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@rynsficrecs
Welcome to the chaos library
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Eddie Munson X Female!reader || WC: 2.8K
SUMMARY: After a brutal day wrangling shitty customers at the garage, Eddie wants nothing more than to crawl into bed and disappear. He anticipates the same old routine: another solitary night in his trailer, restless thoughts keeping him up, a cigarette burning between his fingers as the heavy silence sets in. Only for a sudden shift in the atmosphere, quietly changing the way his night is about to unfold.
WARNINGS: Mechanic!Eddie, established relationship, angst, self-deprecating thoughts, hurt/comfort, SO much fluff, cursing, mentions of smoking, Upside Down does not exist, pure domestic bliss
A/N: Another self-indulgent Stranger Things fic because I am just a sucker for hurt/comfort and I deeply miss Eddie Munson!! 𼚠Hope y'all enjoy!! Divider by @strangergraphics <3
⊠main masterlist
⊠eddie munson masterlist
Eddie could feel the weight of the day hit him the second he killed the engine and the van settled into the quiet of the driveway. Every muscle screamed in protest, arms sore from wrenching stubborn bolts loose, fingers stained with grease that refused to wash out, oil worked into the lines of his skin and under his nails like it belonged there now. His clothes clung to him, heavy and grimy, and all he wanted, desperately, was a hot shower and to pass out on his mattress.
Rude customers werenât new. Hell, Eddie practically expected them. But today had just been something else entirely. It had started with the older woman who took one look at him. tattoos, rings, wild hair pulled back haphazardly, and decided she already knew everything she needed to know. Her mouth had pursed, her words sharp and clipped as she questioned his prices, his professionalism, his very presence behind the counter.
Then came the younger customer, all lingering looks and saccharine sweet laughter, leaning a little too close as he worked. Sheâd laughed at his jokes a little too hard, brushed her fingers against his arm like it was an accident, made it painfully clear she thought it might buy her a discount. When he shut it down, her smile curdled into something sharp, her voice turning clipped and nasty. She paid without another word and walked out without tipping, the door slamming hard enough to rattle the windows.
By the time he was cleaning up, counting the minutes until he could lock up and disappear, the universe apparently decided it wasnât done with him. An older man pulled in just before closing, engine sputtering. Eddie had taken one look under the hood, already running through possibilities, when the man started questioning his competence. Each skeptical comment scraped against Eddieâs patience, wearing it thinner and thinner until he was gripping the edge of the hood just to keep himself from snapping.
Now, sitting in the van with the day finally behind him, all of it pressed down at once. The exhaustion, the frustration, the quiet, simmering hurt of never quite being taken seriously. Eddie dragged a hand over his face, smearing grease across his cheek, and exhaled slowly. He was home. Barely holding it together, but home nonetheless. Climbing the steps of the trailer felt like wading through wet cement, each creak of the metal stairs echoing louder than it should.
Normally, it was a motion he barely registered, muscle memory carrying him up without thought. Tonight, though, his legs felt heavy, like they might give out at any second, every step a reminder of just how wrung out he was. By the time he reached the door, his hand lingered on the handle, knuckles sore, breath slow and uneven. The door swung open with a familiar groan, and the dim, amber glow inside wrapped around him like an old blanket.
Wayne was right where he always was, slouched into the corner of the couch, eyes heavy from an earlier shift at the power plant. The TV murmured low in the background, some rerun Eddie wasnât paying attention to. His eyes were already drooping, exhaustion from the power plant etched into the lines of his face, but they softened just a little when he saw Eddie step through the door. âHey, kid.â Wayne called out, voice rough but warm.
Eddie didnât trust himself to answer right away. He toed off his boots by the door, letting them thunk against the wall, shoulders still wound tight like heâd forgotten how to let them drop. Whatever irritation heâd been holding onto all day clung stubbornly to him, written plainly across his face. âThereâs leftovers on the counter,â Wayne continued, nodding toward the kitchen. âYour girl came by. Dropped off your favorite.â
That did it.
Eddieâs stomach growled loudly enough to embarrass him, the sound cutting through the fog in his head. His gaze snapped to the counter, and sure enough, there it was. A plate of your famous homemade lasagna, wrapped in foil, waiting patiently like it had all the time in the world. The rich smell of tomato sauce and melted cheese hit him instantly, and his mouth watered despite himself.
He crossed the trailer in a few long strides, snagged a fork from the drawer, and dug in without hesitation, not even bothering to heat it up. He didnât care. Warm or cold, it tasted like salvation. He ate standing there, leaning against the counter, fork moving almost mechanically as his body reminded him just how long it had been since heâd last eaten any real food that wasn't from a vending machine.
The shop had been slammed all day, customers stacked back to back, and somewhere along the line heâd completely blown past his lunch break. Each bite settled something in his chest, even if only a little. Still, the relief was bittersweet. Oh how he wished heâd gotten off early. Even just an hour sooner wouldâve meant seeing you, your smile, your voice, the way you always made the trailer feel brighter just by being in it. Lately, your schedules felt like they were working against you on purpose.
His days were swallowed whole by the shop, late-night D&D campaigns, and even later nights playing at the Hideout. Yours were just as bad, with overtime shifts at Family Video stretching long past closing time, and on top of that, those ever-present college assignment deadlines. It gnawed at him more than he wanted to admit. Hell, at this point, even Steve Harrington had spent more time with you than he had.
The mere thought left a sour taste on his tongue that had nothing to do with the lasagna. He stabbed at another bite, jaw tightening as a flicker of jealousy curled low in his gut. He trusted you, completely, but it still stung, knowing someone else got to see you laugh, got to hear about your day, while Eddie was elbow-deep in engines and taking crap from strangers who didnât know the first thing about him.
He swallowed hard, forcing the feeling down. Leaning back against the counter, fork resting on the edge of the plate, his eyes drifted toward the empty doorway of his room. Somewhere between the grease, the exhaustion, and the ache of missing you, the weight of the day finally began to settle. And for the first time since pulling into the driveway, Eddie let himself feel just how damn tired he really was.
âNight, Wayne,â Eddie muttered, the words leaving him in a long exhale, like even speaking required more energy than he had left. He didnât wait for a response, already turning down the narrow hallway toward the bathroom. The door clicked shut behind him, and for a moment he just stood there, forehead tipped forward, hands braced against the sink as he stared at his own reflection, tired eyes, shadows beneath them, jaw still tight with everything he hadnât let go of yet.
The shower was quick and scalding. Water beat down against his shoulders, carrying grease, sweat, and frustration with it as it spiraled down the drain. He scrubbed until his skin felt raw, like maybe if he washed hard enough he could erase the day entirely. When he stepped out, steam clung to the small bathroom, mirror fogged beyond recognition. He pulled on his pajama pants and didnât bother with a shirt, bare skin prickling as the cooler air hit him.
He moved on autopilot toward his room, exhaustion tugging him forward. More than sleep, his body craved comfort, something to quiet the static in his head, something to make his chest feel less tight. Normally, that comfort had your name written all over it. Tonight, heâd already resigned himself to the alternative. Weed would have to do. Slipped into his room he didn't bother flipping on the light, knowing every inch of this place by heart.
His feet navigated around clutter effortlessly as his hand reached for the spot where he kept his personal stash, fingers closing around the pre-rolled joint. Habit carried him forward as his other hand searched for his lighter on the nightstand. And then, he froze. His breath caught sharply in his throat as his shin brushed the edge of the bed, and his heart slammed hard enough that he nearly dropped everything in his hands.
There, sprawled across his lumpy, unmade mattress like she belonged there, because she did, was you. Nestled deep into his pillow, cheek squished adorably against the fabric, lips parted just enough as soft, steady breaths escaped you. Your chest rose and fell in a slow, peaceful rhythm that felt completely at odds with the chaos that had been rattling around inside his head all day.
Eddie rubbed his eyes hard with the heel of his palm, a shaky laugh threatening to escape as disbelief flooded him. He blinked once. Twice. You were still there. Still breathing. Still very, very real. You were dressed in his Hellfire shirt, the fabric worn thin and soft from years of use, hanging off you just right. Your legs were bare, clad in those barely-there shorts he loved, skin warm and familiar even from a distance.
The sight hit him square in the chest, knocking the air from his lungs in the best way possible. Everything inside him shifted all at once. The anger drained first, then the irritation, replaced by a sudden, overwhelming wave of relief that left his knees feeling weak. The day, the customers, the looks, the comments, all fell away like background noise. All that mattered was that you were here. Youâd crawled into his bed when he wasnât even home, made yourself comfortable in his space like it was the most natural thing in the world.
Immediately, he set the joint and lighter down, not even sparing a glance to where they landed on the cluttered desk. They made a soft, hollow sound as they hit wood, forgotten the second his attention snapped back to you. The craving in his chest shifted instantly, no longer a restless, jagged need to numb himself, but something gentler and far more powerful pulling him forward. He moved slowly, like the slightest wrong step might shatter the moment.
The mattress dipped as he carefully climbed onto it, muscles tense as he navigated around your sleeping form. Youâd somehow managed to claim nearly the entire bed, limbs loose and unguarded, like this was exactly where you were meant to be. Eddie smiled despite himself, something soft and fond tugging at his mouth. As much as he told himself to let you sleep, to just lie there and soak in the fact that you were here in his space, the need to touch you was overwhelming. It was instinct. Muscle memory. Survival, almost.
His fingers hovered for half a second before they made contact, brushing lightly over your bare thigh. His breath hitched as his hand slid upward, slow and reverent, slipping beneath the hem of his own shirt you wore. His fingertips traced the curve of your waist, then settled against your ribs, feeling the gentle rise and fall beneath his palm. Further proof that you were really there. A breathy exhale slipped past his lips before he could stop it, tension bleeding out of him in one quiet rush.
He froze when your foot nudged against his calf, heart jumping into his throat. For a moment, he stayed perfectly still, barely breathing, afraid heâd woken you too abruptly. âEds?â Your voice was soft, thick with sleep, but the sound of it sent something warm and electric straight through his chest. Your eyes blinked open slowly, unfocused at first, then sharpening as they found him. Recognition bloomed across your face, followed by the faintest smile.
God, he couldâve cried right then.
âHey, sweetheart.â He murmured, voice low and rough, like it hadnât been used for anything gentle all day. His thumb brushed unconsciously against your side, grounding himself in the feel of you. You didnât give him time to say anything else. You shifted forward, closing the small space between you, one hand curling into the fabric of his pajama pants as you leaned in. Your lips met his in a kiss that was soft but deliberate, unhurried yet full of intent, like youâd been waiting all night to do exactly this.
The world seemed to tilt slightly as his brain caught up with his body. For half a second, Eddie just stayed there, stunned, before instinct took over. He kissed you back with a quiet hum, one hand sliding up to cradle your jaw, the other tightening at your waist like he needed the reassurance that you werenât about to disappear. The kiss wasnât desperate, but it was deep with everything he hadnât been able to say, how tired he was, how much he missed you, how the day had chewed him up and spit him out until heâd walked into this room ready to fall apart.
When you finally pulled back, your forehead rested against his, noses brushing as your breaths mingled in the dark. Eddie let out a shaky laugh under his breath, exhaustion finally catching up to him now that he didnât have to hold himself together anymore. You shifted closer, legs tangling with his, fitting against him like youâd always belonged there. Eddie huffed softly, the corner of his mouth tipping up despite himself. âYouâre a little bed hog, yâknow that?â
You smiled into him, the sound more felt than heard, and burrowed closer like you were determined to prove his point. Your cheek pressed against his chest, warm and familiar, and he felt the tension heâd been carrying finally give a little. You kissed his bare collarbone, slow, unhurried, then drifted lower to the faded black widow spider tattoo. âYour car wasnât in the driveway,â He murmured, fingers lifting to tuck a rogue strand of hair behind your ear.
His movements were gentle, careful, like he was still half-afraid you might vanish if he startled you. âThought I wouldnât get to see you until the weekend.â You cuddled closer at that, fitting yourself against him like it was second nature. One hand slid behind his back, nails grazing his skin in that slow, absent-minded pattern you knew drove him a little crazy, grounding and soothing all at once. The other threaded into his hair without hesitation, fingers finding their place like muscle memory.
âSteve dropped me off,â You whispered, as Eddie practically melted beneath your touch. His eyes fluttered shut when your fingers grazed his scalp, the sound he made low and involuntary. âGuess he and Robin were tired of me moping around.â That earned a quiet snort from Eddie, his chest vibrating beneath your cheek. He dipped his head and pressed his lips to the top of your hair, lingering there, breathing in the faint trace of your perfume mixed with the familiar scent of his sheets.
It grounded him in a way nothing else could.
âShitty day?â You asked softly, pulling back just enough to look at him. Your fingers brushed beneath his eyes, light and careful, tracing the shadows there. He sighed, long and slow, like heâd been waiting all day for someone to ask. âYeah.â He admitted, voice low. You didn't push, only hummed quietly, sympathetic, your thumb brushing his jaw. Eddie let his eyes fall shut for a moment, leaning into the touch.
He hadnât realized how exhausted he was until now, until the adrenaline drained out of him and left only the ache behind. âBut this?â He added after a beat, eyes opening to meet yours. âThis helps. A lot.â You smiled at that, soft and sleepy, and settled back against him, head finding its place beneath his chin. Eddie wrapped an arm around you, holding you closer, like if he let go the day might come rushing back in.
Your breathing slowed first, evening out into a gentle rhythm that Eddie unconsciously matched. Every gentle inhale you took, every soft exhale that brushed against his skin, felt like permission, like the universe was finally giving him leave to drop the weight heâd been carrying all day. For the first time since pulling into the driveway, Eddie realized he could finally breathe without restraint, without that lingering edge of irritation and exhaustion gnawing at him.
Turns out, he didnât need the joint tonight after all. The familiar haze of smoke, the escape heâd planned, suddenly seemed unnecessary. Right here, right now, with you pressed against him, soft and steady, filling every hollowed-out corner of his chest, he already had everything heâd been craving. All the comfort, all the peace, all the relief heâd needed was wrapped up in the warmth of your presence. And for Eddie, that was more than enough.
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light my fire (johnny storm x reader)
As far as the rest of the world is concerned, you and Johnny Storm met in New York on the 17th of April, 1968, at your album launch show. Not quite correct. Your history with the Human Torch runs back far further than the Fantastic Four - right back to your first love, and first heartbreak. Neither of you can seem to let the other go, not entirely.
Through partners, tours, and space missions, you always find a way back into each other's beds.
And yes. All the songs are about him.
warnings: 18+, mdni! a little thigh-riding, fingering, unprotected pinv
HUMAN TORCH IN LOVE? FANTASTIC FOUR PLAYBOY SPOTTED WITH CALIFORNIA SINGER AFTER NYC GIG.
You're hiding behind your sunglasses as you stroll down Sunset Boulevard, the LA sun beating down on your back. Headlines litter the street corners, each one more ridiculous than the last.
According to The Washington Post, you and Johnny are just friends. The LA Times and Rolling Stone insinuated you slept together. Other claimed that you've been sleeping together for quite some time, and are finally ready to go public.
Some of the more inventive publications even seem to imply that this is true love, and Johnny's halfway to buying a ring.
If only they knew the truth.
Somehow, you and Johnny have been all of the above. You've been nothing at all to each other, and everything, before landing in the murky middle ground of friends. Friends who fuck almost every time they see each other, sure. But friends nonetheless.
Really, the multitudes are almost impressive.
It would be too hard to maintain anything else. Johnny's so busy, barely even on the planet half the time. And with the constant touring, you barely know what day it is.
Long distance relationships are hard, and neither of you are built for it.
What you've got going now works. Clandestine meetups, dinners at restaurants where the waiters are sworn to absolute secrecy of the clientele, and stolen nights in each other's arms.
Until he showed up at your gig.
He was the last person you'd been expecting to see. Fraternising in public was an unspoken line. Hell, you don't even see Sue outside of controlled environments, for fear of people drawing a connection between the two of you, despite the fact that you've known her since you were sixteen.
But there he had stood.
Not at the front. Johnny Storm didn't need to be front and centre to be seen. You had spotted him during the encore, arms crossed as he leaned against the bar, nursing a beer.
At first you thought you must have been mistaken - your eyes playing tricks on you. Then you locked eyes with him, and his signature smirk gave him away immediately.
It had taken everything in you just to remember the rest of the song.
He'd appeared in your dressing room after the show.
Without an invitation, of course. He's not the kind of guy who needs permission. He'll do what he wants, and explain himself later.
You hadn't done a whole lot of talking.
Brief pleasantries, before he fucked you against the makeup table.
Leaving the venue, you'd had to steal his leather jacket in an attempt to cover the various marks that now littered your skin. Thankfully, nobody seems to have caught onto that part yet.
Dinner that night had revealed a little more. He'd been away on a mission, and things were looking quiet for the foreseeable. Reed had recommended they all take the time to enjoy themselves, settle down a little, before the next inevitable alien popped up.
So here he was.
You chatted until the early hours, giggling and reminiscing until you finally had to draw back, citing your early flight. He had walked you back to your hotel, under the privacy of the night sky, entirely unaware of the photographer who had captured your entire dinner.
Word sure travels fast around here. It had been quite the shock to wake up in your Laurel Canyon home to a furious call from your manager.
She hadn't been mad about the pairing. Far from it.
The Fantastic Four are the nation's heroes. Everything they touch turn to money and fame. Any potential partner of theirs would be catapulted to a level of attention most could only dream of.
She had just wanted a heads up.
"Carmen - Johnny and I are not a couple," You had stressed over the phone.
"Are you sleeping together?"
"We're not a couple," You repeat feebly, unwilling to commit either way.
Even in New York, while Johnny had assured you he was going to be around more for the time being, he hadn't explicitly said anything about the nature of your relationship going forward.
As far as you're concerned, you and he are continuing on in the same manner. Sleeping together, and pretending that's enough for either of you.
"Ah-ha!" She exclaims, voice rising an octave. "So, you're seeing each other - we can use that-"
"I don't want to use it-"
"C'mon, babe - this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Think about what it could do for the album. For your career."
That gives you pause. While you've always committed to secrecy regarding the inspiration for your songs, it doesn't take a genius to work out who inspired most of them.
It's one of the things Johnny likes to tease you about. But you know he loves it, deep down.
Last time you saw Sue, she'd told you that your debut is all he ever plays at Headquarters. That he's on his third copy, wearing them out at an impressive rate.
You had insisted you needed some time to think about things, before hanging up on Carmen, and heading straight for Sunset. The West coast launch is tonight, at Whiskey A Go-Go - but you always need to ground yourself before a gig.
Sunset is the perfect place to do it, and you drop into Mel's for a shake, trying to make sense of everything that's happened in the last twenty-four hours. Part of you feels like you should try and get in contact with Johnny. See how he feels about it - if he's horrified by the attention, or if he's fine with the rumour mill.
You're back in New York next month. You'll probably see him then.
*****
The club smells like sex. Sex, weed, and sweat. Not uncommon for Whiskey, but your nose still wrinkles a little. The place is packed, probably fuller than regulations allow, but you're thrilled.
New York is great, but nothing will ever beat an LA crowd.
This time, when you spot Johnny, you're only halfway through your second song. Almost an entire set to go, and you suddenly don't remember a single word you've ever written.
He holds your gaze, and the electricity courses through your veins. It becomes a push-and-pull, tension building further and further as you sing, until you think you might burst.
All too soon, the main set is ending, and you're stepping off stage to take a breather, before your final two songs. When firm hands settle on your waist to spin you round, you should get a fright, but instead lean into the touch, coming face-to-face with Johnny Storm.
He's kissing you immediately, pulling you flush against him as you whine against his lips. He's everywhere - teeth, hands and tongue, until you finally detach yourself.
"I have a show to finish," You breathe, chest heaving.
"Fuck 'em," Johnny replies, and you laugh.
"We can't all act like entitled divas and get away with it, Johnny. I'll be fifteen minutes, okay?"
He nods, reluctantly loosening his grip on you. "Chateau Marmont's calling our names, babe. Would be rude not to answer!"
You grin, flipping him the bird as you grab your guitar, and head for the stage again.
The encore stretches on for far longer than the rest of the set seemed to, and you find your mind drifting to the man in the wings, his gaze boring into you.
It's dizzying.
Forgoing your usual practice of hanging about the venue afterwards to chat to fans, you instead let Johnny take your hand, and guide you backstage.
"What the hell are you doing here?" You mumble between kisses, trusting him entirely to get you where you need to go.
"Wanted to see you," He replies, as if it's the easiest thing in the world. "Told you I had some time off."
"Yeah, but I thought that meant I'd see you more than once a month - I didn't realise it meant you were going to fly to Los Angeles."
He shrugs. "I haven't visited in a while. Figured I should change that."
You change as quickly as possible, and ignore Carmen's very pointed looks as you exit your dressing room, hand-in-hand with Johnny.
"My car's out front - I can drive us."
"Your car?" You repeat, eyebrow raised. "The front of Whiskey's always crawling with people, Johnny. Everyone'll see us?"
"So?"
He's pushing through the front doors, hand never leaving yours as you face the onslaught of fans. Cameras flash, and people cheer, and Johnny stays with you every step of the way, grip tightening with every wave of the crowd.
There are various shouts of surprise, autographs asked from both of you. Johnny waves them all off with a charisma you've never had, and helps you into the car, pressing the quickest kiss to your temple.
Too shocked to speak at this sudden public display of affection, from the world's most emotionally stunted man, you simply allow his hand to rest on your thigh as he pulls up Sunset.
Each question dies on your tongue, feeling inadequate to sum up your decade-long history with Johnny Storm.
Of course he's staying at the Chateau. You would expect nothing less from him.
Even for a Friday night, the hotel's busy - packed to the brim with starlets and millionaires.
A hundred of Hollywood's biggest stars are currently milling around - and yet every pair of eyes snaps to you both as Johnny steps out of the car.
You're expecting a hand on the small of your back. Maybe a loose hand-hold. Instead, Johnny's hand settles on your waist, right on the strip of flesh between your flares and shirt. His fingers curl in just slightly, possessive and telling.
Drinks are passed your way, and soon you're crowded round a table, with a few musicians you know, and some socialites Johnny's familiar with. More and more people appear, all of them wanting to be in Johnny's orbit - until there are no seats left.
And when you leave to run to the bathroom, you're entirely unsurprised to find your seat taken when you return.
You recognise the girl a little. She's an actress, you think. Pretty. Probably exactly Johnny's type. With every reply, she inches the chair closer to his. In a few minutes she'll be on top of him.
But as soon as Johnny spots you, his eyes light up, and he's reaching for you.
"I'll just go get another-"
"Nah, don't worry about it-"
A tug of your wrist, and he's pulling you unceremoniously into his lap, arms circling your waist. A slight squeak escapes your lips, as his thigh crooks between yours. "Johnny!"
"Mhm?" He replies, chin resting on your shoulder as he returns to his conversation across the table.
The actress lets out a little huff, abandoning her post, and your chair. The rational part of your brain knows you should get up, take the seat back and get back in your own head.
You're just about to do it when Johnny's fingers dig into your skin a little, almost ticklish. It's a silent statement, to stay where you are.
You glance at him, and he sticks his tongue out at you.
You try and lighten up a little, stealing his drink and relaxing into his grip, but your mind is working on overtime.
What the hell is he doing? Is this his way of trying to make things official? Or is he just working the press?
You have no idea, and it terrifies you. Normally Johnny's like an open book.
It doesn't help that with every passing drink, the urge to roll your hips grows stronger. You can't help it. With every movement, the denim rubs a little further against your clit - to the point that you're biting back a whimper whenever he laughs.
As the night goes on, your face ends up tucked into the crook of his neck, simply watching as he chats to the few people still gathered. He looks natural here. Very California.
And you could get used to him being around more often.
Moving into the Laurel Canyon house, brightening it up a little.
Being yours.
And you'd be his.
Finally, you can't take it any longer. Mumbled apologies, excuses of being tired, and you're heading to his room. Very publicly. In a way that's definitely going to make the news tomorrow.
The kisses are lazy, clouded with alcohol as you stumble into the penthouse. His lips trail fire down your neck, and it's a collective fumble at your clothes to get them off.
Soon, you're braced across his lap, hips rolling against his while your nails drag down the muscles of his abdomen. "God, baby - you're such a pretty little thing," He groans, hands setting the pace.
Each time he pulls you down, you almost see stars. The denim of his jeans seems to catch just right, and your first orgasm crashes over you almost embarrassingly quickly.
He's laying you back against the bed, and pressing a soft kiss to the bridge of your nose before he moves across the room, shedding his jeans.
"Want me to put your record on?" Johnny quips, a lazy grin dancing across his face as he stands by the turntable.
You arch an eyebrow, leaning back against the headboard as you watch his form. Each movement sends a ripple of muscle across his abdomen, and a heat starts to pool low in your stomach. "You think I want to listen to myself during sex? How self-absorbed do you think I am?"
"I don't know what you LA kids are like these days - maybe that turns you on." The rapport is easy. Natural. Like this is the way you and Johnny are meant to be. "Would you rather something else?"
"I'd rather you come back to bed, but I guess if you're insisting on a choice, you could put on The Doors self-titled."
The glint in his eyes betrays his amusement. "Light My Fire, huh?"
You shrug. "If the shoe fits, Storm."
The lilt of Ray Manzarek's keys starts to waft from the speakers, and Johnny makes his way back to the bed, sliding under the covers beside you.
Arms on either side of your head, he's caging you in, a soft smile on his face. "Hi."
"Hi," You murmur, smiling back. "I've missed you."
"Missed you too."
The moment feels charged, different to how it feels when you normally sleep together.
For fear of the moment getting too serious, too real, you speak again. "You gonna fuck me or what?"
"Honey, if I ever say no to that question, I want you to find a shotgun and put me out of my misery." He's kissing you again, hand creeping downward to press you open. His thumb rubs at your clit, another finger pushing past your entrance.
"G-god, Johnny," You manage, eyes fluttering closed.
"I know, babe. Tell me what you want." Contrary to his persona, Johnny's completely cool. Entirely in control, he knows exactly how to work you.
"N-need you, please-"
"Yeah? You want my fingers or my cock?" His index curls just a little as he speaks, and you cry out. "Good girl."
His voice is almost a coo - a condescending tone if it were anybody but your best friend knuckles deep inside of you.
"Your- ah-" Your voice trails off in a whine, hips bucking up feebly to meet Johnny's ministrations. "Your cock."
He hums approvingly. "Gotta give my girl what she wants, yeah?"
My girl.
Despite the loss of contact as Johnny withdraws his fingers, your legs continue to tremble.
The stretch when he fills you is a familiar ache - dull for just a second, before giving way to the most intense pleasure. He moves slowly, inch by inch, until he's bottomed out entirely.
The slightly shuddered breath he lets out is the only indication that he's as affected by this as you are.
There's a moment where there's nothing but you and Johnny, and then he starts to move. Fingernails digging into the flesh of his back, it takes everything in you to maintain some semblance of restraint.
You've been sleeping with Johnny Storm for ten years, and he manages to outdo himself every single time.
No one can unravel you quite like he can. And he knows it.
The Doors continue to spin in the background, a symphony for your unfulfilled wishes.
Who knows what tomorrow will bring? Whether Johnny will keep this up, or whether he'll disappear on you like he's done before.
Instead of dwelling, you kiss his neck, and let yourself go.
It doesn't take long for either of you to come. It never does. When you're as synced as you and Johnny, you orgasm three times in the period it would take another man to get you to come once.
Of course, Johnny's near insatiable after a night of drinking. Round two has you riding him in the giant heart-shaped tub, the sound of skin slapping filling the bathroom as he murmured praise into your ears.
Round three turns out to be the softest, Johnny's front pressed against your back as he fucks into you gently, his fingers lacing through yours.
It's only after you're done, when Johnny's pressing a damp towel to your core, and pressing a kiss to your bare knee, that you have the courage to ask.
"What's going on between us?"
He looks almost surprised at your question. "I kind of thought I was making myself obvious." You shake your head, lip between your teeth, and he sighs. "Aw, shit. I knew I was going to mess this up - I wanted it to be all cool, y'know? Public debut, love confession, and boom. New power couple."
"Love confession?" You ask, but he's stumbling ahead, lost in his train of thought.
"We've always been so good together, but it was really just timing that fucked us, right? Unless I've misread it all-"
"You haven't-"
"I just thought it would be fun, I guess. To give the paparazzi something to talk about, and make a real go of this."
Despite the serious expression on his face, you laugh. "Don't you think you forgot something important in the making it official plan?"
"I thought I made my intentions clear!" He protests, but the furrow of his brows tells you he knows he screwed up. "Can I ask you now, then?"
You shake your head, trying not to grin. "I think I need more convincing."
"Oh yeah? And how would you like to be convinced?" Johnny's back in his element, banishing the nerves as he leans over to kiss you.
"Well, for starters, more sex. Jewellery never hurts, too. Oh, and maybe a trip to Paris-"
He silences with another kiss, deep and slow as he cradles the back of your neck. "I can make that happen."
"You cut me off," You pout. "I wasn't done!"
"You've got a lifetime to make your demands of me, baby. I'm at your beck and call for as long as you'll have me."
are we still down with johnny storm or has the f4 hype died down??
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your relationship with jack throughout the years, told through your social media :)
youruser made a post
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youruser i <3 my friends
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samira_mohan not the soft launch as if we don't already know who it is
⤡ youruser but we've been so subtle :(
⤡ trinsantos as subtle as bulls in china shops
drj_official did you kill him in slide 5??
⤡ youruser it was robby's fault not mine
⤡ abbot.jack (It was her fault)
abbot.jack made a post
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abbot.jack Life outside the hospital.
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youruser omg you know how to use instagram??
⤡ abbot.jack I know how to delete posts
⤡ youruser no wait stop, i didn't mean it :(
⤡ youruser your technological failures endear me
youruser made a post
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youruser happy happy girl :)
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trinsantos UHMMMM WHAT?
⤡ youruser my response exactly when he pulled out the ring
danaevans68 Congrats, you two!
⤡ youruser thank you dana <3 love you lots
samira_mohan you've literally brought the pitt to a halt i hope you know that âĽď¸ by author
abbot.jack made a post
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abbot.jack She's marrying me for my money.
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youruser not funny
⤡ youruser i'm also marrying you for your abs
m.robinavitch Congratulations, brother.
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abbot.jack 3rd of June. Added an Abbot.
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youruser i love you mr abbot <3
⤡ trinsantos ew pda
⤡ youruser you've seen far worse from us
⤡ trinsantos true. comment rescinded
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youruser baby girl abbot joining us this april :) feeling v blessed (and mildly terrified)
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samira_mohan can't wait to meet my goddaughter samira abbot
⤡ trinsantos um i think you mean *my* goddaughter
⤡ youruser who says she can't have all the godmothers?
abbot.jack Love you endlessly
⤡ youruser love you jackie <3
you look good on vacation
18+ account - minors do not interact
jack abbot x f!reader Word Count: 7.8K Rating: E
Summary: You finally talked Jack into ditching the hospital for a beach getaway since every other trip you've taken together has been during colder seasons, buried under layers. Stripping down to swimwear, you're reminded of how just damn good your man looks under the Italian sun.
Warning: SMUT (MDNI 18+) established relationship, language, pet names, flashbacks to so much vacation sex (p in v sex, oral - both m&f), heavy petting/teasing, insecurity (jack's leg and prosthetic), alcohol consumption, pushy italian man not understanding you aren't interested, protective jack, lots of physical touch (dat man is obsessed with you), dirty talk, praise, semi-public smut, (jack fingers you in the ocean - hallelujah), possessiveness, casual dominance, its basically a story about vacation sex, but with plot and love okay? (y'all are both severely horny for one another), jackâs perfect (as per usual)
A/N: How are there not more vacation!jack fics? Please send them all my way. I hope people have some fun upcoming vacations planned as summer ramps up! GIF by @sammy-bryant found HERE. Dividers as always by @saradika-graphics.
Thank you for reading!! if you comment/reblog i love you so much <3.
POSITANO, AMALFI COAST ITALY
You woke slowly, the morning light filtering through the curtains of your suite at Le Sirenuse. Jack lay on his stomach beside you, one arm tucked under the pillow, the other relaxed at his side. His face was turned toward you, lashes resting against his cheeks, mouth slightly parted. You had talked your man into ditching the hospital for a sunny getaway. Jack was utterly deserving of this rest. You leaned in and pressed a gentle kiss to his forehead, breathing in the faint scent of salt and his skin. He had been working tirelessly lately, and dating someone in such a high-stakes profession wasnât easy, but he had recently switched to the day shift, telling you he didnât like your opposite schedules anymore. Knowing he wanted to spend more time with you made you feel truly special.
You slipped out of bed and moved to the kitchenette, brewing coffee while the sea breeze drifted in from the open balcony doors. Once it was ready, you carried your mug outside and settled into one of the chairs overlooking the glittering water. It was Day 4 of the trip. The first day had been quiet, just wandering Positanoâs narrow streets until Jack pulled you back to the suite and fucked you deep and slow until you fell apart for him. You felt his warmth flood your pussy before you both passed out after the long travel day.
Day 2 started with you going down on him, but he stopped you before things could go further. He pulled you up, his breathing heavy, and pressed you against the wall on the private terrace. Your legs wrapped around his waist as he thrust into you with harsh rolls of his hips, the morning sun warming both of you. You came with your forehead against his shoulder, and he followed soon after, breathing hard against your neck.
You then went to the hotel pool. Jack had said he would join you after lunch, but ended up staying inside and told you he got wrapped up in a book. Later, you drove to Tramonti, toured the vineyard, and drank tons of wine and cheese for hours. You both were probably a bit tipsy by the time you came back for dinner to sober up with some food and water. Before you went to sleep, you enjoyed another round. Jack ate you out from behind before bending you over the bed, taking his time to reach that spot that had your vision swimming with tears and your voice breaking over his name while he whispered words of encouragement in your ear. His teeth bared when he pumped you full of his spend, and you continued to scream his name into the mattress.
Yesterdayâs boat cruise was an 8-hour journey along a breathtaking coastline, featuring sights like Emerald Grotto, Furore Fjord, Amalfi, Maiori, Minori, Atrani, and Nerano. Despite the warm sun and the stunning scenery, Jack stayed in his T-shirt and jeans the entire time, while you relaxed in your bikini and cover-up. Both of you ended up talking with a lovely couple visiting from California. For most of the cruise, you hung out with them, sharing stories and enjoying the beautiful views together before returning to the hotel and just sleeping in each otherâs arms. Â
You sipped your coffee and cast a quick glance back inside. Jack was stirring, still half-asleep. You couldnât stop thinking about how something was slightly off with Jack, and you werenât an idiot. This was the first summer (and first beachy vacation) youâd taken together in the two years youâd been a couple. The other big trips had been travelling across the Maritime Canadian provinces one autumn, and exploring Japan one winter, hopping between cities on train platforms and staying bundled in layers the entire time. In his everyday life, it was rare for Jack to wear shorts unless he was in the privacy of your shared homeâhe even preferred his athletic pants when he ran every day back in Pittsburgh. But here, in this quiet, sun-soaked place, you hoped he might finally feel comfortable enough to shed those layers, to wear shorts or trunks like everyone else.
The soft scrape of crutches pulled your attention away from the glittering sea. Jack stepped onto the balcony without his prosthetic, the morning light catching the smooth, healed skin just below his knee. His chest was bare, and his boxer briefs hung low on his hips, revealing the sharp cut of muscle that disappeared beneath the waistband. His curls were mussed, eyes still heavy-lidded from rest. God, he looked so fucking good on vacation.
"You look beautiful," he said, voice gravel-rough from sleep, the corner of his mouth lifting in that familiar half-smile.
Warmth bloomed in your chest. "I never want to leave this place. Itâs perfect."
Jack lowered himself into the sofa beside you and set the crutches aside. You reached for the bare skin of his amputated limb, fingers gliding over the smooth, warm flesh to massage it. He let out a low, rumbling groan, head tipping back against the chair, throat working as his eyes fluttered half-shut. The sound vibrated straight through you, heat pooling low in your belly.
You leaned in to quickly kiss him, not thinking it would escalate to anything, but then his hand slid up your side, strong fingers curling around your waist as he pulled you onto his lap. Your thighs spread over him, the heat of his body pressing up between your legs. His mouth claimed yours again, tongue sliding hot and deliberate against yours. He cupped your breast beneath your shirt, thumb dragging slow circles around your nipple until it tightened into a stiff peak. You felt yourself growing slick, the fabric of your underwear clinging damply as he rocked you subtly against the thickening ridge in his briefs.
"Feel that?" Jack murmured against your lips. "See how fucking hard you make me?"
"I have plans for us this morning," you whined as you began to pull away. "Stop trying to distract me."
"Weâre on vacation, pretty sure this right here is the plan," his hand drifted lower, palm pressing firmly between your thighs, rubbing slow, teasing circles over the damp cotton. You whimpered softly, hips twitching forward into his touch. Your lips parted, breath coming quicker as your fingers curled into his shoulders. Jackâs eyes stayed locked on your face, watching every flicker of pleasure cross your expressionâthe way your lashes fluttered, the soft sound that escaped your throat when he pressed a little harder.
"Thatâs it, pretty girl," he whispered, lips brushing the shell of your ear. His palm rocked against your clit through the thin fabric, steady and deliberate, building the ache until your thighs trembled around him. You could smell the faint musk of his skin, hear the distant crash of waves below, feel the sun warming your back as your body grew hotter, wetter, needier.
"J-Jack," you moaned breathlessly, feeling yourself giving in. Â
"Keep those perfect eyes on me," he demanded, his tone making you shudder.
You made sure to listen and Jackâs breathing deepenedâchest rising and falling faster, jaw tight, pupils blown wide as he watched you. A low groan rumbled from him when you rocked harder, the sound vibrating through his chest into yours.
"God, youâre the most gorgeous thing. I want to lay you out right here, and taste every inch of you until youâre shaking." His free hand slid up your spine, fingers threading into your hair as he kissed you again...slow and fucking filthy.
You moaned into his mouth, hips rolling, the wet heat between your legs growing slicker with every teasing press of his palm. Your nipples ached against the fabric of your shirt, every nerve alive and begging for more. When you finally pulled back enough to speak, voice breathy, you said:
"I booked us that exclusive Arienzo Beach Club pass for today."
"Oh?" Jackâs expression shifted instantly. The heat in his eyes cooled, the easy warmth fading.
"Yeah, itâs a short walk away."
His hand stilled between your thighs. He looked away, a deep crease forming between his brows.
"One of the hotel concierge staff told me about this little walking tour. Kind of a hiddenâgem thing. Figured we might check it out." It was a flimsy excuse, and the lie was obviousâhe probably hadnât thought about it for even a second before saying it.
You leaned closer, voice dropping into something silky. "Donât you want to be in one of those private cabanas with me?"
He withdrew his hand with a final, reluctant twitch of his fingers, then gently lifted you from his lap and settled you onto the sofa beside him. Leaning over, he pressed a soft kiss to your shoulder.
"I don't want to take away from your beach time. You should go, and we can meet up afterwards."
Jack reached for his crutches, stood, and headed inside without another word. The door clicked shut behind him, and the sound of running water soon drifted out. The frustration (and horniness) hit you hard, twisting together in your chest as you sat alone on the balcony, the morning sun suddenly feeling too bright...and too empty.
The water hit Jackâs skin hard, almost scalding, but he didnât turn it down. He braced one hand against the tile with his head bowed down. He hated disappointing you. Hated the look in your eyes when he shut down.
Traveling with him wasnât simple, and he knew it. Checking his crutches at the airport. Packing the waterproof prosthetic. Making sure the shower chair fit in his duffle. Calling hotels ahead of time to double-check handicap accessibility, even when they promised everything was fine. It was exhausting. It required planning. It was stressful.
And he hated that you had to deal with any of it.
What he hated more was the thought that you might be pretending it didn't matter.
He pressed his forehead against the tile, letting the fear and selfâloathing churn through him. Jackâs insecurities about his leg didnât usually own him. Most days, he moved through the world with his usual stubborn defiance. But trips like this, where his body was on display and mobility mattered⌠it brought every buried doubt roaring back. He hated the way he felt less on days like thisâless capable, less appealing, less easy, less fun. He hated that he had to think about terrain, distance, accessibility, and pain levels. Hated that spontaneity wasnât simple for him.
Jack also didn't want you dealing with the stares at the pool or the beach. The curious looks, the pitying ones, the ones that stuck around too long. He didn't want to slow you down. Didn't want to be the thing you had to work around. Didn't want to be the weight dragging down your plans. The truth was he wanted the cabana, the sun, and your skin under his hands.
He stepped out of the shower, steam curling around him as he reached for the towel. He dried off, sat on the bench, and reached for the prosthetic. The socket slid on with a familiar hiss of air, the weight settling against his residual limb. He flexed his foot experimentally, testing the response. Good. No pain today, at least. He dressed quickly, and when he emerged into the suite, you were already dressed. The cover-up was one of his favoritesâthat lavender cream-colored thing that fell from your shoulders and hinted at the curves beneath without revealing them. Your sunglasses were pushed up on your head, holding back your hair, and you were reaching for a book from the side table, your tote bag already slung over your shoulder.
His chest tightened. You'd been ready to go without him.
"No brunch together?" he asked, and even he could hear the wounded edge in his voice.
You glanced up, and he watched your expression shiftâa flicker of something that might have been frustration, quickly smoothed over into something lighter.
"The beach club pass includes food and alcohol," you said, moving toward him with that knowing smile playing at your lips. "But I was waiting for you to get out of the shower to ask if you wanted to eat with me first. You knowâŚif you have time before that 'walking tour' of yours." The sarcasm was gentle, but it was there.
He deserved that.
"I do have time," Jack said quietly. He closed the distance between you and kissed you, pouring everything he couldn't quite say into the press of his mouth against yours. When he pulled back, he kept his forehead against yours.
"I love you," he murmured. You were quiet for a moment, and he felt the weight of what you werenât saying hang between you. He appreciated that you weren't calling him out, weren't demanding explanations or forcing a conversation he wasn't quite ready to have. But he also knew you deserved better than a man who was too afraid to just be with you at the beach.
"I love you too," you replied, and because you were perfect, you changed the subject as you both headed toward the door.
"There are rumors that George and Amal got here last night," you winked, stepping into the hallway. "They might be staying at this very hotel."
Jack followed, catching your hand and bringing your fingers to his lips as you walked toward the elevator. "I still can't believe you read celebrity gossip," he said, against your skin, a smile playing at the corner of his mouth as you pressed the elevator button. You were a highly respected wealth advisor at a massive institution managing over $7 billion in assets. Jack found it fascinating that you could dissect market volatility before breakfast and had an encyclopedic knowledge of who was dating who in Hollywood.
"It's Page Six," you squeaked in protest, as the elevator doors slid open. "It's basically required reading."
He grinned, watching you step into the elevator with that easy confidence you carried everywhere. God, he loved you.
"Oh, and Dua Lipa and Callum Turner just got married," you added as the doors closed, descending toward the lobby. "She looked so beautiful in her custom Schiaparelli skirt suit."
Jack paused. "Who?â
You gave him a look that suggested this was common knowledge as the elevator dinged softly. "Youâre lucky youâre hot."
The sun blazed overhead, turning the water into liquid sapphire that stretched out in gentle rolls toward the horizon. You peeled off your cover-up in the cabana, the purple bikini clinging tighter than your usual suits, and the bottoms riding high on your hips. A quick squeeze of sunscreen across your shoulders and thighs left your skin gleaming. The beach wasnât deserted, with couples lounging on loungers, and a few families splashing at the shoreline. But, the crowd was sparse compared to the packed stretches you had seen elsewhere. You wished Jack were here with you.
You settled into the padded chair, watching the scene unfold. A silver-haired man in linen shorts kept his arm draped around a much younger woman in a white micro-bikini; she laughed at everything he said and let him feed her strawberries from a silver bowl. Two cabanas down, another older man scrolled on his phone while his companion, maybe 22, knelt between his knees applying lotion to his calves, her ass in the air. The dynamic was clear everywhere you looked: older money, younger beauty, easy transactions wrapped in flirtation and sunblock.
A young waiter in crisp, white shorts and a polo shirt appeared at the edge of the cabana, a small notepad in hand.
"Good afternoon. Can I start you with any drinks from the beach bar?" he asked with a surprisingly Australian accent.
"A mojito, please."
"Right away, Signorina," the waiter said with a polite nod, already turning to head back to the thatch-roofed bar nestled among the palms. Less than five minutes later, the waiter was back, presenting a tall, frosty glass.
"Grazie," you said.
The mojito was perfect and just what you needed.
You cracked open one of the paperbacks you had packed, but then your phone buzzed with that unmistakable Outlook chime you had sworn you were ignoring this whole trip. Youâd been doing a surprisingly good job of not checking emails on this trip, but curiosity tugged at you until you finally reached for the phone, muttering to yourself that you were just as bad as Jack when it came to being too dedicated to your job. One new email sat at the top from a long-time client whose portfolio had taken a beating in the market downturn. The message detailed how he'd panic-sold half his positions at the bottom last week; now he was second-guessing everything and wanted to move the rest into cash. You sighed, closed the app, and tried to focus on your book instead.
After a while, the heat became too much. You walked down to the water, the first cool rush licking up your calves, then your thighs, until you dove under. The sea felt silky against your sunscreen-slick skin, the salt stinging pleasantly at the edges of your bikini. You swam lazy laps parallel to the shore, and the current tugging gently at your body. When your arms started to tire, you waded back out, droplets sliding down your stomach.
You were halfway to the cabana when a tall man in board shorts stepped into your path.
"Bella, you swim like a goddess," he said in a thick Italian accent, eyes dropping to your chest. You smiled politely and kept walking, but he matched your pace.
"Youâre not from around here, are you?"
"Nope."
"That explains it," he said, grinning. "The locals donât look like you."
"Lucky them," you muttered.
"I would love to buy you a drink," he said, stepping a little closer.
"I can buy my own drink," you said, tone still polite but firmer now.
He tilted his head, amused. "Ah, independent."
"I guess."
"Come on, bella. One drink. Youâll enjoy it."
"Iâm not interested."
"Oof. Youâre breaking my heart here," he said, acting wounded. You closed your eyes for just a moment, gathering patience.
"Youâll live." You sort of hated that you had to say the next part, "Also, I have a boyfriend," but it felt like he was operating under the assumption that your rejection needed a reason he would accept. A simple lack of interest wasnât going to be one. Maybe if you referenced another man's 'claim' on you, he would take you seriously.
"If you looked like that and were mine, I wouldnât let you out of my sight, bella."
"Good thing Iâm not yours, then."
He opened his mouth to fire back, but then his expression shifted. Not toward you, but past you.
A familiar voice cut through the air behind you, calm but edged with steel.
"Is there a fucking reason youâre harassing her?"
Jack stood shirtless in swim trunks, a t-shirt twisted between his hands, the afternoon light catching the scatter of freckles across his shoulders, chest, and arms. His salt and pepper curls looked so fucking luscious on this trip. His jaw was clenched, his hazel eyes fixed on the man with an intensity that made the air itself feel heavy. He didn't raise his voice. Didn't need to. There was something about the way he looked at peopleâŚthat did all the talking.
The Italian man straightened, but you could see the hesitation flicker across his face. Jack took a step forward, unhurried, and his prosthetic caught the light as his leg shifted beneath him with each measured stride. The man's eyes locked onto it for a fraction of a second, and his confident smirk faltered.
"I asked you a question," Jack said, his voice dropping lower, more dangerous. "You deaf, or just stupid?"
"Look, I didn't meanâ"
"You didn't mean to be a disrespectful asshole?" Jack's smile was all teeth, no warmth. The man took an actual step back. Jack didn't move; he just continued to look at him, that cold, assessing stare that suggested he had already decided exactly what he'd do if this continued.Â
"Listen carefully, you prick," Jack's voice was ice. "Women deal with enough without guys like you pretending that persistence is charming. She said she wasnât interested. Thatâs your fucking cue to leave."
The man held up his hands and practically stumbled backward. "I'm g-going. I'mâI'm g-gone."
You stared at Jack, surprised and instantly warm between your thighs at the protective edge in his tone. He rarely swooped in, usually letting you fight your own battles and handle your own shit. But this was different; he had stepped in because someone had disrespected you, not because you were his property to protect. He did it without that ugly display of ownership and gross possessive edge some men mistook for devotion.
Jack balled up the t-shirt in his hand and tossed it into the cabana behind him before he grabbed your towel without a word and began drying you, slow passes over your arms, your stomach, the curve of your ass. The towel moved across your shoulder blades with surprising gentleness, and you realized his jaw had already unclenched.
"You okay?" he grunted, tossing the towel aside. You turned to face him, still damp, still warm from the sun and something else entirely.
"Yeah. I am."
He tucked a wet strand of hair behind your ear, his thumb brushing your cheekbone. "Good."
"That was a little caveman of you," you murmured, the corner of your mouth lifting.
"Yeah, well," he muttered, while a faint flush crept up his neck, settling high on his cheekbones. "He was out of line."
You stepped closer, nudging his arm with your shoulder.
"Relax, handsome," you said, smile widening. "I liked it." You pulled him into the cabana, the canvas flaps falling closed behind you. The waiter appeared almost immediately to take your drink orders. Once he returned, Jack took his beer and settled on the wide lounger, pulling you between his legs so your back rested against his chest. You set your second mojito of the day on the mantle nearby. His hands stayed on you, thumb stroking the inside of your thigh, fingers tracing the edge of your bikini bottom.
After the waiter left, the mood shifted. Jackâs fingers stilled. "Iâm sorry about earlier," he admitted quietly. "Over the years, Iâve just⌠gotten tired of the stares. I didn't want you dealing with people looking at my prosthetic, wondering what you're doing with me. HonestlyâŚ" his voice dropped to a mutter, barely loud enough for you to catch. "âŚsometimes I wonder what youâre doing with me."
You turned in his arms, cupping his face, and his eyes that now looked green were fixed somewhere past your shoulder.
"Jack, look at me." You waited until his eyes met yours. "Talk to me."
"I can't remember the last time I went to a beach or a pool without dreading it. Years, probably. I've spent so long avoiding situations like thisâall the stares, the questions people have asked, the way I've convinced myself that you probably regret travelling here instead of going with someone who could just... be normal."
"Hey." You tilted his chin up. "Stop. You are normal. And I'm not going anywhere."
