the insane response that I got from the latest fic rec that I posted made me realize I should probably post a little something something about me and my blog! so⌠welcome to my fic rec blog!!
some things to know about me..
ËâĄË ࣪ Iâve had tumblr for almost 10 years, but this blog for about 4.
ËâĄË ࣪ Iâm 26!
ËâĄË ࣪ Believe it or not I am actually Dr. joelmillersbitch I successfully defended my dissertation last month (April 2026)đ
ËâĄË ࣪ Tumblr is my space to turn my brain off so the chances of me writing anything is very slim. I also tend to not capitalize or double check my stuff before posting (this is the only non-academic part of my life please spare me)
ËâĄË ࣪ Iâm Black, bi, and a gemini (the holy trinity)
What you will find hereâŚ
ËâĄË ࣪ Fic recs/ Reblogs aboutâŚ
- Jack Abbot/ Pope Cody
- Joel Miller/ Frankie Morales/ Javier PeĂąa/ Din Djarin
- Aaron Hotchner
- Michael Robinavitch (donât count on this though, iâm not his biggest fan post-season 2 LOL)
- (on occasion) John Shen, Parker Ellis, Trinity Santos, Baran Al-Hashimi
ËâĄË ࣪ Smut, smut, and more smut.
ËâĄË ࣪ âx reader ficsâ only (no OCâs, no âreader but she has a nameâ, no ships (sorry mohabbot lovers jack is all for me muahahaha)
ËâĄË ࣪ My 2 AM thoughts on occasion
What you wonât find hereâŚ
ËâĄË ࣪ Age gap fics. Listen⌠iâm sorry(lie)! To spare anyone from my long winded explanation on why I donât like age gaps letâs just all come to accept it. I find it hard to separate fics and real life, and I get icked when I read about a 21 year old and a 55 year old⌠donât shoot. I will try my hardest not to yuck your yum, but most of the readers are 30 plus over here.
ËâĄË ࣪ Minors! You are not welcome on my blog. Not to be a bitch but donât interact with my stuff or follow me thangyađĽ°
ËâĄË ࣪ Any non-inclusive readers. Nothing about cheeks reddening, privates described as pink, putting your long blonde hair into a messy bun⌠none of that.
Iâm in the process of tagging all of my reblogs so anyone is able to come in and search who they are looking for but please be patient (I have a lot). But thank you again, and welcome welcome!!
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forever thinking about the fact that perlah alawi also had such a terrible awful fucking shift and managed to smile through most of it. stay her reliable self through most of it. even her emotions over louie didn't take over. she only let herself break on the roof, after the shift was done. perlah alawi I love you so so so much
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Pairing: Jackson Joel Miller x Doctor Female Reader
Chapter Rating: Explicit. 18+ (Minors DNI)
Chapter Summary: You close your eyes, tip your face up towards the setting sun of the last day of your honeymoon. Itâs like youâre already imagining all of the quiet evenings youâll spend out here. Maybe youâll knit. Maybe youâll read. Or maybe youâll just sit and rock the night away, listening to the wind and community that you heal every day. Joel will be right there with you, his hand in yours, as the comfortable silence brings you peace. This might just be Joelâs favorite gift ever.
Chapter Warnings: two people madly in love and being domestic, boggle, ellie and joel getting their happily ever afters, idk just cozy all over, smut, p in v, joel eating pussy because your girl is stressed
Words: 4,500
A/N: One chapter left?! Hello?! My thanks to @schnarfer, @mothandpidgeon and @sin-djarin for reading and dealing with me. Also, icymi, please look at the gorgeous art @valevntine created of Doc and Joel living their peaceful, happy life in Jackson. Thank you, as always, for reading and being so patient as I take my time on these final chapters.
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Previous Chapter
â-
The walls of Jackson come into view, worn wood and dulled iron, and Joel feels so different as he rides through the same gates heâs passed through hundreds of times, because itâs never been like this⌠never with you seated behind him, arms around his waist, your wedding ring pressing against his stomach through his shirt. Never with the sweet and sun-drenched memories of the honeymoon still fresh in his mind.
Jackson has never felt more like home.
The guard nods, calls out a welcome, and says something about newlyweds as you both ride through the gates. Jackson opens before him⌠the roads, the buildings, the side streets, the sound of children playingâa life heâd thought was gone for good.
The gate reminds him of another return, another homecoming. Walking down the mountain after Salt Lake, blood stiff on his shirt, Ellieâs soft âokayâ radiating through his head as the lie took root. Heâd carried that lie through these same gates, let it settle into the bones of his life here. That was the kind of homecoming where the ghost haunting you walks right beside you. But this is nothing like that, not when his second chance at life is sitting behind him with her arms wrapped around his waist.
Tommyâs waiting by the stables, leaning against the fence with that half-shit-eating grin that says heâs been planning something. He straightens when he sees you, waves a hand up, and shouts a âWelcome home!â
The sun is just beginning to set as you walk home through Jackson. People wave and nod, calling out congratulations as you go down the street. A woman from the mess hall shouts something about what a beautiful couple you make, and Joel nods, his hand on the small of your back. You reach back and squeeze his hand. Being seen with you, knowing others know about the love you share, will always be something heâs grateful for.
He still expects, sometimes, that this all canât be real, that this is all a mirage of happiness and love, and he had truly paid the price. But you are real and at his side.
Joelâs lips twitch in a slight smile when he sees his house for the first time in a week, and he takes in all the signs of his life rebuilt: the Mr. & Mrs. Miller banner still hung across the garage, Sarahâs garden blooming bright and violet, and the surprise he spots before you do.Â
Thereâs a second rocking chair on the porch. It sits beside his, a bit slimmer and taller than his, but the same dark, worn wood with the same gentle, comfortable curve to the armsâa perfect match in apocalypse terms.
âOh my god!â you gasp, stopping in your tracks.
âSurprise,â Tommy says.
You beam all delighted and gorgeous at Joel. He grins in return before you bound quickly up to the porch, dropping into the rocking chair, hands running along the smooth wooden arms, and when you look up at Joel, your smile is so wide itâs almost like you were always meant to wind up right here in this chair on this porch.
Tommy claps Joel on the shoulder. âMariaâs idea. Figured she needed an actual chair out here.â
Joel nods, once in answer, and Tommy nods back. Theyâve never needed more than that.
You close your eyes, tip your face up towards the setting sun of the last day of your honeymoon. Itâs like youâre already imagining all of the quiet evenings youâll spend out here. Maybe youâll knit. Maybe youâll read. Or maybe youâll just sit and rock the night away, listening to the wind and community that you heal every day. Joel will be right there with you, his hand in yours, as the comfortable silence brings you peace. This might just be Joelâs favorite gift ever.
âThank you,â Joel says, and Tommyâs smile says he understands everything those two words contain.
Tommy leaves you two with a last âwelcome home,â and Joel settles next to you in his own chair, the wood creaking in unison with yours.
He thinks of those first times you joined him on the porch, you wheeling him out into the cool night air. The scent of pine and your sweet vanilla smell filling his lungs, a second chance he could breathe in. Even then, he thinks, he had loved you.
Eventually, you turn to him. âI want to see Jefferson,â you say.
