series summary: based on the movie/novel, you escaped to the small town of Hawkins, Indiana. there, you meet Eddie Munson, who may just be your safe haven.
series warnings: 18+ FOR DARK THEMES AND SMUT. TW for discussions of domestic abuse and violence, and all that may come with it. hurt/comfort. individual warnings will be listed in each part.
series playlist:
Safe & Sound by Taylor Swift.
Man In The Box by Alice In Chains.
Mystery Of Love by Sufjan Stevens.
We'll Never Have Sex by Leith Ross.
Paul Revere by Noah Kahan.
My Desire by Interpol.
main masterlist.
series masterlist below.
part one: come morning light, you and i'll be safe and sound (coming soon).
part two: come and kiss me, pretty baby, like we'll never have sex.
part three: if i could leave, i would have already left.
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Summaryïž±Robby is infamous for his 7 week itch. Though, after being with you past 7 weeks, something changed in him. While he tried going back to his normal routine post hookup breakup, he couldn't.
Pairingsïž±Michael Robinavitch x Fem!Reader
W.Cïž±6.0k (Sorry, got carried away)
Warningsïž±18+ MINORS DNI, age gap obvi, mentions of Park the Shark (my ortho daddy), jealousy, cussing, kissing, no mention of y/n, fingering, unprotected sex (use a condom!!), usage of the word daddy, slight breeding kink, cream pie, let me know if I missed anything!
Author's noteïž±Happy mother's day to my lovely readers who are mothers! I kind of rushed to publish it today so it would make sense haha. There are like three different versions of this fic and maybe I'll release them. Maybe not. Enjoy!!!
Robby got around in the hospital. That was a very well known fact. He had the inability to settle down with someone and had a 7 week itch. After the 7th week of hooking up, he would normally ghost and find another victim.Â
7 weeks is abnormally short to be causally hooking up with someone.Â
But that's how Robby was.Â
He had set his eyes on you the minute you started working in the hospital. However, his pursuit had ended before it had began. Park had locked his jaws on your and hadn't set you free since.Â
18 weeks ago, rumors started to fly around that Park was dating the new OR nurse. Robby assumed that meant that Park left you unsupervised. And behind the shark's back, he took his bait.Â
At first, you hadn't noticed Robby swarming in on you. You had even thought you were delusional that he was suspiciously friendly for an ulterior motive. He must have known you were itching to have sex. Once you picked up on the fact that he was flirting with you, you took the leap of faith and had sex with him.Â
It was some of the best sex you ever had.Â
Surprisingly, your interesting relationship lasted 16 weeks. It didn't end on bad terms necessarily. You just didn't need him that desperately anymore. You began to care less if he came over to fuck you or not. Robby's ego took a hit and he took the hint.Â
What you had liked about your position in the hospital was that you didn't run into Robby. No awkward encounters. No awkward greetings. You were rarely paged down to the ED.Â
Now it seemed like you were paged down to the ED a little too much.Â
It was your third time being in the ED within two days when you were paged at 11:05 AM.Â
"You know, it's a little concerning how much the equipment keeps getting damaged," you commented to Robby. "How bad is your patient satisfaction?"Â
Robby chuckled as he playfully nudged the back of your knee with his foot, causing you to fold slightly forward. "Didn't realize you were here to be a mini Gloria."Â
"Hey!" You yelped at his action. "You're going to make me fall."Â
"Not my fault you're wearing heels," he said as he nodded down to your heels. "They're nice by the way. Did a cute boyfriend buy you those?"
You playfully rolled your eyes as soon as he mentioned the word boyfriend. Robby had bought you a pair of heels once management had told you that heels were a part of the new dress code. They had been a pair of heels you had been eyeing but never bought due to how expensive they were.Â
"Ironically, I did have a very special man friend buy me a pair of heels that looked identical to these," you began to say as you went back to doing your job. "Then they mysteriously landed in my friends closet and I bought myself a new pair."Â
Robby's face fell for a brief second as you called him a special man friend but he quickly recovered to avoid being discovered. Though, he found it much harder to hide the disappointment when he hard you had given away the heels he had gifted you.Â
"You didn't," he said. "Those were a gift."Â
"A very expensive "fuck me later," gift indeed," you retorted without missing a beat.Â
"It came from my heart."Â
You snorted at his words. Of course he would say something like that. "Yeah, the heart of your dick."
"Still from my heart nonetheless."Â
You stopped working on the monitor an angry patient had destroyed during his temporary state of madness and turned to look at Robby. "Don't you have an emergency to go tend to?"Â
"Always do," he said as he shrugged his shoulders. "As chief attending of this ED, I have to make sure everything is running smoothly."Â
"Yeah with your residents and other attendingsânot this."Â
"These machines are a part of the ED which I need to make sureâ"
"That they're running smoothly," you finished off for him. "Yup, got that memo loud and clear."Â
Robby was good with women, everyone knew that he could charm the socks off of any woman. It was his special talent he had. He had a way of being so insufferably annoying that it was cute.
You didn't continue the conversation, solely focused on fixing the monitor as fast as you could. Not because you needed to be away from Robby. But because you knew the department needed the room, they didn't need anymore delays.Â
Robby hated this kind of silence. He loathed it with you. He liked hearing your voice. He liked the playful banter that naturally sprouted between the two of you. He always thought the two of you had great chemistry.Â
Your phone began to loudly buzz among the loud silence. The screwdriver in your hand was quickly dropped onto the bed as you picked up the phone.Â
"Morning, Dr. Park," you greeted with a smile despite the fact that he couldn't see you.Â
Robby stilled for 2 whole seconds as he heard you cheerfully greet Dr.Park. Robby, the ever so nonchalant man, had been keeping a close eye on you over the past few weeks. He had noticed two things. The first thing he noticed was how much time you were up in ortho due to you setting up new equipment for the department.Â
The second thing he noticed was how close you were getting with Park once again.Â
Park was a very fit man for his age. He had that stern demeanor that he knew you liked. Park was a rare man, most of the surgeons in ortho were blissfully married. He was the only man on the floor who was still single and he used it to his advantage. Robby wouldn't be completely surprised if Park already started nudging you his way towards his bed again.Â
He certainly did when you used to work in the ED. The dirty bastard used to pull his strings to get you to float to the OR to spend more time with you. He loathed the days where he'd be down a favorite nurse.Â
"You do know Park has a girlfriend, right?" Robby questioned as soon as you hung up the phone.Â
"He does not," you immediately countered, placing your phone back in your back pocket. "You're such a liar."Â
Robby internally groaned when you didn't buy into his lie. "Okay, maybe he doesn't actually have a girlfriend but he is seeing someone else. Park is a notorious whore. He uses pretty little things like you and then dumps them when he's had his fill."Â
The smirk crawled its way onto your lips. The remark slipped out of your lips as smooth as butter. "Sounds very familiar, I'm sure I can handle it again."Â
"That's not funny," Robby said as he voice instantly grew serious. His hand went to pinch your side, unable to contain his irritation. "Watch your mouth."Â
You jumped at his pinch. A scowl overtook your face as you swatted his hands off of your body. "I wasn't trying to be funny," you countered. "I was just stating the facts. Just how the facts say you're not entirelyâŠ..alone."Â
Robby's eyebrows furrowed inwards in confusion from your words. Alone? What the hell was that supposed to mean? "What the hell are you talking about?"Â
You knew you were poking a bear that you shouldn't have been poking. You loved getting under his skin to test his patience. "Noelle's demeanor seemed too cheerful this morning. Said it was her post sex glow."Â
That was all you needed to say.Â
Ever since you left the ED, you finally got a proper lunch break. A lunch break you share with Noelle Hastings, aka Robby's new fling. She didn't spend lunch with anyone besides you. Despite the age gap the two of you share, she found comfort in spilling her juiciest secrets to a girlfriend.Â
You didn't mention to Robby that your heart dropped once she revealed she was seeing Robby. Or how your stomach churned when you realized how the day prior, she had mentioned her secret fling that had bent her over her counter and pounded her into oblivion.Â
When you pieced the puzzle together that it had been Robby, you had felt strangely bothered by it. You had spent that entire shift full of intrusive thoughts of Noelle and Robby having sex in different positions. The worst thoughts were the ones where he kisses her in his bed, telling her that she was his girl.Â
"Look, good for you for finding someone born in the same century as you," you began to say as you placed on the last few screws on. "It was about time you put an end to your late midlife crisis."Â
Ouch.Â
"I certainly don't care who you have sex with since it is none of my business," you commented as you finally finished. "Just like how it is none of your business who I have sex with. If it happens to be with Park now, it doesn't matter."Â
Oh, he didn't like the sound of that. His body jumped off from the counter and he stood right in front of you. His towering height made his neck crane down while yours craned upwards.Â
"So you're letting him fuck you?" Robby spat. "You're letting that asshole touch you? Again?"Â
"Park and I are friends," you declared, placing your hand on his chest. "That's it.Â
"Friends can fuck."Â
You rolled your eyes in frustration at his words. You took a step towards the right, grabbing your bag to haul it over your shoulder. "So?"Â
"We were friends when you were riding my face and begging me to cum inside you."Â
You turned to look at him at the mention of the intimacy the two of you had. You were never one to talk about intimacy outside of your bedroom. Sexual endeavors with flings were to be talked about among friends during brunchânot to other flings.Â
"So I'm going to ask you one more time," Robby said with calculated anger. "Is he fucking you?"Â
He didn't dare ask if you were the one fucking him. He asked if Park was the one pinning your hips down as he angled his cock at your entrance. Because he knew Park wasn't the kind of man to let the woman have control of a situation involving him. Because he especially knew that Park would coax you back into his arms, you wouldn't have gone back willingly with him.Â
"I have to go back to Ortho," you said to him as you tired to push past him.Â
Robby grabbed your bicep, stopping you from moving any further. "Answer me," he growled in frustration.Â
You continued to ignore him, not wanting to indulge in his jealous behavior in the middle of your shift. You took your arms from out his grasp, heading straight for the door and into the busy ED. Your heels clicked against the ground with every step you took.Â
"I'm not done talking to you!" Robby exclaimed as he followed shortly behind you.Â
"Nice seeing you!" You announced as you kept your back to him.
Robby went to open his mouth, ready to force the answer out of you. Just then a panicked intern went up to him, begging him for help. He couldn't ignore a case for some woman, no matter how badly he wanted to.Â
And you knew you would be seeing him again.Â
Robby was a very persistent man. He wasn't above making himself look pathetic to get a woman's attention. If he had to go on his knees and beg, he would gladly do so.Â
He had been waiting for you after his shift ended. For once, he didn't stay until 8 PM. The minute he had been finished with hand offs, he made a beeline for your car. The ED be damned, he needed to talk to you.Â
He kept his eyes at the entrance, waiting and waiting. His jaw involuntarily clenched when he finally saw your figure right next to Park's. He nearly broke his own molars when he saw Park lean down to whisper something in your ear as his hand squeezed your elbow. He was sure he heard one crack when you loudly giggled at him when he pulled you closer to him.Â
That dirty bastard.Â
Robby couldn't believe Park had the nerve to still be chasing you. The man no longer had the right to pick you off from the floor as he chose another toy. Park left you alone and Robby rightfully captured your attention.Â
You didn't notice Robby leaning against your car as you left the hospital. It was typical of you to be completely unaware of your surroundings, something he had reprimanded you time after time. You had only noticed him when you finally looked up from your purse.Â
"May I help you?" You deadpanned as your hands fished for your keys.Â
"Yes, you can actually," Robby responded with a smile.Â
"I was being sarcastic," you dryly responded, finally finding your keys. "Shouldn't you be at the nursing home? You know they have a curfew of 9 PM."
"I'm exactly where I need to be."
"And that is?" You questioned, tightening your grip on your purse.Â
"With you," Robby responded.Â
Ah, his stupid charm that swept all the ladies off their feet. He was often so quick and smooth with it, It made you wonder if he secretly practiced in the mirror.Â
"Please move so I can get into my car." You didn't have time to be indulging him. If this had been 7:45 AM then it would be a different story.Â
"What's the rush?" Robby said as his hands flew to your shoulders. He mockingly winced at you as he noticed how tense you were. "Oh, poor baby, you're so tense. Let me make it better."Â
The argument died in your throat once his warm, large hands began to massage your shoulders. The moan bubbled in your throat at the touch. Robby knew your body like the back of his hand. Not only was he a quick learner but once Robby learned a person, he knew exactly how to handle them. Especially when it came to you. He knew how your shoulders filled with tension after a grueling shift.Â
"Robby, move. I want to go home," you declared despite your eyes fluttering shut in bliss. "I'm serious this time."
"Oh but you're still so sore," Robby shushed as his hands slowly started to make their way downwards. "Just let me get all the knots out your shoulders."Â
"Robby."Â
He shushed you once again. One hand was still massaging your shoulder while the other slowly strayed underneath your shirt. You barely registered the fact that his left hand was snaking its way up to your breast.Â
"Robby," you called out again with a warning tone.Â
His grip tightened in annoyance from your persistence of getting home."Shut up."Â
Your eyes shot open as soon as his fingers danced slightly underneath your bra, his bare fingers skimming the underside of your breast. "Robby!"Â
"Jesus Christ," he muttered in annoyance, making no move to remove his hand. "Why do you always have to put up a fight?"Â
You scoffed at his tone. You shoved his hand away from under your shirt. You had made an attempt to push him away from you but his right hand was firmly planted on your neck, forcing you to stay put. "Why do you always have to push my boundaries?"Â
"I just want to help you relax," Robby explained. "I know you're stressed and tired."Â
You laughed from amusement at his pathetic excuse. "Yeah? Well, I'm not very relaxed when your hand is on my tit."Â
He shrugged his shoulders, clearly having his fun in riling you up. "It slipped."Â
"Michael!"Â
Robby seemed to let up once he realized you called him by his first name. A rarity unless he was in deep shit.Â
He took his hands away from your body and instead found their way home to your cheeks. He brought you slightly forward as his lips planted a kiss on your forehead. "Oh come on, just let loose a little bit. I just want to play with you. Is that so bad?"Â
You peered at him through your eyelashes, too lazy to tilt your neck up to see him. You feel him guide your face at a higher angle, allowing him to look you in the eyes. "With a game of hello titty in a public parking lot?"Â
"I wanted to expand on our voyeurism kink," he declared with no hesitation.Â
You opened your mouth to protest, ready to fight him once again. Instead, his thumb pushed on your bottom lip, effectively shushing you. "I'm just kiddingâagain. You make it too easy to push your buttons."Â
He could feel the words bubbling up in your throat to fight him. It always had to be your way or the highway. He thought it was cute some days. Just how you thought it was cute how some times he kept fighting you back.Â
The black pumps were really starting to became unbearable to wear. You kept shifting around, hoping to alleviate some of the pain. Robby noticed right away and grappled onto your hips, lifting you to set you down on the hood of your car.Â
A yelp of shock had left your body at the sudden move of being manhandled. Your eyebrows furrowed inwards in frustration but your voice was laced with amusement. "Jesus! Give a girl a warning next time!"Â
"I have always loved the way you say thank you," he quipped.Â
You shot him a sneer in retaliation but it did feel nice not having to be on your feet anymore. The pulse in your feet quickly died and you could feel the relief of not feeling the blood pool anymore.Â
"Better?" Robby asked as he took a step closer.Â
You nodded your head at him. "You know it feels better."
"Of course I do. I'll always know what you need," Robby said arrogantly. "It's my specialty."
A smile twitched on the edge of your lips as a result of his words. "Oh yeah? Then what else do I need?" You challenged.Â
Robby swallowed the last step between the two of you. His legs were threatening to stand in between yours."Want me to tell you? Or do you want me to just do it?"Â
You mockingly cooed at him, placing your hands on the hood of the car to bear your weight. "Oh wow, an illusion of a choice. How sweet of you Dr. Robinavitch."Â
His eyes flickered down to your lips for one indulging second before he peeled his eyes away. He nodded his head like a complete idiot, his head gaining distance between yours "Yeah, I'm a total sweetheart."
You hummed in acknowledgment, leaning back with every inch he leaned forward. While Robby should have taken that as a sign that you didn't want his lips on yours, he ignored the silent rejection.Â
Once you realized you couldn't lean backwards anymore without losing your balance, he took the unwanted bait. His head surged forward and his lips encased yours in a surprisingly soft kiss.Â
You resisted. For about 3 seconds.Â
Your sexual instincts kicked in and you willingly kissed him back. You sudden protest of not wanting to be groped in the middle of a public parking lot was thrown out the window when your felt his tongue caress yours.Â
It was easy to get carried away and ignore your survival skills whenever you kissed Robby. The sudden need of air became a chore when the priority was to hear his low moan grumble in his chest whenever you nipped at his bottom lip.Â
Though, the both of you were forced to pull away when he felt his phone vibrate in his pocket. You looked down to see who was calling him. Besides, you had every right to lurk.Â
Guilt quickly flooded your veins when you saw Noelle's name pop up on his screen with a text asking him if he was still coming over. Here he was kissing you while he had plans with another woman. Your body tensed as you quickly pulled away from him. A hand was placed on his chest, preventing him from getting closer to you.Â
"I can't do this, I'm sorry," you said.Â
But you weren't really sorry.Â
"I can't do this to Noelle," you added as you shimmied your way down. "She deserves a man who will give her his undivided attention even if it's just sex."Â
That was true.Â
Noelle had years on you and the two of you weren't friends outside of work. But you did know her. That was enough to draw the line for Robby. There would always be another man chasing behind you, trapping you against your car while you made it. To you, there was nothing worth more than maintain your friendships with your girlfriends. Even if it was just at work.Â
The sudden wall instilled a sense of urgency within Robby to knock it down. Being denied of having you was something he had came accustomed to. It didn't mean that he liked it.Â
"Noelle is a big girl," Robby stated as he watched you open your car door. "She knew what she was getting into with me."Â
You turned to look at Robby, shrugging your shoulders with indifference. "You made plans with her already. Go be with her."Â
"I don't want to go with her anymore," he quickly responded.Â
You quirked your eyebrow at Robby, trying to fight back the laugh that was climbing up your throat. A toddler didn't whine this much.Â
"Then tell her."Â
Robby shook his head as he waved his hand dismissively. "I'll tell her later."Â
It was clear he wasn't taking no for an answer. As you opened your car door and threw your purse inside, your hand remained on the door panel. "Robby, go play with your friends. I'm going to go play with mine."Â
A mix of a scoff and a dejected sigh left his lips at your words. You took your hand off the door panel and swung your legs into the driver's seat. A silent but friendly goodbye was whispered into the air right before you shut the door and drove off.Â
There was an inconsistent pattern that was beginning to reflect on Robby's commitment. At first, it had been stable. Every time a new relationship began, the 7 week week time bomb began to tick.Â
That pattern became disrupted when you came into the picture. It kept climbing higher and higher. But with every peak, there must be a come down. Much to Noelle's dismay, the relationship had only lasted 27 days. Not even the full 4 weeks.Â
The blame was pinned on a false accusation of work leaving him too tired to function. At 54 years old, working at a poorly funded trauma hospital and emotional baggage chained to his feet, it was certainly believable.Â
In the medical field, it demanded a laser like focus to recognize any alarms the body was triggering. The eyes were meant to catch subtle shifts in the body. Perhaps an abnormal lump by the chest. Maybe even an angry red mark, screaming that there is something wrong.Â
He had noticed the shifts in you.Â
Underneath your shirt, he noticed a new shape that was hidden behind your clothes. Surely it had to be a new necklace. The last one had been oval shaped that used to peek out if you bent down. Now, he could barely make out the shape of a flower. Or was it a heart? He couldn't tell.Â
Robby had never been good at resisting his carnal desires. It simply wasn't in his nature. Patience wasn't his virtue.Â
Which is how he ended up at your doorstep at 8:09 PM, still in his scrubs. A black box was being held in his large hands. With every millisecond that passed, his impatience grew.Â
After a whopping 15 seconds, you finally opened the door. A gray silk night dress adorned your body, showing off his favorite parts of you to him. You leaned against the doorframe, a smirk on your face.Â
"Can't say that I'm surprised to see you," you started off, certainly entertained in this moment. "My mother sends her warm regards and a thank you for the flowers."Â
Robby's face broke out into a smile as he saw the grin on your face. He turned into a mirror every time you smiled, he didn't even realize it. "It was my pleasure."Â
"Yeah, yeah," you waved him off. "Why did you send her flowers? Trying to win her over next?"
Delight was dancing in his eyes as you spoke. This was something he could work with. Now you were playing with him. "Jealous?"Â
A playful scoff pushed past your lips as you shook your head. "Yeah, real jealous my mother got flowers."Â
"Don't worry, I brought you a gift too," he assured you.Â
"An orgasm?" You asked with hope.Â
Robby nodded but you could tell this wasn't part of the banter you were setting up. He was serious. His eyes kept a hold on yours for a little bit too long to be considered casual. "And a gift too."Â
A pause was set in your playful mood. You pushed yourself off your door frame, straightening your spine. The realization that he was serious set in faster than you had wanted it to. "A gift? For what?"Â
He ignored your question and a small box was pushed into your hands. A velvet kissed your palms and you could faintly hear something slithering inside.Â
"Happy Mother's day," he said with a warm voice.Â
The boisterous laugh fled from chest, unable to stay restrained by your mouth. "You have to be kidding me! I'm not even a mom!"Â
Not yet.Â
Robby didn't mind your laugh one bit. In fact, he was happy to get a joyous reaction from you. "I still got you a gift." He nodded his head to the box as it still was left unopened. "Open it."Â
You gently shook your head at him. "Later. I need to do something else first."
You didn't give him time to argue as you grabbed his forearm and dragged him into your apartment. This wasn't a foreign home to him. In fact, he could walk around the entire apartment with his eye closed and come out unscathed.Â
So when his vision was being introduced to the hallway leading to your bed, a Freudian response began. A hot flash of need shot directly down to his pelvis and his heart was already starting to pick up.Â
A relief washed over his body as the routine from 5 weeks ago began to take place. Naturally, his body was being called to your bed. His hands were already flying to his scrubs, peeling them off as you took off your nightgown that you solely wore to tempt him.Â
Of course you had nothing underneath your nightgown because you hated wasting time. His moments became rushed, suddenly finding his scrubs to be a little too tight. They flew across your room without a care in the world.Â
Your hips were soon being cradled by his hands. Robby drew you until your bare chests collided. A soft moan bloomed when you felt your nipples graze the soft hair on his chest. The warmth of your body and you heightened sensitivity only meant one thing.Â
"Are you ovulating?" Robby suddenly asked.Â
You nodded your head at his question, bringing him down to kiss him. Now wasn't the time to talk and Robby knew that. He knew how sensitive women got during this time. How much warmer your body got. How your nipples seemed to poke out, begging for his attention.Â
But his favorite part?Â
The damn waterfall that came from your aching pussy.Â
His arm went to wrap around your waist with a firm grip. With a calculated precision, his middle finger went to gather the wetness that had been pooling in between your legs all day and circled your clit.Â
Just as expected, your knees buckled at the sinful action. His arm around your waist kept your body firmly against his. Your poor pussy was achingly wet and pulsing underneath his touch. Your breath started to get heavier as it was harder to keep kissing him from the pleasure.Â
You released one hand from his bicep, grabbing his fingers to guide it at your entrance. The quiet hint didn't go unnoticed by him and he slipped his middle and ring finger right inside. They slipped right in with no resistance.Â
A sharp gasp flooded the room at the stretch of his thick fingers. His pace started off slow, wanting to drag every wanton moan from you as much as he could. He wanted to savor this precious moment.Â
You eventually had to stop kissing him as your body folded from the pleasure. What had you nearly folding in half was when his fingers slightly curled into the soft spongy spot inside you.Â
Your hand shot out to grasp his wrist, holding him in place. "Don't stop," you demanded. "Just like that. Just like that."Â
Robby shook his head at you. He was too focused to say anything back and too focused on your pleasure. He had been too busy watching your reactions. As a temporary punishment, he wasn't going to let you come undone on his fingers. Or his tongue.Â
No.Â
The only orgasm you deserved was the one on his cock.Â
His fingers never stopped, in fact they curled even deeper inside you. What he needed was to bring you to the edge so he could deny you. A ruined orgasm made it nearly impossible for you reach an actual orgasm. It took longer. It cost more effort than what you were used to.Â
As he felt you clench around his fingers with more frequency, he kept his pace up. He even let you grind against his palm, the friction of your clit grazing the hard edge brought you even closer to your release.Â
"I'm closeâI'm so close," you whimpered as your nails began to leave its imprints.Â
The edge of his palm pushed into your clit and you were sure you were going to gush all over his hand. The fantasy had been cut short when he pulled his hand away right as you were about to finish. You felt yourself clenching around nothing but air.Â
"Michael!" You whined as you chased his hand. "No, no, no."Â
A cruel laugh was heard coming from him as he watched you chase his hand. His fingers encased your wrist, roughly shoving you on the bed. You landed on the bed on your back and your legs had immediately spread open for him, silently and yet loudly inviting him back home.Â
Drool nearly dribbled down his chin as your pussy glistened in front of him. Your slick was dripping down your inner thighs, begging to be licked up. As much as he wanted to lick you like his favorite lollipop, he was simply too impatient to do so.Â
"Fuck me," you meekly whispered, your legs wrapping around his hips to drag him closer to you. "Please. Stop standing there and fuck me."Â
That was new. Robby wasn't used to hearing you beg so quickly. Usually he had to torture your poor cunt throughout the day to get you like this.Â
"I've been so desperate for you since last week," you added as your hands went to his thick cock, missing the weight of it in your hand. "I touched myself but it didn't feel the same."Â
The revelation had Robby's body moving on his own. He took a step closer to the edge of his bed and he took your hand off his dick. With the same hand, he grabbed onto both of your wrists and held them above your head.Â
"Are you still on the pill?" Robby asked as he dragged his leaking tip up and down your slit.Â
Your eyes fluttered shut with every swipe on your clit. A deep flush started to expand to your face. If he didn't move in the next 10 seconds, you were sure you would explode.
"No."Â
In that moment, Robby pushed himself inside you with a deep groan. Your tight heat easily welcomed him in and clenched down, ensuring he would never leave. He stilled, not to let your body adjust, but to feel you clench around him desperately and selfishly.Â
A snap of his hips caused your eyes to squeeze shut as you bunched your white sheets underneath your hands. Robby's pace was brutal from the beginning, deep and hard. Just how you loved it.Â
"Finally," you whispered like a prayer being answered.Â
A soft plap, plap, plap echoed in the otherwise quiet room. Robby looked down at where the two of you were connected, a white ring forming on the base of his cock already. He wasn't a stranger to the sight but it wasn't often that you were this creamy.Â
"Holy shitâyou really are ovulating," Robby gasped.Â
You nodded at him as your body jerked from his rough thrusts. "Mhm," you hummed. "God, you feel so good. Your cock is meant to be inside me, daddy."Â
Your words couldn't have been further from the truth. Ever since the first time the two of you had sex, you never struggled taking him. His thick cock always split you opened but he fit. He could always fill himself all the way and you greedily took him.Â
Every single time.Â
Robby's fingers found its way to your clit once again. Your mouth fell open and a pornographic moan came out. You were already dangerously close to the edge which was only making you babble straight nonsense.Â
"I can't understand you, baby," Robby chuckled despite the fact that he was out of breath. "What do you want? Hm? You want to come?"Â
A frantic nod was all he got as a response. It wasn't enough. He needed you to say it. A sharp punch to your thigh knocked you out of your drunken haze.Â
"Use your words. Daddy wants you to use your words."Â
"I want to come," you quickly said as your adjusted your hips to let him get even deeper. "I want to come and I want to feel you come inside me. Please come inside me."
Perhaps it had been the fact that Robby hadn't had a proper orgasm in awhile. At least since you. Perhaps it had been he was so focused on your pleasure that he missed his own telltale signs of his own orgasm approaching. But once he heard your sweet little plea, the knot in his stomach came undone.Â
Thick white topes of cum shot inside your body as he kept thrusting. His bottom lip was tugged with his own teeth as each wave of pleasure got stronger and stronger. He didn't even register you placing your hands on his pelvis, trying to get him to stop.Â
Your voice was faint in his ears as you squealed from the overstimulation. "I finished! I finished!"Â
As Robby was barely able to register your words. But when he finally came to, he finally stopped. The orgasm had him so spent that he collapsed on your chest without a care in the world. Just like how he didn't have a care in the world that his seed was deep in your pussy.Â
Maybe you would end up pregnant.Â
Hopefully.Â
It didn't sound too bad. It'd mean that he would finally have the privilege of having you all to himself. It would mean that he finally was able to get you out of Park's grasp.Â
It would mean that you would be his in every single way possible.Â
summary: even after swapping from nights to days, you just canât seem to escape the inconveniently attractive night shift attending. then a ptmc night out, a sparkly dress, and a not-so-innocent game of never have i ever leads to dr. jack abbot making sure you can never utter the words ânever have i ever finished during sexâ ever again.
notes: i really hope you guys enjoiy this! it was so much fun to write and i just feel like jack is a little easier to put into silly situations than robby, so here i am torturing the poor man! i'm sorry in advance if the smut is kind of mid, i was fighting tumblr's block limit rule with this fic so i feel like i didn't get indulge as much as i would have liked, but still! i hope you guys love it, and please, please let me know what you think! (p.s. i think i mentioned the title was originally 'unaffected' but i like this one better)
warnings: swearing, alcohol, blushing, italics, jealousy, implied age gap, jack is a yearner, reader wears a "revealing" dress (but description is very vague and there's zero detail about body-type), mildly uncomfortable male encounters, friend!santos, pittlings chaos, garsantos mention, jack gets a little possessive, reader has long enough hair to sweep off her neck, and SMUT (making out, fingering, "panties", a tiny bit of dirty talk, unprotected piv, "good girl", and jack says sweetheart a lot) 18+ only please, mdni.
word count: 18889
Jack Abbot had never thought of himself as a jealous man.