"You say that nowâ"
"I'm not finished." You softened your tone but kept it firm. "I know you've probably convinced yourself that your prosthetic makes you less than, or that it's some kind of burden to be around." You traced his jawline. "But that's not the truth, Jack. Not even close." He exhaled slowly, his shoulders dropping slightly as he listened. "I love every part of you. Your leg doesn't change thatâit never could." You kissed his forehead, then his temple, then his lips. "I love you."
His arms tightened around you, pulling you closer.
"And I really appreciate you for being here, and coming to the beach," you continued, your voice soft against his skin. "But I don't ever want you to put yourself in a situation where you feel uncomfortable either. It doesn't matter if we're here or in fucking Antarctica. I just want to spend time with you. That's it. That's all that matters to me." He pulled back just enough to look at you, his expression vulnerable. "If something doesn't feel right," you said, brushing a curl from his forehead, "you tell me. We figure it out together. We do what feels good for usânot what you think you're supposed to do or what you think I want. Your comfort matters just as much as mine."
His eyes glistened slightly as he nodded, his jaw working like he was fighting to keep his composure.
"For the record. Iâm loving this trip, sweetheart. This might be the best vacation Iâve ever been on."
"Really?" you asked meekly.
Jack swallowed, his gaze locked on your mouth. "Really."
You leaned in and kissed him, slow and deep. His palm slid up your side, thumb brushing the underside of your breast through the thin purple fabric, before he cupped you fully, squeezing just enough to make your breath hitch.
"4 more days of paradise," you murmured against his lips when you finally pulled back, voice dreamy.
Jack smirked, teeth grazing your bottom lip. "I could get used to this. You, half-naked all the time. Might never let you put clothes on again." He nipped at your jaw, then kissed the spot heâd bitten. You pulled back with a soft laugh, eyeing his pale, freckled skin (and the faint farmerâs tan he would absolutely deny having).
"Weâre going to need another bottle of sunscreen just for you," you said as you reached for the bottle.
"For the record, I can tan," he rolled his eyes. "Eventually⌠After several medical interventions."
You giggled, squeezing sunscreen into your palms and began smoothing it over his chest and shoulders, careful and thorough. His skin warmed quickly under your hands, and he stayed still, letting you work while he reached down to cover the top of his thighs. Once you were done, he tugged you closer again. His hands never left youâstroking, squeezing, mapping every inch like he couldnât get enough. The cabana stayed quiet except for the distant waves and the low murmur of your voices, the two of you wrapped around each other while the sun climbed higher outside.
"I havenât seen this bikini before," he said, voice low. "Itâs fucking sexy on you. Those little triangles barely cover anything. I keep thinking about peeling them off."
"You donât think itâs too revealing?" you teased.
"Baby, itâs perfect. You look incredible. I canât stop touching you." There was something almost disorienting about the way he was looking at you⌠like you were the only thing in his entire world worth seeing. It was still hard to understand why Jack saw you as sexy. Past boyfriends had never made you feel that way⌠but Jack? He fucking worshipped you. You had never experienced this kind of adoration before. Being someone's everything.
You lounged together for a while, then swam into the ocean. The water enveloped you both in its cool, briny embrace as Jack pulled you deeper, the waves lapping at your breasts while the sandy bottom shifted beneath your feet. The scent of sea air and his natural musk filled your nostrils, heightening every sensation as his breath mingled with yours in short, excited puffs. He leaned in, pressing his lips to yours, with your tongues dancing in a playful, teenage frenzy of sucking and exploring every corner of each other's mouths. Salty droplets ran down your faces, mixing into the kiss, while the smell of wet skin and ocean breeze enveloped you. His hands were on your hips, and he pulled you tighter against the hard evidence of his own arousal pressing through his swim trunks.
A sharp gasp hitched in your throat, your eyes flying wide.
"Jack," you whispered, your voice a shaky mix of awe and sudden, dizzying arousal. "What are you doing?"
A slow, utterly wicked smile spread across his lips, and his eyebrows lifted in a silent, unmistakable challenge.
"Shhh, just relax," he murmured, his lips brushing your ear. "I've got you."
You felt his fingers trace the edge of your swimsuit bottoms, a teasing hint that made your breath catch. "Jack, waitâ" you breathed, your voice tight with a fear that was half genuine alarm, half intoxicating thrill. Your gaze shot to the shore, a frantic scan of the distant, blurred figures. "Someone could... what if someone sees."
"Half are asleep,â he whispered, his breath hot on your damp skin. "The other half are staring at their phones, trying to figure out if the weird shadow on their screen is a cloud or a notification that their life is profoundly boring." He dipped his head, his nose gliding along the column of your throat, inhaling the scent of saltwater and sunscreen on your skin.
His logic was a seductive trap.
"But..." you managed to say (not really knowing what else to say), as your hips gave a tiny, involuntary roll against his hard cock.
He hushed you gently, nuzzling into the damp hair at your temple. "I'm just finishing what I started earlier," he whispered, his voice a low, tender rumble. "Let me take care of you now."
His fingers slipped beneath the fabric, and your eyes went wide. A soft, surprised "oh" escaped you as he found your clit, circling with a touch that was electrifying. You could hear the distant laughter and chatter of beachgoers, the rhythmic crash of waves, but it all faded into the background.
Jack loved watching that little hitch in your breath. He loved that he could undo you like this. You were usually all sharp wit and raised eyebrows, but hereâŚhere you were just soft sighs and pliant for him. Your fingers dug into his shoulders, clinging for stability as your knees felt weak, even supported by the water.
"Jack," you breathed out, the name itself a plea. The sun warmed the top of your head while the underwater world remained your private haven.
"I know, baby," he murmured, his lips pressing a soft kiss just below your ear. "Youâre doing so good for me."
You were so responsive. Every little circle, every shift of his fingers, and you were shivering. He was looking at your face⌠and all the tension was gone. Just pure, sweet surrender. He could do this forever, just watching you fall apart. His fingers continued their gentle, persistent torment. Then, slowly, he began to slide a finger inside you. The sensation made you gasp sharply, your body tensing for a split second at the new, fuller pressure.
"Shhh, easy," he soothed, his voice a velvet command. He stilled his hand, letting you adjust, his thumb never ceasing its soft circles. "Just relax into it, sweetheart. There you go⌠thatâs my girl."
As your body accepted him, he began a slow, shallow rhythm, his fingers moving in and out with a slippery ease aided by the water and your own growing wetness. Your head lolled against his shoulder, your mouth falling open in a silent, overwhelmed gasp. The dual sensations were too muchâthe focused, maddening friction of his thumb and the soft, filling stretch of his finger moving inside you. A low, helpless moan finally broke free.
Jack caught the sound with his mouth, kissing you deeply, swallowing your noises as the waves gently rocked you both. His kiss was tender but consuming, his tongue stroking yours in time with the rhythm of his hand. When he broke for air, his praise was a hot whisper against your slick lips.
"Listen to you," he breathed, his own voice rough with want. "So pretty. So perfect.â
His movements became more deliberate, his fingers curling slightly, searching. When he found that sweet spot inside you, your entire body jolted against him. A sharp, broken cry tore from your throat.
"God, Jack, please..." you whimpered.
"There?" he asked, his voice thick with satisfaction. He pressed against it again, and your second cry was louder, less controlled, a raw sound of pleasure that echoed slightly over the water before being swallowed by a wave. Jackâs eyes, filled with lust, flicked toward the distant, indistinct shapes on the shore.
"Shhh, baby," he whispered, but there was a new, teasing edge to his tenderness. He pressed another soft kiss to your temple. "You donât want everyone to hear, do you?"
He curled his finger again, rubbing that sensitive spot of yours. Another moan, high and desperate, was ripped from you as your hips jerked against his hand. You tried to stifle it, biting your lip, but it was useless. The pleasure was too overwhelming.
A low, husky chuckle vibrated against your skin. His lips were right by your ear. "Or⌠maybe you do," he murmured, his voice dripping with a filthy, knowing amusement. "Maybe you like the idea that someone might hear how good I make you feel."
He added a second finger alongside the first, stretching you just a little more, the sensation making you gasp. Every slight shift of your bodies rubbed him against you.
"Fuck," he groaned, the word strained. His fingers never stopped their sinful work, pumping into you with a steady, deepening rhythm now, his thumb a relentless counterpoint on your clit.
"God, I wish I could fuck you right now. Make you scream my name so loud the whole beach knows who you belong to."
The vividness of his words, the possessive heat in them, sent a fresh wave of arousal crashing through you. Your own sounds were becoming impossible to controlâsoft, choked sobs of pleasure with every inward stroke of his fingers.
"Jack..." your voice, a ragged, breathless mess against his neck. "Jack... I love you. I love you, don't stop, please don't ever stop..." The words tumbled out, unfiltered and soaked in pure, delirious pleasure. You were babbling, lost in the storm he was orchestrating with his hands. He shushed you again, but it was a mockery of comfort now. He loved this. He loved the raw, unfiltered honesty of your pleasure, the way you completely fell apart for him and him alone. Hearing you babble his name and those three little words while he had you at his mercy was the most potent aphrodisiac he'd ever known.
He trailed his mouth down your jaw, your neck, sucking a wet, salty path to your collarbone. The contrast of his hot mouth and the cool ocean sent shivers racing over your skin, pulling you tighter against his hard cock.
"I love you too," he murmured, while his eyes held yours, with flecks of green and gold that were endless. "You're going to come for me right here." His fingers curled, pressing that perfect spot with unerring precision as he spoke. "And when you do, I want you thinking about how when we go back to the hotel room, I'm going to spend an hour between your legs, tasting you until you come again, just from my tongue."
"Oh f-fuck," you gasped, feeling your orgasm building, a tidal wave of sensation starting deep in your belly, threatening to crest and drown you with the cool water lapping at your waist. Your hips began to move against his hand of their own volition, a frantic, shallow rhythm seeking more friction, more of him.
"And when you're shaking, when you're begging for it, that's when I'm finally going to fuck you."
He saw the panic and the pleasure warring in your eyes, the desperate clamp of your jaw as you fought to stay quiet. It only spurred him on. His thumb became relentless on your clit, a firm, circling pressure, while his fingers fucked into you with a deep, steady rhythm that hit that perfect, devastating spot every single time.
"Hard and fast," he growled, his own breath starting to come faster, his control fraying at the edges just watching you. "I'm going to fill you up so completely that you'll feel me for days. You're going to come on my cock just like you're coming on my fingers right now, aren't you, baby?"
The command in his voice, the filthy, vivid promise, was the final thread to snap. Your body went rigid, a silent scream locked in your throat as the orgasm detonated, a white-hot shockwave of pure, shattering pleasure.
He saw it the second it hit youâthe way your eyes rolled back, the tears that instantly welled and spilled over. He captured your mouth in a deep, consuming kiss, swallowing every choked sob and whimper of ecstasy. His tongue swept against yours, tender and claiming, as he gentled the movements of his hand. He tasted the salt of your tears and felt the helpless tremors still coursing through your limbs.
You were a boneless, quivering weight against him, your face buried in the damp skin of his neck, breathing in the scent of salt, sunscreen, and him. His own breathing was ragged, his body a tightly coiled line of tension pressed against your stomach. For a long moment, he just held you, one arm a solid band around your back, the other hand gently cupping the back of your head.
"You did so good for me."
He shifted slightly, and you could feel him. The hard, insistent length of his cock straining against the fabric of his swim trunks, pressing into your stomachâa stark contrast to your own spent, liquid state. A weak sound of concern escaped your lips.
"Don't you worry about that." Jack gave a strained chuckle, the sound vibrating through you. "We'll take care of it later. Right now... we'll get you some water. And some shade."
He turned around, and you draped limply over the broad expanse of his back. Your cheek rested against the wet skin between his shoulder blades; the world reduced to the sound of his breathing and the gentle lap of the water as he swam. He reached the shallows where the waves gently broke. With a grunt of effort, he stood up, the water dropping from his torso. He kept you secure on his back, your legs hooked over his hips, his hands firmly under your thighs.
Jack walked up the beach in an almost casual stride, nodding at a few scattered sunbathers who glanced your way and were probably staring at his prosthetic (or his raging hard-on). You, clinging to him, were just the tired girlfriend getting a piggyback ride from her attentive boyfriend. The perfect, innocent picture. He reached the private cabana, and with a final, effortless heave, he swung you gently off his back, depositing you onto the lounger. Â You landed with a soft thump, your limbs still feeling like over-cooked spaghetti.
He turned and grabbed the bottles of chilled water that the waiter offered immediately. Crouching down in front of you, he uncapped it with a sharp twist.
"Open," he said, his voice low. He didn't hand you the bottle. Instead, he brought it to your lips. When you parted them automatically, he tilted it, the cold water pouring into your mouth. "Drink," he ordered, watching your throat work as you swallowed. A little trickled down your chin, and his gaze followed the droplet's path over your collarbone. You drank until the bottle was empty.
"Thank you," you whispered, the words barely audible. A shaky, sated smile touched your lips as you looked up at him through half-lidded eyes.
"Good girl," he said, his voice dropping that utterly intimate register of his. He leaned in, his lips brushing your forehead in a kiss.
"You wore me out," you mumbled, your voice thick and drowsy. Your head lolled back against the cabana bed. The sun felt like a warm blanket, and the intense pleasure had left your body feeling heavy, deliciously used, and utterly spent. "Just... gonna close my eyes for a minute..."
Your words slurred into a soft sigh as your eyelids fluttered shut. The world faded to the sound of the distant waves and the feeling of the warm lounger beneath you. You were already slipping into a contented, post-coital doze. He watched you, the bottle of water hanging loosely from his fingers. You were his masterpiece... and beautifully ruined. He sat down in the shade, the frame creaking softly under his weight, and leaned back, stretching his legs out.
"Come here," he said, his voice leaving no room for question. He patted his chest, right over his heart.
Still floating in that boneless, sated haze, you didn't hesitate. You crawled the short distance from where you were and settled against him, your head finding its perfect place on the solid pillow of his muscle. His arm came around you, heavy and secure, his hand splaying possessively over the curve of your hip. His other hand began tracing those lazy, hypnotic circles on the small of your back.
Your eyelids grew too heavy to hold open.
"I love you," you murmured.
"I love you," he echoed, just as you were slipping away.
You stirred, consciousness returning slowly, and pleasantly. The world came back in pieces: the dappled shade of the cabana, the distant cry of seagulls, the solid, warm weight beneath you. You blinked, your eyes adjusting, and glanced at your phone screen where it lay beside the lounger. 4:00 PM. Youâd been out for over an hour.
You tilted your head up. He was awake, watching you from behind his sunglasses, a soft, unguarded curve to his mouth. You leaned up and pressed a slow, lingering kiss to his lips.
"Mmm," you hummed against his mouth as you pulled back just an inch. "I think I need a snack before dinner. All that... 'swimming'.. worked up an appetite." His hand slid from your back to cup your ass, giving it a firm, appreciative squeeze.
"Is that right?" he said, his voice gravelly with disuse. "What kind of snack are you craving?"
"Something sweet," you teased, nipping lightly at his bottom lip. "Maybe something I can eat right here."
"Tempting.â His gaze was hot and appreciative. "But if I start feeding you here, we won't make it to dinner. Let's pack up." He gave your ass one last, playful smack before releasing you. "Up you get."
You pouted dramatically, making a show of stretching your still-tingling limbs. He stood, pulling his t-shirt over his head, the fabric clinging briefly to his torso.
"Watching the people here is fascinating, isn't it?" he mused, his tone conversational but his eyes locked on you. You followed his gaze out to the beach. A group of young women were taking an absurd number of selfies a little way down the shore, angling their bodies and drinks just so.
"Right?" you squealed, playing along, putting a hand on your hip and mimicking their poses with exaggerated flair. "The struggle is so real! Do I look aspirational? Do I look like I have my life together?
He chuckled, shaking his head as he finished smoothing his shirt.
"You," he said, stepping close and pulling you to the edge of the sofa bed, "look like you just got fucked senseless. Which is infinitely better."
You laughed and swatted his chest, and wriggled out of his grasp to reach for your cover-up draped over the back of a chair and shimmied into it. The two of you stepped out of the cabana and began walking hand-in-hand, but you were surprised when Jack started pulling you closer to the shore. You saw Jack raise a hand, catching the eye of one of the influencer girls from the selfie group. She was tall and clad in a minuscule neon green bikini, her phone held up as she surveyed the light.
"Scusi," he called. He made a frame with his fingers, pointing at you and himself, then pretended he was taking a picture with an invisible camera. She immediately lowered her own phone.
"Oh! Photo! Yes, of course, I speak English," she said, her accent a pleasant, unplaceable blend, as she gracefully stepped away from her own photoshoot.
He handed her his phone, while whispering to you. "Is it that obvious that I'm American?"
"Yes," you giggled.
She grinned, positioning you both close, his arm tight around your waist, his waterproof prosthetic clearly visible in the frame. The fact that he wanted the photo with his leg showing made your eyes sting. Influencer girl took a few steps back, expertly using the natural light and the stunning views as her canvas.
"Get closer! Yes, like that. Perfect."
He pressed a kiss to your temple as the girl snapped the first photo.
"Beautiful! Now look at each other. Give me a real smile!" she coached, moving slightly to adjust the angle.
You turned your face toward Jack, and the look in his eyes stole your breath. It was open affection, a quiet joy at simply being there with you, exactly as you both were. Your smile changed, becoming real and unguarded. The camera clicked several times in rapid succession.
"Amazing! You two are gorgeous. That light is everything."
"Grazie," Jack said, the Italian word clumsy but earnest.
"Thank you," you said.
As the girl returned Jack's phone, she lingered for a moment and asked the usual small talk question about where you were from. You answered, and within seconds, the conversation shifted with the realization that you and she had grown up in the same country. What a small world. Your attention was suddenly fully on her, and you were completely absorbed talking to her in your native mother tongue and discussing the last time you had been back home. Jack took advantage of the moment and opened his messages to Robby and attached one of the many photos.
Surprisingly, Robby answered almost instantly since it was a little past 10 AM, which was usually when he sneaked in a snack.
Robby: Sheâs so out of your league. Â
Jack snorted under his breath. Out of his league? Absolutely. Heâd known that from day one, and he still couldnât believe youâd chosen him anyway. His thumb hovered over the send button for a full second before he finally tapped his next message.
Jack: I think Iâm going to do it tonight.
Robby: Holy shit. About damn time, youâve been carrying that ring around for a year.
Jack: Iâm nervous as hell.
Robby: Sheâs perfect. Go get her, brother.
Robby then sent another quick message.
Robby: You look happy. Happier than Iâve ever seen you.
Jack thought about the man heâd been before he met you. He was convinced that good things werenât meant for him. And then you showed upâŚand you made him want things heâd never let himself want.
When Jack looked up, you were turning back toward him, waiting with that patient little smile he loved more than he could ever say. Jack smiled, slipped the phone away, and reached for your hand as you walked back toward the hotel.
 Their hotel <3

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In Time
After decades of war, Bucky finally finds some peace â until a broken kid who mirrors his past forces him to consider forgiving himself enough to start living.
⸠PAIRING & WC: Bucky Barnes x F!Reader â 3.8K ⸠WARNINGS: Insecurities, Bucky is grappling with forgiving himself, some mentions of canon-typical violence, comics!bucky so different technically from mcu!bucky ⸠A/N: wrote this when i was getting into reading comics and read the winter soldier (2018), highly recommend even if it's different from mcu bucky! anyways i loved seeing bucky in his big brother/parental role but also reckoning with the concept of forgiveness and second chances, and ended up with this idea. a lil different but hope you enjoy!
When Bucky defected from HYDRA, he never thought he would ever build himself another home. He couldâve gone back with Steve and stayed in New York. He couldâve stopped in his parentsâ hometown in Romania to lay low. Hell, he couldâve landed himself in a cozy prison cell on an isolated island if the government didnât pardon him for all his crimes as the Winter Soldier.Â
Instead, Bucky chose to go home. Back to where it all started. Shelbyville, Indiana.Â
After his parents passed, the deed to the home passed on to him. If he were to decide between a shoebox in the big city or a not-so-little house on the prairie, itâs a no-brainer. After years of war, or at least thatâs all he remembers, itâs nice to be somewhere quiet where he starts his morning with birdsongs and the sounds of life.Â
Thereâs also you. Youâre the cherry on top of his much-needed sundae. You â his neighbor who spends your days toiling away at your farm, helping out with markets in town, running community fairs. An all-around girl-next-door.Â
He had been worried about what people might think about him moving in here. After all, his case had been highly publicized. But this little town had welcomed him with open arms. They remembered his parents and made space for Bucky to slip right back in.Â
You had been a big help in his transition into the town. Showing him around town, inviting him to dinners with your friends, and even doing weekly movie nights with him. With you, Bucky finds parts of himself that he may have lost. You look at him with faith. You donât see what he sees when he looks in the mirror.
Not an ex-assassin. Not some hundred-year-old grump. Just Bucky.
Now, life should be all fine and dandy, right? Right. Except, Bucky has been thrown another curveball that he isnât quite sure how to manage.Â
When he pledged to use his powers for the greater good, he knew he wanted to focus his efforts on giving people a second chance. These are powers that he never asked for, but are ones he still has all the same. As they say, with great power comes great responsibility.Â
Trading one massive organization for another, Bucky decided to join SHIELD â or at least do some contract work for them. He only takes on jobs that give people an opportunity to make amends. To make right all the wrongs as best they can. Think of it as a product of his guilty conscience.Â
In this line of work, he never expected to stumble into the path of RJ Boyle.Â
Well, stumble is an understatement. RJ had been sent to commit cold-blooded murder against him, vibranium sword in hand to take out Buckyâs own arm. The kid was lethal, trained to be the near-perfect child soldier. He was arrogant and mouthy â and a little bit broken.Â
This kid is just that. A kid. A kid born into unfortunate circumstances. A kid whose weaknesses, whose vulnerability, had been used against him. Bucky knows more than anyone how HYDRA works; they break you down to build you back up, mold you into whoever they want you to be.Â
Itâs like looking at a reflection of himself. Younger. Angrier.Â
Itâs why Bucky decided to take him home â to his home. Show him a slice of the peace that he has managed to create since he left. Show him what his life could be outside of HYDRA. No longer does he need to follow orders to survive. He could just live.
But itâs hard to teach someone how to live when he himself is not yet familiar with the concept. He still has one foot in the real world and the other in the past. Shelbyville has become his safe haven, but parts of it still feel foreign to him. Itâs like heâs playing house in a place that is not his. A story that doesnât belong him, that is being narrated by someone else. A puppeteer from high above.Â
RJ probably feels the same way, especially since Bucky uprooted him from the only thing he knows. Every time he thinks about this, that vein in his head pulses for attention.Â
âYou need to cut yourself some slack,â you smile at him, setting the coffee cup on the table.Â
Bucky presses his fingers against his forehead, hoping that some of the pressure would ease his throbbing mind. He offers a grateful smile in return as he tips the cup back to his lips. âThank you, needed this,â he murmurs.Â
âWell, you do only come to me when you need coffee and eggs,â you say with a smirk, leaning back against your kitchen counter as your eyes sparkle at Bucky at your dining table.Â
His heart slams against his ribcage, a common response to the way you curl your lips so easily at him. Part of him deep inside screams that he wants more than coffee and eggs, an internal voice begging to be declared out loud. He wants mornings and evenings with you. He wants to wake up with your face nuzzled up against his chest or the whiff of your lavender shampoo lulling him to sleep. But he doesnât know how to ask for what he wants just yet. Not when itâs something thatâs for him and only for him.Â
Oblivious to his mental turmoil, you continue, âHowâs the kid doing?â
When he took him in, he thought RJ would be thankful, that he would want this as much as Bucky had. But he knows better than anyone that you canât just transition someone from a life built on pure survival and instinct and battle scars into a suburban, fictitious fairytale without consequences.Â
For the first time in a while, Bucky has to admit that he is at a loss. He is dealing with a trained child assassin who is clearly traumatized from decades of having his brain torn apart, washed, rinsed, and repeated. Trained to do what he was told to do to stay alive.Â
It also doesnât help that the kid is a teenager, which means he is dealing with a severe case of age-appropriate rebellion.Â
Doc Sampson, Buckyâs godsend of a therapist, is still working with him but obviously doctor-patient confidentiality prevents him from actually sharing anything meaningful. Bucky is constantly tempted to break into the office and steal the files, but he thinks that may be crossing some ethical and personal lines.Â
âIâŚâ he pauses, âI donât know.â His answer is honest, desperate even. âNever raised a kid before. Heâs not my biggest fan, which isnât surprising since he did try to kill me. Failed, but tried nonetheless.â
âYouâre a first-time parent. Heâs a kid with a temper. Give yourself some grace. Itâll take him a bit to warm up. Going from back-to-back wars and missions to a quiet farmhouse with sheep bleating in your backyard is a big change.âÂ
Bucky understands that. The lack of stimulation and noise out here is something he had to get used to. His fingers are always itching to do something â anything. He wants to throw the white noise machine that Sharon had gifted him as a joke out the window.Â
âRaising goats is easier than this.â
You laugh and the sound is sugar in his veins. Heâs an addict and heâs not even sure he wants to quit. âNot as expensive too, but also presumably less rewarding. RJ seems like a good kid, I wouldnât stress too much. Heâll come around.â
He wonders how you could say that so easily. Confidence laced into your syllables when youâve barely met the kid. The only time RJ said more than a word to you was the first time you came over, saw him on the couch, looked at Bucky, and said, âI didnât know you had a brother.â
RJ was quick to point out, âHeâs not my brother!â
Ouch.Â
âYouâve got a lot of faith in people,â Bucky mutters under his breath.
âNever had a reason not to,â you shrug. âLife gave me good people. It brought me you, didnât it?â
A blush is quick to furiously sprawl across his face, burning the skin with the heat of a thousand blazing suns. His lips unconsciously stretch into a ridiculously wide grin and he has to hide his childish delight behind the mask of his mug. Part of him knows that you like to tease him, say sweet nothings to see him squirm. Even now, he can see that devious little twinkle in his eye. Still, he canât help but drink your compliments in like a man starved for affection â which he is.Â
âDonât get shy on me, soldier,â you grin at him again, eyes cataloging his face to identify what shade of scarlet he has turned into this time.Â
Itâs almost shameful how obvious he is with his crush. He might as well be writing your name on the margins and praying that you would say yes to sitting with him at lunchtime. Before he got turned into the Winter Soldier, before he replaced an arm with a hunk of metal, Bucky liked to think he was better with women. He was suave. He was charming. He always knew the right things to say.Â
With you, he is in a perpetual state of being tongue-tied and carrying the perfect color of sunburnt. He is the epitome of constant embarrassment.Â
He didnât think it could get worse â heâs heard enough of Sharonâs not yet, Barnes? and Tonyâs wow, youâre embarrassingly slow for a super soldier â but even RJ, who has been here all of five minutes, has caught on.Â
The two of them are on a quick rendezvous to extract a former HYDRA scientist and relocate him into Sharonâs very safe hands. Right before they left, you had leaned against his doorframe, having visited to drop off some eggs.
âDinner tonight?â You ask. âI can whip up some food for you and RJ if you arenât back too late.â
Bucky should be focused on preparing for his mission. Heâs mentally calculating the travel time while also counting the number of lashes in your eyes. Youâre an incredibly delicious distraction in your dirt-covered overalls.Â
He can only dumbly respond with, âHm?â
âI said Iâll get kidnapped by aliens before you come back.â
Jerking up from looking at his gear, he cocks a brow at you. âUh, dinner, right? You said dinner.â
âYes, soldier.â
Bucky clears his throat, feeling that familiar weight of gratitude sit on his chest. âDinner sounds good. You donât have to, though. Weâll probably be back late.âÂ
âI can put something in your fridge.â
âYou really donât have to do that. Weâll raincheck it.â
âAlways too busy for me, sarge.â
Bucky freezes, eyes darting up to meet yours. Are you sayingâ no, it canât be right? You have so many friends. You probably have suitors lined up at your door, he should know this since heâs always checking on your front porch.Â
But thereâs no way that you would be flirting with him. Not seriously at least. âIâm not⌠too busy.â
You only hum, arms crossed over your chest. âGood luck. Be safe.â
He hates these moments the most. Leaving you behind. Youâre not even his and he dreads the idea of saying goodbye to you before he jets off to his next mission. He never knows if this will be the last time heâll see you, if heâll get picked off without ever telling you how he feels about you.Â
But then there is that niggling reminder that nudges the back of his brain, the one that drops a heaviness on his chest that makes the words on his tongue taste like lead. So he doesnât say it.Â
So he does what he always does. He murmurs his thanks before he slips onto his bike with RJ on his back. As he drives away, he watches your shrinking silhouette from his rearview mirror until youâre a speck in the distance.Â
Now, he and RJ are both on the lookout in this cabin.Â
âDude, youâre so lame.â
âWhat?â Bucky frowns, still frowning out into the woods as his most recent target packs up his bag. When RJ doesnât respond, Bucky reluctantly drags his eyes away to focus on the kid next to him. âWhat are you talking about? Also, did you really just call me dude?â
âYouâre sitting here mooning over a woman who lives right down the street from you. You spend every second of free time you have with her and you still canât ask her out?â
The kid may as well have struck him with a bullet, a clean shot straight through his chest. Bucky knows he isnât exactly subtle about his affections, but he didnât think he was that obvious either. At least, not to a point where even a moody, indifferent teenager would realize that heâs been secretly pining over his neighbor for the better part of his time here.Â
âItâs not that simple, alright. Focus on the mission,â he grumbles, redirecting his gaze back into the quiet woods. He should concentrate on keeping the man safe, keeping RJ safe. Â
Except, now heâs thinking about you and what youâre doing, so he isnât exactly functioning at a hundred percent.
âIâm just saying, itâs kind of pathetic to see you like this. I thought the Winter Soldier was supposed to be formidable.â
Bucky releases another grunt as he waves the kid away. âI donât go by that moniker anymore.â
âCanât erase your past, dude. So whatâs the hold up?â
The answer sits on the tip of his tongue. The words, the truth, are there. But itâs not one he is fully ready to reckon with yet. Itâs not a problem with a solution, not an easy one at least. Not one that may even come in his lifetime.Â
Saying it out loud would be admitting defeat. Itâs a confession that he would never even say to a priest, let alone the kid next to him. It is a surrender he isnât ready to commit to, especially when it means giving you up. It means being selfless one more time.Â
When the two of them return home, exhaustion sitting heavy on his shoulders, Bucky instinctively goes to the fridge first. He already knows what heâs going to see there, but the anticipation still has his blood thrumming in his veins. The cool air greets him before he is met with the sight of tupperwares stacked on the glass shelves. Inside, he spots his favorite dishes in a true farm-to-table experience.Â
Itâs a sight he welcomes and appreciates whenever he goes on these late-night extractions. It only took one comment from him about how heâs terrible with maintaining his schedule for you to step up and take the mantle.Â
It is in this moment of weakness, when his heart feels more tender in his chest, that he lets the admission slip.Â
At first, it is only to the silence of his home. But Buckyâs no longer alone.Â
His words are barely above a whisper, as if he is praying that the chilly night air would swallow them up and whisk them away. âIâve done a lot of things. Things Iâm not proud of. Things that I probably can never forgive myself for. While Iâve been working on atoning for my sins, itâs my burden to bear. I donât want her to shoulder that with me.â
The fridge closes with a quiet thump as desolation swiftly sinks into his bones, like the swipe of a blade across his artery. The good doctor has always told him that itâs normal to carry the guilt, but that he shouldnât let it linger. However, when his entire life has been riddled with a darkness that breeds that conscience unconsciously, Bucky has never learned any different.Â
What he doesnât expect is for RJ to say, âYouâre a fucking hypocrite.â
His brows instantly furrow as he turns to look at the kid.Â
RJ rolls his eyes, crossing his arms over his body as he glares at Bucky. His gaze is a mix of irritation and fury, tinged with a disappointment that hits harder than anything else. âYouâre the one who told me that you knew what itâs like to have your life stolen from you, that you knew what itâs like to take it back. You told me that I wasnât alone, that I didnât have to be. But you canât even practice what you preach, so how am I supposed to trust you?â
Itâs ice cold in his veins. Like heâs been struck by lightning. Bucky knows heâs right, heâs always known it deep down. The demons that live in his mind will persist, but they shouldnât stop him from trying to get some semblance of normalcy in his life. To find love and happiness again. It had been a dream once upon a time â the house with the white picket fence and children running across the lawn â but that dream has changed.Â
The vision has morphed into a life that combines his past, present, and future. A life of protecting those who need it most, a life of living in the peace of his current existence, and a life of pursuing this lifelong fantasy to turn it into a reality.Â
And all he has to do is take the first step forward. He has to gather the courage and stuff down pieces of his bitter guilt one at a time until he can live with himself again. Until he can forgive himself and realize that he deserves it.Â
Deserves better things. Deserves you.Â
RJ wonât believe that redemption is possible unless Bucky believes in it himself. So he swallows thickly, resolve hardening in his veins. âAlright then, watch me.â
The kid gives him a questioning look, following hot on his trail as Bucky marches out the door into the midnight that blankets his lawn. Your place is right next door, visible enough from his porch where RJ stands with a flickering light. Alpine curls around the kidâs legs curiously.Â
His fist lifts and he moves on habit alone. He knocks on your door three times as he always does.Â
When you open the door, clearly half awake and rubbing the sleep from your eyes, he stills. âBuck?â Your voice is a little raspy, the way it is in the morning when Bucky comes a few minutes too early. âWhatâs going on?â
âShit, sorry, did I wake you up?â
Maybe he shouldâve thought this through. He doesnât even know what time it is. He probably looks like an asshole banging on your door at this forsaken hour. Heâs also a mess. He smells like sweat, dirt, and gasoline. Adrenaline pumps through him faster than those hours earlier under the threat of enemy fire.Â
What he shouldâve done was shower, sleep, buy some fresh flowers from the farmerâs market, then ask you out at a normal hour. Like a normal person.
But when he glances at his house again, RJ waiting expectantly with that damned cocky eyebrow raised, he knows he canât back down now.Â
You yawn and stretch, a sliver of skin exposing as your shirt lifts. Bucky swallows. He needs to keep it together. âI fell asleep on the couch so I needed to get up to move to my bed anyway. Whatâs up?â
Donât think about you in bed. Do not. He is not a child, he has self-control. Or so he likes to think. But then he sees the poutiness of your lips and Bucky has to subtly pinch himself to stop himself from kissing you.Â
Because that would be crazy.
Right?
Once again, the words fall off somewhere in their journey from his heart to his mouth. His heart stutters against his ribs, flesh pulsing against his bones. His eyes dart around in search of comfort.Â
And they land on you with your kind eyes and your bare feet. They land on RJ who stands there slightly doubtful, slightly hopeful. They land on Alpine who still regards him with cool affection, but a year of trust. They land on his home, this land, and the stretch of space between all of the things that formulate his life today. The redemption he is working towards. The peace etched onto every surface. The work in progress that persists.Â
And he braves himself.
With a deep breath, he smiles gently at you. âI was wondering if you wanted to go out with me.â
Your lips quirk up as you slump against the doorway, tilting your head in that way that makes him want to kiss you senseless. âCame over at midnight to get a booty call? Bold even for you, Barnes.â
Bucky chokes on nothing. Absolutely nothing. Panic flares at his chest over how his actions look. Of course, youâd think heâs being a complete and utter fool. A dog that his parents would be ashamed of. âNo, not aâ definitely not. Not that I wouldnât appreciate that, but I figured I should take you out to dinner first. I want to take you out to dinner first. That Italian place down Second Street, the one with the green logo with the ravio that you like. I thoughtââ
A warm hand settles on his arm. âIâd love to,â you interrupt softly, âtonight at seven?â
He clears his throat, nodding his head a little too eagerly. âYes, I can pick you up.â Which sounds dumb in hindsight because he lives right down the street.Â
âOn that death trap?â You eye his bike warily. âAbsolutely not. Iâll meet you there.â
âNo, Iâll get a car. Iâll borrow someoneâs.â
You snort softly, lips twitching with a smile. âHow about I pick you up in my car? Donât need a knight picking me up on his white steed.â
Bucky tinges pink again. Good thing itâs dark out. âSounds good.â
âSee you tomorrow night, sarge.â Your voice is still gentle, kind. Then you look over his shoulder and wave at the sight behind him. âNight, RJ! Alpine!âÂ
He watches from his periphery as RJ gives a small wave back. For the first time in a very long time, his chest feels lighter â not in a way that it is empty, but that it is alive with hope. When he catches the shit-eating grin on RJâs face and Alpineâs look of I-told-you-so, that voice inside his head quiets.Â
Perhaps redemption is not his acts of heroism to compensate for the guilt that plagues his every slumber. Perhaps redemption comes in the unsaid forgiveness, the acts of kindness, and the optimism for something more. It starts with coffee and eggs and a promise of dinner at seven. Â
As he stands on that porch, Bucky finally lets himself believe it, even a little â that heâs home, that heâs healing, and that this time, he might just deserve it.
+ sam: thank you for reading if you've made it this far!! see below for one of the scenes that inspired this fic! obviously not fully canon compliant but yknow it's the vibes
bucky is kissing (taglist): @superbassbuck @earthsmightiestbenders @houseofhyde @its-in-the-woods @flockoff-featherface @winterdecember18 @chateaubarnes @54nboo @phoenix-in-writing @tofuonfaiya @avengersfan25 @miraclediviner @averyhotchner @hailmary-yramliah @catclaw1 @heldbybarnes @blowingbarnes @stanmarvelous @pinksplace @lunexiax @54nboo @it-is-rebel-owl-ma-dudes @esunarint @captain-shannon-becker @lunaryoongie @sergeantsebastian @alli0-0 @amoremarveloustime @avgdestitute @natskisses @sarah1barnes @parker-barnes-af @sarah1barnes @onecojg @iamthatonefangirl @stegosaurussims @angelryex @evelynstanmarvel @lokisgirlie @mathcat345 @flippedccc @lynnidc @winnichu173 @singulartoast @zhaixiaowen @c3liaaaaa @buckysdecaflove @epiphanyrogers @itsmadamehydra @cutttteeee
+ add yourself to my taglists !
ââ profiled ; aaron hotchner
summary: you've spent years convincing the bau that your love life is chaotic, casual, and completely detachedâwhile quietly dying every time aaron hotchner looks at you. but when your dating profile attracts the wrong kind of attention and your unit chief is forced to look a little closer, it turns out there are very few things more dangerous than being profiled by the man you're hopelessly in love with.
notes: i've been a little conflicted about posting lately, but... it's my birthday, and i want aaron hotchnerâso here you go! i've been working on this for a while and had a very very smart friend help me with the "profiling" parts (especially reid) so i hope y'all enjoy! i also really wanted to actually write the smut, but this fic hit the block limit so hard and fast it actually hurt. as always, please please let me know what you think!
warnings: swearing / cursing, blushing, italics, reader wears a skirt (and heels), reader has a cat, implied age gap, best friend!reid, some pretentious ranting, horny thoughts, likely incorrect behavioural and psychoanalytical information, likely incorrect technical information (sorry garcia), canon-typical themes (homicide, etc. referred to off page), stalker / stalking behaviour, ambiguous use of "online dating" (because i tried to keep it vaguely around s6/s7 era), kind of rushed ending? and... fade to black / implied sex (iâm so sorry) 18+ only still, mdni.
word count: 19001
MONDAY 9:25AM
Working for the FBI means having secrets is difficult. Working with the BAU makes it downright impossible.
Not because your colleagues are nosyâno, theyâre just⌠perceptive. Which means if you want to keep something to yourself, you need to know how to manipulate their perception. Even if it doesnât work on all of themâyou glance at Reid, already seated at the round table with his nose buried in a bookâat least it works on most of them.
At least, it works on Aaron Hotchner.
Your boss. Your unit chief. The man who absolutely cannot find out about your big, fat, massively inconvenient, deeply inappropriate crush on him.
Reid glances up from his book as you drop into the seat beside him. âYouâre wearing a skirt.â
You cross your legs and lean back. âExcellent observation, Reid.â
âItâs impractical,â he says simply. âEspecially with heels. Your centre of gravity shifts forward by almost fifteen degrees, which shortens your stride length and reduces balance recovery time. Youâre significantly more likely to trip while running.â
You roll your eyes. âGood thing Iâm not planning on fleeing the scene of a crime today.â
âIgnore boy genius, baby girl,â Morgan says as he steps into the room, heading straight for the espresso machine. âYou look good.â
You flash him a grin. âSee? Somebody appreciates me.â
Reid hums as he glances back down at his book. âInteresting how your clothing choices become statistically less practical in direct correlation to Hotchâs proximity.â
Your stomach flips. âSpence.â
He lifts one shoulder. âWhat? Heâs not listening.â
You glance back at Morgan, whose eyes are glued to his phone, brow furrowed just slightly as he waits for the whirring coffee machine to fill his cup.
âThatâs not the point, Spencer,â you mutter, turning back to him. âYou need toââ
The conference room door swings open again and Hotch walks inâfiles tucked under one arm, the rest of the team trailing behind him.
âMorning,â he says, dropping the files on the table. âHope everyone had a good weekend.â
Morgan snorts. âWhat weekend?â
âYeah,â Prentiss mutters, dropping into the seat beside Reid. âI was here until five on Saturday finishing geographical profiles.â
âThatâs because you alphabetise your paperwork,â you point out.
She gives you a look. âI enjoy being proficient.â
âWell,â you say lightly, leaning back in your chair âsome of us managed to finish our paperwork on Friday and still have a very enjoyable weekend.â
Garcia gasps dramatically as she falls into the last empty chair, coffee in hand. âOoh, look at you. Was there a man involved?â
You shrug one shoulder, biting back a smile. âIâm choosing to plead the fifth.â
Morgan points across the table. âThat means yes.â
âOr,â Reid says without looking up from his book, âit means she enjoys making people speculate.â
âAw, Spence,â you tease. âDonât sound so bitter.â
He finally looks up from his book and fixes you with a look so flat it borders on threateningâbecause he knows what youâre doing. Itâs what you always do. Itâs how you manipulate their perception. How you keep your secret.
You perform.
You swipe through dating apps, talk about men, brag about your weekends without ever being too specific. You flirt with almost everyone on the teamâReid more than the rest, because heâs your scapegoat... and your best friend.
Heâs the only one who can see through the charade. Not because heâs emotionally perceptive, but because he did the math. He noticed the pattern. He realised very quickly that every time Hotch walks into a room or says your name, you react in a way that can only mean one thing:
Hotch is the secret youâre trying so hard to hide.
Because if you give a team of profilers an easy explanationâharmless flirting with a messy dating life and a weakness for attentionâthey wonât notice the way your entire body betrays you whenever your infuriatingly gorgeous boss gets too close.
Hotch clears his throat. âWell, lucky for all of you, itâs a quiet week.â
Reid shuts his book and sets it on the table.
âNo active cases as of this morning,â Hotch continues. âWhich means weâll be catching up on consults, court reports, and the mountain of paperwork everyoneâs apparently been neglecting.â
His eyes meet yours for the briefest second, and your pulse skitters.
âIâm bored already,â Morgan sighs, leaning back in his chair.
Hotch ignores him. âWeâve got two local consult requests from Fairfax County and a follow-up review from the Richardson case. Dave, Iâll need your notes finalised by this afternoon.â
Rossi nods once. âYouâll have them.â
âGarcia,â Hotch continues, âthe Milwaukee office wants that digital forensic review by Wednesday.â
Garcia gasps softly, pressing a hand to her chest. âBut I already colour-coded my entire week. That review wasnât supposed to be due for another fortnight.â
Morgan blinks. âYou colour-code your schedule?â
âObviously,â Garcia says. âHow else would I maintain my sparkling personality under crushing institutional pressure?â
Reid straightens. âTechnically, organising information activates the same reward pathways asââ
âDonât,â Prentiss says immediately.
Reid frowns slightly. âI was just going to say gambling.â
You snort softly before you can stop yourself, covering it quickly with your hand. Reid shoots you a look. Prentiss just shakes her head. And when your eyes finally flick back to the front of the room, Hotch is already watching you.
Not the team. You.
Your stomach twists.
That signature Hotchner scowl should not be as hot as it is. It shouldnât make you cross your legs a little tighter or make your heart race the way it does. You should be used to that scowl by now. Youâre on the receiving end of it often enoughâwhenever you crack a poorly timed joke or flirt a little too hard with Morgan.
Yet somehow, you still feel like you canât breathe until his gaze finally shifts.
âMoving on,â he says evenly, âJJ will forward the consult details after the meeting.â
He spends the next thirty minutes briefing the team on consults and court appearances while you do your best to stay focusedâbut itâs hard. Itâs hard because every time you look at him, your gaze drops to his mouth and your mind fills with all sorts of filthy ideas. Then he starts moving his hands as he explains something and you canât help but wonder what they might feel like wrapped around your waist, your thighs, your throat.
His voice is a low rumble at the back of your mind, warm and firm, but you have no idea what heâs actually saying. All you can do is think about how that voice might sound, wrecked and rough, telling you how pretty you look when youâ
âThe briefing ended three minutes ago,â Reid says.
You blink hard. âWhat?â
He closes his notebook with a sigh. âThe meetingâs over. You can stop internally monologuing now.â
You frown. âIâm notââ
He gives you a look.
âUgh,â you groan. âYouâre so annoying.â
You push up from your chair and walk out of the conference room without waiting for him, but youâre not surprised that heâs right behind you by the time you reach the bullpen. You drop down at your desk with another indignant huff, watching Reid do the same from the corner of your eye.
Everyone else is already settled at their desksâkeyboards clicking, pens scribblingâand thereâs a fresh stack of files next to your computer with a sticky note on top that reads: Fairfax files. Prioritize pages 12â18. â Hotch.
You want to laugh at the little sign-off, as if anyone else would have put these files on your desk. Your fingers trace over the note once before you peel it off and stick it to the bottom corner of your computer screen.
Reid snorts. âYou know most people throw those away, right?â
You glance sideways at him. âI donât want to forget the page numbers.â
He hums. âSure.â
âYou know,â you say, turning your chair to properly face him, âyouâre being particularly judgemental today. Whatâs your problem?â
He stares at you for a moment, then glances back at the sticky note still attached to your monitor.
âIâm experiencing prolonged second-hand embarrassment,â he says plainly. âAnd repeated exposure tends to increase irritability.â
You roll your eyes. âYeah, wellâyouâre increasing my irritability.â
He nods. âGood.â
You frown.
âIâm attempting corrective behavioural conditioning.â
Your eyes narrow. âBy being annoying?â
âExactly,â he says, already turning back to his computer.
You glare at the side of his head for a long moment, searching for a comebackâbut your mind is completely blank. So with another irritated sigh, you turn back to your own screen, scoot your chair into the desk a little harder than necessary, and settle in for whatâs shaping up to be a very boring Monday.
The next two hours pass by in a blur of interview transcripts, witness statements, and crime scene photos. The Fairfax County PD files detail the death of a woman in her late thirties who accidentally overdosed in her Reston home early last week. No prior history of substance abuse, financial instability, or high-risk behaviourâuntil forty-eight hours before her death.
In just two days, she withdrew a large amount of money, missed work without explanation, visited several bars sheâd never been to before, and bought herself thousands of dollarsâ worth of expensive jewellery and lingerie.
To anyone else, it might look like some sort of breakdownâan impulsive spiral that led to the kind of recklessness you canât come back from. But to you, the behaviour feels too... artificial. As if someone is trying to construct the narrative of a troubled womanâchecking all the right boxes to give investigators an easy explanation for a tragic overdose.
Only there isnât enough concrete evidence to support your instinct. No stalker. No ex. No clear unsub who could have orchestrated this kind of ruse to cover what might actually be homicide.
You sigh. âReid.â
âHm?â
âTell me if Iâm overthinking this.â
Reid pushes back from his desk and scoots across the narrow stretch of carpet between your workstations. He doesnât stop until his chair bumps the side of your desk, causing your pen cup to topple over and spill across the files youâve got carefully laid out.
âOops,â he says absently, pushing the pens aside.
You roll your eyes and start gathering them while he scans the files.
âThe behavioural shift feels manufactured,â you say, dropping the pens back into their cup. âBut thereâs enough legitimate stressors here that I canât tell if Iâm forcing a pattern because itâs too clean.â
Reid examines the highlighted timeline for another few seconds.
âYouâre focusing too much on the existence of the stressors,â he says. âStress explains escalation. It doesnât explain inconsistency.â
You frown slightly.
âShe suddenly becomes impulsive socially, financially, and sexually, but her organisational habits never change.â He taps the timeline. âShe still pays bills early. Still meal preps. Still attends a dentist appointment two days before her death. Real behavioural deterioration isnât usually selective.â
Your brows lift. âSo, Iâm right?â
Reid nods, leaning back in his chair. âYouâre right.â
âWhatâs she right about?â
You nearly jump at the sound of Hotchâs voiceâlow and even, a little rough around the edges in that way that always makes your stomach tighten.
âShe thinks the behavioural shift is staged,â Reid says. âAnd I agree.â
He scoots back slightly as Hotch leans in, one hand braced on the back of your chair while the other pulls the file closer so he can read it properly. His tie falls forward, brushing lightly against your thighâand suddenly, you canât breathe.
Heâs close. Way too close. You can feel the heat of his breath on your skin. Smell the bitterness of coffee beneath his cologne. Hear the quiet creak of leather from his belt as he leans in further.
âItâs too compartmentalised,â Reid says, his voice more distant than it was just a second ago. âReal behavioural spirals usually bleed into every aspect of a personâs routine. Sleep disruption, missed payments, changes in grooming habits, social withdrawalâsomething.â
Hotch lifts his hand off the desk and presses his thumb to the tip of his tongueâthen flips the page.
Your pulse jumps so hard it almost hurts. Heat crawls up the back of your neck. Your whole body feels too hot, your clothes suddenly too tight, the bullpen too smallâbut you canât move. Not with Hotchâs hand still on the back of your chair.
âBut this is curated,â Reid goes on, tapping the timeline with the end of his pen. âThe impulsive behaviour escalates while the foundational routines stay completely intact, which suggests intentional narrative construction.â
Hotch turns his head just slightly, dark eyes finding yours. âYou caught that?â
You clear your throat. âI just... thought the escalation pattern felt off.â
âHer behavioural analysis is spot on, actually,â Reid says. âI canât find a flaw in it.â
Hotch hums quietly as his eyes move back over the file.
