your head, you said. âI did an internship after restrictions started lessening, and the agency was shit. There was barely any training, but they had me supervise a visit between a dad and his son by myself.â
âAre you serious?â He sounded upset.
You nodded, telling the story as if it was a normal one. âIt was fine for the first hour, but then he started yelling at the kid. He was like three years old, knocked down his Lego tower, and that was what set the dad off. I tried to keep the peace, but he just kept screaming. He never hit either of us, but he said he would, and he kept getting too close. I didnât know what else to do, so I carried the kid out to my car. Dad followed us, yelling in my ear, took off his mask and spat on me. Had to go into quarantine after that, so that was fun.â
Michaelâs jaw nearly fell to the table. âWhat the hell?â
âWhat happened after?â
You snorted. âMy stepdad gave them hell. I wasnât embarrassed at all, they were unprofessional. He said heâd beat up the dad too. I told him I wouldnât bail him out, but I wouldâve; just wanted to not spend money on something avoidable.â
He hummed. âReverse psychology.â
âComes in handy.â You asked him. âYou got a Covid story like that? I meanâŚI know itâs different and you donât have to-.â
âThat was your worst Covid story?â He interrupted. When you nodded, he took a minute, eyes dropped to the table. He said. âI had a favorite person at work; Iâm guessing you do too. I donât know if yours is a mentor but mine was. His name was Montgomery Adamson. Even after knowing him for twenty years, he was always Dr. Adamson to me.â
Michael took a deep breath, dropping his gaze again. His voice grew heavier. âHe retired just a few months before Covid started and was back in as a patient. He went on the ECMO, then a little girl came in andâŚhe was on it for seventeen days; we had to take him off to try and save her. She still died butâŚthat was fun.â
Hearing him repeat the ending to your story only solidified just how traumatic it all was. You had trouble finding what to say at first, then.
âYou were close with him?â
He nodded. âVery. MyâŚmy dad was in and out of my life, so Dr. Adamson wasâŚyou know.â
You reached over and placed your hand on his; something about it all told you it was fine this time. He didnât move it.
Michael smiled. âWorked in the field for decades but was still the sweetest person Iâve ever known. Smart as hell but could explain a kidâs injury or illness in a way theyâd understand.â
And conversation fell back into light. Not because you both didnât want to acknowledge the dark, but because of just how it happened. After you both paid for your dinner (this wasnât a date), he offered to walk you to your car (this wasnât a date).
Yet, a story kept you both from doing so.
âYou did not!â You laughed as you left.
âIt was my first double shift!â He defended.
âSomeone puts on âMista Tung Twistaâ, and the first thing you asked was: âIs this French?â!â Â
âI want to see you function after staying up for twenty-four hours on the job.â
âI have,â you sassed. âand Iâve never mixed up two languages.â
He snorted. âAlright, what have you done?â
âRemember the shitty internship I had?â You didnât wait for an answer. âRight before the botched supervised visitation, my other case was a fourteen-year-old. She snuck out one night, and I somehow managed to track down the shitty house party she was at. I donât remember a lot besides screaming, âIâm calling your parents!â and then the girl I was looking after said so proudly, âIâm a ward of the state!ââ
It wasnât funny when she said it, and it wasnât funny when you told the story, but both times you doubled over in laughter and so did Michael.
âThat-!â He wheezed. âThatâs a mouthful.â
âNo, itâs because she was so happy to say it!â You tried to stand up straight as you both tried to walk to your car, but leaned against the wall, still cackling. The only source of light around you was the moon held high in the night sky.
Neither of you could speak, only laugh until it hurt. While you both took heaving breaths of air, your eyes met, and your laughter slowed. Staring at one another, it was only then you realized how close you stood.
Michaelâs breath caressed your cheek as you glanced at him, inhaling heavily. His eyes poured into yours, and you couldnât look away. Well, unless it was his lips, but only for a moment.
You leaned in, kissing him.
