summary . . . you're a respiratory therapist working in a busy ER, where your life is already defined by long shifts, grief, and impossible decisions. The one constant in it all is Jack Abbott—your father's best friend and the only person who's ever made the chaos feel a little quieter. What starts as familiarity and unspoken tension slowly becomes something neither of you can ignore. But when feelings finally surface, everything that connects you also threatens to tear your life apart. Some things are never meant to be simple.
warnings . . . this story includes angst, grief, medical trauma, and emotional breakdowns. It also explores an age gap relationship (20 years) and the "best friend's daughter" trope. Characters make messy, emotional decisions and struggle to say what they really feel. Heavy hurt/comfort themes throughout. All characters and events are fictional. This is a work of fanfiction, created as a form of fan art and creative expression.
The ER in the afternoon had its own geography: the fluorescent hum that never stopped, the linoleum scuffed pale by ten thousand hurried footsteps, the particular silence of a hospital holding its breath between traumas.
Bambi knew every inch of it. Had known it for three years, since she'd graduated respiratory therapy school and landed here, since she'd stopped being her father's daughter and started being-what? A colleague. A peer. Someone Jack could look at without seeing a child he'd watched graduate high school.
Someone he could still call Bambi after all this time.
She'd earned the nickname her first day, fresh out of school, hydroplaning three feet across wet tile and catching herself on a crash cart. Jack had been the one to haul her upright, laughing, his hand warm and steady on her elbow. Her father's best friend. Twenty years her senior. The man who'd taught her to tie her shoes while her dad worked doubles, who'd attended her respiratory therapy graduation with a bouquet and a proud smile that made her chest ache.
The man she was desperately, stupidly in love with.
"You're staring at the coffee machine like it owes you money."
She didn't jump. She'd learned not to jump around Jack, learned to modulate her reactions, her breathing, the way her eyes tracked him across a room. Learned to be casual.
"Contemplating my choices," she said, not turning. "There's a difference."
"Is there?" His voice came closer. Scrub sleeves rustling, that particular gait she could identify blindfolded-slight favoring of his left knee, old soccer injury, the one he never mentioned and she only knew because she'd memorized everything. "Your dad asked me to cover. Plumber's coming at 5 to fix the pipe in the basement. Said he couldn't trust the guy alone in the house."
There it was. The explanation for why Jack was here, two hours early, filling space her father should have occupied. The domestic detail-her father's house, aging pipes, strangers in the basement-grounding them both in the reality of who Jack was to her family. Who he'd always been.
"That pipe's been leaking since I was in high school," she said, reaching for a cup.
Jack's hand got there first. Poured. Added the splash of oat milk she pretended not to need, the two sugars she absolutely did.
"Some things take time to fix," he said, and held the cup out to her.
Their fingers brushed. She didn't flinch. She'd gotten very good at not flinching, at accepting these small kindnesses as the currency of their friendship-colleagues, her father's friend, nothing more.
But she saw the way Dr. Cassie McKay looked up from her charting, eyebrows raised. Saw the way the resident paused in the doorway, watching Jack save the chair beside him during rounds, watching him check Bambi's tray to confirm she'd eaten something before the night got busy.
Watching him find her first, always first, when the trauma bay doors opened and the paramedics called out vitals.
Tiny things. Meaningless separately.
"You're in early," Cassie said to Jack, not quite a question.
"Covering for Bambi's dad."
Cassie's eyes moved between them. Assessing. Knowing.
Bambi took her coffee and sat in the chair Jack had saved, close enough to smell his soap-something clean, medical, familiar-and felt the weight of months pressing down on her chest. The love she'd been hiding so carefully, the wanting she'd learned to bury under professionalism and distance and the sheer impossibility of what she felt.
Jack pretended not to notice how she looked at him. Had been pretending for months.
The problem was that everyone else was beginning to.
Jack came through the ambulance bay doors at 6:02 PM, still in civilian clothes-dark jeans, gray sweater, leather jacket that had aged into something soft and expensive-looking. His scrubs were in his bag, his shift didn't start for fifty-eight minutes, and every head in the ER turned to watch him cross the floor.
Bambi was managing a ventilator in bay three, adjusting settings for a COPD exacerbation. She didn't look up. She didn't need to; she felt him enter the room like a pressure change, like the moment before a storm when the air goes heavy and electric.
"Dr. Abbot," Santos said, too tired to be suspicious over his timing, "you're here early."
"Paperwork," Jack said. The lie was smooth, practiced. He'd used it three times this week.
But there was no paperwork waiting at the physicians' station. Everyone knew it. Langdon knew it, looking up from his charting with that knowing expression. The residents knew it, nudging their colleague. Even the patient Bambi was working with-a seventy-year-old who'd smoked for fifty years-seemed to sense something, his eyes tracking from Bambi to Jack and back again.
Jack didn't go to the nurses' station. He went to the coffee machine, poured two cups, added oat milk to one, two sugars, and carried them both to bay three.
"You're going to burn yourself out," Bambi said, not looking up from the ventilator settings. "Coming in early every day."
She felt him smile. Felt it like warmth against her cheek.
"Twice," he corrected, soft. "Tuesday doesn't count. I had a meeting."
"Jack." She finally looked at him, the nickname slipping out unguarded, too intimate for the department, for her father's presence somewhere behind them, for the eyes she could feel pressing against her back like hands. "You don't have to-"
"I know." He set the coffee down where she could reach it, close enough that his sleeve brushed her shoulder. "I know I don't have to."
But he stayed. Leaned against the counter in his civilian clothes, drinking his own coffee, watching her work with an attention that felt like touch. Around them, the ER hummed its usual chaos, but in bay three, time had gone strange-soft-edged, intimate, the two of them suspended in something everyone else could see but neither would name.
At 6:47, he finally changed into scrubs. At 6:52, her father walked past, paused, looked from Jack to Bambi to the two coffee cups sitting side by side on the counter.
Robby didn't say anything. He didn't need to.
The silence was loud enough.
Michael Robinvitch had spent thirty years learning how to read a room. It was part of the job: the subtle shifts in a trauma bay when a case went bad, the tension in a family's shoulders before they asked the question they didn't want answered, the way nurses communicated silently across a crowded ER when something was about to break.
He knew how to see what people were trying to hide.
What he didn't know was how to stop seeing it once he'd started.
It began with annoyance. The jokes from residents, the raised eyebrows from nursing staff, the way Santos had asked Bambi if she and Jack were together like it was a reasonable question. Robby had shut that down with a look, then buried himself in administrative work, convinced it was just gossip, just boredom, just the department's endless appetite for drama.