When Joel steps inside his home, he takes the cluttered coziness in. The jackets on the hooks, wedding gifts still sitting atop the dining room table, a knitted mouse on Jeffersonâs cat tree, the wooden animals heâs carved on the mantle, and the sage drying in the kitchen window. His house. Your house.
You donât even get to call out for Jefferson, a meow bursts down the hall, the black and white streak comes tearing around the corner from the kitchen. He circles your ankle with an accusing meow, and you scoop him up. The cat rattles in your arms, purring so loud that Joel can hear it all the way from the doorway.
You bury your face in his soft fur. âMissed you too, buddy.â
Joel crosses the room and rubs a thumb along Jeffersonâs chin. The cat leans in, green eyes half-closed in bliss.
You look up at him, Jefferson held in your arms, and your face bright with happiness and love. âWeâre home.â
Joel nods. âWeâre home.â
After all the losses, the narrow misses, the nights spent alone wondering if heâd ever feel anything but hollow again. And now this, a second rocking chair on the porch. A cat purring in your arms. Your eyes on his. Everything heâs ever wanted.
Itâs good to be home.
â-
The clinic door is heavier than you remember. Your first day back. Your first day as clinic head. The title feels too big, too important, but you reassure yourself that Dr. V and the rest of Jackson believe in you.Â
Patient after patient makes the morning go so quickly that you barely have a chance to feel overwhelmed. You check pulses, you listen to lungs, you make notes in your journal. Every person sends you congratulations, whether itâs for your new title or your new husband. By eleven, the rhythm is coming back. Your hands still know what to do even when it seems like your brain is still honeymooning.
When you take your lunch break, Joelâs already in your office, tote bag in hand, adjusting the small Jefferson carving he made, setting it just right under the lamp on the desk.
You walk into his arms, humming happily at the warmth of your husband. âMy doctor. Iâm so proud of you,â he whispers, low adoring voice meant just for you. âReally am, baby.â
You laugh a shaky sound. âIâm a little nervous,â you admit.
He pulls back just enough to look you in the eye. âDonât be,â he says. âYouâre amazing.â
You believe him, because he says it like itâs a fact everyone knows, like the sky is blue and water is wet, and you are amazing.
Joel pulls out two sandwiches, and you have your own private lunch date in your office. He tells you about all the construction updates from when you two were gone, and you tell him how the clinic fared without you.
When your short lunch time is over, he hugs you tight and kisses you so softly you almost forget that you have a whole afternoon left to get through. âSee you at home,â he whispers against your lips before he leaves.
The day speeds through after that. More patients, more congratulations, more notes scribbled. And when the clock ticks to five, and you slip off the white coat, youâve survived your first day as clinic head.
You walk home, messenger bag slung over your shoulder, and a wide smile on your lips that you donât even try to hide. Because here is the thing, the thing that still feels impossible: you are leaving your clinic, and you are going home to your husband in your house. Itâs something that used to be so ordinary, but now, itâs a miracle.
Your house is quiet when you open the door. No music, no guitar, no sound of Joel in the kitchen. Just the soft tick of the clock on the mantel.
âJoel?â you call, hanging your bag on the hook by the door.
âUp here!â he shouts from upstairs.
You follow his voice and find him standing in the doorway of what used to be your bedroom. He steps aside without a word and reveals that your old bed is gone and the room has completely changed. The desk has been moved to the middle of the room, with a chair pulled up to it. Thereâs a bookshelf in the corner, already filled with your few medical books and journals, their spines aligned by size that only Joel would have taken the time to organize. Under the window, thereâs a small table holding a few of your potted herbs with a few empty pots for more.
âWow,â you breathe and then repeat when you fully step into the room. Your own office.
Small tears begin to shed from your eyes when you turn and launch yourself at Joel. You hug him, pressing your face into his chest, and his arms band around you, squeezing you tight.
âLike it?â he asks.
You pull back, and the grin. âSo much.â
âWanted you to have a place to work,â he says. âKnow youâre gonna be busier.â
âThank you,â you choke.
He kisses your forehead. âYouâre welcome, baby.â
You stand in your new office with your husbandâs arms around you. This is what it means to be known. To be seen. To have someone look at everything in your life and build you your own space to help contain it.
Youâll spend hours at this desk. Youâll search your journals, write your notes, research, worry about patients, figure out treatments, and deal with the thousand small failures that come with trying to heal people in a world like this.
But for now, youâll just stand here, held by your husband, in the quiet golden light of the evening and let yourself be grateful for this moment, this room, this man, and everything heâs given you.
â-
Joel can hear the pen working against the paper when he stands outside your office, with a cup of tea in his hand. Youâve been in there since dinner, three hours at least.
He knocks softly at the doorjamb, two taps of his knuckles, and you look up. The tiny smile you gift him leaves him briefly unable to remember what he came here for. Youâre so beautiful.
Three books are lying open on the desk, pages marked with scraps of paper and your journal is a sprawl of handwriting. Youâve been busy.
âFigured youâd like a cup,â he says, setting the mug beside your elbow.
âThanks, baby,â you say.
He hears the frayed edge in your voice and asks, âHowâs it going?â
He moves behind your chair and places his hands on your shoulders, and as expected, youâre tight and tense. He rubs, working his fingers into your knots, and you answer his massage with a groan of relief.
Your pen taps against the journal. âIâve narrowed it down. Is it GERD? Peptic ulcers? God, what if itâs her gallbladder?â You sigh. âItâs just⌠some of the best treatments arenât available to us.â
Joel nods like he understands, though he has zero clue what youâre saying. But he understands the frustration in your voice, the way your shoulders are already tensing again under his hands. He works his thumbs deeper, feels a knot give way, and you moan a sound that makes that familiar heat pool low in his belly.
âI know youâre doinâ your best,â he says. âAnd everyone knows that.â
Your head bows, shoulders slumping, and drop your pen. âThe text is beginning to swim,â you say, rubbing your eyes.
He spins your chair around. His bad knee protests with a familiar ache as he crouches, bracing his hands on the arms of the chair to crowd into your space. âThen, let me take you to bed,â he says, âand you can get up early tomorrow if you want.â
âYou donât have to convince me.â Youâre up in a split second, clicking the lamp off. Joel takes your hand and pulls you down the hallway.
He lays you down on the bed gently. Heâd be lying if he said he hasnât been thinking about this since the moment you disappeared into your office tonight⌠especially when youâre only clad in a pair of flimsy pajama shorts and one of his old tees. Joel crawls across the mattress, propping himself over you. He could stare at you for hours, take in all of your beauty, and memorize every tiny, gorgeous detail of you. His wife, his future, his happiness, already melting for him, body rolling under his.
He hooks his fingers in the waistband of your shorts, tugging them down, palm dragging up the length of your leg. He pushes your shirt up, baring your tits, and he leaves open-mouth kisses down your chest, your stomach, running his tongue in hollows as he makes his way down your body. He cradles your foot, presses a kiss to your ankle before he moves to your other leg, kissing his way back up the inside of your calf and your knee. He kneads your thighs, massaging the tension out, working his way closer.
âYou work hard, baby, you deserve to relax,â he grits, lying down between your legs, face pressed in the cradle of your thighs. He breathes you in, all warm and musky and sweet, and he canât resist you any longer. His tongue runs along your cunt, parting you with his mouth, a groan leaves him, eyes fluttering shut because he just canât get over how good you taste, how perfect your body responds to his mouth. God, he loves you.