It was too quick. You pulled away, as if his lips burnt you.
âIâm so sorry. I shouldnât-.â
He leaned into you, pressing his lips back to yours. It was ravenous the way you kissed him, as if youâd forgotten the feeling. Wrapping your arms around his neck, you dared to bring him closer. He went willingly, one hand sliding to the back of your neck to keep your head off the hard wall behind you, and his other hand circling your waist.
When his knee inched its way in between your legs, you pulled away with a gasp, staring up at him. His breath was warmer now.
âWhatâŚâ he whispered. âWhat do you want?â
âYou.â You didnât miss a beat.
He smiled; the same smile he had rebuked himself for having because he couldnât control his face around women. Kissing your forehead, he whispered. âOkay.â
You walked hand-in-hand together to his car, him opening the door for you. The car ride was silent, both of you sneaking glances just to see the other smiling so stupidly. You arrived in front of his house in a matter of minutes, letting yourself out.
Michael opened the door, turning on the lights. It was a modest, single-level house. Nothing too fancy, considering you could only imagine how much time he spent at the hospital. Still, there was something so him about it.
In this economy? Youâd marry him on the spot if he asked, just to own a house.
âItâs not the best butâŚâ he tried to make conversation as you both slipped off your shoes and jackets.
 âI like it.â You nodded.
He huffed, grinning uncomfortably. âI havenât done this in a while.â
You had no idea if he meant a one nightstand, or sex in general. Still, where you were hot and bothered, you were endeared. Approaching him, you pressed a chaste kiss to his cheek.
Taking his hand in yours, you led him to the couch in his living room. Your lips met his as you sat beside him, your arms wrapping around his shoulders. His hands went lower, one to your waist, the other to drape your leg over his hip, halfway pulling you into his lap. You hummed into his mouth, pleasantly surprised at his assertion.
You felt like you could drown yourself in him the longer his lips were on yours. Breathing be damned, there was something so exhilarating about having to gasp for air just to never separate from him. You felt the tent in his pants grow between your legs, and instinctively, you rolled your hips.
Swallowing his muffled moan, you continued to move against him, your hand trailing down his chest to the waistband of his pants. Your fingers hadnât even slipped in before Michael took your hand.
âNo, I-.â He heaved. âI need to taste you.â
Blood rushed to your face first before it traveled through the rest of your body. Once the initial shock wore off (because you barely knew anyone who wanted to go down on you), a wry grin formed.
âWho am I to stop you?â You answered.
He smiled, kissing your hand then pulling you onto your feet. Adding onto your surprise, he took you to his room and laid you gently down onto the bed.
âSuch a gentleman.â You teased as he fiddled with your jeans.
Michael rested his chin on your lap. âI donât think youâre going to be saying that after this.â
He opened your jeans and carefully slipped them down your legs. He breathed deeply, eyes trained in your clothed center before up at you. âYou can say no; at any point.â
âWhen I told you reverse psychology comes in handy, I didnât mean for you to use it now.â
He grinned, dipping his head and pressing a kiss to your stomach. A shiver ran through your body as he carefully pulled your lace panties down.
âYouâre beautiful.â He sighed, his breath caressing your bare cunt.
It was a reflex to deflect, to make a joke. Yet, for the first time, you didnât feel the need to as Michael shouldered his way further between your thighs, draping your legs over his shoulders. He left a string of kisses from your calf to an inch away from your core.
But when he lifted the hood of your clit with his fingers and pressed his mouth to it? A stuttering mewl left your lips like no other.
His tongue licked up your strip as you laid flat on the bed. His arm tugged you closer to the edge, as if you werenât close enough for him. His nose rested in the patch of your pubic hair, momentarily bumping against your clitoris as you moved against him. You threaded your fingers through his hair, meaning to ground yourself, only to begin tugging on the strands.
