Y/N Padalecki loved acting on Supernatural. Working alongside your older brother and your boyfriend, but after ten seasons the guys have chosen to hang up the guns. Now the three of you are moving on to other projects, but thatâs all that needs to change right? While you have moved to Austin to be closer to your family and boyfriend, Jensen is working elsewhere. Distance is only the start of your troubles.
Series Warnings-This is the angstiest story I have written. Jensen isn't the best person when the story starts out. Medical Drama, car accident in future chapters.
This is still being written, but about 14/15 chapters are done. Major Thank you to @writercole and @leigh70 for their help with this! đ
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This is a slightly weird request but if there are any SPN fans who have read my Life's Lessons Saga (the sequel specifically) and have also seen The Fantastic Four: First Steps, could y'all please DM me? I'd love your help with something in relation to the sequel and how it may continue!
Summary: When it felt like everything in her life was falling apart, getting offered the job as the Acklesâ nanny seemed like the perfect fresh start. It was only meant to be temporary, that is, until one fateful New Yearâs Eve. With a promise to keep, she makes it her mission to keep the shattered family from crumbling into dust, but where does that leave her?
Pairing: Jensen Ackles x Fem!Reader
Series Warnings: Language, angst, character death, discussion of automobile accident, discussions and depictions of grief, smut (tbd), (individual chapters will be tagged accordingly)
Authorâs Note: This story is purely a work of fiction and intends no harm to Danneel or the Ackles family. This is a Danneel-positive blog, and hate will not be tolerated.Â
Hey yâall! Itâs been a minute 𼴠but Iâm back on my bullshit which means I have Part 2 of this series ready to post! Iâll have it coming your way hopefully by this weekend.
I know there arenât many of you left on here, but here is to hoping at least one other person is excited đ¤Ł
Summary- Postponing his original sabbatical plans, Robby finds a quaint town at one of the most northern points of the country. He's quickly taken aback by a waitress at the first diner he walks into.
Contains- 18+ SMUT MDNI. p in v sex, oral (f receiving), hangover nausea, alcohol use, porn with lots and lots of plot :) lmk if i missed anything!
A/N- the town in this is heavily inspired by my love for northern michigan aka the best part of the best state. divider from @thecutestgrotto !
A soft sun welcomes the calm morning. It streaks through the windshield of Robby's recently swapped Ford Ranger. Unlike his bike, it's built for the curvy, tree lined roads of the small northern town he's traipsing through.
His lids start to droop, stomach growling from the endless hours of driving. He perks up at a neon sign cutting through the pale blue skies. Soon thereafter, wafts of bacon, coffee, and oil drift through his cracked windows, and his stomach does the steering for him.
He's the only car in this parking lot, and he's surprised to see a little white building with pink trimming. Bright pink letters splash across the white wooden door.
Petal and Bloom- it reads in loopy letters, and stepping through the door is like walking through a time machine. It's pure 50s, a vibrant turquoise coating the walls, peach booths lining the width of the pink and white checkered floor.
He can't help but let a chuckle escape his lips, the giddiness knocked completely out of him at the sight of the waitress that greets him.
You're pretty. Gorgeous, even. The shiny gloss of your lips, the curve of your hips, the blush painting your cheeks- they make his heart skip in a way he thought wasn't possible anymore.
You sidle up to him, the sweetest diner dress adorning your figure. It's pink, with a pretty name looped into the stitching. It hangs off your frame with ease, pulled tight at the waist by your white apron. You bounce on your tennis shoes, a sweet smile on your sweet face.
"Hi! Dining in?" You chirp, and it's so perky he debates getting a coffee.
"Yeah, just me," Robby huffs, nodding his head and averting his gaze.
Looking at you nearly paralyzes him, but looking and talking to you? He feels like he's 14 again, talking to Patricia Connors at her locker the week before homecoming.
He slides into the booth you cheerily lead him to, cheeks heating at the new position. He looks up at you now, the early morning sun coating you in a golden glow. Your eyes sparkle in the light, and he swallows a thick lump in his throat.
"What can I get started for you, sir?" You ask, and guilt pools in his stomach at the name.
"Please, call me Robby," he waves you off, and you nod lightly. Your instant obedience gets his heart racing, and he smooths a hand down the back of his neck. It does nothing to self soothe.
Chill out, you gross old man, he kicks himself, clearing his throat before answering you.
"Can I just start with a coffee?" He rasps, eyes trained on the menu in front of him, only darting them up when you walk away.
The sway in your hips nearly knocks him unconscious, dark dots literally starting to pepper his vision. The clink of a cheap plastic glass snaps him out of his senselessness.
He sees water, accompanied by a mug of coffee and a piece of toast he's surprised was made so fast.
"You looked like you were about to pass out," you say, apprehensively.
He makes the mistake of looking up at you, your small smile rendering him breathless.
"Thanks," he breathes, and it's a pathetic croak in the back of his throat.
You chuckle, flipping your notepad open. You poise a pink pen to the paper, a pensive brow pointing right at him.
"What else can I get you?" You ask, and he rattles off his order- unable to resist the bacon he smelled a mile back.
"Alright, that'll be a while," you quip, snapping it shut in the wake of his confusion. "As you can see, we're packed to the brim. There's no way the kitchen will be able to get this out in under an hour. That okay?"
The empty sound of the diner fills the space between you. You're joking. He knows, somewhere deep in his semi-consciousness that you are, but his exhausted haze clouds his logical reasoning.
"What?" Is all he can manage, and he wants to kick himself.
"Nothing, sir," you chuckle, and miraculously, he doesn't feel embarrassed or ashamed, but endeared, almost. "I'll be back shortly."
He watches you walk away again, and curses under his breath. He runs a flat palm down his face, trying to scrub out the weariness in his eyes. His heart pounds a symphony against his chest, ringing even in his ears.
He has no idea what happened back there, can't remember a single time he dropped the ball while flirting. It came so easily to him in Pittsburgh, when he was at his worst.
Another thing clicks, something his therapist has taught him to identify. When we recover from trauma, our brain puts together puzzle pieces that have been scattered around for too long. Or something like that.
He makes a match now, realizing that his desperation for validation projected on his female counterparts, romantic or not. It's jarring for a moment, but he's gotten better at acknowledging it, deciding what he'll do better in the future, and moving on.
It's methodical, the steps to this procedure. It feels right for his brain, to check things off in a sort of list. It feels less daunting, actually doable for him.
Once again, his thoughts are interrupted by plastic dishware clinking on the table. He perks a little, the steam of his eggs and scent of his bacon enough to restart his nervous system.
He nods his head at you, muttering a small thank you, heart sinking a little at the thought of your interaction being over.
Like you can read his thoughts, you slide into the booth across from him, propping your chin in your hand.
"Is this okay?" You ask, smiling. "You seem like you could use a little bit of company."
You have no idea, he thinks.
"That'd be great, thanks," is what he says. He glances around, looking for any other employee in the building. "This won't get you in trouble, will it?" He asks, voice quieter than it was before.
A chuckle stifles past your lips, and the sound swirls around his head like little blue birdies in a cartoon. He feels like a caricature around you, a dopey, wide eyed Popeye, smitten by Olive Oil.
"No," you respond, and relief washes over him. "My best friend owns this place, she's not even clocked in. Still hungover from last night."
There's a teasing lilt to your voice, and he smiles, thinking about what it must be like to know you. To have known you, well enough to work together and live in the same small town together.
He does laugh at this information, eyes finding his plate. He grabs a piece of bacon, nibbling on it lightly without breaking eye contact.
"So, what brings you to our little corner of the world?" You ask him, with the familiarity of a life lived in the same place.
He shrugs, looking at the window to survey the scene. It's remote, located off the highway on the right and a small side street to the left. The left hand road leads to a slightly bigger downtown, if his strained vision proves correct.
"I'm a doctor," he starts, and it feels foreign falling from his lips. "I wasâŚ" he starts, and all the possible things he could say dance around in his brain. "âŚburnt out," is what he lands on.
That's one way to put it.
Your mouth twists downward, brows furrowing. It's not pity, though, and it's not sympathy, either. Both of those would have immediately triggered something deep and angry within him.
No, what he sees is more like empathy. The glint in your eye, the purse of your lips, the nod of your head tells him that you relate. It's what he's choosing to believe, anyway, as he doesn't have any factual information to back this up. He feels it pretty strongly, though, and he's learning that's not always a bad thing.
"I get what that's like," you sigh, and his ears perk up like a dog.
His heart pounds at the immediate validation, swirling a euphoric rush through his veins.
"Yeah?" He asks, voice lilting and a bit pitchy.
You nod again, pretty gold earrings dangling with the motion.
"I just got fired," you admit, and now it's his turn to frown. "That's why I'm working at my best friend's diner at 28."
There's a civil war brewing inside him, the guilt of hearing your age at battle with the giddiness your vulnerability makes him. It all results in a sore tummy, and he shovels scrambled eggs in his mouth to try and tamper it down.
"Please," he says, once he's swallowed, taken a sip of water and grounded himself. "You have your entire life ahead of you."
There's a brief pause in your rapport, then, the weight of his words hanging heavier than intended. You don't seem to mind, unless, again, his calculations are incorrect. He's been proven to read you pretty well so far, though, so he's hopeful.
The sparkle in your eye helps. The sun is now fully up, hanging high in the sky as mid-morning dawns on the both of you. It shines through the window, landing perfectly on you.
It takes his breath away, and he allows himself a moment to sink into it, to enjoy it. Instead of feeling guilty, racking his brain for all the reasons he wouldn't deserve to even enjoy a nice conversation, he indulges. That's what the sabbatical is for, right?
"And you don't?" You ask.
His face crinkles in a smile, dipping his head down to try and hide the wrinkles around his eyes. Shock paralyzes him when he feels your soft fingers tucking under his jaw and lifting him back up to you.
You're smiling when he meets your gaze, but then you give him a showy pout. It sends a cacophony of butterflies loose in his belly, and he feels like a school boy. He sips on his coffee, the caffeine doing nothing to quell the giddiness erupting within him.
"What's that face for?" He asks, and his soft tone surprises him.
"You're not smiling anymore," you jut your bottom lip out, and it's taking everything to not lean over the table, take them between his own lips, and suck.
"Why do I need to smile?" He asks, and feels ridiculous almost instantly.
You deserve to smile, Michael, you deserve to enjoy things, Dr. Parker would say, and he repeats it in his head like a mantra.
"You have these sweet lines around your eyes when you smile," your hand once again brands his skin, now your open palm cupping his cheek.
He's stunned at your abrasiveness, pathetically intrigued by what you have to offer. His cheek heats under your touch, and he spots the tiny smile creeping on your lips.
"They're nice," you remark, removing your hand from his face.
It's cold instantly without your touch, a shiver unzipping his spine at the loss of contact.
The moment floats between you two, vibrant and sparkly like a crystal ball. He knows exactly what his fortune is. He's looking at it.
"So," you say, effectively popping the magical bubble, "a doctor, huh?"
He nods, apprehensive to the topic. He can't remember the last time he talked about his job with someone who knew nothing about it. He can't remember the last time he's been this removed from Pittsburgh. It'sâŚscary. Nice, but scary.
He powers through anyway, allowing himself the fortune he's so gracelessly stumbled upon.
"Yeah," he gruffs, smoothing his hand over the back of his neck.
He can't yet bring himself to say more, bottom lip sliding between his teeth.
"Can I guess what you do?" You ask, and he quickly nods.
This, somehow, eases him. It allows him the vulnerability of sharing the information, without the pressure of finding the right words, racking his anxious mind for something to mask how horrible it's been the past few years.
You stroke your chin with your forefinger and thumb, brows puzzled in the sweetest way. He fights the urge to kiss away the crease between your brows.
"Emergency medicine," you say, and his blood runs cold.
You perk up at his reaction, knowing immediately you got it right.
"Yay!" You squeal, clapping your hands together. "What a crazy coincidence! I don't know why I even guessed that, you just seem like you've seen some shit."
He chuckles at that, a genuine, cathartic chuckle.
"Ooh, you have no idea," he says, and your smile makes his heart race.
"Where is it? Are you guys typically busy?" You ask, and he almost envies your naivete.
"Uh, 's in Pittsburgh," he says, eyes trained on his lap.
His ears are on fire, heart roaring in his chest but he pushes through, even though his voice is croaky and he feels like he might throw up.
"We're a trauma center, soâŚ" he trails off, gaining the courage to look back up at you. "Yeah, I've seen some shit."
You give him a kind smile, a sweet giggle peeling from your lips, and he positively melts. He can't remember the last time someone looked at him like this, like he was something, anything else than Dr. Robby.
"Well, I'm looking forward to hearing some stories," you propose, tone uneasy.
"Yeah, I'm sure I can make that work," he says, sipping his coffee, nibbling his toast.
"How long are you in town?" You ask, and his heart sinks at the thought of ever leaving this cozy bubble.
"I'm here for three months," he says, and is almost prideful by the way you perk up at this news. "Plenty of time to swap stories."
"I can't wait," you reply, and his stomach cartwheels. "Where are you staying?" You ask, and he raises a brow.
"Why? Y'gonna come murder me?" He asks, resting his back against the cushiony booth.
"Yup, you caught me!" You giggle, playing along. It electrifies him.
He laughs, and can't help but notice how easy this feels. It's exhilarating, addicting, and utterly terrifying.
"No," you roll your eyes once your laughter dies down. "I've lived here my entire life and I probably already know exactly where you're at."
"Well, with your track record of guessing things about me," he starts, pulling out his phone to open up his Airbnb app. "You probably will."
He turns his phone around, and goes still once he sees your face fall. You grab his phone, pinching the screen to zoom in and out, eyes glossing over. His gut twists, and he feels absolutely awful.
Before he can spiral, he decides to take action instead.
"I'm so sorry, did I say something?" He asks, shaky fingers plucking his phone back.
You shake your head, wiping a stray tear from the corner of your eye.
"Gosh no, no not at all," you insist, and it does nothing to sway his guilt. "That's actually uhm-" you swallow, and his heart sinks even deeper. "That's my grandparents' cottage."
"Oh," he blinks, unsure how to take this news.
"They always rent it out over the summer. They're in the Hamptons," you roll your eyes, and he can tell there's more to this story. "My whole family is, actually."
For the first time this entire conversation, you seemâŚsmall. You're avoiding his gaze, fiddling with your apron, pouting your lips.
"And you're here?" He asks, and you just shrug.
"I just moved back from New York, actually," you confess, and he leans forward, giving you his full attention. "I got fired from the marketing firm my grandfather owns."
His mouth twists downward, once again heeding your earlier understanding.
"One of the jackass accountants tried feeling me up," you say, and the confession rocks him. Not only does your brazen confidence scare the shit out of him, he's also overcome with a severe need to beat this preppy New York accountant's ass.
"I reacted maybe a bitâŚharsher than I should have," you continue. "I turned around and just slapped him. I honestly wasn't thinking, it was an instinctive reaction. So, I got fired for disorderly conduct."
"I'm sorryâŚ" Robby trails off, genuinely confused. "They fired you for disorderly conduct? Not the guy putting his hands where he wasn't fucking supposed to in the first place?"
You nod, to his everlasting fury.
"On top of that, my boyfriend dumped me," you mutter. "Said he couldn't be with a 'snitch', like we're in third grade."
Anger flares white hot within him, furrowing his brows and burning his stomach until there's nothing left but ash.
"I had to come home," you say. "My family is not happy with me. I also have some stories."
"Well, I'm really looking forward to hearing them," he says, only able to offer kindness in wake of this news.
"Likewise," you murmur.
The sun shines between you once again, illuminating Robby's now empty plate. Your eyes find it, and he sees you immediately jump back into waitress mode.
"Let me take care of this!" You chirp, swiping his plate away and whisking it to the kitchen.
He feels cold at the loss of you, eyes trained on your frame the entire time. He watches you ring up the order, bringing his check back to the table.
He opens his mouth to speak, but is forcefully interrupted by the door swinging open.
"Oh. My. God. GIRL!" Another young woman bursts through the door, looking a bit worse for wear.
Her hair is mussy, makeup smeared and clothes wrinkled.
"Is my uniform here?" She asks, skittering through the diner.
"Yeah, in the back!" You shout, and she responds with a comical, "THANK GOD!"
"Aaaand that's Cherry, my best friend," you quip, collecting his payment and dispersing the change. "I'll see you tomorrow, Robby?" You ask, and he nods eagerly.
"Go and get some sleep, you'll need it," you tap your notepad on the table to see him out.
He reluctantly finds the door, slinging his bag over his shoulder before looking back at you one last time.
"And a tip?" You add, and he raises his brow. "The guest bed is comfier than the master bed. Trust me."
"Thanks," he chuckles, pushing the door open, back into the real world.
The next few weeks are almost always a mirror of that first morning. Robby coming in at the break of dawn, you two sitting over a coffee together.
He came in that second day, looking much more rested than the day before, raving about the mattress in the guest room.
You'd laughed, giving him a playful 'told you so!' before assuming the exact same booth he'd had the day before.
Cherry's been more than cool, allowing you to sit and talk with him when you're really supposed to be on the clock.
You repay her in gossip, gushing to her about all the ways the hot, mysterious, older doctor has been flirting with you.
At least, you think he's flirting with you. He dances all around it, a teasing twinkle in his eye, a small smirk on his lips. Cherry's convinced he wants you. You're not so sure.
He always makes a point to confirm with you, and Cherry, that your early morning chats are okay. You can tell he feels guilty every time he asks, and in a sick way, it makes your heart swell. It still doesn't stop him from talking with you until the next customer comes in.
He comes in so early, this typically only happens after you've banked a good hour and change of conversation, each one more titillating than the last.
This morning, you'd finished your conversation with an invite. It was bold, unexpected, tumbling from your lips before you could have stopped it.
"Hey!" You chirp, just as he's about to push the door open. "Cherry and I are hosting a little something after closing hours."
"A little something?" He raises his brow, and your stomach somersaults.
Tonight, you and Cherry were debuting Bloom and Petal: After Hours. It's been a passion project of Cherry's, turning the daytime breakfast bar into a lively night scene.
You reference the framed certificate now resting behind the bar, some fancy scribbling displaying your newly acquired liquor license.
Robby's face shifts in understanding, a small smile hiding behind nervous eyes.
"A bar with a bunch of 25 year olds?" He quirks a brow, and your heart sinks.
You've never really addressed the age gap between you two, though it feels glaringly obvious, and even foolish now. Your face burns, and the words that leave your mouth leave you humiliated.
"For me?" You ask, cringing as they fall out of your mouth like rotten teeth.
He doesn't seem to share this sentiment, though, as his brown eyes glimmer in the light, his telltale sign you've gotten to his soft spot. Your heart rate picks up, and you look at him expectantly.
"Maybe," he murmurs, and you'll take it. It's something. "See you," he says, and he's out the door.
"See you," you breathe, into the empty diner.
Bloom and Petal: After Hours is thumping, and you've been on your feet for hours. Sweat drips from your brow as you weave through the crowd of sticky bodies of people you've known since grade school.
You're thankful to have ditched the thick, cartoony outfit for a pink Bloom and Petal t-shirt, paired with denim shorts. You finally escape behind the bar for a brief moment, attending to a few drinks and avoiding the crowd.
Your eyes keep darting towards the door, expecting a familiar face to walk through. Disappointment spreads deep in your stomach like a disease with each ring of the front bell.
"He's still not here?" Cherry yells over the crowd, and you shake a sad head no.
She rolls her eyes, forever on your side.
"Boo! What a dick! I thought he liked you!" She squeals, and her use of past tense, though unintentional, makes your tummy turn.
"I thought he did, too," you mutter, furiously cranking the beer tap.
Foam aggressively overflows the pint, and you crash it down on to the bar a little too harshly. Cherry rears her head back at this, eyes wide, and now it's your turn to roll your eyes.
"I'm so dumb!" You force a smile, your tone terminally delightful. "The stupidest girl in school!"
Cherry chortles at this, and you give her a sardonic smile. Then, you hear it again.
Ding!
Your head whips towards the door, like a pathetic dog waiting for its long gone owner. Cherry sees this too, wincing at the action.
Shame burns deep in your belly, and you turn, pressing your palms flat on the wall, leaning your forehead against them. A long groan strangles your throat, Cherry rubbing a soothing hand down your back.
"Take a minute, babe, it's been a crazy night," she says before darting to the other side of the bar.
You feel ridiculous, of course he wouldn't show up. He's about twice the age of everyone here, he's clearly here running away from something, and most of all, he's not your fucking boyfriend.
That last fact makes you sick, and you dart into the kitchen to get a fresh breath. You barrel your way through the bustling back to get through the door, bursting open like a treasure chest.
The relief of the fresh air folds you in half, hands resting on your knees as you will yourself not to vomit. Nausea spins your head, quelling with each breath of fresh, summer air.
"Woah!" You hear a familiar voice, and your eyes dart up to find the man you've been looking for all night.
He's like an angel in the fading sunset, approaching you gently from the other side of the parking lot.
"Robby!" You breathe, half chuckle half gasp. "Hi!"
He reaches out a tentative hand as if to steady you, approaching slowly, bending slightly at the knee to look you in the eye.
"You okay, sweet girl?" He asks, and the debut of this pet name does nothing to help your desire to hurl.
You nod, anyway, inhaling deep through your nose and out through your mouth.
"Good job," he mutters, and your knees nearly give out on you.
"Yeah," you swallow thickly. "Yeah, I'm good. I think I just need some water."
"Do you have any out here, sweet girl?" He asks.
You stumble, your heart skipping a beat. Again, with that damn nickname.
"N-no, I don't," you mumble, and you can't tell if the haziness is from Robby, or the overstimulation.
"Stay here, I'll be right back," he darts across the parking lot once more, back to his truck.
Your focus stills on his frame, the way it leaned and stretched into the front seat of his car. Your cheeks burn, shame creeping in your belly.
He's not your boyfriend, you remind yourself. Snap out of it.
He comes back, a steel water bottle rattling with ice. You perk up at the sound, a Pavlovian response driven by dehydration.
He holds out the bottle, and you snatch it from his grasp, savoring each slide of the cool liquid down your parched throat.
You let the straw go with a pop!, a groan of relief escaping your lips. Robby shifts on his feet at the noise, and you choose to think nothing of it.
"Is it okay if I walk you in?" He asks, pointing towards the door. "I just wanna make sure you get back okay."
You nod, wordlessly, letting him guide you toward the door, his arm hovering over your waist. You come back to life step by step, the energy of the bar swallowing you back in the second you cross the threshold.
Your lips wrap around the straw again, vision clearing up with each swallow. Robby taps your hip lightly in approval, and you almost stop to squeeze your legs together.
You burst out of the kitchen, immediately thrust back into the hot, sweaty bubble of the night. He rounds the corner of the bar with ease, propping himself on an empty stool.
It really sinks in, then, him being here. Seeing him, his wide, tired eyes, his soft smile, surrounded by purple and blue and pink flashing lights and bustling twenty somethings.
He's here for you. Your heart sings.
"Thank you for coming," you mutter sweetly. "What can I get you, handsome?"
You count this as revenge for his earlier nickname. You're successful, given his deep blush he tries so sweetly to hide.
"Whatever beer you have on tap, babe," he says, and you shudder.
You give him a curt nod, turning on the ball of your foot to fulfill his order. You tap your foot as you anxiously wait for the glass to fill, butterflies swarming your stomach at the thought of turning around to see Robby again.
You're met with a much worse sight, though. One that completely pops the Robby bubble you've inflated for yourself.
Clean cut brown hair, perfectly tailored suit, $200 tie. The same, sorry excuse of a man that left you alone, deserted in New York, after getting fired from your job.
"Brayden, what are you doing here?" You choke.
Beer threatens to spill over the lid of the glass you're shakily holding. Robby anticipates the situation, reaching two hands out to take his drink himself.
You're suddenly thankful, yet self conscious for his help all at the same time. Your eyes dart back to Robby, then back to Brayden. Back and forth, back and forth.
It's not long before Brayden clocks what's going on, the man sitting next to him. He scoffs, readjusting his tie with an arrogance that makes you want to punch him.
"I'm here to talk some sense into you," he responds, and hearing his voice again after all this time is like nails on a chalkboard. "Clearly you need it."
His eyes dart to his left as he says it, and you burn with rage.
"What the fuck is that supposed to mean?" You size him up. Like always, he takes the bait.
"Your family is fucking furious with you, y'know?" He remarks, and you dip your head in shame. "This little stunt you're pulling?" He circles a finger in the air in reference to the space around him. "It's ridiculous. You know it's ridiculous! I mean- look at you! Are you wearing denim?"
You can't believe the words that are coming out of his mouth, wondering how you could've been so blind to this man's true self.
"I wore denim in New York, you fucking ass," it's the only thing you can think of to say, and you feel like a fucking idiot.
"Not at work," he says, and you roll your eyes. "Any job where you can get away with wearing denim is a job you should never be working at. Can you imagine what your family would say if they saw you right now?"
You cross your hands over your chest, a familiar burn stinging the back of your nose as you will yourself not to cry in front of him.
"I'm sorry," a gruff voice interrupts, and your heart stops.
Robby's holding up a hand in Brayden's direction, who rears his head back in surprise.
"Who the hell do you think you are, talking to someone like that?" he asks, tone poisonous.
It takes you by surprise, eyes anxiously darting back to Brayden
"I'm sorry, who are you?" Brayden scoffs, and your heart pounds in your ears, anxiety thrumming through your veins.
"Does it fucking matter?" Robby responds, and your eyes find the floor.
"Don't think I didn't see you two walking in from the back," he drops, and your body goes white hot with fear. "What do you think your family is going to think when I tell them you're letting a man twice your age fight your battles for you?"
You make the mistake of looking up at him, no longer able to hide the tears pricking your eye. He has an all knowing smirk on his face, and you catch Robby shifting in his peripheral.
"That's not how they raised their strong, nuisance of a girl, hm?" He asks, and Robby slams a hand down on the bar.
"Are you fucking serious?"He asks, wild eyes darting toward you.
You panic, giving him crazy, sad eyes.
"I'm sorry," he gruffs, holding a hand up. "I just can't stand to see him talk to you like this," his voice is quiet, as private as it can be with your ex breathing down his neck.
Your stomach rolls, heart pounding when you see Cherry approach from behind. Anxiety is a pinball within you, hitting each point of your nervous system and sparing no expense.
"Oh. Fuck. NO!" You hear her screech, latching her manicured fingers underneath his shirt collar, yanking him up off the stool.
He squeals, and the sound earns a genuine laugh from you.
"What the fuck do you think you're doing here?" She barks at him, using her large waitress tray as a shield, guiding him out the door with each step she takes.
"Thought I'd come see what you managed to scrounge together," he smirks, walking backward toward the door. "Not bad, classy as ever."
"God, that guy fucking sucks," Robby whispers as Cherry bullies him out the door.
"Tell me about it," you gruff, grabbing a damp towel and wiping down the nearest surface you can find. Anything to distract yourself from the heat of his gaze.
A moment of silence beats between you, his eyes trained on you as you do everything in your power to avoid him. The vulnerability of the moment settles over you like a wet blanket, rubbing you raw and making you ache.
"Robby, I think you should go," you whisper, regret lacing every word.
The look in his eye is that of a kicked puppy, and you once again will yourself not to cry.
"What?" He asks, utter confusion in his tone.
"Thank you for coming," you start, a smile on your lips, bright and fake as ever, "but I think he was right. If my family gets wind of what we've been doing-"
"What have we been doing, exactly?" He cuts you off, and you freeze, not expecting this question.
Because, in all honesty, you really don't know what you've been doing.
You like Robby, that much is for certain. You like spending time with him, talking with him, listening to him, but maybe Brayden was right. He's nearly 30 years your senior, you could never have a relationship with him without stirring the pot with your entire family.
Is it worth it? For someone that will be gone in three months?
"I don't really know, Robby," you throw your hands up. "We'reâŚtwo adults who talk to each other? We're friends?" You let that last question linger, toeing the line on suggesting more than that. You ultimately don't take the bait, and just raise your brow at him instead, begging him to tell you different.
He doesn't, of course, just slides a $10 over the counter, hops off the stool, and leaves.
Your heart sinks, cheeks on fire, and you bury your face in your forearms, laying flat against the bar.
"Ugh!" You groan, tears pricking the corners of your eyes.
What the hell has this man done to you?
You're worse for wear the next morning, a headache splitting your head in two. You bring a hand to your forehead, groaning at the light seeping in through the window.
Folding a pillow over your head, you thrash to the other side, memories of last night coming to you in flashes.
Robby not showing, Robby finding you in the parking lot, Brayden, Robby leaving, the shots Cherry clunk down on the bar after closingâŚ
You're starting to regret that fifth lemon drop as it rumbles your stomach, acid creeping up your throat. You clamp a hand over your mouth, willing the nausea to ebb.
It eventually does, and you feel strong enough to sit up, swing your legs over the side of the bed, and make a sad attempt to stand. Your legs are wobbly to start, but eventually you find your footing, padding into the bathroom.
You freshen up, a mere face wash reviving as you move to the kitchen, desperately clamoring for some coffee and a piece of toast. A buzz on the counter lights up your screen, and you take in a message from Cherry.
Cherry: girlâŚdid robby respond to you yet
Your heart drops, numb fingers swiping rapidly to get to your messages. Robby had given you his number a few days prior, something he tried to keep low key as he scribbled it on his receipt. You remember feeling flushed, like a love sick high school girl who just got asked to the prom.
Now, you just feel sick, actually sick. Opening the messages, an onslaught of drunken nonsense greets you, to your everlasting horror.
RObb
Robb y
H hey
Is your real name robert??? what's up with that
These were just to name a few, and the more you scroll, the worse you feel. Your view is instantly shot back to the very last text you sent- it's just the Spotify link to Go Go Juice by Sabrina Carpenter- and you drop the phone like it's hot as the three, cursed little bubbles pop up.
You scream, literally scream, as the phone clatters onto the counter, making impact with the marble at the same time your toast pops out of the toaster.
You sit in silence with yourself for a minute, then, feeling absolutely ridiculous about the predicament you've gotten yourself in.
Four months ago you were drinking champagne on the fanciest rooftop bars in Brooklyn. You were also more unhappy than you'd ever been.
Meeting Robby has made you feel like yourself for the first time in a very, very long time. And if that's the case, then it can't be that bad, can it?
Your phone buzzes, drawing your attention back to the devilish brick taking up real estate on your counter top.
Robby: My real name is Michael. Last name Robinavitch. Everyone at work calls me Robby. It's easier.
You stare at the words on your screen, tapping your foot anxiously as they settle in. The simplicity of his message is almost laughable, but there's weight to his select words.
He gave you his first and last name, something that feels ridiculously intimate for absolutely no logical reason at all.
As you ponder on how to respond, you come up empty time and time again. Your mind wanders back to that first day, the conversation about his Airbnb.
Before you can consider the possible ethical and moral violations of your actions, you slip your shoes on, grab your keys, and are out the door with your coffee in hand.
You roll up to the familiar, grand cabin with your heart beating a million miles an hour. The adrenaline has finally worn off as you sit in your car, in a deep stare down with the house that you spent most of your childhood in.
You feel so fucking stupid. Why would you even think this was okay? Tears burn your eyes as you scramble for the gear shift, pulling before realizing you hadn't even turned the car back on yet.
Before you can shakily push the button, the door swings open, and you're caught red handed. You freeze, your hands finding a home on the steering wheel, almost in defense in front of you.
He lifts his hand, making a 'come hither' motion with his fingers, and it's embarrassing how immediately you obey.
You swing the door open, stomping across the gravel dirt road to reach the porch. You're breathing hard as you approach him, in his low hanging sweatpants and thin white t-shirt.
And his glasses, oh God, his fucking glasses. It's perfect. He's perfect, you're afraid.
"Your first name is Michael?" You breathe, and he can't help but rear his head back a little.
"Yeah," he huffs, and that, unfortunately, does it for you.
You press your hands on his scruffy cheeks, pressing your lips firmly into his.
He's shocked, at first, going rigid in your arms as you plant one on him.
It doesn't take him long to melt into it, though, gathering his bearings and wrapping his arms around your waist. He pulls you closer to him, your tits pressing against his chest, the thin fabric of both your pajamas leaving little to the imagination.
He stumbles backward into the house, closing the door behind you and pressing you up against it. You shiver at his initiative, wrapping your arms around his neck and pressing him against you deeper.
He runs his tongue over your lips, and you pout, desperately wanting his own on you again. He awards your impatience with one, two, three sweet kisses. You beam.
Your lips brush together as you smile up at him, eyes sparkling in the early morning light. You see his brows crease, a self-pitying smirk on his lips.
"God, I am so fucked," he rasps, smashing his lips into yours once again.
Your teeth clink at his intensity, and your tongues swirl each others as he palms your sides, going lower until he reaches your ass.
"Is this okay?" He husks, pressing sweet kisses and kitten licks to your ear.
You nod feverishly against him, and he pinches the plush skin of your ass. You squeal, and he gives you a light smack.
"Words, doll," he demands, and you're once again at his beck and call.
"Yes, God, yes, please," you mewl, eyes shining desperately.
"Good girl," he grunts, pressing his forehead against yours.
He hikes up your thin pajama shirt, pressing delicate kisses down your neck. You can't help but throw your head back into the wall, nails scraping the back of his neck.
His palms find your tits, squeezing and rolling your nipples, pinching every now and again. Warmth blooms deep in your lower belly, squeezing your thighs together at his expansive grip.
"Feel good?" He murmurs against your neck, and you nod desperately. "Arms up," he instructs, and you throw them up like a rag doll.
He slides your shirt over your head, marveling at the sight before pulling you to him, wrapping your legs around his waist as he carries you to the guest room.
You cup his cheeks as you move, peppering kisses all along his face. He chuckles, and your heart swells with the sound.
"Stop!" He laughs, "I can't see," he flops you down on the bed, his gaze on you so entirely vulnerable.
"Sucks," you shrug, making yourself comfortable on the memory foam mattress.
He quirks a brow, resting one knee on the bed.
"Oh, so you wanna be bratty about this, huh?" He poses, sliding his knee between your legs.
"It's the only thing I really know how to be," you reply, snippily.
Your breath catches in your throat as he hovers above you, ghosting his lips over your neck.
"Such a fucking tease, Michael," you breathe, wrapping your arms around his neck.
He allows himself to be pulled in by you, and you revel in every second of the close contact. His hands fly to your waistband, tugging on the elastic band. He presses a kiss at the exposed skin there, and you draw in a shaky breath.
"Can I taste you?" He murmurs against your skin, eyes closed as he takes you in.
"Yes, please," you reply, and he presses a kiss to your hip bone.
"Oh my God," he groans, peeling your bottoms off to reveal your glistening center. "You're so beautiful, fuck."