Your fingers twist in the curls of his hair, and he thinks to himself heâd like to skip the haircut heâs due for later this week, wanting you to always pull on the loose waves at the nape of his neck. He wills with every lap of his tongue against your clit for you to forget every patient, every worry, every page of the open books left on your desk.
Youâre definitely forgetting, because youâre so greedy for him tonight, hands braced on his head as your hips roll. He lets you ride his face, he goes on and on, happily drowning in the taste of you and the desperate sounds youâre keening out. Your thighs tense around his head, and you gasp that little high-pitched noise that tells him youâre close. He groans against your puffy, needy pussy, and you cum with a gasp of his name, and god what a sound.
It only makes him want more of you. He kisses his way up your belly, up the hollow of your throat until his lips meet yours. Youâre reaching, helping him slide his own pajama pants down, and he rests his cock right there in the crook between your legs, waiting, just looking down at you and your lovedrunk face, all soft with heavy eyelids and a little smile.
He runs his length along you, dipping in between your legs, covering himself with your desire before he slowly pushes into you. Christ, he loves the way you wrap your legs around him. His hand slides under your head, cradling you, tilting your mouth up to kiss him as he fucks you slow and deep, letting each thrust press out the last of your stress.
Your arms twine around his neck, nails digging into his back, and he lets you pull him closer, lets you bite his shoulder when he sinks his cock deeper into your heat. He buries his face in your throat, wanting to be as close to you as he can. Chanting your name, he tells you over and over how good you feel, how pretty you are, how heâd do anything for you, always.
Youâre already tensing, another orgasm building, and when you shatter again, he fucks you through it as you sob his name all drowning and needy, itâs the only thing he wants to hear for the rest of his life. You clench and pulse around him, pulling him right to the edge, as his hips stutter, breath catching.Â
Pelvis grinding against you, Joel cums, spilling inside you with a groan that rattles his whole body. He tightens then slacks, before he collapses against you, catching his weight on his forearms. He just breathes, face pressed into your neck, smelling the heady scent of sweat, sex, and you. Your heartbeat is hammering, and itâs a shared race.
âJoel,â you whisper.
He kisses your throat, your jaw, the corner of your mouth. âYeah, baby?â
You donât answer with words, just a smile and a curl of your fingers into the hair at the nape of his neck. Thatâs enough of an answer.Â
He shifts, rolling onto his side and pulls you against his chest. You tuck yourself against him, leg hooked over his hip. He strokes your back, kisses your forehead, feels the way your breathing slows. You look up at him, and he can see the relaxation in your face, the relief that wasnât there before, and it fills him with a pride heâs only known since loving you.
âBetter?â he asks, lips against your forehead.
You nod. âMuch,â you giggle.
He smiles, arms tightening around you as he relaxes in the peaceful haze of this beautiful life he shares with you.Â
â-
No huge disasters happen during your first few weeks at the clinic, just a lot of congratulations, patients, mysteries you can solve, and a steady build of confidence. By the end of the second week, you feel like youâve earned the title of Clinic Head, and it stops feeling like your imposter syndrome might just swallow you whole. People tell you youâre doing well, and you actually believe them.
The routine establishes itself without fanfare. You wake up every morning to a kiss on your forehead and a cup of tea or coffee in Joelâs hand. Heâs already been awake, adamant on making you breakfast. Most of the time, itâs eggs, sometimes potatoes, sometimes toast or bacon if theyâre available that week. He always sets the plate in front of you, with another kiss against your forehead, before he serves himself. You both eat, you a little slower than he, and when heâs done, he scoots his chair back, watching you with that exact softness in his eyes that still, even after all this time, makes you feel loved and adored.
He walks you to work, carrying your bag, his hand against the small of your back or in your hand as you walk together down the road toward the clinic. He leaves you with a kiss, no matter whoâs watching, and you watch him head to work, broad back moving through the crowd, standing out amongst your fellow Jacksonians. You donât open the clinic door until he turns at the corner and raises a hand and sends you a wink in farewell.
Work is work. Every patient, illness, and cure is vital because itâs part of the thousand small ailments of a community trying to survive. You suture cuts, you set bones, you mix tinctures. Thereâs a rhythm of healing⌠hurried or slowed, you respond to every beat.Â
Steven, Wendy, Linda, and Dr. Vâwhenever he pulls himself away from retirementâare a godsend. Youâve even taken on a couple of new apprentices, includingâto your surpriseâDina. She shadows you with an intense focus, proving herself a quick study and a natural healer.
Most days, around noon, Joel appears in your office, lunch in a tote bag, and a doting smile on his face. You eat together at your desk, and you tell each other about your mornings. Ordinary things⌠things you never thought would matter to anyone. But they do. They matter to him, and you.
Some evenings you donât leave the clinic until late, depending on the patient loads, but your home is always your salvation. Dinner cooked by one of you while the other sets the table. You wash dishes side by side, clean up the kitchen, and fold the laundry. Domestic bliss is in everything you do, especially when Joel is right by you.
The best parts of your day are once the sun hides behind the mountains, the curtains are shut, and the fire in the hearth is lit. The couch, a blanket pulled across both of your laps, Jefferson on your lap, purring as you pet him. Your shoulder is always home to Joelâs arm, hand resting against your skin, thumb tracing idle circles on your skin.
Sometimes thereâs a movie playing on the TV, maybe if youâre lucky, itâs a newly scavenged movie from the library. Sometimes itâs a book shared between you two, or a single one in each of your palms. Sometimes Joel carves, and you knit, the sounds of your progress soundtracked across the living room. Sometimes you just watch the fire, or let your eyes trace the lines of Joelâs profile in the flickering light. You relish these nights, the particular peace of having nowhere to be.
Itâs peaceful. Itâs wonderful. Something you once thought had been burned out of the world along with everything else. Itâs a simple, unremarkable happiness. A routine. An ordinary life built every day, in a house on a road in a town behind walls, with a man who makes you eggs in the morning and holds you on the couch at night, and transformed a bedroom into an office because he wanted you to have a place of your own.
This is enough. This is more than enough. This is everything.
â-
Boggle, Scrabble, Clue, Sorry. A stack of board games Joel has saved in the back of the closet for a rainy day⌠or a perfect housewarming gift for Ellie and Dina.
Their house sits only a short walk down two streets. Itâs a narrow, gray two-story with blue trim and window boxes that you mention youâll help Dina fill with herbs. It already looks lived in, with the glow of the lamplight and Sally looking out the screen door.
You knock on the doorframe. He stands at your shoulder, games under one arm, a wrapped stack of cookies in his other hand. He hears the scrape of a chair against the hardwood floor he just helped repair last month, and someone says something, then footsteps.
The screen door swings open, and Ellieâs face is wide and bright, clad in her trusty flannel shirt with the sleeves pushed up to her elbows. She looks happy, genuinely, ridiculously happy. Her eyes drop to the cloth-wrapped stack in his hands, and her eyes widen. Her mouth opens a little.
âAre thoseââ
âGingersnaps,â you say.
