Trouble in Paradise
summary: It starts with a proposition from a handsome stranger. You both are in need of a distraction to keep you occupied during a week-long tropical getaway, and a summer fling seems like the perfect solution, even as it becomes more and more apparent that your feelings run deeper than just casual sex. But when you discover the man you’ve been hooking up with is none other than Jack Abbot — your father’s best friend — and your father proposes a yearly trip with his family, your little distraction threatens to turn your already messy life upside down. What follows is ten years of the most chaotic, exhilarating, angst ridden vacations of your life.
pairing: dbf!jack abbot x reader
wc: 9.8k (20.4k total)
tags: abbot is reader's dad's best friend (but neither of them know that at first), distracting each other from their trauma and high-stress lives with some good old fashioned casual sex, problematic summer fling, girl dad/widowed jack abbot, marisol abbot is canon, smut + angst + mutual healing -> eventual happy ending.
warnings: discussions of suicide, age gap, mentions of his prosthetic, hurt/comfort, angst with a happy ending (eventually), smut, car crash, alcohol use, original characters, no use of y/n, no betas.
chapter: 2/10
chapter summary: After discovering that the man you hooked up with is none other than Jack Abbot - your father's best friend - you and Jack struggle to adjust to the boundaries of your new relationship, especially after you spend your week long trip with his family intoxicated and seemingly set on torturing him.
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YEAR TWO
There's a phrase Jack always thinks of when he remembers that first summer. Wherever you go, there you are. It had been foolish of him to think that he could leave the blazing MVC that was his life behind, even for one measly week. Somehow, the universe always found a way to knock him on his ass.
It had happened so many times before, he'd gotten used to spending his life bracing for impact. When he finally managed to make some friends and begin to thrive amidst the endless grind of army life, an IED blew off his fucking leg. When he finally adjusted to the night shift, a bad batch of insomnia sent him to psych for nearly two weeks. When he and Marisol finally seemed to be getting the hang of the whole parenting thing, a drunk driver slammed into their mini-van.
It was a fact of life as certain as gravity. What goes up, must come down. When Jack Abbot is happy, something awful must be on the way.
This year, he would simply have to pretend everything was fine. For Florence's sake.
She'd been talking about the trip non-stop for weeks. She and Lucy were planning to turn the vacation into a giant slumber party, which meant that for most of the trip, he would likely have the suite to himself.
He hated that this realization immediately made him think of you.
Imagined falling back into that summer fling.
Pretending like nothing had changed.
But, of course, it was impossible to think of you now without also thinking about the day he and Koa flew out to see your father, twenty-three years ago, the first in their small circle of friends to have a kid. Your wrinkled, pink face staring up at him. Marisol at his side, chin resting on his shoulder as she gently rubbed a finger against your cheek.
I think I'd like one of these some day.
The plane shakes violently, jarring him out of that disturbing train of thought. Florence is fast asleep beside him, mouth hanging open while some beachy rom-com plays at low volume on her phone. He tugs her fluffy, flower-patterned blanket higher and decides to blame the nausea rising in his gut on the turbulence.
The little travel liquor bottles you purchased back in LAX might be the only thing capable of getting you through this trip, which falls in early August this year since you took the Bar Exam at the end of the July - something you DO NOT want to fucking think about for the next week if you can help it.
When you touch down in Lihue, you are determined to fill the next seven days with distractions - distractions that, this time do not come in the form of Jack fucking Abbot. The man who talked you off a ledge (literally), and held you in his arms after giving you two of the best orgasms of your life, and just...acted like it never happened. Never tried to reach out, to ask if things had gotten better after you got home (of course they hadn't).
It should have been so easy for you to put him out of your mind for the past year. After all, you're on opposite sides of the country. You don't live with your parents anymore, so you don't even get the chance to eavesdrop on any of your father's calls with him, and he doesn't seem to have any social media for you to stalk in the middle of the night (not that you went looking for it or anything). Even that word - distraction - sounds an awful lot like his voice in your head when you think it, that low, gravely murmur, and then you're there, glancing up at the devilish glint of his eyes in the dim light of the hotel kitchen, his cum still warm against the back of your tongue. You begin to rummage in your carry-on for another mini bottle of Tito's, but the honk of your family's mud splattered rental car puts an end to that pursuit. You wonder whether this island will always feel like your own specially customized purgatory as you clamber into the stuffy, sun-screen scented back row.
"How was your flight?" your dad asks before you've even had a chance to get your seatbelt on.
"Fine."
Even from the back of the car, you don't miss the glance exchanged between your parents.
Here we go.
Lucy is sprawled across the center row of seats, seatbelt secured but totally ineffective in her current position. Her eyes dart up from her phone.
"What?"
Last summer, you would have told her to sit up, but you can't scrounge up the energy to fight with her now.
"Nothing."
In your bag, your fingers finally make contact with a bottle.
Here's to the week from hell.
Koa and Nani pick Jack and Florence up from the airport. Allan offered, but Jack refused, giving some half assed excuse about not wanting the car to be cramped with both of their families' luggage that he was relieved his friend actually bought. The truth was, Jack wasn't ready to see you yet. He needed some time to prepare himself, to mentally rehearse how he would interact with you. To remember what things he should know based on what Allan told him, and what things you'd told him before...
Yeah, he also needed time to stop himself from doing that, from letting all thoughts come to a jarring halt whenever something reminded him of those two nights with you.
Nani tries to coax some conversation out from Florence from the back row they share, and he's pleasantly surprised when she reciprocates, a bit shy, a bit stiff, but more talkative than usual. The prospect of seeing Lucy is probably already helping her come out of the shell she habitually burrowed into.
Koa and Jack exchange the usual updates, things they mostly already knew about each other from their texts, before Koa broaches a subject Jack doesn't expect.
"So...How are you doing, man?"
It's the emphasis on that word that has Jack raising his hackles.
"I'm fine. I'm better," he corrects, because it's more believable.
