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Guys are genuinely so fucking funny because what do you mean you're barely at the entrance of freakville and simultaneously under the illusion that you're Johhny Sins.
synopsis & a/n: how everything started between Reader and Langdon. This is a snippet from the this chapter from the series "Three Is A Crowd". I felt like this part of their story deserved its own post.
Frank Langdon didn't remember the last time his cars Bluetooth connected to his phone instead of yours.
Not since the first time you ever got into his car after your car got towed because you parked somewhere you shouldn't have while trying to make it into the ED in time for your shift.
You had stood there, asking him if he could drop you off with that annoyed expression on your face and a slight edge in your voice. It was bizarre how you acted, like somehow he was at fault for your troubles and you were doing him a favour by asking to be dropped home.
As if that wasn't enough, you had the audacity to judge his music taste. Huffing and puffing for the entirety of the song, lasting approximately two minutes before grabbing his phone from the center console and unlocking it by holding it up in front of his face- with no regards to the fact that he kinda needed to see the road because well, he was the one driving the car.
You had scoffed and rolled your eyes while scrolling through his playlist as he watched you from his peripheral vision. He didn't last too long before sighing in defeat and walking you through the steps to connect your phone to the cars Bluetooth as he muttered under his breath
"Let's see your perfect playlist, bright spark."
You rolled your eyes at that, unaffected- and hit play anyway.
He loved it.
He hated that he loved it.
And for some time after that, he would hate that he loves you. Still being married to Abby while every part of him wanted nothing more than he wanted you.
You had that affect.
Your stupid music taste also grew on him -just like you- after a while, with songs from a thousand different genres forced into a single playlist that made him burst into laughter when Unchain My Heart was followed with Hit 'Em Up and you didn't look fazed in the slightest, singing along and ignoring him while watching the road.
You put on Lips Of An Angel during a drive to the hospital after you first hooked up while he was still married to Abby.
That was when he realised- that was your weird way of communicating with him without having to open your mouth, being the emotionally stunted mess you were.
After that, he couldn't find it in himself to listen to anything in his car if you weren't sitting in the passenger seat, choosing which song to put on with that focused expression on your face while you chewed on your bottom lip.
And hence, you would hold your own as the matriarch of his car’s Bluetooth, just as you had claimed your place in every other part of his life.
you are so kind and emotionally intelligent… thank you wise writer…
Omg stoppp you're gonna give me delusions of grandeur- jk jk
Also I have a question for you guys, I'm new to tumblr and I dont really know how things work around here. So I just answer all your questions bc it makes me happy idkkk-
Like when I see a question I go "Ooo a questionnn i better answer it rn 🥳🤸♀️" but pls tell me if I look insane bc I'm not sure if this also works like dms but for if you wanted to be anonymous?
I guess what I'm trying to say is if you guys ask me something I WILL ANSWER IT no matter what it is- so if that's not neccesary you can just say "hey! there's no need to answer this cause you'll look like a lunatic" at the end or something like that. Idk is that also weird to ask?
I'm such a mess rn idk dont compliment me again bc as you can see i get flustered guys!!
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So um... Put a finger down if you thought you were an ENTP for 5 years then someone says you could be an ENFP supressing their feelings which makes you realise you haven't actually been able to feel anything real for esp the last 2 years of your life -bc life happens and you're an emotionally stunted mess in general- and now you're not really sure and it doesn't really matter but you also realise maybe you don't know yourself all that well and start analysing and picking apart your every move-
O-kay then. Tough crowd. #yes i think im hilarious sue me
disliked by her coworkers, feeling like a second choice in her relationship, langdon lowkey adding fuel to the fire of her insecurity because he’s a freak, offering the reassurance she needs to someone else. i think my only option at this point would be to kill myself.
Hmm... I wouldn't exactly say she's disliked by them. They in fact like her enough to make sure whenever the nightshift crew hangs out -whether it be a a chill night at a dive bar or just relatively silent breakfasts at 8 am where everyone's exhausted from last nights shift- they make sure to invite her! In fact, they didn't have a single hang out that didn't include Reader since she came to the PTMC.
But of course when the news got out that she was sleeping with Frank Langdon while he was still married to Abby -not knowing that they were actually already separated and waiting on the divorce proceedings- they weren't exactly thrilled.
All the stuff about morality aside, one couldn't exactly say Frank Langdon was a fan favorite in the ED after his return from rehab.
It's not so much that they dislike Reader because they think she's a bad person, but definitely more about the fact that they're pretty sure she's setting herself up for heartbreak.
And yes, while it's true that she feels like the second choice, I wouldn't say that's the case. If there's one thing you need to know about Reader, that's the fact that she's the definition of an unreliable narrator!
As I've said before, while Frank absolutely loves it when she gets jealous and loses her mind, he's also going out of his way to show her that he cares about her.
I mean, come on- this guy is paying child support, the rent of their apartment, utilities and car payments and somehow doesn't shy away from spending ridiculous amounts of money to take her out to dinner on up-scale restaurants every week. Not that he likes them enough to put a hole in his wallet but he does it anyway, because he know she loves it everytime.
And not just the dates because in this fic Frank Langdon is a man of romantic and thoughtful gestures- but I won't be giving too much away because I'll probably make that into another chapter!
So yeah, Reader is definitely her own worst enemy in this whole situation.
I wonder who she was based off of... Definitely a mistery...
synopsis: Reader being delusionally jealous and a complete fucking idiot (um... sorry guys)
a/n: this chapter was inspired into existence by this anon's question- thank you btw! Also, I tried to fully immerse you in the Readers mindset but try to remain objective because #unreliable narrator.
tags: fem!reader× Frank Langdon ×Mel King suggestive language-MDNI!, self induced angst(lol), jealousy, date night vibes, flashback to how they fell in love!
《This is a chapter of "Three Is a Crowd" and you can find the previous parts here.》
Frank Langdon had a habit of playing favorites, and you hated every second of it.
And as if that wasn't eating at you enough already, you couldn't even hold him accountable because well,
How would you even bring it up?
Hey, I know you're also dating my best friend and I know I said it was completely fine but I didn't agree to being the second favorite?
Because the problem wasn't Mel or even the nature of your dynamic, it was Frank Langdon looking at you like you were his girlfriend and looking at Mel as if she hung the moon.
And you knew you had no standing because at first glance, he seemed to give fair treatment.
No, that wasn't right. At first glance, it seemed like he favoured you.
Like how he chose to keep his relationship with Mel a secret from the people at work. People already knew you were hooking up before he got divorced- which didn't make you look the best in the eyes of your coworkers.
So Frank offered that you would get the title of girlfriend, which came with the full package- HR meetings, relationship disclosure forms and all that jazz.
You knew Mel was hurt. She felt like he chose you to show off to everyone, like he deemed you worthy of openly being his partner. Like he wanted to keep her a secret and announce how much he loved you instead.
You, on the other hand, knew that couldn't be further than the truth. Because you knew Frank Langdon. You knew how his mind worked. You knew this wasn't about you.
It was about Mel. It always was.
See, what Mel didn't realise- and how she didn't was beyond you- was that if her relationship with Frank ever got out, she wouldn't like the position she would find herself in.
You were thick-skinned, assertive. Quick witted. You knew how to shut people up. With a sharp mind and a sharper tongue at that, you knew how to get yourself out of situations where you were at a disadvantage- usually because, well, you were in the wrong.
He knew that. So he threw you in front of Mel like a human shield. At least that's what it felt like. It didn't matter their lingerings touches or how they always seemed to find a moment alone- in the breakroom, the ambulance bay, in empty rooms where a patient was just discharged, no one would be suspicious of anything going on between them.
Frank Langdon, who had just gotten divorced, who already had a girlfriend in the ED, somehow getting involved with Mel King? The sweetest, most innocent resident in probably the whole hospital, who was the last person to date someone with a girlfriend. Yeah, you were pretty sure anyone who claimed that would be placed on a physchiatric hold by Dr. Robby.
And so you accepted the arrangement. You cared about Mel King more than you cared about anyone else in your life. You would do anything you can as her friend to protect her reputation and make sure no one had any moral leverage to use against her. Even if she couldn't see that yet.
So you tried to get Mel to understand this wasn't because Frank favoured you, it was in fact the opposite.
But everytime you implied that might be the case, she looked at you like you had told her aliens just landed on earth and they wanted to start their residency at PTMC so you were going to be put on administrative leave.
She would defend Frank, giving you examples of how he's clearly more affectionate with you.
Like the how he sent flowers to you at work while you worked the night shift -which was, in your mind, clearly to steer the attention away from him and Mel.
How he always made sure to pick you up at the end of your shift and drop you home, only to drive back to the hospital with Mel an hour later to make it in time before the day shift starts.
How he planned elaborate date nights at the kind of overpriced places that charged you a ridiculous amount of money and justified it under the guise of fine dining and magical ambiance.
Oh she loved bringing those up.
Of course Mel cited them like they were peer-reviewed proof of how much he cared about making you happy.
Okay, you weren't unreasonable. You could accept that it was a considerate act.
And yes, Frank did take you out on a lot more dates than he did Mel.
He would take you out at least once a week, twice if you had time off from the hospital.
Sometimes it would be a casual thing, you would get coffee, have some dessert while he watched the spoon disappear into your mouth, the chocalate smearing against the corner of your lip, as you closed your eyes and let out a satisfied sound that made his dick rock hard under the table between you instantly, his mind devising a step by step plan about the positions he would put your body in once you got back home- just to hear that noise escape your lips again.
And sometimes, it would be a candlelit dinner at an upscale restaurant.
You would be lying if you said they weren't your favourite, because of course they were.
He knew they were.
You loved getting out of your scrubs, dressing up to the nines and obsessing over the smallest details to make sure you looked perfect all over.
And Frank loved making it into a whole thing. He would wait until you were ready, stepping out of the apartment and deliberately locking himself out by letting the door close, only to knock a few seconds later and wait for you to open it. You'd either roll your eyes or tel him he's sooo stupid for pulling the same move everytime. But there was not bite to your words, not when he could clearly see that you were struggling to keep your mouth a straight line, trying to stop the smile pulling at your lips from taking over your whole face.
