okay but hear me out: jjk The Pitt AU. i need Gojo as the attending physician and Nanami as his senior resident. i need our golden trio as med students. please someone give me this. i am so tired.

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okay but hear me out: jjk The Pitt AU. i need Gojo as the attending physician and Nanami as his senior resident. i need our golden trio as med students. please someone give me this. i am so tired.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
âbend overâ âbend what? overâ
I hate this place
àČ.word count: 3.8k àČ.art by: @!narutoss.ramen on X
àČ.pairing: Nerd!Satoru x Nerd!Reader
àČ.content & warnings: ê°non canon au âźâź crack! âźâź reader & satoru are heavily inexperienced âźâź dry humping âźâź bathroom stall handjob âźâź prem-ejaculation âźâź fingering âźâź multi-orgasms âźâź kissingê±
Satoru Gojo is fucking gorgeous, which is so deeply unfair that youâre still kind of processing it as he pays for your movie ticket with trembling fingers. His white hair is slightly tousled, soft against his ears, and his glasses are tilted just a bit on the bridge of his nose. He keeps pushing them up like heâs stalling, trying not to meet your eyes too long because every time he does, he gets flustered. His face goes pink and he laughs too loud. You bite your lip every time he does that.
Youâre no better. Your hands are clammy inside the sleeves of your hoodie, because you thought this was going to be a safe little date. Nerdy. Harmless. You met at a fucking Doraemon expo for godâs sake, where he gave you a Doraemon-shaped candy and then looked like he wanted to die from shyness.
And now youâre sitting in a too-dark movie theatre with his knee brushing yours.
You think youâre gonna die too. Because thereâs heat pooling between your legs, and you're pretty sure youâve soaked through your panties, and this was supposed to be your first normal date. Not a panty-ruining, thigh-clenching disaster where you keep imagining his stupid hot fingers pulling your hoodie up and touching you like you're not both trembling virgins about to combust from one misplaced touch.
Satoruâs voice cracks in the dark.
âYou, uhâ are you okay?â
You look at him, wide-eyed. âWhat? Yeah. Iâm fine.â
He fidgets. âYouâre breathing kinda fast.â
You are. Shit.
âIâm justâŠâ you squirm, thighs pressed tight together. âThe seats are uncomfortable.â
He makes a strangled little laugh, eyes darting to the screen and then back to your mouth. You donât know who moves first, but a second later, your hands are brushing in the popcorn bag and boomâ your bodies are pressed together like magnets.
The movie is completely forgotten. Youâre both leaning toward each other, breathing the same hot air, and itâs dizzying how close he is. His scent is soft and clean, like soap and sugar and some light cologne that makes your thighs ache. Your lips almost brush before he pulls back, cheeks pink.
âI-I gotta pee,â he blurts. Then winces. âFuck. Not likeâ fuck, I didnât mean it likeââ
You stare at him, lips parted.
ââŠMe too,â you whisper. âBathroom. I mean.â
So of course, of course, ten minutes later, youâre both in the tiny single-stall bathroom behind the snack bar, the door locked, and youâre pressed against the wall with Satoruâs hands hovering an inch from your waist like he doesnât know if heâs allowed to touch you.
Youâre panting.
So is he.
And thereâs the faintest bulge pressing against his pants.
âYouâre hard,â you whisper, stunned.
Satoru turns bright red. âI didnât mean to be! I swear I wasnât thinking anythingâ well I was thinking but not likeâ well yes like that but I didnât expect you toââ
âIâm wet.â
That shuts him up.
He blinks. âWhaâ You, wait really?â
You nod furiously. âSoaked. I thought I was dying. Youâre, l-likeâ youâre so hot and tall and your hands are big and I thoughtââ
He sways toward you like heâs being pulled by gravity.
âYou think Iâm hot?â he breathes, shocked.
Your voice is barely a whisper. âYouâre likeâthe hottest guy Iâve ever seen.â
ââŠBut Iâm a virgin.â
You blink. âYouâre a virgin?â
He freezes. âYou didnât know?â
You shake your head. âYouâre too confident. And tall. And your voice, likeâ you talk like youâve seen shit.â
âI havenât! Iâve literally never seen anything. I still sleep with a body pillow.â
âOh my god.â
You both start laughing, but itâs too breathy, too nervous. Youâre looking at his lips again.
âI thought you werenât a virgin,â he admits, voice low now, almost in awe. âYou look likeâ likeââ
He waves helplessly at your body. âYouâre so pretty. So hot. You look like youâd ruin me.â
âIâve never even kissed anyone,â you whisper.
âMe either,â he says.
Thereâs a beat of silent realization.
Thenâ tentativelyâ his hands touch your waist. Heâs shaking.
âCan IâŠâ
You nod. âYeah. Please.â
The kiss is terrible. Teeth clashing, noses bumping, your mouths slipping messily before you both pull away with startled laughter. But his face is flushed, and his eyes are glassy, and your thighs are pressed tight together because the way heâs looking at you is not innocent anymore.
âWeâre so bad at this,â you whisper.
âIâm gonna die,â he mumbles, forehead pressed to yours.
âIâm so wet I think my panties are ruined,â you say, like a confession.
He groans. âThatâs so hot, please donât say things like that unless you want me to cum in my pants.â
You both snort, but neither of you moves away.
âCan I⊠touch you?â he whispers, barely audible.
Your eyes widen, breath catching.
ââŠYes. But I donâtâ I donât really know how.â
âMe either,â he whispers. âLetâs be awkward together.â
You reach for his belt, and he lifts your hoodie just enough to see the swell of your tits in your bra. And then you both freeze, panting, staringâ because holy fuck this is actually happening.
Two very horny, very confused virgins. In a bathroom. At the movies.
Grinding desperately like youâre learning each otherâs bodies in braille.
His hands find your hips, pulling you closer. Your fingers tremble at his zipper. And you swearâ you swearâ when your pussy brushes against his bulge through your panties and tights, he nearly whimpers.
You're both gonna combust.
Youâre still half-laughing, half-gasping into his neck, your panties damp and sticking to you like sin, and Satoruâs hard dick is pressed against your inner thigh through his jeans like it hurts. He keeps doing these little shaky inhales, fingers digging into your hoodie at the waist like he needs something to hold onto or heâll float off the planet.
His glasses are fogged. His cheeks are pink. And when you drag your nose along his jaw just to feel him shiver, he makes the softest noise youâve ever heard. A tiny, broken sighâ like the kind of sound you might make when someone pets your hair just right.
You feel like youâre on fire.
âYouâre really⊠hard,â you whisper, a little dreamy, dragging your hand down the front of his jeans like youâre curious more than anything else. Because you are. You can feel the length of him, thick and hot under the denim, twitching at just the barest touch of your fingers. âLike⊠all the way.â
âI know,â he whines, quietly. âItâs been like that since the popcorn scene.â
You giggle. âWe didnât have a popcorn scene.â
âYou were licking butter off your fingers.â
ââŠOh. Yeah okay, fair.â
Youâre still staring at the bulge in his jeans. Itâs insane. Itâs⊠kind of intimidating, honestly. But youâre so curious, and he looks like he might actually die from the idea of you wanting to see him like this.
âCan I see it?â you whisper.
His breath catches. His whole body freezes.
âYouâ my⊠dick?â
You nod shyly, face burning. âJust once. I justâ I wanna know what it looks like.â
He stares at you like youâre a mythical creature. âYou really want to see it?â
ââŠYeah.â
His fingers are shaking as he fumbles with his zipper.
You donât look awayâ not even when he shoves his boxers down and his cock bounces free, flushed and heavy and dripping. You make a noise, something halfway between shock and awe, because holy shit heâs big. Not just bigâ long, curved a little toward his stomach, thick enough that your mouth goes dry. The tip is glossy and wet, a pretty pink colorâ a clear bead clinging to the slit like heâs leaking from just grinding on you.
âOh my god,â you whisper, stunned.
Satoru makes a noise thatâs not human. âD-donât look at it like that.â
âI canât help it,â you breathe. âItâs pretty.â
His brain shuts down.
âPretty?â he croaks.
You nod dumbly, staring. âItâs like⊠glossy. And pink. And itâs twitching.â
He groans. âDonât say twitchingââ
âBut it is! Itâs like itâs waving at me or something. It looks so needy.â
He grabs the wall behind your head like he might collapse.
âYouâre so cute,â you whisper. âYouâre really hard just from kissing me.â
âYouâre soaking,â he counters, voice hoarse. âYouâve been wet for an hour.â
You whimper a little. âI didnât even know I could get this wet.â
Satoru groans again and cups himself like itâll stop him from cumming just from talking to you.
You reach outâ slowlyâ and wrap your fingers around the base.
He jolts, hips stuttering forward into your hand like itâs instinct. His eyes flutter shut and his whole body shudders, like heâs never felt anything like this.
ââŠYouâre so warm,â you whisper. âAnd thick.â
âIâm gonna cum,â he blurts.
You pause. âWait, already?â
âI told you,â he gasps, pressing his face into your neck. âItâs your voiceâ fuck, the way youâre touching meââ
You slide your hand up and watch his cock twitch, leaking over your fingers.
He sobs a little. âAngel, pleaseââ
That makes you freeze.
ââŠAngel?â
He peeks up at you, embarrassed. âIt slipped out.â
You bite your lip, then smile, stroking him again. âI like it.â
âYouâre so soft,â he moans. âAnd your handâs so small, it doesnât even fitââ
You squeeze a little tighter. He gasps.
âTell me when,â you whisper, eyes wide. âI donât wanna waste it. Youâve been hard for so long.â
ââWhenâ?â he pants.
âYeah,â you say, breath catching. âI want to see what your cum looks like too.â
He shatters.
Just like thatâ hot, thick ropes spill out across your fingers, your hoodie, his shirt. You watch with wide, fascinated eyes as his whole body curls toward yours, hips stuttering, voice cracked and pleading into your shoulder. His cock throbs in your hand like itâs losing its mind. He sounds so helpless, so high and soft when he whimpers your name.
You stare at the mess.
ââŠWhoa.â
Heâs panting against your cheek, totally limp. âThat was so embarrassing.â
âIt was awesome,â you breathe. âI made you cum.â
âI exploded in ten seconds.â
You stroke his hair. âI think youâre perfect.â
He melts a little into your chest.
ââŠYou wanna see me next?â you whisper.
His head jerks up like a prairie dog.
Satoruâs still shaking.
You can feel itâ his breath hot and unsteady on your neck, his heartbeat punching against your ribs where your bodies press together. Satoru Gojo just came all over your hand like some desperate teenager, having a wet dream, and youâre still standing in a movie theater bathroom, soaked to the skin and so turned on itâs getting hard to breathe.
His cum is sticky on your fingers. Warm, it smells faintly like salt and sugar, and heâs still leaning against you like heâs not sure how to stand on his own.
And thenâ
Your voice, soft and daring, nearly a whisper:
ââŠYou wanna see me next?â
Satoru blinks. Eyes blown wide. Mouth parted, in disbelief.
ââŠAre you serious?â
You nod.
He looks stunned. âLike⊠your pussy?â
Your whole face burns.
âY-yeah,â you stammer, suddenly nervous. âIf you want. I meanâ I know itâsâ kind of a lot, and maybe messy, but I just⊠Iâve never⊠shown anyone." You're looking down at the floor before you finish the rest of that sentence... then your eyes are darting back up to his face, blue eyes stargazed in disbelief. âAnd I want you to see.â
Heâs speechless, Satoru is utterly speechless.
You fidget, heart thudding, tugging your hoodie down like it can hide the way your thighs are trembling, how wet you still are under your panties.
âI just thought⊠since I saw yoursâŠâ
His hand flies up, quick. Cupping your face, both of you look into each other's eyes.
âI want to,â he blurts. âI want to so bad I think Iâm gonna die.â
You smile, shy and giddy. âOkay. Then⊠can you take my panties off?â
He gasps.
Like, actually gasps. Clutches his chest. Staggers backward like you hit him with a spell.
âSay that again,â he whispers.
You reach under your hoodie, slowly rolling your leggings down to your thighs, revealing just a sliver of your pale pink cotton panties, soaked straight through. Thereâs a wet patch over your pussyâ obvious, shiny, and dark.
âTake them off,â you whisper, voice trembling. âPlease?â
He looks like he might cry.
âOh my god,â he chokes. âYouâre so wet you soaked through. Thatâs from me? From justâ grinding on me?â
You nod, cheeks flushed. âYou made me so wet I couldnât focus on the movie.â
His hands are on your thighs now, huge and hot, trembling a little as he sinks to his knees in front of you like heâs not even aware heâs doing it. His glasses slide down his nose. He pushes them up, eyes fixed on your panties like theyâre the most sacred thing heâs ever seen.
âI donât know what Iâm doing,â he whispers, âbut I wanna learn so bad.â
Youâre breathing so fast your legs are shaking.
His fingers slide under the sides of your panties. He hesitates.
âReady?â he asks, voice so soft.
You nod, in eager anticipation, like when you know you're about to rip a band-aid off. But... in this case, it's your soaked sticky ruined panties.
And he pulls them down.
Slow, slow, slow
The cotton clings to your cunt, like they're almost glued to you, but he gets them off with a firmer tug.
Your cunt glosses in the light.
Dripping. Swollen. Slick as fuck and twitching under his gaze. You clench a little just from the air, the tension, the way heâs looking at you like he just saw an angel squirt holy water.
He moans. Moans.
âYouâre so pretty,â he breathes. âHoly shit, youâre soaked. I didnât know it could do that.â
You giggle nervously. âIt doesnât usually. I think itâs a you thing.â
He gulps, audibly.
His eyes donât leave your pussy, even as he leans forward, nose almost brushing your thigh.
âCan I⊠touch you?â
You feel your knees threaten to buckle.
âYes.â You say with too much enthusiasm than you meant.
His fingers twitch. âI donât know how.â
You grab his wrist and guide it...
His middle finger barely grazes your folds and you gasp, clenching, hips jumping forward.
âOh fuck,â he moans. âThat was barely anything. Youâre shaking.â
âYou touched my clit,â you pant. âItâs sensitive.â
His eyes sparkle.
âOh my god. I love that you know what itâs called.â
Youâre breathless, laughing a little. âIâve read fanfiction. Have you not?â
âI have, but in those they just say âyour little pearlâ and shit.â
You groan. âThatâs not even close.â
Heâs looking again, hand hovering like heâs terrified to mess it up.
âOkay, so⊠this is your clit,â he murmurs, grazing it again, watching how your whole body twitches. âItâs so tiny. But you sound like I electrocuted you when I touched it.â
You whimper, cause he's teasing... He's curious as well and doesn't fucking know how much him petting your clit actually affects you.
âYou like that?â he whispers, a bit entranced. Crystalline blue eyes focusing on the sticky strands of your slick connected to his fingertips as they stretch when he rubs and pulls them off your glued pussylips.
âY-yeah.â
He touches again, a little firmer... slower, really working your clit, the soft squelches audible, he really wants to taste it, the creamy thing webbing his fingers, the thought pounding in his head.. Would you be grossed out if he just shoved his fingers in his mouth right now and got a taste of that sappy cream?
You whimper louder, snapping his attention back from his lewd thoughts.
His voice is shaking. âCan you c-cum like this? Just from me touching you?â
You nod furiously. âIf you keep going, Fuck. Please keep going.â
His thumb brushes you now, a bit more confidently.
âYouâre dripping,â he mumbles. âItâs getting on my wrist, angelâ
Your thighs snap shut, embarrassed.
But youâre so close and heâs still rubbing in slow, shaky circles and whispering your name and watching you like heâs studying for a test heâs gonna fail with honors. Your clit feels like itâs throbbing. You canât stop shaking. Canât stop whining.
And thenâ
âCum for me,â he whispers, awed. âPlease, please pretty girl, I wanna see.â
That makes your cunt clench, his voice the thing that makes you break instantly.
You clam up around nothing, crying out as your pussy gushes over his hand, wet and twitchy, making a fucking mess on his hoodie sleeve. Your knees give out. He catches you instantly, still on his knees, arms full of shaking, panting girl.
Youâre sobbing in relief, thighs sticky, pussy still fluttering, and his hands are holding you like heâs afraid youâll vanish.
âYouâre so amazing,â he breathes. âI canât believe I made you cum.â
You whimper. âYouâre so good. I didnât think it would feel like that.â
He kisses your thigh.
Then your stomach, and makes his way up and then your lips, just to feel you.
Soft and careful, with utmost devotion and care.
And you melt against him, fucked out and flushed, pressed to his chest.
ââŠWe should do this again,â he mumbles.
âNext time,â you pant, smiling, âI wanna see if you can make me squirt.â
He chokes, on what little air he's breathing.
But youâre still trembling.
Your panties are hanging off one ankle, his cum is drying on your sleeve, and your pussy is throbbingâ still fluttering every now and then like your body canât believe you actually came. Youâre slumped against Satoruâs chest, half-limp, while he rubs soft little circles on your lower back like heâs trying to soothe an overstimulated kitten.
Time is passing and neither of you has said anything in the last full minute.
Except him whispering âholy fuckâ under his breath every ten seconds like a mantra.
âI canât believe that just happened,â he finally says, voice all hushed reverence. âYou came.â
You nod, agreeing lazily. Dazed, and still reeling in the high. âLike⊠a lot.â
âYou squirted.â
âI did not.â
âThere was liquid. Splash zone level.â
You slap his chest, giggling, but your thighs twitch. Youâre so sensitive you could cry, your clit aches in that perfect, pulsing way that means it wants no more and yet⊠youâre still soaking wet.
And you feel it. That ache deeper inside you now. Heavy and throbbing. Unused.
Unsatisfied.
You shift against him, face buried in the soft cotton of his shirt, and whisper:
ââŠSatoru?â
âYeah?â
âI want you to put your fingers in me.â
You feel him freeze. Every muscle goes stiff. His hands still on your back. You feel his dickâ hard againâ press against your thigh like it heard you first.
âWhaâ what.â
You look up at him, breath shaky. âYou made me cum from the outside. But Iâve never been touched inside.â
His ears go red.
âIâ I donât wanna hurt youââ
âYou wonât.â You take his wrist, place his hand gently against your mound. âI trust you.â
He swallows hard. You begin to guide his fingers between your thighs again, letting him feel how wet you still are. You gasp a little just from the contactâ still sensitive, still twitchy.
His voice comes out hoarse. âYouâre soaked.â
âJust go slow,â you whisper. âI wanna know what it feels like.â
He moves down again and actually takes his jacket off and spreads it over the tiles beneath you. He's kneeling like itâs instinct now, reverent and worshipful. Like he belongs on the floor for you. He kisses your inner thigh once, sweet and shaky, then stares between your legs like heâs seeing magic.
âTell me if itâs too much,â he says.
You nod, open for him by parting your thighs, trembling ever so slightly.
His fingers sliding along your sappy folds, middle finger inching closer to your hole's opening, more slick gathers and pools as it tries to worm its way in.
You gasp at the feeling.. a bit in fear and uncertainty, but he's so gentle, holding you tighter against him.
His finger begins to push in, your tiny hole fighting him, the intrusion. It's nothing like you've ever felt.
Satoruâs breathing stops entirely.
âYouâre tight,â he whispers, stunned. âYouâreâ fuck, youâre so warm, I can feel your pulse.â
You whimper. âGo slow. Just the tip.â
He pushes a little, and you clench involuntarily, sucking him in just a bit.
He moans. Actually moans. Like youâre the one touching him.
âAngel, youâre gripping me.â
You bury your face in your sleeve, whining. âItâs not fair. Your fingers are big.â
He curls his finger just slightlyâ experimentingâ and your entire body jolts.
âOhâ oh fuck!â you cry out.
His eyes go wide. âWas thatâ was that good?â
âD-do it again,â you pant.
He does. Gentler, carefully pressing just right, and your walls flutter around him so tightly itâs like your body doesnât know how to handle it.
âYouâre so wet,â he mumbles. âYouâre sucking me in.â
You grab his wrist. âTry two.â
He stares. âAre you sure?â
âPlease, Satoru.â
Youâre breathless, begging.
He shivers like it physically affects him.
He slides another finger inâ and your pussy stretches around him, tighter than he expected. Your mouth drops open. Your thighs twitch.
âOh my god,â you gasp.
âFuck, youâre squeezing meâ I canât move,â he moans.
You rock your hips, helping him, whining through your teeth.
Itâs deep. Itâs thick. He curls againâ and you sob, eyes fluttering back.
âThereâ oh my god there, right thereââ
His fingers are hooked now, rubbing that spongey spot deep inside that makes your eyes cross. His thumb finds your clit on instinct, and suddenly youâre wailing, your whole body shaking, your pussy clenching so hard around his fingers he can barely move.
You cum again, messier and needy. Your velvet walls constricting his fingers in waves.
And he watches, awed, wrecked. His other hand supporting you as your thighs tremble uncontrollably.
He doesnât even pull out.
He just whispers, âYouâre so beautiful when you cum.â
And you start crying.
Happy tears. Dumb overwhelmed tears. Because no oneâs ever touched you like this, seen you like this, loved your body with nothing but his hands and awe.
He kisses your forehead.
You sniffle. âI want you inside me someday.â
He nods. âMe too.â
ââŠBut I might have to train for it.â
He laughs, breathless. âMe too. My heart canât take this.â
You null away on his chest for a minute. Exhausted by everything your body's endured tonight, your panties still on the floor, his arms still secured tight around you and he press soft kisses to the top of your head.
Eventually when he slowly eases his fingers out of you, you're relaxed, no longer holding them hostage, it slides out with a flurry of slick gushing out, all what's been welling up and stuffed inside your cunt for the entire time.
He rubs it up and down your pussylips then into your clit one last time before he's bringing his fingers to his lips, and moaning as your flavour hits his tongue. Finally, getting a taste of you and he couldn't be more pleased at the tangy-sweetness of it.
Satoru licks his fingers clean, savouring it and after he's the one reaching for your panties, tugging them back up along with your leggings as he tells you softly to, "Raise your hips for me please, angel. Good girl, just like that." You do, and he secures them back in place, cunt still pulsing. Fresh slick soaking your panties again.
Satoru stands first, all long limbs and easy grace and he reaches down for you next. His hands are warm as he pulls you up from the bathroom floor. His jacket lies there still, a dark wet patch blooming where your cunt had soaked through.
Heat floods your cheeks, you're quick to mumble an apology, eyes glassy with leftover pleasure and sudden shyness.
He just chuckles softly. Bends to snatch the jacket up like itâs nothing. He balls it in one hand and tucks it under his arm.
âShh, angel. Itâs fine.â
He cups your face, thumbs brushing your flushed skin. Then he kisses you slow and deep, tasting like sin and sweetness. âOne wash and itâll be brand new. Donât worry about it.â
He doesnât tell you he plans to keep it exactly like this. A filthy little souvenir, from tonight.
His fingers lace with yours as he leads you out of the stall. The movie is long forgotten. He keeps you tucked close against his side the whole way through the emptying theater. The night air hits cool when you step outside.
In the car he drives with one hand on the wheel, the other resting on your thigh. Possessive and gentle.
Later that night you lie in bed, sheets tangled around your legs. Your phone glows in the dark. Heart hammering, you type the silly questions anyway.
you 𩷠so⊠are we... dating? omg omg am i your girlfriend now?!
His reply comes instantly.
toru đ©” i knew we were soulmates when you asked to see my dick aaaand called it "pretty" ilysm angel omg
You giggle into your pillow, face burning. Your chest feels too full. Tonight was crazy. Wild and messy and perfect.
But now one, no two orgasms later and Satoru Gojo is yours. Officially. The nerd from the Doraemon expo.
You fall asleep smiling stupidly into your pillow, already wondering when youâll feel his hands on you again.
Tender â Jack Abbot
pairing â jack abbot x college!reader
summary â the worst-cared-for girl in the county keeps washing up in jackâs er, and he canât help but start paying attention.
warnings â 19.2k. large age gap (jackâs fifty/readerâs in twenties), doctor/patient dynamic initially, power imbalance (attending/nursing student, age, life experience), yearning!jack, protective!jack, jealous!jack, and literally every single word in the book, mutual pining, slow burn, he falls first, hurt/comfort, reader shows signs of adhd but it isnât explicit, alcohol use (recurrent drunkenness, mention of alcohol poisoning, ER, and repeated intoxication played somewhat lightly), loneliness/self isolation, low self-worth, itâs very difficult for her to accept care, lack of family support/implied estrangement, financial stress and overworking, sheâs also spending an unrealistic amt of time hanging out in the ed but itâs fanfic so itâs ok, jokes about financial stress, injuries (sprains, split lip, bruising, gravel burns), medical setting, blood, referenced patient death (patient dies, off-page, Jack grieves), making out/heavy kissing, suggestiveeee content (thumb-in-mouth beat, grinding) but nothing explicit.Â
notes â oops sorry this fic is so so self-indulgent đ«¶ i literally loved writing them tho i was thinking about them for days on end. tried to take a swing at this based on this idea i had + thank you @ker0senebunny for inspriring the shoe scene!!!! inspired by this post + my er visits where i was literally the worst patient ever
Friday and Saturday after midnight, the board filled up with the same predictable words; alcohol poisonings, bar-fight lacerations, the kids whoâd taken things they couldnât name and showed up convinced they were dying when they were mostly just twenty and having a large thought. Jack triaged it on autopilot, and heâd stopped finding any of it interesting somewhere around year seven.Â
Sure, sometimes there were some cases that got a mild laugh out of him or turned his head. There was a kid whoâd superglued his halloween mask on his own face for a dare. The guy whoâd lost a bet and swallowed something he wouldnât name in front of his mother, who was present and furious. The occasional genuinely strange thing the human body did that still, after all these years, made Jack think huh, thatâs interesting, the small grim curiosity that was about the only part of the job the years hadnât fully sanded down. He kept those and told them to new nurses over shitty coffee at four a.m. because he supposed that was a better story than what he could say about the Middle East.Â
The first time you came in, heâd handed you over to Shen. You were a sprained wrist and a BAC that explained the wrist, sixteen other things were louder, and Shen was free then.Â
Heâd clocked you for half a second on his way to a GI bleed in bay nine: girl on the gurney, one heel too high on, and one somewhere in the greater metropolitan area, some little pink lace-trimmed thing sliding off one shoulder, telling Shen with enormous seriousness that she was so sorry, she didnât usually do this, sheâd had a singular margarita. Only.
Singular. Heâd categorized it under the thousand other single margaritas heâd sworn to in this department and forgotten you before heâd reached the bleed.Â
The second time, he didnât take you either, but he noticed the wrist.Â
Same wrist. Different night â a Saturday, three weeks in, the sort of shift where the waiting room sounded like a kennel â and he caught it sideways while he reviewed another chart. It was the same left wrist, taped this time, the nails on that one hand done in some soft pinky color gone chipped at the tips as though the week itself outlasted the manicure, somebody walking you through the discharge paperwork you clearly were ignoring. Something thought for him instead of him thinking much for it, some pattern-recognition thing buried under twenty-some years of reading bodies fast, the same instinct that made him glance twice at something almost normal. A wrist that kept coming back, he supposed. A thread snagging on a nail, there and gone.Â
The third time, it was Shen, breezing past the station with his Dunkin, saying over his shoulder, âFrequent flyerâs back.âÂ
He shrugged, not yet placing that you were the frequent flyer, and went to bed four.
And that â somewhere between the third time and a number he stopped keeping an honest count of â was where it stopped being a chart and became some sort of thing. A bit, heâd say. The nights the bars let out and the board lit up, heâd find himself reading the incoming names a half-second longer than triage required, and feeling something wrong in his chest when yours wasnât in them.Â
Pittsburgh was notoriously interesting, Jack learned through you, in that it apparently contained an infinite supply of ways a girl could get herself in trouble. He was convinced he couldâve drawn a map of the city by your injuries. There was the ankle, of course, a recurring grievance, always the shoes, never your fault. There was one time youâd burned your hand on a curling iron getting ready tipsy and come in more upset about the makeup youâd had to redo (because of crying it off) than the blister. The night youâd gone over in a parking lot because you refused to look at the ground while walking â looking at the ground, while drunk, you informed him, was how you trip â and the time you sliced your finger open trying to shotgun a White Claw with a key because someone had bet you couldnât. You were really proud of the last one, youâd won the bet.Â
You were never the same disaster twice, he had to give you that. A little too keen on busting yourself up here and there, sure, but at least it was the wrist once, then a knee that met a curb, then a memorable evening involving a fence youâd been certain you could clear. You came in apologizing â always apologizing, to him, to the nurses, once, memorably, to the wall â and you came in sweet, which was the part that got under him, because drunk people in this ER were a lot of things and sweet was rarely one of them.Â
âMmm,â you hummed the fourth or fifth time, the second your eyes found him through the gap in the curtain, going boneless with relief like Jack was the cavalry and not the man who was meant to flash light into your eyes for thirty seconds. âThe pretty one.âÂ
Jack let out a huff. âThanks, doll.âÂ
âDoll,â you repeated, the word going gummy in your mouth. âHe calls me doll.â
âEyes open. Follow the light.âÂ
âYou call everyone that, Dr. Abbot?â you said, his name coming out in a cluster like you were losing thread of it, the Abbot dissolving into something closer to a hum.Â
âSure do,â he lied. âTrack the light.â
You looked at his mouth, then his hands, then back up, a slow uncoordinated sweep because your eyes had stopped reporting to anything in particular, much less what they had to. Pupils blown wide and lazy. He thumbed your eyelid up a fraction to get the light where he needed it; your lashes were clumped and starry with whatever mascara had survived the night.Â
He held the penlight steady and waited you out. He had nowhere to be. That was the thing about the dead hours after bars closed; the bleed had been signed up to the floor, the chest pain turned out to be a panic attack and a large energy drink, and there was just you, and the saline ticking into your arm one slow drop at a time.Â
âWhatâd you get up to tonight?â he murmured, thumb finding the pulse at your wrist, counting without meaning to.
âSâfast âcause youâre here,â you said, sounding very pleased with yourself.
âSure it is. Whereâd you hurt yourself tonight?â
â... stairs,â you said after a moment, like your brain had to run a few laps to get to the word.Â
âOh, yeah?â He hummed. You lifted your free hand a little off the mattress, lost track of it, and dropped it back down. âHow many?âÂ
âMm. Four?â You squinted at the ceiling. âMaybe three. I dunno. Not the Great Wall or somethinâ. Promise.âÂ
âI believe you.â He nodded, then turned your forearm to the light, finding the scrape youâd come in with. It was gravel-burn, raw, the heel of your hand and a stripe up your wrist. Nothing that needed more than cleaning. You watched him do it with your head tipped against the pillow, gone quiet so the talking had run out for a second, which never lasted.
âShould I get a better first aid kit?â you asked, then clenched your jaw for a second like you felt something was wrong with it. âSâI donât have to bother you all the time?âÂ
âMight be a good idea to invest,â he said. He pulled the swab through the gravel-burn slowly, and you hissed and tried to pull back the hand on reflex. âEasy.â He kept it, his grip light yet unmoving around your fingers. âAlmost done. Donât fight me.â
You hummed, like you wanted a different answer.
Jack wet his lips, shaking his head slightly. He worked the grit out of the scrape, a fleck of it catching raw skin, and he tilted your arm to the light, getting it on the second pass, and wiped it on the gauze. Your hands twitched in his, and he pressed your fingers flat to the mattress with his thumb, and they stayed.
âYouâd have to do it yourself, though,â he said. âBathroom sink at three in the morning with one hand.â He reached for fresh gauze. âYouâd make a mess of it.â
You frowned at the ceiling, nodding. âSounds a little bad.â
âItâs a lot bad.â He laid the gauze over the scrape, thumbed the tape down at the edge of your wrist slowly, smoothing it flat where it wanted to lift. His knuckle dragged once over the thin skin there, and he felt your pulse jump under it. âYouâd scar, probably.â His thumb passed the chipped polish, the chunky gold ring youâd kept on, even for this. âYouâve got nice hands. Shame to wreck âem over the sink.â
It took you a second. âYou think so?â
âDonât wreck âem.âÂ
âYou like when I come in,â you said, delighted.Â
âWhat Iâd like,â he said, flat, lifting his eyes to yours, âis you off the stairs and down to the one drink.â His thumb settled over the back of your hand again. âBut if youâre set on flinging yourself down, then you come here. Deal?â
Your fingers had curled around two of his somewhere in there loosely, without you noticing. He felt them settle, and he held very still so as to not spook you. He chose to not acknowledge it or look at it.
âDeal,â you mumbled, somewhere far off, probably forgetting the front half of the terms.Â
He let it go at that, taping down the last edge and turning over your wrist once more to be sure of it. Then he set your hand back on the mattress, yours still loosely hooked through his, going nowhere.
âAnyone out there to get you home?â he asked.Â
âDunno.â Your nose scrunched. âWas gonna Uber.â
He sighed through his nose. âWhereâs that girl â the one you came in with last time? Why donât you call her?âÂ
âThatâs annoying, Dr. Abbot,â you said, almost in a whine.Â
âYeah?â He kept looking at the wall behind you. âWhatâs annoying about a ride home?âÂ
âCalling people. Making it a thing.â Your free hand flopped vaguely. âThen they gotta come get you, and theyâre all â have to be nice about it, but you can tell.â Your nose scrunched. âItâs a whole production.â
He pressed his thumb flat back over your hand where your fingers were still caught in his.Â
âOh? Nothing annoying about it, sweetheart. You call, she comes. Simple as that.â He turned to face you. âBut if you insist on it, Iâm not signing you off until youâre good enough to go home alone. So you call your girl, or you sit right here and keep my department company till youâve cleared enough that Iâll sign off on it.âÂ
Your eyes narrowed as you looked at him as though heâd spoken a different language. âSecond one?â
âObviously you pick that one,â he said.Â
He pulled the stool over and sat. For a few minutes, he had nowhere to be, and now, apparently, neither did you.
It wasnât that you simply didnât let people help you, either. Jack had never seen anyone so committed to being simply fine. Jack had met the stoic kind before; construction guys who walked in with rebar through a forearm acting like it was a small inconvenience; old ladies whoâd been having a heart attack since last Tuesday and didnât want to be a bother. But Jack had always believed those people to be suppressing, and you were just convinced, somewhere down in the foundation, that needing anything was an imposition.Â
That was also why the shoes confused him so much.Â
âThis is the same damn ankle,â Jack said, turning your foot in his hands, watching the swelling outside of it.Â
âYou donât have to remind me. Most men buy me a drink before they get this familiar with my ankles,â you said, then groaned as you looked at his eyes going over the swelling.Â
âNo drink.â He pressed along the bone. âNot my fault you keep handing your ankle to me.âÂ
You tipped your head back against the pillow, groaning again. âDr. Abbot, they look so bad. I feel like Iâm pregnant.âÂ
âI can do a quick blood draw and we can rule it out.â His palm flattened on the mattress beside your feet, leaning over to meet your eyes again. âBut I think itâs those heels of yours, doll.âÂ
Your eyes snapped to him. âDonât be a dick, Dr. Abbot.â
He tilted his head, then pointed at the laminated paper stuck to the wall. âAggressive behavior of any kind toward healthcare workers is a felony.âÂ
âThen arrest me, doctor. Iâll die on this hill â and theyâre not heels.â Your lips pursed, and the corner of your mouth kicked up. âCuffs may be a little forward for a date, but I wonât stop you.âÂ
âArenât you just so sweet,â he muttered. âWhat are they, then?â
âBottega Lido Mules.â
The words meant absolutely nothing to him â couldâve been a pasta dish, a town in Italy, a wine â but they clearly did to you, so he remembered them.Â
âThatâs nice, doll. Theyâll be the reason I see you again.âÂ
âMaybe, âcause Iâll never stop wearing them.âÂ
You said the words your whole face, hands coming off the mattress to make the point with a drunk theatrical conviction as you argued something that genuinely mattered to you. Jack thought, not for the first time since heâd met you, that youâd have been magnetic stone-sober at a dinner party, the kind of girl that made a table lean in. It was just that he only ever got the 3am version.
At least you had a hill youâd die on and didnât apologize for, Jack supposed.Â
âYou married, Doctor?â you asked as he started icing your ankle.Â
âNo,â he said, holding your eyes for a second. âWhy â you got a boyfriend I should know about, then?âÂ
He almost wished you did have one. He wished that there were somebody whose name youâd have said just now whoâd be in the waiting room with his jaw tight because youâd gone and hurt yourself again. Somebody whoâd take care of the ankle when you walked out of here in crutches, who took the keys when you had too many. He wished there was a person in the world whose job you were.Â
And you werenât his first patient who heâd understood to not have someone taking care of them. He knew that if he carried them all, heâd drown inside a month if he tried to be the person nobody else had been. Heâd never once had it turn into a wish, standing here with an ice pack in his hand going slack in his hand because he was too busy resenting someone who didnât exist for not being in the waiting room.Â
He wondered when down the line youâd stopped letting the people in your life around you be the ones you could call, became a girl who said sorry for bleeding and had nobody, nobody, and looked at him like he was the warmest place sheâd been in all week.
You laughed. âIf I had a boyfriend, would I be laying it on so thick?âÂ
He let out a breath through his nose, despite himself. âStop wearing the heels, doll. Not nice to not have a foot.â
The next time you came in, it was a Thursday. With some pileup of bad luck, you came in somewhere past one with a split lip and a story about a dance floor he only half got the shape of. Jack hadnât even been assigned to you yet, heâd just seen your name on the board, and reassigned himself quietly enough that dared anyone on shift to comment. Nobody did.Â
âLipâs not bad,â he said, tilting your chin up under the light, thumb at your jaw. The split was already going fat and shining at the center of your lower lip, and he found his eyes stayed on your mouth a second past the part that was his job, on the soft unhurt swell of it under the hurt. He moved his thumb. âDoesnât need anything. You bit it when you fell down. Thatâs all.â
âSâthrobbing, Doctor,â you mumbled, the word coming around muffled around the split.Â
âItâll throb. Youâve got a swollen lip.â He let go of your jaw and reached for the penlight. âEyes on me.âÂ
âI was so cute before this,â you said through a groan.Â
The huff that came out of him was almost a laugh, dragged out against his own will, and he shared a fleeting look with Bennet â a fairly new nurse â who had tilted his head briefly and was too afraid to meet your eyes.
âAlright. Still the prettiest girl Iâve treated tonight,â Jack said when your brows had furrowed together.
âYou treat other girls?âÂ
âItâs a hospital,â he said. âFew hundred a week.â
Your face looked wounded. âFew hundred.â
He leaned in slightly, faking a whisper. âYouâre my top three.â
You were further gone than usual tonight. Heâd noticed it the second he came around the curtain, the way your head was having a hard time holding itself up, the loose unmoored swim of your eyes that took longer than it should to find his finger. A piece of hair had come loose and stuck to the gloss at the corner of your mouth and you hadnât the coordination to deal with it, and he had the unprofessional impulse to, and didnât.Â
Bennet kept working the blood pressure cuff up your arm, half an eye on you, half on his own work.Â
âTrack the light,â Jack murmured. âSlowly.â
âToo bright.â
âTough.â The corner of his mouth moved up slightly. âYou can bat your lashes at me when weâre done. Right now, I need âem open.âÂ
You batted them anyway, slowly and theatrically, just to be a problem about it. They were long, and the theater of it was so ridiculous, and Jack had to bite down the inside of his cheek to keep his face flat to wait you out, until you gave up and tracked the finger. Your pupils were reactive, equal, and lagging half-a-beat behind. He clicked the light off.Â
âToo bright,â you said again.Â
âItâs off,â he drawled, chuckling.Â
Bennett thread a line into the back of your free hand, and you watched him sink it with a drowsy focus.Â
âWhyâs it go in the back of the hand?â you mumbled. âMore nerves there. Hurts more. Why not the â inside. By the elbow.â You tilted your head slightly to let your eyes wander to the crook of your arm. âBigger vein. The antecâantecubital,â you said carefully, sounding out each syllable, afraid of messing it up. You wet your lips and turned to face him, then Bennet. âWhyâs nobody use the good one?âÂ
Jack pursed his lips and looked at you for a moment.Â
âSaves the good one,â he said, catching up, eyes going back to your chart. âAC vein blows easily when somebodyâs moving around, and you ââ He tipped his head at you, raising a brow, the squirming drunk of you. â â Are gonna move around. Back of the handâll hold. Iâd rather you be sore than re-stuck twice âcause you couldnât sit pretty for thirty seconds.â He paused as he saw your eyes glaze over. He sighed. âAsk me how I know that about you.âÂ
Youâd gone busy, lips moving slightly like you were repeating it back to yourself so itâd stick, and Jack felt something in his chest shift a degree as he watched you do it.Â
He sighed, dragging a palm over the lower half of his face. âWhereâd you learn that, then?âÂ
âSchool,â you said to the ceiling, a small hint of pride taking over your voice. âMâgonna become a nurse. Gonna be good at it.â
Bennet snorted, finishing the tape. âGonna be patching up drunk girls just like you then, huh,â he said. âFull circle.â
Jack watched the pride go out of your face slowly, like a house losing its power. Your chin dropped and your eyes slid from Bennet to the curtain as your hand fisted in your lap.Â
âYeah,â you said, almost curiously. âGuess so.âÂ
Jackâs jaw clenched involuntarily. It wasnât the guyâs fault, not really. It was a nothing joke, the sort the whole department tossed off a hundred times a shift, the gallows shorthand that kept you sane at two in the morning. Jack had made worse about patients whoâd never know, about drunks who wouldnât remember, about exactly this, exactly girls like you. Heâd just never had one of them go quiet before, watched the bright thing fold itself up and get tucked away.Â
âBennet, you done?âÂ
âYeah, lineâs good â â
âThen go take vitals on six. Iâve got her.â
Bennet went, and it was just the two of you again.Â
Jack pulled the stool over with his foot and sat â lower than he had to, level with you, taking himself out of the column of people standing over you tonight and telling you what you were â and waited until your eyes came up off the curtain and found him.
âThere she is,â he said when your eyes found him. He turned your taped hand over under the light like there was still something to do with it. There wasnât, he just wanted his hands on something of yours while he undid what the room had done. âLook at me. Nothing good on the curtain.âÂ
âHowâs school treating you then, doll?â he asked, aiming for offhand and not steering you off whatever Bennet had knocked loose.
âHard,â you said, but a small smile had crawled up your lips. âBut I like it.â Your shoulders came up loosely.
âYeah?â He kept his thumb moving over the back of your hand slowly, like he could press the bright thing back up to the surface where it belonged. âI think youâll be good at it.âÂ
It was such a strange feeling, Jack distantly noticed, to feel this utter conviction. He was rarely sure of anything good anymore. Sure of plenty else; sure within ten seconds of a bad rhythm which way the night was going to break, sure of which of the kids wheeled in at 2 am heâd see again and which he wouldnât, a grim accumulated certainty that had nothing in it heâd ever wanted to be right about.
The job had made him an expert on the downslope of things. He could read the exact moment a body wanted to quit better than he could read most of what people said to his face. And here you were, and he was so sure of the other direction, and he felt the same weight of it behind his sternum, except it had swung and pointed at something good for once. You were going to be excellent at this.Â
It bothered him a little, how much he wanted to be there to see it, whoever you were going to be once you stopped washing up on his floor on the worst nights of your week. Heâd known you, what, a handful of shifts as a frequent flyer, a bit, a name his eyes unconsciously caught on. He had no business feeling certain of anything about you, and he was, and heâd let himself feel it.Â
Your eyes found him properly again. âLiar.â
He huffed out a short laugh. âTell you what. You finish that program, you get through all that mess where they try to drown you.â His thumb smoothed over the tape. âThen you come find me here and weâll see if we can get you here with me on nights. Clearly youâre at your finest then.âÂ
It was maybe something silly to say, and Gloria may have his head for it. He had no actual standing to say anything like it, even though youâd never remember it. He knew better; hope was a controlled substance in his field and he was stingy with it on purpose, because heâd seen the withdrawal.
But God, heâd love to see the part of you he could only catch glimpses of through the wreck like a light under the door. Heâd love to be the one who taught you which arrogance to keep and which to let the job take away. Heâd love, plainly and without anywhere to put it, to watch you become who youâd just told him you were going to be.Â
It was a lot of loving for a girl whoâd been in his department and wouldnât recall his face or a word of this by tomorrow morning. He was getting sentimental, or old, or both; the years stacked up behind his eyes until he started mistaking everything for a second chance at something.Â
Your lips moved. âSo I can patch girls up like myself?âÂ
âNah.â He kept looking at your hand. âYou can patch up old bastards like me, too.â Then, he pointed his index finger of his free hand at you, mock-stern. âGotta make sure youâre not at point three BAC, though. Will have to do that work to get you working with me.â
âMm.â Your eyes flickered up to the ceiling, weighing it with the enormous gravity of the very drunk as though heâd posed a very real proposition to you. âOkay. For you, Iâd stop.â
âFor me?â he repeated, mostly to buy himself a second.
âMm-hm.â You turned your face to him and said it with such ease, no glance away to leave yourself an exit. âYouâre worth not drinkinâ over.â
Your words went in clean, the way the best and worst things do, under the ribs where he kept nothing armored because nobody ever aimed there. Jack felt the back of his neck go warm and was abruptly, intensely grateful for the light that wouldnât display it.Â
Jack huffed, having to look away at the floor then. âThatâs the nicest thing anyoneâs said to me all year, and youâre not gonna remember it. Hell of a thing.âÂ
When he made himself look back up, youâd tipped your face into the pillow, watching him from the side with your eyes gone soft and heavy, the smile arriving unguarded across your mouth. The split tugged one corner of it, that small wince folded right into the sweetness, and you seemed to not feel it.Â
He had the sudden, idiotic wish to have met you on a night youâd remember. To have perhaps caught you when you fell at the bar, to have been the stranger whose arm happened to be there, not the doctor it eventually routed you to. Perhaps he couldâve been a man in your night instead of a stop in it.
He shook his head. âYouâre trouble, you know that, right? Saying all these nice things. Whatâs a man supposed to do with that?âÂ
Heâd have liked to have been remembered, was the bottom of it. By you specifically. Heâd spent decades being the man people were grateful to and glad to forget.
âWhatâs your name, Doctor Abbot?â you asked, drowsy.
He looked down at his badge, then back up at you. âTake a wild guess?â Then, he added, âYou never looked at my badge?âÂ
âSorry. Didnât read.âÂ
âDonât apologize to me. Itâs Jack.â
Jack was doing his usual rounds this Friday, on a rush from a chest pain in two that turned out to be a panic attack and a kid in five whoâd put a kitchen knife through the meat of his own palm trying to halve a frozen bagel when Ellis caught him by the elbow at the board.
âHeads up, Abbot,â she said, grinning. She nodded toward triage, toward the doors. âBed three. Your, uhââ The grin tipped over, delighted with itself. âGirlfriendâs got a boyfriend.âÂ
It was a running thing now. Somewhere around the fourth or fifth time youâd washed up on his shift the staff had started on it â your frequent flyer, your stray, your girlâs back â and Jack had stopped bothering to deny it because thatâd only feed it, and heâd learned not denying it had a way of starving the joke faster.Â
He looked, and was immediately able to notice what you werenât doing more than what you were; you werenât grinning at the ceiling, werenât doing that boneless sweet-relief thing. You were sitting up too straight on the bed, hands folded in your lap, and there was a guy fitted to the chair beside you with one arm slung along the back of yours and a hand resting on your knee like heâd put it there to mark the spot. He was saying something low to the side of your face, and you were nodding at it, and not looking at anybody.
Jack felt a muscle tick in his jaw, immediately not feeling anything nice about the situation. âI got it â you mind taking six for me? Iâll come in a couple minutes.âÂ
By the time heâd made it to you, heâd settled his face into something unbothered. You could read it, heâd realized at some point during your frequent visits, and that only meant he had to be on his better behavior around you.Â
âEvening.â He pulled the curtain half-round behind him, glanced at the chart clipped to the foot of the bed, then at you. âWhatâd we do tonight?â
âShe caught an elbow,â the guy answered. âSome asshole on the dance floor. Itâs nothing â sheâs fine. Sheâs just a lightweight, arenât you â â A little squeeze on your knee. â â didnât even really need to come in, but yâknow. Better safe.âÂ
You werenât a lightweight, he immediately wanted to correct. Heâd seen you put away enough over the months to know your tolerance better than this guy apparently did; he knew the difference between the nights you were genuinely wrecked and the nights you came in clearer than you let on, and looking at you, tonight, you werenât anywhere near the state implied.Â
âYou,â he said, tipping his chin in your direction. âNot him. Whereâd it get you?âÂ
You lifted your hand up from your lap and touched your cheekbone, movement slow, and Jack stepped in and tipped your head up toward the light with two fingers under your chin, thumb resting just shy of the scrape. The skin had gone dark along the bone, tender, an elbowâs worth of it. Nothing that needed more than an ice and a night, but you were still holding still under his hand and not meeting his eyes, and that he didnât like at all.Â
âItâs okay,â you said. âReally. Sânot even â â
âLet me be the judge of that, sweetheart. Gettinâ paid for this.â His eyes flicked down to yours and caught, holding it there a second with a small question in the rise of a brow, before he went back to the bone, thumb tracing the edge of the bruise so light you barely felt it. A small frown pulled at the corners of his mouth at the sight. âFollow my finger. Eyes only.âÂ
You followed, pupils fine and equal. No concussion in it.Â
âSheâs fine, I told you,â the guy said from the chair, a little laugh under it like he was inviting Jack in on something. âHardly. She bounces back.â
Jack clicked the penlight off and turned to the side. âGonna need the room.â
âIâll stay.â The hand went back to your knee. âIâm all good here.â
âCanât clear a head strike with people in the room. You get it.â Jack tilted his head to the side, raising a shoulder. âLiability. Coffee machineâs down the hall. Give me two minutes with my patient.â
The easy smile on the guyâs lips went thin around the edges, looking for a thing to push against and not finding it. He stood up slow, making a show of it, squeezing your knee and letting you know heâll be back in a minute, babe, a hand trailing your shoulder on the way past, all of it aimed less at you and more at Jack holding the curtain. Jack pressed his lips in a thin line as he met the guyâs eyes.Â
The second the curtain closed behind him, a breath left you, tiny and involuntary, and your shoulders came down in the empty room.Â
âSorry, Dr. Abbot,â you murmured. âI keep being a mess at this place.â You took in a short, almost shaky breath. âSorry.âÂ
âNone of that,â he almost grumbled, penning your chart. âYour folks down here, sweetheart?âÂ
âNo,â you said to your lap, picking the edge of the blanket. âBack home. A few states over.â You let out a laugh. âJust me out here. Sânice.âÂ
Jack forced a small smile, having to look at the ceiling while you looked down at your lap, shaking his head, more of an action for himself than for you. He pulled the stool over with his foot and sat, getting level with you.Â
âWhatâs goinâ on with you, huh?â he asked quietly, making sure there was nothing sharp in his tone at all. âHonest. I like seeing you but not like this bruised up with a guy who talks for you.â His thumb found your wrist. âSo talk to me. Whatâs going on?âÂ
âHeâs fine,â you said. âJust likes being around.â
Jack tilted his head, dipping his head to meet your eyes that were still facing down. âNot the important part of the question, and you know it.âÂ
You sighed. âSorry, Jack.â
âQuit it. The only thing I want from you tonight is some honesty, alright?âÂ
A corner of your lip kicked up, even though the dimness in your eyes held. âYour eyes look really pretty tonight.âÂ
âHeard that one before,â he drawled. âHad âem fifty years. Try a new one.âÂ
âYour neckâs going red,â you mumbled, fingers reaching up to press flat to the warm of his skin, right there below the jaw, like you just had to feel whether it was true.
Jack stilled. Your fingers were cold on his neck. He distantly registered his pulse was probably going under your fingertips, and youâd feel it if you held there a second longer. And then you caught yourself, hand snapping back to the blanket.
âSorry. Sorry â Iâm so sorry, I shouldnât have done that â â you said, the words coming out in a taut string.Â
âEasy,â he said, voice coming out rough. He swallowed. âGot me all flustered and now youâre gettinâ all shy?âÂ
You huffed a small laugh, your hand still fisted in the blanket where youâd snatched it back. âIâm not allowed to do that. I donât think.âÂ
âHad no idea you knew how to behave,â he leaned a little back from the stool, crossing his arms. âShould I be worried about that guy out there?â
âJealous, Doctor?âÂ
He rolled his eyes slightly, not responding.Â
You sighed when you realized he wasnât taking the bait. âHeâs fine. He just likes being around.âÂ
He stood off the stool and reached for the discharge clipboard at the foot of the bed.
âWhatcha doing there?â
âMy job.â He clicked the pen. âClearing you. Youâve got no concussion. Youâre not dying tonight.â He scrawled on the paper. âAnd Iâm writing you a script for the bruise and a code for an Uber â â
âNo, no,â you said immediately. âPlease donât do that.âÂ
He raised his hand with the pen, palm open. âYou never let me Uber you back when youâre alone. At least have this.â Your face scrunched up, and he could practically feel the guilt building in you. âDonât need to use it now. Or ever. You can keep it for whenever.â He set the slip on your lap before you could push it back at him, the matter completely closed on his end. âGoes in your phone case. You can forget it exists until you need it.â
âYou canât keep handing me stuff â â
âDepartmentâs got a whole stack. Youâre not special.â He capped the pen, though the corner of his mouth made it slightly visible that his words were false. âDonât flatter yourself, doll.â
You looked down at the slip, your thumb worrying the edges of it. âI donât like taking things.âÂ
âI noticed. A few hundred times now.â He tucked the pen back in his scrub pocket, and his voice came down a notch. âIf it really makes you feel so bad, though, then maybe we can start taking care of ourselves so you donât have to keep ending up here?â
Jack was in the middle of hand-off, Robby doing his thing before Robby left and did whatever the hell he did. They were at the board, Robby running down the floor. It was six-fifteen in the ugly hour, the in-between where the day shift was dragging itself toward the door and the night hadnât started biting yet, the light through the ambulance doors gone gold and slanted and almost decent for once.
And then the doors slid, and you came through them. Jackâs attention peeled to you the second your shape entered the room, except this was wrong, he distantly registered. It was daylight and six in the evening and you were on your own two feet, upright and, assumedly, sober and walking in through the front like a person as opposed to a patient. You were wearing a jacket that swallowed you, and he assumed underneath it was shorts of some sort. He could see a stripe of navy cotton peeking from under the collar of your jacket as you adjusted a tote bag on your shoulder.Â
You looked, frankly, like a completely different species from the one he scraped off bed four on weekends. The jacket was too big â his first thought was that it was a manâs, and his second thought, which he didnât care for, was about whose â sleeves shoved up to your forearms, a stripe of soft navy cotton on the collar, and below it bare legs and shorts and sneakers that had likely never seen the inside of a club. Your hair was up and a little damp at the temple and your face was scrubbed clean.
You looked like somebodyâs whole good day, he thought. You looked around around the waiting room with slightly widened eyes, a lost expression coating your features like youâd built up a lot of nerve to walk in here and had no idea what to do with it.Â
â â and the tox screen is still pending, so donât let them,â Robby was saying.Â
âMhm,â Jack said, attention already halved.Â
And Bennet, breezing past the triage desk with cheerful obliviousness, caught your figure and said, out loud, âDonât tell me youâve started day drinking. Itâs barely past six, you gotta pace yourself â â He let out a small laugh at his own joke, and kept walking, and didnât see the way it landed.Â
Your body stiffened, and you looked like a deer in headlights. Your mouth opened, some sort of flustered apology forming, he was sure.Â
Jack let out a short groan, shaking his head. He set the tablet on the counter, already moving to cross the floor toward you. âFinish the hand-off with Shen. I gotta go deal with something.âÂ
Robby said something at his back â deal with what? â but Jack was already gone, crossing the floor slowly but somehow still eating the distance fast, and he watched you spot him coming and watched the relief crash over your face. Except you were sober now, in the daylight, and your whole face was going soft and grateful and just slightly wrecked at the sight of him.
He stopped a couple feet short of you, closer than a doctor, further than he stood to you at night. He wasnât sure what to do with his hands â there was no chart to hold (he shouldâve brought the tablet) or wrist to take or a penlight to shine â so he clasped them behind his back, and tilted his head to get a better look at you.Â
âHi,â you breathed.
âHey,â he said, eyes doing a quick once-over to make sure you really didnât have any new injuries.
You shifted the tote under his gaze and clutched whatever was in the bag a little tighter.
âJack ââ you started, stopped, like the name had come out wrong. â â Dr. Abbot.â You winced, pinching your eyes shut for a second. âJack?â you tried to say again, smaller, your eyes flicking up to check his face to check if youâd overstepped. âSorry, I donât know which â â
âJackâs great.â His mouth tugged up, despite himself. âYouâve called me a lot worse. Jackâs a step-up.âÂ
You let out a startled little laugh, your mouth coming over your mouth like you could catch it, as your body eased a degree.Â
âIâm sorry â I donât â God, this is so embarrassing. Iâm sorry.âÂ
âYou know how many times youâve apologized to me? Quit it.â He rubbed a finger over his lips. âWhatâs got you here today, then?â
âUm, I came to see you.â He raised a brow, and you let out a short breath, then continued, âI might not remember a lot of it, but I remember you took really good care of me. And my friends who came in with me sometimes said you took really good care of me.â The words came out softer now, flowing, more earnest. âEven though I was a mess. Especially when. So I just wanted to ââ You shrugged, smiling slightly. â â come say thanks.â
Jack felt the complete warmth of you land somewhere he kept no armor. âItâs the job,â he said quickly, before he could stop himself. âYou didnât have to come down here for that. Thatâs â itâs what we do. Anybody on shift wouldâve done the same.âÂ
Your expression faltered for a moment, and your eyes dropped to the tote at your side as your shoulders came in. You shook your head, a small motion, then smiled again.Â
âRight. No â yeah, of course.â You chuckled. âSorry. I didnât mean to make it a â I know itâs your job.â You shifted the bag, then shifted your weight from one foot to another. âStill, though. You did, so I wanted to.âÂ
Jack already wanted to take his words back, but he couldnât, so he just shook his head. âHey, youâre my problem, though. So thank you. For the thanks. Weâre even.âÂ
Your shoulders eased and you nodded. âWell, I also have something for you.â You hauled a container out of your tote and held it out to him with both hands before you could chicken out. âIt definitely doesnât make up for all of the times you helped me.â You looked down at the container. âAnd I donât know if youâre lactose intolerant, or have a peanut allergy or anything. Iâm sorry if you do â I can â â
âIâve got a cast-iron everything. The cookies wonât kill me.â When you pushed the container further to him, he took it off your hands, eyes quickly scanning the round chocolate chip cookies, forcing a smile down. He swallowed whatever had lodged in his throat.Â
âThese are homemade?â He weighed the container in both hands, absurdly. You nodded. He swallowed whatever on earth had lodged in his throat at that.âDidnât have to do all that for me.âÂ
âI wanted to,â you said quickly. âI wasnât sure how the food here is, so thought it might be a nice change.âÂ
âWorse than youâre imagining,â he said, then tipped his head to the side as the memory crawled into his brain, uncalled for. âYouâve actually thrown a sandwich across the room.âÂ
Your palm came up to your mouth, and you let out a muffled, âIâm so sorry.âÂ
Jack snorted, shaking his head. Then, after a moment, he cleared his throat before it could get away from him. He looked back toward the board, then at you, knowing time was slipping and heâd have to go back to work and youâd have to go somewhere else, most likely.Â
âYou got finals or anything coming up soon?â he asked.Â
Your lips curved down, and you nodded. âYeah, in a couple weeks.âÂ
âAm I gonna be seeing you getting wheeled in wasted?âÂ
âI want to say no,â you said, smiling a little crooked. âIâm working on it. But Iâve said that before and ended up here. So.â You shrugged, lips jutting out like you were also unimpressed with yourself. âAsk me again in a couple weeks, I guess. Iâd like it if you didnât, though.âÂ
âThen quit doing the hard nights alone,â he said, leaning in just slightly. âYou keep yourself off the stairs, and you can come bother us instead here with a textbook.â He raised a brow as he held your eyes. âWeâve got a family room thatâs almost always empty at night.âÂ
âI couldnât â â
âWonât be a bother. Trust me. Youâd be silly not to use peopleâs help when theyâve clawed through the same exams to get the badge. You get stuck, somebodyâll know it cold.â He shrugged. âHalf of âem are bored out of their minds some nights. Youâd be doing us a favor.âÂ
You let out a breath, brows pinching together. âThatâs â yeah.â You let out a short laugh, looking away for a second. âIâd like that. A lot. Thank you, really. As long as you donât mind.â
âThis is a teaching hospital, doll. I donât mind, so long as you donât mind the company. Might be nice for me, too.â
You smiled and for a moment, neither of you moved to end it. Then you shifted the tote back up your shoulder, and Jack felt the pull to keep you here one more second before he could stop himself.Â
âGo home,â he said gruffly. âAnd Iâll be looking for you. So actually turn up, donât make me look for nothing.âÂ
The whole sun of you came up at that, stunned, like you hadnât expected to be looked for by anyone. Jack felt the ground go quietly out from under him, the vertigo of having reached for a personâs happiness on purpose and connected, of being, for once, the cause of a face doing that. Heâd gotten so used to delivering news that took the light out that heâd forgotten it ran the other way, too.
âIâll turn up. I promise.âÂ
He nodded, clearing his throat and turning for the board, bidding you a throaty goodbye.Â
âSheâs the girl that everyone on night talks about?â Robby asked immediately, falling into step beside him.Â
Jack looked at him sideways, shaking his head. âYou got something to say, too?â
âNo,â Robby said, rubbing his palm at his chin like he was holding something in. âYou like her or something?â
Jack halted for a second, pointing his index at Robby as he lowered his chin. âYou shut up. Sheâs gonna be a nurse.âÂ
âOh, yeah,â Robby laughed. âLooks like sheâs gonna be your nurse, old man. Youâll need it soon enough.â
Thank god you did turn up. Jack had the sense that maybe heâd scared you off altogether by his offer, and the line heâd toed had two very alternate spectrums: youâd find a new hospital altogether to go to in the metropolitan area after your falls or poisonings, or youâd be here a lot more often, which he still wasnât sure wouldâve been often enough.Â
The first time you came in, it was well past midnight and Jack had unfortunately not been able to catch you off the bat because he was in an emergency surgery. Heâd walked out of it with his blood-stained surgical gown still on to be met with the sight of you by the nurseâs station, writing something down on the back of a discharge form for Lena, with another Tupperware laying on the table. He made the guess that youâd brought the whole floor something and were three minutes from having Lena eating out of your hand.Â
Youâd found a corner of his department and made yourself a small soft home in it inside of ten minutes, and you were leaning in, and Jack stood there for a moment with the bad night still ringing in his ears and felt something unclench in his chest by a fraction.