Your heart swells at his praise, nails digging into his scalp as he dives in. He laps at your collecting wetness, running his tongue up to your clit.
You jump when he flicks the tip of his tongue, swirling around your clit in a way that has you preening. You arch your back off the bed, grinding your pussy into his face to absorb any of the friction he was so generously giving you.
The scrape of his beard adds a special sting to the overstimulation, the sensitive skin of your thighs rubbing raw within minutes. It's a delicious sting, one that you can't seem to care much about at the moment.
He plays in your wetness, teasingly dipping his tongue into your hole, just a little. You gasp at his cruelty, tugging his hair ever so slightly. He groans against you, bringing a thumb up to rub your clit.
He coos at your soft whimpers, the pit in your stomach burning hot as he looks up at you, eyes big and brown and desperate.
He delves his tongue into you fully, his thumb never slowing its assault. Your release is quite rapid, waves of fire dancing over your skin as you roll your hips into his face.
He lets you use him to ride it out, rubbing his face and beard against your sensitive skin to help you through it. You dissolve into the pressure, ears ringing as you come down from your high.
Robby wastes no time crawling up your body, pressing his lips against yours immediately. You moan against his mouth at the taste, and he dips his tongue into your mouth.
Your hand finds his length, big and hard and still confined in those damn gray sweatpants.
"Why are you still fully clothed?" You ask, and he can't help but laugh.
He rolls his eyes, sitting back on his heels to lift his shirt off. He goes to lean back over you then, but you put a hand up, stopping him from going any further.
You take a moment to relish in the sight before you, the dark hair peppering his torso, the soft curve of his tummy. He's gorgeous, and you tell him so.
He flushes red at the compliment, moving your hand gently as he dips down to kiss you again.
"Can't remember the last time I've been called that," he murmurs against your cheek, pressing a light kiss there as he kicks off his pants.
He wasn't wearing underwear, and you thank whatever deity is above for the way his cock springs free, bouncing against his tummy.
The tip is red, angry, pre cum pooling at the center. You can't help but lean forward, darting your tongue out and collecting the salty liquid.
He grips your jaw and stops you from going further, earning him a cute little pout.
"I know, sweet girl. Next time," he kisses the pout off your face, and those last two words echo in your mind.
Next time, next time, next time.
"If you get your mouth on me right now, I'm going to cum," he explains, lining himself up at your entrance. "And believe it or not, I'm not in my twenties. Can't just bounce back like I used to."
Your cheeks heat at his words, teeth biting down on your lower lip as he teases your entrance with his tip.
"But don't worry," he mutters, thrusting into you, hips flush with your ass in one fell swoop. "I'm gonna fuck you real good, baby."
The air is knocked from your lungs, a gasp strangling out of your throat as he hikes your legs higher around his waist. He pulls out, only to slam back in harder, a whine falling from your pouty lips.
He leans down to kiss you as he starts to move, a repetitive rhythm that has you squealing into his neck.
You dig your fingers into his back, throwing your head back onto the pillow. He mouths at your neck, desperate grunts falling from his ow lips.
"So fucking beautiful," he murmurs against your neck. You shudder. "You have any idea how good this pussy feels?" He asks, sitting up on his knees to pick up his speed.
You wail, his balls slapping your ass with each thrust. He holds both of your legs up by your ankles. now, resting them on one shoulder as he continues to drive into you.
"God, Michael!" You whine, throwing your forearms over your eyes.
He shudders at this, kissing your ankle and asking you to call him that again.
"Feels so good, Michael," you whimper, a sweet smile on your face now that you know the damage you cause him. "Gonna make me cum."
He groans at this, and it's guttural. Your pussy squeezes down on him extra hard, the spring in your stomach beginning to coil. He kisses your ankle again, your shin, running his tongue along every spare inch of skin he can find.
You're dizzy underneath him, the world hazy as you bring your hands up to his belly, pressing and groping all of him you can.
"Fuck," a strangled groan wrestles its way out of his throat. "Your hands feel so fucking good, baby," he insists, thrusts nearly erratic. "You like feelin' me? Like how soft I am for you? Even when I'm fucking you like a slut?"
His words spark inside you, exploding like tiny fireworks. You feel your wetness pooling on the bed below, only growing messier at his words. He coos as he feels you gush around him.
"So perfect for me," he whispers, and you nod, taking a fistful of his tummy in each hand. "Love it when you fucking feel me up."
"I love your body, Michael," you tell him, eyes hazy and glossed over. "You're so gorgeous," you repeat your words from earlier, and he shudders above you.
"Pretty girl," he moans, his thrusts growing sloppy. "Want you to cum for me, make me the luckiest guy in the world, yeah?"
That does it, your Earth no longer spinning on its axis as your second orgasm hits you. It's like a freight train, rough and brutal and perfect. His own is soon to follow, his hips pressing flush against your ass as he empties himself inside you.
"Michael," you whine, teary eyes finding his darkened ones.
They soften at your plea for him, maneuvering your legs into a more comfortable position before pulling out. You whine at the loss of him, and he lightly taps your inner thigh.
"I know, sweet girl," he says, getting up from the bed. "You stay there 'n look pretty, hm?" He runs a large hand over your hair as he settles you into the bed. "I'm gonna get you a towel, m'kay?"
You nod wordlessly as you watch him go, selfishly committing his ass to memory.
You watch him nearly melt when he comes back, his reaction to you justâŚlaying in his bed an immediate ego boost. Your heart swells as he gets his hands on you again, gently patting your core dry.
He then squirts some lotion in his hands, rubbing them gently into your raw inner thighs. You hiss at the sting, and he presses a sweet kiss to your lips, shushing you gently.
Once he's done a thorough clean up, he crawls in next to you, taking you in his arms and pulling you flush against him. You whimper, your lower half still sensitive as it pulses around nothing, the feeling of just being close to him so exciting.
He reaches down to pinch your ass, a light chuckle and a "be good," leaving his lips. He kisses you when you nod, muttering something about the best girl in the world.
Your lids grow heavy, and he jostles you slightly before you can fully give in.
"Hey," he starts, licking his swollen lips. "We're gonna talk about those messages when you wake up again, hm?"
Embarrassment floods you again, and you bury yourself into him. He shushes you sweetly, rubbing his hand along your back and pressing a kiss to your head.
"It's okay, it's okay," he validates, and you snuggle into him. "You're okay. I'm not mad, or weirded out or anything. I like you, and I want to talk about this, just not when you're this sleepy," he murmurs against your skin, and you nod desperately.
He clutches a hand on the back of your head, holding you flush to him as you drift to sleep.
You have no idea what will come when you wake, or what things will look like in three months when Robby goes back to Pittsburgh. But you're already back at your parents' place in your hometown, what do you have to lose?
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summary: On the morning after his last shift before his sabbatical, you and Robby have a life-changing conversation.
pairing: Robby Robinavitch x reader
No one knows, and honestly, itâs good that way.Â
Robby isnât fond of making a relationship public, because heâs scared of being burned â again. Alright, he has never said it out loud, but itâs quite obvious to those having the chance to be close to him.Â
Normally, you would prefer to have a proper boyfriend you can tell your family and friends about. But this time you make an exception for him, because you really like him, even if heâs quite troubled.Â
Quite being the understatement of the year. Because Robby is terribly lonely despite having friends and occasional girlfriends, and heâs stressed out, and burned out, and heâs losing his grip. Slowly but surely, Robby is reaching the deepest pits of hell, and luckily, youâre not the only one trying to offer a helping hand to him.
Even now, as youâre sitting around his kitchen island, eating breakfast together, heâs not talking to you. Well, heâs talking, but thatâs only about the trip with additional instructions about how to take care of his apartment while heâs gone. You chime in every now and then, giving little hints that youâd be happier if he stayed, if he gave up his plan to go on this trip.
Because he does sound like he wasnât planning to return at all, which is more than alarming. Last night he complained. He complained that Dana and Jack â people you only know by name â both tried to talk to him, both tried to break down his walls by cornering him, and that the latter managed to succeed in a way.Â
It wasnât enough to talk him out of his plan, but at least he finally dropped hints that heâs finally considering therapy, maybe online, while heâs away. Thatâs how it worked during Covid, it might work now too if heâs at a place with proper WiFi. You donât push him to do it, at least heâs thinking about the possibility without his hands being forced.
âI feel bad about baby Jane Doe,â he suddenly notes after a good ten minutes of silence.Â
You give him a questioning look since you have absolutely no idea what baby heâs talking about. He hasnât mentioned that before, but you guess this is related to his latest shift. When your eyes finally meet, Robby lets out a sigh.Â
âSomeone left this baby at the hospital, and we need to find someone to take her in, because she deserves a family, she needs people to love her,â he explains, and you can hear something in his voice that you havenât heard before.
This is personal to him, as if he had some sort of a connection with that baby. After a sigh, you let out a thoughtful hum and lean back a little on the barstool. But you never take your eyes off him, you try to figure out just what heâs not telling you. But then, as if itâs some weird, cosmic thought that strikes you, you clear your throat.
Robbyâs brows shoot up, and it takes you a moment to gather that single thought. âWhy donât we bring her home?â you suggest.
Itâs a bold suggestion, you know that well, after all youâve only been together for a few months, and this relationship is a secret, but still, you feel like this would be the right decision. Robbyâs surprise passes as fast as it shows, and itâs replaced with a look of confusion.
âYou mean, I should go back for her?â You nod, giving him the chance to process the idea. âIâm about to leave, it wouldnât beâ I should stay, thatâs what you want to say, right?â Another nod follows his words. âHonestly, I canât say the thought hasnât crossed my mind too while I held her before coming home,â he admits with a very, very small smile. âWould you be up for it with my hectic shifts?âÂ
Not really, but whoâs ever truly ready for a kid? So, instead, you just bite on your lower lip and nod.Â
Robby lets out a mixture of a sigh and a hum as he taps his fingers on the table. âI will have to cancel my trip if we do this. And we need to buy a bunch of stuff for the baby, this place isnât ready to accommodate one,â he points out.
âLetâs just see if they would let us bring her here first, okay?â
âOkay. Get ready, I guess weâre going shopping for a baby,â he tells you half-jokingly as he stands up and picks up your plates..
âIdiot,â you note with a laugh, and he only kisses your head in response.
Something changed in him, as if a switch had been flipped. But this is good. A good change as he decided to stay, he joked, and heâs seemingly happy to bring that little girl home.
summary:Â You were meant to be on vacation with your boyfriend, but instead you were there alone, where you meet the man across the hall from your hotel room, Michael, drinking alone in the hotel lobby.
Months later, you're admitted to the ER at the Pitt.
warnings/content:Â angst, fertility issues, Reader has endometriosis, some descriptions of blood, explicit casual-not-so-casual vacation sex, oral (f and m receiving), light praise kink, caretaking, hurt/comfort, accidental pregnancy
a/n: don't even get me startedddddddddddd!!! it's super fitting that March is also Endometriosis Awareness Month. I just have so many feelings. I hope you like this!!!! divider by me; unbeta-d and poorly proofread
It wasn't supposed to be like this.Â
Although, the location seemed perfect. Pristine beaches, the clearest water you'd ever seen. The friendliest greeters when you arrived at the hotel placing leis around your neck. Everyone seemed to smile and absorb all those good feelings. There was literal laughter in the air.Â
It was all that you planned it to be, except you weren't alone when you first talked about coming to Hawaii. All that vacation time you saved up together, and then your life went to shit.Â
That was a month ago. You debated for weeks about cancelling everything, since your partner cancelled your life together - but then over time you felt like it was worse to be sitting around at home feeling sorry for yourself instead of being here anyway.Â
You could grieve your old life here instead, where everything looked like a scene on a postcard.
You went to your hotel room, opened up your suitcase and fished out your first swimsuit. It was a low cut one-piece that hugged your body. You wrapped a sarong around your middle and swapped your sneakers for flip-flops and walked down to the beach with your towel and a book.Â
You'd been doing the same thing at home, except instead of the ocean you'd had your messy apartment surrounding you. If this was all you did for the rest of the day, fine.Â
You fell asleep in one of the sunbeds in the long line covered with umbrellas on the shore, only to be awoken by the shrieks of a young family whose children tore down to the beach with their gear. The father gave you a sheepish look as you stared after them, picking up your book from the spot it fell beside you.
Sand was already in it, great. And you managed to lose your spot. You couldnât be upset at the kids, though. They were in literal paradise. You probably should have stayed homeâŚ
You trudged back to your room to shower. As you got out your key, elevator doors shutting behind you, you spotted a man whose back was to you opening the room opposite yours in the hallway.Â
You ducked into your room without a word, not before having brief, awkward eye contact with him. He was older than you, but handsome all the more for it. His brows hiked ever so slightly as you disappeared, and you hoped he wasnât offended.Â
You werenât in the mood to talk just yet.Â
-
Hours later, you couldnât sleep. You ordered room service instead of attending the lĹŤĘťau, hoping that by tomorrow you would have the courage to show your face to random strangers.Â
Now, with the blankets twisting around you each time you moved, there was no way you were getting to sleep anytime soon.Â
You took a deep breath and left your bed, throwing your cardigan over your sleep clothes. Heading downstairs, you could hear there were still a few people around, but it was nothing like earlier that evening.Â
No-one was at the bar, save the guy behind it, and another figure nursing a beer. You recognized him immediately as your neighbor from across the hall, and sat nearby him, an empty stool between you.
As you waited, you scanned the wide dining area behind you. There was one other man at the far wall, staring into his phone with a large whiskey by his elbow.Â
âWhat would you like, maâam?âÂ
The bartender approached with a wide smile, unbothered by the hour.Â
âUh⌠vodka soda, please.â
âOf course,â he said, and departed.Â
You felt watched and looked at your neighbor.Â
âIâm not interrupting?â you asked, and he shook his head.Â
âStay.â
You told him your name and offered your hand.Â
âI think weâre on the same floor,â you added, and he shook your hand.Â
âYeah. Iâm Michael.â
You nodded, taking a short sip of your drink when it arrived a beat later. You remembered your clothes. Michael was wearing shorts and a t-shirt.Â
âI⌠canât sleep.â
âSorry to hear it,â he said. âYouâre here by yourself? Whereâre you from?â
You nodded. âPittsburgh.â
He burst into a real smile and you felt your face flush. He was very, very handsome. Never mind your first impression. He was cute as hell.
âMe, too.â
âOh, no shit?â you said, and he laughed. âWhat are the odds?â
You talked a bit about the journey there, and Michael said heâd got there yesterday. He was on a long vacation, nothing fixed.
You snorted. âJesus. Mine was nothing but planned. So much of it went to shit already-â
It was like you couldnât help yourself, cringing. You hadnât meant to already get into it, but it was bound to come up, why you were alone.Â
âI mean, I had these big plans but the person I was supposed to come with decided not to in the end.â
âSorry, again,â Michael said, taking a swig of beer.Â
You shook your head. âDonât be. Turns out he wasnât the guy I thought he was.â
Michael went quiet for a second, tilting his head, narrowing his eyes. âWas this⌠a break-up?â
âYeah,â you sighed.Â
There was a pause and you added quickly:
âNot that Iâm losing sleep over him! Iâm way past that. I just⌠had these plansâŚâ
You should have already been drinking long ago if you were going to bring this up with a complete stranger, but fuck it. You were on vacation, things were different. This wasnât like being at your local dive, or telling people you work with.
âI had a laparoscopy,â you said. âItâs when-â
âDo you have endometriosis?â he asked.
âHow did you know that?â
âIâm a doctor,â he said.
You looked away, suddenly very aware of him looking straight at you. You wondered what else he knew about you, even if it was just by looking at you.Â
âI wanted to start IVF, after this trip,â you went on. âThis was meant to be our last big one before - hopefully - a baby.â
It wasnât like you, to disclose so much. You didnât feel judged, though you could sense the cogs were turning when you looked back at him.Â
âMust be something about you, for me to get so personal so fast,â you mumbled. âAnd I guess that happens a lot, when people find out youâre a doctor. But Iâm guessing youâre not a psychiatrist?â
He shook his head, with an almost sad kind of smile. âEmergency.âÂ
âSo you work in a hospital?â you asked, and he nodded.
âYeah.â
The silence between you that followed felt less strange, somehow. You didnât want to avoid him like you had before, at least.Â
âI really am sorry if I gatecrashed your downtime,â you said, and he shook his head, draining his beer.Â
âNah, I couldnât sleep, either.â
He got up and you considered doing the same, but left your glass instead of finishing it.
âYou wanna go for a walk?âÂ
You thought about it, and then wondered why it mattered. It didnât hurt. You nodded, rising from your seat. You gathered your cardigan around yourself and walked out, down the short footpath to the beach.Â
Tiki torches still burned, lining the sand well enough to see his face in the halflight. The moonlight did the rest. The tide came and went in a steady rhythm, the night otherwise blissfully quiet.Â
âItâs so⌠peaceful out here,â you murmured, and Michael nodded.Â
It was romantic. It was supposed to be, thatâs why you chose to take your ex here. If he hadnât run away from you, youâd be rolling around in the sand together, trying to make a baby. The regret crested over you again and you sighed, moving on, not waiting.Â
âHas the treatment been⌠effective?â he asked, and you glanced his way, for a moment too lost in your thoughts to understand.
Oftentimes, when someone learned you had endometriosis, their response was pitying, or worse, falsely trying to relate to your emotional and physical agonies. No, it wasnât like ordinary period pain. Yes, it had derailed work and school, it had made life harder in a lot of ways.Â
Yes, you hoped to have children. Past tense - hoped. You didnât know anymore. It meant doing it alone, if you were doing it now.Â
âI thought you were supposed to be on vacation,â you retorted, folding your arms.Â
He copied you, and you could make out a smirk on his face.Â
âIâll send you the bill.â
Your welcomed laughter followed, before you rolled your eyes. âI guess it has been. Symptoms arenât as bad. For now.â
There wasnât a cure. You just had to wait it out, hope that each cycle didnât render you bedridden like usual.Â
âThatâs good to hear,â he said. âSorry, thatâs personalâŚâ
âHey, Iâm the one who told you,â you said, shrugging. You glanced towards the water. âJesus.â
You sidestepped the tide as it came rushing in, faster than you expected. Michael did the same, but heâd been paying attention, guiding you back with a hand that hovered the small of your back. He wasnât quite touching, but you felt that spark of sudden proximity.Â
You kept walking in silence, a little further away from the shore.Â
âHow long were you planning on staying here?â you asked, and he shook his head.
âIâm undecided,â he said.
âIs that why you canât sleep?â you asked.Â
You may as well try more honesty with him. He knew what felt like too much already. You looked at one another.Â
âItâs probably related.â
You smirked back at him, then suppressed a sudden yawn. It was probably time to head back. Michael nodded toward the hotel and you walked back together. The elevator ride was silent, too. You went to your door, and then glanced back his way, shoving the keycard in.
âGoodnight.â
âGoodnight,â he echoed softly.Â
Something about that made you feel warm inside.Â
-
You approached him the next afternoon, among a group of other tourists waiting on the pier. You couldnât see his eyes behind his sunglasses but he smiled back at you.
âHey, I know you,â you said, face shielding your eyes.Â
You hadnât seen him all morning, though admittedly youâd hoped to. You slept okay once you got back to bed, and spent the beginning of the day looking for him at breakfast before you went back to your room to laze around.Â
This afternoon trip was booked well in advance. It was supposed to be a late lunch on the ocean, with a tour guide included. A few families, couples and a bachelorette party gathered to board the yacht.Â
You and Michael stood together like two kids pairing up on a field trip.Â
âI canât get over how clear the water is out here,â he said, and you beamed.Â
âI know, right?â
You hadnât expected him here. In fact, neither of you had said anything about what you planned to do while in Hawaii. You packed too much, as you were prone to, so you were glad to have brought at least a couple nice dresses and skirts.Â
Todayâs outfit was brand new, tags popped off that morning. Linen dress that cinched at the waist with a broad sun hat.Â
Michaelâs Birkenstocks looked well-worn, his shorts were the same from yesterday. He wore a navy polo shirt that hid little of his broad frame. His⌠bulk attracted you. You wanted to stare at his forearms but tried not to. He was fun to look at, but he was a person, too.Â
Also, youâd just gone through a breakup.Â
You put on your sunglasses and ascended with the others, Michael behind you. He stayed by your side as the tour guide from the hotel began his introduction, and then everyone took a seat as the yacht began to move away from the dock.Â
âThis is insane,â you murmured.Â
For the next half an hour, you listened with Michael beside you as the tour went on. Describing the flora and fauna of the islands, you wish you could see it for yourself, not have someone only describe it to you.
There was a loud gurgle and you looked at Michael.Â
âWas that your stomach?â
â...yes,â he whispered.Â
You covered your mouth with your hand, pressing your lips together for good measure. As the trip went on, you too felt hunger begin to pull your focus.
When they finally docked on the other side of the island, wait staff approached with heaping trays of fresh fruit and seafood. There were collective sighs of relief all around.Â
âGet in there,â Michael encouraged, and you laughed openly, tucking in.Â
-
âDid that feel⌠weird to you?â you asked, twirling your hat absently.Â
You walked back up to the hotel with Michael, and he nodded.Â
âYeah, it felt⌠commercial,â he muttered. âInauthentic.â
âNot a waste of money, though, surely?âÂ
âIâm not your accountant.â
âIâm just saying - I donât totally regret it,â you retorted. âIt wasnât what I expected, though.â
His sunglasses were tucked into his neckline, his arms bearing a healthy glow from the sun. You looked at his skin when he kept the elevator door open for you, allowing you in beside him.Â
He pressed the button for your floor.Â
âItâs not gonna help my Yelp review, Iâll tell you that much...â
You smiled again, looking away. âObviously.â
It felt so good to be on the same page. It was different to what you were used to. With your ex, it never felt like you were truly in sync. It was your downfall, in the end. All the time you were together it felt like youâd manage to get over that eventually.Â
âAre you gonna grab some dinner downstairs later?â he asked, and you met his gaze.
He wasnât saying that just to make conversation. You believed that with how he was looking at you now, although maybe you werenât the best judge of character when it came to men.
âYeah, maybe after a nap,â you said.Â
âSounds good,â he said.Â
âWere you⌠were you hoping to see me?â you asked.Â
âSure.â
He made it sound so simple. Why wouldnât he hope to see you? Your face flushed and you looked away.Â
âOkay, cool,â you said.Â
âOkay, Iâll see you after,â he said.Â
He let you out first, and you felt butterflies in your stomach for the first time in years. You smiled shyly and walked away to your door, letting yourself in before you embarrassed yourself.Â
-
Something shifted inside you and wanted to enjoy yourself for the sake of it. You showered, after you didnât nap - your brain kept thinking about Michael and his warm eyes peering at you - and dressed in one of your sundresses.
You found him at the bar and he nodded towards the dining area, where the host led you to a table overlooking the beach outside. Handed a menu, you peruse, unsure of where to begin.
Michael ordered beer, looking your way.Â
âIâll get a cocktail,â you beamed. âSex on the beach.â
If it landed anywhere, you tried not to read it too much on his face as you were left alone. He hadnât said this was a date - but he hadnât said it wasnât either.Â
Conversation came easily, like youâd never stopped talking earlier.Â
âWhatâs it like being an ER doctor?â you asked, as you picked up some bread from the basket between you.Â
You offered it to him and he took a piece, breaking it in half on his plate.
âChaotic,â he said. âSometimes heartbreaking.â
âI canât imagine how challenging it is,â you said, chewing. âI would never stay calm.â
âItâs not easy.â
You felt like he was skirting around the reality he faced, and your brows furrowed.Â
âI feel like youâre trying to not sound as impressive as you are.â
He laughed at that, passing a hand over his face wearily.Â
âI meanâŚâ
âYouâd constantly have to be flexible, right? No day is the same, you deal with anything and everyoneâŚâ
âYeah,â he said. âBut someone has to.â
You swallowed. The waiter returned with your drinks, and you took yours with a brief smile of acknowledgment. You took a sip, and put the towering glass aside, picking out a piece of pineapple stuck to its rim.Â
âSo why you, then? Why not do something other than emergency healthcare?â
You shoved the fruit in your mouth, watching him. He drank from his glass of beer as you asked this. He sighed.Â
âI donât⌠want to. But I probably should.â
You appreciated his honesty. You sucked the juice from your thumb, nodding. The silence felt taut with more questions, from both sides of the table.
âWhyâd you break up with your ex?â he asked.Â
You smiled bitterly. âHe didnât want to have babies with me.â
The heaviness of your conversation only just hit you. You were both alone here, out of choice, but now youâd decided to create this bond, however fleeting it may be.Â
âIâm sorry,â he added.Â
âYou didnât upset me,â you said, because he hadnât. âItâs the truth. He left me. I thought he wanted to have kids. We talked about it enough.â
You sighed, not unlike him.Â
âWe started dating just before lockdown, and then we moved in together pretty fast. I was already diagnosed with endo then - and whenever we talked about the future it felt like hypotheticals. I mean, the world had fallen apart, and we werenât going anywhere. We were forced to know one another really well. And we did, I thought. I thought we were close.â
You rolled your eyes at yourself, at how wrong you were.
âI think maybe he thought Iâd never be serious about it, because I knew it would be hard to conceive, but then I started cutting back on drinking-â
You glanced at your drink briefly and gave a short laugh.
âI was trying to get my body healthy for trying, and I finally had my surgeryâŚâ
âAnd he flaked,â Michael said, not unkindly.
âYeah,â you said. âAnd I feel like an idiot that I spent all this time with him, and I never really knew him. I think he meant more to me than I ever did to him.â
You picked up your drink again to stop talking, to stop yourself from becoming too sad again. You were only repeating the same thoughts youâd had for weeks.
âHeâs an idiot,â Michael said, and you met his gaze. âHe should have known sooner, anyway. Let you down better.â
You rolled your eyes again, trying not to notice how his eyes bore into you. Your skin began to feel hot.
Mercifully, the nightâs entertainment began. Dancers twirling flames drew all attention away from your sad life, and with it your perspective. You were here, and not at home feeling sorry for yourself.Â
The night was warm, beautiful. The scenery and culture was spectacular, and this man was sitting with you out of choice. Things could be a thousand times worse. You were lucky.
âHey, if anyone gets hurt, at least I know where to find a doctor,â you said, clapping with the rest of the dinner crowd.Â
Michaelâs eyes were bright with mirth.Â
Some time later, full of good food, carrying your purse under your arm, your shoes in one hand and a water glass in your other, you and Michael walked along the beach together once more.
âDo you have kids?â you asked, and Michael took a second to reply.
âI had a stepson, sort of,â he said. âI havenât seen him in a while.â
He didnât explain, but added:
âAnswerâs no.â
âDo you want them?â you asked. âI mean, did you ever?â
âSometimes,â he said. âOther timesâŚâ
Again, he didnât elaborate, his words hanging there. You decided to fill the silence.
âI guess I always wanted to try, to⌠yâknow, give it a shot. Try to fight my infertility.âÂ
He nodded, wincing. âI guess it would be hard if I was working like I do.â
âPeople make it work.â
âSorry, I guess Iâm just naturally morbid from time to time,â he said.Â
The sand was oddly comforting as you strolled, the sounds of life around you mere background noise. You drew in a breath, deciding to be your most direct.
âYou werenât just being nice, about my ex being a moron?â you asked.
His brows hiked. âNo.â
âIt can be hard for guys to be with-â
âWith women with chronic illnesses?â he cut in.Â
You glanced towards the sea, the darkness beyond.Â
âYeah, I guess that makes him sound like an asshole.â You sighed. âIâm going to stop mentioning him. I promise.â
Michael stopped, and you turned back, looking down at his hand he had poised beneath your nose.
âPinky promise?â
You smirked, indulging him. You clasped his pinky with your own, shaking. For a beat too long, you noticed. He pulled away first, only to step closer to you, watching your face.
The heat between you was undeniable. He lifted his hand once again, thumb and forefinger catching your chin.Â
âWalk you back?â
âSure,â you said, heart hammering.Â
-
It took a little while to fall asleep, since he was a gentleman and did as he said - walked you back to your room and then said goodnight.Â
No kiss, not even a hug. You simply parted ways and then you throbbed for hours after, feeling like you should have just gone for it. Unless somehow you were misreading it.Â
Those thoughts were pushed aside the second your landline rang beside you, around eight the next morning. You rolled over, confused, picking up the receiver.
âHello?â
âHey, did I wake you?âÂ
Michaelâs voice early in the morning made a thrill stir in your guts, a smile already playing on your lips. He was all soft and friendly, and you felt like you could hear him smiling on the other end of the line, across the hallway.Â
âNo. Who is this?â
âItâs the guy thatâs gonna get you to see some real nature today, if you let him,â he replied.
You grinned, rolling onto your back. âWhat did you have in mind?â
âA hike, if youâre up for it.â
You knew you didnât look your best when you were huffing and puffing up a hill.Â
âIâll take it easy on you,â he added.
âGee, thanks,â you muttered.
When were you ever going to do this again?
âAlright, fuck it.â
You agreed to meet one another in the lobby in half an hour and you hung up, leaping out of bed and into the shower.Â
You threw on some shorts and your new hat, tried to figure out a way to look both cute and not totally ridiculous, and then headed downstairs. You grabbed a banana from the breakfast buffet and a coffee and scoffed them down, before making your way to the lobby.Â
He was waiting for you, backpack over one shoulder.Â
âDonât have one of those,â you said, gesturing.Â
âI can carry everything.â
âWhereâre we going?â you asked, following him out the door and into the street.Â
âItâs a tourist trap, technically,â he said, and you punched the air. âBut the biodiversity is up there, compared to yacht tours-â
âMan, that Yelp review just writes itself, huh?â
You suspected he could walk faster if he wanted to, but he was doing the nice thing and making sure you werenât left behind. He offered you bottled water that you took, uncapping it as you climbed a footpath up a steep hill.Â
âThereâs a cliff view,â he explained.Â
âThatâs the reward?â
âNo, the journey is the reward,â he said, and you snorted. âYeah, I know how I sound.â
He sounded like someone who could call out his own bullshit, which you appreciated. It was refreshing, in a way. In this place with him, there was no room for a facade.
You made sure to walk beside him until the path was too narrow, and then you took the lead, in the hope of seeming up for anything. Also, you knew the shorts you wore did great things for your butt.
Nearly half an hour later, you reached the top, passing another couple that nodded and smiled at you.Â
âEnjoy.â
âThanks,â you called after them, as Michael let them pass.Â
The view took your breath away. Rocks below as waves crashed into them. Lush greenery all around. Birdcalls echoing as Michael rested beside you against a tree.Â
âYou did it,â he murmured, taking out his water.Â
You tapped his bottle with yours and drank. You felt a little out of breath, but otherwise good. There was a sense of achievement.
When you got back to the hotel, Michael jerked his thumb towards the concierge desk.Â
âGimme a sec.âÂ
âWhat are you up to?âÂ
He had a conspiratorial glint in his eye as he walked over, you hurrying after him. As he approached the desk, a worker smiled at you.
âAfternoon, Dr. Robinavich.âÂ
âI was wondering if anyone was available at short notice, we were out hikingâŚâÂ
The worker's uniform reminded you to buy a Hawaiian shirt while you were here in the next few days, the thought distracting you momentarily.Â
âUnfortunately, we only have a couple's massage session available, it's a longer one. Our regular masseuse Amy is away, she does our shorter sessionsâŚâ
âCouple's massage?â you blurted, and Michael looked at you.Â
âWould you mind?âÂ
Uh, fuck no. You shook your head. The worker smiled.Â
âAlright. We'll see you in twenty minutes.âÂ
-
You quickly realized that you were in over your head. The massage rooms were low lit with the kind of ambient lighting you associated with softcore porn.
The tiny candles that dotted the room, along with the soothing New Age music coming from the small speaker in the corner only added to the highly sensual atmosphere.
âUhâŚâ you said, as you walked in with Michael.Â
The masseuses stood by with towels in hand, two smiling young women with matching frangipani in their hairdos, their skin glowing, looking soft to the touch. You envied their calm, feeling your face burn.
âGood afternoon,â one of them said, beaming. âIâm Naomi, and this is MiaâŚâ
Mia gave a little wave.Â
âAfternoon,â Michael said, nodding.
He was also weirdly at ease. Then again, as a doctor, wouldnât he deal with embarrassing situations all the time? You pressed your lips together, listening.Â
âWe will give you a few minutes to undress to your liking. Are there any concerns before we continue?â
You cleared your throat. âI - uh, I can have a tender abdomen sometimes, I have endometriosisâŚâ
Naomi nodded, understanding. âYes, of course. We can avoid certain areas. Anything you want us to focus on?â
âMy neck and shoulders,â you said. âI think I probably look down at my phone too much.â
âMy back,â Michael added. âIâm on my feet a lot, generally.â
âHeâs a doctor,â you said, and he looked at the floor.Â
âOh, wonderful,â Mia said. âThank you.â
They departed, Michael staring after them.Â
ââThank youâ? Iâm not a veteran.â
âYou worked through the height of the pandemic though, right?â you said, and he met your gaze, his face changing.Â
Dread or something close to it flashed across his face and you immediately regretted your question, realizing far too late how invasive and awful it was.
âIâm sorry, that was crass,â you babbled, and he shook his head.
âItâs fine.â
He moved away, towards one of the massage tables, fingers going to his buttons.Â
âRight,â you muttered. âUh. Iâll justâŚâ
You went to the other table, taking your shoes off, hands going to your shirt to remove it as fast as possible.Â
âDonât turn around,â you said.
âYou good?â
âYes, Iâm fine,â you lied.Â
âBecause we donât have to do this if youâre uncomfortable.â
You thought about it for longer than a second and then slipped under the towel, the table firm and unyielding under your weight. You tried to ground yourself, your nipples hardening under your towel as you spared a glance at him.Â
His back was to you, but he was under his own towel, no shirt. He had some scars, a couple moles you found endearing. Freckles and marks of age that only flattered him more. He was broad, too, of course.Â
You thought of that strength hidden under his clothes.Â
âCan I roll over?â he asked, and you whispered:
âYeah.â
He turned, pulling in a breath.Â
âYou with me?â he asked. âAre you in any pain today?â
You shook your head, and you were touched by his concern. You buried yourself further under the towel, barely peeking out.Â
He murmured your name a couple times and your eyes snapped to his.Â
âMy liver spots and wrinkles are really that hard to look at?â
âShut the fuck up,â you retorted, laughing uncomfortably. âYouâre cute and you know it.â
He began to laugh, rolling onto his back, hand passing over his face. You wanted him so badly then, wishing he was under the towel with you. Now you had ninety minutes of this a few feet away from you.