"You know, this trip might be a good opportunity for you to get back out there," Koa whispers, pursing his lips thoughtfully, though Jack can tell he and Nani have likely discussed this idea way before this conversation. "Florence will be hanging at Allan's place the whole time. It's the perfect time to try out something...casual."
Jack's eyes dart back to Florence, thankfully too absorbed in a discussion about a new book she's been reading to eavesdrop.
"I'm not exactly a casual guy," he grunts.
It's the truth. You were the exception, one he never would have expected in a million years. He'd made the mistake of downloading a dating app just once, and deleted it after only a day. He simply didn't have the energy to navigate that fucking battlefield. And he had the perfect excuse - single dad, daughter whose delicate little heart couldn't handle him treating romantic attachments like a fuckin' Blockbuster.
"I just think it could be your chance." Koa shrugs breezily. "Baby steps. Who knows, maybe it would be good for you."
Oh, he fucking knew.
"Just tell her to meet me at the beach," Lucy pleads for the second time.
The startling lack of bitchiness in her tone almost has you willing to give in.
Almost.
"Why can't you just text her?" you say, unzipping your luggage so at least you have some excuse for why you can't fulfill your sister's very reasonable request. So, so busy. So much unpacking to do - see! And someone has to sweet talk the maids into giving us a few extra towels.
"The Wi-Fi's down," Florence answers, waving her phone in front of your face with an agonized groan. "This side of the island gets like, no internet."
"Fine," you acquiesce, blaming the lingering effects of the alcohol and not your sister's stupid, dopey little smile.
She practically pushes you out the door. Once it's shut behind you, you inhale deeply, steeling yourself. Probably best to rip the bandaid off now.
The waves lap at the beach beneath your window, waters a shade of blue you hadn't seen outside of a Mac screensaver before coming here. It's easy to forget how lucky you are, how much you should be enjoying this. And while it's easy to blame Jack Abbot for your discomfort, you know it runs much deeper than that. He's just the easiest aspect for you to fixate on, a clear, tangible symptom to treat without having to fully examine the cause.
You wait for them in the roundabout just outside the lobby. At the sight of Koa's grinning face from the driver's seat of a Jeep, you dig your fingernails into your palms, forcing a smile.
He and Nani wrap you in suffocating hugs, and while usually you abhor this kind of clammy, overwhelming physical contact, you hold on to each of them for as long as you can. Anything to delay the inevitable.
When Nani finally releases you with an affectionate pinch, you lock eyes with him.
He's frozen, bent over the luggage he's just lugged out of the back of the car. Freckled skin dotted with perspiration, biceps flexing against the fabric of his muscle tee - the only thing he seems to have in his fucking closet. He looks good. Damn him.
"Hello."
The small chirp of Florence's voice startles you. You'd skipped over her entirely, the tiny, pale figure standing sentry at his side.
She's a bit odd, now that you have the opportunity to study her without Lucy around. Something peculiarly adult about the rigid set of her shoulders, the discerning, slightly suspicious edge to her stare. She looks a lot like Jack. The same square jaw, just slightly softer on her, same light hair tucked into a tight, perfectly neat braid.
"Hi." You swallow, willing yourself to be normal. "Lucy asked me to tell you to meet her at the beach."
The girl visibly brightens, and turns to her father - god, it shouldn't still be so strange to think of him as that - who gives her a nod. The slight curve of his lips as he watches her race off has your heart tripping over itself, giving a pathetic du-du-dum that sounds an awful lot like it's mocking you.
"Let's get you settled in," Koa tells him, striding toward the back of the Jeep to help him with his things.
The automatic doors to the lobby slide open, and a bout of shouts becomes audible from inside. Koa grimaces.
"I can help," you automatically offer. "You two get back to work, we can handle it."
Koa's lips split in a brilliant grin. "You're a lifesaver kid. Rest of the trip, consider your tab on me."
You laugh, but the sound grows hollow as soon as the two are out of sight. The silence that falls between you and Jack feels thick, weighty. Impenetrable. Although, maybe that's just the humidity.
"How do you want to do this?" you ask.
Jack blinks at you. "What?"
You gesture to the bags.
"Oh. Right." He grunts, scratching the back of his neck as he considers the luggage. "Think you can handle the rolling ones?"
You nod, and you reach for a nearby duffel to stack on top of one of the two rolling suitcases. At the same time, Jack goes to grab it.
"Oh fuck," you grunt as your heads collide, his forehead ramming into your nose.
You stumble back, the cement biting into your palms as you try to break your fall.
"Shit." In an instant, he's kneeling beside you. "You okay?"
"Yeah, I think so," you say. You don't feel any blood dripping from your nostrils, which is a pretty good sign. But before you can begin to pick yourself up, his hand is wrapped around your chin, forcing your head to tilt as he examines your face. "I said I'm fine," you insist, slapping his hands away.
Jack raises his hands, retreating a little. You huff as you dust off your palms, which - shit - are bleeding a little. You wipe them on your sweatpants before he can spot it.
"I can get it," Jack says, pointing at the duffel.
"It's fine," you reply. "We'll get it done faster this way."
Jack holds your gaze for a few seconds, lips pursed. "Fine. But take this one," he says, passing you a smaller tote. "It's lighter."
You roll your eyes, but accept it before you can trigger another minor head injury. You load the tote onto the larger rolling suitcase and begin to push the smaller one in front of you while Jack lugs the remaining few duffel bags onto his shoulders, eyes pinched from the effort.
You begin to follow him down the tiled path to his unit, which you realize you've never seen before. You two hadn't exactly been a behind closed doors couple last summer.
God - no. Not a couple. A fling, a stupid, spur of the moment little fling that was over now. It had to be.
But, now that you think of it, it would probably be a good idea to broach the subject now that you two are alone. Lay out some ground rules, at least.
"Sooo," you begin.
Immediately, you catch the muscles of Jack's back tense.