â â no, but you gotta,â you were saying to Lena in earnest as Jack approached closer. âIf you put the brown sugar in while the butterâs still hot, itâs just â itâs a different cookie.â
âYou taking the recipe, Lena?â Jack asked then, fully submerging into the knot youâd made with his charge nurse.Â
You turned to face him, a smile forming on your lips almost immediately, and then your eyes dropped over him, to the gown, the rust-brown stain dried dark across the front of it, the set of his shoulders.Â
âI am,â Lena replied. âGonna make these for the kids.â She punctuated her sentence by holding up one of the cookies.Â
âGonna make some for us, too, then?â Jack asked, raising a brow, and settled his elbows over the table. He turned his neck to face you properly, putting on his best smile.
Lena laughed shortly. âI donât like you enough.â She pushed off the counter with some forms in hand. âHer, maybe. You can have whatever she leaves behind.â She shot you a look that was almost warm before she went and disappeared down the hall.Â
âCould be you someday,â Jack said, tilting his head in the direction of Lenaâs chair.Â
You shook your head, then pushed the container in his hands. âIâve got to graduate first. And pass pharm, which is currently â â You patted your tote bag, textbooks heavy. â â trying to kill me.â
Jack nodded toward the family room, placing the container on the table for a second beside him. âCâmon, then, doll. Letâs see what the pharmâs doing to you.â
âYou donât have to â â Your eyes flicked down the gown again. âYou just came out of surgery. You donât have to help me study.â
âActinâ like Iâm the one who got the surgery,â Jack muttered, chuckling slightly. He was already peeling off the gown one-handed, balling it up to toss. He started walking, and you followed behind him. âCâmon. Itâs pretty empty right now.âÂ
Itâd been pleasant that night and the few after to have five to ten minute increments of sitting with you helping you study in between doing his actual job. Heâd duck in between things â a lull after discharge, the dread stretch while he waited for a CT scan, the ten minutes a trauma took to roll in once the call came â and youâd be there in the family room with your stack of cards on the couch. Heâd drop on the chair across you or the couch beside you and pick up wherever youâd left off like he hadnât left at all. Then his pager would buzz and heâd be gone, and youâd still be there an hour later when he came back, and heâd sit back down, and both of youâd pretend this was a completely normal way to study.
Itâd annoyed him the first night how badly the flashcards were failing you; heâd seen you stare at the words and your eyes would glaze and slide right off it like they were greased. Youâd memorized or retained nothing. And then heâd said, half to himself, a story for the why to click, and heâd watched it lock in you.Â
So heâd stopped quizzing you primarily off the cards and started telling you stories instead and youâd talk it back to him, reasoning out loud, getting there in the saying of it the way you never got there on the page.Â
The nights stacked up. The first week, youâd sat at a table across from him. By the second, youâd migrated to the chair beside him. Your coffee, the one by the far end of the table, was right by his elbow. Lena started leaving a second cup at the station when she saw you come in, his and yours, and never commented.
Youâd stopped apologizing for taking up his time somewhere in there. He noticed when youâd started saving him the worst looking cookie on purpose because heâd once told you he liked the ugly ones. Heâd noticed when you learned the rhythm of his pages; youâd go quiet and just hand him the next card when his eyes drifted to the board through the window of the door, would have it ready when he came back, like youâd kept his place for him while he was off keeping someone alive.Â
He noticed that he more than looked forward to it. Somewhere in the dead middle of a bad shift, his feet would take him toward the family room before his brain could catch up on the why of it all. An empty table on a night you didnât come in sat wrong with him, a tiny disappointment he didnât have anything in him to figure out why.
Sometimes, like now, youâd get distracted. Jack had learned. Heâd walked into the family room to see you and Ellis folded into opposite ends of the couch, the flashcards abandoned in a fanned mess on the cushion between you, both of you mid-argument and enjoying yourselves too much.
âPoaching my study hall, Ellis?â he said, finally moving in.Â
Ellis pointed one stern finger in your direction as she pulled herself off the couch. âDo the crossword, not the sudoku.âÂ
âSheâs gonna make you a worse student,â Jack said to Ellisâs back.
âSheâs making me a worse doctor,â Ellis said cheerfully, already at the door. âIâve been here twenty minutes. I have patients.â She turned to you one final time. âCrossword. Youâll thank me later.âÂ
She gave Jack a knowing look on her way out, one he didnât want to read too much into, and she was gone, the door swinging shut behind her in one slow plunge.Â
You watched the door settle, and the entire wattage of your attention turned to him. He hadnât gotten used to that, and he didnât think he ever would. âLooks like Iâll never be a nurse.âÂ
âDonât say things like that.â He came around and lowered himself onto the couch beside you. âWhatâre you stuck on? Hit me.â
Your palm met his upper arm, a small smack.Â
He narrowed his eyes at you. âHit me all you want. Youâre not getting out of this.âÂ
âBut Jaaaack,â you drawled, tipping your head back on the couch. âNot here to study today.â
His eyes flickered over to your form briefly as he gathered the cards and squared them. âOh, no? Whatâre you here for then?â
âDunno.â You pulled your knees up to the couch. âDidnât wanna be at mine. And work was a lot and boring.â You turned to face him then, a small smile growing on your lips. âThought Iâd bother yours instead.âÂ
He set the squared deck on his knee. âLucky me.â
Heâd caught it, though, how youâd folded the sad thing in the middle of the sentence where itâd draw the least attention and moved on before it could sit. He let it move on, but he kept it. The image of you on a Tuesday, work behind you, and the choice youâd made was to drive to a hospital rather than go home to your own quiet. He was getting a picture of what that quiet looked like and learned that he didnât like it very much.
âWork was boring, huh,â he said, though he couldnât imagine what a fun day looked like as a waitress. âYou working more?â
âMm. Saturday girl quit, so now Iâm on Saturdays, too.â You picked at your sock. âSâokay. Tips are good. I learned that old guys tip better when you call them âsir.ââÂ
He huffed. âDo they?â
âHuge. Itâs a cheat code.â You tilted your head at him, smiling shyly. âYouâd tip well, I think. Youâd overcompensate.âÂ
âIâm not gonna sit here and get profiled by you in the only few minutes where I can catch my breath.â He held the card up, front to himself. âAnd I tip twenty-five percent like every functioning adult, thank you.â
You groaned. âWhere can I get tipped more than that?âÂ
âYou donât want me to answer that.â
âI do. I do. Iâm a broke student. Point me to the money â where should I apply?â You shifted on the couch, fully facing him now, the cards apparently abandoned for the moment. âCâmon. Youâve lived a hundred years. Youâve gotta know where I can make some quick cash.âÂ
âYouâre sweet to me, doll,â he muttered, rolling his eyes. He set the cards down and looked at you, genuinely considering it now. He tried to ignore the fact that you likely had money troubles and tried to think about how he could actually help. âDefine quick.âÂ
âLike â by next Thursday.âÂ
âLegally?â
âNo.âÂ
âLegally, you can sell plasma. Twice a week, they pay you, you sit there with a juice box.âÂ
Your nose scrunched. âI donât love needles in me sober.â
âYouâre gonna be a nurse.â
âIn other people. Thatâs totally different.â You waved it off. âNext. What else?â
âSleep studies pay you to sleep. Egg donation pays a whole lot but itâs a whole process, not a Thursday deal.â He was ticking them off on his fingers, now fully committed. âMedical researchâll pay you to test things. Phase-one trials. You take an experimental drug and they watch you for side effects.â
âThatâs the one.â You sat up. âHow much?â
âNo,â he said immediately, shaking his head. âAbsolutely not. I bring you in here to keep you from blacking out. Iâm not gonna have you volunteering to get poisoned for a quick four hundred bucks.â He pointed at you. âMaybe start laying on the âsirâ a little too thick from now on.âÂ
âSir.â You tested on him directly, dropping your voice, leaning in an inch, lashes going slow. âCould you help me out, sir? Tips have been so slow, sir.âÂ
He turned his face away from you, now making himself look out the window. âIâm not entertaining this.âÂ
âOh, but sir.â Youâd fully abandoned the cards now, scooting closer, a hand under your chin, the picture of innocence. âIâm just a girl. A poor, hardworking girl trying to be a nurse. Donât you want to help me out, sir?â
âI am trying.â He pulled up the flashcards. âIf itâll help, Iâll bring my SWAT buddies into your place and they can run up a tab.â He waved a card in front of your face, trying to get your attention back to it. âYou do this, Iâll have eight cops eating mozzarella sticks in your section by Friday, overtipping âcause I saved their lives. Wonât even have to call âem sir.âÂ
âRight. No, thatâs â â You let out a little laugh too quickly, eyes widening at his words, and you took the card out of his hand mostly to have something to do with yours. âYou donât have to do that. Obviously. I was kidding â â You batted the whole thing away with a shake of your head. âGod. No. Iâm okay, I promise. I was kidding.â
âIâm half-kidding,â he said, raising a brow. âI do know those guys. Itâs no skin off me. But itâs okay.âÂ
He let the offer sit like that, and he saw you pinch your eyes shut. He watched the whole thing happen on your face, the small involuntary recoil you always had when anyone offered you real kindness. You were bad at it. For a girl who lied so charmingly about how much she drank and how her night went, you had absolutely no poker face for being cared about. You had not the first idea how to hide it.
He found it unbearably endearing.
You opened your eyes and looked a little caught, a little sheepish as your thumb worried the corner of the card.
âYouâre a strange girl,â he mumbled, fond, before he could stop it. âYou know that?â
âShit â Jack,â you said through a small laugh, shaking your head. âI donât â Iâm â â You pressed your lips together and your shoulders came up almost to your ears in a stiff shrug. âIs there anything I can do for you? I canât just accept â all your help.âÂ
He snorted. âWhat help? I give you a study room and review flash cards.â
âLet me do something. Iâm a good cleaner â â
His head went back slightly, shaking his head. âYouâre really not.â
âOkay,â you continued, rallying. âA dog? Guys like you always have dogs they donât walk âcause of their hours. I can walk dogs.âÂ
âNo dog.â He raised his hand when he saw your mouth move again, stopping you. âYou pay me back by passing your boards. You can pay me back plenty if you end up working here, doing good at the job.â
You went quiet for a second. âThatâs just me doing my own thing. Thatâs not real.â
âThatâs real to me.â He shrugged, like he hadnât just made your whole future the price of his kindness. âI get a good nurse out of it someday.â He pulled himself off the couch. âAnd now I gotta go. Floorâs not gonna run itself.â
âBoo,â you said, pulling the entire deck on your lap now. âYouâre the worst study partner. You leave constantly.â
Tonight, Jack had come into the family room after leaving you for a longer stretch of time than usual â a multi-vehicle situation that had eaten two hours and most of his patience â and found the studying had long since lost.
Youâd migrated to the couch at some point. The textbook was open face-down on the cushion beside you like a small tented roof, your flashcards fanned across the middle seat, and you were folded in the corner with your knees pulled up and cheek mashed into the worn armrest, fighting your eyes and losing completely. Youâd dimmed the overhead lights, lighting the lamp in the corner, the one nobody used, throwing everything low and gold.
He paused in the doorway. âYou awake?âÂ
âMhm. Need a cat nap, though,â you murmured.
Jack snorted, shutting the door behind him as he walked closer to you. âHow farâd you get?â
âFar enough.â Then, you added, âCat nap.â
âSayinâ it like Iâm gonna not let you have one.âÂ
Your eye cracked open a sliver, tracked him, then fell shut again. âFeel like youâre gonna make me do more cards.â
He toed the leg of the coffee table aside, reached down, and started clearing your mess off the cushions. He lifted the textbook and shut it around the receipt youâd jammed as a bookmark; gathered the flashcards and squared them in his palm; capped the highlighter and pocketed it. You watched the cleanup through one half-open eye, not lifting a single finger, your cheek staying flat to the armrest.Â
âThere. No more cards. Youâre done for tonight, doll.âÂ
âHooray,â you mumbled.Â
He nudged your socked foot where it had crept up across the cushion. âCâmon. Budge up a second. Donât want you wrecking your neck sleeping like that.â
You made a small sound of protest but you went, peeling your cheek off the armrest with reluctance. There was a crease pressed into your skin where the fabric seam had been and your hair was flat on one side and mushed on the other. You blinked up at him, swaying where you sat, eyes glassy and unfocused in the gold lamplight.
He sank into the space heâd cleared, the cushion dipping, tipping the two of you a fraction into each other. That was all the invitation your body apparently needed, because you folded into him without a beat of thought â too tired to second-guess it, he supposed â your temple finding the warm of his shoulder, your whole side melting against his. You drew your knees up and tucked them against his thigh. Your hand came to rest on his chest, palm flat, fingers spreading once before they went still. You exhaled after a moment, long and slowly, and burrowed your nose into his neck.Â
Jack stilled.Â
âTen minutes,â you murmured, the words barely coming out as words.
He took his arm off the back of the couch and settled it around your back, broad hand spanning between your shoulder blades and drawing you that last fraction deeper into him. You went boneless with it, a small contended hum slipping out of you.Â
Because he couldnât help himself, he tipped his head down a fraction to say into your hair, âBeen doinâ really well, yâknow that, sweetheart?âÂ
You hummed, the sound of it vibrating against his throat, your fingers curling the faintest bit in his scrubs. âThanks, Jack.â
âGonna be a good nurse,â he murmured, thumb moving once along your shoulder.Â
âGonna work with you,â you mumbled, three-quarters gone. âYou said.â
âMhm.â
âHoldinâ you to it.âÂ
âYeah, I know you are.â The corner of his mouth flicked up where you couldnât see it. âGo to sleep. You can hold me to it in ten minutes.âÂ
When you didnât answer for a second, Jack realized you were already gone. You were warm and trusting at his side, your hand slack over his heart, your breath sinking deep and even into his neck.Â
Jack let his head tip back against the couch, pinching his eyes shut at the feeling of you, at the feeling you caused. His hand spread slowly across your back, feeling the breath go through you â the proof of you â and he let his thumb find the curve of your shoulder and rest there, keeping his eyes shut. He sat with the enormous fact of you, the girl heâd not seen anyone circle back for, gone soft and so pliant in his arms like sheâd always belonged there, and he stopped pretending he wasnât already lost.Â
The ten minutes came and went. He let them. Heâd have given you the whole night, the whole shift, the whole of whatever this was turning into. There wasnât one place on the earth worth standing up for, and heâd known it for weeks, and only now, with your breath slow against his throat, did he let himself sit all the way inside of the knowing.
Jack came out of the OR and signed â albeit distantly, mind running a meter a minute about nothing good â what needed signing and said the things he was meant to, feeling the familiar piece of his own damn soul rotting away in the place those things went to rot. He knew the spot by now. Itâd been decades of depositing them into the same place, and the place didnât fill, exactly, but it never emptied, either. It just sat there, getting heavier, like things usually do when you keep adding to it and never take anything out.
This one would sit a while. Jack had started to sense it around the first year in this job; the ones that stayed had a weight, and you knew on the table whether you were getting one of those or whether itâd wash off by morning. This one wouldnât.
He stripped his gloves, and somebody said something he answered without hearing, and then his feet simply walked past the board, carrying him down the hall toward the one door on the whole floor that wouldnât have somebody elseâs catastrophe behind it.Â
His hand was flat on the door. He was still wearing the gown, and he looked down and registered it too late. He shouldâve changed it, left the thing in the dirty bin with the rest of what the shift had taken, the way he always did before he came to you, kept the two halves of the floor separate on purpose.Â
He opened the door. You were on the couch, one leg tucked under you and the other foot on the floor and a half-empty cup of coffee on the table going cold. Youâd been doing something on your phone, or nothing, when the door opened, and you looked up with the easy expectant expression on your face you always had before it dropped. He watched it melt.
âHey,â you said, making your voice soft.
âHey.â His voice came out rough, and he almost winced as he heard it himself.Â
You set your phone face-down on the cushion and unfolded yourself from the couch and stood, crossing the room to close the gap between you. You stopped in front of him and looked up, your brow doing a small worried thing, and he let himself be looked at.
âSit down,â you said. âYou look like youâre gonna fall through the floor.â
He distantly registered you walking him to the chair â your hand finding his forearm, a light touch â and he let you. He folded into the chair like the strings of his own body had been cut, his elbows finding his knees and head dropping.
He heard you move, small domestic sounds of you filling a cup, the tap somewhere down the hall turning on then shutting off. Then your socks were back in his eyeline, toes pointed to him.
âHere.â You crouched, came into his lowered field of vision, and pressed a cup into his hands â water, cold â and folded his fingers around it when they were slow to close. âDrink it all.â
He drank because that was the path of least resistance. The water caught something he hadnât registered was bone-dry. You took the empty cup out of his hands when he was done, setting it on the table behind you, and then he felt your hands find his shoulders.
He flinched just slightly, the smallest involuntary thing, for nobody touched him like that. Nobody put their hands on him that werenât shaking one of his or needing something from him. You settled your thumbs into the iron base of his neck and pressed slowly, working the knots the night, the days, the weeks, and probably the year had wound there.
Your thumbs were unsure of themselves â you werenât good at it, you werenât trying to be, you were simply trying â and that was somehow worse because it got further to him than skill would have; there was the unpracticed earnestness to it, like youâd simply decided his shoulders had been holding too much and you wanted to put your hands there to take some of it down.Â
He felt his head drop lower, coming forward on its own, the tension bleeding out of his neck by degrees under your hands. Your thumbs found a place at the top of his spine that had been clenched so long that it had stopped registering as pain, and you pressed there, and a fraction let go. He felt his shoulders drop the inch theyâd been holding up all night, and an uneven breath went out of him.
You kept your hands moving, your thumbs working the meat of his shoulders through the cotton, occasionally finding a knot and leaning your weight into it until it gave.Â
His head tipped a little forward after a stretch of time â chasing, or simply falling â and it found the soft of your stomach. His forehead rested against the front of you, where you stood close in the gap between his knees. He hadnât intended for it, or maybe he had, somewhere under where the intention happened, his body had chosen to stop holding its own weight and give it to the nearest thing that felt like itâd take it. His eyes were already shut, and he stayed there, hands coming up on their own to rest at the sides of your waist. His fingers anchored into the fabric of your shirt.
âShitty job sometimes,â he mumbled after a moment.
âYeah,â you said softly above him. âI bet it is.âÂ
Your fingers had found his hair, threading through the curls. Then, you added quietly, âBut youâre really good at it.âÂ
His fingers tightened a fraction at the fabric on your waist as he let out a short huff.Â
âDidnât help him,â he said finally, the words coming out muffled behind his own mouth. âWhatever Iâm good at didnât help him.âÂ
âMaybe not.â Your fingers scraped carefully at his scalp. âI think you were the best shot he had.â
He breathed you in, choosing to let the words rest in his skull for a while instead of fighting them.Â
âIâm â â He heard you take in a breath and felt it go through your whole body. âIâm really grateful I met you, Jack.â
For some reason, he waited for you to take it back. There was a primally fast thing in him that told him that youâd take the words back, and heâd have understood.
âYou donât have to say anything,â you added. âI just wanted you to know. While youâre here being all â â Your thumb moved at the back of his neck, tender and so gentle. â â Figured it was a decent time to tell you Iâm glad you exist.âÂ
He took in a shaky breath against you, fingers tightening again.Â
âThank you, sweet girl,â he said, and it sounded like itâd been punched out of him. âLikewise. More than you know,â he finished, his arms wrapping around the rest of your waist now, pulling you in like he could just fold himself smaller if he held hard enough.
Your fingers kept moving slowly in his hair, your other hand coming around the back of his head to hold him there. He couldnât think of the last time heâd let anybody do this; as far as he could remember, heâd decided in some wordless permanent way that heâd carry his own weight from then on, that it was cheaper, that needing somebody was a bill that came due eventually and heâd rather not run the tab.Â
âYou should sit,â he said after god knows how long without letting go. âSelfish, keepinâ you standing here.â
âItâs okay.â
He hummed, thumb moving once at your waist. âTwo more minutes then.â
âWhatever you need, Jack,â you said, voice quiet. âIâm not going.â
Jackâs phone lit up on the arm of the couch at 10:52, face-down, buzzing itself a quarter-inch off the leather before he caught it.Â
Heâd been working his way, with grim completionist patience, through an iceberg video youâd sent him three days ago with the message âTHIS rabbit hole i need you to fall down.â Youâd followed it up by telling him, âdo Not skip tiers!!â He hadnât skipped tiers. He was, in fact, ninety minutes deep and only about two-thirds down the pyramid, somewhere in the tier where a young man with a serious voice was explaining internet folklore he couldnât believe was real.Â
He was fairly sure itâd been invented by some teenager, but Jack only shrugged, distantly wondering why on earth anyone would spend the labor â the diagrams, alone â hoaxing a thing this elaborate for an audience of complete strangers. He also wondered why on earth you were so interested in this. As quickly as the thought arrived, he realized that he was working down the iceberg himself.
Working down a thing youâd handed him felt adjacent to sitting next to you, and his apartment had become the sort of quiet that made adjacent worth ninety minutes of contemporary folklore. Heâd sooner have chewed glass than admitted it out loud.
It was a good apartment and an unwitnessed one. Heâd realized somewhere in the past year it was untouched by any hand but his. Every object was exactly where heâd last set it down, for there was no second person to nudge the remote three inches or leave a hair tie on the counter or ask why there was a mug in the sink and no bowl. His leg was off for the night, propped against the arm of the couch, the whole standing weight from his night shift to SWAT calls finally set down somewhere it was allowed to stay.
So, the phone going off, went off loud in the silence that had become almost-permanent. Your name lit across the screen, and the picture with it (one youâd set yourself, commandeering his phone to do it). It was already strange that it was a call. You never called; you texted in floods, six messages deep before heâd gotten to the first, but the ringing meant the thing had gotten past the point where typing it out would hold.Â
He looked at your laughing face buzzing on his phone for a second too long, the cold little instinct, and thumbed it green.
âHey,â he said. âYou know itâs almost eleven on my night-off. This better be good.â
You stayed silent for a second, and he could hear your breath and the hollow of a call connected in a car, the cooling engineâs tick and automotive acoustics.Â
âHey,â you said finally, and Jack felt it wrongly. The back half of the word had gone soft and unsteady at the end.
Jack was already sitting up. âHey, yourself,â he said. âWhatâs going on?â
âNothing.â He heard you swallow quickly. âSorry. God, this is so dumb. You â were you asleep?âÂ
âI was almost through with your iceberg, if you want the truth.âÂ
You made a sound that tried to be a laugh but didnât clear the runway, breaking apart halfway. âYou watched it?â
âAlmost.â His fingers were drumming against his prosthetic leaning by the couch now. âAre you out?â
âIâm ââ You paused, then hummed like you were debating. âIâm kind of near your place, actually?â Your voice rose toward the end, like you were embarrassed or questioning it all yourself. âI know. Itâs creepy. But I think I need to â talk to you.âÂ
âYeah?â He tried to keep his voice light, though he could already feel something in his body start racing, panicking. âYou break something?â
âNo. No. Promise. Itâs nothing like that.â
For some reason, that put a deeper hook in him. If it wasnât a wrist, an ankle, or your body doing something it shouldnât, then it was the other kind, and he had no idea how to hold something like that. He wasnât sure what he could do with a sprain he couldnât ice.
âOkay â â
âWait,â you interrupted, voice pitching higher, and he could see you were psyching yourself out. âI could just say it now, honestly. Itâd probably be easier over the phone.â
Jackâs eyes widened a fraction at that. His stomach suddenly felt cold.Â
âNo,â he said, voice rougher than heâd intended. âI wonât make it hard. Whatever you want to say, I promise. Just â not like this, okay? Come here.âÂ
He listened to you breathe as you weighed it and knew, with bone-deep certainty, that he wouldnât like what you were going to say. âOkay,â you breathed. âIâll be there in fifteen.âÂ
Jack opened the door after the first knock, unembarrassed of waiting. Youâd come as you were, a coat thrown open over sleep clothes, good wool hanging loose over a thin cami with lace at the collar and soft shorts and bare legs down to the sneakers you hadnât laced properly. The second fact that registered to Jack was that youâd been crying; there was a soft ruin around your eyes, the mascara long gone, wiped with a sleeve somewhere back in the evening. Your hair was up and losing, a claw clip hanging looser than he believed it was meant to.
âHi,â you said, eyes raising to meet his. âThanks for letting me come by.â
Jack felt his shoulders rise to his ears just slightly at the formality. He felt like a bucket of ice had been dropped upon him because somewhere in the past few weeks, youâd stopped apologizing to him as much, which had felt like a small victory he never told you he was counting. And here it was again, your stiff little courtesy, the door swung back shut on a thing that had been open. Jack didnât like it. He didnât like it at all.Â
âYou donât thank me for coming by,â he said gruffly, opening the door wider.
You came in, but only just. Before he could steer you to the warmth of his apartment, you were already reaching into the bag on your shoulder â hands shaking, he realized, with a fine tremor â and pulling out a folded piece of paper, creased hard down the middle and then again like youâd tried to bundle it up into a fist.
He unfolded it and smoothed out the edges, eyes looking for yours briefly, but youâd already looked away. Your bottom lip was between your teeth and you were looking at the ground. He forced himself to look down.
It was your pharmacology exam. Your cramped looping handwriting scattered the margins, a star drawn to one question because you starred everything. There was red pen all down the side and a number circled on the top. The number, Jack saw immediately, was not catastrophic, not a failure even. It was a low pass, the sort of grade that wouldâve stung for Jack in his school days and evaporated by the next exam. Heâd expected worse from the way youâd been shaking holding it.Â
He looked back at you, confused more than anything. âCongratulations, you passed.âÂ
Your jaw tightened, and he could see your eyes go bright and wounded. âItâs a seventy-one.â
âThatâs a pass.â
âBarely. Barely.â You took the paper out of his hands, folding it away like you couldnât stand looking at it anymore. âAnd you helped me with this so much and I still couldnât. Iâm so tired of â â You stopped, looking up at the ceiling as you pressed your lips flat. âItâs not about the test.â
âOkay.â He leaned back against the counter, giving you the whole floor of the room. âTalk, then.âÂ
You looked at him, and he watched you gather it all up, deciding, as it settled into your face, your mouth, whatever youâd come here to say.
âI donât wanna waste your time anymore,â you said, tugging your bottom lip between your teeth as your eyes landed on the wall behind him. âI canât â itâs not fair.âÂ
Jack felt the whole floor shift under him and felt his brows go up an inch as he tried to keep his face seem collected.Â
âYouâre you,â you continued. âYouâve got a whole life, a hard one, and Iâve been just â dumping mine on you. Making you sit there and hold my hand through studying and Iâm â â You shook your head, face going grim as you said the words. âItâs not fair to you. Youâve been carrying me for so long, and itâs not fair. None of this is yours to carry. Iâm not yours to carry.âÂ
His nose scrunched just slightly, something like burning blooming at the center of his face. Something in his chest had cracked along the seam he had no idea was there, because heâd never had to look at it once straight on. It was easy to carry your own weight when there was no one asking to take some. It was easy to call solitude a principle when nobody had ever made the alternative real. And you had. Youâd made it real for months, and here you were proposing â no, telling â to take it back, to hand him his loneliness again because of some measurement of fairness.Â
The horror of how much Jack didnât want it â how badly, how completely he didnât want to go back to how it was before you â was the first honest look heâd taken at himself in longer than he could stand to count.Â
âThat so?â was all he could say, voice roughening as his brows narrowed at you.Â
âYes.â You mistook the roughness for agreement, or maybe you just needed to do so, because you kept going. âYou donât have to help me. The only thing I can think is youâre â you are a good person and I was there. And you help people, itâs what you do.â Your hand waved in the general direction of him as your voice cracked. âSo help someone whoâd actually make it worth it. Who wonât barely pass and keep getting too drunk and â â You laughed slightly, and it was all wet and terrible, the sound. âIâm a bad use of you. Youâre this â you are so much, Jack, and Iâm a bad place to put it. So put it somewhere better.âÂ
Jack had to force a swallow when you ended your words with a sharp intake of breath, the pool behind your eyes slipping free slowly down your cheeks. Youâd run out of anything thatâd make you wipe it away now, and that undid him worse than the crying itself, that you were standing there and letting it fall, done hiding, wrung all the way out.Â
âIâm sorry â â he started.
âItâs okay,â you said immediately, shaking your head.
âFor making you think thatâs what it was,â he said, lowering his voice. âThatâs on me, that you talked yourself into thinking this has been some sort of charity.â He cocked his head to the side then, wishing youâd look up at him. âBut youâre gonna quit shaking your head for one minute, and hear the rest, âcause you got it wrong. All of it, backwards and upside down.â
He came off the counter and closed the space himself, until you had to lift your chin to keep his eyes.Â
âIâm not a man who spends his nights on a stray out of the goodness of his heart. Ask anyone I work with what Iâm like. I donât have that lying around spare.â His jaw tightened. âSo take the halo off. Thatâs not what this was.â
âThen why â â
âYou,â he said plainly, for he learned it cost him nothing to do so, and a lot if he didnât. âI wouldnât do this for just anyone. Thereâs nowhere else I want to put it.â
He watched everything in your face tighten at his words, the disbelief and reflex to argue all curdling underneath.Â
âIf you donât want this.â Me. Me, he wanted to say. âSay it. Iâll leave you alone. You donât owe me anything.â
âThatâs not â â
âBut donât act like itâs some favor for me.â He was closer now than heâd been. âDonât tell me youâre leaving for my sake. Thatâs a lie.â
âItâs not â â
âItâs a lie,â he said, voice going flat and so final, as he slowly nodded his head. He looked at you a second, lips coming between his teeth, then looked away as he felt something physical seize over his entire body.
Jack himself had to process the words as he said them, because he was only just realizing how much truth they held.
âYou make it good.â
He forced himself to look back at you, and you had tilted your head now to look up at him, caught and still as stone, the arguing gone completely off your face now and replaced with something more frightened.
âDonât â â One of Jackâs shoulders came up in a half-hearted shrug. âYouâre the one part of my day that doesnât take anything out of me. Just â get that straight, sweetheart.âÂ
You were just looking up at him with your whole face undone, the tears gone still on it, as though his words had knocked your own clean out of you.
âI donât know what to do with that,â you said quietly. âPeople donât â thatâs not a thing that happens to me, Jack. Being â â Your sentence broke apart and your hand had come up and fisted loosely in front of his shirt without either of you deciding it should, holding on, holding him there. âI donât know what to do with it.â
âNothing.â His hand came up slowly and covered yours where it fisted in his shirt, holding it flat there against his chest. âItâs just true.â
You made a small, pained sound and dropped your forehead against his sternum, right where his hand held yours, and he felt the whole strung-tight weight of you gave at once and settled into him. He felt you breathe against his shirt at the same time he felt his own pulse going too fast on your knuckles; he wasnât bothered enough to try and slow it, because there was no point now. Youâd already found out.Â
âVery grateful for you,â he murmured, his other hand pulled up to rest over the back of your skull. âTold you so earlier. Meant it more than you let yourself hear.â
You huffed against his shirt â half a sob, half a laugh, maybe the ruined cousin of both â and he felt it go through the cotton and land warm against his skin, felt your fingers uncurl a fraction from the fist theyâd made then re-fist, like even now some part of you was checking he was still there to hold onto.Â
Jack held still for it, same as you had in the family room for him. He was good at holding still, it was half the job, but this was a different kind â he supposed â where there was a plain animal willingness to be a wall for as long as you needed one and not move a muscle that might spook you out of it.Â
He rested his chin at the top of your head, murmuring, âI donât have to tutor you anymore, if thatâll help.â He swallowed, closing his eyes as he breathed in your faint perfume. âWe can scrap the whole thing, if thatâs whatâs making you feel so bad.â
You stilled for a second, then made a small sound against him.Â
Despite himself, despite it all, he let out a short chuckle. âSâokay. Iâm the reason you got a seventy-one. Youâre allowed to switch.âÂ
âYouâre the reason itâs a seventy-one and not a thirty,â you said, and it came out muffled and immediate. You almost sounded cross, like you didnât want the slander against him to stand even now.
After a moment against him, you added, âI donât want to be just someone you help, I think. I donât want to be somebody â I guess â that youâre just good to.â
When Jack hummed, you continued, âI donât know what I wanna be instead. Just â a friend â or, I donât know. Something that goes both ways.â
Jackâs chest swelled at the words. He felt that heâd have been anything you asked of him, simply because it had just become how it was. It was almost outrageous how, if youâd asked, heâd have handed it over, the whole rest of it, whatever you wanted the name to be, whatever box you needed him in.
A man his age was supposed to be past this. He was supposed to have calcified somewhere in the second decade of the job into something that didnât reorganize himself around what someone heâd known properly only for the better part of the year had asked him.
âConsider it done,â he murmured, letting the word settle. Friend.
You breathed against him, and Jack felt himself want to remain exactly here and knew that he shouldnât. He knew that the kind thing now was to give you somewhere to put your face that wasnât his chest, some ordinary ground for you to set your feet back down on.Â
âCâmon.â He got a hand on your shoulder and eased you off him gently, a slow, slow reclaiming of the eight inches of air between your body and his. He dipped his head to catch your eyes, which were pink-rimmed and swollen and doing their utter best to avoid his now that the worst was out of you. âDo you want me to order food?â
Your neck rolled back slightly as you met his eyes, caught slightly off-guard at the shift of tone. You blinked. âThat was a lot, and now youâre asking about food?â
âIt was a lot,â he agreed. He reached up and thumbed a smudge of leftover mascara from under your eye briskly, and you let him. âAnd now itâs done. So, food, and we can watch the stupid video you sent me before you head home.â
It had been six days since you showed up at his apartment, and Jack had embarrassingly counted every single one of them. Youâd left his apartment somewhere past two with your eyes finally dry and a paper bag of his leftover Thai youâd protested and taken anyway, and heâd walked you down to your car and stood in the lot like some idiot in a movie until your taillights turned off his street, and then heâd gone back up to a quiet that felt, for the first time in years, like something had been in it.
Since then it had gone like it always had and nothing like it; you still turned up with flashcards and left a graveyard of half-drunk coffees on every surface. But heâd noticed how you started letting him sit closer now, let a compliment land without flinching off, and once, mid-story, had reached over and fixed his scrub top where it had folded under, casual as breathing.Â
Friend was the word youâd settled on. Jack was thinking about that when Shen dropped into step beside Jack with a cup of fresh Dunkin sweating in his hand.Â
âYou know itâs not standard to let your girlfriend occupy the family room for three hours of your shift, right?âÂ
âSheâs not my girlfriend,â Jack immediately clarified. It seemed more important to do now than it was earlier, when people only knew you when you came in as an emergency. Still, it felt wrong, like a key going in the wrong hole. âAnd you got a problem with it?âÂ
Shen lifted the coffee in surrender, unbothered. âYou know weâve grown to her. She and I do the Wordle every midnight.â Then, he spread one hand. âAdministratively, sheâs not staff. Sheâs not a patient. Sheâs not family of a patient. Which leaves the category Iâd have to call ââ He tilted his head, faux thoughtfulness. â â Abbotâs girlfriend, and I donât think thatâs in the handbook.âÂ
âTry again,â Jack drawled, thumbing a form he wasnât reading that didnât need to be read. âSheâs a nursing student getting hours of free tutoring off a board-certified attending. Put that in the handbook. Teaching hospital. Iâm teaching.â
Shen shook his head, letting out a small laugh. âAlright. Alright. Sheâs not your girlfriend. Mind if I ask her out, then?âÂ
Jack snorted. âIf you could only be so lucky.âÂ
âClearly she has a type for attendings,â he pressed, grinning. âOr is it just the ones with gray hair?â
Jack looked at him sideways. âThis is getting a bit weird, even for you.âÂ
âIâm happy for you, man. Even if youâre gonna make us all watch you not do anything about it for the next six months.â
âMind your own damn business.â
âSure,â he turned, lifting a hand over his shoulder as he went. âClose the blinds anyway. Thereâs a window on that door. Everyone can see her making you dumb.âÂ
Jack looked down the hall and set the form down before going there to close the blinds â telling himself it was for the window, for Shenâs real talk â and knowing, somewhere under that, that he was really just going to you.Â
He could see you through the window in the door before he reached it, which was, he supposed, exactly Shenâs point. You had a textbook open in your lap and you were chewing the end of your highlighter, brow pulled in, mouthing something to yourself, working a card over your head. Youâd pulled the sleeves of one of his old sweatshirts down to your hands, the one youâd swiped from his locker two weeks ago and never given back and that heâd never once asked for, because heâd found he didnât want it back, found he liked seeing it swallow you.
You gave him a smile when he walked in. He reached up and tipped the blinds shut on the window with two fingers, the floor outside tipping away.Â
âWhyâd you close them?â you asked, slightly bored.
âApparently the whole departmentâs been getting a show.â
You furrowed your brows then. âA show of what? Me failing?â
âSomethinâ like that.â He let it go at that, coming around and lowering himself onto the couch beside you, the cushion dipping and tipping you toward him a degree, what it always did that neither of you ever corrected. âHowâs it going? Honest.â
âHonestly?â You blew out a breath, closing the highlighter. âIâd kill for a drink.â
âOh?â Jack settled back against the couch, his arm coming up along the top of it behind you. âTelling that to the one man whoâs seen what you look like at the bottom of the bottle.â
âJaaaack,â you said, almost in a whine. âLetâs go to a bar.â
He snorted, dragging a hand down his face. âNow Iâm wondering whatâs pushing you toward the edge.â
He picked the flashcard you had set on the textbook, the one youâd been studying. He read the front of it without much intention â your handwriting was cramped and looping, a star drawn next to it â and turned over and checked the back. He did the same thing he always did, the story, the image; heâd done it a hundred times by now. He could do it half-asleep, and most nights he half was.Â
You thought about it for a second, your bottom lip tugged between your teeth, then walked yourself to the answer.Â
âMhm. See. Good,â he murmured. He flipped the card to the back to check you, and youâd had it. Of course youâd had it, youâd had more of this than you ever gave yourself credit for. âTell you what. Get the next three right, and Iâll get us a drink once your exams are done.âÂ
Your brows narrowed. âBribe?â
âItâs an incentive.â He held up the next card, eyes on you. âDonât think. Just answer me.âÂ
You did. One, then the next, then the one after. You were quicker now that there was something on the end of it, your lip caught between your teeth as you walked yourself there each time. He noticed you worked when there was something to earn. After all three, he hummed. âSee. Good girl, there you go.âÂ
He felt you go still beside him, and his eyes flickered up to you to see your eyes dropping to your textbook. He stayed silent a second, eyes raking over you, your thumb running the worn edge of a card back and forth.Â
Jack knew better than to point out how you being flustered was almost silly when heâd said the same words many times while taping you up or shining a penlight in your eyes. He let his arm stay where it was along the couch, hand not quite touching your shoulder, and watched the side of your face.
âYou wanna do some more?â he said finally, voice coming out rougher. âOr are we done for the night?â
You held up a finger, as if telling him to wait.
âOkay, then,â he mumbled, leaning back further against the couch. âTake your time.â
After a second, he turned to say something dry to break the silence. Youâd turned your head, too, and were closer than he initially realized, your eyes coming up off the card and finding his, near enough that whatever he had bubbling in his throat died there immediately.Â
Jack hummed involuntarily. You closed the sound by pressing your mouth to his, the feeling of the plushness so very featherlight, there and barely there, the softest press.Â
He went still as stone, every system in him locking at once. His hand was still along the back of the couch and his mouth hadnât answered yours, not because he didnât want to â God, he did â but because the entirety of him had gone still with the disbelief of it, with the you, here, choosing this â him â and the half-second of nothing stretched into a second, too damn long.Â
Heâd seized on you, the fact youâd nearly walked, had stood in his kitchen finding the kindest way to disappear, and here you were, closing the last of the distance yourself.
You pulled back like youâd touched a stove, a gasp leaving your mouth, replacing where his own had been.Â
âOh god.â Your hand flew up to your mouth, your eyes going wide before pinching shut completely. âIâm sorry â Iâm so sorry, Jack. I read that so, so wrong. Youâve been so nice and I â fuck, Iâm sorry.â
Jack made a pained sound that was lost somewhere in your ramble, at the sight of you snatching it back. Nothing had gone wrong. Jack knew youâd read nothing wrong, and that the only thing that had happened was that heâd been too slow, too stunned, too thirty-years-rusty to catch what had been handed to him in good reflex.
His hand came off the back of the couch and he caught your jaw, thumb on your chin as he pushed slightly against your skin. He was distantly aware that he couldnât remember the last time heâd been so afraid about leaning in to kiss a woman, and went in to try and give you back the second he lost, mouth finding yours the exact way every bone in his body knew he shouldâve the first time.Â
You made a startled sound against him before the entirety of you melted. His mouth worked against yours, thoroughly, making sure not to fumble it twice. His thumb stayed on your chin, tilting your face the half-degree he wanted it, and when your lips parted on half a breath, his entire upper body leaned in to follow it, deepening it.Â
It was you who moved first. Of course, it was you, always you. You followed it, the kiss pulling you up and forward, your knee coming over his thigh, and then you were settling over him. Jack let out the throatiest of a chuckle, still intent on keeping your mouth, as your hands slid from the front of his scrubs to his jaw.Â
Jackâs hands caught yours on instinct â one at your waist, one at your hip â steadying you down to him, your hips still slightly in the air like you werenât sure you could close the last of the distance, your weight held in the suspended air in the ache of almost, thighs braced on either side of his.Â
Jack pulled back just enough to look at you, letting his head fall back against the back of the couch, dragging his eyes up the length of you poised over him. He blew out a short breath, the corners of his lips kicking up as his palm glided up and down on the side of your waist, catching onto your tank top on accident to show a sliver of skin at your lip â warm, soft, the band of your shorts sitting low â and he watched his own hand do it before he dragged his eyes back to your face.
âNothing halfway with you, huh?â he said, the words practically coming out from his chest. His thumb rested against that bared sliver of you. âClimbing me at my work.â
You lowered your head, and your nose grazed against his. âYou started it.â
âI did?â
âYou closed the blinds.â
He let out a surprised laugh. âI can promise you I didnât expect this when I did that.âÂ
Your lips ghosted over his for a second, and his chest swelled at the sight of you trying to tamp down the sweetest smile. âProblem?âÂ
âNo.â The words came out immediately, because apparently somewhere in him, there was still something insatiable and teenage that had lurched up at the sight of you. âNo. No problem.â
His hand spread flat and warm against the small of your back, fingers slipping under the hem of the top to your warm skin there, and he drew you down, finally, that last suspended inch collapsing as he settled your weight flush over him.Â
He had to pinch his eyes shut a second, then open them again to take in the whole sight of you. His hand came up to your jaw. The light caught the loose hair at your temple, the bare line of your shoulder where the strap had slipped. Your mouth was full and flushed from his, parted slightly, your breath coming. The skin under his hand at your back was hot to the touch, and he spread his fingers wider against it just to feel more of it.Â
You were trying not to smile. Your lip caught between your teeth, the corners pulling anyway.Â
His finger perched against your jaw moved to your lips, dragging slowly across the lower one, parting it under the pad of his thumb. He watched it give, your breath warm against his skin.Â
Your eyes flicked up to his as your lip closed around the first knuckle, your tongue hesitantly pressing flat against the pad, the wet heat of it catching him so completely off guard that the air went out of him in a rough exhale. His other hand fisted at the small of your back, turning over to gather the hem of your tank in his grip.Â
âOh.â His eyes had dropped to your mouth and fixed there, his jaw slack as his head cocked to the side. âPretty.âÂ
His gaze was locked on the sight of his thumb disappearing past your lips, no hesitation in it, that same no-halfway boldness turned filthy and sweet all at once. The tired man in him went down all at once.Â
His thumb dragged free, catching on your bottom lip and tugging it down before it slipped loose. His chest heaved harder now under the warm weight of you.Â
âWhereâd that come from?â he muttered gruffly, almost to himself, thumb pressing the slick of your own lip back against you. His palm moved to cradle your face, tapping your cheek softly once. âCanât be doing things like that here, doll. Iâm on call.âÂ
âThen donât make it so easy.â Your lips brushed his thumb, then you moved down to press your mouth to the line of his jaw, the stubble catching your lips, then lower to the warm of his throat.
âYou callinâ me easy?â he said through a chuckle, letting his head tip back. You scraped your teeth over the cord of his neck and felt the whole of him go tight underneath you, his fingers flexing hard into the bare skin of your back.Â
âAlright.â His voice had dropped to stone. âYouâve had your fun.. No more of that,â he said, though made no move to stop you.
You peppered a line of pecks down his throat down to where his collar had started, your lips dragging over the jut of his collarbone through the thin cotton. He swallowed. One of your hands slid up to the back of your neck, fingers pushing into the soft gray at his nape, scratching light, and the other flattened over his chest, over the steady-then-not rhythm, fisting slow in the fabric just to feel him breathe wrong because of you.
You sat back an inch to look at him. His head was still tipped back against the couch, his throat bared where youâd left it momentarily pink and glossy, his eyes half-lidded. His hands had gone heavy and possessive at your hips, giving up pretending he wanted them anywhere else, you anywhere else.
You dragged your thumb over his bottom lip, watched it give, the same way he did to you.Â
âCan I ask you something?â you asked, quietly, your hips settling more firmly into his lap.Â
âMm.â His hands spread wide, settling you down harder against him. âMy social security number is â â
You laughed.Â
âTwo-two-six â â
âJack â â You swatted at his chest, the seriousness dissolving into something giddier. âIâm being serious. Stop.âÂ
âOkay, okay.â The corners of his mouth lifted up, and his hands squeezed slightly at your hips. He pulled his head up off the couch to meet your eyes properly. âShoot. Doubt I could stop you.âÂ
âAre you seeing anyone?â
He let the question sit, humming. His thumbs moved idly at your hips, head tilting against the couch like the question required any real thought. âThereâs a few women,â he said, lowering his voice as he looked at you, like he was letting you in on a secret. âThereâs a nice lady who brings me fruit baskets.â
Your hand, on the flat of his chest, slid up slow to his throat and he kept talking like he didnât notice.
â â thereâs this nurse on days who keeps leaving me her number at the station â â
You leaned in and closed your teeth slightly on his earlobe. He let out a short laugh, one that was dragged out of him, his head tipped to give more of it to you without permission.Â
âAlright. Okay,â he said as your nose dragged the line of his jaw. âStop doinâ that. I donât wanna explain teeth marks to the whole floor.âÂ
Your hips set firmer into his lap. âJack,â you warned. âI canât do this if youâre seeing fifty other women.âÂ
He sobered a degree, his thumb going still at your waist, his eyes coming up to actually hold yours. The joke drained out of his face as he realised the edge of seriousness you tried to tamp down, and he momentarily short-circuited at how it was even possible for you to wonder.Â
âHey.â His hand came up off your hip, pushed the hair back from your face and stayed there, cradling. âUntil five minutes ago, there were zero women. Forget fifty.âÂ
Your only response to that was a smile and your cheek leaning further against his palm. He let his thumb move once across his cheekbone, watching the way your cheek turned into his hand. Your eyes drifted half-shut. There was a speck of dried highlighter ink on the side of your finger where it curled against his throat. The strap of your top had slid off your shoulder again; he looked at all of you and stopped bothering to pretend, even to himself, that he was looking at anything other than the only thing in the room he wanted.
âWhat about you? You seeinâ anyone?â His thumb stayed where it was, but his voice had gone quieter. ââCause Iâve seen people bring you in. And I never liked one of âem.â
You huffed a small laugh, your nose grazing his. âJealous, Doctor?âÂ
âYeah.â He watched the laugh stall on your face at how easy he gave it up. âIf there is, he should be worried. Iâd like to take you on a nice date to change that.âÂ
âOhhhh,â you drawled through a laugh. âThereâs no one, but I wonât say no to the date.â
âThen youâve got yourself one, doll.â He kissed you on it â short, sure, his hand still cradling your face â sealing the thing as the corner of his mouth caught yours before he pulled back. He let his forehead rest against yours for a second and breathed you in.Â
Then, with a short groan, he tipped his head back off of yours.Â
âI gotta get back out there.â His thumb was still moving at your jaw, clearly working against the very thing he was saying. âMy work ethicâs going wrong and my residents might actually report me.âÂ
Then, his hands found your waist and he lifted you off, setting you off his lap and onto the cushion beside him where the entire thing had started. You landed with a small affronted sound, your hand fisting in his collar a beat longer before he had to let it go.Â
You flopped back into the cushion where heâd deposited you, one hand pressed flat to your chest, the picture of wounded. âI guess itâs true what they say about old men. They use you. Wham, bam, thank you maâam.âÂ
He stood up and scrubbed his palm down his face like he could wipe the last ten minutes off it before he had to walk out and be a doctor again. He could still feel the heat sitting at the back of his neck and even though heâd tried to scrub your gloss off, he was sure there was a remnant somewhere the worst possible person would notice.Â
âYup, got exactly what I wanted. Thank you, maâam.â His hand came down to rest at the top of your head and gave it a slow, condescending pat, ruffling the wreck of your hair worse than it already was. âIâm a terrible man. Youâre welcome to stay here while I go be one somewhere else.âÂ
He made himself step back and snagged his pen off the table, the badge, the small armor of the job clipping back into place piece-by-piece. The whole time his eyes kept catching on you, sprawled and rumpled where heâd set you down, looking up at him like the night had gone exactly where it was supposed to. Heâd seen this room a thousand nights. Heâd never once not wanted to leave it.Â
âMm. Gotta go home. Sâalmost three,â you mumbled. âAnd you get off at seven.âÂ
âI do.â
âSo.â You pushed yourself off the cushion, slow, gathering your hair back off your face and pushing up your strap, putting yourself back together piece by piece the same way he was, the night closing in on both ends. âIâll go and let you be a doctor. Youâve been very neglectful.âÂ
âDonât I know it,â he muttered. He watched you reach for your textbook, your highlighter, the flashcards, and sweep it all back into your bag, feeling the small stupid pull of not wanting the room to empty out.Â
He stepped in before you finished, catching your jaw, tilting your face up to kiss you once more. You went still under it, the bag forgotten halfway zipped, your hand coming up to rest light on his chest. He pulled back an inch to look at you.
âText me when you get home,â he said, thumb dragging along your jaw.Â
You chuckled, brows pulling in. âItâs a ten minute drive.â
âText me. Humor an old man, since Iâm so terrible to you already.â
You laughed slightly, and it was all wet and terrible, the sound. âIâm a bad use of you. Youâre this â you are so much, Jack, and Iâm a bad place to put it. So put it somewhere better.âÂ
genuinely felt like i got shot reading this partâŠ. reader i love you and your complicated mind and complicated relationship with substances soooooo much â€ïž
sadie this was so freaking perfect as always!!!!!!! i hope reader and him live happily ever after and nothing bad ever happens to them đ«đ«đ«
ââ miss independent ; jack abbot
summary: you've always kept things casual. it's just easier that way. you've got a roster, a routine, and absolutely no intention of changingâuntil you realise you've made one very inconvenient mistake: falling in love with dr. jack abbot.
notes: okay, this took way longer than it should have because i burnt out trying to make all the "medical stuff" absolutely perfect, then when i picked it back up i feel like the rhythm changed a little? hopefully for the better? i'm not sure if it's worth the wait, but i really hope y'all still enjoy! and as always, please let me know what you think!
warnings: swearing, blushing, italics, fwb type situation, jealousy, implied age gap, reader is in serious denial, medical descriptions, medical procedure descriptions (not graphic), most definitely incorrect medical information, sexual references, implied sexual relationships, making out (on shift), and one irritatingly handsome and unreasonably reasonable night shift attending.
word count: 15620
âHeyâoh, thank God.â You kick the door shut behind you. âCan you wait for me? I just need, like, five minutes.â
Ellis sighs. âReally? I was just about to leave.â
âFive minutes,â you say again, already moving toward your room.
You donât bother shutting the door. You just drop your bag at the foot of your bed, pull the faded old U.S. Army shirt over your head, and shove your sweatpants down. Then you grab a fresh set of scrubs and pull them on, tying the drawstring quickly before opening your bag to check for your badge and stethoscope.
âArenât you gonna shower?â Ellis calls from the living room.
âWe showered before I left,â you say, âbut I didnât have a clean pair of scrubs.â
Ellis gags. âGross. Whyâd you have to say âweâ?â
You sling your bag over your shoulder as you step out of your room, grinning.
âBecause we had some really great shower sex too.â
Ellis makes a dramatic vomiting noise as you both head out the door, her keys jingling as she turns to lock it.
âI thought Deran was your usual Thursday morning appointment,â she says.
You shrug. âScheduling conflict.â
She turns and starts down the hall, glancing at you from the corner of her eye. âYou are the schedule.â
âIâm restructuring,â you say lightly, falling into step beside her. âDonât think Deranâs making the cut.â
Ellis doesnât say anything else. She just watches you for a secondâeyes narrowing, brows drawing a little tighterâbefore shaking her head and turning toward the fire stairs door. You both make your way down to the parking garage in silence, crossing the dimly lit basement until you reach Ellisâ car.
The drive to the hospital isnât long. Ellis fills most of it complaining about a patient she handed off to McKay this morning who insisted his diagnosis was wrong because heâd googled itâand sheâs still muttering angrily by the time she pulls into the hospital parking lot.
âI swear,â she says, yanking the parking brake a little too hard, âif I hear the words âbut I googled itâ even once tonight, Iâm going to lose my mind.â
You snort softly as you climb out of the car, slinging your bag over your shoulder before shutting the door. You both head inside through the ambulance bay, keeping out of the way of an arriving trauma as the paramedics wheel the gurney throughâsomething about chest pain, you overhear.
âTrauma oneâs open,â Dana calls.
âDr. Toomarian, with me.â
Your head snaps up at the sound of Jackâs voice, your gaze landing on him beside the gurney as he guides it through the trauma bay doors, that familiar mask of focus already in place.
Then he looks at you, something flickering across his face.
âHeyâdonât disappear. I need to talk to you after this.â
You lift your hand, pointing a finger at yourself. âMe?â
He nods once before turning into the trauma bay, the glass door swinging shut behind him.
âOoh,â Ellis murmurs as you both turn down the back hall. âYouâre in trouble.â
You roll your eyes. âYeah, right.â
âMaybe heâs restructuring,â she adds, the corner of her mouth lifting. âThink youâll make the cut?â
You shoot her a flat look. âVery funny.â
Ellis smirks as she opens her locker, shrugging her bag off her shoulder and shoving it inside. You do the sameâmoving on autopilot as you sling your stethoscope around your neck, clip your badge at your hip, and stuff your backpack in your locker before shutting the door.
You head back toward the hub side by side, both peering into the trauma bay as you pass. The patient is stable now, half-conscious on the bed while Jack gives orders and Jesse preps for transfer to a room for monitoring. Dr. Robby is in there too now, looking as tired as always with his arms folded and protective glasses pushed up on top of his head.
âEvening, ladies,â Lena says from behind the nursesâ desk. âGet a good sleep?â
âAlways,â Ellis replies as she grabs a tablet from the rack.
âGood enough,â you mutter, tipping your head back to read the board.
âMm.â Lena peers at you over the top of her glasses. âWell, maybe you should start prioritising sleep over extracurriculars.â
Ellis snorts beside you.
âLena,â you gasp, voice thick with mock offence. âI donâtââ
You stop short as Jack steps up beside you, offering Lena a polite nod before looking back at you.
âYou have my badge.â
You frown. âWhat?â
âMy badge,â he says again, already reaching for the badge at your hip.
He unclips it from your scrub pants and holds it up, brows lifting just slightly.
âAttending physician, huh?â
You shrug. âThought it was time I got a promotion.â
He huffs out a small laugh, shaking his head as he fastens the badge to his scrub top and fishes your badge from his back pocket. Then he steps in closer, his fingers grazing your hip as he tugs on the waistband of your pants and clips the badge where his had been.
âTry to keep track of it,â he mutters, already turning away.
You donât respond. You just roll your eyes and turn back to the nursesâ station, where Lena is still watching you over the rim of her glasses, utterly unimpressed.
âYou didnât even notice?â Ellis asks.
You lift one shoulder. âI just grabbed it off the floor.â
âOkay,â Lena mutters, glancing back down at her chart. âIâm choosing not to know.â
Ellis shakes her head. âYouâre unbelievable.â
âI know,â you say, tipping your head back again to read the board. âBut you love me.â
She snorts, not even looking up from her tablet.
âCome on.â You bump your shoulder against hers. âLetâs go check out the elbow dislocation in One.â
âFine,â she sighs, âbut Iâm not doing traction.â
You roll your eyes for what feels like the umpteenth time as you start moving, heading toward the North corridor with Ellis at your heel. When you pull back the curtain at North One, the man lying there is exactly what you expectedâmid-twenties, gym shorts, red with embarrassment and trying not to wince even though the shape of his shoulder is very wrong.
âAlright, Mr. Donovan,â you say, pulling on a pair of gloves. âLetâs have a look at that shoulder.â
His eyes flick up to your face, the faintest hint of a smirk tugging at the corner of his mouth.
âAre you a doctor?â
âSure am,â you reply as you step closer to the bed. âAnd with me is Dr. Ellis. Sheâs going to help me get that bone back in place, but first youâre going to have to tell us how you did it.â
He grimaces as you gently prod his upper arm.
âYeahâuhâI was just at the gym,â he starts, voice strained.
âBenching?â Ellis asks.
He nods. âYeah.â
âLet me guessâpersonal best?â
He nods again. âYeah. How did youââ
âHappens more often than you think,â you cut in, your fingers finding the pulse at his wrist. âMove your fingers.â
He wriggles them slowly.
âAny numbness?â
He shakes his head.
âI was just putting the bar back,â he says. âMy arm twisted a bit and it just⊠popped.â
You glance over your shoulder at Ellis, and she nods.
âOkay, Mr. Donovanââ
âYou can call me Chase,â he interrupts, the corner of his mouth lifting a little higher.
You nod once. âAlright, Chase. Weâre going to give you something for the pain and a muscle relaxant so itâs easier to get it back into place. Then Dr. Ellis and I are going to do the reduction.â
âWill it hurt?â
âNot much,â Ellis replies. âMaybe a little discomfort, but itâll be quick.â
âOkay,â he mutters, wincing again as he tries to shift in the bed.
You look at Ellis. âFentanyl and midaz?â
She nods, already turning away to find a workstation.
âWeâll be back in about five minutes,â you tell Chase. âJust as soon as a nurse administers the medication and it has enough time to kick in.â
âFive minutes, huh? Thatâs just enough time for me to figure out how to ask for your number.â
You snort. âLetâs just get your shoulder back in first, then see how you feel.â
âOuch,â he chuckles. âIs that your subtle way of saying you have a boyfriend?â
You hesitate, taking half a step back from the bed.
âUhâno,â you mutter. âNo boyfriend.â
He smirks. âSo I have a shot?â
You shake your head as you turn away, a faint smile pulling at your lips. âLike I saidâletâs see how you feel after I manhandle your humerus back into its socket.â
He doesnât say anything elseâjust lets out a quiet breath of laughter as you turn and step out of the room.
Your gaze flicks up as you reach for the curtain, and only then do you notice Jack standing thereâarms folded, shoulders set, his hazel eyes fixed on you like heâs waiting for something.
âOhâhey,â you say. âNeed me?â
He shakes his head. âNope. Just doing the rounds. Want a hand with the reduction?â
âNah, Iâve got Ellis,â you reply, starting back toward Central. âBut youâre more than welcome to supervise.â
He scoffs, falling into step beside you. âYou donât need supervising.â
âI know.â You glance at him from the corner of your eye, a smirk tugging at your lips. âBut I know how you like to watch.â
His mouth quirks, like heâs trying not to laugh.
âCareful,â he murmurs.
âOr what?â you tease, stopping just before the nursesâ station.
His eyes are a little darker now, the tops of his cheeks dusted pink.
âYou donât want to find out,â he says, his voice low enough that only you can hear.
Something twists low in your bellyâand you get the sudden, distinct feeling that you do, in fact, want to find out.
âAbbot,â Lena calls before you can say anything else. âTrauma inboundâcyclist versus vehicle, ETA three minutes.â
Jack pauses for a half a secondâthen nods. âAlright, letâs prep Trauma Two.â He looks at you. âYou in?â
You pull a face, all mock disappointment. âOh, I wish I could, but Iâve got that reductionâŠâ
He gives you a flat look, the corner of his mouth pulling just slightly. âMm. Tragic.â
âGood luck, though,â you add, flashing him a grin.
You turn away before he does, moving around the hub to grab a tablet and find your next patient. It isnât long before the paramedics come crashing through the ambulance bay doors with a groaning patient on the gurneyâand you take that as your cue to get back to the shoulder dislocation.
âAlright, Chase,â you say, pulling back the curtain. âLetâs do this.â
He gives you a lopsided smile. âI was hoping Iâd see you again.â
Ellis snorts. âMidaz is working.â
You laugh softly as you step up beside his affected arm, adjusting the bed slightly before pulling on a pair of gloves. Ellis does the same, moving into position on the other side and bracing one hand against his good shoulder.
You look at her. âReady?â
She nods once.
âOkay, Chase,â you say, one hand wrapping gently around his wrist. âStay loose for me.â
You place your other hand at his elbow and bring his arm out from his body, easing it into position.
âHeyârelax,â Ellis says. âDonât fight it.â
He lets out a breath, the tension in his body easing.
âThatâs it,â you murmur, starting to pull his arm outward.
You feel the resistance from the dislocation, holding his arm steady untilâhis shoulder drops.
Ellis nods. âGood. Now rotate.â
You carefully rotate his arm out, slow and controlled, until you feel a small shiftâthe soft clunk of the bone slipping back into place. Chase flinches, inhaling sharply, thenâ
âOhââ He blinks. âOh, thatâsâthatâs way better.â
You give him a small smile as you guide his arm back in, keeping it supported while Ellis grabs the sling.
âMove your fingers,â you tell him.
He does.
âAny numbness?â
He shakes his head.
âGood.â
You move aside as Ellis steps in with the sling, fastening it over his shoulder before adjusting the bed again.
âComfortable?â she asks.