âOh my god. Get in here, come in, come in.â
Dina has set the table. Thereâs a cloth on it, candles lit in the middle, and thereâs a savory smell of roasted chicken and sweet corn coming from the kitchen. Joel sets the games on the side table near the door and follows you in, taking in how much Ellie and Dina have already accomplished. There are already framed drawings of Ellieâs on one wall, a selection of carved horses Joel made for her on the mantel, and the scarves youâve knitted for Ellie and Dina hanging from a coat hook by the door.
It looks like a home.
âSmells good,â he says when Dina comes out of the kitchen, wiping her hands on a towel.
âChicken,â Dina says. âAnd corn, and potatoes. Nothing fancy.â
âNothing fancy is good,â you say, and Dina grins.
Joel settles into the chair at the table, you to his left. He watches Ellie move around her home with Dina, watches the way she leans against the kitchen counter while Dina dishes things out. Itâs so different for her now.
He thinks about the strange arithmetic of family. Ellie wasnât born his. She had a mother she never knew, she had Marlene, a whole history before she ever wound up in his and Tessâs hands. But somewhere between that and this table, something shifted. Sheâs now his daughter. Thereâs no other word for it.
He watches her argue with Dina about whether the corn is better on or off the cob, watches her take the last piece of chicken off the serving plate, and wipes her hands on her jeans.
His daughter.
His daughter, who, after dinner, has finished half the plate of cookies all by herself. Next to the half-eaten platter of cookies, Boggle sits on the table, and as Joel expected, heâs losing. Horribly.
He stares at the letters. They stare back at him. He writes down cat. He writes down act. He even tries tac. He stares some more.
He writes down tact. Thatâs probably three points. He looks over at you, and your pen is moving fast.
The timer runs out.
The reading off starts. You go first, a long list of words, and Ellie scoffs every time you read out a word sheâd also found. Dina has a solid list. Ellieâs is shorter than she wants it to be, he can see it in the line of her jaw.
He reads his list last. Four words.
âThatâs it?â Ellie asks.
âThatâs it,â he nods.
Dinaâs the first to laugh helplessly into her hand. Youâre biting your lip with a hidden smile. Ellieâs shoulders begin to rock up and down as she giggles her high-pitched squeak. He keeps his face straight for a second, until he also breaks, and the sound of laughter fills the little house on the street two over from his.
You win. Of course, you win. You announce it, with your hands pumping in the air, and Ellie points at you and says, âOf course the doctor wins!â, and you thank her.
Joel watches all of it. He never expected to have this. A table with people he loves around it. His daughter reaching for another cookie that his wife baked for her.
He reaches under the table and takes your hand. You squeeze back without looking up.
Ellie hugs him tight when the night is over, his arms wrap around her, and his chin rests atop her head. âThanks for coming over,â she says.Â
âOf course, Kiddo, wouldnât miss it for the world.âÂ
He watches you hug Ellie just as tight, and promise her youâll show her how to make the gingersnaps she loves so much.Â
This is everything. He doesnât know any better word for it. He doesnât need one.
taking out my braids and wish Pope Cody was here to help me⌠I feel like heâd be so scared to accidentally cut my hair he would just avoid the scissors completely
taking out my braids and wish Pope Cody was here to help me⌠I feel like heâd be so scared to accidentally cut my hair he would just avoid the scissors completely
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summary â¸â¸ Brendon Park has built an entire career on being the smartest person in the room. Then he meets you, who makes him forget what he was about to say.
warnings â¸â¸ coffee shop meet-cute, grumpy x sunshine (?), fluff, pining, brendon yearns, he falls first and harder, jealous! park, park the goldfish bc he canât keep his mouth shut with her near? (one of my tamest fics tbrh), abbot and shen cameo bc I love them. no use of y/n.
notes â¸â¸ first official park fic yaay! I do realise Iâm supposed to be on a break, but look at him! I genuinely donât know why it took me so long to write for him, mainly because I've been told that if there's an ortho bro within a five-mile radius, I'll somehow manage to find him? Itâs unfortunate that theyâre truly horrible tho đ
⥠READ ON AO3 â PITT MASTERLIST
Brendon Park had not looked at anyone twice. Not in his surgical practice, definitely not at a fucking coffee shop of all places.Â
He'd had his thing in med school. Everyone did. Ill-advised entanglement with another type-A who wanted to win every argument and came close. It ended mutually around final year with shaken hands, which should tell you everything.
Ortho had a reputation and Brendon had leaned into it wholeheartedly. Fast, brutal, precise, and deeply uninterested in anything that didn't have to do with bone mechanics or operative planning.Â
Park the Shark. He'd heard the name passed between residents in the corridor like a warning, and he hadn't minded. Warnings kept the noise down.
He was, all told, completely fine.
And then he met you. At the hospital coffee counter on a Wednesday morning, over a cup of black americano, and everything went sideways.
The barista set his coffee down and he was on his way to get it. Pretty normal stuff. Stuff that happened everyday.Â
But before he could get there, there was you, his cup in your grasp, and then between your lips.Â
He'd opened his mouth to say something. Sharply, probably. The same voice that made interns forget how to speak. But then, you drank.Â
Your face did something spectacular. Nose scrunching up, eyes going slightly wide, mouth opened like a fish, as though you were offended, devastated, betrayed by a fucking beverage. You stared into the cup for a full second like you were waiting for it to apologize. "Okay," you said, to the cup, mostly. "That's â what is that?"
Brendon stared at you.
"What'd they put in this?" you continued, as if you were workshopping a complaint, a comical lilt to your voice.Â
In the fifteen seconds of you taking his drink and drinking it, it didnât occur to you that youâd just consumed something belonging to someone else. The coffee â he didnât think youâd agree for it to be called a coffee, to be really honest â had shaken you so much that it took you a minute to compose yourself.Â
When you did, you turned the cup in your hand, read the side and looked up, a sheepish smile on your lips.Â
As you found him just standing there, gaze locked on you, your eyes dropped between him and the cup. "Oh, it's got your name on it." You had the audacity to look adorable â what the fuck did he just think? "Is this yours?"
Brendon nodded. Fucking nodded.Â
Embarrassment should not have looked that good on anyone. How could someone look like that while questioning life decisions, evaluating choices that led to this moment?
"Right." You set it down on the counter between, like you were disarming a situation. "Sorry. I genuinely thought â mine's supposed to be a latte and I just grabbed it, I wasn't looking at the name. I'm really sorry."
Dark circles under your eyes, hair pulled back like it was done in thirty seconds without a mirror, lime green scrubs that had no reason looking good, no reason making you look good. Who even looked good in that colour? Who even chose that colour?Â
You were somewhere between mortified and trying to hold it together, which was fair, because you had just walked up to a stranger's drink and had at it. "Can I at least â I'll pay for a new one, hereâ"
You were reaching into your pocket and Brendon, who had been on the verge of saying something very reasonable like it's fine, not a problemâ "No."
Accidentally spoke in the voice. He didn't always mean to use, it just comes out that way by default, making fourth-year residents straighten their spines. And heâd used it. To you.Â
You looked up at him with an expression he could only describe as a deer having second thoughts about the road.
He hadn't meant â he wasn't angry. He'd said no out of reflex. Most things he said were out of reflex, and now this person was staring at him like he'd personally threatened her. He had the strange and unfamiliar experience of wanting to walk it back. "I meantâ" he started.