"We should probably talk about it."
"I don't see why that's necessary," he grunts.
His face is angled forward, facing entirely away from your discerning eye. You wonder if it's intentional.
"Really? You don't think that this situation warrants even a little bit of discussion?"
You step in front of him, forcing him to come to a halt. He sighs.
"No, I don't."
"We are going to be spending an entire week together," you hiss. "With our families. And we have history."
"History?"
"What else would you call it?"
He doesn't miss a beat.
"A mistake."
His jaw is flexed, the eyes that once looked at you like you were a goddess incarnate as he came down your throat glaring at you now with unbridled disgust.
"Jackie boy!"
You freeze. Glance over your shoulder to find your parents waving at him from about fifteen feet away - too far, you hope, to make out your conversation.
While they exchange greetings, you mumble something about needing to use the restroom and ask your dad to take over. As soon as you are out of sight, you sprint back to your room.
In theory, Jack enjoys being alone. His days are always so crowded, the waiting room in the ER seemingly always full no matter the hour, his home constantly overrun by Florence's ever expanding clothing collection sitting in neat piles he consistently forgets to put away after folding. Even back when he was a kid, he found solace in solitude, practically barricading himself in his room whenever he sensed an argument brewing between his sisters.
The first night, the emptiness of the hotel room is torture. He tries television - nothing but fucking re-runs - and exercise, planking against the cool tile for as long as he can manage before he's finally forced to quit by the sheer boredom of the activity rather than the physical strain. Even scrolls through his email, something he swore he wouldn't do this week. Skims the abstracts of a few new papers from the publications he's subscribed to, checks in with Shen to make sure he's got things handled back home. Is almost disappointed when he receives a simple thumbs up in response.
He knows where he is going to end up. Puts it off as long as he can before finally accepting defeat and sliding on his sneakers.
The humidity is fucking intense, and he's broken a sweat by the time he reaches the clearing. He pauses a moment to swipe at his face with his shirt. Consequently, it takes him a few minutes before he notices you.
The deja vu is so dizzying he has to brace himself against a nearby palm tree. You're sitting in the dirt, closer to the cliffside this time than he remembers. The bottle at your side is different, the liquid inside clear - vodka, he guesses. He thought he'd smelled it on your lips earlier. Your eyes hit him with that same startling force when he meets them.
"Shit," you say, the vowel overly elongated, a sign you're already fuckin' gone. "I gave this to you, didn't I?"
He nods once. He can already feel his pulse beginning to jump.
"It's fine, I'll go," he finally offers, turning on his heel.
"No - no, you stay. It was yours first."
As if to prove your point, you pat the soil beside you.
"I just...don't think it's wise. The two of us being alone."
Something he thought you understood based on your earlier conversation.
You roll your eyes, head lolling against your shoulders dramatically. "Why, because you're scared I'll jump your fucking bones?"
Fuck. He feels the familiar rush of blood to his cock, and clenches his jaw so tightly he gets the irrational feeling it might break as he fights against his erection.
"I'll see you tomorrow," he chokes out before practically sprinting back to his room.
For the first time that night, he's grateful to have the suite to himself. He barely waits for the shower to warm before stepping inside. The frigid water does little to tame his arousal, his cock defiantly hard and beginning to ache.
He cannot jack off to the thought of you. Not now that he knows who you are. So when he finally takes his cock into his hand, he doesn't think of you. Of your smart ass mouth suddenly gone quiet, lips parted in a helpless little 'o', head falling back against your tan shoulders as he buries himself inside of you. Of how tight you would be, of how you'd gasp when he bottoms out, when his cock presses against your G-spot. Before he knows it, his breath has grown ragged, and he's bracing one hand against the wall, head falling against his chest as he cums all over the shower wall.
A bad omen if he's ever seen one.
Family dinner has been a drinking game for you since you turned twenty one. Dad interrogates you about your future, drink. Mom offers a slightly insane, one hundred percent politically incorrect opinion, drink. Lucy picks a fight because you offer to tutor her in English, drink. Drink, drink, drink.
Tonight, the game just might be going into overtime. Your father has brought up the bar exam no less than five times, and the offer to stay on at your firm as an associate that is contingent upon you passing the test on the first try just as often. You are on your third vodka diet coke (all doubles, of course), because you're drinking to get drunk, not to enjoy the selection of tropical cocktails the hotel offers, and you know from experience the less sugar you consume the easier the hangover will be.
Lucy, at least, is in a pretty good mood. She and Florence have been whispering non-stop. You're not sure what they talk about. Your sister's never expressed an interest in boys, although you know she has very, very strong pop culture opinions based on the number of fights you've accidentally wandered into.
"You two look like you're having a terrible time," you joke to Lucy, who rolls her eyes but still manages a grin.
"I'm so glad her dad is letting her sleep over. It's almost like having a sister."
Her face falls. You wonder if yours does the same.
When did I stop feeling like your sister? The question burns the tip of your tongue. More terrifying, you wonder if you ever did.
The age gap was always going to make your relationship a bit odd. Sometimes, it felt like you were more of her parent than your actual ones. After you, it seemed like they'd pretty much given up on the whole strict thing, opting instead for a Lorelai Gilmore style carefree approach that sometimes makes your head spin. Where have you gone, people who raised me, you often find yourself wondering.
So, back when you were living at home, the burden often fell on you to make sure Lucy went to bed on time, finished her homework, kept her planner up to date, had some kind of long term vision for her future. It was you who had to push her to talk to her teachers about honors courses, you who had bear the screaming matches that followed because your parents simply didn't care enough anymore.
All you want is for her to be successful. You know it's what your parents wanted for you. It's the reason why you are willing to try to forget about all the little things they did to fuck up your cortisol levels for life. And for the first time, you realize you have become the very thing that's driven you insane.
Your eyes sting. The world seems to slant, voices fading to a dull murmur, masked by the panicked beat of your heart. You throw back the rest of your drink in one swallow.