He groaned into you, adding a new wave fluttering within your stomach. His tongue moved as if he was trying to spell words with it. Words that you would never know, but just the thought of them alone brought heat to your body. You drew your gaze down, only to be greeted by his own eyes staring into yours. It was too much, tossing your head back. You whimpered his name as the feeling came closer, and closer, and closer.
Your legs trembled as you released your final cry, feeling his tongue pulse within you. You tried to catch your breath, but Michael didnât stop. Still with his face tucked between your thighs, he continued like a man starving.
âMichael.â You moaned, a sore attempt at stopping him. The only sounds escaping him were ones of pleasure as his hands encircled your thighs, almost pulling you off the bed. You kept your hands on the mattress, steadying yourself. He kissed your clit with a fervor you didnât know possible. The pleasure was beginning to become uneasy in your stomach.
âMike, Mike!â You mewled, clutching the top of his head and pulling him off. His beard shined with your slick in the moonlight peeking through the window. If his eyes were mirrors, they would have shown your own: overblown and wide as a doeâs. Your gaze trailed down to the bulge straining in his pants.
âI know youâre not gonna let me be the only one naked.â
It sounded sultrier in your head, but from already being fucked out of your mind, and the strangeness of it all, your words sounded like a whine.
This led to silence followed by laughter
âYouâre so impatient.â He shook his head, using the bed as leverage to stand. You slipped your shirt over your head as he did his.
You turned slightly, showing him the clasp of your braw. âCan you help me?â
âI thought you wanted to get me out of my clothes first?â
You looked over his shoulder. His barrel chest was covered in hair, and the Star of David chain settled perfectly over his sternum. âWell, I canât get it on my own.â
âReally?â He scoffed. âYou canât without my help?â
âYou know youâre setting feminism decades back by claiming that.â
You turned to face him. âI know youâre not lecturing me about feminism right now.â
He kissed your nose, pressing his head against yours. âJust wanted to remind you that youâre smart and capable.â
His hands wound behind your back and unlatched your bra, pulling it off to reveal your breasts. You snickered, hands going to the waist of his pants, pulling them and his underwear to the floor.
Immediately, your eyes fell to his sweltering cock as he stood in front of you. Heat rushed from your cheeks to your pussy, still wet from his tongue. Michael took your face into his hands, kissing you too sweetly with a mouth that had completely ravaged you.
You rose to your knees, and he followed, pulling you tightly to him and laying on the bed. You pulled away, sitting on his lap as his dick rested against your stomach. He closed his eyes, his face scrunching as he breathed in and out.
You brushed his face. âYou okay?â
âIâm not gonna last if you keep doing that.â He responded tightly.
He shushed, kissing your wrist and up your arm, pulling you farther down for his mouth to meet your skin. You hummed, running your fingers through his hair. He stopped suddenly, then moved his hand to the nightstand drawer. Pulling it open, he took a condom out, tearing it open.
With his eyes closed, he attempted to slide it on. You bit your tongue to hold in your laugh.
âYou want help?â You asked.
âI can do it.â He said with his eyes still shut, failing miserably.
âYou know,â you held his hands. âyouâre making it harder with your eyes closed.â
âShut up!â He laughed.
You took charge, slipping the condom onto him with practiced ease. It helped there was enough precum on the tip of his cock. Breathing through your nose, you settled one hand on his chest to steady yourself, and the other around his bulge. You sank down, taking him inch by inch.
The utter of your name brought your eyes back to Michael, and you rested your other hand on his chest. He gripped your hips lightly, never looking away from you. When the stretch no longer felt unpleasant, you rolled your body.
He sucked in a tight breath beneath you, his fingers sinking deeper. Rolling your hips again, you created an easy rhythm. Your clit caressed his pubic hair just enough to create friction. Michael sat up, holding your hips down as he thrusted up into you, sounding like a bitch in heat. Your arms wrapped around his neck to balance yourself, the new speed hitting you just right.