But you'd pulled yourself together, apparently deciding that whatever his problem was, it was his problem.Â
"Okay, no." You held your hands up, like you were placating a toddler. "Noted. For future reference though, why would you get it like that, it's â is this fun for you? Like do you enjoy it?"
He blinked, heat rising up to his cheeks. He could only hope you didnât notice it.
What you did notice was that he looked clueless and you clarified, "the coffee," you pointed to his cup. "There's nothing in it. I took one sip and I think my tongue is still reeling from it."
"That's what coffee tastes like," Brendon said.
"That's a very sad thing to believe." You stated, completely without malice, which made it worse somehow. A genuine opinion. To make matters worse, you were already looking back toward the counter, scanning for your actual order.
Brendon stood there holding his americano while everyone else and everything else continued their life, including you.Â
The barista called your name. You went to get it, came back briefly into his sightline, and gave him a small, still-somewhat-mortified wave on your way out the door.
He watched you go and drank his coffee, the same one your lips touched. It tasted exactly like it always did, which was fine, he liked it fine.
Do you enjoy it?
He took another sip. It was objectively bitter.
Lime green. A colour he couldn't immediately place. It bothered him, sitting in the back of his head while he moved through his afternoon.Â
PTMC colour-coded by department. He knew this. He just didn't have them all memorized, a gap he'd never needed to fill before.
He decided to ask his ward nurse, Delgado, at the end of his post-ops. Casual as he could make it, which for him was still pretty clinical â "lime green. You know which department?"Â
Delgado looked up from her chart. "Lime green," she repeated, slowly, like she was checking the words for a hidden compartment.
âYeah.âÂ
âAre we talking about scrubs here, Dr Park?â She had her eyebrows crossed like she was trying to read him.Â
âYes.â
âNeonatology,â she answered.Â
Four floors up, the opposite end of the building, behind two sets of badge-locked doors and a hand-washing protocol longer than some of his procedures. He'd been in there exactly twice in his career, both times for consults that took fifteen minutes and ended in a referral elsewhere.
It made sense. You looked like sunshine incarnate, all airy and beautiful, effortlessly skilful â not that heâd seen you work, but he had an idea.Â
"Right." He turned back toward the board.
"Dr. Park."
"Mm."
"Are you â Is there something involving neonatology that I should know about?"
A small, unwelcome lurch happened inside his chest. He kept his face the way he kept it in the OR â nothing on it, nothing to read â and he could tell, with horrible clarity, that it wasn't working.
âSomething?â
âA case?âÂ
Brendon could see that sheâd worded it carefully. "No."
"Okay," Delgado said. "No reason then."Â She didn't believe a word of it and had decided not to push, which was worse because he couldâve handled an argument. An argument had an end.
Without looking at her, he said, âyou can go.â
"I'm charting."
"You can chart elsewhere."
"This is the nurses' station, Dr. Park."
She was smiling. He knew that without even looking. He went back to his board and did not say anything else, hoping this was the end of it.Â
It was in no way shape or form, the end of anything. It only took him five minutes to look it up. Not you specifically, he wasnât doing that. Yet, the back of his mind supplied.Â
He was just reading about fellowship timelines, the NICU admission criteria for some reason? He also learned itâs two or three more years of training, all of it happening four floors above his OR in a unit he had approximately zero clinical reason to enter.
The fact that he even went down this road is embarrassing. But he went a whole another mile.Â
Clavicular fractures were the most common birth-related bone injury. Unfortunately â now, he hated himself for even thinking the word â they were managed entirely conservatively. Swaddle the arm, follow up in two weeks. It wouldn't require an orthopedic surgeon, much less him, to stand in a NICU looking purposeful.
For about four seconds, he entertained inventing a reason. He got as far as picturing himself walking through those doors in his scrub cap with some flimsy excuse half-formed, and the picture was so stupid â so transparently, embarrassingly stupid â that he closed his laptop immediately.
The hospital was large and your departments were, in practical terms, on separate planets.Â
Youâd been in the coffee shop on Wednesday, which meant you probably used it, which meant theoretically he'd encounter you again just by existing in the building. He told himself he wasn't going to engineer anything, he was just aware of the possibility. That was all.
Two days passed. He did four surgeries including a complicated tibial nail revision that took three hours and came out beautifully, and one very satisfying conversation with a referring physician who had misread an MRI and needed correcting. Normal week, right?Â
Next day, he got his coffee at six forty, same as every morning, and stood at the counter a beat longer than the transaction required, scanning the line behind him without meaning to. Nobody in lime green. He told himself that meant nothing, took his americano, and left.
Friday, same thing. He noticed himself doing it the second time, which didn't help â like catching his own reflection mid-expression and not recognizing the face looking back.
He didn't see you. Abnormal week.Â
ER consult. Friday, mid-afternoon. A fracture dislocation that the ER attending had flagged as needing operative planning. Brendon came down at two-thirty, and found Abbot by trauma three looking over a film.
Coming down to the ER wasn't his favorite part of the day. Not the work â the work was fine, usually obvious, usually somebody else's problem until it became his â but the way the place ran, all motion and noise hot under his skin. Abbot, somehow, thrived in it.
They'd gotten through about two minutes of the consult â Abbot walking him through the case, Brendon pulling up the images, the two of them doing back-and-forth of people who'd worked a building together long enough to skip the preamble. Uneventful.Â
But then the ER entrance on the left side of the bay opened and you walked through it.
Same lime green scrubs and a your Dunkin' cup in hand. Shen next to you, also holding a Dunkin' cup, saying something Brendon couldn't hear from this distance, and you were laughing. Brendon, to his disappointment, noticed it was not a poilte laugh. Your shoulder bumped into Shenâs with the force of it, a fully open-mouthed laugh, and you looked gorgeous.
The sight in front of him was only fogged by the fact that it was Shen who was at the receiving end of it.
The blush climbed before he could stop it, heat crawling up the back of his neck and into his ears. He thanked every god he didn't believe in, that Abbot was still looking at the film and not at him.
Brendon's jaw locked. Back teeth coming together, the muscle in his jaw pulling. He knew itâd give him a headache if he kept it up.Â
He didnât really know Shen, not really. Having entirely met him through corridors and in consultations. But in that moment he decided, with an immediate, total conviction usually reserved for diagnoses, that he didn't like him.
Because he didnât want to stare, he looked back at the X-ray on the tablet. "So the fracture pattern â" he spoke.
"You okay?" Abbot cut in.
Brendon looked at him. Abbot looked like he already knew the answer and was just asking to pull his leg, like most ER attendings.Â
"Fine," Brendon said. "The fracture is comminuted. Needs ORIF. Iâll book an OR, do it first case tomrorw morning."
Abbot nodded as he scribbled on the iPad. Didn't look fully satisfied with the fine but let it go. Brendon knew that about Abbot â the latter picked his moments.
Brendon looked back at the X-ray.
In his peripheral vision, you and Shen had stopped near the nurseâs station, still talking. You had the cup halfway to your mouth, nodding at whatever he was saying, and then you laughed again, smaller this time, shaking your head. Like whatever Shen had said was ridiculous and you were conceding it anyway.
His molars hurt from pressing down too hard. "ORIF tomorrow, first case," he said again, to the iPad at his hand, to no one.