Chase nods slowly. ââM tired.â
âThen have a nap.â
You peel your gloves off and drop them in the waste bin, squirting a pump of sanitiser into your palm as you turn back toward Chase.
âWeâre going to keep you here for a bit, okay? Just to monitor you and get an X-ray to make sure everythingâs back in place.â
âYouâre leaving me?â he mumbles, eyes half-lidded.
You shake your head, letting out a quiet laugh. âIâll be back in a bit to see how youâre feeling, alright?â
He mutters something else as his eyes slip shut, but itâs too soft for you to hear.
Then, after a beat, Ellis looks at you. âGonna give him your number?â
You roll your eyes. âUm, no.â
âWhy not?â
âBecause I'm notââ
âRosterâs looking a little thin,â she says as she turns and steps out of the room.
You follow her, frowning. âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â
She shrugs. âNot that Iâm keeping track, but⊠by my count, youâre down to one.â
You let out a short, disbelieving scoff. âOkayâwell, not that itâs any of your business, but Andrew moved to Canada, and Craig got back with his ex.â
She glances at you from the corner of her eye. âAnd you dropped Deran, soââ
âLike I said,â you cut in, lifting your chin just slightly. âIâm restructuring.â
âRestructuring,â she repeats mildly, âor retiring?â
Before the words have even landed, sheâs goneâslipping into North Five with her tablet in hand and that stupid little smirk still curled at the corner of her mouth. You can faintly hear her greet the patient as the door eases shut, leaving you confused and alone in the middle of the North corridor.
Retiring?
You blink, your brows drawing tighter.
Retiring?
What the hell is that supposed to mean? Retiring from what?
From having fun? Having casual sex? Blowing off a little steam in the most enjoyable way you know how?
Itâs not like youâre some irresponsible party animalâyou barely go out, you only drink on occasion, and the hardest drug youâve done since starting med school is ibuprofen. In fact, youâd argue that youâre the opposite of irresponsible. You take your casual sex roster very seriously. You donât take risks, you make sure every single one of your partners has regular sexual-health check-ups, and you make sure to actually get to know them before you even sign them up.
Which is exactly why youâre not going around giving out your number to random patients.
You need to know someone before you start something casual. You need to know that theyâre not going to ask for more, that theyâre going to be mature and understand exactly where you both stand.
You need to know that you can trust them not to be irresponsible.
Because the last thing you need is some trigger-happy idiot who isnât wearing a condom getting caught up in the moment and finishing inside you. Not that you ever go without a condom.
Except for...
Wellâexcept for Jack.
But thatâs different. He knows what heâs doing. You trust himâand youâre on birth control.
So it doesnât really matter if, occasionally, he finishesâ
âYou good, or are you just going to keep staring into space?â
Your head snaps up, heat flooding your cheeks as you meet Hendersonâs gaze.
âUhâyeah, sorry, I was justââ
He chuckles. âNo need to apologiseâbut if youâre bored, I could use an extra set of hands in Eight.â
You tilt your head. âWorth it?â
âForearm lac. Exposed tendon.â
You nod. âIâm in.â
The next few hours blur together in a steady stream of night shift weirdnessâa woman with a mystery rash whose story evolves from laundry detergent to poison ivy, someone who decided Gorilla Glue was a reasonable substitute for hair gel, a fish hook through a hand with the fish still attached, and a DIY dentistry job with half the tooth left and a lot of blood.
You barely catch a break until your patient in Central Twelveâwhen you and Ellis absolutely have to leave the room before you both burst out laughing at the mortified man who insists he slipped and fell on a Buzz Lightyear action figure. Because how else would it get stuck up there?
In your defence, you had managed to maintain some semblance of professionalism right up until Ellis muttered under her breath, âTo infinity and beyond, I guess.â
Thatâs when you lost itâmuttering the first excuse you could think of before slipping out the door and doubling over with laughter.
âOh my God,â Ellis says, wiping the corner of her eye. âI love the night shift.â
You press a hand to your stomach, still aching from the laughter.
âStopââ you gasp, shaking your head. âI canât go back in there.â
âIn where?â Shen asks, appearing in front of you.
You and Ellis both go still for a second, the laughter dying down as you exchange a look.
âActually,â Ellis says, turning back to Shen with a smirk. âI think this case might be perfect for you, Dr. Shen.â
You nod. âOh, absolutely. We could really use your expertise on this one.â
Shen frowns. âWhatâs the case?â
âItâs hard to explain,â Ellis says quickly. âYouâre better off seeing it for yourself.â
Shen isnât stupid, obviously, but he is incredibly curiousâas most doctors are. So despite the fact that both you and Ellis are doing a terrible job of hiding your amusement, he takes the tablet from your outstretched hand and opens the door to Central Twelve.
Ellisâ eyes go wide, but before either of you can say anything else, someone calls your name across the department.
âTrauma Oneâget in here,â Jack says, waving a hand.
You let out a sigh, tipping your head back for a split second before jogging across Central to meet the paramedics.
âTwenty-four-year-old maleâfell onto a plastic prop sword,â the first paramedic says, guiding the gurney into Trauma One. âPenetrating injury to the left thigh, object still in situ. Bleeding controlled, pulses intact, GCS fifteen. Fentanyl given en route, vitals stable.â
You almost snort when you realise the man is dressed in a pirate costume, his plastic cutlass wedged about four inches into his anterolateral thigh.
âAlright, weâll take it from here,â Jack says. âCan you tell us your name, sir?â
âJosh,â the patient replies, his voice strained.
âStabilise the leg,â you tell Mateo, moving into position opposite him. âOn my countâone, two, three.â
You shift the patient from gurney to bed, and the paramedics clear out.
âJosh!â
A young woman rushes into the room, clearly from the same partyâwearing what can only be described as a very short, very inaccurate interpretation of a nurseâs uniform.
âOh my God. Is he bleeding out?â
Jack glances up, his lips twitching when he spots the woman. âI donât remember approving that uniform.â
You shoot him a look. âVery funny, Dr. Abbot.â
His eyes linger on you for a beat too long.
âNot that Iâd object,â he murmurs.
You arch a brow. âThe nurses might.â
âIâm not a nurse,â the woman says, indignant. âIâm a sexy doctor.â
You look her up and down again, your gaze catching on the small, laminated name badge pinned to her chest with âDr. Feelgoodâ printed in bold pink letters.
You hum. âRight.â
âStill not the sexiest doctor in the room,â Jack mutters as he moves around the bed.
Your eyes flick up, meeting his for half a second, the corner of your mouth lifting just slightly before you catch yourself and turn back to Josh.
âHave you had anything to drink tonight, Josh?â you ask.
Somewhere behind you, Dr. Feelgood starts to answer for him, but Bridget quickly steps in and guides her out of the trauma bay.
âIâve got a dorsalis pedis pulse,â Jack notes.
Josh groans, mumbling something unintelligible under his breath.
âWeâre going to get you something for the pain, alright?â you say, watching Olive insert the IV. âBut first, I need to know what happened and how much youâve had to drink.â
Mateo carefully cuts up the leg of Joshâs pants, fully exposing the entry site.
âIânghâI fell on itââ Josh manages. âItâs not evenânot even realâfuckââ
Mateo turns away quickly, hiding his amusement.
âWhat about alcohol?â you ask again.
âLikeâtwo beers,â he replies.
âAny drugs?â
âNoâahâno drugs.â
You nod. âOkay. Letâs give another twenty-five of fent.â
âCan we get surgery down here?â Jack asks as he steps back from the bed.
Mateo moves to grab the phone. âCalling now.â
Jack nods, folding his arms and lifting his head to look at you. âAlright. Whatâs next?â
âRepeat neurovascular exam, stabilise the object, donât remove it, and get imaging before anyone touches it.â
He nods again. âGood.â
You try to ignore the way heâs watching you as you move to the foot of the bed, going through the motions of the neurovascular checks a little slower than he had just a minute ago.
âPulses still intact. Cap refill under two. No numbness,â you report.
âGood,â he says again. âKeep checking. If that changes, we move faster.â
You nod once before turning back to Josh.
âDo you know when your last tetanus shot was, Josh?â
He shakes his head faintly. âNo.â
âOkay, tetanus boosterââ you glance up at Jack, âand antibiotics.â
âWhich antibiotic?â
âCefazolin?â
He watches you for a beat, the corner of his mouth lifting just slightlyâthen he turns to Olive. âYou heard the doctor. Get him some cefazolin.â
You drop your head, biting back a smile as you watch Mateo start to clean the entry site.
âLetâs flag contamination risk for surgery,â Jack says, pulling off his gloves. âAnd X-ray forââ
âPosition and fragments,â you cut in, finishing for him. âAnd CTA left leg to clear the vessels before removal.â
He tosses his gloves in the bin and turns back toward you, brows raised.
âAlright,â he says, mildly amused. âI can see Iâm no longer needed in here.â
You flash him a small, smug smile before turning back to the wound.
âEntry looks clean, bleedingâs controlledâletâs pack around it and get him to imaging.â
Mateo nods and moves to grab more gauze, helping you pack carefully around the plastic blade so it doesnât shift during transport. Jack lingers just long enough to make sure youâve got everything under control before he steps out of the room, slipping back into the quiet chaos of the night shift.
You and Mateo quickly finish stabilising the leg before the nurses prep him for imaging. Theyâre just about to wheel the bed out when Walsh arrives from the OR, fighting a smile when she sees the pirate impaled by his own sword. You give her a brief rundown as you pull your gloves off and squirt a pump of sanitiser into your hands. She nods along, asks a few questions, then mutters something about prepping an operating room while they wait for imaging.
When you finally step out of the trauma bay, you spot Jack standing with Lena at the nursesâ station. You donât quite catch all of their conversation as you walk past to grab a tablet, but you do hear something about ETA three minutes and decide to make yourself scarce before youâre dragged into another trauma.
You scan the board briefly, pick your next patient, then head toward the South corridor, already pulling up the chart for South Twenty on your tablet. Youâre halfway through the patientâs intake whenâ
You stopâthen take two steps back, turning your head toward South Seventeen.
âDeran?â
The man in the bed glances up, blowing a lock of dark blond hair out of his eyes.
He smiles. âHey, doc.â
âWhatâre you doing here?â you ask, despite the obvious.
Heâs got his left hand cradled in his lap, wrapped loosely in an oil-stained rag thatâs already soaked through in places, blood seeping into the fabric and drying in dark blotches. His knuckles underneath are split and swollen, his pinky finger sticking out at an odd angle, the rest of his hand already blown out around it.
âI was helping a friend with his truck,â he says, glancing back down at his mangled hand. âThe prop rod slipped, and the hood came straight down.â
âOuch,â you murmur, stepping forward.
He huffs out a short laugh. âYeah. Ouch.â
âMind if I take a look?â
âGo for it.â
You set your tablet at the foot of the bed and step up beside him, leaning in as you gently lift the rag to get a better look at whatâs underneath. Itâs not that deformedâjust swollen, and his pinky finger is obviously broken, but otherwise itâs mostly just bruising and superficial cuts. At least he wonât need stitchesâmaybe some steri-strips and a splintâbut youâre more concerned about the dirty rag heâs got wrapped around it.
âWhat dâyou think?â he asks, the corner of his mouth lifting. âAm I going to make it?â
You tilt your head. âMaybe. If we act fast.â
He laughs softly, the sound ringing almost too familiar in your ears.
You straighten quickly, clearing your throat. âDo youâuhâhave you seen a doctor yet?â
He shakes his head. âNo. Just you.â
You nod once and pick up your tablet, flicking out of South Twentyâs chart.
âCool. Iâll be your doctorââ You pause, glancing back at him. âUnless you think thatâs a conflict of interest?â
His smile widens. âYou mean the prettiest doctor in Pittsburghâs gonna fix me up?â
You roll your eyes. âJust Pittsburgh, huh?â
âWell, I couldnât say the worldâthatâd be way too cheesy.â
You snort. âAll your lines are cheesy.â
He gasps. âAll of them?â
âAll of them,â you echo, keeping your eyes fixed firmly on your tablet.
âWow,â he mutters. âTough crowd.â
You shake your head, trying not to smile as you pull up his chart and make a quick note, effectively assigning yourself as his physician. Then you set the tablet back on the bed and turn to grab a pair of gloves.
âAlright, I just need to have a closer look before I can get you some pain relief.â
You nudge the stool closer to the bed and sit down, leaning in as Deran gingerly shifts his hand. You peel the rag back properly this time, murmuring an apology when he winces, and set the dirty thing aside before reaching for gauze and saline.
âThis might sting a bit,â you say, already starting to clean the dried blood from his knuckles. âLet me know if you want me to stop.â
âDo I need a safe word?â he asks smugly.
Your gaze flicks up, unamusedâthen back down to his hand without a word.
âIâm gonna go with meatball,â he decides. âBecauseââ
ââyour favourite thing in the world is a meatball sub from that deli on Carson,â you cut in. âI know.â
His brows lift. âWow.â
Your eyes flick up again. âWow what?â
He shrugs, wincing slightly as you turn his hand. âNothing. I just⊠didnât think you paid that much attention.â
You donât look up this time, unsure what you could possibly say that wouldnât turn this into a deeper conversation than youâre willing to have right now.
After a beat, Deran hums. âStill doing the whole unavailable thing, huh?â
You roll your eyes. âItâs not a thing, Deran. I work fifteen hours a day with hardly any phone reception, and my days off are spent catching up on paperwork and sleep. I am unavailable.â
âYeah, I know,â he says, glancing back down at his hand. âI guess I just figured since I hadnât heard from you in a while, maybe some lucky guy finally managed to sweep you off your feet.â
You scoff, focusing a little too hard on wrapping fresh gauze around his hand. âYeah, wellâyouâd be wrong.â
He grimaces when you turn his hand again, being careful not to bump his pinky finger as you finish dressing the cuts. Then you gently set it back in his lap and start cleaning up, swivelling on your stool to toss the oily rag and all the bloodied gauze into the waste bin.
âAlright,â you say, turning back. âLift your hand for me.â
He lifts it slowly.
âCan you move your fingers?â
His eyes go wide.
You give him a flat look. âJust try.â
His expression twists as he slowly flexes his fingers, letting out a low, pained groan.
âOkay, thatâs enough,â you say, scooting forward again. âAny numbness or tingling?â
He shakes his head. âNo.â
You reach out and press gently against the tip of his pinkyâuntil it turns whiteâthen watch the colour return beneath his nail.
âCap refillâs good,â you mutter, more to yourself.
He winces again as he lowers his hand back into his lap.
âSo, whatâs the verdictâis my weekend ruined?â
You snort. âNot entirely. Iâll get you some pain relief and order an X-ray. We might have to reduce the pinky, but I want imaging before I touch itâI need to see exactly where the fracture is first.â
âWell then,â he says, smirking as he lifts his right hand and holds up just the index and middle finger. âGood thing Iâm right-handed.â
It takes a moment for the joke to land. You tilt your head, frowning faintly as you stare at his fingers.
Then it clicks.
âOh my God,â you laugh, grabbing his hand and forcing it back down. âWhat is wrong with you?â
He grins. âWhat? You said it yourselfâmy weekend isnât entirely ruined.â
You shake your head. âI didnât think you meant that.â
âWell,â he says slowly, leaning in, âI donât have plans yet, but if youâve got time between paperwork and sleeping, maybe we couldââ
âEverything alright in here?â
You turn to see Jack stepping past the curtain. He stops at the foot of the bed and clasps his hands behind his back, eyes flicking curiously between you and Deran.
You straighten a little and nod. âYep. All good.â
âExcept my hand,â Deran adds, lifting his injured hand.
âRight.â You shake your head once. âDeran, this is Dr. Abbotâheâs the senior attending on shift tonight.â
Then you glance back at Jack.
âCrush injury to the left hand after a truck hood came down on it. Significant swelling through the fifth digit with an obvious deformity at the pinky, plus some superficial lacerations across the knuckles. Neurovascularly intactâcap refillâs good, no numbness or tingling. Iâve cleaned and dressed the cuts, and I was just about to send him for imaging before we decide if the finger needs reducing.â
Jack nods once. âGood. Any pain management?â
You stand and nudge the stool back, picking up your tablet from the end of the bed.
âI was just about to order some ibuprofen and Tylenol.â
He nods again. âSounds like youâve got everything under control.â
You give him a small smile before turning back to Deran. âHang tightâIâll come find you once I get your X-ray results.â
He pouts. âYouâre just going to leave me here?â
You roll your eyes, already turning away. âUnavailable, remember.â
Jack slides the curtain shut before following you out, falling into step beside you as you head back toward Central.
âYou know him?â
You glance up from your tablet. âUhâyeah. Old friend.â
He lifts a brow. âFriend?â
You give him a look. âWhat do you want me to say?â
He shrugs, letting out a quiet laugh. âFriend works.â
âGood,â you mutter, stopping at one of the workstations and setting your tablet down.
Jack pauses beside you. âMeet me in Central Twelve once youâve put the orders in.â
You frown. âWhy?â
The corner of his mouth twitches.
âBecause Iâm your boss, thatâs why.â
Then heâs gone, moving through the department with that faint hitch in his stride and an ass that absolutely should not look that good in scrubs.
You shake your head and turn your attention back to the computer in front of you, swiping your badge to log in. You quickly pull up Deranâs chart, make a few notes, and order the ibuprofen and Tylenol. Then, just because you can, you try to pull up Central Twelveâs chartâif only to annoy Jack by getting a head startâbut thereâs nothing in the system.
Great. Must be a brand-new patient.
You let out an irritated little sigh before logging off and grabbing your tablet again.
The door to Central Twelve is shut when you get there, which isnât unusual, but immediately makes you fear the worst for whatever case Jack has waiting for you inside.
You take a breath, turn the handleâand freeze when you spot the empty bed.
âShut the door,â Jack says, without looking up from the supply drawer heâs rummaging through.
You hesitate. âAm I in trouble?â
He sighs. âDo you ever just do what youâre told?â
You finally step into the room, shutting the door behind you before setting your tablet on the room cart.
âSometimes,â you say. âDepends whatâs in it for me.â
Jack straightens, turning toward you. âThatâs a remarkably transactional approach to life.â
You shrug. âI believe in reciprocation.â
He takes a step closer. âThatâs not what reciprocation means.â
âReally?â you ask. âBecause last time I checkedâin the shower, by the wayâyou were getting a pretty good deal.â
His mouth quirks. âAre you saying I owe you?â
You step forward. âWhoâs keeping count?â
âMaybe I am,â he murmurs.
Before you can say anything else, his fingers catch the hem of your shirt and he tugsâjust enough to pull you off balance. Then his mouth is on yours. Slow, deep, unhurried. As if there isnât an entire emergency department waiting on the other side of that door.
He presses closer, his hand moving beneath your shirt, rough fingers digging into your hip as his mouth parts lazily against yours. His tongue slides along your bottom lip, pulling a breathy little sigh from the back of your throat as your fingers curl into the front of his scrub top. You tilt your head, leaning in, chasing moreâand for a second it almost feels like heâs going to give it to you.
Then he pulls away.
Your lips follow instinctively, and he chuckles, taking a deliberate step back.
You blink. âWhat was that?â
He lifts a shoulder. âNothing.â
âNothing?â
He steps toward the door.
âDr. Toomarianâs got a patient to present.â
You stare at him. âSeriously?â
He reaches for the handle.
âSouth Sixteen.â
Then heâs gone, and youâre left watching the door swing shut with something strange and unfamiliar stirring beneath your ribs.
That was weird.
Not unpleasant. Not by any means. Just... unusual.
It takes you a little longer than it should to remember how to move. How to suck in a full breath, pick up your tablet, and head back out into the chaos of the night shift past midnight.
The department is exactly as youâd left it. Patients complaining about pain that could have been prevented with a little common sense. Doctors running on nothing but caffeine and questionable protein snacks. And Lena in the middle of it all, her glasses perched low on her nose as she scans the tablet in her hand.
âHey,â you say, stepping up to the nursesâ station. âGot anything easy for me?â
Lena glances over the top of her glasses. âEasy left three hours ago.â
You sigh. âCome on. Thereâs got to be something.â
Her eyes flick back down. âIâve got a Ms. Callahan in Central Nine. Migraine, vitals are fine.â
âPerfect. Iâllââ
âIâve got this one,â Jack says, appearing beside you. âDr. Toomarian needs a resident in South Sixteen.â
You frown. âBut Iââ
âNow.â
You stare at him for a second, wondering how the hell a man can kiss you breathless one minute then start barking orders at you the next.
âFine,â you mutter, gripping your tablet a little tighter. âBut when Iâm admitted for emotional whiplash, I want it documented that youâre the reason why.â
Then you turn and head for the South hall before youâre tempted to say something even less professional.
You donât normally snap like thatâespecially not at an attendingâbut something about the last fifteen minutes has crawled beneath your skin and stayed there, impossible to ignore. Your pulse still hasnât settled properly. Your cheeks are still warm. And every time you think about Jackâs stupid little half-smirk after heâd kissed you, youâre annoyed.
You just canât figure out why.
He doesnât normally kiss you in the middle of a shift.
He doesnât normally order you around like youâre a lost med student.
And he definitely doesnât volunteer to see migraine patients.
But you donât normally get this irritated. Especially not at Jack. The two of you are always messing around. Playing games. Flirting. Itâs what you do. So whatâs so different about tonight?
âHey.â Ellis grabs your arm, stopping you just outside of South Sixteen. âYou good?â
You blink. âYeah. Why?â
âYou look like youâre contemplating homicide.â
âAnd if I am?â
âIâd be obliged to remind you that weâre here to save lives, not end them.â
âDamn. Guess Iâll just have to wait until after my shift.â
Her eyes narrow, the corner of her mouth lifting just slightly. âIs this about who I thought I saw being taken up to imaging?â
You frown. âWho did you think you saw?â
âDeran.â
âOh.â
You glance over her shoulder at the empty bed in South Seventeen.
âThat was fast,â you mutter.
Her brows lift. âWait. Youâre his physician?â
You shrug. âYeah.â
âIsnât that a conflict of interest?â
âIsnât my life a conflict of interest?â
She stares at you for a moment, amusement tugging at her mouth. âItâs one of those nights, huh?â
You sigh. âYep.â
She puts a hand on your shoulder. âGood luck.â
âThanks.â
Then she gives you a brief nod and continues down the hall, humming a tune you donât recognise as if to rub it in that sheâs having a far more pleasant shift than you are.
You spend the next half hour alongside Nazely, talking her through a chest pain workup and reassuring the patient whoâs convinced every twinge in his left arm is the beginning of the end. By the time youâve reviewed the ECG for the third time and convinced him that googling symptoms at two in the morning isnât a substitute for medical advice, youâre finally able to move on.
The shift settles back into its usual rhythm after that. Patients. Notes. Consults. A never-ending stream of questions from the new med student stuck on nights and equally never-ending complaints from people who should have gone to bed instead of doing dumb things that landed them in the ED.
It isnât until two a.m. that you finally find yourself back at the nursesâ station with Ellis, sipping a vending machine energy drink sheâd forced into your hand while the department enjoys a rare moment of relative calm.
âShen said the Butt Lightyear guy went up for surgery.â
Lena tilts her head. âButt Lightyear?â
âYou donât want to know,â you murmur into your drink.
âThey tried removing it manually but were worried about the wings,â Ellis explains.
âThe wings?â
She smirks. âYeah. You press a button and the wings pop out.â
You shut your eyes. âOuch.â
âLet me guess,â Lena says, peering over the rim of her glasses. âHe slipped?â
Ellis nods. âYep. Total accident.â
âYeah, and the toy just happened to be completely covered in lube too,â you add.
Lena sighs. âEvery day I learn something new against my will.â
You and Ellis both laugh as Lena turns away, seemingly done with this conversationâand the people of Pittsburgh judging by the defeated look on her face. Youâre about to reach for your tablet to pull up the X-ray images off poor Butt Lightyear when a bright laugh cuts through the quiet hum of the department, drawing your attention toward Central Nine.
You narrow your eyes. âWhy is he still in there?â
Ellis shrugs. âNot sure. I thought it was just a migraine.â
âLaughing pretty hard for someone with a headache,â you mutter.
Ellis glances at you. âDo you know who she is?â
âNope.â
âHuh.â
You look at her. âWhat?â
She shakes her head. âNothing.â
âI have no idea who she is,â you say, grabbing your tablet. âAnd frankly? I donât care.â
Ellis nods. âOkay.â
âGood.â
Then you turn away before she can say anything else, heading toward the North corridor even though you have no idea which patient youâre actually on your way to see.
It isnât long before you find yourself passing through Central again, peering into Ms. Callahanâs room to see if sheâs been discharged yet. Which she hasnâtâbut at least Jackâs not in there anymore. Not that it really matters to you, but you canât imagine the rest of the department is thrilled about an attending wasting half the night on a migraine patient.
Ten minutes later, you walk past Central Nine again. Not because youâre looking this timeâyouâre genuinely just passing on your way to find a free workstationâbut sheâs still in there. And she certainly doesnât look like sheâs in pain anymore.
If you were her, youâd be demanding discharge papers by now.
The third time you glance at Ms. Callahan, she catches your eye, and you offer her a small, awkward smile before quickly glancing back down at your chart. The same chart youâve been pretending to work on for the better part of fifteen minutes without writing a single coherent sentence.
âYou know thatâs Abbotâs ex, right?â
You blink. âWhat?â
Shen nods toward Central Nine. âMs. Callahan. Sheâs Abbotâs ex.â
You glance back at the gorgeous blonde woman scrolling through her phone, not at all looking like someone suffering from a migraine.
âOh.â
Shen nods slowly. âAnyway. Heâs looking for you.â
You frown. âWho?â
âDr. Abbot.â
âWhy?â
Shen shrugs. âDidnât say.â
You sigh. âGreat.â
He watches you curiously as you log out of the computer and push your chair back.
âDid he say where?â you ask.
âSouth.â
You nod once. âThanks.â
Then you turn and head toward the South corridor, but not without one last glance at the woman in Central Nine. The woman who apparently used to date Jack. The woman who, for reasons you still donât entirely understand, is suddenly very difficult to stop thinking about.
You spot Jack standing beside the workstations in the middle of the South hall, frowning at something on his tablet. He looks tired now, his curls standing at odd angles thanks to the way he drags his hand through them after every stressful trauma patientâand heâs leaning his left hip against the side of the desk, shifting the weight off his right leg because three a.m. is always when it starts aching. Not that heâll admit it.
âShen said you wanted to see me.â
He glances up. âYour friendâs imaging came back.â
âAnd?â
âHand surgery wants him,â he says, offering you his tablet.
You take it, glancing down at the X-ray images. âFracture and tendon damage. Fantastic.â
You flip through the images and skim over the surgeonâs review.
âOkay. Iâll send him up.â
Jack takes the tablet back, his brows pulling together slightly.
âHave you eaten?â
You frown. âWhat?â
âHave you eaten anything tonight?â
âI had an energy drink.â
He stares at you. âThatâs not food.â
You shrug. âI havenât had time.â
âMake time.â
You roll your eyes. âFine. I didnât bring anything.â
He lets out a quiet sigh, glancing down at the tablet as he flicks out of Deranâs X-rays and brings up another patientâs chart.
âThereâs a container in the fridge.â
You blink. âWhat?â
âTop shelf. Left side. Blue lid.â
Your brows lift. âYou brought me food?â
He glances up again. âI brought extra food. Itâs that pasta you like.â
As if on cue, your stomach grumbles. Loudly.
âGo eat,â he says. âI doubt surgeryâs coming to collect your friend in the next twenty minutes.â
You want to argue. You really do. Because you donât need to be looked after. You donât need him to bring you food and make sure you eat and be all quietly caring like this. But God is this man a good cook, and youâd have to be an idiot to turn down free pasta at three oâclock in the morning.
âFine,â you mutter, already turning away. âIâll eat.â
âYouâre welcome.â
You donât look back. Because if you do, you might see the stupidly smug look on his face and it might make you smile. Then heâll know he was right, and you absolutely cannot give him that satisfaction. So instead, you drop your gaze and watch your shoes move against the speckled linoleum until you reach the break room door.
You donât even notice that someone else is in there until you reach the fridge and finally glance up.
âOh. Hey.â
Ellis waves her fork. âHey.â
You pull the fridge door open and immediately spot Jackâs blue-lidded tupperware.
âYou brought food?â Ellis asks, clearly surprised.
You donât answer. Not explicitly, at least. You just glance over your shoulder with what could be considered a very brief nod, then turn back toward the microwave and set the container inside.
âSheâs his ex, by the way,â you say without thinking.
âHuh?â
You press the start button on the microwave before turning to face Ellis properly, leaning back against the kitchenette counter.
âThe woman in Central Nine. Shen just told me sheâs Jackâs ex.â
âOh. Yeah.â Ellis stabs a piece of broccoli with her fork. âI know.â
You tilt your head. âHow do you know?â
âI asked Dr. Abbot how he knew the patient,â she says, as if it were obvious.
âOh.â
You glance back at the microwave, still humming, Jackâs container rotating slowly inside.
âWhatâd he say?â
Ellis sighs, stabbing a piece of carrot this time. âJust that they dated about a year after his wife passed, but he realised he wasnât ready to move on yet, so he ended it. It was amicable. Now theyâre friends.â
You frown. âFriends? Heâs never mentioned her to me.â
Ellis finally looks up, something sharpening in her expression. âWhy would he?â
You hesitate. âBecause weâreâwell, you knowâŠâ
Her mouth twitches. âI thought it was casual.â
âIt is,â you say quickly. âI just thought he wouldâve mentionedââ
âDoes Abbot know who Deran is?â
You blink. âWhat?â
Ellis smirks. âYou know, the guy currently sitting in South Seventeen? Mr. Thursday mornings, orââ she tilts her head, âI guess itâs former Mr. Thursday mornings now.â
âWellânot exactly, but thatâsââ
The sharp beeping of the microwave cuts you off, and you turn quickly to silence it.
âThatâs different?â Ellis offers.
You grab the container out of the microwave, shut the door, then yank open the cutlery drawer to grab a fork before turning back to face her.
âYes,â you say firmly. âItâs different. Jack knows weâre not exclusive, but he doesnât need to know who the other guys are.â
Ellis snorts. âOr were.â
You glare at her.
âAlright,â she says, leaning back in her chair. âThen why do you need to know who she is?â
You stab a piece of pasta. âI donât. Iâm just... curious.â
âYou mean jealous.â
Your head snaps up. âIâm not jealous. I donât care what he does when heâs not with me. He can sleep with whoever he wants. He can sleep with every bottle-blonde in Pittsburgh for all I care.â
Ellisâ brows shoot up. âWow. Youâre really jealous.â
âI am not,â you protest. âItâs casual. We both know that. If he wants out, he can just say so. I donât need him. I donât need anyone. I mean, sure, itâs fun when theyâre good, but I am perfectly fine on my own. I donât need someone interfering with my life. With my routine. Iâm happy exactly the way things are.â
Ellis nods slowly. âOkay, Miss Independent. I get it.â
âThank you.â
âJust to be clear,â she says, pushing her chair back, âyouâre standing here eating his food because he told you to. Right?â
You open your mouth to argue, but she keeps going.
âYour hair smells like his shampoo. You walked into our apartment this morning wearing his shirt, and Iâm pretty sure those are his socks.â Her gaze drops briefly to your feet before returning to your face. âYou havenât slept in your own bed once this week and, unless Iâm forgetting somebody, you havenât seen another guy in...â She pauses, pretending to think. âWow. Almost four months now.â
You stare at her.
âAnd when you got that stomach bug last month,â she says, grabbing her container as she stands, âhe called out of work just to sit on the bathroom floor with you for eight hours.â
She steps up right beside you, dropping her container in the sink.
âThatâs not casual.â
The water runs for a few seconds as she rinses the container beneath the tap, then she sets it beside the sink and turns toward the door.
âAnyway,â she says lightly, reaching for the handle. âLet me know when youâre ready to admit youâre in love with him.â
Then sheâs gone, leaving you alone with your pasta and your rapidly fraying nervous system.
You donât move. You just stare at the door, trying to remember how to breathe. Trying to think about anything that isnât that strange and unfamiliar feeling lodged beneath your ribs, insistent on being felt.
No.
Itâs notâ
It canât beâ
You would know if you were inâ
Fuck.
You turn quickly and drop your container of food beside the sink before it ends up on the floor. Then you press both palms into the edge of the counter, as if that might somehow ground you.
This is ridiculous.
Ellis is just messing with you. She has to be.
Youâre not inâ
God. You canât even think about that word.
You drag in a deep breath and grab the fork again, lifting it to your mouth.
Itâs almost annoying how good it is. Infuriating, really. Because apparently being an emergency doctor, a SWAT physician, offensively attractive and unfairly charming isnât enough. No. Jack Abbot just has to be an excellent cook too.
Jerk.
You finish the rest of the pasta as quickly as you can, trying not to be disappointed when the container is empty. Then you rinse it beneath the tap and set it beside Ellisâ tupperware.
Your heart is still beating a little too fast when you step out of the break room, and you have to shove your hands into your scrub pockets to keep them from shaking. You keep your head down as you make your way back toward South Seventeen, trying to focus on what youâre going to say to Deran and not how you may or may not feel about your attending.
âHey,â you say, pulling the curtain back. âHow are you feeling?â
Deran glances up. âHey, doc. Long time no see.â
You squirt a pump of sanitiser into your palm and rub your hands together as you step up beside the bed.
âBeen busy,â you say. âAre the painkillers working?â
He lifts his hand, wincing. âA little.â
You glance at the clock on the wall. âYou could probably get some more soon.â
His brows pull together slightly. âIs that your way of saying Iâm not heading home any time soon?â
You sigh quietly, dragging the stool closer to the bed and dropping down onto it.
âNot tonight, no. Iâm sorry.â
He groans, tipping his head back against the pillow.
âI know,â you murmur, leaning in. âBut one of our hand surgeons reviewed the images, and youâve got a fracture right here.â You gently tap the base of his little finger near the knuckle. âI was expecting a break, but itâs lower than weâd like and close enough to the joint that this isnât something we can safely reduce and splint in the ED.â
He lifts his head.
âThereâs also some concern about the tendon around it,â you continue. âThe finger was pulled pretty hard out of position, and the surgeonâs worried it may have damaged one of the tendons that helps it move properly.â
âWhat does that mean?â
âTheyâll take you upstairs, get better imaging if they need it, and most likely repair everything at the same time rather than risk you losing function later.â
His brows draw tighter. âRepair?â
âThe fracture. The tendon. Anything else they find once theyâre in there.â
He lets his head fall back again. âGreat.â
âYouâll be okay.â
âI know,â he says, the corner of his mouth lifting. âJust not exactly how I pictured getting to spend more time with you.â
You roll your eyes. âReally?â
âWill you be here when I wake up?â
You snort. âHopefully not. If all goes well, Iâll be at home asleep.â
He sighs. âDamn.â
You push the stool back and stand. âAny other questions before I sign you off to surgery?â
He lifts his head, frowning slightly. âYeah, actually. I wanted to ask you about that guy.â
You tilt your head. âWhat guy?â
âThe one that came in here before. The attending.â
Your stomach drops.
âWhat about him?â
âI thought he was your boss.â
You fold your arms. âHe is.â
âHuh.â
âWhat does that mean?â
âItâs justââ He hesitates. âI donât know. You just donât usually look at your boss like that.â
You stare at him for a moment, trying to ignore the rush of your pulse in your ears.
âYou sure you didnât hit your head?â
His brows lift. âWait. Did I hit a nerve?â
âNo.â
âYou sure?â
Your eyes narrow. âWhy donât you just focus on the fact that you need surgery? Do you need me to call anyone?â
He shakes his head. âI already called my mom.â
âGood,â you mutter, already turning away. âGood luck in surgery.â
âTell your boss I said hi.â
âBye, Deran.â
His laughter follows you out into the hallway, but you refuse to give him the satisfaction of looking back as you yank the curtain shut.
You shake your head as you start down the corridor toward Central, as if that might somehow knock your errant thoughts back into place. You can still hear your pulse, still feel the heat crawling beneath your skin, your scrub top suddenly too warm and too tight.
The lights overhead are almost painfully bright now, the way they always get in the late hours of the night shiftâbut tonight their glare feels personal. Offensive, even. As if those buzzing fluorescent bars are shining brightly on everything youâve worked so hard not to acknowledge. Not to feel.
Not that youâre feeling anything.
At least, not whatever it is Ellis thinks youâre feeling.
You just need a minute. One minute of quiet to come up with perfectly reasonable explanations for every stupid little thing she pointed out. Then your mind can stop running circles and you can finish your shift, go home, and get some much-needed sleep.
By tomorrow, all of this is just going to feel ridiculous.
Because thatâs exactly what it is.
Ridiculous.
âDr. Abbot,â Bridget calls from behind the desk. âCan you take a look at this for me?â
You stop short halfway between South and Central, watching as Jack moves from one end of the nursesâ station to the other. Bridget is already holding up her tablet, pointing at something on the screen while Jack leans in, brow furrowing just slightly as he squints at it.
He needs to wear his glasses. Youâve told him this countless times. Yet for some reason, he insists on reserving them exclusively for news articles, novels, and recipes.
Apparently, the PTMC emergency department isnât worthy of his clear vision.
Your stomach lurches as your traitorous thoughts remind you of the time heâd worn them during sex. The time heâd insisted on keeping them on as he settled between your legs because he wanted to see you properly. He wanted to see everything.
You shake your head again, trying to push the memory away.
Jack leans a little closer as Bridget starts explaining something you canât quite make out. Not that you really care to hear what sheâs saying. Youâre too busy watching the way Jackâs left hand grips the edge of the desk, his weight shifting toward it, lessening the load on his right leg.
It must be really sore tonight.
He nods along, murmuring something low as he taps on the screen. You know what comes next before he even does it. He lifts that same hand and it drags across his jaw, tilting his head just slightly as he tries to concentrate on whatever it is Bridgetâs askingâbut heâs tired. You know heâs tired. From the set of his shoulders to the way heâs shifting almost all his weight off his right leg, you just know that heâs counting down the hours to the end of shift.
Maybe you should feel guilty for not letting him get enough sleep yesterday.
His left hand adjusts its grip, the tendon in his forearm flexing as it does and for some stupid reason, you forget how to breathe. Just for a second.
âYou alright?â
You blink. âWhat?â
Henderson frowns slightly, suddenly standing beside you with his tablet in hand. âThatâs the second time I've caught you completely zoned out tonight. Whatâs going on?â
âUhââ
You glance back at Jack just as he looks up, his gaze meeting yours briefly, a small smile tugging at his lipsâand your treacherous heart leaps. It actually leaps.
What the fuck?
You clear your throat. âYeah. No. Iâm fine.â
âYou sure?â
Hendersonâthe perceptive bastardâglances toward the nursesâ station, and his eyes widen.
âOh, shit. Did something happen between you two?â
Your stomach flips. âWhat?â
He gestures vaguely toward Jack. âYou and Abbot. Did you break up or something?â
âWhat?â you say again, louder this time. âWhy would you evenâI mean, weâre notâweâve never dated. Why would you think that?â
He tilts his head. âReally? I thought Ellis saidââ
âEllis?â
âNot just Ellis.â
Your eyes go wide. âWho else?â
He shrugs. âEveryone assumes you guys are together.â
âTogether?â
He frowns. âYouâre not?â
âNo,â you say, almost too fast. âNo. Weâre not together, weâre justâitâs⊠casual.â
His brows lift, the corner of his mouth twitching. âCasual?â
âYes,â you mutter, dropping your head into your hands. âAre you telling me the entire ED thinks Jack and I are dating?â
Henderson laughs. âActually, now that I think about it, I donât think Iâve ever heard Shen mention it.â
Your head snaps up. âPeople talk about it?â
Henderson shrugs. âItâs gossip.â
You open your mouth, ready to deny everything, whenâ
âTrauma inbound,â Lena calls. âMale, twenties. Motorcycle crash. Hypotensive in the field. ETA two minutes.â
âShit,â Henderson mutters. âThatâs not gonna be fun.â
Jack glances over at you again, calling your name across the floor. âTrauma Two. Letâs go.â
You hesitate, taking a step back. âIâI canât. Sorry.â
âItâs alright,â Henderson says quickly. âI can jump in.â
Heâs already moving before heâs even finished speaking, weaving through the growing rush of staff converging on Trauma Two. You watch him for a second, taking another slow step back, then anotherâand just before you turn away, you glance at Jack.
He hasnât moved. Heâs still standing by the nursesâ station. Watching you.
Your stomach twists.
Then you turn away and keep walking down the corridor.
And fortunately for your rapidly deteriorating grip on reality, it isnât long before Dr. Toomarian pulls you into a room to present a patient and youâre forced back into work mode.
The distraction helps, at first. You focus on the patient, answer questions, review scans, place orders, and for a few blessed minutes your brain remembers how to function. Then someone says Jackâs name and your pulse jumps for no reason. You hear a voice that sounds vaguely like Jackâs and your head snaps up. Someone calls for an attending and you catch yourself looking.
By the time youâre halfway through reviewing another chart, your pulse still hasnât settled and youâre no closer to understanding what the hell is wrong with you, only increasingly certain that whatever it is, itâs getting worse.
Eventually you find yourself moving back through Central, your nose buried in your tablet as you scan the next patientâs intake form, determined to stay distracted. Youâre just about to turn down the North corridor when you finally glance upâand there he is.
His brows lift, just slightly. âA word?â
Shit.
âUm. Sure.â
You tuck your tablet under one arm as you follow him around the corner toward the ambulance bay. Not quite all the way outside, but far enough from the nursesâ station that no one nosy can overhear.
When he finally stops and turns to face you, youâre remindedâquite aggressivelyâjust how unfairly attractive Jack Abbot really is.
âWhat was that?â
You take a small step back. âWhat was what?â
He nods vaguely toward Central. âYou completely dodged that trauma back there.â
âYeah. Sorry.â You look away. âI justâI had a patient I needed to get back to.â
âWeâve all got patients,â he says, folding his arms. âBut this is the ED. We treat the most critical patients first. That means traumasâyou know that.â
You glance back at him, then down at your shoes. âI know. Iâm sorry. Iâm just... a little distracted tonight.â
âDistracted?â he echoes. âIs this about your friend?â
Your head snaps up. âMy friend?â
âThe one you just sent up to surgery.â His jaw tightens, just briefly. âIf Iâm being honest, Iâm not even sure you shouldâve been his physician.â
You frown. âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â
âItâs a conflict of interest.â
You scoff. âA conflict of interest? Seriously?â
He folds his arms a little tighter, making the sleeves of his scrub top strain around his stupidly thick biceps in the most distracting way.
âYes.â
You lift your chin. âAlright. Howâs Ms. Callahan, then?â
He blinks. âWho?â
âCentral Nine. Your ex.â
He stares at you for a second.
âWho told you that?â
âIt doesnât matter,â you say quickly. âWhat matters is if you can treat your ex without it being a conflict of interest, then I can treat some guy I used to sleep with.â
The corner of his mouth twitches.
âSo heâs not just an old friend.â
You tilt your head. âYou knew that, Jack.â
For a brief moment, neither of you says anything. You can feel your pulse in your throat now, fast and uneven, and judging by the way Jackâs looking at you, youâre not doing nearly as good a job of hiding it as youâd hoped.
âLook,â you say, desperate to end this interaction. âIâm sorry I ducked the trauma. Really, I am. But Henderson was right thereâitâs not like I left you hanging. I knew heâd jump in.â
Jack rubs a hand across his jaw, looking away for a second before glancing back at you. âYouâre right,â he says. âIâm sorry. Henderson was there, I could have called either of you.â
You nod once, the knot in your stomach finally easing slightly.
âGuess I should stop playing favourites, huh?â
You frown again. âFavourites?â
He lifts a shoulder. âYouâre always the first person I look for when I need a second set of hands.â
Heat rushes up the back of your neck, but you refuse to let him see it.
âWhat about Dr. Robby?â you ask, shifting your tablet against your chest.
He leans in slightly. âIâd still choose you.â
The words hit you square in the chest, settling somewhere deep behind your ribs. For a second, your lungs forget how to work entirely, and by the time you finally figure out how to breathe again, Jack is already gone.
You stand there for a moment, staring after him, waiting for your brain to catch up with whatever the hell just happened. Waiting for those words to make sense. But they donât. Not entirely. They stay lodged in your chest even as you clear your throat and press a hand against your sternum, turning slowly back toward the chaos of the ED.
Whatever.
Maybe they donât mean anything.
You shake your head as you glance down at your tablet, pulling up the chart youâd been focused on before all this. Before Jack told you heâd still choose you over his own best friend, who also happens to have more experience, more qualifications, and significantly better judgement than you.
Ridiculous.
You spend the next half hour cleaning gravel out of a drunk college studentâs knee after he fell down the porch steps at a house party. Then you help Henderson with a nine-year-old girl who split her forehead falling from the top bunk of her bed, distracting her while he does the sutures. After that, you work through a mild pneumonia case with Nazely before treating a middle-aged man with a kidney stone. The orders, pain meds, scans, and paperwork all blur together, and by the time you finally check the clock again itâs almost seven.
âShit,â you murmur, dropping down at desk near the nursesâ station.
You need to catch up on your charting if you plan on getting out of here any time soon.
âHey.â Henderson sits at the computer across from you. âLittle girl with the forehead lac just got discharged.â
You glance over at him. âOh. Nice.â
âHer mom wanted me to thank you for helping her.â
You snort. âBetween the drunk college kid and the old guy coughing up half a lung, it was my pleasure.â
Henderson huffs a laugh. âApparently sheâs been saying she wants to be a doctor since she was six.â
Your brows lift. âReally?â
Henderson grins. âAnd now she wants to be a doctor just like you."
âYeah? Did you tell her not to go into emergency medicine if she values her soul?â
âAssuming you had one to begin with,â Robby cuts in.
You glance up just as he walks past, wearing that familiar half-smile of weary amusement with a coffee in one hand and his bag slung over his shoulder.
âAnd here I was worried youâd be in a good mood this morning,â you say, smiling sweetly despite your words.
His eyes narrow, but the corner of his mouth lifts a little higher. âCareful.â
You roll your eyes playfully, turning back to the screen in front of you as he continues through Central.
It takes exactly eight minutes before youâre interrupted again. Bridget taps you on the shoulder asking for your signature on a prescription, and just as you hand it back to her, the red phone rings. You watch Lena answer it with a tired sigh, both Jack and Robby looking up to hear what kind of chaos is inbound.
âAlright,â Lena says as she hangs up the phone. âMale, forties. Single-vehicle MVC. Hypotensive in the field, positive seatbelt sign. ETA four minutes.â
âIâll take it,â Robby says, setting his coffee down. âLetâs prep Trauma One.â
He glances around the unusually empty floor.
âIâll jump in,â you offer, pushing your chair back.
Henderson shoots you a look as you stand and turn toward the nursesâ station, pulling a pair of gloves from a box. Itâs not that you really want to jump in on another case ten minutes before the end of your shift, but you havenât had a trauma since Captain Stabby and his sexy doctor friend, and youâre starting to feel a little guilty about it.
âSee,â Robby says, pulling on his own gloves. âThereâs hope for you yet.â
You roll your eyes again as you follow him out to the ambulance bay, and it isnât long before you hear sirens.
The ambulance careens in and pulls up right in front of you, the back doors flying open as the first paramedic climbs out, holding a tearful young girl in his arms. She couldnât be older than four.
âThirty-eight-year-old male, restrained driver in a single-vehicle MVC versus a tree,â the paramedic says. âPositive seatbelt sign, abdominal pain, hypotensive on scene, improved with fluids. GCS fifteen. Two IVs in place. Daughter was restrained in the back seat and appears uninjured.â
The second paramedic circles the van from the driverâs side and starts helping Robby lower the gurney.
Robby nods toward the daughter. âYou check her out?â
âWe did a quick assessment on scene, but weâve been focused on Dad,â the paramedic says, still holding her.
âAlright. Weâll get somebody to take a look at her.â
The young girl starts crying harder as Robby and the other paramedic begin wheeling the gurney inside. You stay beside them, one hand on the manâs forearm as you watch his eyelids droop.
âStay with me, sir,â you say, squeezing his arm. âCan you tell me your name?â
âBarry,â he murmurs.
âWhere does it hurt, Barry?â
He winces. âMyâmy stomach.â
The gurney rolls through the second set of doors, and suddenly youâre back under the bright fluorescent lights.
âAbbot,â Robby calls. âCan you take a look at the kid?â
Jack appears before you can even glance over your shoulder.
âHey, sweetheart,â he says, his voice soft as he gently takes the daughter from the paramedicâs arms. âYour dadâs in good hands. Come on, letâs get you checked out too.â
You continue moving with the gurney into Trauma One, where Jesse and Olive are already prepping monitors and equipment.
âOn three,â Robby says, positioning himself opposite you. âOne, two, three.â
The paramedics help shift the patient onto the trauma bed before clearing out, making room for Jesse to start attaching monitors.
âPressure one-oh-four over sixty-eight,â he reports.
Olive quickly cuts Barryâs shirt open.
âSeatbelt sign across the lower abdomen,â you say, pressing gently along his stomach.
He grimaces when you reach his left side.
âLeftâs worse.â
Robby holds out a hand. âUltrasound.â
Jesse hands him the probe as you squirt gel onto Barryâs abdomen.
âRUQ,â Robby says.
You glance up at the ultrasound screen. âClear.â
âLUQ.â
âClear.â
âPelvis.â
âNothing obvious.â
âGood,â Robby says. âFAST negative. Heâs stable enough for CT.â
You turn to Olive. âCT chest, abdo, pelvis with contrast.â
She nods, moving toward the phone as the whole room finally takes a breath. The negative FAST isnât a guarantee, but itâs a promising start.
Barry groans, trying to lift his head. âWhereâs my daughter? Whereâs Ellie?â
You press a hand against his shoulder.
âHey, donât try to sit up. Your daughterâs okayâsheâs just outside with another doctor.â
âSheâs okay?â
You nod. âSheâs okay.â
He lets out a strained breath, settling back against the mattress and tipping his head back.
âHold on.â
You move closer, gently pushing his hair back.
âForehead lac,â you tell Robby. âAbout three centimetres.â
He glances over. âAlright. Weâll close it up before he goes to imaging.â
He strips off his gloves and reaches for a new pair while Jesse preps the suture tray. Olive is already cleaning up around Barry as you reach for some gauze to start cleaning the cut, gently pushing his bloodied locks of hair out of the way.
âLidocaine,â Robby says.
You grab the syringe from the tray and hand it to him, more than happy to let your attending do the work while your adrenaline wanes and that familiar end-of-shift exhaustion sets in.
âStay still for us, Barry,â you murmur, cupping the crown of his head. âThis might sting a little.â
He winces as Robby injects the anaesthetic.
âSaline,â Robby says.
You hand it over before carefully plucking the last few stuck strands of hair away from the wound.
âHowâs the pain?â you ask.
ââS okay,â Barry mumbles.
âForceps.â
You hand Robby the forceps, then the needle driver before he can even ask.
âLight,â he murmurs.
You reach up and adjust the luminaire until he raises his hand, signalling that itâs in the right spot. Then he pinches the edge of the laceration with the forceps and slides the needle through the skin. Easy. Effortless. Boring.
You glance up at the monitor, noting that Barryâs heart rate has finally dropped below a hundred.
âScissors,â Robby says.
You grab the scissors from the tray and hand them to him, then go back to reading Barryâs vitals.
âYou with us, Barry?â Robby asks.
âYeah,â Barry murmurs.
âCanât feel the needle, can you?â
âNo.â
âGood.â
You let your eyes move slowly around the room, already holding gauze for Robby before he can ask for it. You feel him take it from your hand just as you turn your head toward the glass doors, gazing out at the beginning chaos of morning handover.
But it isnât Ellis and Langdon arguing about God knows what that gets your attention.
Just outside the trauma bay, perched on the edge of a bed parked beside the nursesâ station is Barryâs daughter. Ellie, apparently. Her eyes are still red and puffy, but sheâs not crying anymore. Sheâs got a pink hospital gift shop teddy tucked under one arm and her other hand wrapped around the tubing of a black stethoscope.
Jack is sitting on a stool in front of her, gently helping put the earpieces in her tiny ears with a soft smile crinkling the corners of his eyes. Her little hands grip either side of the headset, adjusting it with a very focused look on her face.
Jack hands her the chest piece as he scoots a little closer to the bed, then points to his chest. You canât hear what heâs saying, but you can make an educated guess.
Ellieâs tiny hand grips the bell as she presses the diaphragm against Jackâs chest, a small crease forming between her brows. Jack is watching her with that amused little half-smile, his gaze soft, one hand braced lightly on the mattress beside her so she doesnât topple backwards.
Ellie says something, and Jack nods, schooling his expression.
Sheâs taking her job very seriously right now, and Jack is taking her very seriously.
âDoctor.â
You blink, glancing back at Robby.
âYeah?â
He gives you a look. âScissors. For the third time.â
âOh. Sorry.â
You hand him the scissors and watch him snip the tail on the second-last suture, then you turn your attention back toward Jack and Ellie. Sheâs giggling now, with the diaphragm pressed to Jackâs cheek as he gently shakes his head, laughing too.
âForceps.â
You grab the forceps and hand them to Robby.
His eyes flick up. âYou alright?â
âYeah. Why?â
âYouâre smiling.â
âNo, Iâmââ
Oh my God.
You are smiling.
You turn back toward Jack, and your stomach drops.
Oh my God.
Youâre in love with Jack Abbot.
âAlright, Barry,â Robby says, peeling his gloves off. âWeâre gonna send you upstairs for some imaging now, make sure we didnât miss anything.â
You take one unsteady step back from the bed.
âCan someone call my wife?â Barry asks, his voice strained.
Robby nods. âI'm sure somebody already has, but Iâll check.â
Your hands shake as you pull your gloves off.
âWhat about Ellie? Can I see her?â
âOf course,â Robby says. âSheâs right outside.â
Barry lifts his head slightly. âAm I okay?â
âWell, youâre talking to me, your pressureâs holding, and your FAST was negative. Those are all good signs.â Robby looks at you. âIsnât that right, doctor?â
Your head snaps up. âHm?â
He frowns. âYou sure youâre alright? You seemââ
âIâm fine,â you snap, tossing your gloves in the waste bin. âI justâI have charting to do.â
Then you turn and march right out of the trauma bay, keeping your head down as you take an immediate sharp left. Ignoring the familiar voice that calls your name and makes your pulse scatter.
You donât stop until you reach the picture wall. Only then do you drop down onto the bench, squeeze your eyes shut, and bury your face in your hands. You canât scream. Canât shout. Canât drop to the floor and have a panic attack right here in the middle of the ED. So you just⊠breathe.
Okay. Maybe youâre being a little dramaticâbut can anyone blame you?
You donât want this. You canât want this. You donât have time for this.
Casual sex is easy. No strings, no stress, no reason to worry about anything other than saving lives and finishing your residency. Thatâs all you want.
Or⊠all you wanted.
Now?
Now youâre not sure what you want.
Of course you still want to save lives and survive your residency, but now you canât imagine doing either of those things without Jack.
You canât imagine another shift without knowing Jack is somewhere in the department. Or getting a difficult case and not being able to talk through it with him. You canât imagine going home and not immediately texting him. Or having a bad day and not being able to talk to him about it.
You canât imagine anything without Jack.
Which is terrifying.
Because it isnât just sex anymore. It isnât flirting or late-night texts or teasing glances across the floor. Itâs the way heâs somehow worked his way into every part of your life without you even noticing. Every shift. Every conversation. Every stupid little story you save up to tell him later. Heâs just there. Everywhere.
And now... he matters.
You sit up and drag in a deep breath.
You need to pull it together. This isnât the end of the world. Itâs not even a thing. Itâs only a thing if you let it be a thing, which⊠youâre not going to do.
With another deep breath, you push off the bench and start heading back toward Central. All you have to do is finish your charting, then you can leave. You can go home, turn your phone off, and talk yourself off the ledge.
You just need a little space. A little time away from the hospital, away from Jack, and all these ridiculous feelings willâ
âHey. You okay?â
Your heart lurches, but you donât stop.
âI was going to come over there,â he says, keeping his voice low, âbut I didnât want toââ
âIâm fine,â you murmur, without even looking at him.
His hand closes gently around your wrist, and your stomach flips so hard itâs almost nauseating.Â
âYou sure?â
You finally stop, glancing up at him. At the concerned crease between his brows and the little downward quirk at the corner of his mouth.
âIâm fine,â you say again, pulling your arm out of his grip. âSeriously.â
He gives you a look. Not one that says heâs offended or at all upset by your attitude, but one that says he doesnât believe you. A look that makes you feel far too seen. Far too known.
âI need to finish my notes,â you mutter, turning away before he can say anything else.
You turn down the North corridor and donât stop until you reach the desks just outside the break room. Then you drop into a chair, swipe your badge to log in, and force your trembling hands to steady themselves over the keyboard.
It takes a significant amount of effort to focus on your charting. You stare at the blinking cursor for minutes at a time before finally managing to squeeze out a fewâmostly coherentâsentences. You type Jackâs name at least five times without meaning to, and every time you do, your heart thuds obnoxiously hard beneath your ribs.
Fortunately, no one tries to interrupt you this time, and after forty painstaking minutes of glaring at that computer screen and forcing your wayward thoughts to stay on track, you finally finish.
Now you just need to handover your patients.
You find Langdon by the nursesâ station, standing just below the workboard with his hands in his pockets as he reads through the list of patients and their ailments.
âHey.â You step up beside him. âYou got a minute for handover?â
He glances at you. âOh. Hey. Didnât know there were still any night crawlers left.â
You frown. âEveryoneâs gone?â
âEveryone but Dr. Abbot,â he says. âAnd you.â
Your eyes go wide. âEllis is gone?â
He nods. âSaw her head out about fifteen minutes ago.â
You scramble to grab your phone out of your pocket, unlocking it to find two new notifications from Ellis. Seventeen minutes ago.
Ellis: Abbot said heâs giving you a lift, so Iâm headed out. Ellis: Need anything from the store?
Your stomach drops.
âEverything alright?â Langdon asks.
âUhâyeah. Fine.â
You tuck your phone back into your pocket.
âIâve only got two patients. Can you take them?â
He nods. âOf course.â
âAlright. Central Twelve came in with chest pain. Trops negative, ECGâs clean, waiting on the repeat. If thatâs negative too, he can go home.â
âMhm.â
âAnd South Nineteenâs the pyelo. Got fluids, ceftriaxone, feeling better. Medicine said theyâd come see her, but I wouldnât hold my breath.â
Langdon snorts. âGot it.â
You nod. âGreat. Thanks.â
âAnything else?â
âNope.â
He smiles. âGreat sign-out.â
âI try,â you mutter, already turning away.
You hurry across the floor toward the lockers, pulling your phone back out of your pocket to type a reply to Ellis as you walk.
You: Youâre dead to me. You: And toothpaste.
When you finally reach your locker, you quickly key in the code and pull the door open. You donât bother removing your stethoscope or badge, or taking time to actually put your jacket onâyou just gather everything into your arms and slam the door shut again. Then you turn and make a beeline for the ambulance bay.
Maybe you can catch a bus home. Orâhellâyouâll pay for an Uber if you have to.
âHey, slow down,â Dana says as you rush past the nursesâ station. âWhatâs the hurry?â
âSorry,â you call over your shoulder. âJustâreally need to get home.â
Youâre moving too quickly for her to press you any further. Thank God. Because the last thing you need right now is Dana and her infuriating habit of knowing things she has absolutely no business knowing.
You keep your head down until you make it all the way outside, and only then do you finally feel like you can breathe. You nod to a patient having a cigarette by the garden bed before turning the other way, pulling your phone out to order an Uber.
Only, you canât remember the last time you ordered an Uber. Do you even have the app?
âYou ready?â
You flinch. âJesus Christ.â
Jack huffs a laugh. âNot quite.â
You glance back down at your phone, clutching it a little tighter.
âIâm this way,â he says, nodding toward the other side of the parking lot.
You hesitate. âIâuhâI was just going to grab an Uber.â
His brows lift, but he doesnât look all that surprised. âYou were?â
You nod. âYeah. Iâm good. Thanks.â
âYou sure?â
âYep.â
You turn away, but he doesnât leave. He just stands there, waiting, one hand holding the strap of his backpack thatâs slung over his shoulder, the other buried in his pocket.
âIs there something going on that I should know about?â he asks finally.
âNope,â you reply, too fast.
Then, for some ridiculous reason, you start walking.
âWhere are you going?â
âThe bus stop,â you say, without looking back.
He follows you. Because of course he does.
âYouâre going to catch a bus?â
âYep.â
He laughs again, but this time itâs more disbelief than dry amusement.
âIâm offering you a perfectly good, no strings attached ride home, and youâd rather catch a bus?â
That makes you stop.
You turn around. âNo strings attached?â
He lifts a shoulder. âIf thatâs what you want.â
âWhat I want?â
âIf you want me to just drop you off, Iâll just drop you off.â
You stare at him for a second, your pulse pounding in your ears.
âJust drop me off?â
He nods slowly, his brow creasing slightly.
âAnd then what?â you ask.
He tilts his head. âWhat do you mean?â
âThen you just leave?â
âIf thatâs what you want.â
Your throat tightens. âStop saying that.â
He frowns. âSaying what?â
âIf thatâs what I want.â You drag a hand through your hair. âYou keep saying it like this is entirely up to me. Like none of this has anything to do with you. Like itâs my choice and you donât get to say anything orâor feel anything, and thatâs not fair.â
He studies you for a moment, folding his arms across his chest in the most irritatingly distracting way.
âWhat are we talking about here?â
âI donât know!â You throw your hands up. âThis. Us. Whatever this is. I donât know what weâre doing anymore, Jack. I donât know what Iâm supposed to do with any of this, and you just keep showing up being completely reasonable all the time, which is really fucking annoying.â
His eyes narrow. âIâm... too reasonable?â
âYes! Godââ You laugh once, sharp and humourless. âWhy are you always like this? Why are you always so calm about everything? We never talk about what you want. We never talk about how you feel. We just keep pretending everythingâs fine and maybe thatâs worked up until now, but I don't think itâs working anymore.â
âOkay,â he says evenly. âTell me whatâs not working, and we can talk about it.â
âTalk about it?â You stare at him. âTalk about what? Thereâs nothing to talk about, because thisâthis isnât anything. This is casual, Jack. Itâs supposed to be casual. And maybe thatâs the problem. Maybe weâve spent too much time together. Maybe we just need some space orâor something.â
His brows lift. âIs that what you want?â
You fold your arms, trying to reclaim some semblance of control. âYes.â
Something that almost resembles amusement flickers across his face, but he schools it quickly.