Then he started noticing.
It was 7 PM, a multi-car pileup, the trauma bay flooded with bodies and blood and the controlled panic of a bad night. Robby was across the room, intubating a chest trauma, when he looked up and saw it: Jack's eyes sweeping the chaos, searching, finding Bambi in seconds where she was bagging a patient near the door.
Jack didn't look away. Not for three full minutes, not until Bambi glanced up, met his gaze, and something in her shoulders settled. The tension in her jaw released. She nodded once, barely perceptible, and went back to her patient with steadier hands.
Robby's hands paused on the laryngoscope.
He started watching after that. Really watching, the way he watched residents for competence or patients for deterioration. He saw how Bambi's whole body changed when Jack entered a room-not performative, not conscious, just... relief. Like she'd been holding her breath and hadn't noticed until she could finally exhale.
He saw Jack's hand hover at the small of her back when they squeezed past each other in the corridor, not touching, just... there. Ready. He saw the way Jack checked her tray during long shifts, the way he knew her coffee order, the way he stepped between her and angry family members before Robby could even move.
Protective. Automatic. Unconscious.
Robby told himself it was friendship. Told himself Jack had known Bambi since she was in pigtails, that of course he cared about her, that the age gap alone made the thought absurd-Jack was forty-six, Bambi was twenty-six, and Robby had been there for every year between.
But then came the night shift handoff, 7 PM, Robby staying late to finish a case while Jack came in early. Again. Third time this week.
He watched Jack cross the ER floor in civilian clothes, watched him pause at the coffee machine, add oat milk and two sugars to a cup, and carry it directly to Bambi without asking. Watched her take it without looking up from her chart, her hand finding his sleeve for balance as she stepped back from the counter.
Watched Jack's face in that moment. The softness. The wanting he wasn't hiding because he thought no one was looking.
And for the first time, he wondered if there might actually be something there. Something real. Something that had nothing to do with the age gap or the history or the fact that Jack was his best friend and Bambi was his daughter.
The thought opened up beneath him like a sinkhole.
He went back to his charts. Didn't say anything. But he kept watching, and the terror stayed coiled in his chest, heavy and cold, because he knew Jack-had known him twenty years-and he'd never seen him look at anyone the way he looked at Bambi.
Not a mass casualty. Nothing so dramatic, so organized. Just one of those brutal ER nights when the universe decided that everyone, everywhere, needed medical attention immediately.
It started at 7 AM with a chest pain that turned out to be anxiety, followed by a chest pain that turned out to be a massive MI. Then the pediatric fall. Then the three MVCs in forty minutes. Then the homeless man with frostbite even though it was May, then the executive with chest pain who screamed at her for the wait time, then the grandmother who'd "just felt a little dizzy" and was actually stroking out in the waiting room.
By 2 PM, Bambi had eaten nothing but a granola bar she'd found at the bottom of her bag. Her feet ached in her shoes. Her scrubs had blood on them from a trauma she'd forgotten to change out of, and she couldn't remember the last time she'd sat down.
She was bagging a patient in bay four-a respiratory failure, elderly, family wailing in the corner-when she felt the familiar shift in the room's gravity. Didn't look up. Didn't need to. Jack was standing in the doorway, still in his leather jacket, still fifty minutes early for his shift, and she could feel his eyes find her in the chaos like he'd thrown her a rope.
"Bambi." Her father's voice, sharp, from the attending station. "I need you in two."
She didn't look at Jack. Handed off the bagging to the nurse, wiped her hands, moved toward bay two where her father was examining a belly pain with the focused intensity that meant he was worried.
Jack was still in the doorway when she came out twenty minutes later. Still watching. He held out a coffee, oat milk, two sugars, and she took it without meeting his eyes because her father was watching too, she could feel it, could feel them both like opposing magnetic fields pulling at her exhausted body.
"You need to eat," Jack said. Not a question.
"You're swaying on your feet."
"Jack." The warning in her voice was barely audible, but he heard it. His jaw tightened. He stepped back, just an inch, just enough.
But her father had seen. She knew he'd seen, because when she turned around he was staring at them with an expression she'd never seen before-not anger, not exactly. Something colder. Something afraid.
The shift didn't end. It just kept going, patient after patient, hour after hour, and by the time the evening crew started filtering in, Bambi was running on caffeine and stubbornness and the desperate, bone-deep awareness that Jack was somewhere behind her, still watching, still waiting, still fifty minutes early for a shift that didn't start for another hour.
The patient was seventeen.
That was the part Bambi couldn't shake. Seventeen, with a driver's license still warm from the printer, a cracked phone case with a photo of her dog, parents who'd rushed in behind the ambulance screaming her name like they could pull her back from wherever she'd gone if they just said it loud enough.
Traumatic brain injury. GCS 3 on arrival. They'd worked her for forty minutes before Robby called it, and Bambi had been the one to close her eyes, to smooth her hair, to say the words she'd said a hundred times before: I'm sorry. We did everything we could.
She'd kept moving. That was the trick, the thing they taught you in school that nothing prepared you for. Keep moving. Next patient. The abdominal pain in bay two. The drunk guy in the hallway who needed sutures. The grandmother with the UTI who reminded her of her own grandmother, dead five years now, and somehow that made it worse.
She kept smiling. Kept her voice steady. Kept her hands from shaking when she started an IV on a dehydrated toddler, kept her eyes dry when the mother thanked her, kept her shoulders straight when she walked past the trauma bay where they'd already stripped the gurney and wiped down the rails like the seventeen-year-old had never been there at all.
By 8 PM, she'd been on her feet for thirteen hours. The shift from hell had become the shift that wouldn't end, the kind of day that hollowed you out and left you running on fumes and professional pride.
She made it to the east stairwell before she broke.
It was supposed to be unused. Maintenance access, tucked behind radiology, the stairs that went nowhere useful. She'd found it months ago, her secret place to breathe when the ER became too much. She sat on the concrete step, back against the wall, and let herself finally feel it.
The grief hit like a wave, cold and sudden, pulling her under. She pressed her palms against her eyes, willing the tears back, but they came anyway-hot, ugly, the kind of crying that made your chest hitch and your throat close. Seventeen. She'd been seventeen once. She could have been that girl on the gurney, that girl with the dog on her phone, that girl whose parents would never stop screaming her name.
She didn't hear the door open. Didn't know anyone had found her until she felt the warmth beside her, the presence settling onto the step below hers, close enough to touch but not touching.
Jack's voice. Soft. Broken with something she couldn't name.