"You already said that," Abbot noted.
He pulled up the next item on his consult list â a possible Montaggia fracture, a cakewalk for him, nightmare for others. "I'm confirming."
He was not confirming. He had no idea why he'd said it twice.Â
You'd moved further into the ER now, past his sightline, and he found himself looking at the entrance you'd come through for a second before he caught himself and looked back at Abbot. The latter was watching him like he was trying very, very hard not to smirk.
"Do you need something?" Brendon asked.
"I'm just standing here," Abbot said.
"You're doing something with your face."
"I'm a person, Park, my face does things." Abbot tucked his hands in his pockets. Nodding towards the general direction of where you might be standing, Abbot said, "I didn't know you knew anyone in neonatology."
"I don't," Brendon interjected soon. Too soon.Â
"Hm." Abbotâs head did a sweep of the ER, probably searching for you, and then looked back at Brendon. "Right."
Brendon put his iPad under his arm, said he'd have the operative plan by end of day and walked back toward the elevator, which took him directly past the nurseâs station, where you had apparently remigrated with Shen, talking to the desk coordinator about something.
He did not slow down.
But in the two seconds he passed within range, he did clock that you smelled like coffee and something warm underneath it, something sweet, vanilla maybe. You didn't notice him, but Shen did and nodded. Brendon nodded back and kept walking, very normal. Walk of a man who was fine.
The elevator took forty-five years to arrive.
He stood in front of it for all forty-five of those years, staring at the closed doors with his hands in his coat pockets, acutely, miserably aware that Park the Shark had just sped up his pace to get past a girl with a Dunkin' and was now standing at an elevator hoping it would hurry up.
Somewhere behind him, he was fairly sure, Abbot was still smiling.
It was a horrible week for the ortho residents. And it wasnât even Tuesday.Â
It wasnât because of the caseload. The caseload was what it always was, a rotating carousel of fractures and dislocations and the occasional spectacular screw-up from another department who'd missed a bone scan.Â
No, the residents had a terrible week because Brendon Park had decided, somewhere between Friday evening and Tuesday afternoon, that their technique was uniformly sloppy and their pre-op prep was an embarrassment to the profession, and he'd said so. Repeatedly. In front of each other.
It wasn't personal. He thought so and would tell you so, if anyone asked him. No one was brave enough.Â
His residents just kept standing in his eyeline when he was already irritated, and that was their problem, really.
Delgado, to her eternal credit, had not said a single word about it. She'd watched him tear into a second-year over a chart â like who enters the date wrong? â and kept her face entirely professional. The kid went pale, stuttering through his apology, and Brendon didnât care.Â
He'd noticed it himself. The snapping. He was moving through the ward with even less patience than usual, which was saying something. He did a K wire banding, ate lunch at his desk, reviewed post-op films, and at six-fifteen found himself at the hospital coffee counter scanning the room before his order was called. It was mortifying enough on its own, and you weren't there, so it brought double the mortification.Â
He went back Tuesday. Sat down, which was something he genuinely had never done. He had always taken his coffee to go. There was no reason to sit, the hospital was across the street, he drank it walking.Â
But this time, he sat. Kept his phone out, drank his coffee and checked his messages. He absolutely did not look at the door every ninety seconds.
You weren't there Tuesday either. Which was fine. People had schedules. Neonatologists especially â the NICU didn't exactly run on a nine-to-five, he knew that much. He'd looked it up. For professional reasons, of course. For someone whoâd prided himself for working 24/7, he was humbled real quick.Â
Wednesday, he sat again. He had a consultation at nine, no reason to rush. He could drink his coffee like a human being who used chairs. He pulled up his post-op notes on his phone, found Abbot's message about a fracture dislocation follow-up, which Abbot didnât have to do but does it anyway. Abbot was like that sometimes.Â
When he looked up, his coffee was in front of him. And so were you.
Lime green scrubs, your own drink in your other hand, and you were sliding his cup toward him. The look on your face that said you'd been watching him not notice it for at least thirty seconds. He had been reading an MRI report. A fascinating one.
"I really should get you a coffee," you said.
Brendon laughed. It was him. That was his laugh. Coming out of his face, in a coffee shop, at seven in the morning.
It came out before he could stop it or do anything about it. Just a short, but real sound, surprising him enough that he almost looked around to check if someone else had made it.Â
You were watching him with that same expression from the first time, like you found him interesting the way you'd find an unusual rock formation interesting. Curious but not unkind. It was doing things to his blood pressure.
"You're still doing that to yourself, I see." You nodded at his cup.
"It's coffee."
"Doesn't taste like it, though." Your nose scrunched up, just like the first time, just as adorable. Did he just say adorable again?Â
He picked up the cup, took a sip purely out of spite, and looked back at you.
You sat down across from him. Which he had not expected and also had absolutely expected. Two things existing simultaneously, almost fucking him up.Â
"You're here a lot," you said.
"The hospital's down the street."
"Is it?" You glanced at him, stirring your drink. "Because I've only ever seen you take it to go, and now you're sitting." You took out the stirrer and placed it on a tissue. "Three days in a row."
The back of his neck went warm, mouth opening to say something. Deny it probably, which was stupid and a waste of time. But you interrupted him.Â
Brendon Park is not someone whoâs interrupted. People let him talk, and only think about answering when theyâre sure heâs finished.Â
You, on the other hand, did not care. "You're kinda hard to miss with all the brooding going on."
"I don't brood."
You took a sip of your drink, watching him over the lid, expression doing a tremendous amount of work without saying anything.Â
He held your gaze. You lowered the cup. "You totally brood. It's an ortho thing, right? Comes with it."
"You know I'm ortho?"
"Everyone knows you're ortho." You said it completely matter-of-factly. Like, yes Brendon, the sky is blue and youâve got an Ortho bro vibe going on. "You have the whole â" You made a vague gesture in his direction, encompassing, apparently, all of him. "You've got the OR energy."
"Half the people here have OR energy. It's a hospital."
"No, see, ER people have this sort of â" you tilted your head, "â controlled chaos thing. They're always braced for something. But, you walk around like youâve won everything already. It's very obvious, easy to pick out."
Pick out what? Him from a line-up?
He watched you say all of this with zero self-consciousness, just stating observations, a woman delivering a verdict. He realised his coffee was halfway to his mouth and he hadn't drunk it. You talked about him like he was a case study, and he was sitting there letting you, taking all of it.
"So where else do you brood," you asked, "besides here and the OR?"
"I don't brood."
"Besides here and the OR?" You prompted, dismissing his non-answer.Â
"The ER⌠sometimes," he heard himself say it. See, he did not think of saying it, but said it anyway. Crystal-clear experience of a man who had just walked directly into something. He'd had five years of attendings trying to catch him out on rounds. None of them had managed it. You'd done it in under ten minutes, twice, while drinking a latte.
You made a sound. Not quite a laugh, more like an intake of breath with amusement in it. "The ER."
"Consults."
"Right." You traced the rim of your cup with one finger. "Were you in the ER last Friday?"
And⌠there it was.
He could've said he didn't remember. He could've been very busy, very unbothered, a man who passed through ERs constantly and didn't register the days. He was a surgeon. He was in various hospital departments routinely. There was nothing notable about Friday.