âThis is supposed to be relaxing,â he said. âSo try to relax.â
âA man telling me to relax,â you muttered. âMy favorite.â
âYes, and a male healthcare professional, too, no less,â he retorted.Â
Your eyes met again and you shuffled up a little, until your arms were free, the towel still covering your naked torso.Â
âAfter this, we should-â
Whatever bold thing you were about to propose was interrupted by a short knock on the door, Naomiâs voice floating in.Â
âAre you ready?â
A beat, and Michael closed his eyes.Â
âYeah,â he called. âThank you.â
The massage itself was divine. It felt far shorter than its ninety minutes, and after a while all you could do was melt into a pile of goo. You were surprised you didnât nod off, and Michael admitted the same in the elevator back up to your floor.Â
Whatever momentum you had earlier was lost, but you didnât mind. You werenât in any hurry to get back there, by how liquid you felt. You were rubbed all over with lavender oil and felt your clothes sticking to your skin. You craved a hot shower and a bed to nap on.Â
You gave him a dreamy little wave as you went your separate ways.
-
You woke hours later, hearing a knocking at the front door drifting in as you fought off the remainder of your sleep. You lifted your head from your pillow and walked out to answer it.
Michael stood before you.
âI definitely woke you this time,â he said, looking at your bathrobe that matched his.Â
He looked apologetic but cuddly in the fluffy white robe, his feet bare. He had nice toes, you noted vaguely.
âItâs fine,â you said, not bothering to lie. âItâs better I donât sleep through dinner.â
âIâm actually wondering if you wannaâŚâ
He gestured behind him, toward the elevator down the hall.
âI was gonna order room service,â you said.Â
You were too lazy to dress in something nice, to walk all the way down. You were spoiled by the massage. All you wanted was creature comforts.Â
âYou can order it at mine.â
He really, really wanted to see you, that was clear. You softened, rubbing your eye.Â
âOkayâŚâ
You took your phone and your keys and followed him out. His TV set was on, his window was open with the curtains moving with the soft night breeze, and the moon was out. The sounds of the hotel floated up from below, but you liked it here best, in this little space of his.
His suitcase was open against the wall, its contents far more economical than yours. From your brief glance, you saw a small bottle of cologne resting on his bedside table. On the yacht youâd smelt a fresh, slightly sweet scent on him.
His room itself had his own scent, amplified. You could chase it if you wanted to. It was vaguely earthy, welcoming. You perched on the end of his bed beside him, your knees touching.
He was so close.
âGood day?â you asked, and he nodded.Â
Then he took your hand like you were his and you stared down at him.
âYour hand is crazy soft,â you whispered, just to break the tension.Â
âItâs probably from all the hand sanitizer at work,â he murmured, threading your fingers together. âAloe in it.â
You looked up into his eyes, your stomach full of butterflies.Â
âMichaelâŚâ
You took his free hand and slipped it into your robe, under your bra cup, his fingers finding your nipple. He stared down at your skin, thumb flicking over you as he rolled your breast, the moan tumbling out of you.Â
He leaned in to kiss you, your noses brushing. Light teasing, lips passing over one another until he pushed into your mouth with his tongue, your breaths already turning to panting. You were molten, wet without being touched anywhere near your pussy, and you knew it.Â
Your hands went up to his hair and you pulled him towards you, the TV playing in the background as you kissed and kissed, both of his hands on your chest now. You pulled back once your lips began to numb, relishing in how soft his beard was, noting the grey hairs you could make out.Â
âCan I take this off?â he murmured, nuzzling your skin as you nodded.Â
He pushed down your robe and then the straps of your bra. Freed of them both, you threw a leg over him and straddled his lap, feeling how hard he was beneath you. You gave a grind of your hips against his and he groaned into your mouth, the sound reverberating through you.
You slotted in together, rocking as you kissed, clumsy but not ever rushed. It was so thorough, and you throbbed for him, scratching his scalp.Â
âSex can hurt sometimes,â you warned.Â
You were telling him what you knew heâd already know.
âI just donât want to disappoint you,â you whispered.Â
Michael promptly planted his foot and spun you around so you were pinned underneath him.Â
âThatâs not gonna happen,â he said, and you kissed him hard for that alone, his cock rubbing against your thigh insistantly.
He broke away with a soft smack of your lips, and you gazed up at him with a shy smile.
âCan you get a condom?â you whispered.
He nodded, moving back quick enough to make you laugh at his enthusiasm. You watched as he went to his suitcase, retrieving a box.
âWow, how many is in there?â you teased, resting on your elbows.Â
âIâm on sabbatical for three months,â he said, and you smirked again. âAnd Iâm a doctor.â
âIâm not complaining,â you said.Â
âGood.â
You took hold of your underwear and lifted your hips, pulling them off. You tossed them aside as he watched with a quiet awe.Â
âI was hoping to do that,â he said, returning to the bed.Â
The clear outline of his erection made your heart hammer with anticipation. A Pavlovian-like response, your mouth watered as he went to take off his own robe and pants underneath.Â
When he stood naked by the bed, you crawled over for a closer look, and to touch, of course. You couldnât help it. You reached for his cock, wrapping your hand around it, his hand finding your shoulder and squeezing.Â
âShit,â he whispered, as you jerked him slowly, tenderly.Â
His eyes closed, distracted. He still held the unopened box, and you took the opportunity to dip down and take him into your mouth without warning.Â
You went all the way down, until you were hitting your gag reflex, careful to not trigger it too hard, dragging your tongue along the underside. He tasted nice, that musky saltiness that was never quite enough. The precum that rewarded you made you moan around his cock, pulling back, swirling your tongue around the blunt tip.
He was so warm, and so hard. You bobbed your head, pushing yourself further, foregoing breathing to make him lose his own. He panted as you worked him over in hard sucks, his hand moving up to grab your hair. Just hard enough to be known, but not painful.
âFuck,â he hissed. âFuckâŚâ
You missed this, feeling wanted. Feeling cherished, even if this was fleeting. You could believe it just enough. You pulled back, eyes watering from the effort.Â
âYouâŚâ
He pushed you back, until he lay on top of you, caging you in with his arms. His wet cock slipped between you, and you wrapped your legs around his waist, your nails digging into his back.Â
âYouâre a menace,â he murmured, peppering your face with kisses.Â
You made out again, until you were certain you were dripping onto the sheets, your naked chests and stomachs pressed together. You panted, sweat already beading on your forehead and his.Â
âCondom,â he said, and you nodded.Â
He broke open the box, took out the sleeve of them and tore one off. You watched as he pulled it on efficiently, expertly.
âWhenâs the last time you fucked someone?â you panted.
âFeels like too long ago, now,â he said, his eyes blown with lust.Â
He pulled you under him again and kissed you, lining you up.
âIâll go slowly,â he whispered, and you nodded. âWe can stop ifâŚâ
âNo, donât stop,â you whispered back. âPlease donât stop.â
You wrapped your arms around his neck as he sunk into you, your cunt gripping him already, a whimper falling from your lips as he filled every inch of you to the brim.
You gasped, adjusting. You felt all tingly, right down to your toes. He groaned as he shifted, not moving as you accommodated for him.
âYouâre a fucking dream,â he breathed, and you moaned.
âKeep⌠going.â
âI canât get too worked up or itâll be over too soon,â he said, and you laughed breathily.
âYouâre so sweet,â you whispered.
âI mean itâŚâ
He finally began to move, his nose bumping yours with each thrust. Things quickly dissolved into sweat and moans, each stroke bringing you closer to the edge. He moved in for another swift kiss, teeth clacking, and you gripped him harder, digging into his flesh.
Your bodies slapped together, foreheads pressed to one anotherâs. He slowed, breathing heavily, kissing you deep as he tried to recalibrate.
You watched him pull back, to preserve himself a little longer. You squeezed him deep inside and he blinked down at you, narrowing his eyes.Â
He shifted, moving your legs up to rest your ankles on his shoulders. The stretch was exquisite, his cock feeling impossibly deep inside you. His retaliation was rewarded with your shuddering moan.
As he pounded into you, it blurred between too much and just enough, your trembling hand slipping down between you, desperate to reach your clit.Â
âIâve got you, Iâve got you,â he whispered, and you nodded, suddenly overwhelmed by it all.
Your pleasure crested and you came, crying out right by his ear, his face buried into your neck as he showed you no mercy. Bending you in half like this, your legs in the air, your wailing by his handsome face - it all would usually mortify you but it felt too fucking perfect to diminish.Â
He kept going for several seconds after you crashed back to earth, huffing and nearing his own end. You clung to him as he spilled inside the condom, going rigid above you. You pressed a kiss to his arm, panting with him.Â
In the gentle afterglow, he settled against you, a happy kind of hum in your hair. He held you against him, and it didnât feel like he let go for a long, long time, but things were blurry at best by the end.Â
It was a good fuck. Legendary, even. He peeled away reluctantly and flopped beside you with a sigh. You rested in the wet patch for all of one minute before you too decided you had to move away.Â
-
You hadnât meant to fall asleep, but you woke much later. You drew in a breath, surrounded by Michaelâs heat and scent. You shared a pillow, you remembered, as you blinked and took in the surroundings in the early morning light.Â
The TV was still on, though its volume was too low to make out the majority of the dialogue, you could see it was a black and white Italian movie.Â
Michaelâs arm was across your middle, as if he had flung it across you during the night. You watched the side of his face. His blissed out face filled your stomach with butterflies.Â
You rolled over, and then he stirred at your movement. You waited until he was waking up to finally move again, slipping out of bed and walking to the bathroom.Â
âGet back here,â you heard him call, and you smirked, glancing at the mirror.Â
Once you flushed the toilet and washed your hands, you went back, seeing him waiting for you.Â
You picked up your robe and threw it on. Michael's brows hiked.Â
âI really don't want you doing that.âÂ
âI'm gonna go,â you said. You sat on the end of the bed. âSorry to burst your bubble.âÂ
You moved to grab your slides but he stopped you, suddenly behind you and pulling you back into his arms.
âYou want me to stay?â
âDonât be so surprised,â he murmured, lips already ghosting your neck.Â
You hadnât slept with someone new in literally years, so you were rusty, you figured. But he seemed serious about how much he wanted to repeat this. After all the buildup, he wanted more? You werenât about to argue with him when his hand opened your robe again, exposing your skin once more.
And you certainly werenât going to stop him when he lay you down, your head half off the bed, diving between your spread thighs with all eager lips and tongue.
He had a confidence with a womanâs body that you knew didnât just come with age, though you suspected it helped immensely for some men. He had a greater understanding of experience, plus his regular âtouching strangersâ thing. You could never. Michael seemed born for this.
Your hands found the back of his head as he ruined you, spearing his tongue inside you, fucking you relentlessly with it once you started to whine and shiver with pleasure. Your thighs quivered, fighting to keep themselves open as he stroked deep inside your cunt.
âOh, fuckâŚâ
You back bowed as you came, and he didnât let up, working your clit with his thumb at a steady rhythm. He only stopped when you tried to pull away, his kisses landing on your inner thigh, wet and sticky. He kept kissing you, cherishing you.Â
It was so intimate and intense you had to look away, your hand over your face.Â
âYou okay?â he panted, and you nodded.Â
He pulled you up and rolled you over so your face was in his pillow, the spare under your hips a second later. In no time at all, he lined himself up, the blunt tip of him teasing your folds.
âYouâre so beautiful,â he murmured, and you believed him. The reverence was undeniable.Â
When he pushed inside, bottoming out with a grunt, you gripped him in earnest. He bent down, kissing your neck, your shoulders. You were still recovering from before, still in that floaty stage, when he began to move.Â
âFuck, look at you,â he whispered, never missing a stroke.Â
He didnât last long, and you didnât mind. You honestly didnât notice, with how full and wanted you felt. He was rougher than last night, taking from you, all the while whispering encouragement as you gave him all.Â
He came with a groan, fingers biting into your ass as he went still. You sighed, content as he pulled away.Â
Once you showered in your room and returned, he ate you out again after breakfast. It was a lot. But it felt like the closest thing to perfect. Too bad it wasnât going to last longer than a few more days of your vacation.
âWhat are you doing after this?â you murmured, popping a grape into your mouth.Â
âWellâŚâ
He glanced down at you beside him, lifting the sheet, as if to examine your naked body.Â
âI meant after vacation,â you said.Â
He was engrossed in your lower half. You moved your free hand across your lower stomach where your scars were. As if detecting your self-consciousness, he switched back.Â
âIâm still not sure.â
âHavenât given it more thought?â you said. âYouâve got a passport, right?âÂ
He nodded.Â
âYou could always, yâknow - disappearâŚâ
He swallowed, looking away. The immediate shift in him had you wanting to take it back, like usual.
âI donât have to know,â you added. âIâd just hope you enjoy it. You deserve it.â
He rubbed his eyes. âI dunno about that.â
He went quiet then and you finished eating, moving closer. He let you under his arm, pulling you into his side. Your legs tangled.Â
âWhat have you ever done that was so awful, Michael?â you whispered.Â
He gave a pained smile. You were starting to know it well.
âThe stepson I had,â he began. âJake.âÂ
âWhat happened?â
He closed his eyes. âPittfest.â
Of course. The entire event had slipped your mind as something heâd be part of. You remember donating blood in the days that followed, and you were lucky to not know anyone whoâd been there. The whole city had been affected though, for months after.Â
âHe was there, I gave him my ticket for his girlfriend,â he mumbled. He bit his lip. âLeah. She⌠she was shot, and I⌠I⌠couldnât save her.â
You pulled him into a tight hug before he could resist it, kissing his head, clinging to him. Your chest squeezed when he hugged you back, and you heard him sniffle.Â
âIâm so sorry,â you whispered.
âYeah, me too,â he mumbled.Â
You stayed like that for a while, and he began to relax against you, your lips still brushing his brow when you spoke.
âItâs not your fault.â
âDonât,â he said.Â
âMichael, itâs not- itâs not your fault. Donât do that to yourself. I know weâve only known each other a few days butâŚâ
You pulled back to look him in the eye.Â
âI feel like I⌠fucking skipped time or something. I know you well enough that you tried everything you could to save her, and⌠Iâm sorry. Iâm just so fucking sorry you have to live with that-â
He broke you off with a crushing kiss. In seconds you were tussling again, rearranging yourselves for him to push inside you. It was rushed and desperate, like you hadnât been fucking for hours.Â
âWe fucking skipped time,â he whispered, pounding into you like it was his mission to do so. âCâmon, Iâve got youâŚâ
When he played with your clit, everything shrunk to a pinpoint and you tensed up, clenching around him.Â
âAttagirl,â he whispered, watching you fall apart.Â
He didnât relent until he had his fill, your mind going blank.
-
Robbyâs back and shoulders were beginning to ache, as they always did this late into the shift. He hadnât sat down in over eight hours, except to tell a patientâs relative some bad news in the family room.Â
That didnât count.Â
He hung his neck, tugging on his stethoscope with both hands, taking a deep breath through his nose. It wasnât chaotic, but a steady hum of constant beeps, voices and movement around him. He was waiting for several beds to be available upstairs.
âSix still waiting on labs?â he asked.
âYeah,â Dana said without looking up. âAnd trauma twoâs CT just came back.â
âGreat,â Robby muttered.
Everything was normal, the tunnel-vision type of end to his day. Dana answered the phone, taking off her glasses as she stood up from her chair.
âRobby. Incoming severe vaginal bleeding.â
He nodded, looking around. Whittaker went into eight with a brave look set on his face. He watched as Mel walked with Mohan, deep in conversation. He knew Santos was trying to chart nearby.Â
McKay came out to grab another computer, logging in.Â
âSevere bleeding incoming,â he murmured. âLook alive.â
Not three minutes later, the paramedics burst in with the stretcher, a sheet thrown over the lower half of the woman whose eyes were closed, her face twisted in pain.
âSevere vaginal bleeding,â one of the paramedics rattled off. âHistory of endometriosis per patient. Syncope at home.â
Robbyâs mind clicked into gear.
âHow long?â
âCouple hours of heavy bleeding.â
âAny pregnancyââ
He stopped. The patientâs head rolled slightly to the side on the stretcher, just enough for the overhead light to fall across her face.
Robbyâs brain registered it before the rest of him caught up.
The ER disappeared. The smell of the antiseptic, the fluorescent lights. All of it was replaced with sun, the ocean - Hawaii.Â
You.
He stopped walking, McKay bumping into him.Â
âRobby?â
âTrauma One,â he said, coming back to life. Years of practice kept his voice steady.
He stepped forward, grabbing the gurney to help steer it.Â
âBP is eighty over fifty.â
âJesus,â he hissed.Â
âHeartrate is 130.â
Of all the places to see you again, his ER.Â
Of all the hospitals in all of Pittsburgh, she rolls into mine.
Like something out of fucking Casablanca.
You were transferred to the hospital bed, Robby slipping gloves on as he approached your side, his voice calm:
âLetâs get two large-bore IVs. CBC, type and cross, CMP.â
Your head lolled to the side, your eyelids fluttering.
â...Michael?â
He ignored McKayâs eyes burning into the side of his face. He began to check your pupils. Your skin was cold.
âYouâre in the ER at PTMC. Youâve lost some blood, but weâre taking care of you.â
You blinked, still hazy. But you managed to focus on his face, his gentle tone. You nodded, closing your eyes again.Â
Monitors clipped into place with soft, rapid clicks. The familiar choreography of a patient circling instability.
âFluids and a transfuse,â he said to the room. He glanced back at you, grabbing your hand.
âPressureâs dropping,â Princess at your left said. âSeventy-eight systolic.âÂ
He adjusted your arm for the IV, the sting of it nothing compared to the pain you felt elsewhere. Someone hung a bag of fluids behind him.Â
âBloodâs on the way, weâll start a transfusion the second it gets here.â
âExcellent,â he said.Â
You struggled, eyes fluttering shut. He leaned in closer to you.Â
âHey - stay with me.â
âRobby, should we page OB now or wait for labs?â McKay asked, and he shook his head.
âGiven the history, I donât want to wait.â
âThe⌠history?â she asked, sharing a look with Princess.
Robby tried to not visibly react to the highly likely scenario that this incident would be circling in the days to come.
Robby ignored them, giving your wrist a small squeeze.Â
âYouâre going to be okay.â
âBPâs responding,â someone called. âUp to ninety-two systolic.â
âGood,â Robby said immediately. âKeep it going.â
Your breathing had steadied slightly, though your eyelids still fluttered with the effort of staying conscious. The first unit of blood arrived moments later.
The bag was spiked, the line flushed, the transfusion beginning in practiced, efficient movements.
Robby didnât step away, nor did he hand you over or delegate. He lingered by your side, hand resting beside yours as he watched your vitals.Â
-
On the last day of your vacation, you woke up in his arms. You could hear the crashing of the waves below the open windows, the sea breeze on your bare skin.Â
You rolled over, facing him, your noses brushing.Â
âI wish I could go with you,â you whispered for the first time.Â
You meant it, but knew neither of you would actually follow through with it.Â
âI should kidnap you,â he whispered back, and then he kissed you.Â
-
âRobby.â
It was Santos, rushed but remaining calm. Practically fearless, but looking for help. Robby glanced over his shoulder, then back at you in the bed.
âYeah,â he sighed. He took off his gloves, stood up and tossed them in the trash.Â
He went by Dana at her desk and nodded over at your room.Â
âCome and find me when she wakes up.â
âWill do, Chief.â
Dana stared him down but he refused to engage. He wasnât in the right headspace. Seeing you like that, so vulnerable, had too great of an impact.
He pushed off the desk and left to follow Santos.Â
-
You rest for an hour before you manage to open your eyes again. You glance around, seeing a nurse wearing a hijab checking your vitals.
Among the sea of pain is a shame so sudden you gasp, remembering Michael all over again. What were the chances you ended up here?
âIâll go get Dr. Robby,â the nurse said.Â
You sat up on your elbows, nodding. You hadnât prepared yourself for this. You only had to wait another ten minutes before the resident with a ponytail from before came in with Michael in tow.
âHow are you feeling?â the resident asked, and you glanced over at Michael, feeling scrutinised.
âOkay, uh-â
âIâm Dr. McKay, and this is- well, you seemed to know each other,â McKay said.Â
Michael crossed his arms. âYes, uhâŚâ
âWeâre friends,â you said, though that didnât feel right.Â
You hadnât spoken in months. On that last day, no promises were made. You exchanged numbers, but you hadnât wanted to ruin his time off, and you left him in Hawaii.Â
Sure, youâd thought about him constantly since, but not all for good reasons.
Michael didnât say anything about that, looking at your monitors.
âYouâre definitely improving,â he murmured. âAnd the glow is back in your skin.â
âIt might be sweat,â you muttered.
âHowâs your pain?â McKay asked. âIf you can give it a number-â
You always thought this was one of the more frustrating ways of dealing with endometriosis. Having to self report.
âLike a seven to eight,â you interjected. âI wouldnât say itâs the worst pain Iâve ever felt. I can kind of sleep with it. Or pass out.â
That wasnât funny, not even remotely, but you saw Michael smirk in the corner of your eye.
âYou called the ambulance?â McKay asked, and you nodded.
âAfter I came to,â you said. âThe bleeding was getting worse, and then I realized it wasnât slowing down, and my towel was soaked through.â
âHow was your last menstrual cycle?â
âFine,â you said. âNot like this. Not exactly easy, but not like thisâŚâ
You pulled in a breath. You knew where this was going.
âAny surgeries?â
âI had a laparoscopy six months ago,â you murmured. You looked at your hands.Â
âAny other complications?â
Your eyes stung. You picked at a cuticle.Â
âI had an ectopic pregnancy a few months ago.â
-
Robby rubbed his eyes under his glasses, staring at his screen. He had left you and McKay, dragged away by another patient.
Santos came up to the charge desk, glancing up at the list of patients.Â
âEctopic?âÂ
He heard McKay beside her.Â
âLeft tube,â she said. âTreated with methotrexate. When detected early, we can avoid rupture and surgery.â
It was a teaching moment, but only then did it hit Robby squarely in the chest. Heâd been distracted.Â
Ectopic, a few months ago.Â
Hawaii?
He looked at McKay, whose conversation with Santos changed to something about the weekend.Â
âHey, Santos?â he called. âAre you any closer to sending your guy home?â
âSure,â she said, hands in her scrubs pockets. âOnce I get back a clear drug test.â
McKay met his gaze.Â
âI ordered an ultrasound for your friend,â she said.Â
He nodded. He looked at his watch.Â
âYou think youâre leaving any time soon?â Dana snapped.Â
He put away his glasses with a sigh. He felt several pairs of female eyes on him as he made his way back to your room.Â
He slipped inside, shutting the door behind him. You swallowed hard, a lump already there.
âHey, so⌠you lied to me,â you said.Â
âAbout what?âÂ
He came over to your bed and sat on the chair beside it, scooting closer. It was too close for a doctor-patient relationship, you felt. You didnât mind.
You lifted your hand and reached over, tapping his name tag.
âIt was easier to be Michael.â
ââRobbyâ does suit you,â you murmured. âItâs cute.â
âCute?â he repeated, leaning on one elbow.Â
You stared at one another for what felt like an age, a story unravelling between the two of you.Â
âDonât be sorry you came here,â he whispered.Â
âIâm not, itâs just - I didnât want this to be the way I saw you for a second time,â you mumbled. âI mean, if I ever saw you a second time. I didnât⌠I didnât call.â
âNeither did I,â he said. He sighed. âI couldâve.â
âBut I didnât, like youâd hoped.â
âNo,â he said. âYou did not.â
Everything felt heavy. You sniffled.
âJesus, sorry,â you said, with a roll of your eyes. You wiped your nose with your hand. âTo be fair, I am on my period.â
âItâs okay.â
âIt doesnât feel like itâs okay,â you whispered, your voice so small you could barely hear it yourself.
He was the one to take your hand, your fingers twining. He squeezed.
âI didnât get back with my ex,â you said, and he nodded.Â
âGood.â
You snorted, but then instantly sobered by the look on his face. He stared intently at your fingers before looking back at you.Â
âWas it mine?â
You nodded. You knew what he meant. The moment passed between you and you let out a shuddering breath.
âIt wasnât even a real pregnancy,â you said. âNo possibility of it⌠happening. But I just had this feeling before - and I tested positive, soâŚâ
You rolled your eyes again.
âFor two days it was likeâŚâ
You couldnât get the words out. He squeezed your hand again.Â
âFor two days it was like it was ours.â
-
Robby had been taking a lot of deep breaths in the last half an hour. On the rooftop, the air was fresh, the nighttime sharpness coming in.Â
âSo,â he heard someone say, and he turned, seeing Jack.
âSo,â he echoed.
âWhoâs the girl?â
He smirked, shaking his head. Unbelievable. He hadnât even seen him yet and he knew about you. He could accuse Dana, but if he was honest, most everyone at the Pitt was a gossip.
âSheâs the one I met in Hawaii,â he murmured.
Jackâs mouth fell open. âHoly shit.â
âMm.â
âYouâre up here because youâre trying to figure out a way to get out of this?â he teased.
He joined Robby, glancing down.Â
âNot exactly,â Robby replied. He grit his jaw for a beat. âShe was pregnant. Ectopic. Then today she came in after she couldnât stop bleeding.â
âEndometriosis? What stage?â
âOne.â
Jack shook his head. âYâknow, there are women whose biopsies confirm it, because surgeons canât find it. They can be microscopic.â
âItâs brutal,â Robby muttered. âI canât stand it, Jack. Seeing her like that. She mightâveâŚâ
He didnât dare say it.Â
âWhatâre you doing up here, brother?â Jack murmured.Â
âThinking,â Robby muttered. âThinking too much.â
As they began their walk back, he said:
âSheâs waiting to be transferred to OB.â
He wasnât going to let it go until he said it out loud, so he did it, feeling heavy.
âI got her pregnant. It was me.â
Jack didnât seem surprised, giving him an understanding, soft sort of look.
âItâs okay, it happens. Is she okay?â
âI guess. No?â
He needed to focus back to work, to finally finish his shift. He started to make the rounds.Â
-
He came back to your room. You put down your magazine Dana got you.Â
âHey,â you said. âYouâre gonna leave?â
He nodded, going to the computer, swiping his card. He typed, glasses on. You remembered the first time you saw him use them, when he read the menu on your first not-date on vacation.
âI can feel you watching me,â he said, not looking up.
âWhatâre you doing, then?â you asked.
He typed, then scratched his head. Typed some more.
âRecommending you have an iron transfusion after your follow-up blood test. Your gynecologist will get a letter from the hospital. And then⌠itâs on me.â
âRobby,â you said, a little alarmed. You knew the cost of those. âThatâs too much. What the fuck?â
He smirked, giving a definitive tap.
âBecause, baby, you are anemic.â
You felt a burst of something - a warm affection that made your eyes water. You watched as he came over, sitting on the edge of your bed. He held your hands.
âA girl walks into a hotel bar, and she happens to be from Pittsburgh, and I pass that up? What a fuckingâŚâ
He pressed a kiss to your knuckles.
â...moron.â
You gave a tearful little laugh, and leaned toward him, kissing him. It was rushed and clumsy, but the mixture of trust and danger - it was everything to you.Â
He was everything. You pressed your foreheads together.Â
summary:Â You were meant to be on vacation with your boyfriend, but instead you were there alone, where you meet the man across the hall from your hotel room, Michael, drinking alone in the hotel lobby.
Months later, you're admitted to the ER at the Pitt.
warnings/content:Â angst, fertility issues, Reader has endometriosis, some descriptions of blood, explicit casual-not-so-casual vacation sex, oral (f and m receiving), light praise kink, caretaking, hurt/comfort, accidental pregnancy
a/n: don't even get me startedddddddddddd!!! it's super fitting that March is also Endometriosis Awareness Month. I just have so many feelings. I hope you like this!!!! divider by me; unbeta-d and poorly proofread
It wasn't supposed to be like this.Â
Although, the location seemed perfect. Pristine beaches, the clearest water you'd ever seen. The friendliest greeters when you arrived at the hotel placing leis around your neck. Everyone seemed to smile and absorb all those good feelings. There was literal laughter in the air.Â
It was all that you planned it to be, except you weren't alone when you first talked about coming to Hawaii. All that vacation time you saved up together, and then your life went to shit.Â
That was a month ago. You debated for weeks about cancelling everything, since your partner cancelled your life together - but then over time you felt like it was worse to be sitting around at home feeling sorry for yourself instead of being here anyway.Â
You could grieve your old life here instead, where everything looked like a scene on a postcard.
You went to your hotel room, opened up your suitcase and fished out your first swimsuit. It was a low cut one-piece that hugged your body. You wrapped a sarong around your middle and swapped your sneakers for flip-flops and walked down to the beach with your towel and a book.Â
You'd been doing the same thing at home, except instead of the ocean you'd had your messy apartment surrounding you. If this was all you did for the rest of the day, fine.Â
You fell asleep in one of the sunbeds in the long line covered with umbrellas on the shore, only to be awoken by the shrieks of a young family whose children tore down to the beach with their gear. The father gave you a sheepish look as you stared after them, picking up your book from the spot it fell beside you.
Sand was already in it, great. And you managed to lose your spot. You couldnât be upset at the kids, though. They were in literal paradise. You probably should have stayed homeâŚ
You trudged back to your room to shower. As you got out your key, elevator doors shutting behind you, you spotted a man whose back was to you opening the room opposite yours in the hallway.Â
You ducked into your room without a word, not before having brief, awkward eye contact with him. He was older than you, but handsome all the more for it. His brows hiked ever so slightly as you disappeared, and you hoped he wasnât offended.Â
You werenât in the mood to talk just yet.Â
-
Hours later, you couldnât sleep. You ordered room service instead of attending the lĹŤĘťau, hoping that by tomorrow you would have the courage to show your face to random strangers.Â
Now, with the blankets twisting around you each time you moved, there was no way you were getting to sleep anytime soon.Â
You took a deep breath and left your bed, throwing your cardigan over your sleep clothes. Heading downstairs, you could hear there were still a few people around, but it was nothing like earlier that evening.Â
No-one was at the bar, save the guy behind it, and another figure nursing a beer. You recognized him immediately as your neighbor from across the hall, and sat nearby him, an empty stool between you.
As you waited, you scanned the wide dining area behind you. There was one other man at the far wall, staring into his phone with a large whiskey by his elbow.Â
âWhat would you like, maâam?âÂ
The bartender approached with a wide smile, unbothered by the hour.Â
âUh⌠vodka soda, please.â
âOf course,â he said, and departed.Â
You felt watched and looked at your neighbor.Â
âIâm not interrupting?â you asked, and he shook his head.Â
âStay.â
You told him your name and offered your hand.Â
âI think weâre on the same floor,â you added, and he shook your hand.Â
âYeah. Iâm Michael.â
You nodded, taking a short sip of your drink when it arrived a beat later. You remembered your clothes. Michael was wearing shorts and a t-shirt.Â
âI⌠canât sleep.â
âSorry to hear it,â he said. âYouâre here by yourself? Whereâre you from?â
You nodded. âPittsburgh.â
He burst into a real smile and you felt your face flush. He was very, very handsome. Never mind your first impression. He was cute as hell.
âMe, too.â
âOh, no shit?â you said, and he laughed. âWhat are the odds?â
You talked a bit about the journey there, and Michael said heâd got there yesterday. He was on a long vacation, nothing fixed.
You snorted. âJesus. Mine was nothing but planned. So much of it went to shit already-â
It was like you couldnât help yourself, cringing. You hadnât meant to already get into it, but it was bound to come up, why you were alone.Â
âI mean, I had these big plans but the person I was supposed to come with decided not to in the end.â
âSorry, again,â Michael said, taking a swig of beer.Â
You shook your head. âDonât be. Turns out he wasnât the guy I thought he was.â
Michael went quiet for a second, tilting his head, narrowing his eyes. âWas this⌠a break-up?â
âYeah,â you sighed.Â
There was a pause and you added quickly:
âNot that Iâm losing sleep over him! Iâm way past that. I just⌠had these plansâŚâ
You should have already been drinking long ago if you were going to bring this up with a complete stranger, but fuck it. You were on vacation, things were different. This wasnât like being at your local dive, or telling people you work with.
âI had a laparoscopy,â you said. âItâs when-â
âDo you have endometriosis?â he asked.
âHow did you know that?â
âIâm a doctor,â he said.
You looked away, suddenly very aware of him looking straight at you. You wondered what else he knew about you, even if it was just by looking at you.Â
âI wanted to start IVF, after this trip,â you went on. âThis was meant to be our last big one before - hopefully - a baby.â
It wasnât like you, to disclose so much. You didnât feel judged, though you could sense the cogs were turning when you looked back at him.Â
âMust be something about you, for me to get so personal so fast,â you mumbled. âAnd I guess that happens a lot, when people find out youâre a doctor. But Iâm guessing youâre not a psychiatrist?â
He shook his head, with an almost sad kind of smile. âEmergency.âÂ
âSo you work in a hospital?â you asked, and he nodded.
âYeah.â
The silence between you that followed felt less strange, somehow. You didnât want to avoid him like you had before, at least.Â
âI really am sorry if I gatecrashed your downtime,â you said, and he shook his head, draining his beer.Â
âNah, I couldnât sleep, either.â
He got up and you considered doing the same, but left your glass instead of finishing it.
âYou wanna go for a walk?âÂ
You thought about it, and then wondered why it mattered. It didnât hurt. You nodded, rising from your seat. You gathered your cardigan around yourself and walked out, down the short footpath to the beach.Â
Tiki torches still burned, lining the sand well enough to see his face in the halflight. The moonlight did the rest. The tide came and went in a steady rhythm, the night otherwise blissfully quiet.Â
âItâs so⌠peaceful out here,â you murmured, and Michael nodded.Â
It was romantic. It was supposed to be, thatâs why you chose to take your ex here. If he hadnât run away from you, youâd be rolling around in the sand together, trying to make a baby. The regret crested over you again and you sighed, moving on, not waiting.Â
âHas the treatment been⌠effective?â he asked, and you glanced his way, for a moment too lost in your thoughts to understand.
Oftentimes, when someone learned you had endometriosis, their response was pitying, or worse, falsely trying to relate to your emotional and physical agonies. No, it wasnât like ordinary period pain. Yes, it had derailed work and school, it had made life harder in a lot of ways.Â
Yes, you hoped to have children. Past tense - hoped. You didnât know anymore. It meant doing it alone, if you were doing it now.Â
âI thought you were supposed to be on vacation,â you retorted, folding your arms.Â
He copied you, and you could make out a smirk on his face.Â
âIâll send you the bill.â
Your welcomed laughter followed, before you rolled your eyes. âI guess it has been. Symptoms arenât as bad. For now.â
There wasnât a cure. You just had to wait it out, hope that each cycle didnât render you bedridden like usual.Â
âThatâs good to hear,â he said. âSorry, thatâs personalâŚâ
âHey, Iâm the one who told you,â you said, shrugging. You glanced towards the water. âJesus.â
You sidestepped the tide as it came rushing in, faster than you expected. Michael did the same, but heâd been paying attention, guiding you back with a hand that hovered the small of your back. He wasnât quite touching, but you felt that spark of sudden proximity.Â
You kept walking in silence, a little further away from the shore.Â
âHow long were you planning on staying here?â you asked, and he shook his head.