And he would drive you both to the restaurant with one hand on the wheel and the other on your thigh, mindlessly tapping to the rhythm of whichever song you decided you would be listening during the drive to the restaurant.
He didn't remember the last time the cars Bluetooth connected to his phone instead of yours. Not since the first time you ever got into his car after your car got towed because you parked somewhere you shouldn't have while trying to make it into the ED in time for your shift. You had stood there, asking him if he could drop you off with that annoyed expression on your face and a slight edge in your voice.
It was bizarre how you acted, like somehow he was at fault for your troubles and you were doing him a favour by asking to be dropped home.
As if that wasn't enough, you had the audacity to judge his music taste. Huffing and puffing for the entirety of the song, lasting approximately two minutes before grabbing his phone from the center console and unlocking it by holding it up in front of his face- with no regards to the fact that he kinda needed to see the road because well, he was the one driving the car.
You had scoffed and rolled your eyes while scrolling through his playlist as he watched you from his peripheral vision.
He didn't last too long before sighing in defeat and walking you through the steps to connect your phone to the cars Bluetooth as he muttered under his breath
"Let's see your perfect playlist, bright spark."
You rolled your eyes at that, unaffected- and hit play anyway.
He loved it.
He hated that he loved it.
And for some time after that, he would hate that he loves you. Still being married to Abby while every part of him wanted nothing more than he wanted you.
You had that affect.
Your stupid music taste also grew on him -just like you- after a while, with songs from a thousand different genres forced into a single playlist that made him burst into laughter when Unchain My Heart was followed with Hit 'Em Up and you didn't look fazed in the slightest, singing along and ignoring him while watching the road.
You put on Lips Of An Angel during a drive to the hospital after you first hooked up while he was still married to Abby.
That was when he realised- that was your weird way of communicating with him without having to open your mouth, being the emotionally stunted mess you were.
After that, he couldn't find it in himself to listen to anything in his car if you weren't sitting in the passenger seat, choosing which song to put on with that focused expression on your face while you chewed on your bottom lip.
So you would hold your own as the matriarch of his car's Bluetooth, just as you did with every other part of his life, and you would arrive at the restaurant- sometimes it would be too expensive, sometimes you would be too dressed up for the place and get mad at him for not warning you about it. But he was insistent on keeping the tradition of keeping the place a secret until you were there. Though he would check in with Mel first, showing her the place on Google maps and going through the menu on the website, only deciding when she said everything was good and you would enjoy the food.
You didn't like that at first. It felt unfair to Mel because for some reason he never took her out on dates. Maybe once a month to somewhere you go in jeans and a t-shirt.
While you had this whole ceremony of trying on clothes as the both of them watched, trying to find something that would fit the dress code for whatever mysterious place Frank was taking you.
Mel would watch you two as you tried on different outfits, came out of your room and waited for Frank to tell you if it was fit for where he chose. He would arch an eyebrow and say things like "Sure, if you want everyone to be looking at you the entire time." or "People are gonna think you're a celebrity if you wear that coat and we can't enjoy dinner if you're giving autographs the whole time."
And Mel would just be watching you guys with a huge smile on her face, sometimes giggling at Frank's words and other times at your questionable outfits. Like she didn't mind the obvious unfair treatment that he was giving her.
Then you asked Mel and she explained how she didn't really like dinner dates or anything of the sort. You sat there listening to her explain how they made her feel all awkward, like she had to put on a performance.
How she felt umcomfortable in situations where sex seemed like the expected next step.
Now she was talking about how her and Frank instead go out to see a movie that just came out or to hang out at some nerd-central-convention (as you called it), how they sometimes go hiking even though neither of them like it or go to a museum in a different city, just a few hours away by car. And how she felt more comfortable maintaining their already existing routine, so you had no reason to worry about Frank being unfair by only taking you out on dates.
You were still hung up on one sentence as she made a self deprecating joke about how she's still weird about sex and all things related to it.
"What do you mean?" You said in a confused tone.
"Huh?"
"What do you mean by- um... Sex being a routine. What does that have to with date nights?"
Her eyes widened at that, her hands fidgeting in her lap as she looked away shyly.
"Y-you know, you guys go out and come back a-and... sometimes I take a walk but generally I choose to have a sleepover with Becca or Trinity? You never realised?"
Your still looked completely lost and Mel couldn't help but press her lips to a smile, still trying to keep herself from giggling.
"Y-you um... you kinda tend to go crazy with um... your voice and other things... I-I mean it's different when you're happy," she said with flushed cheeks, "when he makes you happy. Like after a date night." She adds hastily before taking a beat, like she just realised that part might've been what offended you, "I-I'm not saying that it bothers me! I just... I mean generally when I come back in the morning the whole house is a mess so... I thought you guys enjoyed having the house to yourselves anyway-"
You shook your head momentarily in the middle of her rant, blinking your eyes a few times like you just snapped out of a trance.
Of course this was it. That was the reason you got the one thing Mel didn't. Because she didn't want it in the first place. Because you were giving him something in return afterwards that he didn't want Mel to feel pressured into.
Instead he took her out on field trips and movie nights while you were all over him- ready to fuck like rabbits after sitting in a dimly lit restaurant for a an hour and having ,what you thought was, a conversation that drew you closer and leaving you feeling completely naked and vulnerable in front of him and somehow, you were okay with it.
But it wasn't the movies, the museum, the hiking trail, the convention. It wasn't the things that mattered. It was what got you wet and jump his bones the moment you got back inside your apartment. Of course you were stupid to think for one second that he was somehow being unfair to Mel while you were the one getting screwed over. Literally.
You cringed at the memory of yourself blushing like an idiot everytime you walked up to the host stand and heard "Mr and Mrs. Langdon?"
How you would giggle softly and nudge his side by your elbow, rolling your eyes and correcting the hostess like it mattered, "We're not married, but the reservation should be under Langdon, yes."
He would clutch at his chest, teasing you with a small smile as he pretended to be hurt by your words.
"Come on, sweetheart, you can't just act like that because we had a fight."
And the hostess would always smile at the pet name, walking you to your table while talking about how much of a sweet couple you are.
Those damn pet names that had everyone around you swooning, unable to see them for what they really were.
Since the first time you hooked up, Frank seemed to forget what a first name was. He called you every other pet name under the sun, and you wanted to smash something on his head because of it.
Honey, sweetheart, love, baby, pinky-
Oh you didn't even wanna think about how he called you Pinky for 2 months because you happened to make the mistake of losing a patients pinky toe that was given to you in a to-go box, because apparently the patient worked at a restaurant and had an accident involving a clumsy coworker dropping the knife on his feet.
Well, the to-go box was unfortunately thrown out by a nurse when you sat it down on the nurses station and left for a second to get the enough ice and saline alongside the waterproof bag to place it in.
Worst part was that you couldn't even get mad at her enough to chew her out- it was her first day and she had the eyes of a cartoon lamb as she apologised with her trembling bottom lip and a shaky voice that tugged at your heart strings.
Oh come on! Who even cares about their pinky toe enough to wanna get it reattached to their body?
Well, apparently not everyone agreed with you considering Dr. Park had torn into you so throughly that you experienced PTSD everytime you needed to go up to the surgical floor for the next 5 months.
And Frank clearly found the whole ordeal hilarious. He would call you Pinky during a datenight- night ruined, during sex- which spoiled your mood so badly that you knew you wouldn't be able to have an orgasm in the next half an hour until you, hopefully, forgot about it.
But other than that one, they were always sweet.
He would wrap his arms around you while you were cooking dinner, trailing kisses along your jaw and neck and whispering those stupid nicknames he liked so much.
"You're making dinner for us? Hm? You're so sweet baby. Who'd think you would turn out to be such a catch? Maybe I should put a ring on you, hm sweetheart? Wife you up so all this unpaid labor isn't for nothing. You're being such a doll, you need some sort of compensation-"
Oh, how much you wanted to slap that stupid smirk off his smug face in those moments.
Mel thought the pet names were because he liked you so much that he felt the need to put it into words. But you knew better, of course.
The issue was, he never once called Mel a pet name. Like her name was sacred, like he wouldn't dare call her anything other than that.
Like everytime he got to utter her name was some sort of blessing and he wouldn't miss any chance he got to feel that single syllable roll off his tongue.
𝑀𝑒𝑙
𝑴𝒆𝒍
𝑴𝒆𝒍
Oh come on. Like you were stupid enough to not see through his blatant favoritism.
previous “three’s a crowd” anon (sorry i enjoy asking questions lol) - do you think frank and mel are aware of how insecure reader is about them? and do you think there’s anything they could do that would make reader feel more secure or is that jealousy just kind of inherent to their dynamic?
First of all pls dont apologize bc I happen to love answering them! Now onto the topic at hand,
I think Mel is pretty clueless about how much the reader is struggling with this because she simply doesn't see herself as someone that could "compete" with Reader- let me explain- so the Reader is normally an extremely confident person & she's really attractive. She's mouthy, flirty and she's the life of the party in any environment she feels comfortable in. And during the span of their friendship before Frank came into the picture, Mel watched her get asked out by patients, residents and even a few attendings from the surgical floor (new chapter idea soft launch wink wink ;) So to sum it up, Reader is everything Mel she wishes she was in social settings. And because of that, she can't even see how jealous/insecure Reader gets- even when it's happening right in front of her!
Frank on the other hand, as I've mentioned in the prologue of the series, definitely gets off on seeing them get jealous of each other because he's a fucking asshole (oops!) Of course he reassures them to the best of his abilities and tries to mantain a delicate equilibrium. I mean, he's not a narcissist or anything. He definitely couldn't handle actually hurting either of them. He just likes the way it makes him feel, how the two women she loves most in the world also love him enough to get jealous of each other, especially considering the state of his life and his relationship with the other people in it. I mean, think about it-
His wife divorced him, his once mentor can't stand seeing his face, the residents act like he's a ticking time bomb- to sum it up, the guy is pretty sure everyone hates him and he's an unloveable pos. But then, not one, but two amazing women show up, despite being the complete opposite of each other, and they both decide he's worth being jealous of- like loving him wasn't enough of a blessing!