Your tight moans stroked his ear as he cupped your breast, still rocking into you. Resting your head on his shoulder, you looked down between you. His cock sliding in and out seamlessly was the first thing that caught your eye. Then, it was the sharp points of his Star of David medal piercing your chest ever so lightly.
There was something so hypnotizing about it, you couldnât take your eyes away. You drew your mouth down, the chain between your teeth, intending to kiss the pendant over Michaelâs heart.
He came with a groan right from his chest, hiding his face in your shoulder. You breathed together with no space between each other. He grew soft as you sat there, his lips gently tracing a line of kisses from your shoulder to the shell of your ear.
âIâm sorry.â Was the first thing he said.
âItâs okay.â You kissed his cheek, pulling out of him and flopping onto the bed.
Michael slipped the condom off, leaving the bed and entering the bathroom just a few feet away. After washing his hands, he laid back down. Encasing your left breast in his hand, his index finger encircled your areola. Your breath hitched, and he grinned from ear to ear.
âJust give me a minute.â
He lowered himself, taking your right breast into his mouth. You grew wetter than the spit from his mouth on your skin. His hand left your breast and moved to the apex of your thighs, teasing your clit. You bucked your hips against his hand, begging for more.
âShhh.â He moved his free hand to cradle the back of your head.
âI swear,â you heaved. âif you donât-.â
He took his hand away, taking yours in his and kissing the back of it. âI told you to give me a minute.â
You wanted to lash out at his taunts; mouth off at him and see what heâd do. But, you were prideful, so you just stood up and walked into the bathroom. After relieving yourself, you went back out and was welcomed by Michael enveloping you into his arms and tossing you onto the bed with him.
 He kissed your brow. âAre you mad at me?â
You snorted. âDepends.â
He smiled the same smile that drew you to him. A smile, just for a moment, you caught a glimpse of what he might have looked like years ago; when he was your age. Michael kissed your other brow before rolling over and grabbing another condom. There wasnât a song or dance this time as it slid on. It didnât get past him how you watched with hooded eyes.
âYouâre beautiful.â He loomed above you, kissing your jaw. âYou know that?â
You smirked. âI know. I just didnât want to say anything.â
His booming laughter resounded in your neck as he trailed his lips all over your skin. He placed himself between your legs, teasing your entrance. Wrapping your arms around his neck, you brought him close to you. His hand gripped yours, pressing one last kiss to your head before slipping into you.
He was slower this time; gentler. It was almost as if this wasnât your first time sleeping together, your bodies moved in tandem. Even with every thrust of his hips, you couldnât feel much outside of how sensitive your clit was from the previous orgasm. Still, it was just nice to be so close to him; how his pants echoed in your ear, your cheek and chest pressing against his, your legs wrapped around his waistâŚ
Michaelâs hand brushed your face. âYou okay?â
His movements slowed until they stopped. âDo you feel good?â
Pursing your lips, you couldnât look him in the eye. âI donât really feel anything.â
You thought heâd be angry; pull away from you and tell you to leave. Instead, he smiled, unashamed and pulled out of you. âWhat do you need?â
Taking a deep breath, you ran your eyes down his body. Michael was breathing as if heâd run a marathon, yet he was still asking for your pleasure without a hint of slowing down. Kissing his cheek, you draped your legs over his shoulders. Something in his eyes darkened, but his lips were just as sweet when he kissed yours. He slipped back into you as if he was never meant to leave, his thrusts bringing a more deliberate, even pace.
He drove deeper into you, hitting the right spot immediately. Your moans were like music to Michaelâs ears; rhythmic, differing pitches, soft at first before it crescendos into a chorus of breathy groans.
âThatâs it.â He soothed as your pussy tightened around him. âThatta girl.â
His praise only heightened your arousal. You were barely kissing now, more so just breathing into his mouth as your jaw bobbed with your growing pleasure. He held both of your hands above your head, driving himself farther into you.