"I'm going to get a refill," you mutter to no one in particular before making a break for it.
Jack has somehow managed to make it through all of dinner without looking at you. Of course, that streak is shattered when you suddenly stumble away from the table, nearly colliding with a busboy as you make a beeline for the bar.
He's not the only one who turns and stares. Allan watches, a bit of irritation darkening his gaze as he sips his beer.
"Is she..." Jack begins. Stops himself.
It's not his place. But he sees the shot glasses the bar tender lines up on the table in front of you - three of them. Watches the man flash a sleazy grin as you throw them back without taking a breath, like it's nothing. Sees the man brush your arm in a way that had to be intentional as he collects them, already reaching for the bottle.
"Is she alright?"
Allan smiles tightly. "She's twenty-three. She can handle herself."
Jack digs his fingers into his thigh to keep his good leg from jiggling. "Still seems pretty young to me."
His friend rolls his eyes.
"We were younger than that when we enlisted. At a certain point, you have to let them take their lives into their own hands."
He's sure Allan's right. He remembers his twenties, the shock of re-adjusting to civilian life with one less limb. It would probably be good for you in the long run to find your footing on your own.
But, just for tonight, when his eyes start to wander to you, he lets them.
The hangover is worse than you expect it to be, a headache throbbing behind your eyes from the moment you wake. Though, it's not quite as painful as waking the next morning, and stumbling out of your bedroom to find Jack in your family's suite. Clean shaven, wearing another one of those goddamn muscle tees. You don't have to look in the mirror to know you're sporting a truly insane bit of bedhead, and you can feel last night's makeup still stuck to your face, sticky and smeared beneath your eyes in a manner that must look nightmarish.
Of course, Jack lifts his eyes from his coffee to you.
And immediately lowers them.
Bastard.
You're not sure when you decided to hate him. Maybe it was your interaction that first morning, the hostility in his voice when he spat out that word - mistake. But it's easy to now, when he's intruding upon your space at the one time you need peace.
When your dad catches your eye from the breakfast nook where he's sitting with Jack, he raises his eyebrows comically, clutching his chest in mock fright.
"You've got a little something there - and there, and there, and there," he jokes, and you glare at him as you open the kitchen door where your family stores the few bits of meds they brought with them. You find the Advil and unscrew the lid while you hold the label up to the light, checking the dosage.
"Not a good idea in the long run, kid."
The sound of Jack's voice startles you, and a few of the capsules spill onto the countertop. He catches your eyes, seems to recognize the question in them.
"Taking ibuprofen after drinking can have longterm side effects -"
You toss back the pills - more than the recommended dosage, you're certain - and swallow them dry before he can finish.
"Thank you for the free advice, Doctor Abbot."
You turn on your heel and head to the bathroom, and smother your scream in a towel.
Of course, the torture doesn't stop there.
You've been attempting to doze on your lounger at the pool for approximately two minutes before his voice is assaulting you again.
"Skin cancer's no joke."
Your eyes crack open just enough for you to glare at him. Why the hell he would decide to take the lounger next to you is something you cannot make sense of, especially given his attitude so far. But before you can protest, he's pressing a bottle of sunscreen into your hands.
You sigh, but begin to spread the lotion over your legs, your arms, your chest. Jack very, very obviously averts his eyes during that part, opting to squint at the sun instead, as if it is somehow less painful.
When you set the bottle on the cement, he clucks his tongue. "Back too. Here -"
Before you can protest, he squirts a large handful into his palm and begins applying it to your lower back. His hands are rough against your skin, the lotion so cold your stomach flexes in a way that's not entirely unpleasant.
"Hair up," he orders. Something about that specific command, combined with the low, rough murmur of his voice against the back of your neck has you throbbing, which is so fucking embarrassing. Even more embarrassing when he punctuates it with a friendly, "kiddo."
"Kiddo?" you scoff, turning to meet his gaze.
Jack shakes his head slightly, eyes flashing a warning. You bite down on your lip.
Thankfully, it's not long before Florence is occupying all of his attention, begging him to come in the pool so she and Lucy can play chicken. The longer you look at him, the crueler it seems. The sharp lines of his pecks, the greying trail of hair curving down his stomach to his waistband. Freckles dotting his broad shoulders that you wish you could have had time to explore last summer, to press a kiss against, the catch of his breath like a holy chorus in your ears.
When you turn back to the book in your lap, you catch your mom staring at you from her seat.
"Do you remember when you used to have the biggest crush on him?"
"Ohmygod, mom!" You hiss. "That absolutely did not happen."
"I swear it's true! One time when you were about six you told everyone you were going to marry him." She chuckles heartily, a bit of her drink splashing onto her chest. "It's a good thing Marisol was never the jealous type."
You wish that you didn't remember her. Because that - more so than the nauseating refrain of Uncle Jack and the fact that he was there when you were fresh on the fucking planet - that is what really gets to you. Aunt Marisol. The one who bought you your first American girl doll, who took you shopping every time she came to visit and always looked so overjoyed when you spun for her in your oversized polyester princess dresses. You remember her much better than Jack, who spent most of his visits catching up with your father. And even though she's been dead for over a decade, it's the thought of fucking her husband that makes this thing so twisted for you - especially because you have the insatiable urge to do it again.
She and Nani start talking about some karaoke tiki bar in town, and that line of conversation is forgotten before you can get queasy.
"You wanna tag along?" Nani offers. "I guess you're old enough now."
You consider your options. Spending the night either (A) third-wheeling two teenage girls (one of whom is genetically bound to get irritated at everything you say), (B) hanging out with your parents and your secret former situation ship, or (C) alone. With your thoughts. Which, at the mere prospect, are already beginning to stir, whispering the things you have been fighting to keep from your mind since those two days in July.