So to answer your last question, Reader isn't receiving any reassurance for shit! Until she's so paranoid and irritated that she starts making it everyone's problem and things generally blow up on her face- lol
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reader in “three’s a crowd” constantly being jealous and paranoid she’s so real
She's just like her mama, what can i say? 😝but also jokes aside, she feels that way bc frank and mels bond is so unique and intense and it makes her a bit insecure 😮💨
Brendon Park x Reader. 18+ MDNI. Power imbalance. corruption kink. bully kink. degradation. manipulation. biting. enemies to no-other-choice-but-him
The engine isn't turning over.
You sit with your hands on the wheel and your foot on the brake and you listen to the sound of nothing happening. The key is in the ignition. You turned it and... nothing. Not even a click or a stutter; nothing your brain can latch onto and diagnose. Just the key, turned, and the absolute refusal of two thousand pounds of metal and combustion engineering to do the one thing it exists to do.
You try again.
Nothing.
Your hands are still on the wheel. You knuckles have gone pale across the ridges, tendons standing out beneath skin that's been washed so many times today the texture has gone papery and tight.
You're gripping the wheel the way you'd grip the edge of a stretcher, the way you grip things when the alternative is letting your hands shake where people can see them, and you can feel the vibrations traveling up through your forearms into your shoulders where it meets the tension that's been living in your trapezius since approximately six forty five this morning when Dr. Park looked at your patient pre-op notes and said "Did you write this with your eyes closed?"
You breathe.
The parking garage is nearly empty. The late night shadows and overhead fluorescents are doing their usual thing- that sickly amber wash that makes everything look darker and more jaundiced, turns concrete pillars and painted lines into something out of a liminal space photograph. Your shift ended nine minutes ago. You've been sitting in this car for three of those minutes and you're no closer to leaving than you were when you got in.
You try the ignition a third time because you are a person who went to medical school, which means you are clinically incapable of accepting a result without attempting to replicate it, and the result is the same.
Silence.
The dashboard stays dark. The engine stays dead. Your car, the one last reliable thing you have left in your life has chosen today- today- of all days, to stop working.
Something behind your sternum cracks, a seam letting go, a thread that's been holding two pieces of fabric together finally giving up under the accumulated weight of seventeen hours of Park's voice in your ear, Park's corrections on your chart, Park's particular way of standing just inside your peripheral vision so that you could never fully forget he's watching. The sound he makes when you do something wrong, a small exhalation through his nose that somehow communicates more disappointment than a full sentence. The way clicks his tongue when you fumbled the angle of the retractors, not loud enough for the scrub nurse to hear, pitched just for you, intimate in its cruelty.
You get out of the car.
The concrete is gritty under your sneakers. The garage has that particular underground acoustics thing where every sound arrives twice, once directly and once as an echo off the low ceiling, so the slam of your door comes back to you a half second later, duller, like the garage is mocking you. You walk to the front of the car. You pull the hood release. You prop the hood up with the little metal arm and you stare at the engine.
You have no idea what you’re looking at.
You know this. You are aware, in a detached and increasingly unhinged way, that you possess exactly zero mechanical knowledge, that the greasy labyrinth of hoses and reservoirs and metal components in front of you might as well be quantum mechanics for all the good looking at it is going to do. But you’re looking anyway, because the alternative is standing in an empty parking garage at eleven pm and crying, and you are not going to cry. You are not. You’ve made it through seventeen hours without crying and you are not going to let a dead battery or a seized alternator or whatever the fuck is wrong be the thing that-
Your eyes are wet.
You blink. Hard. Twice. You sniff, once, sharp, and press the back of your wrist against your nose and stare at the engine and try to convince yourself that you are absolutely, categorically not falling apart in a parking garage. The fluorescent light catches the moisture on your lashes and turns it amber. A tear escapes down the side of your nose and you swipe it away with your knuckle so hard the skin stings.
Headlights bloom across the concrete behind you.
The light stretches your shadow forward, elongates it across the front of your car, and for a second you’re just annoyed; someone pulling through on their way out, someone who got to have a normal end to their shift and get in their functioning car and leave. The engine behind you is idling, smooth and low, and it doesn’t pass. It slows. It stops.
A door opens.
You don’t turn around because some self preserving corner of your brain already knows. Before the footsteps, before the particular rhythm of that walk- unhurried, deliberate, the gait of a man who has never once rushed to be anywhere because everywhere he goes adjusts to accommodate his arrival- you know who it is.
You know the way you know a headache is about to become a migraine. The way you know a patient is about to code before the monitors catch up. A full body premonition, cellular and certain.
Park’s footsteps stop somewhere behind your left shoulder.
You keep staring at the engine. Your vision has gone blurry, half tears, half exhaustion, half the flat refusal of your eyes to focus on anything that isn’t a pillow. You can feel him behind, the shift in pressure and temperature that changes the quality of the air against the back of your neck.
He doesn’t say anything for five seconds. You count them.
Then he leans past you.
His arm enters your field of vision from the left and he reaches into the engine compartment with the casualness of a man who reaches into open body cavities for a living and finds a car engine charmingly simple by comparison. His shoulder is close enough to yours that you can feel the warmth radiating off him through his clothes.
You catch it then, his cologne, or whatever it is, something clean and warm and slightly woody that cuts through the garage smell of concrete and motor oil and settles into the space between your throat and your chest with an specificity that makes you want to bite down on something.
He smells good. Offensively, inappropriately good. And you hate him for it with a purity that borders on religious, that causes you to jerk back, take several steps away with your arms crossed over your chest and your teeth clenched so tight your jaw is clicking.
He doesn’t let you get very far before. “Come here.”
He says it without looking up from the engine compartment, one hand braced on the frame, the other buried somewhere in the tangle of hoses and cables, and he says come here like he’s calling a dog that pissed on the carpet.
You don’t move.
“I said come here. I’m not going to say it again.”
You move and he grabs your wrist, fingers closing around delicate bones, and pulls you forward until you’re standing beside him with your hip against the bumper and your face approximately eighteen inches from an engine block you couldn’t identify at gunpoint.
“Look.” He positions your hand over a cable terminal crusted with greenish white buildup. Presses your fingers down onto the corroded metal and holds them there. “Feel that?”
You feel it. Gritty. Calcified. Wrong.
“That’s neglect.” He says it close to your ear. Not whispering. Just close. “Months of it.”
He lets that sit for a second. His thumb shifts against the inside of your wrist, a small, almost idle adjustment that drags across your pulse point and there’s absolutely no way he doesn’t feel how fast it’s going.
“When did you buy this car?”
“Two years ago.”
“Two years.” He drops your wrist like he lost interest in holding it, and straightens up. Pulls a cloth from somewhere- his back pocket, his jacket, the fucking ether- and wipes his hands with slow, methodical attention, finger by finger, knuckle by knuckle, while you stand there with engine grease on your palm and the residual ghost pressure of his grip still pulsing around your wrist bones. “And you’ve never once popped the hood. Not once. You’re telling me you’ll spend six hours memorizing the branches of the brachial plexus but you can’t spend five minutes making sure the thing that keeps you alive on the highway actually works.”
He’s not looking at you. He’s looking at his own hands as he cleans them, like they’re the only thing worth his tim, has all the time in the world and you are not a factor in how he spends it.
“I mean, it’s almost impressive.” He glances at you. Just a flick of his eyes, there and gone. “The commitment to not giving a shit. You’re consistent, I’ll give you that.”
“That’s not- ”
“Your positive cable’s loose. Terminals are shot.” He’s still cleaning his hands. Still not looking at you. “The whole system’s been dying for weeks and you just- what? Turned the key every morning and assumed it would keep working because it always had?” He folds the cloth. Tucks it in his pocket. “That’s not optimism. That’s not even denial. That’s just being stupid about the things you depend on.”
The word stupid lands different coming from him. Not like an insult. A fact. Like a lab value being read off the chart, something they can’t be interpreted in any other way, just is, and always will be.
“You’re smart in the OR. I’ve seen it.” He says flatly, without investment, a concession that costs him nothing. “You’ve got good hands when they’re not shaking. Good instincts when you’re not choking on them. But then you do this- ” He nods at the engine. “And I have to wonder if the OR version of you is the anomaly and this is the baseline.”
He lets that hang.
“Get in the car.”
“What?”
“My car.” He says, an instruction, not an offer, delivered with the expectation of immediate compliance.
“I can call a- “
“It’s eleven at night, you’re not calling a tow from a parking garage, and you’re not sleeping in your car. Get in.”
“But-”
He’s already walking away. He doesn’t wait, doesn’t look back. Just walks to his car- a dark Lexus that looks like it costs more than your annual salary- and gets into the driver’s side and sits there with the engine running and the passenger door unlocked and the absolute unshakeable certainty that you will follow.
You follow.
The inside of his car smells like him. That’s the first thing you register as you pull the door shut, the contained, ambient version of whatever you caught leaning over the engine, multiplied and warmed by the closed space.
You put on your seatbelt. You stare straight ahead. You give him your address in a voice that comes out smaller than you intended and you feel him register that, feel the quality of his silence change as he files it away.
He pulls out of the garage.
He doesn’t speak.
You wait for it- braced- shoulders locked, breath held, every nerve ending oriented toward him. You’ve spent enough time in his proximity to know how he operates: silence first, then the observation, then the correction, delivered with the flat, unhurried precision of a man who learned a long time ago that volume is unnecessary when accuracy will do. You know it’s coming. You sit in the passenger seat with your hands in your lap and your spine so straight your lower back is already aching and you wait.
A minute passes.
Two.
The streetlights strobe across the windshield in rhythmic amber intervals. The road noise fills the car, a low, constant hiss of tires on asphalt, the faint vibration of the chassis transmitting through the seat into your femurs, your pelvis, the base of your spine. The heater is on. You can feel it against your shins, a warm current that smells like clean filters and leather conditioner.
Three minutes.
He’s not going to say anything.