She didn't look up. Couldn't. Her face was a mess, snot and tears and the ugly red flush that came with real crying, not movie crying, and she didn't want him to see this, didn't want anyone to see this, but especially not him.
"Go away," she whispered.
"I heard you." He didn't move. Didn't reach for her, though she could feel the tension in him, the wanting to. "I'm not going anywhere."
She laughed then, bitter and wet, the sound tearing out of her like it hurt. "You always do this. You always-" She broke off, swallowed, tried again. "You find me. Every time. Every time I fall apart, there you are, with your coffee and your questions and your-" She gestured helplessly, unable to name the thing he did, the way he made her feel seen without making her feel exposed.
"That's what friends do," he said quietly.
"We're not friends." The words came out sharp, desperate. "We haven't been friends for years, Jack. Don't you get that? Don't you see what this is?"
She finally looked at him. He was still in scrubs, hair mussed from pulling off his cap, eyes red-rimmed and exhausted. He looked as broken as she felt, as hollowed out by the day, by the patient, by everything they couldn't say.
"Do you know what's funny?" she asked, and her voice was strange, distant, like someone else was speaking. "I spend all day trying not to fall in love with you. I wake up and I tell myself, don't look at him that way, don't take the coffee, don't let him save you a seat. And somehow-" She laughed again, broken, hopeless. "Somehow that's the easiest part of my life. The rest of it-" She gestured at the stairwell, at the hospital, at the world. "The rest of it is this. Death and screaming and kids who die for no reason. But you?" She met his eyes, finally, let him see all of it, every humiliating, desperate, impossible thing she felt. "You're the easy part. And that terrifies me."
She watched him process it, watched the words land like blows.
His face went through a dozen emotions in seconds-shock, denial, something that looked almost like pain, and then, finally, something she couldn't read.
"Don't." His voice was rough, scraped raw. "Don't take it back. Don't say you didn't mean it, or you're tired, or-"
"I meant it." The admission cost her nothing now. She was too empty to lie. "I've meant it for months. Maybe longer."
He closed his eyes. She watched his throat work, watched him struggle with something she couldn't see, and for a terrible moment she thought she'd ruined everything. The friendship. The careful distance. The only good thing in her life that she hadn't managed to destroy yet.
Then he opened his eyes, and she saw it. Really saw it.
All this time. All those coffees, those saved seats, those eyes finding hers across the chaos-he'd been fighting the same war, carrying the same weight, wanting the same impossible thing.
"Bambi," he said, and her name had never sounded like that before. Like a prayer. Like a confession of his own.
He moved before she could reach for him. Moved up one step, close enough that their knees touched, close enough that she could smell the soap he used, the coffee on his breath, the particular scent of him that she'd memorized without meaning to. His hand came up, tentative, shaking, and cupped her cheek.
"Tell me to stop," he whispered. "Tell me to walk away. Tell me I'm imagining this, that you don't feel this, that I'm twenty years older than you and your father's best friend and this is wrong-"
"I can't." She leaned into his palm, felt the warmth of his skin against her tear-streaked face. "I've tried. I've been trying for years."
His thumb traced her cheekbone, reverent, terrified. "God, Bambi. Do you know what you do to me? Do you have any idea?"
Not quickly. Not impulsively.
Like a man walking toward a cliff and knowing exactly how far the drop was, knowing the precise velocity of falling, the precise shape of the wreckage at the bottom. He moved through the thickened air of the stairwell as if each inch cost him something irretrievable-his resolve, his distance, the careful walls he'd constructed brick by brick over three years of wanting and refusing to want.
His forehead brushed hers.
The contact was barely there-a whisper of skin against skin, the warmth of him bleeding into her, the faint roughness of his temple where he'd leaned against his hand during a long case. But it stopped her breath. Stopped time. Stopped everything.
For one impossible second the world narrowed to the space between them.
No hospital. No trauma bays with their screaming and their blood. No Robby. No twenty years of history that made this wrong, that made this impossible, that made this the one thing Jack had sworn he would never allow himself to have.
Just the warmth of her breath against his mouth, coffee-sweet and trembling. Just the scent of her shampoo-something cheap and floral, drugstore brand, utterly unlike the sophisticated women he dated and forgot. Just the trembling realization that if he kissed her now, if he closed this final inch, he would never be able to pretend again. Never be able to look at her across a crowded room and call it friendship. Never be able to face Robby over a beer and keep the secret buried in his chest.
He felt the moment he surrendered. Felt it in the loosening of his shoulders, the exhale that shuddered out of him like a man finally releasing a weight he'd carried for years. He was going to do it. He was going to kiss her. He was going to choose her over everything else-his job, his reputation, his best friend, the life he'd built carefully, sensibly, safely.
Bambi's fingers curled into the front of his scrub top.
She was shaking. He could feel it in the tremor of her hands against his chest, in the uneven rhythm of her breathing, in the way she held herself still as if movement might break this spell and send him running again. She wasn't pulling him closer. Wasn't pushing him away. Just holding on, anchoring herself, waiting for him to decide.
And for the first time in months-maybe years-Jack stopped fighting.
He let himself want her. Let himself acknowledge the depth of it, the breadth of it, the way she'd become the first thing he thought of in the morning and the last thing at night. Let himself imagine what it might be like to stop running, to stop pretending, to simply have this. Have her.
His hand came up. Found her cheek. Cupped it with a gentleness that belied the violence of his heartbeat, the roaring in his ears, the certainty that this was both the best and worst decision he would ever make.
"Bambi," he whispered, and her name was a vow, a promise, a beginning.
The sound was jarring, violent, tearing through the moment like a siren. Jack flinched, his hand dropping from her face, and she saw the reality crash back into him-the hospital, his job, her father, the twenty years between them that suddenly mattered again.
He didn't look at the phone. Didn't move to answer it. But the spell was broken.
"Don't." He stepped back, two steps down, putting distance between them. When he looked at her again, his expression had gone remote, shuttered, the way he looked at difficult families or combative patients. "You think this is easy for me? You think I haven't noticed?"
Bambi's heart stopped. "Jack-"
"I've known you for twenty years." Every word sounded painful, dragged out against his will. "I held you at your mother's funeral. I taught you to drive. You're Robby's daughter."
"I know." Somehow that hurt worse. The acknowledgment, the finality of it. "That's the problem."
She was standing now too, her legs unsteady, her face still wet with tears she couldn't control. "Then why? If you know I'm not a child, if you know I choose this-"
"Because I'm twenty years older than you." His jaw tightened. "Because I've known you since you were six years old. Because if I let myself have this..." His voice broke, finally, the crack she'd been waiting for, but it wasn't surrender. It was grief. "I'd lose everything. My job. My reputation. My best friend. The only family I've got."