You failed the bar exam. Of course, you don't know know, but ever since leaving that dismal convention center, you have this feeling, like a thousand cartoonish elephants sitting on your chest. You usually enjoy tests. Prefer them to the kind of mundane busy work and semester-long projects some of your professors so love. Each time you left one of the testing rooms at your law school for the past three years, you've felt damn near giddy - skin buzzing, electric, alive. So certain that you've nailed it you never got the nail biting bouts of self doubt that afflicted most of your friends.
Ninety-nine percent of the time, you're right. Which is why the fact that you feel such all-consuming despair about the biggest exam of your life isn't easy for you to brush off as some simple post-test blues.
If you are left alone tonight, there will be nothing to stop you from rehashing every essay question in your mind, scouring the reddit forums to see the general consensus on what the right answers were, working yourself into a panicky spiral until you forget how to breathe and your lips turn blue.
And you and Jack are fine. It's a little awkward, sure, but not any more than things always are after a hookup. Any lingering weirdness is just the side effect of being forced back into each other's lives after so long. The more time you spend together, the easier it'll get. You're sure of it. Ninety-nine percent.
Okay, who are you kidding. Sixty percent.
"Sure," you say to Nani, and Nani alone. Even though you can see him staring from the edge of the pool out of the corner of your eye. The familiar twitch of his brow. "Sounds fun."
Karaoke was a terrible idea. He can sense it by the way you're already swaying a bit when he picks you and your parents up in his rental car that night. Your parents slide into the back seat, leaving you to ride shotgun. As he drives, he catches the glint of metal in your lap - a flask. You sip whenever the volume in the backseat rises, your parents distracted by bickering over where to hike the next day. He's sure you know that he's watching. Maybe you even want him to.
Was he the reason for your spiraling? Guilt gnaws at him, growing more and more rabid the more he watches you that night.
The group lines up for karaoke once you reach the bar. Somehow, another couple ends up wedged between them in line, splitting it so that you and him are separated from the others. He wishes they wouldn't leave you alone with him so much, but why shouldn't they? Yes, your mental state is obviously not great, but no one else would suspect that he had anything to do with that. You haven't seen him in a decade, and even before his grief-induced isolation severed him from his friends, you two were never close. To Allan, it probably seems like a good thing to give you the chance to bond with each other. He tries to focus on the performances, his smile feeling more like a grimace as he sings along.
You are electric on stage, just as he somehow knew you would be. Strolling back and forth while you belt Mr. Brightside like you own the fucking place. The crowd eats it up, head banging with you during the chorus. Your hair is wild, arcing over your back as you jump to the beat.
When his turn finally arrives, you don't step away. Instead, you flash him a devilish grin, whispering something to the woman running the karaoke.
"You like Springsteen, right?"
He's not sure how the fuck you are able to remember that, especially in this state, but it's right on the fuckin' money. He nods.
The opening beat of I'm on Fire begins to play.
"Come on, Uncle Jack," you say, grinning. "I know you know this one."
The others cheer him on until he finally takes the stage. It's not until the first verse appears on the screen opposite him that he realizes what you've done.
Hey little girl is your daddy home?
Did he go and leave you all alone?
I've got a bad desire
Fuck-ing-hell.
He can't fucking look at Allan during the song. Mumbles the words he should know so well, keeps his eyes on the horizon. It doesn't help that you look so goddamn amused, grinning up at him from the bar.
It's not long before the adults are ready to turn in. You, however, are dead set on staying out.
"It's barely eleven," you complain. "There are some other bars I want to check out in town. I'll just grab an Uber when I'm ready to head back to the hotel."
Allan curls his lips, seeming refreshingly concerned about the prospect of letting you go home with a stranger, but he doesn't attempt to stop you. And, for some reason he can't fucking make sense of, Jack finds himself offering, "I'll keep an eye on her. I'll be up late anyways."
"Our two night owls," Darby croons, playfully swatting at Jack's chest.
The weight of his mistake hits him the second the others are out the door, and you two are left alone at your table.
"I need to get laid."
Jack sputters, the beer he'd had the misfortune to be sipping at that moment shooting down the wrong pipe.
"Jesus, kid, I told you -"
"Not with you, grandpa," you say, wrinkling your nose, a lopsided grin on your lips. "Though I'm flattered. I know you're not very good at sharing."
You let the comment simmer in the air for an excruciating moment before shaking your head and continuing. "No, just...with someone. See any strong contenders?"
He won't indulge you, doesn't even follow your gaze as it circles the crowded room. "You shouldn't be having sex with anyone in this state."
And you sure as hell shouldn't be talking about this with me.
"Oh, Jack Jack." You snort, rolling your eyes. "Nobody has sex sober."
"What? That's - fuck, kid." He runs a hand along his jaw. "That's not a good habit to get into at your age."
You tap a slender, manicured finger against your glass. "Bad habits are all I've got."
He wants to ask you more, but some asshole's roped the entire bar into singing along with him to Sweet Caroline. Instead, Jack just looks at you. Really looks, in a way he hasn't let himself since those first few nights last summer. In the dim light, he catches the slightest sheen of tears gathering in your eyes. You sniff, wiping at them quickly, so quickly he's certain nobody else would know that you're crying.
"I think it's time I got you home, kid," he murmurs.
You shake your head. "I'm fine."
You stand, bracing yourself against the table to keep yourself from wobbling. Jack follows a few steps behind as you walk out of the bar. When you inevitably stumble, he catches you, hooking his arm around your waist to keep you upright.
"Come on, kid," he repeats. "Let's go."
Finally, you nod.
In the car, you lower your window. Cool night air whips around your hair around your face, obscuring it from his view. He still struggles to keep his eyes on the road.
A few minutes later, he feels your head settling against his lap. It's nice, at first. Gentle. A bit intimate, but not unbearably so. Clearly, you need comfort right now.
Then you shift, ever so slightly.
And he's fucked.