The realization doesn’t bring relief. It brings something worse, a vacuum. The silence that Park deploys in the OR when a resident has made an error significant enough that commentary would be redundant. The silence that says I’m not going to dignify this with a response. The silence that forces you to sit inside your own failure without the scaffolding of his criticism to push against, without even the dignity of being yelled at, because yelling would mean he cared enough to raise his voice and Park does not care enough to raise his voice. Park has never cared enough to raise his voice. He saves his volume for the things that matter and you, apparently, do not meet the threshold.
Your throat is doing something. Tightening. The muscles along the anterior triangle contracting in a slow, involuntary squeeze that you recognize as the precursor to crying and you clench your jaw against it so hard you feel your masseter pop. You are not going to cry in this car. You are not going to give him the satisfaction of watching you cry in his car with his cologne in your lungs and his silence pressing against you from every direction like something with weight.
You stare at the dashboard. The blue numbers of the clock. The GPS display showing your route- a clean, illuminated line from the hospital to your house, nineteen minutes, no traffic, as though the journey is simple, as though the distance between where you are and where you’re going can be measured in miles.
“The tibial plateau.”
His voice enters the silence without disturbing it. No change in his posture, no preliminary breath. Just the words, arriving with the same flat, unremarkable cadence he uses to call out hardware sizes mid-procedure.
“You hesitated.”
That’s it. That’s all he says. He doesn’t elaborate. He doesn’t explain which moment, which hesitation, which specific fraction of a second he’s referring to. He doesn’t need to. You know. He knows you know. The sentence is a key inserted into a lock you’ve been trying not to look at all day, and it turns with a click you can feel in your back teeth.
The silence returns.
It’s worse now. It has a shape. The two words gave it a frame and now the quiet is no longer empty, it’s full- full of every specific thing he could have said and chose not to, every elaboration he’s withholding, every detail of your performance that he catalogued and filed and is currently letting you imagine instead of stating outright. Your brain fills the silence the way fluid fills an enclosed space, expanding into every available cavity until the pressure builds against the walls.
You think about the tibial plateau. You think about the oscillating saw in your hand and the way your fingers tightened on the grip a half second before you made the cut and that half second is what he’s talking about. That imperceptible pause. That flicker of uncertainty between intention and execution. Anyone else would have missed it. The scrub nurse didn’t see it. The anesthesiologist didn’t see it. But Park was standing across the table with his hands resting on the sterile drape and his eyes on your hands and he saw it, he felt the hesitation, stored it, and now he’s taken it out of storage and placed it between you in the car like an exhibit.
Your eyes are burning.
“And the hardware count.”
Four more words. Still no elaboration.
Flat, observational, a statement of fact that requires no emotional emphasis because the gravity is inherent. He keeps his eyes on the road.
You know what he’s referring to. The post-op notes. Six screws documented instead of eight. A discrepancy in the record that could follow the patient to every subsequent surgery, every future scan. He caught it. He corrected it. He didn’t report it.
He’s telling you now, in this car, in the dark, with nineteen minutes of road between you and your house, and the telling is worse than a formal write up because a formal write up would have structure. A formal write up would have a process: documentation, a meeting, a remediation plan, something to do with the failure. This has nothing. This is Park dropping two facts into the silence and letting you drown in the space around them.
Your left hand is trembling. You flatten it against your thigh and hold it there, pressing the tremor into the muscle, willing the vibration to disperse through the fascia and the quadricep and the femur beneath it. Your dominant hand. Your operating hand. The one that held the saw. The one that miscounted the screws. The one that’s been shaking on and off since hour six of a seventeen hour day and you’ve been hiding it by keeping it busy, keeping it occupied with tasks and tools and the physical business of the job so that nobody- so that he- wouldn’t see.
“You should have asked for a break during the reconstruction.”
You close your eyes.
“Your hand was fatiguing by hour four. You compensated by overtightening your grip on the retractor, which changed the angle.” A pause. “You knew the tremor was developing and you chose to hide it rather than ask for relief because you were more concerned with how it would look than with how it would affect the surgical field.”
That’s the most he’s said at once. Three sentences. They land in your chest like hardware being placed in sequence- tap, tap, tap- each one seated precisely, each one load bearing, the cumulative construct designed to hold a specific weight.
Silence again.
The thing that’s happening in your chest is not something you can name with language. It’s too large and too formless and it keeps changing shape, contracting into something hot and dense behind your sternum and then expanding outward into your ribs, your clavicles, the soft tissue of your throat where the tightness has progressed from uncomfortable to actively painful. You swallow against it. Your throat clicks. The sound is audible in the quiet car and you hate it, hate the way your body keeps betraying you in small acoustic ways, producing evidence of its own distress for him to collect.
You think: say something back.
You think: defend yourself.
You think: tell him he’s wrong, tell him the hesitation was clinical judgment not fear, tell him the hardware count was a transcription error not negligence, tell him the tremor was fatigue not incompetence, tell him he doesn’t get to sit there in his seventy-two-thousand-dollar car smelling like that and sounding like that and dismantling you with seven sentences spread across ten minutes of silence-
You don’t say any of it.
You don’t say any of it because your throat is closed and your eyes are wet and your hands are shaking and everything he said is true. Not approximately true. Not partially true. Not true-with-caveats-you-could-argue-if-you-had-the-energy. True. Completely, specifically, documentably true, and the fact of its truth is sitting on your chest like a sternum retractor, cranking you open one inch at a time.
A tear escapes. It tracks down the side of your nose and catches at the corner of your mouth and you taste salt and you don’t wipe it away because wiping it away would require moving your hand and moving your hand would require admitting that you’re crying and you are not admitting that you’re crying. You are sitting in this car looking straight ahead and the moisture on your face is condensation, it’s a physiological response to dry air, it’s anything other than what it is.
Park doesn’t look at you.
He knows. You know he knows. The quality of his silence has shifted again- it’s softer now, or not softer, that’s not the right word, it’s attentive. The silence of a man who is aware that something is happening beside him and has decided to let it happen. To let you sit in it. To not offer a tissue or a word or even the small mercy of turning up the radio. He just drives, steady and unhurried, and the road unspools, and you cry without sound in the passenger seat of his car while he navigates the route to your house.
You wait for the rest. The elaboration. The lecture.
It doesn’t come. Instead, after a long moment, he says something worse.
“You know what’s funny?”
You don’t answer.
“You’re actually not bad.”
The sentence lands wrong. It lands wrong because it sounds, for one disorienting half second, like a compliment, and your starved, exhausted brain almost reaches for it before the rest of him catches up- the tone, the timing, the particular way he says not bad. A minimum. A floor. The lowest possible bar of acceptability, offered with the cadence of praise so your body responds to it like praise while your brain is still trying to decode that it isn’t.
“You’ve got a feel for the work. I’ve seen you read a fracture pattern faster than most of my third years. Your spatial reasoning’s above average. Your hands- ” He pauses. You feel the pause in your sternum. “When your hands are right, they’re right.”
He’s building something. You can feel it assembling in real time, each sentence another load bearing element, and you don’t know what the structure is yet but you know it has a weight it hasn’t distributed.
“That’s what makes it hard to watch, actually.”
There it is.
“Watching someone who could be good just… ” He makes a sound. Not a sigh. Something smaller. Something almost like amusement, which is so much worse than disappointment that your vision blurs. “It’s like watching someone with perfect pitch sing off key on purpose. You want to fix it. But you can’t want it more than they do.”
He turns onto your street.
“And I’m starting to think you don’t want it at all. I think you want to want it. I think you like the idea of being good. But when it actually costs you something, when it means admitting the tremor, asking for the break, counting the fucking screws, you’d rather protect your ego than protect your patient. And that’s- ”
He pulls into your driveway.
The engine idles. The blue dashboard light hums. Your house is dark. The porch light is off because you forgot to set the timer this morning, because this morning happened to a different person in a different version of your life.
“That’s not a skill problem. I can fix a skill problem.” He’s looking straight ahead. Blue lit profile. One hand on the wheel. “That’s a you problem. And I can’t fix you.”
I can’t fix you.
Four words that shouldn’t feel like anything. Four words that are, technically, a statement of professional boundaries, an acknowledgment that his role has limits, that your development is ultimately your own responsibility. That’s what they are on paper. That is not what they are in this car at eleven pm with salt drying on your face and his cologne in your lungs.
I can’t fix you means you’re broken. It means I looked, and what I found isn’t worth the effort. It means he assessed you the way he did with the engine and the prognosis is: not salvageable. Not worth the parts.
You should get out. You should open the door and walk inside and lock it behind you and shower and sleep and come back tomorrow and be better, be sharper, be the version of yourself that doesn’t hesitate on the approach and doesn’t miscount hardware and doesn’t sit in a man’s car at eleven pm leaking tears onto her own scrub top.
Your hand is on the seatbelt release.
“The hesitation,” Park says.
You stop.
He’s looking straight ahead. His profile is blue lit, jaw set, one hand resting on the steering wheel at twelve o’clock. His index finger taps the leather once, a single, idle percussion that might mean nothing and might mean everything.
“It’s going to get someone killed.”
Six words. Delivered without emphasis, without cruelty, without any of the sharp edges that have characterized everything else he’s said today. That’s what makes them worse. The previous comments were barbed, they were designed to cut and they cut and the cutting was something you could be angry about, something you could push against, something that gave the pain a direction.
This is different. Neutral. Factual. Almost gentle in its certainty.
It’s going to get someone killed.
Not it might. Not it could. Going to. Future tense. Inevitable. A definitive, not a warning.
You sit there with your hand on the seatbelt and the salt drying on your upper lip and you feel the sentence settle into the shape of your self concept like a fracture propagating, a slow, branching failure that spreads outward from the point of impact into every adjacent structure until the whole system is compromised.
He doesn’t say anything else.
He just sits there. Engine idling. Blue light. One hand on the wheel. And the silence after the sentence is the worst silence of the night because there’s nothing left to wait for. He’s said the thing. The final thing. The thing that all the other things were building toward- the corroded terminals, the loose cable, the tremor, the miscount- all of it was scaffolding for this, the load bearing statement at the center of the construct, and now that it’s in place the scaffolding falls away and you’re left sitting in the bare, terrible clarity of what he actually thinks.