The stairwell went silent. Somewhere above them, a door opened and closed, footsteps fading, but down here the air had gone solid, unbreathable.
"You're asking me to choose," she said, barely audible. "Between you and-"
"I'm not asking you to choose anything." He was already moving toward the door, his shoulders rigid, his back to her. "I'm telling you I can't. I won't. Not with you. Not with Robby's daughter."
He stopped with his hand on the push bar. Didn't turn around.
"I've been fighting this for months," he said to the door, to the darkness, to anything but her. "Every day. Every time you walked into a room. Every time you smiled at someone else and I wanted to break something." His knuckles were white on the metal bar. "But I'm done fighting, Bambi. I'm just... done."
The door opened. Hospital noise flooded in-beeps and alarms and the distant chaos of the ER, the world continuing indifferent to the wreckage happening in this stairwell.
"Don't," she whispered. "Don't leave me like this."
He paused. For a moment she thought-hoped-prayed that he'd turn around, that he'd see her, that he'd choose her over the fear, over the rules, over the two decades between them.
"I'm sorry," he said. And then he walked away.
The door swung shut behind him with a pneumatic hiss that sounded final. Bambi stood alone in the stairwell, her confession still hanging in the air, her heart still beating, her whole body still aching with the memory of his hand on her cheek.
He hadn't said he loved her back.
She slid down the wall until she hit the concrete step, pulled her knees to her chest, and let herself finally, completely break.
Jack made it exactly thirty feet.
Thirty feet down the hallway before his legs stopped working, before his body overrode the autopilot that had carried him up the stairs and through the door and past her without looking back. Thirty feet before he ducked into an empty supply closet and braced both hands against a metal shelf, fingers wrapping around the edge until the steel cut into his palms.
His breathing was wrecked.
Each inhale felt like swallowing broken glass, jagged and insufficient, unable to fill the hollow space expanding in his chest. He leaned forward, forehead pressing against the cool metal of the shelf, and tried to remember how lungs worked. Tried to remember that he was a forty-six-year-old man, a physician, someone who had faced death in all its forms and remained functional.
Not the sharp, diagnostic pain of a cardiac event. Something worse. Something that felt like his ribs were cracking open, like his heart was physically tearing itself apart against the cage of bone that couldn't contain it anymore. He pressed one hand flat against his sternum and felt his own heartbeat rabbiting against his palm, erratic and wild, a trapped animal trying to escape.
Every instinct screamed at him to go back.
The voice wasn't subtle. It wasn't the gentle whisper of conscience or the measured assessment of risk versus reward. It was primal, ancient, the same voice that had told his ancestors to run toward danger instead of away from it, to protect what was theirs, to claim what they loved before it slipped forever into the dark.
To open the stairwell door.
He could still do it. The door was thirty feet away. Three seconds of running. One second of decision. He could still turn around, still undo what he'd just done, still salvage the one thing that mattered.
To tell her he was an idiot.
Because he was. God, he was. The biggest fool who had ever lived, the coward who had been handed everything he'd ever wanted on trembling, outstretched hands and had walked away from it because he was scared of what it might cost him.
To tell her he'd loved her for years.
The truth sat in his throat like a stone, heavy and immovable. Three years. Maybe longer. Maybe since the first time she'd smiled at him across a trauma bay and he'd felt something shift in his chest, something fundamental and terrifying that he'd immediately locked away and labeled forbidden.
Instead he stood there shaking while a code blue echoed somewhere down the corridor.
The sound was distant, muffled by concrete and linoleum, but he knew what it meant. Someone was dying. Someone's heart had stopped, someone's lungs had failed, someone's life was hanging in the balance while a team of professionals fought to pull them back from the edge. It was the sound that had defined his entire adult life. The sound that had always centered him, reminded him of his purpose, given him something to do when emotions became too complicated to navigate.
He didn't move toward it.
For the first time in twenty years of medicine, Jack heard a code blue and felt nothing. No adrenaline. No instinct to run. Just the hollow recognition that somewhere, someone else was experiencing their own worst moment, and it had nothing to do with him.
Because patients were dying.
That was the reality. That was the job. People died every day, in every hospital, in every city, in every country. Death was the constant, the baseline, the thing that made the living precious.
The hospital kept moving.
Around him, beyond the thin walls of the supply closet, the ER continued its relentless rhythm. Stretchers rattled past. Voices called out orders and responses. Machines beeped and alarmed and were silenced. The world didn't pause because Jack Hartley had just destroyed the best thing that had ever almost happened to him.
And somehow the worst thing that had happened that day wasn't the seventeen-year-old.
He thought of the boy-the lifeless body on the gurney, the parents' faces, the crushing weight of failure that had sent him to the stairwell seeking air in the first place. That should have been the worst thing. That should have been the trauma that kept him awake tonight, the memory that haunted him, the loss that mattered.
It was walking away from her.
The realization was devastating in its simplicity. He'd chosen fear over love. He'd chosen safety over happiness. He'd chosen the devil he knew-loneliness, longing, the slow erosion of hope-over the terrifying possibility of having everything he'd ever wanted and losing it later.
Jack sank to the floor of the supply closet, back against the shelves, knees drawn up to his chest like a child. He pressed his palms against his eyes until colors burst behind his lids, until the pressure built to something approaching physical pain, until he couldn't see the boxes of gauze and saline bags that surrounded him in this tiny, temporary hiding place.
He didn't know how long he sat there.
Long enough for the code blue to resolve-one way or another. Long enough for his pager to buzz twice with messages he didn't read. Long enough for the shift change to happen, for the day crew to become the night crew, for the hospital to cycle through its endless renewal while Jack remained frozen in place.
When he finally stood, his legs were stiff, his eyes were dry, and his hands had stopped shaking.
He walked out of the supply closet like a man emerging from a bomb shelter into a changed world. The hallway was the same. The fluorescent lights hummed the same song. The linoleum stretched in the same scuffed patterns toward the same destinations.
But everything was different now.
He'd made his choice. He'd walked away. And he would spend the rest of his life knowing exactly what that choice had cost him.
Three hours later, she was still there when her phone buzzed.
She ignored it. Let it go to voicemail. Then it buzzed again, and again, and finally she pulled it out with shaking hands, expecting Jack, hoping for Jack, terrified of Jack.
Call me when you get this. Worried about you.