The blood rushes to his cock like muscle memory at your mere presence. He can feel it stiffening against your cheek, is about to stammer out an apology when you do something he doesn't expect - press your lips to the hard mound growing beneath his jeans. Just one delicate kiss. Then another. Then you're spreading your lips over it, taking it into your mouth, lips dampening the denim.
Shit. Your fingers are already fumbling with his belt buckle, and this cannot fucking be happening, he cannot let this happen. He doesn't catch the way he's allowed the car to swerve into the other lane until a pair of headlights are shining right into his fucking skull.
"Jesus," he cries, turning the wheel so sharply that the car swerves too far, slamming into the large mound of dirt that's lining the road in lieu of a guardrail.
He feels the back of your head crack against the bottom of the steering wheel at the impact. You groan.
"Fuck, kid!"
He pulls you upright, taking your face in his hands. Your eyes flutter, and you melt into his touch as if you're incapable of keeping yourself upright. His fingers feel around against the back of your skull but thankfully he doesn't feel any cuts or a lump beginning to form. He turns on the flashlight on his phone and glides it in front of your eyes.
"Follow this for me."
You obey, eyes bleary and bloodshot, but decidedly not concussed. Once he's sure that you're alright, he collapses against his seat, running a hand through his hair.
"That cannot fucking happen again, you hear me?"
The tears he's seen you holding back come spilling down your cheeks, wracking your shoulders with violent sobs. His anger quiets, guilt taking its place. It's not even a choice - the decision to take you in his arms, holding you against his broad chest as you shudder against him.
"I - don't - know - what's - wr-ong with me," you hiccup into his shirt.
He hushes you, nestling his chin against your head. Eventually, your sobs fade to sniffles and you pull away. His ribs ache a little, staring at your tear stained, swollen face. As he turns the keys in the ignition, he wishes he could have held you all night.
Your headache the next morning is blinding. It feels as if someone has taken an anvil to the back of your skull, pulverizing your brain to aching little bits. Worse, you can't remember anything from last night - nothing at all since you left the pool that afternoon. Maybe it's the hangover, the lingering alcohol still thrumming through your dehydrated limbs, but you have an awful feeling that something bad happened.
You're relieved when you find your family in the patio of the hotel restaurant, smiling breezily at you like everything is picture fucking perfect. At the very least, it's comforting to know that the "bad thing" did not involve you spilling the gory details of your tryst with Jack last summer to the people who created you. Just the thought has bile rising in the back of your throat.
"Where's Jack?" you ask - a perfectly reasonable question given he's the only one of the group missing from the happy scene.
"I think he's looking for the gym," your mother answers, then smirks in a way that unsettles you. "He told you to hydrate and stay away from the Advil."
You groan. "I'll happily say sayonara to my kidneys if it means I can get rid of this headache," you grumble, reaching for the pill bottle you'd already tucked into your pocket.
"What did you two get up to last night?" Nani asks, eyes twinkling.
You wish you knew.
Jack successfully manages to avoid you for the rest of the day. He's well aware he won't be able to keep it up for the rest of the trip, but for now, it's the best that he can do.
As he tugs the straps of the rowing machine, his mind is overrun by two warring desires. There is, obviously, the desire to put some distance between you. Establish clear boundaries. No more watching you from across the room, no more hanging out just the two of you, no more fucking sunscreen.
Last night had been a disaster of epic proportions, some real Homer level shit. It had been near fucking impossible to find a rental car with the right kind of adaptive device for his leg, and he'd had to return it to a very ticked off man working the desk at the rental company that morning after discovering the massive dent in the fender. And thank fucking god that the car ended up looking a lot worse than you did. The crack of your skull still echoes in his ears. It is probably in both of your best interests to stay as far away from each other as possible.
And then there's the desire to do the total opposite.
To help you through whatever it is you're clearly going through. To keep you from getting hurt - from hurting yourself. To do the things no one else is going to do.
He blames it on his job. He can't see a wound without wanting to stitch it up.
No matter who it belongs to.
It's not even a choice - not drinking that night - but a pressing necessity. That unknowable "bad thing" you are afraid of has grown fangs in the back of your mind, sinking its teeth into your consciousness until your every waking second is consumed by panic. It's so terrifying, you don't even attempt to steal sips from your flask to calm yourself down like you normally would, so fearful that you'll unknowingly repeat history.
After your first twenty-four hours sober in an embarrassingly long time, you're not feeling much better. If anything, you're feeling worse. Your entire body begins to shake intermittently, and your skin is burning hot to the touch. No matter how much ibuprofen you throw back, the headache will not retreat.
Somehow, none of that is enough to get you out of the hike your family has planned for that day.
The humidity hits you like a soggy towel to the face the second you tug open the car door.
"Are we sure this island isn't just a giant microwave?" you joke.
Lucy is not amused. Florence, bless her, gives you a small, placating smile as she steps out of the vehicle.
You're a little surprised to spot Jack stepping out of Koa's Jeep. When he sees you, he stops. Actually stops dead, so abruptly that Koa rams into his back, nearly knocking them both flat on their asses.
Shit.
So, the bad thing definitely involved Jack, then. You should have predicted that. It was like leaving a pyromaniac alone with a lighter and being surprised when they torched the place. You are flint, and Jack is steel. When you're together, you're practically destined to burn both of your lives to the fucking ground.
You pour all of your focus into the hike, hoping the burning in your calves will distract you from the pounding in your head as you trudge up the trail. Your dad explains that there's supposed to be a breathtaking view at the end, a cliffside where you can glimpse the entire bay. You wish they'd chosen something a little more exciting, but you still have a few days left of the trip, and you know your sister still wants to kayak to a trail that leads to a hidden waterfall Florence and Jack visited last year.