âIâm undecided,â he said.
âIs that why you canât sleep?â you asked.Â
You may as well try more honesty with him. He knew what felt like too much already. You looked at one another.Â
âItâs probably related.â
You smirked back at him, then suppressed a sudden yawn. It was probably time to head back. Michael nodded toward the hotel and you walked back together. The elevator ride was silent, too. You went to your door, and then glanced back his way, shoving the keycard in.
âGoodnight.â
âGoodnight,â he echoed softly.Â
Something about that made you feel warm inside.Â
-
You approached him the next afternoon, among a group of other tourists waiting on the pier. You couldnât see his eyes behind his sunglasses but he smiled back at you.
âHey, I know you,â you said, face shielding your eyes.Â
You hadnât seen him all morning, though admittedly youâd hoped to. You slept okay once you got back to bed, and spent the beginning of the day looking for him at breakfast before you went back to your room to laze around.Â
This afternoon trip was booked well in advance. It was supposed to be a late lunch on the ocean, with a tour guide included. A few families, couples and a bachelorette party gathered to board the yacht.Â
You and Michael stood together like two kids pairing up on a field trip.Â
âI canât get over how clear the water is out here,â he said, and you beamed.Â
âI know, right?â
You hadnât expected him here. In fact, neither of you had said anything about what you planned to do while in Hawaii. You packed too much, as you were prone to, so you were glad to have brought at least a couple nice dresses and skirts.Â
Todayâs outfit was brand new, tags popped off that morning. Linen dress that cinched at the waist with a broad sun hat.Â
Michaelâs Birkenstocks looked well-worn, his shorts were the same from yesterday. He wore a navy polo shirt that hid little of his broad frame. His⌠bulk attracted you. You wanted to stare at his forearms but tried not to. He was fun to look at, but he was a person, too.Â
Also, youâd just gone through a breakup.Â
You put on your sunglasses and ascended with the others, Michael behind you. He stayed by your side as the tour guide from the hotel began his introduction, and then everyone took a seat as the yacht began to move away from the dock.Â
âThis is insane,â you murmured.Â
For the next half an hour, you listened with Michael beside you as the tour went on. Describing the flora and fauna of the islands, you wish you could see it for yourself, not have someone only describe it to you.
There was a loud gurgle and you looked at Michael.Â
âWas that your stomach?â
â...yes,â he whispered.Â
You covered your mouth with your hand, pressing your lips together for good measure. As the trip went on, you too felt hunger begin to pull your focus.
When they finally docked on the other side of the island, wait staff approached with heaping trays of fresh fruit and seafood. There were collective sighs of relief all around.Â
âGet in there,â Michael encouraged, and you laughed openly, tucking in.Â
-
âDid that feel⌠weird to you?â you asked, twirling your hat absently.Â
You walked back up to the hotel with Michael, and he nodded.Â
âYeah, it felt⌠commercial,â he muttered. âInauthentic.â
âNot a waste of money, though, surely?âÂ
âIâm not your accountant.â
âIâm just saying - I donât totally regret it,â you retorted. âIt wasnât what I expected, though.â
His sunglasses were tucked into his neckline, his arms bearing a healthy glow from the sun. You looked at his skin when he kept the elevator door open for you, allowing you in beside him.Â
He pressed the button for your floor.Â
âItâs not gonna help my Yelp review, Iâll tell you that much...â
You smiled again, looking away. âObviously.â
It felt so good to be on the same page. It was different to what you were used to. With your ex, it never felt like you were truly in sync. It was your downfall, in the end. All the time you were together it felt like youâd manage to get over that eventually.Â
âAre you gonna grab some dinner downstairs later?â he asked, and you met his gaze.
He wasnât saying that just to make conversation. You believed that with how he was looking at you now, although maybe you werenât the best judge of character when it came to men.
âYeah, maybe after a nap,â you said.Â
âSounds good,â he said.Â
âWere you⌠were you hoping to see me?â you asked.Â
âSure.â
He made it sound so simple. Why wouldnât he hope to see you? Your face flushed and you looked away.Â
âOkay, cool,â you said.Â
âOkay, Iâll see you after,â he said.Â
He let you out first, and you felt butterflies in your stomach for the first time in years. You smiled shyly and walked away to your door, letting yourself in before you embarrassed yourself.Â
-
Something shifted inside you and wanted to enjoy yourself for the sake of it. You showered, after you didnât nap - your brain kept thinking about Michael and his warm eyes peering at you - and dressed in one of your sundresses.
You found him at the bar and he nodded towards the dining area, where the host led you to a table overlooking the beach outside. Handed a menu, you peruse, unsure of where to begin.
Michael ordered beer, looking your way.Â
âIâll get a cocktail,â you beamed. âSex on the beach.â
If it landed anywhere, you tried not to read it too much on his face as you were left alone. He hadnât said this was a date - but he hadnât said it wasnât either.Â
Conversation came easily, like youâd never stopped talking earlier.Â
âWhatâs it like being an ER doctor?â you asked, as you picked up some bread from the basket between you.Â
You offered it to him and he took a piece, breaking it in half on his plate.
âChaotic,â he said. âSometimes heartbreaking.â
âI canât imagine how challenging it is,â you said, chewing. âI would never stay calm.â
âItâs not easy.â
You felt like he was skirting around the reality he faced, and your brows furrowed.Â
âI feel like youâre trying to not sound as impressive as you are.â
He laughed at that, passing a hand over his face wearily.Â
âI meanâŚâ
âYouâd constantly have to be flexible, right? No day is the same, you deal with anything and everyoneâŚâ
âYeah,â he said. âBut someone has to.â
You swallowed. The waiter returned with your drinks, and you took yours with a brief smile of acknowledgment. You took a sip, and put the towering glass aside, picking out a piece of pineapple stuck to its rim.Â
âSo why you, then? Why not do something other than emergency healthcare?â
You shoved the fruit in your mouth, watching him. He drank from his glass of beer as you asked this. He sighed.Â
âI donât⌠want to. But I probably should.â
You appreciated his honesty. You sucked the juice from your thumb, nodding. The silence felt taut with more questions, from both sides of the table.
âWhyâd you break up with your ex?â he asked.Â
You smiled bitterly. âHe didnât want to have babies with me.â
The heaviness of your conversation only just hit you. You were both alone here, out of choice, but now youâd decided to create this bond, however fleeting it may be.Â
âIâm sorry,â he added.Â
âYou didnât upset me,â you said, because he hadnât. âItâs the truth. He left me. I thought he wanted to have kids. We talked about it enough.â
You sighed, not unlike him.Â
âWe started dating just before lockdown, and then we moved in together pretty fast. I was already diagnosed with endo then - and whenever we talked about the future it felt like hypotheticals. I mean, the world had fallen apart, and we werenât going anywhere. We were forced to know one another really well. And we did, I thought. I thought we were close.â
You rolled your eyes at yourself, at how wrong you were.
âI think maybe he thought Iâd never be serious about it, because I knew it would be hard to conceive, but then I started cutting back on drinking-â
You glanced at your drink briefly and gave a short laugh.
âI was trying to get my body healthy for trying, and I finally had my surgeryâŚâ
âAnd he flaked,â Michael said, not unkindly.
âYeah,â you said. âAnd I feel like an idiot that I spent all this time with him, and I never really knew him. I think he meant more to me than I ever did to him.â
You picked up your drink again to stop talking, to stop yourself from becoming too sad again. You were only repeating the same thoughts youâd had for weeks.
âHeâs an idiot,â Michael said, and you met his gaze. âHe should have known sooner, anyway. Let you down better.â
You rolled your eyes again, trying not to notice how his eyes bore into you. Your skin began to feel hot.
Mercifully, the nightâs entertainment began. Dancers twirling flames drew all attention away from your sad life, and with it your perspective. You were here, and not at home feeling sorry for yourself.Â
The night was warm, beautiful. The scenery and culture was spectacular, and this man was sitting with you out of choice. Things could be a thousand times worse. You were lucky.
âHey, if anyone gets hurt, at least I know where to find a doctor,â you said, clapping with the rest of the dinner crowd.Â
Michaelâs eyes were bright with mirth.Â
Some time later, full of good food, carrying your purse under your arm, your shoes in one hand and a water glass in your other, you and Michael walked along the beach together once more.
âDo you have kids?â you asked, and Michael took a second to reply.
âI had a stepson, sort of,â he said. âI havenât seen him in a while.â
He didnât explain, but added:
âAnswerâs no.â
âDo you want them?â you asked. âI mean, did you ever?â
âSometimes,â he said. âOther timesâŚâ
Again, he didnât elaborate, his words hanging there. You decided to fill the silence.
âI guess I always wanted to try, to⌠yâknow, give it a shot. Try to fight my infertility.âÂ
He nodded, wincing. âI guess it would be hard if I was working like I do.â
âPeople make it work.â
âSorry, I guess Iâm just naturally morbid from time to time,â he said.Â
The sand was oddly comforting as you strolled, the sounds of life around you mere background noise. You drew in a breath, deciding to be your most direct.
âYou werenât just being nice, about my ex being a moron?â you asked.
His brows hiked. âNo.â
âIt can be hard for guys to be with-â
âWith women with chronic illnesses?â he cut in.Â
You glanced towards the sea, the darkness beyond.Â
âYeah, I guess that makes him sound like an asshole.â You sighed. âIâm going to stop mentioning him. I promise.â
Michael stopped, and you turned back, looking down at his hand he had poised beneath your nose.
âPinky promise?â
You smirked, indulging him. You clasped his pinky with your own, shaking. For a beat too long, you noticed. He pulled away first, only to step closer to you, watching your face.
The heat between you was undeniable. He lifted his hand once again, thumb and forefinger catching your chin.Â
âWalk you back?â
âSure,â you said, heart hammering.Â
-
It took a little while to fall asleep, since he was a gentleman and did as he said - walked you back to your room and then said goodnight.Â
No kiss, not even a hug. You simply parted ways and then you throbbed for hours after, feeling like you should have just gone for it. Unless somehow you were misreading it.Â
Those thoughts were pushed aside the second your landline rang beside you, around eight the next morning. You rolled over, confused, picking up the receiver.
âHello?â
âHey, did I wake you?âÂ
Michaelâs voice early in the morning made a thrill stir in your guts, a smile already playing on your lips. He was all soft and friendly, and you felt like you could hear him smiling on the other end of the line, across the hallway.Â
âNo. Who is this?â
âItâs the guy thatâs gonna get you to see some real nature today, if you let him,â he replied.
You grinned, rolling onto your back. âWhat did you have in mind?â
âA hike, if youâre up for it.â
You knew you didnât look your best when you were huffing and puffing up a hill.Â
âIâll take it easy on you,â he added.
âGee, thanks,â you muttered.
When were you ever going to do this again?
âAlright, fuck it.â
You agreed to meet one another in the lobby in half an hour and you hung up, leaping out of bed and into the shower.Â
You threw on some shorts and your new hat, tried to figure out a way to look both cute and not totally ridiculous, and then headed downstairs. You grabbed a banana from the breakfast buffet and a coffee and scoffed them down, before making your way to the lobby.Â
He was waiting for you, backpack over one shoulder.Â
âDonât have one of those,â you said, gesturing.Â
âI can carry everything.â
âWhereâre we going?â you asked, following him out the door and into the street.Â
âItâs a tourist trap, technically,â he said, and you punched the air. âBut the biodiversity is up there, compared to yacht tours-â
âMan, that Yelp review just writes itself, huh?â
You suspected he could walk faster if he wanted to, but he was doing the nice thing and making sure you werenât left behind. He offered you bottled water that you took, uncapping it as you climbed a footpath up a steep hill.Â
âThereâs a cliff view,â he explained.Â
âThatâs the reward?â
âNo, the journey is the reward,â he said, and you snorted. âYeah, I know how I sound.â
He sounded like someone who could call out his own bullshit, which you appreciated. It was refreshing, in a way. In this place with him, there was no room for a facade.
You made sure to walk beside him until the path was too narrow, and then you took the lead, in the hope of seeming up for anything. Also, you knew the shorts you wore did great things for your butt.
Nearly half an hour later, you reached the top, passing another couple that nodded and smiled at you.Â
âEnjoy.â
âThanks,â you called after them, as Michael let them pass.Â
The view took your breath away. Rocks below as waves crashed into them. Lush greenery all around. Birdcalls echoing as Michael rested beside you against a tree.Â
âYou did it,â he murmured, taking out his water.Â
You tapped his bottle with yours and drank. You felt a little out of breath, but otherwise good. There was a sense of achievement.
When you got back to the hotel, Michael jerked his thumb towards the concierge desk.Â
âGimme a sec.âÂ
âWhat are you up to?âÂ
He had a conspiratorial glint in his eye as he walked over, you hurrying after him. As he approached the desk, a worker smiled at you.
âAfternoon, Dr. Robinavich.âÂ
âI was wondering if anyone was available at short notice, we were out hikingâŚâÂ
The worker's uniform reminded you to buy a Hawaiian shirt while you were here in the next few days, the thought distracting you momentarily.Â
âUnfortunately, we only have a couple's massage session available, it's a longer one. Our regular masseuse Amy is away, she does our shorter sessionsâŚâ
âCouple's massage?â you blurted, and Michael looked at you.Â
âWould you mind?âÂ
Uh, fuck no. You shook your head. The worker smiled.Â
âAlright. We'll see you in twenty minutes.âÂ
-
You quickly realized that you were in over your head. The massage rooms were low lit with the kind of ambient lighting you associated with softcore porn.
The tiny candles that dotted the room, along with the soothing New Age music coming from the small speaker in the corner only added to the highly sensual atmosphere.
âUhâŚâ you said, as you walked in with Michael.Â
The masseuses stood by with towels in hand, two smiling young women with matching frangipani in their hairdos, their skin glowing, looking soft to the touch. You envied their calm, feeling your face burn.
âGood afternoon,â one of them said, beaming. âIâm Naomi, and this is MiaâŚâ
Mia gave a little wave.Â
âAfternoon,â Michael said, nodding.
He was also weirdly at ease. Then again, as a doctor, wouldnât he deal with embarrassing situations all the time? You pressed your lips together, listening.Â
âWe will give you a few minutes to undress to your liking. Are there any concerns before we continue?â
You cleared your throat. âI - uh, I can have a tender abdomen sometimes, I have endometriosisâŚâ
Naomi nodded, understanding. âYes, of course. We can avoid certain areas. Anything you want us to focus on?â
âMy neck and shoulders,â you said. âI think I probably look down at my phone too much.â
âMy back,â Michael added. âIâm on my feet a lot, generally.â
âHeâs a doctor,â you said, and he looked at the floor.Â
âOh, wonderful,â Mia said. âThank you.â
They departed, Michael staring after them.Â
ââThank youâ? Iâm not a veteran.â
âYou worked through the height of the pandemic though, right?â you said, and he met your gaze, his face changing.Â
Dread or something close to it flashed across his face and you immediately regretted your question, realizing far too late how invasive and awful it was.
âIâm sorry, that was crass,â you babbled, and he shook his head.
âItâs fine.â
He moved away, towards one of the massage tables, fingers going to his buttons.Â
âRight,â you muttered. âUh. Iâll justâŚâ
You went to the other table, taking your shoes off, hands going to your shirt to remove it as fast as possible.Â
âDonât turn around,â you said.
âYou good?â
âYes, Iâm fine,â you lied.Â
âBecause we donât have to do this if youâre uncomfortable.â
You thought about it for longer than a second and then slipped under the towel, the table firm and unyielding under your weight. You tried to ground yourself, your nipples hardening under your towel as you spared a glance at him.Â
His back was to you, but he was under his own towel, no shirt. He had some scars, a couple moles you found endearing. Freckles and marks of age that only flattered him more. He was broad, too, of course.Â
You thought of that strength hidden under his clothes.Â
âCan I roll over?â he asked, and you whispered:
âYeah.â
He turned, pulling in a breath.Â
âYou with me?â he asked. âAre you in any pain today?â
You shook your head, and you were touched by his concern. You buried yourself further under the towel, barely peeking out.Â
He murmured your name a couple times and your eyes snapped to his.Â
âMy liver spots and wrinkles are really that hard to look at?â
âShut the fuck up,â you retorted, laughing uncomfortably. âYouâre cute and you know it.â
He began to laugh, rolling onto his back, hand passing over his face. You wanted him so badly then, wishing he was under the towel with you. Now you had ninety minutes of this a few feet away from you.
âThis is supposed to be relaxing,â he said. âSo try to relax.â
âA man telling me to relax,â you muttered. âMy favorite.â
âYes, and a male healthcare professional, too, no less,â he retorted.Â
Your eyes met again and you shuffled up a little, until your arms were free, the towel still covering your naked torso.Â
âAfter this, we should-â
Whatever bold thing you were about to propose was interrupted by a short knock on the door, Naomiâs voice floating in.Â
âAre you ready?â
A beat, and Michael closed his eyes.Â
âYeah,â he called. âThank you.â
The massage itself was divine. It felt far shorter than its ninety minutes, and after a while all you could do was melt into a pile of goo. You were surprised you didnât nod off, and Michael admitted the same in the elevator back up to your floor.Â
Whatever momentum you had earlier was lost, but you didnât mind. You werenât in any hurry to get back there, by how liquid you felt. You were rubbed all over with lavender oil and felt your clothes sticking to your skin. You craved a hot shower and a bed to nap on.Â
You gave him a dreamy little wave as you went your separate ways.
-
You woke hours later, hearing a knocking at the front door drifting in as you fought off the remainder of your sleep. You lifted your head from your pillow and walked out to answer it.
Michael stood before you.
âI definitely woke you this time,â he said, looking at your bathrobe that matched his.Â
He looked apologetic but cuddly in the fluffy white robe, his feet bare. He had nice toes, you noted vaguely.
âItâs fine,â you said, not bothering to lie. âItâs better I donât sleep through dinner.â
âIâm actually wondering if you wannaâŚâ
He gestured behind him, toward the elevator down the hall.
âI was gonna order room service,â you said.Â
You were too lazy to dress in something nice, to walk all the way down. You were spoiled by the massage. All you wanted was creature comforts.Â
âYou can order it at mine.â
He really, really wanted to see you, that was clear. You softened, rubbing your eye.Â
âOkayâŚâ
You took your phone and your keys and followed him out. His TV set was on, his window was open with the curtains moving with the soft night breeze, and the moon was out. The sounds of the hotel floated up from below, but you liked it here best, in this little space of his.
His suitcase was open against the wall, its contents far more economical than yours. From your brief glance, you saw a small bottle of cologne resting on his bedside table. On the yacht youâd smelt a fresh, slightly sweet scent on him.
His room itself had his own scent, amplified. You could chase it if you wanted to. It was vaguely earthy, welcoming. You perched on the end of his bed beside him, your knees touching.
He was so close.
âGood day?â you asked, and he nodded.Â
Then he took your hand like you were his and you stared down at him.
âYour hand is crazy soft,â you whispered, just to break the tension.Â
âItâs probably from all the hand sanitizer at work,â he murmured, threading your fingers together. âAloe in it.â
You looked up into his eyes, your stomach full of butterflies.Â
âMichaelâŚâ
You took his free hand and slipped it into your robe, under your bra cup, his fingers finding your nipple. He stared down at your skin, thumb flicking over you as he rolled your breast, the moan tumbling out of you.Â
He leaned in to kiss you, your noses brushing. Light teasing, lips passing over one another until he pushed into your mouth with his tongue, your breaths already turning to panting. You were molten, wet without being touched anywhere near your pussy, and you knew it.Â
Your hands went up to his hair and you pulled him towards you, the TV playing in the background as you kissed and kissed, both of his hands on your chest now. You pulled back once your lips began to numb, relishing in how soft his beard was, noting the grey hairs you could make out.Â
âCan I take this off?â he murmured, nuzzling your skin as you nodded.Â
He pushed down your robe and then the straps of your bra. Freed of them both, you threw a leg over him and straddled his lap, feeling how hard he was beneath you. You gave a grind of your hips against his and he groaned into your mouth, the sound reverberating through you.
You slotted in together, rocking as you kissed, clumsy but not ever rushed. It was so thorough, and you throbbed for him, scratching his scalp.Â
âSex can hurt sometimes,â you warned.Â
You were telling him what you knew heâd already know.
âI just donât want to disappoint you,â you whispered.Â
Michael promptly planted his foot and spun you around so you were pinned underneath him.Â
âThatâs not gonna happen,â he said, and you kissed him hard for that alone, his cock rubbing against your thigh insistantly.
He broke away with a soft smack of your lips, and you gazed up at him with a shy smile.
âCan you get a condom?â you whispered.
He nodded, moving back quick enough to make you laugh at his enthusiasm. You watched as he went to his suitcase, retrieving a box.
âWow, how many is in there?â you teased, resting on your elbows.Â
âIâm on sabbatical for three months,â he said, and you smirked again. âAnd Iâm a doctor.â
âIâm not complaining,â you said.Â
âGood.â
You took hold of your underwear and lifted your hips, pulling them off. You tossed them aside as he watched with a quiet awe.Â
âI was hoping to do that,â he said, returning to the bed.Â
The clear outline of his erection made your heart hammer with anticipation. A Pavlovian-like response, your mouth watered as he went to take off his own robe and pants underneath.Â
When he stood naked by the bed, you crawled over for a closer look, and to touch, of course. You couldnât help it. You reached for his cock, wrapping your hand around it, his hand finding your shoulder and squeezing.Â
âShit,â he whispered, as you jerked him slowly, tenderly.Â
His eyes closed, distracted. He still held the unopened box, and you took the opportunity to dip down and take him into your mouth without warning.Â
You went all the way down, until you were hitting your gag reflex, careful to not trigger it too hard, dragging your tongue along the underside. He tasted nice, that musky saltiness that was never quite enough. The precum that rewarded you made you moan around his cock, pulling back, swirling your tongue around the blunt tip.
He was so warm, and so hard. You bobbed your head, pushing yourself further, foregoing breathing to make him lose his own. He panted as you worked him over in hard sucks, his hand moving up to grab your hair. Just hard enough to be known, but not painful.
âFuck,â he hissed. âFuckâŚâ
You missed this, feeling wanted. Feeling cherished, even if this was fleeting. You could believe it just enough. You pulled back, eyes watering from the effort.Â
âYouâŚâ
He pushed you back, until he lay on top of you, caging you in with his arms. His wet cock slipped between you, and you wrapped your legs around his waist, your nails digging into his back.Â
âYouâre a menace,â he murmured, peppering your face with kisses.Â
You made out again, until you were certain you were dripping onto the sheets, your naked chests and stomachs pressed together. You panted, sweat already beading on your forehead and his.Â
âCondom,â he said, and you nodded.Â
He broke open the box, took out the sleeve of them and tore one off. You watched as he pulled it on efficiently, expertly.
âWhenâs the last time you fucked someone?â you panted.
âFeels like too long ago, now,â he said, his eyes blown with lust.Â
He pulled you under him again and kissed you, lining you up.
âIâll go slowly,â he whispered, and you nodded. âWe can stop ifâŚâ
âNo, donât stop,â you whispered back. âPlease donât stop.â
You wrapped your arms around his neck as he sunk into you, your cunt gripping him already, a whimper falling from your lips as he filled every inch of you to the brim.
You gasped, adjusting. You felt all tingly, right down to your toes. He groaned as he shifted, not moving as you accommodated for him.
âYouâre a fucking dream,â he breathed, and you moaned.
âKeep⌠going.â
âI canât get too worked up or itâll be over too soon,â he said, and you laughed breathily.
âYouâre so sweet,â you whispered.
âI mean itâŚâ
He finally began to move, his nose bumping yours with each thrust. Things quickly dissolved into sweat and moans, each stroke bringing you closer to the edge. He moved in for another swift kiss, teeth clacking, and you gripped him harder, digging into his flesh.
Your bodies slapped together, foreheads pressed to one anotherâs. He slowed, breathing heavily, kissing you deep as he tried to recalibrate.
You watched him pull back, to preserve himself a little longer. You squeezed him deep inside and he blinked down at you, narrowing his eyes.Â
He shifted, moving your legs up to rest your ankles on his shoulders. The stretch was exquisite, his cock feeling impossibly deep inside you. His retaliation was rewarded with your shuddering moan.
As he pounded into you, it blurred between too much and just enough, your trembling hand slipping down between you, desperate to reach your clit.Â
âIâve got you, Iâve got you,â he whispered, and you nodded, suddenly overwhelmed by it all.
Your pleasure crested and you came, crying out right by his ear, his face buried into your neck as he showed you no mercy. Bending you in half like this, your legs in the air, your wailing by his handsome face - it all would usually mortify you but it felt too fucking perfect to diminish.Â
He kept going for several seconds after you crashed back to earth, huffing and nearing his own end. You clung to him as he spilled inside the condom, going rigid above you. You pressed a kiss to his arm, panting with him.Â
In the gentle afterglow, he settled against you, a happy kind of hum in your hair. He held you against him, and it didnât feel like he let go for a long, long time, but things were blurry at best by the end.Â
It was a good fuck. Legendary, even. He peeled away reluctantly and flopped beside you with a sigh. You rested in the wet patch for all of one minute before you too decided you had to move away.Â
-
You hadnât meant to fall asleep, but you woke much later. You drew in a breath, surrounded by Michaelâs heat and scent. You shared a pillow, you remembered, as you blinked and took in the surroundings in the early morning light.Â
The TV was still on, though its volume was too low to make out the majority of the dialogue, you could see it was a black and white Italian movie.Â
Michaelâs arm was across your middle, as if he had flung it across you during the night. You watched the side of his face. His blissed out face filled your stomach with butterflies.Â
You rolled over, and then he stirred at your movement. You waited until he was waking up to finally move again, slipping out of bed and walking to the bathroom.Â
âGet back here,â you heard him call, and you smirked, glancing at the mirror.Â
Once you flushed the toilet and washed your hands, you went back, seeing him waiting for you.Â
You picked up your robe and threw it on. Michael's brows hiked.Â
âI really don't want you doing that.âÂ
âI'm gonna go,â you said. You sat on the end of the bed. âSorry to burst your bubble.âÂ
You moved to grab your slides but he stopped you, suddenly behind you and pulling you back into his arms.
âYou want me to stay?â
âDonât be so surprised,â he murmured, lips already ghosting your neck.Â
You hadnât slept with someone new in literally years, so you were rusty, you figured. But he seemed serious about how much he wanted to repeat this. After all the buildup, he wanted more? You werenât about to argue with him when his hand opened your robe again, exposing your skin once more.
And you certainly werenât going to stop him when he lay you down, your head half off the bed, diving between your spread thighs with all eager lips and tongue.
He had a confidence with a womanâs body that you knew didnât just come with age, though you suspected it helped immensely for some men. He had a greater understanding of experience, plus his regular âtouching strangersâ thing. You could never. Michael seemed born for this.
Your hands found the back of his head as he ruined you, spearing his tongue inside you, fucking you relentlessly with it once you started to whine and shiver with pleasure. Your thighs quivered, fighting to keep themselves open as he stroked deep inside your cunt.
âOh, fuckâŚâ
You back bowed as you came, and he didnât let up, working your clit with his thumb at a steady rhythm. He only stopped when you tried to pull away, his kisses landing on your inner thigh, wet and sticky. He kept kissing you, cherishing you.Â
It was so intimate and intense you had to look away, your hand over your face.Â
âYou okay?â he panted, and you nodded.Â
He pulled you up and rolled you over so your face was in his pillow, the spare under your hips a second later. In no time at all, he lined himself up, the blunt tip of him teasing your folds.
âYouâre so beautiful,â he murmured, and you believed him. The reverence was undeniable.Â
When he pushed inside, bottoming out with a grunt, you gripped him in earnest. He bent down, kissing your neck, your shoulders. You were still recovering from before, still in that floaty stage, when he began to move.Â
âFuck, look at you,â he whispered, never missing a stroke.Â
He didnât last long, and you didnât mind. You honestly didnât notice, with how full and wanted you felt. He was rougher than last night, taking from you, all the while whispering encouragement as you gave him all.Â
He came with a groan, fingers biting into your ass as he went still. You sighed, content as he pulled away.Â
Once you showered in your room and returned, he ate you out again after breakfast. It was a lot. But it felt like the closest thing to perfect. Too bad it wasnât going to last longer than a few more days of your vacation.
âWhat are you doing after this?â you murmured, popping a grape into your mouth.Â
âWellâŚâ
He glanced down at you beside him, lifting the sheet, as if to examine your naked body.Â
âI meant after vacation,â you said.Â
He was engrossed in your lower half. You moved your free hand across your lower stomach where your scars were. As if detecting your self-consciousness, he switched back.Â
âIâm still not sure.â
âHavenât given it more thought?â you said. âYouâve got a passport, right?âÂ
He nodded.Â
âYou could always, yâknow - disappearâŚâ
He swallowed, looking away. The immediate shift in him had you wanting to take it back, like usual.
âI donât have to know,â you added. âIâd just hope you enjoy it. You deserve it.â
He rubbed his eyes. âI dunno about that.â
He went quiet then and you finished eating, moving closer. He let you under his arm, pulling you into his side. Your legs tangled.Â
âWhat have you ever done that was so awful, Michael?â you whispered.Â
He gave a pained smile. You were starting to know it well.
âThe stepson I had,â he began. âJake.âÂ
âWhat happened?â
He closed his eyes. âPittfest.â
Of course. The entire event had slipped your mind as something heâd be part of. You remember donating blood in the days that followed, and you were lucky to not know anyone whoâd been there. The whole city had been affected though, for months after.Â
âHe was there, I gave him my ticket for his girlfriend,â he mumbled. He bit his lip. âLeah. She⌠she was shot, and I⌠I⌠couldnât save her.â
You pulled him into a tight hug before he could resist it, kissing his head, clinging to him. Your chest squeezed when he hugged you back, and you heard him sniffle.Â
âIâm so sorry,â you whispered.
âYeah, me too,â he mumbled.Â
You stayed like that for a while, and he began to relax against you, your lips still brushing his brow when you spoke.
âItâs not your fault.â
âDonât,â he said.Â
âMichael, itâs not- itâs not your fault. Donât do that to yourself. I know weâve only known each other a few days butâŚâ
You pulled back to look him in the eye.Â
âI feel like I⌠fucking skipped time or something. I know you well enough that you tried everything you could to save her, and⌠Iâm sorry. Iâm just so fucking sorry you have to live with that-â
He broke you off with a crushing kiss. In seconds you were tussling again, rearranging yourselves for him to push inside you. It was rushed and desperate, like you hadnât been fucking for hours.Â
âWe fucking skipped time,â he whispered, pounding into you like it was his mission to do so. âCâmon, Iâve got youâŚâ
When he played with your clit, everything shrunk to a pinpoint and you tensed up, clenching around him.Â
âAttagirl,â he whispered, watching you fall apart.Â
He didnât relent until he had his fill, your mind going blank.
-
Robbyâs back and shoulders were beginning to ache, as they always did this late into the shift. He hadnât sat down in over eight hours, except to tell a patientâs relative some bad news in the family room.Â
That didnât count.Â
He hung his neck, tugging on his stethoscope with both hands, taking a deep breath through his nose. It wasnât chaotic, but a steady hum of constant beeps, voices and movement around him. He was waiting for several beds to be available upstairs.
âSix still waiting on labs?â he asked.
âYeah,â Dana said without looking up. âAnd trauma twoâs CT just came back.â
âGreat,â Robby muttered.
Everything was normal, the tunnel-vision type of end to his day. Dana answered the phone, taking off her glasses as she stood up from her chair.
âRobby. Incoming severe vaginal bleeding.â
He nodded, looking around. Whittaker went into eight with a brave look set on his face. He watched as Mel walked with Mohan, deep in conversation. He knew Santos was trying to chart nearby.Â
McKay came out to grab another computer, logging in.Â
âSevere bleeding incoming,â he murmured. âLook alive.â
Not three minutes later, the paramedics burst in with the stretcher, a sheet thrown over the lower half of the woman whose eyes were closed, her face twisted in pain.
âSevere vaginal bleeding,â one of the paramedics rattled off. âHistory of endometriosis per patient. Syncope at home.â
Robbyâs mind clicked into gear.
âHow long?â
âCouple hours of heavy bleeding.â
âAny pregnancyââ
He stopped. The patientâs head rolled slightly to the side on the stretcher, just enough for the overhead light to fall across her face.
Robbyâs brain registered it before the rest of him caught up.
The ER disappeared. The smell of the antiseptic, the fluorescent lights. All of it was replaced with sun, the ocean - Hawaii.Â
You.
He stopped walking, McKay bumping into him.Â
âRobby?â
âTrauma One,â he said, coming back to life. Years of practice kept his voice steady.
He stepped forward, grabbing the gurney to help steer it.Â
âBP is eighty over fifty.â
âJesus,â he hissed.Â
âHeartrate is 130.â
Of all the places to see you again, his ER.Â
Of all the hospitals in all of Pittsburgh, she rolls into mine.
Like something out of fucking Casablanca.
You were transferred to the hospital bed, Robby slipping gloves on as he approached your side, his voice calm:
âLetâs get two large-bore IVs. CBC, type and cross, CMP.â
Your head lolled to the side, your eyelids fluttering.
â...Michael?â
He ignored McKayâs eyes burning into the side of his face. He began to check your pupils. Your skin was cold.
âYouâre in the ER at PTMC. Youâve lost some blood, but weâre taking care of you.â
You blinked, still hazy. But you managed to focus on his face, his gentle tone. You nodded, closing your eyes again.Â
Monitors clipped into place with soft, rapid clicks. The familiar choreography of a patient circling instability.
âFluids and a transfuse,â he said to the room. He glanced back at you, grabbing your hand.
âPressureâs dropping,â Princess at your left said. âSeventy-eight systolic.âÂ
He adjusted your arm for the IV, the sting of it nothing compared to the pain you felt elsewhere. Someone hung a bag of fluids behind him.Â
âBloodâs on the way, weâll start a transfusion the second it gets here.â
âExcellent,â he said.Â
You struggled, eyes fluttering shut. He leaned in closer to you.Â
âHey - stay with me.â
âRobby, should we page OB now or wait for labs?â McKay asked, and he shook his head.
âGiven the history, I donât want to wait.â
âThe⌠history?â she asked, sharing a look with Princess.
Robby tried to not visibly react to the highly likely scenario that this incident would be circling in the days to come.