"Yes," his mouth admitted.
You nodded slowly, like something had confirmed itself. "I thought I saw you. You walked really fast."
He put his coffee down. "I had somewhere to be."
"Okay." The word stretched, like you werenât entirely convinced. He wouldnât blame it, he wasnât exactly convincing. An infant could catch him in a lie, and you apparently were their queen. You went quiet for a second and then looked back at him, debating whether to say it or not. Affirmative won apparently. "You saw me with Shen."
It wasnât a question. And he wasnât exactly thrilled to answer it. He'd spent five days being awful to residents over it. A little late to play it cool.
"I figured." The amusement on your face was warm rather than sharp, which made the ache in his chest somehow worse. Whoa, whoa, what ache? "We have a thing going, me and Shen. Whoever lost the bet had to do the coffee run. I'd just lost." You paused. "For the fourth time. I'm apparently terrible at predicting admission numbers."
"The fourth time," Brendon parotted.
"In a month. I know." You shook your head, shaking the thought, a soft sigh leaving your parted lips. "I don't know why I keep agreeing to it. Every time I'm like, this time I'll get it right, and then the board goes completely feral and I'm standing at Dunkin' at two in the afternoon getting Shen's ridiculousâ" You stopped to look at him, and he had his utmost attention on you. "Anyway. That was just the loser tax."
Loser tax. He sat with this for a second. The whole week reshuffled. Him being a monster to those unsuspecting residents â itâs not like it's unwarranted, but still.Â
You and Shen, a bet. A coffee run. A losing streak that apparently had nothing to do with the bond between the two of you and everything to do with ER admission patterns, which, if he was being honest, were genuinely unpredictable, nobody could forecast those accurately, it wasn't â
"You walked so fast," you spoke again, this time interrupting his thoughts. He noticed you liked to do that, keep him on his toes. There was a laugh behind it now, delighted almost. "I didn't know an orthopedic surgeon could move like that without a reason."
"I had a reason."
"What was it?" You prodded.
I just couldnât stand you bumping shoulders with Shen like you belonged together.Â
His eyes dropped to his coffee at his hand and found you again. You looked back at him. You had the same âinterested in rock formationâ thing going on, except closer now and clearer somehow. He had the increasingly urgent sense that you knew exactly what you were doing.
"You were with someone.â He sighed.
A smile adorned your lips like youâd won, finally beat him.Â
Like your mind was displaying in neon, Sunshine neonatologist : 1. Big bad ortho guy : 0.Â
You let it sit there between you while you took another sip of your drink. "I was getting Shen's order," you said finally. "Because I lost a bet."
"I know that now."
"But you didn't walk fast because of Shen specifically. Did you?"
His molars found each other again. What is with you and asking him impossible questions? Was this like your hobby? Hit the ortho guy until he falls over? At what point in medical school had someone taught you to do this, and could he have a word with them?
Without giving him a moment to recover, you spoke again. "So," you set your cup down, straightened up a little in the chair, met his eyes with an expression so direct it nearly made him blink. "When are you buying me a coffee?"
He stared at you. Staring was not his thing. He assessed, evaluated, and arrived at conclusions. What he did not do was stare, sit with his mouth slightly open like a fucking goldfish.Â
"That's what you've been trying to do, right?" Your voice was mild, conversational, voice of a woman confirming a meeting time. "For three days. In a row. Sitting here."
The heat that climbed his face was complete, total and immediate, and there was absolutely nothing to be done about it. Park the Shark. Sitting in a coffee shop for three days like a golden retriever who'd learned to use a chair.
You laughed. It filled the air and came right back to him. And he thought, sitting there red-eared with his black coffee, that it was the best sound he'd heard all week.
Possibly longer.
He only remembered that you asked a question when you raised your eyebrows. Right. The question. Which he totally didnât forget when he was staring at your lips and thinking about how they would feel pressed to his.Â
"I have a nine o'clock," he said. "Seven works."
"That's very early."
"You work in a NICU. You guys are up since five."
You looked at him for a moment and he had no idea what you were looking at. But he sat very still, which was insane on his part. He only hoped he passed whatever test you were conducting. Apparently having looked enough, you picked your cup up, along with the tissue paper and the stirrer you discarded, and stood. "Seven," you said. "Don't brood while you wait."
He watched you walk out. He looked down at his americano. He drank it.
It still tasted exactly like it always did, and he liked it fine, and he was aware, in a dim and reluctant and completely inescapable way, that this was probably not going to be the last time he sat in this coffee shop.
Not by a long shot.
MY MASTERLIST !
extras â¸â¸ lime green scrubs bc I was forced to wear them during my NICU postings
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â.á EXPECTATIONS ââ Brendon âThe Sharkâ Park
summary: park accidentally washes your number off his hand, you make him a list of things to do to get it back. (wc: 1.9k)
pairing: brendon park / f!reader
content: fluff and humour. park is still moody but a softie for reader. grumpy x sunshine. pilates princess!reader who is a menace. related to these fics. the idea is to write each thing on the list as its own little blurb/fic!
pilates princess!reader agenda
Park didnât think twice when the sanitiser spat into the central part of his palm, because it had been drilled into every medical professional to make use of the dispensers located throughout the different zones to prevent unintentional spreading of infections. Plus, it had just become habitual at this point.Â
So, when the inky blue smear from a ballpoint pen slathers up to his wrists; it was safe to say the realisation seeped into his bones almost instantaneously from his grave mistake.Â
(Being stoic enough, none of the fellow Ortho doctors took note of the miniature change of expression.)Â
Brendon Park had just rubbed your phone number off in one swipe. Your cute hand-writing turning to a streak of diluted blue, dissipating with his palms rubbed together. Part of him chastises the other half of him that had dipped into the deep waters of the Emergency Department with a poor execution of flirtations andâwhat he classed asâan impressively old school way of getting a womanâs phone number.Â
It made sense why it hadnât gained further traction in the more modern era of exchanging numbers.Â
In spite of the minor blunder, Park continues his day throughout the OR which includes, repairs for traumatic fractures, the odd joint replacement and Laminectomy to relieve some poor patients pressure that had been pressing on their spinal cord.Â
He has every intentions when a vacant space in his schedule becomes apparent to march back down to the ED, and catch you for your number again. This time; with his phone in hand.Â
Unfortunately, that plan goes haywire when a patient was wheeled in with an infected prosthetic joint. Park proceeds to make his soured mood from the increasingly complicated surgery, everyoneâs problem in the Orthopaedics department.Â
Park kept it in his best interests to prevent you from receiving the same fate as his fellow co-workers after a tricky surgery that couldâve been prevented if the prior surgeon hadnât butchered the prosthetic, and left his emotions to stew into a simmer before he finds you again.
It doesnât take more than twelve hours before heâs swimming about the ED with an unrelenting facial expression of disconcert. The two nurses, Perlah and Princess, huddle together to whisper in Tagalog as he passes, his head giving them a subtle nod to acknowledge their presence as he walks by them.Â
The same isnât said for when Dennis Whitaker catches his eye, in that mouse-like wonder he carried.
âYou need something?â Whitaker asks, unsure of what waters heâs treading in.