âOkay,â he says again. âIf you want space, I can give you space.â
âSeriously?â You let out another sharp laugh. âOf course thatâs your answer. Do you see what I mean? This is exactly what I mean. I stand here and tell you maybe we need some space, and youâre just... okay with it? Just like that? No questions, no argument, no nothing.â
A smile tugs at the corner of his mouth. âDo you want me to argue?â
âMaybe!â You throw your hands up again. âI donât know, Jack! Maybe I want something. Anything. Just some indication that this means something to you. Because every time I say something, you just... accept it. You just nod and go along with it like none of this affects you at all. Like if I said I wanted space, youâd give me space. If I said I wanted to end this, youâd end it. If I said I never wanted to see you again, youâd just stand there being completely calm and reasonable and tell me thatâs okay too.â
You let out a shaky laugh, shaking your head as you look away.
âAnd donât tell me thatâs not true, because you spent half the night in Central Nine with your ex and I spent the rest of the shift pretending I wasnât paying attention to that, which is insane, by the way. Completely insane. She was a patient. Youâre a doctor. I know that. I know Iâm being irrational.â
You tip your head back, squeezing your eyes shut for just a second before looking back at him.
âAnd thatâs the worst part, because I know none of this is actually about her. Thatâs the problem. Itâs not about her at all. Itâs about the fact that youâre always fine. Youâre always so calm and so reasonable and so completely unbothered, and I donât know how you do that.â You let out an unsteady breath. âIt's likeâlike none of this matters to you. Like you donât care. Like you could just walk away from everything, from me, and be completely fine.â
Your chest is rising and falling too fast now, your heart is beating so hard youâre almost sure he can hear it.
He doesnât say anything right away. He just watches you, the corners of his mouth softened by something that looks suspiciously like fondness. And suddenly youâre struck by the horrible suspicion that he understands exactly what youâve been trying so hard not to say.
âYou think I could just walk away from this and be completely fine?â he asks, his voice soft. âYou think I could walk away from you?â
He steps closer, the toes of his boots barely inches from yours now.
âWhen this started, it was casual. I knew that. I knew you were seeing other people. I knew you didnât want a relationshipâand if thatâs still not what you want, then okay. Iâm not going to pressure you into something youâre not ready for. Iâm not trying to be overly reasonable, and Iâm certainly not trying to make you feel like youâre losing your mind.â
The corner of his mouth twitches.
âWhen I ask you what you want, itâs not because I donât care what happens. Itâs because I do. Itâs because Iâd rather be patient than push you into something before youâre ready for it. And if space is what you need right now, then Iâll give you space.â
His gaze holds yours.
âBut donât mistake that for indifference. Because thereâs no version of this where walking away from you is easy. Thereâs no version of this where I donât care. And if one day you tell me thatâs what you really want, then Iâll respect it. Not because itâs what I want. Not because what I feel doesnât matter. But because I respect you.â
His expression softens again.
âDo you understand?â
You nod slowly, your throat suddenly too tight for words.
âNow listen to me.â
He lifts a hand and pinches your chin gently between his thumb and forefinger.
âI know youâve had a long shift. I know youâre exhausted. I know youâre standing here trying to convince yourself you haven't completely lost your mind, and Iâm not trying to make your day any harder than it already isâbut I need you to hear this.â
His eyes search yours, earnest and unguarded.
âI love you too.â
For a moment, all you can do is stare at him. With your breath caught somewhere in your chest, your mouth slightly open, and your heart trying to punch its way through your ribcage.
His lips quirk. âYou alright?â
âNo,â you breathe.
And then you grab the front of his shirt and kiss him.
His hand drops from your chin to your neck, fingers pressing in just slightly as he kisses you back. Firm, unhurried, like he has all the time in the world and has decided, without hesitation, that he only wants to spend it on you.
He steps closer, tilting your head back as his mouth parts against yours. A soft, helpless little noise breaks at the back of your throat, and you can feel his lips curl in satisfaction. Then he kisses you harder, deeper, his other hand finding your waist as his tongue presses past your lips.
You step in until thereâs nothing left between you. Nothing but hospital scrubs and the fact that youâre standing in the middle of a public parking lot right now.
And for a second, neither of you seems to care.
The hand at your waist slides higher, pulling you closer as his mouth moves slower. Not because he wants less, but because he knows heâs got you. Because after months of patience and uncertainty, he knows he can finally take his time.
Your fingers bunch tighter in the front of his shirt, and he smiles again.
âDonât,â you murmur against his mouth.
He doesnât say anything. He just kisses you again, gentler this time. A lingering press of his mouth against yours. Then another. His thumb brushes against your neck as he tilts his head, stealing one more kiss that feels almost unfairly tender after the way heâd just been holding you.
Then he pulls back completely.
You stare at him.
He stares back.
Your lips are still tingling, your hands are still fisted in the front of his shirt, and your heart is still beating hard enough to crack a rib.
The corner of his mouth lifts a little higher.
âStill catching the bus?â
You immediately let go of his shirt. âShut up.â
He laughs properly then, letting you turn away and start marching toward one end of the parking lot.
âMy carâs the other way,â he calls.
You stop, close your eyes, then slowly turn around.
Jack is still standing exactly where you left him, with his hands in his pockets and looking entirely too pleased with himself.
âShut up,â you say again.
His smile only widens.
You roll your eyes and start walking again, brushing past him with as much dignity as someone can reasonably muster after having a complete emotional breakdown and then immediately making out with their boss.
You donât need to look back to know heâs following you.
You just know.
And by the time you finally reach his car, you realise youâre smiling.
Which is annoying for several reasons.
© 2026 geminiwritten

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youâre allowed 2 minutes of sadness then you gotta keep it gangsta
THANK YOU FOR NOTICING
pairing: spencer reid x bau!reader
summary: Spencer Reid spends six months flirting. You spend six months not realizing he's flirting. The BAU spends six months losing money in Rossi's betting pool.
word count: ~2.5k
authors note: should I be sleeping? yes. will i be late for work tomorrow? yes. do I care? Not really.
just light rom com spencer x reader. not proof read.
masterlist
~âĄ~
The thing about Spencer Reid was that he was terrible at being subtle, at least according to everyone else.
You, unfortunately, were completely immune to recognizing romantic interest when it was directed at you.
Which was why, six months after joining the BAU, you still hadn't figured out that Spencer was hopelessly, ridiculously in love with you.
The betting pool started because of a Tuesday.
Not a dramatic or life-changing Tuesday.
Just an ordinary Tuesday when you mentioned, in passing, that you hadn't slept well.
That was it. One sentence.
The next morning there was coffee waiting on your desk.
The morning after that there was coffee again.
And the morning after that.
Three weeks later Spencer was still showing up with coffee, exactly how you liked it.
No one mentioned it. At least not to either of you.
But Rossi quietly slid twenty dollars toward Emily. Emily accepted it without question. Across the room Luke raised an eyebrow. Garcia looked delighted.
Spencer remained completely unaware. You remained completely unaware. Everyone else was suffering.
The thing about Spencer was that he remembered everything. Most people found that impressive, however you found it comforting. You could mention something once and Spencer would remember it months later.
A favorite author.
A movie you loved as a kid.
A food allergy.
A random story from college.
It all stayed somewhere inside his mind. One afternoon you were searching your desk.
Spencer looked up from a file.
"What are you looking for?"
"My charger."
"It's in conference room B."
You blinked.
"What?"
"You left it there after the briefing."
"How do you know that?"
"You forgot it."
"As opposed to?"
"You forgetting it somewhere else."
You laughed, what made Spencer smile. The room collectively watched. Then looked away before either of you noticed.
A month later the team was flying home from a case. You fell asleep halfway through the flight. Nothing unusual.
The unusual part happened afterward, when the jet landed. You woke up covered with Spencer's suit jacket. Garcia nearly bit through her lip trying not to smile. Luke immediately looked toward Rossi. Rossi silently updated the betting pool.
You simply handed the jacket back.
"Thanks."
Spencer looked almost embarrassed.
"Of course."
Like covering you with his jacket was the most natural thing in the world. Which, to him, it was.
The problem wasn't that Spencer was subtle.
The problem was that he treated you differently in a hundred tiny ways, that only became obvious when people paid attention.
He always sat beside you during briefings, partnered with you when possible, saved you a seat on the jet, noticed when you were tired or stressed, or hungry, or upset.
The rest of the team noticed.
You didn't.
One afternoon Emily walked into the bullpen and stopped. Spencer was talking and you were laughing. Neither of you seemed aware that everyone else had stopped working. Your eyes blurry with tears, Spencer vividly gesticulating as he was telling you an old story about prank war he had with Derek, years ago.
Luke slowly slid into the chair beside Emily.
"How long do you think?"
Emily sighed.
"At this rate?"
"Yeah."
"Six months."
Luke nodded thoughtfully.
"Optimistic."
Across the room Garcia was already adding notes to the betting spreadsheet.
The funniest part was that Spencer thought he was hiding it.
Everyone knew. Everyone. Including suspects, witnesses, local police.
Once, during a case, a detective looked between you and Spencer and casually asked how long you'd been together.
You nearly choked. Spencer looked like he forgot how talking worked.
The detective immediately apologized.
The team spent three days making fun of him. Spencer never recovered.
The jealousy started by accident.
At least that's what Spencer told himself.
The team was interviewing witnesses at a local bar. You were speaking with one of them. A very attractive witness. A witness who was clearly more interested in you than helping with the case.
Spencer was trying not to stare.
He failed. Spectacularly.
The witness leaned closer, what made Spencer hate him immediately.
The witness said something and your smile vanished.
"Oh no," Luke muttered beside Spencer.
"What?"
"The poor idiot crossed a line."
Sure enough, you folded your arms.
"What exactly do you mean by that?"
The witness smirked. Spencer couldn't hear his response. Whatever it was, he didn't need to.
Your eyebrow lifted.
Three minutes later the witness looked like he'd lost an argument with a lawyer, a professor, and a disappointed mother all at once.
He practically fled.
You walked back toward the team.
"What happened?" JJ asked.
"He told me I'd be prettier if I smiled more."
Emily winced.
"Oof."
"He also suggested women usually aren't greatat this job."
Luke barked out a laugh.
"Well, he deserved whatever you said."
You shrugged.
"I simply informed him his confidence was unsupported by evidence. And that if he thinks me smiling more would help finding the killer, I'm glad his job is cleaning tables."
Rossi laughed into his coffee.
Spencer tried to hide his grin and failed. You caught it immediately.
"What?"
"Nothing."
"You look pleased."
Spencer shrugged.
"I enjoy watching arrogant people get embarrassed."
Your smile widened and Spencer forgot how breathing worked.
The breaking point came another two months later. The team was flying home after a case. Everyone was exhausted. Luke was asleep with his head tilted back. Garcia was scrolling through her phone. Emily and JJ were discussing paperwork. Rossi had somehow fallen asleep the second the jet left the ground.
You sat across from Reid.
He sat with a book open in his lap. Supposedly reading. You knew he was reading because he always read.
What you didn't know was that he'd been staring at the same page for fifteen minutes. Because you were sitting directly across from him. And because he was trying very hard not to think about how good you looked. He was failing miserably at that.
You sighed and stretched.
"Can I ask you something?"
Spencer glanced up.
"Of course."
"Why don't you date?"
A few seats away, Emily immediately looked interested. Luke cracked one eye open.
Spencer tried to focus back on the book.
"That's a broad question."
"I mean, you're smart."
He turned a page. The wrong page.
"Kind."
Another page. Still not reading.
"Funny."
The book lowered slightly.
"And ridiculously attractive."
Reid nearly dropped it.
Across the aisle, Luke looked ready to choke.
You continued obliviously.
"Anyone would be happy to be with you."
Spencer stared at the page, not reading a single word. Then he said, almost casually:
"Well, you don't seem interested."
You blinked.
"What?"
The words came out before he could stop them. His eyes widened slightly. The entire jet suddenly felt very quiet.
You stared.
Spencer stared at his book, very intensely.
Like maybe if he focused hard enough he could disappear into it.
"What do you mean?"
He swallowed, slowly lowered the book and looked at you.
"I mean..." He hesitated.
For once, Spencer Reid seemed completely unsure of himself. Then he gave a tiny shrug.
"You don't seem interested in dating me."
The silence was immediate. Absolute.
Across the jet, Luke's eyes snapped fully open. Garcia looked up from her phone. Emily stopped pretending not to listen. JJ pressed her lips together. Rossi looked awake all of a sudden.
You simply stared. Because surely you hadn't heard that correctly.
Spencer realized exactly what he'd just admitted. A faint blush spread across his face.
"Oh."
He looked away.
"That wasn't how I intended to say that."
You were still staring. Because suddenly everything made sense.
The coffee.
The jacket.
The attention to detail.
The jealousy.
The way he always found you first.
"Oh my God."
Spencer let out a quiet laugh.
"Yeah."
"Oh my God."
"I know."
You pointed at him. Completely horrified.
"You're flirting with me?"
Luke physically buried his face in his hands. Garcia made a noise somewhere between a scream and a laugh.
Spencer finally smiled.
Warm.
Fond.
A little smug.
He tilted his head.
"For like... two months now, thank you for noticing."
"Two months?"
Emily snorted.
"Try six."
Spencer groaned.
"Emily."
"What? She deserve the truth.
You looked confused.
"You knew about it?" You looked at everyone, trying to figure out what exactly is happening.
"Technically Rossi had the betting pool."
"I financed the betting pool," Rossi corrected.
You looked back at Spencer, furrowed brows, thinking. Analysing.
"You really like me?"
Spencer's expression softened immediately. Like the answer was obvious.
"Considering I haven't stopped thinking about you for almost a year?"
Your heart completely stopped.
"A year?"
Spencer closed his eyes.
"Please stop repeating that."
"A year?"
Luke laughed so hard he nearly fell out of his seat.
Garcia was openly crying.
And Spencer looked like he wanted the jet door to open so he could jump out.
"Yea" he admitted quietly. You smiled, not taking his eyes off of him.
"That's good" you said eventually and that made him curiously look at you.
"Good?"
"Yea. Because I like you too. For quite some time" you admitted, smiling fully now.
"You do?"
"Yes. Thank you for noticing" you couldn't help but mock him, as you intertwined your fingers on the small table inbetween you.
Garcia already started planning your wedding. JJ and Emily exchanged looks, knowing smirks. Luke just silently handed Rossi fifty bucks, mutting something that sounded like "one week too soon".
You didn't care. Cuz Spencer Reid liked you back.
Dads Best Friend
Jack Abbot x fem!reader
Summary: Youâre doctor Robbyâs younger daughter, and you are waiting outside for him in front of the ER. As usual he doesnât make it out of work on time. So, instead youâre greeted by his best friend, Jack Abbot.
Contains: Daddy issues, absent father, dads best friend, age gap, forbidden, almost getting caught, couch makeout session, dry humping, hand kink, words like âkiddoâ, Abbot drives a truck, desperation, praise kink, fingering
One thing you hated was the fact your dad worked in the ER. Especially the ER in Pittsburgh that never seems to get a break.
You wait on a bench outside of the noisy hospital. Ambulances rolling in and out every now and then. Your hands are tucked away in your dadâs green coat. You sniffle as your nose runs from the cold. It grows numb at the cold breeze.
You didnât mind waiting in the cold though.
Every time the sliding doors open you canât help but glance up in hope itâs your dad. Each time itâs someone different; some familiar faces but it was never your dad.
The sliding doors open once more, your eyes flick up, and to your surprise itâs a more than familiar face.
"Dr. Abbot?" You say, almost like it was a question.
"You waiting up for your dad?"
You scoot over on the bench as he inches closer. He just has on black scrubs, a grey shirt under, and a stethoscope wrapped around his neck.
"Yeah." You kept your response short.
With a soft grunt he sits down next to you. He leans back a bit and his legs spread open slowly in a manspread you canât help but notice.
Your eyes flick away quickly.
"Robby is going to be held up a bit tonight." His tone makes you worry. Your eyes flick to his.
"Should I be worried?" Something in your stomach twists.
"There was a car pile up on the freeway tonight. Some of the local hospitals computer systems went down, so they had to transfer them over." He explains.
"Heâs been in there for almost twenty-four hours." You mumble.
"You know how your dad is, kiddo."
Kiddo.
"The sun is rising practically, and I see the night shift doctors going home." You point at the night shift doctor who has a Dunkin' drink with him everyday, leaving.
"I know youâre upset-"
"Upset? Yeah, I hardly get to see my dad because his second home is a hospital for crying out loud." You shout angrily.
Abbot seems taken aback at your frustration, but he understands. He places a hand on your knee and gives it a squeeze.
"I get your frustration â I do. Your dad just works hard," Abbot tries to defend your dad.
You shake your head, "But when do I get a say when I want to see my dad."
You squeeze your hands into a fist, theyâre tucked away in the long sleeves of your dadâs coat. You feel the tears of frustration starting to rise in your eyes. You bite your lower lip to try to stop anything from escaping but itâs hard with the cold air smacking you in the face. A tear escapes and so does a hushed sniffle.
"Hey, hey, woah," Abbot turns to you and you refuse to look up at him. "These tears arenât worth it."
He grabs your face and his calloused hand glides against your cheek. Your eyes flinch at the touch. His hands are surprisingly warm. His thumb brushes away a tear under your eye.
"How did you get here?" Abbot asks you.
"I took the bus." You sniffle.
"Iâll text Robby that Iâm taking you home today, okay?" You feel your heart rate increase at the idea of being in Abbotâs truck, just you and him, going to your house.
You nod and wipe away the tears from your face, "Okay." You softly say.
The car ride felt like it was the longest car ride. The soft hum of the engine, and the smell of the cars heater blowing in your face. You can tell his truck is a little older. It is a nice rustic red, and it suits him. Everything Abbot has or does suits him.
He pulls into the driveway of you and your dadâs house. Your own car, a 2016 Volkswagen Beetle, which broke down on you about a month ago, sits peacefully next to his truck.
"You took the bus but you have your beetle?" He points to your red beetle.
"She broke down on me last month. I think somethingâs wrong with the transmission. Dad was supposed to take it to the shop last week, but he got busy."
As usual.
"I can always take it into the shop. I know a mechanic who could probably get her back up and running." You canât help but smile.
"Youâd do that?" Your eyes flick between his.
With a soft nod and a smile that you canât help but stare at, "Of course. Iâd do anything for you, kiddo."
Your heart skips a beat and you can feel your palms grow sweaty. Your stomach twists and turns like you have to throw up.
"You should come in," You blurt out.
Abbot looks surprised, "You want me to come in?"
"I mean, dad wouldnât like you to not come in. You drove me here you must be hungry or thirsty or â something." You ramble a bit.
Abbot chuckles at you and shakes his head. He reaches for his key fob and turns off his truck.
"Okay, Iâll go inside." He rests his hands on his legs.
His black scrubs fit nicely on his body. It squeezes around his legs and his black shirt accentuates his biceps.
You guys get out of the truck and you take out your key. Itâs on a keychain with a picture of you and your dad, a small stuffed bunny, and a red heart. The keys jingle and you fumble a bit trying to unlock your door. You can feel Abbot staring at the side of your face and at the lock.
Once you get the door open you are instantly greeted by your cat Cinnamon. Sheâs a smaller tabby cat, and she rubs against your legs. She doesnât hesitate to go to Abbot next. Rubbing on his black scrubs; her fur clings to it.
He leans down to pick her up. He lays her on her back and she purrs loudly. He takes his middle and ring finger and begins to pet her gently in the stomach.
"Such a pretty girl," He hums and rubs her fur slowly.
You lick your lips and swallow the lump forming in your throat. Your eyes canât help but focus on his veiny hands and the thickness of his two fingers rubbing your cat.
He sets her down and when he gets back up he softly groans.
You blink out of whatever fantasy you were playing in your head.
"Are you thirsty?" You ask and walk over to the kitchen.
"Coffee would be great," He nods.
"Coffee after doing the night shift?" You tease and he huffs as he sits down on your sofa.
"Coffee is like water to me now, kid."
"You realize Iâm nineteen. Iâm not a kid," You glare at him.
"I know, I know. I just like saying it," He smiles.
You put the pod of coffee into your Keurig. It begins to rumble as the water starts to heat up. You awkwardly stand in the kitchen not knowing if you should go over to the couch or not.
"Donât be so uptight in your own home," You flinch at the husky voice and look over at Abbot.
He pats the cushion next to him and hesitantly you begin to walk over. You stand in front of him and his head tilts up to look at you. You sit down slowly next to him. You can feel his eyes on you; watching your every move.
You guys sit in silence, you can hear your heart beating loudly. Youâve been around Abbot many times but this one time youâre with him alone.
You notice him bringg his hand up, and it finds your leg. He places his hand on your leg and brings your chin over his lap.
You watch him.
He knows youâre watching.
He slides his hand up to your chin slowly â rubbing your skin. Shivers run up your spine at his warm hands caressing your legs.
He turns his head and his eyes lock with yours.
You swallow.
"Abbot," you say almost breathlessly.
"Yes?" His voice is deeper than before.
You lean in more, your butt pressing against his thigh. Your legs are now both over his lap, but youâre not sitting in his lap â yet.
"Keep going," you say. "Please."
His eyes flick between yours. Something new lights in them and you can tell heâs enjoying this as much as you are.
You lean in to his neck as he continues to stroke your legs. You get a smell of his musk that makes him smell more like a man. You place a soft kiss on his neck and his hand halts on your chin.
You pull away and look up at him.
"Kid," Abbot begins.
His hand reaches out for your cheek. His thumb traces your bottom lip as he holds your face. A breathy gasp escapes between your lips. You stare up at him; he licks his lips slowly. Before you left him finish his sentence you place your mouth on his. His breath gets caught in his throat, but he doesnât fight the kiss. His mouth wanders yours; his tongue protruding the entrance to your mouth. Your tongues fight against each other.
You find yourself now straddling him. Your hands are on his broad shoulders, squeezing and pulling on his shirt. The more you two kiss, the more you want.
He breaks away from you. Youâre both breathless and he stares into your eyes. You can feel your lips are swollen but you donât mind.
"Kid, we shouldnât have done that." He says.
"But I wanted it to happen," You whisper.
He tilts his head back a bit and you bite your lip. You inch towards his face again and he doesnât mind. You place another soft kiss on his lips. You can feel the heat from his breath on your lips. His breath smells like peppermint, and you canât help but crave it.
Your tongue glides along the bottom of his lip, and slowly you rock your hips forward. With the movement of your hips you can hear him grunt in your mouth.
Everything around you disappears. All you can focus on is the feeling of your pussy slowly grinding against his growing hard on, and the way his breathing grows erratic against your mouth.
"Fuck," He groans.
He stared at you intensely through hooded eyes. You rock your hips and a shot of pleasure shoots through you.
You lean forward a bit and your head meets his muscular shoulder. His hand slides into your hair and the fingers that were once petting your cat were now racking through your hair.
You let out a muffled moan into his shoulder at the feeling of your cunt grinding and his hand roughly playing in your hair.
"Keep going," He encourages through a groan.
You press down harder and roll your hips. Your breath hitches softly.
"Yeah," He breathes. "Just like that."
You moan again at his words.
"What would your dad think?" He whispers. "Him coming home and seeing his daughter grinding against his friend, huh?"
You whimper in response.
You lean back and look at him. Your chest heaves up and down.
"I want more," You gasp. "Jack, please."
"Jack, hm?" He moves his hands down onto your thighs and up to your hips.
He squeezes and massages them slowly.
"What more do you want?" He asks.
"Touch me, anything, please." You beg.
"Touch you?" His hand slides closer to the button of your jeans.
He rubs his finger around the button. You watch the way his index finger slowly does circles on the piece of metal. You feel yourself pulsing at the idea of his fingers doing that to you.
He unbuttons the button and glides down the zipper. He can see your pink lace underwear youâre wearing. His thumb glides against the silky underwear and he looks up at you â looking for an answer.
"Please," you beg. "Touch me."
Without anymore hesitation he slides his hand inside of your underwear. You let out a mixture of a gasp and a moan as his index finger slides up your wet folds and runs over your clit, slowly. You rub is back and forth in a slowly flicking motion. You moan and tilt your head back a bit and rock your hips forward.
"You think you can take my fingers?" He wraps his free hand around your neck and tilts your head back to look at him.
You bob your head and he gives a smirk.
Slowly he pushes between your folds and slides his index finger inside of you. You squeeze your eyes shut at the feeling of his finger going in. A mixture of pain and pleasure rush over you. His index finger slides in and out slowly but his thumb finds its way down back to your clit. In a motion you fingers you and rubs circles on your clit.
"Look at that," he hums. "Such a good girl."
You moan loudly at the way heâs treating you and the words he speaks. You can feel the nerves bundling up and the pleasure becoming intense on you.
"Oh God," You whimper. "Iâm going to cum." You moan out.
"Itâs okay," He reassures. "I got you; cum for me."
With those words, it felt like an explosion hit you. Your body trembles as you reach your climax and you let out a loud moan. You bite your lip and collapse onto his shoulder once again. He pumps his finger slower inside of you until all thatâs left is your body twitching.
You sit up and catch your breath. You two are both breathless and you canât help but smile. Jack cracks a smile back at you.
He opens his mouth to say something, but nothing gets out as you both hear the sound of keys entering the front doors lock.
You jump off Jackâs lap and zip up your jeans. You quickly tuck your hair behind your ears and glance at Jack once more. You notice him adjust his dick in his scrubs before the door opens.
"Hi dad," You blurt out.
"Hey sweetie," Robby sets down the keys in the bowl by your door and he walks over and kisses your forehead. "Sorry Iâm home so late."
"Itâs fine," you say. "Dr. Abbot kept me company."
You turn your head and smile at Abbot.
â â
For tonight
âiâm always on my own
fake boyfriend! jack x eldest daughter! reader
âKnow I wanna beat it, wanna beat it bad Oh, everyone looks happy in a photograph I've crossed the county line, I cannot go back I'm always on my own.â -All Them Horses, Noah Kahan
summary: your family is in town for the annual âparents berating their kids for their decisionsâ get together. jack overhears you talking about how much easier it would be if you had a boyfriend to shove in their face, and offers his services. No strings attached, of course.
wc: 15.7k (steak is too juicy lobster is too buttery)
tags/tropes: jack falls first and harder, reader is an eldest daughter (but not the eldest child) to a large judgmental family who are constantly disappointed in her, jack pretty much uses the fake dating as a chance to show reader what a good boyfriend he COULD be to her if she let herself have nice things, jack 'i'll pay for it' abbot, jack is YEARNING in this one, a teeny bit of mean dom jack as a treat
a/n: how are we all feeling about the latest noah kahan album. Doors is great. i do NOT repeat timestamp 2:14-2:21 of All Them Horses. iâm normal and can be trusted with noah kahanâs discography. fic has been crossposted on ao3 and is linked below :)
acknowledgements: thank you @wesandresons for the amazing gif and @saradika-graphics, @chrisssiren, and @uzmacchiato for the dividers! and thank you @leeknowpegger for your work in keeping up morale and being deranged with me
masterlist | ao3
âYour familyâs in town?â
Youâre at the nurses station, tucked into a corner with your head in your hands while Shen, of course, drinks what has to be his third Dunkin coffee of the day. Where heâs getting them is one of the worldâs strangest unsolved mysteries.Â
You canât see his face, on account of the heels of your hands being pressed into your eyes so hard stars are bursting and swirling behind your eyelids, but you can hear the grimace in his tone.Â
âYeah. I moved out here to get away from them, but they decided to host the annual family dinner circuit here in Pittsburgh instead. My mom always complains about how itâs such a huge imposition to have the entire family fly out, but I never asked to do it and offered to just fly to them on multiple occasions. Apparently, my work schedule is too hard to work around.â
âDinner circuit?â
You wave a hand. âItâs actually a lunch circuit now, since I work nights. Basically, for every single day that theyâre here everybody has to attend a lunch, no matter what. Most of the time theyâre at different restaurants, but sometimes my mom demands to have them at my place.â
âYikes,â The attending says, sipping on the last bits of his coffee, âAnd the whole successful doctor thing doesnât work on them? It got my parents off my back.â
You shake your head. âIâm the only doctor in the family, but they thought I shouldâve been a hospitalist or go into general surgery.â
The sound of ice being shaken in a plastic cup rings in your ears. âThereâs money in emergency medicine. Eventually.âÂ
âThereâs money in all medicine eventually,â You groan, lifting your head and leaning against the wall, blinking dazedly up at the flickering fluorescent lights. âIâm sure if I'd picked general surgery they wouldâve found a problem with that too.â
âSo your fucked, basically.â
Your eyes slip shut again. âYep. Anything short of showing up with a rich boyfriend and a promise of grandkids on the way wonât get my mom off my back.â
Shen clasps you on the shoulder. âBest of luck with that. Youâre the only intern the night shift has got, so weâd rather you donât off yourself via poisoned wine.âÂ
âI wouldnât do poison. Iâd choke on bread so theyâd have to live with the guilt of not being able to save me.â
âJesus fuck, man. I mean, clearly, they suck, but thatâs brutal.â
You shrug. âNot as brutal as my mom not coming to my med school graduation.â
He gapes. âWhat reason could she have possibly had for not showing up?â
âI told her at dinner the night before that I was going into emergency medicine.â
âThatâsâŠâ Shen trails off, flabbergasted, ââŠWow. Now I'm worried youâre going to kill one of them.â
âWay too much effort. They arenât worth the jail time.â
The attending tosses his now empty coffee in a nearby trash can. âWell, if you snap and kill them all in a fit of extremely valid rage, please donât call me. I canât afford to be implicated.â
âYou saying I canât hide a body myself?â
âIâm saying I canât hide a body.â
âWhoâs hiding bodies?â Jack says, sidling up to the two of you with a tablet and a chart open in his hand.Â
Shen jams a thumb in your direction. âSheâs killing her parents later today.âÂ
You roll your eyes. âIâm not. Honestly, so long as I agree with whatever my mom says and donât bring up any trigger topics, Iâll be fine.â
Jack snorts. âYouâre describing being held hostage by someone mentally unstable.â
âDr. Intern?â Ellis interrupts, using the stupid nickname Santos picked for you when she found out youâre the only PGY1 on the night shift, âThereâs a woman in the lobby here to see you. Says sheâs your mom.â
Your stomach drops to your feet and your heart seizes in your chest. âItâs six in the morning. Oh my god. Oh my god.â
Someone behind you says âHoly shit,â but youâre already gone. As youâre speed walking you whip out your phone, checking the dates of their flights that youâd only had a chance to skim andâ fuck. They got in an hour ago. Why the fuck would she stop here? At the PTMC?
You practically slam the doors open and make eye contact with your mom across the crowded lobby.Â
âMom?âÂ
âThere you are sweetie. I was trying to explain that thereâs nothing wrong with me and I was here to see you, but they wouldnât let me. Something about a security issue?â
âItâs not safe. Weâve had incidents in the pastââ
She waves a hand, dismissing you. âIâm your mother. Honestly, I wouldnât have had to come down here if youâd just respond to my texts.âÂ
âIâve told you mom, Iâm really busy here and I donât get very much time to look at my phoneââ
âYour brothers take the time out of their busy schedules to text me back,â She sighs, then continues on, âDid you get time off this week for dinner?â
You frown. âI thought we were having lunch.â
âWell, I figured since weâre all making it easier for your work schedule to come to you, you could manage to take a few days off for your family. But if we need to make an extra effortââ
âItâs fine, mom,â You tell her with a gritted-toothed smile, âI can make something work. Can you just send me the dates again?â
âItâs this Friday and Saturday.â
Before you can even open your mouth to respond, a large, warm hand settles on your shoulder. Accompanied by the hand is a steadying one on your lower back, a familiar, rich scent and a low voice.Â
âCan I help you, maâam?âÂ
Jack.Â
Jack fucking Abbot.Â
Hottest man in the ED. Probably in the world.
Your mom blinks, clearly caught off guard, before regaining her judgy senses and narrowing her eyes at him.Â
âIâm trying to have a conversation with my daughter. Donât tell me youâre security.â
You know for a fact that Jack has his stethoscope around his neck and his keycard in his scrub pocket that says âDOCTORâ on it, so your momâs just being bitchy. Figures.Â
Jackâs hand in your shoulder gives you a tiny, reassuring squeeze before he speaks.Â
âIâm Dr. Abbot,â He sticks out a hand for her to shake, the one that was on your shoulder, âIâm an attending here at the ED.â
And my boss, you mentally add. Your mom probably hears it anyway.Â
âYou work with my daughter?â
âYes maâam. Sheâs the most promising intern we have here on the night shift.â
Your lips twitch at his words. Heâs joking. Testing your motherâ youâre the only PGY1 on the night shift. If your mom remembers that, sheâll pick up on his joke.Â
She doesnât. She purses her lips for a moment before giving him one of her big, fake smiles.Â
âWell thatâs good to hear. Weâre very proud of her.â
Proud of the money I send home, maybe.Â
âIf youâll excuse us, I need her working on patients.â
âOh yes, of course,â Your mom gushes, clearly already charmed by Jack. He has that effect on people. âI didnât realize she was so important and busy here.â
You would if youâd ever let me talk about work before interrupting me and telling me what I should be doing better.Â
Jackâs thumb makes tiny sweeping motions on your lower back, little tingling motions that distract you enough to unclench your jaw and relax your shoulders.Â
âIâll text you as soon as I can, okay mom?â
Your mom sweeps you into a hug, a rare show of affection. Putting on a show for Jack, more than likely.Â
âNo rush. Whenever you get the chance, sweetheart.â
Jack gives her a parting nod, but you wait until your momâs turned around and walking out of the lobby before allowing Jack to steer you back inside.Â
The second the doors close behind you and youâre enveloped in the sounds and smells of the heart of the PTMC, you shut your eyes and release a long exhale.Â
âI,â You start, âAm so sorry. I never thought sheâd show up here, I got the flight times mixed upââ
âHey,â Jackâs voice is low and steady, a much needed anchor. He uses the hand still on your lower back to turn you towards him, âNone of that was your fault. We deal with patients like that every day. It is not your job to keep your mother in line.â
âI know. I know. Still, Iâm sorry. She can be⊠difficult.â
He snorts. âUnderstatement of the year. But seriously. Donât worry about it. If I didnât want to get involved with her, I wouldnât have swooped in there.â
You huff a laugh. âMy hero. Iâm pretty sure if youâd introduced yourself as my boyfriend she wouldâve had an aneurysm. Or a heart attack.â
âAre those desired outcomes?â
âMostly.â
He slides his hands into his pockets and leans against the opposite wall. âMight be worth a shot, then.â
Itâs a very well kept secret that youâve harbored an embarrassing, âthink about him while youâre falling asleep at nightâ crush on Jack.Â
So naturally, your response is to laugh. Loudly. And semi-awkwardly. Because he has to be joking. Obviously.
âYeah, right,â You say, looking down at your feet because eye-contact has never been your forte and Jackâs gaze is too intense, âCould even take you to dinner with me. Maybe my dad would have a heart attack too. Really just wipe out the whole family.â
âYou could.â
âWipe out my entire family?â
âTake me to dinner with you.â
Jackâs body is relaxed and his tone is even. Not light and humor-filled. Thereâs no mischievous uptick to the corner of his lips. He looks like heâs serious.Â
âAre you joking?â
He canât really be serious. Heâs probably just fucking with you. He wouldnât actuallyâ
âNo.â
You run a hand over your hair. âYeah, sure, laugh it up, hahaââ
âIâll go to dinner with you. As your boyfriend.â
What. The. Fuck.Â
âNo.â You gape, incredulous.Â
âNo?â He raises an eyebrow.Â
âNo, I meanâ fuck. Dr. Abbotââ
âJack.âÂ
You purse your lips. âJack. You canât just⊠pretend to be my boyfriend at a family lunch.â
âWhy not?â
âWhy not?â You sputter, âFor one, we hardly know each otherââ
âYouâve been working here for three months. Weâre hardly strangers.â
âYouâre my boss, your way older than me, youâreââ You cut yourself off before you can say something embarrassing like âyouâre ridiculously fucking hot and I havenât washed my socks in monthsâ, âIt wouldnât even be believable. How would we even have met?â
âIn the ED, obviously.â
âHow long have we been together?â
âMonth and a half.â
âWhy are we even dating?â
âBecause youâre a beautiful and intelligent woman, not to mention a good doctor.â
Your mouth goes dry, and your stomach does an entire gymnastics routine.Â
âHave you⊠thought about this?âÂ
He makes a noncommittal hum, tilts his head back a bit. âWould it work?â
âAre you rich?âÂ
Thereâs that devilish, pants dropping smile.Â
âIâm a senior attending on night shifts in an emergency department. Iâm comfortable.â
You worry your lip between your teeth. âI still canât⊠I appreciate the offer, but I canât subject you to my family. No one else should have to suffer through these lunches and dinners.â
âBut you do?â
âTheyâre my family.âÂ
Jack doesnât respond, but he doesnât move off the wall and walk away either. Distantly, you really hope a patient isnât coding somewhere.Â
You sigh. âWhy would you even offer, anyway?âÂ
âYou need help, and Iâm in a position to give it. Plus life has been kind of boring recently. My therapist told me to pick a new hobby that doesnât involve people dying or getting shot at.â
âSo you thought spending an evening being subjected to backhanded questions, comments, and not very subtle micro-aggressions was a good substitute?â
âBeats drinking beer in the park.â
You canât say yes. Itâs crazy. One, it would make your crush a million times worse and you might never recover on that fact alone, and two, when this inevitably blows up in your face, your family will never let you live it down and bring it up in literally every conversation for the rest of your life.Â
On the other hand, if it works, it will work. Your mom would probably get off your back for a while. You wouldnât be a complete and total disappointment. If it works, it would be a much needed win.Â
âSo. Weâve been dating for a month and a half?â
Jack nods, another smile playing at his lips. âI asked you out, of course.â
âFlowers?â
âNaturally.â
âYou pay?âÂ
âFor every meal.â
âWhatâs my favorite color?â
âNavy blue. Mine?âÂ
You roll your eyes. âBlack. What are we going to tell my mom when she pokes at the age gap?â
Someone rushes by, pager beeping, and you both wordlessly start moseying towards your respective patients.Â
âWill she really be that upset about it?â
âProbably not, but sheâll definitely ask about it. My dad will probably be angry, but heâs easier to placate than my mom is.â
Jack hums thoughtfully. âWhenâs the lunch today?â
âTwelve-thirty, at that Italian place that has that mussel dish.â
âHow about this,â He starts, apparently not needing anymore clarification on the location, âLets focus on finishing our shifts right now. Then go home, get some sleep, and Iâll pick you up at eleven so you can pick my brain for every detail that you want to make this work. Deal?â
Last chance to back out. Say hell no, this is a crazy idea, why would you even volunteer for it, I changed my mind.Â
âDeal.â
â
Holy fucking shit. Jack Abbot is your boyfriend.Â
Fake boyfriend. But for the next few hours, heâs as good as yours. Kind of.
In a way.Â
Youâre standing in front of your bathroom mirror, dressed in the outfit you picked out for the stupid lunch when your mom texted you the plane ticket details a month ago.
Neither your makeup nor your hair are cooperating and you really need them to because you have to be perfect, so you need your mascara and stop clumping and your hair to stop laying like that and you just donât want to fucking go.Â
Before frustration induced tears can ruin your half-done makeup, a knock sounds at the door.Â
You rush through your apartment, nearly cracking your skull open on the corner of the couch when you trip over a stray shoe.
Shit, heâs here and youâre not ready, god heâs going to be so upset you have to make him wait itâs so rudeâ
âHi!â You swing open the door and plaster what you hope is a cute-frazzled smile and not a panicked one. Itâs a thin line between the two, âIâm almost ready, Iâm so sorry, you can come in and sit down wherever, I promise I wonât take too long to finish up. Sorry.â
You turn, unable to bear the anger or frustration on his face and dart away (an old methodâ hiding and disappearing is much better for everyone in the long run) but a hand encircles your wrist before you can successfully escape.Â
âWoah, easy girl. Nobodyâs mad at you. We have time, remember?â
Your smile is definitely coming across as panicked.Â
Your nails wander and find a hangnail to pick at while you talk. âI know, but that was so weâd have time to plan and itâs rude to make you wait and I really need time to plan, but I canât get my makeup to look rightââ
Jack nudges you into the house and you cut yourself off with another apology. Right. Cause heâs just standing in the hallway and youâre rambling on like someone deranged. God. Why canât your brain just work? Get into gear? Actually function properly?
âFirst of all,â Jack starts, gently steering you towards your couch, âYou look beautiful.â
Why does he have to say these things? Has he no care for what heâs doing to your heart? Is he unaware that Simone Biles would be impressed with the flip routine your stomach is currently doing?Â
He places a throw pillow in your hands which were previously clenched in your lap. Itâs your favorite throw pillow, actually, because the texture is very soothing. You squeeze it and rub your fingers across the grain.Â
âSecondly, we donât have to do this if you donât want to. I can go home and go to bed and if you want, Iâll never bring it up again. Not even to Robby.â
You crack a wobbly smile. âNot even to Nurse Evans?â
âSheâd probably guess on her own, but I would never confirm her suspicions.âÂ
You tuck your feet under your legs, shrinking into the corner of your couch. âI couldnât even if I wanted to. I already texted my mom to add a person to the reservation, and if I show up without a plus one thereâll be hell to pay.â
âYou could swap me with someone else?â
âDo you think I would have agreed to let my boss be my fake boyfriend if I had someone else to bring?â
âTouchĂ©.âÂ
The corner thread of your throw pillow has begun unraveling, and your wandering fingers pull and tug at it erratically.Â
âIâm sorry. Iâm not usually this neurotic, I swear. My family brings out the worst in me.â
âI ainât judging, sweetheart,â Jack soothes, âBesides. Weâre ER doctors. Weâre all a little neurotic.â
Steadfastly avoiding his gaze (again, just a little too knowing, like he can see every insecurity youâre trying to hide) you stand on shaky legs and rush to the bathroom.Â
âIâll just. Finish up. Sorry again.â
âIâm gonna start a tally of unnecessary sorryâs. Youâre gonna owe me an hour of overtime for each one.â
Oddly enough, getting ready (the rest of the way) feels much more manageable and much less difficult with Jack nearby. He doesnât critique how long it takes you, the fact that you change earrings three times, or tell you that you look good enough and should just go.Â
He just hangs out in your living room, on the couch, practically oozing calm and nonchalance. The foolish, romance-starved part of you wants to cancel on your mom and spend the rest of the day curled up next to him on the couch, like a cat. Lazily dozing while Jack watches TV or something sounds like a much better way to spend your time after work than experiencing all five stages of grief over the course of one lunch. Repeatedly.Â
Finally ready, and with your sanity intact thanks to Jack, you pause by the kitchen and debate the merits of taking a shot to loosen your nerves. Unfortunately, your mom would undoubtedly somehow smell the alcohol on you and no doubt chew you out for a minimum of twenty minutes. Heaven forbid you make the event bearable.
Ever the kind host, you peek your head around the kitchen wall. âDo you want a shot, Jack?â
âYouâre aware that Iâm fifty?â
Right. That's probably an unhinged question.
âJust thought Iâd offer,â You say, meekly tucking the bottle back under the shelf, slightly embarrassed, âSometimes alcohol is the only way I can survive these things.â
Heâs leaned up against the couch, hands in his pockets when you exit the kitchen. âIt was very considerate, thank you. But I think the days of vodka and tequila shots are behind me. Iâm more of a whiskey man, anyways.â
âIâll keep that in mind when we end up at a bar afterwards to drink away memories of the lunch.â
Jack raises an eyebrow. âYou act like weâre going to be hung, drawn, and quartered after showing up.â
You worry your bottom lip between your teeth. âSorry. I just donât want you to be unprepared, because theyâre not always bad but when theyâre bad theyâre bad, you know? And I just donât want to scare you off, and ruin the day you could be spending sleeping, and I really am thankful, by the way, I just donâtââ
âDo you always ramble when youâre worried?â Jack interrupts, tilting his head to the side.
âUm. No? I donât know. I try not to. But like I said. My family brings out the worst in me.â
He searches your face for a moment, then taps the underside of your chin with a crooked finger, raising it slightly.Â
âWe got this, okay? Iâm not easy to scare. Combat med vet, remember? Plus, if it really gets that bad, Iâll fake a call from the hospital. Say there was some horrible accident and weâre being called in.â
âWonât my mom get wise when she never hears it on the news?â
Jack shrugs. âItâs the city. Something horrible is always happening here.â
He holds the front door open for you when youâve got your shoes on and purse ready, but as youâre sliding past him, he leans down, the angle of his jaw almost brushing the side of your neck, and breathes in deeply.Â
âYou smell good.âÂ
Fuck the gymnastics routine. Your stomach is going for Olympic Gold.Â
âOh,â You exhale, a shiver running up your spine and a pleasant tingling sparking where your skin barely brushed his, âUhâ Thanks. Vanilla and spice. I like layering scents.â
âItâs nice. Suits you.âÂ
You manage to squeak out another awkward âThanksâ before hastily locking the door, hoping he canât tell just how flustered he keeps making you. Judging by the smile playing at his lips, your hopes are in vain.Â
The car ride to the restaurant is longer than it should be, on account of Pittsburgh traffic, but the time goes by quickly as you pepper Jack with questions to prepare for the million and one that your mother will no doubt ask.Â
(âWhat should I say if she asks if weâve slept together?â
âDo you really, honestly, truly think your mother is going to bring up the topic of sex at the table, in a nice restaurant, with your entire family present?â
âFair point.â)
By the time you arrive, youâve picked and torn every single hangnail and loose cuticle around your fingers down to raw flesh and tiny dots of blood. Jack parks the car (parallel parks easily in one go, no repositioning needed, in downtown Pittsburgh. Itâs one of the hottest things youâve ever seen in your life) a good distance away from the restaurant, so that your family wouldnât be able to see you if you decided to flee to his car to escape them.Â
At least, thatâs what he says.Â
âI want you to hang onto the car keys, okay? If they get too much, you can sneak out through the kitchen and go to the car. Iâll meet you there.â
You canât help but smile at his efforts. âAnd what will you be doing while Iâm sneaking out?â
âSinging your praises, of course.â
Exhaustion from the shift you worked in what seems like a lifetime ago lines your limbs, but as you step out of the car (through the door Jack insists on opening for you âIn case theyâre still watching,â) and loop your arm through Jackâs, you feel⊠almost capable.Â
The lunch is going to suck. Thatâs a given. But Jack assured you heâs seen worse (âProbably done worse, sweetheart,â) and will not leave the lunch in a fit of rage and cause a scene. His arm is firm and solid âand fucking huge, how are his biceps that bigâ under your arm, and his presence is steadying.Â
As you cross the street and begin your final walk towards the building, he un-loops his arm from yours, but after you make a questioning noise in your throat, worried youâd be completely untethered (how pathetic to already be this reliant on a man, but thereâs no time to unpack that now) but instead he wraps his arm around your waist instead, drawing you to his side and effectively grounding you to his body.Â
The entire left side of your body lights up at the contact, and if this were your apartment, it would be very difficult to refrain from climbing him like a tree or doing something equally embarrassing, like plastering yourself to his side and begging him to never stop touching you.Â
Youâve almost managed to come off unaffected, but then he leans down, lips almost brushing your ear, and whispers:Â
âYouâve got this, baby. And if you donât, I do.â
Forget your family. Jack Abbot is going to be the death of you.Â
When you walk into the restaurant, hyper-aware of Jackâs grip on your body (your delusional mind has you thinking how⊠possessive the hand almost feels, if you ignore the fact that this is all fake) your family is waiting in the foyer, talking amongst themselves.Â
Your mother immediately zeroes in on you. âHoney, weâve talked about you being on time to these things. You canât be late to important familyââ
You watch in real time as your motherâs gaze finally flicks to Jack, and the shades of recognition, shock, almost disgust, and confusion before settling back into forced pleasantness.Â
Your father, however, looks downright murderous. Looks like the age gap isnât going down too well.Â
If Jack is at all nervous or put off by the several stares and outright glares from your family, he does not show it. He exudes cool confidence, the same unflappable energy he has during chaotic night shifts. The same calm that makes him so alluring to you in the first place.Â
He sticks out his hand for your mother to shake, a mirror of earlier that day in the PTMC lobby.Â
âI believe weâve met before, but Iâll introduce myself again. Iâm Dr. Jack Abbot.â
Your mother shakes his hand, but looks between the two of you like youâve just spilled wine on her Persian rug that she canât afford in the first place.Â
âYouâre my daughterâs plus one?â
Jack nods. âHer boyfriend, yes.â
Your brotherâs gape. Your dadâs glare intensifies. You want to kiss Jack.Â
âHoney,â Your mother says, gaze darting to you, âYou didnât sayââ
âI didnât want you to meet him at the hospital,â You tell her, hoping the lie doesnât come across as too rehearsed, since you did rehearse it several times with Jack in the car on the way over, âThe lobby of the hospital isnât the best place to introduce people. And we really did have patients to get back to.â
Your mother purses her lips. âWhy the last minute addition? If youâd told me that he was coming before today, it wouldâve been easier to make the reservation.â
Jack is quicker to respond than you. âThatâs my fault, actually. I didnât think I was going to be able to come, what with my shifts as a senior attending, but when we met in the lobby I understood how important it was to make the time.â
You have to try hard not to smile at Jackâs not-so-subtle flex. Senior attending.Â
âYes, well. My daughter doesnât always stress the importance of these things.âÂ
Jackâs grip on your waist tightens ever-so-slightly at the backhanded remark, and your motherâs gaze darts to the point of contact. But your father jerks his head towards the tables before she can say anything. âIâm starving.â
Everyone files in behind him, with you and Jack at the back of the line. Again, he leans down to whisper to you.Â
âHowâd I do?â
You elbow him in the side. âWeâll discuss your performance after this is over.â
âLooking forward to it.âÂ
The hostess leads everyone over to a large table near a window (your mother is particularly about seating) and everyone finds a seat. One of your brothers, either as a test or just to be a shit (your moneyâs on the latter) slides into the open seat next to you before Jack can.Â
To his credit, Jack doesnât cause a scene, but he doesnât back down either. He just stares at your idiot brother for awhile before finally asking:Â
âDo you really wanna do this right now?â
Your brother must sense that Jack Abbot is not a man to be fucked with (just a man you want to fuck), and scurries to his own seat, tail between his legs.Â
Once everyone is seated and the food is ordered (you donât bother ordering anything other than the salad; Jack orders the most expensive thing on their menu. Heâs never seemed like one to care for finery and expensive Italian restaurants where you practically have to order in Italian, but again, his unfazed demeanor makes him fit in anywhere) your family immediately begins peppering him with questions. Questions you knew theyâd ask and appropriately prepared him for.Â
âSo. Dr. Abbotââ
âJust Jack is fine.â
ââHow long have the two of you been dating?â
âA month and a half.â
âWhyâd you start dating?â
You take a generous gulp of your wine.Â
âBecause your daughter is an incredible woman and an even better doctor.â
âDo you think sheâs pretty?â One of your brothers chimes in.Â
Jack takes it in stride, despite that not being a question you prepared. âIâd have to be blind and stupid if I didnât.â
You feel hot from the tips of your ears down to your toes.Â
Thatâs going in the mental folder.Â
âHave you always wanted to be a doctor?â
âPretty much. Took a bit of a detour as a combat medic first, though.â
âWhyâd you leave?âÂ
âHonorably discharged after I lost my right leg. Below the knee amputation.â
You drain the rest of your glass and inconspicuously motion to the waiter for more wine.Â
The table is silent for the customary length of time after someone drops the âgot a limb chopped offâ bomb. Your family is clearly mildly uncomfortable, but Jack just keeps sipping his drink, his free hand drifting down and brushing the side of your thigh.
Your dad clears his throat. Here we go. Home stretch. Final questions before weâre in the clear.Â
âMr. Abbotââ
âEither Doctor or Jack works.âÂ
Ooo. There was some bite in that one.Â
Your Dad frowns. He does not like to be interrupted or corrected. Youâve been on the receiving end of far too many hour long lectures (read: berating and borderline verbal abuse) to know better.Â
But Jack isnât his daughter. Jack is pretty much his equal. Actually, the fact that Jack not only served but is now a doctor places him above your father, by social conventions.Â
This no doubt infuriates your father. Heâs always hated it when he couldnât tear somebody down to his level. A true coward.Â
âJack,â Your dad continues, a trademarked forced smile to save face, âYouâre a smart man, yeah? Havenât you ever considered the age difference between the two of you might be a little much?âÂ
Yikes. Questioning Jackâs competency is not the way to go. Jack is very competent. And smart. And capable. Itâs really hot.Â
Your fake-boyfriend just reaches over and grasps your hand, over the table, and looks at you with such devotion in his eyes that you forget how to breathe.Â
âWar doesnât really lend to longevity. Iâve learned to hold on tight to things I care about.âÂ
For a moment, it doesnât feel fake. Thereâs raw, punched emotion in his voice, and his thumb rubs your hand gently. Like he really does care that much. Like he wants to hold on.Â
But then your brother fake-gags and your fake boyfriend looks away with that, heâs passed the tests, and the conversation moves onto to different topics. Jack laughs at all the right moments, doesnât bring up any argument-starting topics, doesnât rise to bait when itâs thrown his way.Â
Heâs perfect.Â
Eventually lunch is drawn to a polite close. You have one last glass of wine while Jack settles the bill. Himself. With one card. He doesnât even look.Â
Your mom sends a smirk your way after he waves off your fatherâs attempt at splitting the bill or offering to pay. Itâs probably the third time sheâs actually looked at you for the entire duration of the lunch, but since itâs positive, youâll let it slide.Â
Pretty soon bags are grabbed, hands are shook, and Jackâs hand magically finds its way back to your lower back and youâre being (very gently) escorted out of the restaurant and to the car.Â
âWow,â You breathe as you slide into the passenger seat of his car. âI think thatâs the smoothest a lunch with my family has ever gone in my entire life. Youâre really good at this.â
Jack doesnât respond though. Doesnât make any kind of noise that he heard you. His hands are nearly white knuckled on the steering wheel and heâs staring straight ahead.Â
âJack?âÂ
âThey didnât even talk to you.â
You blink.Â
âWhat?â
âYour family never tried to include you in the conversation. Didnât even ask you any questions.â
You snort. âTrust me, itâs better that way.â
He hasnât started the car yet, just keeps staring off into the middle ground. He canât be old enough to start doing a thousand yard stare already, right?
âYou ordered a salad.â He says, a very prominent frown on his lips.Â
âSo? It wasnât too expensive, was it? I swear, if I knew you were gonna pay for the whole bill I wouldâve looked at something cheaper, I donât know why salads are so expensiveââ
âPlease donât apologize for ordering a salad,â Jack says, voice pained, âEspecially because I know you hate salads.â
Oh.Â
âHow do you know that?â
âI overheard you talking to Dr. King that time you two were discussing the merits of Olive Garden. You said the salad there was the only kind you like, because of the dressing and the pepperoncinis.â
Your cheeks heat. âI never said I hated all salads. I said I like that one in particular.â
âYou hardly ate anything during lunch.â
âMy family tends to have that effect on my appetite.â
Jack does not look placated. He doesnât take the out that your little joke provides. Doesn't so much as huff. He looks upset. Distressed.Â
Something about what he said goes ding! in your mind.
ââŠMel and I had that conversation like, last month. You seriously remembered that?âÂ
He frowns harder, like the answer to your partly rhetorical question should be obvious.
(Itâs not. Why would he remember that conversation? Why would he care at all?)
âOf course I remember.âÂ
There isnât much to say after that. Youâre not really sure what in particular has upset Jack, what possibly blunder or error youâve made to incur him going completely monosyllabic and frowny. Ever eager to appease, you refrain from any attempts to cajole him, make conversation, breathe too loudly, or make any kind of indication that youâre still present.Â
The tension in the car is thick and uncomfortable. It prickles at your skin and the hairs on the back of your neck, but the only thing you dare to do is scroll through Pinterest, only looking at the safest, basic boards in case Jack glances over (he doesnât.)
But then he does glance over. He just doesnât look at your phone.Â
Jack just keeps looking at you.Â
Heâll look over, eyes darting over your face like heâs looking for something, and then heâll look away. Over and over for almost the entire course of the drive. He only stops when you accidentally time your staring (monitoring) of him wrong and make eye contact.Â
He parks by your place (he once again sexily parallel parks with ease) and then puts the car in park. And then he starts talking.Â
âYouâre so much more than them.âÂ
Jack has the heat on, but the air in the car suddenly feels cold.Â
âWhat?â
âYour family,â Jack clarifies, like that was the confusing part âYour parents. I hated watching you⊠disappear like that. You deserve better than that. You are better than that.âÂ
You try to swallow, almost choking on the sudden lump in your throat.Â
âListen,â You start, unaware of how to even begin processing what he said, let alone formulating the best response because your brain is just flashing abort! Abort! Abort! in big neon letters,, âThank you for today. I really appreciate it. But if this is all just too much, I can handle things from here. Really. I can say that someone called out and you had to cover shiftsââ
âNo.â
Jack says it with such vehemence, bordering on vitriol, that it startles you, and you flinch backwards ever so slightly.Â
An old habit.Â
Something flashes across his face âgone before you can decipher itâ and he noticeably forces himself calmer. Â
âI wouldnât be able to live with myself if I let you go alone again. Ever.âÂ
Your brain starts short-circuiting at his words. âI really canât ask you toââ
âItâs a good thing youâre not asking me then.âÂ
âJackââ
âPlease.â
Youâre stunned silent at the rawness in his toneâ the pain.Â
He said please. He said it like he was begging. He is begging.Â
âI donât know how you do it,â He continues, jaw working, âI can see it on you, plain as day. How you hate what they do, how it makes you hurt. But you keep going.â
You shrug uselessly. âIs there another option?âÂ
Jack reaches out for you, then falters, like he thought better. A tiny part of you wishes heâd followed through; bridged the yawning gap between the two of you thatâs made up of the center console in his car, a couple decades, and your own unwillingness to try at vulnerability.Â
âIâll walk you to your door.âÂ
The walk to your door is a stark contrast to the walk to the restaurant. Thereâs no mischief on his face now, only a mask of stony distress.Â
At the doorway to your apartment building, you pause. It seems customary. Appropriate. Necessary.
Really, you just want to look at Jack some more. Try to puzzle out why the lunch that felt like it went so well made him so upset. Where youâre getting signals wrong and crossing wires. Why success to you is failure to him.Â
(As an ED resident, youâve seen child abuse cases. Youâve seen foster care children littered with cigarette burns and criss-crossing scars of broken bottles and the corners of coffee tables and haunted eyes. Â
You know your family isnât great. But there arenât any cigarette burns or glass scars or eyes that track fast movement.)
You have this burning inclination to apologize to Jack. Logically, you know you havenât done something wrong, but you feel like you have because heâs upset so maybe you can make it better?Â
âYou have that look on your face.â
You frown. âWhat look?âÂ
âThe âIâm gonna apologize for something stupidâ look.â
âI wasnât going to.â
âYou were thinking about it,â Jack ducks down, catches your eyes, âHey, listen to me. You cannot fix what I am upset about. It is not your job. My mood is not your responsibility.âÂ
âItâs freaky when you do that.â
âDo what?â
âYou always know what Iâm thinking.â
Jack just huffs; shoves his hands in his pockets.Â
Emboldened by his reassurance, you ask: âWhy are you upset?âÂ
âBecause your family treats you like shit, and I want to fix it, but I canât.âÂ
âOh.âÂ
Itâs not that bad. It canât be that bad. Youâve seen bad. This isnât it. Itâs hard, but itâs not bad.Â
He stays quiet, seemingly sensing the inner turmoil his words have sparked. That, or he really is that good at reading you.Â
Jack nods towards your door. âWe can talk later. Get some sleep. We both have shifts tonight.â
Right. Yeah. All of these events roughly occurred over the course of six hours. Time makes sense.Â
Despite the fact that you are exhausted and desperately need to sleep if you have any chance of surviving your âquickly approachingâ shift, you linger.Â
âHow am I supposed to repay you for all of this?âÂ
The question thatâs been burning a hole in your pocket since he said Iâll do it.Â
He just shakes his head. Like itâs simple. Easy. âThis isnât something I want repayment for. Now go. Youâre no good to me as a zombie.âÂ
âIâll just have some of Shenâs Dunkin.â
âHe doesnât share that shit. Besides, heâs off tomorrow.â
âMaybe Iâllââ
âSleep,â He points at your door, âNow.âÂ
You smile at his insistence. Heâs sort of like cold coffee with sugar. Seems all bitter but then you get a bit of that sweet crunch, so it balances out. He balances out.Â
Sometimes it feels like he balances you out.Â
âGoodnight.â
He gives you a little smile of his own.Â
âGoodnight.â
â
Jack Abbot does not take his own advice. Mostly because he knows if he doesnât talk about what happened during that lunch from hell, heâs going to do something that will end in him being thrown in prison and having his medical license revoked. More importantly, if that happens, he wonât be around to take care of you.Â
So instead he collapses on his couch, works his prosthetic off to give his stump a needed break, and dials the number at the top of his favorites in his contact list.Â
âThis really isnât a good timeââ
âRobby,â Jack starts, âThey didnât even fucking talk to her.âÂ
âJesus, okay. Whitaker! Cover for me a sec, will you? I gotta deal with this.â
âThey justâŠâ Jack continues, genuinely at a loss for words. His vocabulary feels woefully unequipped to relay the depth of anger he feels about the events of the lunch, ââŠIgnored her. They talked over her, didnât ask her questions, hardly ever let her finish speaking when she did finally get a chance to speak, and threw jabs at her constantly. It was fucking awful.â
The background noise quiets over the phone, and Jack knows Robbyâs moved to either the break room or an empty patient room.Â
âShe fight back at all?â
âNo. Just⊠grinned and beared it. It was fuckinâ unsettling, man. Iâve seen her yell back at rude patients, watched her stand her ground to EMTâs who think they know better. It was like she hollowed herself out to sit at that table.âÂ
âChrist.â
âShe flinched away from me. Afterwards, in the car, when I raised my voice on accident.â
âFuck. Do you thinkââ
âI donât know. Maybe when she was younger. They donât live in state, so if they are, sheâs safe.âÂ
Jack scrubs a hand down his face. âGod. I donât know what to do, Robby. It doesnât seem like sheâs got⊠anybody. She didnât even understand why I was upset. She doesnât get why that would be upsetting.âÂ
âSheâs friends with Mel and Santos, right?âÂ
âAnd Whitaker by extension, yeah. But those are recent friends. Iâve never heard her mention anybody from back home. No boyfriend or best friend or anything. Sheâs just been doing everything on her own.â
Jack can picture Robby nodding. âWeâve done our fair share of that.â
âYeah, and look where that got us. I canât just leave her here. Fuck, it was like watching someone kick a puppy, over and over.âÂ
âThat bad?âÂ
âYeah.âÂ
The line goes silent for a bit, both men stewing on the subject at hand.Â
âSheâs always had these habits. I thought they were just personality quirks, you know. I mean, weâre all fucked up, but watching it happenâŠâ
âItâs different.âÂ
âYou could say that,â Jack sighs, âShe soaks up praise like a fucking sponge. She looks surprised every time I do something nice for her. And she keeps trying to make me happy.â
âYou lost me on that last one.âÂ
âIt doesnât⊠Sheâs not doing it to make me happy, exactly. She just does everything she can to keep me from getting mad.âÂ
âIs there a difference?â
âThere is. Eager to please versus eager to appease.â
âAre you sure you want to get involved?â
âBit late for that.â
âYou could pull back.â
âFuck no, I canât. Then Iâd be kicking the puppy.â
âShe is a grown woman.â
âWho happens to look like a kicked puppy.â
He scrubs a hand down his face, groaning into the microphone.Â
âYou finally realize how ridiculous you sound?â
Jack grunts. âIâm not giving you the satisfaction of answering that.â
The line crackles with the staticky sound of Robby chuckling. âThatâs an answer in it of itself, and you know that.âÂ
He lets the line go quiet again, briefly debating just hanging up.Â
âI donât know, Robby. Itâs justâŠâ
âWorse than you expected?â
âYeah.â
âCome on. You knew that was a possibility. Has it put you off, at all?â
âFuck no.â
âExactly. Now please, go to bed so I can get back to saving lives? Whitaker is covering for me and heâs only gone through two pairs of scrubs so far today. Iâm not a betting man, but if I were, Iâd bet money that heâs moved onto his third during this conversation.âÂ
âI save lives too.â
âYou wonât save any if you fall asleep on the drive over and die.â
âI would never fall asleep behind the wheel.â
âThatâs what they all say.âÂ
Jack really does hang up after that, plugging his phone in and rushing through everything he needs to do before bed.Â
But even as exhaustion pulls his body down into deep, dreamless sleep, he canât stop thinking about that hollow look on your face. And he knows, even half-asleep, that he wonât be able to let it go.