She stared at the message, numb. She couldn't call him. Couldn't face him. Couldn't pretend everything was fine when her heart was in pieces on a concrete stairwell floor.
She typed a text instead.
Need a couple days. I'm safe.
She turned off her phone before he could respond. Then she stood, wiped her face, and walked out of the stairwell into the fluorescent glare of the hospital corridor.
She made it to her car. Made it home. Made it through the door of her apartment before the next wave hit, before she collapsed onto her bed fully dressed, shoes still on, and cried until she had nothing left.
She didn't call out sick. She didn't do anything. She just lay there in the dark, her phone dead on the nightstand, her heart empty, her future suddenly a blank she couldn't face.
She didn't know that two floors down, in the physicians' station, Jack was staring at her untouched coffee cup, wondering where she was.
She didn't know that her father was already watching him, already suspicious, already putting together pieces that would lead him to her door.
She only knew that she'd been brave. She'd told the truth. And it hadn't been enough.
It hadn't been nearly enough.
Jack knew something was wrong when she didn't take the coffee.
He'd set it on the counter automatically, muscle memory from three years of mornings, the oat milk already added, two sugars stirred in. But the shift changed, nurses came and went, and the cup sat there cooling, untouched.
He checked the schedule. She was off. Had been off for six hours.
He told himself she was sleeping. Told himself the stairwell meant nothing, that she'd needed space, that disappearing was normal after what he'd said, what he'd done.
He told himself these things for twelve hours. Then twenty-four.
Jack looked up from a chart he hadn't been reading. Robby stood in the doorway of the physicians' station, hair mussed, the same worry Jack had been swallowing for a day now written all over his face.
"She's not answering my calls," Robby said. "Not my texts. Just one message yesterday. Need a couple days. I'm safe.That's all."
Jack's stomach dropped. "When did you last hear from her?"
"Two days ago. Before-" Robby stopped, narrowed his eyes. "Before your shift. You were there. Did she say anything?"
She said she loved me. She said I was the easy part. I almost kissed her and then I walked away while she begged me to stay.
"No," Jack said. "Nothing."
Robby studied him for a long moment. Jack felt it like a physical weight, the scrutiny of a man who'd known him twenty years, who'd trusted him with his daughter, who was looking at him now like he was a stranger.
"She's never done this," Robby said quietly. "Not once. Not even when her mother died."
The words hung between them. Jack thought of the stairwell, of her face when he'd walked away, of the way she'd looked at him like he was breaking her heart with every step.
"I'm sure she's fine," Jack offered, the lie tasting like ash. "Probably just needed rest after that shift."
"Maybe." Robby didn't sound convinced. "Or maybe something happened. Maybe that shift broke something. Maybe-" He stopped, ran a hand through his hair, suddenly looking every one of his fifty-two years. "Maybe I should have seen it. Whatever it was."
Robby's phone buzzed. He glanced at it, frowned. "Her apartment manager. Says her car's in the lot but she's not picking up." He looked back at Jack, something shifting in his expression. "I'm going over there. You coming?"
Jack shouldn't. He knew he shouldn't. Every instinct screamed at him to stay away, to maintain distance, to not walk into her apartment with her father like he had any right to be there.
"Yeah," he said. "I'm coming."
They found her car first. Parked in her assigned spot, dust already gathering on the windshield. The manager let them in after Robby flashed his hospital ID and used his chief-of-staff voice, the one that brooked no argument.
Her apartment was neat. Too neat. Bed made, dishes washed, a half-empty coffee mug in the sink. Her phone sat on the nightstand, dead or turned off, the screen black and silent.
Jack stood in her bedroom doorway while Robby checked the bathroom, the closet, anywhere a person could hide, and felt the full weight of what he'd done pressing down on his chest.
She'd left everything. Her wallet on the counter. Her keys in the bowl by the door. Her shoes lined up in the closet, the running shoes she never went anywhere without.
"Her bag's gone," Robby called from the living room. "Her scrubs. Some clothes."
She'd packed, then. Planned. Not a breakdown, not an impulse-a decision.
Jack thought of the seventeen-year-old on the gurney, the way Bambi had kept working afterward, kept smiling, kept pretending. He thought of the stairwell, her forehead almost against his, her hand reaching for him.
Don't leave me like this.
He'd left her exactly like that.
"Jack." Robby's voice had changed. Jack turned to find him holding something-a photograph, framed, from Bambi's bookshelf. He crossed the room, took it, and felt the world tilt.
The photo was from three years ago. Her first day. The crash cart, the wet floor, his own face laughing as he hauled her upright. Someone had caught the moment, the two of them frozen in time, her cheeks flushed, his hand on her elbow, both of them grinning like idiots.
She'd kept it. Framed it. Put it where she'd see it every day.
"Jack," Robby said again, and this time there was something dangerous in his voice, something that sounded like the beginning of understanding. "Why does my daughter have a framed photograph of you?"
Jack looked at the picture. At her face, young and hopeful and already half in love, though neither of them had known it then.
He looked at his best friend of twenty years, the man who'd trusted him, who'd asked him to look out for her, who was staring at him now with dawning horror and the first sparks of rage.
"I don't know," Jack lied, and the words tasted like poison.
But even as he said it, he was pulling out his own phone, scrolling to her number, typing a message he knew she wouldn't see, wouldn't answer, because she'd turned it all off, disappeared into the silence he'd created.
I'm sorry. I'm so sorry. Please come back.
He didn't send it. He couldn't. Not with Robby watching, not with everything still at stake, his job and his reputation and the friendship he was already destroying just by standing here with the truth unspoken between them.
"She'll turn up," he said, putting the phone away. "She's smart. She's capable. She just needs-"
"Needs what?" Robby's voice was ice. "Space? Time? What did you say to her, Jack?"
I told her I'd lose everything. I told her she was the problem. I walked away while she begged me to stay.
"Nothing," he said. "I didn't say anything."
Robby held his gaze for a long moment. Then something in his face shifted-cracked-and the controlled calm he'd been maintaining shattered.
"You're lying." Robby's voice was low, dangerous. "You've been lying to me for months. Maybe years."
"Don't." Robby stepped closer, close enough that Jack could see the veins in his temples, the white-knuckled grip he had on the photograph. "I found this. I saw the way you looked at her. And now she's disappeared, she's turned off her phone, she's-gone-and you're standing here telling me you didn't say anything?"