The girls decided to bring the cheap portable speaker they've been dragging around the island with them on the hike. Normally, you would have enjoyed having a substitute for silence, but Gracie Abrams is the last thing in the world you want to hear given the migraine still haunting you like the ghost of hangovers past. You try to power through it, grinding your teeth against the noise, the chatter of the two teen girls trudging through the foliage in front of you, and god damn can someone please tell Gracie to shut the fuck up, no idea how you ever listened to this whiny bullshit, wah wah wah -
Your foot catches on a root, and you pivot it the precise wrong way - something you feel deep in your bones, because said bones give a dramatic pop.
You crumple like a soda can. It's pathetic, but you can't seem to care, writhing on your back with your knee pulled to your chest, teeth gritted against the pain driving through your foot. Can't even glare at the person who almost immediately drops to the ground beside you.
"What hurts?"
"Ankle," you gasp.
Jack's quick to gently pull off your shoe and sock. His fingertips are cool against your skin despite the heat, and the contact gives you the slightest bit of relief as he carefully examines your ankle, squeezing it ever so gently. You wince.
"Let's get you up," he finally instructs.
He props an arm against your lower back, helping you stand. The group has stilled around you. Lucy bites at her thumbnail as she watches the two of you, a tiny, almost imperceptible wrinkle of concern in her brow.
"Can you stand on it?" your dad asks.
Jack's arm doesn't leave your back as you attempt to put pressure on it - and thank God for that, because the second you do white hot pain floods your entire leg. You blink back tears.
"Yeah," you finally grit out. "Just really fuckin' hurts."
"Probably just a sprain, then," he surmises.
Your mother elbows him in the ribs. "Let's listen to what the actual doctor has to say."
"No, he's right," Jack agrees. "Probably just a sprain. But, you'll need to get it X-rayed to be sure."
Great. There's a chance you might be spending the rest of the week in a cast. As if this goddamn trip cannot get any worse.
"You guys go on ahead," Jack tells the group. "I'll help her back to the car."
"Uncle Jack to the rescue," your father jokes.
You wince. Talk about salt in the fucking wound.
As your family continues on up the trail, you bend to the ground and struggle to get your shoe back on, biting your lip against the pain. Finally, you're able to take your first excruciating step. You can't stop yourself from groaning, your already shaky knees threatening to buckle. Thankfully, it's not too far back to the car since you were only ten minutes into an hour long hike. Things could definitely be worse, you remind yourself, although when you try to take another step it certainly doesn't feel like it.
"Fuck, stop."
Jack is watching you from a few feet ahead. His jaw is flexed, eyes pinched.
"Can I -" He swallows. "It would be easier if I carried you."
You scoff. "No fucking way."
"You don't have to like it, but you really should fucking listen, kid."
There's a bite to his tone.
"Did I -" You stop. Aren't exactly sure what you want to ask. "I can't remember anything from the night before last."
Jack exhales sharply. Looks almost...relieved?
"Seven shots will do that to you," he finally says.
"But nothing -"
"No."
That single syllable is so definitive, so final. And yet, you still don't quite believe it.
He sighs, and rubs his hands together. A muscle ticks in his jaw.
"Alright, let's do this, kid."
It takes all of your self restraint to keep you from elbowing him in the ribs as he scoops you into his arms. Your head lolls back against his chest as he walks. He smells like sweat, and sunscreen, and something else you can't quite place - something distinctly him. Masculine, and warm, and raw.
"Okay, listen," you begin. "I am all for moving on, but what you are not going to do is treat me like I'm a fucking child. And I'm not saying that because I'm pining after you or some other hopeless romantic, I'm not over you bullshit, I'm saying it because I've earned it. I have two degrees, several very shitty and semi-traumatizing relationships under my belt, and have been able to vote for far too long for anyone to call me kid, especially you. We may not be peers, exactly, but we're both adults and I would appreciate it if you could acknowledge that."
Jack is silent for a moment. Birds chitter overhead.
"What should I call you?"
"Goddess divine, obviously." You snort. "You don't have to call me anything. I never understood why everyone is so obsessed with nicknames. It always reminds me of some shitty romance book."
"Hey," Jack snaps, his tone easing into something playful as he adds gruffly, "I happen to enjoy those."
"Seriously?"
He nods, his chin brushing the crown of your head.
"Marisol was always obsessed with them, and I guess Florence inherited it from her. I pick 'em up from time to time."
You grin up at him.
"Wait, so what exactly are you reading? Like...Emily Henry or minotaur smut?"
"I - I like Emily's stuff. I don't know what the fuck a minotaursmut even is."
"Trust me, that's probably for the best."
You feel a small twitch of insecurity the longer he carries you, knowing it must be difficult in this terrain, in the heat, especially given the situation with his leg. But Jack doesn't complain.
"So...no nicknames."
"No nicknames. We can just talk, no bullshit."
Jack huffs out a laugh.
"Okay, maybe a teeny, tiny buffer layer of bullshit," you amend. "Just enough to keep what happened last summer under wraps. But I'd like to be able to be with you without it being weird. I could use the distraction."
You feel him stiffen. "I don't know about that," he murmurs.
"A distraction doesn't have to be sexual, you know. We were having a pretty good conversation before..."
"Before it got sexual?"
You sigh. "Yeah, before it got sexual. But I assure you, this offer is purely platonic."
As platonic as an offer of friendship to the man who fucked your anxiety right out of you a year ago - who is currently carrying you through the rainforest like a goddamn Disney prince - can be. You can't help the way your stomach tenses before he finally says, "Deal."
It was, as he'd thought, just a sprain. That doesn't stop Jack from insisting you be fitted for a boot and given a pair of crutches, and paying for the urgent care visit before you're even released.
He paces the sterile halls of the clinic, arms folded behind his back, daring quick glances through the narrow window beside your exam room. He shouldn't be so fucking antsy. This environment should calm him. The familiar bite of antiseptic in his nostrils, flickering fluorescent overheads, incessant beeping of monitors in the distance.
It doesn't.
Because he's not thinking about the PTMC right now. He's thinking about a different ER - the one where the love of his life was officially declared dead.