âGood girl,â he says absently.
Your entire nervous system short-circuits.
âKeep it up,â he adds, smoothing his tie as he straightens.
You donât say anything as he turns and walks away. You couldnât even if you wanted to.
Reid just sits there, hands folded in his lap as he watches Hotch disappear into his office before slowly turning back toward you.
âYou know,â he says thoughtfully, âthe age-gap preference is actually more interesting than the authority fixation.â
You finally blink. âWhat?â
âBecause the authority thing makes perfect sense. High-pressure careers tend to reinforce attraction to competence, decisiveness, emotional restraintâespecially in workplace environments where leadership qualities become psychologically linked with safety and stability over long periods of exposure.â
You frown. âWhat are youââ
âBut the older man preference is statistically more complicated because you donât actually display the attachment markers usually associated with paternal absence or instability.â
Your eyes go wide. âSpencerââ
âYou have a healthy relationship with your father, no documented authority issues, and relatively secure interpersonal attachment patterns, which suggests the preference is less psychologically compensatory and more rooted in behavioural reinforcement.â
âReid.â
âFor example,â he goes on, ignoring you completely, âyou spent your formative professional years surrounded almost exclusively by older men in positions of intellectual and behavioural authority. Gideon, Rossi, Hotchâwhich likely created a reinforcement pattern where emotional competence became unconsciously associated with attraction, arousal, and sexual interest.â
You freeze. âReid, I swear toââ
âYou donât react this strongly to older men generally,â he continues. âYou react strongly to Hotch because heâs emotionally controlled, professionally authoritative, intellectually intimidating, andââ
He pauses, tilting his head.
âVery obviously your type.â
You glance frantically around the bullpen, scanning the desks for the rest of your team.
Morgan has his headphones on, completely focused on whatever report heâs typing. JJâs desk is empty, as usualâsheâs probably with Garcia. And Prentiss is only halfway back from the kitchen, still stirring her fresh cup of coffee.
Your gaze cuts back to Reid. âYou are so lucky no one heard that, Spencer.â
He shrugs. âWouldnât matter if they did.â
Your brows pull together. âWhatâs that mean?â
âYouâre good at redirecting attention,â he says, slowly pushing his chair back toward his desk. âYouâre less good at hiding physiological responses.â
Your hand flies up to your cheek, palm pressing flat against the burning skin.
âWhatever,â you mutter. âItâs warm in here.â
Reid glances around the bullpen. âItâs sixty-eight degrees.â
âI hate you.â
âNo you donât.â
You shoot him one last glare before turning back toward your computer, aggressively waking up the monitor with your mouse.
You stay chained to your desk for the next few hours, finishing up the victimology report for the Fairfax files before taking them to Rossi for final review. Then you head out with JJ to grab a late lunch from the deli down the street, and when you get back, thereâs a brand-new stack of files on your deskâonly this time, with a tall takeaway cup of coffee set on top.
âHotch got dragged into some last-minute Section Chief meeting across town,â Morgan says, pushing his headphones down. âSaid he needs those cross-referenced before tomorrow morning.â
âGreat,â you mutter, dropping into your chair.
Morgan chuckles softly as he pulls his headphones back up, turning back to his own pile of reports.
You grab the coffee from the top of the files and find a sticky note stuck beneath itâwritten quickly but still in his unmistakable handwriting: I owe you one. â Hotch.
Your stomach flips.
God. Thatâs pathetic.
You peel the note off and drop it into the top drawer of your desk, not wanting another psychoanalytic lecture from Reid if he were to spot that note stuck to your monitor.
The rest of the day passes the way every other caseless Monday afternoon does. JJâs the first to head outânot long after fiveâtaking advantage of the slow week to spend a little extra time with Henry. Rossi leaves about an hour later, announcing to the bullpen that heâs got a date with a bottle of wine and reruns of his favourite medical drama. Morgan manages to clear the files on his desk before seven, finally putting his headphones away before bidding the rest of the team farewell.
Prentiss and Reid linger until nearly nine, and only when the motion sensor lights blink out does Prentiss finally glance up, realising how late it is. She gathers her things and nudges Reid, whoâs been firmly stuck in hyperfocus mode despite the rest of the world quietly slowing down around him.
âYou coming?â he asks, adjusting the strap of his satchel.
You look up slowly, your brain buffering as it untangles itself from the files spread across your desk.
âNot yet,â you reply, blinking tiredly. âHotch needs these by morning.â
Reid tilts his head. âWant me to wait?â
You wave a hand. âNah, go ahead. Iâll get security to walk me to my car.â
âAlright,â he says, already turning away. âJust remember that positive reinforcement loses effectiveness when the subject becomes emotionally dependent on it.â
You glare at his back. âIâm reporting you to HR.â
âYouâd have to explain the context,â he calls over his shoulder.
You roll your eyes as you turn back to the last file on your desk, taking a deep breath and flipping it open.
With the bullpen almost completely silent and the promise of sleep so close you can taste it, you manage to get through it in record time. You even give it a quick second pass to make sure you didnât miss anything glaringly obvious in your tired stateâbut youâre used to working through sleep deprivation, and by ten p.m., you finally start packing up.
You organise the files back into a neat pile, then open the top drawer of your desk for Hotchâs note. You stick it to the top file and grab a pen, scribbling just below the words he wrote: Dangerous thing to promise me.
And, just as he did, you sign off with your name.
Then you gather the whole stack in your arms and cross the bullpen toward his office. Unlocked, as usual. You nudge the door open with your foot, warm lamplight casting an orange glow over the quiet space. It smells faintly like coffee and his cologneâenough to make your heart start racing the second you step inside.
You set the files neatly on his desk, trying not to linger on the quiet traces of him scattered throughout the room.
Thereâs still half a mug of cold coffee abandoned beside some paperwork, and the cashmere sweater heâd been wearing beneath his jacket this morning is draped haphazardly over the back of his chair. Quiet evidence of just how suddenly heâd been called away.
It makes you feel a little better knowing you really have helped him out.
You adjust the files until theyâre perfectly straight, then take the sweater from the back of his chair and fold it neatly before setting it on the chest of drawers beside his desk. You hesitate for just a second before grabbing the mug of cold coffee and heading out of his office, straight for the break room. You empty it, wash it, dry it, then return to his office, placing it back on his desk exactly where you found it. Then you switch the lamp off on your way out, pulling the door most of the way shut behind youâthe way itâd been before you stepped inside.
It doesnât take long for you to gather your things, head down to security, and badge out. One of the guards escorts you to the parking garage, waiting until youâre safely inside your car with the engine running before he takes the elevator back up.
Once home, you quickly feed the yowling Leiaâyour cat, whoâs very unimpressed by your late arrivalâtake a quick shower, change into your comfiest, threadbare sleep shirt, then crawl into bed with your laptop balanced on your knees. You know you should just try to get some sleep, but youâve been ignoring a few personal messages and emails for a couple days now, and you know that if you donât get to them soon, youâll start to feel guilty.
You open your emails, reply to a couple, then pull up a new browser tab and type in the login address for the dating site Garcia set you up for. Not that you couldnât have set up your own profile if youâd really wanted to.
Noâthis profile is just the unintentional byproduct of your ongoing attempt to redirect attention.
One slow Thursday evening in the bullpen, while youâd been loudly complaining about how impossible it was to meet men with a job like yours, Morgan had the brilliant idea of making you a dating profile. Garcia immediately lit up at the idea, pulling the site up on her computer while Reid launched into a rambling statistical analysis about the probability of finding genuine compatibility online.
Hotch hadnât contributed to the conversation, but youâd known he was listening.
That had been the whole point. You always perform a little harder when Hotch can hear.
The site finally loads and you type in your credentials, waiting a few seconds for your profile to pop up.
Twelve notifications.
You click on the âmessagesâ tab and start scrolling. There are a few old conversations that fizzled out and youâve long since decided not to reply to. There are a couple of messages from people you never intend on starting a conversation with. Then there are two new messagesâones youâd seen pop up on your phone but couldnât be bothered to engage with over the weekend.
After all, youâre not actually looking to date anyone.
But one of the messages catches your eye.
DCRunner00: You seem like the kind of person whoâs either very funny or very mean. Iâm willing to risk it.
You snort, then type out a reply.
You: Unfortunately for you, those traits arenât mutually exclusive.
Just as you hit enter, Leia leaps up onto the bed.
âHey, sassy girl,â you coo, moving your laptop to reach for her.
Your fingers graze her soft coat, and she gives you an incredibly disapproving look.
You roll your eyes. âAlright. Sorry for loving you.â
You settle back against the pillows as she makes her way to the other side of the bed, curling up as far as she can possibly get from you.
Ping! Ping! Two more messages pop up.
DCRunner00: Thatâs probably the best possible answer you couldâve given. DCRunner00: So whatâs your worst personality trait? I feel like thatâs more interesting than hobbies.
That answer comes a little too easily.
You: Workaholic. You? DCRunner00: I get bored easily. DCRunner00: Which usually means I either start running or annoying people for entertainment. You: Sounds like a public safety issue. DCRunner00: Depends who you ask. DCRunner00: You should probably get some sleep, Workaholic. Itâs late.
You glance over at Leia as she rolls onto her side, stretching her front legs, and only then do you realise you were actually smiling at your screen.
You shake your head, typing quickly.
You: Yeah, I should. You: Night, Running Man.
Then you shut your laptop before he can send another message.
TUESDAY 9:50AM
âMorgan, youâre with me at district court this afternoon,â Hotch says, closing the file in front of him. âThe defence attorneyâs pushing back on the Richardson testimony, so weâll need to review our timeline before the hearing.â
Heâs wearing a grey suit today.
You can never think straight when heâs wearing a grey suit.
Morgan sighs dramatically. âNothing says excitement like four hours in a courthouse basement.â
Hotch ignores him completely.
âJJ, I want the media requests filtered through Straussâs office before lunch. Reid, finish the geographic overlays from the Fairfax case and send them to Rossi when youâre done.â
He glances once around the table.
âIf anything urgent comes in, youâll be notified. Otherwise, continue using this downtime to catch up on reports.â
Then he gathers the files into a neat stack and stands, turning toward the door.
The rest of the room starts moving slowly. Morgan mutters something to JJ about the court hearing, Prentiss turns to Reid, asking something about a case you donât quite catch, and Garcia is already explaining something on her laptop to Rossi, whoâs watching the screen with quiet concentration.
Which leaves you to shamelessly stare at your bossâ ass as he walks out of the room.
âYou should probably blink.â
Your head snaps toward Reid, frown already forming. âIâll blink when I want to blink.â
He presses his lips together to keep from laughing, and you know heâs fighting the urge to launch into some deeply unwanted psychoanalysis of your behaviourâbut thankfully, the rest of the team is still too close for him to risk it.
Eventually, everyone starts filing out of the conference room and back into the bullpen. You end up being the last to leave, behind Reid and Garcia who are chatting animatedly about some new phone app theyâre both obsessed with.
Youâre just about to pass Hotchâs office door whenâyou hear your name.
You turn your head, and he gestures for you to come in.
Reid glances briefly over his shoulder, an irritatingly knowing look on his face as you turn and step into Hotchâs office.
You clear your throat, stopping a few feet from the desk. âSir?â
âHow late were you here last night?â he asks.
You lift a shoulder. âAbout ten.â
His jaw shifts as he leans back in his chair. âThatâs late.â
âMorgan said you needed them done by the morning.â
âI didnât mean first thing,â he says, smoothing the end of his tie. âYou couldâve finished the rest before lunch.â
You blink. âOh.â
His gaze holds yours for a second too long.
âYou donât need to stay late to impress me.â
Your eyes widen slightly before you force out a small, awkward laugh. âOhâuhâgood to know.â
He glances briefly at the navy-blue cashmere sweater still folded neatly on the chest of drawers.
âStill,â he says, lower this time. âI appreciated it. The files, and⌠everything else.â
Your breath catches softly in your throat.
âAnytime, sir,â you manage.
He nods once, then drops his gaze back to the paperwork on his desk.
You donât need any more of a dismissal than that, so you turn quickly and step out, pulling the door shut behind you. He prefers it closed, even if he wonât admit it because he doesnât want the team to think heâs shutting them out. Heâs just more comfortable in privateâit helps him focus.
By the time you get back to your desk, everyone else is already settled and working quietly. Not even Reid glances up or offers a teasing remark.
You drop into your chair and wriggle your mouse, grabbing your phone while you wait for the screen to wake up.
Two new messages from DCRunner00.
DCRunner00: Running Man? DCRunner00: Great book. Slightly concerning nickname, though.
You canât help yourself, so you type out a quick reply.
You: Better than âWorkaholicâ. You: You read Stephen King?
âHey, you busy?â
You glance over at Reid. âArenât we all?â
He tilts his head. âYouâre on your phone.â
âI could be working.â
âAre you?â
âNo.â
âGood,â he says, shuffling the files on his desk. âHotch wants us to prep the full geographic and timeline package for the Fairfax files in case it turns into an active investigation.â
You sigh, already pushing back from your desk. âAnd by âusâ you mean...?â
âI could use your help.â
âFine,â you mutter, setting your phone down.
He scoots over as you roll your chair toward his desk, settling in beside him. The files are all laid out, including your victimology report with Rossiâs few annotations. There are crime scene reports, autopsy summaries, witness statements, geographic overlays, and mapsâeverything needed to justify escalating the case into a full BAU investigation.
âWhere do you want to start?â
âIâm trying to rebuild the geographic timeline digitally,â he says, âbut half the field reports were logged out of sequence and now the movement patterns donât align.â
You nod. âOkay, walk me through where it stops making sense.â
Three hours later, you feel like your eyeballs are bleeding. Youâve read the same witness statement at least twenty times now, but with every pass it only makes less sense. How could Annabelle Hutton possibly be placed in two different counties less than forty minutes apart?
âItâs physically impossible,â you mutter, rubbing your eyes.
Reid hums quietly beside you. âNot necessarily.â
You stare at him. âCare to elaborate?â
âWell, depending on traffic conditions, inaccurate timestamp reporting, and the reliability of eyewitness memory retention, there are at least four scenarios where the timeline could still technically work.â
You sigh, leaning back in your chair and staring up at the ceiling. âIf you know so much, then why canât you figure this out?â
He still doesnât turn away from his screen. âI will. Eventually.â
You groan softly, dragging both hands down your face just as a familiar voice cuts through the quiet bullpen.
âNo, listen to me carefully.â
Both you and Reid glance up automatically.
Hotch is walking slowly past the desks with his phone pressed to his ear, expression calm but impossibly stern in a way that immediately makes heat crawl beneath your skin.
âYou donât need to explain the problem again,â he says evenly. âYou need to tell me how youâre fixing it.â
He pauses briefly beside Reidâs desk, listening.
âThen prioritise the transfer first,â he says. âIf the paperwork isnât filed before opposing counsel reviews discovery, the timeline becomes vulnerable and the entire testimony gets picked apart.â
He rests a hand on the partition between the desks, gaze fixed somewhere distant as he listens to the person on the other end.
âNo,â he says after a moment, voice lower now. âIâm not asking you to stay late. Iâm telling you this needs to be finished tonight.â
Your stomach flips.
This absolutely should not be as hot as it is.
âGood,â he says calmly into the phone, straightening again. âCall me when itâs done.â
Then he keeps walking, cutting through the bullpen before turning sharply toward his office.
You stare after him, the thought slipping out before you can stop it. âDo you think he talks you through it?â
âProbably,â Reid says, turning back to his screen. âHigh-control personalities usually prefer maintaining verbal direction in intimate situations because it reinforces predictability and compliance dynamics.â
You go still. You hadnât actually expected an answer.
âSomeone like Hotch would probably place a pretty high psychological value on responsiveness,â Reid continues. âThe immediate compliance aspect reinforces authority, which means verbal direction would likely become part of the overall intimacy dynamic rather than just communication.â
Your face heats.
âEspecially because heâs not impulsive enough to rely on unpredictability. Heâd want constant awareness of how the other person is responding emotionally and physically, so talking them through things would help maintain control of the situation while also reinforcing trust.â
Oh my God.
âAnd honestly,â Reid goes on, âpeople with highly structured leadership personalities usually develop pretty strong positive associations with obedience because it confirms stability, attentiveness, emotional investmentââ He pauses briefly. âWhich means heâd probably find it disproportionately attractive when someone follows instructions immediately or responds well to praise because it validates both the authority dynamic and the emotional trust beneath it, so statistically speaking heâdââ
He stops.
Then slowly turns toward you.
â...I crossed a social boundary somewhere in there, didnât I?â
You nod slowly, your voice coming out unnaturally high. âJust a couple.â
He sighs, dropping his chin slightly as he turns back to his screen.
You huff out a breathless laugh and lean back in your chair again. You need a minute to recover from that, because now youâre hot all over and the only thing you can think about is your boss hovering over you, praising you in that low, steady voice while his hand settles around your throatâ
Fortunately, it doesnât take Reid long to start rambling about geographic overlays again. You do your best to focus on what heâs saying, but after another hour of scrutinising the timeline inconsistencies, you decide you need an actual break.
You grab your phone and your jacket and head out of the office, sending a quick text to the team chat asking if anyone else would like a coffee from the cafe down the road. Itâs a thousand times better than break room coffee.
When you step out of the elevator on the ground floor, you bring up your messages with DCRunner00. Youâre not sure why, because normally you only check your profile when you feel like you need to keep up the act, but something about this guy keeps making you want to reply.
DCRunner00: Iâve read a few. DCRunner00: What does a workaholic do for fun?
You type your reply as you step out of the building.
You: Work, mostly. You: And sleep.
By the time you return to the office with a tray of four coffees, you have two new messagesâbut you canât reply to them until you set the tray down at your desk.
âThanks, pretty girl,â Morgan says as he takes one, flashing you a grin.
You smile back. âAnything for you, gorgeous.â
Then you pull your phone out of your pocket and bring up the message thread.
DCRunner00: Whatâs your schedule even like? DCRunner00: You strike me as an âanswers emails at midnightâ type of person. You: Nah. Thatâs my boss. You: My schedule is chaos, though.
âThanks,â Reid says as he takes his coffee, leaving only two.
You set your phone down and take the last two coffees out of the tray, leaving one at your desk before taking the other to Hotchâs office. You can see through the window that heâs not on the phoneâfor onceâso you knock twice on the slightly ajar door before stepping inside.
He glances up, his brows pulling together slightly. âI didnât ask for coffee.â
âI know,â you say quickly. âBut itâs almost three, and you always need another coffee around three, and I figured you probably didnât answer the team message because you still feel bad about me staying so late last night, which you shouldnât, by the way.â
He straightens, brows drawing tighter.
âAnd I know youâve got court with Morgan this afternoon, and youâre going to try to leave early, but someoneâs definitely going to call at the last second and derail that plan, so youâll only have enough time to get to the courthouseânot enough time to stop for coffee.â
You set the cup down in front of him.
âSo,â you tilt your head, âcoffee.â
He leans back in his chair, studying you for a second.
âThatâs some pretty solid profiling, Agent.â
Your face heats instantly.
âWell,â you say, backing slowly toward the door, âmaybe now you owe me two.â
The corner of his mouth lifts, just slightly, but itâs enough for the butterflies in your stomach to explode. You canât help but grin as you turn away, slipping quickly out the door before your lungs forget how to work entirely.
You spend the rest of the day at Reidâs desk, finishing the case package for the Fairfax files and complaining about unreliable witnesses. Hotch and Morgan head off to court just after three, announcing to the rest of the team that they wonât be back. JJ is the first to head home again around five, followed by Prentiss, then Rossiâthen you and Reid finally decide to call it a day just after six.
Which is also when you finally check your messages again.
DCRunner00: Chaos how?
You type a quick reply while you wait for your carâs AC to warm up.
You: Long hours. You: Weird hours. You: And a deeply unhealthy relationship with caffeine.
Then you tuck your phone away and head out of the parking garage.
Leia is already yowling by the time you step through your apartment door. Sheâs always hungry, even though she has an automatic feeder for dry foodâbut apparently that isnât good enough. She prefers the wet stuff.
You quickly peel open a packet of fishy-smelling chicken jelly sludge and drop it into her bowl before washing your hands and moving into your bedroom. You flip the ensuite light on and start the shower, pulling your phone out of your pocket while you wait for the water to warm.
DCRunner00: Ah. So youâre one of those people. You: Rude.
He replies almost immediately.
DCRunner00: Accurate, though? You: Unfortunately.
You drop your phone on the bed and start undressing.
Ping!
DCRunner00: What do you actually do?
You hesitate. Itâs not like you can just say youâre in the FBI. Contrary to what some people might think, real FBI agents canât just go around bragging about their highly classified work status. Itâs dangerous.
You: Mostly admin. You: Governmental stuff.
You toss your phone back onto the bed and turn into the steamy ensuite. You shower quickly, dry off, run product through your damp hair, then pull on a shirt and a pair of sweatpants before heading back out into the kitchen.
Youâre not in the mood to cook tonight, so you grab a protein bar out of the cupboard and start boiling the kettle while you check your phone for what feels like the hundredth time.
DCRunner00: Sounds boring. DCRunner00: Do you get days off, though?
You drop a teabag into your mug before typing out a reply.
You: Sort of. You: But if my boss calls, I answer.
He replies instantly again.
DCRunner00: Iâm starting to think you secretly enjoy being overworked. You: I think Iâd get bored otherwise.
You pour the boiling water into your mug and watch his next reply pop up.
DCRunner00: That sounds suspiciously unhealthy. You: Probably. What about you? What do you do?
You tuck your phone into your pocket, then grab your tea and protein bar and head to the couch. Thereâs nothing youâre really interested in watchingâsince you donât usually have the time to keep up with any showsâso you turn on the nightly news before grabbing your laptop and pulling up a new browser.
Heâs already replied by the time you log in.
DCRunner00: Run. DCRunner00: Read. DCRunner00: Annoy people professionally. You: That sounds made up.
You open your protein bar.
DCRunner00: It mostly is. DCRunner00: So your boss actually calls you outside work hours?
You hesitate at the sudden redirection. Most men on dating apps prefer talking about themselves. Their jobs, hobbies, gym routines, childhood dogsâwhatever makes them seem interestingâbut this guy seems far more interested in observing than being observed.
You type out a vague response.
You: Sometimes. You: Occupational hazard, I guess. DCRunner00: And you always answer? You: Pretty much. You: Heâd only call if it mattered.
His next reply takes almost two minutes to come through.
DCRunner00: Hm. DCRunner00: Iâm starting to think your boss gets more attention than I do.
You almost choke on your tea.
Thatâs... weird.
Maybe you have mentioned your boss a little more than strictly necessary, but heâs the one asking all the questions about your job. Itâs a little hard not to mention your boss when your life practically revolves around himâin more ways than you care to admit.
You: Jealous already, Running Man? DCRunner00: Should I be?
You sit up straighter, suddenly a little nauseous.
You: I think youâre spending too much time talking to strangers online. DCRunner00: Maybe. DCRunner00: You still replied, though.
âOkay,â you say, startling Leia who was half-asleep on the other end of the couch. âThatâs enough.â
You: Iâm going to sleep. You: Try not to spiral while Iâm gone.
His last message pops up just before you shut your laptop.
DCRunner00: No promises.
WEDNESDAY 8:10AM
âCome on,â you mutter, mashing the elevator button for the doors to close.
Youâre a whole thirty minutes earlier than usual this morning. You didnât even make a coffee in your travel mug before running out the door. You just woke up, brushed your teeth, checked your messagesâand decided you needed to talk to Garcia immediately.
âHeyâwoah.â Reid steps out of your way as you rush into the bullpen. âYouâre early.â
You drop your bag on your desk and quickly shrug off your jacket.
âIs Garcia in yet?â
He frowns slightly. âI think so. Why?â
You pull your laptop out of your bag.
âI justâI need her.â
Youâre already walking away before he can press any further, moving back through the bullpen with your laptop hugged against your chest. Youâre just about to round the corner toward the elevators whenâ
âHeyââ Hotch stops short just as you nearly run into him. âSlow down. You alright?â
His hand is hovering near your waistânot quite touching, but close enough for you to feel its warmth.
You blink up at him. âSorry. Yeah. Uhâtotally fine. Just going to see Garcia about... a case.â
His brows pull together slightly.
âAlright, well, Garciaâs not going anywhere,â he says evenly. âTake a breath.â
You nod slowly, already stepping around him.
âRight,â you mutter. âBreathing. Got it. Sorry, sir.â
You can almost swear you see the corner of his mouth liftâbut then the elevator dings behind you, and you have to hurry to slip through the doors before they slide shut.
It feels like an eternity before they finally open again, but once they do you practically sprint down the hall to Garciaâs lair and burst through the door without warning.
She startles so hard she nearly drops her coffee. âSweet mother of encryption, knock first!â
âSorry,â you say, breathless. âI need you.â
âWell, obviously,â she mutters, checking her shirt for any spills. âIâm the backbone of this entire operation.â
You drop down into the spare chair and open your laptop, setting it on her desk.
âYou cannot judge me for what Iâm about to show you.â
She glances up, brows lifting. âOh. So this is serious?â
You grimace. âI donât know.â
âOkay,â she says slowly. âSlightly less reassuring than I was hoping for. Tell me whatâs happened.â
You take a deep breath, then let it out in a rush.
âYou remember the dating profile you set up for me?â
She nods.
âAlright, so, I wonât lie, I havenât really met anyone on there yet, but I check the messages occasionally. When Iâve got time, you know? And I donât have a whole lot of ongoing conversations, but this one guy sent me something that was kind of funny, so I responded, and the conversation was pretty normal for the most part. I couldnât reply all that quickly, but he didnât seem to mind.â
You shift awkwardly, scooting your chair closer to her desk.
âNothing really felt out of place untilâwell, he wouldnât talk about himself much, which is strange because most people on dating apps are usually more interested in presenting themselves than gathering information. He kept asking questions about my job, actually. Not that my job is on my profile, but he was really curious about my schedule, orâI guessâlack of schedule.â
You wince.
âSo now that I think about it, that was probably the second sign something might be off. Or maybe he just wanted to meet up, I donât know.â
You hesitate.
âBut then he sent me this message at like... two a.m.â
She squints at the screen.
DCRunner00: Bet you answer your boss faster than you answer anyone else.
âMmm. Nope. Donât love that,â she says, shaking her head. âThat is not a normal amount of emotional investment for a stranger.â
You sink back in your chair. âThatâs what I thought.â
She starts scrolling back through the messages.
âHave you told Hotch?â
âNope.â
She glances at you from the corner of her eye. âYou answered way too fast for that to be a normal response.â
âBecause the answer is no,â you say firmly, leaning forward again.
âMm-hm.â She keeps scrolling. âOkay, well... technically this could still be nothing. He could just be some lonely basement cryptid with Wi-Fi and poor social skills.â
You groan, dragging both hands over your face.
âYou do mention Hotch kind of a lot.â
Your head snaps up. âHeâs my boss.â
Garcia gives you a long look.
âOkay,â she says slowly. âSure.â
âGarcia.â
âIâm just saying, if a man talked about a woman this much online, weâd all be making faces.â
You point at the screen. âFocus.â
âRight. Yes. Creepy internet man. Sorry.â
Her expression settles into something more focused as she turns back toward her array of monitors.
âOkay. Hereâs what weâre going to do. Donât block him yet.â
You sigh. âI donât love that idea.â
âNeither do I, babycakes, but if heâs routing through the website normally, I might be able to pull connection data if we keep him talking long enough.â
You frown. âIn English?â
She gives you another look. âTimestamps, login patterns, regional pings, possible VPN usage, device signatures if he slips upâbasic digital stalking fun.â
âOh, of course,â you say sarcastically. âNormal stuff.â
âFor me, it is normal.â She points toward the laptop. âNow reply to him. Something casual. I want to see if he responds immediately again.â
Your fingers hover over the keys for a second before you type out your reply.
You: I thought I told you not to spiral.
He replies so fast that even Garcia flinches.
DCRunner00: Relax. It was a joke. DCRunner00: Mostly.
She stares at the screen. âOkay, I officially donât like him.â
You lean back in your chair again, nausea twisting low in your gut. âI feel sick.â
Garciaâs expression softens slightly. âMaybe you should tellââ
âNo.â
She sighs quietly. âOkay. Fine. Can you keep replying from your phone?â
You nod.
âGood. Donât overdo it, just enough to keep him engaged.â Her fingers start flying across the keyboard. âIâll work my magic down here and call you if I find anything.â
You push yourself out of the chair, clutching your phone a little tighter.
âYouâre the best, Pen.â
âI know.â She waves a hand without looking away from her screens. âNow go pretend to be emotionally stable upstairs.â
By the time you get back to your desk, almost everyone is already in the conference room ready for the morning briefing. You drop your phone beside your keyboardâtoo anxious to have it with you during the meetingâthen quickly unpack your things and grab a notebook before making your way up.
Reid nods at you from his usual seat, gesturing to the empty one beside him.
âHey,â you mutter as you drop down next to him.
His brows pull together. âEverything alright?â
You nod. âYeah. Fine. Iâll explain later.â
Hotch keeps the morning briefing quick. He goes over yesterdayâs court hearing, outlines the Fairfax briefing package in case it escalates into an active investigation, then gets JJ to run through the highest priority consultation requests.
You spend most of it toying with a loose thread on the cuff of your blouse. Youâre pretty sure itâs the first briefing in years where you havenât spent at least part of it staring at Hotch instead of your notesâand when the room finally relaxes and everyone starts to filter out, Reid turns to you.
âOkay, now Iâm concerned,â he says.
You glance at him. âWhy?â
âYou didnât look at Hotch once during that entire meeting.â
You roll your eyes. âSpenceââ
âSomething must be seriously wrong.â
You let out a long exhale, glancing briefly around the almost empty room. Only Morgan and Rossi are left, halfway to the door, deep in discussion about something that happened at the court hearing yesterday afternoon.
âOkay,â you say quietly, turning back to Reid. âIâm having some... trouble, I guess, with a guy.â
His brows shoot up. âA guyââ
âOnline,â you add quickly.
He tilts his head. âIâm confused again.â
You sigh. âRemember that dating profile Garcia set up for me?â
âYou mean the profile you allowed Garcia to create as part of your increasingly unsustainable performative dating strategy?â
You glare at him. âYes. That one.â
âThen yes, I remember it very clearly.â
âWell,â you mutter, pinching the bridge of your nose, âI had this guy message me a couple days ago. It was normal at first but now itâs gotten... weird. So, Iâm getting Garcia to look into it.â
His forehead creases. âHave you toldââ
âNo.â
âMaybe you shouldââ
âI said no.â
âAlright.â He raises both hands in surrender. âOkay. Iâm dropping it. Itâs justâŚâ
You narrow your eyes at him.
âWell, statistically speaking, the majority of uncomfortable online interactions donât escalate into actual stalking behaviour. Most people displaying premature emotional fixation online are socially isolated rather than violent.â
You lift a brow, waiting for the punchline.
âHowever,â he adds, âcyberstalking offenders also tend to develop parasocial attachments disproportionately quickly because the perceived emotional intimacy bypasses a lot of normal social barriers, which means escalation patterns can become highly personalised in a very short period of time.â
You stare at him.
âIn cases where the fixation becomes grievance-oriented, the offender is usually highly organised rather than impulsive, so the behaviour tends to be significantly more deliberate and psychologically targeted.â
He pauses, frowning faintly.
âThat was supposed to be reassuring.â
ââŚThanks, Reid,â you mutter, turning away from him slowly. âNow I feel so much better.â
When you get back to your desk, you decide itâs time to reply again. You grab your phone and bring up the messages, taking a minute to think about what to typeâknowing Garcia will be seeing the conversation too.
You type out the only mildly casual response you can think of.
You: Youâre weird.
He replies just as fast as usual.
DCRunner00: You disappear a lot. You: Workaholic, remember. You: I told you my schedule was chaos.
Youâre about to turn your phone over on your desk when a different notification pops upâfrom Garcia.
Garcia: If this is your version of flirting, baby girl, I think I just figured out why youâre still single.
You snort softly, typing out a quick reply.
You: Trust me, thatâs not the reason. Garcia: So there IS a reason? You: Shh. Iâm working. Garcia: Boo!
You huff another quiet laugh as you turn your phone over, nudging it toward the edge of your desk in the hopes that you might be able to focus on work rather than creepy internet man for at least a few hours.
It doesnât work.
Barely half an hour later, you lift your phone to check for another notificationâbut thereâs nothing there. You pull up the message thread again and scroll up, checking the timestamps to see if heâs ever gone quiet on you beforeâbut he hasnât. Not really. So you type another message.
You: You went quiet. Should I be concerned?
Itâs a calculated move. If heâs paying attention to response patternsâand at this point youâre pretty sure he isâthen following up first helps maintain the illusion that nothing has changed. No sudden distance. No obvious discomfort. No reason for him to think youâre pulling away.
If he is dangerous, the last thing you want is for him to feel rejected.
An hour later, Rossi drops a legal pad onto your desk, asking you to take another look at a witness timeline that doesnât feel rightâwhich keeps you occupied for a good forty-five minutes. Then Morgan leans over the partition between your desks, asking if you can translate Reid into English. That takes up another hour of your day, and by the time you grab your first afternoon coffee, youâve got three notifications.
One is a missed call from Garcia. The other two are from creepy internet man.
DCRunner00: Depends. Are you worried about me? DCRunner00: Blue looks good on you, by the way.
Your stomach drops. âOh my God.â
You immediately call Garcia back.
She answers on half a ring. âAre you wearing blue?â
âYou saw me this morning.â
âI canât remember,â she says. âAre you?â
You drag a hand through your hair. âYes.â
âHoly shit,â she whispers. âYouâve got to tellââ
âNo.â
âAre you insane?â
âMaybe, butââ You squeeze your eyes shut for a second. âOkay, justâhear me out. Blue is a statistically safe guess. Itâs a neutral professional colour with high frequency in workplace attire, especially in government buildings.â
Garcia goes quiet for a second.
âAnd does this unsub know you work in a government building?â
âDonât call him that,â you snap. âAndâwell, kind of. I didnât tell him exactly, but I said... government adjacent.â
âI swear to God,â she mutters, âif I have to identify your body next week, Iâm going to kill you.â
You press your free hand against your forehead.
âYou wonât,â you say firmly. âAlright? Weâre getting ahead of ourselves.â
Garcia scoffs loudly.
âSeriously,â you insist. âIt could still be nothing. A weird coincidence, maybe an awkward guy with boundary issues and too much free time. We deal with actual predators every day. I can handle a few creepy messages.â
The line goes quiet againâthen she sighs.
âWhy are you so against telling Hotch?â
âBecause I donât want to bother him,â you say quickly. âWeâve got a quiet week, he finally seems slightly less stressed, and I donât want to cause a whole fuss over something that might turn out to be nothing.â
She sighs again, louder this time. âFine. I wonât go to Hotch.â
Your shoulders sag. âThank you.â
âOn one condition,â she adds. âIâm sleeping over tonight.â
You nearly choke. âWhat?â
âNon-negotiable.â
âPenelope, thatâs insane.â
âNo,â Garcia says firmly, âwhatâs insane is you trying to casually explain away potential stalking behaviour while actively refusing to inform your unit chief.â
âHe is not stalking me,â you protest, keeping your voice low.
âMm-hm.â
âYouâre overreacting.â
âAnd yet,â Garcia says, âif you die, I become morally complicit because I knew about creepy internet man and failed to intervene.â
You frown. ââŚMorally complicit?â
âAccessory to murder-adjacent,â she corrects. âAnd my guilty conscience requires eight hours of sleep minimum, so congratulations. Weâre having a slumber party.â
You let out a long sigh. âOkay. Fine.â
She hums, satisfied.
âI need to reply to him again.â
âWell, donât ask me,â she mutters. âYouâre the one whoâs apparently fluent in creepy internet freak.â
You laugh despite yourself. âThanks, Pen.â
âMm-hm. And just so weâre clear, tonight we are watching wholesome romantic comedies and eating enough sugar to kill a Victorian child.â
âI was actually thinking psychological thriller marathon.â
âAbsolutely not.â
You smile faintly, leaning back in your chair. âFine. Romantic comedies it is.â
âGood,â Garcia says firmly. âNow hang up before I change my mind and march upstairs to Hotchâs office myself.â
You roll your eyes as you hang up, then open the message thread again. You donât have to think too hard about what to type. You donât want to escalate or accuse him, but you need him to stay engaged. You want him to explain himself to see how he reframes the behaviour.
You: Lucky guess.
The next few hours slip by in a strange blur of routine tasks and fragmented conversations.
At about three oâclock, Prentiss drops a file on your desk and asks if you can double-check a victim timeline while sheâs stuck on the phone with Chicago. Then Rossi calls you into his office to sanity-check a profile theory heâs working through out loudâwhich means fifteen minutes of listening to him argue with himself while you sit there trying not to focus on Hotchâs voice through the wall.
When you finally get back to your desk, Reid spends twenty minutes walking you through a probability model nobody asked for but everyone somehow ends up listening to anyway. He only stops when Hotch appears, carrying a stack of files from the Richardson case he wants Morgan to look over before he signs them offâand for the first time in God knows how long, you donât stare shamelessly at his ass as he walks out of the bullpen.
By six p.m., JJ and Rossi are gone, Prentiss is helping Morgan with the Richardson files, and Reid is building a tiny tower out of paperclips while he reads over a file Rossi dropped on his desk before he left.
At exactly six-fifteen, your desk phone rings.
âHello?â
âPack your things, baby girl. Your government-issued sleepover is about to begin.â
You snort softly. âAlright. Iâll see you soon.â
You hang up the phone and start clearing your desk, organising paperwork into piles and packing away stationery while you wait for your computer to shut down.
âSee who soon?â Reid asks.
You glance at him. âGarcia.â
He tilts his head.
âSheâs staying over tonight.â
His brows lift. âBecause of your stalkââ
âGirlâs night,â you interrupt, eyes widening. âThatâs all.â
His gaze narrows. âShould I be worried?â
You scoff. âAbout me? Never.â
You slide your arms into your jacket then finally pick up your phone, finding two new notifications from creepy internet man waiting for you.
âReally?â Reid asks, turning his chair to face you. âBecause youâve spent most of the day staring at your phone like itâs a bomb, you spent most of Rossiâs profile discussion peeling the label off your water bottle instead of contributing, and you reorganised the same stack of paperwork three separate times.â
You pause mid-motion.
âAlso,â he continues, âyou usually correct Morgan when he misquotes case statistics and today you let him do it twice, which honestly might be the most concerningââ
âOkay!â you cut in quickly, slinging your bag over your shoulder. âGood talk. Love the observational skills. Bye.â
He doesnât say anything else as you walk away, murmuring goodbyes to Morgan and Prentiss as you pass, but you can still feel him watching you. Youâre just about to press the button for the elevator whenâ
âAgent.â
You stop automatically, turning to find Hotch with a file tucked under one arm and that signature frown etched between his brows. Only this time it isnât frustrated or disapprovingâitâs curious.
You force a small smile. âSir.â
His eyes move over your face briefly. âYou alright?â
You nod once. âOf course.â
He takes a step forward, his voice dropping lower. âYou sure?â
Your breath catches.
Heâs close now. Too close. You have to tilt your head back to meet his eyes. You can smell his cologne, feel his warmth, count the beauty marks dotted across his cheek.
âYouâve seemed distracted today,â he says.
You swallow hard. âUhâno. No. Sorry, I justâI didnât get much sleep last night.â
His brows draw a little tighter, and he opens his mouth as if heâs about to say something elseâpress harder, maybeâbut then seems to think better of it.
âAlright,â he murmurs. âGet some rest tonight.â
Then he nods once and steps back, his jaw tightening for just a second before he turns away.
You donât move immediately. You canât. Your mind is reeling, your pulse is still hammering, and your breath is caught somewhere between your ribs while your lungs try to remember how to work.
âHello?â Garcia calls from behind you. âI cannot hold these doors forever, babycakes.â
You shake your head. âShit. Sorry.â
You turn and hurry into the elevator, slipping in beside her just before the doors slide shut.
For a moment, neither of you says anything.
Thenâ
âSo, that thing you said earlier about there being a reason youâre still singleâŚâ
You shut your eyes. âPenelope.â
âIâm just saying,â she continues lightly, âunless I hallucinated whatever just happened in that hallway, Iâm starting to develop theories.â
You ignore her, watching the numbers on the elevator slowly descend like counting down the days you have before the entire team figures out your secret. Because if this guy really is a creep, if you do have to tell Hotch, then itâs only a matter of time before the BAU are dissecting your dating life and realising what a ruse it really is.
And you know better than anyone that once these profilers start looking too closely at something, they rarely stop until theyâve pulled it apart completely.
The second you step through the door to your apartment, Garcia rushes past you to sweep the place. Leia startles almost immediately, running from the couch to your bedroom while Garcia complains about the fact that Leia is the only cat sheâs ever met that doesnât like her.
âLeia hates everyone,â you tell her, kicking your shoes off by the door. âEven me.â
Garcia just rolls her eyes, continuing from room to room to check the window locks and balcony doors.
Once sheâs satisfied that everything is secure, she sets her laptop up on your kitchen counter and starts running a program that looks like hieroglyphics to you.
âHave you seen his latest messages?â she asks.
You shake your head, setting your phone on the counter. âNo.â
She opens your laptop and logs into the dating siteâbecause apparently she knows your password now.
DCRunner00: Maybe. DCRunner00: Or maybe youâre just easier to read than you think.
You type out the first response you can think of, not wanting to seem like youâre overanalysing this.
You: Or maybe Iâm just not trying so hard to be mysterious.
Garcia then spends the next ten minutes trying to explain her process to you in terms that almost make sense. So far sheâs managed to narrow him down to a general region through login patterns and routing behaviour, but she still canât lock onto a direct IP address. Not because she canâtâapparently that part would actually be pretty easyâbut because doing it properly would mean running requests through systems that leave a trail. And right now, this definitely isnât an official investigation.
âThe second I start pulling the fun federal strings,â Garcia says, typing furiously, âthereâs paperwork, access logs, oversight, and approximately twelve thousand ways for this to become a whole thing.â
You lean against the counter. âWe donât want that.â
âNot yet.â Her expression sharpens slightly. âAlso, if creepy internet man is more sophisticated than he seems, thereâs always a chance heâs monitoring for targeted tracing attempts. If he realises someoneâs looking too closely at him before we know who he is, he could disappear completely.â
Your stomach twists. âOr escalate.â
You spend the next couple of hours keeping creepy internet man engaged while Garcia rambles tech jargon that makes less sense the longer the night wears on. At some point, you order pizza, then you migrate to the couch, and eventually you both end up sitting through the credits of Two Weeks Notice while waiting for one last reply in the hopes that he might finally answer something about himself.
DCRunner00: Refreshing DCRunner00: Most people hide too much. You: Depends what theyâre trying to hide. DCRunner00: What are you trying to hide? You: Besides the fact that Iâm exhausted? Nothing. DCRunner00: You seem distracted tonight. You: Long day. DCRunner00: I noticed. You: How was yours?
You wait until almost midnight before finally deciding to call it a night.
Garcia checks all the windows and doors again while you brush your teeth and change into pyjamas. When you step back out of your bedroom to say goodnight, Garcia is trying her hardest to lure Leia onto the couch with her, but Leia is very stubbornly curled up beneath the TV unit.
âNight, Pen,â you murmur, rubbing your eyes. âThanks again... for everything.â
âNight, gorgeous,â she calls, peering over the back of the couch. âWake me up if you hear literally anything suspicious. Or if Leia finally decides itâs my time.â
You laugh softly, blinking slowly as you turn back into your room and fall face first into bed.
THURSDAY 6:45AM
Youâre not sure whether to be relieved or concerned when you wake up to no new messages from creepy internet man. He hasnât gone quiet for this long beforeâbut if he is just a normal, slightly awkward guy with boundary issues and an internet connection, well... itâs not that hard to believe he might just be sleeping.
Garcia is already up making coffee by the time you step out of your room, trying to bribe Leia out from under the couch with a tube of tuna paste.
The second she sees you, she jumps up and launches into another long-winded explanation about login activity and movement patterns across different access points. Apparently, creepy internet man logged in from three different geographical locations over the course of a few hours last nightâwhich is normal, right? That means he was out doing normal human things, not just lurking in his motherâs basement, stalking women online.
Garcia isnât entirely convinced that him moving locations is enough to get him off the hook as the BAUâs next unsub, but it at least shuts her up until youâre both back at the office.
âHey,â Reid says as soon as you walk into the bullpen. âYou havenât been murdered.â
You frown slightly. âGood morning to you too, Spence.â
Morgan glances up from the file on his desk. âUhâwhy are we getting murdered?â
Reid gestures vaguely in your direction. âBecause sheâs potentially being cyberstalked by aââ
âOh, wow, look at the time,â you interrupt, glaring at Reid. âWouldnât it be such a shame if we all started minding our own business right about now.â
Prentiss turns in her chair, brows raised. âCyberstalked?â
âNobody is cyberstalking anybody,â you say as you drop into your chair. âAnd nobodyâs getting murderedâbut great start to the morning, everyone. Love the energy. Now leave me alone.â
Morgan chuckles quietly. âDamn. Thought you said you got laid last weekend.â
Your hands slip off the desk as you try to pull yourself closer.
âTechnically,â Reid says, âshe only implied it by refusing to answer Garciaâs question during Monday morningâs briefing.â
âAh.â Morgan leans back in his chair. âI knew this was a drought issue.â
You scowl at him. âA drought issue?â
âStatistically speaking,â Reid adds, âpeople experiencing prolonged romantic or sexual dissatisfaction often display lower frustration tolerance and increased agitation in familiar social environments.â
Morgan looks at him. âMan, just say she needs to get laid.â
âOh my God,â you snap. âI do not need to get laid. I am having a completely normal amount of sex already, thank you very muchâand frankly I think itâs deeply inappropriate that youâre all this invested in whether or not Iâm orgasming regularly.â
Reid tilts his head. âYouâre having sex?â
Morganâs brows shoot up, Prentiss chokes on her coffee, and you open your mouth to fire back at him whenâ
Someone clears their throat behind you.
Heat crawls violently up your neckâbut you donât turn around. You canât.
âBriefing room. Five minutes,â Hotch says, his voice dangerously even. âJJâs got an update on the custodial interview with Wallace.â
Morgan presses a fist against his mouth, tryingâand failingâto smother the strangled sound of laughter.
Very slowly, you turn in your chair.
Hotch is standing at the edge of the bullpen with a coffee in one hand and a file in the other. His expression is almost perfectly composed, but thereâs something dangerous lurking beneath itâsomething suspiciously close to amusement in the tightness of his mouth.
âBe right there, sir,â you blurt, lifting two fingers to your forehead in the most ill-timed attempt at a salute the FBI has ever seen.
Hotch just looks at you, the muscle in his jaw jumping once before he turns away.
You want to die.
The second his office door clicks shut behind him, Morgan drops his fist and smacks his palm flat against the desk with a choked laugh.
âOh, you are never recovering from that,â Prentiss mutters, smirking behind her coffee cup.
Morgan leans back in his chair, grinning. âBaby girl, that was painful to watch.â
You drop your head into your hands.
âYou somehow escalated the situation at every possible opportunity,â Reid says thoughtfully.
âI hate you all,â you mumble into your palms.
You spend the next half hour with your nose buried in your notebook, avoiding eye contact with the entire team while JJ explains the month-long back-and-forth that it took to finally get approval for the Wallace interview.
Apparently, the prison is limiting the interview to a single hour and reserving the right to terminate it early if the inmate becomes uncooperativeâwhich Rossi thinks is less about policy and more about Wallace trying to dictate the terms of the interaction.
Itâs not ideal, especially considering you were the one who convinced Hotch to push for the interview before Wallace is transferred to death row. His case was one of the first you ever studied during the BAU training programme, and there isnât much you wouldnât give to pick the sociopathâs brains. One hour with him feels dangerously shortâthat is, assuming Hotch actually picks you to be in the interview with him.
âWe donât have enough time to waste managing personalities in the room,â Hotch says, gathering the files in front of him. âIâll decide on a second agent and send out the interview schedule later today.â
Chairs start scraping back almost immediately, files and notebooks snapping shut as everyone gathers their things and starts filtering out of the roomâbut you donât move. You stay firmly planted in your seat, chewing thoughtfully on the inside of your cheek while you debate whether to follow Hotch into his office and ask to be part of the interview. You donât even have to be asking the questions, you just want to be there. You were the one pushing for it in the first place.
But then your brain very helpfully reminds you that Aaron Hotchner heard you say the word orgasming less than an hour ago and suddenly, being on death row yourself feels infinitely preferable to making eye contact with your unit chief.
âYou alright?â Reid asks, lingering beside you.
You sigh heavily, finally closing your notebook. âYep. Just thinking about how Iâll probably have to fake my own death and change my name after this morning.â
He shrugs. âHotch probably isnât even thinking about it anymore.â
You glance up at him hopefully.
âMorgan definitely is, though.â
You roll your eyes, letting out another resigned sigh as you stand up and follow him out of the briefing room.
The rest of the morning manages to pass without incident. You stay chained to your desk, reviewing reports and processing any files that come your way while very deliberately not glancing up any time Hotch steps out of his office. At around eleven, Morgan and JJ head out to the cafe down the street and come back with coffees for the whole team. Then thereâs a printer jam that gives the rest of the office a rare glimpse at just how angry Emily Prentiss can get when frustrated.
It isnât until just before midday that you finally get up to go to the bathroom, and when you return to your desk, thereâs one new notification in your inbox.
From: Aaron Hotchner Subject: Wallace Interview Youâre with me next Thursday. We leave at 0700.
Your stomach flips.
âWow,â Reid says, suddenly standing right beside your desk. âHe picked you pretty quickly.â
You shoot him a warning look. âSpence.â
âIâm just saying, he usually deliberates longer.â
You glance back at the screen, rereading the first five words that make your pulse skip a little faster.
âYou and Hotch do work unusually well together in confined conversational environments,â Reid adds.
You turn back to him, frowning.
He tilts his head. âThat sounded more suggestive than I intended.â
You open your mouth to tell him how deeply unhelpful heâs being when your phone buzzes twice against your deskâlike it does several times a day, but something about it feels different this time. Wrong.