He thinks you’re going to kill someone.
He thinks it with the same certainty that he had when he looked at your engine and found the problem in four seconds. He looked at you the same way. He looked at your hands the same way. He’s been looking at you for months, confirming what he already suspected, and tonight- the car, the drive, the prognosis- tonight was the consultation where he tells you the findings.
Your seatbelt is still buckled. Your hand is still on the release. Your body is doing something that doesn’t align with the plan your brain is trying to execute, which is: unbuckle, open door, leave. Simple.
Three steps. Motor planning so basic a first year anatomy student could diagram the neural pathway. But the signal is getting lost somewhere between your prefrontal cortex and your extremities, scrambled by the interference of everything else your body is processing- the smell of his cologne in the warm car, the blue light on his hands, the tear track tightening on your cheek, the ache in your trapezius, the tremor in your dominant hand, the sound of his breathing.
His breathing.
You’re listening to him breathe. You’ve been listening to him breathe for the entire drive, you realize, a low, even rhythm that hasn’t changed once, that maintained the same rate and depth through every cruel observation and every silence and every tear you failed to hide. His respiratory rate is probably twelve. Maybe fourteen. Resting. Resting. He’s been resting this entire time. His nervous system has been in parasympathetic mode for the entirety of this drive, calm and regulated, while yours has been in full sympathetic cascade- tachycardic, diaphoretic, pupils dilated, hands trembling- and the asymmetry of it, the sheer physiological unfairness of it, lights something in the back of your skull that isn’t sadness and isn’t defeat.
It’s rage.
Not the sharp, vocal, defensible kind. Not the kind that generates arguments and rebuttals and righteous indignation.
Something lower. Something that lives in the body, not the mind. Something that has nothing to do with what he said and everything to do with the way he’s sitting there, breathing his twelve fucking breaths a minute, resting his hand on his thigh, occupying his leather seat with the boneless ease of a man who has never once lost sleep over the things he’s said to someone while you sit fourteen inches away vibrating at a frequency that might actually be damaging your soft tissue.
You want to hit him.
The thought arrives without preamble. You want to hit him in his calm, blue lit face. You want to put your fist into the hinge of his jaw and feel the impact travel back up your metacarpals and into your wrist and you want him to feel something, anything, any disruption at all in the flat, metronomic equilibrium of his goddamn resting heart rate.
You don’t hit him.
You look at him.
You turn your head and you look at him and he must feel the weight of it because he turns too, slow, unhurried, and his eyes find yours in the blue dark of the car and they’re steady. Completely steady. No tension in his eyes, no furrow in his corrugator, nothing in his expression that suggests he’s experiencing any version of the catastrophic internal event currently leveling every structure in your chest. He’s just looking at you. The way he looks at the surgical field. The way he looks at a fracture pattern on a film. Assessing. Reading. Processing the data without any visible emotional response to the findings.
But there’s something else. Something you almost miss because it’s buried so deep in his face that you’d need to be exactly this close, exactly this wrecked, exactly this far past the boundary of professional distance to catch it.
His gaze drops.
To your mouth.
It’s fast. A quarter second. Maybe less. And then it’s back, steady and clinical and blank, but you saw it and the seeing rewires something in your brain so fast you feel it as a physical lurch, a tilt in the axis of the car, the sudden sickening recalibration of a system that just received information it doesn’t know how to process.
He looked at your mouth.
He has spent the last twenty minutes telling you that you’re negligent and broken and dangerous and going to kill someone and he just looked at your mouth.
And the thing that breaks you isn’t the cruelty. It isn’t the silence, or the criticism, or I can’t fix you, or it’s going to get someone killed. It’s the quarter second glance. It’s the knowledge that somewhere inside of this man who has spent seventeen hours making you feel like the smallest, most incompetent person in the building, there is a circuit that looked at your mouth. That the same eyes that catalogued your hesitation and your tremor and your miscounted screws also, in the same sitting, looked at your mouth. And he thought you wouldn’t catch it. And you did. And now you’re both sitting in the knowledge of it and the air in the car has changed entirely.
And something about the way he can sit here in the aftermath of everything he’s said and look at you with the same detached focus, cracks the last load bearing wall in whatever structure was keeping you upright.
Your body, which has been running on cortisol and adrenaline and seventeen hours of accumulated fight-or-flight with no outlet, moves without conscious thought. Your hand comes off the seatbelt release and goes to the back of his neck and your fingers close in the short hair above his collar and you pull, and your mouth finds his in the dark, and it’s not a kiss so much as a loss of structural integrity. Catastrophic failure at the point of highest stress. The break you saw coming but couldn’t prevent because the forces were already in motion before you understood what they were.
He doesn’t flinch.
That’s the last thing you register before everything goes: he doesn’t flinch, doesn’t pull away, doesn’t stiffen. His mouth is warm and the sound he makes against your mouth is quiet and short and so unsurprised it makes your blood run sideways.
He was waiting for this.
The knowledge doesn’t stop you. It should. It should be the thing that makes you pull back, that trips the wire between mistake and trap, but his mouth is already moving against yours and your brain has been demoted to a purely observational role, a bystander taking notes while your body runs the operation.
You kiss him like you’re trying to hurt him. Teeth and pressure and the graceless, artless force of someone who doesn’t know what they’re doing and doesn’t care, and for a second- a long, terrible second- he lets you. He sits there and he takes it, your mouth on his, your hand fisted in his collar, your breath coming in sharp little pulls through your nose, and he doesn’t move. Doesn’t reciprocate. Doesn’t push you away. Just absorbs it, and the passivity of it is so much worse than rejection that you feel your eyes sting behind your closed lids.
Then his hand moves.
It goes to the back of your neck, fingers closing around the nape and gripping, thumb pressing into the tendon beside your spine, the rest of his hand spanning the width of your neck, and he holds you there. Holds you mid kiss, mid breath, mid everything, and the grip says stop. Not stop kissing him. Just… stop. Stop thrashing. Stop fighting. Stop moving.
You stop.
He pulls you back. Just enough to break the contact. An inch of cold air between your mouth and his, and you can feel the heat of his breath against your wet lower lip and you can see his eyes, close enough to make out the individual fibers of his iris contracting in the low light, and he’s looking at you with something that makes your animal brain go very, very still.
He doesn’t say anything.
He just looks. And the quality of the looking is- you don’t have language for it. Something pre-verbal, pre-civilized, something that belongs in a context where the lighting is firelight instead of dashboard glow and the power dynamic is measured in muscle mass and jaw strength rather than titles and institutional hierarchy.
He looks at you like he’s deciding where to bite down.
His grip on your neck tightens. Fractionally. A compression you feel in your molars.
Then he kisses you.
And it’s different. Everything about it is different. Where yours was frantic and desperate and searching, his is slow. His mouth moves against yours with a patience that feels predatory, that feels like the unhurried gait of something that doesn’t need to chase because it already has what it was after, and his hand on your neck isn’t holding you still anymore, it’s steering.
Tilting your head where he wants it, adjusting the angle, his thumb pressing under your jaw until your chin lifts and your throat is exposed and the sound that comes out of you is something you’ll hear in your own head for weeks.
Your fingers scramble against his shoulders. Your nails catch the fabric of his scrub top and drag and you feel the muscle underneath shift in response, a twitch, a contraction, involuntary and brief, and that one small proof that his body is responding makes you desperate in a way you don’t recognize.
You need to be closer. The thought is incoherent and absolute. There’s a center console between you and fourteen inches of dead space and it’s intolerable, physically intolerable, your body rejecting the distance, urgently, violently, without higher input.
You pull back. Fumble the seatbelt. The buckle snaps free. You get one knee on the console and your hand on the headrest behind him and you’re climbing, graceless, desperate, your shin banging the gear shift, your elbow catching the rearview mirror, and the logistics are terrible and you don’t care. You don’t care because his hands have dropped to his sides and he’s not helping you, he’s just watching, his head tipped back against the headrest, his eyes half lidded, tracking your clumsy, frantic movements in the space with something that isn’t amusement and isn’t patience.
It’s hunger.
Controlled, banked, hunger behind glass.
Your knee finds the seat beside his thigh. Then the other one. You settle into his lap and the steering wheel cuts into your lower back and his thighs are solid beneath yours and you’re breathing too hard, chest heaving, hands shaking where they grip his shoulders, and he’s… still.
Completely still.
Looking up at you. His hands at his sides. His jaw set. The only thing moving is his chest, rising and falling with breaths that are marginally faster than they were ten minutes ago, and you fixate on that the way a drowning person fixates on a piece of floating debris.
You wait for him to touch you.
He doesn’t.
The seconds stretch. Three. Five. Seven. You’re sitting in his lap and his hands are resting on the seat on either side of his thighs and he’s looking up at you with that banked, glass walled hunger and he is not touching you.
He is making you sit in it, in the wanting, in the desperation, in the raw, humiliating fact that you just climbed into your attending’s lap in a driveway and he’s giving you nothing back.
Your hips shift. You can’t help it. A restless, involuntary roll that presses your cunt into his cock, and you feel his abdomen tighten beneath you, a hard, sudden contraction that he controls almost immediately but not before you feel it, not before you register the proof that his body is doing things his face won’t admit to.
His jaw tightens. You see it. The masseter flexing, the tendon standing out below his ear.
Then finally- finally- his hands move.
They don’t go where you expect. They go to your hips. Both of them. Settling over the bones with a grip that is immediately, unambiguously possessive, not exploratory, not tentative, not the careful hands of a man testing boundaries. He grips you like you’re his. Like you’ve always been his. Like the last four months of corrections and cruelty and silence were just the long, patient process of wearing you down to this, to the moment where you’d put yourself in his hands because you had nowhere else to go.
His thumbs dig into the hollows inside your hip bones. The pressure is just on the edge of pain, right at the threshold where sensation tips from one thing into another, and you gasp and his hands tighten in response and you realize with a full body lurch that the sound you made didn’t concern him. It fed him.