Possessive, maybe. Protective, definitely. But jealous? Never.
He had never really had anything to be jealous of.
Until now.
Now there are far too many things.
Like the pen between your lipsâand the way you bite down just hard enough to leave a little dent in the plastic while you read through Danaâs notes.
Or Dana herself, and the way youâre looking at herâsoft, sleepy, warm in a way that twists something tight in Jackâs chest. The same way you used to look at him in the quiet hours at the end of a night shift.
Or your scrubsâGod, your scrubsâand the way they fit just a little too well tonight. Too tight in all the right places. Distracting in ways that are becoming increasingly difficult to ignore.
Jack has never needed to be jealous of anything before, but now he finds himself jealous of inanimate objects, coworkers you barely glance at, and your goddamn clothes.
So, yeah. Jack Abbot had never thought of himself as a jealous manâuntil you came along.
âDr. Abbot,â Dana calls, peering over the top of her glasses. âYouâre early.â
Beside her, you glance up from your tablet, meeting his eyes across the ER with that same soft smile.
âDr. Abbot,â you say, like you canât quite help yourself.
Jack squares his shoulders and starts toward the nursesâ station, determined not to let Dana and her all-knowing, all-seeing bullshit clock exactly why heâs at work almost two hours earlier than he needs to be.
âYeah, Iâve got some stuff I didnât get to wrap up this morning,â he lies.
Princess pops up from behind the desk. âI thought you said you stayed back this morning to make sure everything was sorted?â
Jackâs gaze cuts to her. âYes. But I forgot something.â
Dana narrows her eyes. âMhm. Whatâd you forget?â
âA few notes from the three a.m. GSW,â he replies quicklyâtoo quickly.
Itâs weak and he knows it, but thereâs nothing else he could think of with Dana watching him like that and your warm, sleepy gaze still lingering from across the desk.
Dana nods slowly, adjusting the chart in her hands. âRight. Two hours early for a few notes.â
Jack just shrugs, avoiding her gaze as he walks pastâand he doesnât look back until heâs safely around the corner, standing in front of his locker. Only then does he risk a glance, just briefly over his shoulder, quick enough to catch a glimpse of you disappearing down the North hall.
God. Itâs ridiculous, really. Heâs a grown man.
More than thatâhe's an old man.
Yet here he is staying late at work and coming in early just to see more of you. Because ever since you swapped from nights to days, Jack doesnât quite know what to do with himself. Sure, he could barely concentrate when you were on shift together, but who knew not having you around would be even worse?
He spends the first half of his shift hating himself for being so hung up on someone so young and so impossibly out of reachâthen spends the second half anxiously awaiting your arrival for the day shift.
And itâs only been two weeks.
But the absolute worst part?
He doesnât even know why you swapped shifts. You never even spoke to him about it. You just told him at four a.m. two Saturdays ago that you were switching to day shift. No reason. No explanation. That was it.
At first he wondered if it was his faultâif maybe youâd simply decided you didnât like working with him.
But you still greet him every morning and every evening with that same warm smile. You still look to him first whenever someone asks for an attending and heâs still around. You still text him whenever the ER cat shows up outside the ambulance bayâwhich apparently happens much more often during the day shift.
And Jack still buys a packet of freeze-dried liver treats every Sunday to keep in the cupboard above the break room fridgeâbecause he knows how much you love feeding that cat.
âWhatâre you doing here?â
Jackâs head whips around at the sound of his friendâs voice.
âIâuhâcame in early to fix up a few notes,â he says, turning back to shove his bag into his locker.
Robbyâs brows lift. âTwo hours for notes?â
Jack sighs, slinging his stethoscope around his neck and shutting his locker before turning to face his fellow attending. âAre you of all people really going to lecture me about not having a life outside of this ER?â
Robby chuckles quietly, lifting both hands out of his pockets in surrender. âI wasnât judging.â
âGood,â Jack mutters, already starting back toward central. âAnything I need to know?â
Robby falls into step beside him. âNorth Threeâs waiting on a CT for possible appendicitis. Kid in Five came in with chest pain but his labs look clean so far. Danaâs still fighting with bed control about moving the pneumonia admit upstairs.â
They both stop at the nursesâ station, glancing up at the board.
âOtherwise itâs been unusually calm,â Robby adds. âWhich probably means youâre about to get slammed.â
Jack gives him a flat look. âThanks.â
âAnytime.â Robby claps him on the shoulder. âOhâand that R2 you gave me?â
âWhat about her?â
Robby shrugs. âSheâs great.â
âI know,â Jack says, keeping his voice carefully even.
Robby studies him for a second, eyes narrowing just a fraction, the corner of his mouth threatening to lift. The man might be a disaster when it comes to his own feelings, but he has an uncanny talent for spotting everyone elseâs.
âWeâre alright out here if you want to catch up on your notes,â he says after a moment, already turning away. âOr go make the rounds. Get some very thorough handovers from the residents.â
Jack keeps his eyes fixed on the board. âI hate you.â
Robby huffs out a quiet laugh. âThen why are you here two hours early?â
Jack exhales sharply and steps forward, pulling one of the tablets from the rack.
âNotes,â he says, a little louder than necessary.
Robby just shakes his head, still smiling faintly as he disappears down the North corridor.
For a moment, Jack doesnât move. He lingers at the nursesâ station, tablet in hand, pretending to analyse the board while ignoring the incredibly unsubtle looks from Perlah and Princessâboth of them watching him with the kind of interest that usually means someoneâs about to become the subject of a very entertaining conversation.
Then, with a polite nod to each of them, he clears his throat and steps away, turning toward the break roomâtrying very hard not to hope he runs into you on the way.
And trying not to be disappointed when he doesnât.
The break room is empty when he steps inside, the noise of the ER dulling as the door falls shut behind him. He sets his tablet on the tableânext to someoneâs half-eaten lunch and a discarded Lean Cuisine containerâand grabs a clean mug from the cupboard, pouring the last of the coffee pot into it.
Then he drops into the seat furthest from the door, his back to the bulletin board, and taps the tablet awake, pulling up the notes for the three a.m. GSW. The same notes he already finished in detail while staying back this morningâbefore Robby told him to get the hell out of his ER and get some sleep.
He barely makes it through two lines of the chart before the door swings open again.
âShit, sorry,â you say quickly, stepping toward the table.
Jackâs pulse does the same stupid thing it always does whenever he sees you, making his chest feel hot and his head a little fuzzy.
âWhat are you sorry for?â he asks, as if it isnât obvious.
Youâve already stacked the Lean Cuisine container on top of the half-eaten bowl of something grey and mushy-looking and are halfway to the sink with them.
âI only got, like, a five-minute break today and had to run out for a trauma, then completely forgot about my lunch,â you explain, cheeks flushed as you glance down at the bowl. âThis is gross. Iâm so sorry.â
Jack shifts in his chair. âIâve seen worse in here, I promise.â
You glance over your shoulder as you turn on the tap, the corner of your mouth lifting just slightly. âReally?â
He nods. âReally.â
He could almost swear your smile lifts a little higher before you turn back to the sink, scrubbing hurriedly at the bowl of slop that probably shouldnât be going down the drain anyway.
Jack clears his throat. âButâuhâLean Cuisine? Really?â
You look back at him again, brows drawn. âWhatâs wrong with Lean Cuisine?â
âNothing,â he says lightly. âIf youâre trying to survive a very stressful twelve-hour shift on only four hundred calories.â
You huff a quiet laugh, turning back to the sink. âI actually managed to eat lunch today. Thatâs already a win.â
âItâs mostly sodium and sadness,â he adds, almost absently. âNot much protein.â
You finally turn the tap off and spin around, leaning a hip against the counter. âAlright, Dr. Abbot. When I find the spare time to start meal prepping between my very stressful twelve-hour shifts, Iâll let you know.â
Jack opens his mouthâthen closes it again. Because what he wants to say is ridiculous.
But it comes out anyway.
ââŠI cook.â
You blink.
âYou cook?â
Jack clears his throat, suddenly very interested in his coffee mug.
âYeah. Well.â He shrugs. âIâve been told Iâm reasonably good at it.â
You stare at him for a second, brows knitting slightly as you clearly try to figure out where the hell that came from.
âWell,â you say with a quick smile, âI guess your dinner guests are pretty lucky.â
Before he can respond, you grab the Lean Cuisine packet, toss it in the bin, and step toward the door.
âSorry again for the mess.â
Then youâre goneâleaving Jack alone with his coffee, his notes, and the growing suspicion that there might actually be something seriously wrong with him.
-
âIs that Dr. Abbot in the break room?â Santos asks, falling into step beside you.
You keep your eyes fixed on your tablet.
âYep.â
She leans closer, steering you out of the way of a gurney.
âBut night shift doesnât start for like two more hours.â
âIâm aware.â
âSo, why is he here?â
You exhale sharply and finally look up from your tablet. âI donât know, Trin. Maybe because the universe hates me.â
She snorts. âOr maybe because he likes you.â
You roll your eyes, turning toward the South corridor. âPlease donât start.â
âIâm not starting anything,â she insists. âI seriously think that old man has a thing for you.â
âDonât call him that,â you mutter.
âOkay, fine. I seriously think that hot, older man has a thing for you,â she says, stopping beside you at the South desks. âAnd we all know how you feel about him, soââ
âNo,â you snap. âWe donât all know how I feel about JaâDr. Abbot.â
She presses her lips together to keep from laughing.
âBesides,â you go on, dropping into a chair. âI swapped to day shift so I could stop being distracted by my attending and actually focus on being a good doctorâso could you please stop distracting me?â
She leans a hip against the desk, completely ignoring you. âAnd donât you think thatâs a little strange? I mean, you swapped to day shiftâwhat, two weeks ago?â
You glance at her from the corner of your eye. âAnd?â
âAnd,â she says dramatically, âfor the past two weeks Dr. Abbot has been staying back every morning and coming in early every afternoon.â
Your gaze slides back to the computer. âSo?â
She sighs, exasperated. âItâs not a coincidence.â
âActually, I think it is,â you argue.
She stares at you for a second, eyes narrowing. âYouâre impossible.â
âAnd youâre annoying.â
She rolls her eyes and pushes off the desk. âWhatever. Youâre still coming out tomorrow night, right?â
Your fingers hesitate over the keyboard. âUhâIâm not sure yet.â
âDr. Ellis is the only person from night shift thatâll be there,â she says.
You let out a quiet sigh of defeat.
âFine,â you mutter. âIâll come.â
âGood.â She grins, already turning away. âCome to my place around six. We can get ready and pregame.â
âWhy canât I get ready at home?â you ask.
âBecause,â she calls over her shoulder, âI get to pick what you wear.â
And before you can argue, she slips into a patient room, effectively ending the conversation.
âGreat,â you mumble, turning back to the computer. âCanât wait.â
Itâs not like youâre not looking forward to finally joining in on a night out now that youâre no longer on the night shift.
You are. Youâre just... nervous.
Nervous, perpetually stressed out, and still adjusting to life as a day-walker. And Santos knows that. She probably knows you better than anyone else at PTMCâeven though youâve spent the better part of ten months working opposite shifts.
Which is exactly why sheâs pushing you to join this night out. Because she knows you need it. She knows you need to relax, forget about work, and do something other than obsess over the night shift attending whoâs had you completely undone since the day you first met.
God.
Jack Abbot. The single most dangerous man in Pittsburgh.
Not only is he stupidly hot, but heâs also annoyingly competent, irritatingly attentive, and has the starring role in every single one of your most inappropriate fantasies.
Heâs also the very reason youâre terrified of having to redo your second year of residency, because that man affects your focus so much you literally canât function. Like three weeks ago, when you walked straight into the glass door of Trauma One because you were too busy watching him take his jacket off.
His damn jacket.
That was the moment you finally decided you needed to swap shiftsâbecause Dr. Shen couldnât look at you for the rest of the night without bursting into laughter.
Jack Abbot is a liability to your health and wellbeingâwhich means he is a liability to your career. And even though asking Dr. Robby to swap to day shift was one of the most ridiculously difficult things youâve done since starting at PTMC, you stand by the fact that it was the right decision.
The smart decision. The professional decision. Even if⊠it might not be working yet.
Because now you canât just glance across central anymore and see Jack leaning against the desk, talking through a case with Lena. You canât have him step up beside you when youâre unsure about something and quietly walk you through it. Heâs not the one across from you in the trauma bays. And there isnât a coffee cup that magically appears in front of you during the three oâclock lull.
Now you just⊠think about him instead.
But itâs only temporary. Youâre sure of it. You just need to get used to the day shift and figure out how to get Jack Abbot out of your head.
Which⊠you have a sneaking suspicion is what Santos plans on helping you with this weekend.
Youâre pretty sure you overheard her the other day telling Whitaker that the only way to get over someone is by getting under someone else. And maybe thatâs exactly what you need to doâget under someone else so you can stop thinking about the maddeningly hot man whoâs nearly twice your age and most definitely does not have a thing for you. Regardless of what Santos seems to think.
You spend the rest of your shift catching up on charting and trying very hard not to think about Dr. Abbot.
When someone asks for an attending, you call Dr. Robby. When you hear his voice just around the corner, you change paths as quickly and inconspicuously as you can. And when your notes are up to date and night shift starts rolling in, you find Dr. Ellis and give herâand only herâthe rundown on your patients.
By the time you shut your locker and sling your bag over your shoulder, the sky outside is dark and there are only a few day shifters left lingering around the nursesâ station.
âDid you drive today?â Whitaker asks, shutting his locker only a moment after you.
âYeah,â you reply. âNeed a ride?â
He nods sheepishly. âThatâd be great. Santos left already, said I was taking too long.â
You roll your eyes. âYeah, I bet it had nothing to do with whatever she and Garcia were whispering about in the stairwell.â
Whitaker winces. âI just hope theyâre at Garciaâs tonight.â
You huff a small laugh and hitch your bag higher. âYou ready?â
He nods.
You both turn and start back toward centralâbut just as you reach the nursesâ station, his steps slow.
âDo you need toâŠ?â
He jerks a thumb over his shoulder.
You frown. âNeed to what?â
He hesitates. âDonât you normally say goodbye to Dr. Abbot?â
Your eyes widen slowly. âUhâno. Why would you say that?â
He shrugs. âI donât know. I just thought you two were close.â
âWeâre not close,â you say, a little too quick.
âSorry,â he mutters, raising both hands in surrender. âI justâI donât know. I thought because you were his resident you two were⊠close.â
âIâm not his resident,â you snap. âIâm just⊠a resident. I donât belong to him.â
âOkay,â he says slowly, brows drawing together. âIâm sorry, I just thoughtââ
âYou thought wrong,â you mutter, glancing over your shoulder to make sure no one is listening.
Thankfully, the two nosiest nurses in the ER have already gone home for the day.
âLetâs just go.â
You grab his wrist and walk quickly toward the ambulance bay doors, giving Ellis and Shen a small nod as you passâcompletely missing the middle-aged attending who just overheard most of your conversation.
The car ride to Santos and Whitakerâs isnât long. Whitaker fills most of it anywayârambling about the shift, about the kid in Five and whether night shift is going to get slammed, about how Dana looked like she was two seconds away from strangling bed control by the end of the day. And every few minutes he circles back around to apologising for making you drive him home.
You wave him off each time.
âItâs fine, Whitaker.â
âSeriously though,â he says as you pull up outside their building. âI really appreciate it.â
He slings his bag over his shoulder and climbs out of the car, pausing on the sidewalk to give you one last wave before heading toward the front door.
The moment the passenger door falls shut, the quiet settles in. You let out a long breath, tipping your head back against the headrest and letting your eyes fall shut for a moment. And immediatelyâinevitablyâyour brain drifts straight back to the same place it always does.
Jack Abbot. Of course.
You scrub a hand over your face before shifting the car back into gear and pulling away.
The rest of the night passes the way most nights doâwith a quick shower, something vaguely edible scavenged from the fridge, and half-heartedly scrolling through your phone until exhaustion finally drags you to bed.
When your head finally hits the pillow, you tell yourself youâre too tired to think about him. Itâs been a long dayâlong weekâand all you need right now is sleep, not fantasies.
But that doesnât stop your brain from doing it anyway. Because sometime in the early hours of the morning, Jack Abbot shows up in your dreams. Not in the ER. Not standing beside you at the nursesâ station or leaning over a chart.
Heâs in a kitchen. Cooking.
Sleeves rolled up to his elbows, moving around the stove with the same quiet confidence he carries through the hospitalâlike he knows exactly what heâs doing and expects the rest of the world just to trust him.
And in the dream, you do.
You lean against the counter and watch him the way you sometimes watch him in the trauma bays, telling yourself youâre just observing. Just curious. Just learning.
He glances over his shoulder eventually, catching you staringâand says something you canât quite hear over the soft clatter of the pan. But heâs smiling.
Then the dream shifts the way dreams tend toâlogic slipping sideways until suddenly youâre standing much closer than you should be. Close enough to smell whatever heâs cooking. Close enough that when he turns toward you the space between you disappears entirely.
His hand settles at your waist like it belongs there.
Your back meets the edge of the counter.
And when his mouth brushes your neckâ
You wake with a sharp inhale, staring up at the ceiling, heart racing.
âFuck,â you mutter, dragging a hand over your face.
So much for getting him out of your head.
For a while, you just lie there, staring at the ceiling, watching the first pale line of sunlight creep across until it touches the wall opposite your window.
At some point you realise youâre still replaying the dream in your head.
The kitchen. The way his hand had felt at your waist. The warmth of his mouth against your neck.
You groan quietly and drag the blanket over your face.
âGet a fucking grip.â
Then you throw the covers back and force yourself out of bed, heading straight into the kitchen in search of coffee.
Your small apartment is always quietâbut this morning it feels too quiet. Too still as you silently sip your coffee, one hip leaned against the kitchen counter. Which, unfortunately, leaves far too much room for your brain to wander right back to its favourite topic.
Jack Abbot.
After coffee, you take yourself for a long walk around the block, hoping the cool morning air might help clear the remnants of the dream from your head.
It doesnât.
But by the time you make it back to your apartment, your legs feel loose and your mind feels a little quieter, and for the briefest moment you almost manage to convince yourself that youâre excited about tonight. That youâre going to be able to do what Santos is clearly angling for and go home with an attractive stranger so you can stop draining your vibrator battery with inappropriate thoughts of your attending.
The rest of the day drifts past in a slow blur of small, forgettable things. Laundry. Answering a couple of messages in the group chat. Half-heartedly reviewing a few notes from earlier in the week before deciding you absolutely refuse to think about work on your day off.
Eventually the afternoon light begins to soften and stretch across the floor, which means itâs probably time to start getting ready if youâre actually going to make it to Santosâ place before she decides youâre bailing and comes knocking to drag you there herself.
So you shower, change, pack a bag, and throw it over your shoulder on the way out the doorâtrying very hard not to feel disappointed that Dr. Ellis is the only person from night shift whoâs going to be at the bar tonight.
It really is for the best.
You, alcohol, and Jack Abbot in the same room is a terrible idea.
âAlright, Iâm ready,â Santos announces, finally stepping out of the bathroom.
You, Javadi, and Whitakerâwho have spent the last twenty minutes on the couch chatting and sipping beerâlook up.
âAw, I wish I could do winged eyeliner like that,â Javadi says. âIt just doesnât suit my eye shape.â
âDonât look too close,â Santos mutters. âItâs super uneven, but I donât have time. I still have to fix this one before we go.â
She tips her chin toward where you and Whitaker are sitting on the opposite end of the lounge.
Whitakerâs eyes go wide. âMe?â
Santos scoffs. âNot you, Huckleberry. God, I donât have enough time in the world to fix whateverâs going on there.â
Whitaker frowns, glancing down at his navy-blue button-up shirt. âWhatâs wrong with this?â
Whitaker lifts his head, glancing between you and Javadi. âIs it really that bad?â
Javadi leans forward, lowering her voice. âThereâs nothing wrong with it, Whitaker. You look great.â
You pat his shoulder. âItâs fine, really. Sheâs justââ
The words die on your tongue as Santos reappears, holding what can only be described as a sparkly scrap of fabric on a hanger.
Javadi tilts her head. âWhatâs that?â
Santos grins. âA dress.â
Whitaker chokes on his beer. âThatâs⊠not a dress. Thatâs a glittery napkin.â
âOh my God.â Javadi snorts. âMy mom would kill me just for buying that.â
âI didnât buy it,â Santos says lightly. âA friend in college gave it to me, but itâs never fit quite right.â
She steps forward, extending the hanger toward you.
âBut I know youâll be able to pull it off,â she adds, her grin sharpening.
You stare at itâglinting in the low evening sun spilling through the windows.
âSantos⊠this is a work thing,â you mutter.
She rolls her eyes. âItâs not a work thing. Itâs just an outing with people from work.â
âIsnât that the same thing?â Whitaker asks.
Santos sighs. âNo, itâs not. And are you forgetting our main objective?â
You blink at her.
âTo get you laid.â
Javadi giggles nervously, trying to hide it behind a swig of beer.
âCome on,â Santos says. âJust put it on and if it doesnât work, we try something else.â
You hesitate, staring at the glittery thing like it might catch fire at any moment. Which, given enough sunlight, it probably could.
âFine,â you say at last, pushing off the couch. âIâll try it on, but that does not mean Iâm wearing it.â
Santosâ eyes sparkle with excitement. Or maybe itâs just the dress.
âThatâs my girl.â
You take the hanger from her and trudge into her room, nudging the door shut behind you. It takes a minute for you to figure out how the glittery napkin is supposed to go onâbut once you do, you shed your comfortable clothes and shimmy into the most sparkly piece of fabric youâve ever worn.
And somehow, the shimmering scrap of nothing turns out to be an actual dressâshort, sparkling, and just structured enough to stay where itâs supposed to while still feeling mildly illegal.
With a deep breath, you turn away from the mirror and open the door, stepping back out into the lounge room.
âSo?â
For a moment, no one says anything.
Whitakerâs mouth falls open.
Javadiâs eyebrows lift. âOh.â
Santos, meanwhile, tilts her head appreciatively, one hand on her hip, eyes gleaming as she looks you over from head to toe.
âI knew it,â she says smugly.
Whitaker blinks. âThat is not a dress.â
Javadi elbows him. âStop talking.â
You tug awkwardly at the hemâwhich doesnât actually move much because there isnât very much hem to tug.
âSantos,â you say carefully, âIâm not sureââ
âRelax,â she says. âYou look incredible.â
She circles you slowly, like a stylist inspecting her work.
âAnd youâre definitely going to get laid.â
âI feel like I shouldnât be here,â Whitaker mutters, his face bright red.
Santos rolls her eyes. âYouâre only here because you live here, Huckleberry. Now go grab that bottle of tequila from on top of the fridgeâweâre going to need some liquid courage before we head out.â
After two shots of tequila and Santosâ finishing touches to your makeup, you all head out the door. Whitaker calls an Uber, the four of you pile in, and you carefully keep Santosâ leather jacket wrapped around yourself for some semblance of modesty.
You donât really plan on taking it off for the rest of the nightâeven if it isnât that cold.
The ride to the bar isnât nearly long enough. Javadi spends most of it excitedly talking about how she can finally go out drinking now that sheâs twenty-one, which Santos encourages with the enthusiasm of someone who clearly intends to make the most of that milestone.
You mostly just stare out the window. Trying not to think about the dress you shouldnât have agreed to wear and the night shift attending you definitely shouldnât be missing right now. Because if someone asked you where youâd rather be tonightâthe bar or the ER with Dr. Abbotâyour honest answer would be incredibly depressing.
Who would rather be at work than out with their friends on a Saturday night?
âWeâre here,â Santos announces, nudging your side a little too hard.
You all thank the driver before climbing out, gathering yourselves on the sidewalk in front of the familiar establishment Santos loves dragging everyone to.
âRelax,â she says, dropping a hand on your shoulder. âYou donât need this.â
She tugs at the leather jacket, pulling it off your shoulders until itâs bunched at your elbows.
âI feel naked,â you mutter. âLike this is some nightmare where I show up to work in my underwear.â
Whitaker snorts. âNot far from it.â
Santos rolls her eyes. âWell, youâre not at work. Youâre at a bar. And this is supposed to be fun.â
Right. Fun.
That is the entire point of tonight. Go out. Have a drink. Meet someone who isnât Jack Abbot. Ideally forget Jack Abbot exists for at least a few hours.
Completely achievable.
Right?
âFine.â
You draw a deep breath and drop your arms, letting the jacket slide off completely. Santos grins as you sling it over one elbow, trying not to instinctively hold it in front of your body like armour.
âSee?â she says. âMuch better.â
âLetâs just go inside before I change my mind,â you mutter, already starting toward the door.
Javadi loops her arm through yours. âYou look amazing. Seriously.â
You give her a small smile, trying not to feel quite so awkward as Santos leads the way toward the main entrance.
Itâs just a bar. Just a normal Saturday night. Youâll be fine after a few more shots of liquid courage.
You glance through the front window as you approachâmore out of habit than anything else, your eyes drifting lazily over the crowded room inside.
People. Low lights. Patrons lingering around the bar.
Andâ
Your brain stalls.
Because thereâs a man leaning against the bar with one elbow braced on the countertop, his shoulders broad under a tight black shirt, head tipped slightly as he talks to someone beside him.
A familiar someone.
Dr. Ellis.
And the manâ
Oh.
Oh fuck.
Your stomach plummets.
Jack fucking Abbot.
Your feet stop moving, your whole body suddenly forgetting how to function.
Your pulse kicks violently against the inside of your throat as a wave of heat rushes up the back of your neck, sudden and dizzying and sharp enough to make the edges of your vision blur for half a second.
Because he looksâ
He looks so good.
Relaxed in a way youâve never seen at work. One hand curled loosely around a glass as he frowns slightly at something Ellis is saying, that small crease between his brows you know far too well.
And suddenly you are extremely, violently aware that you are standing outside a bar wearing approximately three square inches of glitter.
âSantos,â you say again, your voice almost breaking.
She glances over her shoulder. âHm?â
âYou knew.â
She stops, her hand hovering near the door.
Whitaker glances between the two of you. âWhatâs happening?â
âTechnically,â Santos says slowly, âI didnât know. I just... suspected.â
âYou said Ellis was the only one from night shift whoâd be here.â
She winces. âI did, but what I meant is⊠Ellis is the only one who actually told me sheâd be here.â
You stare at her. âSo you did know?â
âI knew it was his night off.â
âSantos, Iââ You glance back at him through the bar window. âI canât go in there like this.â
âLike what?â she asks. âSmoking hot?â
âHalf naked.â
She rolls her eyes. âYes, you can.â
âI will actually die.â
âNo, you wonât,â she says firmly. âYouâre an adult. You can wear whatever you want, talk to whoever you want, and just because your incredibly inconvenient attending crush happens to be inside does not suddenly revoke your civil liberties.â
She pulls the door open.
âNow stop panicking and get in the bar.â
-
âHe swore the chest pain had nothing to do with the seven energy drinks heâd had that night,â Ellis says, still rambling about a patient who pissed her off two nights ago, âwhich was a bold position to take with a heart rate of one-forty.â
Jack snorts softly. âAnd did you believe him?â
Ellisâ eyes go wide, and she takes a long drink before continuing her rant about night shift patients and the strange confidence people have when explaining why their terrible decisions definitely have nothing to do with the symptoms theyâre currently experiencing.
Jack nods along, offering the occasional comment or question where needed, meeting her gaze now and thenâbut mostly keeping his attention on the door. Waiting. Because heâs not stupid enough to ask anyone if youâre going to be here tonight, but he is naĂŻve enough to hope you will be.
He wasnât even supposed to be here tonightâhis first night off in two weeks.
He was supposed to be at home, cooking something decent for dinner, enjoying the rare luxury of not wearing scrubs, and inevitably indulging in his favourite guilty pleasureâinvolving nothing but his hand and some very inappropriate thoughts of you.
But heâs not.
Heâs here. In a crowded bar, sipping cheap scotch, listening to Ellis complain about the night shift patients and their weird confidence, just⊠waiting.
For you.
Heâd wanted to ask you yesterday if you were coming to the bar tonightâbefore he agreed to joinâbut heâd barely seen you before the end of your shift. And you didnât even say goodbye. Which isnât unusual, given how chaotic the ER can be, but then heâd overheard your conversation with Whitakerâand something about it made his chest feel too tight.
It wasnât anger. Not exactly. Not jealousy, either. It was just... wrong. Not because what you said was wrong, but because he hates that it was right. That you donât belong to him. Even if Robby calls you âhis R2â and Whitaker thinks youâre close because youâre his residentânone of it changes the fact that he has no real claim over you.
Which is ridiculous. He knows it.
He shouldnât feel territorial. He shouldnât want this. Want you. And yet, his chest still feels too tightâa slow, hot coil of frustration and longing curling up into his throat, and he hates it. Hates hearing it out loud, hates how much it matters, hates that he canât make it not matter.
âOh.â Ellis glances over her shoulder. âLooks like Santos and the others are here.â
Jackâs gaze flicks back to the door.
He tries not to react, not to straighten, not to square his shoulders as if heâs bracing for somethingâbut he can already feel his composure slipping.
Santos steps in first, her head turned slightly as she talks to Whitaker, who walks in behind her. Then itâs Javadi, an unusually wide smile on her face as she looks atâ
You.
Oh.
Oh fuck.
Jack stops breathing.
His chest burns. His stomach flips. His hand tightens dangerously around his scotch glass.
Itâs you. Of course itâs you. Youâre perfect.
But thenâ
That dress.
God.