You reach for it slowly, your stomach twisting tighter as you turn it over.
Two new notifications from creepy internet man. The first since last night.
You open the message threadâand your stomach drops.
DCRunner00: [Image attachment] DCRunner00: Did you and your friend have fun last night?
The image is of your apartment building. Itâs grainy, slightly crooked, clearly taken from somewhere across the streetâbut your living room windows are unmistakable. Warm light glowing through the glass. The blurred silhouette of someone inside.
Ice floods your bloodstream.
You stop breathing.
âIs that... your apartment?â Reid asks, leaning over your shoulder.
You donât answer him. You canât.
The bullpen dissolves into white noise around you.
Untilâ
âIâm done!â Garciaâs voice cuts through the static. âI canât do this anymore!â
Sheâs marching right toward you, your laptopâthat sheâd still been monitoringâtucked under one arm.
Reid gasps. âWait. Is thatââ
Morgan straightens in his chair. âWhatâs happening?â
âHotchâs office,â Garcia says, her expression dangerously stern as she stops beside your desk. âNow.â
You nod slowly, your shoes almost slipping against the carpet as you push your chair back. Reid steps aside just enough to let you stand, but before he can get too far, you reach out and wrap your fingers around his wrist, silently dragging him with you as you follow Garcia back through the bullpen.
Hotch glances up the second Garcia pushes open his office door.
âWhatâs going on?â
His tone is calm, automatic, already slipping into that low, calculated cadence he uses when heâs trying to talk someone down from the ledge. His gaze moves from her to youâand something in his expression shifts. Hardens. That muscle in his jaw ticking just once before he turns back to Garcia.
âWhat happened?â he asks, sharper now.
Garcia crosses the room quickly, opening your laptop and sitting it on his desk while you hover uselessly in the doorway with Reid still caught in your grip.
Hotch glances at the screen, his eyes flicking through the messages.
Then he looks back upâright at youâand something unreadable settles across his face. Something dangerous.
âWho sent this?â
Garcia spends the next five minutes explaining the entire situation at hyper speed while you just... stand there, leaning slightly against Reid like the whole world has tilted on its axis.
Itâs funny how you can spend years building a career around finding bad people. Thinking like them. Predicting them. Profiling them. But the moment something happens to youâsomething realâthatâs when all the theory suddenly stops feeling theoretical. And maybe itâs because you know exactly what people like this are capable of, or how quickly situations like this can escalate once someone decides theyâre emotionally invested in you.
Or maybe itâs just the horrifying realisation that some part of you knew where this was heading all along. And you still didnât do anything about it until now. Not until you put yourselfâand your friendâin danger.
âGet everyone in the briefing room,â Hotch says the second Garcia finishes. âNow.â
Garcia nods once before slipping back out the door, and only then do you finally let go of Reidâs wristâmaking a mental note to apologise later for the excessive physical contact.
Hotchâs eyes drop down briefly, following the movement almost automatically. Something tightens in his expression for half a second before his attention snaps back to the laptop still open in front of him.
âReid,â he says. âPrint the entire message history and document everything. Full timeline, screenshots, attachmentsâall of it. I want copies ready for the team in ten.â
You swallow hard. âTheâthe entire message history?â
âYes,â Hotch says simply. âEvery message.â
Could this day get any worse?
Fifteen minutes later, youâre back in the briefing room with the entire team flipping through printed copies of your dating profile and messages. It almost feels like an out-of-body experience. Like one of those mortifying dreams where you watch everything unfold from above without any real ability to stop it.
âOkay,â Prentiss says. âWhere do we start?â
âVictimology,â Morgan answers immediatelyâthen he glances at you. âSorry, baby girl.â
You wave him off. âReidâs been profiling me all week. Go for it.â
Thereâs a quiet ripple of laughter around the table, but Hotch barely blinks. Heâs sitting on the opposite side, between Prentiss and JJ, with his arms folded tightly across his chest and gaze fixed on the copies spread out in front of him like heâs trying very hard not to look directly at you.
âWe need to be careful building a victimology this early,â he says evenly. âEspecially considering how well we know the victim. Personal familiarity creates bias.â
Reid tilts his head. âNormally, yes. But stalking crimes are often highly individualised.â He starts flipping through the printed messages as he talks. âStatistically speaking, stalking victims are usually targeted for a very specific reason. The motivation is generally rooted in either resentment, fixation, revenge, or romantic obsession.â
You grimace. âFantastic.â
âMost victims also know their stalkers,â Reid continues. âApproximately seventy-five percent of stalking cases involve some form of prior relationship or perceived emotional connection.â
âOkay,â JJ says carefully, looking toward you. âIs there anyone you can think of who might hold a grudge against you? Someone you arrested, rejected, testified againstâanything like that?â
You snort quietly. âDoes every criminal Iâve ever interviewed count?â
The room goes still for half a second.
âWait,â Prentiss says, sitting forward slightly. âActually, that makes sense.â
Hotchâs eyes flick up as Prentiss pushes one of the printouts into the middle of the table, tapping the page.
âThis escalation happened fast. Less than a week. Thatâs not somebody slowly building emotional trust from scratchâthatâs somebody who already came into this interaction emotionally invested.â
âOr angry,â Morgan adds.
âExactly,â Prentiss says. âHe doesnât lash out until she has Garcia over. Thatâs jealousy. Possessiveness.â
You sink lower in your chair.
âAnd he starts reacting every time she brings up her boss,â Rossi says, flipping through the printouts. âThatâs territorial behaviour. Heâs fixating on a prominent male figure in her life.â
âNot the only one fixating on him,â Reid murmurs beside you.
You elbow him immediately.
âOw.â
Hotch glances up sharply. âSomething to add, Reid?â
Reid straightens. âUhâno. No, I think Rossi covered it.â
Hotchâs eyes narrow slightly, like he knows thereâs something heâs missing, but he lets it go.
âGarcia,â he says instead, âtell me you found something useful.â
âOh, I found things,â Garcia says immediately, the rapid clacking of her keyboard echoing loudly through the conference room speaker. âDeeply unsettling things. Our creepy little internet goblin has been very busy.â
Prentiss frowns slightly, mouthing âinternet goblinâ across the table to JJ.
âOkay, soâprofile was created nine days ago using a burner email and a VPN bouncing between three different states, which normally would make me want to set my computer on fire, but our boy got sloppy.â
Hotch leans forward slightly. âHow sloppy?â
âSloppy enough that one login pinged off a public Wi-Fi network less than six blocks from her apartment last night,â she says. âAnd before anybody asks, yes, Iâm already pulling traffic cams.â
Hotch nods once, already shifting into command mode.
âMorgan, Prentissâstart canvassing within a ten-block radius of her apartment. Garcia will feed you anything useful from the traffic cams. JJ, coordinate with local PD and see if thereâve been any complaints of suspicious activity in the area. Peeping, prowlers, stalking complaintsâanything that fits this escalation pattern. Rossi, start pulling names from old cases. Anybody with a history of fixation, stalking behaviour, or inappropriate attachment to investigators. Garcia, keep digging and keep me posted.â
Everyone starts moving immediately, papers shuffling and chairs scraping back as the room shifts into motion.
âI want to help,â you say suddenly. âThis is my mess, let me fix it.â
âYou can help,â he says evenly, âby going home, locking your doors, and staying there until we know exactly what weâre dealing with.â
You open your mouth to argue.
âI mean it,â he adds, voice low.
âIâll take her,â Reid offers immediately.
âNo,â Hotch says, gathering the printouts into one neat pile. âYou go with Morgan and Prentiss.â
Then his eyes flick up, meeting yours.
âIâm taking her home.â
The next hour is one of the strangest of your life.
Hotch tells you to take your laptop back down to Garcia, whoâs already in full FBI investigation modeâher screens covered in maps, metadata, CCTV stills, and enlarged screenshots of your own dating profile staring back at you in horrifying definition. When you finally make it back to your desk, Rossi spends twenty straight minutes walking you through every violent offender youâve interviewed in the last three years, forcing you to revisit dozens of interactions youâd long since filed away as routine.
Somewhere in the middle of it all, Morgan drops a schematic of your apartment building onto your desk and starts questioning you about entrances, exits, blind spots, and security cameras while Reid quietly replaces the coffee you forgot existed an hour ago. It isnât until Morgan leaves and JJ immediately takes his place beside you that you realise nobody has let you out of their sight for more than a few minutes at a time.
Then, finally, Hotch steps out of his officeâfiles in one hand and his go-bag in the other, like he fully intends on staying the night if necessary.
âReady?â he asks, stopping beside your desk.
You stare at the go-bag for one long, deeply horrified second.
âYep,â you manage, voice tight as you slowly push out of your chair.
Hotch drives. You donât even try to argue. You just sit in the passenger seat with your knees pressed together and your heart beating out of your chest. Itâs not like you havenât been in the car with him before. You have, plenty of times. This just feels... different.
Neither of you speak until he cuts the engine in the parking garage of your building, and you have to try very hard not to dwell on the fact that he hadnât asked for directions the whole way here.
âWait,â he mutters before climbing out of the car.
He grabs his bag from the back, then moves around the car and opens your door.
It takes an embarrassingly long time for you to unbuckle your seatbeltâyour hands are shaking and your pulse is still pounding hard enough to make you dizzyâbut once you finally do, you slip out of the car and lead him toward the fire stairs.
He never leaves more than a foot of distance between you. Never checks his phone. Never glances down. He stays glued to your side like a real protection detail. And thanks to your avid and wildly inappropriate imagination, youâve already mentally written an entire bodyguard romance plot starring Aaron Hotchner and yours truly by the time you finally reach your apartment door.
âIâuhâwasnât really expecting company,â you say as you push the door open. âSorry.â
The second you step inside, Leia leaps off the couch with a loud, rumbling trillâprobably wondering why youâre home before dark for the first time in years.
Hotch pauses, his brow furrowing slightly. âYou have a cat.â
You glance back at him as you kick your shoes off and nudge them out of the way. âIs that really the most surprising thing youâve learned about me today?â
He watches Leia for another second before glancing back at you. âItâs unexpected.â
You roll your eyes, trying to ignore the way your heart skips when he quietly toes off his shoes beside the door without even asking. Like he already expects to stay awhile.
Leia chirrups again as she pads through the living room toward you, no doubt about to demand an early dinnerâuntil she catches sight of Hotch and abruptly stops short. Her ears flicker, her tail waving from side to side as she assesses the new man in her apartment.
Hotch crouches slightly, holding one hand out toward her.
âOh, she doesnât really like people,â you say quickly. âSo donât take it personally if sheââ
Leia immediately walks straight up to him. She sniffs his hand once before pressing directly into his palm with a loud purr rumbling through her entire body.
Your eyes go wide.
Traitor.
Hotchâs mouth twitches faintly as Leia leans harder into his hand.
Oh my God. Are you jealous of your cat right now?
He gives Leia one final scratch behind the ears before straightening, the softness in his expression fading almost immediately as he slips back into work mode. He scans the apartment briefly before setting the files down on your tiny dining table and shrugging his jacket off, draping it over the back of a chair.
You stand there for a second longer than you probably should, watching him move through your apartment with the same calm focus he brings to crime scenes and briefing rooms and interrogation tables. He checks the windows, the balcony doors, glances brieflyâthank Godâinto your bedroom, then double-checks the locks on the front door.
The whole thing feels weirdly surreal. Youâve imagined Aaron Hotchner inside your apartment a thousand times in a thousand different waysâjust not like this. And nothing you imagined could have possibly prepared you for the reality of it. The way everything feels so much smaller. Warmer. More exposed.
Every object in every room suddenly feels mortifyingly personal.
If he lingers long enough in your kitchen, heâs going to notice the unusually empty trash can and realise you survive almost entirely on caffeine and convenience. If he looks too closely at your bookshelf, heâs going to find an unhealthy collection of romance novels with more trigger warnings than plot points. And if he looks into your bedroom again and turns his head just a little more to the right, heâs going to see your vibrator sitting on the nightstandâand then youâll actually have to fake your own death.
Because youâve spent years carefully curating a version of yourself that keeps people from looking too closely. Flirty. Casual. Detached enough to joke about bad dates and hookups and sex without anybody ever realising that none of it means anything. Itâs easier that way. Easier to let everyone assume your attention is scattered in every direction instead of fixed very specifically on the one person you absolutely cannot have.
But this?
This feels dangerously close to being found out.
The next couple of hours pass in strange, uneven waves of normalcy and low-grade psychological torture.
Hotch sits at your tiny dining table without complaint, dwarfing it as he hunches over files and asks careful questions about your routines, your neighbours, and whether anyone in the building has seemed overly interested in you recently. His phone rings a lot, which isnât unusual, and every time he answers it you spend almost the entire conversation staring unashamed at the way his shirt pulls tight across his back when he reaches for another printout.
Which is wildly inappropriate considering the circumstances, but you canât really help it. Youâre strung out, on edge, and, as Morgan so helpfully pointed out this morning, severely under-fucked.
And Leia, unfortunatelyâbut not unsurprisinglyâremains no help whatsoever.
By seven oâclock sheâs fully abandoned you in favour of draping herself across Hotchâs lap while he reviews new data from Garcia, completely oblivious to the fact that you havenât been able to breathe normally since he walked through the door.
âAre you hungry?â you ask eventually, moving back into the kitchen as if you have anything in there to offer.
Hotch glances up from his laptop, one hand resting absently against Leiaâs back while she purrs in his lap.
âIâm fine.â
You lean a hip against the kitchen counter, folding your arms tightly across your chest. âAny updates?â
He glances back down at his screen. âGarcia narrowed the traffic footage down to three vehicles that stayed in the area longer than they should haveâMorgan and Prentiss are running the plates now. And Rossiâs pulling relatives connected to your previous cases. Family members who attended trials, sentencing hearings, interviews. Anyone who mightâve had access to your name outside the official reports.â
You nod slowly, silence settling again for a moment before you exhale sharply.
âAre you sure sitting here doing absolutely nothing is really the best use of me right now?â
His eyes flick back up, that signature Hotchner scowl set between his brows.
âYou think this is nothing?â
His voice stays calm, but thereâs something firmer underneath it now.
âYouâve spent the last four days being threatened, surveilled, and followed by someone we still havenât identified,â he says. âMorgan, Prentiss, and Reid are out chasing leads because somebody targeted you. Rossiâs pulling case files because somebody targeted you. Garciaâs been at her desk for six straight hours because somebody targeted you.â
His jaw tightens slightly.
âMy job right now is making sure nothing happens to you,â he says quietly. âLet me do that.â
Your breath catches, something warm and uncomfortably familiar twisting in your chest as Aaron Hotchner just sits there watching you like he hasnât said anything unusual at all.
Which, to him, maybe he hasnât.
Heâs just doing his job. Looking out for his team. Heâs not here because he wants to be. Heâs here because someone threatened one of his agents.
Thatâs all.
You clear your throat, pushing away from the counter before the silence stretches too long. âIâmâuhâIâm just going to shower quickly. If thatâs alright.â
He nods once. âWant me to clear theââ
âNo,â you say immediately. âGod, no. No. Itâs fine. Totally fine.â
His brows pull together slightly, confusion flickering briefly across his face before you turn and hurry into your bedroom, shutting the door a little harder than necessary behind you.
Then you take the longest shower known to mankind. You stand beneath the scalding spray for at least ten minutes before even touching anything. Then you scrub, exfoliate, shave, condition, rinse twice, and stand there for just a little longer before finally gathering the courage to step out. All the while trying desperately not to think about the fact that your unit chief is only two thin walls away while youâre dripping wet and completely naked.
You rummage through your dresser until you find an oversized sweater that isnât totally threadbare and a clean pair of pyjama shorts. Technically, theyâre just striped flannel pants you cut into shorts, but at least theyâre not as short as the rest of your pyjama collection that definitely needs replacing.
If only you actually had time for things like shopping... and emotional stability.
âNo, wait for Morgan before you approach,â Hotch says as you step quietly back into the living room, phone pressed against his ear while he paces slowly beside the dining table. âIf the registrationâs fake, I donât want you making contact until we know exactly whoâs inside.â
He pauses, expression sharpening slightly.
âAlright. Keep me updated.â
He lowers the phone slowly before looking over at you for the first time since you re-emergedâand for half a second, he visibly loses his train of thought. Itâs only tiny. Barely there. Just a brief pause before his expression shutters back into place.
âGarcia tracked one of the vehicles from the traffic footage to a motel outside Arlington,â he says, glancing back down at the files scattered across the table. âThe driverâs been masking his activity through multiple VPNs, so she couldnât pull a clean trace from the motel Wi-Fi, but only one room in the motel was actively using the network.â
Your stomach tightens.
âThe name on the reservation was fake,â he continues, âbut the room was paid for using a credit card belonging to Daniel Mercer.â
The name hits you immediately.
âEthan Mercerâs brother,â you say quietly.
Hotch nods. âRossi confirmed it about twenty minutes ago. Morgan and Prentiss are waiting for local PD before they move in.â
You nod slowly, your pulse fluttering anxiously in your throat as you move toward the kitchen. Not because you actually need anything in there, but because standing still feels almost impossible right now.
âEthan barely spoke during the trial,â you murmur, folding your arms as you lean back against the counter. âI donât think I ever even met his brother.â
âYou wouldnât need to,â Hotch says, already gathering the files into a neat pile. âPeople build attachments to investigators without ever interacting directly. Especially when theyâre looking for someone to blame.â
Your skin prickles. âYou really think itâs him?â
âIt fits,â Hotch replies evenly. âEstablished emotional investment, personal motive, no prior record. Which explains the inconsistency. The escalation without follow-through. The long gaps between contact attempts. He knows enough to be cautious, but not enough to stay controlled.â
He straightens, turning back toward youâand for the briefest second, his eyes drop to your bare legs before snapping back up to your face almost immediately.
He clears his throat. âThis probably isnât something heâs done before. But his brother has.â
The apartment falls quiet again after that. Hotch returns to collecting files while you stare absently toward the dark balcony doors, your pulse still refusing to settle beneath your skin.
âWell,â you mutter eventually, gripping the edge of the counter to hoist yourself up. âOn the bright side, I still think Iâve dated worse.â
The joke leaves your lips lightly enough, the same way they always doâeasy, detached, halfway between genuine and ironic so nobody ever pauses long enough to look too closely.
Except this time Hotch does pause.
âWhy do you do that?â
You frown. âDo what?â
âDeflect.â He straightens again, one hand still holding a stack of printouts. âEvery time something gets too serious, you make a joke. Or you flirt. Or you say something just inappropriate enough to throw people off balance.â
You lift a shoulder. âMaybe Iâm just charming.â
âNo.â His eyes narrow slightly, brows pulling together. âNo, because it changes depending on the situation.â
Your pulse stutters.
âWith Morgan itâs competitive,â he continues, setting the papers back on the table. âYou tease him because he pushes back and it keeps conversations superficial. Garcia gets exaggerated stories because she responds emotionally instead of analytically. Half the things you say to Reid are specifically designed to make him flustered enough to stop examining what you actually mean.â
âWow,â you murmur, shifting your weight against the countertop. âStarting to feel a little attacked here.â
But Hotch doesnât seem to hear you.
âThe dating profile doesnât fit,â he says, almost to himself. âNeither does the apartment.â
Your stomach twists as his gaze moves briefly across the room. The bookshelves. The carefully organised clutter. Leia now curled up asleep on the couch.
âYou project someone impulsive. Social. Sexually confident. But nothing in here supports that.â His eyes flick back toward you again. âYou live like someone who protects their space carefully. Even the cat.â
âLeave Leia out of this.â
âShe doesnât like strangers.â
âShe likes you.â
The words slip out too quickly, and something in his expression shifts.
âYou keep people at a distance,â he continues slowly, close enough now that you can hear the quiet rasp beneath his voice. âEven the team. You let people think they know you because it keeps them from looking closer.â He hesitates, brow furrowing. âExcept Reid.â
Your fingers tighten instinctively around the edge of the counter.
âYou trust him,â Hotch says. âNot just socially. Behaviourally. You anchor yourself to him when youâre stressed. Physical proximity. Eye contact. Redirecting conversations through him.â He pauses, watching you carefully now. âAnd earlier you said heâd been profiling you all week.â
Oh God.
âWhich means Reid already noticed the pattern.â
He goes quiet for a moment, his expression tightening almost imperceptibly as he looks back over the last few monthsâyearsâin real time. You can practically see it happening behind his eyes. Every interaction. Every joke. Every look you thought youâd hidden quickly enough.
âYou track me.â
The words come quieter now. Less certain. Like heâs still realising them.
âYou know my routines,â he continues slowly. âYou anticipate questions before I ask them. You look up when you hear my office door open even when you canât see me.â He steps closer again. âYou know when I need coffee before I do. You watch my reactions before anyone else in the room.â
Your breath stutters.
And Hotch notices immediately.
His expression shifts slightly as his eyes flick across your face, your posture, your hands still locked around the edge of the counter hard enough that your knuckles have gone pale beneath the kitchen lights.
âYour breathing changes when I get too close to you,â he says quietly.
He takes another slow step forward, close enough now that you have to tilt your head back slightly to keep looking at him.
âYou stop fidgeting,â he continues. âYou go completely still.â His gaze drops briefly to your hands before lifting again. âLike youâre afraid movement alone is going to give you away.â
Your heart is beating so hard now youâre half-convinced he can hear it.
âYou lose verbal fluency,â he says, voice lower now. âYou trip over words you normally wouldnât. Your pupils dilate. Your heart rate increases. And every single time I get close to noticing itââ
His eyes lock onto yours.
âYou redirect.â
You can barely breathe now.
Heâs standing right in front of you, close enough that the heat rolling off him sinks straight into your skin, close enough that one more step would put him between your knees where youâre perched on the counter.
And somehow the worst part is that he still sounds calm. Thoughtful. Like Aaron Hotchner is profiling you with the same careful focus heâd bring to an unsubâexcept this time the thing heâs slowly uncovering is the fact that youâve been hopelessly in love with him this entire time.
You swallow hard, your gaze catching just briefly on his mouth before you drag it back up to his eyes, pulse hammering so hard you can barely think straight.
âFigured it out yet, Agent Hotchner?â you ask softly.
He goes still for half a second, something unreadable flickering across his face as his eyes drop to your mouth before lifting back to your eyes again.
The apartment suddenly feels oppressively quiet.
His throat shifts slightly.
And thenâ
His phone rings.
He steps back immediately, his expression shuttering back into something careful and unreadable.
âHotchner,â he says, pressing his phone against his ear.
You donât hear much after that. Not really. You recognise Morganâs muffled voice, but you canât quite hear what heâs saying. Not while Hotch slowly paces your living room. You catch fragments of the conversation. Questions. Short answers. The low, steady cadence of his voice slipping effortlessly back into work mode while your own nervous system continues actively collapsing in on itself.
Because holy fuck.
Holy fuck.
What the hell just happened?
âThey got him.â
Your head snaps up. âThey what?â
Hotch moves back to the dining table and starts gathering his things.
âIt was him. Daniel Mercer,â he says. âMorgan and Prentiss found him in the motel room with multiple burner phones, printed screenshots from the dating profile, and enough surveillance material to establish intent.â
âOh.â
âLocal PD recovered notebooks too,â he continues. âNames, schedules, work addresses. Everyone connected to Ethan Mercerâs conviction. Judges, prosecutors, witnesses. You were first because you were the arresting agent.â
A cold shiver slips down your spine.
âGarcia also confirmed the motel Wi-Fi matched the same VPN chain used to access the dating profile,â Hotch adds. âOnce Mercer realised the Bureau was involved, the direct contact stopped. After that he shifted to surveillance. Morgan said the room was covered in trial material. Photos. Notes. Newspaper clippings. Heâd been building the grievance for months.â
He pauses, then looks at you.
âBut they got him.â
âGood,â you say quietly.
Hotch nods once before turning back to the dining table, slipping his laptop into his bag with careful efficiency before gathering every file and printout into one neat pile.
âLocal PD will hold Mercer overnight until federal transport clears,â he says, sliding the papers into his bag. âGarciaâs already started coordinating with the U.S. Attorneyâs Office. Youâll need to give an additional statement tomorrow regarding the dating profile.â
You nod. âOkay.â
Hotch reaches for his jacket, draping it over one arm.
âThereâll still be additional officers patrolling the area tonight,â he says. âAnd if you donât want to be alone, I can have Reid or Garcia stay here.â
âIâll be fine,â you mutter, glancing down at the kitchen tiles. âYou can stop babysitting me now.â
Hotch stills.
Then slowly, deliberately, sets his jacket on the table.
âBabysitting?â he repeats.
âYou know what I mean.â
He steps toward you, brows drawn. âI donât think I do.â
âYou solved the case,â you mutter, heat crawling up the back of your neck. âYou profiled me. Thoroughly. So congratulations, I guess. You figured out the whole sad little secret, the weird avoidance issues, the entire personality disorder cocktailââ You let out a short, humourless laugh. âYou can go back to pretending none of this ever happened now.â
He closes the distance between you before you even fully realise heâs moving, stopping directly in front of the counter again. Exactly where heâd been when you asked him if heâd figured it out. Close enough that you can feel his warmth. Close enough that you can see the day-old shadow of stubble lining his jaw.
âYouâre being deliberately provocative now because youâre embarrassed,â he says. âBut embarrassment isnât actually your primary response here.â
His gaze drops to your mouth again, and your pulse stumbles.
âIf it was,â he adds quietly, âyou wouldnât still be looking at me like that.â
Your breath catches in your throat.
You want to say something. Anything. Another joke. Another deflection. Something sharp enough to cut through the tension in the air and stop him looking at you like this. Exposing you like this.
But you canât.
All you can do is stare at him. At the steady intensity in his eyes. At the way his tie has loosened slightly over the course of the night. At the slow rise and fall of his chest beneath the white shirt youâve spent an embarrassing number of years picturing on your bedroom floor.
You swallow hard, and he notices. Of course he does.
Something shifts in his expression then. Something softer. Less guarded.
His hand comes up beneath your jaw, his thumb pressing gently into your chin as he pulls you closer. You fall forward without hesitation, and he leans in, dark eyes still searching yours as if he isnât entirely sure he has permission yet.
Then he kisses you.
Itâs not rushed. Not messy. If anything, the first press of his mouth against yours feels almost unbearably controlled, like heâs still holding himself back even now.
But the restraint doesnât last long.
Your hand catches his tie, tugging him closer, and something rough slips from the back of his throat as he steps in, his hips slotting between your thighs. His hand slides from your jaw into your hair, fingers tightening just enough to tilt your head back exactly as far as he wants it.
Your lips part against his with a broken sound, and he deepens it slowly, his tongue moving against yours like he has all the time in the world. Tasting you. Learning you. Mapping every small sound and ragged exhale with the same focused intensity he brings to everythingâand somehow thatâs what undoes you the most. Not urgency. Attention.
His breath mingles with yours, hot and uneven, and when his teeth catch your bottom lip itâs deliberate, measuredâa sharp little spark shooting straight through your spine. Your hips roll toward him without permission, and his answering groan rumbles through his chest, vibrating beneath your palm and making you ache everywhere youâve been starving for him.
Then he pulls back just enough to look at you properly again. His hand still tangled in your hair. Thumb dragging once across your jaw. His eyes move over your face with the same intensity he uses in every debrief, every case, every crisis, except right now you are the thing heâs making sure of.
Like he needs to be absolutely certain this is real.
âAaronââ
âBedroom,â he says immediately, voice low and rough enough to send heat crashing straight through you. âNow.â
FRIDAY 6:15AM
Your alarm blares somewhere beside the bed, startling you awake hard enough that your heart immediately starts pounding. You reach for it blindly, determined to silence it before it wakesâ
Oh God.
The second your hand hits the snooze button, you freeze.
Your heart is beating faster now, your pulse thrumming in your throat as you turn slowlyâso slowlyâtoward the other side of the bed, where Aaron fucking Hotchner stirs sleepily.
Your stomach swoops.
You slept with your boss last night.
With a shallow, shaky breath, you carefully start to move. His arm is heavy at your waist, but you manage to slip out from underneath it without fully waking him. You shove the covers off and shiver at the sudden exposure, leaning over the side of the bed to find your discarded sweater. You pull it over your head before quietly padding toward the ensuite, refusing to glance back at your very hot, very naked unit chief still tangled in your sheets.
You only just make it around the other side of the bed before something tugs at the back of your sweater. You stop, glancing back to find Hotch half-awake, eyes half-lidded with one hand caught at the hem of your sweater.
âDo you really get up this early?â he asks, voice rough with sleep.
âYeah,â you murmur. âMost days.â
His brows pull together slightly. âWhy?â
You let out a small, breathless laugh. âBecause my boss is kind of a hard ass about punctuality.â
Something that almost resembles amusement flickers across his face.
âSounds like a terrible boss,â he murmurs.
Then he tugs on your sweater againâhard enough this time that you let out a startled laugh as you stumble backward onto the mattress and into him. He catches you easily, one arm wrapping around your waist before you can even fully recover, pulling you back against the warmth of his chest.
âYeah,â you murmur, laughing softly as his mouth brushes beneath your ear. âHeâs awful. Very demanding.â
He hums, breath warm against your skin.
âHeâs really hot, though,â you add, smiling despite yourself. âSo I like having time to put in a little effort, you know? Hope he notices.â
âOh, he notices.â
Your stomach flips. âReally?â
âMhm.â
His arm tightens around your waist. âHe notices the skirts.â
Heat floods your face. âAaronââ
âHe notices the tights.â His mouth brushes against the nape of your neck. âThe ones with the seam up the back.â
âOh my God.â
You try to turn your face into the pillow, but he just holds you tighter, pressing his lips firm against your neck.
âAnd the red bra,â he murmurs.
Your breath catches.
âNoticed that so much I had to wait until everyone left the conference room before I could get up.â
You let out a strangled sound, squirming in his arms, but itâs no use. His chest vibrates against your back, something suspiciously close to laughter.
âMy washing machine broke that week,â you whine. âIt wasnât my fault.â
âMm, sure.â
You twist around immediately. âIâm not lying.â
The corner of his mouth twitches, like he doesnât quite believe you, but before you can protest againâhe kisses you. Warm, slow, sleep-soft. His mouth moves against yours almost lazily, his hand tightening slightly at your waist when a pathetic little whimper slips out before you can stop it.
âCareful,â you murmur, breathless against his mouth. âDonât want to be late.â
You feel his lips curve.
âGood thing Iâm the boss.â
10:35AM
You made it to work well on time. Even after three orgasms, a shower, and an awkward attempt at a âWhat Now?â conversationâthat ended in the aforementioned third orgasm. Because fortunately for your rapidly fraying nervous system, Hotch hadnât even hesitated when youâd finally asked what happens next. In fact, heâd answered a little too quickly.
The first thing heâd asked was whether youâd be comfortable keeping things quiet for a while. Not because heâs worried about the team finding outâhe trusts them. Trusts you. The concern is Strauss, and the Bureau, and keeping you in the BAU while he figures out exactly how much trouble the two of you have just created for yourselves. At some point heâd even started muttering about reporting structures and supervisory chains, half-thinking out loud while pulling on his tie. Something about possibly moving your reporting line over to Rossi. Something else about needing to review the Bureauâs fraternisation policies before making any moves.
That was when you kissed himâeffectively, and very quickly, kicking off round three.
Because heâd clearly been thinking about this for a while, which means Aaron Hotchner has been noticing a lot more than just short skirts and inappropriately coloured underwear. It means that the second he decided to kiss you in your apartment last night, heâd already known exactly what he was getting himself into.
âAlright, gorgeous,â Morgan says, startling you as he raps a knuckle against your desk. âTheyâll be ready for you downstairs in ten.â
You glance up at him, brows drawnâand it takes an embarrassingly long second for you to figure out what heâs talking about.
âOh.â You blink. âRight. Yeah, Iâll head down soon. Thanks.â
Prentiss looks over from her desk. âYou gonna be okay?â
You lift a shoulder. âSure. Whatâs another case report?â
Morgan frowns, dropping into his chair. âItâs not exactly every day youâre the victim, baby girl.â
âYeah, but nothing really happened.â
Morgan and Prentiss both stare at you.
âBecause of the team,â you add quickly. âYou guys caught him before he actually did anything. So... you know, nothing bad happened.â You plaster on a smile that feels reasonably convincing. âThanks for that, by the way.â
Prentiss narrows her eyes, but before she can say anything else, Reid appears.
âYouâre in a remarkably good mood for someone who was being actively cyberstalked twelve hours ago,â he says, stirring his second coffee of the day.
You turn back to your screen, trying to ignore the heat creeping into your cheeks. âMaybe I just have a newfound appreciation for life.â
Reid studies you for a moment, clearly unconvincedâbut he doesnât push. He just moves slowly back toward his desk, setting his coffee down with unnecessary care while the rest of the team turn away, finally deciding to mind their own business.
You force your attention back to the report in front of you, determined to at least look productive for the next ten minutesâwhen a familiar voice cuts through your concentration.
âRossiâs taking Wallace with you next week,â Hotch says, setting the file down on your desk.
You blink up at him. âI thought you were leading the interview.â
âI was.â
Something in his expression tightens briefly before he lowers his voice.
âWallace has a long history of using sex, intimidation, and emotional targeting to destabilise people during interviews,â he says. âEspecially women.â
You frown. âHotch, Iââ
âAnd if he says something to you in that room,â he continues evenly, âor looks at you the wrong way, I need to know the agent sitting beside you is still capable of thinking objectively.â
Your stomach flips as his eyes meet yoursâsteady, intense, devastatingly honest.
âRight now,â he says quietly, âIâm not sure thatâs me.â
Then heâs gone. Moving through the bullpen back toward his office like he hasnât just set your pulse racing and your head spinning. You watch after him for a moment before shaking your head, glancing back at your computer screen as if youâd been focused on it at all in the first place.
ââŚHuh.â
You turn toward the sound and find Reid staring at you again. Not rudely. Just watching with the same focused curiosity heâd been wearing since your suspiciously cheerful comment about cyberstalking.
He tilts his head.
Thenâ
âOh my God.â
You close your eyes. âSpencer⌠donât.â
Š 2026 geminiwritten
cry if you need to
Pairing: Michael Robinavitch x F!Reader Summary: Literally just a story about Robby finally having a breakdown in the arms of someone who cares about him WC: 2.5k Tags: Flangst, loving supportive relationship, high school teacher!reader, brief mention of gun violence at a school (told as a memory)
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Robby shut the door softly not wanting to wake you. The cat you moved into his house meowed softly, weaving through his feet. Growing up, Robby hadnât been allowed a pet and they had always seemed like slightly too much work to ever get one in adulthood. But you had come with a cat. She was surprisingly long with the softest fur Robby had ever felt. Her calico pattern was smoky and made her very effective at blending in under the bed.
She was named Myrlie after a key Civil Rights leader, Myrlie Evers-Williams. You had named all your pets after prominent women in history.
Robby had met you when you hosted the local high schoolâs career day. Youâd reached out to hospitals in the area and Robby, along with Santos and Whitaker, had been volun-told to attend. He shamelessly flirted with the history and government teacher, assuming heâd never see you again.
Except the school liked him so muchâfor some godforsaken reasonâthat they asked him to train teachers in first aid. It was bleak, depressing, and triggering as hell. But he and Jack showed up and did it. You were stone faced the whole time, impeccably good at picking up on the life saving skills they were giving.
When Jack started to show how to pack an open wound, you slipped out of the room so quietly, Robby was pretty certainly only he and Jack noticed. With a subtle nod from Jack he had gone after you and found you dry heaving over a trash can in the hallway.
âNot as fun to flirt with now, huh?â You asked.
You slid down the wall and curled your legs up against yourself.
âI could still make an effort,â he said, easing down next to you. At least it made you laugh. âAre you okay?â
âI cannot imagine you want my tragic backstory,â you laughed a little tearfully.
âIâll share mine if you share yours,â he offered. âIâll even go first.â
You were quiet for a few seconds and he wondered if you were going to say no. He hadnât told many people about Pittfest, heâd barely told his current (and longest lasting) therapist.
âYeah, alright then,â you replied, wiping at your eyes.
âI was working during the Pittfest shooting,â Robby said. He felt the familiar crushing wave of emotion well up in his throat.
âChrist,â you said, leaning your head back against the wall.
âAnd for three hours body after body came through my ER. For a minute, it felt like COVID all over again. The worst part was that my stepson was at Pittfest and he comes in covered in bloodânot his own, but his girlfriendâs. Andââ Robby clears his voice to avoid it cracking. âAnd I donât save her.â
âFuck,â you said.
âFuck,â he echoed.
âI grew up in Appalachia, grew up around guns, I can shoot them and know how to handle myself around them. My first year I was a nervous wreck and I was in a rich little suburban district just on the edge of a rural county,â you said. âAnd some little dick head thought it would be funny to bring his daddyâs gun to school and scare his friends. Naturally he chose my classroom to do it in. He accidentally shot his best friend.â
âIâm so sorry,â Robby said.
âI managed to get the gun away from him and make it safe, but then I had no idea what to do with a kid bleeding out in front of me. They do not teach you that in a masters degree,â you continued. âI just saw that kid in front of me and heard his best friend sobbing. And I had to leave.â
âYou donât need to justify it,â Robby told you. âThis was our last thing we were covering anyways.â
âI appreciate you taking the time to check on me. I was about to leg it to my classroom and maybe hyperventilate there,â you said sardonically.
âYou teach history and government, right?â
âI do, good memory, Dr. Robinavitch,â you said bumping your shoulder against his. âWant to see my classroom?â
âIs that a euphemism?â
âNope. My classroom is just a couple hallways away,â you laughed. Your eyes were still a little bloodshot and puffy, but you no longer held the countenance of someone who had been crying.
âLead the way, then.â
It had started with a classroom tour, then drinks, then dinner, then two months, then six months, then a year. There was a brief freak out at a year that you calmly pointed out was his brain looking for problems and not an actual problem. And then when Robby was confident that he didnât want to cut and run, he asked you to move in with him.
He had been surprised at your reluctance at first. But you didnât want to become his homemaker just because you were a âjustâ a teacher and he was a big important doctor. It took nearly a month and the reminder he employed a cleanerâone he did not plan on firingâfor Robby to finally convince you.
His only stipulation was the cat was not allowed in the closet because he didnât want to risk cat dander on his scrubsâwhich you were more than happy to accommodate.
After shift though, your cat would shit next to the bench where the two of you stored your shoes and wait until Robby had unlaced his shoes, taken off his backpack and shrugged off his scrub top before she would give him a single warning âmrrp!â and launch herself into his arms.
She had been doing this long before you both moved in together but now it was a regular event after he returned home from a shift. But she seemed to only do it when he came back from the hospital. With Myrlie in his arms he would scratch under her chin, rub her cheeks and then bury his face in the soft fur of her side.
You claimed Myrlie was not an emotional support animalââshe loves to bite my ankles too muchââbut on night like this, where Robby ended up home far later than usual, weary and weather worn, she always let him soak in her comfort.
Robby wasnât sure how long he stood in the entry way with his face buried in his girlfriendâs cat, but eventually even Myrlie got tired and began to wiggle. Reluctantly, Robby let her go.
It was a little past eleven. Even though he had left the hospital doors a bit after nine a handful of the Pitt staff went to the park to decompress. It was an apartment fire tonight. One that claimed the lives of more children than he wanted to count. Unfortunately, it was his job to count.
How had Monty done this job for so long?
You were normally asleep by this time of night, even on a Friday. When he eased open the bedroom door he found you sitting in bed by the lamplight, your own glasses on reading through essays. There was a forgotten mug on your side table and the bed was littered with high school papers.
âHey,â you said without looking up. âGo shower and Iâll have the bed cleared off when youâre done.â
Robby couldnât make words happen so he just hummed in what he hoped was an affirmative tone. He stepped through to the en suite. Despite the fact you didnt want to become his live in assistant and maidâneither of which he wanted eitherâyou still were thoughtful in ways that took his breath away.
You had already put a towel in the towel warmer for him, laid out a change of clothes, and put some kind of aromatherapy bullshit in th shower. You didnât believe in the healing power of smells and Robby certainly didnât but he appreciated the thought. Your caring burgeoned him though the shower.
He tried to do the same for you during hard stretches. The emotional whiplash of being a teacher: watching students succeed and blossom only to be verbally abused the next day left you raw often. Every passive aggressive parent email or bleak understanding of readings scores pulled at you. On your bad days, Robby would cook you dinner, sit you down in front of him on the couch and knead the stress away in your shoulders. He learned that a scalp massage was the fastest way to ease your overactive system. So the evening would always end with you in his lap, slowly rubbing away any negative energy until your slow breathing was the only thing he could hear.
Tonight though, even with the strong shower smelling salts, he could still rememberâalmost tasteâthe burnt flesh and soot clinging to his nose. He remembered when you got a sinus infection a few months ago and you bought one of those neti-pots. After he turned off the water and toweled off with the pre-heated towel, he dug through the cabinet until he found it.
He pulled on the pajama pants you laid out for him but forwent the shirt until he finished rinsing out his nose. It was weird and uncomfortable and Robby was certain he didnât do it right. But placebo or not, he felt better afterwards. When he finally came out of the bathroom you were stacking the essays on your dressers.
âHey babe,â you said turning to look at him. âOh no, youâre not okay.â
There was something about that statement that took Robby so off-guard. So many people ask him if heâs okay. So many people need him to be okay. But you didnât. Your cat didnât. Not just that, but you hadnât need him to say anything. You knew immediately there was nothing good going on in his head.
All of it culminated into a sob that wretched itself out of Robbyâs body without his permission. His eyes blurred and burned as tears welled up. The tightness in his chest constricted and constricted until another inhuman sound came from him.
He felt you rush up to him and instead of pulling him into a hug like he expected, you pulled him onto the bed. His mind and body were so disconnected he wasnât sure how he ended up curled around you sobbing in your lap. All he knew is that your nails were softly raking through his hair and down his scalp.
Each heave of his body had you pulling him in closer.
âI have you,â he heard you say at one point. âIâm not going anywhere.â
And for some reason that made his body react worse. It felt like as soon as he felt he had control over his emotions, you would caress him and they would release like a tidal wave again.
âSorry, Iâm so sorry,â he said.
âDonât apologize. Donât ever apologize for this, Michael,â you said firmly. âCry as much as you want and let me hold you.â
And thatâs what happened. He remained tucked against your body held behind your arms and against your chest. At some point he sunk down into your lap and you continued to run your fingers through his hair and rub his back until eventually the full body sobs ceased and only the tears remained.
But even those dried either out of exhaustion or dehydration, Robby really wasnât sure at this point.
âIâm sorry,â he croaked, trying to sit up.
âDonât apologize for something you havenât done wrong,â you said sharply. He had a sudden vision of why you were such an effective teacher.
âIt was a lot.â
âWhen was the last time you were able to let go like that?â You asked. You were still running your fingers through his hair and he could help but lean into the touch.
âI donât know,â Robby replied.
âHave you ever let go like that?â
âNot with another person,â he said quietly.
âI think youâre not touched enough,â you said.
âWhat?â
âI think we should cuddle more because the moment I held you your body went haywire.â
âI donât think my body cares,â Robby said gruffly.
âBullshit.â
Robby didnât said anything. You sighed and leaned down to kiss his temple.
âDo you feel better at least?â
Did he feel better? Did embarrassing himself by crying in the lap of his girlfriend ease some long standing woundâŚunfortunately the answer was yes.
âYeah, a bit.â
âWell thatâs something. I want you to know that I want you to come to me if you need this. It makes me happy to do things like this for you,â you told him softly.
Robby couldnât figure out what emotion he was feeling in his throat and chest so he said, âWill you hold me and tell me about your day. I really donât want to think about mine anymore tonight.â
âSure, Iâm going to get you some water and snack before we get settled, okay?â
âYeah,â he said hoarsely. You kissed him softly and Robby felt it from his lips to the tips of his toes.
When you returned, you made him chug the water before you let him crawl between your legs laying face down on your chest and stomach, arms wrapped around you. Suspecting he needed pressure and contact, you wrapped your arms and legs around him along with the duvet.
âSo weâre talking about the Gilded Age, right? And one of the big conversations is who is an Americanâwho gets the right to be called an American. Itâs really timely with modern politics and it was so great to watch them connect dots. So naturally I ask them who they think Americans are and this is my first period class,â you begin.
âIs this one AP?â Robby asked, semi-muffled by your shirt.
âNo, these are my normies. Donât tell anyone, but I like them a little more. And when I ask this Iâm always a little afraid Iâm going to have to deal with an âismâ or and âobiaâ. Instead, Carlton, that little fucker who used ChatGPT on his essayââ
âIs he the kid who used âacquiescedâ but didnât know what it meant?â Robby asked?
âYes! Unfortunately heâs also very funny, so itâs hard to hate him. Anyways heâŚâ
Robby let your story wash over him, relaxing his nervous system one anecdote at a time. Your body heat warmed him to his very core and he wondered if this is how safe everyone feels with their partner. He found himself laughing with you and holding you just as tightly as you were holding him.
It was like being laid bare before you and yet you choosing him over and over anyways. You had seen him have a full breakdownâsomething he had always promised himself he would never allow himself to do and instead of running for the hills you held him tighter, you made him drink water, you continued to tell him about your day.
âI think youâre right,â Robby said eventually.
âI normally am, but about what, this time?â
âI think this is good for my body and nervous system,â he mumbled. You snorted and kissed the top of his head.
âI love you, you dumb motherfucker.â
âLove you, too.â
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Leave You to Love Me
Being in love with Scott Miller isnât for the faint of heart â especially when you have to watch him fall for someone else.
⸠PAIRING & WC: Scott Miller x F!Reader â 2.6K ⸠WARNINGS: Implied sex (no graphic descriptions), fwb to lovers, idiots in love, un-unrequited love basically, hurt/comfort â¸Â A/N: first actual scott fic i wrote (and with plot!), pls go easy on me. thank you dear shay @lunexiax for giving me this opportunity to finally test him out <3 if you see similarities in the miscomm between this and right to love, no you didnt (jk i outlined for that one and thought the vibes would kinda fit scott too). more scott to come!!!
⤠main masterlist
Scott Miller is not the kind of guy you marry â hell, heâs not even the kind of guy you date. The closest heâll ever get to wedlock is his marriage with his job. For as long as you can remember, heâs always been the numbers guy. Calculating the probability of success and conducting risk analyses to see if something is worth the effort.Â
With you, he has determined from day one that, while your friendship is worth investing in, a real relationship with you is not.Â
Scott is your best friend, your partner-in-crime. The two of you have been glued to each otherâs sides for as long as you can remember. Heâs a few years older than you and you grew up chasing after his footsteps, and he never seemed to mind. You never curbed that habit.
Not when you ended up graduating from the same university, with a major that complemented his future career. Not when you recruited for StormPAR because he was leading investor relations there. Not when you decided to pack up your life and move to the midwest to chase tornadoes.
In the first week of your three-month research project for the new sensors, you and Scott had a little too much to drink. One kiss led to another and suddenly youâre falling into bed with him.Â
Scott hesitates initially, his words about how relationships and women are a pain echo in your mind â so you find yourself blurting out we can keep this simple, no strings.Â
He only grunts in agreement before he slides into you. His mouth is hot, distracting, and the unsaid agreement is signed with the burning ache between your legs.Â
So you buried your feelings, swallowed your ego, and took what he could give you.Â
Because, for Scott, youâll eat the crumbs if it means you get to keep the taste of him on your tongue.Â
It should be fine â this arrangement. You get him and he gets company every night, particularly when youâre in the middle of nowhere surrounded by crazy weather fanatics. Theoretically, it should be fine.
But you never expected the addition of a new variable â Kate.Â
Kate is⌠perfect. Sheâs gorgeous, sweet, and terribly smart. Within days of joining the team, sheâs leading them to the greatest tornadoes, giving them the opportunity to collect prime data theyâve never been able to capture. Sheâs quick as a whip and she seems to get along with everyone â whether itâs the prissy, uptight StormPAR guys or the wild, free-flying tornado enthusiasts.
Once again, it should be fine, except youâve never seen Scott so bothered by someone. Sheâs different, you can see it. The way he watches her, frowns at her. He calls her dandelion. Youâve always only had your name, heâs never had a cute pet name for you. You canât help but wonder what he thinks about when he sees her.
If she is what he sees now when he fucks you. Even when youâre in bed with him, his mind is sometimes far away. He absentmindedly traces your bare shoulder, keeping you close even if his attention seems elsewhere.
You canât watch him be silently enamored with someone else so you start leaving at the end of the night.
He doesnât stop you.
One day, when your friend tells you about an opening for a data analyst position, you entertain it â even if it means you have to move to New York.
Because, while you love Scott, you also canât bear to watch him fall for someone who isnât you.
As youâre leaving his room one night, he finally stops you. Heâs still naked in his bed, sheets pooled around his hips, as he catches your hand. The look on his face is indifferent when he asks you why you donât stay; he is asking out of curiosity, not out of desire.
Youâre shrugging on your shirt, back turned towards him. âI have to get up early tomorrow. Iâve got an interview.â
Maybe you shouldnât have revealed that, but youâre exhausted and the honest answer slips.
âAn interview? With who? For what?â He sounds more alert now.
âJust a job.â
âYouâve already got a job,â Scott presses, forcing you to face him with a tug of his hand. His brows are furrowed.
âI donât know. I might want to try something different.â
He blinks at you for a moment, gears turning in his mind. âSomething different,â he echoes slowly.
âItâs not a big deal,â you brush him off, âI donât even know if Iâll get it. Iâll see you in the morning, okay?â
Scott, again, doesnât say a word.
It seems so⌠easy for him to let you go. You know it isnât on him to love you the same way you do him; thatâs not a fair ask. But you also have enough pride to know when to take a step back.
Creating physical distance is not the challenging part; itâs dealing with the emotional toll. Every time you have to avoid your silently-designated spot next to him at bars or how you opt to take Javyâs car instead of his, a piece of your frail heart chips away. You donât come over uninvited anymore, instead sliding under your own covers for the first time in weeks.
Scottâs not a fool. Of course, he notices but he still doesnât say anything.
On the other hand, he actually starts talking more with Kate, private chats in the corner of a bar or early mornings over coffee. Sometimes his gaze would flick over to you, harden, and ultimately return to her. That used to be you, but you left that space empty for someone else to fill.
Then you finally get the call.
âI got the job,â you tell him quietly that night.