Jack backed up until he hit the wall. "I didn't-"
"What did you do to her?" Robby's voice rose, cracking with something between grief and fury. "Did you touch her? Did you-"
"No!" Jack's own voice broke, desperate. "God, no. I would never-"
"But you wanted to." It wasn't a question. Robby saw it-the guilt, the wanting, the twenty years of friendship being destroyed in real time. "You wanted to, and you did something, and now she's-"
"I walked away!" The confession tore out of Jack like it was ripping skin. "She told me-she said she loved me, and I walked away. I told her I couldn't. That I'd lose everything. That she was your daughter." He was shaking now, the photograph trembling in his hand. "I left her in that stairwell crying, Robby. I left her because I was scared. Because I'm forty-six years old and I've known her since she was six and I have no right to want her but I do. God help me, I do."
The silence that followed was absolute.
Robby stared at him, the photograph forgotten, the anger draining out of him like blood from a wound. He saw it now-the exhaustion, the grief, the same brokenness he'd seen in his daughter's face.
"You love her," Robby said quietly. Not accusing. Just stating.
Jack closed his eyes. "Yes."
"I don't know." Jack's voice was barely audible. "Maybe always. Maybe since she graduated and I realized she wasn't a kid anymore. Maybe since the first time she smiled at me and I felt it like a physical thing."
Robby nodded slowly. He thought of twenty years of friendship. Of Jack showing up to every birthday, every graduation, every milestone. Of how Jack had stopped coming to dinner six months ago, how he'd started making excuses.
"She kept this photograph," Robby said, holding up the frame. "Three years. She's loved you for three years, and you loved her back the whole time."
Jack opened his eyes. "I'm sorry."
"For what? For loving her? Or for being too scared to do anything about it?"
Robby set the photograph down on Bambi's nightstand. He suddenly looked every one of his fifty-two years-tired, defeated, afraid.
"If you had chosen her," Robby said quietly, "if you had actually chosen her instead of running... I would have been angry. I would have yelled. I might have even hit you." He met Jack's eyes. "But I would have respected you. Eventually. Because she would have been happy."
Jack flinched like he'd been struck.
"But you didn't choose her," Robby continued. "You chose your fear. You chose your job, your reputation, your-" His voice cracked. "Your friendship with me. You chose everything except the person who actually matters."
Robby drove for nearly an hour before he realized he wasn't heading anywhere.
The city blurred past in streaks of red brake lights and streetlamps, each intersection melting into the next. He stopped at three different lights without remembering them changing from red to green. His hands stayed locked around the steering wheel, knuckles white, fingers cramping, as if gripping hard enough could keep the world from spinning off its axis.
The thought kept circling back, relentless, each pass cutting deeper.
The weight of it pressed against his sternum, making it hard to draw a full breath. Twenty years of friendship unspooled through his head like damaged film, frames skipping and catching: college football games in freezing rain, Jack's shoulder pressed against his for warmth; standing side by side at Sarah's funeral, Jack's hand steady on his back while Robby couldn't stop shaking; the night Bambi was born, Jack pacing the waiting room for six hours because Robby looked more terrified than the woman actually in labor, bringing him terrible coffee and not mentioning that his hands were shaking too.
Jack had been there for everything.
Every birthday cake with candles blown out.
Every graduation gown with the mortarboard tilted wrong.
Every Christmas morning after her mother died, showing up with presents and a forced smile, staying until the house wasn't empty anymore.
Every single time Bambi had needed someone, Jack had materialized like he'd been summoned.
And somehow Robby had missed this.
Maybe there had been signs he hadn't wanted to read.
The way Jack always poured her coffee before she asked, two sugars, oat milk, the specific combination she'd mentioned once in passing three years ago.
The way his body oriented toward her in a crowded trauma bay, like a compass needle finding north.
The dinners Jack had stopped attending six months ago, the excuses growing thinner, the distance deliberate and painful.
The guilt Robby had mistaken for work stress.
A humorless laugh escaped him, cracking the silence of the car.
Of all the people in all the world.
He pulled into an empty grocery store parking lot and killed the engine. The sudden silence flooded the car, heavy and absolute, broken only by the ticking of cooling metal and his own uneven breathing.
His anger should have been a clean thing, directed at Jack.
But another part-one he hated acknowledging, one that sat heavy and sour in his gut-was directed at himself.
Because Jack hadn't manipulated her.
Hadn't taken advantage of her trust or her youth or her grief.
If anything, the idiot had done the opposite.
He'd spent months, maybe years, running away from something Robby now realized had probably been obvious to everyone except the two men most determined not to see it. The nurses probably knew. The other doctors probably knew. The whole damn hospital probably watched Jack find excuses to be near her, watched him leave rooms when she entered, watched him destroy himself with propriety while everyone else saw straight through it.
Robby leaned back against the headrest and closed his eyes.
The image that wouldn't leave him wasn't Jack's confession in Bambi's bedroom, the words torn out like something bleeding.
Six years old, missing her front teeth, dragging Jack by the hand across their patchy lawn because she wanted him to watch her ride her bike without training wheels for the first time. Jack had run beside her for twenty minutes, hand hovering near her back, ready to catch her, letting go only when she screamed at him to stop.
Twelve years old, hair in a messy bun, demanding Jack help with a science project because apparently her father explained things "too boring" and Jack made physics sound like a story.
Twenty-three, graduating respiratory therapy school, throwing her arms around both of them for a photograph that now sat in a frame on his desk, her cheek pressed against Jack's shoulder, both of them grinning like they'd won something.
Maybe that was why this hurt so much.
Because somewhere along the way, without him noticing, he'd stopped seeing her as an adult.
Everyone else had adjusted.
Jack had adjusted-had been adjusting for years, apparently, carrying this alone.
Bambi had adjusted-had grown up, fallen in love, made her choice.
Robby was the one still looking at his daughter and seeing every version of her at once, layered on top of each other like transparencies. The little girl with skinned knees. The teenager with too much eyeliner. The woman who'd held a dying boy's hand yesterday came home and told a man twenty years her senior that she loved him.
All three were colliding inside his chest, and he didn't know which one he was supposed to protect.
His phone sat silent on the passenger seat.
Nothing from Bambi, nothing from Jack.
The anger drained away slowly, leaving only fear in its place. Not fear of Jack. Not fear of gossip or hospital politics or what the board would say if they knew.
Fear that his daughter was hurting somewhere in the dark and believed she had to do it alone.
Robby started the engine. The sound was too loud in the empty lot, aggressive, final.
He didn't know if he'd ever sit across from Jack again, sharing a beer like nothing had changed. Didn't know if twenty years of friendship had survived the last hour, or if it was already dead and he just hadn't felt the body go cold yet. Didn't know if forgiveness was possible, or if he'd even want it when the shock wore off and the betrayal settled into something permanent.