âYouâre so-fuck,â he grunted. âfuck, youâre perfect.â
Words could not form out of your mouth, only sounds you never heard yourself make before. Your sweat glued you together, there was nothing but the music of pants and moans filling the room as you moved together. It was filthy, it was raw, but it was real.
You didnât even know your orgasm swept over you until your body was spasming with aftershocks. Michael soon followed behind, trying his best not to collapse on top of you. You dropped your legs and ran a hand up and down his back as you breathed together.
âI donât know how Iâm gonna walk tomorrow.â You thought aloud.
A muffled chuckle tickled your neck. âYouâll be fine.â
You hummed a ânoâ sound. âDonât doubt your abilities.â
âWho said I did?â He pulled out of you, wrapping up the condom then throwing it in the trash in the bathroom. He laid back down next to you, tossing his right arm over your chest and kissing your shoulder.
Trailing your fingers over his arm, in the corner of your eye, you saw something on his bicep. Sitting up to get a better look, you saw Latin words written in ink.
âIâm dumb, what does this say?â You asked.
 ââLove your fateââ He chuckled, then showed his left arm, revealing another tattoo. ââRemember you will dieââ
âI imagine you got those on an impulsive night out when you were younger?â You teased.
He shrugged. âSomething like that.â
âWhat were you like?â You found yourself asking. âWhen you were in medical school?â
Michael released a long breath. âI donât knowâŚmore hopeful, I guess? I wanted to be a surgeon, actually.â
âDonât act so shocked.â He teased. âYeah, I thought I was hot shit. Was kind of a jerk sometimes too.â
âWhat made you change to ER?â
âThe people. Patients and doctors alike.â
âScrew the nurses, I guess.â
He laughed, kissing your cheek. âAnd the nurses.â
You both lay there, relishing each otherâs presence. The curtain had parted, letting the moonlight in and basking upon your body. You got to see more of his room as well. Surprisingly, it was spotless. You imagined it would have been littered with dirty laundry because he probably didnât have time to organize clothing, but then you realized he just didnât have time to be dirty.
As you psychoanalyzed his bedroom, you felt a line of kisses on your skin. You snorted.
âYouâre not tired?â
âNot at all.â He came back up to your shoulder, lightly biting the skin. You sighed at the feeling of him sliding his hand over your side to fondle your breast. He was pressed up against you, and after another minute, you felt him against your ass.
Needless to say, you were impressed, and your gentle moans only confirmed it.
Humming, you looked over and saw him reaching over on the nightstand. There were no more condoms.
âItâs alright.â You whispered. âIâm on the pill.â
You expected him to deny you, and you wouldâve understood. Instead, he was quiet.
âAre you sure?â He asked.
Him massaging your ass was his response. You rolled onto your stomach, not having the strength to even raise yourself to your knees. Michael lifted your hips before smoothly sliding back into you. A pleasant groan left your lips as he entered, feeling him instead of rubber. He slowly thrusted into you, resuming his kisses down your neck to your spine.
âYou spoil me,â he breathed into you. âyou know that?â
You could only groan into the pillow, his thrusts creating friction between your clit and the mattress every time you moved together. Your sensitivity to all of him seemed to wash away and overwhelm you at the same time. You felt Michaelâs hand grip the back of yours that rested above your head. It was certainly a little awkward to hold, but that didnât stop him from intertwining his fingers with yours as he sat up on his knees, pistoning his hips into you.
âMike, Mike, Mike.â You babbled, pinching your eyes shut from the pressure and pleasure of it all.
You couldnât make out any of the words he whispered into your skin, but it didnât matter. His actions and care towards you spoke louder: His chest pressed against your back, moments of the cool, metallic feel of his pendant caressing your skin alongside the sharp edges of the hair on his chest. Just as you felt the beginnings of another orgasm, he stopped with a sharp groan.