â
The next night at work is weird, because nothing has changed, except now you know what the inside of Jackâs car looks like and how his voice sounded when he begged you to let him help.Â
Itâs jarring, to say the least. Unsteadying and mildly world-rocking if youâre being honest.Â
But gossip travels fast within the walls of the PTMC, so by the time night shift is halfway over, youâre convinced youâve heard every variation in existence of the same two questions:Â
âDid you and Jack go on a date yesterday?âÂ
And:Â
âWhatâs Jack like on a date?âÂ
The answer to the first question is complicated and embarrassing, so you donât answer it or any of itâs variants. The answer to the second question is not complicated but it does, however, stir some very complicated feelings, so you refrain from answering that one too. You just try to refrain from thinking about or seeing him in general.
Youâre not avoiding Jack, per se. Just keeping busy. With other stuff. Thatâs conveniently nowhere near him.Â
Ellis keeps shooting you entirely too knowing looks, Mckay, whoâs pulling a double, pats your shoulder and tells you sheâs there if you want to talk, Shen is absent as Jack said he would be, and Jack himself is acting like nothing happened and everything is normal and heâs never been to your apartment smelled your perfume.Â
(ââŠI like layering scents.â
âItâs nice. Suits you.â)
Itâs all too much.
Hence the avoiding.
You try to curb your own ridiculousness for the sake of your patients, but itâs oddly difficult. Youâve always been amazing at compartmentalizing. If your family gave you any kind of skill, itâs the ability to shove your feelings in a box, and then shove that box in a corner of your mind you wonât access consciously until you end up on public transportation with your headphones. You should be more than capable of gathering up all the loose feelings labeled âFor: Jack Abbotâ and tucking them all nice and neat in that little box and then shove it in a dark mental corner.Â
But you canât. And along with the flurry of Jack Abbot causing a hurricane in your head, thereâs a lesser storm that is the result of your family. More specifically, how they look to Jack.Â
All roads lead back to Rome. Or, in your case, to Jack.Â
You catch yourself during every spare moment or menial task that doesnât require 100% of your brain power analyzing every interaction he had with them. Everything they said, everything they did, and how Jack wouldâve taken it. And why. Because clearly, the act of dealing with them isnât the problem. The ease and finesse in which he did so crosses that off the list. So itâs something else.Â
Itâs how they treat you.Â
You understand, logically, that it would be upsetting, from his point of view. If you were in his place, youâd also probably be upset too.Â
But this feels different. Jackâs reaction is different. Jack is different.Â
Itâs just never really been something that anyone should be upset over. Your family are who they are. Not great, but not truly bad either. You deal with them sparingly. You donât even live in the same state anymore. Itâs not a big deal.Â
âWhy are you hiding from me in a supply closet?âÂ
You whirl around, a box of gloves clutched in your hands.
âIâm not hiding from you.â
Jack crosses his arms and leans against the doorway. âThis is the third time youâve been here in two hours.â
âSo? I just want to be⊠on top of things. Iâm a productive person.âÂ
âYou are,â He amends, âBut all of your productivity tonight has been pretty strictly nowhere near me. Funny how that works.â
You sigh, placing the gloves back on the rack. âThings are just⊠weird, okay? I donât know how youâre being so normal about all this?â
He raises an eyebrow. âNormal how?â
âYou seemed pretty upset yesterday. Youâre acting like nothingâs changed, butââ
âNothing has changed.â
Your fingers wander and find a loose piece of skin on the edge of your cuticle, and you begin absent-mindedly picking at it.Â
You canât exactly disagree with him, right here, in the supply closet at the hospital. But you canât quite bring yourself to agree eitherâ because whether he acknowledges it or not, things have changed. Seeing him outside the hospital, perfectly placating your family into one of the most peaceful get-togethers youâve had in years isn't just nothing.Â
Itâs everything. And you, for one, canât just pretend that it didnât happen.Â
âHey,â He calls your name softly, âWhatâs on your mind? Whatâs bugging you?âÂ
âNothing.â
He snorts, pushing off the doorframe and shutting the door behind him, so itâs just the two of you alone. âLiar.â
He doesnât probe any further, just leans against the now closed door with his hands in his pockets, eyes flitting over you like theyâre looking for an answer. An answer youâre too hesitant to give.Â
âIâm just worried.âÂ
âYou? Worried? No.âÂ
You cut him a glare, âThereâs a very real chance that this could all go horribly awry, you know.â
âSure,â Jack dips his head, âBut thatâs not what youâre really worried about.â
âAnd how do you know that?â
âBecause that doesnât address the fact that youâre avoiding me.â
You sigh, scrubbing a hand across your face.Â
âWhy do you care?âÂ
The question thatâs been nagging at you since the beginning. The little itch in the back of your mind that you just canât seem to get rid of. The puzzle you canât figure out; the tune you canât place.Â
Youâre a logic driven person. You like knowing how things worksâ why they work. Why things do the things they do.Â
You like having the why. Having the why makes the world make sense.Â
Nothing about Jack Abbot makes sense.Â
âWhy do I care about what?â
âThis,â You gesture vaguely to the air, âMe. I donât buy that you just didnât have anything better to do or whatever it was you said. People donât just⊠do that. Youâre really ruining your life for an entire week for what? So I'm a little less uncomfortable? Me? At the end of the day, weâre just coworkers. I know how important your down time is for you, so I just donât get why youâre so okay with being miserable just for my sake. Iâm not that important. These stupid lunches arenât that important.âÂ
Itâs a stupid confession. Much too vulnerable for a supply closet and a man youâre harboring feelings for.Â
He doesnât respond right away. Hums, stares at his shoes for a bit. Re-adjusts so his prosthetic isnât taking so much weight.Â
âYou are important. Youâre important to me, to this hospital, to your patients. And for the record, I am not âruining my week.â If it was that easy for my week to be ruined, I never would have become a doctor, let alone joined the military.â
âBut why?âÂ
âJesus, you watched a lot of the science channel growing up, didnât you?âÂ
You snort. âGuilty as charged.âÂ
Now itâs his turn to sigh.Â
âYou⊠seem to have this misguided belief that caring is reciprocal in nature.â
You frown. âIt is.âÂ
âIt isnât. At least it shouldnât be, but I donât think anyone ever told you that.âÂ
You scoff. âSo this is about my family.âÂ
He shrugs. âAmongst other things.â
âTheyâre not that bad.â
âThey are.âÂ
âOther people have it worse.â
âItâs not a competition.âÂ
You resist the urge to throw your hands in the air. âWhy is this such a big deal to you?âÂ
âBecause itâs a big deal to you.âÂ
The air gets quiet and tense. Like the supply closet and all the medical supplies in it are holding their breath. If they were alive, if they were holding their breath, youâre convinced theyâd all be looking at you.Â
Itâs Jack who speaks first though.Â
âI can see it. You do everything yourself, get back up even when itâs hard. You look out for other people more than you look out for yourself. Youâre selfless and kind and I donât think very many people give that back to you.âÂ
A reflexive smile pulls at your lips, a habit you never quite managed to kick after years of people telling you âsmile, look grateful, stop looking so upset, thereâs nothing to cry about.â It feels awkward and clunky on your mouth but you donât know what else to do. Thereâs no pre-written protocol for something like this.
âI still donât really get it.â You murmur, more to yourself than to Jack.
Jack sends you a light grin. âWeâll work on it.âÂ
âWe will?âÂ
âSure,â He shrugs, âAlready started anyways.âÂ
âIf youâre sure.âÂ
âIâm sure,â He opens the door, âNow get back out there. And bring the gloves too.â
You roll your eyes but comply, snagging the box off the shelf where youâd left it and following him out.Â
The rest of your shift passes much smoother than before, even with the routine influx of patients as the time inches closer to morning. Jack doesnât hover, but doesnât pull the disappearing act that you (totally fairly) pulled on him either. He truly seems unfazed. Like it really, actually doesnât bother him.Â
Well. Correction. It does bother him, but not because itâs something heâs doing for you, the part that bothers him (apparently) is how all of this affects you. All this caring makes you feel like a deer in the headlights.
You recall something he said that night. Something that had made you shiverâ something that hit the nail right on the head.Â
âHey, listen to me. You cannot fix what I am upset about. It is not your job. My mood is not your responsibility.âÂ
He always seems to know exactly what to say to you. How to act, what to do, what specific worry youâre feeling and the best course of action to soothe it. Itâs great but itâs also difficult, because thereâs a part of you that wants to let him keep doing it, but then thereâs the part of you that bristles every time and wants to snap that youâre completely capable of doing things yourself.Â
That probably wouldnât even work. Heâd just say something infuriating and sexy, like âI know, but I want to do this for you.âÂ
He would. He totally would.Â
The thought is equal parts haunting and reassuring.Â
(And maybe, also, a little, kind of really sweet?)
â
The next two lunches go great. Jack is still freakishly incredible at charming your family. And, with his help, you actually manage to hold a (mostly) civil conversation with your parents for the first time in⊠years.Â
The lunches are fine, but the part youâve started looking forward to is the before and after. Before, Jack comes to pick you up, and sometimes he comes early and helps prepare (which mostly involves him either talking you off the ledge, pouring a shot or two, or assuring you that your makeup and outfit look great. Not fine, great) or just to hang out. The hanging out part is nice, because he never comes with any sort of expectation. Heâll sit on your couch and scroll through his phone and entertain all the inane chatter you like to get out of your system beforehand but never had an outlet for before.Â
The after is even more fun. You run through the highlights of the night and hate on all the annoying things your family said to you. This usually also involves stopping somewhere for food (only for you, Jackâs never hungry because he eats t=at the restaurants but youâre never allowed to order anything that isnât a salad) and then the two fo you fight over who pays. You always insist since youâre the only one actually eating any of the food, but then Jack usually takes your card, puts it in his pocket, and uses his own.Â
Itâs as frustrating as it is hot.Â
But for the most part, the lunches and your shifts at work have actually been pretty goodâ as good as night shifts in a trauma center can be, anyway. Jackâs presence is⊠steadying, even when heâs not physically there. Heâs always present in some wayâ whether itâs little reminders he leaves at your favorite spot for charting (he only uses blue sticky notes) or a real lunch left for you in the breakroom fridge (you werenât previously aware he actually knew how to cook, or that he knew how picky you are when it comes to what youâll actually eat for lunch and how often you get too busy to properly make something.) Sometimes heâs there in your head; in little things heâs told or taught you that you remember in the moment.Â
Itâs nice. To have someone be around. Someone you can relax with, joke withâ someone who hasnât looked down on you for the the way you turned out.Â
You were pretty ready to declare smooth sailing ahead, but then on the third lunch your mother shows up and is decidedly not in a good mood and the seas turn choppy and the boat smashes into the rocks below.Â
At least, two peach bellinis in, thatâs what it feels like.Â
âHonestly,â Your mother puffs, âI donât understand why making some simple appetizers could take so long. This is why I hate going to restaurants during lunch hours, the staff just gets so lazy. The menu is always better at dinner anyways.âÂ
You ignore the thinly veiled dig and instead choose to quietly drain the rest of your third peach bellini. They taste like juice and take a much needed edge (or two) of the evening. Lunch. What-fucking-ever.Â
Jack, ever aware of the best way to survive these functions (somehow) whilst keeping his sanity, remains silent as your mom huffs and puffs, seeming to understand that trying to placate her when she gets in these moods is a fruitless endeavor that only leads to your mom getting more upset and everyone else more annoyed.Â
You, made slightly optimistic by the wonderful powers of alcohol, attempt to put her in a better mood.Â
âI have the next three days off, mom. Weâll be able to do dinners instead.â
Your mother, however, only scoffs. âThatâs no good to anyone now. Weâve already spent half this week dealing with poor restaurant service. I mean, no respectable job would have such a ridiculous schedule."Â
âIâm a doctor, mom. It doesnât get more respectable than that.âÂ
Jack nudges your leg with his, either a silent laugh, show of support, or quiet question of your sanity. Maybe all three.Â
Another bellini appears in front of you, this one heavier on the alcohol than the last. Your server is getting a giant tip when this is all over.Â
âYou work in the emergency department, dear. Thatâs hardly stable, and stable is respectable,â Jack clears his throat, and your mother at least has the manners to look mildly sheepish, âNo offense, Jack.âÂ
He smiles thinly. âNone taken.âÂ
Conversation from there is stilted at best with even your brothers tip-toeing around your mother. No one wants to be the subject of a nitpicking lecture, even when the version she gives them is a slap on the wrist compared to what you endure.Â
So you keep drinking your belliniâs and they keep coming. After your fourth, you think you should maybe slow down a little, but then your dad starts grilling Jack about his life (again) and you decide that alcohol is, in fact, necessary.Â
âHave you ever been in a serious relationship before, Jack?âÂ
That one almost makes you ask the server for a shot of vodka, straight. Thatâs a question you ask a nineteen year-old pimple-faced boy, not a fucking fifty year old man.Â
âI have, yes. But, like most things in life, they were learning experiences. Iâve moved on.âÂ
Your dad snorts, then gestures to you. âYou could teach her a thing or two about moving on.âÂ
Your blood runs cold.Â
Jack sets his glass down. âAnd what do you mean by that?â
Itâs your mother who answers. Because one vulture circling your soon-to-be carcass wasnât enough.Â
âIâm surprised she hasnât told you. It was all she ever talked about for years. Sheâs had exactly one boyfriend before youâ what was his name honey?â
âChristopher,â You answer hollowly, stomach churning.Â
Your dad snaps his fingers. âThatâs it. It took ages for her to get her first boyfriend. We were fairly convinced it would never happen, but then one day she came home with Christopher. Whole family wanted to throw a partyâ finally found someone to put up with all that attitude!â
Your family laughs, but Jack doesnât.Â
âWhereâs the funny part, in all this?â
Your mother clears her throat, just a tad awkward. âWhen she broke up with him it was awful. She refused to leave her room for works, cried all the time. Honestly, I would have understood if he had broken up with her, but it was all her decision.âÂ
Your dad nods in agreement. âWe had to have a sit-down conversation with her about decisions and consequences before she finally stopped crying and hiding in her room. Christopher was such a nice boy, we hated to see him go.â
Jack opens his mouth, poised to fire something back and defend you, but you beat him to the punch.Â
âHe cheated on me with my best friend.âÂ
At that, your mother frowns. âThatâs not what Christopher said. You were in your teen angst era, remember? Always picking fights? He told your brother that you were so distant with him he didnât know you were still together.âÂ
âI wasnât distant, I was really busy. I was studying for the MCAT. He knew that. He knew how important medical school was to me.âÂ
Your brother rolls his eyes. âMed school was all you talked about. Itâs not like you were putting out.â
Your mother snaps her fingers once. âThat is inappropriate talk for public. You know better.âÂ
âCome on, mom. Itâs true. Everyone knowsââ
âSorry to interrupt,â Jack says, not at all sounding sorry, âBut the hospital just texted. Thereâs an emergency, and weâre needed, so we have to go.âÂ
Jack does not wait for your mother or father to excuse him. He just stands, offering you his hand. It turns out that you need it, because there is, apparently, such a thing as too many peach bellinis. Your mom sends you a pointed glare as you stumble once, after which you make a concerted effort to look more sober.Â
Neither you nor Jack bother saying proper goodbyes. Once he grabs your jacket and purse (and your vision stops swimming so much and youâre sure you can walk in a convincing approximation of a straight line) youâre both gone. You pass your server on the way out, who is slipped a very generous cash tip for the excellent bellini service.Â
By the time you get to the car, you realize that youâre about to have to save patient lives and you are very, extremely, drunk. There is no way you are capable of doing any life-saving at the moment.Â
âJack,â You mumble, fumbling with your seatbelt, âI think Iâm too drunk to go in. Did they say how serious the emergency was? Can I just get a banana bag?âÂ
âThere is no emergency,â He says calmly, batting your hands away and buckling you in properly, âI made it up. I figured youâd be okay with ducking out of there.âÂ
âOh. That was nice of you.âÂ
He clicks you in and gives you a wry grin. âTold you I would handle things.â
You nod, the movement exaggerated and lopsided. âI hate it when they bring up Christpher. They always take his side. Like, is there ever a situation where itâs okay to cheat on a girl with her best friend? I was studying for the MCAT. I didnât even wallow or break up with him when I found out. I waited until after I took the exam so I didnât fuck up my score.âÂ
âThatâs my girl.âÂ
âChristopher was an asshole. He was a real dickhead. The whole situation sucked. I lost the only two people who I thought cared about me at the same time. My family acted like I was the fucking anti-christ for being upset about it, too. It was fucking terrible. Iâm so glad I donât live with them anymore. I mean, I still love them, and I care about them, cause theyâre my family, but everything is just so much easier when theyâre not around.âÂ
âYouâre allowed to hate them, you know.âÂ
âI know,â You say, fiddling with a hangnail. âI know I probably should.âÂ
You sigh, tilting your head back against the headrest. âI always keep holding out hope, you know? That one day theyâll apologize, figure their shit out, care about me in a way that matters. I know itâs stupid.â
âItâs not stupid.âÂ
You frown. âItâs not? It kinda seems stupid. Youâd think by now I would know better.âÂ
âNo,â Jack eases the car out of the parking space, âWeâre biologically wired to love our families. Itâs the reason why they can fuck you up so bad. Your brain canât compute why the people who are supposed to love you above all else just⊠donât. Not in any of the right ways.âÂ
You blow air through your lips. âI think my parents fucked me up. I was so happy when I matched into the Pitt, because it was so far away. But then I got out here it just kind of hit me, all at once, that I was alone. My best friend was gone, my ex boyfriend sucked, and I was too busy in med school taking care of myself and my family to make any friends.â
Shit, that sounds so whiny. âBut it turns out it wasnât so bad. Now I've got Mell, and Santos, and Iâm pretty sure Iâm friends with Shen too. Mckay is nice too. I like her. Sheâs cool.âÂ
Jack huffs something that could be a laugh, and you turn to study him; the angles of his face awash in the glow of the red light youâre currently stopped at. From here, you can see the tiny bits of tension he carries in his faceâ a slight pinch in his brow, the tiniest downturn of his lips. Itâs the only evidence that heâs not as unaffected by your family as he pretends to be.
Then the light turns green, and his face isnât illuminated the same.Â
âAnd what about me?âÂ
Oh. Well. Thatâs a loaded question.
The alcohol emboldens you to answer honestly. âI donât know what to think about you.âÂ
âOh really?âÂ
âMmm. Nope.âÂ
âHow come?âÂ
"You're soââ You gesture vaguely, âConfusing. I canât figure you out. For a while there, I was pretty sure you hated me, but then you offered to help me with this and you keep saying you care so I think Iâm wrong.âÂ
âYou think youâre wrong?â
âStill canât figure you out.âÂ
âAnd how can I show you that I mean it?âÂ
Thatâs. Hmm.
âI donât know. I think what youâre doing is working,â You pause, debating the pros and cons of continuing to just say whatever the fuck you want before deciding youâre too tired to care, âIt helps that youâre really hot.âÂ
His lips twitch. âOh, does it now?âÂ
âMhm. Youâve got this whole⊠capable thing about you. Itâs hot. Competency is in.â
âIf you say so.âÂ
âI do say so. I feel like if I had a problem I could call you or something and you would fix it. Youâre soâŠâ
âCompetent?âÂ
âThatâs the word.â
If heâs at all irritated, annoyed, or otherwise put off by your stupid rambling, he didnât show it.Â
âYou should call me whenever you have a problem. Chances are, I can fix it.âÂ
âAre you like Bob the Builder?â
âIâm a doctor, so no.âÂ
âYouâre kind of like Bob the Builder.âÂ
âWhatever you say,â He pauses at an empty intersection before continuing on, âBefore I start heading towards your place, do you want to stop by mine? You didnât even get to eat your salad, and I have leftovers. You can say no.â
âAre you gonna be mad at me if I say no?âÂ
âNo.âÂ
âThen yes.âÂ
âYou sure? I wasnât lying.âÂ
âI know. But I like your cooking.â
You spend the drive to Jackâs continuing to ramble about nothing and everything, to which he entertains with a seemingly endless amount of patience. The only time he interrupts is to hand you a bottle of Gatorade he procured from his back seat. Apparently, he bought a few to keep in his car after the first lunch. âFor any alcohol excursions.âÂ
Itâs freaky how prepared he is for every situation.Â
When you arrive, he unbuckles your seatbelt for you (unbuckling is just as difficult as buckling when youâve had an unknown amount of peach bellinis) and helps you up the stairs to his apartment.Â
His gigantic apartment.Â
âWoah,â You mumble as you shuffle through the doorway, pulled along by your hand in Jacks, âI didnât know they made apartments this size.âÂ
âIts not that big.âÂ
âI think, like, four of my apartments could fit in here. Your living room is the size of my entire place.âÂ
You stumble once, heel catching on the little rug on the entry way, and heâs immediately motioning for you to sit on the little bench by the door and pats his thigh once. You clumsily raise your leg, barely managing to land your foot on the general area he gestures to. He pulls the first shoe off, then repeats with the second with an air of total calm. Like this is normal and he does this all the time for you. Like you regularly find yourself drunk in his apartment.
You decide to unpack the moment when youâre sober.Â
âOne, itâs not that big, and two, thatâs what you get for renting a studio apartment.â
âLike you could afford better when you were an intern.âÂ
He snorts, leading you to his couch and gesturing for you to sit. âIf you want to change clothes you can borrow some of mine.â
You chew on your lip. The outfits you choose to look nice for your mother are never exactly comfortable, and when else are you going to get the chance to privately live the scenario you fantasize about several times a week before falling asleep?
âOnly if you donât mind.âÂ
âI wouldn't have offered if I wasnât. Stay there.âÂ
Jackâs only gone for a few minutes before he reappears with a dark grey sweatshirt and a pair of sweatpants in a slightly lighter shade. The sweatshirt is oversized and looks well worn, but the sweatpants are suspiciously new, close to your size, and look eerily similar to a pair you changed into after a shift a few weeks ago.
He hands them to you. Neither of you mention the sweatpants. âYou can change in the bathroom. Door locks from the inside. Iâm gonna change too, and then Iâll heat up the food.âÂ
Jack shows you the bathroom (you donât bother unpacking why exactly he felt the need to tell you that the door locks and from the inside, thatâs for when youâre significantly more drunk than you are now and when youâre not in his fancy-ass apartment.)Â
Because heâs a man and men take approximately three seconds to change, heâs already in the kitchen setting stuff on the counter by the time you emerge from the bathroom. His countertops are solid granite, because the apartment is clearly expensive and heâs a man. Theyâre an inky black color with tiny flecks that sparkle when the light hits them just so.Â
âWhat are you doing?â Jack asks when he turns from the fridge to find you tilting your head this way and that.Â
âLooking at the sparkles.âÂ
âOookay. Do you want me to heat up the vodka pasta or the chicken?â
âYou made vodka pasta?âÂ
He shrugs. âYou said you liked it.âÂ
You slide into a seat at the kitchen island, a flush creeping up your neck. âThe pasta, please.âÂ
Suddenly exhausted now that youâre in soft, comfortable clothes that smell like Jack, you decide to just rest your head on your arms for a bit. And close your eyes. But youâre not going to fall asleep. Youâre not.Â
âDonât fall asleep. You need to eat something first.âÂ
âMâ not fallinâ asleep.âÂ
âMhm. Sure.âÂ
With great effort, you blink your eyes open and watch Jack while he heats up the pasta and prepares something else. A salad maybe?
âWhatâreâyouâ making?â
âJust a little salad. In case the pasta is too heavy for you.âÂ
âOh. How come?âÂ
âBecause I donât want you to throw up.âÂ
âI promise I wonât throw up on your furniture. I donât usually throw up when Iâm hungover.âÂ
âYou drink often?âÂ
âNo,â Your head lulls to the side, âIâm too busy. Iâm actually not-so-secretly very boring. I donât really like partying. I much prefer staying at home.âÂ
âThought you went to that thing with King and Santos?âÂ
âYeah, but that was âcause Trinity really wanted me to come and I felt bad and I didnât want her to think I was a boring, uptight bitch.âÂ
âI see.âÂ
âYeah. I kinda had fun, though. I wished you were there.â
âReally?âÂ
âYeah,â You sigh, probably a hint too dreamily, âMakes me feel better when youâre around.âÂ
âIâll keep that in mind.âÂ
He slides a little bowl with a light salad in it to you across the counter, and it's perfectly refreshing. Not at all heavy like the pasta ends up being.Â
âSorry I couldnât finish it,â You say, forcing down a yawn and resisting the urge to burrow into your arms and go to sleep right there, âI feel bad that you went through the trouble of making it and heating it up.âÂ
âIt wasnât that much effort. Besides, now you can just eat it for lunch tomorrow instead. Iâll send it home with you.âÂ
âMhm.â You hum, slowly inching your arms forward and down onto the counter, your head quickly following suit.Â
Jack chuckles, and you can hear the light step of his feet as he rounds the corner of the island and nudges you in the arm.Â
âCome on, sweetheart. You wanna get home to bed, donât you?â
âNo,â You shake your head, âI wanna sleep right here. Itâs comfortable.â
âIt wonât be when you wake up.â
You whine, curling away from him.Â
He just puffs another little laugh. âYou can either sleep in your bed, or my bed. You canât sleep on the kitchen island.â
âWhy not?â You finally lift your head, âAnd why is your bed an option?â
âOne,â He lifts up one finger in front of your face and slowly drags it back and forth, âBecause the kitchen island is not a bed. Two, Iâm not letting you sleep on the couch.â
âWhy? Is your couch uncomfortable?â
âNo,â He says, shuffling back over to where the leftovers are and tucking all the food away in the proper places, âItâs just not right to make a woman sleep on the couch.â
âI like sleeping on couches.â
He shoots you a look over his shoulder, âIâm sure you do. But youâre still a little drunk, and my bed is closer to the bathroom than the couch is.âÂ
You prop your head on your hand. âWho said Iâm even staying here tonight?â
Jack closes the fridge. âDo you want to? Because I donât care either way. We both have tomorrow off.â
âItâd be weird to wake up here.â
âWhy?â
âBecause youâre my boss.â
âAnd Iâm faking being your boyfriend so your parents get off your back. Pretty sure weâre past coworkers.âÂ
âWhat would we even do in the morning?âÂ
âSleep.â
âI donât want to kick you out of your bed. Iâll sleep on the couch.âÂ
âYouâre my guestââÂ
âYouâre already doing so much for me,â You blurt, stomach clenching, âIâ You know me. I can only handle so much. Let me do this one thing? Please?âÂ
Jack glowers for a bit, then sighs.Â
âOnly because you asked nicely and I believe in rewarding good behavior. And because I know my couch isnât uncomfortable. Iâll help you make it up.âÂ
Jackâs apartment is surprisingly tidy for the fact that a man lives in it (Christopherâs room at his parentâs house always looked like shit) and he pulls down a couple options for bedding. You go with the plain black sheet and its matching thick, fluffy comforter. He insists on making up the couch himself (despite the fact that the alcohol has mostly worn off by now) and even sets up a glass of water, a liquid IV packet, and a bucketâ âJust in case those belliniâs donât love you back.âÂ
The sight of it all is almost too much. Itâs just so much care. All of it. The fact that heâs helping out with you and your disaster of a family, the way that despite the horribleness of it all he hasnât judged you at all for how you deal with them. He refuses to let you drive yourself, always pays for every lunch for your entire family and the little snacks you get afterwards. Listens to you rant and he makes you food and gets you blankets andâ
âYou okay there?âÂ
âMhm,â You hum, âJust thinkinâ.âÂ
He leaves you be for a moment, busies himself with fixing your pillows and and tugging the comforter into its proper place.
Before you can talk yourself out of it, you turn, throwing your arms around Jackâs middle and burying your face in his chest.Â
âThank you,â You say, voice muffled by the fabric, âFor doing all of this. Thank you for looking out for me.âÂ
Jack is still for a second, just long enough for you to second guess initiating physical contact âa line you were previously too scared to crossâ but then his hands come up and it's so, immediately, remarkably over. Because youâre never ever going to draw that line again. You can never go back to your life without having this. Without having him.Â
Jackâs hands are big and deliciously warm as they slide up, around your waist, lingering to rub a few circles on the mid of your back before moving on. One arm stays, tightening around your waist and drawing you closer while his other glides further up, up, up, his callused palms sliding over the knob at the very base of your neck before his hand settles around your nape, fingers just barely brushing the edge of your hairline.Â
You barely manage to suppress a whine at how warm and incredible it feels to be fully enveloped by him. You never want him to let go. Goosebumps erupt everywhere he touches, little sparks of electricity lingering under your skin in his wake.
âI will always,â He presses the lightest of kisses to your temple, just a feathering of his lips, âLook out for you, baby. Iâm always gonna be right here.â
His arms tighten around you, drawing you inâ closer, closer, closer. Wrapped up in everything that is Jack you canât help but sag, going completely boneless in his grip and allowing yourself to just bask in him.Â
âYou smell good.â You mumble into his shirt, completely lost in the moment.Â
âDo I?â
âYeah. Good. Like man.âÂ
He chuckles, the sound vibrating pleasantly against your cheek. âThank you sweetheart.âÂ
âWhy do you call me sweetheart?âÂ
âBecause youâre a sweetheart.âÂ
âI am?âÂ
âDonât play dumb now,â He pulls back a little, just enough to get a good look at you, fingers curling in the fine hair at your nape and tugging down, angling your chin up so youâre forced to look at him, âYou know you are.âÂ
You shrug, eyes darting to the side, your cheeks flushing, âI donât know. I was just making sure.âÂ
âMhm.â He hums, tone almost mocking, fingers tightening around your hair just before the precipice of pain.
You stay like that for a few moments of charged silence. Jackâs eyes shamelessly rove over the planes of your face, mapping it out in his mind. He keeps his grip on your hair, not completely forcing eye contact but keeping your head firmly in place.Â
Itâs possessive. Bold. Probably too intimate for two people who (supposedly) are not actually dating
And you love it.Â
Jack only lets his hand (and your head) drop when your jaw opens in a splitting yawn.Â
âOkay,â He huffs, taking a step back, âTime for bed. Get going.âÂ
Embarrassment is the only thing keeping you from whining at the loss of contact and impending reality of sleeping on the couch alone. But you made your bed (figuratively) so now you have to lie in it.Â
The couch does look comfortable. Especially since Jack put all the blankets together.Â
He waits until youâve crawled under the comforter to bid you goodnight, followed by a parting reminder to âWake him up if you start aspirating on vomit.â Itâs a very Jack thing to say.Â
Youâre out almost the second Jack turns the lights off. You fall into deep, blissful sleep, dreaming of that final moment in the living room, your eyes boring into each other.Â
Except in the dream, you tilt your head up those last few inches, and kiss your fake boyfriend as hard as you can.Â
â
Generally, the annual lecture event ends with a massive blow out argument. Something dramatic and filled with expletives, after which your mother will refuse to answer any texts or calls you send before finally telling you thatâs sheâs sorry if (always if) something she said offended you, but talking to you is just so hard sometimes so she doesnât want to unless youâre ready to be more civil. By the time the two of you are on neutral terms again, itâs time for the next annual lunch circuit.Â
Youâre a mess of nerves in the hours before the last one. Like usual, your mom requested that the last dinner be held at your place. âSo it can feel like a real family dinner.â While you know that there isnât any saying no to your mother, you also know that there is no way youâre cramming your entire family in your tiny ass studio apartment. It happened once. It will not happen again.Â
You originally asked Jack during a last minute shift you both got called in to cover if he would help you move some of the furniture at your place to accommodate them, and then heâd gotten this incredulous look on his face and then told you to tell your mom that youâre having dinner at his place.Â
âJack,â Youâd gaped at him, âItâs fine. My apartment isnât that small, and you donât have to help move the furniture if you donât want to. I can ask Dennis to give me a hand instead. I really donât think you want to host my family.âÂ
âSweetheart, itâs just logic. Youâve seen my place.â
âOkay. No need to rub it in.âÂ
Heâd just rolled his eyes and pinned you with a firm look. âCome on. You know this is the best option. If your mom throws a fit, tell her I insisted and give her my number.âÂ
âDo you have a death wish?â You hiss, âThatâs asking for torture.âÂ
Jack had just shrugged. âWould having it at my place be easier for you?âÂ
â...Yes?âÂ
âThen weâll do it there. Youâre off in a bit, right?âÂ
Youâd nodded.Â
He fishes something small and shiny out of his pocket and tosses it to you. âThatâs my spare key. Iâll be here later than you, so just let yourself in if you want to get there earlier to start setting up. Iâll be home soon.âÂ
Robby shouted his name soon after and Jack was whisked away, leaving you standing in the middle of the ED, holding the fucking spare key to his apartment, gaping like a fish.Â
The line between real and fake has become so blurred youâre not sure if it ever was there to begin with.Â
Heâs started calling you sweetheart more and more oftenâ sometimes when no one's around. No familial audience to be persuaded into the romantic lie youâre selling. Is it still a lie if it doesnât feel like one anymore?
The question and accompanying feeling follows you all day. All throughout your harried dinner preparation. Even now, with a solid hour until your family is supposed to start showing up, you canât help but pace the length of Jackâs kitchen, heeled feet clicking on his floor. Jack himself is similarly dressed up, wearing a pair of dark jeans (âIâm not wearing slacks in my own home, and Iâm not old enough to start wearing khakis with everything.â) and a black button down shirt with the first two buttons undone and the sleeves rolled up to his forearms. He makes a very nice view and under other circumstances you might take the opportunity to climb him like a tree. But alas. Anxiety.Â
âTake your shoes off if youâre going to pace. Youâre gonna give yourself blisters.âÂ
You ignore him, chewing on an already stinging cuticle.Â
âThings have been pretty good this far, right? Do you think sheâs just waiting until the very end to bring up some secret thing that sheâs upset about?â
Jack begins preparing the wine âyour mother only likes redâ for decanting. âI think if your mother were that upset about something she wouldnât be able to hide it.âÂ
âTrue. But what if?â
âIâm not going to help you spiral.âÂ
âWhy not?â You whine.Â
He looks at you with a heavy glare and points to the shoe tray at the door. âShoes. Off. You can put them back on when they get here.âÂ
You grumble under your breath the entire way but comply. Only because your feet were starting to hurt.Â
When your family finally does arrive, it ends up being annoyingly anti-climactic. You spend the entire time on the edge of your seat (literally and figuratively) waiting for the other shoe to drop. Waiting for conversation to turn sour, arguments to erupt, someone to choke on a piece of lettuce and die despite professional intervention.Â
But the argument never starts, conversation remains what it usually is and becomes no worse (or better, unfortunately) and no one passes away due to unevenly chopped vegetables.Â
The torture is over fairly quickly. Most everyoneâs flight back home leaves early the next morning and your dad is paranoid about flight times.Â
Pretty soon itâs all just⊠over. They leave, your mother bickering with your father on the way out about something that probably doesnât matter, and then itâs just you and Jack and the entire scheme is just done. Finished. Just like that.Â
There won't be anymore knee's brushing under the table, no more shared glances and pecks to the cheek when you make a joke that actually lands. No more excuses just to sit and watch him under the guise of playing the adoring girlfriend. No more late night milkshakes.
You'll just go back to being coworkers-- People who pretend not to know each other intimately. Jack probably won't struggle with it. But to you, right now, the idea of just not having him anymore seems like a another wound, right over top all the others.
You don't want him to become another person who used to know you.
Youâve been staring at the closed door for upwards of five full minutes, clenching and unclenching your fists when Jack comes up next to you. He hands you the same clothes you wore the last time you were there and jerks his head in the direction of the bathroom. Â
âWhy donât you go and change, huh?â
Your lip wobbles a bit as you answer. âBut I want to help you clean up.âÂ
âYou can,â He soothes, âAfter you change.â
âButââ
âHey,â He interrupts, âNo. Youâve been stuck in those clothes for hours. Go change. Iâll wait for you.âÂ
Jack keeps his word. Heâs leaned up against the kitchen island when you emerge, rubbing at your ânow bare, having had the foresight to bring makeup wipes with youâ face.Â
He looks up when the door opens. âBetter?âÂ
âYeah. Thanks.âÂ
He just hums, heading back over to the kitchen table, stacking plates and cutlery. You follow in silence, and he thankfully doesnât push for conversation.Â
Cleaning up doesnât take long enough. Jack has a fancy dishwasher (and probably doesnât want to stay standing any more than he has to this late in the day) and there arenât any leftovers to pack up. Your brothers are bottomless pits when it comes to free food.Â
It canât just be over like this. It can't.
When everything is finished and there isn't anything left to do, Jack wordlessly leads you to the couch and puts something quiet and calm on the TV. The white noise washes over you as you attempt to get comfortable, but the knowledge that it's all over proves to be an itch under your skin that you just can't seem to squash.
âSo,â You say after the two of you are seated on opposite ends of the couch, âThatâs it then.âÂ
âSo it is.âÂ
âGuess I owe you big time, huh?âÂ
âIâve already told you I donât care about that.âÂ
âRight,â You look down at your lap, âYeah. Sorry.âÂ
You lapse into silence.Â
Jack sighs. âSweetheartââ
âWas it fake to you?â You blurt, jiggling your knee, still staring at your lap, âWere youâ did you mean it?â
It never felt fake. It never felt like pretending.Â
It felt real.
It felt like, for the first time in your life, things could be easy.
Maybe easy isn't the right word. But it life sure as hell didn't feel as hard.
When you look up, uncomfortable in his silence and hoping thereâs answers in his face, but instead of finding something like disappointment or irritation, heâs grinning.Â
âWhat do you think?âÂ
âI donât know.âÂ
He dips his head once. âYes you do. Youâre a smart girl, I think you can figure it out.âÂ
Your fingers are curled around the hem of his sweatshirt, white-knuckling the fabric as if to stabilize yourself. Like youâre liable to somehow float away if you donât dig your heels into the couch and hold on tight.Â
âWhat if Iâm wrong?âÂ
âYou wonât be.â
A scoff escapes your lips, âYou canât know for sure.âÂ
He taps his pointer finger on his leg in an unhurried rhythm.Â
âYou do.âÂ
Your stomach is rolling in a combination of leftover anxiety from the dinner that went better than it was supposed to and the weight of Jackâs gaze on you.Â
âI thinkâŠâ You pause, worry threatening to overwhelm you, and take a deep breath before continuing, âI think you might like me.âÂ
âYou think,â He drawls, âI might.âÂ
âI donât want to be wrong!â You cry.Â
Jack huffs, throwing his head back in a good-natured sigh.Â
âCome here.âÂ
You scoot further down the couch, sitting criss-cross right in front of him. This is not going the way you thought it would. You were almost certain youâd walk away shamed and embarrassed, forced to fake your death and flee the country out of the sheer humiliation of thinking your boss would actually have a crush on you.Â
Jack does love to prove you wrong.
âSoo,â You start, still hesitant, âYou do like me.âÂ
Jack props his head on his hand, his expression something youâre starting to recognize as fond. âYes.â
âMore than a little?âÂ
âYes.âÂ
âAnd you werenât faking anything. You were serious about theâ You know.âÂ
âUse your words.âÂ
âThe flirting.â You clarify, ears burning.Â
âAll correct,â He nods, âThough I would have said it differently.âÂ
You frown. âAnd how would you have put it?âÂ
âI would have said,â He reaches out, snagging your arm and tugging until you fall down onto his chest with a little oof, âThat you have a hard time believing things that are good, so I had to audition for my role. Like old-fashioned courting.âÂ
You want to be offended, but unfortunately, it did work.Â
You frown.Â
Wait.Â
âHave you known I liked you this whole time?âÂ
Jack snorts. âOverheard you talking to Whitaker about it during your second week.â
Heâs known since the second week?
âOh my god.âÂ
âDonât worry, I didnât tell anyone. Except Robby. Heâs been hoping you would figure it out for awhile now.â
âOh my god.â
âI thought it was cute,â He smoothes a hand over your hair, âYou were so much more nervous back then. Youâve come a long way.âÂ
You shift uncomfortably at the praise, but Jackâs having none of it. He wraps his arms around you, holding you in place.Â
âCan you take a compliment?âÂ
âNo.âÂ
He re-positions under you, getting more comfortable. âWeâll try again later.âÂ
âAm Iâ Can I stay here tonight then?âÂ
âOf course,â he murmurs, âMy one condition is that youâre not sleeping on the couch.â
âFine,â You sigh, long and drawn out, âI suppose we can share.âÂ
âHow kind of you to share my bed with me.âÂ
âI have been told Iâm kind.âÂ
You both smile, and everything just feels so right and so perfect that you can't help but lean up, clearing the last few inches, and pressing a hesitant, gentle kiss to his lips.Â
Itâs just like your dream.Â
Only this time, itâs real. And Jack is kissing you back.Â
And youâre not alone anymore.Â
THIS WAS AMAZJNG J HAVENT READ A FIC LIKE THIS IN SO LONG ITS PERFEXT
Fly Me To The Moon : ÌÌâ Ryland Grace x Reader
Pairing: Teacher!Ryland Grace x Teacher!Reader
Summary: The entire school knew how close you and Ryland Grace had become since you'd joined Grover Cleveland Middle's staff a year prior. That knowledge only fueled the rumor mill, that one that ran between the staff and students alike, on just how close the two of you were. It didn't help that you were definitely head over heels for the slightly awkward and endearing science teacher.
Warnings: pre-Project Hail Mary and should not include spoilers but caution anyways just in case, pre-movie storyline, tooth-rotting fluff, idiots in love, workplace romance, friends to lovers, slightly suggestive-ish comments but no smut, female reader but no characteristics described, definitely some incorrect science information but I am not a scientist so apologies, I am also not a teacher so I am sorry for any inaccuracies there lol, lightly edited so apologies for any mistakes
Word Count: 14,596 words
Requests are open! : ÌÌâ Find my masterlist here
â§ïœ„ïŸ: *â§ïœ„ïŸ:* â§ïœ„ïŸ: â§ïœ„ïŸ: â§ïœ„ïŸ: â§ïœ„ïŸ: â§ïœ„ïŸ: â§ïœ„ïŸ: â§ïœ„ïŸ: â§ïœ„ïŸ: â§ïœ„ïŸ: â§ïœ„ïŸ: â§ïœ„ïŸ: â§ïœ„ïŸ: â§
âCan anyone tell me why it was that Penelope asked her suitors to string Odysseusâs bow?â
The silence that followed was deafening. Your eyes shut for half a second, a tiny sigh escaping through your lips. Reopening your eyes, not a single one of your students had dared to raise their hands. No one except for Olivia, your star student, who waved her hand repeatedly in the air from the back of the classroom. A single glance to the clock told you all you needed to know.
11:55. These kids were already in lunch mode, and there was zero way you were getting them to listen to you.
With a sigh and a wave of your hand, you gave Olivia the okay to answer the question. She happily took your permission and ran with it, always the first to answer any questions you posed in class. If only the rest of these damn middle schoolers were as eager as she was.
âPenelope didnât want to marry anyone else, so she gave them an impossible task,â
âWhy does she always know everything?â
Marcus thought his comment was whispered just low enough that you wouldnât hear him in the first row, but he was never quite that lucky. He quickly shut his mouth and looked anywhere but in your direction the second he caught sight of the disapproving look you were casting directly at him.
âYou are exactly right, Olivia. Thank you for answering my question,â there were a few chuckles in the room at the obvious sarcasm laced through your words, as you hopped up onto your desk to relax and get a better look around the room full of kids. âPenelope knew the only person that could string her husbandâs bow, was her husband himself. She needed to buy time, especially when these suitors only really wanted to be the ones to inherit Ithaca-â
There was a loud knocking on the door to your classroom that had been left open for the last 20 minutes of class, interrupting your words. You werenât surprised in the slightest to meet the eyes of none other than Ryland Grace, the science teacher.
âUh- sorry! Didnât mean to interrupt important book talk stuff. Super important, you uh-you never know when Shakespeare will come up at your future desk job,â the cringe that Ryland physically did at his own comment was easy to see, even from across the room. He gave you a sheepish smile, his glasses barely hanging onto his face from their unconventional spot hanging off of one of his ears. The blonde held up the brown bag in his hand, and you could practically smell the food that rested inside. âIâm early, Iâm sorry. Didnât think youâd want to have a cold burger for lunch.â
âI told you!â Marcus still didnât understand the concept of a whisper, leaning over to his best friend Jason at the desk beside him, slapping him on the arm. âTheyâre totally dating!â
âAs if Mr. Grace could pull her,â
There was a chorus of snickers and laughter through the class, any semblance of order you mightâve had descending into chaos as every single one of your loveable, little shits just kept casting looks between you and Ryland, who still stood awkwardly in your classroom doorway with reddened cheeks.
Your face was surely no better, you were sure you could feel the heat that was emanating off of your skin, as you ran a hand down the burning skin of your face and wondered why you chose to teach these little menaces for the rest of your life. The world decided to be kind to the pair of you though, for once, letting the lunch bell save you from any further embarrassment from a group of 13 year olds.
âPlease come to class prepared to actually answer questions tomorrow!â you called out over the hustle and bustle of the class as they grabbed their things, eager to scurry off to their lunch hour and finally eat. âYour unit test is at the end of next week, and I would prefer not to fail all of you.â
They werenât listening, but by this point in the day you were hungry and didnât have the energy to try and argue with them.
Any of that tiredness they brought to your bones? It disappeared the second you watched the way they all interacted with Ryland on their way out the door.
Big smiles, every single one of them excited to see the schoolâs favorite science teacher lingering in the doorway to their English class. You could just barely hear the tail end of one of Rylandâs terrible science puns, something about a hungry planet needing a âlight snackâ that got a groan out of Marcus. All it did was bring a soft smile to your face, though, one that somehow softened even more at the quick, secret handshake Olivia shared with him before she was out the door.
Then, it was just the two of you, smiling like idiots as you locked eyes across the room again. And god, did you want that fluttering group of butterflies in your stomach to calm down for just a moment.
Having a crush on Dr. Ryland Grace, the former molecular biologist turned San Francisco middle school science teacher, was inevitable from the moment you turned up at the school for your first day over a year ago. Incredibly smart, amazing with kids, and so incredibly handsome you thought your heart stopped beating the first time you saw himâhell, Mrs. Doyle, the math teacher for over 5 years, said there were at least 4 other young teachers that absolutely had crushes on this man. You were far from the first.
He broke that perfect vision of himself you were building in your head within 5 minutes of meeting, tripping over his own two feet and knocking the stack of papers a mile high from the Principalâs hands, but you had only found it even more endearing.
âI didnât mean to interrupt,â he apologized again, long legs striding across the room and reaching your desk in a matter of seconds. âI had a free period before this, a-and you mentioned this morning you forgot lunch so I grabbed some for both of us-â
âSalâs?â you questioned, pointing to the bag of foot now sitting on your desk with the familiar logo. âTheyâre, like, 10 blocks away. Whyâd you go that far?â
âBecause I know theyâre your favorite,â
The flare of heat in your cheeks was instant. Ryland Grace, who rode a damn bike to the school every day, used his free period to ride 10 blocks away and pick you up lunch from your favorite spot, all because you mentioned offhandedly at 7 a.m. about forgetting your lunch for the day.
Well, he certainly didnât do that for the four fresh out of college teachers that had crushes on him. Youâd mentally consider that a hefty win in your book.
âHow sweet of you to remember,â Ryland simply waved you off, head turned away as he passed your wrapped burger into your hands, taking up space on your desk chair while you stayed comfortable on top of your desk. âYou even remembered tomatoes this time!â
âI forgot them one time and I never hear the end of it,â laughter was shared between you both for a moment as Grace took a bite of his own burger. âI caught the tail end of that discussion. Olivia answering all your questions like a champ?â
âIsnât she always,â you shot back with another laugh, turning slightly on your desk to better face him. âI swear sheâs the only one that I can ever get to answer any of my questions. She might be the only one that does any of my assigned readings.â
âTo be fair, can you blame her?â Rylandâs words were muffled slightly by the food in his mouth. You couldnât even contain the slight smile that grew as he managed to just barely catch the ketchup dripping off his burger before it could smear itself on the stack of papers that needed graded at your desk. âShakespeare was justâŠso interesting. Couldnât get enough of his stuff. Donât know why your kids donât want to read it.â
There was silence for a moment, your eyebrow quirked in his direction. The blonde stopped mid bite of his burger, looking back at you quizzically, trying to figure out what he had said wrong.
âYou know weâre currently learning The Odyssey, right?â
âYes?â
âIâll let you think about that for a second,â
He did, just slowly blinking in your direction. He glanced at the chalkboard behind you, covering in little notes youâd made throughout the class discussion, before they flickered to the copy of the book that sat on your desk. That was finally when you saw the light bulb flicker on above his head, Rylandâs eyes shutting as he let out a loud sigh.
â...that wasnât written by Shakespeare, was it?â
The laughter that bubbled out of you practically had you throwing your head backward.
âNo, but Iâm sure Homer wonât be too offended,â feet landing on the ground as you hopped off your desk, you gave Rylandâs shoulder a quick squeeze as you moved past him. âThe attempt was cute, though, it was a good try.â
Cute. Why in the world did you let that one slip? You were practically cursing yourself in your head for that one, taking another bite of your burger as you worked to erase the whiteboard to prepare it for your next class. You didnât dare steal a glance over at Ryland, in fear that your little slip-up was going to ruin everything.
There was only quiet for a moment before the single moment of awkwardness was gone.
âI promise you I know Homer wrote that. I swear!â
The desperation to believe him drew another laugh out of you. Sparing a glance in his direction, Ryland was giving you his best, exaggerated puppy dog eyes, begging you to believe him, as a smile just barely squeaked its way onto his lips.
âRight, of course you did. My mistake. Whatever you say, Ryland-â
âI mean it!â It was his turn to laugh this time, a sound that had those butterflies rattling around once more. âI was justâŠdistracted.â
âUh-huh, distracted,â as if you were preparing to scold one of your students, you turned to face him fully with a hand on your hip, eyebrow raised expectantly. âBy what, exactly?â
If a human being could buffer, Ryland Grace always seemed to be constantly buffering. Your eyebrow remained raised, waiting for him to piece together his response. All he could do was open and close his mouth like a fish, before looking away and taking another bite of his food.
âNevermind that, just finish your food before it gets cold. I did bike, like, three miles to get that thing,â
With a roll of your eyes that held zero malice what-so-ever, you made sure the blonde could see your next bite of your food, a satisfied smile on his face.
âBack to the previous topic,â you steered the conversation in another direction, wiping off the last bits of chalk on the board and writing down your next period at the top so that you could start the discussion on the reading over again. âI donât understand why itâs so hard to get some of these kids to just read the content. They all pay attention in your class!â
âI heard Jason make a comment yesterday during class that Marcus has a crush on Olivia. Maybe theyâre too distracted to read,â
You shot him a skeptical look.
âMarcus, crushing on Olivia? He was just making fun of her before you came in the room,â
Ryland averted his eyes, suddenly very interested in his ID badge hanging around his neck from his school issues lanyard.
âW-well, maybe he just doesnâtâŠknow how to express his feelings,â he spared a glance up at you, seeing you were still watching, as he tripped over his words again. âIt can be hard for boysâand menâof all ages, toâŠtell someone how they feel.â
âWell, I donât know where heâs learning from, but making fun of the girl you like isnât the right way to go about things,â you shot back.
âThen teach them!â Ryland sounded absolutely ecstatic, that light bulb over his head going off again as he looked like heâd come up with the worldâs greatest idea. âClassic literature, thereâs plenty of great love stories in there. Get his interest by teaching them about that, so he can learn from them.â
âAlright, give me an example then, Mr. Suddenly an Expert in Classic Literature,â
âRomeo and Juliet,â he said like it was the easiest thing in the world, balling up the remnants of his finished food and tossing it in the bag it came in. âGreatest love story ever told, so great Taylor Swift wrote a song about them.â
âExcept they donât run off and get married and live happily ever after, Ryland. Romeo thinks she is dead and kills himself with poison, and when Juliet realizes heâs dead she stabs herself,â
Rylandâs excitement fell slightly, his mouth forming a little âoâ shape.
â...oh,â
âDonât think thatâs what I want to teach young, impressionable pre-teens about love-â
âDaisy and Gatsby, then! He loved her so much he stood on that dock staring at the-the bright yellow light of a stoplight for her,â
âIt was a green light and it was the dock light, first of all. Iâm not even sure how you could be that off. Secondly, Gatsby is murdered at the end of the book and Daisy doesnât even attend the funeral, she and Tom move away and pretend it never happened,â
Rylandâs eyes are shut at this point, his fingers massaging his temples and those glasses just barely hanging on from their place around his neck.
â...does anyone not die in these old books?â
The sound of your laughter permeates the room and you sweep over, collecting his trash and combining it with yours. You never even spared him a glance, though you could feel his eyes on you, as you swept the trash away with you to the other side of the room, his voice echoing across to you.
âIâm going to get lucky on one of these guesses!â
What Ryland Grace was really lucky about was how adorable you found him, and how head over heels you were for him, because his lack of literary knowledge was astounding.
â€ïž
âIâm sorry, youâre trying to tell me that arenât currently fucking the eye candy that is the science teacher in room 305?â
âEvelyn!â
Evelyn Doyle was in her late thirties, married since she was 18, and already had three kids with her high school sweetheart. Since you had transferred into Grover Cleveland Middle, youâd become fast friends and she had become a great mentor.
She had, sadly, caught onto your pathetic crush on Ryland Grace before you had even fully realized it, and was now âvicariously living through youâ as she always said.
âThereâs not a single child left in this entire school right now,â she shot back, gesturing around her empty classroom, as she finished cleaning up anything her students had left around at the end of the day. You rolled your eyes at her excuse, perched on the edge of her desk. âPlease, Iâm tenured, what are they going to do?â
âIâm more so yelling at you for butting into my love life, once again,â was your reply through laughter. âRyland and I are good friends, thatâs it.â
It was her turn to laugh, finishing up her cleanup around the room before she joined you at her desk, packing her things away into her shoulder bag.
âOh please, you keep denying that little crush of yours-â
âI never said I was denying that,â you cut her off. âLord, you realized I liked him before I even did. But he and I arenât anything besides friends. Iâm not lying.â
Your pleas fell on deaf ears, like they typically did when you were around Evelyn. She simply waved your statement off, tossing her bag over her shoulder as you followed her out of her room and down through the quiet of the school hallway. The quietest the hallway ever was, in the hours right after students were sent home for the day. Youâd rather be anywhere else, preferably at home, but these mandatory once-a-month staff meetings were unavoidable.
âWhether youâre telling me the truth or not, you have to understand why everyone thinks soâteachers AND students. I think even some parents think so!â The only response she got was an eyeroll, her shoulder bumping into yourâs playfully. âHe brings you lunch at least once a week, meaning he rides that dingy bike to get whatever youâre craving that day.â
âItâs usually just something random-â
âConstantly in your classroom, or vice versa,â she cut you off, and you quickly realized you werenât getting a single word into this conversation. âIâm pretty sure Principal Marshall has considered, somehow, moving your classroom closer to his just so heâll stop being late to classes because heâs busy talking to you.â
OkayâŠyeah, you didnât have a retort for that one. Your classroom was on the opposite end of the school building from Rylandâs own, and yet every time he had even a split second he was somehow always leaning in your doorway. Even if it only resulted in a conversation that lasted all of a minute.
Many times those ended with your students having to remind him that the bell rang and he definitely had students in his own class unattended, waiting on their teacher. More than once heâd slipped as he tried to sprint back to his classroom from yours. It didnât matter how short those little conversations were, though, because every second around him was precious to you.
âAwe, look at you blushing about it-â
You slapped Evelynâs hand away, throwing her a look of disdain that didnât really hold any true malice to it.
âLook, all Iâm saying is the ball is in his court,â was the response you finally settled on as Evelyn propped the door of the small auditorium open for you to enter. âRyland is nothing but friendly to me, so if heâs interested then heâs got to show me.â
âYouâre acting as if youâve made your own feelings clear, honey,â
âNo, but I clearly donât do a good enough job of hiding them,â
Speak of the devil: there he was. Rylandâs head shot up the moment the pair of you walked into the auditorium. Those damn glasses hanging down from one side of his face, framing his stubbled jawline perfectly. A smile lighting up his face the second those blue eyes found yours, gesturing to the empty seat beside him.
A packed auditorium, as you and Evelyn were the last ones there. Every seat up practically filled, and yet Ryland Grace sat among a crowd of people, eyes trained on you and a single seat saved for you amidst it all.
All you could feel was the heat in your cheeks, and the touch of Evelyn patting your back as she laughed, voice low but loud enough to hear as she shifted past you to find a seat of her own.
âDoesnât have interest in you my ass,â
Her words swam through your head with every apology you muttered to the other teachers as you snuck past them in the cramped rows, happily taking the empty seat beside Ryland.
âYou didnât have to save me a seat, you know,â your voice held a hint of teasing to it, but it was soft. Filled with an adoration that you knew you were terrible at hiding. Luckily, Ryland was terrible at picking up on it.
âWanted to sit next to you,â he whispered back as Principal Marshall began to drone on about updates neither of you particularly cared about. He leaned in close, a hint of his breath wafting over the shell of your ear as he spoke. âYou make these slightly less boring.â
Close proximity to this man was your worst nightmare, and the cramped auditorium wasnât helping. That single touch of his breath against your skin was enough to send a simultaneous shiver down your spine and another round of heat to your cheeks. His suit jacket covered arm rested on the shared armrest between your seats, the edge of his bicep ghosting against the bare skin of your arm with every little shift he made, tapping incessantly against the armrest.
The slight action made you smile. He never could sit still in these meetings, always hated them.
âDid anything fun happen in class today?â you kept your voice low, eyes trained on the principal, as your head tilted slightly over to Ryland so he could better hear you.
âUh, if you count Madison telling me that she thinks the sun orbits the earth, then sure,â you had to stifle your laugh at that, casting Ryland a side glance as he grinned at you, doing a terrible job of whispering back at you as usual.
âHow could she possibly think that?â
âYouâd be surprised,â Ryland leaned just a tad bit closer, the side of his arm pushed up fully against your own. You could almost hear the smile in his voice without even having to look over at him. âThe National Science Foundation estimates that 26% of Americans still think the sun orbits the earth.â
âJesus, that many?â
âWell, 100% of them are stupid, so,â
Nasty looks from other faculty were shot your way that second you choked on your own breath, slapping a hand over your mouth in an attempt to stop yourself from breaking out into uncontrollable laughter. You gave them the most sympathetic look you possibly could, learning how to breathe normally again before mouthing sorry at them all.
Ryland didnât care in the slightest for the warning look you shot him, a bright smile on his face as his eyes seemed to trail over every inch of your face.
âIf you keep doing this in every faculty meeting, theyâre going to separate us, Ry,â
âI met Madisonâs parents for the first time last month for parent-teacher conferences,â he continued, ignoring your plea. Instead, he leaned in even closer, eyes locked on yours, and god it was impossible to look away. âThey are, 100%, undeniably, part of the Flat Earth Truthers Club.â
You shook your head, a smile creeping back up on your lips. Rylandâs gaze could still be felt on the side of your face as you turned back to face the front, eyes focused back on the principal again in an attempt to pay attention to the meeting.
âFlat earthers are ridiculous. Theyâre just scared of science,â
âWell, you know what they sayâŠthe only thing they have to fear is sphere itself,â
There simply wasnât enough time to clap your hand over your mouth and conceal your laughter, a split second of it breaking through the quiet of the auditorium. And Ryland? His smile was somehow even brighter than it was before, still locked onto your face, never having strayed once.
âDr. Grace, is there something you feel needs to be shared with the rest of your fellow faculty?â
Principal Marshallâs voice was enough to knock Ryland out of whatever trance he seemed to have put himself in. Eyes wide as if heâd just seen a ghost, hands barely able to catch his glasses as they almost fell right off of his ear where they dangled, a burst of red spread through his cheeks instantly as his deer-like eyes locked onto the unamused principal.