The road ahead was dark, unwritten.
Robby pulled out of the parking lot and drove toward the cemetery, toward whatever he would find there, toward the only thing he knew for certain: that tomorrow, and the day after, and all the days that followed, he would choose her.
Robby didn't go home. He didn't go to the hospital. He drove to the one place he hadn't checked-the cemetery where they'd buried her mother five years ago.
He found her there at dusk, sitting on the grass in front of the headstone, her knees pulled to her chest, her face streaked with tears that had dried hours ago.
She didn't turn. Didn't flinch. Just sat there, staring at the stone with her mother's name carved into it, like she was waiting for answers that would never come.
"I've been looking everywhere," Robby said, sitting down beside her, not touching her, just being there.
"I know," she whispered. "I saw your calls. I just... couldn't."
They sat in silence for a while, father and daughter in the growing dark, the cemetery quiet around them.
The words fell into the space between them, heavy as stones dropped into still water. Bambi went completely still-shoulders rigid, breath caught, her body language screaming retreat even as she remained seated on the cold grass.
"You did?" Her voice was barely audible, thinned by the evening wind that rustled through the oak trees overhead.
Robby nodded, though she wasn't looking at him to see it. "I confronted him."
She looked down at her hands, fingers twisting the hem of her sweater until the fabric warped and stretched. Robby watched her knuckles turn white, watched her retreat into herself the way she'd done as a child when the world became too loud, too sharp, too much.
He rubbed a hand across his face, feeling the scratch of stubble he hadn't bothered to shave, the grit of exhaustion in his eyes. For a moment he didn't say anything. The truth sat in his throat like a physical obstruction, harder to speak than he'd expected, because saying it out loud would make it real-would transform this from a nightmare he could wake from into a reality that would reshape all three of their lives permanently.
Because once he said it, there was no pretending this was some misunderstanding. No pretending Jack had simply been careless with her feelings, or confused, or momentarily stupid.
The words came out rough, scraped against his vocal cords like gravel. Bambi's head snapped toward him so fast he heard the vertebrae in her neck crack. Her eyes were wide, disbelieving, desperate for hope and terrified of finding it.
Robby stared out across the cemetery, unable to hold her gaze. The rows of headstones stretched into the gloaming, gray shapes dissolving into the gathering dark. Somewhere in the distance, a crow called out, harsh and lonely.
"I don't like it," he admitted. The confession felt necessary-a father's duty to acknowledge the wrongness of it even while accepting it.
"I don't." He shook his head, the motion sharp, definitive. "I don't like the age difference. Twenty years, Bambi. Twenty. I don't like that he's my best friend-that he's been my best friend since before you were born. I don't like that I've known him longer than you've been alive, and that he held you when you were six months old, and that he watched you take your first steps."
A watery laugh escaped her-brittle, broken, surprised despite everything.
Robby looked at her then. Really looked. Saw the woman she'd become, sitting on her mother's grave with her heart in pieces, still brave enough to ask for the truth.
"But I know what love looks like."
His voice softened, dropping into the register he used when she was small and frightened of thunderstorms. "And when that man talked about you..." He swallowed hard, the memory of Jack's face rising unbidden-those twenty years of friendship stripped raw, exposed, the naked grief of a man who'd spent years hiding his own heart even from himself. "I've never seen Jack look that broken."
Bambi's eyes filled, tears spilling over before she could blink them back. "He walked away."
"He chose everything else." Her voice cracked, splintering on the words. "His job. His reputation. You."
Robby reached over and squeezed her hand. Her fingers were ice-cold, stiff with cold and grief, but they curled around his palm like she was drowning and he was the only solid thing left in the world.
"And I'm still angry at him for it."
The admission seemed to surprise her. Her tear-blurred eyes found his face, searching.
"I'm angry because he hurt you," Robby continued, the words gaining momentum now that he'd started, each one a small betrayal of the friendship he'd valued for two decades. "I'm angry because he should've been braver than that. Because he spent years being careful and respectful and then when it mattered most-when you were standing there offering him everything-he ran like a coward." He sighed heavily, the anger draining as quickly as it had risen, leaving only the complicated truth. "But being angry doesn't mean I can pretend he doesn't love you. That he hasn't loved you for years. That he wouldn't cut out his own heart before he'd actually harm you."
The silence stretched between them, filled with the whisper of wind through grass and the distant hum of traffic beyond the cemetery walls. The last light of dusk was fading, the sky bleeding from violet into indigo, stars beginning to pierce through.
Finally Bambi whispered, the sound barely carrying across the inches between them:
"What if he never comes back?"
Robby stared at the headstone in front of them-her mother's name carved in granite, the dates marking a life too short, the space beside it where he would eventually lie. He thought of Jack, alone in his house, probably staring at his own walls, probably wondering if he'd destroyed everything that mattered.
Then he answered honestly, because his daughter deserved honesty even when it hurt.
"Then he's the biggest fool I've ever known," Robby said quietly. "And I will spend the rest of my life being grateful that he was too stupid to see what he had, because it means I don't have to share you with anyone." He paused, squeezing her hand tighter. "But I don't think he's that stupid, baby. I think he's just scared. And scared men either run forever, or they run until they realize what they're running from is the only thing worth having."
Bambi leaned her head against his shoulder, and they sat together in the dark, waiting for morning, waiting for whatever came next.
Jack stayed in Bambi's apartment long after Robby left.
The door had barely clicked shut before the silence settled over the room-heavy, suffocating, the kind of silence that made every thought sound louder than it should. Jack stood in the middle of her living room, his shoes sinking into carpet that needed vacuuming, his breath shallow in a space that suddenly felt too small, too intimate, too filled with her.
He stared at the photograph Robby had left on the nightstand.
Three years ago. Her first day. His hand wrapped around her elbow after she'd nearly taken out a crash cart, steadying her while she laughed and apologized and tried to pretend she wasn't mortified. He remembered the warmth of her skin through the thin cotton of her scrub top. Remembered the way she'd rolled her eyes and accused him of being dramatic when he'd insisted on checking her ankle. Remembered the sound of her laugh, bright and unguarded, before she'd learned to be careful around him.
He remembered every second of it.
What he didn't remember was realizing someone had taken a picture. Or that she'd kept it. Framed it. Displayed it on her nightstand like it mattered. Like he mattered. Like a moment of casual kindness from her father's best friend was worth preserving in wood and glass.
Jack sank onto the edge of her couch and dropped his head into his hands.