That dressâshort, sparkling, clinging just enough to make every nerve in his body snap awake. It shimmers under the low lights as you move, and he hates himself for noticing every subtle curve, every shift of fabric, as if time itself has slowed just to torture him.
Itâs all too much.
He can feel his pulse in his throat, heat burning beneath his skin, blood rushing in the one direction it really, really shouldnât be right now. In public. In front of his coworkers.
He blinks, finally tearing his gaze away from you.
And thatâs when he notices the rest of the bar. All staring. All stunned.
He hates them all.
He hates that they can even look at you. Hates that the universe allows it. Hates that they might see even a fraction of what he seesâand feel a fraction of what he feels.
And he hates, more than anything right now, that youâre not his.
âDr. Abbot,â Robby says, appearing beside him and slinging an arm across his shoulders. âWhatâs your poison tonight?â
Jack lifts his drink, knuckles still white around the glass. âScotch.â
Robby claps his shoulder, the corner of his mouth lifting slightly. âYou might not want to have too many of those.â
Then he slips past both Jack and Ellis and raises a hand to flag down the bartender.
âAlright,â Ellis says, pushing off the bar. âIâm going to go grab a seat before the table gets too crowded.â
Jack nods, but he doesnât follow. He stays beside the bar, rigid now, eyes fixed on the group of men at a high table just a few feet from the front door. Theyâre muttering to each other, leaning in, voices lowâbut nothing about it is subtle. Their gazes are glued to you as you weave through patrons and tables to greet the rest of the PTMC crew gathered in a booth near the back.
One of themâthe dumbest looking one, Jackâs already decidedâslowly slides off his stool, nodding along while his friends murmur their advice.
Jack glances back at you, now standing beside McKay, sliding your arms into the leather jacket youâd been carrying. Santos grabs your wrist, tilting her head toward the bar as she starts dragging you with her.
And, like a fourteen-year-old boy with a crush, Jackâs pulse starts racing.
âDr. Abbot,â Santos says, grinning as you both approach the bar. âFancy seeing you somewhere other than the ER on a Saturday night.â
âI do have a life outside of work, you know,â he says dryly, lifting his drink and looking anywhere but at you.
âLike playing bingo at the senior centre?â Santos asks, resting both forearms on the bar.
You step up on her other side, squinting at the shelves of liquor on the back wall like theyâre the most interesting thing in the room.
âBingoâs on Wednesdays,â he says mildly. âTry to keep up.â
Santos snorts, shaking her head as she reaches for the small leather-bound bar menu. But out of the corner of his eye, Jack sees your head dipâjust slightlyâand you try to hide a small laugh against your shoulder.
Jack feels it like a punch to the ribs.
Because youâre listening.
And apparently⊠you think heâs funny.
âAlright,â Santos says, lifting a hand. âI think we need some tequila over here.â
The bartender steps away from where heâd been serving farther down the bar, but his attention quickly drifts past Santos and lands on you. He leans in, resting one palm flat against the bar while he wipes down the counter with a rag that doesnât really need wiping.
âSo,â he says to you, not Santos. âWhat are you drinking tonight?â
Santos blinks.
âI just told you,â she says flatly. âTequila.â
The bartender barely glances at her.
Jackâs jaw tightens.
You look briefly confused, glancing between Santos and the bartender.
âUhâwhatever she orders is fine.â
âYeah. Tequila,â Santos repeats, slower this time.
The bartender laughs like sheâs jokingâand Jack sets his scotch down slowly. Carefully.
His eyes stay locked on the man now lining up four small glasses in front of you, still completely ignoring Santos. The way heâs watching you is too much. Too close. The faint curl at the corner of his mouth makes Jack want to punch the smirk right off his face.
And by the way you shift a little closer to Santosâpulling your jacket tighter around yourselfâhe knows youâre uncomfortable.
His hand clenches at his side.
Robby pauses as he walks past, a beer in each hand.
âEasy, tiger,â he mutters. âShe can handle herself.â
âI know,â Jack says, voice low. âDoesnât mean she has to.â
Robby gives him a lookâa brief, knowing glance, somewhere between amusement and warning. âCareful.â
Jack doesnât respond. He just turns back to you and Santos, watching as you each knock back two shots of tequila, your nose scrunching as the burn hits. And he canât help the small twitch at the corner of his mouth, because the face you make as you set the second glass down is ridiculously cute for someone wearing a dress like that.
âOkay,â Santos says. âI need a vodka soda before I start making bad decisions.â
The bartender nods, already reaching for another glassâand before he can even ask if youâd like another drink, someone else steals your attention.
âHey,â the guy says, stepping up beside you. âCan I get you another one?â
He leans in, just enough to be heard over the noiseâbut itâs still too close.
You shift slightly, angling toward him. âOh. Uhâsure.â
Santos presses her lips together, clearly fighting a smile as she turns back to the bar, suddenly very invested in whatever the bartender is doing. The second he sets the vodka soda in front of her, she scoops it up and drops a few bills on the counter.
She lifts the drink to her lips as she turns away, pausing just long enough to glance at Jack over the rim of the glass.
Her brows lift. âYou really gonna let that happen?â
Jack frowns. âWhatââ
But Santos is already gone, drink in hand, halfway back to the booth where everyone else is.
Where Jack should be headed tooâbecause thereâs no reason for him to stay here. No reason for him to linger, to hover, to make sure youâre okay, to stand there glaring at the guy buying you a drink like thatâs going to change anything.
Itâs not like he can blame him. If Jack thought he had a shot with you, heâd take it too. The difference is, Jack wouldnât need the dress. Or the drinks. Or the crowd. Heâd take that shot with you even when youâre tired and stressed out and covered in blood at the end of a bad shift in the ER. Heâd take it any time. Any place.
But Jack doesnât get that shot.
Because youâre young. You donât have baggage. And youâre a residentâmaybe not his resident, but still a resident.
Itâs just too inappropriate.
Jack sets his glass back on the bar a little harder than necessaryâand the bartender glances over, brows raised as if silently asking if heâd like another, but Jack just shakes his head.
His eyes flick back to you. To the way youâre smiling nowâsoft, not uneasy. To the way you seem to have forgotten about keeping your jacket closed, and now the idiot talking to you is looking anywhere but your face.
Then you laughâlight, easyâand something in Jackâs chest tightens again.
He looks away. He canât keep standing here. Heâs not going to stand here and watch you flirt with some idiot at the bar like he has any right to care.
With a deep breath, he forces himself to turn away and start walking back to the table.
Where he should have been five minutes ago. Where he plans on staying for the rest of the night.
Half an hour later, most of PTMCâs day shift staff are gathered in the booth, half still wearing their scrubs after coming straight from the hospital. The volume of conversation builds with the growing collection of empty glasses in the middle of the table, voices overlapping, getting louder with every roundâbut Jack doesnât order another scotch. At some point, Ellis sets a beer in front of him, which he nurses until itâs too warm to enjoy.
Every now and then, he makes a point of nodding or laughing or glancing at someone across the tableâpretending to follow the conversation, pretending heâs paying attentionâwhen really, all he can focus on is you. You and your smile. And your laugh. And the way your hand settles lightly on a manâs bicep when he says something that makes you blush.
Not the same man as before, either. Noâthis one is new. This one swooped in when the first one excused himself to take a phone call, and now that one is back at the table with his friends, sulking.
Kind of how Jack is right now, sitting at the table with his friends. Sulking. Glaring. Plotting.
He knows he shouldnât. He knows itâs none of his business. But he canât stop himself from trying to come up with an excuse to interrupt you. To get you away from those men and their lingering stares.
Not that heâs any better.
âAbbot.â Robby nudges his side. âHungry?â
Jack blinks, finally dragging his gaze away from you to where Ellis is standing, looking expectant.
âHm?â
âAre you hungry?â Ellis asks. âIâm going to order some wings.â
Jack frowns. âUhâno. Iâm good. Thanks.â
Ellis nods once and turns away, heading straight for the bar.
Robby huffs a quiet laugh beside him. âYou might want to turn your hearing aids up, old man.â
Jack doesnât even look at him. âFunny.â
âIâm serious,â Robby says mildly. âYouâve missed, what, three questions in the last five minutes?â
âI heard her,â Jack mutters. âI was just... thinking.â
Robby hums like he doesnât believe that for a second.
Jack shifts, pushing his chair back as he sets his warm beer on the table. âIâm gonna hit the head.â
Robbyâs brows lift, slow and knowing, his gaze flicking briefly toward the bar.
âMm,â he says. âSure you are.â
Jack does, in fact, turn toward the bathrooms firstâmostly because he needs a second away from all the music and chatter to try and clear his head. To try and stop himself from doing what he really left the booth to do.
He locks himself in the accessible bathroomânot that he needs it, but itâs more private than the menâsâand stands in front of the vanity. He presses his palms into the porcelain sink, shifting his weight forward with a deep, steadying breath.
This is ridiculous, and he knows it.
Heâs a grown man. He shouldnât be acting like this.
This is trivial shit, for Godâs sake. Jack is a vet. A seasoned ER doctor.
So why is a goddamn crush undoing him like this?
Why are you undoing him like this?
He lifts his head and stares at his reflectionâjaw tight, shoulders rigidâtrying to get a grip. Trying to remember that he is a grown ass man, not some idiot who canât keep his shit together.
His gaze drifts across his faceâthe day-old stubble, peppered hairâthen to the reflection of the bathroom behind him. The graffitied walls, covered in stickers and spray paint, a chaotic collection of late nights and inebriated thoughts. He wonders, briefly, how many people came in here intending to leave something behind.
Then he spots something scrawled in the corner of the mirror in thick black marker.
HESITATE AND SOMEONE ELSE WONâT.
Jack tilts his head.
Thatâs not exactly... subtle.
But thatâs the thing, isnât it?
He doesnât hesitate.
Not in the trauma bay. Not out in the field. Not when it matters. Not when someoneâs life is on the line and everyone else is waiting for someone to make the call.
So what the hell is this?
This⊠standing back. Watching. Letting it happen.
Like he doesnât know what he wants. Like he hasnât already made up his mind.
He drags a hand over his mouth, shaking his head onceâsharp, annoyed.
âJesus Christ.â
Itâs not caution. Itâs avoidance.
With another deep breath, Jack reaches for the tap and braces his hands beneath the stream. He scrubs them togetherâquick and thoroughâthen turns off the water, grabs a paper towel, and dries his hands with more focus than necessary. He tosses the towel in the bin on his way out the door, his gaze sharpening as he scans the barâfinding you immediately.
Youâre still standing where you were, maybe a few steps closer to the back of the room. Thereâs a new guy in front of you now, closing you in, crowding your space just enough to make Jackâs eyes narrow.
The manâs hand settles at your waist, a little lower than what could be considered innocent. And anyone else watching might think youâre okay with itâbut Jack knows you. He sees the small flicker of discomfort that crosses your face, the subtle drop of your shoulder as you try to angle yourself away without seeming rude.
Good thing Jack doesnât mind being rude.
Heâs already moving before heâs fully decided to. Just a few long strides and heâs thereâclose enough to cut through the space between you and the guy without touching either of you, his presence alone enough to interrupt whatever the hell this is supposed to be.
He looks at you. Just you.
âHey.â
Your head turns immediatelyâand the shift in your expression is instant. Relief.
âOhâhey,â you say, a little breathless.
And then you step into him. Not too close. Not in a way that draws attention or suggests anythingâbut enough to make Jackâs pulse jump. Enough for him to feel your warmth and the way it settles under his skin.
âHey, man,â the guy says, holding out a hand. âIâm Trent.â
Jack ignores him.
âYou alright?â he asks you.
You nod slowly. âI am now.â
Your fingers curl into the back of his shirt, just for a secondâlike you didnât even think about it. Like you just needed something solid to hold onto.
Jack goes still.
Trent clears his throat. âSorryâuhâwho are you?â
You glance at him with a tight smile. âThis is my attending.â
Jack likes being called your attending.
Trent frowns. âWhat?â
âRemember how I said I was a doctor?â
Trent just stares at you.
âWell, Dr. Abbot is my attending,â you go on anyway. âHeâs like my supervisor. Iâm his resident.â
His resident.
âRight,â Trent mutters, eyeing Jack. âCool. Soâyouâre a doctor?â
Jack doesnât even look at him. His eyes stay fixed on you.
âAre you hungry?â he asks. âEllis is ordering wingsâwe can grab a menu.â
âStarving,â you reply, the corner of your mouth lifting slightly as you look up at him.
âGreat.â His hand settles at your shoulder, firm but casual. âLetâs get back to the others.â
âWait,â Trent says. âAre youââ
âIt was nice meeting you,â you cut in, flashing him one last tight-lipped smile before Jack steers you away.
He keeps his arm around your shoulders until youâre halfway back to the booth of PTMC doctors and nurses. Only then does he pull back, clasping his hands behind his back like he needs the physical restraint.
âThanks for that,â you murmur. âHe just wouldnât take a hint.â
Jack nods. âI noticed.â
He doesnât look at you as he turns back toward the other end of the table, toward his seat beside Robbyâbecause if he did, he might not be able to leave your side. From the corner of his eye, he sees Santos reach for you, already asking what happened as she pulls you into the seat between her and McKay.
And for twenty blissful minutes, Jack feels okay. The most okay heâs felt all night.
Because youâre here, at the table, talking to Santos and McKayâand not some idiot who thinks he deserves a chance with the prettiest girl in the room. In the world, according to Jack.
But only for twenty minutesâbecause once you finish your drink, Santos drags you back to the bar.
Another shot. Another drink. Another guy.
Jack shifts in his chair, trying to listen to whatever it is Ellis and Mateo are arguing about, but he canât focusânot when your hand settles lightly on this new guyâs shoulder. And especially not when it slides down his bicep, flirty in a way that makes Jack want to get out of his chair.
He tells himself heâs not going to. That he shouldnât.
But the second the lights dim and the music gets louder, he pushes out of his seat.
He finds you at the edge of the dancefloor, catching your wrist before you can disappear into the crowd.
âHey,â he says, voice raised over the music.
Your head whips around, your brows lifting slightly in that soft, expectant wayâlike youâre waiting for him to say whatever it is thatâs so important he had to stop you right here.
Jack clears his throat. âHave you been drinking water?â
You frown. âUm. Not really.â
âYou should really drink some water,â he says, tipping his head toward the bar.
You hesitate, glancing back over your shoulder at the man waiting for you to follow him into the crowd.
Then you look back at Jack.
âUh, yeah. Okay. Water.â
He knows he shouldnât have done it. He knows it was stupid and petty and jealousy-drivenâbut he canât help the flicker of satisfaction when you follow him to the end of the bar with the self-serve water tower.
The music is too loud for conversationâand even if it wasnât, heâs not sure what heâd say. Not when youâre looking at him like this. A little drunk. A little curious. Your brows drawn, your skin glistening with a thin sheen of sweat, your lips wet from the water.
God. This has the be the finest form of torture.
Because here you areâso young and so sweet, so trusting in Jack that heâs just trying to look after you, when all he can think about is the fact that youâre not his. That they think youâre fair game. That every man in this room thinks he has a chance.
And the fact that heâs not going to let them anywhere near you.
-
The third time Jack Abbot appears at your side, he catches your elbow just as youâre about to step out the door with a man named Leo. Not to leave the barâjust for some airâbut then Jack says something about Mateo buying a round of shots and guides you back inside.
You donât mind. Not really. Especially not when a free drink is involved.
So you line up beside your coworkers and sink another shot of tequila with a grimace before Santos drags you back to the dancefloor.
The fourth time Jack Abbot intercepts you, youâre just about to start dancing with a handsome stranger Santos accidentally made you bump intoâbut before you can even take the manâs hand, Jack pulls you away, insisting you take a seat for a minute and drink more water.
Which, fine. Whatever.
But by the fifth interruption, youâre starting to notice a pattern.
And youâre getting a little annoyed.
âOh my God,â Santos says, her eyes going wide as the opening notes to ABBAâs Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! start blaring through the speakers. âWe have to dance. Come on!â
You barely have time to scoop your drink up off the bar before sheâs dragging you onto the dancefloorâinto the throng of warm bodies all moving to the beat beneath the single, sparkling disco ball.
The music pulses through the floor beneath your feet, the bass thrumming in your chest as Santos drags you deeper into the crowd. Somewhere between Mateoâs round of shots and your tenth song on the dancefloor, your jacket disappearedâand now your dress catches the light with every movement, glittering under the shifting colours as bodies press in from all sides.
The bar is still pretty full, even if the PTMC booth has already lost a few soldiers. There are still plenty of prospectsâplenty of strangers who might offer to take you home and make you forget all about Jack Abbot. Which is still very much the plan.
If only the man himself would stop interrupting every interaction like heâs doing you a favour.
At some point during the secondâor maybe thirdâchorus, Santos subtly steps away and a guy ends up in front of you. Youâre not even entirely sure how. One second youâre dancing and screaming the lyrics, the next heâs thereâclose enough that you can feel the heat of him, his hands hovering like heâs trying to decide where to put them.
You let it happen. Because this is what you want, right?
This is the plan.
He leans in and says something you donât quite catch over the music, but you laugh anywayâmore out of obligation than anything else.
Then his attention shifts.
His eyes flick past you. And just like thatâhe falters.
Itâs subtle, but you feel it. The hesitation. The way his body pulls back a fraction, like something just snapped him out of it.
âUhâactually,â he mutters, already stepping away. âIâyeah. Sorry.â
Then heâs gone.
You blink, frowning slightly as you glance over your shoulder andâ
Of course.
Jack Abbot, standing just beyond the edge of the dancefloor, drink in hand, eyes locked on you with a look that makes your stomach drop.
Not angry. Not exactly.
But intense. Sharp. Focused in a way that feels⊠deliberate.
You stare at him for a secondâfrustration flickering across your faceâthen turn back to Santos, who is still dancing with her vodka soda lifted in the air.
You lean in, raising your voice just enough to be heard over the music. âYour plan isnât working!â
She turns to face you, frowning. âWhat do you mean itâs not working?â
You stare at her. âThe plan to get me laid? Itâs not working.â
âWhy not?â
You huff out a laugh, incredulous.
âBecause of him,â you say, nodding toward Jack. âBecause I let him save me from one bad interaction and now heâs justâhovering. Interrupting. Scaring people off.â
Santosâ mouth twitches.
âI think he thinks heâs being helpful,â you add, shaking your head. âLike heâs doing me a favour or something, butâGod, Iâm never going to get a stranger to take me home with a hundred-and-ninety-pound war vet glaring over my shoulder every five minutes.â
Santos just looks at you for a secondâthen smiles. Slow. Knowing.
âAnd what part of my plan isnât working?â
You frown. âAre you even listening to me?â
âI said I was going to get you laid,â she says, lifting her drink to her lips. âI never said anything about going home with a stranger.â
It doesnât land straight away.
You blink at her, still frowning as you try to follow the logicâbecause that doesnât make sense, thatâs not the plan. If youâre not going home with a stranger, then whoâ
And then it clicks.
Your stomach drops.
âWaitâSantos,â you start, eyes widening. âYou donât meanââ
Santos just looks at you over the rim of her glass. Calm. Patient. Smiling faintly, like sheâs been waiting for this exact moment all night.
You glance toward the side of the dancefloor againâto the man still focused on you in a way that feels far too intentional now. Arms folded, jaw set. He doesnât even pretend to look away when you meet his stare.
âActually,â Santos says, her hand closing around your wrist. âI think my plan is working perfectly. Now, come onââ she nods toward the booth where everyone else is, âletâs play a game.â
A game?
Before you can argue or even question it, Santos is dragging you off the dancefloor toward the booth at the back of the bar. The thrum of the music dulls the further you get from the crowd, and by the time you both slide into empty seats at the table, you no longer feel like you need to yell just to be heard.
The PTMC crew has thinned since you were last sitting here. Robby, Dana, and Donnie are gone, and McKay is holding her purse in her lap like sheâd been trying to leave when Mateo cornered her with another rant about how no patient actually seems to understand the pain scale.
âAlright,â Santos announces, picking up someoneâs abandoned drink and taking a sip like she owns it, âweâre playing a game.â
Whitaker leans forward. âA game?â
âYes, Huckleberry. A game.â Santos glances around the table with a lazy half-smile. âItâs called Never Have I Ever.â
Mateo snorts. âThatâs a middle school sleepover game.â
âGreat,â Santos replies. âThen it should be easy for you.â
Thereâs a ripple of laughter around the table, but no one else seems to object.
âCan I start?â Mohan pipes up beside Santos. âIâve got a good one.â
Santos nods. âBe my guest.â
Youâre not entirely sure when Jack rejoined the table, since heâd been at the edge of the dancefloor just a few minutes ago, but now youâre suddenly very aware of his presence across from you. Like the few people that called it a night have unintentionally left a smaller, more intimate group behindâand now Jack Abbot is almost directly across from you while you play one of the most notorious, tension-raising middle school games of all time.
âOkay,â Mohan says, sitting up a little straighter. âNever have I ever⊠called in sick when I wasnât actually sick.â
McKay laughs. Mateo groans. Almost everyone at the table lifts their drinks.
âReally?â Santos says. âThat was your good one?â
Mohan shrugs. âI thoughtââ
âNever mind,â Santos cuts her off. âMy turn.â
Her gaze moves slowly around the table before landing on you, the corner of her mouth lifting just slightly.
âNever have I ever,â she starts slowly, âfantasised about someone else sitting at this table.â
Whitaker frowns. âYouâve accidentally fantasised about someone here?â
He shrugs. âSometimes the wrong people pop up, you know?â
Santos rolls her eyes. âOh my God. Whatever. Intentional or not.â
Mateo nods once and lifts his drink. Javadi sinks lower in her chair as she lifts hersâand you try not to look around at the rest of the table as you bring your own up to your lips.
Beside you, McKay drops her purse to the ground and straightens, clearly invested now.
âAlright, Iâve got one,â she says, grinning. âNever have I ever⊠faked it.â
Javadi chokes, Santos snorts, and across from you, Jack huffs out a quiet laugh.
âNever?â Ellis asks, eyes wide. âSo you alwaysââ
âOh, God, no,â McKay laughs. âDefinitely not. I just refuse to fake it.â
Laughter moves through the table again, a little louder this time, and everyone takes a second to decide whether or not to raise their drinks.
You lift yours slowly, looking anywhere but at Jack.
âOkay, my turn,â Ellis announces, shifting in her seat. âNever have I ever⊠hooked up with someone at work.â
The table reacts around you, a mix of laughter and quiet protest, but it all blurs at the edges when you finally glance upâbecause Jack is already looking at you.
Not surprised. Not amused.
Just⊠watching.
He doesnât laugh or say anything. He just lifts his drink, slow and deliberate.
And something sharp twists in your chest.
âWhatâve you got, Langdon?â McKay asks, nodding at him across the table.
Langdon strokes his chin thoughtfully for a momentâthen sighs.
âAlright, I already know Iâm going to get shit for this, butââ He clears his throat. âNever have I ever⊠had sex in public.â
McKay laughs, loudly, and lifts her drink to her lips without hesitation. Ellis and Santos drink too, while Mohan laughs into her hand and Javadi sinks even lower in her chair.
Across from you, Jack sips his drink again like itâs nothing.
And that sharp twist in your chest doesnât ease.
Because of course he has. Of course there are other people. Other women.
And youâ
You catch Santosâ gaze from the other end of the tableâsharp, knowing, daring.
Your grip tightens slightly around your glass.
And before you can talk yourself out of itâ
âOkay, my turn,â you say lightly, sitting up a little straighter.
Everyone turns to you, but you keep your eyes fixed on your glass.
âNever have I ever,â you say slowly, ââŠfinished during sex.â
For a secondânothing.
Then the table erupts.
âWhatânoââ Mateo is already laughing, leaning forward like he thinks youâre joking. âYouâre kidding.â
Javadi chokes on her drink, coughing as she turns toward you. âWait, seriously?â
âOh my God,â McKay says, half-laughing, half-staring at you like sheâs trying to figure out if youâre lying.
Langdon huffs out a quiet, disbelieving laugh, shaking his head. âWell⊠thatâs unfortunate.â
Whitaker just blinks at you, caught somewhere between surprised and confused, like he doesnât quite know what to do with that information.
Santos doesnât say anything. She just leans back in her seat, watching you over the rim of her glass with a slow, satisfied smile.
And across from youâ
Jack just goes still.
Completely still.
His expression doesnât change, but something in his eyes doesâsharp, dark, focused in a way that makes your stomach flip.
It takes you a minute to remember how to move. How to breathe. How to laugh and sip your drink and keep playing the game that doesnât stop just because it feels like your heart did.
Eventually, everyone eases off the third-degree on your embarrassingly real confession, and Mateo pipes up next with something ridiculous that makes the table groan. Then Javadi comes out with something surprisingly rebelliousâand blushes hard when Mateo flashes her a wink.
And so it goes on.
You know it does.
You can hear itâvoices overlapping, laughter breaking out again, someone arguing over what counts, someone else swearing theyâre being misrepresentedâbut it all feels⊠distant.
Like itâs happening a few steps away from you instead of right here at the table. Because now, all you can focus on is Jack. On the way heâs hardly moved. Hardly spoken. Hardly looked away from you.
At some point, he mutters his own confession with a small smirk and everyone laughsâbut you donât catch the words. Youâre too aware of everything else to hear them. Too aware of your pulse pounding in your ears, the thrum of the music beneath your feet, the way Jackâs jaw ticks every time you glance back at him.
Another round starts. Then another.
Someone groans. Someone laughs too loud. Santos says something that earns a chorus of reactionsâbut it all slips past you, unimportant, forgettable.
Time stretches. Blurs.
Your drink empties, refills, empties again.
People shift in their seats. Someone stands. Someone leaves.
Then suddenlyâ
âYou ready?â
You blink.
Santos is standing beside you, brows raised.
âReady?â you echo.
She nods toward the door. âTime to go. Most of us have to work tomorrow.â
You glance around at the empty table. âOh.â
Santos is already halfway to the door by the time you gather your things and catch up to her. Youâre still pulling your jacket on as you step outside, bracing against the cool night air that nips at every inch of exposed skinâwhich, in this dress, is a lot of skin.
âThe Uberâs just around the corner,â Whitaker says.
âGreat,â Mohan mutters, hugging her jacket tighter. âIâm freezing.â
Youâre not sure if itâs the alcohol or just the heat lingering beneath your skin from the way Jack had been watching you earlier, but youâre not nearly as cold as you should be.
âYou sure you donât mind if I stay over tonight?â Javadi asks, glancing between Santos and Whitaker.
Santos shrugs. âAs long as you donât mind the couchâand Dr. Shamsi isnât going to have us arrested for kidnapping.â
Javadi lets out an awkward laugh. âUhâno. Itâs totally fine. I told my dad.â
âAre you working tomorrow?â Whitaker asks.
Javadi shakes her head. âDay off. You?â
Whitaker sighs. âYeah.â
âSo am I,â Santos adds. âAnd if I donât get at least five hours sleep, I cannot be responsible for other peopleâs lives.â
âThatâs reassuring,â Jack mutters, almost startling you as he steps out of the bar.
He buries his hands in his pockets, hardly sparing you a glance as he steps closer to the group. Thereâs a faint hitch in his stepâsomething you recognise from the waning hours of a night shift, when heâs been on his feet for too long and starts to favour one leg.
âThis is us,â Whitaker announces, nodding toward the car pulling up at the curb.
Mohan hurries forward first, yanking the door open and climbing into the back seatâand Javadi is next, flashing you a smile before she ducks in beside her. You step forwardâthen hesitate. Whitaker is already holding the front passenger door open, and Santos is standing at the curb, about to join the others in the back.
âWait.â Your pulse jumps. âThereâs too manyââ
âYouâre with Dr. Abbot,â Santos says lightly, her mouth twitching like sheâs trying not to smile.
Your stomach drops.
âIâIâm what?â
Santos shrugs. âJavadiâs staying over and Mohanâs place is on the way to ours. Just makes sense.â
Then she climbs into the car, shuts the door, and rolls the window down.
âSee you tomorrow!â
Thereâs a chorus of goodbyes from the others before the car pulls away from the curbâand the cool, quiet night settles in too quickly. The only sound is the dull thrum of music from the bar, and the pounding of your pulse in your ears.
For a second, you donât turn around. You canât. Not now that youâre alone with him.
Thenâ
âIâm this way,â he says, voice low and rough and maddeningly hot.
You nod, but donât dare look at him as you start following the line of parked cars up the street.
The night air feels sharper now, cooler the further you get from the barâand it makes you pull into yourself, arms folded tightly while your jacket barely does anything to help.
Jack keeps an easy pace beside you, not crowding you, not touching you, but close enough that youâre aware of him anyway. Of the space he takes up at your side. Of the way he adjusts slightly so youâre walking on the inside of the path, further from the curb, without making a thing of it.
Neither of you says anything.
Itâs not awkward. Itâs just⊠quiet in a way that feels heavy, like the silence is holding onto everything that happened inside instead of letting it go.
Your heels click unevenly against the pavement, catching slightly every few steps, and youâre suddenly, painfully aware of everythingâthe way your dress shifts as you move, the cool air against your skin, the way your pulse hasnât quite settled.
You feel too sober. Too aware.
When his car finally comes into view, he moves ahead of you just slightlyâjust enough to reach the passenger door first and hold it open.
God. Heâs so annoyingly considerate.
You give him a small, tight smile before climbing into the passenger seat.
The car is still warm, still holding onto the heat from earlier in the day, and it smells like him in a way thatâs subtle but unmistakableâclean, familiar, something faintly sharp beneath it that you canât quite place but instantly recognise. The seat gives slightly beneath you, softer than you expect, and for a second you just sit there, hands hovering like youâre not entirely sure where to put them.
Itâs his.
All of it.