Robby ignored them, giving your wrist a small squeeze.Â
âYouâre going to be okay.â
âBPâs responding,â someone called. âUp to ninety-two systolic.â
âGood,â Robby said immediately. âKeep it going.â
Your breathing had steadied slightly, though your eyelids still fluttered with the effort of staying conscious. The first unit of blood arrived moments later.
The bag was spiked, the line flushed, the transfusion beginning in practiced, efficient movements.
Robby didnât step away, nor did he hand you over or delegate. He lingered by your side, hand resting beside yours as he watched your vitals.Â
-
On the last day of your vacation, you woke up in his arms. You could hear the crashing of the waves below the open windows, the sea breeze on your bare skin.Â
You rolled over, facing him, your noses brushing.Â
âI wish I could go with you,â you whispered for the first time.Â
You meant it, but knew neither of you would actually follow through with it.Â
âI should kidnap you,â he whispered back, and then he kissed you.Â
-
âRobby.â
It was Santos, rushed but remaining calm. Practically fearless, but looking for help. Robby glanced over his shoulder, then back at you in the bed.
âYeah,â he sighed. He took off his gloves, stood up and tossed them in the trash.Â
He went by Dana at her desk and nodded over at your room.Â
âCome and find me when she wakes up.â
âWill do, Chief.â
Dana stared him down but he refused to engage. He wasnât in the right headspace. Seeing you like that, so vulnerable, had too great of an impact.
He pushed off the desk and left to follow Santos.Â
-
You rest for an hour before you manage to open your eyes again. You glance around, seeing a nurse wearing a hijab checking your vitals.
Among the sea of pain is a shame so sudden you gasp, remembering Michael all over again. What were the chances you ended up here?
âIâll go get Dr. Robby,â the nurse said.Â
You sat up on your elbows, nodding. You hadnât prepared yourself for this. You only had to wait another ten minutes before the resident with a ponytail from before came in with Michael in tow.
âHow are you feeling?â the resident asked, and you glanced over at Michael, feeling scrutinised.
âOkay, uh-â
âIâm Dr. McKay, and this is- well, you seemed to know each other,â McKay said.Â
Michael crossed his arms. âYes, uhâŚâ
âWeâre friends,â you said, though that didnât feel right.Â
You hadnât spoken in months. On that last day, no promises were made. You exchanged numbers, but you hadnât wanted to ruin his time off, and you left him in Hawaii.Â
Sure, youâd thought about him constantly since, but not all for good reasons.
Michael didnât say anything about that, looking at your monitors.
âYouâre definitely improving,â he murmured. âAnd the glow is back in your skin.â
âIt might be sweat,â you muttered.
âHowâs your pain?â McKay asked. âIf you can give it a number-â
You always thought this was one of the more frustrating ways of dealing with endometriosis. Having to self report.
âLike a seven to eight,â you interjected. âI wouldnât say itâs the worst pain Iâve ever felt. I can kind of sleep with it. Or pass out.â
That wasnât funny, not even remotely, but you saw Michael smirk in the corner of your eye.
âYou called the ambulance?â McKay asked, and you nodded.
âAfter I came to,â you said. âThe bleeding was getting worse, and then I realized it wasnât slowing down, and my towel was soaked through.â
âHow was your last menstrual cycle?â
âFine,â you said. âNot like this. Not exactly easy, but not like thisâŚâ
You pulled in a breath. You knew where this was going.
âAny surgeries?â
âI had a laparoscopy six months ago,â you murmured. You looked at your hands.Â
âAny other complications?â
Your eyes stung. You picked at a cuticle.Â
âI had an ectopic pregnancy a few months ago.â
-
Robby rubbed his eyes under his glasses, staring at his screen. He had left you and McKay, dragged away by another patient.
Santos came up to the charge desk, glancing up at the list of patients.Â
âEctopic?âÂ
He heard McKay beside her.Â
âLeft tube,â she said. âTreated with methotrexate. When detected early, we can avoid rupture and surgery.â
It was a teaching moment, but only then did it hit Robby squarely in the chest. Heâd been distracted.Â
Ectopic, a few months ago.Â
Hawaii?
He looked at McKay, whose conversation with Santos changed to something about the weekend.Â
âHey, Santos?â he called. âAre you any closer to sending your guy home?â
âSure,â she said, hands in her scrubs pockets. âOnce I get back a clear drug test.â
McKay met his gaze.Â
âI ordered an ultrasound for your friend,â she said.Â
He nodded. He looked at his watch.Â
âYou think youâre leaving any time soon?â Dana snapped.Â
He put away his glasses with a sigh. He felt several pairs of female eyes on him as he made his way back to your room.Â
He slipped inside, shutting the door behind him. You swallowed hard, a lump already there.
âHey, so⌠you lied to me,â you said.Â
âAbout what?âÂ
He came over to your bed and sat on the chair beside it, scooting closer. It was too close for a doctor-patient relationship, you felt. You didnât mind.
You lifted your hand and reached over, tapping his name tag.
âIt was easier to be Michael.â
ââRobbyâ does suit you,â you murmured. âItâs cute.â
âCute?â he repeated, leaning on one elbow.Â
You stared at one another for what felt like an age, a story unravelling between the two of you.Â
âDonât be sorry you came here,â he whispered.Â
âIâm not, itâs just - I didnât want this to be the way I saw you for a second time,â you mumbled. âI mean, if I ever saw you a second time. I didnât⌠I didnât call.â
âNeither did I,â he said. He sighed. âI couldâve.â
âBut I didnât, like youâd hoped.â
âNo,â he said. âYou did not.â
Everything felt heavy. You sniffled.
âJesus, sorry,â you said, with a roll of your eyes. You wiped your nose with your hand. âTo be fair, I am on my period.â
âItâs okay.â
âIt doesnât feel like itâs okay,â you whispered, your voice so small you could barely hear it yourself.
He was the one to take your hand, your fingers twining. He squeezed.
âI didnât get back with my ex,â you said, and he nodded.Â
âGood.â
You snorted, but then instantly sobered by the look on his face. He stared intently at your fingers before looking back at you.Â
âWas it mine?â
You nodded. You knew what he meant. The moment passed between you and you let out a shuddering breath.
âIt wasnât even a real pregnancy,â you said. âNo possibility of it⌠happening. But I just had this feeling before - and I tested positive, soâŚâ
You rolled your eyes again.
âFor two days it was likeâŚâ
You couldnât get the words out. He squeezed your hand again.Â
âFor two days it was like it was ours.â
-
Robby had been taking a lot of deep breaths in the last half an hour. On the rooftop, the air was fresh, the nighttime sharpness coming in.Â
âSo,â he heard someone say, and he turned, seeing Jack.
âSo,â he echoed.
âWhoâs the girl?â
He smirked, shaking his head. Unbelievable. He hadnât even seen him yet and he knew about you. He could accuse Dana, but if he was honest, most everyone at the Pitt was a gossip.
âSheâs the one I met in Hawaii,â he murmured.
Jackâs mouth fell open. âHoly shit.â
âMm.â
âYouâre up here because youâre trying to figure out a way to get out of this?â he teased.
He joined Robby, glancing down.Â
âNot exactly,â Robby replied. He grit his jaw for a beat. âShe was pregnant. Ectopic. Then today she came in after she couldnât stop bleeding.â
âEndometriosis? What stage?â
âOne.â
Jack shook his head. âYâknow, there are women whose biopsies confirm it, because surgeons canât find it. They can be microscopic.â
âItâs brutal,â Robby muttered. âI canât stand it, Jack. Seeing her like that. She mightâveâŚâ
He didnât dare say it.Â
âWhatâre you doing up here, brother?â Jack murmured.Â
âThinking,â Robby muttered. âThinking too much.â
As they began their walk back, he said:
âSheâs waiting to be transferred to OB.â
He wasnât going to let it go until he said it out loud, so he did it, feeling heavy.
âI got her pregnant. It was me.â
Jack didnât seem surprised, giving him an understanding, soft sort of look.
âItâs okay, it happens. Is she okay?â
âI guess. No?â
He needed to focus back to work, to finally finish his shift. He started to make the rounds.Â
-
He came back to your room. You put down your magazine Dana got you.Â
âHey,â you said. âYouâre gonna leave?â
He nodded, going to the computer, swiping his card. He typed, glasses on. You remembered the first time you saw him use them, when he read the menu on your first not-date on vacation.
âI can feel you watching me,â he said, not looking up.
âWhatâre you doing, then?â you asked.
He typed, then scratched his head. Typed some more.
âRecommending you have an iron transfusion after your follow-up blood test. Your gynecologist will get a letter from the hospital. And then⌠itâs on me.â
âRobby,â you said, a little alarmed. You knew the cost of those. âThatâs too much. What the fuck?â
He smirked, giving a definitive tap.
âBecause, baby, you are anemic.â
You felt a burst of something - a warm affection that made your eyes water. You watched as he came over, sitting on the edge of your bed. He held your hands.
âA girl walks into a hotel bar, and she happens to be from Pittsburgh, and I pass that up? What a fuckingâŚâ
He pressed a kiss to your knuckles.
â...moron.â
You gave a tearful little laugh, and leaned toward him, kissing him. It was rushed and clumsy, but the mixture of trust and danger - it was everything to you.Â
He was everything. You pressed your foreheads together.Â
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Summary: You were driving alone after getting into a huge fight with your now ex-boyfriend. You had spotted a guy standing on the side of the road in the rain, hitching a ride, so you gave him a lift. That guy happened to be Dean Winchester and you had an unforgettable one night stand with him.Â
Pairing: Dean x Female!Reader
Word Count: 3.1K
Warnings: Slight angst, description of injury, possible spoiler for Season 1 of SPN, little bit of fluff.Â
Song Inspiration- Heart - All I Wanna Do Is Make Love To You.
A/N: This series is not really based in any season of Supernatural. The basic story line is reminiscent of season 1, but please imagine that Dean and Sam are living in the bunker. Also, I am SO SORRY it has taken me an absolute age to update this series! I hope you enjoy.Â
A/N 2: As always thank you to my beta @winchest09â. You are my cheerleader, my bestie and my constant support. I love you.
My Masterlist
Part Five
Series Masterlist
You barely hear Deanâs footsteps as he moves to check the doors and windows, making sure nothingâor no oneâhas followed. Your mind races as you rush to pack a small bag for yourself and another for Grace. Clothes, diapers, wipes, a few toys. Bare necessities. Every sound outside makes your heart jump; every shadow seems sinister.
Dean watches silently from the living room, arms crossed, jaw tight, his gaze never leaving you. When he finally speaks, itâs quiet but firm.
âY/N, listen. I know this is a lot. Hell, itâs everything but we donât have time to think about it. Heâll come back if we hesitate. You trust me, right?â
You swallow hard, gripping the handle of Graceâs car seat. âI⌠I trust you,â you say, though your voice trembles.
Dean nods, relief flashing across his face for just a moment before he steels himself again. âGood. Letâs move.â
Grace, still half-asleep, whimpers when you pick her up. You stroke her hair, whispering soft reassurances as Dean grabs your bags and leads the way to his car. The night is eerily quiet outside, but you canât shake the sense that eyes are watching you, waiting.
Once youâre in the Impala, Dean slides behind the wheel. He doesnât turn on the radio, doesnât speakâhis focus is all on the road ahead. You buckle Grace into her car seat in the back and glance at her sleeping face, your heart squeezing painfully.
âWill⌠will we be safe?â you ask quietly, almost afraid of the answer.
Dean glances at you in the rearview mirror, his jaw tight but eyes soft. âWe will be. I promise you, Y/N. You and Grace are coming somewhere no demon can touch. Somewhere Azazel wonât ever know exists.â
You nod, trying to hold back the panic bubbling up inside you. The world you thought you knew, normal, mundane, has just been ripped away. And yet, sitting here in the car with Dean, you feel a strange flicker of hope.
Deanâs voice cuts through your thoughts, low and tense. âWe should get a move on. This guy doesnât play fair. Heâll be coming for us as soon as he realizes weâre gone.â
Your stomach knots. You glance at Grace again, asleep and unaware of the danger that stalks her, and then back at Dean. Somehow, you feel an unspoken bond forming, one forged in fear, desperation, and the faint glimmer of trust.
The Impalaâs engine hums steadily as Dean floors it. The night stretches out before you, dark and uncertain, but for the first time in weeks, you feel like youâre not running alone.
And somewhere deep in your chest, a small, optimism begins to grow: maybe, just maybe, you and your little family will survive this.
The drive to the bunker is long, and the highway stretches endlessly before you. The Impalaâs headlights cut through the night, the only sound in the car is the steady hum of the engine and Deanâs occasional muttered curses at the stretch of road. You sit in the passenger seat, Grace behind you, her soft snores barely audible over your own racing thoughts.
Every mile you cover, you feel the weight of the world pressing down on your shoulders. The normal life you had imagined for your daughterâthe safe days of daycare, playgrounds, and bedtime stories is gone. Replaced by this: Dean, a demon who wants her dead, and a legacy you never asked for but canât ignore.
You glance back at Grace, asleep and trusting, and feel a surge of both love and terror. You shift in your seat, feeling the tight knot in your stomach loosen just a fraction. You arenât alone in this. Dean is here. He may not have all the answers, but he knows how to fight, and right now, that is everything.
Dean clears his throat. âY/N⌠I should probably explain a little more before we get there. Just so you know what youâre walking into.â
You tense, gripping the edge of your seat. âIâm listening.â
Dean takes a deep breath. âThe bunker⌠itâs not just a place to hide. Itâs a base of operations. Sam and I have everything there. Research, weapons, the Colt, books on every kind of demon you can imagine. Weâve been hunting Azazel for years, and this is the safest place weâve got. Wardings, hexes, the works. When weâre inside, nothing gets in.â
You nod, absorbing the information. âAnd the Colt⌠you said it can kill him?â
Deanâs jaw tightens. âThe Colt can kill any supernatural being. But thereâs a catch: it only works if you know how to use it, and Azazel⌠heâs smart. Heâll expect you to use it wrong. Thatâs why Sam and I are bringing it with us, and why youâre staying out of the fight for now.â
You lean back, trying to process it all. Your head is spinning with information, with fear, with the weight of what could happen if you make a single wrong move. But then, the reassuring press of Deanâs hand on your knee grounds you. Heâs here. Heâs real. Heâs not leaving.
For the next two hours, the drive is mostly quiet. Dean occasionally hums under his breath or mutters a joke to keep his own nerves at bay, and you find yourself chuckling despite the tension. Grace stirs once, whining softly, and you lean back to rub her knee until she settles again.
Finally, Dean pulls off the highway and into a gravel driveway that disappears into the darkness. A large metal door, reinforced and unassuming, is set into the side of a small hill. The Impala rolls to a stop, and Dean kills the engine.
âWelcome to home base,â he says quietly, though thereâs a hint of pride in his voice.
You stare at the door. It looks like nothing more than a storage shed. The bunker? Hardly what you imagined, but if it keeps Grace safe, youâre not complaining. Dean climbs out first, moving around to your side to open your door. You unbuckle Grace and pass her into his arms, following him to the entrance.
Dean reaches up and presses a series of buttons above the door. A low hum fills the air, and the metal door slides open, revealing a stairwell that descends into the earth. The air is cool and smells faintly of metal and oil. The walls are lined with pipes and lights, and the hum of hidden machinery echoes faintly.
âWowâŚâ you murmur, following Dean down the stairs.
âYeah, itâs not much to look at, but itâs safe,â he replies, leading the way down a long corridor. âCome on, Iâll show you where youâll be staying.â
The bunker is larger than you expected. The main corridor leads to a wide, open room with a kitchen, living space, and many other doors which keep their secrets. It also leads to a seating area in which Dean settles Grace down on a couch and lets her curl up under a blanket. She looks around, eyes wide, before nestling back into the cushions.
âThis is⌠nice,â you admit, letting your shoulders relax slightly. âI mean, itâs safe.â
Dean grins faintly. âSafe is what matters. Now, youâll be in the room down the hall. Closest to Grace, easiest for me to keep an eye on her. Samâs room is the other side, and mine⌠well, mineâs where I sleep, and where we keep the weapons.â
You nod, still trying to wrap your head around everything. âWeapons? Like what?â
Deanâs eyes flick to the far wall, and he gestures. âKnives, guns, holy water, salt rounds, blades coated in demon bloodâwhatever you can imagine. Weâve got it.â
You swallow. âAnd⌠Azazel knows where this place is?â
Dean shakes his head. âNo. Thatâs the point. Wards, sigils, hexesâhe wonât get in unless he knows the combination. And even if he did⌠heâd have to fight us to get to Grace.â
You feel a flicker of relief. âSo⌠weâre safe here.â
Dean leans against the wall, arms crossed, watching you. âSafe, yes. But donât get too comfortable. Demons are patient. And Azazel⌠heâs clever. Heâll try again. Tonight was just a taste.â
Your stomach tightens. âA taste? You mean⌠he could come back?â
Dean nods. âYes. Thatâs why you need to stay here. No more going out. No more taking chances. Iâll handle the hunting. You handle Grace.â
You nod, swallowing your fear. âOkay. I can do that.â
Deanâs expression softens. âI know you can. And Iâll help. Weâll do this together.â
The first night in the bunker is tense. You stay in your room, Grace sleeping in a crib beside your bed. Every creak, every hum of the bunkerâs ventilation system makes you jump. You lie awake for hours, thinking about Azazel, thinking about the danger he poses, thinking about Dean and Sam.
Eventually, exhaustion takes over. In the next room, Dean paces, listening for any sign of danger, his hand never straying far from his gun.
At three in the morning, a distant sound wakes youâa faint whisper, almost too soft to hear. Your heart races, and you instinctively reach for Grace. The sound grows, a low, guttural voice chanting something in a language you donât understand.
Dean bursts into the room, Colt in hand, eyes blazing. âStay behind me!â
The lights flicker, and suddenly, the shadows in the corner of the room coalesce. Azazel stands there, taller and more menacing than ever. Yellow eyes blazing, grin sharp, claws glinting in the dim light.
âYou brought me a gift,â he hisses, voice echoing through the bunker. âAnd you think you can hide her from me?â
Dean steps in front of you, gun raised. âBack off, Azazel. Not tonight.â
Azazel laughs, a sound that chills your blood. âYou think your little toys can stop me? I will have her, Winchester. Your little girl is mine, and you⌠you cannot save her.â
Dean fires his gun, a single shot that echoes through the bunker. Azazel screams, the bullet striking him directly, and he vanishes in a swirl of black smoke.
You clutch Grace, shaking. Dean drops to the floor, breathing heavily, his hand still on the gun.
âIs⌠is he gone?â you whisper.
Dean looks up at you, green eyes intense. âFor now. But this isnât over. Heâll be back. And weâll be ready.â
You nod, heart still racing, and hold Grace close. For the first time since the attack, you feel a flicker of hope. You are in the bunker, with Dean and Sam, protected.
Morning comes slower than usual in the bunker.Â
The hum of the ventilation system and the faint metallic scent of the underground compound are now familiar enough to be comforting, almost. But sleep didnât bring peace. You wake several times in the night, checking Grace, listening for any hint of Azazelâs return. By the time the first rays of artificial sunlight creep through the bunkerâs small windows, youâre exhausted, body tense, and heart still racing.
Dean is already up. The smell of coffee drifts from the kitchen as you quietly dress and move into the main living area. Grace, still half-asleep, clings to a stuffed rabbit, rubbing her eyes. Dean spots you and offers a faint smile. âMorning,â he says. His voice is rough from sleep but steady, grounding.Â
âSleep okay?â
âNot really,â you admit, sitting on the couch with Grace in your lap. âEvery little noise⌠I kept thinking he was here.â
Dean sits down beside you, placing a hand on your knee. âItâs okay. Thatâs normal. For now, youâve got to adjust to the idea that danger could be lurking just outside these walls. The first few nights are always the hardest.â
You nod, swallowing hard, stroking Graceâs hair. âAnd Sam? Where is he?â
Dean glances toward the stairwell leading to the lower levels. âDownstairs. Heâs working on some researchâtracing Azazelâs movements, trying to figure out where he might strike next. Weâve got a database of sightings, patterns, and possible weaknesses. Itâs not much, but itâs all weâve got.â
Grace squirms in your lap, finally standing and toddling toward Dean, who catches her easily. Her tiny hands grab at his flannel shirt as she leans forward, and Dean laughs softly. âGood morning, Gracie.â
You watch them, heart clenching. This is what family looks like, in its own strange, chaotic, dangerous way. And for a moment, you allow yourself to hope that this could be permanent, that Grace could grow up safe, even with the shadow of the Winchester life looming over her.
After breakfastâcereal for Grace, black coffee for you, and whatever energy drink Dean manages to findâyou move to the small kitchen table. Dean pulls out a chair and sits across from you, Colt in hand.
âAlright,â he says, serious now. âBefore we get comfortable, I need to show you a few things. You need to understand the basics. Grace may be safe in the bunker, but if we have to leave or fight, youâll need to know a little about protecting her.â
Your stomach tightens, but you nod. âOkay. Iâm listening.â
Dean starts with the Colt. He lays it on the table, handling it like a sacred object. âThis,â he begins, âis the Colt. One shot, any supernatural being, dead. But itâs not just about pointing and shooting. You need to know your target, the type of demon, and the circumstances. OtherwiseâŚâ His jaw tightens. âIt could go wrong.â
You study the gun, metal gleaming in the bunkerâs harsh lighting. âAnd⌠you think I could ever use it?â
Dean shrugs. âMaybe. Not yet, though. First, I need you to know how to handle yourself, Grace, and the basics. Thatâs what weâll start with today.â
The morning passes with a series of practical lessons. Dean teaches you how to check doors and windows for signs of tampering, how to use salt rounds to create barriers, and how to recognize the subtle signs of a demonâs presenceâsounds, smells, changes in the air.Â
Every new skill fills you with both dread and determination.
âY/N,â Dean says after showing you how to mark doors with wards, âthis isnât a game. Demons lie, they deceive, and they kill. You canât let your guard down for a second. Not with Grace.â
You nod solemnly, understanding the gravity of his words. âI wonât. I promise.â
By midday, youâre exhausted, both physically and mentally. The bunkerâs security gives you a false sense of comfort, but Deanâs teachings remind you constantly of the world outside. Every shadow in the hall feels like a threat, every flicker of light suspicious. Grace, oblivious to danger, giggles as Dean shows her how to hide under blankets.
âYou canât just let her play in the open,â Dean tells you, though his smile softens the words. âIf a demon got in, Iâd want her somewhere safe, away from it. She needs to learn that too. Weâll start smallâhiding games. Makes it fun and safe.â
Grace laughs and hides behind a cushion, peeking out at you. Your chest swells with a mix of love and fear. This is what youâre fighting for. Her laughter, her safety, her life.
In the afternoon, Dean disappears for a while, leaving you to settle Grace for a nap. You sit on the couch, staring at the walls lined with books, weapons, and tools, trying to process everything. The bunker feels like a strange blend of home and prison; safe, yet full of reminders of the world you canât escape.
A faint sound makes you freeze. The hum of the ventilation, maybe? A creak in the pipes? You glance at Grace, sleeping peacefully. No, it wasnât her. Your heart hammers in your chest.
Dean appears in the doorway, eyes scanning the room. âWhat is it?â
âI⌠I thought I heard something,â you whisper, voice tight.
He steps closer, resting a reassuring hand on your shoulder. âItâs probably nothing. But stay alert, alright? Thatâs the key here. Donât panic.â
You nod, trying to calm yourself, but a prickle runs down your spine. Your instincts scream at you.Â
Something isnât right.
Hours later, Sam returns, eyes bloodshot from research and late-night surveillance. He carries a laptop, feeding information to Dean. âWeâve picked up unusual activity,â Sam says, voice low. âNothing direct, but scoutsâlesser demons. Azazelâs testing our defenses.â
Your stomach drops. âWhat do you mean, scouts?â
âMinions,â Sam explains. âHeâs not coming himself yet. Too risky. But heâs sending others. They might try tonight. Or tomorrow. Could be anyone, anything. You need to stay alert.â
Deanâs jaw tightens. âNo leaving the bunker. No exceptions. You and Grace stay in here. Sam and I handle the rest.â
Fear claws at you, but you nod, swallowing hard. âOkay.â
Night comes again, heavier than before. You and Grace settle in your room, every noise amplified, every shadow a potential threat. Dean checks on you one last time before nightfall, Colt strapped at his hip. âWeâve reinforced the wards. They wonât get in without being noticed. Sleep, if you can. Weâll be right outside.â
Grace clings to you as you lie down, exhaustion overtaking your vigilance. You close your eyes, heart still racing, wishing desperately for the normal life that was ripped away.
Suddenly, a faint whisper drifts through the room, soft, almost imperceptible. Your chest tightens, and you clutch Grace closer.
âStay here,â Deanâs voice is a hiss in the darkness. You hear his boots on the floor as he moves toward the door, Colt in hand.
The whisper becomes clearer. Words in a language you donât understand, chilling and guttural, echoing faintly. You can feel it crawling along your skin, the temperature in the room dropping. Grace stirs, tiny hands clutching your shirt, sensing the unease.
Dean returns moments later, Colt raised. âItâs a scout,â he mutters. âHe tried to get in. Didnât make it past the wards. Youâre safe..â
You breathe out, relief flooding through you, but fear remains.Â
This is only the beginning.Â
Azazel is clever, patient, and relentless. And now, you understand: the bunker isnât just a home. Itâs a fortress. And youâre its guardian.
Dean kneels beside you, brushing a strand of hair from your face. âYouâre doing good. I know itâs overwhelming, but youâre doing so good. Both you and Grace.â
You nod, tears threatening again, and hold your daughter close. The warmth of Deanâs hand on your shoulder, the sound of his steady breathing, the faint hum of the bunker. All of it forms a fragile bubble of safety.
Outside, somewhere in the dark, Azazelâs scouts prowl, testing, probing. Inside, you are learning to fight, to protect, to survive.
And deep in your heart, you know one thing for certain: you will do whatever it takes to keep your daughter alive.
Because the war has only just begun and this time, youâre not alone.
To be continuedâŚ
Thank you for reading! If you enjoyed please like, comment and reblog as FEEDBACK IS GOLD and is the fuel that keeps me writing. My tag list is open, so if you wish to be added, send me an ask.
Iâm not sure if any of the below are still active, or still want to be tagged but Iâm just going on my old tag list from about 3 years ago! If youâd like me to remove you, please let me know â¤ď¸
I MAY have some series updates - just want to read them over and make a few edits before I post as itâs been an absolute AGE since I have written anything!
Characters:Â Ryan Hart, Don Hart, Pregnant!reader, Roxie Alba
Warnings:Â Angst, fluff, things get saucy, drama ensues, this probably wouldn't happen to Ryan but I couldnât get the idea out of my head, mentions of a one night stand, Ryan is not married, don and blythe are nice to the reader despite not knowing her, set pre show, just before blue comes into the picture, Ryan is an idiot
You walked into the fire station, nervous as all hell. You took a deep breath, believing this was going to be your fresh start. If you fake it eventually youâll believe it or so your mama told you.
You knew this was going to be a rough one, starting a new job, pregnant by someone you havenât seen since, well six months ago.
You take slow steps towards the truck, starting at it. Wondering how long it takes them to make it sparkle. You swear you can see the creases in your makeup.
You jerk back at the sound of someone talking.
âI bet youâre wondering how it gets so clean.â
You take a deep breath and offer a small, nervous smile. âA little bit.â You glance over his name tag, wondering who youâre talking to. âCaptain.â
You perk up and offer your hand, âI believe Iâm the one youâve been emailing about the secretary position.â
His smile widens. âRight you are. Iâm Don.â He gestures for you to follow him.
âIâm sorry for wandering, I got lost trying to find your office and then a bathroom and then got distracted by the firetruck.â
âNot a problem. Believe me, I was the same way when I first came to our station.â
-
You two make small talk and Don shows you to your desk where youâre going to be working.
He slides over a container and a gift bag.
You raise a brow. âMy wife and I send our congratulations. She was the one who actually picked you to be our secretary despite your soon to be bundle coming.â
âOh,â you cheeks flush. âUm, th- thank you.â
âGo on, open it.â He gestures to the bag.
âOh, oh. Right.â You reach in and pull out a yellow baby blanket⌠with little fire engines. âOh,â you tear up. âPlease thank your wife for me and of course, thank you from you too.â You dab the corner of your eyes. âCan I- would it be inappropriate for me to hug you?â
He shakes his head, âitâs a thank you hug.â
You sniffle and gently hug him as he pulls you into the kind of hug you get from family. âOh.â
He pulls back, keeping a hand on you to keep you steady. âAre you okay?â
You nod with a smile. âShe kicked.â
âWell isnât that a good way to start your first shift.â
You giggle and nod. A knock on the doorway startles you. âDad, Roxie and the others are bringing in their dishes for the potluck.â
âAlright, son.â He turns back to you. âHey Ryan, while youâre here, why donât you be the first to introduce yourself to our new secretary.â
He steps into the room and your stomach drops. âRyan this is,â Don introduces you to him.
You put on a fake smile and reach out to shake his hand. âHi.â
âHi,â he whispers, shaking your hand.
You take a step back and gesture to the desk. âIâm just- Iâm going to settle in for a bit. You two go enjoy.â
âAre you sure you donât want to join us? Iâm sure the little one is hungry.â
âLit- little one?â Ryan echoes with a stutter.
âYes,â his dad answers, the smile stretching across his lips. âOur new secretary is going to be with us for a few months before she has to take a few months off.â
âI thought mom hired a temp?â
Don shakes his head. âI hired her and no.â
âI- do you know who the father is.â
âWoah, son.â The captain turns to you. âYou donât have to answer that if you donât want to.â
You lift your gaze at his question. âI do.â
âWhere is he?â
âRyan!â
âWhat I just- I asked a question.â He glances from his dad to you.
âYou did, you got an answer, now you can go.â
The two leave with Don leaving a string of apologies.
You take deep breaths to calm down before refolding the blanket and tucking it back into the gift bag.
-
You take a deep breath after sitting down after coming back from the bathroom as a knock on the door.
You glance up and find him standing there with a plate. âI come with a peace offering.â
You huff. âDo you- I didnât invite you in,â you add as you watch him sit down.
âYou didnât, I did.â
âFor what exactly?â
âI know.â
âKnow?â
âOh, come on.â He turns his head away before turning back to you. âAre you really going to pretend that you aren't pregnant with my baby?"
âMy baby and I are perfectly fine on our own.â
âYou don't have to do it alone though,â he tells you softly.
You take a deep breath. âI know that but you and I don't know each other much less enough to raise a child together.â
âExactly, if we're going to do this, we'll need to, you know, get to know each other to raise this baby.â
You narrow your eyes and lean in slightly, gesturing between you two. âWe are not doing this together.â
âAnd why not? I'm just as much a part of this as you.â
âI don't want you to be.â
He huffs, âlook. I am all for your body, your choice but I am not going to leave you to do this alone. Had I known sooner, I would have been with you the entire time, helping with the cravings and- and taking you to your appointments.â
You sigh, âthat's very sweet of you but-â You eye the food being slid closer to you. âI'm not hungry.â
âYou've been snacking on granola bars the last three hours.â
âYou've been watching me?â
âI call it checking on the mother of my child.â
âDo you?â
He smirks, âsee this,â he gestures to the both of you. âShows we can do this.â
âYou're not going to give this up are you?â
He shakes his head. âNot a chance.â
âOkay well, to be fair, the first time I met you. You told me you were freshly divorced so call me crazy for not wanting to put all my eggs into your basket.â
âThat's a bit ironic, isn't it?â
You roll your eyes. âLook, buddy-â
âRyan.â
âLook, Ryan. I'm willing to talk to you but building a relationship with you is a bit iffy.â
He purses his lips. âOkay, we start talking and go from there.â He raises his hand to shake yours.
You glance between his hand and face.
âWhat? You're looking at me like I'm not clean.â
âI haven't seen you in months, I don't know where that hand has been.â
He stares at you with a deadpan expression until you start giggling. âOh, you're making a joke. I see. Is this what I'm going to be experiencing with you?â
You nod. âYep.â
He sighs. âYou're going to be a handful.â
âFor two.â
âYeah, for two.â
You start nibbling more at the food, listening as he goes on, informing you a bit about him as a start.
-
Extra
You slid the sonogram across the table, letting him see the latest picture (hoping he'll shut up after).
"What's the- is it-" He glances at you with wide eyes. "Are we having a girl?"
A sheepish smile stretches across your lips as you nod. "Yeah."
A breathless chuckle escapes him as he comes around the desk to hug you.
You stiffen, unsure of what to do before you hug him back, finally happy to have support.
"Oh, um," he pulls back, keeping his arms around your waist. "I should have asked before," his voice comes out raspy.
You blink at him, gulping as your mind messes with you. You think back to him undressing back in your apartment. "It's- it's okay," you whisper. "Oh."
"What?"
You glance down, pulling his hand close to feel the little girl in your belly kicking. "I think someone's happy to hear you."
â§ď˝Ľďž: * pairing: Michael Robinavitch x Female!Public Defender!Reader
â§ď˝Ľďž: * summary: a chance meeting at a coffee shop turns your world upside down as you fight to save your clientâs future.Â
â§ď˝Ľďž: * content: 18+ (MDNI) due to eventual smut (facesitting, p in v, idiots falling in love). angst, pining, fluff, canon typical medical scenarios, age gap, lawyering, minor original characters, panic attack, too much caffeine. robby is an endearing train wreck. acab. fund public defense. you might say i got carried away.
There is coffee all over your new suit.
The two of you collide so hard that your face presses against his throat. You gasp from the mild burning on your chest and the shock, but when you look up and see the regret in those brown eyes, your mouth clamps shut.
âOh, fuckâIâm sorry,â stammers the guy, who has just dumped nearly twenty ounces of black coffee on your chest. Itâs hard to tell whose fault it is, really; you both walked through the door of the Allegheny Coffee & Tea Exchange at the same time from opposite directions, you both have earphones in, both of your minds are elsewhere. But itâs still hot coffee. On your new navy pantsuit, which you had bought more out of necessity than vanity. The rest of your suits are beginning to show their age, and not in a cute antique way.
âFuck,â he says again, as if heâs starting to chant it. Heâs watching the brown stain spreading across your button down and you have to resist the urge to put your hands there to cover yourself up. âDid I burn you?â The stranger nearly looks like heâs going to pull your collar forward and look at your skin himself, and you take a half-step back.
âN-no. All good. Well, exceptâŚâ You gesture vaguely at your torso.