The apartment smelled like her. Coffee from the French press still sitting in the sink. Vanilla lotion from the bottle on the bathroom counter he could see through the open door. The faint scent of laundry detergent-lavender, something soft and clean-lingering in the blankets folded neatly over the armrest. Evidence of a life. A life he'd somehow become part of without ever allowing himself to acknowledge it, without ever admitting that he knew which cabinet held her mugs, which drawer held her takeout menus, that she preferred the left side of the couch because it faced the window.
His gaze drifted around the room, cataloging details he'd pretended not to notice during dozens of visits.
A half-finished book sat face-down on the coffee table-spine cracked, pages warped from being carried in a bag. A blanket was tangled in the corner of the couch, the one she wrapped herself in when she was cold, the one he'd seen her burrow into a hundred times while they watched bad medical dramas and she criticized the inaccuracies. One of her hoodies hung over a dining chair, gray and soft, something she'd probably thrown on to run to the store, and he knew without checking that it would smell like her shampoo if he pressed his face into it.
And somehow they hurt worse than the photograph.
For years he'd convinced himself distance was protecting her. Protecting Robby. Protecting all of them from a scandal that would destroy careers and friendships and the careful order of their lives. He'd told himself he was being noble. Responsible. That wanting her was a failing he could manage through sheer force of will, through avoidance, through the careful construction of boundaries that kept everyone safe.
Now he was sitting alone in her apartment while she was gone. Actually gone-having fled somewhere he couldn't follow, couldn't find, couldn't apologize to. And none of the things he'd protected seemed particularly important anymore. The job felt hollow. The reputation felt like chains. The friendship already felt like ash, destroyed not by what he'd done but by what he hadn't done, by the cowardice that had masqueraded as honor.
Jack looked toward the dark window. His reflection stared back at him-older than he felt, tired in ways that sleep wouldn't fix, ashamed in ways he hadn't known were possible. The image of her in the stairwell slammed into him again unbidden, as it had been slamming into him every three minutes since he'd walked away.
The way she'd looked at him like she was finally done hiding, like she was offering him everything she had and trusting him not to destroy it.
The way she'd handed him her heart without hesitation, without conditions, without any of the fear that had paralyzed him for three years.
Not because he didn't love her. Not because he couldn't imagine a future with her-waking up beside her, learning her routines, building a life that included her in every moment. But because he'd been afraid. Afraid of the conversations they'd have to have. Afraid of Robby's anger. Afraid of the hospital board and the gossip and the years of careful reputation-building that would crumble overnight.
The irony was almost enough to make him laugh, except his throat felt too tight, his chest too compressed.
Because he'd ruined everything anyway.
His eyes landed on the bookshelf. On another framed photo, this one from her graduation-Robby on one side, him on the other, Bambi in the middle grinning so hard her eyes were nearly closed, her arms thrown around both of them, pulling them together. Jack stood and crossed the room before he could stop himself, drawn to the image like a man approaching a wound he needed to probe.
His fingers brushed the frame. Dust motes danced in the lamplight.
"You idiot," he muttered.
He wasn't sure whether he meant himself or the smiling man in the photograph. Maybe both. Maybe Robby for not seeing what was obvious, for trusting him with the one thing that mattered most. Maybe himself for betraying that trust not through action but through inaction, through years of wanting and never admitting it, through the final, devastating choice to walk away when she'd finally offered him everything.
The apartment remained silent. No phone calls. No texts. No sign of where she'd gone, whether she was safe, whether she was crying, whether she hated him now or simply felt nothing at all.
Just the lingering proof that she'd loved him long enough to make space for him everywhere. In photographs. In memories. In her life. In the careful way she'd arranged her apartment to be comfortable for him, the way she'd learned how he took his coffee, the way she'd become the person he called first when something went wrong.
And he'd still acted surprised when she said the words out loud.
For the first time since the stairwell-maybe for the first time in years-he stopped fighting the truth. Stopped trying to rationalize it, to minimize it, to hide it behind professional distance and paternal concern and the thousand other excuses he'd constructed to keep himself from acknowledging what was happening to him.
The truth was painfully simple.
Not as his best friend's daughter. Not as the kid he'd taught to ride a bike, the teenager he'd helped with science projects, the young woman he'd watched graduate and start her career. Not as someone he needed to protect from the world or from himself.
He loved the woman who argued with him over vent settings until they were both red in the face, then bought him coffee afterward to apologize. Who stole his fries during overnight shifts and complained when he ordered onions. Who sat beside grieving families and somehow made impossible moments easier through sheer presence, through the warmth of her hand on a stranger's shoulder, through the way she never looked away from pain.
Who had become the first person he looked for in every room. The first person he wanted to tell things to-good news, bad news, the stupid jokes that occurred to him at 3 AM. The first person he thought about in the morning, wondering if she'd slept, if she'd remembered to eat, if she was happy. The last person he thought about at night, replaying conversations, storing up moments to revisit later.
And she'd been standing right in front of him.
While he'd been too scared to choose her back.
Jack swallowed hard. His throat burned. His chest felt hollow, scraped out, like someone had reached inside and removed something essential. He pulled out his phone with hands that wouldn't stop trembling and opened their messages. The cursor blinked against the white screen, patient, waiting.
For once, he didn't overthink it. Didn't draft and delete and draft again. Didn't calculate the impact or the risk or the potential for regret.
A pause. His thumb hovered. Then:
The words looked small on the screen. Inadequate. A pathetic offering after everything he'd done, everything he hadn't done. But they were true. And after everything-the years of silence, the stairwell, the walking away-the truth was all he had left.
The message disappeared into the void, marked delivered, then read. Or maybe her phone was still off. Maybe she'd never read it. Maybe she was staring at the screen right now, crying, or laughing bitterly, or feeling nothing at all. Maybe she never wanted to speak to him again.
He'd earned that possibility. He'd earned worse.
Jack slipped the phone back into his pocket and looked around the apartment one last time. At the photographs that documented a history he'd tried not to notice. At the blanket on the couch that still held the shape of her body. At the life she'd built so carefully, so completely, while he'd been pretending not to watch.
At the space she'd made for him inside it.
Then he headed for the door.
Halfway there, he stopped. Looked back. And for the first time since the stairwell, allowed himself to say it out loud. To the empty apartment. To himself. To her, wherever she was, in whatever state he'd left her.
The words echoed softly through the silence, filling the space she'd left behind, hanging in the air like a promise or a confession or a beginning.
And this time, as the door closed behind him with a sound that felt like the end of something old and the start of something new, he already knew he wasn't going to spend the rest of his life running.