The way everything is exactly where it should be, nothing out of place. The faint scuff on the console. A pair of sunglasses tucked neatly into the centre compartment. His backpack thrown into the back seat like heâd discarded it in a hurry and never thought about it again.
The sound of the driverâs side door opening almost startles you.
You drop your hands into your lap, shifting slightly and smoothing your dress down over your thighs like that might ground you somehow.
The car immediately feels smaller when Jack climbs in. More intimate. Closer in a way thatâs almost stifling.
You keep your eyes fixed out the windshield.
Waiting.
For the engine to start. For the car to move.
But nothing happens.
The silence stretches, thick and suffocating, settling into every inch of the space between you.
And thenâ
âYou canât say shit like that around me.â
You blink, finally turning toward himâand regretting it immediately. Heâs so irritatingly handsome, so annoyingly gorgeous in a way that makes you want to be stupid and reckless and climb across the console into his lap.
âSay what?â you ask, your voice embarrassingly thin.
He looks at youânot fully, just turning his head slightly.
âYou know what,â he says, his voice low and rough with something that sounds a little too close to control slipping.
And you do.
You know exactly what he means.
But before you can say anything else, he turns the key and the engine rumbles to life. The radio crackles a little before some late-night news station fills the silenceâand he doesnât move to turn it off, doesnât even turn it down. He just drives.
The radio reporterâs voice hums through the car like white noise, talking about something youâre not really listening to as you try to focus on keeping your breathing even.
You can still hear his voice.
You canât say shit like that around me.
The way he said it. Low. Controlled. Like it cost him something to keep it that way.
Your fingers shift slightly in your lap, smoothing over the fabric of your dress again without thinking, and your mind starts turning his words over before you can stop itâpulling at them, testing them, trying to make them mean something that makes sense.
Because what does that even mean?
You glance at him, quick, like you might catch something you missedâbut heâs focused on the road, jaw set, one hand loose on the wheel like nothing happened. Like he didnât just change everything with eight little words.
You look away again.
No. He didnât mean it like that.
Heâs justâheâs your attending. Heâs responsible. Of course heâd say something. Of course heâdâ
Except he didnât say it like that.
Your stomach tightens as your thoughts circle back, slower this time, more deliberate.
The way he kept pulling you away from people tonight. The way heâd been watching you. The way he didnât laugh, didnât joke, didnât let it go.
The way he said it.
Around me.
Not here. Not in front of people.
Around me.
Your breath catches slightly, and you shift in your seat, suddenly very aware of the space between youâof how close he is, of how easy it would be to just turn your head, lean in andâ
No.
No, thatâs notâ
You swallow, gaze fixed stubbornly ahead.
Youâre just reading into it. You have to be.
Because the alternativeâ
Your pulse jumps.
God. The alternative is too much to even consider.
But the thought lingers anyway.
It settles in the back of your mind, quieter now, but heavierâpulling at everything he said, everything he did, everything you might have missed until now. The words circle back, sharper this timeâuntilâ
The car stopsâand you blink.
For a moment, you donât move. You canât.
Then Jack clears his throat.
âOhâuhâthanks,â you mutter, reaching for your seatbelt buckle.
He nods once. âAnytime.â
You push your door open before you can think too hard about it, stepping out into the cool night air that hits a little harder this time. Your heart is still beating in your throat, your pulse still too loud, your thoughts are still circling those eight wordsâeight little words that feel like they weigh far more than they should.
You hesitateâone hand on the door, the other gripping your keys in your jacket pocket.
God.
This is stupid.
This is reckless.
This isâ
âDo youââ You clear your throat, the words catching slightly before you force them out. âDo you want to come up?â
He stares at you for a second, then lets out a short, disbelieving breath, like heâs not quite sure he heard you right.
âYou canât be serious.â
Heat rushes up your neck, quick and unwelcome, and for a second you just stand there, wishing you could take it backârewind a few seconds and keep your mouth shut.
What the hell were you thinking?
âYeah,â you say, a little too quickly. âNo, that wasâthat was stupid.â
You turn away before he can say anything else, pushing the door shut harder than you mean to as you step back onto the sidewalk. You donât look back. You refuse to. You just keep walking toward the lobby door, drawing your keys from your pocket and fumbling through them to find the right one.
It takes longer than it should, but eventually you find the lobby key and wriggle it into the lock.
This door has never been your friend. Itâs old, a little rusted, and the lock has always been jankyâbut now your hands are shaking, and this stupid old door seems to think thatâs funny, because it wonât budge.
You jiggle the key and try again, but nothing changes.
Thenâ
âHere.â
His voice is low. Close.
Your hand stills as he steps in behind you, not touching, but close enough that you can feel the heat of him at your backâthe solid line of his chest just shy of pressing into you as he reaches past your shoulder.
His fingers brush yours as he takes the keyâand the lock turns easily this time.
Of course it does. Traitorous fucking door.
His arm lingers there for a second longer than it needs toâthen he pushes the door open.
You donât even glance at him as you step inside, already turning back to grab your key before the door swings shutâbut heâs still holding it, barely a step behind you.
He tilts his head slightly, nodding toward the lobby. âGo.â
Itâs quiet. Controlled.
Not a suggestion.
Your breath catches, just for a second, and you hesitateâlong enough to feel it, whatever this is, tightening between youâ
Then you turn and keep walking.
And he follows.
He follows you across the lobby, up the fire stairs, down the corridor, all the way to your apartment door. He stands a little closer than necessary as you unlock itâalmost like he doesnât think you know how doors work nowâbut the key turns smoothly this time.
You push the door open and step inside.
The apartment is quiet, dim, and you shrug out of your jacket without thinking. You can feel him watching you as you drape it over the arm of the sofa, and itâs a little... thrilling. Dangerous. Because Jack Abbot is in your goddamn apartment right now, looking at you like heâs a man on the edgeâ
And youâre daring him to jump.
âDrink?â you offer, keeping your voice lightâinnocent.
He clears his throat. âWater, please.â
You canât help the small smirk on your lips as you brush past him, a little closer than necessary.
âSo polite,â you murmur.
He doesnât move, doesnât shiftâbut you can feel him there, tense just beneath the surface.
You open the fridge and bend over to grab a bottle of water, letting your dress ride up the backs of your thighs in a way thatâs totally unnecessary. Jack clears his throat again, just a little too sharp, and when you glance back toward him, heâs turned away completely.
You press your lips together to keep from smiling too wide as you straighten again.
âHere,â you say, stepping toward him and holding the water out.
He turns hesitantly, taking it. âThank you.â
Your eyes catch his, a slow smile tugging at your lips before you bite the corner gently, just enough for him to notice. He looks away quickly, jaw tightening as he focuses on uncapping the water bottle.
You brush past him again, still a little too close, and move toward the sofa, dropping onto it and leaning forward to take off your shoes.
Jack takes a long swig of water, then clears his throat for the third time.
âAre you working tomorrow?â he asks.
You glance up, still leaned forward, and itâs hard not to notice the way his eyes dip from your face.
âIsnât that something you should already know?â
The corner of his mouth twitches, like he canât quite help himself.
âYouâre impossible. You know that?â
Heat rushes up your neck at the way he says itâshort, sharp, loadedâand you bite back a grin, letting your eyes glint just a little as you straighten.
âAm I?â you murmur, tilting your head just slightly. âOnly one way to find out.â
He freezes for a second, shoulders tight, hand curling slightly around the water bottleâand it crackles softly under his grip. His breath hitches, just barely.
âI should go,â he mutters, voice low and clipped.
He takes a step toward the doorâand you shoot up from the sofa, heartbeat racing.
âWaitâuhâbefore you go,â you say, stepping toward him, âcould you help me with something?â
He hesitates, turning slowly, as if every second in here is costing him something.
You move until youâre almost between him and the door, looking up at him through your lashes.
âCould you help me out of my dress?â
The second the words leave your lips, you forget how to breathe.
Jackâs jaw tightens, his shoulders coiling ever so slightly. His fingers twitch around the bottle, just a whisper of movement, as if holding himself together by force. His eyes catch yours, dark and sharp, taking in the faint scrunch between your brows, the small pout on your lips, the way youâre offering him something he never thought heâd be allowed to have.
He nods onceâcareful, controlledâbut the tension radiating off him is almost unbearable.
Your stomach flips.
Without a word, you turn, sweeping your hair out of the way while your pulse hammers in your ears.
You feel him shift, his warmth, and the ghost of his touch at the nape of your neck. And that first, tiny contact sends a shock straight through youâhot, sharp, impossible to ignore.
He pauses, just a heartbeat, and you catch the tiniest hitch in his breath.
Then he moves again, slow, deliberate, dragging the zipper down almost painfully slow, his knuckles grazing your skinâwarm, rough, controlled, just enough to make your heart pound in your throat.
âHow do you do it?â you whisper, voice catching slightly. âHow are you always so⊠unaffected by everything?â
âUnaffected?â he murmurs, almost tasting the word, as if testing it against himself.
His knuckles brush the small of your back, pausing where the zipper endsâbut he doesnât stop. His fingertips graze your skin, deliberate, teasing, tracing the line of your spine upward again, slow enough that it drags your breath with it, sharp enough that heat blooms through every nerve.
âYou have no idea,â he whispers, voice low and rough, almost breaking, âhow much you affect me.â
Your breath catches, sharp and sudden. Everything in your chest pulls tight, something hot and dizzying blooming low as his words sink in.
You turn before you can stop yourselfâand heâs closer now. Close enough that you can feel the warmth of him, the shift of his breath, the space between you narrowing into something fragile and dangerous.
For a second, neither of you move.
And then his hand finds your neckâ
Not rough, not rushedâjust firm enough to anchor you there, thumb pressing under your jaw like he needs to feel that this is real, that youâre real. His other hand tightens where it still holds the loosened fabric of your dress at your back, fingers curling into it like restraint is slipping through his grip.
He hesitates, just for a breath. Like heâs giving himself one last chance to walk away.
Then he kisses you.
Itâs not tentative. Thereâs nothing careful about it. It lands like something heâs been holding back for too long, all that control finally snapping under the weight of you standing here, asking for him, looking at him like that.
His mouth is warm and certain against yours, a sharp inhale breaking through you as you lean into him without thinking, your hands finding him just as quicklyâhis stomach, his chestâanything to hold onto as the world tilts. He makes a low sound, barely there, but you feel it more than you hear it, the vibration settling deep in your chest as his grip tightens.
You melt before you can stop yourself.
Your head tilts back, giving him more, and he takes it immediately, deepening the kiss with that same quiet intensity that steals the breath right out of you. His thumb shifts along your jaw, not lingering, just enough to guide you where he wants you, and the control of itâGod, the way he still tries to control it after everything, after all that restraintâmakes something in your stomach flip hard.
His hand at your back slips under the loosened zipper, fingers pressing into your bare skin now, warm and steady, but thereâs tension in it. You can feel it in the way his grip flexes, like heâs still tryingâstillâto hold the line even as he pulls you closer.
It doesnât work.
Not when you press into him like this, not when your fingers curl tighter in his shirt, not when you kiss him back without hesitation, without thinking about consequences or lines or anything except how he feels against you.
He exhales against your mouth, sharp, like youâve just undone him, and for a second the kiss faltersânot because heâs pulling away, but because heâs trying to.
You feel it. The conflict. The split second where he almost stops.
Your hand slides up to his jaw, fingers catching there, holding him in place before he can even try.
âDonât,â you whisper, barely pulling back, your lips brushing his as you speak.
And something in him gives.
You see it in the way his eyes darken, in the way his hand tightens at your back, pulling you flush against him this time, the last inch of space gone like it was never allowed to exist in the first place.
When he kisses you again, itâs deeper.
Less restrained.
Like heâs finally stopped pretending this isnât exactly what he wants.
Itâs different nowâharder, hungrier, like something in him has shifted for good. His hand slides from your jaw to your waist, gripping tight as he steps into you, crowding you back without breaking the kiss, without giving you a second to think.
Your back meets the door with a soft thud.
He doesnât stop.
If anything, it only makes him sharper, more certain, his mouth moving against yours with a kind of urgency that steals the air right out of your lungs. You barely get a breath before he takes it again, and you let himâGod, you let himâtilting into him, giving him everything he reaches for.
His hand tightens at your waist, then slips lower, dragging you flush against him again, like he needs to feel exactly how close he can get before he loses control completely.
And you can feel itâhow close he is.
Itâs in the way his grip flexes, in the way his breath turns uneven against your mouth, in the way the kiss keeps deepening like he canât quite stop himself from taking more.
Your fingers find his shirt again, pulling him closer, and he breaks the kiss just long enough to drag in a breath, his forehead almost brushing yours, like heâs tryingâone last timeâto get a handle on this.
He doesnât.
His hands are on you again, immediate, sliding up your sides, pushing the straps of your dress from your shoulders in one smooth, decisive motion. The fabric gives easily, slipping under his hands like it was never meant to stay there in the first placeâand it falls to the floor, pooling at your feet.
His breath catches, and his gaze dropsâjust for a second, but itâs enough.
âTell me to stop,â he says, voice low, roughânothing steady about it now.
You meet his eyes, chest rising and falling fast, heat still sparking under your skin.
âBedroom,â you murmur.
For a second, he just looks at you.
Something in his expression shiftsâtightensâlike that word landed exactly where it shouldnât. His gaze searches yours for a moment, checking for hesitation, for doubt.
But he doesnât find any.
He nods onceâand you turn, already moving toward the bedroom. You can feel him right behind you, close enough that his hand finds your waist again before youâve even taken two steps, steady, grounding, like heâs not about to let you get too far ahead of him.
Itâs barely a walk.
More like being guidedâpulledâacross the apartment toward your room, your pulse loud in your ears, every step charged with the knowledge of what youâve just set in motion.
The door barely makes it closed before heâs on you again.
Not rushedânever rushedâbut certain, like the decision has already been made and thereâs no point pretending otherwise. His hands find you first, steady at your waist, turning you back toward him before you can take another step into the room.
Your breath catches as you look up at him. Thereâs something in his expression youâve never seen before. Itâs not soft, not gentleâjust stripped of whatever distance heâd been holding onto all night.
Gone.
His gaze drags over you, slow and deliberate, and this time thereâs nothing in the way of itânothing to hide behind, nothing to buffer itâand the heat in it settles low in your stomach, heavy and immediate.
âStill want this?â he asks, voice rough, quieter nowâbut it lands heavier here.
You donât answer. You just step into him.
And itâs all the permission he needs.
His hand tightens at your waist as he pulls you back into him, and the kiss this time is slower, deeper in a way that feels intentionalâlike heâs choosing it, not chasing it. His mouth moves against yours with a kind of controlled hunger, every shift measured, every breath deliberate, like heâs letting himself feel it fully instead of fighting it.
Your fingers curl into his shirt, and he exhales against your mouth, something unsteady finally breaking through.
His grip shiftsâfirmer nowâguiding you back a step, then another, not hurried, not careless, but unrelenting all the same. You feel the edge of the bed behind your knees before you fully register moving at all, your focus too caught in the way heâs kissing you, the way his hand anchors you like heâs not about to let this get away from him.
His mouth breaks from yours just long enough to draw in a breath, his forehead pressing briefly to yours.
Not hesitation. Control.
Or what little he has left of it.
âLast chance,â he murmurs, quieter now.
You drop back onto the bed, gaze locked on his, breath still uneven.
âIâm not the one holding back.â
You barely have time to move up the mattress before heâs there, crowding over you, hands braced on either side as he follows you down. The mattress dips under his weight, the space between you gone in an instantâreplaced by the solid heat of him, the firm press of his hips against yours.
His mouth finds yours again, hot and insistent, teeth catching your bottom lip just enough to pull a soft sound from youâbut itâs different now. Slower. Not restrained, but deliberate. Curious, almost.
Like heâs learning you.
The way you react. The way you move under him. The way you give.
Your hands slide up his chest, fingertips digging in as heat coils low in your stomachâbut they donât stay there long. He shifts his weight slightly, steady, controlled, one hand lifting off the mattress to catch your wrist.
His fingers close around itânot tight, not forcefulâjust certain, guiding.
He lifts your hand above your head.
âJack,â you whisper. âIââ
He shushes you.
âLet me do this, okay?â His voice is rough, thick with something unsteady beneath itâsomething that makes your stomach knot. âIâve got you.â
And you believe him.
His hand slides down your body, slow and sure, brushing over your chest, your waist, the curve of your hipâeach touch deliberate, like heâs taking his time even now, even like this. His fingers hook at the inside of your thigh, grip firm as he nudges your leg wider.
âThatâs it,â he murmurs. âGood girl.â
The words go straight through you.
You can already feel the damp heat between your legs, the slick fabric pressed close, but the way he says itâthe way his voice dropsâmakes your hips shift up instinctively, chasing something you canât quite reach.
Chasing him.
And he notices. Of course he does.
You only just catch the faint lift at the corner of his mouth before his lips are back on yours, swallowing the breath from you as your back arches, pressing yourself up into him without thinking. Your fingers curl into the sheets above your head, tension pulling tight through your body as everything narrows down to where heâs touching youâwhere he isnât touching you.
His hand drags back up your thigh, slower this time. Intentional. And when his fingers finally press against you through the thin fabric, you gasp.
He takes the sound from you immediately, mouth moving against yours, deeper now, like heâs feeding off it, like every reaction just pushes him further. His fingers start to moveâslow, circling, testingâwhile his mouth leaves yours to trail along your jaw, your cheek, the side of your neck.
With your mouth free, the sounds slip out before you can stop them.
Soft. Unsteady. Needy.
And he loves it.
You feel it in the way his breath shifts, in the way his grip tightens just slightly, in the way his hips rockâslow, controlled, a subtle pressure of denim thatâs more suggestion than friction.
âJackââ your voice catches, breaking on his name. âPlease. I wantââ
âTell me, sweetheart,â he murmurs, mouth brushing your shoulder, voice low and coaxing.
âMore,â you manage, breath shaking. âNeed more.â
He groans against your skin, the sound low and rough, his body settling heavier over yours like any space between you is something he canât stand.
Then his hand shifts.
Your breath catches as his fingers slide beneath the damp fabric, dragging through your wet heat in one slow, deliberate stroke.
Your whole body jolts. âFuckâJackââ
The reaction pulls something from himâa sharp inhale against your neck, his mouth pressing there like he needs to ground himself for a second before he loses it completely.
Youâve never felt like this before. Never this hot, this open, this aware of every inch of your own body.
And youâve never wanted anyone like this before.
âGod,â he murmurs, voice thick, lips tracing back up your throat. âYouâre so wet for me, sweetheart.â
All you can do is nod, whimpering softly, your hips lifting without permission, chasing him, asking for more without the wordsâand he gives it to you. Of course he does.
His finger slides inside you, slow at first, letting you feel itâthe stretch, the heatâbefore he pushes deeper, and the sound that breaks from you is swallowed instantly as his mouth finds yours again, your back arching beneath him as he starts to move. Not fast. Never fast. He sets a rhythm instead, steady and controlled, curling his finger just enough to make your breath catch, just enough to make your hips move against him again.
And when you press into it, when your body starts to chase that feeling properly, he adds another finger, the stretch pulling a broken sound from your throat as your hands tighten in the sheets and your body rolls beneath him, helpless to it now, completely caught in the slow, deliberate way he works you open.
Every movement is intentional. Every curl hits deeper, sharper, building something tight and aching low in your stomach that makes your whole body tremble, your breath coming out in uneven gasps as you press into his hand, chasing, needing.
Then his thumb finds your clit, and the contact is immediateâdevastating.
You cry out, sharp and breathless, your whole body tightening as he starts slow, deliberate circles that send heat spiralling through you, your hips lifting again, desperate now, unable to stay still under him.
You canât answerânot when his mouth is everywhere, your throat, your jaw, the corner of your mouth, like he canât decide where he wants you most before he finds your lips again, and this time the kiss is different again. Hungrier. Messier. His tongue presses into your mouth just as his fingers push deeper, his thumb working harder, more deliberate now, and the moan that tears from you is swallowed whole.
âPlease,â you whimper against his mouth, breath breaking. âPlease, Iâneed you.â
He lifts his head, dark eyes searching yours, brows pulling together just slightly.
âYou sure?â
You stare at him, trying not to whimper as your whole body clenches around his stilled fingers, the sudden stillness almost worse than anything he was doing before.
âNever have I ever finished during sex, remember?â you manage, breathless but steady enough to land. âYou gonna fix that, or what?â
Something feral flickers across his face.
And then itâs goneâreplaced by something heavier. Something decided.
He kisses you again before you can catch your breath, all teeth and tongue, the restraint heâs been clinging to snapping clean in half as he groans into your mouth, the sound dragged straight from his chest. You feel the loss of his fingers immediately, your body protesting it, but itâs replaced just as quickly by the slow, deliberate roll of his hips, the friction of denim against your soaked panties making you gasp against him.
âFuck,â he breathes, like he canât quite believe it.
He pulls back just enough to shift, bracing himself on one arm while the other moves to his belt, not rushed but far from steady now. Thereâs a hitch in his breath, a tension in the way his fingers work at it, shoving his jeans and briefs down just enough to free himself, and your gaze drops before you can stop it.
Heâs already hardâfully, heavilyâflushed and slick at the tip, and the sight of it sends a sharp pulse of heat straight through you, your mouth going dry even as your body reacts in the complete opposite way.
âFuckââ he chokes, the word breaking out of him. âI havenât been this hard inââ His eyes flick back up to yours, dark and molten, and whatever he was going to say changes. ââever.â
It hits you low and deep, twisting something tight in your stomach that makes your hips shift under him without thinking. You finally let go of the sheets, your hands finding him, sliding up to wrap around his neck as you pull him back down, needing him closer, needing him everywhere.
Your legs come up around his waist, drawing him in, urging him forward, and his breath stutters as he presses in, his swollen tip dragging against the damp fabric between you. The contact is just enough to make your head fall back, a broken sound slipping from your throat as he triesâtriesâto hold himself up, one arm braced, the other moving between you.
You can feel the strain in him now, the way everything is slipping in real time, in the slight shake of his arm, in the uneven rhythm of his breathing as his hand hooks into the waistband of your panties.
âIâll buy you new ones,â he murmurs against your mouth, voice rough, almost distracted, like the thought barely registers before itâs gone. âPromise.â
And then the fabric gives.
The sound of it tearingâsharp, suddenâgoes straight through you, your breath catching hard as he pulls the fabric out of the way, the last barrier gone in an instant.
It shouldnât be as hot as it is.
But it is.
Jack Abbotâcontrolled, composed, always holding the lineâlosing it enough to rip your panties off you?
Fuck.
He sinks into you in one steady thrust, and both of you gasp at the stretchâthe sudden, overwhelming closeness, the way want crashes hot and heavy between you. Your pulse hammers in your ears, that dizzy edge of fear and urgency tangling together until all you can think is himâhere, now, inside you.
For a moment, you just breatheâpant, reallyâeyes squeezed shut, hands locked on his shoulders as your body clenches around him, like youâre trying to keep him right there, like you never want to let him go. He drops his head to your neck, breath hot against your damp skin, and you feel the way it shakes out of him.
âYouâfuckâyouâre so tight, sweetheart,â he pants, voice rough and muffled where his mouth presses into you. âIâm not gonna lastââ
âThen donât,â you murmur, your voice softer but no less certain. âJust fuck me. Please, Jack.â
A groan tears out of him, low and wrecked, and you feel it through his chest as he shifts above you, hips pulling back, his cock dragging against your walls in a way that makes your stomach coil tight, sparks chasing across your skin. You suck in a sharp breath, your grip tightening on himâand before you can brace, he drives forward again, deeper this time.
âFuckââ you cry out, the sound breaking loose without warning. âJackââ
He doesnât stop. His hips roll back again, slower now, controlled in a way that almost makes it worse, his head lifting so he can look at you, really look at you, like heâs checking, like he needs to see it.
The anticipation coils tighter in your chest, sharp and electric, lighting up every nerve in your body until it almost hurts.
âMhm,â you manage, breath unsteady, nodding as your arms wind tighter around his neck, pulling him closer, needing him closer, like it still isnât enough.
For a secondâjust a secondâyouâre distracted by something stupid, the feel of his shirt between you, the barrier of it, the way you want it gone, want skin on skin, want to see him, feel him, all of himâ
And then he thrusts forward again. Harder again. And the thought disappears completely.
Your body jolts beneath him, every movement knocking the breath from your lungs, and the sound that leaves you is loudâtoo loudâechoing back off the walls in a way that would make you self-conscious any other time.
But not now.
Right now, you donât care who hears. Not when it feels like this.
His name spills from your lips in broken gasps, tangled with raw cries, and he answers with a rough sound against your shoulder, biting it back as his hips drive into you at a relentless pace. Heâs barely holding himself up now, his weight pressing into you in a way that feels like too much and somehow still not enough, the strain in him obvious in every uneven breath, every sharp exhale against your skin.
His hand drags down your side, back to your thigh, fingers digging in as he pushes your leg wider, and the shiftâsmall as it isâhits something deeper, sharper, your vision flashing white as your head tips back and the knot in your belly pulls tight. His grip slides to your hip, anchoring you there, holding you in place so every thrust lands exactly where it needs to, deep and unrelenting, the sound of it filling the room, wet and rhythmic and impossible to ignore beneath the broken sounds youâre both making.
And then his hand moves between you.
You feel it immediatelyâthe change, the focusâas his fingers find your clit in the slick mess between your bodies, steady despite everything else, despite the way heâs losing himself in every way. Your back arches, breath catching sharp as his touch turns deliberate, circling, pressing, coaxing, sending jolts of sensation straight through you until itâs too much, not enough, everything all at once.
âJackââ you whine, the sound falling apart as soon as it leaves you. âFuck, Iââ
âI know, sweetheart,â he mutters against your jaw, voice wrecked. âCome on my cock, yeah?â
Your hips lift to meet him without thinking, chasing the rhythm heâs set, chasing the pressure, the friction, the way heâs working you with a precision that feels almost cruel now. His hand doesnât falter, his fingers moving with intent, building and building, every touch sending sharp bursts of pleasure up your spine as the tension in your stomach pulls tighter, tighter, until it feels like it might snap.
Itâs never felt like this before. Youâve never felt like this before.
Your whole body tightens, back arching, legs trembling around him as your hips grind up against his, desperate, chasing something you canât hold onto. He keeps hitting that same spot, again and again, relentless, his pace rougher now, less controlled, while his fingers stay locked on you, steady, practiced, pushing you right to the edge and holding you there.
You cry out, the sound raw, breaking from your chest as everything finally tips.
The release hits all at onceâsharp, overwhelming, tearing through you in a rush that steals your breath and leaves nothing behind but heat and tension snapping loose. Your body locks up around him, tightening, pulsing, your hands gripping at him as your legs shake, your hips still moving against his like you canât stop, like you donât want to.
âFuck,â he groans, burying his face in your neck, his voice wrecked as he keeps moving inside youâslower now, but deeper, like heâs chasing every last pulse of you, like he doesnât want to miss a second of it. âThatâs it. Thatâs my girl.â
His rhythm falters, hips stuttering, and then he loses it completelyâa broken sound tearing from him as he drives into you one last time, deep and hard, spilling inside you as his whole body tenses, shuddering above yours.
You feel itâevery part of itâthe way he comes undone, the way he clings to you through it, like he needs something to hold onto just as much as you do. Your bodies keep moving together, slower now, instinctive, chasing the last fading edges of it as your breathing stays uneven, your chests rising and falling in sync, skin slick and overheated where youâre pressed together.
It takes a moment to come back downâa long one.
But eventually, the tension drains from him and he collapses almost fully above you, face buried into your shoulder, his weight heavy and grounding as he exhales, slow and spent. It makes it a little harder to breatheâbut you donât mind.
Not when you can feel his heartbeat against your chest, strong and real, still racing like yours.
-
For the first time in two weeks, Jack Abbot isnât stupidly early for his shift. He couldnât be, really. Because heâd woken up late this morning, limbs tangled with yours in warm sheets that smelled so much like you it made his head spinâand that had thrown off everything else he needed to get done today.
If it was up to him, he wouldnât have left at allâbut he had to. He had police paperwork to finish, a neighbourâs cat to feed, and sleep he shouldâve caught up on before being back in charge of an entire emergency department for twelve hours. But on the bright side? He knows you have a swing shift today, which means he doesnât need to be early to see you, because youâre going to be stuck at PTMC until at least ten p.m. tonight.
With him.
And he really shouldnât be looking forward to that as much as he is.
âAfternoon, Dr. Abbot,â Dana says, glancing over the top of her glasses. âWasnât sure weâd see you today. Arenât you usually here by now?â
âIâm on time,â Jack mutters. âIâm a busy man.â
Dana hums, the corner of her mouth lifting slightly as her eyes drop back down to the tablet in her hands.
Jack tries not to appear too conspicuous as he scans the department, glancing toward the trauma bays and South corridor as he passes the nursesâ station. He shouldnât be this anxious to see you againânot in the apprehensive kind of way, but in the way that makes it feel like his lungs wonât quite fill until youâre near him again.
âSheâs not here,â Dana says without looking up from her chart. âWasnât feeling well, so Ellis came in early.â
Jack spots Ellis across central, exiting one of the rooms with Santos at her side, and he opens his mouth to say somethingâdefend himself, maybe, lie about what or who he was looking forâbut he hesitates, unsure what he could say that wouldnât incriminate him further.
So instead, he just drops his head and keeps walking, fumbling for his phone in his pocket.
Heâd seen you this morning. Just this morning. You were sleepy, had a headache, so he got you water and Tylenol and kissed you before he leftâbut you hadnât said anything about feeling so unwell you were going to call in sick.