He pulls you forward. Down. A controlled, forceful drag that seats you flush against his him, and the contact makes your vision white out at the edges and one of his hands goes from your hip to your hair and he's gripping it, pulling it, fingers twisted strands at the crown of your head, yanking, exposing your throat, and the sound he makes rewires something fundamental in your nervous system.
His mouth finds your neck, teeth grazing the tendon that runs from your ear to your clavicle, a slow, dragging pressure that leaves a trail of heat in its wake, and then he bites down, hard enough to make you jolt, to make your fingers tighten on his shoulders, to make your hips roll forward again in a motion that is completely involuntary and that he responds to by pulling you into his clothed cock harder, fingers digging into the meat of your hips with a strength that’s going to leave marks.
You know it’s going to leave marks. You know because his hands are surgeon’s hands, hands that crack bones into alignment and drive hardware through cortical shell, and they are currently clamped onto your body like he’s setting a fracture and the thing he’s reducing is you.
He doesn’t let go of the bite. He holds it. His jaw flexing against your throat, his breath hot against your pulse point, and you can feel your own heartbeat hammering against his teeth and he can feel it too; you know he can feel it, your pulse trapped between his mouth and your skin, and he stays there. Counting it, maybe. Tasting it.
Your hands are moving without thought. Down his chest, pulling at the fabric, trying to find skin and not finding it fast enough. You’re making sounds- small, fractured, desperate things that you’ve lost the ability to be embarrassed about because embarrassment requires a functioning prefrontal cortex and yours left the building sometime around the moment you smelled the cologne on him in the parking garage.
He releases the bite. His tongue passes over the indentation once, flat and slow and then his mouth is at your ear and his breathing is different now. Ragged at the edges. Fraying. The composure that he’s worn like a second skin all day is coming apart in increments you can measure by the roughness of each exhale and the tightening of his grip.
“You should eat more,” he says and his hands slide under your scrub top, palms flat against your bare skin and the heat of them is obscene, radiating a constant steady warmth that seeps into your tissue, spreading outwards from the points of contact and into the muscles beneath. His hands slide up your sides, palms dragging over abdominal muscles, calluses catching against your skin, and his thumbs find the ridges of bone, thumbs tracing your ribs, counting them. “I can feel every one of these.”
It’s not tender. It’s not concern. It’s inventory. He’s cataloguing what’s his and finding it insufficient and the disapproval is so tangled up with the want that you can’t separate them, can’t tell where the criticism ends and the desire begins because in him they’re the same thing. The same impulse. He wants you and he’s angry about the state of what he wants, angry when something he’s claimed isn’t being maintained to his standard.
His hands stop. Bracketing your ribcage, fingers splayed across your back, thumbs resting in the shallow valley between bones. The heat of his palms is sinking through your intercostal now, settling into the spaces between your ribs like something poured, and you can feel your own lungs expanding against his hand with every breath, pushing into the warmth, your body leaning into him without your permission because its been so long since anyone touched you with this much sustained focused heat.
His hands drop to the hem of your scrub top. He pulls it up, bunching the fabric at your ribs, exposing your waist, your stomach, the line of your hip bones above the drawstring of your scrub pants until your shirt is pulled above your head and dropped somewhere to the side. The air in the car hits your bare skin and you shiver and he flattens his palms against your stomach.
“Someone needs to feed you,” he mutters. His thumbs press into the soft tissue below your navel. “Make sure you actually sleep.” His hands drag down, hooking into the waistband pads of his fingers against your lower abdomen, the weight of his grip tilting your pelvis toward him. “You’re a goddamn mess.”
You are. You are a goddamn mess. You are shaking and crying and half undressed in your attending’s lap in a parked car and his hands are on your bare skin and his teeth marks are throbbing on your neck and every word out of his mouth is an insult wrapped in something that sounds, horribly, like a promise.
A promise that he’s going to fix what you can’t fix. That he’s already decided. That this- the car, the drive, the cruelty, the bite, his hands inside your waistband- this is just the intake assessment. The preliminary exam. The first step in a treatment plan that he’s been designing for months, one that ends with you exactly where he wants you, which is right here. Underneath his hands. Dependent on his attention. Unable to function without the particular combination of damage and repair that only he provides.
You should be terrified.
His hands tighten. He pulls you into him again, harder, and your breath leaves your body in a rush and your forehead drops to his shoulder and your teeth find the muscle where his neck meets his trapezius and you bite down because it’s the only language your body has left.
He groans. The sound travels through his chest cavity into yours, a vibration you feel in your sternum, and his hand slides up your spine and fists in your hair again and pulls, arching your neck back, exposing your throat, and he looks at you, looks up at you from below, his lips parted, his breathing finally, irrevocably wrecked, and the expression on his face is the most honest thing you’ve ever seen from him.
It’s not the mask. It’s not the bored superiority. It’s not the carefully metered cruelty he portions out across an operating day.
It’s greed.
Simple, uncut, undisguised. The face of a man who found something he wants and is currently in the process of closing his hand around it and he does not intend to open that hand again.
“Come here,” he says, for the second time tonight, and this time it means something completely different and exactly the same.
You come, your body answering the order the way it answers every order he’s ever given- before thought, before shame, before the part of your brain that still pretends it has dignity can raise an objection, and you lean in, mouth crashing against his.
You hate yourself for it. You hate the speed of it, the automaticity, the way your knees dig harder into the leather on either side of his thighs and your mouth finds his again. You hate that you’re shaking and he’s not. You hate that your hands are fisted into his collar and pulling and desperate and his are still, idle, unbothered, a man being kissed by someone while he decides whether or not to kiss back.
He tracks you. Every tremor of your lower lip, every frantic slide of your tongue against his, every wet graceless sound you make when his teeth catch your bottom lip and tug. Controlled. Proprietary. Taking this in like he takes in everything, filing it, noting it, adding it to whatever mental inventory he maintains of all the ways you embarrass yourself in front of him.
You pull back. Your chest is heaving. His isn’t.
“Fuck you,” you say.
It comes out wrecked. Shaking. Nothing close to the strength you want it to be. He looks at you flatly, unimpressed.
He hooks two fingers into the drawstring of your scrub pants and pulls. One motion. The knot gives. The pants slide down your thighs and you should stop this. You should stop this right now. You should climb off his lap and open the door and walk into your house and lock it behind him and never look at him again. You know this. The knowledge is clean and certain and completely irrelevant to what your body is actually doing, which is lifting one knee, then the other, kicking cotton of your ankles, while your hand stays fisted in his collar like letting go would kill you.
His hand goes behind your back. One flick of his thumb and the bra releases and the straps slide down your shoulders and you feel the air hit your skin and the humiliation is so acute it tastes metallic, like biting down on foil, like blood from a split lip.
He doesn’t even look.
He lets the fabric fall and his palms settle over your breasts and his thumbs brush across nipples already tight from the cold and the adrenaline and he does it with absent focus, like this is a step in a sequence, like your body is a series of tasks to be completed on the way to something else.
“You’re an asshole,” you whisper. Your voice cracks. “You know that? You’re a completely fucking-”
His hand slides down your stomach. Hooks into the waistband of your underwear. Drags. The fabric catches on your thighs, resists, then gives away with a tear.
“- asshole.”
“Yeah,” he says. That’s it. Yeah. One syllable. Bored. His eyes haven’t changed. His breathing hasn’t changed. You are sitting in his lap in nothing but the blue dashboard light, stripped and shaking, every flaw and rib and tremor illuminated, and his pulse is resting.
You want to claw his face off.
You want to rake your nails down his cheeks until he bleeds, until something in his expression breaks, until he shows you one single shred of evidence that this is affecting him even a fraction as much as it’s affecting you. But he’s still dressed beneath you- scrub top, scrub pants- and the obscene imbalance of naked and clothed, wrecked and composed, is doing something to the power dynamic that you feel in the base of your skull like a boot on your neck.
One hand leaves your hip. You hear the shift of fabric, the elastic drag of a waistband, and then he’s there, cock pressing against the inside of your thigh, hard and hot. He wraps his hand around himself and strokes once, slow, lazy, and you watch the muscle in his jaw flex and that’s it. That’s all he gives you. One flex of one muscle while you’re sitting naked in his lap with tears drying on your face and your whole body vibrating like a plucked string.
Then he lines the head of his cock up, blunt insistent pressure of him against the entrance to your cunt, and your body- your traitorous, mutinous, shame soaked body- is already wet. Has been wet. Has been wet since the you smelled his cologne in the parking garage, maybe earlier, maybe since the OR, maybe since the moment you were first introduced to him as your attending and the knowledge of that is so humiliating you actually close your eyes against it, squeeze them shut like a child who thinks not seeing makes them invisible.
“Sit.” A command. Like he’s speaking to a dog, like you’re a dog, like you’re a misbehaving mutt caught doing something you shouldn’t and he’s issuing a command to correct. Sit, heel, lay down, roll over-
Don’t, you think.
You sink.
The stretch is immediate. Obscene. A slow, relentless parting that you feel in your cunt, your thighs, your abdomen, your teeth, and you hate every inch of it and the contradiction is going to break you in half. He fills your cunt the way he takes up any space around him- completely, unapologetically, without any interest in whether you were ready to accommodate him or not.
Your hands fly to his biceps. Nails through fabric into muscle. And for one heartbeat you sit there, trembling, adjusting, feeling the way you body has to restructure around him, and your eyes are open now and burning and you’re looking directly at his face and his expression is…
Calm.
He looks calm. His dick is buried inside of you to the hilt and his face is the face of a man sitting in traffic. Waiting for the light to change. Reading a notification on his phone. And you want to scream, wrap your hands around his throat and squeeze until something in those steady, half lidded eyes shows you that he’s here, that he’s present, that this is costing him anything at all.
His hands find your hips again. Thumbs pressing bruises into bone. And then he moves you.
Up. Down. Controlled. Like you’re nothing more than a doll, an instrument, something he can use and play until he’s had his fill, and that pisses you off.
You start to move on your own and the first roll of your hips without his guidance is yours, angry and hard, grinding down onto him with a force that’s closer to violence than fucking, and you watch his face for the flinch, for the flutter of his eyes, for his lips to part open, for any crack, any goddamn indication that you’re getting to him.