âHold on.â Since his cup is now basically empty, he drops it on the sidewalk and runs inside, while you stand dumbly among the passersby.Â
There are tears coming into your eyes against your will. Why is being the victim in a bad situation always so humiliating? Surely thereâs some sort of psychological explanationâ
âHere we go.â He thrusts about a hundred coffee shop napkins into your sprawled hands. âIâm so sorry.â He shoves his hands into the pockets of his jacket, too gentlemanlike to help clean up the giant stain that has started to cool over your breasts. Through the tears stinging the back of your eyes, you can read in yellow letters over his heart: Beers of the Burgh.
âUm,â is all you can say as you helplessly dab at your button down and blazer with the coarse, mostly useless squares heâs given you. Heâs running his hands through his hair and looking up the street like someone might swoop in to make everything better.
âPlease let me pay to get those dry cleaned,â he says finally, taking the sodden napkins from you and stuffing them in his empty coffee container.
âIâm sorry about your coffee,â you say weakly, deciding youâre going to be late for arraignments, capitulating to the hand youâve been dealt this morning. Itâs overcast and chilly and the magistrate judge is going to be livid.
He did spill his drink all over you like a drunk freshman at a dive bar, but he has a puppydog look about him that makes you reluctant to stop talking to him. You almost donât want to walk away and put this shitty morning with the little coffee shop disaster behind you. Because heâd still be standing there, hands in his pockets with his jacket sleeves pushed up, those dark brows slanted with concern and embarrassment. He looks to be middle-aged, but his voice is smooth and kind.
âIâm much more sorry about your clothes,â he nearly laughs. He pulls his cell phone out of his pants pocketâyou notice theyâre slouchy Carhartts. He taps a few times on his screen and flips it around to show you a QR code. âAdd me and request the total of the dry cleaning costâand add whatever your next cup of coffee costs ya. Again, Iâm so sorry. Please let me make it right.â
You scan it and add him, @robbyrobin1, feeling like a robot that was never programmed to speak.Â
âYouâre forgiven, I promise,â you say at last, knowing you also need to take a rideshare home to change before you go to court, though you donât enlighten him of that. You donât know why. You donât even know his name, and he ruined a perfectly normal morning. But you just canât make him feel worse.
âThanks. I hope you have a better day than what Iâve started you off with,â he smirks self-deprecatingly, tugging on the strap of his satchel. He nods and heads off down the slope of the sidewalk. For some reason, you watch him until he rounds the corner of a building and is gone.
You text your coworker Adam that youâll be late for court while you let one frustrated tear fall. Itâs swiped away before anyone else can see it. Your ride comes and you head home, thinking of those incredible brown eyes. Which you would never see again.Â
Gone, melted into the hundreds of thousands of people in Pittsburgh. Just like you.
âGood morning, counsel. I see youâve decided to grace us with your presence,â Judge Moran snips.
You sigh. This gray suit from Kohlâs, which has to be at least six years old now, will have to do for this morningâs Magisterial District Court docket. For which you are thirty-five minutes late.
âThank you for your patience, your honor,â you say with more confidence than you feel. Sorry, Judge, I was busy racing home to change out of my newest suit because an older man who, I am realizing in retrospect, I found quite attractive, covered me with an entire dayâs worth of caffeine. Who gets black coffee from a coffee shop anyway? Really, shouldnât you justâ
âI tried to drag my arraignments out for you, but sheâs in a mood this morning,â Adam, another public defender who also covers felonies, whispers in your ear. His steady voice breaks through your incoming internal meltdown. âHang in there.â He stuffs his files in his bag and gestures for a bailiff to take one of his clients back to the holding cells so they can talk.
You dump your files on the podium and take a deep breath. You scan the jury box, which is currently filled with red-jumpsuit-clad and shackled incarcerated people. Youâre trying to match names to the faces you looked up last night on the jail website.Â
Two thefts by unlawful taking. Seven drug possessions involving fentanyl, two of them with assault charges as well, and you realize from reading the short citations that they might be co-defendants. Your office paralegal should have caught that. This day is shaping up to be a real shitshow after all.
The incarcerated defendants begin muttering amongst themselves as your silence stretches. âI canât believe Iâve got a fuckinâ public pretender,â one of Adamâs clients says loud enough to get escorted back to the holding cells by the bailiff.Â
Some of his neighbors snicker, but most of them are looking at their feet, defeated.
You get to the bottom of your stack and realize thereâs a file with a name you donât recognize: Quade Jameson. You flip through it, wondering if Adam accidentally left it, but sure enough, your name is on the upper left-hand corner of the fileâs inside. It must have been a late assignment within your office and shoved into your stack before you went home for the day yesterday. Not surprising but still maddening.
There are only three sheets of paper on the inside: the short police citation, a criminal history printout from pretrial services, and the application for a public defender. Mr. Jameson makes less than forty grand per year, so you go ahead and write on the lined sheet stapled inside both the date and âpreliminary arraignment.â
You quickly flip to the citation, sensing Judge Moran burning holes into the side of your head with her gaze as she waits for you to begin calling cases, and squint at the text.Â
COUNT 1: MURDER (1ST DEG.) (F)
COUNT 2: TAMPERING WITH PHYSICAL EVIDENCE (M)
âDamn, are you kidding?â you whisper, tilting your chin away from the hot microphone. A late assignment on a murder? You take a cursory look at the prosecutor, Nathaniel, who is obviously looking at fantasy football stats on his phone. You then scan the jury box, and through the process of elimination, set your eyes on who you think might be the one. âMr. Quade Jameson?â you call.
Heâs maybe a year or two younger than you and has mid-length dreads not yet bedraggled by a stay at the jail. His eyes are round and frightened, with just a touch of anger, which you have come to recognize very well. He lifts one hand as well as he can in the cuffs, and you step over to squat beside him, telling him your name. âIâm a public defender. Today youâre being informed of your rights and bail will be set, as well as a preliminary hearing, probably later this week.â
âMaâam, I didnât do nothing, I swear. Please get me out of here. Please!â he whispers a little too loudly. You place your hand on his upper arm and nod as the bailiff glares at you both.
âI understand youâre frustrated. Iâll meet with you after court today, okay?â You hand him a business card. âHow long have you lived in Pittsburgh?â
âMy whole life. Live with my momma and my baby girl. Sheâs four. Momma was gonna come to court but she canât find anyone to watch Isabelle.â
âCan your mom post any sort of bail? Pay for an ankle monitor?â
He shakes his head and chews the inside of his cheek.
âIâm going to do my best, Mr. Jameson, but your charge is very serious. Step up to the podium with me, please.â
He nods as he stuffs your card in the one pocket on his jumpsuit.
âYour honor, may we begin by calling the case of Commonwealth versus Quade Jameson?â
âYou may,â Judge Moran says through gritted teeth, as you walk forward, and your client shuffles in his leg shackles. âMr. Jameson, did you hear the rights I read to everyone earlier?â
âYes maâamââ You elbow him softly, hidden behind the podium. âYes, your honor.â
âAfter reviewing the economic information from pretrial services, I am appointing the Allegheny County Public Defenderâs Office. Counsel, will you be representing Mr. Jameson?â
âI will.â You flip back to the criminal history report. Low pretrial risk scores for failing to appear and criminal activity: a small beam of hope. Not that it matters much to Judge Moran. âYour honor, if I may be heard on the matter of bail?â
âYou may,â she responds, not looking up from playing sudoku on her phone.Â
You swallow your frustration and try not to roll your eyes. âMr. Jameson is a lifelong resident of Pittsburgh. He lives with his mom and his young daughter.â You lean over to Quade and whisper, Are you employed? He nods vigorously. âHe has a job as well, but like many people in our community, he cannot possibly post any significant cash bail. He understands that this case is serious and that he must reappear in court. I would ask that he be considered for the electronic monitoring grant from the county.â
Nathaniel scratches the inside of ear and replies around a yawn, âA very high cash bond would be appropriate considering he is alleged to have killed someone. Unprovoked. With a firearm.â
Quade takes in a sharp breath and you shush him gently. âDonât let him rile you up.â
âIâm inclined to agree with the Commonwealth. One hundred thousand dollars, full cash. The Court sets this matter for a preliminary hearing this Friday. I order that the Pittsburgh Police Department be notified.â
You take in a breath, hold it for three seconds, and then turn to face Quade, who is grinding his teeth. âI will come see you as soon as I can to talk about all this. Promise.â
He shrugs and shuffles back to his seat, his head dropped low between his shoulder blades.
At the end of the long docket, you text your boss. Late assignment on a murder case? Really?
He responds brutally: Super late add to the docket. All yours from here on out.
You stagger down the steps of the courthouse to head to the office. The bailiffs taking a smoke break look at you with barely concealed pity. The wind hits you and you can somehow still smell the coffee on your skin.Â
When you went home earlier to change, you should have just crawled under the covers and never come out.
Michael cannot stop thinking about it, even thirteen hours later.
The blood all over the gurney, the blank look in the patientâs eyes, the coldness of the young manâs forearms. The way the gold chain around his neck turned a sickly orange with bloodstains.Â
It had happened toward the end of an otherwise bearable shift. Damion Yates, twenty-six-year-old male, gunshot wound to left chest, brought in by the EMTs who said he was in and out of consciousness. Robby stepped up to the gurney, McKay close to his side, since they both happened to be standing by the ambulance bay when the patient was wheeled in.
âTrauma Two,â Michael said authoritatively, pulling on a pair of gloves. âMohan! Over here, please.â
As the nurses were opening the doors to Two, Damionâs eyes suddenly shot open, and Michael leaned in close. Damion coughed up some blood and growled, âTh-that bastard. Thinks heâs bad. But I seen him in that red shirt from a mile away. FollowingâŚâ And his eyes closed.
âStay with us, Damion,â Michael yelled, pointlessly.
An hour and a half of coding. Compressions, transfusions, frantic brainstorming from the doctors, all at a loss against the destruction of a single bullet. The fluorescent lights glared so fiercely on the face of Michaelâs watch that he had to tilt his wrist to see the hands. âTime of death: 6:58 PM.â
They each stared at one another: Mohan, McKay, Mateo, Princess, each one eventually looking toward their leader, Dr. Robby, who stood like a beacon at the foot of the bed.
âA moment of silence for Damion,â he murmured, folding his hands, which were shaking slightly. âA human being gone too soon.â
They all looked down at the bed, where the still form of a young man did not breathe, did not move, did not feel. A life that was snuffed out like a candle.
You would be forgiven for thinking that in an urban center, Michael would get used to gunshot deaths. But he never did. How a single piece of metal could easily take away someoneâs sibling, someoneâs parent, someoneâs child, someoneâs spouse. It was completely absurd, and yet they faced it every single week. Usually every day.
And then they all left the room. But Damion, even if only in spirit, went with them.
After debriefing Jack, who would have to deal with the morgue staff and the family when they arrived, Michael went home and slept fitfully on his couchâhis bed seemed too good for himâall the while seeing that young man burned behind his eyelids. He tried to cry and couldnât.
The next morning, he decided that it was a new day, and that he would support the coffee shop down the street from the hospital and get a muffin and the largest black coffee they would give him.
And then he poured it all over a woman, who looked up at him with so much shock and confusion that the first words out of his mouth were Oh, fuck. Of course. Smooth, Dr. Robby.
She looked really nice, with her faux leather tote and red lipstick. And he had ruined it allâprobably her entire day, if not her entire week.
She had been embarrassed, but not particularly angry, and he could not have been more grateful. He couldnât handle a fistfight with a stranger before a twelve-hour day shift, even if he deserved it. Not after yesterday. Damion Yates, twenty-six. He remembered being that age; he had a nostalgia Damion would never have.
He heads back to the Pitt with no coffee and a head swimming with the image of that dead young man, now joined by the timbre of your voice. Iâm sorry about your coffee. You sounded so soft and sincere. Who the hell sounded like that after they got a chest full of someone elseâs order?
Before he knows it, heâs stepping into the Pitt, which is buzzing with activity at shift change. âGood morning, hon,â Dana calls to him, staring at him quizzically over her metal-rimmed glasses. âNo coffee today?â
âLong story,â Michael groans, already looking at the board. Dana is silent for a long while, so he looks down at her again. âWhat is it?â
âTilt your chin back up,â she says seriously, one side of her mouth pulling into a half-smile. Michael complies with some confusion before his charge nurse steps toward him and wipes at the bottom of his throat. âMichael Robinavitch!â
âWhat?â he snaps, jerking his head away.
Danaâs voice drops a dangerous octave, but with a trace of delighted mischief, she whispers, âWhy did you come into the hospital with lipstick all over you?â
Heat creeps up Michaelâs neck and over his ears against his will. âExcuse me?â Dana holds up her thumb, smeared with a cool red shade, and Michael stares, completely dumbfounded. âThe hell is that?â
âLipstick! Donât act stupid!â Dana starts laughing maniacally. âThe good doctor is getting some before work, hm?â
âI am not,â Michael snaps, rubbing his own jaw vigorously. âI donât knowâoh.â His expression falters with realization. âItâs not what you think.â
âIâm sure itâs not.â Dana looks ready to continue, but sheâs cut off by Jack, who is heading toward them from the locker room with a brooding look on his face.
âMorning, Robby,â he says around a yawn. âBad night. Damion Yatesâ mom came in. I gave her your note. They took him over to the morgue not long after. I think the cops would like to get a statement from you, too. Detective Whatâs-His-Face said heâd be back around noon. Heâs picking up where patrol left off.â
âGreat,â Michael sighs, not wanting to relive a single moment of that experience. âHowâs the mom?â
âDevastated.â Jack frowns. âShe told me to pass on her thanks, though. I told her I was sure Damion had been in the best hands.â
I hope so. Michael worries his bottom lip with his teeth to keep his emotions under control. âThanks, Jack. See you later.â
âYou did your best, Robby,â Dana says, quietly, seriously. Michael only passes his hand over his short beard and sighs.Â
âAnd yet a young man is still in a drawer in the morgue,â he replies so softly that Dana almost doesnât hear. But she does, and it breaks her heart.
The Allegheny County Jail is by design a dehumanizing place, and by neglect a disgusting one. But you spend so much time there that even its heavy booking room door with the peeling paint feels comfortingly familiar. You sign in under the not-so-watchful eyes of three bored jailers, two of whom are arguing about politics, and one who is clearly on the verge of a nap.
You bang on the door to the central surveillance room and the deputy lets you in. âGot any law boxes open for me, Ritchie?â
The man, who is pushing seventy and slowly finishing a bag of gummy bears, hums. âIâll get ya one, hon. Go to number four.â
Thirty minutes later, youâre finally in the same room with Quade Jameson. His face brightens somewhat as one of the jailers opens the door and he recognizes you.
âYou want me to uncuff him?â The jailer asks.
âPlease. Mr. Jameson and I are cool. Arenât we?â
Quade nods enthusiastically, while the bored deputy languidly unlocks the cuffs and disappears down the hall. All that remains is you, your client, and a fully metal picnic table.
âGood to see you again,â you continue. âWould you prefer that I call you Quade or Mr. Jameson?â
âMr. Jameson was my old man.â
âQuade it is,â you smile slightly. âQuade, can you tell me how youâre feeling?â
His expression sours. âHow Iâm feeling? Dead tired. You canât sleep in here with the lights and the screaming. Everything echoes. And I shouldnât be in here.â
You nod slowly. âI know itâs a terrible situation. Could you please tell me what happened on Monday night that got you in this mess?â
Quade grips his head between his hands and laughs bitterly. âI had a gun at the wrong place at the wrong time. And now Iâm in here.â
âCan you tell me more, please? And if it looks like Iâm not listening, Iâm just taking notes.â
âIâm a janitor at the tire factory way down at the other end of East North Street. I clocked out, said hi to the night janitor, took my stuff from my locker, and was walking home. Because of the time of year, you know, the sun was trying to go down already, and the sunset was pretty. I remember that so well for some reason.â He stares at the wall for a few moments. âIâm walking up that hillâyou know the one, itâs a damn killerâsorry for cussingâand I hear this loud bang behind me, and this super loud whizz, going right past my head. You canât grow up in the Burgh without learning to recognize that sound. I was right next to that huge parking garage theyâre gonna demolish, the side with nothing but solid wall. I figure someoneâs trying to kill me, so I reach into my pocket and grab my Ruger. I donât walk anywhere without a gun around here.â
You scribble notes furiously. âWhat did you do after you grabbed your gun?â
âI crouched down. I figured they would fire again, and there was nowhere for me to hide. When they didnât fire again and I finally raised my head up, I looked behind me, and some guy was running back down the hill.â
âWhatâd he look like?â
Quade huffs. âDidnât get a good look. He was running fast. White guy. Red shirt, white shoes: mightâve been Jordans. Dunno.â
âDid you go after him?â
âI was going to, but itâs like my legs wouldnât work.â He hangs his head, reminiscent of his arraignment. âI should have hauled ass and caught him. Too late now.â
âWhat did you do next?â
âI looked up the hill and there was this guy laid out in the middle of the sidewalk. His shirt was white so I could see that there was blood, even from that far away. It was rough,â he trails off, running a hand over his face.
âWas there anyone else on the street?â
âWay up at the top of the hill, some older white man called 911. I dunno how much he actually saw of the shootingâI just saw him dial on his phone. When he saw me looking at him, he went and jumped in his car, parked on the street.â
You swallow, fearing what you believe to be the next piece of the puzzle. âWhat happened then?â
âI went over to the guy on the ground to see if I could maybe help him, but his eyes were closed. And my legs still werenât really working right. Or my head.â Quadeâs chin trembles. âThen I hear those police cars shrieking, and the ambulance. My handâs still on the gun in my pocket. I donât know why, but I yanked it outta my pocket and threw it in this line of bushes next to the garage. I was just scared for them to find one on me, I guess.â
âBut youâre not a convicted felon, are you?â You try to recall his criminal history report.
âNope,â he says flatly. âJust Black.â
That cuts you to the quick. âI hear you, Quade.â You clear your throat. âYouâre standing over the man and you hear sirens. What then?â
âPolice cars pull up. Cops start screaming at me to get on the ground. Guy up the street gets out of his car and points at me, starts yelling, âThatâs him. Thatâs the shooter. And I just saw him throw his gun over there.ââ
Detective Whatâs-His-Face, as Abbot so ably described him, is in fact Detective Asher from the Pittsburgh Police Department, and Michael instantly dislikes him. Working in the emergency department gave him a lot of exposure to law enforcement and other emergency responders, and Asher was a prime example of the dregs. Despite being a detective and therefore not on-duty in the traditional sense, Asher wore a bulletproof vest and apparently always stood with his thumbs hooked into it at his pecs.Â
He writes halfhearted notes on a mini notepad while he asks Michael, who is trying to get back to his patients, surface-level questions. And making stupid small talk.
âDoctorâŚâ
âRobby,â Michael reminds him for the third time.
âDr. Robby, is it your medical opinion that the victim died from a gunshot wound?â
âThe forensic pathologist will give you a full conclusion, but from my observations during treatment, that was the chief trauma.â
âCould it have been self-inflicted?â
âIâm not qualified to answer that.â
Detective Asher sniffs. âDid he say anything to you?â
âHe was mostly nonresponsive throughout his treatment. He did say at one point that someone had been following him.â
Detective Asher smirks. âThose are all my questions, Doc.â
Thank Christ, Michael thinks. âIâm sure anything else can be answered by the forensic pathologist, later on. Now, if youâll excuse me.â Michael does a round of his patients, and is finally able to discharge two of them. He keeps checking his phone, which he almost never does during a shift, and Dana notices.
âWaiting on a text?â
âHm? No,â he mutters, sliding it back into his pocket.
Michael realizes later what it was that kept him checking his lockscreen like a fifteen-year-old waiting on a text back. He was anticipating a notification from his coffee shop victim. He felt so guilty that you could have requested any amount of money and he probably would have given it. But it was five hours later and you hadnât asked for anything.
He hides in the breakroom and clicks on the profile picture from where you added him. Itâs a picture of you in sunglasses, skin glowing, a big smile on your face. Sheâs pretty, he thinks, though he knows that already from this morning. And youâre wearing red lipstick in the picture, too. He smiles to himself.
He thinks about sending you fifty bucks unprompted, but knows that would be weird, so he goes back to central and tries to forget it. Unsuccessfully.Â
âAll rise,â the bailiff bellows. âCourt is now in session.â
Per usual on preliminary hearing days, you feel frantic, trying to read police narratives given to you by the prosecutor just this morning (of course) and trying to talk to the clients who arenât in custody and donât have phones for you to call beforehand (classic).
Detective Asher sits smugly in a chair against the wall, just behind the prosecutorsâ table, watching you run around and whisper to clients. Most of it, at this stage, is honestly futile. A defense attorney is lucky to get a case dismissed at the preliminary hearing stage a couple times in an entire year. But itâs always worth the effort. Or at least you tell yourself so.
Youâve cross-examined Detective Asher before. He mainly investigates homicides, hence why heâs here today, digging dirt out from under his fingernails with a pocketknife. Heâs maybe fifty with graying hair and a sleazy smile. And he despises you.
Asher was the lead detective on your first murder trial, which ended with a verdict of voluntary manslaughter and a minimum sentence. Your client still went to prison, and yet Asher hated you from that day on, taking it personally that you put on a zealous defenseâan occupational hazard.
The preliminary hearing is about what you expect. Asher is the sole witness and takes the stand to testify about the scene, the caller, the firearm, and makes a big deal about Mr. Jameson asserting his right to remain silent after his arrest. He also testifies to the bullet and its casing matching a nine millimeter, which is the caliber of Quadeâs Ruger. Asher cuts his eyes at you every few seconds just to make sure you remember he hates you.
âDetective,â you begin your questioning in that confident voice that you know will drive him up the wall. âWere there any eyewitnesses to this shooting?â
âThe gentleman I was describing earlier.â
âHe called the police, yes, and claims he saw my client throw a firearm. I asked if there were any eyewitnesses to the shooting itself.â
Asher cracks his knuckles and stares at the space over your head. âIâm not aware of any at this time.â
âHave you requested any security footage from any nearby buildings or city traffic cameras?â
âNot at this time.â
You could throw the podium at him if you really tried, you think, even though it is solid wood. âDonât you think that might be important?â
âYour honor, this is a preliminary hearing, not a trial,â Nathaniel interrupts, knowing just what to say to make your blood boil.
âI agree with the Commonwealth. Wrap it up, counsel.â
You look around the room for a moment and are struck by how little everyone cares. Nathaniel resumes playing Candy Crush after interrupting you, and Detective Asher is staring down at his hands. Judge Moran is checking her email on the huge monitor up on the bench. Quade looks at you like youâre a life raft in the middle of a vast sea. You finish your questions and argue that there isnât probable cause to refer this case to the Court of Common Pleas for the filing of a criminal information, but you know at this point, there definitely is enough evidence for that low bar. You press Quadeâs hand, promising youâll call his mom, and leave the courthouse. On the sidewalk, you dial the number of your officeâs lead investigator.
âWould you mind meeting with me on Monday afternoon to get the ball rolling on the Jameson case? Thereâs more to this than meets the eye.â You pause. âI trust my guy.â
Itâs Sunday and youâre headed toward Allegheny Coffee & Tea Exchange, which just so happens to be the site of The Incident That You Canât Stop Thinking About. As a regular, you know that itâll be unbelievably busy, so you ordered your caramel macchiato ahead. You also have a third of a novel left, which you have big plans to finish reading on a blanket in the park, enjoying the late autumn sunshine.
âHere she comes! Our very favorite customer!â Itâs the cheerful tone of your favorite barista, who always works on Sundays.
âCertainly your most loyal one,â you laugh. âThanks so much.â
Youâre taking your drink from her hand when you see him.
You donât know how you recognize him so quickly; itâs been six days, after all, and the shop is full. But the line of people parts a bit and you spot him, sitting at a round table by himself, a laptop open in front of him.
When you finally find his eyes, heâs already looking at you. Before you realize what youâre doing, youâre walking toward him, and heâs standing up from his chair. His zip-up jacket and Carhartts have been replaced by a pair of dark-wash jeans and a moss green sweater, but you notice his sleeves are still pushed up his forearms, revealing dark dustings of hair and a simple watch. Heâs wearing glassesâthough he wasnât when you ran into him on Monday, or you would definitely rememberâbut he takes them off as he stands. A pity.
âHello there,â you grin easily. Your heart gives a distinct thump that you decide not to examine too closely. You introduce yourself, because if youâre going to keep running into each other at the Exchangeâhopefully not literally, from now onâyou really ought to know each otherâs names.Â
His smile mirrors yours. âIâm Michael. The guy who never got the pleasure of picking up your dry cleaning tab.â He tilts his chin down so he can look up at you through his lashes. His arms are crossed, and you have to intentionally not look at his forearms. âWhy is that?â
âStill havenât been by the cleaners,â you say with a sigh. âIâve been a little busy.â
He cocks his head at that before gesturing casually at the other chair at his table. You sink into it, and he sits, closing his laptop and leaning forward to listen among the din of the shop.
âIâm a public defender. My time is not my own, unfortunately. Hopefully Iâll drop it off tomorrow, but the stain might be a lost cause. I kind of forgot about it after the week Iâve had.â You run a finger around the lid of your cup.
âYou have to get the jump on stains or youâre screwed,â he says confidently. When you raise your brows, he adds, âI work in a hospital.â
âAh.â You look down and see that his in-house mug has black coffee in it.Â
He chuckles self-deprecatingly, knowing what youâre thinking just from the look on your face. âItâs just easier. I got used to drinking it during school and never looked back. How about you?â
âCaramel macchiato. Iâm a softie. Like it hot and sweet,â you wink wickedly.
He leans back in his chair and laughs, which youâre grateful for, because his attentive gaze is putting you on the verge of stuttering. âSo, public defender, huh? When are you going to go to law school to become a real lawyer?â
Your smile drops and you prepare to enter a tirade, but just as the words are about to whip off your tongue, you watch his expression change. His eyes are crinkling at the corners, and heâs trying to suppress a smile.
âYou jerk!â You huff, hitting him gently on the arm. âI was about to give you a whole lecture.â
âI could tell.â He chuckles warmly. âYour look just then is in the dictionary under âthunderous.â I bet you hear crap like that every day.â
Your barista friend cuts through your banter. âDr. Robby, hereâs an orange bar, on the house. I know you like them and this batch will be a bust after today.â She hands him a wrapped square and then gives you one, too. âAnd one for Lady Justice.â
He thanks her with that devastating small smile, and you notice he wonât look you in the eye. âDoctor?â
âMichael Robinavitch, physician, at your service,â he says quietly, watching his own hands unwrap the tiny cake. He bites off half and chews it before he continues. âI work in an emergency department.â
An emergency department? It isnât often that you meet people with crazier jobs than you. You sit back and try to imagine him in a lab coat. It occurs to you that the black shirt he was wearing underneath his jacket when you first met him might have been scrubs. Wow. âThatâs amazing. And you even have a hip name. Dr. Robby,â you giggle, and he cracks a smile.
âItâs easier for people to say,â he muses. You love his nameâMichael Robinavitch, Michael Robinavitch, Michael Robinavitch, you repeat in your own headâbut since you work with the public, you get it. The path of least resistance.
âWell, Dr. Robby, please accept my orange bar,â you say reverently, sliding it across the table. âIâm trying to cut back on sugar. Partial success thus far. Weâre not counting the macchiato.â
âDonât start calling me that,â he groans, half-serious, but accepts your offering. âAre you trying to keep the doctor away?â His eyes twinkle.
âNope,â you respond. âTrying to keep him around.â
Michael goes quiet, and your stomach drops with the thought that that was too forward. Heâs swiping his laptop into his satchel and is downing the last of his coffee. Dammit. Why did I have to make it weird? I was just making a new friend whoâs not a lawyer and I had to go andâ
âWould you like to go for a walk?â he asks, delicately placing your orange bar in his bag.Â
Youâre nodding before you even stop to think about it.
The two of you stroll by the river, since itâs nearby and itâs a gorgeous afternoon, with the sunlight shimmering on the water. Your book sits forgotten in your bag, while Michael has put on sunglasses that suit him very well.
âSo, you work in the emergency department?â you say dumbly, trying not to stare at him.
âYeah, Iâm an attending physician.â
âCan you break that down for a mere lawyer?â
Michaelâs laugh is rich and short. You canât get enough of it. He bends over to pick up two pebbles, one for each of you to skip across the water, and he scores six skips before he answers. âIt means the buck stops with me. I assume you can supervise law students when you have a bar license?â You nod, hoping your mere three skips isnât too embarrassing. âIâm not the only attending in the department, but Iâm on day shift. Day shift tends to get the worst of it. Anyway, attendings are fully board certified, and weâre ultimately responsible for the actions of the residents and interns.â
You whistle. âNo pressure.â
He tilts his head with a modest smile. âNo kidding.â
âDo people look down on you for specializing in emergency medicine?â you ask before you realize that might be too personal.Â
Michael raises his eyebrows, but with more appreciation than surprise. âYes, actually. A lot of the other specialties think weâre lazy, stupid, or both.â
You try to imagine how anyone could describe the man before you as either of those things, but then you give up. âBeen there.â
âIâm sure. Because weâre the jack-of-all-trades of medicine, other doctors assume weâre shallow and live to pawn work off to the other departments. Most hospitals have an unspoken pecking order with surgeons on the top. Emergency medicine is always overlooked and underfunded.â
âWhy did you choose the ERâsorry, the EDâthen?â
âWhy did you choose public defense?â
âI asked you first, Dr. Robby.â You stick your tongue out.
He lets you win. âI didnât, sweetheart. It chose me.â
The way he so easily calls you that makes you blush, but he either doesnât notice or pretends not to. And you feel the sentiment so profoundlyâthe sense of a calling, a destiny you canât get away from, no matter how hard it is.Â
âYou seem very well suited to it,â you say, not able to look directly at him while you do so.
âIâll take that as a compliment.â
âYou should. I mean it.â
He smiles, and the way it lights up his eyes makes your stomach flip. âThank you. I mean it.â
Before you can think of what to say, his phone rings. He apologizes and answers. âDana.â You throw another rock and get five skips in, hoping that Dana is his maiden aunt or something. Heâs quiet for about a minute. âYeah, I guess Iâll head over. Donât wake up Jack. Itâs all good.âÂ
He shoves his phone back in his pocket and lets out a deep sigh. âIâm sorry. Iâm on call this weekend. One of the other attendings is either genuinely sick or wants to go home to watch football.â He smirks wryly. âIâve gotta go.âÂ
You try to look cheerful, even though the thought of retreating to the park by yourself with your book now sounds boring, and say, âDonât worry. I totally understand.â
He nods once and fidgets with the strap of his bag. âThanks. This has been really nice.â
Itâs been wonderful. âYeah, it has. It was lovely meeting you. Without disaster this time.â
Michael looks down, the tips of his ears pink, and rubs the back of his neck. âDonât forget about the dry cleaning. Or whatever else it takes. Please.â
âI wonât.â Although he doesnât move, he also doesnât say anything else, and you turn in the direction of the park. âI guess Iâll be seeing you.â
You take two slow steps before you hear his voice. âCouldâI mean, would you be okay with giving me your number?â
When you look back, he looks sheepish and so sweet that you nearly laugh at him, but you catch yourself. âI would really like that.â
Your office investigator is struggling to keep up with the list you rattle off: measurements of the street and the sidewalk, nearby businesses and the status of their CCTVs, whether their employees saw anyone suspicious walking around that evening, the parking garage and its CCTV, Flock traffic cameras, going door-to-door at nearby apartments. Even though heâs not saying so, you know just from his look that he thinks itâs excessive for this early on in a case.
âHe wonât even be arraigned in Common Pleas for a month or two,â he grumbles at last, though he knows better than to cross you, so he keeps writing notes. âYou sure you wanna put this much effort in? He might change his mind and plea out as soon as he gets upstairs. Youâve got a lot going on.â
You stretch your arms behind your head and let out a breath. âTrue. But Iâm trying to get Nathaniel not to file an information, so we need to work fast. If we let this get to Common Pleas, itâll take forever, and thereâs no way that judge is going to lower his bond once we get there.â You rub your forehead. âI saw a line about it in the paper this morning. PPD is requesting information from the public. Crappy area if Iâm recalling correctly, though. More an alleyway than a road.â
âYeah,â he groans. âAlright. Iâll look into the CCTV stuff. You should start getting discovery from the DA this week, right? Iâll find out who the vic interacted with at Pittsburgh Trauma and see if you can depose âem. Iâll bring you the subpoenas to sign as soon as I do.â
âThanks. Knew I could count on you.â He stands to leave, glancing around your desk, covered in piles and piles of paper. âDonât worry about me. Weâve got this.âÂ
He nods at you with understanding and heads out. As he does, your phone buzzes.
You drop off that suit this morning?
Itâs Michael. Your heart jumps. You type: Yes. You gave me the motivation to go over there before work. Well done.
Good deal. What do I owe you?
You drum your fingers on one of the few cleared-off spots on your desk and chew on the inside of your cheek. You slowly write, How about you take me out to dinner instead? You hit send before you can chicken out.
His typing bubble appears and disappears over and over again. Your breath catches as you pretend not to care whether or not heâll say yes. You pull up the court docket on your computer and pretend to be able to read the names until you hear your phone buzz again.
Letâs do it. Friday? I can pick you up at work if you like. I get off at 7, but trust me, you want me to go home beforehand.
You jump out of your chair and dance badly around the room to the song playing on shuffle on your computer. âYes! Yes! Yes!â
âSomething exciting, I take it?â
Adam has stuck his head through your office door. You let out a short scream and nearly drop your phone. âAdam, you scared the shit out of me!â
He laughs and arches one brow. âYouâre never this happy on a Monday morning. Whatâs up?â He conspiratorially closes your office door.
You collapse into your rolling chair and slide your phone over to him. He sits in the spot your investigator vacated and puts on his reading glasses, humming with interest after scanning the short texts. âWhoâs Michael?â
âGuy who dumped coffee all over me last week before Moranâs arraignments. Saw him again at the Exchange yesterday and we went for a walk by the river.â
âA date?â Adam, who lives for romance and intrigue despite being at forty and happily married himself, clicks his tongue.Â
âNot sure. Thatâs when he asked for my number.â
Adam pumps his fist and slides your phone back toward you. âAnd heâs offering to pick you up at work so you can stay late if you need and you donât have to give him your apartment address. I like this guy already. We can forgive the clumsiness if heâs attractive.â
You blush and throw a stack of sticky notes at him. He catches them easily. âHe is. Older than me but heâs got that earnest look about him that you know is my ultimate weakness.â
âWoof. Youâre a goner.â You both laugh and then Adam looks down at your desk and says, âWorking on the Jameson stuff?â
âYou can call me naive if you like, but I went to talk to our guy last week, and somethingâs up. I think he really was in the wrong place at the wrong time.â
Adam, ever the good mentor, nods slowly. âAlright. Trust your gut. But donât forget youâre covering that suppression hearing for me on Friday morning.â Adam and his husband are going on vacation, and he of course tricked you into taking some of his hearings.