The memory doesn't come to him often anymore, usually smothered beneath the thousands of other micro-traumas he's experienced while working in the Pitt. Now it is inescapable. He can recall the all consuming hopelessness that hit him while he stood there, limbs turning to lead. How much effort it took to keep himself upright. A man drowning, struggling to keep his head above the water from that moment on.
He's jeopardized your wellbeing twice now - that head butt the first day, the car crash barely forty-eight hours ago. And he's not certain, but he can't help feeling like he's to blame for this injury, too. Like he's a curse, a broken mirror you couldn't help cutting yourself on.
The notion is irrational, he's well aware. But nothing's made fucking sense since he met you.
Lucy and Florence decide to keep you company while you're sentenced to bed rest, which actually ends up taking place on the sofa of your suite. They aren't the only ones.
Jack is there. Lingering, at first. Hugging the walls of the room as he chats with the girls, arms folded across his broad chest, eyes occasionally drifting idly to the movie playing on the TV. It only gets cable, and so you're stuck watching a Swoony Summer Marathon full of the beachy rom-coms the girls love. You don't think he'll stick around long.
He does.
Longer than the girls, who finally abandon you for the pool, wanting to strengthen their tan lines before the end of the week. The film switches to Fifty First Dates, which you've never seen before. You guess that Jack hasn't either by the way he sinks deeper into the couch, arms tucked behind his head, eyes glued to the screen.
"What do you have against romances?" he finally asks.
"I guess I just prefer gritty realism to overly indulgent fantasies," you say with a shrug. "It's more comforting."
"I'm guessing you're the type who listens to true crime at night like it's a fuckin' bedtime story."
"No, god no. I do love horror, though. You?"
Jack shakes his head. There's something sheepish about the crinkle of his eyes. "Get more than my fair share of gore in the ER, never understood why anyone would watch any of that shit to unwind."
"It's a control thing. One of my professors talked about it a bit in undergrad, how the emergence of genres like horror and mystery is tied to these massive cultural shifts like urbanization. Imaginary horrors displace the real ones, give you a bit of relief and closure when the plot is resolved."
"Huh. Guess that makes sense." His Adam's apple bobs. "My therapist thinks I find comfort in the darkness."
You snort. "I could have told you that for free."
"Yeah, I'm sure you could have," he grins, rolling his eyes. The smile drops suddenly, and his gaze deepens into something more serious. Nerves stir in your stomac.
"I think it's normal, what you said last summer. Not knowing how to exist without the bad."
You're strangely touched that he remembers. You've honestly forgotten how much you opened up to him, preoccupied by the fucked up psychosexual drama of it all.
"I hope so." You pop a piece of popcorn into your mouth. "At least we've gotten better at relaxing."
Jack glances pointedly down at the boot on your foot. "Not sure if this counts."
"Well, at least I'm sober."
He looks at you. Doesn't speak, just stares. Like he's waiting for you to say it.
"I know I've been a mess this summer." Maybe an even bigger one than you were last year.
"Is it...work?"
"No, it's -" You groan. Blow the air out of your cheeks dramatically. "I don't know. I thought it was just post-bar exam jitters, but I think it's more than that. I think I have a habit of making bad situations worse. Like I just can't stop until I hit rock bottom."
Jack breaks your gaze, fixing his eyes on the screen.
"Rock bottom is safest sometimes. No place to go but up."
Maybe that's what it is. Like you said - sometimes one form of fear can end up being a comfort, a distraction from something bigger. If you thrust yourself into terrible situations, constantly see the world through the lens of your anxieties, you don't have to think about the things that scare you the most. The things that could shatter you.
"I've tried the drinking thing," Jack continues after a moment. "Back when I met Marisol, I was deep in a hole. She helped to pull me out of it."
"It's hard to imagine you like that," you admit. "You always seem so...disciplined."
Jack shrugs. "I wish I had better advice to give you." He closes his mouth suddenly, like he had to stop himself from punctuating the sentence with his usual kid or kiddo. "Honestly, I don't know what works yet. All I know is a long list of shit that doesn't."
"I'll figure it out. We'll figure it out."
He holds your gaze a moment, then nods slowly. "We will."
The intimacy of his stare is a bit too familiar. On the L-shaped sofa, your faces are just a few inches away, separated by a stack of throw pillows tucked into the corner. You shove a handful of popcorn into your mouth, crunching it loudly.
"You have to admit, this movie's pretty creepy right?" you mumble as you chew.
He shushes you. "A good romantic comedy requires suspension of disbelief."
"But the entire premise is so fucked up!"
He tosses a pillow at your head, nearly upending the bowl of popcorn resting on your chest.
"Whatever happened to do no harm?" you exclaim as you throw it back at him.
"I'm off the fuckin' clock."
"Mmm I don't think it works like that."
He grins. "Smartass."
"See now that's a nickname I can get behind."
"Suits you," Jack comments as he leans onto his side to lean over and steal some popcorn from you.
It's such a totally normal moment, so easy for you to fall into a friendly rhythm with him, that you're almost embarrassed that it's taken the two of you so long to reach this point.
"Jack?"
"Hmm?" he hums through a mouthful of popcorn.
"I don't think it was a mistake."
He swallows.
"I just mean - I'm glad that we met, or reconnected, or whatever. Even if everything's all messed up now, I'm still glad you're here."
Jack is silent a moment. You wonder if you've said too much, if you're going to scare him off again. But then he smiles.
"Likewise." His eyes glint. "Smartass."
And that is the moment. Not the night you met, or Jack's proposal, or when you finally realized who he was. There, laying on the couch in your pajamas, tossing popcorn at each other's heads. The mischievous twinkle on his eye as he looks at you, the smug curve of his lips. Your blood turning fizzy the longer you look at him, making it harder and harder for you to conjure the strength to look away. A flutter in your chest unlike anything you've felt before.
That is the moment your life turns upside down.