His eyes lower. Barely. The faintest contraction around the corner of his eyes.
That’s it. That’s all you get.
His hands tighten and he takes back control of the rhythm, pulling you down on his cock hard, forcing the depth, and the sound that rips out of you is something between a sob and a moan and you hate it, hate the wet broken sound, hate that he heard it, hate that his expression doesn’t change when he hears it.
“This is what you’re good at.”
The words are like a slap and you feel them behind your eyes, in your lungs, in the slick slide where your body is betraying you again, again, again.
“Fuck you- “
“Not the tibial plateau.” His hips drive up. “Not the hardware count.” Again. “Not even remembering to get your fucking car serviced.” His hands drag you down so hard onto his cock that your clit grinds against the base of him and your vision whites out and your mouth falls open with a sound you can’t control, high pitched and needy. “This. This is the only thing I’ve never seen you hesitate on.”
“I hate you- “ Your voice splinters with another thrust, that grinds his cock against the spot that has your nails digging into his shoulders hard enough to break skin through fabric. “I hate you, you fucking-”
“I know,” he says. Quiet. Unbothered. Like you just told him the weather. And then he rolls his hips up into you with a hard grind that makes your spine arch and your head fall back and the I hate you dissolves into a whimper you’ll never forgive yourself for.
“Look at you,” His breathing hasn't changed. Twelve per minute. Resting. While yours comes ragged and sobbing, chest heaving, your whole body shaking on top of his. “Seventeen hours of your hands shaking. Seventeen hours of being unable to hold a retractor steady. But you can ride cock like this. Perfect rhythm. No tremor. No hesitation.” He pulls you into another downstroke, meets you with his hips, punches the breath from your lungs. “Maybe this is what I should have had you doing all along instead of letting you pretend you’re a surgeon.”
You hit him.
Your palm connects with his face, an open handed strike that lands hard enough to make a sound in the car, and he doesn’t flinch, doesn’t tense, just absorbs it the way he absorbs everything, and his hands on your hips don’t even stutter.
He smiles.
Not wide. Not warm. A thin, asymmetric thing, one corner of his mouth pulling up in the blue dark, and it’s the first genuine expression you’ve seen on his face and it’s the worst thing you’ve ever looked at. Because the smile says he liked that. The smile says do it again. The smile says he has been waiting, patiently, methodically, for the entire duration of the encounter, for you to hit him, and now that you have he can file it alongside every other piece of evidence that you are exactly as out of control as he’s always suspected.
“There she is.” His thumb slides between your bodies. Finds your clit. Circles it in a way that makes your spine lock and your teeth clench. “There’s the good girl I knew was buried under all that incompetence.”
“Don’t call me- “ Your voice breaks, hips moving faster not, frantic, beyond your control. “Don’t you dare-”
“Come on.” His thumb presses harder. His other hand drags you down into the next thrust. “Show me the one thing you’re actually competent at.”
“I fucking hate you- “
“You keep saying that.” His mouth is close to your ear. His breathing is finally, finally different- rougher, a fraction faster, the composure fraying at the thinnest edges- but his voice is still steady. Still controlled. Still the voice of a man who is winning and knows it. “And yet here you are.”
And yet here you are.
The truth of those words- the bare, unarguable, catastrophic truth of them- hits harder than anything else he’s said all day. Here you are. In his lap. In his car. In his hands. Naked and shaking and full of him and crying and still moving, still rolling your hips into his, still chasing the orgasm that’s building in your lower abdomen, because he told you to and because you want to and because the wanting and the hate have fused into something singular and molten that you couldn’t separate even if you had the higher brain function to try.
The car is rocking on its suspension. The windows are opaque. Sweat slides down the valley of your spine. Your breasts move with every thrust and his eyes track them and the shame of being watched makes something tighten in your lower belly and you hate that too, hate the wiring of your own body, hate that humiliation and arousal are using the same neural pathways and you can’t tell where one stops and the other starts.
“This is what you’re good at,” he says again. Quieter now. Almost fond. And the fondness is worse than the cruelty because the cruelty you can fight but the fondness seeps in and finds the soft tissue and stays. “Not saving lives. Not pretending to be a doctor. Just this. Just taking what I give you until you forget you ever had anything else to fuck up.”
“Shut up.” You’re crying openly now. Tears and sweat and the sounds coming out of your mouth are wet and broken and you can’t stop them and you can’t stop moving. “Shut the fuck up-”
“Make me.”
Two words. And they’re not said like a challenge. They’re said like a dare, and underneath the dare is something that sounds terrifyingly like affection, the way someone would talk to a small animal that keeps trying to bite them, amused and patient and completely unthreatened.
Your orgasm is building. You feel it in every trembling muscle, the quiver in your inner thighs, the tightening low in your abdomen, the involuntary clenching of your body around his cock that makes his breath hitch for one unguarded second before he smooths it over.
You’re close. You’re so close it’s blurring the edges of your rage, softening the anger into something needier, something that wants to collapse forward against his chest and be held and the wanting of that- the wanting to be held by the man who’s been destroying you- is the most humiliating thing that’s happened all night and that is a competitive field.
His grip adjusts. His thumb digs in deeper. His pace doesn’t falter.
His mouth finds your ear.
“Don’t you dare come until I tell you you’ve earned it.” His thumb circles your clit and the contradiction- don’t come while his hands do everything to guarantee you will- is so perfectly, characteristically cruel that a laugh rips out of you, unhinged and wet and bordering on hysterical. “You don’t get to be good at anything unless I say so.”
And you keep bouncing, because he told you to.
Because somewhere between the parking garage and the engine and the drive and the months of him taking you apart and breaking you down like you were a failed construct, you stopped being a person who makes her own decisions and became a person who waits for his.
You hate him.
You don’t stop.
***
The hospital smells the same.
That’s what gets you. The absolute, insulting sameness. You walk through the door at six thirty and the air hits your face with its standard cocktail of antiseptic and recycled ventilation and floor wax and the distant, perpetual ghost of coffee, and it is exactly, precisely, atomically the same as it was yesterday morning when you walked in as a person who had not yet detonated her entire life ion the front seat of a Lexus.
Your neck hurts.
Not the muscular ache of a bad night’s sleep, though there’s that too- you slept maybe ninety minutes, in twenty three minute increments, each one interrupted by the sensation of waking up inside a body that still smelled like him despite the shower. The shower that was too hot. The shower where you stood with your forehead against the tile and your hands flat on the wall and mentally assessed the damage- bruise on your left knee, bruises on your hips in the shape of his fingerprints, raw patch on your lower back from the steering wheel, and the bite. The bite on your neck, which you examined in the bathroom mirror, reddish purple, visible above the collar of a scrub top. Visible above the collar of anything you own.
You’re wearing a turtleneck under your scrubs. In September.
You keep your head down. Badge clipped. Hair pulled back so tight your scalp aches. You walk with a posture that says normal day, regular morning, nothing to report, and you’re almost to the locker room when another resident steps into the hallway and says, “Admin wants you.”
Every drop of blood in your body goes cold. You stare at him.
“Underwood’s office.” He says. “Now.”
You don’t ask why. You don’t ask why because your body already knows. Your body already knows before he opened his mouth, maybe before, maybe the moment you walked through the doors and the air tasted the same and the hallway looked the same and nothing was different except everything was different.
The walk takes ninety seconds. You count your footsteps because counting is something your brain can do while the rest of it shuts down.
You see him through the open door.
Park is in the left chair. One ankle crossed over the opposite knee. He’s holding a coffee, steam curling from the lip, which means its fresh, which means he stopped on his way here, which means he budgeted time into his morning for this.
He doesn’t look up when you walk in.
Gloria Underwood is standing beside her desk. She’s holding a manilla folder. It’s thick. Too thick for something assembled this morning. Too thick for a single incident. The thickness of it does something to the air in your lungs, displaces it, compresses it, makes the next breath feel like trying to inflate against a weight.
Gloria’s face is arranged in the express you’ve seen administrators use when they’re about to change the trajectory of a person’s life. Controlled. A mask of professional compassion that has been practiced in mirrors and refined in meetings and has nothing to do with whether the person wearing it actually feels anything at all.
“Please sit down.”
You sit. The chair is identical to his. Your elbow is inches from his elbow and you can smell him, smell the coffee, and the soap, and the cologne, and your body responds with a full system lurch of sense memory so violent you have to press your fingernails into your palms to stay in the chair.
“A formal complaint has been filed,” Gloria says, opening the folder. Turns to a page that’s already been flagged with a colored tab, pre-marked, pre-organized, the administrative infrastructure of a process that was set in motion before you arrived. “Regarding conduct of sexual nature directed at Dr. Brendon Park by a subordinate member of the surgical team.”
Directed at.
The preposition enters your ear and detonates.
Directed at Dr. Park. Not by Dr. Park. Not between you and Dr. Park. At him. By you.
“Dr. Park has reported that over the course of several months, he has been subjected to escalating patterns of inappropriate attention from an intern under his direct supervision.” Gloria’s eyes move across the page but she’s not reading. She memorized this. “Including persistent attempts to initiate physical proximity, repeated instances of unprofessional fixation during surgical procedures, and recently, an incident of unsolicited sexual contact initiated in his vehicle after he offered professional assistance with a mechanical issue in the hospital parking garage.”
Persistent attempts to initiate physical proximity.
That’s- standing near him. In the OR. Where he assigned you to stand.
Unprofessional fixation during surgical procedures.
That’s- watching him operate. When you were assisting.
Unsolicited sexual contact.
That’s-
The room is doing something. The walls aren’t moving but the space between them is contracting, the air thickening, the fluorescent light taking on a quality that feels granular, particulate, like you’re trying to see through something that’s settling between you and the rest of the room.
“The complaint has been supported by documented observations,” Gloria continues. She turns another page. Another colored tab. “Dr. Park has provided a written timeline of concerning behavior, including specific dates and incidents.”
A timeline.