âI-I uh, no. No, nothing, Principal Marshall,â he scratched at the back of his head, ruffling up his already messy hair, a nervous tick youâd picked up since the moment youâd met him. You simply buried your head in your head, eyes trained on your shoes and Ryland out of the corner of your gaze, terrified to look up at your fellow faculty that youâd already apologized to once. âJust getting super jazzed about faculty updates. Hard to keep it in here. Iâm like a mushroom, getting allâŠhyphaeâŠâ
A collective groan sounded through the auditorium at the terrible biology pun that rolled off of him with ease. All you could do was smile into the palm of your hand.
âPlease justâŠpay attention to the meeting, Dr. Grace, before I separate you and your other half,â
Other half. Thatâs not how she meant it, but it was impossible not to let your mind wander to the idea.
Early mornings. Coffee, the smell of eggs and toast burning in the kitchen. Ryland and his hair that was surely even more unkempt that early in the day. The guarantee that he definitely had about 120 science puns ready to go at any moment.
Late nights. Curled up on a couch. A movie, a shared blanket, warm in the embrace of his arms. The quiet of just being with someone that made you happy in ways youâd never felt before. The promise of another day with them on the horizon.
It was becoming increasingly harder not to think about Ryland Grace like that every day, of what a life with the awkward, endearing science teacher could be.
And as Principal Marshall continued her meeting, and your eyes met the blue ones that were already looking at you: soft, kind, a hint of something you couldnât understand in them, you could only dream he thought the same thoughts when he looked at you.
â€ïž
âAlright, who can tell me the day of the first human space flight?â
Not a single middle schooler, packed into the buildingâs planetarium, raised their hands at first. Many of them started whispering to each other, confused looks on their faces, but Ryland just waited with a smile on his face. A brave soldier from Mr. Harkinâs class, Damien, finally raised his hand.
âUh, Mr. Grace? Wouldnât thatâŠbe today?â
âExcatly!â Graceâs clap echoed through the room as he pointed toward the young kid sitting in the front row of seats. âInternational Day of Human Space Flight, commemorating the first human space flight by Yuri Gagarin. It was a trick question, and you passed my tiny friend.â
Were you excited about losing a chunk of your day to escorting your class to the planetarium, along with other classes in the building, for a special science presentation? Absolutely not, especially not with how terribly your class did on their last The Odyssey assignment.
When you found out that Ryland was giving the presentation during your allotted time? Suddenly, The Odyssey meant nothing to you. Not when you could watch Ryland teach, something he did so effortlessly.
The way he captured every single childâs attention with ease. That glowing smile on his face every time they answered a question right, and simply the way he seemed to love what he taught. You were captivated every time you got the chance to see him teaching the thing he loved so much.
âYuri Gagarin was a Soviet cosmonaut who became the first person in space in 1961 aboard the Vostok 1,â the planetarium was lit up with the night sky, little stars reflecting down. You could almost see them in the students eyes, in their bright smiles as they looked up into the vastness of space. Your eyes trailed to Ryland, already looking at you with a soft smile of his own, before he cleared his throat and moved throughout the room, focusing back on the kids. âOver the course of 89 minutes, his ship traveled to a maximum altitude of 187 miles, as it orbited the Earth.â
âWait, so we werenât the first people in space?â one of your students, Lydia, called out. Ryland laughed, pointing over at her.
âNo, we kind of sucked,â you rolled your eyes with a grin at Rylandâs statement, though it drew a laugh from all of the kids. âNo, America had actually scheduled its first space flight for May 1961, so this was a huge blow to us. It really heated up the space race.â
âHe really is good with them, isnât he?â
Glancing over, Mr. Harkin had saddled up beside you on the edge of the room, head tilted toward you and voice low so as to not disrupt the lesson the kids were being taught. Your gaze drifted back to Ryland as he continued his lesson, eliciting more laughter from the kids. It only brought another soft smile to rest on your lips.
âHe is, in a way that I just donât understand,â
Those blue eyes youâd become so fond of met yours for a moment across the room, face illuminated by the light projecting onto the planetariumâs dome walls. The little grin he wore seemed to drop just slightly, gaze still locked on you but flickering every moment over to Mr. Harkin as he spoke to the students. Harkinâs elbow dug lightly into your side.
âCareful, youâre giving him major âheart eyesâ across the room right now,â
You did your best to conceal your laughter, shooting Harkin a look, Rylandâs gaze still felt on the side of your face even as you looked away.
âWhy do I feel like Iâm about to find out that every teacher in this school has a secret betting ring going on when it comes to Ryland and I?â
âI mean, itâs not a secret. Principal Marshall runs the damn thing,â
âMr. Grace?â one of the youngest girls in the grade, Aurora, called out, raising her hand up to get Rylandâs attention. âMy mom told me the other day that thereâs 8 planets in our solar system. What happened to Pluto?â
Ryland went to answer when Mr. Harkin beside you laughed, capturing the attention of everyone in the room, as he shook his head at his young student.
âNo, honey, scientists a couple years ago decided that Pluto wasnât a planet anymore,â
Your eyes flickered to Ryland, who was already staring at Harkin from across the room as he tossed his little crochet earth back and forth in his hand. His response was a bit of a forced laugh.
âWell, your teacher isnât wrong. Scientists classified Pluto as a dwarf planet a couple years ago,â he explained to the kids, eyes trained on the little crochet sphere in his hands. âBut thereâs 8 other very important, even closer planets that we should focus on. I mean, who really cares about a tiny, slow planet that takes 248 years to orbit the sunâhonestly, he should just accept that heâs slowly falling into obscurity and stop trying to steal the spotlight.â
The room got quiet. Your eyebrow raised slightly, head tilted, as everyone just seemed to stare at Ryland, who had yet to look up.
âUh, Mr. Grace?â some student in the back called out. âWhy did you call Pluto âheâ? Are the planets boys and girls like us, too?â
Rylandâs head shot up, as if he suddenly remembered he was in a room full of students. His eyes shot to you, his mouth opening, then closing, before he quickly looked away.
âIâwellâŠplanets donât reallyâŠIâm not trying to misgender the planets, you know? Thatâs not for me to decide, thatâs for them toâyou know what, does anyone else have any other questions that arenât related to Pluto?â
You really didnât want to laugh at Ryland, but only he would be able to accidentally turn a lesson about space and planets into almost a lesson on bodily autonomy. He caught your eye, his widening just slightly and you could almost see his cry for help written across his face, but it only made your laughter worse.
It was little Madison that raised her hand next, speaking before sheâd even been called upon.
âAre you sure the Earth isnât the center of the universe?â
Ryland hung his head in shame, the shaking of his head evident from across the room as a few of the kids around laughed at the young girlâs comment. You were quick to shoot them a warning look, not keen to hand out any detentions today.
By the time your gaze turned back to Ryland, he was already looking at you. His gaze flickered to Harkin, then back to you, and it was like a light bulb had just flickered on the way his eyes lit up.
âYes, Madison, Iâm sure the Earth isnât the center of the universe. And I can show you,â his long legs crossed the room in seconds, his body sliding between you and Mr. Harkin as his hands landed on your shoulders with a tiny little squeeze that sent your heart leaping through your chest. âBut to do that, Iâm going to need this volunteer that Iâm not quite giving a choice.â
âItâs not volunteering if you didnât ask, Ry!â
You exasperatedly tried to whisper to Ryland as he steered you across the room to stand before all the kids. He only shook his head as a bunch of your own students started cheering for you around the room, only worsening the red that coated your cheeks the second his hands had landed on your body.
âI need you for this,â he shot back hastily, positioning you in the middle of the room, standing in front of you. His body blocked the students from your vision, blue eyes boring down into yours, hands gently squeezing at your upper arms as you begged the blush in your skin to not be too obvious. âYou trust me?â
A ridiculous question, because the only answer was yes. You gave him a nod, and Rylandâs smile only widened as he turned back to the kids in the room.
âAlright, kids. Your gorgeous teacher here is the Sun,â
Little oohs and awes sounded from the kids around the room at Rylandâs little slip in of the word âgorgeous.â There was a sting in your bottom lip as you bit into it with your teeth, trying to contain your own smile. Marcus spoke up from across the room without raising his hand, as usual.
âThen whatâs Mr. Harkin?â
âOh, heâs Pluto,â Ryland shot back immediately, nodding his head. âSuits him.â
Laughter rang through the room, the young boys as rambunctious as ever. Ryland met your astonished look with a tiny wink of his own, one that forced a small laugh to tumble from your lips. Then, he began to slowly spin, walking around you in a circle.
âAnd I am the Earth,â he called out to the kids, and you could only hope he didnât trip over his own two shoelaces. âThe Sun holds 99.8% of the mass in our solar system, which means itâs packing some massive gravity.â
Ryland stopped spinning himself, still moving around you in a circle. He held his hand out toward you, and you slipped yours into it without hesitation, spinning in that circle slowly with him.
âBecause the Sun holds such intense gravity, itâs actually pulling Earth into it. But, Earth has such high forward velocity that it actually keeps us moving sideways. Put these two together, and it keeps Earth moving in an almost perfect circle around the sun. Can anyone tell me another fun fact about our movement around the sun?â
The words went in one of your ears and straight out the other. There was no paying attention, not when Rylandâs hand held your own. Soft skin, just slightly rough around the edges, and those blue eyes were so soft, locked onto you as if there was nowhere else he wanted to look.
âOur speed changes!â Olivia called out from somewhere in the back, but you didnât even try to look and find her. âWhen weâre closer to the sun in our orbit we move faster, and the further away we are, the slower we move.â
âVery good, Olivia!â Ryland called out, sparing just a quick glance over to the kids in the room as his hand held yours tighter, still spinning slowly together. âMadison, we also know this works because thereâs other sun-like stars out there that are also orbited by planets. Like Tau Ceti, which has four Earth-like planets orbiting it.â
âIs the sun important for other things, besides just being the center?â
Rylandâs eyes flickered to you, and you watched as he paused. The slight hesitation on his face, the bobbing of his Adamâs apple for a moment, before those blue eyes locked onto yours and refused to look away.
âI-It isâŠfor a lot of reasons. The Sun is the Earthâs entire reason for existing. The Sun gives the Earth life. The Sun is the reason the world is beautiful,â
Your breath hitched, eyes still trained on Ryland. There was something in his words, something in that earnest, raw look that he had written across his features as he looked at you that added a weight to his words. A weight that sent a tiny chill across your skin, raising the hair on your arms.
âWithout the SunâŠthe Earth would be nothing,â
There was quiet across the room. Then, a couple snickers, followed by Oliviaâs smug little voice.
âThe Sun sounds beautiful the way you talk about it,â
âShe is,â his voice was lower, softer than it was before. Until, he seemed to realize what he said, the red on both of your faces spreading further than before as his eyes shot wide. âTHE SUN I mean! I-Iâm talking about the sun, obviously, b-because this is a science presentation!â
Laughter rang through the room, little chants of your names mashed together coming from some of the kids as the bell rang and saved either of you from further embarrassment.
Ryland, being Ryland, chose that moment to finally trip over his own two feet. You pulled on his hand as hard as you could, saving him from plummeting to the ground as he instead just landed on his one knee.
âMake good choices,â Ryland commented lowly as some of the kids walked past the two of you, still snickering and giggling to themselves. You let go of his hands finally, simply resting it on his shoulder with a gentle squeeze. âDonât uh, I donât know, blow up the world during lunch or anything. Or pop those chip bags and give kids heart attacks, whatever you kids do these days.â
You laughed, stepping around Ryland as your kids lined up outside of the room, waiting for you. He shot you a sheepish smile from the floor, and your skin still burned with heat at the memory of his words as you looked at him.
âEvery time I think youâre doing well with those kids, they manage to knock you down a peg,â
âYeah, well, whatâs new?â
When you met your class outside, you didnât let them get a word in before you warned them not to say anything. You could still hear little comments talking about âshippingâ their English and Science teachers the entire way back to your classroom.
â€ïž
Ryland Grace didnât understand how he had ended up here.
Well, he did. Calling the leading scholar in his field a âstaggering waste of carbonâ at a UNESCO conference in Denmark was an easy way to get blacklisted from the field heâd studied in for many years in college. It was an easy explanation for how he ended up teaching middle school science at Grover Cleveland Middle in San Francisco.
Not that he had a problem with teaching! He actually loved it. Loved his kids, loved talking about science. He loved teaching the future little scientists of the world about why every facet of science was awesome. The pay wasnât great, though.
Especially when it was the reason he rode a bike to school daily.
And there was currently the equivalent of a monsoon raining down from the sky onto the pavement, the reason heâd been standing at the front doors for the last 20 minutes hoping that the rain would simply let up. The heavens didnât take pity on him, though, and it only rained harder and harder. His rain coat and bike were not meant to withstand heavy rain and damaging winds to this extent.Â
Best cast scenario? It takes him a little longer to get home on his usual 20 minute bike ride than normal. Worst case? He crashes and dies, dead in a ditch covered in mud.
âRyland, please tell me you arenât thinking of riding your bike home in this?â
Then there was you. You were probably the single greatest reason why he loved teaching at Grover Cleveland Middle. If he ever had the unfortunate chance to meet that scientist from the conference again, heâd thank him this time for being a staggering waste of carbon, because it led him down a path to you.
âI canât be that bad,â he tried to joke, waving you off as a crack of thunder seemed to shake the entire building, and his fake confidence faltered for a second. He glanced back at you, coat wrapped around your bag instead of yourself in order to keep its contents dry. âJust, you knowâŠthe slight threat of bodily harm.â
He really wished the path that led to you was less bumpy and full of himself looking like an idiot, but at this rate heâd take what he could get from the universe.
âYeah, absolutely not,â was your immediate reply, head shaking as she fished your car keys out of the bag still covered with your coat. âIâm giving you a ride home, canât risk the best science teacherâs life over a dumb storm.â
Ryland immediately shook his head, turning to face you beside him. He was not letting you risk your own life in the storm for him. If it really came down to it, heâd sleep at his desk. There was a change of clothes he kept in the bottom drawer, it wasnât the first time heâd had to do it.
âI canât let you-â
âThis isnât up for discussion,â Ryland snapped his mouth shut as you cut in once again, dangling your car keys up in front of him with a little shake. âIâŠcare about you, okay? I want to know you are home safe.â
There was no stopping the immediate heat that filled Rylandâs cheeks, and he knew it. There was red blooming across your own, but Ryland shook all wishful thinking from his mind. The AC unit in this school was unreliable, you were definitely just flushed from the heat. No other reason.
Ryland decided he wasnât going to put up a fight at this point, but he wasnât going to let you do this without anything in return. He shrugged the yellow raincoat hanging over his own shoulders off as he kicked the glass door in front of him open, the muffle sounds of the torrential downpour now louder as droplets of water splashed into the front door. He held the jacket out, hanging it above your head to protect you from the rain.
âAt least let me save you from getting drenched,â
âYouâre going to look like a dog that just had a bath by the time we reach my car,â Ryland only smiled at your joke, and the little giggle that fell through your lips. The close proximity didnât help as he held the jacket up around you.
âActually, itâs not windy today,â he shot back with a grin, nodding out the propped open door into the rain. âThat means if we run, Iâll be drier than if we walked, because the rain thatâs hitting us from above is proportional to time. Though, the rain hitting us from the front is proportional to distance, and when running-â
âRyland Grace, you are adorable when you get all science-nerd, but if weâre going to runâŠwe should run,â
Ryland was thankful that you couldnât see the renewed heat flooding his cheeks, as you were both too busy sprinting through the torrential downpour to the staff parking lot.
Being a gentleman (who was head over heels in love with you and too terrified to say a damn thing) was thrown out the window with how fast you were booking it to your car, the idea of shielding you from the rain with his jacket abandoned after just a moment booking it across the lot. He could feel the coolness of the water settling against his skin as it soaked through every layer of clothing he had, every few seconds having to furiously wipe at his glasses in hopes of seeing through them.
None of it really mattered in the end, not when he heard your laugh. The little shrieks of laughter as a particularly big drop happened to fall right in your eyes. Or the laughter as Ryland managedâin his signature fashionâto slip on the final step into the parking lot, and you had to double back in laughter to help haul him to his feet.
Heâs spring clumsily through the rain a thousand more times if he got to see you smile like that. And that is why his kids always told him that he was definitely âwhippedâ for you. Whatever that meant.
The second you had both jumped into your respective seats of your vehicle, doors slamming shut, there was only a moment of silence between the both of you. Ryland felt like his chest was going to explode, remembering why he always hated gym class, his heavy breathing mixed with yours as you both caught your breath, before you locked eyes over the center console.
Then the laughter resumed.
He held his hand to his stomach, feeling an ache settling in as he couldnât stop his own laughter. Yourâs grew slightly louder in his ear as you leaned over, trying to help him wipe at his glasses that were still covered.
âI was right, you look like a wet dog,â
Rylandâs only response was to shake his soaking wet hair like one, a simple reaction that earned yet another shriek of laughter from you and a light slap to his shoulder. You muttered something unintelligible under your breath, but Ryland found himself unable to tear his gaze away from your lips as you started the car and began to pull out of the staff lot. How soft they looked, the way the little beads of water running down your cheeks fell over them.
Whipped. He still didnât get it, but he agreed wholeheartedly with his kids at this point.
There was no driving fast in this rain, especially when the windshield wipers were moving at their highest programmed speed and it still wasnât enough. It was quiet in the car for just a moment as you pulled out of the parking lot, but Ryland broke it the second your phone had connected to the carâs bluetooth, music filling the space between him and you.
Fly me to the moon, let me play among the stars. Let me see what spring is like on Jupiter and Mars.
âFrank Sinatra,â Ryland couldnât help the growing smile on his lips as the familiar song flooded through the car speakers. He kept his eyes trained on the side of your face, watching the little smile grow on your own lips, eyes focused on the road conditions in front of you. âOld books and old music. Didnât know you had such an old soul.â
âYou calling me old, Ryland?â
âN-no!â Ryland immediately back track, hands flying up and shaking back and forth as his eyes went wide. âI might say some stupid stuff someâokay, most of the timeâbut I know better than to comment on a womanâs age.â
âIâm just teasing you,â he could thankfully hear the sincerity mixed in with the teasing lit to your voice. âBut yes, I do enjoy some old music. Always been a big fan of Sinatra, especially this one.â
âItâs a nice songâŠjust not scientifically accurate,â he caught the side eye that you threw his way for just a moment, another crack of thunder banging across the sky and almost shaking the car. Ryland couldnât help but jump slightly. âJupiter only has a 3.13° tilt to its axis, so it doesnât experience seasons like we do. Marâs would, though, because its axis is tilted at 25°, only 1.5° more than our own tiltâŠâ
Ryland trailed off as the car rolled to a stop at a red light, and he caught you fully facing him this time with a bemused expression written across your face. His smile dropped just slightly as he let out a sheepish laugh, adjusting his glasses as they slid back down the wet bridge of his nose.
â...I went full science-nerd again, didnât I?â
Your laughter drowned out the rain beating against the roof of the car as your attention returned to the road once more.
âYou always do, but I happen to enjoy it very much,â
If only teaching paid more, because the commute to Rylandâs apartment was a lot shorter than his bike ride home every day from work.Â
Parked in an open space across the road from the dimly lit apartment building, Ryland Grace hesitated with his hand on the handle of the door. His eyes swept out over the area around the vehicle, still being hounded with rain. The top of his road looked like the beginning of a river, the way the water was rushing down the small incline to pool at the bottom.
âThanksâŠfor this,â he gestured toward the weather right outside the card.
You moved to respond to him, when the weather alert on your phone propped up on your dashboard sounded out. Ryland could just barely make out the headline: FLASH FLOOD WARNING.
The roads were far too dangerous, and Ryland already knew from various conversations that you lived on the opposite end of town from him.
HeâŠcould ask you to stay for the night. Just for safety reasons, obviously! He was quickly trying to work through the pros and cons list in his head.
Pros: his only friend that just so happened to be the woman heâs been head over heels in love with for the last year would be safe and not driving in this storm.
Cons: his only friend that just so happened to be the woman heâs been head over heels in love with for the last year would be inside his tiny little apartment that looked like it had been hit by a separate hurricane than the one it felt like they were currently suffering through.
âI should probably get home-â
âStay,â Ryland cut in, quickly continuing his words after his vague statement. âI-Itâs just, the roads are bad, and you live on the other side of town. This storm is just going to get worse, and I-Iâd hate to know something happened to you.â
You hesitated, he could tell, shaking your head.
âRyland, I couldnât ask you to let me stay,â
He hesitated himself for a moment, every feeling heâd kept bottled up for a year now threatening to escape past his lips. Instead, he settled on echoing your own words.
âIâŠI care about you. I want to know youâre safe,â
Moments later, he had his rain coat draped over your head as he rushed you inside his apartment to shelter from the storm.
Rylandâs hands shook the entire time as he put his key into his front doorâs lock. The last time he had guests overâŠwas never. His apartment was built and designed for him and his brain, scattered with notes and books and piles of arts and crafts that he worked on in order to decorate his classroom. It was not meant for visitors, especially not ones as pretty as you.
âDonât, uh, mind the mess,â he mumbled, holding the door open and motioning after you, allowing you to take a step inside his apartment as he let out the small breath he didnât realize he was holding.
Chucking off his sneakers, little puddles of water forming below them on the ground, his jacket found its way into a pile with them. Ryland wiped his hands nervously against the thighs of his jeans, the action doing nothing against the soaking went material, as he watched you take in his apartment.
The apartment that looked like it had been ransacked, at least partially. Stacks of books relating to a thousand different topics were stacked on the ground by the tv stand, on top of the coffee table along with the coffee cup heâd abandoned there early in the morning in a haste to get to the school, and and by his desk that had a stack of papers scattered around it after her strewn them about in order to find one specific slip of paper at 11 p.m.
It was a mess, and Ryland regretted everything.
âItâs not messy, itâs homey,â your reply sent a burst of heat through his skin as you turned to him with a bright smile, leaving your own bag and coat by his pile of wet items before gesturing to your own soaking wet clothing. âDo you maybe have something a little lessâŠwet?â
He scurried away into his bedroom, trying to ignore that little section of his brain that took your comment in a MUCH different way.
His bedroom was worse. Ryland wasnât letting you sleep on the couch, but he surely wasnât letting you see his room in a state like this.
Clothing was thrown across the room and Ryland quickly ran about, shoving piles of clothing away into corners where he was certain you wouldnât be able to see any of it. Throwing it into his closet and slamming the door before it could fall out, pushing it down in his laundry basket, kicking it under his bed so it was out of sight and out of mind, whatever he could think of.
âGreat idea, Ryland,â he muttered to himself, pulling on a dry pair of sweatpants and a tshirt for himself, trying to shake the remaining water out of his hair as he rummaged for something you could wear. âAlmost get the woman youâre in love with killed by letting her drive you home in a monsoon. Invite her to stay the night in your apartment that makes you look like an even bigger loser than you are. Amazing idea. A doctorate in molecular biology and this is the best you can do.â
You were waiting by the couch in his living room, just glancing around at everything with a smile, when he reappeared. Sheepishly, he handed the folded clothing over to you, hand running through his soaking wet hair as he pointed down the hall.
âYou can take my bed for the night. Uh, just leave your clothes in the bathroom, I can throw them in the dryer in a bit. I can scrounge up something to eat in the meantime,â
âThanks, Ry,â your hand reached out, squeezing his upper arm lightly, and he felt the heat in his skin instantly bloom under your touch. âFor all of this.â
If it wasnât for the giant crack of thunder that flickered the lights of the building for a moment and made Ryland jump out of his skin, he wouldâve forgotten how to breathe again.
He rummaged through every part of his kitchen, desperately trying to find something that he could make the two of you to eat that also wouldnât make him seem pathetic. All he could come up withâŠwas a loaf of bread, a jar of peanut butter, and a jar of jelly.
Yesterday. Heâd stayed late after the end of the day to help in tutoring. He forgot to go grocery shopping. Ryland let out a sigh at his realization, back to his fridge door and head banging back against the stainless steel, hand running down his face and dragging against his skin as his glasses were knocked off, hanging off of one ear.
âGreat,â he muttered into his palm. âJust absolutely freaking great, Ryland.â
Ryland Grace desperately wished he had the guts, the bravery, to just simply tell you how he felt.
From the moment he met you, when you had arrived for your first day at Grover Cleveland Middle, he was a goner. It had been a long time since heâd had a partner, his last one certain that he was too busy with his head in the clouds to pay attention to her, and she wasnât wrong. But from the moment he looked at you, waving and smiling as you introduced yourself to all of the teachers that had gathered to welcome you, you were suddenly the only thing his brain wanted to focus on.
He had been so focused on you, too busy admiring every inch of you in silence, that in his typical clumsy fashion he tripped over his own two feet and knocked Principal Marshallâs papers out of her hand, spreading them five feet across the floor. But youâd joined him on the ground, laughing lightly to yourself, as you helped him clean up the papers, and Ryland knew he was a goner for you.
It only continued every single day, getting worse, and you somehow became his friend. His only friend, if he was being quite frank. So he tried to hide the way he really felt, too scared to mess anything up. Heâd rather have you in his life in any way he could, then mess this up and lose you forever.
Keeping those feelings in was getting increasingly harder in the last few months. Which explained why heâd traveled cross town just to get lunch from your favorite place, or compare you to the sun and basically called you his entire reasoning for living in front of a bunch of children-
Either Ryland was going to blurt it out at some point, or he was taking these feelings to the grave with him.
âPeanut butter and jelly? Sounds like weâre eating like royalty tonight,â
He shouldnât have looked over at you. He really, really shouldnât have. Leaning against the opposite wall of the kitchen, hair still damp and dripping onto the cheesy âI had potentialâ shirt heâd been gifted by one of his students the following year. Sweatpants that were bunched up around your ankles so that you didnât trip over the length, waist tied in as tightly as possible so they didnât just slide right off your hips.
Ryland Grace had never thought it possible that you could look more gorgeous than you did every day, but he stood corrected. He felt more in love than he ever had just looking at you right in this moment.
âSorry, I donât exactlyâŠlive a life of luxury,â Ryland awkwardly laughed as he spoke, pulling out two sad paper plates from the cabinet next to him and flashing them in your direction, shaking them lightly in the air. âHope this doesnât ruin my perfectly curated image.â
His eyes followed you as you brushed past him, humming to yourself with a little grin. You fumbled through every drawer in the kitchen, looking for something, when Ryland quickly popped open the one right next to him, showcasing his small selection of utensils. You flashed another heart-stopping grin at him before digging out two knives from the drawer.
âThat image cracked a long time ago, Ry. Like that time you let Marcus perform some chemical reaction and got the fire department called to the school,â
The tall blonde groaned to himself, rubbing at his temple as you pushed past him to throw some of the bread down onto the plates and crack open the jars of peanut butter and jelly set out.
âThat was one time!â he tried to defend himself, saddling up beside you as you passed him one of the knives. He almost completely missed the opening of the peanut butter jar, eyes too transfixed on the sight of you in his clothing. It was still up in the air if his heart was actually working correctly yet. âI learned my lesson very quickly not to let him handle any more chemicals.â
âDonât worry. I made the mistake of doing popcorn reading when we were working on The Outsiders. Marcus seemed to end up with every single instance of profanity in the book, which he would yell at the top of his lungs,â
Ryland snapped his fingers, glancing down at you at his side with a teasing smile.
âYou know what? That explains that really loud âHELLâ I heard across the school a couple months ago. I was so sure that it was going to shatter the windows of my classroom,â
âOh, shut up! It wasnât that bad!â
Your laughter permeated the air, elbow digging into his side as you spoke. And when your eyes locked with his, and Ryland got the perfect look at every square inch of your face, he could see it so clearly in his head.
Mornings just like this, where youâd both struggle to get out of the warmth of the blankets. The way he would surely annoy you with his very disorganized morning routine, but heâd make up for it with coffee already set out for you, just as you liked it. The lingering moments by the door, too wrapped up in each other because you didnât want to leave the peace of this space, even though you were going to the same place.
Late nights, curled together on the couch with some movie playing on TV that neither of you were particularly paying attention to. Whispered words, laughter shared. Kisses that lingered, hands that trailed-
Thunder broke Ryland from his spell, thoughts gone in a flash. He was back in his dingy kitchen, with you just inches away, staring up at him as the picture of true beauty.
âT-This is nice,â he cleared his throat, turning back to his sandwich as he spread his toppings along the bread, heat blooming across his cheeks again. It always did around you. âMaking dinner with someoneâŠno matter how sad the dinner is. I havenât done this in awhile.â
âRight,â your voice responded after a momentary pause. âSarah, wasnât it? You were dating her when we first met. What, uhâŠwhat ever happened to her?â
âOh, we broke up a long time ago,â Ryland waved the comment off, shaking his head. âShe just, uh, thought my head was too far in the clouds. Didnât think I wanted to be down here on Earth. She wasnât wrong. It was for the best, though. She hatedâŠall of this. The rundown apartment, the lack of a car, my love of science. She just never understood it. I was justâŠtoo much for her. But sheâs with Mark now, so Iâm sure sheâs happy.â
Ryland chose not to mention that his last relationship had been dead long before it officially ended, the pair not having seen each other in well over a month by that point. If his math was right, which it usually was, Sarah had started dating Mark before sheâd even broken it off with him.
He also failed to mention the relief he felt inside when she had called it off, knowing his heart had belonged to you the moment your eyes had locked with his.
Fingertips just barely ghosted over Rylandâs cheek, and he froze in place. Eyes trained on the plate in front of him, he could feel the way your hand curled around his cheek. The way your thumb glossed over his skin, back and forth, and the way your other fingers barely grazed over the shell of his ear. He couldnât help the way he instantly leaned into the touch, a touch he hadnât felt in so long.
Ryland turned his head, still resting in the palm of your own, to look you in the eyes. You gave him the softest smile, hand trailing across his cheek and ghosting over his jawline. His eyes watched it move, the way your fingers gently curled around the frame of his glasses dangling precariously from his face, and placed them gingerly back where they belonged, resting on the bridge of his nose.
His breath caught, your body so close to his, as your hand trailed back down and rested on his chest for just a moment, your own gaze flickering to its resting spot while his gaze stayed on your face.
âYou are never, and will never be, too much, Ryland. Not for the right person. Theyâll love every part of you. The clumsy parts, the nerdy parts, every part that makes youâŠyou,â
The Sun. Thatâs what you were to Ryland Grace. He meant every word he had said in that planetarium that day, driven by the rare jealousy of seeing Harkin that close to you.Â
The Sun was the reason Earth had life. Without the SunâŠthe Earth would be nothing.
Without youâŠwell, Ryland Grace had accepted long ago that he didnât understand what it was like to truly live until heâd met you.
Your eyes flickered for just a second, and Ryland took in an audible breath, swearing they settled on his lips for just a second. The apartment was quiet, except for the hum of the fridge and the pattering of the rain against the living room windows.
The moment shattered with yet another terribly timed clap of thunder, your body jolting away from his, focus turned back to the counter in front of you, face hidden from his wide eyes.
âY-you knowâŠI canât tell you the last time I had a peanut butter and jelly sandwich,â
Ryland shook his head, smiling slightly to himself at the little stutter in your own words, turning back to finishing his own food as well. But the moment still lingered in his head, the heat that bloomed from where your skin touched him still lingering.
âSince peanut butter is banned in school for allergies, probably awhile,â
âI almost forgot that rule a couple weeks ago and almost packed peanut butter crackers,â you joked back, before Ryland heard you snap your fingers. âOh! Speaking of work, did you put yourself down to volunteer for the school dance next week?â
Sandwiches finished off, Ryland packed the ingredients away and stashed them back in their appropriate spots, laughing awkwardly to himself.
âHah, uh, no I didnât. I chaperoned last year and kind of left covered in punch, became the kidsâ favorite âmemeâ for a week afterward since one of them got a picture of it,â
He turned back to you. Leaning against the island counter, holding your sad little sandwich in your hands, face still lit up red as you smiled toward him.
âI think so far it's me, Doyle, and Harki, plus Principal Marshal and I think Katie and Dawson from the front office. We could really use another teacher,â he swore the fluttering of your lashes was on purpose just to kill him and his resolve. âSign-up? For me?â
Well, there was no universe in existence where Ryland said no to a request like that.
Rejoining you at the counter, he held his own sandwich in his hand, reaching out and tapping it against yours as if you were sharing a toast.
âFor you? Totally,â
Even as you both took a bite of your sandwiches, eyes still locked together, Ryland felt as if something had shifted in the air. Your eyes were still as kind, your smile still bright, but it felt like there was a new weight to your gaze as you looked at him.
And he sworeâand hopedâfor just a split second, that your eyes had just flickered down to his lips again.
â€ïž
The student council had outdone themselves with this end of the year dance.
As you stepped through the main doors of Grover Cleveland Middleâs building, the smile on your face grew immediately at the sight before you. The walls were lined with little fairy lights, little styrofoam planets hanging down from the ceiling at various lengths, glow in the dark stars right around them and glowing. Silver streamers hung around the fairy lights, with the check in desk decorated with tons and foam and lights behind them to look like twinkling lights in the clouds.
âA space theme?â you called out as the two kids in front of you ducked away from the registration desk. Evelyn Doyle finally looked up from the sign-in sheet, grin growing as she took in the sight of you and rounded the desk. âI hadnât heard anything from the student council on the theme, but they did well.â
âNevermind the theme, youâre finally here!â you laughed as you threw her arms around you, reciprocating the hug, before her hands landed on your shoulders in order to get a good look at you, eyes trailing you up and down. âAnd look at this dress, oh my god!â
The deep yellow dress fell right around your knees, the fabric light and airy as it swooshed through the air with every move you made. Buttons lined the front down to the tie around your waist, leaving just enough room for the little gold necklace resting against your collarbone. You thanked yourself for choosing a short sleeve option, already feeling the heat in the building from how many kids were all packed in and dancing together.
âThank you,â was the sheepish reply you gave your friend as she let you go. âIâm sorry Iâm late, I caught one of my studentâs parents in the parking lot and they turned it into a mini parent-teacher conference, sadly.â
âNot a problem,â she waved the comment off, gesturing toward the doors of the gym just off to the left of you both. âJust get on in there, have some fun, and keep those slow dancers at least 12 inches apart at all times.â
If the hallways were gorgeous, the inside of the gym shone even brighter. Bathed in blue and purple, even more little lights twinkled around the room, hung off the walls, the ceilings, and on every surface they could possibly find. Moon and star decals, made by the art students, hung off the walls and from the ceiling, almost glowing under the lights.
Your eyes trailed over all of your children, scattered throughout the room, already having been dancing for at least thirty minutes. The smile on your face grew as you watched each one of them, gathered with their friends as they danced together in groups, or even stood off to the sides and just observed from beyond the dimly lit dance floor.
Mr. Harkin had been stationed at the punch table, and you could hear him from across the room warning these middle schoolers not to try and spike the punch. You could only giggle to yourself, shaking your head at his antics, before your eyes swept over the crowd once more-
The music seemed to stop in your ears, breath hitching, the second you laid eyes on him across the room. Ryland Grace.
He wasnât in anything fancy. A nice pair of jeans, the worn pair of black dress shoes youâd seen by his apartment door that night. A dark green shirt was tucked into his jeans, adorned with a worn, navy blue suit jacket overtop, and those same glasses almost falling off the bridge of his nose as he spoke animatedly to Olivia.
Ryland looked good. Too good, in your eyes.
For just a second, he looked up, and his eyes happened to meet yours across the room. You thought for sure youâd forgotten how to breathe.
Whatever had happened that night, in the silence of his apartment with only the beating of the rain against the windows and the roof as a witness, had shifted something. From the moment your fingertips had ghosted along his skin, your hand had rested against his chest, and youâd been close enough to see the specs that danced in those ocean blue eyes of his up close, nothing had been the same.
Like the little bubble you had been existing in with your harbored crushed had finally popped. Like a toe had dipped just slightly over a line, and there was no going back from then on.
You always blushed around your friend, every time heâd manage to fumble his way through a comment that borderlined on a kind-of-not-just-friendly compliment. But since that day just a week or so ago, every time he has been within a few feet of you, your face lit up like a hot summerâs day.
Moments where heâd find a second to linger in your classroom door, held a new weight to them. Sharing lunch together, fingers just barely brushing for a second as you both reached for your food, to moments when youâd simply be walking together down hallways, back of hands brushing along each otherâs but no one making any moves to stop it from happening.
Something was different, and you werenât sure you wanted to go back to how things were before. Not after touching his skin, or existing in his orbit like that. Not when youâd seen the side of him beyond these school walls.
You were in love with Ryland Grace. You had been for a long time. And, finally, you were done trying to pretend that there wasnât at least a small chance that he felt the same.
âI need your help,â
The heated staring contest between you two was broken by the sound to your right. You turned, just to see Marcus standing directly beside you and reaching up to pull on the sleeve of your dress. His hands wrung together, foot tapping incessantly on the ground, and you immediately knelt down in front of him to get a better look at his face that he was trying to hide from you.
âMarcus? Honey, whatâs wrong?â you asked gently, hands coming to rest on his arms as you tried to get him to look at you.
âIâŠI like Olivia,â
Oh. It was one of those problems. The anxiety you felt in that moment finally washed away, an easy smile falling to your lips as you took a quick glance over in Ryland and Oliviaâs direction, the formerâs eyes still locked onto you from across the room.
âI did hear a rumor about that. Olivia is a great girl,â
âShe is,â he said quickly, finally looking at you. His nerves were basically written across his face. âI-Iâve been really mean to her. I didnât mean to be.â
âI know, honey. Sometimes feelings can be confusing,â you stood up, hands on your hips as you looked down at him with a smile. âDo you want to dance with her?â
âI do,â
You held your hand out toward him with a smile.
âThen why donât we start by going and apologizing to her?â
With Marcusâs hand in yours, you confidently led him across the room, eyes locked back onto Rylandâs as you approached. He stood with Olivia at his side, who was talking his ear off, a dopey looking grin on his face as he nodded to whatever she said as he continued to watch as you approached him.
âDr. Grace, Iâm sorry to interrupt you and Olivia,â you announced yourself to the pair with a grin of your own, hands on Marcusâs shoulders and you lightly pushed him forward. âBut Olivia, thereâs something that Marcus here wants to say to you.â
The young boy shuffled awkwardly forward, hands wringing together again as he stood in front of his crush.
âI, uh, I wanted to say I was sorry. For being really mean to you. I didnât mean it,â
Oliviaâs eyes went wide, as she too shuffled uncomfortably for a second. Ryland saddled up to your side, the pair of you sharing a glance as you watched the interaction happen right before your eyes. His hand graced over yours lightly, and it took everything in you not to reach out and lock your fingers with his.
âOh! Itâs, um, itâs okay. Thank you,â
âSay, Marcus?â Ryland called out to them both, catching the boyâs eye and gesturing toward Olivia with a wink. âWhat do you think of Oliviaâs dress?â
âIâŠI think she looks really beautiful,â
That comment finally seemed to catch Olivia off guard, her eyes wide in shock as she giggled nervously.
âOh! IâŠthank you, Marcus. You look really nice too,â
âThank you,â his posture seemed to straighten out at Oliviaâs reaction, like seeing her accept his compliment gave him the confidence he needed. âDo you want to dance with me?â
Olivia shot you and Ryland a look, and you both immediately gave her a thumbs up. Then, your happy eyes could only watch the two pre-teens awkwardly shuffle away together to the dance floor, not daring to meet the eyes of the other.
âLook at us, playing matchmaker for middle schoolers,â
âI think they did that for themselves, we just helped,â you laughed, turning your head. The laughter died on your lips the second your eyes met with Rylandâs, voice low and breathy as you whispered to him through your smile. âHi.â
âHi,â he whispered back just as breathily. His hand came up to the back of his head, running through his hair for a moment, and you could see the red and pink hues that lit up his cheeks. âI got worried when I didnât see you. I was ready to call you.â
âYou couldâve,â
âIâll remember for next time,â he shot back, hands finding their way to rest in the front pockets of his jeans. His eyes moved back over the crowd, finding your two young students once more. âIâm proud of him for that. ThatâŠmust have taken a lot of guts to do.â
You followed his gaze, landing on the pair as they danced together, laughing and talking like old friends.
âLike you said before, it can be hard for boys to express their feelings. All he needed was to pull up his big boy pants and ask her,â
Ryland laughed beside you.
âYeahâŠI should probably follow in his footsteps,â
You glanced back to him, seeing him already watching you. A single eyebrow raised toward him quizzically, even though your heart felt like it was ready to beat directly out of your chest.
Rylandâs mouth opened, then closed, then opened again, as if he were trying to force out words that he couldnât quite seem to get right. You didnât even realize you were holding your breath, hoping inside that whatever he wanted to say would address the weight that seemed to be hanging between your gazes.
âStay here,â
There wasnât even time for you to respond before the tall blonde rushed away, almost tripping as he dashed over to the DJ booth across the way from the makeshift dance floor. He whispered something to the DJ, and you could see the thumbs up he got in return, before he rushed back over to you, panting slightly.
âRyland?â you questioned softly, the man who held your entire heart without knowing it standing just a foot in front of you with a nervous grin on his face. âWhat did you just do?â
As if on cue, the song changed, and familiar lyrics floated through the room, bouncing off the walls.
Fly me to the moon, let me play among the stars. Let me see what spring is like on Jupiter and Mars
âIâm pulling up my big boy pants,â he responded with a nervous laugh, his hand outstretched toward you. âAnd asking you to dance with me.â
Nothing else existed the second that you slid your hand into Ryland Graceâs without hesitation, letting him pull you in. You werenât in the school, not in a room decorated for a middle school dance, and certainly not surrounded by middle schoolers and a bunch of faculty that had placed bets on you both.
It was just you and Ryland Grace. Thatâs all you wanted it to be.
Your arms found a place to rest around his shoulders, fingertips just barely brushing past the strands of hair that tickled the back of his neck. There was a fluttering in your chest the second that his hands made their way to your waist, curling around the divet just above your hip bone, pulling you into him just by another inch.
In other words, hold my hand. In other words, darling, kiss me. Fill my life with song, and let me sing for ever more.
"I didn't tell you yetâŠ,â his voice was soft, words whispered just between the two of you in a crowded room. âBut you look beautiful,"
"You don't have to flatter me, Ryland,"
"No, really, you look-"
"Like a banana in this yellow dress?"
He paused. His tongue poked out, running along his bottom lip, and you could see the nervous bob of his Adamâs apple before he spoke again.
"...like the sun,"
You are all I long for, all I worship and adore.
Oh. That fluttering in your chest was back, and suddenly, you werenât at a middle school dance anymore. You were back in that planetarium, spinning in circles. And this time, there were no doubts in your mind. You were the Sun, and he was the Earth. And what was the Earth, without its Sun?
"Ryland-"
"I wasn't lying,"
You cocked your head.
"...about what?"
"That I knew Homer wrote The Odyssey,"
That drew a short laugh from you, but you could still see the nerves that were laced through Rylandâs smile.
"Right, you were just distracted,"
"I was. By you. I'm always distracted by you,"
In other words, please be true. In other words, I love you.
You took a deep breath. Heâd crossed the line for you, thrown himself onto the other side, and was waiting for you with open arms. It was just a leap of faith.
âIâm always distracted by you, too. Since the day we met,â
The song faded away, melting into the next. There couldâve been eyes on you both, either from students or from faculty, but nothing would break either of your gazes away from the other.
Ryland took a quick look around the room, before his hands took hold of your own, bringing them down between you both. He gave you a grin, one filled with more happiness than you had ever seenâand you knew your own matched his perfectlyâbefore he tugged you toward the doors of the gym.
âCome with me,â
âRy, weâre supposed to be chaperoning!â
âI donât see Principal Marshall anywhere. Whatâs the worst she could do, fire us?â
âQuite literally, yes!â you shot back with a laugh.
Ryland only shrugged his shoulders, tugging you again, and you didnât even try to fight back. Your feet simply moved with him.
âWorth it,â
Hands clasped together, fingers intertwined, your laughter echoed off the walls of the empty hallways as Ryland Grace ran you down them, a destination clear in his mind. Every few seconds heâd look back, just smiling at you as his eyes trailed over every single inch of you, before youâd yell at him to look at his own feet before youâd both be sprawled across the linoleum floors.
The door to his classroom was open as you flew inside, hand slipping from his as you caught yourself on the projector cart sitting in the middle of the room. Spinning on your heel, you caught his eye just as he shut the classroom door behind him, and the silence enveloped you both once more. Finally alone, no prying eyes to watch.
The momentarily confidence that seemed to seize hold of Ryland dissipated in that moment. He wiped his hands against the front of his jeans, chuckling awkwardly as he took a few steps toward you.
âWhat was your plan here, Dr. Grace?â you teased, taking a couple steps toward him as well, too high on the feeling of everything youâd just finally realized. High on the feeling of finally not denying what your heart knew long ago: you and Ryland Grace were never just friends.
âIâm not going to lie,â he shot back, coming to a stop just in front of you, barely an inch or two separating you. âI hadnât thought this far ahead.â
âThen stop thinking,â
No one had leaned in first. It had been both of you, as if drawn together like two magnets, as your lips finally found one another's.
Goosebumps rose across your skin as Ryland Graceâs mouth moved against yours with an ease that shouldnât exist between two people that have never kissed before. It was like a perfect dance between two partners that knew each other better than anything.
Your lips never left his, moving against his as if you couldnât believe you had deprived yourself of this for so long, as your hands wound around his shoulders. Fingers curled into his hair, finally carding themselves through the blonde strands that felt so soft between your fingers.
The slightest little moan, enough to send heat coursing through your body the second you heard it, slipping from Rylandâs mouth into your own. His hands grasped at your hips, winding around your back to press into your lower back and tug you as close as humanly possible, as if he was a starved man that craved to touch you in any way that he could.
His lips were soft, a feeling that you knew you were going to crave for the rest of your life now that youâd had a single taste of them. You pressed further into him, a small mewl tumbling from your own lips and swallowed by his mouth as you pressed every inch of yourself into him, desperate to hang onto the moment in case the world would be cruel and wake you from this dream moments later.
The need to breathe was what finally separated you, but not far. Rylandâs forehead pressed to yours, his breath fanning out across your skin. His hands still gripped at your hips, holding him to you, as yours stayed carded through his hair, nails gently scraping at his scalp as you chest heaved as it tried to level your breathing back to normal.
âIf I havenât made it clear already, youâre my best friend,â his words were breathy, accented by the way he was still trying to catch his breath. But his smile was bright, his eyes almost shining, as he looked down at you. âAnd Iâm completely in love with you. Literally, since the moment we met.â
You laughed, trapped in this little bubble with him, as your hands slid from his hair to instead cup his cheeks. The tip of your nose just barely brushed against his, and he bumped his right back against yours without hesitation.
âIâm completely in love with you too, Ryland Grace. Since the moment you tripped over your own two feet,â
The sound of your laughter filled the empty, dark science classroom again as Rylandâs hands came to scoop you up around your thighs, spinning you in relentless circles. All you could do was hang onto his broad shoulders and smile, his lips peppering a thousand kisses to every inch of skin he could possibly reach.
The Earth needed the Sun, like how Ryland said he needed you. The person that makes it all worth it, that makes the days brighter, that makes this short little life worth it.
The Sun needed the Earth too.

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LITTLE MISS PRIM-AND-PROPER âËàż
when the crew discovers your secret tramp stamp, jack accidentally reveals he knows far more about it than he should
đ°ââ.àłàż*: interested in how the pitt crew got approved for a week in greece? the original invitation is still posted
PAIRING: jack abbot x shy!reader WARNINGS: fem!reader, reader wearing a bikini, shy!reader, secret relationship, tramp stamp, nosy coworkers, suggestive banter, implied intimacy PROMPT: here! WC: 1.2k
Itâs too bright out today. Blindingly so. Like the sun crawled out of bed nursing a petty grudge specifically against your corneas and decided today was the day it would exact revenge.
Your palms form an ineffective visor above your eyes, everything still burns despite this.
The sand throws light back at you in sharp, splintering flashes, like someone crushed up a chandelier and scattered it along the shore, sea spread out before you in that lurid, too-perfect blue that does not look real anywhere outside of vacation brochures and edited Instagram posts.
You squint toward the shoreline, blinking against the glare until Emma and Joy emerge in pieces.
A moving arm. Emma springing up and down at the edge of the surf. Joy beside her, louder, both hands around her mouth with the grave urgency of someone trying to rescue you from land.
Which is ironic because you are on land. And land is safe.
Land is reasonable. Land is not going to seize your ankles with freezing water and stop your heart out of spite.
Whitakerâs speaker thuds behind you, the bass breaking open in the breeze as Joy yells, âStop being such a wuss!â and Emma adds, a little gentler, âCome on, itâs really not that cold!âÂ
âThey're just gonna keep bugging you, you know,â Jack butts in, flipping another page of his book with a flick of his wrist. âMight as well rip the band-aid off.âÂ
You glance sideways at him, stretched beneath the umbrella like some indolent deity, skin still glistening from the generous layer of sunscreen you smeared into his chest earlier, fingertips skittering shyly over muscles and bones as he tolerated it with begrudging patience.
His shoulders, however, still blush pink at the edges, a physical monument to yesterdayâs disregard for your very detailed and considerate planning.
Jack Abbot would rather burn a little than admit you might know best. The eternal martyr, sacrificing comfort at the altar of pride.
You didnât give him the chance today.
âBut the sand,â you protest, words coming out a little more whiny than intended, each syllable a tiny balloon of anxiety popping mid-air. âIt gets wet, Jack, and then it sticks in between my toes, and dries in weird little crusty patches, and then Iâm stuck thinking about that all afternoon instead of, I donât know, enjoying myself, which is the entire point of a vacation â at least as far as I understand vacations, and ââ
Jackâs book snaps shut decisively, interrupting your spiraling train of thought.
He stares at you, expression caught somewhere between amused tolerance and weary affection, as though heâs watched you spin yourself dizzy like this too many times before. And he has.
âHey.â His voice is level, gently pulling you back to earth by the scruff of your neck. âWeâre at a beach. Sand is inevitable. Rinse it off, dry your feet, move on. Youâre preemptively ruining your own day, you realize that, right?âÂ
A helpless little pout blooms across your mouth, the tired-and-true expression you reserve for only the direst emergencies. Which, admittedly, occurs more often than youâd like to acknowledge.
Itâs practically foolproof.
And the way Jackâs gaze softens in increments demonstrates that.
He sighs in response, an unconvincing performance of irritation, eyes half-lidded in exaggerated exasperation.
âLook,â he mutters, resignation thickening his voice, âif it gets that bad, just come back up here and Iâll...I donât know, help rinse the sand off myself, if thatâs what it takes.âÂ
âKay,â you mumble, the concession melting off your tongue in the most petulant way possible, fingers fussing at the edges of your cover-up, dragging it upwards.
âThere we are,â he drawls, squinting to look at you. âAtta girl.âÂ
You resist the urge to stick out your tongue at him as you pull it fully off.
And when you do, a sudden, piercing wolf-whistle splits emerges from somewhere in the sea of your peers.
You reel backwards until the backs of your legs nearly knock into Jackâs chair.
You freeze when you get your bearings, cover-up still bunched in your fists, shoulders crawling toward your ears as Danaâs voice sails across the beach.
You think it might be loud enough to alert passing boats.
âWell, damn. Didnât have you pegged as the type.âÂ
For a second you think she means the bikini, which is revealing, yes, but nothing crazy.
And that would be bad on itâs own, honestly, because itâs weird enough to have your coworkers perceive you in swimwear, but then Santos gasps from your left.
âLittle Miss Prim-and-Proper has a tramp stamp?â
You can feel your eyes double in size.
You release a strangled little laugh. At least, you meant for it to be laughter. You think it sounds more like a sparrow smacking headfirst into a glass window.
âOh, itâs â itâs nothing,â you insist, swatting a hand. You hope no one notices that the pitch of your voice has risen several octaves. âI honestly forgot it was there.âÂ
A lie. A terrible one at that. Because yes, obviously, people forget about permanent body art all the time. Perfectly normal. Perfectly believable.
You turn so your back is toward the ocean, blocking the majority of everyoneâs view of the damning evidence as your palm flutters helplessly near your hip.
Whitaker rolls slowly onto one elbow from his spot on a towel, eyes narrowing. âIs it, like, supposed to be symbolic?â
âIs â what?âÂ
âThe tattoo,â he elaborates, waving a hand in your general vicinity, like heâs reluctant to approach it directly, wary of frightening you off. Valid concern. You do feel like a flight risk at this exact given moment. âDoes it represent something meaningful?âÂ
Dana snorts into her drink. âYeah, kid. It means she had a wild semester and access to eighty dollars.â
You part your lips, words half-formed. Explanations or possibly just meaningless static. More likely the latter.
Because with everyoneâs eyes suddenly looking at you waiting for you to say something, the attention feels a little too overwhelming.
âItâs a pomegranate,â Jack announces suddenly, rescuing you from yourself. You could kiss him right then and there. âFor Persephone. Rebirth, renewal, growth, all of that. She got it sophomore year of college.â
âYeah,â you agree faintly. You glance helplessly from face to face, feeling every glance bounce painfully between you and Jack, dissecting the air between you into tiny, fragile pieces. âItâs, um â exactly that.âÂ
Samiraâs the first one to offer a reassuring smile. âOh, thatâs actually really beautiful.â
You release another round of nervous laughter, shoulders inching down cautiously. A little uncertain whether youâre in the clear just yet.
Apparently not.Â
Langdon jerks his head toward Jack in one jerky movement, sunglasses nearly tumbling from the bridge of his nose. âHang on. Why the hell does he know that?âÂ
Your stomach does a violent drop. Like someone yanked a trapdoor beneath you and forgot to cushion you fall.
Shit.
Of course. Why wouldnât this happen?
Because clearly, the tattoo itself was only a minor humiliation, the polite opening number before the headline act of Jack publicly revealing his encyclopedic awareness of the ink approximately one inch above your ass.
But this is salvageable, right? Itâs plausible that you wouldâve told him this on a night shift after too much adrenaline and too little sleep.
Your gaze swings toward Jack, wordlessly pleading, imploring him to explain this all away, practically mentally gripping him by the collar and begging for mercy, but he only shrugs. Lazy and indifferent with the tilt of his burnt shoulders.
âKind of hard to miss from certain angles.â
You watch everyoneâs faces go slack jawed.
You donât wait around the witness the dawning realization behind you.
Thereâs no need; you can feel it spreading through the air like spilled ink soaking silently into paper.
A terrible little chain of silence, then gasps, then hissed laughter like matches flicking alight one by one. Youâll never live it down, you think.
Someoneâs voice calls after you, but youâre already moving towards the ocean.
Suddenly, wet sand seems acceptable. Inviting. Wonderful, even.
this fic was part of my 2 year celebration: maria's summer in santorini đ°ââ.àłàż*: to learn more, click here!
MARIA'S SUMMER IN SANTORINI MASTERLIST
hi mae! Iâm finally done with finals and itâs getting warmer but Iâm sick for the 4th time this year. this year!! I was wondering if you could write a doctor!remus x reader whoâs a frequent flyer? I love reading all of your work and thank you for taking the time to write :))
Thanks for requesting angel <33
a/n: Please do not misconstrue my participation in the marauders fandom as support of JKR. If youâre new here and want to participate in the fandom, I encourage you to do so without participating in anything that would provide financial gain to her or her transphobic agendas
doctor!Remus x fem!reader ⥠825 words
Remus enters the exam room looking sorry for you.Â
Despite yourself, you feel the corners of your mouth twitch. âWhat?â you ask, sore throat making your voice unusually husky. âArenât you happy to see me?âÂ
Your doctorâs lips twitch in turn. âIâm glad youâre feeling well enough to make jokes,â he says.Â
You shrug. âI think Iâm starting to get used to it.âÂ
âTo what? Being poorly?âÂ
You nod, and he clicks his tongue, taking a thermometer from a drawer on his way over to you.
âThatâs not ideal,â he says while he settles it in your ear. "Not that we want you miserable, of course, but it would be my preference for you to be used to feeling well instead."
You hum impartially. "It makes me appreciate breathing more."
Remus looks at the computer on the roomâs desk over his shoulder, reading the notes the nurse who checked you in typed up.Â
âYour symptoms are the same as a couple of weeks ago?â he checks just as the thermometer beeps.Â
âYeah,â you confirm.Â
You must sound as enthused as you feel, because Remus smiles ruefully as he places his hands gently on either side of your face. His fingers probe gently around your neck and underneath your jaw. You never know what to do during this part. Remus looks very concentrated, so you try looking over his shoulder, keeping your own expression neutral. Though you must reveal something (that, or Remus has spent so much time with you you've formed a telepathic bond) because he asks, âThat hurts?âÂ
âA little, yeah.âÂ
Remus hums compassionately. He reaches back towards the desk to pick up a cotton swab. You must be feeling rather comfortable with him (or possibly just too fatigued for pretense) because you sigh morosely.Â
âWe already know what it is,â you try. âCanât you prescribe me the same stuff as last time?âÂ
âWe need a positive test first.â He takes up a popsicle stick, and you open your mouth begrudgingly.Â
Remus makes quick work of it, at least. He swabs the back of your throat in a couple of quick passes, already taking the stick out when you gag with a murmured, "Sorry.âÂ
âBack soon,â he promises, putting your swap in a clear baggie and stepping out.Â
You swallow against the uncomfortable feeling that lingers in your throat. The act of swallowing hurts, too. This is the fourth time youâve been under the weather in as many months, and you are, for lack of a better word, sick of it. Itâs no pleasant task dragging yourself to the doctorâs office each time, sitting in stiff chairs under harsh lights when all you want is to be underneath the covers of your own bed. Remus makes it easier, though. Heâs an easy presence. He makes you feel looked after rather than looked at.Â
Itâs a minute later when he returns to sit with you while you both wait on your test results.Â
âSo,â he says, pulling up a stool in front of the computer, âI last prescribed you antibiotics on the twenty-fifth. Do you remember when your symptoms cleared up?â
âUm.â Your throat scratches painfully. You try to clear it. âA few days after that. Maybe three?âÂ
âAnd they came back when?âÂ
âYesterday.âÂ
He glances at you, one brow slightly lifted. âYou came in quickly.âÂ
âIâm starting to learn the drill.âÂ
Remus laughs. (Almost. His mouth twitches, and he makes an amused sort of sound in his throat. Always a victory.) âFair enough,â he says. âSo, yesterday. Thatâs about two weeks in between. You finished the full course of antibiotics?âÂ
âOf course,â you say, nearly offended. You thought you'd established this is not your first time.Â
âJust checking.â He types something into his computer, one corner of his mouth quirked up amusedly. âHave you been to see an ear, nose, and throat specialist?âÂ
âWhat, like cheat on you?âÂ
Remus grins outright now (another victory). He swivels his stool to face you. âWeâre on our way to qualifying this as a chronic case. If it comes back again after this round of antibiotics, you might consider seeing an ENT to ask about a tonsillectomy.âÂ
The thought is strangely daunting. Itâs taxing enough forcing yourself out of bed to come see Remus; you donât want to begin the process again with someone else.Â
âCanât I keep seeing you?â you ask.Â
Remusâ expression softens. âOf course you can. I just thought you might want another opinion.âÂ
You shake your head. âIâm good.âÂ
His mouth twitches again, like youâre making a joke. He sombers, though, as he looks at you for a long moment.Â
âIâm sorry this keeps happening to you,â he says. âYou must be tired.âÂ
Maybe itâs the sudden shift to earnestness, but your reply is a bit too genuine and far too self-pitying. âYeah.âÂ
Remus doesnât begrudge you it. âWeâll work it out,â he promises.Â
The thing is, you have absolute faith that he will.Â
mixed laundry
Ashes at the Tree Line || Ryomen Sukuna
Ryomen Sukuna X F!reader - completed
âYou had stumbled into the forest half-dead, running from a husband who wore a badge and your bruises like trophies. When you collapsed past the tree line, you fell onto the land of Sukuna Itadoriâa reclusive lumberjack with scarred hands and a silence that felt like a storm waiting to break. Taking you in should have been temporary, but your presence turned his quiet world into something violent and fragile. As he hid you from the law that protected your abuser, protection twisted into obsession, and love became a dangerous vow. In the end, the story was never just about escapeâit was about what Sukuna was willing to destroy, bury, and become to make sure the man who broke you never touched you again.â
cw ; abuse. smut. trauma. murder
main masterlist
chapter one. the house in the trees chaoter two. the sound of boots chapter three. roots returning chapter four. the sound of names chapter five. the weight of truths & lies chapter six. the things that keep growing chapter seven. a seat at the table chapter eight. new walls, old roots chapter nine. the shape of small miracles chapter ten. honey on the tongue
bonus chapter one. sunflower hurricane bonus chapter two. splinters in the honey
âœâââââ one who yearns is one who earns ââââââ„
ft. suguru geto
synopsis ~ months of longing. a week at a beach house. one shared bed, too much tension and too little self control. suguru geto has spent far too long wanting his friendâs roommate. far too long trying not to ruin her. unfortunately for him, when she shows up to spring break looking at him like that, he fails spectacularly.
tags ~ 18+ mdni !!! idiots in fucking love, yearning yearning yearning, geto's a masterclass yearner, lowkey slowburn? friends to lovers-ish, mutual pining, praise kink, dirty talk, pet names, oral fixation, piv sex, creampie, marking, size difference, belly bulge, light possessiveness, aftercare, geto's just down bad and i love him and i love this
a/n ~ gosh this was toooo much fun to write. decided to make this one a long(er) oneshot compared to the multi parts i had for choso n gojo, bc it made more sense with the plot i had in mind! hopefully all of u lovelies enjoy ;) and sorry for the wait <3
w/c ~ 17.4 k (youch i got carried away)
access the frat verse here!
your roommate brings it up three days before finals week officially starts, which already tells you the idea is terrible. the two of you are sitting cross-legged on the floor of your apartment living room surrounded by open textbooks, half-folded laundry, and empty instant noodle containers.
sheâs supposed to be writing a paper. instead, sheâs online shopping for bikinis. âi actually canât do this anymore,â she announces dramatically, laptop balanced on her thighs. âif i read one more discussion post iâm walking into traffic.â
you hum absentmindedly, highlighting a paragraph without processing any of it.
outside, rain taps against the windows in soft uneven bursts. campus looks gray and muddy and exhausted. even the frat houses have gone quieter this week. everyoneâs studying, or pretending to.
your roommate suddenly gasps. âspring break,â she says.