You told yourself this would be the last time. One last night with him before â for the first time in your life â you allow your paths to diverge. Scott in Oklahoma, you in New York.
The two of you are side by side in bed, youâve slipped on his t-shirt, drowning in the cotton and his familiar storm-stained scent. You allow yourself to indulge in your last night.
Scott doesnât look at you, his eyes zeroed in on the blank television screen of the crappy motel room. âDo you want it?â
No, no, you donât. You want to stay here â with him and the rest of the team. But this is also a great opportunity, both for your career and the survival of your heart. âI think so.â
He whips around to face you, eyes flashing with what you think is irritation. âYou think so? Youâre not even sure?â
âWell, itâs a big jump, but I might take it,â you swallow.
âYou shouldnât do it unless youâre absolutely sure.â
You roll your eyes at him. âIâm never absolutely sure about anything.â Except for the fact that Iâm in love with you and that it would destroy me if I stay and watch you fall in love with Kate.
âThen donât go. Stay here.â
His words are cold and stiff. Itâs calculated. You are an asset to the team. It would be a pain to hire a new analyst in the middle of tornado season and get them fully trained to do what you do. Maybe you could stay just another month until all this is over, maybe you can get them to postpone your start date.
But could you really do it? Could you stand by the sidelines and swallow your feelings long enough to last until the bitter end?
Sighing, you know your answer. âIâm not going to lie. I donât think I can do this anymore. I donât think I can be here anymore.â
âWhat do you mean?â
Itâs now or never. If youâre leaving anyway, you might as well confront him â if you canât have him, then at least Kate could.
âIâm not stupid, you know. I can see it.â
âWhat are you talking about?â
âYouâre in love.â
The pin-drop silence that ensues is deafening. Your heart thunders against your eardrums; you can hear the hitch of his breath.
âIâm notââ he stops himself, âI donât know what youâre talking about.â
With a deep sigh, you extract yourself from his side. Your fingers pick at the worn linen. âIâve never seen you like this before, Scott. And listen, I get it if you want to end all this, whatever weâre doing.â He frowns. âKate is wonderful, so I understand.â
Scottâs furrow only deepens. âWhat the hell are you going on about?â
âYou and Kate,â you say, tongue heavy like lead in your mouth. âYou guys make a good pair. Iâm happy itâs working out, but I just canât be here to watch that happen so Iâm going to take the offer and move to New York. I know itâs tough to replace my work during this time, Iâll try and stay until the end of the season, but afterwardsââ
âFuck that,â he snaps, âlike hell youâre leaving. What do you mean you canât be here anymore? What are you going on about with Kate?â
Maybe he thinks youâre badmouthing her. âSheâs great! Iâm happy for you. Iâm justââ your chest constricts. âIâm in love with you. Shit. Iâve been in love with you, Scott. I canât do this no-strings thing anymore. I thought I could take it, whatever scraps youâll let me have, but I canât. Especially not when youâre falling for someone else.â
Scott pinches the bridge of his nose and he looks more than pissed off as he looks at you. âWho said anything about falling for someone else? Also, youâre in love with me? Since when?â
A groan slips past your lips. âThis is so humiliating. Can we drop it?â
âOh, no, you started this, so you answer my question. Since when have you been in love with me?â
âForever! Fucking forever alright. Is that what you want to hear?â You grumble, âI was in love with you before⌠this even started.â
You see his tongue press against the inside of his cheek, his blue eyes sharp. âWhy didnât you tell me?â
âBecause youâre my friend, Scott.â
âApparently not if you didnât fucking tell me,â he glares.
âWould it have changed anything?â
Disbelief colors his face. âIt wouldâve changed everything. Are you kidding me? Youâve been in love with me all this time and you didnât tell me?â
Is the thought of you loving him really that repulsive? Heâs got his hands balled into fists on the sheets, jaw clenched like he would rather be anywhere but here. While the possibility of him rejecting you has always crossed your mind, you didnât think that he would have this visceral a reaction. Gone are your chances of maintaining a cordial relationship after you leave.
Heâs right. This changes everything.
âIâm sorry,â you whisper, âI shouldnât haveââ your breath snags in your throat again, your eyes sting with unshed tears. âI shouldnât have said anything. I donât want this to change anything between us. Weâll stay friends.â
âWe canât stay friends,â he scowls. Your heart sinks.
You press the heel of your palms against your eyes, praying the tears away. The last thing you want to do is cry in front of him. âI canâtâ Iâm gonna go. I need toââ
âNo, youâre staying right here so I can kiss some fucking sense into you.â
For a second, you canât hear past the rushing in your ears, the frantic urge to leave. But when his words settle in and your brain slowly digests each individual syllable, you pull your wet hands away from your eyes. Scott swallows thickly when he sees your face.
âYou think what â that I was in love with Kate?â He scoffs but thereâs no weight to his words. He almost sounds weak. âWhat gave you that idea?â
You balk at him. Itâs your turn to be confused. âYouâ youâre literally always watching her! You call her dandelion for godâsâ sake! Who gets a cute nickname like that?â
âThatâs because Iâm bad with names! You know this. You know me. It took me a while to remember her name â and I keep watching her because sheâs like this little circus freak. Who the hell guesses storms by looking at goddamn flowers?â
You open your mouth, then promptly shut it again. Speechless.
âAnd that job? I canât fucking believe you even thought about leaving. Leaving all this. Leaving me. You know damn well Iâd never let that happen. If you really wanted it â and you were leaving for yourself, then sure, do it, but youâre out of your mind if you donât think Iâll be following you to the ends of the earth.â
Your lungs stutter against your ribs. âWhat?â
Scott turns to face you, hands sliding up to cup the back of your neck. He forces you to look at him. To really look at him. âIâm in love with you. Iâve been fucking in love with you.âÂ
You feel the desert in your throat when you croak out, âSince when?â
âForever.â
âWhy didnât you tell me then?â
âYou were the one who said you wanted to keep it no strings! I thought you didnât want to date.â
âThatâs because youâre always going on and on about how women and relationships are a pain!â
Scott lets out a frustrated breath, as if youâre the fool in this situation. âExcept when it comes to you! Jesus, youâre never a pain. Youâre the best part of my day. I think about you all the goddamn time. Sometimes, I want you to stop doing this tornado chasing thing because itâs dangerous and I want you in a safe fucking bubble where nobody, nothing can touch you. But youâre passionate and I fucking love that and I fucking love you.â
âBut youâ whatâ this canât be happening.â
âYouâre a goddamn idiot.â
Your lips press together. âYou love me and youâre calling me a goddamn idiot? Really?â
âThatâs because you are. Fuck. I canât believe I wasted all this time. I canât believe I even let you take that interview,â Scott grouses, mostly to himself. âI need you to get it through your thick skull that I donât want anyone else. Itâs always been you. You think Iâd let anyone tail me around like you did?â
A pinched pout forms on your lips, mostly to stop yourself from crumbling. âI just thought you felt bad for me.â
âYou somehow managed to be the smartest person on this team and the biggest idiot,â he mumbles. âI love you. Iâm not letting you out of my sight, you hear me. Need you in my car every day. Next to me every time we go out. I need you in my bed every night and I donât want you leaving either. Weâll share one room from now on.â
You sniffle, âThatâs very fiscally responsible of you.â
Scott chuckles, âWell, Iâll take any excuse to keep you next to me. Canât have you getting bored with me.â
âPlease,â you roll your eyes with a smile, âif weâve survived this long without getting sick of each other, whatâs forever, right?â
The reality of what youâve just said slams into you like a truck. Heat floods your insides.
âI meanââ
âIs that a proposal?â He smirks. Before you can dig a bigger hole for yourself, Scott leans over and presses his lips against yours.
Sweet, slow, steady.
âBecause Iâve got a ring with your name on it back at home. Iâve been itching for a reason to finally take it out.â
âYouâre unbelievable,â you mutter, cheeks warm.
âYeah, well, you love me anyway.â
That, you canât deny.
+ sam: you know how excited i was to write this and i hope it didnt disappoint. ily queen thank you for always matching my freak and my yap mwah!!
scott is yearning for (taglist): @unabashedlyinlovewithyou @eiaf4uwn @thebabykashmere @nbhrhn @w1nchesterfiles @ae1szn @pinksplace @stanmarvelous @coffinlolz
+ add yourself to my taglists!
Gardenias
wc: 1,307 // tags: Â flower shop au, cassie mckay x reader, slow-burn, pining, fluff, age gap, mutual pining, confessions, established reader owns a shop, cassie is a disaster lesbian, mutual pining, happy ending
takes place after cassie asked the reader on a date, so this is their first date.
ââââŕ¨ŕ§ââââ
The next day, Cassie texts you at 4:00 PM.
"Still on for tonight?"
You stare at your phone for a full minute before typing back.
"Yeah. Where are we going?"
"There's a place. Italian. Low key."
"I like Italian."
"Good. Me too. I'll pick you up at 7."
"You don't have to pick me up. I can meet you."
"I want to pick you up."
You stare at your phone again. Maya is watching from the cafĂŠ.
"Who are you texting?" Maya asks.
"No one."
"You're smiling at your phone like an idiot."
"I'm not smiling."
"You're smiling."
You put your phone in your pocket. Go back to work. You're still smiling.
---
Cassie pulls up at 7:00 on the dot.
You're waiting outside the shop. You locked up early. Changed twice. Settled on a sweater and jeans. Not too dressy. Not too casual. You've been standing on the sidewalk for five minutes, pretending you weren't watching for the car.
Cassie's sedan pulls up. The window rolls down.
"Hey," she says.
"Hey."
"You look..." She stops. Starts again. "You look nice."
"Thanks. You too."
Cassie is wearing a dark sweater. The same brown leather jacket. Her hair is down. She looks nervous.
You get in the car. The passenger seat is still pushed back too far. There's a hoodie on the back seat and a granola bar wrapper in the cup holder.
"Sorry about the mess," Cassie says.
"It's fine, Cassie."
"Ok... cool."
She puts the car in drive.
---
The restaurant is small. Red checkered tablecloths. Candles in glass jars. A man at a piano in the corner playing something slow.
Cassie holds the door open. You walk in.
"Reservation for McKay," Cassie tells the host.
"Right this way."
You're led to a table by the window. Cassie pulls out your chair. You sit. Cassie sits across from you. She puts her hands on the table. Then takes them off. Then puts them back on.
"You're nervous," you say.
"I'm not nervous."
"Your hands are shaking."
Cassie looks down at her hands. Puts them in her lap.
"Sorry."
"Don't be sorry."
The waiter comes. You order. You both get water. The waiter leaves.
"You're not drinking?" Cassie asks.
"I don't really drink."
"Good. Me neither. I mean â I don't. Not anymore."
You nod. Don't ask.
"I used to," Cassie says anyway. "A long time ago. Different life."
"Okay."
"You're not going to ask about it?"
"Do you want me to?"
Cassie thinks about it. "No. Not yet."
"Then I won't."
Cassie looks at you. Really looks. Like she's trying to figure something out.
"You're different," she says.
"Different how?"
"I don't know. Easier. Most people ask too many questions."
"I figure you'll tell me when you're ready."
Cassie nods. Picks up her water glass. Puts it down.
---
The food comes. Pasta for you. Gnocchi for Cassie. You eat. You talk. Nothing heavy. Where you grew up. How you ended up in Pittsburgh.
You talk about the shop. How you opened it three years ago. How it was a laundromat before. How you gutted it yourself.
"You did the renovation?" Cassie asks.
"Most of it. My friend helped with the electrical."
"That's impressive."
"It's just drywall and paint."
"It's not. It's a business. You built it."
You look at her. Cassie is serious.
"Thanks," you say.
Cassie talks about Harrison. His obsession with video games. His refusal to eat vegetables. The way he leaves his shoes in the middle of the hallway every single day.
"He sounds great," you say.
"He's a pain in the ass. But yeah. He's great."
"Does he know you're here?"
"He knows I have a date. He's with his dad this weekend."
"And he was okay with it?"
"He said you were nice. And that your shop smells good."
You laugh. "That's high praise from a twelve-year-old."
"He's not wrong about the shop."
Cassie says it like it's nothing. Then she adds, quieter: "Or about you."
You look down at your pasta. Feel your face warm.
---
After dinner, you walk back to the car. The street is darker now. The shops are closed. A few cars pass. The air is cold.
"I had a good time," you say.
"Me too."
"I was nervous."
Cassie looks at you. "You were?"
"Yeah. I thought you were going to be smooth."
"Me? Smooth?"
"You're older. I thought you'd have it together."
Cassie laughs. "I don't have anything together."
"I'm starting to realize that."
"Is that a problem?"
You stop walking. Turn to face her.
"No," you say. "It's not."
Cassie stops too. You're standing under a streetlight. Her blue eyes are almost gray in this light.
"Can I kiss you?" Cassie asks.
"Yeah."
Cassie leans in. Slow. Like she's giving you time to change your mind.
You don't change your mind.
The kiss is soft. Brief. Cassie tastes like wine and something else. Something warm.
She pulls back. Looks at you.
"Okay," she says.
"Okay."
"That was..."
"Yeah."
Cassie nods. Shoves her hands back in her pockets.
"I should take you home."
"Yeah."
---
You drive back in comfortable silence. Cassie keeps one hand on the wheel, the other resting on the center console. Your hand is on your own leg. Your fingers are inches apart.
Cassie pulls up in front of the flower shop. Your car is parked out front.
"This is you," Cassie says.
"This is me."
You don't get out.
"I had a really good time," you say.
"Me too."
"Like, really good."
Cassie smiles. A real smile. "Yeah."
"Do you want to come in?" you ask. "For tea or something?"
Cassie hesitates.
"I have to open early tomorrow," you add. "So not late. Just... tea."
"Tea," she repeats.
"Tea."
Cassie turns off the car.
---
Inside the shop, you flip on the lights. The cafĂŠ is dark. The flowers are quiet. You lead Cassie to the back, where the small kitchen is.
"Sit," you say, pointing to a stool.
Cassie sits.
You put the kettle on. Get two mugs. Tea bags. Honey.
"You don't have to do all this," Cassie says.
"I want to."
You wait for the water to boil. The kitchen is small. You're close. Cassie's knee is almost touching your hip.
*"Can I ask you something?"* Cassie says.
"Sure."
"Why gardenias?"
You lean against the counter.
"My grandmother grew them," you say. "In her backyard. She had this whole garden. It was the only thing she was precious about. Everything else she let grow wild. But the gardenias, those were hers. She'd spend hours on them. Watering. Pruning. Talking to them."
"Talking to them?"
"She said they needed encouragement."
Cassie smiles.
"She died when I was twenty," you continue. "The garden died with her. I couldn't keep them alive. Tried for a year. Killed three plants."
"So you understand the succulent thing."
"I understand the succulent thing."
The kettle clicks off. You pour the water. Hand Cassie a mug.
"So now I sell them," you say. "Instead of growing them. It's easier."
"Do you miss it?"
"The garden?" You think about it. "Yeah. Sometimes. But the shop helps. Watching other people take them home. Keep them alive. It's not the same, but it's something."
Cassie wraps her hands around her mug.
"I'm going to keep mine alive," she says.
"The gardenias I gave you?"
"Yeah."
"That's a lot of pressure."
"Good pressure."
You drink your tea. The shop is quiet. The street outside is quiet.
"I should go," Cassie says finally. "You have to open tomorrow."
"Yeah."
You walk her to the door. Cassie stops on the sidewalk.
"Same time next week?" she asks.
"I'd like that."
"Okay."
Cassie leans in. Kisses you again. Slower this time. Less nervous.
"Goodnight."
"Goodnight."
You watch her drive away.
You lock up. Turn off the lights. Go to bed.
You can't stop smiling.
ââââŕ¨ŕ§ââââ

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The One Where Cassie Keeps Buying Flowers She Doesn't Need
wc: 1,780 // tags: Â flower shop au, cassie mckay x reader, slow-burn, pining, fluff, age gap, mutual pining, confessions, established reader owns a shop, cassie is a disaster lesbian, mutual pining, happy ending
a/n: i might do a part 2 of this or something idk yet lol
ââââŕ¨ŕ§ââââ
The first time Cassie walks into the flower shop, it's a Tuesday in early October. The bell above the door chimes and you look up from the arrangement you're working on, roses and eucalyptus for a wedding order, and you see her.
She's wearing a brown leather jacket, worn at the cuffs, and a flannel underneath. Her hair is messy, choppy bangs grazing her eyelashes. Blue eyes. She's standing just inside the door like she's not sure why she came in.
"Hi," you say. "Let me know if you need help finding anything."
"Thanks."
She starts wandering. Picks up a succulent. Puts it down. Touches a peony. Reads a label on a bag of potting soil like it's the most interesting thing she's seen all day. She doesn't buy anything. But before she leaves, she walks to the counter.
"Can I ask you something?"
"Sure."
"What's your favorite flower?"
You blink. No one's ever asked you that. Customers ask about meanings, about longevity, about what's in season. They don't ask what you like.
"Gardenias," you say. "They're complicated. Finicky. Need the right conditions or they won't bloom. But when they do, they're worth it."
She nods like she's filing that away.
"I'm Cassie."
"YN."
She says your name once, quiet, like she's testing it out. Then she leaves.
The bell chimes. Your employee Maya appears at your elbow.
"She was staring at you."
"She was looking at the flowers."
"She asked your favorite flower. No one asks that."
You don't have an answer. You go back to your roses.
---
She comes back three days later. This time she's in black scrubs, a grey zip-up hoodie over them, sleeves pushed up to her elbows. She looks tired. The kind of tired that comes from a long shift and a longer week.
"You're a doctor," you say.
"PTMC. Pittsburgh Emergency Medicine."
You nod. That explains it.
She walks to the buckets of flowers. Stares at them without really looking. Her heart's not in it. She's just moving her eyes across the colors.
"You don't have to buy anything," you say.
She looks up.
"You can just stand here. If you need to decompress. I won't make you buy something."
"That's bad business."
"I'm good at business. But I'm also good at knowing when someone just needs a minute."
She doesn't say anything. But her shoulders drop. Just slightly.
She stays for almost twenty minutes. Doesn't buy a thing. Just stands by the window watching the street. Before she leaves, she walks to the counter.
"Gardenias," she says.
"What about them?"
"I looked them up."
Your heart skips. You keep your face neutral.
"Yeah?"
"They are finicky."
She holds your gaze for a moment. Then she leaves.
---
The third time, she buys flowers. A bouquet of pink roses and white lilies. You ask what they're for, and she says, "A friend," and you nod, wrap them up, and she pays and leaves. Maya, one of your workers, watches her go.
"Friend, my ass."
"Maya."
"What? No one buys that many flowers for a friend."
You ignore her. But you're thinking about it too.
---
The fourth time, she says they're for her son's teacher. You raise an eyebrow but don't comment. Yellow tulips and purple iris. She pays. Leaves. Doesn't make eye contact the whole time.
"She doesn't have a son," Maya says after the door closes.
"You don't know that."
"She's lying."
"About having a son?"
"About why she's buying flowers."
You shake your head and go back to work. But Maya isn't wrong about everything.
---
The fifth time, she doesn't buy anything at first. She stands by the succulents for a long time, staring at them like she's trying to solve a problem. You're behind the counter, pretending to do inventory, but you're watching her. You're always watching her now.
"Do you need help?"
She jumps. Turns around. Her face does something complicated.
"No. Yes. I don't know."
You wait.
"I need flowers for..." She stops. Her mouth opens and closes. Then she makes a face, eyes squeezed shut, lips pressed together, like she's just said something incredibly stupid and she knows it.
"For?"
"For my fish."
You stare at her.
"Your fish?"
"My fish. Died. I need flowers for the funeral."
You keep staring. She's turning red.
"I don't have a fish," she admits. "I don't know why I said that."
You try not to laugh. You fail. A small one escapes.
She closes her eyes. "I'm going to leave now."
"Don't."
She stops.
"Just tell me what you actually want."
She looks at you. Her blue eyes are embarrassed but something else too. Something softer.
"I don't know how to say it."
"Try."
She opens her mouth. Closes it. Opens it again.
"I like coming here," she says. "That's all. I just... like coming here."
You nod.
"You don't need to buy flowers for that," you say. "You can just come."
She stares at you.
"Really?"
"Really."
She exhales. "Okay."
"Okay."
She doesn't buy anything that day. But she stays for a while. Sits in the cafĂŠ corner with a cup of tea. You don't talk. You just work and she watches and it feels like something.
---
Over the next few weeks, it becomes a thing. She comes by after shifts, sometimes in scrubs, sometimes not. Sometimes she buys flowers, always something different, like she's grabbing whatever's closest, like she didn't plan it, and sometimes she just gets tea and sits by the window.
Over the next few weeks, it becomes a thing. She comes by after shifts, sometimes in scrubs, sometimes not. Sometimes she buys flowers â always something different, like she's grabbing whatever's closest, like she didn't plan it â and sometimes she just gets tea and sits by the window.
Maya and Derek have opinions. They share them loudly when they think you can't hear.
"She's buying roses again. Who's she cheating on?"
"Maybe she's not cheating. Maybe she's just bad at buying flowers."
"She's bad at something, but I don't think it's flowers."
You tell them to get back to work. But you're smiling.
---
One afternoon, a boy walks in. Maybe eleven or twelve. Dark hair. Blue eyes like Cassie's. He's holding a twenty-dollar bill and a torn piece of notebook paper.
"Are you YN?" he asks.
"I am."
"My mom said to get flowers. She wrote it down but I lost the paper."
"Your mom is Cassie?"
He nods. "She said you'd know what to get."
You feel something warm spread through your chest.
"What's her favorite?" you ask.
He shrugs. "She likes the white ones. The ones you gave her that one time."
Gardenias.
You put together a small bouquet. White petals. Dark green leaves. You tuck a few sprigs of lavender in there too, because you want to. Because you can.
The boy, Harrison, he tells you, pays and takes the flowers. He's almost to the door when he turns back.
The boy â Harrison, he tells you â pays and takes the flowers. He's almost to the door when he turns back.
"She talks about you a lot," he says.
"Yeah?"
"She said you're pretty." He makes a face. "It's weird."
Then he leaves.
You stand there for a full thirty seconds.
Maya is grinning at you from the cafĂŠ. You ignore her.
---
The next time Cassie comes in, she's alone. No Harrison. No scrubs. Just a flannel and jeans and that tired look she always has.
She walks to the counter. Doesn't look at the buckets. Doesn't glance at the cafĂŠ.
"Harrison came by," you say.
"I know."
"He said you think I'm pretty."
She closes her eyes. "I'm going to kill him."
"Don't. It was cute."
She opens her eyes. Looks at you.
"He also said you like gardenias."
"I do."
"I got the ones you gave me. They lasted two weeks. I've never kept flowers alive that long."
"Maybe you're better with plants than you think."
"I'm not. I killed a succulent once. They're supposed to be impossible to kill."
You laugh. She watches you laugh. Her mouth does something small, not quite a smile, but close.
"Can I ask you something?" she says.
"You can ask me anything."
She hesitates. Her hands are in her jacket pockets. She's not looking at you anymore.
"Are you seeing anyone?"
Your heart stops. Just for a second.
"No," you say. "I'm not."
She nods. Keeps nodding. Like she's processing.
"Okay," she says. "Good. I mean, not good. I mean..." She makes that face again. The one where she knows she's messing up and can't stop.
"Cassie."
"I should go."
"Cassie."
She stops.
"I'm not seeing anyone," you say. "And I haven't been for a while. And if you're asking because you want to ask me something else, you should just ask."
She stares at you.
"I'm old," she says.
"So?"
"I'm forty-three."
"I'm aware."
"I have a twelve-year-old. I have an ex-husband. I have," she gestures at herself, "baggage. A lot of it."
You lean on the counter. Look at her.
"I own a flower shop," you say. "I have two employees who gossip about me constantly. I drink too much coffee and I talk to my plants and I've been waiting for you to ask me out for three months."
She blinks.
"Three months?"
"I'm good at math."
"You never said anything."
"Neither did you."
She runs a hand through her hair. Messes it up more than it already was.
"I don't know how to do this," she admits.
"Do what?"
"This. Dating. Flirting. I'm not, I'm not smooth. I buy flowers for my dead fish. I send my son to do my dirty work. I'm a mess."
You smile.
"I like you," you say. "Fish lies and all."
She stares at you.
"Really?"
"Really."
She doesn't say anything. But she's not leaving.
"So," you say. "Dinner?"
"Dinner," she repeats.
"Tomorrow night?"
She nods slowly. "Tomorrow night."
"It's a date."
She almost smiles. Almost.
Then she looks at the buckets of flowers. Back at you.
"Can I have some gardenias?" she asks.
"For your fish?"
She laughs. A real laugh. It changes her whole face.
"For my apartment," she says. "So I can look at them and think about you."
You put together a bouquet. Bigger than usual. White petals. Dark leaves. You don't charge her.
She takes them. Holds them carefully.
"Tomorrow," she says.
"Tomorrow."
She walks out. The bell chimes.
Maya appears at your elbow.
"Did that just happen?"
"Yes."
"Are you going on a date with the flower murderer?"
"She's not a flower murderer."
"She killed a succulent, YN. A succulent."
You shake your head. But you're smiling.
You can't stop smiling.
ââââŕ¨ŕ§ââââ
uncommon goods
Pairing: Cassie McKay x f!Reader Summary: A little shop, a kind proprietor, and maybe the chance at more than one date. WC: 2k Tags: fluff, flirting, "meet cute", street team cassie, mention of homelessness a/n: this might end up being a short fluffy series of cassie finding love again. also that pose in the last photo is sooooo cassie (or perhaps how I imagine her). not proofread at all btw.
Cassie didnât know what exactly she would do after her residency. She was considering a handful of fellowships, namely addiction and pain management. Different fellowships with the same outcomesâso to speak. Working with the street team had changed her even more than her own experiences changed her. Each person she treated had a story, a history, friends and family. They were owed dignity and respect.Â
More than that, working with the community and other mutual aid groups kept her going on days when it felt like the world was no longer fighting for those that needed it. This country was big, vast, and unforgiving. It would eat you up and spit you out without a second thought. And yet, there were also people dedicated to caring, to pushing back on the jaws that tried to grind and destroy. Cassie hoped she was one of those.Â
Every kind of person worked in mutual aid. While it was uncommon, there were handful of rich business people, more often than not though, it was young people who saw the changes in their community and wanted to push back.Â
Cassie hadnât been sure what to make of you, though.Â
She first heard about you from Yasmin and Petunia, two older women who had probably been living on the streets longer than not.Â
âThe art and gift shop down the road, she lets us use her shower and her nice products,â Yasmin told Cassie conspiratorially. âAnd she helped re-bandage Jimmyâs foot.âÂ
âReally?â Cassie asked, her eyebrows raising. âSounds generous.âÂ
âThere are rules, but we all tend to abide by them.âÂ
âWhat rules?â Cassie asked.Â
âNot to steal products, only take what you need, things like that. Sometimes, she cooks us dinner. Itâs not very good, but sheâs nice about it,â Petunia replied.Â
âShe lives above the shop, so when Carlos had his overdose, she is the one who called 911 and gave him narcan,â said Yasmin.Â
There were a couple dozen or so homeless neighbors (Kiara preferred house-less, but Cassie didnât mind either way. When she was homeless it wasn't just because she was lacking a house; she was lacking a home.) In the five block radius of the community clinic corner. Every week one of the street teams would deploy to this area and people would come by and seek out whatever services they needed. Cassie deployed a lot of methadone and gave away a lot of narcan.Â
âShe gives away sterile needles, too. She had a bin in her alleyway for people to get rid of them safely,â piped in Alexander. He was younger than the two women; they seemed to have adopted him. He had only been on the street for the last few months. Both women were trying to convince him to take advantage of more than just the medical services the street team provided.Â
âThatâs really kind of her,â Cassie replied.Â
âShe pays me to clean up the needles around the street. Gave me stick proof gloves and everything,â Alexander continued. He fished them out of his coat pocket and handed them to Cassie.Â
Whoever this woman was, whoever you were, Cassie was determined to meet you before the day was up.Â
After a long day walking along the homeless encampment under the bridge, Cassie trudged up to the high street and found the juxtaposition startling. The tree covered idyllic road was covered in pedestrians, cars, and young families taking advantage of the cool fall day. Each meandering person was so unaware that on the underside of the bridge were dozens of people who were never guaranteed food, water, or any kind of safety.Â
But thatâs often how people preferred it.Â
Still, Cassie shouldered her backpack and made her way into the crowd eventually landing in front of your storefront.Â
Uncommon Goods.Â
The shop was the same orange-ish red brick as its neighbors, with an inset door and a wide window decorated with a display of goods. There were art pieces, herbs, jewelry and more based on the window. There was a hand painted sign that displayed: Local artisans. Local goods. Local prices.
Cassie thought it was a clever way of saying expensive, but she couldnât begrudge. It was expensive just to exist now-a-days and if advertising unique hand-crafted goods with euphemistic pricing is how you stayed in business, well, so be it.Â
Pushing through the door, there was a soft tinkle of bells above her. The smell was not as strong as Cassie had been expecting, not that Cassie could identify any of the scents. She had lost most of her sense of smell years ago. There were tall shelves full of beautiful artwork, decor, hand crafted items. There were also herbs and things that might suggest the store moonlighted as a witchâs coven.Â
You were sitting at the counter, perched on a stool. It had been years since someone had taken her breath away. Frankly, Cassie had thought that she had been mostly desensitized to the visuals of a human body, considering how often she had seen it in so many different states. However, you were as close to a goddess as Cassie had ever seen in real life. Tattoos were covering your arms, jewelry stacked on your ears, fingers, and neck.Â
Despite the eccentricities of the shop, you were wearing a simple shirt and jeans. Cassie suspected if she could peak behind your counter, heavy boots would adorn your feet. You looked exactly as she was expecting and also nothing at all. It was hard to pin an age on you and Cassie wasnât too interested in trying.Â
Instead, she moseyed around the shop, looking at hand crafted soaps, candles and even pottery. When the customer you had been helping finished, Cassie made her way over to you and said,Â
âThis is an impressive place.âÂ
You looked up from your computer and beamed at her. Briefly, Cassie wondered if this is what a heart attack felt like. She wanted all of your attention and none of it at the same time. It was like you had wrapped her in a magic spell, not that Cassie was in any hurry to leave.Â
âThank you,â you replied. Even your voice was magnetic. âFirst time in?âÂ
âYeah, I got it on recommendation,â Cassie replied.Â
âOh? From whom?âÂ
Even your grammar was impeccable.Â
âPetunia and Yasmin,â Cassie replied.Â
âReally?â Your face was unreadable and Cassie realized you were waiting to see why Cassie was here. She wondered if the women below the bridge were still being harassed by the local PD after their protesting against demolishing the community center down the street.Â
âIâm with PTMCâs street team. We come out to the bridge every week to check on the neighbors,â Cassie replied.Â
Your smile relaxed and you said, âWhatâs your name?âÂ
âCassie McKay.âÂ
âOh! Yes! Theyâve mentioned you.âÂ
âI wanted to meet the woman who is so kind to them,â Cassie replied. âIâve grown to care about them a lot.âÂ
âTheyâre good people. They have a rotating schedule of who uses the showers so everyone gets water and a chance at being clean.âÂ
âSounds like them, they run that place like the navy,â Cassie replied. âHow long have you worked here?âÂ
âI opened the shop in 2022,â you replied. âNot very long, but long enough that I think weâre here for awhile.âÂ
âEverything is created by people in Pittsburgh?âÂ
âDefinitely, the art, pottery, jewellery, everything.âÂ
âDo you make anything?âÂ
âI do the stained glass and some of the jewelry,â you replied. âHold on a second.âÂ
You stood (Cassie was right about the boots) and disappeared through a beaded curtained off doorway. Shifting from foot to foot, Cassie found herself amused by the stickers and key chains waiting for an unsuspecting tourist on the counter. A cute cartoon bird that said âSupport Your Local Murderâ was emblazoned on a key chain and sticker. Cassie picked it up the sticker for Harrison and key chain for her name badge
When you returned, you had a small pair of earrings in your hand. They were a faded orange, like the last vestiges of a sunset. Neither were identical, instead, were a long oblong shape, maybe an inch long. Cassie thought they were beautiful.Â
âFor you,â you said, sliding them over to you. âFor all the work you do for my neighbors.âÂ
âI canât accept this,â Cassie said. âLet me pay for it.âÂ
âNo way,â you leaned closer and whispered, âBetween you and me I went viral on tiktok a while back. Iâm not hurting for customers.âÂ
âAt least let me pay for the sticker. Itâs for my son,â Cassie said. She wasnât sure why she mentioned Harrison.Â
Your smile didnât change, but you almost lookedâŚdisappointed?Â
âStill, no. But if you tell me you want something for your husband and not wife, I might be inclined to charge you. Weâre very pro women here, well, perhaps weâre anti-cis men,â you amended.Â
Cassie felt her cheeks flush. âNo husband or wife, or partner.âÂ
âReally?â You asked. âShame.âÂ
âShame?âÂ
âWell, not for us single women in Pittsburgh,â you said winking.Â
âAre you flirting with me?â Cassie found herself spluttering.Â
âIâm trying to.âÂ
âAnd what would you do if I flirted back?âÂ
âIâd ask the most beautiful doctor Iâve ever seen on a date and then brag about how I went on a date with a doctor. What else would I do?âÂ
âJust like that?âÂ
âJust like that.âÂ
âEven though I have a son?âÂ
âIâve always had a thing for MILFs,â you said sitting back on your stool and crossing your legs. Cassieâs eyes couldnât help follow the lines of your legs.Â
âWhat if Iâm a terrible person?â Cassie challenged. Why was she challenging this? A beautiful woman was kind of asking her out and she was fighting it?
âThen Petunia and Yasmin wouldnât like you,â you said simply. âDo you have any other silly questions or can I get your phone number and pick you up the next time youâre free?âÂ
âIâm free tonight,â Cassie heard herself say.Â
âYou donât say. Tell me, Cassie, do you like sushi?âÂ
âYes.âÂ
âWhen do you get off your volunteering shift?âÂ
âIn an hour.âÂ
âThe shop closes at six.âÂ
âI could meet you back here. Maybe when I am not dressed in scrubs.âÂ
Your eyes clearly roved over her form. âThey certainly do something for you.âÂ
âThat is bullshit,â Cassie laughed. You just grinned at her and said,Â
âMeet me here at six. Iâll wine you, dine you, and maybe if Iâm lucky youâll come upstairs with me.âÂ
âI donât do that on the first date,â Cassie said, almost apologetic.Â
âWell, I guess I should make sure Iâm fun enough for a second date.âÂ
âI guess you should,â Cassie replied, still struck by how she walked in without a date and left with plans. âThe earrings werenât to bribe me on a date, were they?âÂ
You snorted but said, âNo, they were thank you gifts for treating my friends with dignity. Anyone else from your team is welcome to stop in, too.âÂ
âI kind of want to keep you to myself,â Cassie muttered. She didnât realize you could hear her until your wind chime laugh erupted.Â
âDonât worry, Dr. McKay. I think youâve bewitched me too much for another to catch my eye so soon.âÂ
The heat that had been slowly building in Cassie's gut bloomed into butterflies. Not even Chad had spoken to her in such a blatantly flirty way. It wasnât even true that she didnât sleep with people on the first dateâthatâs almost exclusively what she did. But for some reason she didnât want you to only be interested in sex. She wanted to keep you in her orbit for however long you were willing to stay.Â
âIâll take your word for it.âÂ
âDonât worry, my actions will back me up, too,â you said. âIâll see you in a few hours, Cassie.âÂ
âYeah,â said Cassie. âYou will.âÂ
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dividers by @/uzmacchiato
Everything
Pairing:Â Jack Abbot x Reader
Summary:Â You wake up from surgery, unfamiliar with the man hovering over you. Your husband copes.
Word count:Â 2.2k
Warnings: Surgery/medical procedures, mention of death, hurt/comfort and cutie a little :)
a/n: I still cannot writeeeee 𼲠but I wrote this so please enjoy it's a fun trope <3 ily bye <3
Masterlist
~~
Jack was not used to being in waiting rooms. He was used to walking through them, maybe taking a glance to grab a family, but he was never the one waiting. He found that he didnât like it; the chairs were uncomfortable, and the magazines on the side tables were from 12 years ago, all fraying and discolored where othersâ hands had been. The light felt off as it filtered through tinted windows, and he could hear each personâs issues as they checked in for their own procedures. Jack leaned his elbow on the thin, wooden arm of his chair, hand over his mouth, and he waited in possibly the worst place on Earth.Â
You would be fine.Â
He told you you would be fine, and he believed that.Â
But Jack was also starting to believe that waiting rooms were intentional harbingers of doubt, and with each tick of the clock sitting above the receptionistâs desk, he felt himself spiralling into anxiety.Â
What if you werenât fine? What if you believed him, and then you died or there was a complication or several other things all aligned perfectly, and you were patient zero for some strange, unresolvable medical anomaly? It was all possible, even if the chances were slim, and waiting in this dismal room was making him consider it all. He wished he had gone into surgery. He wouldnât be going through any of this if he were a surgeon.Â
Jackâs knee had begun to shake when a nurse finally entered the waiting room and looked around. It was the same nurse who had assured him, several times, that they were aware of your allergies and would call him immediately if anything went wrong, so Jack shot up from his chair. He ignored the ache in his leg and brushed down the material of his jeans, and he walked over to her before she could even register who he was.Â
âHowâs she doing?â Jack greeted, hands pressed together to look casual, but he was anything but casual. His wife was lying in a hospital bed, and he wasnât there, and that was not casual.Â
Nurse Caroline, Jack had taken it upon himself to remember, gave him a soft smile. She still had a scrub cap on and didnât look stressed or nervous, but Jack was familiar with compartmentalizing in front of patientsâ families, and he was a patientâs family. He held his breath and tried to look casual again.Â
âSheâs doing just fine, Dr. Abbot. There was a minor complication with bleeding, but nothing we couldnât handle. Weâve been observing her for the past half hour, and sheâs responding well to the titration of meds. Starting to wake up, but sheâs pretty out of it. Donât be alarmed.âÂ
âWhat kind of complication?â Jack asked, right on the heels of nurse Caroline as she guided him through the maze of patient rooms. âSomething surgery-related or a predisposition?âÂ
Caroline hooked her chin over her shoulder. âIâll give you the full note in her discharge summary, how about that? You can review the entire procedure.âÂ
âNot sure I need to do that,â Jack muttered under his breath, though the thought comforted him. âJust a rundown would be fine.âÂ
âRight. And Iâm sure about a thousand follow-up questions after? I know how you doctors are.â She pointed at him with a teasing smile. âAnd I especially know how you are when weâre working on your wives. You can read the summary and bring any questions to her post-op in two weeks, capiche?âÂ
Jack grumbled something back, the sound left in the hall as he entered your room. And you looked⌠fine. About what he expected you to look like after surgery. He didnât particularly enjoy the bleary way you were staring up at the ceiling, your waning skin, or even that you were in a hospital bed at all, but those were all temporary things. He could pack away the comparisons to nightmares heâs had about you in the ED and lower his tone to a comforting decibel. You needed that more than you needed a panicky, nauseous husband.Â
âHey, baby,â Jack all but whispered, his hand coming to rest on the top of your head. He leaned down and tried to enter your line of sight. âHow you feeling?âÂ
You didnât answer right away, or even focus your gaze on him. Jackâs thumb rubbed along your forehead, and he looked up to Caroline in the corner of the room, her attention fixed on the computer. âHow long did you say sheâs been awake?âÂ
âOnly a few minutes,â nurse Caroline replied. âSome people just take a little longer to come out of it, as Iâm sure youâre aware.âÂ
âButââÂ
âJust give it a sec, Dr. Abbot. Before you freak out.âÂ
Jack noddedâto himself, as Caroline hadnât looked up from her computer onceâand furrowed his brow as he turned his gaze back down to you. He blinked as he realized you were already looking at him, a layer of relief resting atop his panic. He offered you a smile that radiated fondness and adjusted his hand on your head, brushing your hair back.Â
âThereâs my girl,â Jack quietly encouraged. âFeeling pretty crappy, huh?âÂ
You squinted and nodded, and Jack asked, âDo you have her on pain meds?â which nurse Caroline quickly affirmed. She seemed very well-versed in treating doctors and related categories, and Jack was subtly grateful for her nonchalance. He wondered if she was chosen specifically for the ED attendingâs case, and then stopped wondering as you started to speak.Â
âAre you my doctor?â you hoarsely asked, grimacing as you shifted on the bed.Â
Jackâs smile widened. âNot today. Tried to be, but they told me I donât have enough specialized training to remove a gallbladder.âÂ
âThey took my gallbladder?âÂ
âYeah, sweetheart. It was causing you more trouble than it was worth. Better to take it out.âÂ
You made a worried sound, your eyes hazy. âCan I live without my gallbladder? Can I have someone elseâs?â
Jack quietly chuckled to himself, his fingers continuing to draw shapes along your temples, your forehead, your jaw. âYou can live a perfectly healthy life without one. Iâll help you figure it all out, okay? Worst case scenario, Iâll find a way to give you mine.âÂ
You hummed, leaning into his touch, and Jack felt his chest warm. Everything was fine. You were uncomfortable and confused, but you were fine. He was about to ask Caroline more about your post-op appointment and when you could be discharged when you jolted against him. He snapped his gaze down to you instantly, assessing for anything that could have gone wrong. His hands went from caressing you to hovering an inch over your body, afraid to do more.Â
âWhat is it?â he pressed out.
But your wide eyes were not filled with pain. Instead, they were tracking the wedding band on Jackâs left hand, a hint of fear in your expression. âAre you married?â you whispered.Â
Instinctively, Jack rolled the ring in his fingers. He slowly replied, âYes,â and let caution simmer in the space between you. Somewhere behind him, Caroline had finally turned away from her computer, brows raised at the scene.Â
âOh my god,â you groaned, and Jack winced as you shoved your head back against the bed. âAnd to think I was being all⌠like that with you. How mortifying.â
âI donâtââÂ
âAnd you were being all⌠touchy. You have a wife.â You ran a hand over your face, your IV trailing alongside you and making Jack wince again as he worried for the tangled lines. âI am so embarrassed.âÂ
Jack didnât quite know what to say. You were very clearly still out of it, your brows furrowed in confusion and your eyes looking lost, but all the usual tactics he would use to comfort you were not going to work. His adoring husband repertoire was effectively useless. Jack felt his heart break a little at the notion of being a stranger, but this was temporary. You likely wouldn't even remember it.Â
Jack swallowed, cleared his throat, and shoved his hands in his pockets because he couldnât just have them hanging. âHey, no need to be embarrassed. Iâm⌠uhâI do have a wife, butââÂ
âBut heâs your post-op nurse,â Caroline cut in from behind him. She threw him a look that said donât confuse her when sheâs coming off of anesthesia and rounded the other side of your bed. âThe touching is necessary. In fact, heâs also going to be your driver home. New service we have.âÂ
âOh,â you mumbled out, playing with your fingers in your lap. Jack felt his own hands twitch in his pockets at your slight pout. âSo everything is fine?âÂ
It took Jack a moment to realize you were looking at him. He sprang into action as he caught your expecting gaze. âOh, more than fine, sweetâuh, miss. Weâre going to get you home, and Iâll be back for more post-op care.âÂ
âBe back at my house?âÂ
âYeah. Iâll⌠be there a lot.âÂ
âLucky me,â you yawned. âBut not lucky wife.âÂ
Jack pressed his lips into a line to stave off the laugh. âMy wifeâs okay with it. She knows itâs part of the job.âÂ
Caroline had begun checking final vitals and milling about your bed. She removed your IV and scanned your hospital bracelet before returning to the computer. Jack watched each step carefully, hands still shoved into his pockets, and nodded when discharge paperwork was sent to his email. He didnât really need it, but he knew the procedure notes would be attached, so he would read every word as you slept. A quick check-in from the surgeon was the final key to going home, and Jack had carefully guided you into a wheelchair with hands that knew you better than he led on. You were half-asleep by the time you reached his truck.Â
âHey, wake up for me, baby. Gotta get you settled in.â
You squinted and grimaced, and Jack wished he could have just carried you in without the hassle, but the nurse said your stitches were in a delicate zone and you needed careful movement. You threw an arm over his shoulders, and Jack fought the urge to kiss your head as he buckled you into the seat. He didnât want to startle you. It took physical force to shut the door without touching you more.Â
He opted for a soft smile when your head rested against his passenger-side window, feeling jittery as he started the engine and backed out of the employee parking garage at the PTMC. You spoke again when you were a few miles away from home.Â
âYour wife must really love you,â you sleepily pointed out, eyes struggling to stay open. âIf you treat her like you treat your patients.âÂ
The lingering warmth in Jackâs chest made his heart skip a beat. He kept his eyes on the road. âI like to think I treat her just a little more special.âÂ
âReally love you, then.âÂ
âYeah, thatâs the hope,â Jack smiled to himself. âBut pretty sure I love her a whole lot more than that.âÂ
âThatâs nice, Nurse.âÂ
And when you got into the house just a couple of minutes later, your wedding pictures sprawled across the walls, Jackâs belongings mixed with yours, your jaw dropped, a starry-eyed gaze turning on your âpost-op nurse.âÂ
âAm I your wife?â you gaped.Â
Jack took the opportunity to finally touch you, bringing his hands from the clinical guidance around your shoulders to rest delicately around your waistâjust to help you walk inside. And maybe because it had only been a car ride, but he missed touching you like he was your husband. He smiled at you from over your shoulder.Â
âYeah, baby. We had a pretty fun wedding. Youâll remember it when you wake up.âÂ
âHo-ly shit,â you replied, stunned as Jack led you through the living room filled with your life together. âWhy didnât you tell me?â
Jack let his nose brush along your temple. âBetter to leave things simple when you wake up from a surgery. Wouldnât want to stress you out with big news.âÂ
âAre you actually a nurse?âÂ
âIâm a doctor.âÂ
âShit,â you repeated. Jack took on more of your weight as you started to fall forward.Â
âOkay, no more big news until youâre lying down,â Jack stressed, gently tucking your hair back as you approached the bed and struggled to sit down. You swayed slightly where he put you, and Jack crouched down to meet your dazed expression. âIâll tell you everything you want to know after you sleep some of this off. Promise.âÂ
âWhereâs my wedding ring?âÂ
He took your hand into his, kissing the empty space. âNo jewelry in surgery. Did you hear me? Sleep first, then information.âÂ
âAm I a doctor? I donât think I am. Do we have children?âÂ
âI love you so much.â Jack paused, tapping your cheek lightly. âItâs time to sleep.âÂ
âYouâll tell me everything when I wake up?âÂ
âEverything. Promise.âÂ
Wildfire
main masterlist
pairing: foreman!Bucky Barnes x ranch owner!Reader
summary: You were born to run the ranch, Bucky was raised to work the land. Somewhere between exhausting days of work, barn hookups and ten months of something neither of you dared to name you've crossed a line you can't uncross. But love doesn't mean the same thing to both of you. And when pride, class, and everything Bucky thinks he should be start pulling him away from you you realize loving him might not be enough to make him stay.
word count: 19.8 k (longest one posted yet omg)
warnings: +18 MNI explicit sexual content, unprotected p in v, oral sex (f receiving), secret affair, angst, mutual pining, class difference, miscommunication, power imbalance, harassment, attempted intimidation, physical violence, alcohol use, happy ending. | english is not my first language so I'm sorry for any grammar mistake or mystipo
a/n: as some of you may or may not know, I'm from Mexico so that means I grew up watching telenovelas full of drama and all of that, this idea came to me when I suddenly saw a picture in pinterest and my mind started thinking a lot of what if? I hope you enjoy it! dividers by @saradika-graphics & beta read by my girls @herejustforbuckybarnes @buckysdecaflove & Denice ę¨ď¸
read in AO3
The sun hasn't cleared the horizon when you step onto the porch, coffee mug in hand. The ranch is already awake. You can hear the low murmur of cattle in the distance, the sharp whistle of someone calling the dogs, the creak of the barn doors and machinery coming to life. This was your ranch. Your responsibility. Your pride.
You'd grown up with dirt under your fingernails and hay in your hair, your father's shadow stretching long over every fence post and pasture. He'd raised you to run this place since you were little. Mainly, because you were his only child, but also because he knew you would take care of the land accordingly.
Now the shadow is yours and you wear it well.
"Morning, wildfire."
The voice comes from near the equipment barn. You don't have to look to know who it isâyou'd recognize that low rasp anywhere, the way he says that nickname with practiced ease.
Bucky Barnes leans against the fence, one boot propped on the lower rail, his work shirt already dusty though the day's barely started. His dark hair is combed back, a few strands escaping to frame his face, and his blue eyes track you as you descend the porch steps.
"Morning," you say, keeping your voice level professional. "Crew's here?"
"Most of 'em. Sanchez is running lateâtruck trouble. I sent Pete to pick him up." He straightens, falling into step beside you as you head toward the barn. "We're rotating the herd to the north pasture today. Fencing's solid, checked it myself yesterday."
"Good." You pause at the barn entrance, turning to face him. "What about the irrigation system? Johnson said there was a blockage in sector three."
"Already working on it, it should be cleared by noon."
You nod, taking a sip of your coffee. This is how it always goesâBucky anticipating problems before you have to ask, handling details before they become emergencies. Your father had hired his dad twenty years ago, and when the old man got sick, Bucky stepped into the role like he'd be born for it.
Which in a way, he had been.
"You're thinking too hard," Bucky says, his mouth quirking. "I can see those gears turning."
"Well, I'm always thinking. Kind of part of my job."
"Yeah, well." He shifts his weight and for a moment, something flickers across his face, something soft and unguarded⌠you blink and it's gone. "Try to not hurt yourself."
You shoot him a look that would wilt lesser man. He just grins and tips an imaginary hat before heading toward the equipment barn, leaving you with your coffee and the creeping warmth in your chest that you refuse to name.
By midday, you're elbow-deep in the business of running the ranch, fielding calls from suppliers, reviewing feed costs, checking the schedule for the county livestock show next month. Your office is a converted tack room in the main barn, all exposed beams and the faint smell of leather and hay. You liked it here. It feels real in a way that glass and steel never could.