âWouldnât miss it for the world. Canât wait to get the email with the order denying your motion.â
âThatâs the spirit, counsel.â
With Adamâs approval, you write to Michael, Sounds perfect. 8?
He responds almost immediately: Black BMW. Iâll be there.
The week practically dissolves in a flurry of pretrial conferences, changes of plea, arguing with felony prosecutors (at different voice levels, depending on how ridiculous theyâre being), and emails. Your investigator spends three days just talking to business owners near the alleyway, interviewing cashiers and cleaners, all of whom say they donât remember seeing anything relevant before they heard the gunshot.
He also talks to the cityâs interior department on Thursday. One of their clerks informs you that the parking garage hasnât been equipped with CCTV for months, since itâs now vacant and slated for destruction. Youâre not surprised, but you still sigh when your investigator forwards you the email.Â
You finally get something of a breakthrough on Friday morning. One of the gas stations has low-quality security footage, but itâs around the corner from the parking garage, and they keep their footage for up to sixty days per company policy. Theyâre even nice enough not to insist on a subpoena and promise to send you the footage once they contact their headquarters, which holds all of the files. You text Adam with the good news, and his text congratulating you is filled with typos; youâre sure heâs drunk on the beach.
Itâs seven-thirty on Friday evening and youâre still frantically typing away at your computer, trying to finish a motion to compel so you can file it first thing Monday morning. You steal glances at your phone every few minutes, convinced Michael is going to beg off at the last minute, but as the time ticks by, he doesnât.
Your office hallway is empty: usually only Adam works late with you, and heâs elsewhere, no doubt drinking out of a coconut, while you nervously pace to the bathroom. You look at yourself in the mirror and smooth your hair with the tiny brush you keep in your purse before swiping on red lipstick. You donât always wear it, but youâve had it on both times youâve seen him, so itâs becoming a good luck charm. Your knee-length black dress is professional but form-fitting, and you hope itâs good enough for wherever Michael is taking you.
Iâm out front.
You close your office door, trying not to think about all the files still sitting there, and square your shoulders like youâre walking into court. While you try not to race out the front door, you see Michaelâs bimmer parked on the street, and heâs leaning against the hood on the passenger side, hands in pockets. Heâs wearing a white button down and black slacks, with his sleeves rolled up, of course.
âHey,â he says smoothly, opening your door for you. âGood to see you.â
âYou too,â you beam, and he takes your hand so he can help you lower yourself into the passenger seat. âWhere are we going?â
âItâs a surprise.â He shuts your door and walks around to the driverâs side, getting in, and it gives you a whiff of his woodsy cologne.Â
âHospital cafeteria?âÂ
He pulls onto the street and barks a laugh. âI said a surprise, not a punishment.â Robert Bradleyâs Blackwater Surprise is playing low through his speakers. âHow was your week?â
âNot as wild as yours, Iâm sure.â
He looks over at you while you wait at a stoplight. âTry me.â
âLetâs see. I hadâtwenty-six?âchanges of plea lined up this week, and only two fell through, thank God. One of the ones who changed his mind tried to choke me out with his handcuffs, and when the bailiffs tackled him, they broke his wrist. So now he hates me even more than previously. Wants my boss to give him a different public pretender.â You watch Michaelâs jaw clench. âIâve been working with my investigator to hopefully get a murder case dismissed before it actually gets to felony court. This morning, I covered a suppression hearing in front of a judge who I donât think has granted a motion like that in the fifteen years heâs been on the bench.â
Michael taps his thumbs on the wheel and whistles. âYou might have me beat.â
You shake your head. âLetâs hear it, Dr. Robby.â
He shrugs, and that little piece of humility endears you to him. âThree twelves this week: Monday, Wednesday, and today. Iâve had four gunshot woundsâall survivors, amazinglyâand a handful of heart attacks. A bad overdose on Monday afternoonâforty years old and dead. Two kids came in this morning with beans stuck way up in their noses. Two lineman electrocutions on Wednesday.â He tilts his head. âIâm forgetting some stuff. Sorry, that was dark.â
You touch his hand lightly where it rests on the gear shift and youâre surprised by how warm his skin is. âI asked. Youâve definitely won out.â
He chuckles. âOkay, maybe weâre tied. But I like hearing about what you do. Itâs not so different.â
You give him a small smile, which you hope he can see under the passing streetlights, and duck your head. âI agree.â
âAh, here we are,â Michael sings. You recognize the facade: Sienna Mercato, a three-story Italian restaurant, its peaked glass dome twinkling with the downtown city lights. He flawlessly parallel parks on the street, and you hate how attractive you find it to be. âHope you like Italian.â He reaches over and unbuckles your seatbelt for you. His hands are still so warm.
âWho doesnât?â You grin and let him jog around to help you out of the car.Â
You sit on the second floor, with its firestone pizza and charcuterie options, despite the fact that you offered the rooftop beer garden, remembering his Beers of the Burgh jacket. He shakes his head at the hostess and looks at your dress. âYouâd get cold.â His attention makes you shiver all on its own.
At the table, he lets you have the side with the booth, and he takes the wood chair. He insists you try the thin crust, and agrees to share when the waiter comes back over. He orders a beer but promises just one.
âBut I do know a good attorney, just in case,â he quips. When they bring him his glass, he lets you take the foam. The way he stares at your imprint of lipstick on the glass makes you tingle. âGood, right?â
âMhm.â For a moment you think he might put his mouth where yours just was, but he spins the glass ninety degrees and takes a sip. You watch his long fingers smear the condensation on the glass. You ask, âAre you a connoisseur?â
âJack and I fancy ourselves as such.â
âJack?â
âAnother attending, usually does night shift. Heâs a grouch but you get used to him. Smart as a whip, too. I think weâve drunk our way down every street in the Hill District.â
You laugh, and the way Michael mirrors your smile makes you lean toward him. âGood camaraderie at the hospital, I take it?âÂ
âIâd like to think so. You?â
âIâm good friends with my coworker Adam, but the turnover around us is hard. We both came in during the height of the pandemic, with telephonic court and all its delays and frustration.â Something in Michaelâs gaze shutters, but only for a second. âWe pretty much only do felonies now, so itâs a special kind of bond. Adam is on vacation in the Bahamas right now. Bastard.â
Michael laughs and runs his tongue over his bottom lip, sliding his glass back to you. âYou like the beach?â
âNot especially. Itâs the principle of the matter,â you huff and take another pull before passing it back. Your hand brushes his. It feels electric. âHow long have you been a doctor?â
âToo damn long,â he drawls, leaning his chin on his upturned hand. Your eyes trace the small paths of gray in his beard. Thereâs a gold chain resting under his collar that you havenât noticed before. âDonât get me wrong. I love it. Saving lives, training new doctors and med students, helping people during their worst days. But itâs hard.â Heâs looking down at the wood grain of the table.
âWere you working during COVID?âÂ
It takes him a few beats to look back up at you. âYeah. Yeah, I was.â
Wanting to comfort him and not knowing how, you gently close your fingers around his left hand, just above his watch. âI canât imagine how hard that must have been.â
He looks down at your hand, his eyes glazing over a bit. âThanks. I lost someone important to me. But so many people did.â He puts on a small smile and looks up at you, his brown eyes shiny. âSorry.â
âDonât apologize.â You slide your arm back to yourself and swear you see his fingers splay, like he doesnât want you to let go. âI interned in a defense clinic during law school. It bothered me that I was so affected by the cases; as a woman, I wanted to look tough, even though it didnât feel natural. My supervising professor took me to the side after court once and demanded that I cry.â You smile sadly at the memory. âI sobbed into her shoulder in the hall. I was so tired. She told me that tears are always worth the time, and I decided to believe her.â
Michael smiles, his crowâs feet curving, and nods. âGood advice.â
The two of you are interrupted by your pizza, and you laugh at the groan Michael emits as he looks at it. He lets you take the first slice and watches with interest as you bite. âWhatâs the verdict?â
âAmazing.âÂ
He winks. âJust what I wanted to hear.â
Michael keeps his promise to stick to one beerâand, in fairness, he had probably let you drink a good third of it, on top of the glass of wine you hadâand offers to drive you home after the two of you demolish the pizza. You think of Adam, who would say, Heâs giving you an out in case you want to Uber home. Another mark in the gentleman column.
He notices youâre cold and gives you a cardigan from the back seat of his car. You drape it over yourself and pretend youâre not taking in the traces of his smell from the fabric as he drives you to your walk-up. Luckily, thereâs a spot open on the street right in front of your stoop; a neighbor must be gone to enjoy the Friday night in the Burgh.
Of course, Michael opens your door again, but when he helps you out, he doesnât let go of your palm. You can see the intensity of his gaze under the yellow streetlamp as he closes the car door with his other hand. Both of you climb the stairs, pausing in front of the large wooden doors, where the intercom waits for you to buzz in.
âThanks so much for dinner and the ride,â you say. You squeeze his hand before you let it drop. âI really enjoyed it.â
âYouâre more than welcome. Glad you liked it.â He seems so large in the alcove, with your back to the door, and your heart thrums.Â
âGoodnight,â you murmur, even though you havenât even pressed the intercom button.
âGoodnight.â Neither of you move. You look at the intercom box out of the corner of your eye, worried about the stretch of silence, but also not wanting this night to be over.
âMichael?â you say, catching his dark eyes, and your voice sounds so loud in the still night. He hums, one of his brows arching. âCan I kiss you?â
He puts one hand on your left cheek, and you can feel calluses on his fingers, rough over your own soft skin. His gentle laugh fans over your cheeks. âNot if I kiss you first.â
Never one to be beaten so easily, you lean up with a hand to his chest, and press your mouth to his. Itâs tentative at firstâyou canât remember the last time you kissed someoneâbut Michael takes a half-step toward you and, oh, he is good. When you feel his tongue run over the seam of your mouth, you moan just slightly, and he presses his advantage by backing you against the door. Heâs even holding the back of your head so you donât bang it against the wood.
He tastes like the cranberry beer he ordered, and you think vaguely that right now, you would do anything he asked. His hair is surprisingly soft as you run your fingers through it, pulling slightly, and Michael moans. You would drop to the ground if he wasnât holding you so tightly.
In your fervor, your shoulder hits the intercom box, and you hear the speaker crackle to life. Your doormanâs voice pipes up. âThat you, number six? Working late again?â
Michael releases you and tries not to laugh, so he hides his face in your neck. You have to take a second to catch your breath. âYep, itâs me!â The click of the doorâs latch brings you back to reality, and Michael holds it open for you.
âMeet me at the Exchange on Sunday?â he asks, his voice full of something like possibility. âEleven?â
âItâs a date,â you answer, still panting a bit.Â
âYeah,â Michael is certain. âIt is.â
Standing alone in the stairwell, you text Adam: Amazing kisser. He responds while youâre climbing the flights: Hell yeah.
Itâs hard for you to focus when you return to work. Adamâs still not back, and you canât get a certain Michael Robinavitch out of your head. You spent nearly the entirety of Sunday with him, not to mention most of Saturday just thinking about him: he was so alluring, and smart, and funny, without being too full of himself.Â
The two of you had walked the opposite way up the river on Sunday, and coffee had turned into lunch, and lunch had turned into beer and pretzels. You talked about everything and nothing: where you grew up, stories from your college and professional school years, your opinions on cats versus dogs. (You forgave Michael for not taking a stiff position on the latter.) He ended up walking you home from the bar a little after sunset, a little unsteady on his feet, and before you put him into an Uber, he stole another kiss.Â
When you debriefed Adam over the phone Sunday night, he confidently said, âYouâre so screwed.â
But work stops for no manâor any slightly lovesick attorney, even as Michael texts you Monday morning, Have a good week, Lady Justice. That afternoon, you plea out on a terrible trial that was supposed to start next week and have a meeting with your investigator, who now has an external drive of security footage from the gas station. He leaves it on your desk for you to watch, but you have court nearly constantly from Monday to Thursday, and you feel like youâre drowningâeven more so than usual. On Thursday afternoon, he brings you a subpoena to sign. Youâre emailing a prosecutor about something unrelated and keep typing as he talks to you.
âThe attending at PTMC,â he explains, handing you a pen. âI talked to him yesterday: he worked on the victim for the Jameson case. I cleared it with general counsel at the hospital. She didnât give me too much grief since itâs just a deposition, but sheâs insisting on accompanying the doc. First round of depos is set next week.â
âExcellent!â you chime, clicking the pen. Your eyes skim the paper, and youâre about to skip down to your empty signature line, but you freeze.
Personal Appearance Subpoena
To: Michael Robinavtich, M.D.
âThis is the doctor who treated Damion Yates?â you exclaim, and your investigator peers at you strangely.
âYes. Seems like a nice enough guy. Do you know him?â
You stare back down at the paper, as though looking at it for long enough will cause the words to change. Collecting yourself, you print and sign your name at the bottom quickly, and hand it back. âA little. Youâre right. Nice guy.â
The investigator shrugs. âIâll hand-serve it on him and the general counsel tomorrow. Charge nurse said heâs working then. Donât forget about the surveillance video.â He closes the door behind him.
Michael Robinavitch, M.D. All of a sudden, you feel nauseous. Of course it had to be him. Of course Damion Yates had to be taken to that hospital at the end of the day shift that Michael was working. You hold your head in your hands and whisper to the surface of your desk, âJust my luck.â
Michael had never said anything to indicate that he looked down on you for being a defense attorney. In fact, he praised you for it, and laughed at your jokes at the Commonwealthâs expense. But this is different. You represent someone that the state believes killed his patient. And youâre going to have to ask him about it, in detail, with him under oath. In front of Nathaniel, a court reporter, and PTMCâs lawyer. Just my fucking luck.
Youâre at a loss for what to do. Tomorrow, Michael will probably see your name at the bottom of the subpoena, and even if he doesnât, general counsel will prepare him before he comes to be deposed at your office. You think you would rather die than say to him, Hey, next week, Iâm going to direct examine you at my office about a really traumatic event that you tried to help with, but ultimately failed, because the young man whose blood probably got all over you had a disastrous gun shot through his heart. Pretty much everybody but me thinks my client fired that bullet. Is that going to make things weird between us?
But thatâs exactly what you have to do. Heâs been fairly quiet this weekâyou probably would be too if you worked multiple twelves in an emergency roomâbut thereâs a smattering of texts, mostly each of you saying good morning and good night. You press the text box and sigh.
Hey. Can I see you today?
He responds much faster than youâre expecting. Sure. Iâm off today. When?
Meet me at the Exchange at 6:30.
Itâs a date, sweetheart.
You drop your head onto your folded arms, feeling defeated. He may just change his mind about that, you think.
The hours drag, but the work day finally passes, and the Exchange is packed with college students and night shifters when you finally make it over there, not really feeling your limbs. Michael is at his usual table, which youâre impressed he was able to snag, wearing a Steelers pullover and a wide smile. He has two to-go cups, and you raise your brow at him.
âCaramel macchiato and a black coffee,â he explains, and you would kiss his cheek if you werenât in public. Because he is assuredly not your boyfriend and you met a little over two weeks ago, you remind yourself. Even though he knows your favorite songs and how to kiss you to make you weak at the knees. He hands your cup up to you from the table, ostensibly just so he can touch your fingers.
You had planned to ask him to walk outside with you, but the wind is biting, and you feel so safe at this table, his table. His hospital badge is peeking out of his bag, forgotten on the floor, and it reminds you why youâre here. His face in a small square, then: MICHAEL ROBINAVITCH, MD. EMERGENCY MEDICINE. DOCTOR.
âEnjoying your day off?â you ask, and you have to fight to put a smile on your face.
âMuch more so now,â he flirts, and watches you take your first sip. âI slept in then went to the gym. Edited a journal article for a while.â He does look especially well-rested, and you resist the urge to picture him on any gym equipment. Because he is not your boyfriend.
âThe one youâre co-authoring?â you ask, and he smiles warmly, clearly impressed that you remember.
âThatâs the one. Youâre a steel trap. How was work?â
âNot too bad,â you try to say nonchalantly, but it doesnât work. âAbout that...â
Michael is looking over your shoulder, which is strange considering his usual attentiveness, and he stares for so long that you pivot your own head. A man with black scrubs, short graying curls, and coarse stubble on his jaw is holding his hand up at Michael.
âWell, if it isnât Dr. Robby,â the man says, clapping Michael on the shoulder when he finally pushes through the crowd to get to you both.Â
Michael smiles lopsidedly and looks between you both. He says your name and then, âThis is the one and only Dr. Jack Abbot.â
Your mouth drops open in a smile of disbelief, and you hold out your hand. He takes it to shake, and his hands are even rougher than Michaelâs, you notice. âDr. Abbot. Itâs my pleasure.â
âNo, no, Iâm sure itâs mine. And you had better call me Jack before you make me feel old,â he says smoothly, and you wonder at Michael describing him as grouchy. âRobby, do you normally take pretty young ladies here on Thursday nights? If so then Iâve been missing out.â
You blush fiercely and Michael crosses his arms, but you can tell heâs used to this kind of ribbing. âJust this one, and you are adamantly not invited.â
âRude.â He shakes off the comment and turns to you. âHowâd he trick you into this?â
âBy dumping one of thoseââ you point to Michaelâs cup, âall over me. Heâs a real charmer.â
Michael runs a hand through his hair while Jack laughs loudly. One of the baristas calls out an order and Jack tilts his head toward the counter. âThatâs mine. Iâm heading into Pitt. See ya, brother.â He and Robby shake hands. âAnd Iâm sure Iâll be seeing you around,â he says to you, and even with all his charm and bluster, you think he really means it.
Both you and Michael watch him pick up his coffee and leave, like a comet you canât look away from. âNice to put a face to a name,â you laugh, feeling strangely light.
âYouâll never forget him, I assure you,â Michael grunts, which makes you laugh again. âHeâs only in a good mood because youâre here.â
âWell, Iâm glad,â you hum.Â
âAnyway. What were you saying, sweetheart?â
You nearly short-circuit. He needs to stop calling you that if he wants you to remember how to speak English. âUm. I wanted to see you but I also need to tell you something.â
His expression darkens a bit. âGo on?â
You look around. âI think itâs better if we talk about it outside.â When he frowns, you add, âItâs not horrible, I promise. I just want to be able to hear you clearly.â
âBe my guest,â he says, picking up his bag.
He walks you over to the small park abutting the river, making sure heâs on the side with traffic as you go down the sidewalk. You sit on a cold metal bench, and he pulls a jacket from his bag. Itâs his Beers of the Burgh one. âDid you bring this just for me?â you ask, your heart aching.
âEvery man must have his secrets,â he says, and you swear you can see the moon reflecting in his eyes while you put your arms through the sleeves. âAlright, shoot.â
You take a deep breath, pulling in as much of the cold night air as you can stand. âI represent a young man named Quade Jameson.â Michael nods but clearly doesnât recognize the name. âHeâs accused of shooting another young man named Damion Yates.â
Michael squints, as though heâs trying hard to recall something, and pivots his body toward yours so that heâs staring directly at you. You can tell he wants to say something, but stops himself.
âI already know you treated Damion when he came into the emergency department. You talked to my investigator yesterday.â Michael flinches. âI didnât know that you were involved when I asked you out for dinner, I promise.â
He sighs and puts his arm behind your shoulders. âOkay. Why are you telling me this?â
âBecause tomorrow, youâre going to be served a subpoena for a deposition taking place next week.â
âAnd youâre going to be the one asking me questions.â
You bite your lower lip so hard that youâre surprised you donât taste blood. âRight.â
Michael hangs his head and you can see him rubbing his forehead with one hand. When he doesnât say anything, you turn toward him and mumble, âMichael, Iâm sorry. I never wanted our professional lives to mix.â
âLuck of the draw,â he groans, finally lifting his head to look you in the eye. Heâs surprised, but heâs not angry. âItâs okay. Weâre okay.â
Tears come into your eyes at his soft tone, and you look out at the water, hoping he canât see. Itâs surprising how affected you feelâthe relief washing over you. And he said we. You try to steady your voice as you say, âWe canât talk about what youâre going to testify to. But thank you so much. Iâm so happy youâre not upset.â
He shrugs good-naturedly. âYouâre just doing your job.â
You turn back toward him and put your hand on his jaw, feeling the softness of his beard, and he leans into your palm. âAnd you were just doing yours. As well as you possibly could, Iâm sure.â
âOne of the many I couldnât save.â
âBut you tried,â you whisper, just inches from his lips now. âI know you did.â
Despite everything, he kisses you, tucking you to him against the coldness of the evening. A line of bicyclists whizzes by right behind you, yet neither of you look up.
âWhenâs the deposition?â he asks, after you finally come up for air and put your head on his shoulder.
âWeek from today.â
âMy day off,â he scoffs, but his hand is resting on the top of your head. âItâs a date. Let me walk you home. Youâre exhausted.â
âWill I see you this weekend?â you ask as he pulls you up from the bench.
âIf Iâm lucky,â he answers, and tucks your arm through his. When you get home, he doesnât take back the jacket.
Michael canât stop thinking about you, and Dana is noticing, which is making it worse. Jack told Dana; Dana told Princess and Mohan; they told Mateo, who told seemingly everyone on planet earth. Thank God no one actually knows who you are, because now, every time Michael smiles or says a kind word, someone whispers itâs because heâs getting some. Which he isnât, even. Yet.
Monday is pure insanity. He puts his bag in his locker, where the folded subpoena sits, before Jack comes up behind him to grill him on what Michael and the pretty young thing are, how long theyâve been not-dating, and why he was not properly notified. Michael is cagey, and the stonewalling only makes Jack more motivated.
âAnd sheâs an attorney?â Jack whistles, yanking his stuff out of his own locker. âYour kidsâll be smart.â
âLay off, Abbot,â Michael growls, feeling sort of naked without his jacket, which you still have.Â
Jack holds his hands up in surrender and turns to leave. âYou are so screwed, Robby.â
Three drowning victims from a car that went over the side of the bridge. Two of them make it, one of them doesnât. A broken nose and a stab wound, with the combatants separated by nothing but a curtain and the iron wills of the interns. A third-degree burn victim. They all start to blur together. Itâs really Michaelâs fault, because he stayed up late last night staring at the ceiling and thinking of his little public defender. The fact that heâs even thinking his in the context of you is a major problem.
You donât really text him over the next three days, and he chooses to not think about that too much. Each day, he texts you good morning when he gets up at the cursed hour of five to go to the gym. You answer an hour later with a gif that makes him smile. He imagines youâre probably too busy to think up clever things to text him while heâs getting bled and puked on, but God, he wishes you would.
Thursday arrives despite him tossing and turning all night. He canât decide what to wear, and itâs bothering him more than it should. Scrubs would be stupid: heâs not working, and the depositionâs at your office, not the hospital. Button-up and slacks it is. Tie or no tie? Tie says Iâm taking this seriously; tie it is. Blazer or no blazer? Blazer says Iâm taking this too seriously, like I have something to prove; no blazer it is.
He met with PTMC general counsel yesterday at Gloriaâs behest and she reminded him to protect the hospital, but to tell the truth. He wondered vaguely what she would say if he asked, And if those things come into conflict? But he didnât.
âI know the lawyer who issued your subpoena,â Ms. Wilder says toward the end of their conversation. âShe might try to slip you up. Donât let her.â
Michael swallows. I think I already have.
The front desk receptionist at the Allegheny Public Defender leads them through the labyrinthine County Office Building until they reach a midsize conference room, where a woman sits at a long table with a laptop and what looks to be a desktop microphone. The receptionist hands Michael and Ms. Wilder a mini water bottle each and assures them that things will start soon. Ms. Wilder greets the woman, who turns out to be a court clerk, by name.
After some vapid small talk, he hears three sets of footsteps, one clearly a pair of heels. His ears perk up, and he tries to not look too interested when you enter the room. Youâre wearing a dark brown suit with a turtleneck underneathâno lipstick today. He forces himself to look at the older guy coming in behind you, whoâs shorter than you and already looks disinterested. After him, a man dressed in more casual clothes comes in, and takes a seat in the corner.
âDr. Robinavitch. Ms. Wilder. And madam clerk! Good to see you,â you greet everyone at the table, and your singsong tone eases his nerves. You set down a legal pad and a pen in the place across from him.
âHe goes by Dr. Robby,â Ms. Wilder says for him, as though heâs a child, as you lean over to shake their hands. His hand is noticeably warmer than yours, per usual, and he canât meet your eye while he thinks about it or he might blush.
âDr. Robby, this is Nathaniel Groff, the District Attorney.â Michael and the DA shake hands, but the DA doesnât say anything, and Michael tries not to bristle. âLooks like weâve got everyone present.â He wonders who the man in the corner is, and where your client is, but doesnât mention it. Instead, he watches you take a seat and tugs slightly at his collar.
âReady?â the clerk asks, and both you and the DA nod. âWe are on the record in the case of Commonwealth versus Quade Jameson. Mr. Jameson is represented solely by counsel as he is in state custody. Also present is District Attorney Nathaniel Groff, as well as Karen Wilder, general counsel for Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center.â The clerk glances at you, and Michael feels his palms start to sweat. âCounsel, you may begin when youâre ready.â
âThank you.â You look at him, the color of your eyes so pronounced in the light from the window, and his mouth goes dry. âCould you please state your name for the record?â
âDr. Michael Robinavitch, but everyone calls me Dr. Robby.â Itâs strange to talk to you in this sterile way.
âDr. Robby, where are you employed?â
âPittsburgh Trauma Medical Center. Iâm an attending physician in the emergency department.â
âHow long have you been a doctor?â
âOver twenty years. I did my residency at Big Charity in New Orleans, specializing in emergency medicine, and Iâve never practiced any other specialty.â He tries not to be smug about the genuine interest in your expression.
âIn your professional capacity, have you had reason to come into contact with a man named Damion Yates?â
âYes.â He looks at Ms. Wilder and then away. She had explained to him that the judge had issued a supplemental order for him to testify despite the doctor-patient privilege, because of the patientâs death and the high relevance to the pending criminal case. âI treated him in the ED at PTMC.â
âDid he, unfortunately, die while under your care at the hospital?â
âYes, Mr. Yates was pronounced dead after a significant period of coding by myself and my team.â
You smile very slightly at him. âCan you explain for the record what âcodingâ is?â
He relaxes a bit. âBasically, it means weâre pushing all our resources for a patient according to their needs, and it notifies all relevant staff of the emergency. The code means we give them all possible medical intervention to try to save them.â
âWhat was your involvement in Mr. Yatesâ treatment?â
âAs the attending, I supervise major trauma intakes, and I happened to be standing near the door to the ambulance bay when his gurney came in. My staff and I took him to Trauma Two.â When you raise your brows, he explains, âItâs a special room for major wounds or conditions that we think will require a lot of equipment.â
âWhy did you direct him there?â
âHe presented with a single gunshot wound to the left chest and was mostly unresponsive.â
You stop taking notes and look up, your head tilted to one side. âWhat do you mean when you say âmostly unresponsiveâ?â
âSome patients go in and out of consciousness, especially when thereâs significant blood loss, because the brain is not getting enough blood volume to maintain consciousness.â Michael shifts, remembering Damionâs face, the pain and desperation in his voice. âI remember Mr. Yates occasionally waking up and speaking to us.â
âWhat did he say?â
âThis is gonna be hearsay,â the DA mumbles, and you glare over at him before continuing.
âDr. Robby, letâs back up. When Mr. Yates was wheeled into your department, how would you describe his wound?â
âIt was⌠catastrophic. The bullet went through his heart, and he had experienced significant blood loss before he arrived.â
âWhen Mr. Yates spoke to you, did he seem like he thought he was going to get better?â
Michael grits his teeth. âNo. I thinkâhe knew.â The DA crosses his arms and leans back as you nod gently at Michael.
âOkay. Do you remember anything he said to you?â
âHis most lucid moment was not long after he came in. I was leaning over his gurney and he said that someone had been following him.â
âDid he say anything about what that person looked like?â
Michael had spent the night before digging through his own memory, so he answers somewhat easily. The way you framed the question makes him remember something he hadnât told Detective Asher. âHe said that he was wearing a red shirt. I remember that clearly.â You write something down in big, bold letters and circle it.
âDid he say anything else relevant to his cause of death?â
âNo. He sometimes muttered a name, and I found out later it was his momâs. Yolanda.â Michael clears his throat and blinks hard.
Your expression softens. âIs there anything else you would want to say about your treatment of Mr. Yates?â
âOnly that Iâm very sorry I couldnât be of more help.â
Silence settles. He watches you gesture to the DA, who says he doesnât have any questions of his own, and Michael exhales. Itâs over.
You somehow know Michaelâs going to come into your office before he does. You hear him thanking your receptionist down the hall and making his excuses to Ms. Wilder, who you first met at a networking reception six months ago. (Adamâs bright idea, not yours.) But then you hear his oxfords padding down the hall. You put your legal pad back in your portfolio, kick your heels off, and pull your legs up into your chair.
He appears in your doorway, looking unsure whether youâll invite him in. He looks so handsome. And the best part is, he has no idea. Heâs not quite a silver fox yet, but heâs starting to have the bearing of one. His dark red tie makes his eyes look the exact shade of milk chocolate.Â
âKnock, knock,â he says quietly, leaning against the doorframe.Â
âCome on in, Dr. Robby,â you say, winking. He appears to relax. âHave a seat. Welcome to my lair.â
He closes the doorâhmâand pulls his tie off with two concerted pulls while he sits down. You swallow. He notices and smirksâjerk.
âDid I say anything particularly interesting?â
You shake your head. âYou know I canât tell you.â You lean forward across your desk, and he matches you automatically. âYou did a good job. Was that your first time?â
âNope. My first criminal one, though.â He puts his elbows on your desk so that heâs even closer to you; all the oxygen seems to have fled from the room. âItâs fun watching you do your job. Youâre soâŚâ Sexy? Definitely capable enough to be a candidate for the enviable position of a doctorâs younger girlfriend? âConfident.â
You smile and lean back a bit so you can think. âI do my best.â
âWhy wasnât your client there?â
You look at your knees, which are tucked up near your chin. âHe doesnât have a constitutional right to be at a deposition, and if I insisted on him being there, we would have had to do it at the jail. A place I wouldnât wish upon my worst enemy.â You shrug. âAnd I wondered if it might be painful for you to see him.â Michaelâs eyes soften, and you have to busy yourself with organizing your desk. âHeâs not a bad guy.â
âIâm sure,â he hums, so magnanimously that your hands still. âI have to work a twelve tomorrow. I wanted to ask if youâd like to come over to my place and watch a movie after. I make a mean chicken alfredo.â
âI dunno. Might need a subpoena,â you joke. âI would love that, Michael. Itâs a date.â
He stands up, loosely holding his tie at his side, and leans down to kiss your cheek. âGood deal. Iâll text you the address. Have a good day, sweetheart.â
Youâre burning up in your turtleneck, and you decide that after he leaves youâre going to prop open your tiny, grimy window. âYou too.â
Michael opens the door, looks both ways as though heâs sneaking outâwhich you suppose he isâand then heâs gone. And you feel profoundly lonely all of a sudden.
With some effort, you turn your attention back to the notes you took during the deposition, opening your portfolio to look at your handwriting. RED SHIRT is circled three times. Above it, slightly smaller, is FOLLOWING. You turn to your computer and click on the huge file on the external hard drive. After a few seconds, the surveillance video pops up, and you drag the seek button around until you find two minutes prior to the approximate time of the shooting. Your eyes burn from having watched two hours of this video yesterday.Â
You see him again. This clip haunted your thoughts last night. Strutting on the sidewalk past the gas pumps, one hand in one pocket of his baggy shorts. You pause the video. White guy. White Jordans. Red shirt.
You text your investigator a picture of the still. Heâs probably already left the building, as you also should. But youâre burning with energy. We absolutely have to find this guy.
Michael doesnât know why, but the next morning at shift change, he gets there early and tells Jack everything. About The Incident, seeing you at the Exchange again, all the dates, all the texts. The deposition. Having you over for dinner tonight. Everything.
âShit, dude,â Jack says with as much seriousness as heâs ever said anything, Michael thinks. âThatâs a lot.â
âYeah.â Michael opens his locker. He puts his bag in and covers his eyes with his hands, pressing so hard that he sees blues and purples. âAm I completely fucked?â Jackâs silence is answer enough. âFuck.â
âWhatâs the problem?â Jack snickers. Michael wants to punch him. âSheâs smart, sheâs cute, sheâs funny, sheâs nice, sheâs employed. She apparently likes you, God help her.â
Michael drops onto the hard wood bench and tries to put his hands into his pockets before he remembers that he still doesnât have his jacket. âSheâs too young for me.â
Jack shrugs. âSheâs young, but I donât think sheâs too young. Not her fault youâre old.â
âShut up.â Michael puts his face in his hands. âI justâam I ready for this?â
âYouâre fifty, dumbass. I certainly hope you would be.â Jack sits down next to him. âI know whatâs wrong with you.â
âOf course you do.â
âYou donât think you deserve to be happy. But you do.â Jack nudges his friendâs shoulder with his own. âEmbrace it. Donât sabotage a good thing. And trust me, she looks like a good thing.â
Michael shoves him at his last sentence. âShut up, Abbot.â Before Jack leaves, Michael calls, âThanks, buddy.â
âYouâre welcome, Robby.â
The day is fineâsurprisingly calm for a Friday, in fact. Two falls from a nursing home, one of them caused by the other. A blown-off finger from a firecracker. Critically dehydrated hiker. Michael tries to pay attention to his residents and patients and not think too much about how heâs going to make his famous alfredo: will he stick with the recipe this time or freestyle? What will you wear to his apartment? What are you doing at work right now?
Do you think about him as much as he thinks about you?
He knows heâs in too deep when he shuts himself in the break room late in the afternoon and texts you. Canât wait to see you later. He sits at the table with his leg bouncing until you respond, ten minutes later.
Itâs a picture of your smiling face, with what looks to be the side of the courthouse in the background. Docketâs over. Just a couple more hours.
Heâs trying to think of something funny and alluring to say when McKay throws the door open. âRobby? We got a critical COVID case coming in.â He nearly drops his phone in his hurry to lock the screen.
âAlright, you, me, and Princess. N95, goggles, and gowns. Is Trauma One open now?â
âYeah. James Eddings, seventy-one. Son hadnât heard from him in a couple days and went over to find him on the floor. Breathingâs really bad. Ambulance is pulling up. Weâll have to intubate.â
âHe vaccinated?â
âThe EMTs radioed en route so I went ahead and looked. His history doesnât say anything about it.â
Michaelâs stomach drops as he follows McKay out to get their PPE. âPrincess, with us,â he says to her, and she instantly obeys. âI want everyone to clear out of central while we wheel in Mr. Eddings,â Michael yells, being intentionally vague so no one panics. âTake the few hallway patients into bays for just a couple minutes.â
Everyone who was standing around is now moving, pushing beds and wheelchairs, while Michael, McKay, and Princess suit up in the general supply room. Michael ignores the shaking in his hands while he tries to tie his gown. âWe got this, ladies,â he says as confidently as he can.