âwhat about it?â
âwe should go to your beach house.â
that gets your attention. you look up slowly from your laptop. âwe?â
âyes, we.â she tosses a sock at you. âlike. everyone.â
âeveryoneâŠus girls? orââ
âno, the frat too,â she says, smiling. âi want choso to be there.â
you roll your eyes, focusing back on your notes. sheâs been glued to her boyfriendâs hip ever since they got together. itâs almost sickening, if they werenât so perfect for each other. youâre rarely in the house alone anymore.
âdunno if thatâs a good idea,â you say, because your brain immediately supplies the image of suguru geto.
itâs geto. always geto.
your roommates notices your change in expression instantly. the grin that spreads across her face is immediate and evil. âoh my god.â
you narrow your eyes. âdonât.â
âyou thought about him first.â
âi literally didnât,â you mumble, pushing your glasses up your nose.
âyou literally did.â
you throw the sock back at her head and she dodges it, laughing. âyouâre soooo weird about him.â
and sheâs right. you are weird about him. not in an obvious way, no. whatever thing between you and geto occurs in fragments. in pauses and glances held half a second too long.
eye tag.
thatâs what gojo called it once after catching the two of you staring at each other across the frat kitchen while everyone else argued over beer pong rules. âyou guys do this every time,â heâd said.
youâd denied it immediately. geto had just looked away.
your roommate clasps her hands together. âplease invite them. choso already said yes if you say yes.â
âyou asked him before asking me?â
âwell, yes.â
you sigh, rubbing your forehead. âthe house isnât huge.â
âit has four bedrooms.â
âone of them barely counts,â you point out.
âwe can make it work.â
your parents are never at the beach house this time of year, anyways, and know youâre responsible enough to handle it on your own.
itâs few hours from campus along a quieter part of the shoreline. you havenât been in almost a year.
the thought of ocean air instead of stale lecture halls makes you exhale slightly.
âaha,â your roommate says, pointing at you. âthat was a considering face.â
âit was not.â
âcome on. itâll be fun.â
âitâll be loud.â
âonly a little.â
âimagine bonfires,â your roommate says dreamily.
âimagine property damage.â
âimagine volleyball.â
âimagine bail money.â
you already know youâre going to cave. despite everything the rest has somehow become tangled into your life over the past semester. in the middle of late-night food runs and campus events and parties is getoâs face and how you notice him before he notices you almost every time.
at parties, heâs usually tucked somewhere quieter while everybody else spirals around him in chaos. sitting on kitchen counters, leaning against walls with a drink untouched in his hand. watching. and eventually his eyes find yours, every single time.
the first few times it happened you thought you imagined it. you? nerd you? suguru geto looking at you?
but it kept happening. across crowded rooms and across lecture halls.
âyouâre thinking about him again,â your roommate says.
itâs his deep voice and calmness and the way he rolls his sleeves to his elbows when heâs focused. the exhaustion constantly sitting beneath his eyes lately because heâs balancing classes and internship applications and responsibilities and everybody elseâs problems too.
âshut up,â you say weakly.
âiâm texting choso. this is happening.â
you sigh, knowing that once your roommate wants something to go her way, itâs happening.
how bad can the trip really go, anyway?
âgojoâs already asking if the beach house has speakers.â
âtell him yes, but the neighbours donât like noise past 10pm.â
âgeto says he can drive.â your roommate looks up at you, chewing her lip, and youâre suddenly very interested in the notes youâve been trying to read over.
now youâre imagining geto driving, one hand on the wheel, ocean air and his stupid rings glinting under the dashboard lights
you stand abruptly, gathering your notes before your imagination gets worse.
thursday - eight days from departure
geto realizes heâs in trouble on a thursday night while half-drunk freshmen scream-sing nextdoor to music that sounds like somebody attacking a speaker with a hammer. heâs sitting at the frat dining table with an untouched beer beside his laptop, trying to finish an internship application before midnight.
keyword : trying.
because youâre here. youâre not even doing anything particularly distracting either. youâre sitting cross-legged on the couch in one of those oversized university sweaters, glasses sliding slightly down your nose while you argue with chosoâs girlfriend over how many bags of chips are too many for one week at the beach house.
you shouldnât be this difficult to ignore, and yet getoâs cursor has been blinking on the same sentence for six minutes.
gojo and toji yell something at each other from across the room. everyone starts talking over each other, except for choso, whoâs curled into his girlfriendâs side, and you.
you stay focused, tapping at your laptop with concentration pulling your brows together slightly. geto watches your mouth move while you talk.
thatâs becoming a problem too. noticing little things. the tiny crease between your eyebrows when youâre annoyed. the way you tuck your legs underneath yourself without thinking.
itâs gotten worse recently, or maybe heâs just stopped pretending it hasnât been happening. for months now, every room he walks in feels altered slightly if youâre there.
he hates how aware heâs become of you. worse, you notice him too.
getoâs not stupid. he sees the way your eyes snag on him before flicking away. the pauses, the tension, that look you get when he stands too close.
itâs there constantly, like static humming between you both.
âgeto.â your voice cuts clean through his thoughts.
he looks up immediately. youâre staring at him from across the room now, brows raised slightly. his stomach does something deeply irritating. âyeah?â
âyou havenât answered a single thing we asked.â
gojo grins instantly from the kitchen island.
âhe was staring at you.â
geto doesnât react outwardly. years of dealing with satoru have made his self-control nearly supernatural.
you, unfortunately, do react. irritation flashes visibly across your face before you glare at gojo. âoh my god, shut up.â
âam i wrong?â
âyes,â both you and geto say at the exact same time.
toji starts laughing so hard he nearly chokes. âjesus christ,â he mutters. âyou two are painful.â
geto drags a hand down his face slowly. youâre suddenly very interested in your spreadsheet.
cute.
âi made categories,â you explain, stuttering over the last word as you regain composure. âcolour coded. itâs a shared excel sheet so you can all access it too.â
geto smiles softly. youâre focused and bossy and pretty. he thinks he should probably stop looking at you like that.
âokay,â you say, tapping the couch. âcan everyone e-transfer me their share tonight so i can book groceries in advance?â
gojo raises a hand. âno. actually, toji and i pass.â
you run a hand down your face. âwhat?â
âweâre the entertainment,â he explains, like it makes total sense.
âeighty dollars, each of you, please,â you say, tilting your head back. âi hate all of you.â
âthatâs not true,â gojo says. âYou like suguru.â
the room goes quiet instantly. choso coughs into his drink. gojoâs girlfriend physically turns away to hide her smile.
gojo points between the two of you lazily.
âthe vibes are crazy.â
âthere are no vibes,â you say immediately.
âyou look flustered,â toji notes helpfully.
everybody starts talking over each other again while you try defending yourself with rapidly deteriorating success. geto says nothing, because while the others laugh and argue his eyes stay on you.
you can feel it too. he knows you can. that tension pressing tighter every time your gazes meet.
your eyes lift to his and his gaze flicks to your mouth for one brief, horrible second.
you both look away just as fast.
sunday - five days from departure
your bedroom looks like a clothing store exploded. bikinis draped over desk chairs, shorts hanging off your bedframe, three different pairs of sandals abandoned in the middle of the floor. âi hate everything,â you announce.
your roommate barely glances up from where sheâs laying across your bed with choso half beneath her like a human mattress. âdramatic.â
ânone of this looks right.â
âyouâve changed outfits six times.â
âbecause i look weird.â
âyou literally donât.â
you turn sideways in the mirror, scrutinizing yourself harder. the dress is just soft black fabric that skims your body, thin straps, lower neckline than what you normally wear. you bought it for some finance networking event your department hosted last month because your mom said you needed âstaple outfits.â
your roommate sits up on her elbows finally, exasperated. âyou know most people going on beach trips are worried about, like, sunscreen?â
âi am worried about sunscreen.â
âi forgot you made a spreadsheet for sunscreen.â
âuv rays are serious.â
choso laughs quietly from beneath her, hands resting loosely on her thighs. you point at him immediately. âdonât encourage her.â
âi didnât say anything.â
âthe laugh felt judgmental.â
your roommate rolls her eyes before looking back at you properly. âyou look hot,â she says flatly. âactually annoyingly hot. if you donât pack the dress iâm stealing it.â
you scoff softly, turning back toward the mirror. âitâs too much.â
âfor who?â
you shrug. some part of you already knows exactly who youâre thinking about, which is ridiculous. youâre literally standing in your bedroom overanalyzing a dress because suguru geto might see it.
your roommate seems seconds away from teasing you about exactly that when choso speaks absentmindedly from the bed.âgeto likes that one.â
the room goes silent and you slowly turn around. ââŠwhat?â
choso freezes and his eyes widen slightly like he physically felt the mistake leave his mouth in real time.
your roommate lifts her head immediately. âwhat do you mean geto likes that one?â
ânothing,â choso says too quickly.
âchoso,â she says.
âiâm serious.â
you narrow your eyes at him. âhow would he even know this dress?â
another pause then choso makes the fatal mistake of hesitating. your roommate gasps dramatically. âOH MY GOD HE DOES KNOW THE DRESS?!â
âbaby,â choso says weakly.
âno, no, come back.â she grabs his arm before he can sit up. âwhat do you mean he likes the dress?â
âi wasnât supposed to say anything.â
you cross your arms slowly. âthatâs an insane sentence.â
choso looks deeply distressed now. your roommate softens instantly though, because unfortunately for choso, she knows exactly how to handle him. she cups his face gently, pressing a tiny kiss against his jaw. âplease?â she asks sweetly.
choso exhales heavily through his nose, cheeks going pink. weak man. he folds almost immediately. âokay but you cannot tell geto i said any of this.â
you and your roommate both nod way too fast and he points at both of you suspiciously before continuing. âyou wore that dress to the frat one night.â
your brows pinch together slightly. ââŠwhen?â
âwhen you came to pick her up after that finance networking thing.â
oh.you remember that night.
youâd stopped by the frat around midnight because your roommate was too drunk to uber home alone. you were still dressed up from the event downtown. heels hurting. hair done. tired and irritated because gojo had answered the door already yelling.
you hadnât stayed long, just long enough to drag your roommate upstairs to collect her stuff while half the frat stared at you like theyâd never seen a woman before.
apparently including geto.
âwhat happened?â your roommate asks immediately.
choso rubs the back of his neck awkwardly. ânothing happened exactly. some guy made a comment after you left.â
your stomach tightens slightly. âwhat kind of comment?â
âjust saying you looked good or whatever.â
âand?â your roommate presses.
choso sighs. âand geto got weird about it.â
heat crawls instantly up your neck. âweird how?â
âhe justâŠâ choso pauses, visibly trying to decide how much to say. âhe looked annoyed.â
your roommateâs jaw drops. âhe got jealous?â
âwell, I dunno, notââ
âchoso.â
âiâm serious.â
âwhat did he say?â
another long sigh. âhe said you donât even realize how pretty you are.â
your roommate physically collapses face-first into the bed, laughing into a pillow. you just stand there your heart suddenly beating way too hard. âthatâs notâŠâ you clear your throat softly. âthatâs not that serious.â
both of them look at you. your roommate lifts her head slowly. âyou are genuinely the dumbest smart person i know.â
âiâm not dumb.â
âhe said you donât know how pretty you are.â
âpeople say things.â
ânot like that.â
choso looks like he regrets existing and unfortunately for him your roommate isnât done. âwhat ELSE has he said?â
ânothing,â choso mutters, rubbing the back of his neck.
âliar.â
âbaby.â
another soft kiss against his jaw, pretty doe eyes, and you watch the fight leave chosoâs body. he groans quietly. âhe just asks about you sometimes,â he mumbles, glancing up at you.
your stomach flips again. âasks what?â your roommate says immediately.
ânormal stuff.â
âdefine normal.â
âlike if sheâs seeing anybody.â
your eyes widen slightly.
âor what her type is,â choso admits.
your roommate grabs your arm so hard you almost lose balance. âi knew it.â
âstop saying that,â you hiss, feeling too warm and out of place in your own body now.
choso keeps talking now that heâs doomed anyway. âthere were these guys talking to you outside one of our econ buildings a while ago and geto asked after if you knew them.â
you blink. you remember that too. two business majors from another frat trying very hard to impress you after class. geto had walked by while you were talking to them and you hadnât thought he even paid attention.
apparently he had.
âand,â choso adds carefully, âhe asked if they were bothering you.â
something warm and dangerous and twisting settles low in your stomach, and your roommate looks one second away from planning a wedding. âthis is insane.â
âitâs not insane,â you say weakly.
âhe likes you.â
âyou donât know that.â
ây/n,â she says flatly. âbe serious.â
you sit on the edge of your bed, the black dress clinging to your skin, and now all you can think about is geto noticing it. remembering it. liking it enough to mention it after youâd already gone.
your roommate watches your expression carefully from the bed and then smiles slowly.
friday - day of departure
departure day starts at eleven in the morning and immediately feels cursed. gojo is late, even though the meetup spot is outside the frat. toji's holding an iced coffee and is directing where bags are to be put instead of actually helping. somehow, your roommate's lost one of her sandals already. choso's carrying about fourteen bags (thirteen of which are his girlfriend's) and you?
you're standing in the driveway trying to figure out how seven people accumulated this much luggage for a beach trip. a seven day beach trip. âwhy do you have three suitcases,â you ask gojoâs girlfriend.
"two of them are satoru's," she says, patting her boyfriend's head, and he grins like a lovesick puppy. "i don't know why he has so many clothes."
getoâs car sits at the curb behind gojo's girlfriend's car - the two drivers for the trip. geto's leaning against it, typing on his phone, and of course the fact that he looks good pre-noon makes your heart pang. you can only imagine what you would look like standing beside him, what with your frizzy hair and crooked glasses.
he's wearing a dark hoodie and shorts, sunglasses pushes up into his hair while choso helps him load luggage into the back. you try not to stare but your brain seems to enjoy self-destruction.
because watching geto lift heavy bags with one hand while calmly reorganizing everybodyâs mess should not be attractive.
"okay," gojo announces loudly, clapping once. "vehicle assignments."
getp closes his trunk with a final solid thud. "my car's got the most space," he says. "why don't you transfer all the luggage over from the other car?"
your roommate perks up immediately. "perfect."
"there'll be room for one person up front too," geto adds casually. then he looks directly at you. your stomach flips so hard it almost makes you angry.
you glance away first. before you can say literally anything, your roommate beams. "great! y/n'll go with you."
you whip around instantly. "what?"
"you get carsick in crowded backseats," she says innocently.
which is true. unfortunately. âi can survive.â
âand i want leg room,â toji says. "no fuckin' way am i cramming in the back with the lovebirds," he grumbles, pointing to choso and your roomate, "with this fucker in the front." he points his thumb to gojo, who's smiling happily.
"then you can go in the front with geto," you say.
your roommate gives you a deadpan look. gojo's girlfriend sighs.
"toji, just sit in the back, please," choso says quietly. "it's only a two and a half hour ride."
he opens his mouth to retort an excuse but gojo's girlfriend promptly elbows him in the chest. he grumbles but settles in the back of gojo's girlfriend's sedan anyway.
geto looks almost relieved, but he quickly masks it with his typical aloofness.
your roommate grabs your shoulder, grinning ear to ear. "have fun!"
you narrow your eyes at her. âi hope your phone charger breaks.â
gojo leans out the passenger window of the other car. âpee break every forty-five minutes!â
âabsolutely not,â both you and geto say simultaneously.
gojo points between you both immediately. âtheyâre married already.â
you ignore him completely, mostly because geto is already walking around to the passenger side of his car and opening the door for you. which should not affect you this much.
itâs basic manners. normal behavior. except when you pass him, the scent of his cologne mixes with cool morning air and coffee and suddenly your thoughts short-circuit for half a second.
annoying. very, super annoying.
you settle into the seat while geto finishes loading the last bag.
the car smells clean, like sandalwood and detergent and something distinctly geto. you hate that you know what he smells like.
the second he slides into the driverâs seat beside you, the space feels smaller. you feel him glance at you before putting the car into start, and you're driving off, leading the other car behind you.
your phone buzzes immediately.
roomie: have fun on your first date â€ïž
you: iâm going to kill you with my bare hands
you shove your phone away quickly before geto can accidentally see. âyou have the address?â he asks quietly.
âyeah.â you pull up the map. âdid gojoâs girlfriend save it too?â
âi sent it to her twice.â
âgood.â
âyou donât trust them?â
you stare out the windshield where gojo is currently hanging halfway out the car window yelling something about his spring break arc. ââŠshould i?â
geto laughs quietly beside you and the sound makes your head spin happily. you don't hear him laugh often, unless he's mocking gojo. this quiet, real laugh is something you notice every single time.
after twenty minutes you hit the highway and you sink back into your seat with a sigh. âfinally.â
âyou stressed?â geto asks lightly.
âi like plans.â
âi noticed.â
you narrow your eyes slightly. âthat sounded judgmental.â
âit wasnât.â
âmhm.â
he glances at you briefly while turning onto the highway. sunlight catches against the rings on his fingers resting on the steering wheel. your brain immediately decides to become unhelpful so you look out the window instead.
for another few minutes, itâs quiet except for road noise and the distant bass vibrating from the other car behind, then geto taps the screen on the dashboard. âyou want music?â
âi donât mind.â
âyou sure?â
â...yeah? why?â you glance over at him.
âbecause now if you hate my music taste you'll have to be super polite about it and the car ride will be awkward.â
you laugh softly. âi promise it won't be bad. i won't be that harsh.â
his mouth curves slightly before he scrolls through his phone. music fills the car a second later and you recognize it almost instantly.
your head turns before you can stop yourself. âwait,â you say. âis this the smiths?â
geto glances over briefly. ââŠyou listen to the smiths?â
âobviously.â
âobviously?â
âwhatâs that supposed to mean?â
ânothing,â he says, clearly amused now. âi just didnât expect it.â
you scoff. âwhat did you expect?â
he thinks about it for a second. âsomething old. like classical music.â
"i don't mind classical, but the smiths have always been one of my favourites."
he flashes you a genuine smile, fingers gently tapping the rhythm of the song on the wheel. "i'm glad."
after that, conversation begins to flow easier. favourite albums, worst profs, gojo. (lots of gojo). he says something that makes you snort and that same small, real smile etches onto his lips and god, this is dangerous.
you watch the highway stretch under the pale morning sunlight while trees blur at the edges of the road. after a moment you steal another glance at him. he's relaxed, one arm resting near the window, sunglasses low on his nose.
he's so...pretty.
the thought hits so fast and hard it almost embarrasses you. as if sensing it, geto looks over suddenly. your eyes meet instantly and there it is again. that thing. that horrible, suspended moment where neither of you looks away fast enough.
his gaze flicks down briefly to your mouth then back up. your pulse stutters.
behind you, gojoâs girlfriend's car suddenly swerves slightly as gojo sticks his head out the sunroof, shouting something imperceptible.
the moment breaks. you clear your throat quickly, looking forward again. âtheyâre going to die before we even get there.â
getoâs laugh rumbles low beside you. âprobably.â
gojoâs girlfriend has both hands gripping the steering wheel like sheâs transporting explosives. âif you scream one more time,â she says flatly, eyes locked on the road, âiâm pulling over and leaving all of you on the highway.â
âthat feels hostile,â gojo says from the passenger seat.
âyou barked at a motorcycle.â
âit barked first.â
from the backseat, toji groans dramatically as chosoâs girlfriend shifts closer into chosoâs side again. âiâm in hell,â he mutters.
âyouâre just bitter because nobody wants to cuddle you,â she says cheerfully.
âwrong. women love me.â
âdo they?â gojo says from the front, shit-eating grin on his face.
âhistorically. your mother would know.â
âyou don't know shit about my mom,â gojo laughs. âshe doesn't have your fucking number.â
âthat's cause she gave it to me.â
choso quietly adjusts his arm around his girlfriendâs waist so she can lean more comfortably against him. toji gags loudly. âthere they go again,â he says. âthe worldâs most nauseating couple.â
"you're just single. quadruple-wheeling the trip. us, choso and his girl, and whatever the fuck is going on in geto's car."
toji kicks the back of gojoâs seat and the car swerves slightly.
everyone yells immediately. âif we die,â gojoâs girlfriend says through gritted teeth, âiâm haunting all of you.â
âyouâd look hot as a ghost,â gojo says instantly.
she snorts despite herself. from the backseat, chosoâs girlfriend glances down at her phone.
âtheyâre probably having the most awkward car ride ever right now.â
gojo twists around immediately. âyou think theyâve kissed yet?â
âitâs been thirty minutes,â choso says.
âexactly.â
âtheyâre not kissing,â his girlfriend says, though she sounds deeply unconvinced.
toji stretches his long legs out miserably. âthey do have weird tension though.â
âthank you,â gojo says, pointing dramatically. âfinally someone sane.â
chosoâs girlfriend smiles to herself a little, gaze drifting toward the road ahead where getoâs car moves steadily a few lengths in front of them. âi think theyâre both just nervous,â she says softly.
âgeto?â gojo laughs loudly. ânervous over a girl?â
if only they saw how bright geto's smile was right now as you talked animatedly about how well your finals went. with you and your legs propped up on the dash, smooth and perfect and he couldn't stop staring without seeming weird. how his heart skipped a beat every time one of your perfect smiles were directed to him.
if only they knew how gone for you he really was.
the second the beach house comes into view, everyone in the other car completely loses their minds. your phone starts vibrating before getoâs even finished pulling into the driveway.
SPRING BREAKKUHH
gojo: HOLY SHIT???
gojo: WHY IS IT HUGE
roomie: i warned u
you laugh softly under your breath as the other car practically screeches to a stop beside you. the house sits glowing gold in the late afternoon sunlight, all warm cedar and giant windows overlooking the water below. dune grass sways softly around the edges of the deck while waves crash faintly in the distance.
home.
you hadnât realized how badly you needed this until now. gojo launches out of the car first. âBEACH ARC!â he screams.
âinside voice,â you call automatically.
âweâre outside.â
âfuture inside voice.â
toji steps out next, stretching dramatically. âthank christ. my knees were touching my organs back there.â
everyone starts unloading luggage in a blur after that. bags thumping against the deck, music already blasting from someones speaker, and of course, gojo attempting to carry six things at once before immediately dropping half of them.
youâre hauling one of the grocery bags up the front steps when your roommate appears beside you wearing the smuggest expression imaginable. âso,â she says casually.
you already know. âdonât.â
âyou and geto looked cozy.â
âwe were in a car.â
âalone.â
âwith seatbelts.â
gojoâs girlfriend appears on your other side immediately. âthe sexual tension was visible through the windshield.â
you nearly trip over the doorway. âthere is no sexual tension.â
both of them stare at you and you adjust your glasses defensively. âthere just objectively is not.â
âyouâre doing the nerd thing,â your roommate says.
âwhat nerd thing?â
âthe glasses push.â
your hand drops instantly away from your frames. traitors, the both of them. behind you, geto lifts two suitcases from the trunk effortlessly while listening to choso say something beside him.
he glances toward the front porch, toward you, and your stomach does the stupid thing again. once inside everybody immediately scatters to explore the house.
gojo runs directly toward the back windows dramatically. âthe back deck is is insane.â
âdonât break anything,â you warn.
âyou say that every time.â
âbecause every time you almost break something.â
toji opens the fridge. âthis thing is bigger than four of the fridges at the frat.â
you kick your shoes off near the entryway while everybody talks over each other around you. the house smells faintly like cedarwood and ocean air, comfortable and familiar. comfortable. familiar.
geto pauses beside one of the windows quietly, gaze moving across the living room and you watch his expression shift slightly. he looks good, his hoodie sleeves pushed up, hair loosened slightly from it's usual knot, sunlight catching against his skin through the windows.
you look away before your brain gets worse.
eventually everyone gathers in the living room surrounded by luggage and grocery bags while you attempt to regain control of the chaos. âokay,â you say, clapping once. âroom assignments.â
immediately, âdibs,â both gojo and choso say at the same time.
their girlfriends laugh. âobviously,â gojoâs girlfriend says. "we can take the upstairs bedroom, if you don't mind? the one on the side?"
âdonât be loud,â you say, and gojo flips you off. within seconds choso and your roommate have claimed one of the downstairs bedrooms, which leaves you, geto and toji, and two remaining bedrooms.
the master, upstairs. the guest room, downstairs, which has a double bed.
youâre mentally calculating sleeping arrangements when geto speaks first.
ây/n should take the master.â
your head lifts. getoâs leaning back slightly against the kitchen island now, arms folded loosely. âitâs her house,â he says simply.
heat flickers low in your stomach at how immediate the answer was. before you can respond, toji lets out a deeply offended noise. âwhat,â he says flatly.
everyone turns toward him. he gestures broadly at himself and geto. âso your solution is to cram two six-foot-plus men into a queen bed?â
âyou survived the car,â gojo calls from halfway down the hall.
âbarely. my spine compressed.â toji points accusingly at you. âi already sacrificed circulation for this trip.â
your roommateâs eyes flick between you and geto so fast itâs almost cartoonish. âeasy fix,â she says. âgeto and y/n share.â
silence, and your heart drops to your ass. nobody says anything immediately because apparently every single person in this house has collectively decided to make your life harder.
you stare at your roommate. she grins back innocently. beside him, gojo's girlfriend physically bites the inside of her cheek trying not to smile.
toji shrugs instantly. âworks for me.â
âof course it does,â you mutter.
your roommate looks dangerously delighted now. âi meanâŠâ
you whip around. âokay, that's--that's enough.â
âit makes sense.â
âdoes it?â
âlogistically?â
you narrow your eyes. she smiles sweetly. geto has gone suspiciously quiet beside the kitchen island and when you risk one glance towards him he's already looking at you completely unreadable except for the faintest pink creeping up his ears.
your pulse stutters embarrassingly hard. âi can sleep on the couch,â you say quickly.
âabsolutely not,â geto says immediately. too fast. the room goes quiet again and you feel every single person notice the tension. especially when geto clears his throat softly afterward. âi mean,â he adds more evenly, âitâs your place.â
gojo looks one second away from exploding with laughter.
toji stretches lazily against the armchair. âwell iâm not sharing with him.â
your roommate suddenly stands. âperfect! problem solved.â
you stare at her in horror. âyou didnât solve anything.â
âyou and geto get the master.â
your brain short-circuits. you open your mouth to protest then glance toward geto again. his eyes meet yours instantly, and you both look away.
biggest coward of all - your one and only, y/n.
everyone disperses after that. gojo immediately starts trying to connect his phone to the speaker system downstairs, toji disappears toward the back deck with a beer already in hand, choso and his girlfriend vanish into their room carrying bags and giggling like a disease.
you flee upstairs before your friends can torment you any further. your heartbeat still feels weird - you hate that.
the master bedroom sits at the end of the hallway overlooking the water, all soft linen and huge windows glowing gold from the lowering sun outside. youâve always loved this room, not that you were in it often. throughout your childhood, it was occupied by your parents.
you especially love it at sunset. usually it calms you down.
usually.
right now all you can think about is the fact that suguru geto is sharing this room with you for an entire week.
it's insane and horrible and slightly thrilling in a way you refuse to examine too closely. you drop your bag onto the bed with a sigh before digging through your suitcase for something more comfortable. the drive left you sticky and overheated so you tug your shirt over your head absentmindedly, tossing it onto the bed before reaching behind yourself to unclasp your bra.
finally. freedom.
youâre halfway through pulling on a loose tank top when the bedroom door suddenly opens. you turn automatically.
geto walks in mid-sentence. âi was just gonna leave my baââ
he stops completely. so do you.
silence detonates through the room because your bra is currently halfway off your arms and your tits are fully out.
oh my god. you yelp immediately, clutching the tank top against your chest. geto looks genuinely horrified. not in a bad way but shocked, like his brain physically short-circuited. his eyes flick upward instantly but itâs too late because the image is already there now, permanently burned into his consciousness forever.
âfuck,â he blurts immediately. âshit. fuck, sorry. jesus christ.â
you make another strangled noise while trying to cover yourself and pull the shirt on at the same time. geto turns around so fast he nearly walks into the doorframe. âiâm sorry,â he says again, voice suddenly rougher than usual. âi thought you were downstairs.â
âitâs okay,â you squeak.
it is not okay. your face feels approximately one million degrees.
geto grabs the doorknob blindly. âiâm gonnaâ yeah. sorry.â then he practically slams the door shut behind him.
you stand frozen in the middle of the bedroom clutching your shirt to your chest while your nervous system completely implodes.
oh my god.
OH MY GOD.
geto descends the stairs with a flushed face and rigid expression - the kind of forced composure that immediatley attracts attention in a house full of idiots.
gojo looks up from the couch instantly. ââŠthe hell happened to you?â
geto keeps walking toward the kitchen. ânothing.â
âyou look like you saw a ghost.â
âsomething like that,â geto mutters.
friday - 7 pm
by early evening, the house finally settles into something softer. the unpacking chaos dies down, most of your group is watching the ocean from the back porch. youâre cleaning up dinner dishes with choso, who keeps (politely) asking why youâve got a weird look on your face.
itâs been four hours since that disaster upstairs. the awkwardness still hangs between you and geto, who canât look you in the eye.
you change into one of your bikinis eventually, tugging an oversized button-up over it before heading downstairs with your glasses perched back on your nose. the second you appear, gojo grins. âbeach time.â
âbeach time,â you confirm with a small smile.
outside, the air smells like salt and warm cedar as everybody trails down the private wooden path toward the shoreline. the beach stretches mostly empty around you, pale sand glowing gold beneath the lowering sun while waves roll lazily onto shore. your roommate immediately grabs your hand and drags you toward the water. gojo sprints in after you both screaming for no reason. toji lights a cigarette. gojoâs girlfriend seems reluctant to put her feet in the water but she explodes into giggles when the white-haired man hauls her over his shoulders.
geto hangs back slightly. he still canât think normally, not after upstairs. not after accidentally walking into the bedroom and seeing you half-dressed with your tits out looking shocked and all cute and soft beneath afternoon light.
jesus christ.
heâs trying very hard to be normal about it but the image keeps replaying against his will. the gentle curve of your chest and your startled expression and the way you scrambled to cover yourself.
he feels insane.
âyou good?â
geto blinks. choso stands beside him now holding a cooler in one hand.
âfine,â geto says immediately.
choso hums, not believing him at all. ahead of them, youâre standing ankle-deep in the water now while your roommate splashes at gojo nearby. the ocean catches sunset light in shifting ribbons of gold and blue around your legs and fuck, getoâs pulse jumps instantly.
your oversized shirt hangs open slightly over your swimsuit whenever the wind catches it. your hair glows warm at the edges beneath the fading sun while you laugh at something gojo yells from farther down the shoreline.
pretty doesnât even feel like the right word anymore.
itâs worse than that now. every time geto looks at you lately, something low in his chest tightens painfully. beside him, choso watches quietly for about three seconds. âyou should probably stop staring.â
geto tears his eyes away immediately. âi wasnât.â
âmhm.â
annoying.
they walk farther down the beach together while the others spread out ahead. waves crash softly nearby, the wind cool against their skin. âyou know,â choso says after a minute, âshe likes you too.â
geto nearly chokes. ââŠwhat?â
choso shrugs lightly. âiâm just saying.â
âyou shouldnât say anything.â
âokay.â
barely a pause before geto blurts, âdoes she actually?â
choso laughs quietly while geto rubs a hand over his jaw with a sigh.
this whole situation feels increasingly impossible to manage. before this trip, there was distance. space and campus distractions. now thereâs shared car rides and a shared room and seeing you every five minutes. and apparently accidental nudity.
and of course thereâs the fact that geto genuinely likes being around you. he likes talking to you. likes the way your brain works. the way you explain things when youâre excited. the little irritated face you make whenever gojo says something stupid.
itâs becoming a real problem.
âyouâve spent six months pretending you werenât obsessed with her,â choso observes quietly.
geto glares at him. âiâm not obsessed.â
choso looks unconvinced. fair enough.
the sound of you laughing (at something toji or gojo did, likely) hits geto square in the chest. thereâs something different about you here already. youâre lighter, less tense than you are on campus. he watches you push your glasses back up your nose while smiling toward the ocean, sunset washing warm gold across your skin.
beautiful.
the thought arrives with startling clarity this time, like he could spend an entire lifetime memorizing moments exactly like this. you glance back toward him suddenly and your eyes meet across the beach.
there it is again, that pull.
that awful suspended feeling like the rest of the world drops slightly out of focus whenever you look at each other too long.
friday - 9 pm
it's properly evening when you all head back to the beach house. the sky's a pretty shade of dark blue, stars shining little dots above your head. you all file into the house and you say something about not trailing any sand in, looking very pointedly at gojo.
salt clings faintly to your skin, your hair's a mess from the wind, and your brain still hasn't recovered from the way geto looked at you on the beach. you slip into the kitchen first to grab water, hoping for approximately thirty seconds alone to regain your sanity.
so, naturally, geto walks in immediately after you. of course he does.
you busy yourself with the fridge while he moves toward the sink beside you, sleeves pushed up again as he washes sand from his hands.
silence stretches, and it's not uncomfortable, exactly. it's worse - aware. you can feel him there without even looking. the heat of him beside you, the sound of water running over his hands. your pulse does something deeply irritating when his shoulder brushes yours accidentally reaching for a dish towel.
âsorry,â he murmurs.
âyou keep saying that this trip.â you regret the words as soon as they come out. why would you bring up that incident?
his mouth twitches slightly.
before either of you can spiral further or say anything else gojoâs voice erupts from the living room.
âmovie night?!â
you close your eyes briefly. saved by the idiot.
everybody migrates downstairs afterwards where the basement living room is. it's cozy and there's a huge projector setup against one wall, and an entire cabinet full of old dvds your parents collected over the years.
gojo kneels in front of it like heâs discovering sacred texts. âthis is so fucking cool.â
âdonât touch them with your greasy hands,â you warn.
âsnob.â
he ends up carefully plucking the first indiana jones movie from one of the shelves and hands it to you. "good pick? i've never seen it."
"great pick," you approve. you crouch down to the dvd player, fiddling with the wires to connect it properly to the projector. behind you, everyone's already claimed spots on the couches.
you don't think much of it until you finally turn around and freeze. one end of the sectional is occupied by toji's giant limbs. the rest has a very comfortable looking choso-and-roommate combo who are already curled into each other. the beanbag has gojo and his girlfriend squished onto it.
the only open spot left is beside geto on the loveseat.
your roommate suddenly becomes very interested in not making eye contact and gojo's girlfriend looks seconds away from laughing. you narrow your eyes at both of them before trudging toward the loveseat.
you sit as far from geto as physically possible, which on the loveseat is not very far. there's maybe a foot of space between you both ,close enough to feel hyperaware of each other's presence.
as the movie starts gojo's already stealing popcorn from his girlfriend and your roommate is practically asleep against choso's chest within minutes. geto's still infuriatingly still beside you, one arm draped along the back of the couch. not touching you, just there, and your heartbeat won't calm down.
you manage to balance this thin line of whatever-this-is between you and geto for half the movie, hardly paying attention to the plot, though you've seen the flick a dozen times. you keep gettind distracted by his arm (it's right there) and how if you inched just a liiiitle bit over, you'd basically be pressed against geto.
your bubble's interrupted by gojo bolting up from the beanbag, shouting about about a plot twist he 'totally saw coming,' and the volume of his screaming is so aggressive you jolt slightly.
your thigh brushes geto's. the rush that flows through you is electric and you both go still instantly. the contact lingers half a second too long before you shift subtly back except now geto's arm behind you lowers slightly. closer. his fingers brush your shoulder lightly and your pulse spikes so hard it hurts.
you stare very intensely at the movie screen pretending your entire nervous system isnât imploding, then his thumb moves - small absentminded circles against your shoulder through the thin fabric of your shirt.
oh my god oh my god oh my god oh my god -
you stop breathing for a second and beside you, getoâs voice drops low enough only you can hear. ââŠthis okay?â
your throat feels weirdly tight. you nod once, his arm sliding lower around you slowly, careful enough to give you time to pull away if you want.
you donât.
so instead he gently pulls you against his side, warm and solid, your brain short-circuiting instantly. somehow curling against him feels natural already. your head settles near his shoulder while his arm stays firm around your waist now, thumb still tracing slow patterns against your side.
the movie disappears completely and all you can think about is him. his cologne and the warmth radiating through his hoodie and the steady rise and fall of his breathing beneath your cheek.
your heart feels seconds away from exploding.
geto feels equally doomed. having you tucked against him like this is significantly worse than he imagined. you fit there too easily. soft against his side and warm beneath his arm. he can smell coconut sunscreen faintly lingering on your skin from the beach and itâs actively destroying his ability to think. he's also trying very hard not to tighten his grip every time you shift closer unconsciously.
from across the room, toji announces, with zero social awareness, âiâm cold.â
tojiâs voice cuts through the moment like a gunshot. you pull away instantly and getoâs arm drops from around you immediately like he touched fire.
âi can get blankets,â you say quickly, already standing.
âiâll help,â geto says, glancing at you.
âyou donât have toââ
âitâs fine.â
you swallow thickly and nod, walking up the stairs, legs feeling like jello, geto right behind you.
from the couch, choso's girlfriend grabs a pillow and hurls it directly at toji's head. âwhat the fuck is wrong with you?â
toji catches it midair, deeply offended. âwhat?â
âthey were having a moment.â
âhow was i supposed to know that?â
âbecause everyone with functioning eyes knew that.â
gojo starts cackling.
when you make it upstairs, the silence between you and geto feels heavy and sharp and you move the hallway quickly trying to regain control of your heartbeat while grabbing blankets from the linen closet.
geto stands too cloise behind you that when you turn accidentally, you nearly walk straight into his chest.
your breath catches. his does too.
for one suspended second neither of you moves.
the hallway feels narrow suddenly and you're focused on warm, dim light spilling softly across his face and his dark eyes fixed on yours. your pulse pounds violently as geto's face flicks briefly to your mouth, then back up.
you think heâs going to kiss you.
you really think heâs going to kiss you.
instead, he quietly says, ââŠyou donât have to feel weird about downstairs.â
the words feel strange and your stomach drops slightly. ââŠweird?â
his expression shifts instantly like he realizes too late how that sounded. âno, i just meantââ
âright,â you say quickly.
humiliation flashes hot beneath your skin. he thinks you misread things, or worse, that he did. you step back first, push your glasses up too quickly. âno yeah. obviously.â
geto looks frustrated suddenly. âthatâs not what iââ
âitâs okay,â you interrupt softly. âreally.â
the tension curdles painfully into awkwardness as you grab as many blankets as possible before he can say anything else, then practically flee downstairs.
everyone looks up when you return. you toss blankets at people mechanically before settling onto the far end of the loveseat, as far away as you can from geto.
your roommate notices immediately. so does choso. so does gojo. gojo's girlfriend would've, too, if she weren't out cold asleep.
geto comes downstairs a second later quieter than before and he hesitates briefly looking toward you, then sits separately too.
on the floor.
distance stretches cold and strange across the room now. your chest aches and you tightly pull a blanket around yourself, staring at the movie screen without really seeing it.
geto watches the side of your face in silence from his spot on the floor and from that point on the rest of the movie feels wrong. nobody says anything outright but everybody notices, because thirty minutes ago you'd been curled into geto's side looking soft and shy while he stared at you like you painted those stars in the sky over the ocean.
now you're curled up like a hermit and geto's face seems almost painful as he stares at his feet.
gojo's eyes flick between the two of you every few seconds with all the subtlety of a car accident. his girlfriend, now awake, elbows him every time
choso notices too, though heâs more discreet about it. he just keeps glancing toward geto occasionally like heâs trying to figure out which one of you panicked first.
(toji remains blissfully clueless.)
you stay tucked beneath your blanket staring blankly at the projector screen while the movie plays out in blurry colors you barely register.
geto looks equally miserable. worse, actually, because now that he's replaying the conversation upstairs in his head, he realizes exactly how badly he phrased it. 'you don't have to feel weird about downstairs'. god. he sounded like he regretted it, like he was trying to backtrack, which is the opposite of what he meant.
heâd only wanted to make sure you werenât uncomfortable. that you didn't feel pressured and that he hadn't crossed a line. instead he'd watched your face fall in real time. idiot. he's an idiot.
when the credits finally roll, everybody starts talking at once again. gojo arguing about the ending and toji asking if there's leftover chips and your roommate whispering something to choso while glancing at you.
you quietly push the blanket aside and stand. âiâm gonna go to bed,â you mumble. youâre not even sure anyone hears, but geto does. his head lifts immediately but you don't look at him, disappearing upstairs before anyone can stop you.
you trudge to your bedroom, straight to the en suite. the shower helps a little. the warm water and the silence as you scrub salt from your skin and try very hard not to think about how close geto had been in the hallway upstairs. or how badly you wanted him to kiss you.
humiliating.
by the time you finish changing into your university sweatshirt and tiny sleep shorts, exhaustion finally starts creeping in around the edges. the bedroom is dark when you return except for moonlight spilling silver across the floor through the giant windows.
geto isnât there yet. your stomach twists at the thought but you climb into your side of the bed anyway, pulling the blankets up to your chin while ocean waves crash softly somewhere outside.
you tell yourself not to care, then eventually fall asleep anyway.
when you wake up again, the room is still dark. for one disoriented second you donât know why your chest feels strange then you glance toward the other side of the bed.
empty. empty?
your brows knit together immediately. the digital clock beside the bed reads 4:07 am. you push yourself upright slowly. ââŠgeto?â
nothing, and the bathroomâs empty too. confused now, you slip quietly out of bed and head downstairs.
the house is silent, dark except for one of the kitchen lights left on.
and there he is. geto's asleep on the downstairs couch, or at least attempting to be. one arm thrown over his eyes, long legs awkwardly cramped against the cushions because the couch is way too short for him, a blanket half falling onto the floor.
your chest tightens. he thought you didn't want him upstairs and guilt floods through you instantly. you carefully walk closer. âgeto,â you whisper.
he wakes almost immediately. years of frat-house living apparently killed deep sleep permanently. his arm drops from his face slowly when he realizes itâs you standing there. his hairâs messy, voice rough with sleep. ââŠhey.â
you hesitate, suddenly nervous again. âwhy are you down here?â
his eyes flick away briefly. âdidnât wanna make things uncomfortable.â
your heart sinks. âyou werenât,â you say quickly. âi just thoughtâŠâ you trail off awkwardly.
geto pushes himself upright slowly, watching you carefully in the dark. âthought what?â
you fiddle with the sleeve of your sweatshirt. âthat maybe you regretted it. when...we were on the couch.â
his expression changes instantly, softens to something almost confused. âwhat?â
âupstairs,â you mumble. âwhen you said i didnât have to feel weird.â
geto exhales quietly through his nose then drops his head back against the couch cushions. âthat is not what i meant.â
heat creeps into your face again. âoh.â
he looks up at you then, eyes all sleepy and honest in the dim blue light. âi was trying to make sure you were okay,â he says quietly. âbecause i wanted to kiss you.â
your breath catches hard. silence fills the room save for the hum of the fridge, ocean waves somewhere outside and your heartbeat going completely feral.
geto's gaze stays fixed on yours. âand i wasnât sure if you wanted that too.â
you stare at him for one suspended second. âi thought you were going to.â
his mouth parts slightly, something warm flashing through his expression. âyeah,â he says softly. âi was.â
your pulse feels violent now and you shift your weight nervously. âyou should come upstairs.â
geto studies your face carefully for another second like heâs making absolutely sure, then stands. the couch blanket slips forgotten onto the floor while you both just stand there in the dark living room breathing the same air.
when getoâs hand brushes lightly against yours heading toward the stairs, neither of you pulls away. walking beside him somehow feels more intimate than the almost-kiss downstairs. your hand brushes his once on the staircase and suddenly your pulse is trying to escape your body.
neither of you talks much once you reach the bedroom either. itâs painfully awkward now in that fragile post-confession way. you hover near your side of the bed, and geto stands near the dresser rubbing the back of his neck.ââŠsorry again,â he says quietly.
âfor what?â
âall of this being weird.â
you blink at him then laugh softly despite yourself. âyou saying that is making it weirder.â
his mouth twitches. âright.â
when you both scramble into bed you face opposite directions, approximately three feet apart. you can physically feel the tension across the mattress. as you stare at the ceiling you're trying very hard not to think about the fact that geto is right there.
same bed, same room, close enough that you can hear his breathing if you focus.
saturday - 10 am
you stir faintly as the sun wakes you up, bright enough to peek through the edges of the blinds. you stir faintly, something heavy resting around your waist. your brows pinch together sleepily.
wait.
you blink your eyes open slowly and realize with immediate horror that sometime during the night, both of you migrated completely across the bed. youâre practically tangled together now, your head tucked against getoâs chest, his arm wrapped firmly around your waist beneath the blankets, one of your legs halfway thrown over his.
before you can even process it fully, geto shifts too, his arm tightening instinctively for half a second before he wakes up enough to realize.
you both freeze then very slowly, geto looks down at you. his hair is completely loose from sleeping now, dark strands falling around his face messily and eyes still heavy with sleep.
his voice comes out rough and groggy when he finally speaks. â...morning.â
his voice sounds unfair, deep and sleepy and warm against the quiet room. you want to choke. instead you stare at him for one embarrassingly long second before scrambling backward so fast you nearly fall off the bed. âgood morning!â
too loud. way too loud.
geto pushes himself upright slowly, clearly trying not to laugh.
youâre suddenly acutely aware now of your oversized university sweatshirt riding up slightly from sleep and the tiny shorts you forgot you were wearing. you can feel oil slicking to your skin and you probably look horrible, meanwhile geto looks basically offensively attractive for a man who literally just woke up. dark pools of hair fall over his shoulders, features softened
your nervous system cannot survive this week. âiâm gonna change,â you announce suddenly.
geto blinks once. ââŠokay.â
you point at him very seriously while backing toward the bathroom. âdo not come in there.â
that finally gets a real laugh out of him, low and sleepy. âwasnât planning on it.â
âgood.â you disappear into the bathroom before your dignity can deteriorate further and once inside you stare at your reflection while trying to regain basic human functionality.
you slept wrapped around suguru geto. comfortably.
eventually you change into denim shorts and a fitted tank top before putting your hair up and emerging from the bathroom again.
the bedroomâs empty and for a confusing second you think maybe geto left downstairs already, before movement catches your eye through the balcony doors.
getoâs outside stretching in the early morning sunlight. shirtless. warm golden light spills cross his skin while he stretches one arm over his head lazily, back muscles shifting beneath the sunlight. his sweatpants hang low enough that the sharp v-lines disappearing beneath the waistband are very visible.
extremely visible.
you feel warm all over immediately because sure, you knew geto was attractive. obviously. but this feels actively engineered in a lab to ruin your life specifically.
outside, he rolls his shoulders once before turning slightly and immediately catches you staring. your soul leaves your body as geto pauses then very slowly raises a brow. ââŠmorning again.â
heat floods your face so fast itâs almost violent. you look away instantly. âyou could warn people.â
âabout what?â
you gesture vaguely toward him without looking directly.
âthat.â
his laugh drifts softly through the open balcony door and when you glance at him again you see how prettily the sun catches against the winding tattoos along his arms.
geto watches your expression carefully and smirks slightly.
you swear you'll die before noon.
the house is (unfortunately) wide awake as you and geto walk downstairs. gojoâs voice echoes through the kitchen before you even hit the last stair. âWHY IS IT SMOKING?â
you immediately close your eyes. âwhat did you do,â you say, voice dangerously low.
ânothing!â
you walk into the kitchen to find everyone gathered around the coffee machine like itâs a bomb squad situation. steam hisses violently from the side of it and gojo stands there holding the glass pot. âi pressed brew,â he defends.
âwith no water in it,â his girlfriend says.
toji looks half asleep at the island. ânatural selection shouldâve taken him years ago.â
your roommate's eyes narrow immediately as she sees you and geto walk in. her gaze drifts to the living room, specifically the blanket crumpled on the couch and the pillow on the floor.
you grab a mug to avoid eye contact with her, geto moving toward the counter beside you like this is a completely normal morning.
gojo squints suspiciously. ââŠyou two look weird.â
âyou always look weird,â you mutter into your juice.
âtrue but irrelevant.â
âthe coffee machineâs dead by the way,â toji interrupts.
âi figured as much,â you sigh, examining the machine with a frown.
âhe killed it,â gojo's girlfriend says.
âit was weak,â gojo argues.
âit was a twelve hundred dollar espresso machine,â you say, rubbing a hand over your eyes. "my parents are so going to kill me."
gojo freezes. âit was how much?â
you groan softly, dropping your forehead against the counter. âiâm going back to bed.â
beside you, geto laughs under his breath, low enough only you heard it. your stomach flips and you glance at him accidentally and immediately regret it because his hair's tied loosely back and he's in a fitted black t-shirt that does nothing helpful for your concentration.
plus you know what's under it. worse - you know what it looks like first thing in the morning sunlight.
your brain needs to be chemically sterilized.
everyone slowly migrates toward breakfast eventually while arguing over plans for the day. gojo offers to toast bagels (provided he doesn't break the toaster, too) and your roommate keeps kicking your ankle beneath the island every time you look at geto too long.
âstop that,â you hiss quietly.
âmake me.â
youâre still groggy as hell from waking up at four in the morning and emotionally spiraling before sunrise so eventually everyone starts looking at you expectantly when discussion turns toward plans.
âwhatâs the weather?â choso asks.
you glance out the giant kitchen windows toward the water. clear skies, barely any wind. perfect.
âitâs gonna be a good beach day,â you say, wrapping your hands around your mug (yes, still full of juice. you'd kill for coffee right now). âwe can stay down there most of the afternoon.â
gojo pumps a fist. âbeach arc continues.â
âthen maybe head into town this evening,â you continue. âthereâs a boardwalk and some restaurants by the marina.â
âshopping?â your roommate perks up instantly.
âyou donât need more clothes.â
âcounterpoint, yes i do.â
âwe can do dinner there,â you say. âthen come back for the sunset.â
everyone nods along pretty quickly after that but getoâs not really paying attention anymore, because while youâre talking, sleepy and slightly disheveled in your little tank top with your glasses sliding down your nose, sunlight catches against your skin through the kitchen windows.
all he can think about is waking up with you curled against his chest.
you look over toward him mid-sentence.âdoes that sound okay?â
geto realizes a full second too late that everyoneâs waiting for his answer. ââŠyeah,â he says quietly, eyes still on you. âsounds perfect.â
after breakfast, the second you head upstairs, your roommate and gojoâs girlfriend follow immediately with excited little grins. you barely make it into the bedroom before your roommate shuts the door behind her dramatically.
âspill.â
you blink. âabout what.â
both of them stare at you. ây/n,â gojoâs girlfriend says flatly, âthere was visible yearning at breakfast.â
âthere was not.â
you move toward your suitcase quickly before they can corner you properly. ânothing happened.â
âliar,â your roommate says instantly.
ânothing serious happened.â you push your glasses back up your nose. you ignore their little comments and start sorting through your bikinis instead. âweâre focusing on beachwear now.â
âavoidance,â your roommate whispers solemnly.
âcoping mechanism,â gojoâs girlfriend agrees.
you throw a swimsuit at both of them and eventually the three of you end up sitting cross-legged around the open suitcase debating bikini options. âthis oneâs cute,â your roommate says, holding up a blue floral set.
âi dunno why i packed that one.â
âthis one?â
âtoo bright.â
gojoâs girlfriend suddenly digs deeper into the suitcase before pausing. ââŠwait.â she lifts a black triangle bikini from the pile. sleek black fabric and a tiny gold charm dangling between the cups.
you laugh nervously. it's smaller than what you typically wear - you prefer more full-coverage, something that doesn't let the plush of your stomach and thighs fully exposed. the top'll push up your tits way more than anything you normally wear.
both girls stare at it reverently like archaeologists uncovering forbidden treasure. âTHIS one,â your roommate breathes.
âabsolutely this one,â gojo's girlfriend agrees.
you snatch at it immediately. âthatâs too...much. i don't -â
ây/n, you're going to look amazing in it, no matter what comments you have to say about yourself or your body,â your roommate says. âyou're hot. it's hot. you're going to look good.â
âiâm literally not wearing dental floss to the beach.â
ây/n.â
âwhat.â
âput it on.â
five minutes later you emerge from the bathroom already regretting every life decision that led here. the bikini really is tiny.
the black fabric contrasts sharply against your skin while the gold charm rests perfectly between your chest. the top pushes everything up unfairly well and the bottoms sit low against your hips with thin strings at the sides.
you instinctively cross your arms slightly. your roommateâs jaw physically drops and gojoâs girlfriend just stares.
ââŠholy shit,â she says softly.
âyou HAVE to wear that.â
âi look insane,â you say, glancing at your feet. "bad insane."
âyou look hot.â
heat crawls across your face instantly, and you glance toward the mirror again. okay. maybe it does look good. âitâs more revealing than what i usually wear,â you mumble.
âand you rock it.â
eventually they encourage you to keeping it on and you throw on a loose white cover dress afterward at least, something soft and flowy enough to hide most of the bikini beneath it.
then you start filling your beach bag. book, sunscreen, waterbottle, lip balm, portable charger.
your roommate watches with deep affection. âyou pack for the beach like a divorced father.â
âpreparation prevents suffering,â you say wisely, and gojo's girlfriend laughs while you shove sunglasses into your hair.
the three of you head downstairs together where the guys are still getting ready. gojo's already shirtless and toji's hoarding chips and choso nearly walks directly into a wall when his girlfriend appears in her bikini.
geto looks up from the kitchen counter when you enter. you feel his gaze drift down your face, down the cover dress you're wearing, and your pulse jumps instantly.
gojo ruins the moment by throwing sunglasses at him. âbeach.â
everyone starts heading outside after that. the walk toward the shoreline is warm and breezy, sunlight sifting through dune grass while everybody talks over each other around you. youâre halfway down the road when somebody calls your name suddenly.
you turn instantly, recognizing the voice with a smile. âaaron?â
geto watches as a guy about your age jogs over from the neighboring property, grinning broadly. he's tall, sun-bleached hair, and apparently he knows you very well because he immediately pulls you into a quick hug.
âholy shit,â he laughs. âwhenâd you get here?â
âyesterday! i didnât know your family was coming down this week.â
âmom wanted the boat out, even though it's kinda early.â
you smile easily at him - you did practically grow up together, summer after summer.
behind you, your friends have gone suspiciously quiet.
âoh, these are my friends,â you say, gesturing to your group. aaron shakes everyoneâs hands easily while you chatter beside him naturally, smiling more openly than you usually do around new people.
geto watches the entire thing in silence and immediately dislikes this guy. he knows it's irrational but you look happy talking to him. not nervous or flustered, just easy and warm and familiar. aaron says something that makes you laugh and geto's jaw tightens.
logically, this means nothing. he knows that, but still. he watches aaronâs hand brush briefly against your arm while talking and suddenly feels the deeply primal urge to throw him into the ocean.
gojo notices instantly, of course, despite being a bumbling oaf most of the time. his eyes slowly widen behind his sunglasses. âheâs jealous,â he whispers as he leans towards choso.
âobviously,â choso whispers back.
the second aaron finally heads back toward his familyâs place, the group starts moving again. something's shifted now, though. you notice it almost immediately walking beside geto down the sandy path toward the beach.
heâs quieter. thinking.
gojo notices too, his grin getting increasingly more dangerous every few seconds. eventually he speeds up to walk backward in front of you both. âso,â he says brightly. âbeach boyfriend.â
âdonât start,â you sigh.
âhe looked rich.â
âhis parents are both lawyers and they own three beach houses here.â
âshit, well -â
gojoâs girlfriend drags him away by the arm before he can get worse. bless her.
for a minute itâs just you and geto walking side by side while the others move ahead laughing about something. ocean wind catches softly at your cover dress, your sunglasses rest pushed into your hair.
geto finally speaks. ââŠyou two close?â
you glance over. his expressionâs careful, casual sounding. âkinda,â you say. âi only really see him in summers though. it's been a while.â
geto hums once. silence stretches another few steps then before he can stop himself, he asks, âyou ever date?â
your brows lift slightly.
geto stutters, âi just meanââ
âno, i know what you mean.â you laugh softly under your breath a little awkwardly now. ânot seriously. we messed around a little as teenagers.â
geto goes still. you say it so casually, like it means nothing, and his brain instantly starts supplying images he absolutely does not want. you younger, laughing with that guy at bonfires, swimming together at night.
that guy touching you.
âoh,â he says evenly.
you glance at him sideways. ââŠyou okay?â
âfine.â
liar. heâs absurdly jealous which is insane because he knows he has zero claim over you whatsoever. (and yet he thinks about last night and how you almost kissed and that soft look in your eyes and he feels waves of jealousy wash over him again.)
the thought of anyone else having touched you makes something dark and unpleasant twist low in his stomach. the walk to the beach is silent and the shoreline opens wide before all of you again.
everyone starts setting up camp and the warm sand burns pleasently beneath your feet. umbrellas, chairs, coolers, towels are all placed in motion
toji tries to ram an umbrella into the sand with zero clue what he's doing and you laugh softly, setting your beach bag down near one of the chairs.
geto watches you from a few feet away while pretending to unfold a towel as you reach for the ties of your cover dress.
his brain short-circuits instantly, watching the thin fabric slip from your shoulders. jesus christ, that bikini is devastating.
sleek little triangle top, gold charm catching sunlight perfectly between your chest, tiny straps against your skin. the bottoms sit low on your hips with those little thin side ties and geto physically has to look away for a second because blood rushes south immediately.
fast.
heâs actually in hell because now not only does he remember accidentally seeing your chest upstairs yesterday, but he also has visual confirmation that your body is genuinely engineered to ruin his life specifically.
nearby, your roommate whistles. âsee?â she says smugly. âtold you.â
heat creeps across your neck while you shove your sunglasses on quickly. âstop making announcements.â
toji glances from you to geto and laughs under his breath. ââŠdude.â
geto doesnât answer. he's still staring until toji smacks his shoulder hard enough to jolt him back to reality. âget in the ocean.â
geto blinks. ââŠwhat?â
âcold water.â
realization hits instantly and his ears turn red immediately.
âshut the fuck up,â geto mutters. gojo walks by and smirks, shouting no way at the top of his lungs with absolute glee.
you look between all of them confused. âwhatâs happening?â
ânothing,â geto says too quickly.
tojiâs grin turns downright evil. âhe just really likes the scenery.â
your face burns alive instantly.
geto looks seconds away from committing homicide. he starts trudging towards the ocean, following everyone who's running towards the water.
choso's girlfriend stops him, pausing with the slyest smile you've ever seen in your life. ây/n needs someone to put sunscreen on her.â
geto stares at her blankly. ââŠokay?â
your roommate glares at him pointedly. âyou dumbass.â
when realization hits, geto goes still, cause youâre standing there in that tiny black bikini looking suddenly very interested in literally anything except him, and now heâs imagining touching sunscreen onto your skin for an extended period of time while already painfully hard.
cool.
great.
awesome.
gojoâs girlfriend physically drags your roommate toward the lake before either of you can escape.
âhave fun!â she calls sweetly.
silence settles immediately afterward except for distant waves and screaming from the water where gojoâs already drowning dramatically. you stand awkwardly beside the chairs clutching the sunscreen bottle and geto pushes a few loose strands of hair back from his face slowly before reaching for it.
his fingers brush yours. your pulse jumps. (his does too.)
ââŠso,â he says.
âmhm.â
ââŠwhere do you want it?â
you choke, brain interpresting that in the worst way possible.
geto's eyes widen slightly. âi didnât mean it like that.â his ears are turning red again.
âright,â you mumble weakly. god, the tension between you lately feels actively lethal.
geto clears his throat once. âi just meant sunscreen.â
âi know.â
âokay.â
you very quietly mumble, ââŠjust put it everywhere.â you realize how that sounds approximately one second too late.
geto shuts his eyes briefly like heâs asking the universe for strength then gestures toward the towel laid out beneath one of the umbrellas. âyou can, erm, lay down. or stand. dunno.â
you nod quickly, and the sand's warm beneath the towel as you settle carefully onto your stomach. geto kneels beside you, close that you can hear the bottle of sunscreen click open. your heartbeat pounds harder instantly.
âtell me if iâm using too much,â he says quietly.
âokay.â
cool sunscreen hits your shoulders first, then his hands. getoâs fingers spread the lotion slowly across your skin, warm palms gliding carefully along your shoulders and upper back.
heâs trying very hard to stay normal about this but your skinâs warm from the sun and soft beneath his hands and when you shiver slightly when his thumbs press near the base of your neck it certainly doesnât help hisâŠsituation.
geto swallows hard. ââŠcold?â
âno.â your voice comes out quieter than usual.
you hear him exhale softly through his nose and his hands move lower slowly, fingers spreading sunscreen across the middle of your back now, dragging lower and lower inch by inch. it feels intimate, the kind of slow touch that settles beneath your skin.
you wonder, briefly, what your roommate, or gojoâs girlfriend, or choso, or any of them really, think of the sight (if theyâre looking) geto leaning over you beneath the umbrella with his hair falling loose around his face slightly while his hands move slowly across your skin like heâs memorizing it. you lying there visibly tense every time he touches you.
âyou missed a spot,â you mumble weakly, pointing toward your side mostly just to say something.
mistake. big huge mistake because you throb as getoâs hand slides carefully along your waist, thumb brushing just beneath the curve of your ribs. as your breath catches so does his and his hand lingers one dangerous second too long against your side before pulling away.
ââŠdone,â he says roughly.
you sit up slowly, face to face with him at extremely close range. his hairâs falling into his eyes slightly from the wine, jaw tight, expression unreadable except for the very obvious tension simmering beneath it.
the moment snaps apart before either of you can do something catastrophically stupid. ây/n!â gojoâs voice echoes from the water.
you jerk backward slightly like youâd been caught doing something you shouldnât and geto clears his throat immediately and pushes to his feet a little too fast. ââŠiâm gonna get in the lake.â
âokay,â you say too quickly.
he nods once before practically escaping into the water, leaving you sitting there afterward feeling completely disoriented. your skin still tingles everywhere he touched so to attempt to distract yourself you grab your book from your beach bag.
it doesnât work. you read the same sentence six times in a row without processing a single word because all you can think about is the feeling of getoâs hands slowly sliding over your waist.
youâre hopeless.
your roommate and gojoâs girlfriend eventually wander back up from the shoreline dripping water everywhere and both immediately clock your expression.
âwow y/n,â your roommate says sweetly.