You're on the phone with the feed supplier, arguing about bulk pricing, when Bucky appears in the doorway. He doesn't interrupt, just leans against the frame and waits, and you're hyper-aware of his presence in a way that's become second nature over the pastâ how long has it been? Ten months since that first kiss in the summer heat, all sweat and impulse and that kid of chemistry that burns.
Ten months of this thing between you that has no name, no rules, no promises.
You finish the callâa victory, 10% discountâ and set the phone down. "What's up?"
"Got a situation with the new colt. He's favoring his left foreleg, might be nothing, but I want you to take a look before I call the vet."
You're already standing. "Show me."
The colt is in the training pen, a gorgeous chestnut with a white blaze and too much attitude for his own good. You'd purchased him at auction three months ago, saw the potential in his bloodline and the fire in his eyes. Now he's limping, and your stomach tightens.
Bucky's already in the pen, speaking low and calm as he approaches the colt. The animal sidesteps, nervous, but Bucky doesn't rush. Just keeps talking, that steady murmur that works in horses and people alike, until the colt allows him close enough to run a hand down his neck.
"Easy, buddy."
You slip through the fence rails and approach from the other side, moving slow. The colt's ears flick toward you, but he doesn't spook. Between you and Bucky, he's boxed in by a kind of trust, and after a moment he settles.
"I've got his head," Bucky says. "Check the leg."
You crouch, running your hands carefully down the colt's foreleg, feeling for heat, for swelling, for anything out of place. The colt shifts but doesn't pull away, and you can feel Bucky's presence above you, solid and grounding.
"There," you murmur, fingers finding a tender spot just above the fetlock. "Minor strain, I think⌠it's not serious, but he needs rest."
"Figured." Bucky's voice is closeâcloser than you expected. You glance up and find him watching you with an expression you can't quite read. "You want me to call Doc Johnson anyway?"
"Yeah, better be safe than sorry." You straighten, brushing dirt from your jeans. "Good catch."
"Just doing my job."
"You do it well."
Something passes between youâ a look, a breath, the weight of words unsaid. The colt stamps impatiently, breaking the moment, and you step back.
"I'll handle the rest of the rotations," Bucky says, his tone careful and neutral. "You've got that conference call at two, right?"
You'd forgotten. "Shit, yeah. Thanks."
"Anytime, wildfire."
There it is again. That nickname. The way he says itâaffectionate and just a little bit awed, like you're something bright and untamed and worth admiring from a careful distance.
You walk away before you can do something stupid like ask him what it means, why he started calling you that. If it means what you think it might.
That evenings you stop by Miller's feed store in town to pick up supplements. Bucky's with youâhe'd been checking on a part for the tractor at the hardware store next door.
Old Miller's behind the counter, and his eyes light up when he sees you.
"Well if it isn't the lady rancher herself," he says warmly. "How's business?"
"Good, been busy lately." You hand him your list. "Need these loaded up when you get a chance."
"You got it," he glances at Bucky. "And how's your foreman treating you" Working you too hard?"
It's a joke, everyone knows you're the one who sets the pace, but you see Bucky's jaw tighten slightly.
"Bucky runs a tight ship," you say. "Couldn't do it without him."
"That's good, that's good. 'Course your daddy always said the Barnes men were the best workers in the county." Miller starts pulling items from shelves. "You keeping busy, Bucky? Staying out of trouble?"
"Yes, sir" Bucky says evenly.
"Good man," Miller chuckles. "Though I gotta say, at your age, figured you'd have your own spread by now. Following in your old man's footsteps is fine work, but eventually a man wants something of his own, you know? Something to build on."
The words are casual, friendly even, but you see Bucky's shoulders stiffen.
"I'm exactly where I want to be," Bucky says, but there's an edge to it.
You pay quickly and get out of there, but the damage is done. Bucky's quiet on the drive back, staring out the window with that same look from earlier.
"Miller's an old gossip," you say. "Don't listen to him."
"He's not wrong though." Bucky's voice is carefully neutral. "I'm thirty-two and I don't own anything but a truck and a cabin on someone else's land."
"You own half the knowledge that keeps this ranch running," you counter. "That's worth more thanâ"
"It's not the same," he cuts you off gently. "And you know it."
You don't know what to say to that. Because in the world you both live inâwhere land equals legacy and property equals statusâ maybe he has a point.
But it doesn't make it right.
By the time the crew clocks out, the sky is bruising purple and gold, the heat of the day giving way to the cool promise of night. You make your rounds, checking that everything's secured, the animals settled, the equipment stored. It's a ritual, this final sweep and you always find peace in it.
You're in the main barn, running through inventory counts one last time, when you hear footsteps behind you.
You don't turn around. "Thought you left already."
"Had some things to finish." Bucky's voice is low in a way that sends heat curling through your belly. "Saw your truck was still here, figured you were doing your obsessive end-of-day check."
"It's not obsessive, it's thorough."
"Right." He's closer now, close enough that you can smell himâsweat and hay and something uniquely Bucky that makes you want to turn around and close the distance, andâ "You done?" he asks and there's an edge to his voice that makes your pulse quicken.
You set down the clipboard and turn to face him.
He's still in his work clothes, shirt untucked and streaked with dust, hair falling loose from its tie. There's smudge of grease on his jaw and his eyes are dark in the dim light of the barn, and you know this look. Know what comes next.
"Yeah," you say, your voice already dropping to something lower. "I'm done."
The space between you evaporates. You don't know who moves firstâmaybe it doesn't matter. His hands find your hips, fingers digging in with just enough pressure to make you gasp, and your fingers curl into his shirt, yanking him closer. Then his mouth is on yours, hot and demanding, and you open for him immediately.
God, you'll never get tired of kissing him. The way he tastes like coffee and the mint he chews when he's working, the way his stubble scrapes against your skin, the way he kisses like he's starving for you.
His tongue slides against yours and you moan into his mouth, pressing closer, needing more. His hands slide from your hips to your ass, squeezing, lifting, and suddenly your feet aren't touching the ground anymore. You wrap your legs around his waist instinctively, feeling the hard length of him pressed against your core even through layers of denim, and the friction makes you both groan.
"Fuck," he breathes against your mouth, walking you backward "You feelâ"
"Don't talk," you manage, biting his lower lip hard enough to make him hiss. "Justâ"
Your back hits the wall of the tack room and he pins you there with his hips, grinding against you making your head fall back and desperate sounds tear from your throat. His mouth moves to your neck, teeth and tongue and the kind of rough attention that you crave. Your hands are already fumbling with his belt, impatient, needing him out of these fucking clothes.
"Wildfire," he murmurs against your throat, and the nickname sounds different now. "Let meâ"
He sets you down just long enough to yank your shirt over your head, his flannel following seconds later. Then his hands are on your breasts, thumbs brushing over your nipples through the fabric of your bra, and the sensation shoots straight between your legs.
"Off," you demand, reaching behind yourself to unhook it, and he helps, tossing it aside before his mouth replaces his hands.
The first pull of his lips around your nipple makes your knees buckle, makes you grab his hair to stay upright. He works you with his mouthâsucking, biting, soothing with his tongueâwhile his hands work open the button of your jeans. You're already shoving them down your hips, kicking off your boots in a graceless rush, and then you're standing there in nothing but your underwear, while he's still mostly dressed.
"Not fair," you gasp and he pulls back just enough to flash you a wicked grin before dropping to his knees. Oh. "Buckyâ"
"Let me," he says again, and this time it's not a question. His hands slide up your thighs, thumbs tracing the edge of your underwear, and when he leans forward and presses his mouth against you through the fabric, you nearly come apart right there.
"Jesus Christ," you manage, fingers tightening in his hair as he mouths at you, the friction not nearly enough. "Stop teasing."
He hooks his fingers into the waistband and drags your underwear down, helping you step out of them, and then he's right there, face level with your cunt, looking up at you like you're something sacred.
"You're so fucking wet already," he murmurs and then his tongue is on you and coherent thought becomes impossible.
He eats you out like it's his religionâlong, slow strokes of his tongue followed by focused attention on your clit that makes you shake. Your fingers are fisted in his hair, hips rocking against his face, and he takes it all, groaning like your pleasure is his, like this is what he needs.
When he slides two fingers inside you, curling them just right, you cry out his name.
"That's it," he encourages, voice muffled against you. "Let me hear you, wildfire. Let meâ"
The orgasm hits you like a lightning strike, sudden and devastating, and you come with his name on your lips and your legs shaking and his fingers still working inside you, drawing it out until you're oversensitive and trembling.
He pulls back, mouth glistening, and the look on his face is pure hunger.
"I need you," you manage, still catching your breath. "Now."
He's on his feet in seconds, shedding his jeans and boxer in quick, efficient movements, and then he's sitting on the old wooden bench and you're straddling him, lining him up, sinking down onto him in one smooth motion that makes you both groan.
He feels so good, thick and hard and perfectly filling, the stretch of him always just on the edge of too much in the best possible way.
"Christ," Bucky grits out, hands gripping your hips hard enough to bruise. "You're fucking perfect."
You start to move, rolling your hips, finding the rhythm that works, and his head falls back against the wall, throat exposed, jaw clenched. You lean forward and bite the tendon in his neck, and his hips buck up involuntarily.
"Harder," you demand against his skin. "Don't hold back."
His hands tighten on your hips and he starts to thrust up into you, meeting your movements, and the angle is perfectâhitting that spot inside you that makes your vision blur. You brace your hands on his shoulders and ride him harder, chasing the pleasure building in your core, and he watches you with dark, hungry eyes.
"So fucking beautiful," he murmurs, one hand leaving your hip to cup your breast, thumb circling your nipple. "You look so beautiful like this, taking what you need from meâ"
"Bucky," you gasp, rhythm faltering as the pleasure builds. "I'mâ"
"I know, wildfire, I can feel that pretty cunt of you squeezing me so tightâŚ" His other hand slides between you, thumb finding your clit, and the added stimulation makes you cry out. "There you go, come for me wildfire. Wanna feel you come on my cock."
His touch and relentless thrust sends you over the edge and the orgasm crashes through you, walls clenching around him. You can hear him curse as he follows you over, spilling inside you with your name broken on his lips.
For a moment, neither of you moves. You just lay down breathing, tangled together in the half-dark of the barn, the smell of hay and sex and the summer breeze in the air, your bodies still joined, hearts pounding against each other.
Thenâand this is different, this is newâBucky doesn't pull away immediately.
His arms wrap around you, pulling you against his chest, and your head finds the curve of his shoulder like it was made to rest there. His hand slides up yous spine, tracing patterns on your bare back, and you feel him press a kiss to your temple.
That wasn't part of your routine. The sex? Yes. The intensity? Definitely. But this tenderness, this soft aftermath⌠that was new territory.
"Hey," you say quietly, not moving from where you're tucked against him.
"Mm?"
"You okay?"
He's quiet for a moment, then his hand finds your hair, fingers threading through the stray strands absentmindedly.
"Yeah," he says, but his voice sounds strange. "Yeah, I'm just⌠catching my breath."
You pull back just enough to look at him, and what you see in his face makes your chest tighten. There's something unguarded there, something raw and almost frightened, like he's said too much, shown to much.
His hand comes up to cup your jaw, thumb brushing your cheekbone, and for a second you think he's going to say something important, something that will change the shape of this thing between you.
But then he blinks and the moment fractures.
He lifts you gently, helping you off him, and you both reach for your clothes in a silence that feels heavier than before. You watch him dressâjeans first, then his shirt, fingers working the buttons with a focus that seems excessive for such a simple task. He doesn't glance at you once.
"Same time tomorrow?" You ask, trying to sound casual, trying to rebuild the easy rhythm that's kept this simple for ten months.
He stills, shirt half-buttoned, and for a long moment he doesn't answer.
When he finally looks at you, there's something in his eyes that makes your stomach drop. Something that looks like longing and resignation all tangled together.
"Yeah, sure."
Not "same time, wildfire" with that hint of warmth. Just "yeah, sure". Like you're asking him to check the fences, not meet you here tomorrow night.
He finishes dressing in silence, and you pull on your own clothes, hyper-aware of every movement, every breath. When you're both decent again, he moves toward the door. Just before he reaches it, he pauses. Doesn't turn around.
"You know Miller's not wrong," he says quietly. "About⌠a man wanting something of his own."
Your stomach drops. "Buckyâ"
"I'm just the foreman," he continues, still not looking at you. "Always will be. That'sâ" He shakes his head. "That's just how it is."
"That's notâyou're more thanâ"
"Goodnight, wildfire."
The nickname sounds wrong in his mouth now. Distant like he's already pulling away.
Then he's gone, the door swinging shut behind him, and you're left in the tack room, fully dressed now but somehow feeling more exposed than when you were naked.
You sink onto the bench, hand drifting to where his thumb had traced patterns on your back, and Miller's words echo in your head.
Eventually a man wants something of his own.
And Bucky's response: I'm just a foreman, always will be.
Like that's all he'll ever be. Like that's all he thinks he's worth. Like loving youâif that's what this isâ means settling for scraps instead of building something real.
The thought settles in your chest like a stone, and you realize with creeping dread that something's changed. And if Bucky's convinced himself he's not good enough, that he can't give you what you deserve because he doesn't own land or have money or status⌠you don't know how to fight that. Or if he'll even let you.
The first sign that something's wrong comes three days after that night in the tack room. You're going over breeding schedules when Bucky comes in to report on the north pasture rotation. He's all business, standing near the door instead of leaning against the frame like usual, keeps his eyes on the clipboard in his hand.
"Rotation's complete," he says. "Moved the last of the herd this morning without issues."
"Good," you wait for moreâthe usual back and forth, the easy conversation that filled spaces between work tasks, but he just nods.
"Need anything else?" He asks instead.
You, you want to say. I need you to look at me like you did three nights ago. I need you to stop acting like a stranger.
"No," you say instead. "That's all."
He's gone before you can figure out how to ask what's wrong.
Within the days, things get worse.
Bucky starts sending Pete or Sanchez to give you reports instead of coming himself. When you do see him, he's never alone; he's always with the crew, always busy, always with a reason he can't try for long. The nickname disappears entirely. Now he calls you by your name, said in a tone so professional it feels like a reprimand.
Meals with the crew become exercises in studied avoidance. He sits at the opposite end of the table, talks to everyone but you and leaves as soon as he's done eating.
The nights are the worst. You wait in the barn like always, telling yourself you're just finishing paperwork, but he doesn't come. Not that night,not the next, not the one after that.
On the fifth night, you stop waiting.
On the sixth day, you corner him in the equipment barn.
"We need to talk," you say, closing the door behind you.
He doesn't look up from the harness he's mending. "Kind of busy."
"Bucky, what the hell is going on?"
"Nothing's going on, just work."
"That's bullshit," you move closer and he shifts away and the retreat stings. "You've been avoiding me for almost a week, you won't look at me, won't talk to meâ"
"I talk to you every day, about work."
"That's not what I mean and you know it."
His jaw tightens. "Don't know what else you expect from me."
"I want you to tell me what changed!" Your voice rises despite yourself. "I want you to tell me why you're acting likeâlike we're nothing to each other."
"We're not nothing." He finally looks at you, and his eyes are so carefully blank it makes your chest ache. "You're my boss, I'm your foreman, that's what we are."
"That's notâ we're more than that. You know we are."
"Are we?" He sets down the harness, standing up. "Or was it just convenient? You scratch an itch, I scratch an itch, nobody has to call it anything more?"
The words hit like a slap.
"You don't mean that."
"Don't I?" His voice is even, controlled, and somehow makes it worse than if he was yelling. "Been thinking about it, about what this is, and maybe Miller was right, maybe it's time I figure out what I want instead of justâ" He gestures vaguely. "Instead of this."
"Instead of me, you mean."
Something flickers across his faceâpain, maybeâ but it's gone too fast to be sure.
"I didn't say that."
"You didn't have to." You're trying to keep your voice steady and failing. "If you want to end this, Bucky, just say it. Don't make up excuses about figuring out what you want."
"I'm to making excuses." His hands clench at his sides. "You're running a multi-million dollar operation, you're smart, successful and I'm justâ"
"Stop." You know where this is going and you can't stand to hear it. "Don't you dare finish that sentence."
"I'm the hired help," he says anyway. "That's the reality, and maybe it;s time we both stopped pretending it's anything else."
You laugh, but it's an ugly sound. "Is that really what you think you are to me? After everything weâ"
"After everything, that's still what I am." His voice is flat. "That's all I'll ever be."
You stare at him, at this man you've known for years, loved for months even if you haven't said it out loud⌠and you don't recognize the stranger looking back at you.
"You're a coward," you say quietly.
He flinches. "Maybe I am."
"This isn't about what you are, this is about you being too scared toâ"
"I need to finish this repair," he cuts you off, turning back to the harness. "Was there something work-related that you needed?"
The dismissal is clear and absolute.
You leave before he can see you cry.
The Hillside County Livestock Show is your least favorite event of the year, and that's saying something considering you spend most of your life covered in dust and dealing with literal bullshit. But there's something about the forced socializing, the political maneuvering disguised as friendly conversation, the way everyone sizes up everyone else's cattle like they're comparing dick sizesâit grates.
Still, you go. Because your ranch has a reputation to maintain, and because your breeding program produces some of the best cattle in three counties, and because your father never missed a year and neither will you.
You're standing near the action ring, catalog in hand, watching a decent Angus heifer go for more than she's worth, when you feel someone approach from your left.
"Impressive animal," a voice says. Deep, smooth, with the kind of confidence that comes from never being told no. "Though I'd say she's overvalued by at least fifteen percent, maybe is some sentimental bidding."
You glance over. The man beside you is older, mid forties probably, with silver threading through dark hair and a smile that has probably charmed plenty of people. Expensive boots, custom shirt, a watch that costs more than most people's trucks. Everything about him screams money.
"Sentimental bidding keeps the market interesting," you reply neutrally, turning back to the ring. "Besides, she's got excellent bloodlines, she'll be worth the premium to the right buyer."
"Spoken like someone who knows her stock," he extends a hand. "My name is Clayton Sheridan, I just purchased the Meadow brook Ranch, east of your property."
So this was your new neighbor. You'd heard someone bought old man Peterson's spread after he retired to Arizona, but you hadn't paid much attention to the details.
You shake his hand briefly. "Welcome to the area."
"Thank you, I've heard impressive things about your operation, fastest-growing herd in the county, certification for quality geneticsâŚ" His hand lingers a moment too long before you pull away. "It's rare to see a woman running a ranch this size⌠and running it so well."
There it is. There it's the compliment wrapped in condescension, the implication you're an exception rather than simply capable.
"My father raised me for it," you say, voice cool. "Gender doesn't have much to do with whether you can read a market or manage a land."
"Of course, of course." His smile doesn't falter. "I didn't mean to imply otherwise, just⌠admiration. It must keep you very busy, handling everything by yourself."
"I have an excellent crew."
"Ah yes, your foreman Barnes, isn't it? Son of your father's foreman?" Something in his tone makes your jaw tighten. "Lucky to have someone who knows the place so well, family legacy and all that."
You're trying to formulate a response that's polite but firm when you catch movement in your peripheral vision. Bucky, standing near the equipment displays about thirty feet away, his attention locked on you and Clayton with an expression you can't quite read.
Even from there, you can see the tension in his shoulders.
"Excuse me," you say to Clayton, not waiting for a response before you start walking toward Bucky.
But by the time you navigate through the crowd, he's already gone.
You get home from the show late, exhausted and frustrated. The house is dark and empty, and you should go to bed, but instead you find yourself walking to the stables.
Copper's in his usual stall, the big bay gelding lifting his head when you approach. Twenty-two now, long retired, but still your father's horse.
"Hey, old man," you murmur, letting yourself in. He presses his nose into your palm, warm and familiar, and you lean your forehead against his neck. "Long day."
He huffs softly, patient like always.
You're running your hand down his shoulder when you hear footsteps.
"Thought I saw the lights on."
Bucky's in the stable entrance, hands in his pockets.
"Couldn't sleep," you say.
"Yeah, me neither." He shifts his weight. "How's old Copper doing?"
"Good, little stiff in the mornings." You stroke the horse's neck. "I should take him out to pasture more."
"I can do it tomorrow if you want," Bucky offers quietly. "Give him a good walk, let him stretch his legs."
Something in your chest aches at the offer. Even with all this distance between you, he's still thinking about what you need.
"You don't have to."
"I know," he takes a step closer. "But Copper's important to you."
"My dad's horse," you say quietly. "He was the first horse I rode."
"I know," his voice is gentle. "I remember."
For a moment, the walls between you feel thinner. Like maybe you could reach across this space, say what needs saying. Then Copper shifts, and Bucky clears his throat.
"I should let you finish up. Just wanted to check you were okay."
"I'm fine."
It's obviously a lie, but he doesn't call you on it.
"Goodnight, wildfire," he says softly, and then he's gone.
"He still cares," you tell the horse. "He wouldn't check on me if he didn't, right?"
Copper just snorts and goes back to his hay.
You stay a while longer, taking comfort in the familiar routine of checking water, running your hands over Copper's legs to make sure he's sound, whispering all the things you can't say to Buck into the horse's patient ear.
When you finally head back to the house, you see Bucky's cabin light is still on.
Neither of you is sleeping tonight.
Clayton Sheridan doesn't understand the concept of boundaries, as you discover the next two weeks.
The flowers arrive first, expensive arrangements delivered to your door with cards that are just on the edge of appropriate.
Looking forward to being neighbors.
Thinking of you.
You throw most of them away.
Then, he starts showing up: at the feed store when you're picking up supplies, at the diner where you grab Saturday breakfast, at the county planning meeting where you're discussing water management.
"What a coincidence," he says every time, with that practiced smile.
It's not a coincidence and you both know it, but he keeps playing his game.
The gifts escalate: wine, a leather portfolio with your ranch name embossed, an invitation to some charity gala in the city, hand-delivered.
"I think we'd make quite an impression together," Clayton says when he drops off the invitation. "Power couple of the ranching community."
You haven't even said yes to coffee.
"I'll think about it," you answer, because outright rejection seems to make him more persistent.
Through it all, Bucky gets quieter, more distant. Like he's disappearing piece by piece.
You catch him watching sometimesâ watching Clayton talk to you, watching the gifts arrive, watching you navigate the attention with gritted-teeth politeness. And every time, his expression is the same: resigned, like he's watching something inevitable play out.
Like he's already decided how this story ends.
Three weeks into Clayton's courtship, you're in the barn doing evening checks when Bucky appears in the doorway. Your heart jumps at the sight of him. This is the first time he's sought you out in almost a month.
"Hey," you say carefully.
"Hey." He shifts his weight, not quite meeting your eyes. "Wanted to let you know⌠the mare's showing signs, probably foaling tonight or tomorrow."
"Okay, you need help monitoring?"
"No, I got it." He starts to turn away, then pauses. "Your neighbor came by today. Sheridan, he was looking for you."
Your stomach sinks. "What did he want?"
"Didn't say, just asked where you were, when you'd be back." Bucky's jaw tightens. "Seemed pretty comfortable helping himself to the property."
"I'll talk to him."
"Sure." Another pause. "He seems⌠interested."
"Buckyâ"
"Just an observation." His voice is carefully neutral. "A guy like thatâ successful, established. Probably looking to settle down with the right person."
"I don't care what he's looking for."
"Maybe you should." Bucky finally looks at you and there's something in his eyes that makes your breath catch. "Opportunities like this don't come around often."
"Opportunity?" You stare at him. "He's a stranger who won't take a hint, that's not an opportunity, that's a problem."
"Is it?" Bucky's voice is soft, almost sad. "Or is it exactly what someone in your position should be looking for?"
"What the hell does that mean?"
"Means he can give you things, things Iâ" He cuts himself off, jaw clenching again. "Just think about it."
He's gone before you can respond, leaving you alone in the barn with a sick feeling in your stomach.
Clayton makes his move the following week. You're at Miller's feed store, alone for once, when he corners near the grain.
"I was hoping to run into you," he says, blocking your path to the checkout. "Saved me a trip to your property."
"I'm kind of in a hurryâ"
"It'll just take a moment." He steps closer, and you resist the urge to step back. "I've been patient, I think. Given you time to get to know me. And I'd like to think we've developed a⌠bond."
"Claytonâ"
"Let me take you to dinner." It's phrased like a request, but it feels like a demand. "A real dinner, not as neighbors, not as business associates⌠a date."
"I appreciate the offer, butâ"
"I know I can give you what you need," he continues, like you haven't spoken. "Partnership, stability. A merger of our operations could be incredibly beneficial for both of us. I know you're a smart woman, you have to see the potential."
There it is, the assumption that this is about business, about strategy, like you're an asset to be acquired.
"I'm not interested," you say clearly. "In dinner, in partnership, in any of it. Sorry if I gave you the wrong impression, butâ"
"The wrong impression?" He interrupts you again, his smile doesn't reach his eyes. "You've been accepting my gifts, letting me court you."
"I've been polite, there's a difference."
"Is there?" He is closer now, close enough that you can smell his cologne. "Or are you just playing hard to get? Because I have to tell you, it's getting old."
"I'm not playing anything," your voice goes cold. "I said no. That's final."
Something flickers across his faceâsurprise, then anger, quickly masked.
"You're making a mistake," he says quietly.
"That's my choice to make."
"Is it?" He glances toward the window, where your truck is parked. "Or does your foreman make your choices for you?"
Your blood runs cold. "That's none of your business."
"In a town this size, everything is everyone's business." His smile turns cruel. "You're fucking the help, everyone knows it. So stop acting high and mighty with me when you're spreading your legs for some ranch hand who'll never be able to give you what a real man couldâ"
"That's enough." The voice comes from behind you. Miller is standing at the end of the aisle with a bag of feed in his arms and steel in his eyes. "Mr. Sheridan, I think it's time for you to leave my store."
Clayton's expression smooths back into charm "We're just having a conversationâ"
"I heard what kind of conversation you were having." Miller sets the feed down with a heavy thump. "And I won't have you speaking to a lady like that in my establishment. Time to go."
"This is ridiculousâ"
"Now." Miller's voice is firm. "Before I call sheriff Morrison and have you removed for harassment."
Clayton looks between you and Miller, jaw tight with barely contained rage. Then, he smooths his expression into something coldly polite.
"Of course, my apologies if I caused any⌠discomfort." But his eyes hold a dark promise when they land on you. "We'll continue this conversation another time."
He's gone before you can tell him there won't be another time. Miller waits until the door closes before turning to you with concern.
"You alright, honey?"
You nod, but your hands are shaking. "Thank you for stepping in."
"That man's got a mean streak under all that polish," Miller says. "My wife had a cousin who dated a man like that once, all charm until you say no, thenâŚ" He shakes his head. "You be careful. Men like that don't handle rejection well."
"I will."
"And for what it's worth?" Miller's voice gentles. "Whatever that jackass said about you and Bucky? That's your business and nobody else's. Young Barnes is a good man, his father was good people and he is too. Don't let anyone tell you different."
The kindness breaks something in you and your eyes sting. "Thank you, Mr. Miller."
"Call me if you need anything. And tell Bucky to keep an eye on that one, Clayton Sheridan strikes me as the type to hold a grudge."
You pay for your supplies in a daze and load them into your truck with shaking hands. You should go home, go straight to your bed. Instead, you park near the stables.
Copper's in his stall, and he lifts his head when you approach, nickering softly.
"Hey, old man," you manage, voice cracking.
You let yourself into the stall and he immediately presses his nose to your chest, and that's when you break.
You cry into Copper's neckâfrom anger, from humiliation, from the way Clayton looked at you like you were something he could buy or break. From the fear that maybe he's right, that everyone is talking about you and Bucky, judging you, seeing something shameful in what feels sacred.
"He doesn't know anything," you whisper into Copper's mane. "He doesn't know us, doesn't know what weâ"
But even as you say it, Clayton's words echo: Fucking the help.
Is that what people see? Not two people who care about each other, but something tawdry and wrong?
You're still crying when you hear footsteps.
"Wildfire?"
You straighten quickly, wiping at your eyes, but it's too late. Bucky's standing at the stall entrance, and even in the dim light, you notice he's been drinking. Not drunk yet, but there's a flush on his cheeks, a looseness to his shoulders that means he's had a few. And his eyes look sad, pained.
"You heard," you say flatly.
"Whole town's heard by now," his voice is rough. "Was at the diner grabbing lunch and Pete and Sanchez were with me. Table next to us was talking about how Sheridan got turned down by the ice queen rancher who's too busy fucking her foreman to see a real opportunity."
You flinch at his words.
"They didn't know we were there," Bucky continues, stepping into the stall. "Didn't know Pete and Sanchez were ready to flip the table. I had to practically drag them out before they started throwing punches."
"Buckyâ"
"Then I heard the rest of it, how you rejected him at Miller's, how he got nasty about it, how old Miller had to throw him out." His jaw clenches. "And I wasn't there, I was checking fence posts while he cornered you and I wasn't fucking there."
"You couldn't have knownâ"
"I should've been there!" The words burst out of him. "I should've been the one telling him to back off, to leave alone, toâ" He stops, hands clenching into fists. "But I can't, can I? Can't defend you publicly without everyone knowing exactly what we are to each other. Can't step in without proving every goddamn thing they're saying about us. Can't stand next to you in town and tell assholes like Clayton Sheridan that you're mine."
"I don't need you toâ"
"Well maybe you should." His voice drops. "Maybe you should have someone who can do all that, someone who can take you out without counting cents."
"Stop," you cut him off, voice shaking.
"Why? He's right about one thing, wildfire. I can't give you what someone like him could. Can't give you respectability, or stability, I can't giveâ"
You cross the stall in two strides and kiss him hard. He freezes for half a second, then he's kissing you back something that feels like desperation⌠and fear.
His hands fist in your hair and you grab his shirt, pulling him closer, needing to erase Clayton's words, the town's gossip, the shame trying to creep into something that's never felt shameful before.
"I don't want respectable," you gasp against his mouth. "I don't want public dinners, or whatever the hell you think I need. I want you."
"You're upset."
"I'm fucking furious," you correct. "At Clayton for being an entitled asshole, furious at this stupid town for their gossip, furious for you thinking any of it mattersâ"
He kisses you again, harder this time, walking you backward until your back hits the stall wall. His body presses against yours and you can feel how much he wants this despite all his protests about what you deserve.
"We shouldn't," he breathes against your neck. "You're upset, I've been drinking, this isâ"
"I don't care," your hands work at his belt. "I need this, I need you, please Buckyâ"
Something breaks in him. He lifts you and you wrap your legs around his waist, and then you're fumbling with clothes, desperate and graceless. When he pushes inside you, you both groan like it's a homecoming and a goodbye all at once.
The sex is different this time. Rougher, more desperate. Like you're both trying to prove or forget something. Or like you're trying to hold onto something that feels like it's slipping away.
When you come, it's with his name on your lips and tears on your cheeks. He follows moments later, your name broken and his forehead against your shoulder. For a moment, you stay like that, connected, breathing hard, coexisting in the same space. Then he sets you down carefully and reality crashes back in.
You both fix your clothes in silence. The air feels heavy, charged with everything still unsaid.
"I'm sorry," Bucky says finally. "For drinking, for not being there when Claytonâ"
"Stop apologizing." Your voice comes out sharper than intended. "You didn't do anything wrong."
"Didn't I?" He won't look at you. "Miller threw him out, Miller defended you. And where was I?Where the fuck was I?"
"You were working, doing your job."
"My job." He laughs, but it's bitter. "Right, because that's what I am. The foreman, the employee, not theâ"
"Not the what?" You push. "Say it."
"Not the boyfriend," he says quietly. "I heard what he said about you, about us. And I wanted to kill him, wanted to drive straight to his ranch andâ"
"But you didn't."
"Because what would that accomplish? Everyone would know then, would see exactly what we are andâ" He runs a hand through his hair. "Maybe they're right to gossip, maybe we areâ"
"Would you please stop?" You grab his arm, forcing him to look at you. "Don't let him do this, don't let their gossip make this into something shameful."
"It's not shameful," he says. "But it's not right either. You deserve better than barn hookups and secrets, you deserve someone who can stand next to you proudly, take you to dinner, court you the way you should be courtedâ"
"I don't wanna be courted by anyone else!"
"Well maybe you should! Maybe you should want someone who can give you a normal relationship, someone who'sâ" He swallows hard. "Someone who's your equal."
"You think you're not my equal," you say slowly.
"I know I'm not." His voice is flat. "I'm the foreman, you're the owner. And no matter what we feel, that's the reality, that's what everyone sees when they look at us."
"I don't care what they seeâ"
"Well, maybe I do." He's breathing hard. "Maybe I care that I can't defend you without it looking like the hired help overstepping. Maybe I care that men like Clayton can say whatever they want about you and I have to justâ just take it because what am I? What right do I have?"
"The right of someone who loves me," you say, and watch his face go white.
"Don't," he whispers.
"Why not? It's true, isn't it?" You step closer. "You love me, and Iâ"
"Don't say it," he backs away, hands up like he's warding off a blow. "Please don't say it."
"Why not?"
"Because it doesn't change anything!" His voice breaks. "It doesn't change that I can't give you what you deserve. It doesn't change that I will never be enough. I'll never be enough for you, wildfire. And the sooner we both accept that, theâ"
He doesn't finish, just turns and walks out of the stall, leaving you standing there with Copper and the ruins of your heart. You sink down onto the bench and Copper nuzzles your shoulder gently.
"He's wrong," you tell the horse. "He's so wrong."
But the words feel hollow even as you say them. Because how do you fight someone who's convinced themselves they're not worth fighting for?
You threw yourself into work because work didn't require you to think about the way Bucky's jaw had tightened when you'd said the word "love".
Work was spreadsheets and feed orders and the county extension agent calling about soil testing. Work was quantifiable, solvable, something you could actually control⌠unlike the man who was currently avoiding you like you carried some contagious disease.
It had been two weeks since the stable. Two weeks of Bucky sending Pete or Sanchez to deliver reports that he used to give himself, two weeks of catching glimpses of him across the propertyâalways busy, always moving, always just out of reach. When you did cross paths, his eyes would slide past you like you were part of the landscape, something to navigate around rather than toward.
"Boss?" Pete stood in your office doorway, hat in hand. "Bucky wanted me to tell you the irrigation system's back online, no more issues in sector three."
Bucky wanted me to tell you. Not "Bucky said", or "Bucky asked", like even the mention of his name in connection with you required careful phrasing.
"Thanks, Pete." You kept your voice level. "Anything else?"
"No, ma'am, that's all." He hesitated. "Though uh⌠if you need anything else, I canâ"
"I'm fine," the lie came easily now. "Tell the crew I'll do the evening walk-through myself tonight."
After Pete left, you sat back in your chair and let your eyes drift to the window. You could see the training pen from here, the fence where you and Bucky had worked with the colt just weeks ago, where his hands had been steady on the animal's neck, his voice low and soothing, and the three of youâyou, him, the skittish coltâ were the only things that mattered in the world.
Your mind drifted before you could stop it, reaching back to a different summer. You'd been sixteen, and Bucky had been nineteen, home from community college for the summer to help his dad with the heavy work.
Your father had sent you both to check the fence line at the north property border, and you'd spent the whole afternoon trying not to stare at the way Bucky's shirt stuck to his back in the heat, the flex of his forearms as he drove new posts into the hard ground. He'd caught you looking once and grinnedâthat easy, boyish grin that always made your stomach flipâand you'd turned away so fast you nearly tripped over the wire spool.
Later, sitting in the shade of the truck bed sharing a canteen of water, he'd looked at you differently. Not like his boss' daughter, not like the kid who used to chase him around the barn.
"You've got dirt on your face," he'd said.
"Where?"
Instead of answering, he'd reached out and brushed his thumb across your cheekbone, so gentle it barely counted as touch. Your breath had caught, and then⌠so quick you almost thought you'd imagined it, he'd leaned in and pressed his lips to yours.
Just a peck, soft and sweet and over in a heartbeat.
He'd pulled back immediately, eyes wide. "I shouldn't haveâ"
"It's okay," you'd whispered.
But he was already climbing out of the truck bed, putting distance between you, and the rest of the drive back had been silent. Neither of you mentioned it again, not that summer, not the next. By the time he came back to work full-time after his dad got sick, you'd both learned how to pretend it never happened.
Except you've never forgotten.
And now, seventeen years later, he was looking at you the same way: like you were something he wanted but couldn't let himself have. Only this time it wasn't because you were too young, or because he was overstepping with the boss' daughter. This time he'd convinced himself you were too good for him.
You pressed your palms against your eyes, willing yourself not to cry in your office in the middle of the workday.
Your phone buzzed, another text from Clayton Sheridan that you immediately deleted without reading. He'd been trying to "apologize" for a week now, messages that sounded sincere until you read between the lines and saw the entitlement still lurking here.
The afternoon sun slanted through the window, dust motes dancing in the golden light, and you forced yourself back to the feed cost analysis spreadsheet on your screen. Work didn't ask questions you couldn't answer, work didn't look at you with resignation and longing tangled together⌠work was safe.
So you buried yourself in it and pretended you couldn't feel the Bucky-shaped hole in your chest getting wider every day.
Bucky sat at his kitchen table with his laptop open and a beer he hadn't touched going warm beside him. The numbers on the screen hadn't changed in the last hour, no matter how many times he refreshed the page or recalculated his math.
$58,000 in savings. Fifteen years of hard work, of living cheap and saving steady, and that's what he had to show for it.
He pulled up another tab showing land listings in the county. The cheapest viable spread was listed at $425,000. The nicer properties started at $650,000 and went up from there.
He took a long pull from the beer, grimacing at the taste. The smart move would be to look further out, maybe two counties over where land was cheaper, but that would mean leaving the ranch, leaving you, and what was fucking point of building something if you weren't part of it?
His phone sat face-down on the table. He'd been staring at it for twenty minutes, trying to decide if he should call his cousin Hugh. He had made something of himself, built a successful business in Denver, bought a house. Hugh would probably tell him to forget the ranch work, come to the city, learn a trade that paid better..
But Bucky wasn't Hugh. He didn't want an office or a crew of subcontractors or a house in the suburbs. He wanted land, cattle and horses and the kind of legacy his father had helped build for someone else's family. He wanted to be able to stand next to you and not feel like he was taking something he hadn't earned.
His father's voice echoed in his head, rough from years of cigarettes and dust: A man provides for his family, son. You work hard, build something and give your wife and kids a life worth living.
His old man worked himself into an early grave trying to live up to that standard, died at sixty-two with nothing but a paid off truck and a pension that barely covered his medical bills. Bucky's mother had held it together with grit and his father's life insurance, but she's had to move into town and had to make herself smaller to fit into what was left.
Bucky had sworn he'd never put a woman in that position, that he'd build something solid before thinking about settling down⌠and then you'd kissed him in the barn last summer with dirt on your jeans and challenge in your eyes, and every promise he'd made to himself had evaporated.
Ten months of telling himself it was just physical, just chemistry, just two people scratching an itch. Ten months of lying to himself and to you and pretending it wouldn't end in exactly this kind of pain,
He opened a new tab for job listings this time. Foreman positions at other ranchesâmost paid about what he was making now, maybe five thousand more if he was lucky. Manager positions required degrees he didn't have. The oil and gas jobs paid better but required months away at a time, and what good was money if he couldn't be near you?
He closed the laptop harder than necessary.
This was about building something with you, about not being that guy who moved into your house, worked your land, lived off your success. He'd seen it before: men who married into ranching families and became permanent accessories, useful but ultimately replaceable.
His pride wouldn't let him become that.
But how the hell was he supposed to close a $400,00 gap? Even if he worked himself into the ground, saved every penny, made all the right moves he'd still be forty before he had enough to buy anything worth having.
And you'd be what? Waiting around for him to get his shit together? Turning down men like Clayton Sheridan who could give you everything right now? The thought of you with Sheridan made him want to put his fist through the wall, made him want to drive to that bastard's ranch and make it crystal clear that he'd never speak to you like that again.
But he hadn't, because what right did he have? He wasn't your boyfriend or your husband. He was just an employee, the man who was too proud to be with you on your terms and too poor to offer his own.
His phone buzzed, it was a text from Pete:
Boss asked me to tell you she's doing the evening rounds herself tonight, thought you should know.
Bucky's chest tightened. You were avoiding the crew now, doing the work yourself rather than risk running into him. Or maybe you didn't trust him to do his job anymore.
He typed back: Thanks, I'll check the north pasture, make sure everything's locked down.
It was cowardice, making sure he'd be on the opposite end of the property when you made your rounds. But he wasn't strong enough yet to see you and not break, he wasn't ready to look into your eyes and see the hurt he'd put there.
Not until he had a plan and could offer you something more than apologies and empty promises.
Bucky drained the flat beer and got back to work on the numbers. Somewhere in these spreadsheets, in these listings, in the careful mathematics of sacrifice and saving, there had to be an answer, there had to be a way to become the man you deserved⌠he just had to find it.
You found him in the equipment barn three days later, and this time you didn't let him walk away. You were done avoiding him.
He was replacing the hydraulic line on one of the tractors, his shirt off in the afternoon heat, and for a moment you just watched him work, watched the flex of his shoulders, the concentration on his face, the competent sureness of his hands. This was the Bucky you'd grown up with, the one who could fix anything, who moved through the wold with quiet capability.
The one you'd loved since you were sixteen years old.
"We need to talk," you said.
His hands stilled on the wrench, but he didn't look up. "Kind of in the middle of something."
"I don't care." You stepped into the barn, letting the door swing shut behind you. "You've been avoiding me for three weeks, I'm done pretending this isn't happening."
"Nothing's happening," his voice was carefully flat. "I'm working, you're working, that's all there is."
"That's bullshit and you know it."
He finally looked at you, and the exhaustion in his eyes made your chest ache. "What do you want me to say?"
"I want you to stop running," you move closer. "I want you to stop deciding what's best for me without asking me what I actually want."
"I know what you want."
"Do you? Because from where I'm standing, it seems like you've built this whole story in your head about what I need and what you can't give me."
His jaw tightened. "You deserve someone who can give you a real future."
"I deserve someone who loves me," you countered. "Everything else is just details."
"They're not just details!" His voice rose, frustration finally breaking through. "They're the difference between being your partner and your charity case. I don't want to just be the guy who lives in your mansion, works your land and gets to be with you because you're generous enough not to care that he's got nothing to offer."
"That's notâ"
"It is, though." He set down the wrench, finally giving you his full attention. "You're telling me the money doesn't matter, that the land doesn't matter, that I don't need to be able to provide anything because you've already got it all covered. You're telling me to just⌠accept the fact that I'll never contribute equally to this relationship, that I'll always be the hired help who got lucky enough to fuck the boss."
The crudeness of it made you flinch. "Don't talk about us like that."
"Why not? That's what everyone else is saying." His laugh was bitter. "And maybe they're right. Maybe that's exactly what this isâyou slumming it with the help because it's convenient and exciting, and me being too stupid to see that I'm just a phase before you settle down with someone appropriate."
The accusation stung like a slap. "You think you're just a phase to me?"
"I don't know what I am to you!" His voice cracked. "Because you keep saying it doesn't matter, that we'll figure it out,that love is enough, but it's not! Not when I lie awake every night doing math that doesn't add up, not when I have to watch men like Clayton Sheridan circle you like sharks because I can't protect you⌠not when I know that staying with me means you'll never have a man who can stand beside you on his own as an equalâ"
"You're my equalâ"
"I'm your foreman! I earn in one year what you make in one month! We're not equals, no matter how much you want to pretend we are."
"Money doesn't make someone more or less valuable, Bucky. Weâ"
"It's not about value!" He ran both hands through his hair, pulling slightly like he wanted to tear something out. "It's about being able to build something together, about me being able to contribute more than just labor and good intentions⌠about not feeling like a kept man every time you solve a problem I can't afford to fix."
"So what do you want from me?" Your voice shook. "You want me to pretend I don't have money? Want me to apologize for inheriting this ranch? To make myself smaller so you can feel more like a man?"
"No! Christ, no, it's completely the opposite. I wantâ" He stopped, his jaw working. "I want to be worthy of you, I want to look at you without feeling like I'm stealing something that should belong to someone better. But I can't do that with fifty-eight thousand dollars in savings and a truck I've had since college."
Fifty-eight thousand dollars. That number hit you like a gut punch. He'd been counting, calculating, measuring himself against some impossible standard and finding himself lacking.
"Bucky," you said softly, stepping toward him. "I don't care how much money you have, or if you own land or if you live in that cabin for the rest of your life. I care about you because I loveâ"
"Don't," he backed away, hands up. "Please don't say that again."
"Why not? It is the truth."
"Because it doesn't change anything!" His voice was ragged. "You saying you love me doesn't change the fact that I can't give you what you deserve, doesn't change that I wake up every morning knowing I'm not enough or that I want to be the kind of man who can take care of you."
"I don't need you to take care of me, I can take care of myself, I just⌠I just need you to be here, to stop running from our love, toâ"
"That's exactly the problem." His voice went quiet, deadly calm. "You don't need me, not really. You need a good foreman and a warm body in your bed, and I can be both of these things but that's not what I want to be. I want to be necessary, I want to provide for you. I want to build you a life instead of just existing in the one you already have. And you telling me none of that matters, that I should just be grateful that you want me anywayâŚ"
He laughed, but it sounded like something breaking.
"I don't need your pity, ma'am."
The formality hit like a physical blow. Not wildfire, not your name, not even a cold distant boss. Just ma'am, with all the professional distance that implied, with all the class and power differential laid bare.
Your throat closed. "That's notâ I'm not pitying you, Bucky, I'm trying to tell you that I love youâ"
"And I'm trying to tell you that's not enough. Not when loving you means giving up every shred of pride and self-respect I have left."
"So what?" Your voice broke. "You'd rather have your pride than have me?"
"I'd rather become someone worthy of having you." He picked up his shirt, pulling it on with sharp, angry movements. "And I won't let you settle for less than you deserve just because you think you love me."
"I don't think I love you, I know I love you, I've been in love with you since I was sixteen years old." He froze, shirt half buttoned. "That kiss by the north fence, you think I forgot about it? You think I didn't spend the last decade wondering what would've happened if you hadn't pulled away?"
"Stop," the world was barely a whisper. "Don't do this."
"Don't tell me what I feel, Bucky, don't tell me I'm wrong about loving you, and don't you dare walk away just because you've convinced yourself matters more thanâ"
"Don't you understand? It's not about the money!" He shouted, and you'd never heard him yell like that, not in twenty years. "It's about what the money represents, about being able to look my father's ghost and say I built something⌠it's about not being the guy who couldn't make it on his own, so he shacked up with the rich girl who felt sorry for him. It's about not being enough, and I'm not, not yet. I have to at least try to become someone who can stand next to you without shame."
You stared at him, this stubborn, proud, heartbroken man and realized you were fighting a ghost. Not just his father's expectations, but generations of them⌠every man in his family who'd worked someone else's land and dreamed of their own. Every lesson about what it meant to be a provider, the man of the house.
"And what if you never have enough?" You asked. "If the math never adds up and the land prices keep rising and you're still chasing this impossible standard in ten years? What then?"
His silence was answer enough.
"You're going to let this destroy us," you said. "You're going to choose pride over love, over happiness, over us, because you can't accept that maybe your father's way isn't the only way. That maybe I don't need you to own land to prove you're worthy of me."
"It's not about what you need," he said quietly. "It's about what I need. And I need to be able to respect myself when I look in the mirror, which I can't do right now."
He moved past you toward the door, and you didn't stop him this time. At the threshold, he paused, but didn't turn around.
"I'm sorry, wildfire," he said and the nickname sounded like a goodbye. "I'm sorry I'm not the man you think I am."
Then he was gone, and you were alone in the equipment barn with the smell of motor oil and the wreckage of your heart scattered across the concrete floor. You sank down onto the workbench, pressing your palms against your eyes and let yourself finally break.
Because he was right about one thing: love wasn't enough. Not when one person had already decided they weren't worthy of it.
You were in your office when you heard a truck. The engine was too loud, too aggressive, not the familiar sounds of Pete, Sanchez or Bucky's trucks. Something was wrong.
You looked up as footsteps approached, uneven and heavy on the gravel outside, and Clayton Sheridan appeared on your doorway. The smell of whiskey hit you before his expression did.
"There you are," his words spurred slightly at the edges. "Been looking for you."
Your hand moved toward your phone on the desk, but he saw the movement and stepped fully into the small office, blocking the only exit. The space suddenly felt suffocatingly small.
"Clayton, you need to leave." Your voice came out steady, but without its usual steel. You were so tired lately, tired of fighting, of hurting, tired of everything. "You're drunk, this isn'tââ
"This isn't what?" He moved closer, and you stood up instinctively, chair scraping back. "Isn't appropriate? Since when do you care about appropriate? You've been fucking your foreman for months, don't talk to me about appropriate."
"Get out of my office."
"Or what?" He was close enough that you could see the anger in his bloodshot eyes, the mean set of his jaw. "You gonna call your cowboy to come save you? Oh, wait. I heard you two had a falling out, guess even he figured out you're not worth the trouble."
The words hit hard, landing right on the wound Bucky had left bleeding. Your breath caught, and Clayton saw the flinch, the way you'd gone still.
"That's it, isn't it?" His voice dropped, almost soothing, which made it worse. "He finally wised up, left you all alone in this big ranch, and now you're realizing what a mistake you made by turning down a real man for some hired hand who couldn't even stick around."
You should tell him to leave again, move past him, get out of this small room, get your phone, do something. But you felt frozen, hollowed out, like all the fight had been burned out of you in that equipment barn when Bucky had called you ma'am and walked away.
Clayton took another step, you backed up until your hip hit the desk.
"I'm trying to be reasonable here," he was so close, invading your space, using his size to intimidate. "Trying to give you another chance, because despite you embarrassing me, rejecting me and making me look like a fool, I'm still willing to overlook it. Still willing to offer you a real partnership."
"I don't wantâ" Your voice came smaller than intended, and you hated how weak you sounded. But you were so empty, so worn down by weeks of heartbreak and loneliness and loving someone who'd convinced himself he wasn't worthy of being loved back.
"Don't want what?" Clayton's hand came up, palm flat against the wall beside your head, caging you in. "Don't want stability? Success? A man who can actually provide for you instead of living off your charity?"
You turned your head away, trying to duck under his arm, but he shifted and suddenly you were truly cornered, desk behind you, Clayton in front, his other hand coming up to block your escape route.
"Look at me when I'm talking to you," his voice had gone hard. "I've been patient, I've been courteous. I've given you space and time and you've thrown it back in my face over and over, and I'm done being nice.