âWhat?â You drunkenly mumbled, turning your head to see him. âAre you okay?â
He hissed, letting go of your hand to brace himself on the bed. His other hand cradled his back. âYeah, I justâŚâ
Slipping out of you, he slowly lowered himself back onto the bed, breathing evenly. You brushed his face with your hands.
He laughed suddenly, making you flinch. He kissed your palms. âMy age catching up with me.â
âFuckâŚdid you hurt yourself?â
âNo, just did too much. Iâm sorry.â
You shook your head, laying beside him. âDonât be.â
It was just you, him, and your slowing breaths. After moments of complete silence, Michael stood up and went to his dresser. He opened the top drawer, taking out a large shirt. âSit up.â
You did, and he slipped it over your head, helping you put your arms through the holes. It smelled exactly like him, and the material was perhaps one of the softest things you ever felt. You laid back down, sinking into both the mattress and his oversized shirt. After slipping on his boxers, Michael tossed an arm over your waist, pressing his lips to the side of your head.
Neither of you said a thing, still just relishing in each otherâs presence. YetâŚin the silence, your mind lingered to perhaps the worst thing it could have that night. The longer it wore on you, the more tempting it became to put it into words.
No matter how much you resisted it, it won in the end.
 âYouâre a doctorâŚright?â
Michael glanced at you, grinning like a fool. âIf this is your way of getting me to do a thorough exam, Iâm done for the night.â
You didnât say anything, already feeling tears spring into your eyes. You had to say something; you had to laugh, tell him you meant nothing of it.
âHey,â he sat up, placing his hand on your cheek. âwhatâs wrong?â
âIâm sorry.â You sniveled, pressing the heels of your hands to hide your eyes. âI donât know why IâŚâ You began to get up. âIâm ruining this, Iâll go-.â
âYouâre not ruining anything.â He soothed, setting his hand on your shoulder. You were silent, staring at the crack in the curtains of his windows. His hand made its way to the back of your neck, his thumb stroking your skin. âJust tell me whatâs up.â
You didnât have to beg him to comfort you. It was second nature. How was it that you never experienced a tenderness like this?
Sinking down onto the mattress, you still avoided his gaze, but the words left your mouth.
âI-I quit my job months ago and I got one at a hospital last week.â You confessed. âI wasâŚthere was a little girl, and she got into an accident but-but I thought she was okay. I just went out to talk to someone and she died. Her name was Molly, she lost her first tooth in the accident, and I had to tell her parents-.â
You covered your mouth before a sob could escape. You stopped crying, but it still felt like the entire world was trying to swallow you whole. Michael stood up and you watched as he went into the bathroom. He came back out with a washcloth, and he sat back on the bed, cleaning you up.
âYour first death?â He asked.
âSo young.â You responded.
He didnât say anything right away, and you knew he was trying to find the correct words. Then, when he finished running the washcloth over you, he kissed your hairline.
âIt shouldnât ever be normalized.â He started. âIâve been in healthcare for years, and those ones especially feel the same as if it were the first time. I wonât lie; it doesnât get easier, and the job isnât for everyone. Still, the thing is, if your mind is in the right place, youâll get stronger. It doesnât mean youâre weak whatever you choose, but itâs a part of the job. I wish I had something better to say.â
You shook your head. âYou said it best.â
Michael gave a tender smile, laying next to you and encasing you in his arms. âYou know IâŚI never really talked about Adamson to a lot of people.â
What else was there to say? You couldâve (and probably shouldâve) prodded him more about it, or say âThank you for being vulnerable with meâ. But you were exhausted, and you had a feeling he didnât want to speak on it anymore; just let you know. So, you kissed the apples of his cheeks and clung onto him before drifting off to sleep.
It was some of the best rest youâd ever got.
Even when he stirred and woke you up, you still felt relaxed enough to keep your eyes closed. Even when you heard him shuffling around the room, you said nothing.
Then, his kiss on your forehead brought you back to the land of the living.
Humming, you rubbed your eyes, only for him to shush you.