Park slows, low-browed as he bestows a judgemental gaze upon the resident, âNot you.â
âO-kay.â Whitaker murmurs, returning back to his charting without further elaboration needed.Â
The Orthopaedics doctor rounds the hub, head on a swivel to catch a glimpse of floral pattern beneath dark scrubs with the occasional acknowledgement to the peers that he was more lenient on the patience side with. Sets of eyes follow him with the question in repetition: Who called for Shark?Â
Dr. Robby shares the same sentiment when he saw the infamous sharp features peer into the trauma room he was currently in with a handful of residents. He had been sporting a teaching cap to the younger generation of doctors whilst walking them through a nasty head-on car collision with collateral damage following behind in gurneys.Â
It was your reaction that had Robbyâs brown eyes drift from Park the Shark toward you, where you openly stared with the body language that only furthered Dr. Robbyâs suspicions of the happenings between the mean-mugging Ortho doctor and his cup always half full rather than half empty, resident.Â
You perk and then smother your joy by clearing your throat, gloved hands clasped together with your eyes narrowed at the open gash on the patientâs chest.Â
âAnybody know why Park the Shark is stalking Trauma Two?â Santos says flippantly, suited in a white gown and blue gloves.
You press your lips together.Â
Robbyâhoweverâdoes not. He looks directly at you with a tilt of his head, âI have a few guesses.âÂ
It makes your skin prickle with embarrassment that your Chief Attending continued to prove the reason as to why he was top of the food chain in the ED of the PTMC. Aside from Dana Evans, the geriatric maleânot even close to that title, but it had made him laugh dryly when you had said it to himâwas the eyes and the ears of the whole operation down in the Pitt. Observation was key to run an Emergency Department; and it seemed as if Michael Robinavitch was in abundance of it.
He doesnât dismiss you, nor does he attend to your affairs with Park the Shark; who remained stood outside of Trauma Two like a bodyguard and not a highly sought after doctor a few floors up.Â
Seems like he had all the time in the world when it came to you.Â
Once the patient had been overseen by Dr. Garcia, the group of residents are prompted to move onto other ailments dotted on the board overhead. You move behind Dr. Robby, who flashes you a knowing look over the rim of his glasses and you dip beneath the arm he was using to hold the door open for you.Â
Park walks in formation with you. Prompt and ever so casual. (Definitely not a man on the edge of begging over some digits.)
âYou are starting to stick out like a sore thumb down here,â you point out, knowing his growing attendance in the Pitt was catching unwanted attention. You rub your hands together with sanitiser between them, âThereâs a joke going around that youâre the shark in shallow waters, thatâs gotten a taste for human blood.â
âDoes that make you the human I tasted?âÂ
You scrunch your nose up, âDonât be crass.â you make a beeline for a free computer, sitting down with Park leering over you as you work. âWhat can I do you for, Sharky?â
Park has a hand against the back of the desk chair youâre sat on, his head lowers as if heâs checking over some notes that are none of his business; on the monitor in front of you.
The closeness draws out a smile from your lips.
âI sanitised your phone number off yesterday.â Park mutters, eyes darting across a blank document. He points to it for theatrics, âI brought my phone down this time, so you can just input it there.â
âOh, I can, can I?â you croon.Â
âYou donât want to?âÂ
You shrug as Park turns his sharp eyes to you, âI donât knowâŚit didnât seem that important if you justââ you wave your hand about as you playfully speak, ââlost it.âÂ
âIt was an accident.â Park says in a softer tone because itâs you heâs speaking to.Â
âIntentional dressed up as an accident.â you retort and begin typing a string of random letters into the document you had opened, feeling amused by the upper hand youâve been gifted. âMy number is a privilege to have. Seems like you lost that privilege, Sharky.âÂ
Oh good, Park thinks, youâre going to make him beg.Â
He shifts beside you, throat bobbing as he conjures up a lighthearted apology. Despite the softening of edges that you had done in the time that Brendon Park got to know you, he was still a brash, direct man with little room for humour. Soâironicallyâthe bone doctor was losing in his attempt to find his funny bone in this sudden back and forth you had created.Â
Instead, you answer for him.Â
âIt can be undone. You seem like a man who thrives in harsh working conditions, and I can provide you with harsh, Park.â you goad him cruelly, âI have expectations when it comes to grovelling, and usually they come in a more physical form than verbal.âÂ
Park blinks. Were you asking for a sexual favour?Â
Evidently, you saw the same thought cross his blank expression and jump to mend that idea, âNo, you do not need to whore yourself out for my number. However, let me know your schedule, and you can prove your worthiness for my digits again through hard labour.âÂ
There wasnât even a beat of hesitation, no argument that came to the forefront of Parkâs mind as you ordered him about like a dog in training. You yanked his leash, and he came bounding after youâdidnât mean he didnât slightly curse your defiance in his mind. Either way, he silently fished his phone out from his pocket and opened up his schedule for you to take a look at.Â
Each minute you two spent in each otherâs company added more curiosity to everyoneâs lips. (They were just ensuring you were okay, for the most part.)Â
Neither of you cared to notice as you opened up your calendar to mirror Sharkâs schedule for Orthopaedics.Â
You reach for his phone, âDo you mind?â you ask politely with those sort of twinkly eyes that makes Parkâs knees go a bit soft. You smile up at him when he willingly hands it over, âThank you.âÂ
You soon find out that Park the Sharkâs calendar is nothing but a strict regime. Work, run, work, therapy at 5PM, food shop and more work. So the rumours were true: he was a lone shark.Â
What better way than to brighten that loneliness up with some decoration?Â
Satisfied, you hand Park back his phone, noting how he had spent the time you had been punching information into the empty dates on his calendar; by making the surrounding doctors and nurses scarce with a mean look to make them back off.Â
âYou can come do these things with me.â you say happily when you lock the computer screen, âFun things.â you add.Â
Park scrolls through his calendar with one finger. His brows pinch, ââŚPilates?âÂ
âYes!â you clap your hands together, âOoh! Youâll love it.â (He wouldnât.) When Park gives you a disapproving look at the list of things you added to his week, you dramatically deflate on the spot, âCome on, Park. You know itâs okay to be multifaceted? It isnât a crime. You Ortho Bros are such meatheads.âÂ
(RisquĂŠ insult, but it paid off.)Â
âDo I look like I go to Pilates?âÂ
You give him a slow look up and down, ââŚDo you need me to answer honestly?âÂ
Park couldâve kissed your smart mouth. He went for the latter of a short huff that couldâve been mistaken for a snippet of laughter.Â
Your own face cracks with a big grin, âThese are my expectations, big guy. If you donât want to do these things with me, well, my number just wasnât meant to be. Was it?âÂ
âIt was. Youâre just playing a mean game.â Park states as he tilts his chin upward, staring down the slope of his nose at you.
It was incredibly attractive, to be honest.
Even with the little resistance, Park was prepared to play the long game with you at the core of it. If he had to attend a Pilates class everyday at the crack of dawn, then so be it. It would also mean heâd catch a glimpse of you out of scrubs, and greedily take up your spare time with his brooding presence; not that, that phased you.Â
He slots his phone back into his pocket, âIâll see you tomorrow forâŚPilates, then.âÂ
âOkie-dokie!â you pat his broad back as he turns to take leave. You speak lowly, âI canât wait to see you in your Pilates get-up.âÂ