Jack doesnât stop until he reaches the lockers, then turns back to survey the ED one last time before leaning a shoulder against the wall and pulling up his text thread with you. He hadnât texted you today because he knew heâd see you tonight and didnât want to seem⊠overbearing. Even now, heâs not sure if he shouldâbut he feels off in a way he hasnât in years, like heâs waiting on something he canât control and itâs making him feel sick.
What if last night hadnât meant what he thought it did? What if you regretted it? What if it was justâ
âHey, kid,â Dana calls from the nursesâ station. âBig night?â
Jackâs head snaps upâand there you are.
The relief hits before he can stop it, sharp and instant, loosening something in his chest he hadnât realised was wound so tight. He swallows it down just as quickly, his expression settling before anyone can clock it.
âYou donât know the half of it,â you mutter.
Dana huffs a short laugh. âI have a feeling I donât want to know.â
Jack canât help but watch as you cross the floor toward him, your backpack hanging from one shoulder while the other hand presses two fingers to your temple, like you could massage the headache away. Thereâs a smug little smile on your lips when you reach him, slowing your steps until you pause just beside himânot too close, but enough to make his breath catch.
You glance down at his phone, at the open message thread where his thumb is hovering, and your smirk curves a little higher.
âMiss me?â
Jack locks his phone and tucks it back into his pocket.
âThought you were sick.â
You lift one shoulder. âA little hungover, so Ellis swapped with me.â
For a second, neither of you move. He just looks at youâand you look right back, like you both know exactly whatâs changed, even if neither of you is about to say it out loud. Not here. Not now.
âAnd I missed the night shift attending,â you say finally.
Thenâbefore he can respond, before heâs even fully processed what you saidâyou lean in and press a quick kiss to his cheek. Only brief. Barely anything.
But it feels like everything.
And just like that, Jack Abbot is done pretending he isnât yours.
summary: you accidentally overhear steve calling you âclingyâ to robin. instead of confronting him, you retreat into silence, letting your hurt fester. steve notices and becomes desperate to understand, but the more he reaches out, the wider the distance grows.
word count: 6.1k
a/n: after writing way too much steve fluff, itâs time for some angst with my fav trope: fmc overhears her spouse call her clingy⊠eventual happy ending <3
tags: takes place after s4 timeskip, so much angst, emotional hurt, crying, reader has scars from a demo attack, nancy and robin are so sweet here, distancing, reader has ptsd, emotional vulnerability, reader was eddie's bsf, mentions of violence, trauma, typical upside down gore, lack of communication, so much fluff at the end, happy ending.
You truly didnât mean to eavesdrop.Â
If anything, it was an accident, a cruel, stupid accident orchestrated by the universe itself and whatever higher power up there that wanted to see you suffering.Â
Youâd been at the Squawk with Steve and Robin, the three of you crammed into the booth like always. Robin, as usual, was rambling about something while Steve laughed and bumped his knee into yours under the table, grounding you without even trying.Â
By the time the clock crept past 8:30, the air outside was already dark and heavy, that familiar tightness had started curling in your chest; one that always showed up when it got late.
Youâd told yourself you could handle it, that you were fine and you werenât helpless, but you still asked Steve to accompany you home anyway, too afraid to go on your own.
âCan you come with me?â youâd asked casually, âor at least drive me home?â
Steve frowned, glancing at Robin. âBaby, youâll be fine. You can go on your own. Iâll be back in like an hour, okay? â
You nodded and kissed him goodbye, then you walked out to your car telling yourself you werenât a scared little kid, and that nothing can harm you anymore.
Only to realize halfway down the lot that your coat was still inside.
So you turned around.
That was all; a forgotten coat, a stupid, normal thing, and you would have been in and out in seconds if not for your name cutting through the noise in the squawk as you heard Steve mention you to Robin.
You shouldnât have listened, you knew that. You were raised better than to hover at doors and steal pieces of conversations that werenât yours to hear, but your body didnât listen to reason anymore.
Your feet stayed planted, your lungs forgot how to work as panic washed over you so fast and so violently that for a second you werenât in Hawkins at all.
You were back in the Upside Down.
Back in that choking red sky, where the air is thick and cold. You could feel all over again the vines slick and alive under your hands as you ran, heart tearing itself apart inside your chest.Â
You could still feel the demobats, the weight of them, the wet snap of their wings, the sound of flesh ripping, the blood, so much blood, everywhere you looked there was bloodbloodbloodbloodbloodâ
âthe combined screams of yours and Eddieâs. You remembered the way his body had gone still, the way Steve had dragged your bloodied body away as your entire abdomen was ripped apart, shaking so badly you couldnât even scream.
You remember the way youâd thought you were going to die there with your throat ripped open and your bones scattered across that fucked-up place.
You hadnât felt safe since.
Four months, five months? however long it had been, it didnât matter. Fear had latched onto you like a parasite and refused to let go.
Everything startled you now, doors, clocks, cold air on your neck, cars backfiring, footsteps too close behind you. The world felt like a nightmare, and the night was only much worse.
Steve was the only place that didnât feel like that.
Steve made it quiet. Steve made it stop.
You hadnât even realized youâd started clinging until it was already done, until your body had decided he was shelter, that he was protection, that if he was near then nothing could touch you.Â
And now you were standing outside a door, listening to him talk about you.
âI donât know, Robin,â he says again, voice rough and worn down, like heâs been chewing on the same thought for weeks and itâs finally gone bloody. âSheâs just⊠different. Ever since.â
Robin leans back against the counter, arms crossed, watching him carefully. âYeah,â she says, slow and measured. âNo shit. She went to literal hell, Steve.â
âI know that,â he snaps too fast, immediately regretting the edge in his voice. He exhales, drags a hand down his face. âI know. I do. Thatâs the problem. I know, and I still feel like shit about how I feel.â
She waits. Robinâs good at that. At letting him talk himself into the truth.
âItâs like,â he starts again, quieter but faster, words tumbling over each other now, âsheâs everywhere. All the time. Wherever I go, sheâs already there or tryinâ to be. If I grab my keys, suddenly she needs to leave too. If Iâm sittinâ down, sheâs sittinâ down. If I say Iâm tired, sheâs tired. Itâs like she canât exist unless Iâm right next to her.â
Your stomach drops where you stand, frozen just outside the door, fingers clenched tight around the strap of your bag.
âIâm serious,â Steve keeps going, oblivious, frustration bleeding through every word. âIf Iâm goinâ to see Dustin, sheâs got a reason to come. If Iâm headinâ to the Squawk, somehow weâre paired up for drills again. She doesnât do anything alone, Robin. Never. Sheâs just⊠latched onto me.â
He laughs humorless. âAnd I sound like a dick sayinâ it, I know I do, but itâs fuckinâ suffocating.â
Suffocating. Like heâs drowning because of you.
Robin doesnât answer right away. When she finally speaks, her voice is softer, more careful. âSteve. Thatâs not weird, matter of fact it's a normal response given what she's been through. Thatâs her brain trying to keep her alive.â
âI know,â he says, rubbing at his neck like it physically hurts to admit it. âI know sheâs not doing it on purpose.â
âShe nearly died,â Robin presses. âShe watched Eddie die right in front of her. She got dragged into the Upside Down and came back with scars all over her body. She wakes up screaming, Steve. Youâre the only thing that makes her feel safe.â
âI didnât say she was the bad guy,â he snaps, voice cracking despite himself. âIâm just sayinâ Iâm overwhelmed. Sheâs so clingy, Robin. You saw her tonight. She didnât wanna leave without me. I had to practically beg her to go first.â
Your vision blurs. You press a hand to your mouth, swallowing hard.
âItâs like I gotta make up excuses just to be alone,â he admits, quieter now, stripped bare. âI need space. I need to breathe. And I canât say that without soundinâ like a heartless asshole because yeah, sheâs traumatized, and then suddenly Iâm the villain for wantinâ five goddamn minutes to myself.â
Robin scoffs, pushing off the counter. âSteve, you idiot. You said it yourself. Your girlfriend is traumatized.â
âYeah,â he shoots back, voice rising, âbut how the hell do I tell my traumatized girlfriend to back off without destroyinâ her. How do I say âhey, I love you, but youâre smotherinâ me,â and not absolutely fuck her up more than she already is.â
âYou donât call her clingy,â Robin says immediately. âFor starters. That word is banned and most girls, including Vickie, hate it.â
Steve lets out a short, bitter laugh. âWell, she is.â
Robin gasps dramatically, clutching her chest. âOh nooo,â she mocks, voice high and obnoxious. âIâm Steve Harrington and my girlfriend loves me so much. Oh noooo, she feels safe with me. My life is helllll.â
âShut up,â Steve mutters, shoving her shoulder.
âOww, you asshole!â Robin shoots back, swatting him in return, then sobers as she gets all serious again. âYouâre not wrong for being tired. You are wrong for talking about her like sheâs a burden.â
Steve goes still. âI donât think sheâs a burden,â he says quietly, and this time it sounds like the truth. âI just⊠I donât wanna be the only thing keepinâ her together. What happens if I fuck up? What happens if I leave?â
Robin sighs. âThen you talk to her. You communicate, dingus.â
You step back before they can see you, heart pounding, every word replaying in your head on a brutal loop. Suffocating. Clingy. Everywhere.
You donât grab your coat when you leave.
You donât even realize youâre driving until youâre already halfway home, knuckles white on the steering wheel as every memory crashes into you at once. Begging him to stay while you showered because you were convinced something would crawl out of the drain. Nights you woke up screaming, clinging to his shirt like it was the only safe place left in the world. Training days for the crawl where you stuck close, too afraid to be alone, grateful when you were paired with him again.
You could see it all, every single little thing you had leaned on him for, flashing through your mind like some god-awful horror slideshow.
Steveâs words had been like a bucket of ice water dumped on you, shocking you into clarity whether you wanted it or not.Â
Maybe you had been too sensitive. Maybe you had been unbearable. Maybe you had been so clingy that it wasnât fair for him, and maybe you needed to let go, at least a little.Â
It wasnât as if you had been the only one stuck in the Upside Down. Will had survived a week in that hell, seen things that should have ripped him apart, and yet he had come back and carried himself with a strength you couldnât even muster.Â
Dustin had lost Eddie too, but he hadnât latched onto anyone, hadnât made himself a burden. Eleven had been tortured, exploited, experimented on, broken in ways that should have left her crushed, and yet she still managed to find herself amidst everything, to stand and breathe and continue on.Â
And here you were, the only one who seemed incapable of moving past it, of finding even a fragment of independence, still tethered to Steve as if without him you would fall apart.
Somehow, without realizing it, you had arrived at your shared home with Steve, parked your car in the driveway, and walked inside on autopilot, your body carrying you through familiar motions while your mind carried the full weight of guilt, shame, and heartbreak.
You stripped off your clothes in the bathroom, letting the water hit your skin in a rhythm you used to find comfort in, and prepared some dinner. You heated up leftovers, the smell of food filling the kitchen like it always had, but this time there was no laughter, no shared commentary on who had eaten what, no teasing Steve about his obsession with ketchup.Â
By the time Steve arrived, the house was quiet. You were already in bed, tucked under the covers, something you hadnât done alone in months because for months you hadnât slept unless his arms were wrapped around you.Â
But tonight, the house felt empty, and he found himself standing in the kitchen, fork in hand, staring at the warm meal you had prepared for him, and realizing that for the first time in an eternity, you werenât waiting for him.
The next morning only deepened the silence. Steve woke to an empty bed, the sunlight spilling across rumpled sheets that smelled faintly of your perfume, and felt a prickling, cold panic he couldnât name at first.Â
You were already dressed, shoes on, ready to leave.
âWhere are you heading?â he asked, voice rough.
âGoing to get some stuff from the store,â you replied dryly.
âWant me to come with you, sweetheart?â His words carried that familiar gentleness, but you couldnât look past it without feeling like a burden.
âNo,â you said simply.
It was such a small, simple word. It shouldnât feel like this. Except it made Steve sit in bed alone, blood running cold, realizing far too late that you were beginning to avoid him.
You leave early and donât come back until the sky is already dimming, the house dark except for the kitchen light that Steve has turned on and off three times now like it might summon you home faster.
By the time you unlock the front door, he has been pacing a groove into the living room carpet, heart in his throat, mind running through every worst case scenario he promised himself he wouldnât think about anymore. The second the lock clicks and the door opens, heâs there, crowding your space before you can even hang up your coat.
âWhere the hell were you?!â he blurts, voice tight and frantic, eyes scanning you like heâs checking for blood. âYouâve been outta the house for nearly six hours. Six. I was losinâ my goddamn mind. I thought somethinâ happened to you.â
You sigh, slow and tired, and for a split second when you really look at him, at the pure unfiltered worry etched into his face, you almost break.
Almost step into his arms, almost let yourself melt into him and admit how badly you missed him, how those six hours felt like six days without his voice or his hands or the steady reassurance of his presence.Â
If six hours did this to him, then the space you were forcing had been tearing you apart twice as badly.
But then your brain betrays you, replays his words in his voice, clingy, suffocating, always there, and you harden.
âI was out, Steve,â you say quietly.
âYeah, no shit,â he fires back, following you as you walk toward the kitchen. âOut where?â
You open the fridge, more for something to do than because youâre hungry, and shrug. âWith Nancy. We hung out and I accidentally lost track of time.â
The tension drains out of him immediately, shoulders sagging in relief. âJesus,â he breathes. âWhy didnât you tell me, huh? I was freakinâ out. Is everything okay? Did somethinâ happen?â
You shake your head. âNo, nothing happened, donât worry.â
He nods quickly, like heâs trying not to push. âOkay. Okay. I wonât pry.â He hesitates, then softens. âHey, I was thinkinâ dinner. You want lasagna or pizza?â
âIâm not hungry,â you say, already turning away. âIâm gonna go sleep, okay.â
He frowns. âBut I thought we could just hang out a little, I mean we barely saw each other todaââ
âMaybe another time, alright? Goodnight, Steve.â
He exhales, defeated. âGoodnight,â he says softly. âI love you.â
You pause just long enough to whisper it back before disappearing down the hall. âI love you too,â
The days after are worse.
Steve wakes up and barely gets a word in before youâre already pulling on shoes, mumbling something about a jog. If he waits, you need a shower. If he waits longer, youâre late to see your nana.Â
If he suggests the Squawk, youâre already going with Nancy. Itâs like every time he reaches out, you slip through his fingers a little more, like trying to grasp smoke.
Not long ago, you haunted him with your presence. You were everywhere, constant, inescapable, but now you ghost him with your absence. He doesnât know where you go or what you do, only that the house feels emptier even when youâre technically still there.
Thatâs how he ends up sitting on the edge of the bed tonight, waiting for the bathroom door to open, heart pounding like heâs bracing for bad news. When you finally step out, hair damp, towel slung over your shoulder, he looks up like heâs been holding his breath.
âHey, sweetheart,â he says gently, like heâs testing the word to see if it still belongs to him.
You glance at him in the mirror and give him a small, careful smile. âHi, Steve.â
He lingers there for a second, then steps closer, hands hovering before he settles them lightly at your waist, afraid you might flinch. He leans down and presses a kiss to your collarbone.Â
âI missed you,â he murmurs. âYouâve been out all day. Didnât even see you at the Squawk.â
Your body betrays you before your mouth does, a shiver running through you at the sound of his voice, the warmth of him behind you. For a heartbeat you let yourself feel it, the pull, the ache. Then you pull away, just enough to break the contact, reaching for your hairbrush like itâs a shield.
âYeah,â you say lightly. âNancy asked me to go shopping with her again.â
âOh.â He straightens, nodding, trying to keep his tone easy. âWas it fun? I figured youâd come back with, like, ten bags or somethinâ.â
You shrug, brushing through damp hair. âDidnât need anything.â
He watches you in the mirror, the way you wonât quite look at him, the way your answers land flat and stop short. He clears his throat as heshifts his weight.
He hesitates, then clears his throat, trying again, voice low and careful. âUh. We trained today. Me, Hopper, and El. She shaved her time down again.â
You pause only briefly, tugging at your hair with the brush.
âThirty-three seconds,â he continues, a little brighter despite himself. âLast week it was thirty-six. Sheâs pissed about it too, which I guess is good. Means she knows she can do better.â
âThatâs good,â you say quietly.
He nods, even though youâre not looking at him. âYeah. Sheâs gettinâ scary strong again. In a good way.â
âMhm.â
Steve frowns. He leans back on his hands, searching your face even though youâre facing away now. âWe could all hang out this weekend. Just us, or maybe the kids too. Whatever you want. Thought it might be nice.â
âIâm actually quite tired,â you say quietly.
âOkay,â he says quickly. âYeah. Thatâs fine. We donât have to do anything big.â He pauses, then softly asks. âHey. Are you okay? Like, really okay?â
You swallow. âIâm fine, Steve.â
Thereâs a beat of silence where he clearly wants to say more as his mouth opens and closes like heâs rearranging words that never come out right.Â
He tries again, desperate now. âDid I do somethinâ? Because if I did, I swear Iâm not tryinâ to mess this up. I just need you to talk to me, okay.â
Your chest tightens. You squeeze your eyes shut.
âSteve,â you say softly, cutting him off before he can dig himself deeper, âcan you turn off the light, please?â
He gets the hint; you donât want to talk.
He freezes for a second, then nods once. âYeah. Yeah, of course.â
He stands, reaches for the lamp, and the room falls into darkness. He lingers there for a moment longer, like heâs hoping youâll turn back around, say his name, give him something to hold onto.
You donât.
âNight,â he says quietly.
âNight,â you reply, barely audible.
He lies down beside you, careful not to touch, staring up at the ceiling with the awful, sinking realization that this is what losing you looks like..
As the days passed, then quietly turned into weeks, you built a new routine that did not include Steve in it at all. It happened slowly enough that it almost felt reasonable at first.Â
You learned how to time your mornings so you were out the door before he woke up, learned how to come home late enough that conversation felt unnecessary, learned how to smile just enough to keep him from asking questions that you did not have the strength to answer.
Avoiding him became second nature. Lying became easy.
You spent most of your days outside, anywhere that was not the house and not around him. Sometimes you sat beside your nanaâs hospital bed for hours, holding her hand and watching the rise and fall of her chest just to remind yourself that people stayed alive even when everything went wrong.Â
Other days you walked until your legs ached, wandering neighborhoods you barely recognized, letting exhaustion drown out thought. Occasionally you called a friend, anyone who would answer, and let the hours blur together in cafes and parking lots and friendly conversations that never went anywhere deep enough to hurt.
It got to the point where you could not remember the last time you had kissed him without forcing yourself to think about it, and when you did, the number made your stomach twist. Four days. Four whole days since his mouth had been on yours, since his hands had found your waist without asking, since you had slept tangled together instead of inches apart.Â
There was a time when five minutes apart felt unbearable, when you haunted each other in hallways and kitchens and doorways, hands always reaching, always searching.
You grew used to the distance.Â
Steve though, did not.
His patience thinned in ways that showed. It did not help that things with Dustin were already strained. Steve started snapping again and retreating into old habits he thought he had outgrown.Â
He tried to pull himself back every time he felt it happening, tried to reach for you like he always had.
And every time he did, you stepped further away.
That was how he found himself one late afternoon sitting on the couch, elbows braced on his knees, staring at the front door.Â
You had been gone all day again, supposedly with Nancy, doing whatever it was you told him you were doing now.Â
Steve knew you were close to her, knew you trusted her, but not to the point where you would spend hours every other day together. Still, he told himself not to judge. Girls were odd in their friendships, and he did not want to be the guy who questioned everything.
But his mind would not shut up.
Every instinct in him was screaming that something was wrong, that he needed to do something instead of sitting there waiting. He was snapped out of his thoughts when the doorbell rang.
Steve was on his feet instantly, relief and fear colliding in his chest as he rushed to the door. He yanked it open, already ready to say your name.
Instead, Nancy Wheeler stood there.
For a split second, his brain refused to process it. Then panic slammed into him so hard it stole the air from his lungs. If you were supposed to be with Nancy, then why is she standing here alone?
âWhere is she?â he blurted out, voice sharp and scared. âIs she okay? What happened?â
Nancy blinked in shock at his reaction, taking in the way his shoulders were tight, the way his hands were already shaking like heâd been holding himself together by sheer force of will. âWhoa, Steve, hey,â she said quickly. âSlow down. Whatâs going on?â
âWhat,â he shot back, breath uneven, eyes already scanning the driveway behind her like you might suddenly appear. âWhereâs she? Why are you here without her, Nancy?â
Nancy frowned. âWithout who?â
âY/N,â he snapped, panic bleeding into anger because fear always did that to him. âIâm talking about Y/N.â
Her expression shifted immediately. âYeah,â she said slowly, âthatâs actually why Iâm here. I havenât heard from her in weeks. I just wanted to check in.â
The words hit him like a punch straight to the chest.
âWhat do you mean you havenât heard from her?â he said, quieter now, like saying it louder might make it real. âYou were literally together today?â
Nancy let out a short, incredulous laugh. âSteve, no. Iâve been with Jonathan all day. Heâs waiting in the car right now. I just stopped by because I was worried about her.â
The color drained from his face so fast it scared her.
âSteve,â she said carefully, stepping closer, âyouâre freaking me out. Whatâs going on?â
He swallowed hard, throat tight like it was closing in on itself. âSheâs been telling me sheâs with you,â he said. âEvery time sheâs gone. She says sheâs with you.â
Nancy stared at him. âWhy would she lie about that?â
âI donât know,â he said, voice cracking despite how hard he tried to keep it together. âThatâs the thing, Nance, I donât know. One day she was everywhere. Everywhere. I couldnât turn around without her being there, couldnât breathe without feelinâ her next to me, and then suddenly itâs like she vanished. We didnât fight. Iâi didn't do anything. At least not that I remember.â
Nancy sighed, rubbing her forehead, her tone firm but not unkind. âSteve. You donât just wake up one day like that. Something must've happened.â
âNo, no, noâ he said immediately, shaking his head. âNo, I would know. I would remember if I fucked up that bad.â
âAnd you didnât think to ask her?â Nancy pressed.
âI did,â he snapped. âI tried. Every time I tried sheâd shut it down, say she was tired or busy or fine. What the hell was I supposed to do, corner her?â
âShe was clingy, okay. Iâll say it. I couldnât go anywhere without her, couldnât get a second alone, and then suddenly itâs like she was gone.â
Nancyâs head snapped up. âDonât,â she said sharply.
âWhat?â he shot back.
âYou do not call her clingy, Steve!â Nancy said, anger flaring now. âYou donât get to use that word with Y/N out of all people!â
He bristled. âOh come on, Nancy. I didnât mean it like that.â
âYeah, you did,â she said. âAnd even if you didnât, it doesnât matter. In case youâve forgotten, Harrington, weâre all wrapped up in this upside down bullshit because we have to be. I do it because of Mike and Barb. You do it because of Dustin. Guess what? She doesnât have to be involved in it!â
Steve opened his mouth, then stopped.
âThat girl is fucking traumatized, and she went through that shit because you dragged her into it!â Nancy continued, voice steady but fierce.
âShe nearly died. She was attacked by monsters that shouldnât exist. She watched Eddie die just like the rest of us, and she doesnât get to talk about it with anyone outside this circle. She canât go to her friends or her family and say, âhey, I got slimed by an interdimensional monster and almost got ripped apart.â The only person she feels safe enough to lean on is you!â
His jaw tightened, guilt creeping in through the cracks.
âSo yeah,â Nancy went on, âmaybe she leaned too hard or she didnât know how to be alone after that. But that doesnât make her clingy, Steve. That makes her scared.â
He dragged a hand down his face. âI didnât mean to hurt her.â
âI know,â Nancy said. âBut intent doesnât erase impact. Something you said or did made her feel like she was too much, like she was a burden, and instead of yelling or crying she did the only thing she could think to do. She disappeared.â
Steve let out a shaky breath. âSheâs been lying to me, Nancy.â
âSheâs protecting herself,â Nancy said. âYou need to see things in her lightâ
Silence stretched between them, thick and heavy.
âSo what,â he said finally, voice raw. âWhat if sheâs just⊠done? What if she realized she doesnât need me?â
Nancy softened then, stepping closer. âSteve. She needs you. She just doesnât think sheâs allowed to anymore. And thatâs on you to fix.â
He looked at her, eyes glassy. âHow?â
âYou talk to her,â Nancy said simply. âReally talk. Don't accuse her or get defensive. Listen to her.â
She glanced back toward the driveway. âIâll stop by tomorrow and check on her too, okay? But you canât let this sit. Whateverâs going on, itâs clearly eating both of you alive.â
Steve nodded faintly, chest aching. âYeah.â
Nancy opened the door, then paused. âAnd Steve.â
âYeah?â
âSnap out of it,â she said firmly. âBefore you lose her for real.â
With that, she left, heading back toward Jonathanâs car, while Steve stood alone in the doorway.
Ironically, barely ten minutes after Nancy and Jonathan pulled out of the driveway, you came home.
The house was dark. Too dark.
Your stomach dropped immediately, panic flaring hot and fast as you stepped inside, the door clicking shut behind you. No lights. No TV. No noise.
For a split second, every worst-case scenario youâd trained yourself not to think about came crashing in all at once.
âSteve?â you called out, voice tight.
Footsteps shuffled, and then he appeared in the doorway to the kitchen, lit only by the faint glow from the stove light.
âHey,â he said, like nothing in the world was wrong.
You froze for half a beat. âOh. Hi.â
There was something awkward in the air instantly, like youâd both stepped into the same room carrying entirely different weights. He leaned against the counter, trying to look casual.
âHow was your day?â he asked.
You shrugged, slipping your shoes off. âIt was⊠alright.â
His eyes drifted to the bag clutched in your hand, the crinkled plastic catching his attention. âWhatâs that?â
âOh,â you said quickly, glancing down at it. âI stopped by the pharmacy to get the cream. For, uh⊠you know. The scarring.â
He nodded, softer now. âThatâs good.â
Neither of you said anything else as you walked down the hall together. The bedroom felt smaller than usual as Steve sat on the edge of the bed while you set the bag down.
âUm,â he said, rubbing the back of his neck. âDo you want me to help you apply it?â
You hesitated for a second. Then you nodded and handed him the bag.
He unsealed the ointment while you slipped your shirt off and sat cross-legged on the floor, your back to him. You were suddenly acutely aware of every scarâdeep, jagged reminders carved across your back and abdomen from the demogorgon attack. Old wounds, but never really gone.
Steve didnât react the way you always feared people might. He never did.
His hands were warm as he scooped some of the cream, spreading it carefully across your skin gently. He worked it into your shoulders, thumbs pressing lightly as he massaged your shoulders.
You let yourself breathe.
He kept going until he was done, smoothing the last of it in with quiet focus. As you started to shift, ready to stand and pull your shirt back on, you felt itâ
Two soft kisses. One pressed over each long scar crossing your back.
Your heart kicked hard against your ribs.
You stood quickly, sliding your shirt back on, suddenly unsure what to do with all the space between you. You were halfway to the door when his voice stopped you.
âUhm, Y/n.â
You turned. âYeah?â
He reached out, fingers wrapping gently around your hand, and tugged you a step closer. âCan we talk?â
He keeps hold of your hand when you hesitate.
âTalk about what?â you ask quietly.
Steve doesnât answer right away. Instead, he steps closer, close enough that you can feel the heat of him, the familiar gravity thatâs always pulled you in whether you wanted it to or not. His hand tightens around yours like heâs afraid youâll disappear if he loosens his grip.
âI know Iâve been shitty,â he says again, like repeating it might finally make it land where it needs to. His voice is low and rough, scraped raw by guilt. âI know Iâve been so far away from you. I know you felt it. I saw it, even when I pretended I didnât.â He swallows hard.Â
âAnd I know youâre going through thingsâthings I canât even fully understandâand I hate that instead of being the person you could come to, the person who made it easier, Iââ
He cuts himself off with a sharp breath, hand lifting to his face like he can physically stop the words from spilling.
Your chest tightens so painfully it almost steals your breath.
âI panicked,â he rushes on, panic bleeding straight through his words now. âI didnât know how to handle it. Knowing someone was dependent on me, really dependent on me, not just for rides or babysitting or stupid shit like that, but emotionally.â His voice wavers. âI thought I was gonna screw it up. Thought I already was screwing it up. And instead of dealing with that like an adult, I freaked out.â
He laughs once, sharp and broken. âGod, I thought I needed space. I thought if I pulled back, things would calm down, that weâd both breathe easier. But fuckââ His voice cracks hard on the word. âThis is so much worse. You being gone is so much worse than you being everywhere. Iâd give anything to have you hovering around me again, asking if Iâm okay, touching my arm, sittinâ too close on the couch.â
He steps closer, hands shaking as they come up to your sides, not quite touching like heâs scared youâll flinch away.
âPlease,â he whispers, forehead nearly brushing yours now, eyes glossy and wrecked. âPlease, sweetheart. Donât stop being dependent on me. Donât stop needing me. Donât stop loving me.â
Your breath stutters, a broken sound caught somewhere between your chest and your throat.
âI need you to need me,â he says, the words spilling faster, desperate and unfiltered. âI didnât realize it until you pulled away, but I do. I need it. I need you. Because I canât do this anymore. I canât wake up every day wondering if youâre okay and knowing itâs my fault you donât tell me.â His voice drops to a whisper.Â
âI canât do this without you.â
Thatâs when you break.
The sob tears out of you violently, ripping through your chest like something finally gave way. Your knees nearly buckle as you fold into him, crying so hard your body shakes, hiccups jerking through each breath.Â
Steve reacts instantly, arms wrapping around you tight, crushing you to his chest like if he lets go youâll disappear for real this time.
âIâm sorry,â he murmurs into your hair, voice breaking completely now. âIâm so sorry. Fuckâfuck, baby, donât cry. Please donât cry.â
His hand moves up and down your back in slow, steady motions, grounding and familiar, his chin pressing into your hair. You cry into his shirt until itâs damp, until your throat burns and your lungs ache and you feel wrung out and hollow.