You didnât wake up again until the light poked in through the slit of the curtains. Stretching as you got up, you found your clothes folded on his dresser with a note on top of it.
âI had to go in early. I only work ten hours today. You can stay if you want. I had a great night. I hope you have a good day. -Mike.â
You could tell he wrote it in a rush and perhaps didnât have the best words to say so early in the morning. Still, you were happy he at least left a note. At the same timeâŚwhat were you going to do for ten hours? It was your day off, you had no idea when he left, so what was the point?
After getting dressed, and taking a few more minutes to deliberate, you left.
Then, you realized you left your car back in the restaurant parking lot the night before. While it was about a five-minute drive, you looked on your phone and saw that it would be a thirty-minute walk. You werenât in a position to spend money on an Uber, so you decided to bite the bullet.
After taking a glance in the mirror before you left, you hoped no one would look you in the eye as you walked down the sidewalk.
Of course, ten minutes into your journey, as the cold, morning air bit your skin through the fabric of your clothes, a car pulled up beside you.
The last voice you ever wanted to hear called your name.
Eyes wide, you looked and saw Jack Abbott slowly driving beside you. He mirrored your look of utter surprise.
You couldnât say anything at first. This was something that shouldâve happened when you were in high school, or even college, not now.
âHiâŚâ Was all you could manage.
âAre you alright?â He quickly asked.
âYou live on the other side of town, what the hell are you doing here?!â
What were you supposed to say? âSleeping with a guy older than youâ? No, you settled on. âTaking a walk.â
With that, he parked the car and got out, stopping in front of you.
âWhat day is it today?â
You blinked. âSunday?â
âOkay,â he took your arm, trying to lead you into the car.
You escaped his hold. âIâm not in a fugue state, Jack.â
âWell, I wouldnât know that, would I?â You havenât seen him like this in a while. Hands on his hips, eyes intense and voice tight with the harshness but concern all parents had. âIâll ask you again: what are you doing here?â
Pursing your lips, you glanced down at your feet. It was a walk of shame, and you both knew that. You also knew he wouldnât stop asking questions.
You shook your head. âJust my pride.â
He sighed, debating on whether to talk more about it or not. Then, he said. âGet in, Iâll drive you home.â
âI left my car in a parking lot, you can just drive me there.â
âGot yourself a real Cassanova, didnât you?â He scoffed.
âHey, thatâs the same thing I told Mom when she brought you home.â
Jack only responded with a slight glare as if he didnât instigate it; to be fairâŚyeah, maybe Michael wasnât the best considering your options were to either spend money, walk half an hour, or wait for ten hours.
Begrudgingly, you accepted Jackâs offer to drive the short distance to the restaurant. At least, it shouldâve been short. Some dipshits apparently decided it was the perfect time to get into an accident on a major intersection. So, there you two were, experiencing shared suffering being in a car together.
When flipping through the radio to fill the silence didnât work, it was Jack who took a deep breath and spoke first.
âWe never really debriefed on your week.â
You pursed your lips. âNight shift was fine.â
âYou excited for day?â
âTheyâre more type A, so take with that what you will.â He said, and when you didnât respond, he asked. âJust to really make sure youâre not dissociating, when do you start?â
âTuesday.â You sighed.
âThe Attendingâs Robby, who means well but has a stick up his ass sometimes, so donât take it personally.â
That caught your attention. âI thought Iâd have Al-Hashimi?â
âShe had a family emergency and should be back on Wednesday.â
You thought thatâd be the end of it, but alas, traffic was still horrible. Soon enough, Jack asked.
âHowâre you doing though? Really?â
Swallowing, you knew what he really was asking: âHow are you coping with a little girl dying?â
âI donât know how youâve done this since you were likeâŚtwenty-five?â You answered.