He kept a timeline. He’s been keeping a timeline. Every shift, every surgery, every moment you stood too close or looked too long or held your breath- he was writing it down. Dating it. Building a file. Constructing a narrative in which every single thing your body did in his presence was evidence of you pursuing him, and the evidence is in Gloria Underwood’s hands right now, and it’s thick, and it has colored tabs, and it’s been here since before you walked in the door.
“Given the nature of the supervisory relationship and the severity of the allegations, you are being placed on immediate administrative suspension pending investigation, effective as of this meeting.”
You open your mouth.
Nothing comes out.
You try again and what emerges is a sound that isn’t a word, is a breath, a fragment, the beginning of that’s not what happened that stalls in your larynx before your larynx has done the math that your brain hasn’t finished yet.
The math is:
He is a senior attending. Board certified orthopedic surgeon. Ten years at this hospital. Published. Respected. The kind of name that appears on department letterheads and in the acknowledgment section of textbook chapters. He has a reputation. He has colleagues. He has a record, spotless and long and documented in the same filing system that is currently absorbing this complaint.
You are an intern. Four months in. No publications, no tenure, no institutional weight. You have a shaking hand and miscounted screws and a performance record that he has been personally authoring for your entire rotation.
Who is Gloria going to believe?
Who is anyone going to believe?
The intern who can’t hold a retractor steady? The one who freezes on approaches and forgets to count hardware and cries in parking garages? The one who ended up naked in her attending’s car at midnight?
Or the attending who has spent months carefully, meticulously, documentably expressing concern about a subordinate’s fixation.
“During the suspension period,” Gloria is saying. “You are not to enter clinical areas, access patient records, or make contact with Dr. Park directly or through intermediaries.”
You turn your head.
Park is looking at Gloria. He’s been looking at Gloria the entire time. Sitting in the chair with his coffee and his crossed ankle, and his face arranged in an expression of restrained concern; brows drawn, mouth set, carefully composed like a man navigating a difficult situation with professionalism and grace. He looks like someone this is being done to. He looks like a man who tried his best with a troubled intern and is now dealing with the unfortunate consequences of his own generosity.
He is sitting in this chair, hours after his teeth were in your neck and his cock inside you and his hands on your hips dragging you down onto him while he told you that riding him was the only thing you were competent at and he looks troubled.
Something happens behind your face. Not tears. Something past tears, something drier and more dangerous. A sensation like the moment before something snaps, the last frame of structural integrity, the instant where the material is still holding its shape but the forces have already exceeded its capacity and the failure is inevitable, just not yet visible.
“Do you have anything to add,” Gloria asks you.
You're still looking at Park.
He turns his head. Finally. Slowly. Meets your eyes for the first time since you walked in.
His face is still wearing the mask. The concern, the gravity, the restrained compassion of the Wronged-Mentor. It’s flawless. Every muscle recruited, every micro expression calibrated, the kind of performance that could only be produced by someone who’s been rehearsing it for a very long time.
But his eyes.
In the space behind the performance, in the deep architecture of his gaze, where the mask doesn’t quite reach, there’s something looking back at you that makes your blood crystallize in your veins.
It’s not guilt. It’s not satisfaction. It’s not even cruelty.
It’s patience.
The bottomless, immovable patience of a man who built something and is now watching it work.
He holds your gaze for two seconds. Then he turns back to Gloria and picks up his coffee and drinks and the meeting continues, and the folder stays open, and your badge is collected, and you walk out of the hospital at seven forty one am wearing a turtleneck in September and it’s sunny outside and the sky is very blue and you don’t remember driving home.
(And Park watches you leave, coffee in hand. You look very small. Smaller than you looked in scrubs, which is saying a lot, because you already looked like a stiff breeze would snap you in half-
(And the first part is done. Solved. He doesn’t have to watch you bite your lip when you concentrate anymore, doesn’t have to correct the angle of your hands and pretend the contact is clinical. Doesn’t have to stand behind you during a procedure and smell your shampoo and keep his hands professional while he vividly imagines what he’d do to you if the room was empty-
(Four months of that. Four months of keeping his hands on the instruments instead of on your waist, of watching your throat move when you swallow and thinking about his teeth there, of memorizing the exact pitch of your voice when you’re nervous because he wanted to know what it would sound like under him, or fucking his fist to the memory of the little punched out breath you made when you startled coming out of the supply closet, imagining you making that sound with his fist in your hair and his cock grinding against your cervix-
(And you’ll spiral. That’s fine. That’s the design. You’ll go home and fall apart and burn through the anger hot and fast the way you burn through everything, and then the anger will run out and what’s left will be the silence. No OR. No corrections. No one watching. No one who knows you hold your breath when you’re nervous or that your left hand shakes first or that you haven’t been eating enough or sleeping enough or taking care of yourself the way someone should be taking care of you. The way he would, if you’d stop being so fucking difficult about it-
(Give it three weeks. Maybe four. You’ll reach for your phone. You won’t call, not yet. But the intervals between looking at his name and putting the phone down will shrink every time until eventually you just stop putting it down. And he’ll answer when he’s ready, and you’ll be crying, and he’ll listen the way he always listens to you you- completely- because that’s the drug and he’s the only supply you’ve got left.
(Pavlov’s dog with a prettier face. He spent four months ringing the bell- every correction a tap, every silence a withhold, every rare scrape of approval timed to land when you were most desperate for it- and now that the bell is gone and you’re salivating into nothing, confused and aching and reaching for the only hand that ever fed you even though it’s the same hand that kept you starving-
(He’ll feed you. Get your weight back up. Move you into his place once you can’t make rent. He’ll frame it as practical. You’ll be grateful. And in six months you’ll be standing in his kitchen in his T-shirt and you’ll look up when he walks in with that open, searching expression- the same one you used to give him across the operating table- checking his face for what he wants you to do next, his pretty obedient wife, trained so fucking well-
Summary: You came to Pittsburgh with a match, a white coat, and a countdown you tried not to think about. Jack Abbot was the first constant in a city that didn’t feel like yours yet. For two years, you keep your feelings buried. Out of sight, though never truly gone. But when the life you’ve built starts to slip out of reach, you’re forced into a decision you can never return from.
Because some choices don’t wait for hearts to catch up.
tags: marriage of (readers) convenience(lol), slow burn, reader is a non-US IMG (international medical graduate) on a temporary J1 visa, Visa Complications, age gap, mutual pining, angst.
Pittsburgh was stingy with its springs.
You had learned that when you got off the plane, setting foot in Pittsburgh for the first time, only to be met by the cool night air blowing in your face. Though it seemed that today the city had decided to bless its residents with a weather that was truly fit for a perfect summer night.
The soft breeze shyly caressed your shoulders, messing your hair up just a little and maybe for the first time in your life, you didn't care about looking put together.
You weren't sure if it was just your imagination or maybe the excitement that came with being new to the city, well, the country to be exact.
But this city felt like freedom.
And more than that, it made you feel brave.
Maybe it was the sweet breeze around you that helped dry the sweat on your skin without making you feel cold.
Or maybe it was how ever since you came to Pittsburgh, you always seemed to catch the bus just in time or make it into your apartment before downpour flooded the streets.
You couldn't help the smile tugging at the corners of your lips as you muttered in a playful tone, "Oh you like me, don't you?"
"Excuse me?"
You flinched momentarily, turning toward the owner of the concerned voice that called out to you.
You felt the heat crawling up your neck as you realised how ridiculous you looked, standing in front of the gates of the ambulance bay and talking to yourself like a lunatic. And you just had to be caught by the most attractive person you saw since you arrived at Pittsburg. Great.
"Ma'am? Are you okay? I can help you get inside if you're confused."
You snorted at that, your eyes widening slightly afterwards, realising how rude that must have sounded.
The man in front of you looked confused by the act, in fact, he looked confused by the entirety of you.
"Sorry it's just... you're treating me like geriatric patient at risk of delirium and... it was kind of funny. I um... I didn't mean to be rude. I apologize."
Yep. The last thing you wanted was making an enemy of an attending who would probably be supervising you in 2 months.
He looked intrigued by your answer, slightly arching an eyebrow as he looked you over for a moment before speaking again.
"Did we get a new resident while I was on sick leave or are you a here for an elective?"
You were caught off guard by his question, hesitating for a moment on how much to give away. So you resorted to deflecting it, gaining some time to decide.
"You're very sure that I'm not an attending for someone who was just treating me like I fit the textbook description of old age."
He let out a huff that sounded closer to a laugh at your jab, slightly shaking his head while looking down before dragging his gaze back to your face.
"Are you always this vindictive? I'm feeling targeted here sweetheart."
Your breath hitched at the way the pet name rolled of his tongue so effortlesly.
Oh this man was trouble.
Thankfully, he didn't let the silence linger long enough for it to require an answer before resuming with a reassuring smile on his face.
"You don't look a day over twenty five, no need to be so touchy. You're not gonna last long around here with such thin skin, is all I'm gonna say."
He said while slightly lifting both his hands at his sides and giving a small, unapologetic pout.
Cute, you thought to yourself.
Well, shit- was what followed close after.
Thankfully you had enough one sided crushes throughout your life, which helped you gain the skill to not let the attraction show in your face.
At least you were hoping that was the case.
Narrowing your eyes, you looked him over for one second and answered with a playful tone,
"Do you really wanna push your luck here, old man?"
He let out a dramatic groan, putting his hand on the left side of his chest and taking half a step back.
"Oof. And she bites back."
You rolled your eyes, trying to stop the amused smile threatening to take over your whole face.
He smoothly slipped out of his wounded act while adjusting his backpack slung over his right shoulder and closing the distance again.
"So, are you gonna be blessing the PTMC with your presence or are we just not that lucky?"
Okay, this man was officially out of line with his flirty remarks and playful smiles.
You took half a second to find your voice after calming your throbbing heart.
"You guys must really be in shambles if you're so sure a random resident is gonna be any help, let alone a blessing.", you retorted with a sarcastic tone.
He smiled at that, his head slightly tilted to the side as his gaze lingered on your face for a moment before answering.
"Nah, I don't think that's it." he said, matter of factly. There was no sign of banter in his tone for the first time since the conversation started.
You felt your cheeks heat under his gaze, forcing yourself to say something just to fill the silence, "Yeah? Then what?"
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