Eventually, trembling, you pull back just enough to look at him.
âI heard you, Steve,â you say, the words tripping over themselves.
He freezes. âYou⊠heard what?â
Your hands curl into fists at your sides, nails biting into your palms like you deserve the sting. âA few weeks ago. At the station. I left early and forgot my coat.â Your voice wobbles badly now. âI came back, and I heard you.â
The color drains from his face so fast it scares you.
âYou were talking to Robin,â you continue, tears spilling again. âYou said I was clingy. You said I was suffocating you.â
âOhâno,â he breathes, panic exploding across his features. âNo, no, no, baby, pleaseââ
âI didnât mean to be,â you sob. âI swear I didnât. I wasnât trying to trap you or make you feel stuck. I justââ Your breath breaks, the words barely making it out. âI only felt safe with you. And everyone else was doing okay. Everyone. And I wasnât. I was falling apart and I didnât know how to be alone with that.â
You swallow hard, voice dropping to something small and raw. âAnd somewhere along the way, it started to feel like you werenât loving me anymore.â
Your eyes lift to his, shining. âIt felt like you were just⊠tolerating it. Tolerating me.â
Steveâs hands come up to cradle your face, thumbs brushing your tears away like each one physically hurts him.
âBaby,â he says fiercely, voice shaking as his arms tighten around you. âYou can cling to me as tight as you want and as long as you want. I donât ever want you to feel like you have to pull away to protect me.â
His voice drops, thick and aching, the words pressed straight into your hair. âI love you so much it hurts. I love you so much it scares me, and instead of owning that, I ran my mouth and said something stupid and careless. And I hate that it hurt you. I hate that I made you feel like you were too much when all you ever were was⊠you.â
He presses his forehead to yours, breath shaky. âYou were never suffocating me. I was just scared of how much I needed you back.â
You search his face, eyes swollen, chest still hitching with quiet aftershocks of sobs. He looks wrecked and earnest and painfully open, like every wall heâs ever built has finally come down.
âItâs okay, Steve,â you whisper, even though the words wobble on the way out, even though they donât quite feel solid yet.
He shakes his head immediately, curls bouncing with the movement. âItâs not. Itâs really not.â His hands slide up your back, holding you close. âBut weâre gonna fix it, okay? I will fix it. I promise. I donât care how long it takes.â
His forehead presses against yours again, like heâs grounding himself. âJust⊠donât pull away from me ever again.â
You nod, slow but sure, arms wrapping around him fully now as you bury your face into his chest. He holds you like he means it this time, rocking you gently, big hands warm and steady like theyâre reminding you that heâs real, that heâs here.
You breathe him in.
And thenâ
Grrrgrgrgrgrgr.
You freeze for half a second.
Then you pull back just enough to look up at him, eyes still wet, face scrunched, and you burst out laughingâbroken, hiccupy laughter that comes out of you mid-cry.
âAre youââ you sniff, laughing harder, ââare you hungry?â
Steveâs face goes bright red.
âIââ he stammers, mortified. âI was gonna wait for you to come back, okay? I didnât wanna eat without you.â
That just makes you laugh more. You press your face back into his chest, shoulders shaking, and he lets out a breathy laugh too, embarrassed but relieved, his arms tightening around you again.
âGod,â he mutters. âTiming, huh.â
You tilt your head up and kiss him. He kisses you back immediately, like heâs been starving for it just as much as food. When you pull away, barely an inch, he leans in again and kisses you harder this time and deeper, pouring everything unsaid into it.
He breaks the kiss with a breathless laugh, forehead resting against yours. âMissed kissing you.â
You smile. âMe too.â
He exhales, then straightens suddenly like heâs had an epiphany. âYou know what?â
âWhat?â you ask.
âI am starving,â he says, dead serious. âAnd Iâm pretty sure you are too.â
You blink. âSteveââ
âCome on,â he says, already grabbing your hand and tugging you gently toward the door. âGrab a coat.â
âWait,â you laugh, stumbling after him. âWhere are we even going?â
He grins over his shoulder, that familiar boyish smile you fell in love with. âEnzoâs.â
Your eyes widen. âWhat? No, Steve, that place is expensive. And you need a reservation andâ I can just heat something up, itâs fineââ
âNope,â he cuts in immediately. âAbsolutely not.â
âSteveââ
âI gotta spend the next year or so making it up to you,â he says, squeezing your hand. âMinimum.â
You gape at him. âButââ
âToo late,â he says cheerfully, already opening the door.
You stumble as he leads you out to the car, the night air cool against your skin. He opens your door for you like always, and excitedly smiles at you. As the engine starts and the house disappears in the rearview mirror, you lean back in your seat, heart full and sore and warm all at once.
Deep down, you know it again: Steve will stay by your side. Heâll wait while you heal. Heâll hold you steady until youâre strong enough to take steps on your own.
And Steve knows, wholeheartedly, that heâll be the one clinging to you just as tightly. Because youâre the only one heâs ever loved enough to spill his heart to.
And, apparently, spend three hundred and ninety dollars on at some fancy restaurant without even blinking.
pairing: steve harrington x reader
summary: itâs the age-old fall from grace: high school royalty faceplants into reality, and the burger king crown starts hanging heavy. (sailor hat, in his case.) heir to the hawkins high hierarchy, ruler of keggers and hallways alike, steve harrington used to be untouchable. now? he's shaking under your hands, bleeding from battles no trophy could ever commemorate. you've stitched together plenty of broken people beforeâbut never one that left a scar in you, too.
warnings: 18+ mdni, piv sex, oral (m!receiving), touch/praise-starved!steve, hurt/comfort, blood, injury, mutual friends/enemies-ish to lovers, hair washing, massaging, praise kink, body worship, sexual tension, forced proximity of sorts, reader isnât fond of steve at first, mostly S4 canon but fix-it, angst, domestic fluff, found family, happy ending
a/n: another steve harrington character study dressed as a fic, what the hell else is new? | playlist âŹ.á
They donât take him to the hospital. They bring him to you.
Which is, objectively, stupid. Â Â
But apparently, hospitals ask questions. And youâpart-time party medic, occasional dispenser of prescription-only painkillers (for legitimate anxiety and migraines, thank you very much)âyou donât.
Youâre halfway through a rerun of M.A.S.H., sucking the soul out of a cherry popsicle. Youâre braless. The house is quiet. Peaceful, if a little tragic. Exactly the way Fridays are meant to be.
Until the knocking starts.
Correction: pounding.
Panicked, frenzied, FBI-doesnât-need-a-warrant kind of pounding.
You groan and peel yourself off the couch, popsicle stick still dangling from your lips. You are not emotionally equipped to accept salvation or Thin Mints right now.
But when you open the door, itâs not a solicitor.
Itâs Robin.
Robin Buckley, looking like she just got shot out of a chimney. Her cheekâs streaked with soot and something red that is very much not Kool-Aid. Â
You blink. Yank the popsicle out of your mouth with a wet plop.
âDonât freak out,â she blurts, before you even ask.
Which is Robin Buckley-speak for: Start freaking out immediately. Shit is on fire, metaphorically or otherwise.
The last time she said that, you ended up faking an asthma attack so you could ditch pep band and hit up Dennyâs for the $1.99 Grand Slam. The time before that, you drove through three counties to rescue her cousinâs âemotional support ferretâ from a petting zoo in Muncie.
This time? Sheâs brought a car with her.
A sleek maroon BMW, purring at the curb, passenger door flung wide open.
Inside: Limbs. Denim. Blood.
A boy.
Slumped sideways in the front seat, head tilted back at an angle that screams whiplash or maybe already dead.Â
You squint.
âWho the fuck is that?â
âŠ
Steve Harrington.
Steve Harrington is bleeding out in your driveway.
You donât know him. Not really.
Knew of him, sure. Back in high school, he was all Farrah Fawcett volume and varsity swagger. Heir to the Hawkins High hierarchy, ruling keggers and hallways alike. He had rich parents and a bimmer he didnât pay for. Threw parties like they were some kind of divine rite.
But then? Senior year hit him like a metaphorical truck. Or maybe a literal one. Hard to say.
Because somewhere between the scorched-earth gossip of graduation and the literal scorched-earth of the mall burning down, Steve Harrington dropped off the map.
Poof. King Steve: dethroned.
Burned out, like the very mall he used to work in.
You missed that whole implosion. Spent that summer in Chicago drowning in vending machine coffee and disaster drills, chasing your EMT cert while trying not to puke during ride-alongs.
You came home to find that Hawkins had gained a mall, lost a mall, and started blaming everything weird on âgas leaksâ again.
And Robin Buckley had Steve.   Â
Her little sidekick from the ice cream wars. Who, allegedly, once confronted a creeper in the food court for harassing her. Ruined his pretty face doing it, too. Walked around with a purple shiner for weeks after that summer ended.
He now stocks tapes with her at Family Video, where helping customers ranks somewhere between abusing the label maker and arguing over who gets to abuse the label maker.Â
You ran into him once, alone, in the cereal aisle of Melvaldâs.
Dark rings under his eyes. Hair still doing that gravity-defying thing.
He smiled. You didnât smile back.
You didnât care. Â
Itâs the age-old fall from grace: high school royalty faceplants into reality, and the Burger King crown starts hanging heavy. (Well, sailor hat, in his case.)
But now, heâs here.
Dying on your lawn.
Ruining your Friday.
âŠ
Up close, he looks worse.
Biblically bad.
Like, plague-of-locusts, hail-from-the-heavens, Lamb-of-God-who? kind of bad.
His jeans are shredded, shirt gone entirely. Bright red ligature marks around his throat like someone tried to strangle him with a piano wire. Thereâs ash in his hair, and something black smeared across his jaw that youâre really, really hoping is just dirt.
His eyes flutter.
Then, absurdly, he smiles.
âH-hey. Heard you know first aid?â
You stare at him for a beat. Then toss your popsicle stick into the grass.
âYeah. Try not to bleed out on my porch, Harrington.â
He snorts. Gives you a weak thumbs-up.
Then promptly goes limp.
âŠ
âItâs called compensated shock,â you grunt, dragging six-feet-too-much of unconscious prom royalty into your living room. âHe looked okay âcause his body was pumping him full of adrenaline. Now itâs wearing off.â
Robinâs on the other end, doing her best to help, which mostly means not helping.
âOh my god, yeah,â she babbles, smacking his sneakers into the doorframe. ââshit. He got all woozy at Skull Rock earlier.â
You pause mid-haul. âSkull Rock? Like, the makeout spot?â
Robin makes a face. âYeah, but not for us, gross. Thatâd be like making out with my brother. Anyway, Steve invented Skull Rock! Took Heather C. there in tenth grade. Remember her? The girl with, like, thirty scrunchies and that creepy obsession with Mr. Connorâsââ
âRobin.â
âRight! Sorry! Panic talking!â
Steve groans from where youâve deposited him on the couch, more pained by Robinâs volume than the probable internal bleeding.
You ignore him. âWhy were you actually at Skull Rock?â
âUhh walking? You know... trees. Friendship.â
You level her with a look.
She claps her hands. âAnyway! You can fix him, right? Youâre, like, certified!â
You glance down at Steve.
His lips are blue at the corners, breath hitching in those tight, silent gulps that mean pain and refusal to show it.
âYeah,â you say quietly. âMaybe.â
âŠ
You do fix him.
Because youâre a sucker. Because you trained for this. Because your hands know what to do even when your brain is screaming.Â
And maybe, just maybe, because Steve Harrington keeps making these soft, miserable, apologetic noises every time he flinches.
Like heâs sorry.
Sorry for bleeding. For being in pain. For existing.
You hate that.
You also kind of hate how he looks like thisâhot, in that tragic, beaten, dog-left-out-in-the-rain kind of way that hits your brain like a chemical imbalance.
You strip off his vest first (Dio patch on the back, which, huh, maybe he has changed) and find a makeshift bandage beneath it, half-dried and crusted with old blood. You peel it off. It comes away with a wet schlorp like opening a bottle of dollar store wine.
And something inside you goes still.Â
These are... bite marks.
Not scrapes. Not scratches.
Bites.
His flesh looks shredded, like a rottweiler got bored of chew toys and decided to sample teenage boy instead.
Except: youâve treated dog bites. This is not a dog bite.
âJesus christ,â you whisper.
You look up at the boy collapsed on your couch: sweaty, shirtless, andâoh, now heâs got a belt in his mouth.
Robin jams it there. âFor the pain,â she says, helpful as ever.
Steve groans around the leather, eyes fluttering. Looks like he wants to die.Â
Youâre still staring at the worst bite, wondering if itâs actually moving, when you ask, voice low:
âSomeone want to tell me what the fuck did this?â
Robin freezes. Eyes the belt like sheâd rather choke on it herself than answer.
âUh⊠bats?â She offers weakly. Â
You blink. âBats.â
âLike. Big ones? Really big?â
You stare at her. Then at Steve. Â
You donât believe her.
But also⊠you kind of do.   Â
Because whatever this thing was, it didnât just attack.
It fed.
âŠ
âOkay, but likeââ Robinâs pacing like sheâs trying to wear a hole in your rug. âHe was fine earlier. Like, maybe not fine fine, but, you know, Steve-fine. And then we got out of the Upâuhâthe woods, and I was driving him back and he justâŠâ
She makes a dramatic fainting motion. Nearly brains herself on the coffee table.
âSo, it could be rabies? Or tetanus? Or maybe one of those parasite things that lay eggs in your stomach? Orââ
âRobin?â you cut in, sharp as the pair of shears in your hand. âThereâs towels and vodka in the kitchen. Go.â
âRight. On it.â
She skitters away like a gremlin set on fire, the thud of cabinet doors punctuating her panic.
You turn back to Steve.
His pulse is thin, fluttering weakly under your fingertips, but itâs there.
âHarrington. You with me?â
His hand twitches once, thumb up.
âŠ
He doesnât scream.
You wish he would.
Because you know this hurts. You know that when you pour antiseptic into wounds this deep, itâs supposed to rip sound out of a person. A yell. A curse. A sob. Something.
But Steve just⊠takes it.
His jawâs locked tight enough to bend steelâno belt, miracle he doesnât shatter a molarâand his throat works once, twice, swallowing back whatever wants out. His whole body trembles, shoulders twitching, knuckles bone-white, yet his voice stays sealed inside him like itâs chained there.
You kind of hate him for it.
Because you know this type.
Boys who bleed quiet. The beautiful, tragic kind who carry pain like itâs a penance.
Youâve seen them before, at crash sites, in the backs of ambulances.
Itâs not bravery. Itâs habit.
A mask.Â
And Steve Harrington? Heâs been wearing his so long, itâs practically fused to the bone.
Still, Robin squeezes his hand like sheâs coaching him through labor. Eyes locked on the ceiling, because sheâs still pretending sheâs never seen boobs or blood or the inside of a human person.
You press gauze to the worst of the bites, just under his ribs, angry and wet and oozing something thick. You have to lean your weight into it.
Steve joltsâfull-body, every muscle locking under your palms. His hand lashes out, fast and blind, gripping the leg of your jeans until his knuckles go pale. Â
Then, just as quickly, he lets go. Eyes squeezed shut. Shame radiating off him like heat.
âShit. S-sorry.â
You donât answer.
You canât.
âŠ
It takes two hours.
Three full rolls of gauze. One regrettable vodka break, just to keep your hands from shaking.
It's not pretty. Not even close. But it's enough to keep him breathing, which, all things considered, feels like a decent win for a Friday night.
Now, heâs bandaged. Shirtless under your exâs old hoodie, the one with the weird bleach stain and the hole in the sleeve, but Steve fills it out like it was made for him.
Of course he does.
In the kitchen, Robinâs hunched over your tiny sink, scrubbing dried blood and whatever else is staining her forearms that awful color. Â
As soon as sheâs done, you grab her by the sleeve and tug her into the hallway.
âTalk.â
Robin sighs, long and loud. Tries to stall by running a hand through her hair, only to grimace when it sticks up with dried sweat.
ââŠDemobats.â She mutters.
 âIâm sorry?â
âDemobats,â she repeats, like thatâs a word people just know. âFrom this place called the⊠Upside Down.â
You wait. Thereâs no punchline.
ââŠYouâre serious.â
She nods.
And then it all spills out.
Demobats. Some guy named Vecna. Russians. Underground government labs. Scoops Ahoy, for christâs sake.
You lose the thread somewhere around âtelepathic hive mind overlord.â
But you donât interrupt. Because Robin may be a lot of thingsâloud, chaotic, deathly allergic to social cuesâbut sheâs not a liar.
And thereâs a half-dead boy on your couch with holes the size of teacups to prove it.
âSo,â you say slowly, âthat job at the mallâŠâ
âYeah. Secret Russian lab.â
âAnd you were tortured?â
 âI mean, mostly Steve?â She winces. âBut, uh. Yeah.â
âJesus christ, Robin.â
âI know,â she groans, dragging both hands down her face. âI know it sounds crazy. I didnât want to drag you into this, okay? But I thoughtâhe looked bad. Worse than before. And I couldnât exactly walk into the ER and say âHi, my best friend got eaten by mutant bats from another dimension, please ignore the blood trail.ââ
She huffs, blowing hair from her eyes, and squints at you. âYou donât believe me.â
You snort. âNo. I do. And I think you shouldâve called me sooner.â
âWell, I thought he was fine. He was fine. Until we got in the car and he started slurring his words and, like⊠blinking wrong. Then I panicked.â
You glance back toward the living room. At the boy who didnât scream. Curled on your couch, twitching in his sleep like heâs stuck in a loop he canât wake from.
Robin follows your gaze, voice softening. âLook, I know heâs not exactly your favorite person, but⊠thank you. Really.â
You roll your eyes. âHe was bleeding out, Robs.â
She gives you a look. The kind that says she knows you better than you want her to.
You scowl.
âGo. Shower. You smell like a burnt tire.â A beat. ââŠYou want something to eat?â
Robin doesnât answer. Just throws her arms around you in the tightest, sweatiest, most Robin hug imaginable. All elbows and bones and bloodstained sleeves.
You stiffen. Then sigh.
âLove you,â she mumbles into your shoulder.
You hold her tight for a second. Then let go.
âYou owe me, Buckley. Big time.â
⊠Â
Robin crashes in your bed, dead to the world in ten seconds flat.
You stay on the couch next to Steve.
Not close. Just close enough. So if he does something stupid like stop breathing, youâll notice.
You keep a cool cloth on his forehead. Check his pulse every half hour. Whisper a soft âmotherfuckerâ every time he twitches, because if he wakes up and asks if you were worried, you want to be able to say no with a straight face.
You stay up.
Because someone has to.
âŠ
Itâs almost 3 a.m. when he stirs.
Your head snaps up, heart launching into your throat like a flare. Your hand goes automatically to the bucket, the cloth, the mental checklist of emergency procedures youâve memorized so well theyâre practically sewn into your DNA.
But then his lips part.
Just a cracked breath through the dryness, small and quiet and impossibly fragile.
âDonât⊠donât let âem go back.â
Itâs barely a whisper. It slams into you like a freight train.
You donât know who âtheyâ are, but you know exactly what he means.
Youâve seen this kind of thing before, too. In the shaking hands of people who left something behind where no one could follow. This is what happens when the body survives, but the rest doesnât.
And goddammit.
Goddammit, you didnât want this.
Didnât want some pretty, broken boy bleeding all over your couch. Didnât want this guilt. This terrifying protectiveness. The quiet, suffocating weight of whatever this is clamping around your ribs like a trap you walked into willingly.Â
Didnât want Steve fucking Harrington, of all people, to break your heart without saying a single word.
But he looks so young like this. Pale cheeks, sweat-damp hair sticking to his forehead. Heâs curled in on himself like heâs bracing for another hit, one hand fisted in your throw pillow. Â
Without thinking, you lean forward.
Brush his hair back. Cool his skin with your fingers.
âSteve,â you whisper.
No answer. Just a tiny, broken noise. Almost a whimper, almost nothing.
Your throat tightens.
You reach down, and carefully, gently, pry his fingers free from the cushion. Thread yours through the empty spaces.
His grip grows impossibly tight, fingertips paling where they press between your knuckles.
âYouâre okay. Youâre safe.â
And slowlyâlike thawing ice, like a held breath finally let goâhe stops shaking.
You stay like that, hand in his, until the sun starts bleeding through the curtains.
âŠ
Robin once told you that you get off on fixing people.
She meant hearts. You meant bones.
Youâre starting to think maybe she was right.
âŠ
You wake to yelling.
Not normal yellingâwhisper-yelling. The kind of frantic, hushed bickering thatâs somehow louder than regular voices.
ââŠcanât just walk out, Steve!â
âItâs not that bad, justâgive me a secondââ
Thereâs the unmistakable rustle of struggling. A pained grunt. The telltale shuffle of someone stumbling sideways, seconds away from faceplanting.
âOh my god, what is wrong with you?!â
âIâm fine,â Steve grits out, in the exact tone people use right before they pass out on you.
âAnd where exactly are you gonna go, huh? Enlighten me.â
âJustâIâll go back and change, and then weâllââ
âNope. Absolutely not. You canât even see straight, Harrington.â
âYes, I can.â
âReally? Okay. How many fingers?â
âWhy do you always do that?â
âBecause it works!â
You groan loudly, dragging an arm over your face.
âDo I need to put you two in a time-out? Because I swear to god, I will.â
Instant silence.
When you peel your arm back, Steveâs frozen midâescape, one shoe on, looking like a kid caught stealing from the cookie jar. He glances your way, sheepish.
âHey,â he says, like he didnât just almost eat your tile. âYouâre up.â
âUnfortunately.â
Robin flaps a dramatic hand at him. âPlease, please talk some sense into this idiot before I duct tape him to the wall.â
You sit up, and immediately regret every decision youâve ever made. Your spine crackles like bubble wrap. Your skull is pounding. The entire living room looks like a crime scene: blood-crusted towels, empty gauze packets, that one lonely vodka bottle rolling under the coffee table like a sad tumbleweed.
You squint at Steve. âSit down.â
âIâm good.â
âYouâre not.â
âI just need toââ
âNow, Harrington.â
You donât raise your voice. You donât have to. Itâs the tone youâve used on half-conscious college boys insisting they can âtotally drive, man.â
Steve blinks. Then sighs, slowly lowering himself onto a kitchen chair.
Robin hovers like a human seatbelt, and he bats her away with a feeble flap of his wrist. Still, he grips the edge of the counter like itâs the only thing keeping him vertical.
You scrub a hand over your face. âCoffee? Or are we all just committing to bad decisions today?â
âŠ
The coffee is yesterdayâs.
Bitter, burnt, practically an oil slick in a mug.
You pour three cups anyway.
Steve drinks it black, which tracks. You clock the way his hands tremble as he brings it to his lips and file it away without comment.
Robinâs already rattling off the story again, filling in details she left out the night before. You get more names now. Places. Dates. Vines that slither like snakes. The gate under Loverâs Lake. You get the part where Steve dove in, headfirst, no hesitation.
Well, you already got that part last night, but Robinâs repeating it, and youâre starting to think maybe itâs not for you this time.
Steve just listens, quiet. Winces at certain beatsâjaw tic here, hard blink thereâbut doesnât interrupt.
You lean against the counter, sip your bitter sludge, and ask, casual as you can:
âSo, you just jumped in. No plan? No backup?â
He shrugs, eyes on his mug. âDidnât really have time to think about it.â
âClearly.â Â Â Â Â
He looks up at you then. Runs a hand through his still-matted hair, blood-sticky at the roots, and releases a quiet breath.
âThank you. For last night.â
You raise a brow. âDidnât really have a choice, Harrington. It was either that or explain to the cops why thereâs a dead body on my couch.âÂ
He huffs a weak laugh.
âBy the way,â you add, sipping again, âdo your parents know about all this monster-hunting extracurricular bullshit?â
Robin makes a sound like a choked squirrel.
âOh fuck! My parents! Shitshitshit.â
Sheâs already halfway out of her chair, tripping over her shoes while she scrambles for her jacket.
âCan youâ?â she gasps, eyes wide.
âYeah, yeah. Iâll cover.â
âThankyouthankyouthankyou!â She barrels over, grabbing your face and planting a comically loud kiss on your forehead. Then she turns and grabs Steve in the same breath.
Gives his face a little shake.
âIf I come back and find out you even thought about sneaking out, I will tell everyone you still sleep with a nightlight. Got it?â
You snort into your mug. Steve glares at her. âRobinâ"
âGot it?â
He scrubs a hand through his hair, rolling his eyes. âWhatever.â
She releases him, then points at you. âYouâre in charge. Donât let him do anything heroic.â
âOh no,â you deadpan. âHowever shall I bear the weight of such responsibility?â
Robin snorts, slaps your shoulder, then bolts, keys jingling like cowbells as she shoots out the door.
âWaitââ Steve squints after her. âAre youâRobin! You canât just take my car! Youâre not evenââ
Slam!
ââlicensed.â
You both sit in the silence she leaves behind. Steve stares out the window, listening to the screech of his precious bimmer as it peels down the street.
Then he turns back, eyes flicking to the trauma floor that used to be your living room. Â
He clears his throat. âSorry about your, uh⊠couch. And the carpet.â
You follow his gaze. The stains are bad, probably permanent. It stings a little, looking at them.
It hurts worse looking at him.
Steve Harrington, bruised and bandaged and slouched in your chair like heâs trying to disappear into the seams. His stupidly wide, puppy-dog eyes look like theyâre about to apologizing for breathing your air.
You blink.
Then slowly, slowly, lean forward across the island.
âHarrington.â
âYeah?â
âStop apologizing for almost dying. Itâs weird.â Â
He opens his mouth. Closes it. Lands on a sheepish smile instead.
You hate how it softens his face, how it creases the corners of his eyes.
âAnd for the record,â you mutter, lips concealed behind the rim of your cup, âyouâre not the worst thing to stain that couch, so. Youâre fine.â Â
He blinks, brow furrowing. âWhatâs⊠that supposed to mean?â
You shrug. âWouldnât you like to know.â
It takes him a second to process it. Then he snorts quietly, eyes flicking to the side.
You take another sip, watching the pink rise in his cheeks as the sun filters in through the window.
And if youâre smiling tooâwell, he doesnât have to know.
âŠ
You try to make pancakes.
Try being the operative word.
Thereâs flour in your hair, batter on the counter. Somewhere, the smoke alarm is just giggling with anticipation.
Steveâs still in his spot behind the island, watching you glare down a lumpy pile of batter.
Itâs distracting.
Itâs fucking annoying, is what it is.
Pancakes arenât hard. Whisking is not rocket science. And yet, it feels impossible with him sitting there, doing that thing with his eyes. All soft and brown and bruised, like you saved his life and now he doesnât know how to deal with it. Â Â
âHowâs it going?â he asks, voice pitched deliberately neutral.
You donât turn around. âFine.â
A beat.
âYou sure?â
You slam the next pancake into the pan. It looks like something you'd peel off a sidewalk after a hot summer day. You stare at it, furious.
Behind you, thereâs the scrape of a chair.
âI said Iâm fine,â you warn.
He ignores that.
Limps over to you instead, his gaze finding you like a physical thing. Warm. Curious. You catch him in your periphery as he stops beside you, close enough that the heat from the stove mixes with the heat of his skin. Suddenly, the kitchen feels about fifteen degrees hotter.
âHere,â he murmurs.
Before you can object, his fingers wrap around yours, gentle and coaxing as he eases the spatula from your grip.
Then: flip.
One smooth flick of his wrist. The pancake lands perfect. All golden and fluffy.
You blink at it, betrayed.
âI was handling it.â
âSure,â he says, lips twitching. âLooked like it.â
He flips another. Doesnât even look this time.
You narrow your eyes. âOkay. How are you doing that?âÂ
He shrugs, adjusting the burner dial like heâs lived here his whole life. âCook for myself a lot.â
You pause. Thereâs something in the way he says itâoff-hand, casual, but quiet enough to leave an echo.
He just snorts quietly at that, eyeing you sideways. âWell, my French toast is pretty solid. Could show you next time, if you want.â
You glance over, arching a brow. âWow. Is that line always so subtle?â
He meets your gaze, smirk tugging at his split lip.
âI donât know. You tell me.â
And fuck, it lands.
It lands hard, right in the soft space under your ribs. That warm, twisting feeling that makes your breath hitch and your stomach go stupid.
You turn away before your face can betray you, yanking open a drawer for a fork.
And then, as if the universe decided to throw you a bone, the kitchen landline starts to shriek like itâs being murdered.
You lunge for it like a lifeline.
Itâs probably Mrs. Buckley, confirming her daughter crashed at your place, again.
âHello? âŠYou WHAT?â
Robin groans on the other end. âYeah. Possibly until college.â
âRobin, you canâtââ You lower your voice, turning away from Steve and cupping the receiver like heâs not standing two feet away. ââyou canât be fucking grounded right now.â
âI know! But my mom saw the blood on my jeans and I totally panicked. I told her it was ketchup. Ketchup, dude. Now sheâs got Toby posted outside my room. Heâs just sitting there with his Legos, but he will scream if I so much as leave to go to the bathroom. So... yeah. Itâs gonna be a while before I can sneak out. Are you⊠are you okay to stay with him for a bit? Heâs trying to pretend heâs fine, but heâs definitely not.â  Â
You glance back.
Steveâs standing at the stove, peering at his stomach while waiting for the next pancake to bubble. His hand drifts down and starts poking at one of the bandages under his hoodie. Slow and gentle, like it wonât count as touching if heâs polite about it.  Â
You stretch the phone cord and smack his hand away.
He startles. Blinks at you like, Seriously?
You raise your brows like, Try me.