âAbout that age.â He shrugged. âWhat youâre doing is something I could never do.â
You furrowed your brow. âBullshit, you have to play therapist and doctor.â
âYou and the other social workers take all of the emotional aspect on.â He looked at you. âIf I need to, I can go back out and work on someone else. You though? You have to sit with it, and with the people you need to break bad news to.â
It was true. So true, that you felt the walls chipping.
âI havenât been sleeping well since then.â You confessed. âI sleep, but I still feel tired when I wake up. Even on days off.â
He nodded. âI wish I could say it gets better-.â
âBut it doesnât.â You sighed.
It felt strange to hear that from him after Michael told you. Still, it wasnât the first time you had even heard it; it was such a common, somewhat performative, motivational phrase. Didnât make it any less true.
âLook,â he said when you went quiet. âIâd let you know if I thought you couldnât do this job. Iâve done this for almost twenty-five years, being an attending for thirteen of them, and Iâve seen all types come and go. Iâve seen recently graduated nurses quit within the first ten minutes, med students throw up after their first bloody patient, all of it. You wanna know what though? Iâve seen all of that shit happen on the same day, and a lot still stay. Few months ago, when Pittfest happened? Two med students, an intern, and a second year had their first day. How many stayed?â
âAll of them.â It wasnât like it was a twist.
âBut guess what? Everyone who I said abandoned ship? I donât judge them.â
âYeah, right.â You scoffed.
âI really donât.â He didnât sound defensive. âThe point is that while I think you can do this, and that thereâs proof youâve rocked the job, you have to listen to yourself. If you want to stop, if you want to keep going, all that matters to me is that youâre okay.â
A simple sentiment you never thought heâd express; at least, outright. Dare say you feltâŚvalidated. Again, you didnât say anything, staring ahead at the traffic beginning to clear up. Tears tried to pierce through your eyes, but you blinked them away.
âThank you.â Was all you could say.
You never hated him; well, you did sometimes but in the same way you wake up in a bad mood and donât want to talk to anyone the whole day, but then you do. There was a new understanding between the two of you. The rest of the car ride was silent, but not unpleasant.
âAlright.â Jack began when you got out of the car to the restaurant parking lot. âCall me if you need anything, okay?â
He said that a lot when you were a teenager, and you never thought youâd hear it again. There was something nice about him being worried about you. You gave him a smile.
He nodded and drove off. Sighing, you unlocked your car and sat inside of it. The week prior was rough; there was no doubt about that. It was something you never really had to do before, or at least in a while. Juggling all the patientâs emotional, and sometimes spiritual, needs. You had an idea itâd be worse during the day; more people, more of them fully awake and probably ready to bitch at you.
But thatâs what you signed up for, and it wasnât the first time you had to do difficult things. You also knew a few people coming into the day shift too; well, you hoped they worked the same shift and werenât on their days off.
Your mind drifted back to Michael. On one hand, you felt bad you didnât leave a note, on the otherâŚwas he really expecting you to stay at his house for ten hours? You didnât feel used per say, and you understood that he had to leaveâŚbut it still hurt.
You had no idea when youâd ever see him again. The more you thought about it in your car in the restaurant parking lot, you realized you knew the strangest things about him and didnât know the most basic.
You didnât know his phone number but knew his coffee order.
You didnât know his favorite color but knew he lived with his grandma because his father was neglectful and his mother was dead.
You didnât even know his last name but knew where he lived.
Sighing, you pressed your head on the wheel. It was official: You were having a mid-youth crisis for sleeping with him the same way he was most likely having a mid-life crisis.
With that, you understood nothing serious would come from it; but it was all serious to you. From sharing your vulnerabilities, to sharing your bodies. It most likely wasnât to him, considering how he left you.
It wasnât the time though. Partners could come and go from your life, and while you didnât feel young, you still were (in the grand scheme of things). At that moment, you had a job to do; one where you anticipated it to be harsher during the day shift.
So, with newfound vigor, you started the car and began to drive home to savor your last few days off. You had no idea what Tuesday would bring, but you had a good feeling.
And that didnât happen very often.