Everything afterward moves in a blur. Trauma One is sealed off, and they move fast to assess the damage. Heart rate too high, blood oxygen too low, skin pale and so clammy that it almost sticks to their gloves. They intubate, and the beeping is so loud in Michaelâs ears, as is his own breathing behind his respirator.
âRobby,â McKay says twice before he looks up at her. âThis is multi-organ failure.â
âNow that heâs intubated, letâs hand him off to the ICU.â He blinks, feeling like heâs moving in slow motion. âThey can assess for primary respiratory failure and then do the sequential organ failure assessment if needed. Weâve done all weâre equipped to do down here. The two of you take him upstairs, and Iâll supervise the scrubbing of this room.â
âGot it,â McKay says, with a little too much concern behind her goggles as she and Princess wrangle all the equipment and begin moving the bed. Michael opens the door for them, out to central, which is thankfully still empty except for Dana, who is wearing a mask.Â
âDana, need a full clean on this room,â Michael says through the door, hating the shaking in his voice. âLet our guys finish in here and then central can go back to normal.â He clears his throat and yanks off the gown and gloves so he can throw them away. When he takes a step toward the bin, his legs feel weak. Not here. Please, not here.
He steps out and pulls off his respirator, throwing it in the trash can, as two of the janitors approach Trauma Two. He nods to them while he washes his hands, schooling his face, then stalks off to the single-occupant bathroom.
The door bursts open when Michael hits it with his shoulder. He intends to step over to the sink and splash some water on his face, but his heart is slamming against his ribs, and his vision starts to gray. He locks the door and drops to the floor harder than he means to.Â
Why this? Why today? The ringing in his ears blocks out all other sound. Dr. Adamson. The tubes, the way his own breath fogged up the plastic of his PPE. Heâs breathing hard now, and grinding his jaw so hard he fears he might break his teeth. The animals on the walls of pedes, the way residents, nurses, everybody kept coming up to ask him what to do, what to do. He canât get enough air in his lungs. I miss you. I miss you. Iâm sorry. Forgive me.
You knock on the door for the third time, harder now, wondering if you have the wrong place. But the small mailbox next to the door definitely says M.R., and youâre starting to get worried.
Maybe he changed his mind. Or forgot. Even though he just texted you about this three hours ago. âMichael?â You say tentatively. Louder, âMichael?â
You donât hear a response, or even any movement. You look down at your phone and press his number. Five rings, no answer, no ringtone from behind the door. Maybe heâs stuck at work? But surely he would have texted you.
A sickening feeling tells you that this has all been an elaborate prank, and that the guys from Punkâd are about to throw open the door and shove cameras in your face. Your hand is pressed flat against the door. You donât want his one neighbor across the hall to think youâre stalking him, but you donât really know what else to do. At least you shared your location with Adam before coming over, in case this is actually the place you get murdered.
Being a public defender could make you really twisted.Â
You try the doorknob, and surprisingly, it twists. âMichael, itâs me,â you say as you squeeze the metal. âIâm coming in, okay?â
The space you step into is obviously large, but dim. A skylight lets in a weak moonbeam and nothing more. You can make out the shape of a wide couch and you nearly trip over a pair of sneakers. You turn your phone flashlight on. âMichael, are you here?â Nothing.
You navigate past the kitchen and down a hall, and all the doors are shut. One is a bathroom and another is a tidy home office filled with books and academic journals. You reach the last door and your chest constricts. You switch your flashlight to its dimmest setting before opening the door, keeping the light at your feet.
Thereâs a large bed, covered in navy blue bedding, with a shape balled up in the middle. You tiptoe over to his bedside lamp and flick it on, thankful to see that his back is rising and falling on his breaths: you can tell because heâs shirtless. His scrub top is gone and his shoes are by the front door, but other than that, it looks like he came home and collapsed, still wearing his pants and socks. His phone is on the nightstand; you tap the screen to see a picture of Michael and a teenage boy you donât recognize, along with âž Do Not Disturb at the bottom. How do you go about this without startling him?
âMichael, wake up for me,â you shake his shoulder as gently as you can considering how nervous you are. His skin is soft and warm. He groans softly. âPlease wake up.â His bleary eyes blink open slowly, slowly, underscored by dark circles that look almost purple. âAre you okay?â
He shoots upright and looks like he might bolt out of the room. âIâ Whyââ He realizes he doesnât have a shirt on and folds his arms around his middle. All of a sudden, his face crumples. âOh, shit.â
âMichael, honey, are you sick? What can I do for you?â
âSick in the head, maybe,â he says, and the lamp enhances the shadows on his face. He sighs. âSorry. I shouldnât have said that.â
You lower yourself on the mattress next to him, careful not to touch him, just in case he doesnât want it. âTalk to me.â He takes in a shaky breath. A minute passes with no answer. âPlease, Michael, talk to me. I wonât judge you.â
He lifts his head without looking at you. âI had a mentor. An attending named Montgomery Adamson.â Michael sniffs. âBest man I ever knew. He got COVID during the pandemic. We put him on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation for seventeen days, but we had to let him go. I watched him die.â His lip starts to tremble and he canât go on.
âAnd why are you overcome by that memory today?â you ask as softly as you can.
âMan came in today with COVID and likely multi-organ failure. It took me back to that day like Iâve never experienced before. IâI had a panic attack.â You can see tears on his face now. âMy charge nurse sent me home. I got here and apparently crashed.â
âIs it okay if I hold your hands?â He nods. You kneel in front of him, taking both of his hands, and look up into his face. âYouâre okay. Iâm here with you.â
âIâm so sorry. I canât believe I forgot about you,â he starts to sob.Â
âShh, Michael, you have nothing to apologize for.â You stand so you can hold his head to your middle while he cries. His hair is soft when you run your hand over it, over and over. âYouâre okay, sweetheart. Let it out. Tears are always worth the time.â
He weakly grips the back of your jeans as he presses his face into your stomach and weeps. Drops fall down your own face just from watching him. Has he been carrying all this, alone, for years? You have no idea how long you stand there: at least ten minutes, alternatively comforting him and crying with him. His breath finally goes even and you hand him the tissue box from his own nightstand. He wipes his face while you sit, cuddled close to his side like that night on the park bench, except now you can feel the warmth of his skin without a barrier.
âThank you for sharing that with me,â you say into his shoulder before pressing a kiss there. âWill you let me stay? Do you feel up to that?â
He looks conflicted and embarrassed. âYou really want to stay after that?â
You purse your lips. âYes. If youâll allow me.â
He shakes his head and gives you the tiniest smile. âBe my guest, then.â
You hold his face in your hands. âTake a shower. Then, you have an appointment with Chinese takeout and Youâve Got Mail.â When you kiss his cheek, you swear you can taste the tears there, and your heart cracks.
His closet is a treasure trove of options, which he offers up when he sees how damp heâs made the front of your shirt. âIâm always messing up your shirts.â Heâs got hoodies from medical school, quarter zips from St. Jude, and the Steelers pullover that youâve seen before. You opt for the latter and pad out to the living room to sit and order the food.
What strikes you most is that it smells like him everywhere, and that books are on basically every available service. The entertainment center, the kitchen table, the narrow bar, and even the small table in his entryway have books and medical journals sprawled over them. Stray pairs of glasses sit on some of them.Â
The food arrives and you cue up the best romcom ever made. Michael pads out into the living room, his hair damp, wearing a white tee and red flannel pajama pants. Seeing him look so domestic puts your heart in your throat.
âSettle in,â you say, lifting the plush blanket over your lap, hoping he understands your request. He sidles up to you and accepts a small container of fried rice, which he picks at lethargicallyâbut he does his best, knowing youâre watching him.Â
By the time Meg Ryan is sick in her apartment, your head is on Michaelâs lap, and you have a second blanket. He pretends that youâre not lying when you tell him youâre not falling asleep.
âI love this movie,â you mumble. His arm is so comforting where it rests across your middle.
âI saw it in the theater. Were you even born then?â he whispers.
âShut up.â You yawn. Tom Hanks is pausing in the middle of the parkâs path: your eyes arenât even open, you can just tell from the swell of the music. Somewhere over the rainbow. You think you hear Michael say, âThank you for being here with me.â
Is this what being with Michael forever would be like? Warmth, comfort, honesty? Youâre desperate for it. Thankfully youâre pulled into sleep before you can say something stupid.
You wake up with a square pillow under your head and a text from Adam. You sly fox. You stayed over. Your legs are sore from you sleeping in your blue jeans.Â
It takes a second to remember where you are, but staring up at the skylight, you put the pieces together. Michael lifting your head up to put the pillow under it and his lips ghosting over your temple. You remember very well.
You stagger to the bathroom and run your hand over your hair, though it doesnât do much good, and swish some mouthwash. Thatâll have to do.Â
Michael is in the kitchen when you come back out, and he hands you a glass of water. Heâs already fully dressed in his jeans and a plaid flannel. âMorning, sweetheart.â
You chug half the glass and set it down so you can hug him. âMorning. Sorry.â
âDonât be sorry,â he chuckles, and kisses the top of your head. âLet me drive you home.âÂ
You donât hear from Michael for the rest of the weekend, though you donât expect to. When he dropped you off at your apartment on Saturday, you made him promise to set up a therapy appointment, and he sheepishly agreed to look into it. He hugged you and drove away.
You meet up with Adam at the Exchange on Sunday, and he grills you about everything he missed while on vacation. You spend hours talking, and youâre equally excited and nervous at the thought that Michael might walk in. But he doesnât.
Work becomes more bearable with Adam back on deck. You spend all of Monday doing arraignments and preliminary hearings and trying not to think about Michaelâabout how heâs doing, whether he misses you, whether he regrets any of it. Whether he regrets showing you everything. Adam keeps looking at you with concern during the docket, but you avoid meeting his eyes, no matter how hard he tries.
The next afternoon, your investigator runs into your office, scaring the hell out of you. Before you can hide under your desk, he shoves the external hard drive at you, which he had taken back from you. âItâs footage from a Flock camera, and then one corner of a city parking lot.â Itâs not normal for him to insist you watch something immediately, but this time he does.
He clicks on the parking lot video first. âI got this after interviewing a doorman at a nearby walkup who swore he saw the guy. A different doorman than I talked to the first time. Itâs hard to see, but here, this guy gets out of this black truckââ he points, âand approaches the sidewalk that runs along East North Street.â You see flashes of red and white as the man gets closer to the camera, though he keeps his head down. âThis lot is about a mile and a half from where our shooting happened.â
The man gets closer and closer before turning to walk parallel to the camera. Even with the grainy footage, itâs your guy alternative perpetrator. âAnd the Flock camera?â
âIt captured his plate before he turned into the lot. I bet he thought he was in the clear because this lot isnât well-lit, and itâs next to a car junking place, not any buildings.â He clicks the other file. âI had to fight with the City to get this, but here we go.â Itâs a surprisingly well-lit clip of cars traveling down a one-way, and you see the black truck go by. He slows the video until itâs nearly still.Â
PENNSYLVANIA
BBR9233
LET FREEDOM RING
âAnd there he goes,â you gasp. âCan youââ
âCalled PPD an hour ago. Told them they could either run this plate for me or deal with the consequences after making me jump through the hoops of a subpoena for Driver and Vehicle Services.â He breaks into a satisfied smile. âCarâs registered to one Trevor Mayes.â
âI would say we need to talk to Mr. Mayes,â you say, nearly so excited you canât breathe.
âLuckily for you, you have all the access in the world to Mr. Mayes.â
âOh? How so?â
âHe got booked at the jail on drug trafficking charges thirty minutes ago.â Your mouth hangs open. âPPD couldnât figure out why I happened to be calling about someone who was actively getting arrested. Imagine my surprise.â
âI bet they found a nine millimeter handgun in his truck,â you scoff. âAmazing work. Iâm so proud. I need to go tell the boss that we all need to be conflicted out of Mr. Mayesâ upcoming arraignment. And Iâll brag about you exceedingly.â
On your way down the hall, you shoot a text to Nathaniel, which you almost never do. Need to talk to you urgently. Be in your office in fifteen minutes.
Your boss congratulates you and promises to give your investigator a shoutout at the next staff meeting. You thank him and run out. Luckily, the prosecutorâs office is in the same building, and you rush over with your laptop, the file, your portfolio with your legal pad inside, and the hard drive. The DA receptionist eyes your agitation with suspicion while he leads you down the hall.Â
âWell, if it isnât my favorite public defender,â Nathaniel says sarcastically, but without too much bite. Thank God heâs not in a bad mood, you think. âWhatâs so important?â
You plop into the armchair across with him and try not to get annoyed at how clean his desk is. âNate, I know you and I donât always see eye to eyeââ understatement of the century, âbut I really need you to hear me out on this. It could save us both a lot of grief.â You flip open Quadeâs file and find your first sheet of jail notes. âWhen I first talked to Quade Jameson, I knew something was amiss. Believe it or not, I was right.â
You spend half an hour just laying out everything youâve found: the videos, your investigatorâs notes, even the timeline you made last night, which had holes that the new videos filled. âThrough no fault of your own, youâve got the wrong guy.â It takes a lot of self-control to say that, but youâd do anything for Quade. And his mom. And his daughter. âAnd you have the chance to do the right thing by letting him go. Youâve already got the real perpetrator in your custody.âÂ
Nathaniel sits back in his big, comfortable leather office chair and puts his hands behind his head. âYour guy was found on the street with a firearm of the same caliber as the bullet found in my shooting victim. Your guy threw said gun into the bushes. Said gun did not have a full clip. Your guy refused to talk to my detective.â
You feel your control slipping. The leather of the chair squeaks as you dig your fingers into it. My client, Mr. Groff, is a young Black man who got scared. But you canât imagine that, can you? You think unaccountably of Michael. Clever, levelheaded Michael.
âI hear you, Nate,â you say, with as much feigned sincerity as if you were saying I could punch you in the face right now. âJust do me one favor. Who arrested Trevor Mayes?â
âOfficer Dailey.â He knows because he took the call for the application for a search warrant, youâre sure of it. âWhy?â
âI imagine theyâre done searching his truck and have towed it. Can you call Officer Dailey and ask her if she found a nine millimeter?â
Nate sniffs. âTo what end?â
âPlease.â
He huffs and picks up his work cell to dial. It rings twice. âDailey? Question for you,â he drawls, as if this minor conversation is taking all his effort. âDid you all find a nine millimeter in Trevor Mayesâ truck?â You hear her muffled voice. His face drops. âHow many cartridges?â It drops further. He listens for much longer than it would take to answer that simple question. âThanks.â
Both of you sit in silence, the unstoppable force and the immovable object. You squint at him.
âOfficer Dailey says Mr. Mayes started talking about the shooting when they pulled him over,â he says at last. Your heart pounds. âIt was pre-Miranda rights, but it was unprompted.â
You try not to let your exhilaration show and decide to use a different tack. âYour kids play little league soccer. You want to be watching them on the weekends, freezing your ass off on the sidelines, not fighting with me on this as it goes on.â You lean forward. âAnd an innocent man is sitting in that jail while his family calls my office to ask how to get on food stamps.â
Nathanielâs jaw juts out. You prepare for the worst. âWhat do I get?â
âThe satisfaction of a job well done,â you say, and he rolls his eyes. âJust donât file the information, and do an agreed order with me to release Mr. Jameson. You can always re-arrest him and file the information if Iâm wrong. But Iâm not, not on this one.â
He stares down at his hands, flat against the desk, for a long time. You can hear his breaths. Without looking up, he says, âYou write and file the order. Iâll email Judge with my reasons and copy you, just so she doesnât storm over here.â
You stand, holding out your hand. âThank you.â For the first time in a long time, Nathaniel Groff shakes it.
Thursday arrives in all its splendor. The bond modification was signed yesterday, and the District Attorneyâs Office made their announcement this morning. Adam sends you a link to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette website: DA Groff Decides Not to Pursue Murder Charge, Says Alternative Suspect Being Investigated. Adamâs text underneath says, Good job, counsel. Drinks on me this weekend.
You stare at the drawing on your desk. It was done by Quadeâs daughter Isabelle, who came to sit in your office while her grandmother went to pick up her dad at the jail. She drew crude hearts and a rainbow that didnât really have a curve. She also scrawled four stick people, their only differences being your heights, and pointed to each. âDaddy, me, Grammy, you.â
Quade looks much better when heâs not wearing a bright red jumpsuit. Heâs wearing jeans and a hoodie his mom brought to the jail for him, and you can smell laundry detergent when he hugs you. He and his mom thank you over and over while Isabelle continues to color.
âYouâre welcome, and Iâm so sorry for everything youâve been through,â you say, trying to force the wobble out of your voice.
âYou believed me,â Quade responds. âThatâs all I needed.â
The relief on his face, the tears on his motherâs, the butterfly clips in his daughterâs hair. You bottle it all up to store in your heart for all the days when it feels like all you do is lose. You also think of Damion Yates, and the doctor who was unable to save him. Death, loss, confusion, anger. Mistakes.
You had called the tire factory that morning and assured them that Quade would return the next day, and told them in no uncertain terms that they ought to rehire him. You talked to Quadeâs direct supervisor and then his boss with as much conviction as when you talked to Nathaniel. They listened.
Finally, after several achingly long weeks, Quade and his little family go home. You close your door, lay your head on your folded arms, and cry tears of profound relief, as loudly as you want to.
Your receptionist knocks on your door a little before the office closes. Youâre writing a suppression motion and donât look up when you call out that she can come in, assuming sheâs going to tell you about an upcoming appointment and then leave. Something that sounds like thick glass thunks down onto your desk, and she stands there until you turn.
Itâs a vase of orange and yellow peonies with a small card sticking out on a pronged stick.
Congratulations, sweetheart. Am I allowed to say that, as a witness? Guy at the flower shop says these symbolize good luck and prosperity. I canât tell if heâs making it up. Exchange at 6:15, if youâll have me. -M.
You text him as your receptionist retreats with a knowing look. Thank you. Itâs a date.
The Exchange is a moderate walk from your apartment, and you notice itâs not terribly busy as you head down the road. You can see that the standing chalkboard, which usually has cute menu drawings, instead says Closed for private event.
You stop in your tracks and look down at your phone. Youâre running a few minutes late. Surely Michael would have told you if he walked here and it was closed. As you near the door, your favorite barista pops her head out. She beams and waves you over.Â
You glance behind you, like she must be gesturing to someone else, but thereâs no one there. She exaggeratedly rolls her eyes and pulls you in by the arm.
âSurprise!â A chorus of voices sings, and you nearly jump as party poppers go off from two baristas standing on the bar. Theyâre surrounded on the counter by pastries and bowls of punch.
Your eyes adjust to the dimness of the shop slowly. You see Adam, your investigator, your boss, your receptionist, and a smattering of your fellow public defenders. Then there are several people you donât recognize, some of them with scrubs on. Finally, you see Michael in the center of it all, with Jack at his side.
Michaelâs wearing a blazer and that dark red tie. You press your hands over your heart.
âEverybody cheer for Lady Justice!â The barista shouts from over your shoulder, and the applause and cheering is raucous, even though there are probably only thirty people here.
Michael sees that youâre overwhelmed and steps up to take your hands while everyone else falls into their own conversations, mostly laughing at the shock on your face. âI got your receptionistâs number last week. Congratulations again.â
You swallow hard to tamp down the tears. âThank you. This means so much to me.â You laugh. âPublic defenders never get feted like this. Adam will get jealous.âÂ
âAlready am, my girl,â Adam chimes in, coming up from behind Michael to give you a quick hug. âProud, but not surprised.â
One of the baristas climbs down from the bar and plugs their phone in behind the counter. âLetâs get this party started!â
All the tables are pushed up against the walls so people can dance. You quickly learn that the punch is spiked, and you pretend not to know that the Exchange doesnât have a liquor permit. Michael takes you around to meet his coworkers, all of whom look at you so intensely that they must be planning to paint you from memory. You try to catch all of the names: Princess, Cassie, Mateo, Samira, and others whose names and positions go in one ear and out the other.
Jack laughs at their interest in you when you get around to him. âDonât worry. Theyâre all wondering who they owe their gratitude to.â
âOh?â
âThis oneâs been in too good of a mood for too long. Itâs all starting to make sense to them.â He points at Michael, who is distracted, and Jack uses the opportunity to offer you his hand. âA dance?â
The song is slow, but he keeps a respectful distance, and positions himself so that you can keep an eye on Michael. He continues, âRobby is a good guy.â
âI know,â you smile, trying to look at Jack as often as you look back at his friend.
âOur job is insane,â Jack murmurs. âI hope you understand. Heâs worth the risk.â
You squeeze Jackâs hand and look seriously at him before you repeat, âI know.â
The song ends and he bows to you dramatically. âI must take my leave of Lady Justice to go to the Pitt.â He squeezes your shoulder before picking up his bag from the corner. âSee you.â
âThanks for coming. Have a good shift.â
âNo such thing,â he winks, and heâs gone, weaving through the dancers to go save some lives.
You can tell itâs Michael touching your elbow just from the feel of his palm. âHey,â he says into your ear, and a thrill runs down your spine.
âHey.â You turn and put your arms around his neck while his own hands slide down to your waist. âThank you again for all this. I feel so happy.â You press your face into his shoulder and let him lift your hand as another achingly slow song comes on over the speakers.
âMe too,â you hear him mumble into your hair. âI hope Mr. Jameson is doing okay.â
âHis life is forever changed, but heâll rally. People usually do, with time.â You choke up. âHis faith in me meant a lot.â
Michael runs his hand across your back in quiet comfort. His voice is low, just for you. âI met with my departmentâs social worker. She gave me a list of therapists.â
You smile into his shirt, and you hope he can feel it. âVery good. Weâll set up an appointment soon.â You love saying we.
He says your name, and you look up to meet his gaze, which is soft. Those damn puppydog eyes. âYou mean a lot to me. Thank you for putting me back together the other night.â
You kiss the tip of his nose, not caring who sees. âI want to help. Because you mean a lot to me, too.â
The chaos of your living roomâbooks, papers, empty mugs, blankets, and pens everywhereâaffects you much less when Michael is kissing you with abandon. He backs you through your door and doesnât even stop for you to take your shoes off, so you have to toe out of them blindly. He presses his leg up between your thighs, pinning you to the door, and you gasp with pleasure.
âYou sure about this, sweetheart?â he groans into your neck, his hand gripping your ass so that he can grind you down onto his knee.
âI donât think Iâve ever been more sure of anything in my life,â you laugh, and he captures the sound with his mouth. He tastes like punch, which the two of you polished off, as you were the last people to leave the Exchange other than the baristas. It reminds you of the first time you kissed him, and that craft cranberry beer you shared. Both of you are tipsy and kept running into each other on the walk to your place.
Michael drops his blazer on your couch and you seize the chance to run to your bedroom before he can ravish you in your disastrous living room. You hear him following down the hall, and his gaze darkens when he rounds the corner to see you already in your bra. He steps to you and plays with the waistband to your slacks while you tug at his tie.
âYou look amazing in a tie,â you admit, leaning up to nip at where your hands are revealing the skin beneath his shirt as fast as you can. âI need you to wear one every day.â
âYes, maâam.â He hooks his thumbs into your waistband and pulls, taking your underwear along. You gasp at the rush of cold air. To get your revenge, you undo his belt buckle and pull so hard that one of the ends hits you in the thigh. Done with teasing, Michael strips, and watches with relish as you look down. You nearly gasp.
He is thick. But heâs back on you almost instantly, unhooking your bra so he can kiss at the swells of skin, soft at first, and then biting. âWill you let me fuck you good, sweetheart?â he asks into your chest, and you tremble with anticipation. His beard is scratching you deliciously.
âPlease, Michael, I know youâll take care of me.â He growls at that and lifts you up onto your bed alongside him. He slides so that his legs are hooked over the end.
âSit on my face, baby.â
At first, youâre sure you donât hear him correctly. Thereâs no way. Is he that wasted? But then heâs gripping your thigh hard, trying to pull you over. Seeing your expression, he smirks. âCome on. Let me taste you.â
Youâre certain youâve never been so wet in your entire life. You crawl over and nestle your knees around his head, and you nearly jump when he instantly leans up to press a kiss to your clit. His fingers draw circles on the back of your thighs. âPretty girl,â he says, and his breath fanning over your skin makes you cry out.
He alternates between assaulting your clit and sticking his tongue into your entrance as far as it will go, and uses his fingers wherever his tongue is not. Youâre practically melting, and you have to grip his hair to keep yourself lifted up.
âMichael, Iâm s-so close,â you whimper.
He pauses only to say, âCum on my face.â
Your orgasm explodes, and Michael doesnât let up; your whining and pleas only motivate him. When you start begging and squirming, he tortures you with his mouth a little while longer, but then he runs his tongue over his lips and lets you roll off of him. Your head hits your pillow and you pant, your legs turned to jelly.
When you can finally open your eyes, heâs rolling a condom over himself, and despite the shaking in your thighs, you rally. âI need you to fuck me, baby,â you simper. He leans down so you can hook your arms around his shoulders.
He runs his tip through your folds, and you could cry with the sensation. âTell me if I hurt you,â he says into your ear before sinking into the gates of heaven.Â
Your mouth falls open at the sheer width of him. Your nails claw at his back, and youâre sure itâll leave marks, but he only moans in that deliciously whiny voice of his and whispers praises into your collarbone. The stretch makes tears form at the corners of your eyes all over again. Michael kisses them away.
He drags himself in and out of your intoxicating heat, and itâs embarrassingly soon that you start seeing stars again. He lifts your knees so that he can thrust at an angle, all the while telling you how perfect you feel, how perfect you are. Your heart is hammering where his lips and tongue trace over your chest. âMichael, Iâm gonna cum again. Baby.â
You feel him nodding into your neck and give yourself up to it. Youâre shocked at your own voice, echoing with pleasure, but Michael says, âThatâs right. Let me hear you.â He slams his hips into yours until youâre sure youâve lost the ability to think. âIâm so close.â
âCum for me, Michael. I want to feel you,â you practically sob, and soon, heâs losing his steady rhythm. He says your name with bare adoration as he stills. He collapses on top of you, and you run your hand through the back of his hair.Â
Both of you clean up, and he holds you close under your covers, keeping out the October chill. You trace figure eights through the hair on his chest. After a while, you can sense he wants to say something.
âHit me with it, Dr. Robby.â
âPlease put me out of my misery.â He grabs your hand and kisses your fingers.Â
âIâm not sure what you mean,â you shrug. But you definitely do.
âWould you be exclusive with me? Please?â He presses your hand, caged between his, to his chest.
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MYTHOLOGICAL BEAUTY â michael robinavitch x f! emergency medicine resident!reader
one day, i am gonna grow wings; 3k - february 13-14, 2020
you were adamsonâs star resident, when you land yourself in the emergency room, robby realizes thereâs more to your story than what you let on during work hours.
i donât belong to anyone; 3.2k - august 9-26, 2020
after performing extreme measures to preserve adamsonâs life, robby faces two fears: death and inheriting the responsibility of the emergency department all in the same day.
i owe you a black eye and two kisses; 3.2k - december 25, 2020
robby takes time off of work, you call in a favor just to skip family christmas dinner. robby gives in to years of pining and unrelenting frustration, only for it to not go exactly as planned.
a romantic clichĂŠ; 3.6k - december 24, 2021
upon receiving your early-admission letter for your fellowship, abbot begrudgingly tells you a secret he was supposed to take to the grave. you and robby have a heart to heart just before you are set to put in your two weeks.
we kissed for hours straight; 4.8k - august 24-26, 2024
survivorâs guilt is killing robby, you decide to get him flowers as an effort towards a ceasefire. really you just wanted a proof of life, he wanted a proof of you being actually there and it wasnât just some sick dream that heâd wake up alone.
you dream of walls that hold us in prison; 4k - august 26, 2025
you go over robbyâs head, he forces you out of the emergency department, seemingly screwing any chance he had of mending a wound he created. lucky for both of you, youâve grown over the past five years.
blood gushing from my head; december 24, 2025
robby crosses multiple lines that you werenât even aware of until they bothered you. then it clicks to him why your legs are littered with scars from soccer games, why you ended up being the doctor of the family, why you vehemently avoid them. whatâs a christmas without family drama and a moment of you questioning your relationship?
something special, someone sacred; july 4, 2026
power outages, flooding, honestly the worst the entire emergency department has had the privilege of seeingâ certainly not you, dana, robby, jack, or samira have seen. you finally let robby in.
Summary: You and Donnie have been friends since you started at the Pitt, and you both like to drop funny pet names into conversation with each other. Robby overhears, and he seems less than pleased, though you're not entirely sure why.
Tags: f!nurse!reader, jealous!robby, bestie!donnie, pre-relationship, silly pet names
---
Youâve always been affectionate with your friends. Even with your coworkers, at previous positions. Hugs, nicknames, holding hands, whatever it takes to get through the day.
And you bonded with Donnie as soon as you started at the Pitt. He reminds you of your older brotherâs friends, how theyâd always look out for you, protect you, tease you.
Youâve shared enough beers in the park after shifts to really bond with him, and he was the first one to notice how you tended to drop pet names into conversation with people you know. Donnie, being Donnie, took that to the extreme, finding the weirdest things to call you that are still at least mostly work-appropriate. Itâs become something of a game for both of you, and you hardly notice the endearments, such as they are.
On hard days, heâs always the first to come up and give you a hug, and he always picks up an extra soda for you at the vending machine. You grab him an extra candy bar when you splurge a little, and itâs nice, having a work best friend. As much as youâve heard Princess and Perlah whispering about it, you and Donnie have both acknowledged that your relationship is nothing but platonic.
More than that, when he has a date, youâre right there with advice and tone checks before he sends a text that might blow everything up before it starts. When you have one, he does a quick check with his buddies to make sure the guy is on the up-and-up. Itâs easy, and it feels like having family close by, even when you donât.
âHey, honey,â Donnie says, rapping his knuckles on the counter. Youâre at the Hub, helping Dana update the board, and he spotted you as soon as he left South Twenty. âI need a favor.â
You sit back in your chair, resting your chin on one hand. âWhat can I do for you, my love?â
You see Robbyâs head tilt in the corner of your vision. Heâs been working on a patient chart for a few minutes, and you donât know why heâd be listening, but he seems very interested now.
âCan you check in on Central Twelve in like, five? I need to go take a leak, but they need meds in a minute.â
âOf course. Need anything else?â
He shakes his head. âNope. Thatâs it.â
âI got you, boo,â you say, grinning at him. He taps the counter one more time and spins on his heel to hurry to the bathroom.
Robbyâs eyes are boring straight through you now, and you turn to face him, smile faltering a little at the look on his face.
âDid you need something, Dr. Robby?â
He frowns, the crease between his eyebrows deepening. âNo.â The word stretches out between you. âYou and Donahue?â His eyes dart in the direction Donnie went, then back to you.
You nearly laugh at the lingering confusion on his handsome face, but you manage to hold it in. âJust besties.â
The lines on his face donât ease, even though he nods. âRight.â
âIs that okay with you?â you say, watching his expression carefully. Youâve always had a little bit of a crush on Dr. Robby. Heâs older, smart, forceful when he needs to be, and heâs always been kind to you. And those eyes. Those big, sad, brown eyes. Youâre certainly not used to having him so focused on you, but you canât say youâre complaining.
He blinks at you, and youâre fascinated to watch the blush rise in his cheeks. âOh, uh, sure. Why wouldnât it be?â
âI donât know. I need to go see a patient.âÂ
You can feel him watching you as you head for Central Twelve, but you do your best to shake it off. The patient is a sweet old man who needs blood pressure medication to address the lightheadedness he came in with. He thanks you profusely, and Donnie walks up as youâre leaving the room, so you hit him with a fist bump on the way by.
âThanks, sweet cheeks.â He smirks and you keep walking, heading to the next patient who needs assistance.
Itâs not a terribly stressful shift, all things considered, but you like the beer ritual in the park, so you head that way once youâre done handing off your last patient. Donnieâs already there, handing you a cold beer with a nod. You sit across from him, listening to the chatter around you while you sip on the beer.
You often donât engage much when you come to the park, but itâs nice to be around these people to decompress a little before you head home. Youâre surprised when someone sits beside you, and when you look up, itâs Dr. Robby.
He pushes up the sleeves of his hoodie before catching a can from Mateo. He takes a long drink and sighs, running a hand through his hair.Â
âYou okay, Dr. Robby?â you ask, nudging him with your knee.Â
His eyes shift over to meet yours, crinkling a little at the corners when he smiles. âCan I ask you something?â
You shrug. Heâs never needed permission before. âSure. Whatâs up?â
âYou always call me Dr. Robby.â He says it slowly, thoughtfully, like itâs been bothering him all day. You wonder if it has.
âThatâs not a question,â you say, nudging him again.
He chuckles a little, under his breath. âNo, it isnât.â Clearing his throat, he turns to face you a little more directly. âWhy donât you use nicknames with me?â
âIsnât Dr. Robby already a nickname?â
âYeah, but thatâs what everyone calls me.â
You blink at him, trying to understand what heâs asking you. âSure. Iâm just trying to be professional.â
âBut not with Donahue?â
The lightbulb goes off. âYou want me to call you sweetie? Cupcake? Honey bun?â
Itâs dark, but the flush you saw earlier creeps back into his cheeks and he looks down at the beer in his hands, twisting it in his strong fingers. âNo, not exactly.â
âListen, Donnieâs like my brother. We look out for each other, we give each other shit, we use stupid nicknames.âÂ
Robby lets out a low breath, catching your eye again. âGot it.â
âYouâre not my boss, but youâre the boss, you know?â
He nods, letting out a low breath through his nose. âI know. Believe me, I know.â He drains his beer and stands to go.
Youâre not sure what that means, but when he looks back at you, you catch a gleam of something in his dark eyes.Â
âReady to go home, cake pop?â Donnie says, tossing an empty can at you to get your attention.
You roll your eyes at him. âSure am, lovebug.â
Robby shakes his head and holds up a hand as he leaves for home. You watch him go with a little more attention than is strictly necessary. He puts in his AirPods and walks confidently into the dark.
Maybe tomorrow youâll figure out whatâs going on with him. And why heâs so bothered about the nicknames.
Probably not, but youâve got his attention now, and thatâs something.
---
A/N: This one came to me in a fever dream while I was very sick last weekend, so not sure if it's anything, but I hope you enjoyed it!