âdonât.â
âyour sunscreen is blended sooo thoroughly.â
gojoâs girlfriend nods solemnly. âvery even application.â
you close your book dramatically over your face. âi hate both of you.â
âhe looked one touch away from cardiac arrest.â
âiâm serious,â you say, voice muffled from beneath the pages.
âand you looked like you were gonna melt into the towel,â your roommate adds wisely. you groan into the book.
out in the lake, getoâs standing waist-deep in freezing water, mind still scrambled, because shit, he can still feel the shape of your waist beneath his hands. he can still remember the tiny sound you made when he touched your side.
he thinks you might have noticed his situation downstairs. the water helps a little, at least, and beside him, gojo suddenly appears floating on his back. âyou know,â he says conversationally, âyou were sporting a fucking hard-on.â
geto nearly drowns him. âwhat the fuck is wrong with you.â
âyou could see it from across the beach.â
âwhy were you looking, you piece of shit.â
âbecause you looked stupid.â
toji barks out a laugh nearby. âiâve never seen you this bad over anybody.â
geto drags both hands through his wet hair with visible frustration. he knows they're right. this is bad. worse than bad. you're going to be upstairs sharing a bed every night walking around in tiny little outfits and looking at him with those shy nervous eyes whenever he gets too close.
from your spot in your chair on the beach you glance to the shoreline again over the edge of your book. you make the mistake of seeing geto standing waist-deep in the water with his wet hair pushed back.
by late afternoon, you're all making your way to the marina, everyone sun-kissed and buzzed off coolers. there's cute little boutiques with sun-faded signs, ice cream stands, tourists wandering around with shopping bags, boats bobbing against the docks while seagulls scream overhead.
it should be relaxing but instead, everyoneâs acting weird. well, not everyone - gojo is still normal, unfortunately, which means heâs being loud as shit and trying on ugly sunglasses in every store while his girlfriend tells him he looks like a divorced dad. toji's carrying everyone's bags very bedgrudgingly and chosoâs girlfriend keeps linking arms with him and dragging him into little souvenir stores.
meanwhile you and geto keep ending up next to each other by complete accident, which is to say, absolutely on purpose by everyone else. youâre walking along the docks eating gelato at one point when your roommate suddenly grabs your arm. âcome into this store with me.â before you can respond, sheâs already yanking you inside.
you blink, looking back where getoâs left standing outside with gojo and toji before you get tugged into a store.
gojo smirks immediately. âyou gonna keep staring at the door like that?â
geto doesnât even look at him. âshut up.â
âbro.â
âsatoru.â
âyouâve had the expression of a war widow since sunscreen.â
by dinner, if possible, things have gotten even weirder. you all end up at this marina-side restaurant right on the water, string lights overhead and music drifting faintly from somewhere nearby.
the seating arrangement was personally made to ensure you don't survive the meal, obviously, what with gojo and his girlfriend together, choso and his girlfriend together, toji sitting like heâd rather die, and you and geto next to each other. close enough that your knees almost brush beneath the table.
drinks come, everyone's talking about the beach tomorrow and whether they should rent paddleboards. "we have the budget, but everyone has to pitch in," you say, which makes toji groan.
gojo says, "i saw that you can get a boat tour? we could go fishing or something."
you're all talking animatedly (save for geto, who's oddly quiet and keeps looking at you from the corner of his eye) then the waiter comes over. he's probably around your guys' age, eyes skimming over gojo's girlfriend tucked under gojo's arm, choso's girlfriend pressed against choso's shoulder, then you.
sitting alone, or rather alone-adjacent. âand what can i get for you?â the waiter asks you with a smile that lingers a little too long.
you look up awkwardly. âumâŠâ
âgood choice on the drink,â he says after glancing at your glass. ânot everybody appreciates taste.â
your roommate nearly chokes on her water and you stare at the waiter awkwardly. âthanks?â
the waiter grins. âyou guys visiting?â
you can physically feel everyone at the table stop listening to their own conversations. getoâs gone silent beside you, more silent then earlier. âyeah,â you say after a beat.
ânice,â the waiter says, leaning slightly against the table. âhope someoneâs shown you the good spots around town.â
you laugh weakly because what the fuck do you even say to that. âuhâŠâ
âhey, if you need someone to show you around, i get off at ten.â
âi think i'll get the chicken parm?â you say, laughing nervously. âplease.â
âor maybe i could just give you my number,â the waiter says with a smile that makes your toes curl in disgust.
geto finally looks up, slowly, expression completely unreadable except for the fact that he looks deeply unimpressed. âsheâs very clearly not interested.â
silence. complete silence. you even stop breathing, and the waiter blinks, looks between you and geto. ââŠsorry, man,â he says with an awkward little laugh, hands up. âcanât blame me for trying.â
geto doesnât even smile. âyeah.â he pauses before saying, coldly, âjust get the food and go.â
the waiter straightens. âalright.â he scribbles something on his pad quickly, then mutters, âdidnât know your boyfriend was so serious,â and walks away.
the silence is nuclear. nobody says anything, nobody moves, and your face is so hot you think you might actually die.
because boyfriend.
because geto didnât correct him.
because nobody corrected him.
gojo is staring at his plate so hard his shoulders are shaking. your roommate wonât look at you. chosoâs girlfriend is chewing on her straw like sheâs witnessing live television and toji actually says nothing for once in his miserable life.
you risk one glance sideways to see geto staring straight ahead, jaw tight, ears slightly red.
you immediately look away.
dinner proceeds in the most painful silence known to man.
conversation starts back up eventually, but itâs all stilted and everyone keeps exchanging looks when they think you and geto aren't noticing.
you barely taste your food. geto says maybe twelve words the entire meal.
when the bill comes everyoneâs kind of ready to leave purely to escape the tension. checks get split, gojo grabs his and his girlfriendâs without looking. choso pays for his girlfriendâs too.
toji stares at his own bill like it insulted his bloodline.
âwhy the fuck is grilled salmon thirty dollars.â
âbecause you ordered grilled salmon,â gojo says.
you reach for your wallet quickly.
âi got mine.â
âsame,â geto says at the exact same time.
your fingers brush awkwardly near the bill tray, both of you jerking back like you touched fire. chairs scrape back and everyone starts filing out onto the marina walkway under the string lights and the tension between you and geto follows like a third person walking right between you.
saturday - 10 pm
on the drive back to the beach house, gojoâs girlfriend controls the aux while everybody talks intermittently about dinner and shopping bags and whether toji could survive prison after complaining about restaurant prices loud enough for the waiter to hear.
but underneath all of it sits that awful electric awareness between you and geto. every glance feels more loaded than before now, especially after the boyfriend comment. especially because a small part of you didn't want to correct it.
you stare out the window most of the drive pretending the cool night air coming through the cracked glass is enough to settle your heartbeat. (newsflash - it isn't).
when you finally pull into the driveway, the skyâs gone deep navy overhead, stars scattered bright across the water beyond the dunes. gojo stretches dramatically exiting the car. âi feel alive. this was a good day.â
âyou screamed at a seagull today,â his girlfriend says.
âwell, it was disrespectful. did you see how it took the hotdog out of my hand -â
everyone slowly filters toward the back deck unloading leftovers and drinks while the ocean crashes softly somewhere below. youâre halfway through carrying cups into the kitchen when gojoâs girlfriend suddenly says, âbonfire?â
you all immediately agree and you're honestly grateful for the distraction, because if you had to go straight upstairs right now and exist in a quiet bedroom with geto after today, you think your nervous system might actually collapse.
outside, the fire crackles warmly against the cool night air while everyone settles into chairs scattered around the pit.
you end up directly across from geto. the flames flicker gold across his face while he leans back slightly in his chair listening to gojo argue about horror movies beside him.
heâs not really listening, you can tell. every few seconds his eyes drift back to you again, and the look in them makes your stomach twist painfully.
yearning.
thereâs genuinely no other word for it anymore. itâs there in every glance and every pause and every second too long his eyes stay on your face. you feel warm all over despite the ocean breeze.
around the fire, conversation drifts lazily between everyone else toji and gojo arguing and your roommate curled against chosoâs side and music humming faintly from someoneâs speaker. nobody comments on the way you and geto keep looking at each other. they just quietly notice, giving you both space.
across the fire, geto feels like heâs losing his mind a little.
you look beautiful tonight, your hair slightly windblown, oversized hoodie on, firelight dancing warm across your skin while you smile softly at something choso says.
he canât stop looking at you and doesnât really want to. his chest physically aches with it now, this awful wanting.
god, getoâs never been this gone over anybody before.
when yawns start appearing, everybody heads inside. gojo drags his girlfriend upstairs and your roommate shooting you one deeply knowing look before disappearing too.
itâs just you and geto left outside.
you crouch near the firepit gathering empty bottles quietly while embers glow soft orange against the dark.
geto watches you for a second.ââŠwanna walk to the beach?â
your heart stumbles immediately. âsure.â
the shorelineâs almost completely dark except for moonlight silvering the waves. sand cool beneath your feet, wind soft against your skin. you walk side by side in silence at first. comfortable silence this time. above you, the stars stretch endlessly bright across the sky untouched by city lights.
you stop eventually near the waterline where waves curl around your ankles gently before retreating again.
geto looks at you like heâs trying to memorize something. like his chest hurts with it. like every glance all semester somehow led here, to you, moonlight catching softly against your face when you tilt your head upward to the stars.
beautiful.
the thought, though not new, hits him so hard it almost steals his breath. ââŠyou know what the worst part is?â he says quietly.
you glance over. âwhat?â
geto laughs softly once, self-aware and helpless. âi spent months trying not to want you this bad.â
your breath catches yet his eyes stay fixed on yours, steady and honest in a way that makes your pulse pound harder. âand now i donât think iâll ever stop.â
something in your chest melts completely. there's no teasing in his voice, just aching sincerity. geto looks at you like you're something precious and terrifying and like you're everything all at once, and suddenly you canât stand the distance anymore.
so you kiss him.
his breath catches sharply against your mouth before he melts instantly, completely. one hand slides gently against your waist while the other cups your face like he canât believe youâre real, kissing you back slow and deep beneath the stars. warm, careful for approximately two seconds before all that pent-up wanting finally cracks open.
you feel him exhale shakily against your lips. it feels a lot like relief.
you kiss him back just as deep, hands sliding up into his hair you've been aching to hold for months now, tangling your fingers there, and he groans into your mouth, pulling you more flush against him.
your toes curl from the sand when you feel his hardness poking against the top of your stomach.
from one kiss?
when he pulls back it's reluctant, his hands cupping your face and staring into your eyes like you're the only person he's ever seen.
"should we go back?" you ask softly, and he nods immediately. your lips are tingling, geto's hand laced tightly with yours like he physically can't let go now that he finally has you. every few steps he glances at you again with that same dazed expression that makes your stomach flip violently.
like he still canât believe you kissed him first.
the house is dark when you slip inside, quiet, everyone asleep in their rooms already. you barely make it through the kitchen before geto pulls you gently against him again, kissing you hard enough to steal the breath from your lungs.
you laugh softly into it, hands catching against his chest while he kisses you like heâs trying to memorize the feeling.
months of tension finally snapping all at once.
you nearly stumble into the staircase together trying to stay quiet and by the time you reach the bedroom, both of you are flushed and breathless and grinning a little helplessly.
the door clicks shut behind you and suddenly getoâs hands are on your waist again and your back hits the wall softly beside the door while he kisses you deeper, warm and hungry. your fingers slide automatically into his hair again and he makes this low sound against your mouth that nearly destroys you.
âfuck,â he murmurs quietly against your lips. you can feel how nervous he is underneath it too though, how his hands careful despite how badly he wants you. you tug at the hem of his shirt first and geto pulls back just enough to drag it over his head quickly before immediately kissing you again.
shirtless in the dim moonlit bedroom, he looks unfair. your eyes stare at the tattoos winding along his arms and chest, dark hair loose around his face from the beach wind.
you stare for half a second too long because geto's cheeks flush slightly. (this, of course, makes him infinitely more attractive.)
âdonât look at me like that,â he mutters.
you laugh breathlessly while your hands slide down his chest, his muscles tensing beneath your touch instantly. his fingers hook gently into the hem of your hoodie, hesitation flickering briefly across his face. you nod softly, and that's all he needs.
geto pulls the hoodie over your head slowly and when it drops to the floor he just stares quietly. his eyes drag across your skin with open awe now, nothing hidden in his expression anymore.
this is how he wanted to see you. not startled or accidental. wanted.
heat blooms across your entire body under that look and geto steps closer again slowly, one hand settling against your waist while the other brushes lightly up your side like heâs still convincing himself youâre real. ââŠpretty girl,â he says softly.
you kiss him again immediately because otherwise you think you might combust, your fingers fumbling with the button of his pants while geto's lips start to press kisses down your jaw.
your back eventually hits the mattress gently as you both stumble toward the bed, and for one second he hovers over you breathing hard while moonlight spills silver across the sheets behind him. he's gazing at you with those lidded eyes, his boxers strained as his hands run up your stomach slowly, savouring, until he's cupping your tits in his hands, squeezing with gentle reverence.
ââŠi wanna take my time with you,â he says quietly. one hand moves to slide up your thigh while he properly settles over you, his other elbow braced beside your head. one of his legs slips naturally between yours and the pressure makes your breath catch immediately.
a faint smugness flickers briefly through his expression now, that quiet confident energy finally surfacing. âthere she is,â he murmurs softly.
heat floods your face instantly and geto kisses you again before you can hide from it. your lips, deeply, tongue sliding against yours, brushing along your mouth. then your jaw, then your neck. his mouth lingers just beneath your ear, sucking gently, while his hand drifts carefully along your waist, thumb brushing slow circles into your skin.
âfuck,â he mutters quietly against your throat. his voice sounds wrecked already.
your fingers slide through his hair, tugging lightly without thinking, and geto exhales sharply against your neck before lifting his head to look at you. dark eyes and flushed cheeks and hair falling loose around his face.
he looks gone.
completely gone for you.
his hand smooths slowly along your waist again before drifting higher, fingertips tracing along your side with almost unbearable patience. your breathing stutters when he holds your tits again, kneading them once before rolling your stiffened nipples between his fingers.
âyou okay?â he asks softly.
you nod quickly and he kisses you again while his thumbs slowly brush over sensitive skin, drawing another shaky breath from you. the sound goes straight through him - geto's spent months imagining this. wondering what you'd sound like, how you'd react to him touching you.
(the little, jealous part of his brain remembers aaron. he shoves the thought away immediately.)
reality is infinitely worse for his self control. you squirm slightly beneath him and his leg presses more firmly between yours automatically.
your breath catches harder this time and geto looks at you, something a little darker simmering beneath his eyes. âthat feel good?â he murmurs quietly.
you hide your face briefly against his shoulder. ââŠmaybe.â
his laugh comes soft against your hair. âmaybe?â
heat floods your face when he tilts your chin back toward him gently. âuse your words, pretty girl.â
your stomach twists and you nod once. âyeah.â
âyeah what?â
you stare at him in disbelief. âyouâre annoying.â
he grins properly for the first time all night. âand youâre avoiding the question.â before you can answer, he kisses you again, swallowing the tiny embarrassed sound you make while his hand drifts lower along your thigh slowly.
your fingers curl against his shoulders when his mouth returns to your neck again, kissing lower this time while his hand squeezes gently at your thigh. when his hands defly dip into the waistband of your shorts, tugging them down, you moan quietly, head turning to the side.
he makes you so nervous and excited your heart feels like it's going to lurch out of your chest.
"can i touch you here, pretty girl?" he murmurs, fingers sliding along your inner thighs until they ghost over your cotton panties. if you'd known you'd end up like..this tonight, youd've chosen a more tasteful pair of underwear.
"please," you whisper, pulling him to your mouth as his fingers press against your clothed cunt, applying just enough pressure to make you mewl into his lips. you feel him smile, pushing your panties to the side before running a finger through your folds.
"you're wet," he chuckles before pushing his finger in, crooking it against your spongey insides. your head falls back against the pillow, hands digging into his back.
"oh my god, geto," you whimper, lips parting.
"suguru," he corrects, pushing another digit in, curling them deep enough to find the gooey spot that has your nails making crescent against his arms.
"suguru, please, 's so good," you babble, thrusting your hips to meet his hand.
he stills for a moment at the sound of his name on your lips. how you moan his name so prettily, begging for more. he leans down, kissing you hard, fingers moving faster and faster inside you, the sound lewd and so dirty and buzzing right to his crotch.
geto feels how you clench around his fingers, and he swallows thickly at the thought of how you'll take his cock. he groans, low and wrecked, capturing your nipple between his lips, teeth grazing along it slightly.
your head's dizzy, stars behind your eyes, gazing at geto and how he's sucking little bruises along your tits, up your neck, down your stomach. constellations of bite marks across your body.
"suguru, iâi'm close," you say, voice breaking. his eyes darken and he thumbs tiny circles over your clit, his two - no, three - fingers curling against all the right spots inside your core.
when you cum, body pulsing hard and hot in waves that make you tingle all over, geto groans, fingering you slowly until your breathing evens. the sight of you coming undone for him has him hardening impossibly more in his boxers, now damp at the front with precum.
you're panting below geto and your hand inches to his boxers, itching to tug them off. "you sure?" he asks quietly, restraint obvious in his voice.
"i'm sure, suguru," you say softly, kissing him again, palming over his boxers. he lets out a strained sound as you reach to pull them down and he quickly obliges, shrugging them off.
suguru geto, in all of his naked glory, is the most beautiful man you've ever seen.
you're rather partial to his pretty, leaking cock, too.
your eyes trace over the vein that runs along one side, the flushed, mushroomed dip, slick with precum, the thick shaft. how it twitches slightly under your gaze, hard and angled up towards his abs. you watch in a daze as he pumps himself slowly, his lips parted, watching you sprawled out so prettily for him, your hair like a halo around your head as you lay there.
you watch his gaze drift down your body, down past your tits, down past the splattering of marks he's left across practially every square inch of your skin. down to your pussy, still slick from your orgasm.
you squirm under geto's face and he tuts, leaning down and pressing his tip to your core. "don't have to be nervous, pretty girl," he says, kissing the side of your neck. his cock brushes against your folds and you both moan quietly.
geto's forehead drops to yours as one of his hands hooks through your thighs, pushing it up as he pushes in slowly. you wince at the pressure, eyes watering slightly - none of the men you've been with have been this...proportionate. he's quick to wipe the tears from your eyes, kissing your cheeks softly, jaw tight as he pushes in more, and more, passing each wall of muscle with a grunt.
"you're squeezing me, y/n, shit," he manages, pushing your thigh higher to deepen the angle. when he finally bottoms out his eyes roll back and you whine.
loud.
geto pushes his thumb into your mouth, his hand cupping your face, and you suck on it gently, face contorting with pleasure as he starts to thrust slowly, struggling to fit his cock back in when he pulls out.
"so tight," he groans raggedly, and all you can do is moan in response, his thumb still in your mouth, his other hand still warm against your thigh, sliding up to squeeze your waist. when geto manages to set a slow, steady pace, he's grunting every time he thrusts in fully, watching your hands grip the sheets desperately.
"right there, suguru," you moan, muffled against his thumb.
"here, pretty girl?" he rumbles, pistoning his cock deep and faster now, brushing your cervix with every thrust.
you nod, babbling incoherently, tugging his hair, holding his biceps, wrapping around his neck, touching everywhere you can and he lowers himself, chest pressed to yours. your tits soft against his skin, your tongue swirling around his thumb.
he holds you reverently, kneading the plush of your thighs as you clench around him, chasing another orgasm. you pull his thumb out of your mouth with a pop, a string of saliva connecting your lips to the digit. "suguru," you whimper, "suguru, suguru, suguruâ"
"yeah, i know," he coos, thrusting so deep inside you you can see where he pokes at your stomach, the bulge bumping against your skin every time his cock presses deep in your cunt. "look at that, pretty girl. taking me sooo good, yeah? so good for me."
blood rushes hot through your body, liquid heat coursing through your veins, and your back arches off the bed, pulling geto impossibly closer to you as you moan softly into his ear, biting his neck as you feel your climax build and build and build.
"are you close? 'm gonna cum," he says, voice rough and eyes blown wide. "you feel me here?" he presses his hand to where his cock bulges against your stomach, the pressure stealing the air from your lungs.
"inside," you breathe, panting now. "cum in me, suguru."
and so he does, seconds later, because your voice saying those words along with his name fully break him. he holds you against him as he cums, pulsing thick and hot spurts of release, coating your walls. he rubs circles over your nipples as you climax, too, with a cracked moan of his name and your hands tangled in his hair.
after, youâre both a little breathless, tangled in rumpled sheets with the balcony doors cracked open enough for the ocean air to drift in. geto just stays close, one arm wrapped around your waist while his fingers lazily trace little patterns against your skin like he doesnât quite know what to do with all this softness in his chest. youâre tucked against him, cheek pressed to his shoulder, listening to the steady thump of his heartbeat finally slowing down. ââŠyou okay?â he asks after a while, voice low and sleep-rough now.
you tilt your head to look at him, how pretty he looks with his pink lips and flushed cheeks. you smile softly. âyouâve asked me that like eight times.â
âi know.â
âparanoid?â
he huffs a quiet laugh, looking at the ceiling. âa little.â
your heart squeezes and you lift yourself enough to kiss him softly. geto smiles into it, eyes closing briefly. "you like me," he murmurs, and you bury your face in his shoulder so he can't see you smiling.
he helps you clean up, gently rubbing a warm cloth along your inner thighs where his cum's dried, hands you your hoodie, tucks blankets around you when you both collapse into bed. when you instinctively curl toward the far side like you did the first night, geto just blinks at you. "...seriously?"
you look over. "what?" and he wordlessly lifts an arm. your stomach flips and you slide back over, letting him pull you into his chest. his chin rests lightly on top of your head, one hand smoothing once down your back.
sometime in the middle of the night, you both fall asleep smiling.
sunday - 8 am
the next morning feels surreal. when you wake, blinking sleepily, you realize two things immediately. one: you're basically half on top of geto. two: he's already awake, watching you. the second your eyes meet, he smiles, small and sleepy and completely soft. "...hi," you mumble.
"hi." his voice is still rough with sleep and you both just stare at each other for a second like idiots then start laughing quietly for no reason at all.
everything feels weirdly giddy, soft. you brush hair out of his face, he catches your wrist and kises your palm. as you both get dressed you exhange stupid little smiles the entire time.
however, when you both head downstairs together, something awful starts to creep into your brain. there's no way anyone heard, right...? gojo's girlfriend is a notoriously heavy sleeper, though you don't know much about how gojo sleeps...toji and choso and your roommate, being downstairs, couldn't have heard anything at all. and you weren't that loud.
the living room comes into view where choso's sitting drinking coffee (from a new, temporary machine you bought at the marina yesterday). when he sees you and geto walk down the stairs he goes tomato red and your soul leaves your body. beside you, geto's trying so hard to act normal.
"morning," he says in the most suspiciously casual voice ever.
choso makes a sound that is not a word. "...morning." he looks away so fast he nearly spills coffee on himself. you stare at him, horrified. there is no way. there is absolutely no way they heard anything. they couldn't have.
before you can spiral further, gojo strolls in from the kitchen, looking smug for no reason. "good morning!" he says brightly. you narrow your eyes immediately. never trust that tone. he starts making coffee, chatting casually about breakfast plans like a completely normal person. too normal.
geto relaxes as gojo stirs sugar into his cup. takes a sip, then says, "so."
you feel the danger immediately. gojo glances over with the smile of a man about to ruin lives. " 'cum in me , suguru'?" he says thoughtfully. "that's the best you got?"
you swear time stops. geto goes completely motionless, full red ears to collarbone. your body leaves this earthly plane. choso coughs so hard he nearly dies on the couch. from the back porch, where you now see your roommate, gojo's girlfriend, and toji watching with rapt attention, they all burst laughing.
which means. oh my god.
you stare blankly at the wall in front of you and geto slowly turns toward gojo. "i'm going to kill you."
gojo raises both hands, grinning. "hey, don't shoot the messenger. walls are thin, lover boy."
you make a strangled noise and bury your face into your hands. somehow, impossibly, gojo makes it worse. "also," he says, taking another casual sip, "the name thing was kinda hot. personal fave detail."
"SATORU."
"WHAT? i'm being supportive!"
a/n ~ did u cry when they kissed? no? just me blubbering like a baby writing this? ...

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I like smut as much as the next person but yall aren't even trying to write anymore. All fanfic on here is just 300 words of sex and then just tagging any character you think fits.
No tropes
No storyline
No arcs
apocalypse - one undergroundboxer!kuna x reader [soulmate au]
warnings [mdni] - angst | implied trauma | mean sukuna
wc - 7.3k
series masterlist
â
ryomen sukuna knew three things about his soulmate.Â
she drank too much caffeine, she slept curled on her side whenever anxiety crawled beneath her skin and whenever she read for hours on end or colored, the noise in his head quieted enough to let him breathe.Â
it was fucking irritating.Â
the first time she got under his skin, it was in the middle of his first match.Â
heâd nearly put his fist through the guy, rage sitting ugly beneath his ribs as blood pooled in his mouth and sweat dripped down his spine.Â
then suddenly, he was overcome with serenity heâd never experienced before.Â
a calmness that wasnât his own, never his own.Â
something soft slipped beneath his skin then, warm and quiet in a way he wasnât used to. like somebody had pressed cold hands against the back of his neck after years of burning where he stood.Â
heâd won that match.Â
âagain?â toji muttered from across the gym, cigarette balanced lazily between scarred fingers.Â
sukuna rolled his jaw once before slamming another punch into the heavy bag hard enough for the chains overhead to rattle violently.Â
âfuck off.âÂ
toji smirked, tongue peaking out to lick at the scar against his lip.Â
the gym smelled like rust, sweat and the metallic ting of blood that both men were used to. it was a shitty set up buried beneath the city in the lower levels of an abandoned parking structure. it barely looked legal from the outside and the inside wasn't much better.Â
the concrete floors, flickering lights and men all too violent to exist comfortably above ground.Â
and it was the place ryomen sukuna felt alive.Â
sukuna had been fighting since he was fifteen and filled with a rage even he couldnât understand.Â
toji found him bloody outside a convenience store after some older guys tried jumping him for gambling money.Â
it was clear they didnât get the money but sukuna took that fire in his gaze out on them.Â
sukuna still recalled the way toji looked down at him, droplets cascading down his sharp features and dark hair, damp cigarette hanging from his mouth while blood dripped steadily from sukunaâs split brow.Â
âyou fight like an animal,â toji began, taking a drag of his fading cig before tilting his head at the salmon haired boy, âwhat if i told you that you could beat the shit out of guys every day and get paid for it?âÂ
a fucking dream is what that was. he gets to utilize his anger and he could finally get out of his fatherâs house.Â
how could sukuna even say no?Â
somehow, it turned into this.Â
years later, ryomen sukuna had become the name whispered through underground rings across the city. not because he was the biggest or the strongest, but because he was cruel.Â
there was something deeply unsettling about the way sukuna fought.Â
controlled, almost lazy sometimes. like violence came so naturally to him that he didnât even need to think about it.Â
people feared men who fought emotionally.Â
they feared ryomen sukuna more because he never did.Â
most nights, he fought beneath screaming neon lights while crowds chanted his name loud enough to shake the walls.Â
they bet on him like he was a sure thing and fuck, did he get a shitload of money from it.Â
heâd leave each night, beaten and bruised with a duffel of cash hanging off his shoulder.
he was living the dream.
that was until he arrived home, in his apartment downtown, and sat in silence while somebody elseâs emotions bled quietly into his chest.Â
a girl heâd never met yet somehow knew like the back of his hand, all too intimately.Â
he knew she liked coffee because of the bursts of energy heâd feel during mornings where he usually slept in because his fights usually carried into the night.Â
he knew she did yoga often because his muscles werenât as sore as they would get when he was younger and god knows it wasnât his doing. he didnât stretch nearly as much as toji nagged at him to.Â
he also knew that she despised him.Â
that one was obvious.Â
their bond always sharpened after his fights. her irritation sat bright and hot beneath his ribs every time he came home bruised and bloody.Â
sometimes he couldnât differentiate between his own rage and hers.Â
maybe they were more alike than he thought.Â
truthfully, sukuna didnât know how to do things any differently and frankly, he didnât care enough to.Â
he hated this whole soulmates shit. why would the universe ever pair two people together with the utmost certainty that they were perfect for each other?
and what fucking masacre did this girl commit to be bonded with him of all people?Â
violence was the only thing sukuna had ever been good at and he wouldnât change that for anyone, especially some girl who was almost a mere figment of his imagination.Â
he did that sometimes. pretended that he was a non-existent and that he was merely hallucinating her.Â
non-existents made up a very small part of the population and they were essentially humans who didnât have soulmates. like toji was.Â
lucky bastard.Â
sometimes sukuna believed toji was lying because heâd get this distant look on his face some days, kind of like himself when he felt his own soulmate torment him.Â
so maybe he was a late bloomer?Â
either way, he was in a better situation than sukuna was.Â
âyour girlâs pissed again?â toji commented dryly from where he leaned against the boxing ring ropes, head tilted with a knowingness sukuna hated.Â
toji was the one sukuna had to confide in because who else did he have?Â
when he was overwhelmed as a young teenager about his soulmate, toji would be the one he would reluctantly go to. the older man had taken him under his wing, so yes, he did trust him more than anyone.Â
he also knew that toji cared about him in his own fucked up way.Â
sukunaâs knuckles ached tonight, phantom annoyance curling beneath his skin that didnât belong to him. it was her.Â
probably studying somewhere in the city while silently wishing death upon him.Â
the thought almost made him grin.Â
throughout the years, pissing her off became a hobby of some sort, though he knew she didnât find it nearly as amusing as he did.Â
âat least you know sheâs got personality.â toji stated once more as sukuna finally stopped punching and turned to shoot the man a glare.Â
âshut the fuck up.â
toji huffed out a laugh, âgod help you both when you finally meet.â
the thought made sukuna freeze momentarily.Â
it was almost sad.Â
usually, at least from what sukuna knew, people usually couldnât wait to meet their soulmates.Â
then there was sukuna, filled with dread at the mere idea.Â
sukuna hated even talking about the bond.Â
he hated how aware he was of her.Â
because despite everything, the distance and never seeing her to begin with, she felt woven into him already, like a haunting.Â
some nights, when his insomnia clawed violently at his nerves after fights, heâd feel her wrap her arms around herself beneath warm blankets god knows where.Â
and sleep came easier those nights.Â
he couldnât explain it and truthfully, he didnât like to think about it.Â
he hated talking about her because the truth was ugly.Â
that he didnât particularly hate her. which is exactly why he knew meeting her would ruin everything.Â
naturally, his solution was to sabotage everything which is why he started to sleep around with non-existents whenever he got the chance.Â
and he knew what it did to her.Â
good. he hoped it made her despise him enough to never want anything to do with him, whether they meet now or twenty years down the line.Â
sukuna didnât want anything to do with her.Â
â
you hated downtown on friday nights.Â
it was always too loud and all too crowded.Â
neon signs bled into rain-slick streets while bass-heavy music spilled from every open doorway along the block.Â
girls stumbled across sidewalks in tiny dresses and tall heels, drunken laughter cutting through the humid summer night air while taxis lined the streets endlessly.Â
the city looked beautiful after dark, but you still wanted to be everywhere but here.Â
âstop looking at people with that judgy look of yours.â shoko muttered beside you, nudging your shoulder lightly as the three of you crossed the street.
âiâm not judging, iâm just looking aroundâŠâ you defended with a huff as you hugged yourself protectively, little kitten heels clicking against the pavement.Â
âyou are judging,â utahime confirmed, âitâs your classic disgusted and glare-ey look.âÂ
âwell excuse me, youâre the ones who brought me to crackhead-ville.â you glared at the two girls as shoko rolled her eeys before hooking her arm through yours anyway.Â
she pulled you towards the entrance of yet another overcrowded building downtown.
apparently, tonightâs party was being held somewhere above an abandoned old bar. or beneath it.Â
either way, something you found entirely too ominous but you were too distracted when shoko was explaining to actually disagree.Â
your soulmate had spent the entire evening restless beneath your skin. not angry but worse.Â
aware.Â
you felt him constantly tonight.Â
a steady pulse of adrenaline humming through your bloodstream that didnât belong to you.Â
your chest had felt tight since leaving the penthouse, some strange tension settling low in your stomach like your body was anticipating something before your mind could catch up.
it was unsettling.Â
you blamed the lack of sleep, or rather, you blamed him. you blamed him for it all.Â
âew, ewâŠâ you muttered as shoko pulled you through the door into what you could only describe as chaos.Â
warmth and noise hit you instantly.Â
bodies crowded wall to wall beneath flashing lights while music shook violently through the floorboards.Â
cigarette smoke lingered in the air despite the open windows somewhere deeper inside the space.Â
you physically recoiled.Â
âoh my god,â utahime muttered beside you, laughing softly at the expression painting your features, âyou look horrified.âÂ
âi am horrified!âÂ
shoko snorted, ârich kids.âÂ
you threw her a glare before the three of you squeezed through the crowd until you reached a quieter section tucked near the back of the room.Â
a curved leather couch sat half-empty beneath dim red lights, thankfully far enough from the speakers that your skull stopped vibrating the second you sat down.Â
you exhaled deeply, chest deflating as you blinked up at your friends who were looking at you with amusement.Â
âdrinks?â utahime questioned as shoko nodded eagerly while you merely hummed, shoulders tense as you gazed around the sea of bodies.Â
utahime disappeared toward the bar while shoko took a seat beside you, the leather beneath you sticky in a way that had you shuddering, sitting at the very edge of the couch.Â
fuck, you hated this and you couldnât explain why.Â
yes, you hated parties in general but you just felt wrong.Â
âyouâre being weird tonight.â shoko observed, eyes narrowed on your tense figure.Â
you frowned faintly, âi knowâŠi feel weird.â
your skin felt like it was buzzing, chest vibrating in a way it usually wasnât.Â
it wasnât necessarily bad, but simply off.Â
you felt your soulmate more than ever tonight, you were almost hyperaware.Â
he felt electric.Â
every emotion coming from him felt sharper somehow, close enough that you could almost mistake them for your own.Â
your pulse kept jumping for no reason.Â
fuck, you hated this.Â
âis it devils dick?â shoko casually asked as your eyes closed momentarily.Â
how would you explain that it was both yes and no.Â
yes, the bond felt different tonight.Â
but no, it wasnât muscle aches or phantom pain you were feeling on his end, though you didn't want to speak too soon.Â
it was a friday after all. friday nights usually meant bruised ribs by saturday morning.Â
âoh my god, guys!â hime stood before you, handing shoko her drink before placing a water bottle in your hand, âeveryoneâs saying gojo and his crew are gonna be here!âÂ
your eyes rolled gently, very much aware of utahimeâs obsession with those random illegitimate fighters.Â
underground fights happened constantly throughout the city.Â
illegal betting rings buried beneath clubs and abandoned buildings, violent enough that respectable people pretended they didnât exist despite everyone secretly knowing otherwise.Â
your father even told you how known politicians and well known figures even placed bets they hid from the public. Â
and lately, there was one name that everyone kept talking about-
âdo you think sukuna would show up?â shoko questioned, eyes wide with excitement, taking a sip of her cherry vodka as you looked between the two girls.Â
ryomen sukuna.Â
youâd heard it constantly from utahime the past few months.Â
uathime, shoko, sora and percy often went on double dates to these underground fights you had zero interest in.Â
you were very much used to fifth wheeling alongside your friends, that wasnât the issue. the issue was rooted in the prospect of spending the night in a filthy underground boxing ring riddled with people and violence alike. yuck.Â
still, amongst all the fighters utahime gushed about, ryomen sukuna seemed to be the most known.Â
the undefeated underground fighter with pink hair and a snake tattoo across his shoulders and collarbones.Â
people were terrified of him just as equally as they were obsessed with him.Â
âpercy says sukuna knocked his opponent unconscious in under thirty seconds last week!â shoko stated, taking another sip as utahime nodded frantically.Â
âheâs insane!â utahime gushed, âlike, gojo is obviously a show off and just cares about the clout he gets but sukuna? heâs terrifyingâŠâ
utahime continued, you were sure. you could see her mouth moving but you didnât-couldnât register the words she'd uttered.Â
the world around you turned hazy, just enough to feel like everything slowed in a way that definitely wasnât normal.Â
your heartbeat stopped, not metaphorically, but physically.Â
a sharp wave of adrenaline crashed violently into your chest hard enough to steal the breath straight from your lungs.Â
you went still, every muscle in your body tightening instinctively.Â
you could see both of the girls leaning towards you, brows furrowed in concern, mouths moving and uttering words you knew were dipped in concern. you couldnât hear any of it.Â
you swallowed hard, eyes darting up and around you, as if a siren was luring you towards the crowd, come to me, come, come.Â
fuck, were you drugged or something?
your heartbeat stuttered painfully beneath your ribs, once, twice then again.Â
you felt like youâd been dropped underwater while everyone else remained above the surface.Â
the bond felt raw and entirely too overwhelming.
it felt like standing at the edge of something life-altering, like your soul had recognized something before your mind could catch up to it.Â
for the first time since youâd first felt your soulmate, he didnât feel far away.Â
you had grown used to the idea of him, something intangible and not truly real.Â
merely a ghost haunting the edges of your nervous system, phantom bruises in the middle of lectures and an adrenaline rush at three in the morning.Â
he was the deep-seated exhaustion that riddled your body but didnât belong to you.Â
but this felt real. close enough to touch.Â
the sensation crawled slowly beneath your skin, winding around your ribs like invisible string being pulled tighter and tighter and tighter until you thought you might choke on it.Â
the realization hit your bloodstream like a drug.Â
he was here, you knew it. you could feel it in your bones.Â
your eyes darted towards the door that had swung open, summer air rushing inside alongside four figures dressed almost entirely in black.Â
the first thing you noticed was height.Â
they all carried themselves with the same dangerous sort of confidence, the kind that came from men who had never truly feared consequences before.Â
one of them had snowy white locks, the tallest of the bunch, bright enough to catch beneath the flashing lights, sunglasses balanced lazily across his nose despite the fact that it was nearly midnight.Â
another stood beside him, quieter with shoulder length black locks with stretched gauges in his ears and sharp eyes that swept across the room once before settling into bored indifference.
the third one was shorter than the rest but still tall, black locks in two spiked buns with a joint resting between plump pink lips, eyes hooded in a way that exposed that joint not being his first of the night.
they were all attractive in a way that felt almost unfair and dangerous.Â
people moved out of their path without being asked.Â
your eyes turned to the one trailing just a step behind them and your breath caught so violently, it hurt.Â
the salmon colored locks gave him away.Â
ryomen sukuna.Â
tattoos curled dark against tan skin disappearing beneath the collar of a black shirt that stretched across broad shoulders.Â
even from where you stood, you could see the dried blood and bruises across his knuckles.Â
he looked nothing like what youâd imagined from shokoâs descriptions.Â
and simultaneously, exactly like it too.Â
something deep inside you snapped taut, your stomach dropping.Â
you could tell he was dazed too, jaw locked and eyes blinking at a slow pace, eyes looking around the sea of bodies.Â
the soulmate bond surged so hard beneath your ribs, you physically recoiled, fingers gripping the edge of the leather couch.Â
oh god. no, no, no.
oh my godâŠ
âoh my god,â utahime whispered beside you, though unlike you, she sounded impressed rather than horrified.Â
shoko looked moments away from passing out entirely.Â
âthatâs him!â she breathed out quietly.Â
you couldnât answer, breath stilling and hands trembling.Â
because sukuna had stopped walking.
fuck, the realization came slowly enough to feel cruel.Â
maroon eyes met your own and the room around you dissolved entirely. the music became muffled noise, lights blurring and the crowd disappeared.
all you could see was him. him. him. him.Â
he was all you could see, feel and you knew all he could see was you.Â
sukuna felt it the second he stepped through the doorway.Â
you.Â
the bond snapped violently alive beneath his skin hard enough that his entire body locked for half a second mid-step.Â
he almost thought someone had drugged him until he remembered he hadnât even drank anything yet.Â
then what was this feeling?Â
his eyes locked on yours and he felt the most alive heâd felt in his life.
something even the ring and the violence couldn't offer.Â
there you were, all too pretty and wide eyed.Â
he barely heard gojo speak beside him anymore, the lanky man rambling on about some idiot from last weekâs fight who apparently called him out on twitter after.Â
sukuna ignored him completely because across the room sat a girl staring at him like sheâd seen a ghost.Â
and in some ways, he was your ghost.Â
he haunted you and lived under your skin in ways he was sure you didnât appreciate in the slightest.Â
his soulmate.Â
years of phantom feelings crashed together all at once so violently, it almost made him sick.Â
because the realization hit him harder than heâd anticipated and yes, he had anticipated this.Â
the moment heâd meet his soulmate.Â
well, he dreaded more than anticipated it.Â
it hit him hard because he realized that he knew this girl.Â
sukuna had never met you, yet, he bet he knew you more than the two girls hovering over you. more than fucking anyone.Â
you were the girl whose stress bled into his bones during finals week, the girl who wrapped her arms around herself at night and somehow lulled him to sleep from miles away.Â
you were real.Â
and you looked soft.Â
that was the first thing he took note of.Â
soft skin, soft wide eyes, soft pink shimmery gloss coating your plush lips he recognized only through phantom warmth heâd felt against his own skin before.Â
his soulmate was a pretty little thing, so pretty it almost made his chest ache. in your tiny skirt and halter top.
far too fucking pretty to belong anywhere near him.Â
âsukuna?âÂ
chosoâs voice cut through the haze faintly and sukuna snapped out of it, gaze finally leaving hers to glance at his friend who tilted his head towards the other side of the room.Â
sukuna resisted the urge to glance at you as he made his way across the room.
fuck, fuck, fuck!Â
this couldnât be happening, this was a fucking nightmare.Â
just as he made it across the room, he felt it.Â
warm fingertips brushing his own skin despite his hands at his sides.Â
his pulse stuttered once.Â
his gaze snapped to yours once more and your eyes widened instantly when you noticed his hand drift to his neck where your own hand was resting.Â
slowly and carefully, sukuna lifted his own hand.Â
his fingers brushed lightly against the side of his jaw, a barely there touch.Â
yet, across the room, your breath hitched sharply as warmth bloomed against your own jawline seconds later.Â
not imagined or coincidence. it was all real, so so real.Â
your stomach twisted violently.Â
oh no. no no no no.Â
shoko was gazing at you, âwhatâs wrong?!âÂ
you couldnât answer, eyes stuck on a pair of crimson that held you hostage.
her eyes narrowed as both her and utahime followed your gaze before catching sukunaâs eyes on you.Â
then they both looked between you both a total of five times before realization hit.Â
âwait,â shoko whispered harshly, hand shooting out to grip your arm, âWAIT.â
utahimeâs jaw physically fell open, âholy shitâŠâ
your heartbeat pounded so violently, you thought you might faint right then and there beneath the flashing red lights.
what you despised most is that it made sense.Â
of course it was him. a violent and dangerous underground fighter, fuck, that explained everything so perfectly.
if fate was a person, youâd have her by the neck right now.Â
because sukuna was still staring at you, as if he knew you already and perhaps, he did.Â
then horrifyingly, he smirked.Â
and suddenly, you understood exactly why the entire city feared ryomen sukuna.Â
sukuna moved before he could really think about it, jaw clenched but determined.
one second he stood on the other side of the room and the next, his body was already weaving through the crowd toward you like the bond itself had wrapped invisible fingers around his spine and dragged him to you. you. his soulmate.Â
people moved instantly to let him pass.Â
you took note of that immediately.Â
you noticed the way conversations died around him, the way bodies shifted out of his path and nobody dared touch him, even accidentally.Â
it was fear, you realized. people feared him.Â
the recognition made your stomach twist.Â
âoh my god,â shoko whispered harshly beside you, nails digging into your arm, âheâs coming over here!âÂ
âi can see that.â you hissed back faintly, though your voice barely sounded like your own.Â
fuck, you should leave. you should absolutely leave.Â
except, you couldnât move, body drilled to where you sat, frozen in place while ryomen fucking sukuna rossed the room toward you like some predator chasing prey.Â
closer and closer and closer.Â
until suddenly, all his 6â4 glory was towering above you.Â
your breath caught embarrassingly hard.Â
up close, he was worse.Â
taller than youâd imagined and broader too.Â
there were faint bruises scattered along his jawline beneath the dim lights, on the very spot that you woke up feeling sore. fresh cuts healed across his knuckles.Â
and his eyes, god, they looked at you with the same recognition burning through your own chest.Â
sukuna looked down at you for a moment too long.Â
fuck, you were even more ethereal up close.Â
that thought hit him first and annoyingly hardest.Â
his pretty little soulmate sitting curled into the edge of a leather couch looking at him with wide doe eyes, almost expectantly with a mix of fear and restraint.Â
âhey.âÂ
his voice slid down your spine like smoke.Â
low, dangerous and rough in a way even your mind couldnât conjure up.
fuck, was this really happening?
your throat tightened instantly, âhi.â
the word left you horrifyingly softer than youâd intended and sukunaâs lips twitched at the sound.Â
your voice was his favorite sound, instantly.Â
âum,â shoko hummed, eyes wide as she shared a glance with utahime, âweâll give you two a second.â
you almost wanted to yell in protest, but the two girls were already shuffling away, shooting you encouraging looks.Â
as you glanced up at the dangerous man once more, you felt your heart still in a way you hadnât ever felt before.Â
not in fear or apprehension but calm.Â
he made you feel calm, your body stilling and quieting in a way you hadnât expected.Â
regretfully, fuck, you despised it, but when that gentleness overcame you and you looked up at himâŠ
his disheveled pink locks, his handsome rugged features and his dark eyes, all of it was him.Â
and you felt stupid for trying to deny that this man was your soulmate.Â
who else would it be?Â
âiâm sukuna,â he stated lowly, moving to take a seat beside you, leaving an appreciative distance between you, âryomen sukuna.âÂ
your name left you softly with a nod.Â
as you gazed at each other, the same realization overcame you both.Â
even with barely an introduction, you knew each other.Â
while sukuna had only fond memories of what youâd done for him, your mind was riddled with poisonous ones.Â
this was the man who often trained in the middle of the night, filling you with soreness and a rush of adrenaline that left you sleepless most nights.Â
he was the one who fucked other girls knowing what that put you through.Â
your heart clenched.Â
beyond all those things, he was the one who hugged himself to sleep after that one night of utter hell.Â
he was the one who held a hot water bottle to his stomach when your cramps left you nauseated and pained in bed.Â
as much as you wanted to forget those things, to snap yourself out of the sad patheticness that riddled you, how could you?
how could you when those were the only memories that kept your hope that he wasnât a total monster alive?
your eyes travelled along his bloodied knuckles, âyou get those a lot.âÂ
sukunaâs fists instinctively clenched at the attention.
âand you burn yourself with whatever you do your hair with at least twice a week.â
your eyes widened instantly.Â
âand you get punched like every other day!âÂ
sukunaâs mouth twitched and you hated how your eyes drifted towards the movement and your heart stuttered.Â
âbarely.â sukuna stated cooly, a small smirk painting his features.Â
your eyes drifted toward him again before you could stop yourself.Â
and then you remembered.Â
every phantom feeling, every sleepless night and every ache.
all attached to him.Â
the violence, the pain, the girls.Â
your jaw tightened, "youâre not exactly the best person to be connected to, you know.âÂ
sukunaâs expression didnât shift much, still cool, but you felt it. the hollow drop in your stomach that wasnât yours. guilt.Â
real and immediate, it almost made you laugh in disbelief.Â
of course he felt guilty, he had to know he was a fucking nightmare.Â
sukuna leaned back slightly, jaw working once as his gaze flickered away from yours for half a second, âyeah, i bet.âÂ
your brows lifted, âthatâs it?âÂ
his eyes returned to yours, low and indifferent.Â
you scoffed, anger bubbling up so quickly, it nearly startled you, âthatâs all you have to say?âÂ
sukuna let out a breath through his nose, âwhat do you want me to say?â
âoh, i donât know,â you let out a sharp little laugh that held not an ounce of humor, âmaybe sorry would be a good place to start?!âÂ
sukunaâs head tilted, âsorry.âÂ
you stared at him in utter disbelief before a laugh left you once more, this time softer and dripped in something worse than anger, âwowâŠâÂ
sukunaâs eyes borrowed, âwhat?âÂ
âyouâre unbelievable is what!âÂ
âyou asked for sorry.âÂ
ânot like that!â you nsapped, voice rising just enough to have your cheeks flushing, ânot like youâre apologizing for stepping on my shoe!â
his expression hardened slightly and you felt it immediately, the irritation beginning to curl beneath his skin.Â
ugh, you hated how the closeness made both your emotions so heightened.Â
though, you hoped he could feel your rage.Â
"an apology isn't gonna change shit. won't make y'feel better either."
his words enraged you even more.
âyou have no idea what you put me through,â you continued, voice trembling despite you rbest efforts, ânone.âÂ
sukunaâs gaze darkened, âdonât do that.â
âdo what?âÂ
âact like i wasnât there too.âÂ
you blinked at him, something hot and ugly twisting in your chest.Â
was he for real?Â
âyou were there?â you repeated quietly, âyou were there?âÂ
his jaw clenched, âdonât-â
âno, please,â you leaned forward slightly, anger sharpening every word, âexplain it to me. because to my knowledge, you were the one making my life miserable while i was the one trying to keep us both sane!â
sukuna looked at you for a long moment, jaw clenching and unclenching. the lights washed over his face in flashes of red, making him look even more unreal than he already did.Â
âyou think i wanted this?â he stated more than asked and your heart clenched.Â
hurt shot through you, your eyes growing glassy against your will because you knew he wasnât referring to the pain heâd put you through.Â
he meant the soulmate thing in general, fate as a whole.Â
he didnât want you.
you bit the inside of your cheek, willing your tears to stay in your eyes before breathing out, âno. but neither did i.âÂ
silence settled between you then, not peaceful but loaded.Â
sukuna could physically feel your hurt and his eyes dropped briefly to your hands where they trembled in your lap.Â
your fingers curled instantly, too proud as you hid the movement.Â
it was too late. heâd seen it.Â
even worse, heâd felt it.
âi didnât know.â he stated lowly and you froze.Â
your eyes flickered up, âwhat?âÂ
his tongue pressed against the inside of his cheek, expression unreadable.Â
âat first,â he clarified, âi didnât know what it did to you.âÂ
your chest tightening, knowing what he was referring to and his words didnât soothe you in the slightest.Â
âand after?âÂ
in fact, it made it all worse.Â
especially as he said nothing.Â
your face fell slightly, all the anger in you cooling into something quieter and melancholic.Â
âafter, you knew.âÂ
his gaze remained on you as his fingers flexed once against his thigh, âyeah, i knew.âÂ
your eyes burned and you hated yourself for it. you hated that it still hurt despite knowing already, you hated that hearing him say it aloud made it real in a way the bond never had.Â
âwhy?â you asked, the one word absolutely humiliating as much as it was devastating.Â
sukuna looked away first and somehow, that hurt too, âbecause it was easier.âÂ
your lips parted faintly, âeasier?âÂ
he lout out a grunt, âif you hated me, you wouldnât look for me.âÂ
the words settled between you like something deadly.Â
for a second, you genuinely couldnât speak.Â
then you did, âthat is the stupidest, shittiest thing iâve ever heard.âÂ
hsi eyes snapped back to yours, scowling, âcareful.âÂ
âoh, fuck you!â you hissed lowly, âyou donât get to do that! you donât get to hurt me on purpose and then act like it was some noble sacrifice.âÂ
his jaw tightened, âit wasnât noble.âÂ
âyeah, no shit.âÂ
âit was necessary.âÂ
you laughed once, incredulous, ânecessary? well, congrats, you got what you wanted, i absolutely fucking despise you.âÂ
sukunaâs jaw clenched, eyes glaring at you, âgood. because you donât know shit about me, this saves us both the hassle.â
âi donât know you?â you shot back, âi know you more than anyone, probably. i know your body hurts more often than they donât. i know you clench your jaw when youâre mad. i know you canât sleep because of your nightmares and unless somebody practcially forces your nervous system to shut down, you could go days without it. i know youâre so angry at the fucking world, it makes you so hateful.â
sukuna went still, too still.Â
you swallowed hard, eyes burning once more, âand i know that for years, i was the one cleaning up the damage you left behind.âÂ
his eyes darkened, âcleaning up?âÂ
âyes,â your voice cracked despite yourself, âme. i was the one hugging myself to sleep because you wouldnât. i was the one stretching every morning because your body always felt like fucking concrete. i was the one coloring like a goddamn toddler at three in the morning because it was the only thing that made your anger stop choking me!âÂ
sukuna said nothing and you hated that even more.Â
you wanted him to argue back, to answer, to fucking care.Â
âdo you know how pathetic that feels?â you whispered, âtaking care of someone who kept hurting me?âÂ
his expression shifted, barely, but you felt it again.Â
the guilt, even deeper this time.Â
sukuna looked at you like he wanted to say something cruel and couldnât quite manage it, settling with, âyou didnât have to do all that.âÂ
your laugh came out watery, tears now trickling down your heated cheeks.Â
fuck, you felt nauseous, you felt so fucking sick.Â
âyeah, i know that now.âÂ
something passed across his face then, a flicker of pain so quick, you almost missed it.Â
but the bond didnât allow you to miss anything. you felt it bloom in your own chest, sharp and unwanted. his.Â
for one terrible second, you almost let it soften you.Â
almost.Â
because there it was again.Â
that tiny, stupid sliver of hope youâd spend years nurturing because it was the only thing that kept you mildly sane.Â
the one that whispered that maybe he wasn't all cruelty. maybe there was something beneath all that violence and pain.Â
maybe the boy who held a hot water bottle to his stomach when your cramps got bad had to exist somewhere inside the man sitting in front of you.Â
you looked at him then, through your blurry vision, really and truly looked.Â
the hard line of his jaw, the coldness in his eyes and the casual arrogance sitting across his shoulders like armor.Â
and that hope crumbled quietly inside your chest.Â
not dramatically or all at once, but piece by piece, like something old finally accepting it had been dead for a long time.Â
utter disappointment filled you then. you should have known better.Â
this shouldn't be surprising.Â
sukuna had spent years telling you exactly who he was, painting you the worst image of himself and you had hoped it was just that.Â
the worst of himself.Â
except the worst was all of him.Â
sukuna was cruel. not because he didnât know better but because he did.Â
because heâd known what hurt you and decided hurting you was easier than wanting you.Â
you swallowed around the ache in your throat, suddenly exhausted in a way a thousand years of sleep couldnât fix.Â
all you wanted was to be home now, cuddled up with ani in your room alone.Â
âright,â you whispered, nodding once to yourself.Â
sukunaâs brows pulled together slightly, âright what?âÂ
you pushed yourself to your feet, smoothing trembling hands over the front of your skirt because you needed something to do. anything that didnât involve looking at him.Â
âthis was enlightening.âÂ
his eyes narrowed, âsit down.âÂ
the command sparked something sharp beneath your ribs, the thorn twisting in your heart.Â
you let out a hollow laugh, âfuck you.âÂ
his jaw flexed, âdonât make a scene.âÂ
your name left him then and you hated the way your stomach fluttered at the melody of it in his voice.Â
fuck, your heart hurt.Â
because he was your soulmate. yours.
because some sick, twisted part of you had expected the universe to redeem itself when you finally found him.Â
you expected the first moment to feel like every story youâd grown up hearing, witnessed amongst your friends.Â
warmth, recognition and relief.Â
instead, you were standing in front of the man who had turned your body into a battlefield and your heart into collateral damage.Â
âi hope i never see you again.âÂ
something flickered across his face then and you didnât stay long enough to decipher it.Â
you turned around, the crowd swallowing you almost immediately as you walked away.Â
music slammed back into your skull, bodies pressing close as you pushed through them with shaking hands and blurred vision.Â
your chest felt too tight, lungs too small for the oxygen your body ached for.Â
behind you, you felt sukuna rise before you saw it. the immediate pull.
his presence growing closer and your heart stuttered stupidly.Â
some miserable, pathetic part of you sparked alive at the thought before you could kill it.Â
maybe he did care.Â
maybe he was going to take back all the words he regretted, that he would stop you and apologize properly this time.Â
he would say what youâve been waiting years to feel.Â
the thought was so humiliating, it almost made you sick.Â
âfuck are you lookinâ at?!âÂ
you heard his voice aimed at the crowd of people that were watching you both, probably since your conversation on the couch.Â
you shoved through the door and stepped into the narrow hallway outside the main room, the music muffling instantly behind you.Â
the air was cooler here, damp with rain and cigarette smoke, blue neon bleeding through the cracked windows at the end of the corridor.
you took in a breath like you hadnât breathed in days, eyes shutting as your heart hammered against your chest, trying to simply process everything that had taken place.Â
âhey.â his voice followed you out and you froze, heart stilling.Â
stupid, traitorous thing.Â
you turned slowly, eyes fluttering open.Â
sukuna stood a few feet away, tall and shadowed beneath the hallway light.Â
away from the party, he seemed even more dangerous. less like a person and more like a warning your body had spent seven years failing to understand.Â
he was an enigma.Â
for one breath, neither of you spoke.Â
your hope stood there too, fragile and shaking, fucking pitiful.Â
waiting.Â
sukunaâs gaze dragged over your face once, catching on the wetness beneath your eyes and his expression tightened faintly.Â
say it, you thought bitterly.Â
say sorry! say you didnât mean it!Â
say something!
his jaw worked once, âno one can know.âÂ
your brows furrowed, the hope dying cleanly.Â
âexcuse me?âÂ
sukuna stepped closer, voice lower now.Â
his mouth opened to clarify when his gaze met your own once more.Â
your wide glassy eyes. your pretty face that was streaked with tears, your plump bitten lips.Â
the little sniffles that left you, making his ribs ache.Â
and suddenly, he froze, the words stuck in his throat.Â
fuck, he had to get it together.Â
âabout this.âÂ
your lips parted faintly, âabout us?â
the word us felt absolutely pathetic in your mouth.Â
all too soft and hopeful. undeserved, even.Â
something in his eyes shifted at the sound of it but it was gone before you could hold onto it.Â
âthere is no us.âÂ
oh. you actually felt that one.Â
not through the bond, nor as some phantom ache borrowed from him.Â
the pain was yours, all yours.Â
you laughed once, quiet and disbelieving as you took a small step back, âwowâŠâ
sukuna followed you, taking one step forward as his jaw clenched, âlisten to me-âÂ
âno,â you shook your head slowly, voice trembling, âno, i think i understand perfectly.âÂ
sukunaâs eyes darkened, âyou really donât.âÂ
âoh my god,â you shook your head, âi canât believe i thought-âÂ
you stopped, humiliation burning up your throat.Â
sukuna stared, taking a step closer, his chest now brushing your chin, âthought what?âÂ
his voice was almost desperate and you swallowed, blinking hard, ânothing.âÂ
his face tightened and he felt it anyway, of course he did.Â
the hope and hurt.Â
the fact that some tiny, unbearable part of you had wanted him to come after you because he simply couldnât let you leave.Â
sukuna looked away first as you took a step back. fucking coward.Â
âitâs dangerous.â he stated as you stared at the side of his face.
âdangerous?âÂ
âyes.âÂ
âfor who?âÂ
his gaze cut back to yours, âfor you.âÂ
you almost laugh but he continued before you could.Â
âpeople know me and if they know about you, theyâll use you. you make me weak.âÂ
the words landed colder than you'd expected.Â
sukuna watched you closely, as if waiting for the fear to register and maybe it did.Â
somewhere deep, deep down, but anger got there first.Â
âso thatâs what this is?â you whispered, tears leaving you without you noticing, âdamage control?âÂ
his silence was answer enough and you nodded faintly, tears burning hot once more.Â
âright.âÂ
âyou need to keep your mouth shut about it.âÂ
you flinched before you could stop yourself and sukuna paused, regret flashing through instantly.Â
âdonât talk to me like that.â you stated lowly and his jaw clenched.Â
âiâm trying to keep you safe.âÂ
âoh, how big of you.âÂ
the hallway seemed to shrink around you both.Â
outside, rain tapped gently against the glass.Â
inside, bass thudded like a second heartbeat through the walls.Â
you looked at him then, this man that fate had tied to you with an invisible string and cruelty dressed up as destiny. and for the first time since youâd felt him at sixteen, you stopped wondering what it would be like to find him.Â
because now you knew and god, you wish you didnât.Â
it felt like losing something youâd never even had.Â
âis that all?â you questioned lowly, clearing your throat once.
sukuna stared at you, nose flaring and throat bobbing once, âyeah.âÂ
another piece of you gave out as you nodded, âokay.âÂ
the word was so calm, it made his eyes sharpen.Â
you turned away, walking past him but his hand caught your wirst before you could take full step.Â
skin met skin and the bond went silent, completely and utterly silent.Â
no buzzing or aching or distance.Â
just him, all warm and real. terribly real.Â
your breath hitched at his touch. it was the first time heâd ever touched you.Â
sukuna froze too, fingers wrapped around your wrist like heâd touched fire and couldnât make himself pull away.Â
for one second, just one, all the cruelty fell quiet.Â
and you felt him beneath it, scared and lonely, wanting and waiting.Â
you felt it and you hated him for letting you feel it now.Â
slowly, you looked down at his hand then back up at him, âlet go.âÂ
his grip tightened by a fraction, âthis is the best thing for the both of us.âÂ
your face crumpled before you could stop it.Â
you pulled your wrist free and this time, he let you.Â
âoh, trust me, not having to be stuck with you? i couldnât agree more.â venom laced your words as sukunaâs expression changed, tightened and you felt the hurt then.Â
sharp and immediate and you were glad for it.Â
you turned and walked away then, tears streaming down your cheeks and a sob left you as soon as you were out of his vicinity.Â
for the first time, the bond didn't feel like a thread pulling you closerâŠ
it felt like noose.
â
an | was so late with this but had the worst past few days so SORRY! anyways PLSSS lmk what u think cuz i'm iffy abt the direction of this BUT this is lowk my fav thing i've written omg! this is kinda like a prologue pt2, next chapters will deffo be longer! i cannot wait to write more of these two and sukuna's a dick but bear w him ! also each chapter in the masterlist will be titled a song and i recommend listening to it while reading for the vibes đ«Ą
also lowk need toji BAD i wanna give him some lore so lmk if u want a one-shot of him in this au!