"Let me go," you tried to put command in it, but it came out defeated.
"Not until you listen and understand what you're throwing away by being stubborn about some ridiculous idea of love with a man who has already given up on you. He doesn't want you enough to fight for you, but I do. So you're going to stop being difficult andâ"
"Get your fucking hands off her."
The voice came from the doorway, low and lethal, and you'd never heard Bucky sound like that. Clayton turned, hands dropping, and you could see him trying to recalibrate, trying to pull on charm or authority, but he didn't get the chance. Bucky had already crossed the small office and his fist connected with Clayton's jaw with a sickening crack.
Clayton staggered backward and hit the wall. "What the hellâ"
"You don't fucking touch her." Bucky hit him again, this time in the ribs and Clayton doubled over with a wheeze. "You don't corner her, or come to her property drunk and put your hands near her talking like she's something you can intimidate intoâ"
He grabbed Clayton by the shirt and hauled him toward the door. Clayton tried to swing back, caught Bucky's cheek with a glancing blow, but Bucky barely seemed to notice. He shoved Clayton out into the barn aisle, following him out.
You stood frozen in the office, watching through the doorway as Bucky grabbed Clayton again and drove his fist into his stomach. Clayton crumpled, coughing and Bucky dragged him upright.
"You ever come near her again," Bucky's voice was shaking with barely controlled rage, "and I will fucking end you. I don't care about consequences, or going to jail, you don't get to scare her and make her feel small. Are we clear?"
"You're insaneâ" Clayton choked out.
Bucky shoved him toward the barn entrance. "Get the hell out."
He punctuated it with a kick to Clayton's ass that sent him stumbling forward. Clayton caught himself, turned back like he might try to fight, but whatever he saw in Bucky's face made him think better of it. He spat blood onto the barn floor and shot you a look full of venom before limping toward the exit.
"This isn't over," Clayton said.
"Yeah, it is." Bucky's voice was flat. "You're done. Now get the fuck off this property before I make you."
Clayton left, and you could hear his truck start up moments later, tires spitting gravel as he sped away.
Silence filled the barn. You were still standing in the office doorway, arms wrapped around yourself, shaking. Not from fear but from shock, from the crash of adrenaline, from everything finally being too much. Bucky turned to look at you, and his expression crumpled.
"Did he hurt you?" He stayed where he was, like he was afraid to get closer. "Did he touch you?"
You shook your head, the words wouldn't come.
"Jesus Christ," he ran both hands through his hair, pulling hard. "I was just walking back from the equipment barn, heard his voice andâ If I hadn't been walking by, if I hadn't heard him say that shit about you, if he'dâ"
He couldn't finish, his hands were shaking, knuckles already swelling and split.
"Buckyâ" You managed, but your voice sounded wrong and distant, like it belonged to someone else.
"Boss!" Pete appeared in the barn entrance, Sanchez right behind him. They must've seen or heard the commotion. Pete took in the scene: you trembling in the office doorway, Bucky with blood on his knuckles, the tension still cracking in the air. "What happened?"
"Sheridan," Bucky's jaw was tight. "Showed up drunk, cornered her in the office. I handled it."
"Handled it?" Sanchez was looking at Bucky's hands. "Jesus, man."
"Is he gone?" Pete asked.
"Yeah," Bucky's eyes hadn't left you. "He's gone."
Pete moved toward you carefully, like you might spook. "Boss? You okay?"
You nodded, but it was a lie and everyone knew it. You weren't okay, hadn't been for weeks, and this had just broken something that was already cracked.
"Why don't you come with me?" Peter said gently. "Maria's at home, she can make you some tea, you can get away from here for a bit."
"I'm fine," but your voice shook on the words. "I don't needâ"
"I insist," Pete said. "Just for a few hours, let us make sure Sheridan doesn't try to come back, let yourself breathe."
You wanted to argue, stay here and deal with this yourself, prove you didn't need protecting, but you were so tired of fighting, so tired of being strong. And the thought of Pete's warm, comfortable house, of his wife Maria's kind presence, of being somewhere that felt safe for just a little whileâŚ
"Okay," you whispered.
Bucky's face did something complicated. "I can stay here, keep watchâ"
"No." Pete's voice was firm. "You need to clean up and cool down. Sanchez and I will handle security, you go home."
For a moment you thought Bucky would argue, but then he just nodded. His eyes met yours one more time, and the guilt and longing and helplessness in them made your chest ache. But he didn't say anything, he walked away, disappearing into the darkness beyond the barn, and you felt the distance between you like a physical wound.
Pete's house was warm and lived-in, smelling like the chicken Maria had roasted for dinner and the vanilla candles she loved. She met you at the door with soft hands and softer eyes, asked no questions, just guided you to the kitchen table where a chamomile tea was already waiting for you.
"Pete called ahead," she said settling into the chair across from you. "Said you had a rough evening."
"You could say that," your hands wrapped around the mug, seeking warmth even though you weren't cold. You were shaking again, small tremors you couldn't control.
Maria reached across the table and covered your hand with hers. "You're safe here, mija. Whatever happened, you're safe now."
You nodded, throat tight. Through the window, you could see Pete outside, on the phoneâprobably coordinating with Sanchez, making sure your property was secure. Making sure Clayton wouldn't come back.
The simple care of it broke something loose in your chest.
"Pete's a good man."
"The best," Maria's smile was soft, full of easy affection. "Drives me crazy sometimes, leaves his boots in the middle of the floor and falls asleep during every movie, but he's good all the way through"
You watched Pete through the window, the way he moved with easy confidence, the way he glanced back at the house, checking on his wife to make sure she was okay. There was something so simple about it, so uncomplicated.
"How do you make it look so easy?" The words came out before you could stop them. "Being together."
Maria tilted her head, studying you. "It's not always easy. We've had our share of hard timesâmoney troubles, my mother getting sick, that year Pete threw his back out and couldn't wait for three months. But we're partners, you know? We figure it out together."
Partners. That word sat heavily on your chest.
"What if one person thinks they're not good enough?" You stared into your tea. "What if two people love each other but one of them is convinced⌠they don't have enough to offer?"
Maria was quiet for a long moment. When she spoke, her voice was gentle. "This is about Bucky, isn't it?" You looked up, startled. She smiled sadly. "Honey, everyone knows you two have been circling each other for months, and everyone can see you're both miserable right now. Whatever he thinks he doesn't have⌠does it matter to you?"
"No," the answer came immediately. "It doesn't matter at all, I don't care about money or land or any of it. I just want him."
"Have you told him that?"
"Yes, multiple times, but he won't listen. He's convinced that loving me means being able to provide for me the way his father provided for his mother, the wayâ" Your voice broke. "The way Pete provides for you, and he can't. At least not in the way he thinks he should, so⌠he'd rather let me go than accept that maybe I don't need what he's supposed to give me."
Maria's eyes were sad. "Men and their pride, especially the good ones. They get these ideas in their heads about what it means to be a man, what they owe the women they love, and sometimes those ideas do more harm than good."
"So what do I do?" You hated how desperate you sounded. "How do I fight someone who's already decided he's not enough?"
"I don't know if you can, mija." She said it kindly, but it still hurt. "Sometimes people have to figure things out for themselves, have to learn that love isn't about what you can provide in dollars and cents.It's about showing up, being present, building a life together even when it's hard⌠But you can't force someone to believe they're worthy of love, that's something they have to find on their own."
You felt tears prick your eyes. "What if he never does?"
"Then that's his loss. Because from where I'm sitting, he's throwing away something real and good because he's too stubborn to see that you already chose him, that you'd choose him every day if he'd let you."
The tears spilled over then, you tried to wipe them away, embarrassed, but Maria just moved her chair closer and pulled you into a hug. You let yourself cry against her shoulderâfor Bucky, for the relationship that was dying before it ever really lived, for the loneliness that had become your constant companion.
"I love him," you whispered into her shoulder. "I've been in love with him since I was sixteen years old and I don't know how to stop."
"Oh, sweetheart." Maria rubbed your back. "Maybe you're not supposed to stop, maybe you just have to love him from a distance while he figures things out. And maybe he'll figure it out on time⌠but you can't sacrifice yourself while you wait. Can't make yourself smaller or quieter just to make him comfortable with loving you."
You pulled back, wiping your eyes. "I don't know how to do this."
"None of us do," she smiled sadly. "We're all just making it up as we go."
Pete came back inside then, took in your tear-stained face and his wife's protective posture, and his expression softened.
"Everything's secure, Sanchez is doing perimeter checks, but the property's locked down tight." He hesitated. "You're welcome to stay here tonight, the guest room is ready."
You shook your head. "I appreciate the offer, but I should go home. I can't let Clayton chase me out of my own house."
"You sure?" Maria asked.
"Yeah," you stood, steadier now. "I'm sure."
They walked you to your truck, Pete insisting on following you back to make sure you got inside safely. The drive was short, and when you pulled up to your dark house, Pete waited until you unlocked the door and turned on the lights before giving you a wave and heading back to his own home.
You stood in your empty living room and felt the silence press in. You've always loved this house and all the memories that it contained, but lately it felt too big and lonely. Tonight it was just you and the weight of everything that happened.
You should eat something, shower or try to sleep.
Instead, you sank onto the couch and let yourself feel everything you'd been holding backâthe fear from Clayton's visit, the heartbreak from Bucky's rejection, the bone-deep exhaustion of loving someone who wouldn't let himself be loved.
Eventually you dragged yourself upstairs, changed into sleep clothes and crawled into bed. The house settled around you with familiar creaks and sighs, and slowly, finally, you drifted into an uneasy sleep.
The smell woke you first. Acrid, wrong, burning.
You sat up in bed, disoriented. The clock read 2:17 AM. For a moment you thought you were dreaming, but then you heard itâ the panicked whinnying of horses, the sharp crack of wood giving way. Fire.
You were out of bed and running before conscious though kicked in, flying down the stairs in your sleep clothes, your slippers hitting the porch steps, and then you saw it: the stables lit up against the night sky, flames already consuming the east side of the building, spreading fast through the old dry wood.
The horses.
Copper.
You didn't think or stop to call for help or consider the danger. You just ran.
The heat hit you when you reached the stable doors, but you ripped your shirt up over your nose and mouth and plunged inside anyway. The smoke was thick, black, choking, but you knew this building like you knew your own heartbeat, knew exactly where each stall was, which horses were where.
"I'm coming!" You shouted, voice muffled through the fabric. "I'm coming, it's okay!"
The first stall was Daisy's, the chestnut mare. You fumbled with the latch, hands shaking,a nod shoved the door open. She reared back, eyes rolling white with terror, but you grabbed her halter and dragged her toward the entrance. "Go, go, go!"
She bolted past you into the night, and you were already moving to the next stall. Juniper, the bay mare heavy with foal. She was screaming, hooves striking the stall door, and you got it open just as part of the roof above groaned ominously.
"Out!" You slapped her hindquarters and she ran, coat slick with sweat and far.
The smoke was getting thicker. You couldn't see more than a few feet in front of you, couldn't breathe without coughing, but you kept moving. Duke and Ranger in the double stall, the two yearling colts next, skittish and terrified but moving when you shouted at them.
Your lungs were burning. Each breath felt like inhaling glass, and your eyes streamed tears from the smoke, but you pushed deeper into the stable. Eight horses out. Copper was the only one missing.
His stall was in the back, farthest from the entrance, and the fire was spreading fast. You could feel the heat on your skin, could hear the ceiling beams cracking and shifting. You should leave, get out while you still could, but Copper was your father's horse. Your first horse. The only living reminder of him, and you wouldn't leave him.
"I'm coming, old man!" You choked on smoke, stumbled, caught yourself against a stall door. "I'm coming!"
You found his stall by memory more than sight. The smoke was too thick now, the world reduced to burning shapes. Your fingers found the latch and you yanked it open. "Copper! Come on, baby, we gotta goâ"
He was pressed into the back corner, wild-eyed, making sounds you'd never heard from him before. You grabbed his halter, pulled, but he wouldn't move.
"Please," you begged, coughing so hard you nearly doubled over. "Please, Copper, pleaseâ"
He finally moved, and you were leading him toward where you thought the entrance was, one hand on his hater and one hand trailing the wall, it the smoke was everywhere now. You couldn't see or breathe properly anymore.
Your foot caught on something and you went down hard, hand ripping free from Copper's halter. You heard him bolt, heard his hooves on the concrete floor, and you tried to get up and call after him, but your lungs wouldn't work. The smoke was too thick and the world was starting to gray at the edges.
Get up, you told yourself. Get up, you have to get out.
But your arms wouldn't hold you. You collapsed face-down on the concrete floor near what you thought was the entrance, and distantly you realized you were going to die here in the stable. On the land you loved.
You couldn't breathe anymore, couldn't move. The smoke filled your lungs and the world went soft and strange, and the last thought before everything went black was of Bucky's face when he told you he wasn't enough for you and walked away.
Then nothing.
Bucky had been awake when the fire started.
He'd been lying in his bed, staring at the ceiling, thinking about the way you'd looked when Clayton had you cornered in that office. The fear in your eyes, the way you seemed so small, so defeated, like all the fight had been burned out of you.
It was all his fault. If he hadn't pushed you away, if he hadn't been so goddamn stubborn about his pride and his plans, maybe you wouldn't have been so vulnerable when that bastard showed up.
He was still stewing in guilt and self-loathing when he smelled the smoke.
For a second, he thought maybe someone was burning trash, but it was 2 AM and the smell was too strong. He got out of bed and looked out his window toward his property.
His heart stopped.
The stables were on fire, visible even from his cabin, and he was running before his brain fully processed what he was seeing. Running toward the fire in just his sleep pants and boots he grabbed by the door, no shirt, no phone, nothing but pure animal panic driving him forward.
The horses were scattered in the yard, wild-eyed and panicked, and his first thought was reliefâsomeone got them out, they were safeâbut then he got closer and saw the stables entrance and his world tilted sideways.
You were lying face-down just inside the doorway, smoke billowing around you, and you weren't moving.
"No!" The scream tore out of him, raw and animal. He was at the entrance in seconds, dropping to his knees, hands on your back. "No, no, no, pleaseâ"
You weren't breathing. Your skin was gray, lips tinged blue, and there was ash in your hair and you weren't fucking breathing.
"Help!' He screamed it into the night, voice breaking. "Help! Someone call 911! Please help!"
He got his arms under you and lifted, staggering away from the entrance as part of the roof collapsed inward with a shower of sparks. You weren't breathing limp in his arms, a horrible dead weight, and he couldn'tâ
"Please, don't be dead, please wildfire, pleaseâ"
He laid you down on the grass far from the fire, hands shaking so hard he could barely function. Tilted your head back, checking for breathing⌠nothing. He pressed his fingers to your throat, searching desperately for a pulse.
There. Weak and thready, but there.
"Call 911!" He screamed it again, looking around wildly, but no one was there. Everyone was asleep or too far away to hear. "Somebody please help us!"
He started CPR, hands laced over your sternum, counting compressions like the training he'd taken years ago. Thirty compressions, two breaths. Your lips were so cold under his, and you still weren't breathing on your own, and he was going to lose you before he ever got the chance to tell you, that he'd been an idiot, that his pride meant nothing compared to you.
"Come on, baby, come on," he begged between breaths. "Breathe for me, please breathe. I'm sorry, I love you, please don't leave me, pleaseâ"
He continued, thirty compressions, two breaths. Your chest rose and fell when he breathed for you, but then nothing. No response.
"HELP!" His voice was wrecked, tears streaming down his face. "Please, someone help!"
Lights flickered on in the distance. There was a truck approaching. Thank god.
Thirty compressions, two breaths.
"You don't get to do this," he told you, voice breaking. "You don't get to die because I was too fucking stupid to tell you I love you. Come on, wildfire, fight, I know you're strong."
Another thirty compressions, two more breaths.
Your body jerked and you coughed, harsh and wet and he rolled you onto your side as you vomited up smoke and ash. You gasped, a horrible wheezing sound, but you were breathing. Your eyes fluttered but didn't open, and your breathing was labored and wrong, but you were alive.
"That's it, that it baby, breathe." He was sobbing openly now, one hand on your back and one stroking your hair. "You're okay, you're gonna be okay, just keep breathing for me."
Pete's truck roared up, and he was out and running before it fully stopped. "Jesus Christâ what happened?"
"She went in," Bucky choked out. "She went into the fucking fire, got the horses out and sheâ call 911, she's not breathing right, she needs oxygen."
Pete already had his phone out and was shouting into it about the address and fire and person down.
Sanchez appeared from somewhere, still pulling on his shirt. "Holy shitâ is sheâ"
"She's breathing, but barely." Bucky couldn't stop touching you, couldn't stop checking your pulse like it might disappear if he looked away. "She inhaled too much smoke, she was unconsciousâ"
You coughed again, weaker this time, and made a sound like you were trying to speak.
"Don't talk," Bucky said. "Don't try to talk, just breathe, help is coming, you're gonna be fineâ"
But you weren't fine. Your breathing was getting worse, more labored, and your skin was still that terrible gray color. He gathered you against his chest and pressed his forehead to yours.
"I'm sorry," he whispered. "I'm so fucking sorry, I love you, I was just too stupid and proud and scared toâ" His voice broke completely. "You have to be okay, because I can't do this without you, wildfire, I can't."
Sirens in the distance getting closer. The volunteer fire department, the ambulance. Pete was directing them, shouting coordinates.
You made another small sound, and your eyes opened just a crack. "Bucky," you breathed, barely audible.
"I'm here," he was crying so hard he could barely see. "I'm right here, I've got you, you're gonna be fine."
"Copperâ"
"He's fine, all the horses are fine. You got them all out, you crazy, brave, stubbornâ" He couldn't finish, just held you tight as the ambulance pulled up, as EMT's swarmed with oxygen and equipment.
They tried to take you from him but he couldn't let go, couldn't release you until one of them put a hand on his shoulder.
"We've got her," she said gently. "Let us help her."
He forced himself to release you, watched as they got an oxygen mask on your face, loaded you onto a gurney. Your eyes found his one more time before they put you in the ambulance, and he saw fear there.
"I'm coming with you," he told the EMTs.
They didn't argue. He climbed into the ambulance and took your hand, and as they pulled away, he pressed his lips to your knuckles and made you a promise.
"You're gonna be okay," he said. "And when you are, I'm gonna tell you every single day for the rest of my life that I love you. Gonna prove to you that I can be the man you deserve, that my pride was bullshit, that yore all that matters. Justâ don't leave me before I get the chance. Please, wildfire, please don't leave."
Your fingers twitched in his, the barest squeeze and he held on like you were the only thing keeping him anchored to the earth.
The first thing you became aware of was the beeping. Steady, rhythmic, accompanied by a mechanical hiss that matched the uncomfortable pressure around your face. The second thing was the voice.
"âand I know I don't deserve it, I know I fucked everything up, but if you wake up, I swear to God, I'll spend the rest of my life making it up to you. Proving that I can be the man you think I am, even if I don't believe it yet."
That was Bucky's voice, coming from somewhere to your left.
"I'm sorry I pushed you away, I'm sorry I let my pride and my own stubbornness matter more than you, I'm sorry I wasn't paying attention when the fire started. I'm sorry for all of it."
You tried to open your eyes but they felt crusted shut, heavy. Your throat burned like you'd swallowed razor blades, and breathing hurt in a way that suggested your lungs had been through something awful. And then you remembered it all: the fire, the stables, Copper.
You tried to move or speak, but all that came out was a rough sound that might have been a cough.
There was movement immediately, a warm hand closing around yours. "Wildfire? Hey, hey, don't try to talk. You've got an oxygen mask on, your lungs need time to heal. Justâ just squeeze my hand if you can hear me."
You squeezed, or at least tried to. Your hand felt like it weighed a thousand pounds.
"Thank god," his voice broke on the words. "You scared the hell out of me, I've aged like ten years tonight."
You managed to get your eyes open finally, blinking against the harsh hospital lights. Everything was blurry at first, but slowly it resolved: white ceiling tiles, an IV stand, medical equipment beeping away. And Bucky, sitting in a chair pulled up close to your bed, still shirtless under the blanket someone had draped over his shoulders, covered in soot and ash, eyes red-rimmed.
He looked like he'd been crying. Bucky Barnes, who you'd never seen cry, not even when his father died, had been crying over you.
"Hey," he said softly, and his thumb traced circles on the back of your hand. "Welcome back."
You tried to speak, but the oxygen mask muffled everything, and your throat was too raw anyway. You lifted your other hand weakly, gesturing at the mask.
"No way," he caught your hand gently, brought it back down. "Doctor said you need to keep that on for at least another few hours, your oxygen levels were scary low when you came in, you inhaled a lot of smoke."
You made a frustrated sound, and he actually smiled. "I know, I know, wildfire. But just rest, okay? Everything else can wait."
But you didn't want to wait. You'd heard him confessing, apologizing, saying things you'd been desperate to hear for weeks. You needed him to know you'd heard and needed to respond, neededâ
The door opened and a nurse came in, checked your vitals with practiced efficiency. "Good to see those eyes open. How's the pain level? Blink once for manageable, twice for severe."
You blinked once. Everything hurt, but it was distant, muted by whatever they had you on.
"Good, the doctor will be in soon to check on you." She adjusted something on your IV. "You're very lucky, young lady. Another minute or two in that smoke and we'd be having a very different conversation." Her eyes cut to Bucky. "And you should probably get checked out too. That cough doesn't sound good."
"I'm fine," Bucky said automatically.
"You performed CPR for several minutes and you've been breathing smoke residue all night, at least let me listen to yous lungs."
He looked like he wanted to argue, but the nurse had already pulled out her stethoscope with a look that said she wasn't asking. While she checked him overâpronounced him "borderline but not critical"â you watched him. Catalogued the soot in his hair, the redness along his eyes, the exhaustion in his body⌠He'd stayed all night.
After the nurse left, silence fell between you. Bucky was still holding your hand, his thumb still stroking your knuckles, but he was looking down at your joined hands like he was afraid to meet your eyes.
"The horses are all okay," he said finally. "Pete's got them in the training paddock and the north pasture. Copper's fineâspooked but fine. You got every single one out before youâŚ" He swallowed hard. "Before you collapsed."
You squeezed his hand.
"The stable's gone, total loss. But Sanchez thinks the fire was deliberately set, he found evidence of accelerant near the east wall. The sheriff's already investigating, smart money's o Sheridan."
That should have made you angry, should've sparked fear or rage, but you just felt tired. You'd deal with Clayton later. Right now, all you cared about was the man sitting beside your bed, still covered in ash from pulling you out of the fire.
You tugged weakly at the oxygen mask, and this time Bucky didn't stop you, just helped you pull it down to rest under your chin.
"Wildfireâ"
"Did you mean it?" Your voice came out as a rasp, barely audible, your throat shredded but you needed to know. "What you said earlier, did you mean it?"
His eyes finally met yours, and they were so raw it hurt to look at. "Every word, I love you. I've been in love with you for so long I can't remember what it felt like not to love you. And I'm sorry I let my pride and y stupid hang-ups about money and worth keep me from saying it. I'm sorry when I pushed you away when all you wanted wasâ"
"Bucky," you interrupted him, voice still rough. "I'm not gonna die."
He blinked. "What?"
"I'm not gonna die," you repeated. "So you can stop with the dramatic deathbed confessions."
For a second he just stared at you, then incredibly, he laughed. "You almost died and you're making jokes?"
"Someone has to lighten the mood." You tried to smile but your face felt stiff. "You look like shit, by the way."
"Yeah, well." He scrubbed a hand over his face, smearing the soot. "Watching the woman you love nearly die in a fire will do that to you."
The woman you love. He'd said it again, and this time the words settled in your chest like something warm and permanent.
"I heard you," you said quietly. "In the ambulance, and when I first woke up, I heard you."
His hand tightened on yours. "Then you heard me say I'm sorry, that I was an idiot, and that I'm going to spend every day proving I can be man youâ"
"You already are." You cut him off. "You've always been, that was never the problem."
"Then what was?"
"You not believing it." You coughed, wincing at the pain in your chest. "You letting your father's expectations and your own pride convince you that you weren't enough⌠but you were always enough, Bucky, you were always more than enough."
He was quiet for a moment, just looking at you with those blue eyes full of things he'd never let himself say out loud.
"I thought I needed to build something first," he said finally. "Thought I needed to have land, money, something concrete to offer you, something that would make me your equal instead of just⌠the foreman who got lucky."
"I never wanted an equal. I don't want a business partner or a merger, or someone who can match my net worth. I just want you, the guy who checks on Copper because he knows the horse matters to me. The guy who fixes problems before I know they exist, the guy who punched Sheridan for cornering me and then ran into a burning building to save me even thoughâ" Your voice cracked. "Even though I'd already gotten myself out."
"Barely," he said roughly. "You barely got yourself out, and when I found you lying there not breathing, Iâ" He stopped, jaw working. "I couldn't breathe either, felt like my heart was being ripped out of my chest. And all I could think was that I'd wasted so much time, weeks we could have had together because I was too proud to accept that maybe love doesn't care about bank balances and property."
You brought your other hand up to cup his face, felt the scrape of stubble and the warmth of his skin. "Life's too short."
"Yeah, it is." He said leaning into your touch.
"I was at Pete and Maria's house yesterday before the fire," you ran your thumb along his cheekbone. "Watched them together, the way they move around each other, the easy affection, how simply it all looked⌠and I just wanted that with you so badly it hurt. Just simple love, coming home to each other, building a life together without all the weight and the expectations and the fear."
"I want that too," he said quietly. "But I don't know if I know how to do simple. Don't know if I can turn off the voice in my head that says I should be providing more."
"Then we'll figure it out together." You held his gaze. "I'm not asking you to change overnight. I'm not asking you to suddenly be okay with everything you're not okay with, but I need you to try. Need you to let me in instead of pushing me away when it gets hard."
His eyes were bright again. "What if I fuck it up?"
"You will," you smiled slightly. "And I'll fuck it up too. We'll fight and disagree and drive each other crazy, but we'll do it together."
He was quiet, and you could see him wrestling with itâthe pride and the fear, but also hope, all tangled together in a know he'd spent his whole life tying.
"I don't have much," he said finally. "Don't have some grand plan, damn, I don't even have a shirt on right now, but I love you, wildfire. I love you so much it terrifies me. And if you're willing to take a chance on a stubborn idiot who almost lost you because he couldn't get out of his own wayâ"
"I'd give it all up," you interrupted. "The ranch, the money, the legacy⌠all of it. If it meant I could have something like what Pete and Maria have, If it meant I could have you."
His breath caught. "You don't mean that."
"I do," you held his eyes, let him see the truth "I love the ranch, the work, the land⌠but I would walk away from all of it tomorrow if it meant having a simple life with you. A small place, horses we actually have time to ride, mornings where we drink coffee together. I'd trade the empire for the everyday, Bucky, every single time."
"Don't say things like that, wildfire." He pressed is forehead to yours, careful with the oxygen tubes and the IV lines.
"Why not?"
"Because it makes me want to take you up on it, makes me want to say fuck the ranch and the town and everyone's expectations and let's just run away together."
"Maybe we should," you said.
He pulled back to look at you. "You're delirious from smoke inhalation."
"I'm serious," and you were. "Not today, or tomorrow, but maybe eventually."
"You'd really leave?" He searched your face. "You'd really walk away from everything you've built."
"For us?" You smiled. "In a heartbeat."
He kissed you then, gentle and careful with your injuries, tasting like smoke and salt and promise. When he pulled back, his eyes were wet again.
"I don't deserve you."
"Probably not," you agreed and he huffed a laugh. "But you love me anyway."
"I do," he said it like a vow. "God help me, I do."
"Then that's enough," you laced your fingers through his. "We'll figure out the rest, but right now, can we just⌠be?"
"Be what?"
"Together." You squeezed his hand. "Just two people who love each other⌠just us."
He settled back into the chair, brought your joined hands up to press a kiss to your knuckles. "Yeah, wildfire. We can do that."
You drifted off to sleep with his hand in yours and his voice soft in the darkness, telling you about how Copper had tried to break back into the paddock, about how Pete was already talking to contractors about rebuilding the stable, about how the sun was going to rise soon, and when it did, everything would look better.
One year later
You woke up to the sunlight streaming through the bedroom window and the smell of coffee drifting up from downstairs. For a moment, you just lay there, hand drifting to your still-flat stomach, the secret sitting warm in your chest.
You've known for three weeks, ever since you'd taken the test in the bathroom of the main house while Bucky was out checking the irrigation system. You'd been waiting for the right moment to tell him, something that matched the enormity of it.
You are going to be a father.
The other side of the bed was rumpled and empty, Bucky's watch still on the nightstand beside a book about investment strategies he's been reading. Your husband had surprised you over the past year while you've been scaling back the ranch operations, he'd been building something of his own. Nothing that took him away from you, nothing that required sacrifice or absence, but careful investments in stocks, a small stake in a friend's agricultural tech startup, some rental properties two counties over that he managed remotely.
"Not trying to match you," he said when he first told you about it, almost shy. "Just building something for us, for the future."
And now there was a very specific future growing inside you.
You pulled on one of Bucky's old flannel shirts, over your sleep clothes and padded downstairs barefoot. He was in the kitchen, leaning against the counter in jeans and nothing else, two mugs of coffee already poured.
Well, one mug of coffee⌠the other was herbal tea.
Your heart stuttered. Had he noticed? You've been so careful, switching to decaf when he wasn't looking, making excuses about wanting to cut back on caffeine.
"Morning, wildfire." He turned and smiled, and you searched his face for signs that he knew. But he just looked like himselfâhappy, relaxed, the permanent tension he used to carry finally gone from his shoulders.
"Morning, husband." You crossed to him, let him pull you in for a kiss that tasted like coffee and mint toothpaste. "You made me tea?"
"Figured you might want something different." He handed you the mug."You've been drinking less coffee lately, thought maybe you were getting tired of it."
Not suspicious, then. Just Bucky taking care of you the way he always did, paying attention to the small details.
"Thank you," you took a sip. "You're up early."
"Couldn't sleep." His hands settled on your hips. "Kept thinking about that trail ride you promised me."
"Did I promise you a trail ride?"
"You definitely did," he kissed your temple. "Said something about finally having time to actually ride horses instead of just breeding and training them."
He wasn't wrong. In the year since the fire, things had changed. You hired two additional hands, promoted Pete to co-manager, and started actually delegating tasks. The ranch still ran beautifully, but you and Bucky had something you'd never had before: time.
And soon, you'd need that time for something else entirely.
Your hand drifted to your stomach before you could stop it, and you caught yourself, turning the gesture into smoothing down the shirt. But your mind was already spinningâwould you still be able to ride in a few months? Would Bucky insist you stop? Would he be overprotective, or excited or scared orâ
"Wildfire?" Bucky's voice pulled you back. "You okay? You look a little pale."
"I'm fine," you smiled, probably too brightly. "I'm just hungry, should eat something before we ride."
His eyes narrowed slightly, but he just nodded. "I'll make breakfast, you sit."
You perched on one of the kitchen stools and watched him move around the kitchen with easy familiarity. This was your favorite part of the new life you'd built, mornings like this, just the two of you before the day really started.
Soon there would be three of you, and the thought made your chest tight with joy and terror in equal measure.
"Actually," you said as he cracked eggs into a pan, "what if we skip the trail ride this morning? We could go this afternoon instead, make a whole thing of it⌠pack a picnic, ride out to the creek, spend a few hours just existing."
He glanced over his shoulder a bit surprised. "Yeah? You want to play hooky from ranch work on a Tuesday?"
"We're the bosses, we're allowed." You wrapped both hands around your mug. "Besides, when was the last time we just took an afternoon for ourselves?"
"Good point," he played the eggs, added toast and brought it over to you. "We can do the morning checks, make sure everything's running smooth, then disappear for a few hours."
"Perfect."
The world came out soft, full of meaning he didn't quite catch yet, but he would. This afternoon, by the creek, you'd tell him about the baby, about your future, about how everything was about to change in the best possible way.
You just had to make it through the morning without giving it away.
By noon, you'd packed a basket with sandwiches, fruit, and the fancy cheese Bucky loved from the market in town. You'd also packed ginger cookies for the nausea that had been creeping in the past week, and a bottle of sparkling cider that you hoped would work for a toast.
Bucky was tacking up Duke and Ranger, and you were trying to calm your racing heart. You've told people difficult things before, you've fired employees, negotiated contracts, stood up to your father when he was being stubborn, but this felt bigger than all of that.
"Ready?" Bucky appeared in the tack room doorway, looking unfairly handsome in his worn jeans and work shirt, hair pushed back from his face.
"Ready," you grabbed the basket and let him help you mount Ranger.
You rode out in comfortable silence, taking the familiar trail north toward the creek. The autumn day was perfectâcool but not cold, the leaves just starting to turn gold and red. When you reached the creek, Bucky dismounted first and came to help you down, hands lingering at your waist a moment longer than necessary.
"You sure you're okay?" he asked. "You've seemed⌠I don't know, different today. Nervous, maybe?"
Damn his observant nature. "I'm fine, just happy."
"Yeah?" He smiled, some of the concern easing. "Me too."
You spread out the blanket you'd fought while Bucky loosened the horses' girths and let them graze nearby. The creek burbled softly, and the sun filtered through the trees in dappled patterns, and everything felt almost too perfect.
"This was a good idea," Bucky said settling beside you on the blanket. "We should do this more often, just disappear for a few hours."
"We should," you busied yourself unpacking the basket, hands shaking slightly. "Especially now that you've got your investments working for you, Pete can handle more of the daily operations."
"Speaking of which," he took the sandwich you handed him. "I wanted to talk about that. Remember the tech startup I invested in? They're doing really well, better than projected. My stake has almost doubled in value, andâ" He paused, looking almost shy. "I've been thinking about diversifying more, maybe some agriculture projects or another rental property, something that can generate passive income."
"That's amazing, Bucky." And it was. You'd watched him transform over the past year from someone who measured his worth in sweat equity to someone who understood there were other ways to build security.
"Yeah, well." He rubbed the back of his neck. "I know I used to be weird about money, but this feels different. Feels like I'm building something that's ours without sacrificing time with you. Without having to choose between being present and being a provider."
"You've always been a provider." You set down your untouched sandwich. "But I'm proud of you for finding a way to do it that works for you."
"I had a good teacher," he kissed your temple. "You taught me that there's ore than one way to build a life together."
This was it. This was the moment. Your heart was pounding so hard you wee sure he could hear it.
"Speaking of building a life together," you started, voice shaking slightly. "There's something I need to tell you."
He set down his sandwich, his attention immediately focused on you. "What's wrong? Are you sick? Is it the ranch? Isâ"
"Nothing's wrong." You took his hand, pressed it against your still-flat stomach. "Everything's right, actually. Everything is⌠perfect."
He froze and you watched understanding dawn slowly: the tea instead of coffee, the fact that you'd been tired lately, the way you'd been careful about lifting heavy things. All the small signs he'd noticed but hadn't put together.
"Wildfire," he breathed. "Are youâ"
"I'm pregnant." The words came out in a rush, nervous and excited all at once. "About six weeks. I found out three weeks ago and I've been trying to find the right moment to tell you and I thought here, by the creek, it feltâ"
He cut you off with a kiss, so deep and full of joy so pure it made your chest ache. When he used back, his eyes were bright with tears.
"You're pregnant," he said, like he was testing the words. "We are having a baby."
"We're having a baby," you were crying now too, laughing through the tears. "I know we didn't plan this, we haven't even talked about kids yet, but I'm so happy, I'm soâ"
"Happy," he finished for you, his hands coming up to frame your face. "God, I'm so happy I can't evenâ I don't have words, I don't know what else to say except I love you and this is everything."
He pulled you into his arms, held you tight against his chest, and you could feel him shaking.
"Holy shit, I'm going to be a dad" he whispered into your hair.
"You're gonna be a great dad," you pulled back to look at him.
"I know, thanks to you. And this baby is gonna have everything they need, not because of money or any of that shit I used to obsess over, but because we'll be their parents."
"Yeah," you covered his hand with yours. "Yeah, they will."
"How are you feeling? Are you sick? Do you need to see a doctor? Should you even be riding? Jesus, should I have let you get on a horseâ"
"Bucky," you laughed, cutting off his spiral. "I'm fine, I saw the doctor two weeks ago, everything looks good. I can ride for another few months as long as I'm careful. The morning sickness is mild, just some nausea, nothing terrible. I'm healthy, baby's healthy, everything's perfect."
"Everything's perfect," he repeated, and then his eyes went wide again. "Wait, does anyone else know? Pete? Maria? Have you been keeping this secret by yourself."
"Just me," you squeezed his hand. "I wanted you to be the first to know, wanted it to be just us, just this moment."
"Best moment of my life," he kissed you again, soft and sweet. "Well, second best, first was marrying you."
"Third best was punching Sheridan's face."
He laughed, loud and bright, and the sound of it made your heart soar. This was the man you'd fallen in love with, the one who could still laugh, who could let go of his pride and just be happy, just be present in the moment.
"We should celebrate." He reached for the basket, pulled out the sparkling cider you'd packed. "Did you plan this?"
"I hoped," you watched him pour two glasses. "Hoped you'd be happy, and this would be the right way to tell you."
"It's perfect." He handed you a glass, raised his own. "To our future."
You clinked glasses, sipped the sweet fizz, and then he was kissing you again, laying you back on the blanket with careful hands.
You laid there together as the afternoon sun shifted through the trees, talking about names and nursery colors and whether you'd find out the gender or be surprised. About how the ranch would need some adjustments, but nothing you couldn't handle. About how Pete and Maria would be thrilled, how the crew would rally around you, how this baby would grow up surrounded by love.
About the future you were building, not just the two of you anymore, but three.
He placed his hand over your stomach, and you covered it with yours, and for a long moment, you just sat there together, listening to the creek and the horses and the perfect silence of a life finally fully lived.
When you finally rode back, the ranch was settling into eveningâcrew heading home, lights coming on in the main house, the familiar rhythm of end of the day routines. But everything looked different now, felt different.
Because you weren't just coming home to the ranch you ran together. You were coming home to the place where you'd raise your child, whey you would see their first steps, teach how to ride their first horse, learn what it meant to work hard and love harder. Where they'd grow p knowing their parents chose each other every day and created a life worth living.
Bucky helped you dismount, hands lingering in your waist, his eyes soft with wonder and love and barely contained joy.
"Ready to tell everyone?" You asked.
"Ready," he laced his fingers through yours. "Let's go tell our family."
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my (wo)man on willpower | j. abbot
pairing jack abbot x fem!reader
summary you and jack have always been a hands-on, canât-keep-your-hands-off-each-other kind of coupleâuntil you decide to commit to a month-long âdetox.â no sex, no touching, no shortcuts. jack feels like the least sought after man in the land. (ao3)
(inspired by sabrina carpenterâs my man on willpower (2025)!)
tags/warnings MDNI (18+) explicit sexual content, age gap (mid-20s / 50s), established relationship, living together, unprotected p in v, oral (f/m, m/f) handjobs (mutual), mentions of masturbation, praise & teasing, domestic, hospital/medical stuff / orthopaedics (r3), wellness / âspiritualâ themes, r. can do splits, santos being santos (mentions of santos/garcia breakup), robby lowkey ur third lol, healthy, sane relationship, more romcom than angst (much less sad than the actual song) (written by a law student, not a doctorâmedical accuracy idkher)
wc 16.5k words
âIâm sorry,â Jack says slowly, like heâs trying very hard to be reasonable, âIâm still⌠a little lost hereâwhat exactly are you doing?â
You donât turn around from the stove. You know that tone. Measured and suspicious. The same one he uses when a story from a patient doesnât quite add up, or when heâs looking for you to notice what he has noticed in your words.
âIâm doing a detox,â you say, plating the pasta with unnecessary precision. âSoâyou know, yoga, no alcohol, no drugs, no screens, no shopping, no sex, no sodaââ
ââright there,â he cuts in.
You pause, glancing over your shoulder. ââŚNo soda?â
He doesnât even blink. âNo. The no sex.â
You turn back to the counter, like this is completely normal. âWhat, you canât handle a month without sex?â
Jack doesnât biteâdoesnât rise to it like someone your age would. He just watches you, lips pursed, arms folded, weight settled into one hip, expression flattening into something more deliberate.
âNot when itâs without you,â he says, simple.
You huff a small laugh, trying to shake off the way it lands somewhere inconvenient in your chest. âThatâs flattering. That will get you very far.â
You slide his plate toward him. He doesnât take it yet.
âItâs not like I wonât miss it,â you add, softer now. âSame as alcohol. Same as everything else.â
âYeah,â he says, pushing off the counter finally, crossing the kitchen in a few easy steps. âDifference is alcoholâs not making you come in under ten minutes, and four times in an hour.â
You shoot him a lookâsharp, immediate.Â
He shrugs, already reaching past you into the fridge like he didnât just say that. âItâs a valid comparison.â
âYouâre unbelievable.â
âYou love it,â he shrugged, knowing, grabbing the cheese. âPoint is - you know, itâs a big difference.â
You try not to smile. You fail, a little.
âI justââ you sigh, taking the cheese from him, grating it over your pasta. âI want to do something that requires actual discipline. Reset a bit. Clear my head.â
âHon,â he says, quieter now, leaning his shoulder against the counter beside you, close enough that his arm brushes yours, âyou work ortho and youâre an R3. Youâre up for thirty hours at a time, you operate on broken bones for fun, you look amazing, youâre healthyâwhat part of you needs more discipline?â
You glance at him. Heâs looking at you properly now. Not teasing.
You soften a fraction. âItâs not about that.â
âThen what is it about?â
You hesitate. Just a second too long.
ââŚItâs just a month,â you settle on. âFour weeks. Thirty days. Weâll live.â
He studies you. You can feel itâclinical, almost. Like heâs trying to diagnose something youâre not saying out loud.
Thenâ
âAnd this is just penetration?â he asks.
You freeze.
Your silence is loud.
Jack exhales, slow, disbelieving, dragging a hand down over his mouth. âGoddamn.â
You busy yourself with the plates again. âItâs part of the program.â
âProgram,â he repeats flatly. âWho the hell put you up to this?â
âSantos. and McKay. We all agreed to do it together.â
That earns you a look.
ââŚSantos,â he says, like heâs deeply reconsidering several life choices. âOf course this has Santos written all over it - getting you into a nun-cult thing.â
You laugh despite yourself, handing him his bowl. âItâs not a cult. Itâs a detox.â
âItâs a sexless cult,â he mutters, taking the bowl.
You nudge his hip with yours. âYouâve survived longer droughts.â
âYeah,â he shoots back immediately. âIn the army.â
You grin. âOh, here we go.â
âYouâre really gonna do this to me?â he says, following you toward the couch. âMake the disabled veteran relive his worst years?â
âYour worst years were not lack of sex, be serious.â
âDebatable.â
You snort, dropping onto the couch, tucking your legs under you. He sits beside you, closeâcloser than necessary, knee knocking into yours, like heâs testing the boundaries of this already.
You hand him a fork.
âItâll be good for us,â you say, softer now. âBuilds character.â
He looks at you sidelong. âI have enough character.â
âYou could always use more.â
âYeah?â he murmurs.
His hand comes upâabsent, habitualâresting warm at your knee, thumb brushing once, slow. Not even thinking about it. Your breath catches before you can stop it.
His mouth twitches, just slightly. Not quite a smile.
ââŚFine. Iâll do whatever I can to support you in this⌠detox, thing,â he says.
You smile, even though his calloused hand is rubbing softly against your skin, warm, rough and inched maybe a little further onto your thigh. âI appreciate that.â
He leans back into the couch, finally picking up his fork, but his hand doesnât move from your leg.
A pause.
Thenâ
âWe can still watch Housewives?â he asks, like this is the real negotiation.
You let out a breath, tension cracking just enough to smile. âHousewives stays.â
âRight,â he nods. âGood. Thought you were gonna take everything from me.â
You roll your eyes, nudging him with your shoulder. âSo you think you can handle this?â
ââCourse I can handle this.â
â â â
âI canât handle this,â Jack says.
Robby doesnât even look up as he checks his watch, pulling up his sleeves as they step outside, already smiling like heâs been waiting for this. âItâs just a month, man. Cool it.â
âItâs not just a month,â Jack shoots back, arms folded, pacing a tight line along the bay, outside the ED. âItâs a month without her. Thereâs a difference.â
Robby snorts. âOh, Iâm sure there is.â
âIâm serious,â Jack says, sharper now. âYou donât get itâyou donâtââ he gestures vaguely, frustrated. âWhen you have her, sheâsâ sheâs everything. Itâs not just sex, itâsâŚ. well, it is, but it's also more, it's... deeper? No, it's... you know, I meanââ
ââyou were about to say something amazingly poetic and then ruined it,â Robby cuts in, amused.
âYeah, well,â Jack mutters. âWe have sex four to five times a week. Minimum three. And now?â He throws his hands up. âNothing. She wonât even let me spoon her.â
Robby pauses.
Then looks up slowly.
ââŚSpooning.â
âDonât,â Jack warns.
Robbyâs grin breaks wide. âJack Abbot. Spooning. Are you the big or little one? Or does it switch?â
âOh, shut up.â
âThatâs⌠wow,â Robby shakes his head, impressed. âItâs a cute image.â
Jack drags a hand over his face, already irritated. âNot evenânothing. Itâs like Iâm in a goddamn monastery.â
âVoluntarily celibate,â Robby nods. âVery spiritual of you.â
âI did not volunteer,â Jack snaps.
âYou stayed,â Robby counters.
Jack glares at him, then looking out into the evening. âWhere the hell are they? They said two minutes.â
âRelax,â Robby says, still enjoying this far too much. âAlsoâ five times a week? Christ, having that kind of libido at your age?â He clicks his tongue, an exhale. âImpressive. You should get that checked out.â
âForget that,â Jack mutters. âSheâll kill me if Iâm talking about this.â
âOh, so thereâs still fear. Good. Thatâs healthy.â
Jack exhales sharply, jaw tight, eyes flicking back out toward the ambulance bay.
âHow longâs it been since you twoâŚ?â Robby asks, vaguely gesturing, curious as to how his friend is already so wound up.
Jack hesitates.
ââŚTwo days.â
Thereâs a beat.
Robby stares at him. ââŚTwo days,â he repeats.
Jack doesnât answer.
Robby lets out a disbelieving laugh, shaking his head. âYouâre kidding me.â
âI wish I was.â
âYouâre like this after two days?â
Jack shrugs, already keyed up. âLook, I mean, that is including any kind of touch and sexual actions, alrightââ
âThatâs pathetic,â Robby says, still grinning.
âI know,â Jack snaps, pacing again now, faster. âI know, itâsâthis is ridiculous. She wonât even kiss me, barely hugs me. Sheâs⌠walking around like nothingâs changedââ
âYeah,â Robby hums. âAlmost like sheâs not the one with the problem. Just let her ride this out. You expect her to put on a nun costume?â
Jack shoots him a look. âYou're not helping.â
âIâm not trying to,â Robby says easily.
Jack exhales, running a hand through his silver waves, agitation sitting just under the surface now. He glances out again, scanning for lights, for movement.
âWhere the hell are they?â he mutters. âThey said two minutes.â
Robby straightens a fraction, checking his watch again. âTraffic, maybeââ
âAmbulance crashed!â
The shout cuts through the bay, and their conversation is finished quickly as they race out with nurses to help.
â â â
Jack Abbot was a strong man, in many respects.
Heâd seen enoughâdone enoughâto have a working relationship with pain, with loss, with the kind of things that hollow people out if they let it. He wasnât perfect, but he was⌠steady. More emotionally literate than most men he knewâRobby included, which wasnât exactly a high bar, but still.
He knew how to sit in discomfort. Knew how to carry it. Knew how to endure.
But this. This thing you were doingâŚ
The thing about you was, heâd never really had to hold back before.
From the moment youâd settled into his lifeâproperly, fully, toothbrush next to his, your things in his drawers, your presence in every corner of his apartmentâheâd made a decision: you get all of him. Whatever he has, whatever he can give, whenever you want, itâs yours.
That includes the easy things. The soft things.
And yeahâsex too.
It wasnât the foundation of your relationship. Not even close. Two years together, six months living side by side, working different departments, different hoursâyou loved each other in ways that had nothing to do with sex.
But â Christ. It didnât hurt that the sex was very good.
And youâyoung, bright, all sharp edges and softness in the right placesâyouâd woken something up in him he hadnât realised had gone quiet. Made him feel⌠not younger, exactly, but awake.Â
Kept him on his toes. Made him care, in small stupid waysâlike going to the gym on his off days so he could keep up with you, so he didnât feel like he was lagging behind when you dragged him out into the world.
You were tactile in a way that blurred the line between affection and need. Always finding him. You always managed to make him feel like the centre of any and all desires.
Hands on his arm when you passed. Fingers hooking into his belt loops when you walked past him in the kitchen. Leaning into him mid-conversation like gravity pulled you there. Curling into his side on the couch, half on top of him, legs tangled, absentmindedly tracing patterns over his chest like you didnât even realise you were doing it.
Youâd climb into his lap without asking. Kiss him just because you could. Start something in the middle of nowhereâhalf a joke, half notâjust to see the way heâd react.
It didnât go unnoticed. Robby had picked up on it within the first few weeks.
Some shitty bar down the road with shittier beer, end of shift, nothing specialâand all Jack could do was watch you.
âThe hell did you find her?â Robby asked, leaning against the bar, eyes flicking between Jack and where you were across the room, laughing too loud at something Ellis had said, drink loose in your hand.
Jack followed his line of sight without meaning to. It softened him, visibly.
âShe found me,â he said, like that explained anything. Took a sip of his beer. âCafeteria. First week at PTMC.â
Robby hummed, unconvinced. âRight. Of course she did.â
Jack shrugged, trying for casual. âSheâs⌠enthusiastic.â
Robby glanced back at you, just in time to see the way your attention shifted mid-conversationâlike something had tugged on you. Your eyes landed on Jack immediately.
Locked. And thenâthere it was. That smile. Not polite, not social. Specific.
âYeah,â Robby muttered. âThatâs one word for it.â
You were already moving.
Didnât even finish whatever you were saying, just peeled off like the rest of the room had lost its relevance. Straight line to Jack, weaving through people without hesitation.
You slipped into his space like you belonged there, like you always had.