You sigh into the receiver: âYeah. I got him.â
âUgh, youâre the best. Just donât let himâohh, crap, I gotta gâ"
Click.
Steve doesnât turn when you pad back into the kitchen.
âShe grounded?â
âYep. Possibly until retirement.â You pause. âYou donât need to call your folks?â
He hesitates, just for a second. Then shakes his head. âTheyâre out of town.â
Then, with a one-handed spin of the spatula, he flips the pancake onto a plate.
You glance at the growing stack. They look obscene. Youâd punch someone for a bite.
In your head, you run through the math.
Ten days. Minimum.
Ten days before the stitches can come out. Before he can walk out of here without ripping something open. Longer if he keeps poking at his bandages like that.
God help you. Itâs gonna be a long week.
âŠ
Breakfast is awkward.
No other word for it.
Steve eats like heâs on a timer. You eat like youâre trying not to notice.
Trying not to notice the way he keeps sneaking glances at you. Little flicks of his eyes over his plate, always quick, always subtle, never quite fast enough.
Trying not to notice the way he winces. Quiet flashes of pain, there and gone, just long enough for that crease to cut across his brow before he smooths it away.
When both your plates are emptied, he clears his throat.
âHey, do you⊠you mind if I use your bathroom?â He gestures vaguely to his face. âJust need to clean up a bit.â Â
His hair is still matted. Thereâs soot smeared along his jaw, a faint line of red where the bloodâs dried and half-wiped away.
You nod, mid-sip. âSure. First door on the left. Just donât get the bandages wet.â
âGot it,â he nods, starts to riseâthen stops halfway, jaw flexing tight.
âActually, uhâŠâ His hand slides to the back of his neck. His eyes shut briefly. âCan you give me a hand with this? I canât reallyâŠâ
He doesnât finish the sentence. Doesnât need to.
The white-knuckle grip on the hem of his hoodie tells you enough.
You blink, setting your mug down, and push your chair back without a word. Â Â
He doesnât meet your eyes as you reach for the bottom of the hoodie.
The fabric peels up inch by inch, sticking to where the gauze bled through, catching where raw skin clings to cotton. He winces, raising his arms awkwardly, the stitches along his sides clearly pulling. So you move gently, painstakingly slow.
Your knuckles graze his stomach, andâ
Jesus.
Heâs warm. Muscle corded tight under skin that flushes easily, even with all the bruises blooming across his ribs like bad watercolors.
You get the hoodie off.
His chest is bare.
And now youâre standing close. Way, way too close.
His breath brushes your cheek when he exhales. You glance up, just on pure instinct, and find his eyes already on you.
You both freeze.
Thereâs a beat where everything narrows. Where sound drops out. Â
Your hands hover midair, still clutching the fabric, close enough to feel the heat radiating off his skin.
Close enough to trace the moles scattered across his chest. Â Â
You donât.
You look away so fast it nearly gives you whiplash.
âTowels are under the sink," you mumble. "Iâll get you some new clothes.â
Then you take a quick step back. Like distance will save you from whatever the hell that was.
Steve blinks. Once. Twice. Then nods, eyes flicking away. âThanks.â
He disappears down the hall, barefoot and bruised.
You stand in the silence with his hoodie clenched in your fists, your pulse trying to beat its way out of your throat.
âŠ
Thereâs an old joke your friends like to make.
That youâre a sadist.
That you chose the EMT life because you enjoy it. The blood, the pain. The broken bones and the chaos. Things normal people flinch away from.
But in truth, theyâve got it backwards.
Youâre not a sadist.
No. What you are is a fucking masochist.
Because thereâs no other explanation for why you keep doing this to yourself. Why you let yourself get this close to people you shouldnât. Why you torture yourself, again and again, with things you know better than to want.
Why youâre standing outside your bathroom door right now, ears tilted, listening to someone who shouldnât mean anything to you rinse the blood off his skin.
You told yourself you were just finishing the dishes. That the stovetop needed wiping down. That there were chores to do, reasons to move around.
But your feet kept wandering. Back to the hallway. Back to him.
Back to this spot in the hallway, where you can feel the warmth bleeding under the door. Where you can hear the faucet running in short, irregular burstsâon, off, on again.
You picture him hunched over the basin. One hand braced against the counter, the other shaking under the strain of movement. Jaw clenched. Shoulders bowed.
Something twists low in your stomach.
You roll your eyes at yourselfâbecause god, youâre patheticâand raise a fist.
A light knock.
âYou good?â
A pause, then:
âUh, yeah. Just⊠hang on.â
Thereâs a clatter, a quiet shit. Then the door creaks open.
And Steveâ
Well.
Heâs wet.
And shirtless. And pink.
Flushed from the steam, maybe from embarrassment. Because his hairâThe Hairâis half-lathered and sticking up in foamy tufts, like a soggy cat caught mid-bath. A single drop of water slides slow down the hollow of his throat.
Your gaze follows it.
The sweatpants you gave him ride low. Damp at the waistband, pulled snug across his hips in a way youâre absolutely not thinking about.
He gestures toward the sink, sheepish.
âI, uh⊠canât really bend right now. Tried to rinse it out, butââ He winces, fingers grazing his sides. âThe stitches are kind of a hard no.âÂ
Your eyes drop, unbidden, to the bruises blooming purple-black across his ribs. The way his chest lifts a little faster when you step closer.
You should walk away. Turn around. Go wipe down the goddamn stove like you told yourself you would.
Instead, you say:
âSit.âÂ
He blinks. ââŠWhat?â
âOn the floor. Back against the tub.â
Thereâs a pause. His brows draw together like heâs trying to figure out the punchline. Â
You donât blink.
He exhales sharply, jaw flexing. âNo, itâs okay, I canââ
âSteve.â
It lands heavy. The weight of it surprises even you.
His first name, in your voice.Â
Youâve only said it once before, when he was unconscious, twitching under bloodstained gauze, fists clenched against a nightmare you couldnât reach.
But now, he hears it. And something inside him goes quiet.
He studies you for a second longer, then sighs, shoulders dropping.
Wordlessly, he lowers himself to the tile.
One hand braced on the edge of the tub, the other on the floor, every movement stiff. His back hits the porcelain with a soft thud. Â
You kneel beside him and roll up your sleeves.
âLean your head back.â
He shifts, uneasy. âSeriously, you donât have toââ
âI know.â You pick up the cup beside the sink and check the tap, waiting for the water to warm. âJust tilt."
Thereâs a long pause.
Then he does.
His head tips back against the curve of the tub. With his throat exposed, the worst of the bruising shines a mottled red-black beneath his jaw. His lashes flutter, lips parting just slightly.
The first pass runs slow and gentle down his scalp. He flinches.
âToo hot?â
He blinks, breath shallow. âNo. Sâfine.â
So you pour again. And again. Slow rivulets trickling through his hair, carrying blood and soap and grime down the drain. His hair start to fall naturally again, dark strands slicking to his forehead.Â
Itâs just the water at first. Rinsing out grit, loosening stiff knots and matted roots.
Then you lather the shampoo between your palms, and sink your fingers into his hair.
And thatâs when it happens.
The shift.
Steve Harringtonâking of easy charm, Mr. Everythingâs Fineâgoes completely still.
Not in a relaxed way. Not in a sleepy way.
No, he goes rigid.
His breath falters. His jaw locks. You can see the muscles in his neck ripple with tension.
And when you sweep a thumb absently behind his ear, chasing a line of foam, he jolts.
A full-body shiver, running shoulder to spine.
You clear your throat, voice catching before you force it steady. âBeen a while, huh? Since someone did this for you?â
His response is delayed, a low rasp. âUh huh. Long time.â
Then, after a beat:
âUsed to be my momâs thing. When I was a kid.â
Your hands still in his hair. He goes stiff the second he says itâjaw clenched, lips pressed tight, hands curling in his lap.
You blink, then resume drawing slow circles over his crown.
âThat mustâve been nice,â you say quietly.
He doesnât answer. Just breathes through his nose and keeps still.
So you keep going.
Rinse. Lather. Repeat.  Â
And with each pass of your hands, his breathing changes.
His head rests heavier against the porcelain. His lips part around soft, even breaths. His eyes flutter shut.
Then, he leans.
Barely enough to notice. But you feel it, the subtle tilt of his head toward your hands.
Like a plant bending toward light.
You wonder, not for the first time, how long itâs been since someone touched him like this. How long heâs gone without care, without softness.
And maybe thatâs why this hurts so much.
Because youâd had him pegged, hadnât you?
The hair. The charm. Pretty boy, ladiesâ man, heartbreaker.
King Steve.
But this? This isnât him.
This is the After.                                                                                      Â
The aftermath of Russians and monsters and lakes with no bottoms. The man who throws himself between danger and kids that arenât his, time and time again. Like heâs got something to prove. Or maybe something to atone for.
The one who apologized for bleeding on your floor.
This is someone whoâs forgotten how to be held.
And right now, heâs under your hands. Throat bared. Hair dripping. Leaning into your touch like heâs starved for it.
And that slow, sinking weight in your stomach settles for good. That gut-churn of realization that you barely know anything about the man who nearly bled out on your couch last night. Â
You try to swallow the feeling down. Try to keep your focus on softer things: dripping water, steam-soaked light, the silky-smooth slip of his hair between your fingers.
But every time your hands leave him, even for a second, you feel it. The tension in his frame. The hesitation in his breath. Like heâs bracing for it to end.
And each time you returnâthumb grazing his temple, palm cradling the back of his neckâhe breathes in. Relief, sharp and silent, tucked between the ribs.
You reach for the conditioner next, fingers trembling a little as you work it through. When you tip his head back, he goes easy. Pliant. Trusting.
And then a quiet thought hits you. Â Â
A hunch, really.
You let your fingers drift lower. Past the crown. Down to the nape of his neck. The hair there is softer, damp strands clinging to skin gone tight with tension and bruising.
You trace gently around the worst of it. Avoid the dark, angry lines where something had closed around his throat.Â
Strangled. Thatâs what Robin said. Â
You press into the muscle just beneath it, right where the pain likes to live.
Steve shudders. His head lifts from the tub with a breath, caught on something sharp.
But you donât let up.
You continue pressing in slow, deep circles, growing firmer.
Thereâs a sound, then. Sharp. Brief. A strangled thing, torn between a groan and a gasp.
He tries to stifle it a second later, clearing his throat.
âToo hard?â you ask quietly.
His voice comes cracked. âN-no. Justâitâs fine. You donât have toâŠâ
The rest trails off when you move to his shoulders next, thumb kneading into the dense muscle. Youâre not a massage therapist, but you know anatomy. You know where pain settles when itâs been left too long. How it tucks itself into the tender parts: the base of the neck, the hollow beneath the collarbone. Â
And god, heâs full of it. All the signs. All the tells.
He lets out another shaky breath, lips sealed around a sound he doesnât let out.
And there, just for a moment, you let yourself look.
At the bruises. The thin cuts just beginning to scab. The water gliding over his collarbone, beading into the curve of his chest.
That thick, molten part of your brainâthe masochist, the idiot, the one who says yes when she should absolutely say noâflares hot.
It wants to lean in.
Wants to touch your mouth to his skin, right there, at the slope of his throat.
Just to see if he tastes like lavender and heat. Just to see if he lets you.
To kiss him slow enough to wash the ache from his mouth. Replace every sharp thing heâs swallowed with something soft.
God, youâre losing it.
You drag your thumb again along the base of his neck. His lashes flutter.
Then, from the corner of your eye, you see itâhis hands shifting in his lap.
Cross. Adjust.
You glance down without thinking.
And oh.
Oh.
The sweatpants donât hide much. Not like this. Not with how heâs sitting, loose-limbed and open, the fabric soaked and clinging in ways it wasnât meant to. Theyâre pulled taut across the breadth of his thighs, darkened in patches where the waterâs seeped through.
And beneath that?
Yeah.
Your breath stutters. Heat rockets up your neck.
You yank your gaze away, fumbling for the faucet and filling another cup. Your hand trembles as you lift it, rinsing out the conditioner.
His hair sticks to his forehead. Without thinking, you smooth it back.
His eyes flutter open.
And the look he gives youâŠ
Itâs quiet. Devastating. Tucked somewhere tender and deep, pressed hard against bone.
Softer than longing. Sharper than want.
It's something that aches.
You donât know what to do with it.
So you just keep your hands in his hair.
And you rinse. Â
âŠ
You rinse long after the conditionerâs gone.
After his breath has evened out and the waterâs cooled to a gentle trickle, steam curling around your ankles like fog.
The bathroom smells like lavender and heat and skin that isnât yours.
When you reach for the towel and bring it up to his head, he leans.
Blot, pat, smooth. The towelâs too soft, your hands too careful. You graze the shell of his ear, the edge of his jaw, feeling the quick flutter of his pulse beneath your thumb.
His eyes are still on you.
âThanks,â he says, quiet. Â
You nod, not trusting your voice.
The steamâs thinning now, but the air still clings.
Too warm. Too full of something unsaid.
His breath brushes your cheek.
Youâre too close.
Itâs too much.
You could kiss him.Â
God help you, you could.
Just one lean forward. Thatâs all it would take. His mouth is right thereâslightly parted, pink and swollen in the middle where heâs been biting down.
And the look on his face isnât just gratitude. Not just relief.
Thatâs want.
And worse? Itâs yours too. Itâs in the pit of your stomach, burning upward. Itâs in your hands, your chest, your throat, curling behind your teeth like smoke with nowhere to go.
You pull back abruptly. The towel slips from your hands and lands in his lap with a soft thud.
âOkay,â you say, voice tight. âYouâre good.â
Steve blinks, like you just dragged him up from underwater.
His throat bobs. âCool. Yeah. Thanks.â
You stand too fast. Your knees pop. You donât look at him when you speak next. âYou should lie down for a bit. Keep pressure off the stitches.â
He nods, a little too slow.
You grab the towel again and press it against his chest. Not hard, but firm enough to make a point. Whatever it is.
Then you turn.
And you walk out.
You donât need to look back to know heâs still watching you go.
...
It starts the way summer storms do.Â
Not with thunder. Not with rain.
With pressure.
The kind that presses close to the skin, wrapping around like a second layer. That hair-raising, skin-prickling tingle. Right as the birds go quiet and the trees hold still and the sky forgets how to move.
Stillness so absolute your skin buzzes with it.
The moment before it tips.Â
Itâs here now. In this room.
In the narrow inches of couch cushion between you. In the weight of the blanket tangled over your legs. In the single, unspoken brush of his thigh against yours.
The TV plays to no one. A dull flicker of static and synth beats, some late-afternoon rerun neither of you are really watching. The glow of it pulses dim blue across his skin, the shadows deepening where his jaw tightens every time you move.
The room smells like clean skin and new sweat. Yours. His. Both.
His voice breaks the quiet.
âHey, how long âtil the stitches come out again?â
âTen days.â
âHm. I like this show.â
âKnight Rider?â
âYeah. Itâs cool.â
âNo. Itâs dumb.â
âWhat? Câmon, the car talks.â
âExactly.â A beat. âHow do the stitches feel?â
âUh, good. Yeah. Theyâre fine.â
âYou hungry?â
âNo, you?â
âNo.â
And it builds, again. That low, rolling kind of stillness.
Storm pressure. Â
It crawls up your spine. Pools hot behind your ears. You fidget with the hem of the blanket, rolling your shoulder back into the cushion like you can shake it loose.
You canât.
The blanketâs too warm.
Heâs too close.
And heâs watching you. You donât have to look to know. Â
ââŠYouâre doing it again.â
âHm?â
You turn your head. Meet his gaze full-on. âLooking at me like that.â
His lips part. âLike what?â
Your eyes drop to his mouth.
His pinky brushes yours.
And just like that, the storm breaks.
âŠ
Steve leans in first.
The same way he had in the bathroom, instinctive and unthinking. Like something inside him keeps tipping forward and youâre the only place left to fall.
Only this time, you donât let him do it alone.
You meet him halfway.
His nose nudges yours. His breath fans hot across your cheek.
And then your lips meet.
A question and an answer, exchanged wordlessly.
Thereâs no clean edge between want and need, no way to separate gentle from hungry. One second, itâs the cautious warmth of shared breath, the nextâ
Itâs the pull of his hands. The low, wrecked sound he makes in his throat when your fingers slide up his neck, threading into the damp hair at his nape. Â
Heat. Ozone. The bright-white zing of electricity rocketing down your spine.
You move forward without thinking. He shifts to catch you, hands spanning your hips, guiding you into his lap. You straddle him, careful to avoid the bruises across his stomach.
His breath is hot. His lips are plush, a little chapped from the way heâs been chewing on them all night.
Wordlessly, you reach for the hem of your shirt, tugging it over your head and letting it fall behind you. Cool air rushes over your skin.
Steve goes still. âGod, youâreâŠâ He breathes, throat working around the rest of the words when you take his hand and guide it upwards. Across your stomach, up your ribs. His thumb grazes over your nipple, soft and reverent, and your breath hitches.
You tug him back into a kiss, hips starting to drag across his lap. The hard press of him burns heat through the cotton of your sleep shorts.
âGood?â you breathe against his mouth. Â
âYeah,â he rasps. âFuck. Yeah. You?â
You nod, catching your breath.
But he doesnât stop looking at you
And thereâs something about the way his gaze lingersâsoft, searchingâlike heâs waiting for more than just an answer to a question. Something he doesnât know how to say out loud.
But you know.
You just⊠know.
The same way you knew when your hands were in his hair earlier. That quiet ache. That silent pull in him, desperate and soft.
So you give him what he doesnât know how to ask for.
Your hand slides up to his chest, pressing over his heart. Itâs pounding. So is yours.
âYou feel so good, Steve,â you whisper, close enough for him to taste the words off your lips. âYouâre so good. So fucking good.â
He shudders, pulling you in tighter, groaning with his lips buried against your neck like he needs to hide the sound somewhere safe.
Still, you donât stop.Â
You reach for his hand and slide it lower, under the waistband of your shorts. His fingers slip through your slick heat and go still.
âJesus,â he breathes.Â
You kiss his temple, then his cheek. Frame his jaw with both hands and lift his gaze to yours.
âFeel that?â you murmur. âThatâs for you. All for you.â
He lets out a strangled sound, nearly pained, and surges up to kiss you again. His fingers start to stroke through your heat, finding the rhythm, learning you. When his thumb grazes your clit and starts to circle, you gasp, hips jerking into his touch.
âShit, babyâŠâ he breathes.  Â
And that wordâ
Itâs soft. Unconscious. Slipped out before he knew it was there.
You donât think he even realizes he said it. His eyes are blown wide, focused only on you: the way your hips grind, the way you cling to him when his fingers push deeper.
Still, thereâs that tremble in his voice.
Like that word came from somewhere deeper than he meant to reach. Like it cracked off the part of him thatâs always waiting to be turned away but still dares to offer softness first.
You roll your hips again, chasing friction, but your focus has shifted now. Youâre watching him insteadâflushed and open beneath you, mouth parted, eyes locked to your face like youâre something heâs trying to memorize.
And it guts you. The honesty of it.
How easy it is to see now.    Â
That this is someone who aches for closeness. Reaches for it before he even realizes heâs doing it. Who says baby like itâs the only word he knows for want.Â
Your chest grows tight. The heat in your stomach twists into something unbearably tender.
You roll your hips one last time, savoring the drag of him against you, then shift off his lap. His hand slips from your shorts, reluctant, trailing warmth up your stomach.
His eyes follow you as you slide to the floor. Your knees sinking into the carpet, fingers hooking in the waistband of his pants. He lifts his hips andâ
You blink. Your mouth goes dry.
Because heâsâ
Wow. Okay.
Noted.
Itâs not just the sizeâthough, yeah, thatâs definitely part of it. Itâs the weight of him. The flushed color, the dusky warmth. Velvety skin stretched tight over thick veins. The way he sits heavy against his thigh, curved just slightly, leaking at the tip and twitching under your gaze.
You swallow hard.
âWhat?â He stirs, uncertain. âIs somethingâŠ?â
You look up at him, eyes wide. Â Â
âJesus, SteveâŠâ you breathe. âJust. Holy shit.â
His brows pinch together, concern flickering across his faceâuntil he sees your expression.
And there it is.
That grin. That stupid, boyish, shit-eating grin.
âOh,â he says, trying to play it off. âYeah?â
You narrow your eyes, desperately trying to hide your smile. âDonât get cocky.â
He raises a brow. Â
You realize your mistake immediately. Your cheeks flare hot.
He laughs, breathless. Looks down at you all soft and pleased and fond. It makes you want to bite him until he forgets how to smirk entirely. Kiss him stupid and never let him go.
âShut up,â you mutter.
âDidnât say anything,â he says, still smiling.
You roll your eyes and yank his pants the rest of the way down.
He quiets instantly.
Because your hands are on him now.
You stroke his thighs first, warming up the sensitive skin there. Pressing soft kisses along the inside, inching higher and higher until heâs twitching under your mouth.
âYouâre so pretty like this,â you whisper. âYou donât even know, do you?â
He makes a strangled sound, part laugh, part disbelieving groan. His hands flex where they rest against his thighs.
You reach up and guide one to your hair, eyes still on his.
âYou can touch me,â you murmur. Â Â Â Â Â
His fingers curl, tentative. âYou sure?â
You nod. âI want you to. Want you to feel this.â
Then, without looking away, you lower your mouth to him.
Slow. Wet. Base to tip, dragging your tongue along the underside. He jerks, whole body going taut. Â
âJesus,â he hisses. âOkay. Okay.â
You take your time. Because no one ever has, it seems. Not like this. Â
Your fingers wrap around the base, tongue gliding along the ridge, licking the salt beading at the tip. Every twitch, every shudder, every wrecked baby whispered from above becomes something you file away silently, cataloguing the way he unravels.
And Steve unravels beautifully.
You glance up through your lashes, watching the way his stomach trembles, how his throat works. All the control heâs trying so hard to hold on to.
Then finally, you wrap your lips around him.
Just the head at first, sucking slow and sweet. You circle your tongue around the crown and let out a soft hum.
âFuck,â he whispers. âBaby, your mouthâshitââ
His voice keeps catching like he doesnât quite believe it. You get the sense he hasnât been cherished in this way, either. Adored. Worshipped.
So you double down.
You ease off for a breath, kissing the flushed tip, thumb gliding over the sensitive skin there. Then you sink deeper, lips sliding lower, jaw loosening, tongue tracing the underside as you stretch around the thickest part of him. Â
You keep going until heâs pressed up against your palate, brushing the back of your throat. You breathe into it. Let the weight of him sit there, hot and thick and yours.
âShit, shitââ he pants. âIâm notânot gonna last if you keepâ"
You pull off with a soft pop, lips slick and swollen. A line of spit follows you from the flushed head of his cock.
âItâs okay,â you smile, breath warm against his skin. âDonât have to. Just want you to feel good.â
He stares down at you, cheeks flushed, eyes glassy.
Then, suddenly, breathless and earnest:
âWait, can Iâcan I get you off first?âÂ
You pause, stunned. Â
You blink up at him, hand still wrapped around the base of his cock. âYou donât have toââ
âI want to,â he says, quick and pleading. He cups your jaw, stroking your cheek. âPlease. Let me?â
You hold his gaze a moment longer, drowning in that quiet, unspoken vulnerability he carries, one youâre learning to name without words.
Then, finally, you nod.
âOkay.â
You crawl back into his lap, shorts discarded somewhere behind you, it doesnât matter where.
What matters is the way his hands settle on you again, calloused palms sliding around your hips, drawing you closer. You feel the thick heat of him pressed between your thighs, sticky and flushed and aching.
You roll your hips teasingly, gliding against him before reaching down to line him up. The head of his cock nudges, presses, catches. Then slowly, inch by inch, you sink down.
The stretch is immediate. Hot and all-consuming. You clutch at his shoulders, mouth falling open as you let your weight sink deeper, not pausing until heâs fully seated.
Your thighs tremble where you straddle him.
Steve groans low, one arm tight around your waist, the other gripping your hip.
âShit, are youâ?â
âIâm okay,â you breathe, laughing softly into his skin. âJust⊠gimme a sec. Youâre kind of a lot, Harrington.â Â
He kisses you, rubbing circles into your back while you adjust. The burn softens. The fullness remains.
And when you start to moveâlifting your hips, rolling them back downâyou feel him everywhere.
âGod,â you pant, âyou feel so good.â
You kiss his jaw, his throat, burying whispers between breaths.
âCan feel you so deepâfuckââ Â
The rhythm builds slowly. Wide circles, deep grinds, savoring the way his cock hits just right.
And the more you give himâYou feel so good, Fucking me so well, Low how you feel inside meâhe melts a little more beneath you.
âShit, right thereââ you gasp, hips stuttering when his hand slides between your bodies, pressing into your clit.
âCome for me,â he whispers, voice rough. âPlease. Want to feel you.â
His fingers circle faster. Â
And your body breaks.
You cry out, nails digging into his shoulders, every muscle clenched and trembling as the orgasm crashes through you. You collapse against his chest, shaking, gasping his name, everything hot and white and so much.   Â
He holds you through it, breathing hard against your temple.
âThatâs it,â he pants. âThatâs it, baby, Iâve got youâfuckââ
Youâre still trembling in his lap when you feel him thrust up into you once, twice. He pulls out with a sudden gasp, groaning your name, spilling hot and thick across your stomach, shuddering with the force of it.
You kiss him through the haze of your own come-down, legs still trembling, fingers tangled in the sweat-damp hair at his nape.
âJust like that,â you whisper. âYouâre perfect like this, Steve. So good.â
His breath stutters against your cheek. His body, still pulsing with aftershocks, presses into yours like he canât stand the space between.
And even after the world goes still, after the stuttered breaths give way to silence and the hum of the TV creeps back in, you keep touching him. Stroking his hair, brushing sweat from his brow, pressing soft, open-mouthed kisses anywhere your mouth can reach.
And in the hush that follows, you murmur things youâve never said aloud. Not to anyone.
Things too raw for daylight.
Things meant only for him.
âŠ
You never ask him to stay.
Not when he wakes beside you the next morning, bare-chested, sleep-warm, hair sticking up in a dozen directions. Not when he wanders into your kitchen wearing nothing but rumpled boxers, whisking eggs for French toast like itâs an inside joke youâve shared forever.
Not when you start leaving the sugar bowl out because thatâs how he takes his coffee: one teaspoon, no milk. Not when you slip a second toothbrush into the cup by the sink, bristles leaning together like theyâve been kissing too. Â
He never asks. You never offer.
âŠ
You learn the little things first.
That he hums when he cooks, usually something dumb from the radio, sometimes dumber jingles from the worst commercials. That he wipes down your counters when he thinks youâre not looking. That he folds your laundry better than you do, big hands careful with worn-out cotton and delicate lace. It gets to you, the way he touches your things like they matter.
And sometimes, you catch him staring again.
Only now, you donât look away. Â
Youâll be across the room, pretending to read, eyes dragging over the same sentence for the fifth time because you can feel his gaze on you. Heâll be leaning in the doorway with his arms crossed, wearing that stupid smug expression he pulls when he knows exactly what heâs doing.
âSeriously, Harrington,â you mutter, eyes on the page. âTake a picture.â
He doesnât blink. âIâm good. Like this view better."
You roll your eyes and throw a sock at his face. He catches it one-handed, smug.
Then he moves.
Three steps. Thatâs all it takes.
Three steps until your backâs against the mattress, his weight pressing you down, mouth dragging hot across your collarbone. His hands sneak under your shirt, warm palms sliding up your ribs. His lips chase yours like itâs a promise heâs been dying to keep.
âYouâre annoying,â you whisper, breath hitching as he nips at your neck.
He grins into your skin. âYeah? You gonna kick me out, then?â
You donât.
You kind of never do.
âŠ
The days bleed together after that. Â
A quick stop at his house to grab spare clothes turns into a silent pause in front of his dresser. His fingers hover over a framed photo: faces you donât know, smiles frozen mid-laugh.
He doesnât explain. You donât ask. You just wait by the door until he turns and threads his fingers through yours.
He doesnât let go the whole ride back.
A grocery run on day three turns into a dumb argument in the pasta aisle. Youâre ranting about canned tomatoes; heâs trailing behind you like a sulking toddler, forearms slung across the cart handle, sneaking cookies into the basket when youâre not looking.
You scowl at checkout. He grins.
âYouâre gonna thank me later,â he says.
You do.
First with a mouthful of chocolate and a grudging laugh.
Then again, ten minutes later, when your 'thank-you's come in the shape of his name and a fistful of his hair between your thighs.
âŠ
Eventually, the domestic stops feeling borrowed.
It starts to feel owned. Â
You vacuum, he sweeps. You cook, he washes up. He steals bites of dinner while itâs still sizzling and you smack him with a spatula, pretending to be mad.
He says, âOw,â even when it doesnât hurt. You say, âAsshole,â even when itâs not true.
On the fourth night, you both sit cross-legged on the living room floor, scrubbing blood out of the couch cushions with baking soda and half-assed prayers.
Heâs watching you. Again. Â Â
You glance up. "What?"
He shrugs, smiling a little. âNothing.â
âSteve.â
âI justâŠâ He hesitates. Looks down. âI like this.â
You raise a brow. âCleaning your blood out of my furniture?â
He shuffles forward, bringing his cushion closer to yours.
âYeah,â he says.
But itâs not what he means.
You both know that.
âŠ
The sex changes, too.
In the mornings, itâs quiet. Slow. All languid stretches and sleep-warm skin, coaxing sighs from your lips as the sun peeks through the blinds.
But at night? Heâs something else entirely.
He fucks you like he needs it to survive. Like youâre his last breath. Gripping your thighs, your hipsâholding you open, holding you still, driving into you like heâs trying to memorize the shape of you forever.
And as the bruises fade, so does his hesitation.Â
He knows you now.
Knows what makes you beg, what makes you break. Where to bite, where to suck, where to press until your voice is raw and your nails leave crescent moons down his spine.
One night, he pins your wrists above your head, breath ragged.
âSay it,â he murmurs, grinding deep. âTell me who makes you feel like this.â
You break on his name.
He swallows the sound with his mouth and doesnât stop until your thighs are shaking.
And afterward, he stays.
Inside you. Around you.
He never pulls away first.
âŠ
Not all nights are easy.
Some nights, you wake alone.
You find him in the kitchen, framed by the glow of the open fridge. The light catches the tired slope of his shoulders, the untouched glass of water going warm in his hand. Â Â Â
You donât ask. Just step in behind him, press your cheek between his shoulder blades, and wrap your arms tight around his waist.
He breathes out. Sets the glass down. Closes the fridge.
When he turns, he doesnât speak. Just lets you hold him.
Lets you guide him back to bed.
âŠ
Your mornings are different now. Â
You wake in shirts that smell like him. Brush your teeth while he showers, fog curling across the mirror. He laughs at something stupid from behind the curtain, and you laugh back, still half-asleep.
It all happens so slowly you almost miss it.
The toothbrush that isnât yours. The second pillow with its permanent dent. The pair of shoes you stop tripping over by the door because youâve learned to walk around them.
Heâs etched himself into your life in the smallest of ways. Fit through the cracks with warm hands and boyish grins and quiet looks in the daylight.
Like maybe he was meant to be here all along.
âŠ
Somewhere between day seven and eight, you stop keeping count.Â
Because every morning, you tell yourself heâll probably leave soon.
And every night, he gives you another reason to believe he wonât.
âŠ
Like tonight.
Youâre wrapped around each other, skin still damp with heat, covers shoved somewhere near the foot of the bed. His hand rests on your back, fingers splayed. Yours curls against his chest, cheek pressed to the slow, steady rhythm behind his ribs.
It would be so easy to stay here.
To let the quiet stretch. To pretend the heaviness in your chest is just exhaustion, not the weight you've been carrying since the night you dragged his bleeding body across your living room. Since you sat awake beside him, watching every shallow breath, waiting for the next one to come.
But the questionâs been sitting on your chest for days now. And with the weight of him beside you, it presses too hard to ignore.
âWhyâd you do it?â
He doesnât answer right away, and you wonder if heâs already fallen asleep. But then his chest rises under your cheekâa careful, deliberate breath.
ââŠDo what?â Â
âThe lake,â you murmur. âYou jumped in first. Why?â
Heâs quiet for a beat too long. You glance up to find the tight underside of his jaw, his eyes fixed on the ceiling.
âI donât know,â he sighs, dragging a hand through his hair. âSomeone had to go. And I was the best swimmer, so. Didnât really have to think about it.â
And you believe him. Itâs the part that hurts the most.
That he didnât have to think. That throwing himself in came as naturally as breathing.
Because somewhere along the way, Steve Harrington decided that his pain was worth less than everyone else's.
You shift closer, hooking your chin on his shoulder. His thumb draws slow, thoughtful circles against your spine.
âSteve,â you say quietly. âYou know itâs not about being a hero, right? You donât have to keep throwing yourself in front of everything just to prove yourself.â
His hand stills.
âIâm not.â Â
âNot what?â
âA hero. Iâm not.â He lets out a bitter huff, eyes looking at something past the ceiling. âI was⊠just kind of a selfish asshole for a long time. Didnât care about much. Or anyone. And even after I tried to fix it, it justâit never felt like enough. Still doesnât.â
You watch him, the weight of his words like pressing down on a bruise.
âSo what, you jump into lakes now to make up for it?â
He almost smiles. âKinda. Yeah.â
Then, quieter:
âI donât know, itâs like, if Iâm not the one stepping up, then⊠whatâs the point, you know? What the hell am I even good for?â
Your heart aches. Because god, how long has he carried that? How many times has he thrown himself in just to keep from drowning?
You see it then, the fracture that runs through him. Spiderwebbed across everything he is, everything he was. A wound so old itâs fused to him. Clotted over, never cleaned. Â
The weight he carries isnât something he puts on; itâs something that grew with him.
Years of being told he wasnât enough. Not smart enough. Not serious enough. Just the boy with the car, the smile, the house too big for how small it made him feel.Â
That kind of doubt doesnât heal. It burrows deep.
Sinks its teeth in. Festers. Â Â
Until guilt turns into remorse,
Remorse turns into habit,
And habit drags on as penance.
So he made himself useful.
Built his worth out of protection. Of stepping up, stepping in, taking the hit before anyone else could.
Diving first. Bleeding first.
Hurt first. Hurt worst. Hurt instead.
Thatâs where his value lives. Not in being loved, but in being needed.
You lift yourself up until you're eye to eye, cupping his face, thumbs brushing the tops of his cheeks. Â
âYouâre for you, Steve.âÂ
He blinks, brows knitting.
âYou donât have to earn it. Being loved. Being cared for. Thatâs not something you have to prove.â
His eyes search yours, like heâs trying to make sense of the words.
Then, slowly, his shoulders ease. He cups the back of your neck, drawing you in. His exhale against your lips sounds like a weight being untethered.
You stay like that for a while, breathing together, fingers laced at his chest.
Eventually, he sleeps.
You donât.
You stay awake, tracing the lines of his face in the dark. The peace that sleep gives him. The stillness that never lasts. Â
You watch as his brow smooths. As his lips part. As his lashes flutter once, then settle into stillness.
You stay up. Â
Because someone has to.
âŠ
You get used to the quiet.
Used to Steve padding around the house in socks, humming half a tune under his breath.
To the way he opens every cupboard before finding the cereal thatâs been in the same spot for days.
To the way he claims half your couch, half your bed, half your toothpaste.
You get used to someone elseâs heartbeat in your space.
So when the knocking startsâthree sharp raps that rattle the woodâit takes you both by surprise.
Steveâs already halfway to the door when you follow, tugging your sweatshirt over your head.
Youâve barely turned the knob before the door bursts open.
âGuess whoâs officially un-grounded and here to collect her idiot boy? Oh, and lookâI brought backup!â
Robin barrels in first, followed by two figures: a curly-haired kid drowning in a bright yellow baseball cap, and behind him, a taller shape in black denim and leather. Eddie Munson, wearing that same smug grin you remember vaguely from high school.
Youâve heard about them, of courseâSteveâs strange little apocalypse crewâbut hearing about it is one thing, seeing it is another.
âHeâs alive!â Robin crows, flinging her arms around Steve.
âTook you long enough,â he mutters into her shoulder.
âUh, excuse me. Your fault,â she shoots back, jabbing a finger in his chest. âGrounded, remember?â Then she turns to you, eyes sharp with curiosity. âSo? How much trouble was he?â  Â
You glance over at Steve. Heâs already looking back, mouth tugging at the corner like heâs daring you to say something first. Thereâs a kaleidoscope of memory that flashes between you in the space of a blink.
You look back at Robin and shrug, casual as ever. âNot much. He folds my laundry now.â
Robin gasps. Eddie lets out a low whistle.
âWell, shit,â he drawls. âSteve Harrington, domesticated. Didnât think Iâd live to see the day.â
Steve rolls his eyes. âYou guys are hilarious.â
But his ears are pink by the time you close the door.
âŠ
After a round of burnt grilled cheeses, the kitchenâs a mess of crumbs and chatter.
Robin perches on a stool, slurping tomato soup straight from the pot. Eddieâs straddling a chair backwards, drumming on the counter. Dustin paces, orchestrating what sounds like a full-scale military operation using a butter knife and a salt shaker.Â
ââIâm saying if we shift the rendezvous point closer to the treeline, we can cut our response time in half. Minimum.â
Steve leans against the fridge, nodding like heâs catching every third word.
Youâre at the sink, rinsing dishes, the voices behind you fading into a comfortable humâuntil Dustin steps in beside you, tone low and careful.
âSo⊠heâs okay to come back now, right?
You glance over your shoulder.
Steveâs got his shirt hiked up for Robin and Eddie to see, scars catching the kitchen lightâpale and raised, still tender from where you pulled out the last stitch two days ago. Robin wrinkles her nose, groaning about how she's lost her appetite.
You turn back to Dustin. âI mean, no fever, no infection. Doesnât seem to be actively dying. So yeah, Iâd say heâs good.â
Dustin beams. âAwesome.â
You hesitate. Then, before you can stop yourself:
âActually⊠I was thinking I could come with you guys this time.â
The room goes still.
Robin lowers her spoon. Eddie looks up. Even the sink seems to hush.
Steveâs voice breaks the quiet.
âNo.â
You turn, incredulous. âExcuse me?â
âNo way,â he says, pushing off the fridge, crossing the kitchen with that particular brand of determined worry youâve come to recognize. âYouâre not going.â
You blink at him like, Seriously?
He raises his brows like, Try me.Â
You sigh, turning off the water. âI wouldnât be going in. Just close enough to help. You know, in case someone ends up bleeding to death again?â You shoot him a pointed look.
He ignores it, jaw working like heâs gearing up to argue again. But Dustin cuts in.
âWait, thatâs actually kind of genius,â he mutters thoughtfully. âYou could be our medic. LikeâEddie, dude, she could be like our cleric!â
You frown. âOur what now?â
âD&D thing,â Eddie smirks. âHealing spells. Keeps the rest of us idiots alive.â
You laugh softly. âSure. Okay. Cleric.â
But Steve isnât laughing.
âWait, justâhang on,â he steps forward, catching your wrist. âCan I talk to you for a second?â
âŠ
The hallway is narrow and dim, lit only by the slant of light spilling in from the kitchen.
You lean against the wall, arms crossed, watching him pace three slow steps before stopping, running both hands through his hair.     Â
He doesnât look at you. Doesnât speak.
You wait.
Finally, quietly: âYou canât come with us.â
You narrow your eyes. âYouâre not the boss of me.â
âI mean it.â His voice is low. Firm. But itâs not angry. Not that sharp, flinty tone you remember from high school, when he used to wield confidence like armor. No, this is something else.
Fear.
You tilt your head, voice softening. âSteveâŠâ
He exhales through his nose, more of a tremor than a breath. âYou heard what itâs like down there. You saw what happened last time.â
âI did. Thatâs why Iâve decided to go.â
His eyes snap to yours, incredulous. âAnd you didnât think to talk to me about it before?â
âWhy? So you could freak out and tell me no?â
âIâm notââ He cuts himself off, jaw flexing. âI just canât ask you to risk that. Itâs not fair.â
âYouâre not asking,â you say quietly. âIâm offering.âÂ
For a moment, neither of you moves. He stares at you like heâs searching for somethingâsome argument, some loophole thatâll make you stay here while he walks back into hell. Like if he keep fighting back, maybe he wonât have to admit what this really is.
But when he speaks, his voice isnât tense anymore. It just trembles. Â
âI canâtâI canât lose you in there. You get that? I canât. I justâŠâ His eyes flicker away, toward the shadowed doorway behind you. He swallows hard.
â...I just got you.â
The quiet stretches. You gaze at him, heart heavy.
His shoulders are tense when you reach for his hand. His fingers twitch in yours, like heâs ready to pull awayâbut he doesnât. He never does.
âSteve,â you start gently. âI know youâre scared. I am too. But I canât just sit here and wait while you...â you take a breath, squeezing his hand. âIf thereâs a chance I can help, Iâm taking it.â Â Â
He looks down at your joined hands, your fingers laced tight. His thumb drags slow, absent circles against your skinâonce, twice, like heâs trying to memorize the feel of it. The fight drains out of him with a sigh that sounds too big for his chest.
He steps forward wordlessly, and pulls you into his arms. His chin drops to the top of your head. You press your cheek to his chest, feeling the wild rhythm of his heart start to slow.
âFine,â he murmurs. âBut youâre staying up here. Radio only. And youâre not going anywhere near the gate, you hear me?â
You smile into his shirt. âDeal.â
âŠ
Itâs almost 3 p.m. when he stirs.
The sunlightâs lazy this time of day, all thick and golden, caught in the slow spin of dust motes above the coffee table. The air smells like coffee and the lavender candle you lit this morning. Youâre curled sideways on the couch, a book open but long forgotten on your chest.
âJesus,â comes a voice beside you, rough with sleep. âHow long was I out?â
You smile, already watching. âCouple hours.â Â
He squints at the light. âYou let me nap that long?â
âYou needed it.â
Steve rolls up from where he was buried in the couch, a soft pillow line stamped across his cheek. His hairâs flattened on one side and sticking up in the back. You reach out and comb your fingers through the mess. It fluffs up worse for it, but he sighs and leans into your hand anyway.
He trades the throw pillow for your stomach, draping a heavy arm across your waist. You rest your palm on his shoulder, thumb tracing the ridge of his collarbone.
The house hums around you: the low buzz of the fridge, the steady tick of the clock, the soft creak of settling wood. Itâs a silence that no longer feels hollow.
You let it breathe. Â
Itâs been three weeks.
Three weeks since you stood on the other side of a collapsing gate, heart in your throat, waiting for their silhouettes to break through the mist.Â
Three weeks since the air finally stilled, the ground stopped shaking, and the last portal sealed itself shut behind Eddie, behind Robin, behind all of them.
Three weeks since you checked every pulse, cleaned every wound, counted every head, and realized, miraculously, that no one was missing.
That everyone made it out. Alive. Together.
Three weeks since Steve stumbled out of the wreckage and into your arms and didnât let go.
The bruises have faded since then. The stitches dissolved. The nightmares are fewer now, further between. Â Â
And Steve hasnât left. Not once.
You're not sure when it stopped being temporary. When duffel bags became dresser drawers, when his shaving cream started living on your bathroom counter, next to the ceramic dish that holds your rings. When the dent in your couch, the dip in your pillow, stopped feeling like borrowed space and started feeling like home.
He still has his edges, the instinct to fix, to shield, to throw himself in front of the next disaster before it happens. But youâve learned how to slow him down. To be the hand that pulls him back before he burns himself out.
And heâs learning to let you.
Youâre halfway lost in that thought when he pokes your side.
âHey,â he murmurs. âYou okay?â
You hum. âJust thinking.â
âUh oh,â he teases, voice still scratchy with sleep.
You smile, ruffling his hair. He groans and nips playfully at your stomach. When your laughter settles, you say it, quietly:
âI was just⊠thinking about what you said.â
He stills, blinking up at you. âYeah? Whatâd I say now?â
âAt the gate.â
Thatâs all you have to say. You both remember.
The roar, the smoke, the sting of blood and dirt. The ground giving out beneath you when he finally made it outâonly to tell you he had to go back. One last time. To help the others out. To step into the jaws of a place that wanted to claim him for good.
I know! I know! JustâI need to tell you something. No, I know, just listenâ
You remember the chaos closing in, the sky fractured by fire and screaming metal, and his handsâsteady, impossibly steadyâas he caught your face. His voice cracking on the words:
I love you. I need you to know that, okay? I love you.
You stare at the book laying on your chest, swallowing hard. âI never said it back.â
Steve looks at you for a long moment.
Then, softly: âYeah, you did.â
âWhen?â
He smiles, tracing a quiet pattern along your waist.
âNot out loud. But you did.â
You think back.
To the tremor in your hands as you let his fingers slip away. The hitch in your breath when the walkie crackled with his voice. To how tightly you held on when he staggered out with the others, bruised and shaking and breathing, and realized you could finally breathe too.
Every heartbeat since has felt like a promise.
Maybe words wouldâve failed then. Maybe he heard it in all the ways you refused to let go.
Your fingers find his jaw.
âStill,â you whisper. âI want to say it now.â
He tilts his head, waiting.
And you do.
Softly, firmly, the words falling easy like theyâd been waiting inside you all along.
And when he says it back, you feel it in your chest long before you hear it.
âŠ
The house is still too small. The front door still sticks when it rains. The couch still carries the faint stain from that first night.
But itâs home.
More than it ever was. More than it ever couldâve been without him.
The proof is everywhere: his Ray-Bans next to your keys, a battered boombox on your plant windowsill, the Polaroid Robin took where heâs smiling at you instead of the camera.
Some nights still weigh heavy on him. When even rest wonât stay kind.
But on those nights, he finds you. He always will.
And somewhere between the grocery runs and movie marathons, between loud songs in the kitchen and quiet kisses before bed, it stopped feeling like borrowed time.
Itâs just time, now.
Yours.
Together.
âŠ
Robin once told you that you get off on fixing people.
She meant hearts. You meant bones.
Maybe she was right. Â
But maybe thatâs not such a bad thing.
You've named it something else now, anyway.
âŠ
epilogue
You stretch, set the book aside, and head for the kitchen.
Youâve got prep to do for night.
Steve moves in behind you, hair still rumpled, sleeves pushed to his elbows. He leans his hip against the counter, flipping through the Playerâs Handbook Dustin left last week, brow furrowed like heâs cramming for a test.
âI swear,â he mutters, squinting, âyou need a math degree to play this game.â
You laugh, laying a neat row of apple slices beside a bowl of pretzel sticks and M&Msâfuel for the chaos to come. âYouâll live.â
âNot if Eddie's dragon eats me.â
âWell, maybe you should listen to your cleric tonight, then.â
He grins, stealing a slice from the tray, then slides closer until heâs flush against you. His hips trap you against the counter, chest warm against your back. He leans into the crook of your neck, lips grazing your ear.
âYou know it's kinda hot when you boss me around, right?â
Before you can roll your eyes, he catches you by the hips and spins you around, grin breaking wide and easy. You love how it softens his face, how it creases the corners of his eyes.
Soon, the party will be hereâarms full of sodas, dice clattering in boxes, voices overlapping in familiar chaos. The house will fill with laughter, with the easy rhythm of shared lives.
But for now, itâs just him.
Rumpled hair. Soft smile. Apple-sweet kisses and the honey-gold hush of afternoon light.
And the sun keeps pouring in. Â Â
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The edges of your soul (I haven't seen yet) âïž S.H.
âïž Warnings: 18+ mdni! post apocalypse, character death, angst, mean!steve, grumpy!steve x sunshine!reader, blood, wounds -- all the gory stuff, smut in the future chapters, hurt/comfort
âïž Pairing: Grumpy!Steve Harrington x sunshine(fem)!reader
âïž Summary: Everything he once knew, is gone, dead and buried, burned to the ground and turned into ash. All he has known is loss, death and pain, he despised this world, until it brought you to him -- the sunshine he had long forgotten. Light he will follow till the very end.
âïž
Prologue âïž When the sun hits, she'll be waiting
Chapter one âïž Welcome and Goodbye
Chapter two âïž Can you see right through me?
Chapter three âïž Youâre the greatest thing weâve lost
Chapter four âïž While I'm alone and blue as can be
Chapter five âïž Watching cityscapes turn to dust
Chapter six âïž The killing time. Unwillingly mine.
Chapter seven âïž Fall back into place. Fall back...
Chapter eight âïž Dead-eyed. Dead weight.
Chapter nine âïž Pull the trigger on the gun I gave you when we met
Chapter ten âïž Turn me into something tragic, just for you, I let it happen
Chapter eleven âïž And I'll fear no evil because I'm blind to it all
Chapter twelve âïž Youâre a bandit like me. Eyes full of stars
Chapter thirteen âïž Then this heart would break and fall as twice as far
Chapter fourteen âïž The devil in your eyes, won't deny the lies you've sold
Chapter fifteen âïž Every print I left upon the track has led me here
Chapter sixteen âïž One day I am gonna grow wings...
Chapter seventeen âïž Now I'm racing for what to do, all roads lead me right back to you
Chapter eighteen âïž I'll give you all that I can, as long as you'll wait for me there
Chapter nineteen âïž When youâre lying between my legs, it doesnât matter
Chapter twenty âïž If you can't survive, just try
Chapter twenty one âïž Look into my eyes and baby, whisper
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âyâwanna know what stupid looks like?â he mutters, head dropping down until his lips near your jaw. âyou, wakin up with my fuckin dog tags round your neck and nothin else.â
based off a request i got - tispy simon riley x drunk reader. simon is a man of morals, even when you make it very very hard for him to exercise them. 18+. lots of detailed dirty talk.
ââââ-
itâs honestly not even your fault.
youâll blame it all on soap, if anyone asks - heâs the one who had a tab open, a devil on his shoulder, and kept pouring shots as if they were free. now youâre blackout-adjacent, stumbling through the hallway with simonâs arm wrapped around your waist in some makeshift tourniquet while everything spins like a goddamn carousel.
simon always gets stuck on clean-up crew. mostly because heâs the only one who can handle their fuckin liquor.
needless to say, heâs used to this by now. used to the way youâve been rambling on about nothing for the better part of five minutes - doesnât say much when you stop and get distracted by something stupid for the billionth time. doesnât complain when you grab his arm and lean a little too hard into his side, as if heâs a lifeline in the sea that is the floor beneath your feet.
heâs tipsy, sure, but somehow still annoyingly steady. classic simon.
âjesussiâyouâre big.â itâs slurred and breathless, broken by your own laughter as your head drops lazily onto his shoulder. âlike, industrial grade. military-issued big.â
the corner of his mouth tilts. if you were sober youâd see the smirk heâs biting back.
âtha right?â
âmmm. like a fuckin tank,â you hum, fingers kneading the muscle under your palm. itâs involuntary - just like itâs involuntary when he twitches. âor an armoured vehicle. yâshould come with airbags.â
simon bites his cheek. the devil in you is dancing in the waves of tension rolling off him.
maybe heâs not as used to this as he thought - because this isnât just drunk-banter. this is you, murmuring compliments with all that heat behind them. personal. stupidly involuntarily honest.
hes not used to compliments. not ones that sound like that.
âyouâre drunk,â he breathes.
you grin. âsoâre you.â
ânot even half as much as you.â
you let out a giddy little laugh that makes him glance down, at that. itâs quick and brief, the way his eyes flick over you, like heâs checking to make sure you havenât stripped mid-hallway. itâs just the bickering that gets you. makes you warm inside.
âmânot that drunk,â you lie through your teeth with all the drunken confidence you possess. âi meanâi am, but not likeâŠmemory loss drunk. iâm still gonna remember how wide your shoulders are tomorrow.â
itâs only seconds after that and your fingers are moving again, crawling down his arm to where leather edge meets skin.
â..and how insanely big your hands are,â you sigh in continuation, unable to help yourself. âlikeâbiblically destructive. ruin-her-life-in-a-single-night kind of hands. anyone ever tell yâthat?â
and that might just be precisely when it starts - the feeling in his gut. brought to life through the filth youâre beginning to feed.
âdonât.â he says, and itâs torn. ânot now.â
heâs all but begging you - and however miraculously, his pace doesnât break. still steady as ever even as you switch from squeezing to tracing his tattoos with your finger. the only response he gives is a devastating clench of his jaw as he keeps you moving - steering past flickering lights and sterile walls.
âyâever choke a girl out with them?â you press, unfettered. ânot like, unconscious, but like. in bed?â
he exhales. slow. almost a growl.
âjesus. stop talkinâ.â
âwhy?â you blink up at him, all wide eyes and flushed cheeks, far too innocent for someone whoâs very much not being innocent. âam i makinâ you nervouuus?â
his head tilts just slightly, just enough to peer down at you again.
âno,â he says, and even drunk you hear the grit in it. âyouâre makinâ me hard.â
he says it like he hates himself for it. like it slipped out - cut from the meat of some deep place the inebriation in his veins simply wonât let him keep inside.
and you?
you blink slow, lips parting in surprise.
âfuckinâ finally.â you exhale with a smile. slow and crooked and dangerous. âthought iâd have to be on my knees and naked for you to admit thatââ
he doesnât let you finish that thought.
âfuckâs sake, yâlittle minx.â heâs dragging you now, as if heâs realizing the dangers that are surfacing the more this conversation continues. by this point heâs half-carrying, half-hauling your giggling form down the hall like you weigh nothing. âyâneed to stop talkin.â
âyou like it,â you slur between unsteady steps. âyâlike me like this cause youâre a freakkkââ
his grip tightens. morals in tatters. control evaporating.
âiâd like you more if yâwere unconscious.â he huffs, hard. âor duct-taped.â
that makes you giggle more. worse, it eggs you on.
âwas that supposed tâbe a threat?â you ask, lips glistening. âcause if so, itâs workingggg.â
he grunts - some deep, violent sound in his throat like that one hit a nerve. âbloody hell.â
by the time you make it to your door, heâs breathing heavy. less from exertion and more from sheer fucking restraint. it takes two seconds before he throws the hinges wide, kicks it shut with his boot, and all but drags you onto your bed.
and you hardly even realize youâve reached it until the cotton caresses the side of your cheek. but that feeling is quickly forgotten when simon, the gentleman that he is, leans over you - one knee braced on the mattress as his hands go to work on the laces of your boots.
your thighs tense. he notices.
âfuck, simon.â you canât stop yourself. not even god himself could, at this point. âiâve been into you for ages, yâknow.â
he pauses. boot in hand.
ââŠwhat?â
he says it low. like a warning - like a donât you fuckin start. but youâre too drunk to care - especially when all you smell is him and all you see are those shoulders, leaning over you while youâre flat on your back beneath him.
your lashes flutter.
âjus sayin- since, like. youâre in my room, on my bed above me like one of my codeine fever dreams.â you slur, brain sloshing. the room spins with it. âthought yâshould know.â
he looks at you like youâve hit him with a brick.
your head lolls. glassy eyes dragging up over the length of him. âused to think about itâyouâwhen i couldnât sleep.â
he swallows, and you watch his throat work with it. the grip heâs got on your ankle could shatter bone.
ââŠ.you tellin me yâthink bout me when yâtouch yourself?â he asks.
âgod yes.â you donât even realize youâve said it. âyou. your hands. bending me over the sinks. in the showers while muttering filth in my ear, tellin me to behaveââ
ââfuck.â it punches out of him like it hurts.
the silence falls heavy. he doesnât blink, breathe, or move for what feels like forty minutes, when in reality, itâs like forty seconds - just long enough for him clamp the leash back on whatever beast is tearing through him.
not fully, but enough.
you stretch like a cat, oblivious to it. arch your back. sigh. âdâyou think about it?â
he doesnât answer. not at first. thenâ
âonly when i breathe.â
your stomach lurches. your thighs twitch. âyou mean that?â
he looks at you, finally - eyes darker than the devils deal, filled with filth and heat from the fire you started without even trying.
he shakes his head, his jaw clenches with the effort of keeping the beast at bay. âi mean, if you donât stop talkin, mâgonna fuckinâ fold.â
the alcohol in your blood just roars, at that. fuel to the flaming fire inside you.
âtell me.â you murmur. âyou think about fucking me? what iâd sound like moaning yourââ
before you can finish that thought, his hand is over your mouth. it swallows your face, makes you twitch in all the wrong places â and he sees it.
âenough.â itâs barely a whisper. âchrist. fuck. youâre gonna make me do somethinâ stupid.â
you moan against his hand - it spills out of you, vibrates against his fingers. he curses.
âyâwanna know what stupid looks like?â he mutters, head dropping down until his lips near your jaw. âyou, wakin up with my fuckin dog tags round your neck and nothin else.â
his palm silences everything but your pulse, which is roaring, at this point.
your fingers come up, shift a few of his digits until your voice finds room to leak out. âplease.â
his eyes snap shut.
âyâdont know what youâre askin for, sweetâeart,â he mutters, grabbing the edge of the blanket with his free hand and yanking it over your hips. âainât gonna wake up with you hatin me.â
even drunk you realize heâs a man of morals.
âyou think iâd regret it?â you whisper. stars in your eyes. he doesnât respond. âsimon. i just told you iâve fantasized about fucking you. i wonder how big you are, if itâd hurtââ
his palm tightens over your lips again.
âone more fuckinâ word and iâll forget every goddamn reason why i shouldnât touch you right now.â he spits. âif yâeven remember this tomorrow, yâcome say it to me sober. promise on every grave iâve ever stood over iâll bend yâover on the spot and fuck the idea of regret right outta you.â
then he pulls back, moving slow like it hurts, and you smile.
âguess iâll see you tomorrow.â
âmhm.â he hums, take a step or two toward the door. âfuckin hope you will.â
Hello new followers, this is Trans HC Central. I don't usually make alts like this, but I couldn't decide which one I wanted more. So enjoy the treat of having both. :P
hi, hello! đ€ âš some of you may have read my dbf!joel snippets before, but this series is taking us WAY BACK, back to where it all began. buckle up, i hope you enjoy! taglist is open âš
How is it that in one simple, fleeting moment, the dynamic with the constant in your life, your dadâs best buddy, old, gruff Joel Miller.. shifts into the most thrilling, turbulent secret youâre forced to keep under wraps?
If only you knew where it was always doomed to lead.
MDNI* this series WILL contains mature and explicit themes đ«¶đ»
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You know that one tweet where it's like "in college my roommate was like I'm gonna have so many girls and maybe some guys over here and if you don't like it, grow up" but then he brings one girl home the entire time they're at college together and they end up married?
That, but steddie.
Cause I always imagine Steve figuring out he's bisexual and being super chill about it, because generally he is quite a chill guy and he knows about Robin so he's experienced at loving a queer person and doesn't see why he can't do the same for himself and like, there's an active hell dimension right under us Robin, don't you think we have more important things to stress about than me wanting to kiss guys as well as girls?
So his initial reaction is basically "oh, I guess I'm bi then. Huh. Hey sweet, double the potential dating pool! Robin, get rid of the you suck board immediately cause I'm about to woo so many guys!"
But then he meets Eddie and all that shit goes down (and Eddie doesn't die cause obviously he doesn't, why would he? That's ridiculous). And Steve kisses one (1) boy one (1) time and thinks "actually, you know, I'm good, I think I'll just keep this one"