âHi,â you said, bright, a little breathless. âMissed you.â
Jack blinked. âYouâve been gone fifteen minutes.â
âFelt longer,â you shrugged, already reaching for himâfingers brushing over his bicep, then squeezing, slow and appreciative, like you were reminding yourself he was real. âI love this shirt.â
Robby snorted into his drink. He knew that shirt. Cheap, slightly too tight on purpose. Jack had once tried to pretend it wasnât a strategy. Apparently, it was working.
You didnât move away. If anything, you leaned closerâhips brushing his, hand still on his arm, thumb dragging once like you couldnât quite help it.
Robby watched the exact second Jack stopped pretending this wasnât affecting him.
âYou busy?â you asked, softer now.
You tilted your head, smiling like you already knew the answer.
Then you leaned in.
Close enough that Robby couldnât hear, but not subtle about it eitherâyour mouth brushing Jackâs ear, your hand tightening slightly on his arm as you murmured something low.
Whatever it was, Jack went still.Immediate. A shift. Shoulders tightening, breath catching, eyes dropping to you like he needed a second to recalibrate.
Robby raised a brow. You pulled back like nothing had happened, smile sweet, completely unbothered. Jack set his beer down.
âWeâre heading out,â he said.
Robby stared at him. âYou just got here.â
âYeah,â Jack replied, already reaching for his jacket. âWeâre done.â
Jack had called it the honeymoon phase. It wasnât. It just⌠evolved.
You stayed exactly as enthusiastic as heâd first describedâjust more efficient about it. More integrated into the rhythm of your lives. Somehow worse, if you asked Robby.
And when you were stressedâwhich was often, given Ortho, given your hours, given youâit got worse. Or better, depending on who you asked.
Youâd come home wired, exhausted, brain still running at full speedâand instead of shutting down, youâd go straight to him. Like he was the off-switch. Like being close to him, touching him, feeling him, was how you came back to yourself.
You didnât overthink it. You didnât ration it.
And now nothing. Heâs not sure if he recognises you.Â
Itâs not just the sex. Thatâs the worst of it, sure. The obvious absence. But itâs everything else thatâs starting to wear on him. Youâre thorough with it. Annoyingly disciplined.
â â â
Day Six.
He gets home just after eight in the morning, dead on his feet, the kind of tired that sits behind his eyes and dulls everything out.
The apartmentâs not quiet. Thatâs the first thing.
The secondâ You.
On the floor in the lounge, in the middle of a yoga mat, moving through a pose like this is something youâve always done. You quit yoga a year ago. Said it was boring. Said you couldnât sit still long enough.
And yet here you are. And Santos is with you. Which is⌠its own problem. Thereâs a lot to unpack there.
Why does Santos know where you live?
Why is Santos doing yoga?
Why are you wearing thatâsome tight, soft, barely-there athleisure set that looks like it was designed specifically to make his life harder?
âHi, baby!â you call, bright, easy, like nothingâs changed, as you both move into cobra.
âGross,â Santos mutters under her breath.
âHey, hon,â Jack says, voice rough with fatigue as he steps in, toeing off his shoes.
The coffee tableâs been shoved aside, the TV playing some overly calm instructor guiding you through it like this is a wellness retreat instead of his living room.
He walks over anywayâautomatic, like always. Bends down, aiming for your mouthâ
âand you shift just slightly.
Itâs subtle. Anyone else wouldnât clock it. But he does.
His kiss lands on your cheek instead.
You donât even break the pose.
âNo kisses during yoga, interrupts my zen,â you remind him lightly.
A beat.
âRight,â he says, quieter. âForgot about that.â
Thereâs the faintest pauseâjust enough to feel it.
âFeels like itâs all the time lately,â he adds under his breath. Then, correcting himself, âButâyeah. I get it.â
You hum, already moving out of cobra like nothingâs happened.
He straightens, slower now, glancing at Santos.
She rolls her eyes.
âNext pose,â she says flatly.
You shift without hesitation.
âYou should shower, then have some breakfast,â you tell him gently, already moving into childâs pose. âI made oats. Theyâre in the fridge.â
âOats?â he repeats. âSince when do you eat oats?â
âItâs good for your gut, heart health, digestion, blood sugar,â Santos answers, not looking up. âCleansing in some cultures.â
Jack blinks at her. ââŚRight. Iâve been a doctor for twenty years. Think Iâve got gut health covered, Trinity.â
âI donât think your army rations count as a gut health plan,â she shoots back.
You let out a small laugh into the mat.
âI thought you said oats were for Victorian children and farmers who hate themselves,â Jack adds to you.
âThey are,â you mumble. âBut these have honey and cinnamon.â
Santos chimes. âAnd spite.â
Jack just stares at the two of you for a second.
Looking at youâfolded into the pose, calm, deliberate. Not reaching for him. Not pulling him down. Like heâs background noise.
âOkay,â he says finally, a little clipped. âYou two⌠have fun.â He drags a hand over his face. âIâm gonna sleep for about five hours.â
He turns, already heading for the bedroom, shoulders a little tighter than when he walked in.
You glance up, watching him go.
Thereâs a beat of silence.
Santos shifts beside you into a side plank, already shaking slightly. âJesus Christ.â
You follow, steady.
âHe seems⌠stable,â she says.
âHeâs a bit grumpy,â you reply. âWe havenât touched in nearly a week.â
Santosâs head snaps toward you. âSo?â
âWeâre touchy people.â
âRight,â she nods once. âI hate happy couples.â
You huff a quiet laugh.
âThis was your idea, by the way,â you remind her.
âYeah, and itâs a good one,â she says immediately. âI needed to not text Garcia at 2AM and ruin my life again.â
âYou could just⌠not text her.â
Santos looks at you like youâve said something deeply stupid. âOh, yeah. Genius. Why didnât I think of that?â
You smile slightly.
âShe blocked me last night,â Santos adds, flat.
âOh.â
âYeah. âFor her peace.ââ She makes air quotes with one hand, nearly losing balance. âWhich is crazy, because Iâm incredibly peaceful.â
âWell, this detox thing is a great idea. Youâll cleanse yourself of her.â
âEvil lesbians are not for the weak.â
âHon, where are those scented candles?â Jack calls from the hallway, voice carrying through the apartment.
âI threw them out,â you call back. âThey release benzene. Cleansing, remember?â
Thereâs a pause.
ââŚOf course you did,â he mutters, just loud enough.
Santos snorts as you both move into the next stretch, threading your arm under your body.
âBit much, isnât it?â she says.
You exhale into the mat. âI am going to be so aggressively cleansed by the end of this, youâd consider me the Virgin Mary.â
â â â
Day Nine.
Virgin Mary, my ass.
Thatâs all Jack can think as he leans in the doorway for a second too long, watching you at the counter. Pink, ridiculous, barely-there panties.
The ones from Valentineâs. His t-shirt hanging off you like it belongs there, cut just high enough that every small shift of your hips flashes skin he knows too well. Music hums low from the radioâsomething easy, something youâre half-swaying to as you chop vegetables like this is just⌠normal.
Heâs been up maybe five minutes. Has to leave in thirty. And heâs already half-hard. He pushes off the doorway anyway. Walks up behind you like muscle memory.
His arms come around you slow, familiarâsettling over your waist, pulling you back into him. He feels the way you soften immediately, that slight melt into his chest like your body still knows him, even if youâre being⌠whatever this is.
You startle just a little, then relax.
âHey,â you murmur, turning your head slightly as he drops his chin to your shoulder. âYouâre up.â
âMhm,â he hums, already pressing his mouth to your neck.
He doesnât even pretend restraint. Just goes for itâslow, lazy kisses wherever he can reach, nosing along your skin, breathing you in like heâs been deprived, because he has.Whichâhe has.
âWhatâre you making?â he asks against you, voice rougher than he means it to be.
âFood prep,â you say, though it comes out softer than that. A little breath slipping through when he finds that spot under your ear.
âShitâJack,â you add, quieter now, the knife slowing in your hand. âYou canât.â
He smiles against your skin. Not nice about it.
âI canât,â he repeats, low. âOr you canât?â
His hands move without askingâsliding under the hem of his shirt on you, palms warm against your stomach first. Familiar. Testing.
You inhale sharply. He doesnât stop. Just keeps goingâslow, deliberateâup over your ribs, feeling the curve of you, the heat of your skin, until his hands settle over your chest. Not rough. Not greedy. Like he belongs there. Because he does. Or he did.
Your hand stills completely on the counter.
âJack,â you say again, but itâs weaker this time. Less conviction, more breath.
He presses another kiss just below your ear, voice dropping.
âBeen real good about this,â he murmurs. âHavenât I?â
You donât answer.
Because he has. You're not making it easy, after Santos suggested to have more fun with it. So, sure, you go for panties and shirt, maybe even the barely there nightgowns you bought a while back, feeling as he is completely still besides you in bed.
His touch shifts just slightlyânot pushing, not crossing a line, but close enough to remind you exactly how easily he could.
Your head tips back a fraction before you catch yourself.
âNo,â you say, firmer now, even as your body lags behind. âNope. No, canât. Iâm staying cleansed. My book says even too much contact can make you unfocused.â
He exhales slowly, like heâs dragging himself back by force.
âUnfocused.. alright,â he mutters. âWhatever you want.â
But his hands donât move right away. You finally set the knife down, turning in his arms so youâre facing him. Big mistake.
Because now youâre looking at him properlyâsleep-rough, hair a mess, jaw shadowed, eyes still heavy but fixed on you like youâre the only thing in the room. And you know that look. Youâve felt what follows it.
âYou should get a hobby,â you tell him quietly.
âYeah?â he says, not looking away.
âMaybe pottery,â you shrug. âSomething that isnât being a SWAT medic andââ you hesitate just slightly, ââfucking me or whatever.â
His hands slide down your sides, slower this time. Reluctant.
âBut I really like my hobbies,â he says, voice low, rough around the edges. âEspecially fucking you, or whatever.â
The way he looks at you when he says itâlike heâs imagining you in the most vulgar of situationsâmakes heat climb straight up your neck. You hate that it works.
He doesnât move.
âJack.â
âJust one kiss?â He asks.
You open your mouth to say yes, but you bite your lip and think for a second. You lean in pressing a deliberate kiss to his cheek, hand up to his neck, feeling how he melts under your touch.
You fingers briefly fidget with the grey curls at the nape of his neck, as his fingers dig slightly into your hips. You pull back.
âIâll try pottery,â he mutters.
You smileâsmall, controlled. Infuriating. Then he lets you go. Barely.
You watch him walk off toward the bedroom, running a hand through his hair like heâs trying to shake it off, his own shirt fitted against him, rising, tight against his biceps, and the second heâs out of sightâ
You exhale. Your grip tightens on the counter, head tipping forward for a second. This is... harder than you thought itâd be.
Itâs him. The way he moves around you like itâs instinct. The way your body still answers before your brain catches up. The way one kiss feels like a warning.
If you touch him properlyâif you let yourself lean into it even a littleâyou know exactly how it goes. Thereâs no halfway with him. There never has been. You've struggled to hold back with him.
You both work too hard, sleep too little. You orbit each otherâshared meals, late-night TV, quiet mornings when they exist. Heâs steady, solid, always there. And sex has always been part of that too.Â
Easy, natural, constant, release. Escapism, almost.Â
You press your lips together, shaking your head slightly as you keep chopping, trying to focus. You shouldâve fought harder on the point about no sex, but Santos seemed so pitiful, you donât have the heart to tell her you broke or to lie.Â
Cleanse. Reset. Prove youâve got discipline. Prove youâre not just running on impulse and instinct and whatever feels good in the moment. Focused...ness. All that.
Itâs just youâve never seen him like this. Not like this kind of worked up. Not this restless, this⌠needy. Your thighs press together instinctively, heat lingering, annoying and insistent.
âGod,â you mutter under your breath, grabbing the knife again like thatâll ground you. âPathetic.â
â â â
Day Twelve.
âI cannot tell if youâre being serious right now,â Robby says, standing beside Jack in the elevator as they head down from the roof.
Jack doesnât even look at him. âItâs psychological warfare.â
Robby scoffs. âOh my god.â
âIâm serious,â Jack insists, dragging a hand over his face. âI canât think straight. Itâs like⌠cognitive impairment. I should get tested.â
âYou need to get a grip,â Robby replies.
âYou donât get it,â Jack mutters. âYou havenât had a relationship like this inâwhat, a decade? More? This isnât casual. This is⌠routine. Structure. Stability.â He gestures vaguely. âWe live together. Weâve got a system.â
âA system,â Robby repeats, flat.
âYes,â Jack says, defensive. âAnd sheâs dismantled it. Completely. No warning. Justâgone. Overnight. You know her, she's all over me usually. And Iâm a touchy guy, man, I feel like a sunflower without sun. She is my sun.â
Robby exhales through his nose. âItâs been two weeks.â
âTwelve days,â Jack corrects. âThatâs long enough to destabilise a man.â
The elevator dings. Doors open. A couple of nurses step in.
Jack lowers his voice, but not his intensity.
âShe wonât even cuddle with me,â he mutters. âDo you understand that? Cuddling. Baseline intimacy. Gone. She almost slept on the couch the other night because she thought she mightââ
He cuts himself off as one of the nurses glances over.
Robby stares straight ahead, deadpan. âPlease stop talking.â
Jack exhales sharply, jaw ticking. âItâs like⌠all that energy I spent with her, is just⌠Like Iâm allââ
âDo not say pent up,â Robby murmurs.
âIâm pent up, man,â Jack says anyway, under his breath. âI donâtââ
âJesus Christ.â
âAnd she keeps wearingââ
ââand thatâs our stop,â Robby cuts in quickly as the doors open.
They step out into the corridor, quieter now. Both hit the sanitiser on instinct.
Jack rubs his hands together, restless. âSheâs doing it on purpose.â
âNo, she isnât.â
âShe is,â Jack insists. âShe knows exactly what I like. The shirts, theâlack of shirts. The shorts. The yoga. The fucking⌠tiny nightgowns. Sheer, too. Door open when she showers. Itâs targeted.â
âOr,â Robby says, dry, âsheâs a twenty-something woman existing in her own home.â
Jack ignores that. âAnd thenânothing. Wonât touch me. Wonât let me touch her. She kissed me on the cheek three days ago, and I was gonna⌠ruin my pants like an idiot. I feel like a teenager.â
Robby snorts. âYou sound like one. She showers with the door open?â
âIâve done tours,â Jack goes on, either ignoring or not hearing Robbyâs query, quieter now, almost incredulous at himself. âIâve been shot at. Iâve dealt with death at its worst. And somehow this is whatâs got me pacing like a lunatic at three in the morning.â
Robby stops walking.
Grabs his shoulder.
âYou hear yourself, right?â
ââŚYeah,â Jack mutters. âHearin' it.â
âGood,â Robby says. âBecause itâs insane. And Iâm tired of it, brother.â
Jack exhales, trying to resetâthen his gaze shifts past Robbyâs shoulder.
Locks. You.
At Central Four, mid-discussion with McKay and Mel, one hand braced lightly against a patientâs lower leg as you check the alignment on a fresh below-knee castâthumbs pressing along the tibial crest, eyes flicking between the limb and the patientâs foot for perfusion. Focused. Calm. Explaining as you go, that steady, assured cadence youâve grown into over the past couple years.
You look good. You always do, butâtoday is⌠worse. Yeah, heâs definitely pent up. Jackâs jaw tightens. Robby follows his line of sight, spots you, then looks back at him.
âYou really look like a kicked puppy right now, bud.â
âDonât.â
âI mean it,â Robby says. âItâs palpable.â
Jack exhales sharply. âIâll be right back.â
âYou arenât going there.â
âIâm just gonna ask my girlfriend about her day.â
âNo, youâre gonna say something deeply unprofessional to your girlfriend in the middle of a ward round,â Robby corrects. âWhile Shark is somewhere nearby, sensing weakness.â
âRight, âcourse, youâve interrupted my plan to give her head in the middle of the ED,â Jack says, sarcastically, then a brief beat of thought. âGod, If she asked me to I probably w-â
â-We need boundaries, man,â Robby says. âI donât⌠You have fun with that.â
âRelax. Itâs fine, weâre both clocking off now. Once she wraps up, weâre outta here.â
Jack glances back at you again. You laugh softly at something McKay says, adjusting the cast edge with careful fingers, smoothing it down. Your hand lingers just a second as you explain something to the patientâvoice warm, easy, reassuring.
Mel nudges your shoulder, subtle, and tips her chin toward Jack.
You look up. Catch him. Smile. Itâs small, but it lands.
Jack stiffens like heâs just been called to attention, gives you a tight nodâcontrolled, restrainedâthen abruptly turns and heads toward the station with Robby.
Robby snorts under his breath. âThat was painful to watch.â
âI told you. Psychological warfare.â
McKay smirks a bit as she watches Jack retreat.
âWhatâs that about?â McKay murmurs, rolling her stool a little closer to the patient bed.
âOur detox program?â you say lightly, refocusing as you check distal circulation again. âNot a fan.â You glance to the patient. âAny numbness or tingling, maâam?â
âNo, love. Feels fine,â she says, half-distracted by her phone.
âGood,â you nod. âLet me know if that changes.â
McKay hums, folding her arms loosely. âAh. The celibacy portion not going down well?â
You let out a quiet breath. âNot particularly. And Iâm not being super easy on him about it either.â
âYeah,â she says, dry. âCanât imagine why.â
You suppress a smile, smoothing the cast. âEverything else is good, though. Iâm committed now.â
âMm,â McKay says. âSantos bullied us into it.â
âSantos encouraged it.â
âSantos got dumped and decided everyone else should suffer,â McKay corrects.
âThatâs notââ you start, then pause. ââŚentirely inaccurate.â
Mel watches all of this with mild fascination, then looks back at the cast. âUmâcan I try wrapping the next layer?â
You brighten a little. âYeah, of course. Come here.â
You shift off the stool, making space. âAlrightâsupport here,â you guide, hands hovering near hers. âKeep your tension even, donât gap it.â
Mel nods seriously, concentrating.
McKay glances between you and the half-set cast, then back at you. âAre you feeling detoxed?â
You huff a quiet breath. âA little. More flexible, improved sleep, and a deeply irritated boyfriend.â
âHolistic wellness,â McKay deadpans.
You smile despite yourself. âAnd you?â you ask.
âNope,â she sighs. âBut Harrisonâs loving the yoga mat, so at least someoneâs thriving. And I wasnât getting laid anyway, soâno real sacrifice on that front. But the no screens thing is doing wonders. I can feel my brain gaining another wrinkle.â
You snort softly, nudging Melâs hand. âSmoother thereâyeah, thatâs it. Keep the overlap consistent.â
Mel adjusts, careful, precise, tongue just slightly between her teeth in concentration. McKay watches her for a second, then leans in a fraction closer to you, voice dropping just enoughâ
âHe looks like heâs about five minutes from a breakdown.â
You donât look over. âHeâll be fine.â
âMm,â she hums. âHe keeps looking at you between charts.â
âHe always does that when Iâm down here,â you say, a little softer.
âYeah,â McKay replies. âNot like this.â
You ignore that, focusing instead on Melâs technique. âGoodânow just secure it there. Donât pull too tight.â
Mel nods, finishing the wrap neatly. âLike that?â
âPerfect,â you say, genuinely pleased. âNice work, Doctor King.â
Mel beams, small but proud. Behind you, you can feel it againâJackâs attention, flicking back over, catching, lingering even when he forces it away.
You keep your eyes on the patient. But youâre aware of him. Constantly. And across the room, Jack shifts his weight, jaw tight, tryingâand failingânot to look again.
Later, he finds you around the ED. Youâre mid-conversation with Santos, focused, explaining something on the chart.
Jack walks up beside you, close enough that your arms brush. You donât react. Donât even break your sentence.
ââŚso we stabilise first, then reassess once imagingâs backââ
He waits. Nothing. Not even a glance. Santos clocks it immediately. Raises her brows.
ââŚHi, Dr Abbot,â she says, dry.
You finally look up. âOhâhey.â
He stares at you.
ââŚHey, just... checking in,â he says, somewhat shy now.
You smile, polite. "All good here." Then turn straight back to Santos. âAnywayâlike I was sayingââ
He stands there for a second. Then another.
Robby, from across the station, watches the whole thing with poorly concealed amusement.
ââŚYou gonna be okay?â he calls out.
Jack doesnât look at him. âNo,â he says flatly, before walking off.
â â â
Day Eighteen.
Youâre supposed to be detoxing. Self-restraint. Discipline. Clarity.
Apparently, that also includes driving your boyfriend quietly insane in your living room.
âYou need to be doing that right now?â Jack asks as he finally drops onto the couch, exhaustion dragging at him. Scrubs half-off, shirt discarded somewhere along the way before he drags a fresh one over his head, lazy, spent.
You donât even look at him. âI can stop if you want,â you say, adjusting your stanceâhands walking a little wider on the mat, hips tipping higher as you settle deeper into downward dog, covering a good half of the TV screen.
He watches the shift. The stretch. The way your shorts ride up just enough to be completely fucking useless.
He exhales slowly, dragging a hand over his face. âNo, noâcarry on. This is great. Very relaxing.â
You hum like you believe him. You donât.
He leans back, head tipping against the couch as he reaches down, taking off his prosthetic with practiced ease, setting it aside. His body finally settlesâbut his eyes donât.
They stay on you.
Track every adjustment.
You shift againâone leg lifting, extending behind you before you draw it through, slow, controlled, foot landing between your hands. Your back arches slightly as you ease into it. Jackâs jaw tightens.
âParkâs been on my ass lately,â you say, like this is normal conversation.
âGlad someone has,â Jack murmurs.
You shoot him a look.Â
âIâm sorry, baby, Iâm just⌠distracted, I donât knowâ He says, somewhat earnestly, dryly. âWhat is it about Shark?â
âHeâs not as bad as you guys make him seem, heâs just got tunnel vision," You try, slowly repositioning. âBut he can be such a dick sometimes. No concept of tact. I missed one chart the other day, and he ripped me a new one in front of the med students.â
And then you slide down. Slow. Controlled.
One leg extending forward, the other back, lowering into a full split like itâs nothingâhips sinking, spine straight, hands resting lightly on your thighs.
Jack actually goes still. Thatâs new.Â
ââŚRight,â he says, quieter now.
You keep talking. Like you havenât just changed the entire atmosphere in the room.
âAnd I was gonna snap,â you continue, calm, measured, âbut I did that breathing thing from the book. Actually worked. I didnât react. I just⌠sat in it and breathed, five to two.â
âYeah,â he says, voice a little rougher. âLooks like itâs working great.â
You shift out of it fluidly, folding in, then rolling onto your backâknees lifting, falling open as you stretch through your hips, one hand braced lightly on your stomach as you breathe through it.
Jack leans forward slightly before he catches himself, hand dragging over his jean clad thigh, like heâs trying to reset.
Heâs trying to be good. You can see it.
Trying to sit still. Trying not to react. Trying not to reach for you.
You keep going anyway.
âSo then Isla comes into the break roomâdid you know sheâs getting divorced?â you say, drawing one knee closer, holding it there, breath catching just slightly at the stretch.
âDo you need help with that?â he asks, too quick.
âNope,â you say immediately.
You donât look at him.
Because you know exactly what that would do. You know exactly what this looks like from where heâs sitting. You know exactly what heâs thinking about, because youâre thinking about it tooâthe way heâs had you like this before, hands on you, holding you in place, your body not your own for a while.
You switch legs, pushing through it again, slower this time.
âDo you think he cheated?â you ask.
âWho?â His voice is tighter now.
âIslaâs husband.â
âYeah,â he says after a beat. âMaybe.â
You let your leg drop, exhaling as you roll up, sitting back on your knees. Arms stretch overhead, spine lengthening, chest lifting.
Jack looks away this time.
Briefly.
Then back.
Like he canât help it.
âI taught her the breathing thing,â you go on. âShe calmed down immediately. I could totally pivot into this, you know. Wellness, mindfulnessââ
âYeah,â he cuts in, too fast. âYou should absolutely do that.â
You glance at him now.
âYeah, Iâll give up years of med school and fixing bones to teach whiny people how to lock in,â You joke.
âWhatever you want to do, baby,â He nods, eyes looking down at you on the floor, mind literally anywhere else.
âYou look like a kicked dog right now. Was the yoga too much?â
âIâm fine,â he insists. âRobby said the same thing. Maybe I just have a pitiful face.â
You donât disagree with that.
You look at him. Really look.
Heâs not relaxed. Not even close. Shoulders tight despite the way heâs sitting, fingers flexing once against his knee like he needs something to do with them. His gaze flicks over you, then away, then back again like itâs a losing battle.
You stand, cross the room, and settle beside him, curling your feet under you so youâre facing him properly.
He immediately turns his head slightly away, like that helps.
âThank you for putting up with this,â you murmur, softer now, even though itâs just the two of you. Then, almost casuallyââHave you touched yourself at all?â
His inhale is sharp enough to answer before he does.
âNo,â he says. Then, like heâs committing to honesty instead of dignity: âFigured weâre in this together. Minus⌠everything else. I canât not do a line of cocaine before I go into work.â
That earns a small smile from you.
âResponsible of you,â you say.
âHave you?â He asks.
âNope.â
âAre you struggling at all? Because itâs⌠you know, you⌠you really seem very comfortable with all this. This cleansing thing.â
You inhale sharply. âIâm doing great.â You lie.
âI feel like youâre forgetting how good our sex is,â He says.
You raise your brows, give it thought. âOr⌠Iâm free from such⌠baseless temptations.â
âBaseless temptations had me eating you out for three hours, three times a week. Which in our line of work is a lot. And, at my age, a cardio workout.â He reminds.Â
Your tongue darts to your lips, eyes flicking away from him like it helps you regain control. It doesnât.
âI should go,â you say, too casually. âErrands.â
Jack nods once, like heâs trying to behave. âTwo more weeks.â
âTwo more weeks,â you repeat.
You lean in and press a quick kiss to his cheek.
Itâs small. Controlled. Safe.
Except it isnât, because itâs the first real contact in ten days and your body reacts like itâs been starved of oxygen. Like you didnât realise how much you were holding your breath until you finally touched him again.
He turns his head slightly before you fully pull away.
Just enough. Just enough to trap you in that in-between spaceâfaces inches apart, his breath warm against your mouth, his eyes locked on yours like heâs waiting to see if youâll fold, head tilted, just a bit, curious.
You shouldnât.
You press your mouth to his. Itâs chaste, sweet, PG. Lasts maybe three seconds, and itâs not long enough for him as you pull away, as if youâve rewarded him, but he canât help but be greedy when it comes to you.
âYou can do better than that, baby,â he says quietly.
âMm,â you reply, steadying yourself. âI canât.â
A pause.
âPromise I wonât do anything,â he adds.
You look at him for a second too long.
Then you nod.
His hand comes up immediately, settling at the back of your headâgentle, anchoring, familiar in a way your body reacts to before your brain does, mouth agape. His thumb brushes your cheek once, slowly, briefly moves to your jaw and chin, over your bottom lip, your mouth opening, almost instinctually, but he moves it back to your cheek, not entertaining it further.
You kiss him again properly.
It starts off controlledâyour mouth on his, testing, like youâre still trying to keep it within the rules you made for yourself. The moment he kisses back, the rules seem very silly. No hesitation, no easing inâjust straight into it, like your bodies already know exactly what theyâre doing, falling into step all over again.
Your hand lifts like youâre going to hold him off, going to stop it but it just hangs there uselessly, mid-air.
His mouth is on yours harder now, deeper, tongue sliding in like heâs done waiting for permission. Slow, but not gentle. Familiar in a way that makes your stomach dropâlike your body reacts before your brain even catches up.Â
A small sound slips out of you without meaning to.
His hand at the back of your head tightens, fingers in your hair, not yanking but holding you exactly where he wants you. His other hand shifts at his crotch, you barely glance down at the corner of your eye, seeing as his palm moves over his hardening length beneath his jeans.
He exhales into your mouth, rough. âDamnit.â
You kiss him back harder, mouth opening more, his tongue dragging against yours again, slower this time but deeper, like heâs checking how far youâll go if he just keeps pushing like this.
You make another soundâlow, breathyâand he feels it immediately. You can tell by the way his hand tightens at the back of your neck, thumb pressing in like heâs grounding himself there, like he needs something solid to hold onto before he loses the plot completely.
âMmâno more,â you manage, pulling back slightly, dazed. âNo more. Errands. Oxygen. Meditation. Focus. Detox. Okay? Okay.â
âOkay,â he hums back, like he agrees, but he doesnât move his eyes off you.
Youâre both breathing heavier than you should be for a kiss thatâs supposedly not doing anything.
He drags his tongue over his lips, slow, watching you properly now. Then his hand drops from your neck and he leans back a fractionâexcept heâs not actually done. Heâs just shifting, exhaling through his nose like heâs trying to reset and failing.
You glance down.
Heâs already adjusting himself, palming himself through his jeans, at the feeling and sight of you, far from subtle at all. His eyes flick between your face and your reaction like heâs half curious, half done pretending this isnât affecting him.
You just stare for a second, hair slightly messier now from his grip, lips swollen, clearly trying to act normal and not really succeeding. Your eyes linger as you watch him become harder under the denim.
âBaseless temptation?â he echoes, dry, almost mocking, interested by your seeming entertainment.
âYouâre ridiculous,â you mutter, swallowing, standing up like that fixes anything. âIâm going. Errands.â
âMm,â he says, already unbuckling his belt properly now, like heâs given up on dignity for the moment. âThat.â
You clear your throat, turning away too quickly. âYeah. That.â
âGreat detox, honey,â he calls after you, voice low, almost satisfied, like heâs both impressed and completely fucked by it.
You donât look back when you walk out.
â â â
Day Twenty Two.
You were even stricter after your brief lapse on Day 18.
Santos had spiralled a bit after Garcia tried to re-enter her lifeâone text, then another, then a âjust checking inâ that meant absolutely nothing and everything at the same time. And Santos, for all her bite, was still soft where it counted. So she doubled down.
We resist.
You werenât going to be the weak link in that. Not when she was white-knuckling her way through it.
So you didnât argue. Didnât say that your situation was devolving.
So. Yoga, reading, no screensânone of it was enough anymore. Not because you were failing, but because youâd started treating this like something to actually get through properly.Â
So you added structure.
Cooking, mostly. Proper cooking, technically normal, but now with a kind of performative discipline to it. Whole-food, vegetarian-heavy meals that smell intense enough to make Jack pause in the doorway like heâs trying to decide if heâs being punished or supported.
You explained something about how Santos had plenty of recipe choices, these were the best. He dreaded knowing the worst.
Youâve always cooked. So has he. Itâs part of your relationshipâeasy, domestic, something you both fall back on without thinking.
But wow, the past three or four days have been a steady rotation of âcleansingâ meals that are aggressively healthy in a way that feels almost personal and cruel.
Youâve also tightened everything else.
Early nights. Early mornings. Youâre not avoiding him exactlyâyouâre just very efficient with your time now. No lingering in shared spaces. No sitting too close on the couch âby accident.â No hand brushing his back when you pass him in the hallway, even though that one clearly takes effort.
The hardest part was that you kept missing out on Housewives.
âHon, you sure?â Jack had tried one night, hovering in the doorway. âItâs the mid-season finale.â
Pitch black room. Eye mask on.
âTell me about it tomorrow,â youâd said.
Heâd watched it alone. Hated it.
Even the small stuff has become intentional.
Youâve started drinking herbal tea that tastes like wet grass just to prove a point to yourself.
Heâs started making coffee louder than necessary just to annoy you.
And stillâyou function.
You were both high-energy peopleâincapable of just sitting still without developing a new hobby or mild personality trait.Â
The apartment was proof: books half-read, yoga mats permanently out, easels you didnât touch, Jack picking up SWAT shifts âfor funâ like thatâs a normal recreational activity.Â
And, historically, youâd had a very reliable outlet for all that excess energy. Now thatâs been⌠aggressively decommissioned. So it lingers. In your body, in his shoulders, in the space between youâtight, charged, and just annoying enough to make everything feel a little harder than it needs to be.
The call comes down fast and uglyâtrauma bay already prepped, voices sharp, movement tighter than usual.
Open tib-fib. High-energy. Motorcycle versus ute, no helmet.
Youâre already pulling gloves on as you move, snapping them tight against your wrists, pace quick to match the rhythm of the room. Doctor Park is a step ahead of youâof course he isâalready at the bedside, already assessing, already ten steps into the problem.
Robby and Jack linger to the side, Whitaker working the patient while they observe, supervise. Robbyâs still here past his shiftâbecause of course he is.
âWalk me through it,â Park says without looking at you.
âMid-shaft tibial and fibular fracture, likely comminuted,â you reply immediately, eyes scanning. âSignificant displacement. Possible vascular compromiseâfoot looks pale, delayed cap refill.â
âGood,â Park says shortly. âCheck dorsalis pedis. Posterior tibial.â
You nod, moving in.
The leg is⌠bad. Angulated wrong, skin stretched too tight over something that shouldnât be pressing there. Blood everywhere, soaked through layers Whitaker is tryingâearnestlyâto keep under control.
You donât flinch. You tilt your head slightly, studying it like a problem you already want to solve, something in you clicking into place.
âDorsalis pedis faint,â you say, fingers pressing in. âPosterior tibialâhard to appreciate.â
âMm,â Park hums. âWe reduce now.â
Behind Whitaker, Jack stands with his hands clasped behind his back, posture loose but attention razor sharp. Tracking everythingâmonitor, patient, Park.
You.
He hasnât seen you all day. You left before he got homeâleft him in a cold bed, a note about oats, and absolutely nothing else. And now, every time he does see you, it feels deliberate. Like youâre making it harder.Â
Three weeks of this⌠discipline.
And now youâre here, calm, focused, humming under your breath like you havenât been systematically ruining his life, like his muscles arenât taut without getting to feel you under him or on him.
Jackâs jaw tightens.
âTraction,â Park says.
You nod, hands steady as you take hold above and below the fracture. âOn you.â
âNow.â
You pullâfirm, controlled. Thereâs a shift. A sickening, mechanical realignment as bone slides back into place.
Whitaker visibly winces.
âBetter,â you murmur, almost satisfied.
Jack exhales through his nose. âHold it,â he says, stepping in just slightly. âPulse?â
Whitaker checks, brow furrowed. âStronger. Still thready, butâbetter.â
âGood. Splint.â
You glance upâjust brieflyâand catch Jack already looking at you.
Not subtle. Not tonight. Something heavier in it. Sharper. Like heâs been holding onto something all shift and hasnât decided where to put it.
You hold his gaze for half a second.
âDoctor,â you say, light.
He tilts his head a fraction. âNice work,â he says, dry. Then, without missing a beatââYou leave that⌠green-orange situation in the fridge?â
You blink. âAre youâseriously?â
âI got four hours of sleep,â he shrugs. âIâm allowed one grievance.â
You briefly glance to Park who doesnât seem to care or mind your minor chatter with Jack, looking at the monitors with a hardened gaze.
âItâs vegetable soup,â you say, adjusting your grip. âItâs good for you. Anti-inflammatory.â
Whitaker glances between you, confused. âSoup? Do you two live together?â
Jack ignores him completely. âTastes like punishment.â
âFunny,â you say. âYou seemed very into punishment a few weeks ago.â
Robby lets out a short, sharp laugh from the other side of the bed. âOh, Iâm awake now.â
âNot helpful,â Jack mutters, not even looking at him.
âYou started it,â you shoot back, breath steady despite the strain in your arms. âAlso, Robby likes my soup. Donât you, Robinavitch?â
Robby raises both hands. âIâm not being... triangulated into whatever this is.â
âYouâre making bone broth for my best friend now?â Jack goes on, like he didnât hear that. âThatâs where weâre at?â
âItâs not bone broth,â you correct. âAnd maybe Iâd cook for you if you werenât so moodyââ
You cut yourself off, refocusing as the splint is brought in.
âKeep traction steady,â Jack says, tone snapping cleanly back to clinicalâbut thereâs an edge under it now. âYouâre drifting distal.â
You correct it immediately. âBetter?â
âYeah,â he nods. âDonât let it shorten.â
Park finally glances back down, unimpressed. âIf youâre both done flirtingââ
âThis is not flirting,â Jack and you say at the same time.
A beat.
Whitaker frowns. ââŚWhat is happening?â
Robby snorts. âIâll tell you about it later. Celibacy ritual.â
âRobby,â Jack says, warning.
âWhat?â Robby shrugs. âIâm just saying. Thereâs context.â
âYou told Robby?â you shoot at Jack.
He opens his mouthâ
âI heard from Santos,â Robby cuts in, enjoying this far too much. âAnd McKay. Whole department knows youâve gone monk mode.â
You scoff. âItâs not monk mode, itâs a detox.â
âYeah,â Robby nods. âAbbotâs detoxing from joy, from what I can tell.â
Jack exhales sharply. âCan we focus?â
âYou are the one who brought up soup. Besides, this guyâs gonna be fine. If he wasnât, Shark here wouldâve bit one of your heads off,â Robby shoots back.
Whitaker looks even more lost, Park stands off the side, giving Robby a brief glare before nodding back to you to continue.
âAngle your wrist,â you tell him, cutting through it. âYouâre losing medial pressure.â
âOhârightâsorryââ
âItâs fine. Just donât let him bleed out.â
âRight. Yeah. Prefer that.â
Jack hovers just behind your shoulder nowâclose enough that you can feel the heat of him, the shift of his weight when you adjust yours.
He leans in slightly, voice low, for you.
âBreakfast tomorrow,â he murmurs. âIs it gonna be more⌠anti-inflammatory punishment?â
You donât look at him. âDepends.â
âOn?â
âHow much you told Robby.â
He exhales a quiet, disbelieving breath, your words just for each other as the others get to work. âJust the basics. Nothing bad, just the weird bunny mask roleplay youâre into,â he jokes. âAnd I am not moody.â
âDebatable.â
âReactionary to my dire circumstances some might say,â he mutters.
âYouâre ridiculous.â You remark.
Thereâs the smallest pause. Then, softer, a bit quick, to make sure you know he means nothing bad by itâ
âYou look lovely, by the way. And Iâd eat oxygen if you made it for me, promise. I love all your cleansing meals.â
You donât respond to that. Not here, a small smile twitching at the corner of your lips.
âSecure it,â Park says, already moving on mentally. âGet him upstairs.â
You guide Whitaker through the final positioning, hands precise, controlled.
Jack steps back, watching you finish the job.
Still looking at you like that.
By the time you strip your gloves off, the room already shifting on, Robbyâs watching you. Not subtle about it, an amused hint behind his tired eyes.
âWhen do you clock off?â you ask, tossing the gloves.
âAn hour ago,â he says. âI stay for the live show now. Better than anything on TV.â
You huff. âHow is he doing?â
Robby considers that, eyes narrowing like heâs actually weighing it up.
âClinically?â he says. âGreat. On top of it, always is. Itâs annoying.â
âAnd not clinically?â you prompt.
He tilts his head. âMm⌠a little rougher than usual,â he admits. âBut heâs dramatic. You know âim.â
You grin. âYeah, I do. Itâs cute.â
âThatâs certainly a word for it,â he mutters, jerking his chin subtly across the room. âBecause he looks like heâs about to file a formal complaint with God.â
You follow the glanceâJack, shoulders tight, jaw set, mid-conversation with Park like heâs holding himself together out of sheer professionalism.
You look back, unfazed. âItâs temporary.â
Robby studies you for a beat, then huffs a laugh. âYouâre enjoying this.â
You donât even try to hide it. âA little bit. Itâs fifty-fifty. Itâs fun seeing him worked up, itâs annoying because we do have great sex. And I know that isnât TMI for you because he tells me worse about your sex life.â You pause, then add, âDidnât realise Hastings was so freaky.â
âJesus,â Robby exhales, scratching at his beard. âYouâve been around him too long.â
âOccupational hazard,â you shrug.
He shakes his head, but thereâs a smile tugging at it now despite himself.
Thereâs a small pause, thenâmore casuallyâ
âSoup was good, by the way.â
You blink. âThe vegetable one?â
âYeah,â he nods. âDonât tell him I said that.â
âHe called it punishment.â
âHeâs wrong,â Robby shrugs. âI had two bowls.â
You brighten, just a fraction. âSee? Someone has taste.â
âLetâs not get carried away,â he says. âItâs still soup.â
You laugh under your breath.
He glances around, then back to you. âI think Sharkâs already ditched you,â he adds, nodding toward the empty space where Park had been.
You swear quietly. âFuck. Whatever. Nice seeing you.â
âYou too,â he says, stepping aside.
You pass Jack on your way out, offering him a light, professional smile like nothingâs off at all.
âSee you at home in a few hours.â
He watches you go, something unreadable flickering across his face.
âLove you,â he calls after you anyway, voice a little rough, arms folded as the room empties out.
âLove you too,â you say as you hurry out, not turning back.
Youâre gone. Whitaker stands there for a second, still blood-specked, brain clearly lagging behind everything that just happened.
âIâm⌠still a bit confused aboutââ he gestures vaguely between where you were and where Jack is now, ââthat.â
Jack shoots him a look. Then Robby. Then just shakes his head, already walking.Â
âHey, what have you told her about me and Noelle?â Robby asks, following after, quiet, a bit antsy now.
Jack shakes his head immediately. âNothing much, just the leash stuff youâre into. Anyway, I think youâre sleep deprived, man. Time to clock off, daywalkers.â
â â â
Day Twenty Nine.
âSo, howâre we doing?â you ask, already halfway into the break room fridge like itâs part of your job description.
McKay and Santos are at the table with lunch. McKay looks as composed as everâtired, but functional. Santos, on the other hand, looks like someone who has emotionally moved on from her entire relationship with Garcia but hasnât informed her nervous system yet.
âGreat,â Santos says immediately. Then, after a beat: âI stopped yoga.â
You glance over. âWhy?â
âPulled my calf,â she replies. âTurns out inner peace is physically unsafe.â
âUnfortunate,â you say, finding Jackâs labelled container and closing the fridge.
McKay watches you sit down. âThat his lunch?â
âYeah.â
âDoesnât he need that later?â she asks.
âHeâll order takeout,â you say easily. âIâm doing him a favour. He keeps eating the stuff I make, even though I know he hates it, I think he thinks suffering is his virtue.â
Santos snorts. âHe and Garcia would get along in a really unbearable way.â
You glance at her. âYou miss her.â
She points at you with her fork. âDonât.â
âYou brought her up first.â
âThatâs because you brought up food and suffering in the same sentence,â she shoots back. âItâs a trigger.â
McKay, calmly: âYou both need to stop talking.â
You ignore her. You exhale, rubbing at your temple. You feel⌠weird. Wired. Like your bodyâs trying to replace one habit with ten others. Youâve thought about buying something three separate times this morning. Shoes, candles, a ridiculous blender you donât need. You havenât, obviously. Discipline. Wellness. Enlightenment.
âWhereâs Robby?â you ask. âI can split this with him.â
âTalking to Gloria,â Santos says. âLooks like heâs in a mood. Snapped at Whitaker.â
âGreat,â you mutter. âTwo moody old attendings. Love that for you guys. I think Park might actually be more regulated than either of them.â
McKay doesnât push it, just turns her attention back to you, calmer. âYouâve been very⌠consistent with this whole detox thing. Very controlled. Composed.â
Santos squints at you. âAlmost spiritual, honestly. Itâs impressive.â
You blink. âItâs just discipline.â
McKay hums. âMost people donât call not having sex for a few weeks âdiscipline.â They call it âbeing busy.â Or just not having a high libido.â
You sigh, too quickly. âIâm just⌠glad itâs nearly over. I think Jackâs actually counting down the days.â
McKay tilts her head slightly at that but doesnât bite yet, a slight purse in her lips. She makes eye contact with Santos. Santos bites back a smile. McKay begins to shake her head, as if reading her mind..
Santos, however, immediately does.
âSo,â she says, leaning forward, âwhatâs he like?â
McKay shoots her a warning look over her fork.
âWhat?â Santos says, unbothered. âIâm curious. You thought of it too.â
âLike⌠personality-wise?â you try.
Santos waves a hand. âNo. Donât be boring.â
McKay mutters, âOh God.â
Santos continues anyway, delighted now. âLike sex-wise. Come on. There has to be a reason heâs walking around like a man personally victimised by fucking⌠yoga and vegetables.â
You nearly choke. âSantosââ
âWhat?â she says. âIâm just saying. Thereâs clearly a secret here. Heâs what, fifty-something? Night shift ED attending? You know how fucked you have to be to be the attending on night shift? Robby level fucked up. And youâreââ she gestures vaguely at you, âyou. So either heâs got some hidden advantage or youâve all been lying to yourselves.â
McKay, dry as ever: âPlease stop talking.â
Santos ignores her. âAm I wrong?â
You stare at her.Â
âThatâs not an answer,â she says.
McKay finally looks at you properly now, faintly amused despite herself. âYou do not have to answer that.â
âIâm not going to answer that,â you say immediately.
Santos leans back, offended. âOkay, so itâs missionary.â
You blink. âAnd that's my cue to leave.â
âDoggy?â she tries. âAm I warm? Am I cold?â
You stand up. âIâm very happy for you and your recovery from Garcia, truly.â
McKay actually smiles now. âThis is why I eat alone.â
Then, casuallyâ
âDo you guys have threesomes with Robby?â Santos adds. âGot a vibe there.â
You donât even hesitate. âConstantly. Heâs actually the glue holding the relationship together. Into weird shit.â
McKay exhales through her nose.
Santos tilts her head. âI donât believe you.â
âThat sounds like a you problem. We host swinger parties, come by next Thursday if you want.â
Santos rolls her eyes, somewhat disappointed by your sarcasm. At that exact moment, Dana walks in. She stops, looks between all of you, then sighs.
âOh no,â she says, immediately clocking the energy. âWe having a party? What are youse talkinâ about in here?â
âNothing,â McKay says instantly.
Santos says at the same time, âAbbotâs sex life. Featuring Robby, too.â
Dana physically recoils. âOh Jesus Christ, why?â
You look at her like salvation. âHelp.â
Dana points at Santos without hesitation. âNo. Absolutely not. Iâm not beinâ dragged into whatever this is.â
Then she looks at you, and her whole face softens a little. She gives you a nod, as if to ask if youâre well. You give a nod back, a small smile.
Dana claps once, decisive. âAlright. Trauma two. You two. Now. Move it.â
Santos groans. âYouâre ruining my research.â
Dana points again. âMove. It. Out.â
â â â
Day Thirty Two.
Your schedules have always been a mess.
Some weeks you overlap perfectlyâsame shifts, same hours, brushing past each other in hallways, stealing five minutes in empty consult rooms, syncing like itâs easy. Other weeks, like this one, you exist on completely different timelines.
Park needs you flexible. Jack is the schedule. So you miss each other.
You leave just as heâs getting in. He leaves while youâre dead asleep. Nights bleed into days, days into nights, and suddenly itâs been forty-eight hours of doubles and youâve communicated more through texts and post-it notes than actual words.
Eat something.
You too.
Left food in the fridge.
Miss you.
Jack finally makes it back into the apartment, adrenaline high shaking in his veins, excited to finally see you, feel you.
He shuts the door behind him, exhalesâand then pauses.
Something smells good. Really good. Definitely not green. Lacking salt, maybe, though.
âHow are you cooking after working that long, baby?â he calls out, already loosening up as he moves toward the kitchen. âChallenge is over, I am going to give you the best damn head of your life and then cuddle likeââ
âIâd cuddle with you,â Robby says from the stove, âbut Iâm busy right now. Preferably not the head part, though.â
Jack thinks for a moment, a slow nod.
ââŚYou are not my girlfriend.â
Robby glances over his shoulder, unimpressed. âI like to think of us as work husbands, but yeah. Good observation.â
Jack just stares at him for a second, processing.
ThenââWhy are you in my apartment?â
Robby sighs, turning back to the pot like this is his burden to bear. âThis is not turning out well.â
He gestures vaguely at the spaghetti bolognese like itâs personally offended him.
âI followed her recipe,â he adds.
Jack moves further in, slower now, dropping his bag, still trying to catch up, somewhat antsy as he taps the counter repeatedly. âWhere is she? She texted me she was home.â
âShops,â Robby says. âSaid she needed a few things. Asked me to start this because she didnât wanna get changed and dirty her clothes, a surprise, or something.â
A beat.
âI think Iâve screwed this up,â he admits.
Jack sinks onto the stool at the island, scrubbing a hand over his face. âHow do you fuck up spaghetti?â
Robby turns to him, dead serious. âWho puts that much sugar in a sauce?â
Jack doesnât even hesitate. âShe does. Itâs good.â
Robby squints. âIt feels offensive.â
âItâs not,â Jack mutters. âItâs⌠you know, balanced.â
Robby gestures at the pot again. âItâs dessert.â
Jack leans forward, peering into it like heâs assessing a trauma. âDid you reduce it?â
ââŚDid I what?â
Jack looks at him slowly. âOh my God.â
âI stirred the thing, I don't know,â Robby defends.
âYeah, Iâm sure that helped,â Jack says dryly, already pushing himself up despite the protest in his leg. âMove.â
Robby steps aside with zero resistance. âBe my guest, chef.â
Jack takes over, grabbing a spoon, tasting it, making a faceânot terrible, but not right.
âYou didnât salt it properly,â he says.
âI salted it.â
âYou absolutely did not. I can even smell the absence of salt.â
Robby watches him work for a second, then glances at him sideways. âYou look like shit, by the way.â
âFeel like it,â Jack mutters.
âYou two havenât seen each other?â
âNot properly.â
Robby nods once, like that explains everything. Thenâcasual, but not reallyââOnce you finally get laid and stop being so damn dramatic, I need help with Noelle. Bring your girl if you want, I told her the two of youâd meet. Tomorrow night?â
Jack doesnât even look up. âMy girl and I will be very busy, if all goes well, so, unlikely.â
ââŚI hate knowing things about you,â Robby mutters.
Jack huffs, stirring the sauce.
The front door clicks open. Both of them look up.
âRobby, you didnât salt itâI can smell it,â you call out immediately as you step inside, toeing off your shoes.
âSalting it now, sweetheart,â Jack shoots back, not missing a beat. He flicks Robby a look. Robby scoffs.
You come in fully then, arms loaded with shopping bagsâVictoriaâs Secret, a couple of clothing stores, something small and overpriced in tissue paper. You were pretty keen to break that no shop rule, apparently.
âWhenâd you get back?â you ask.
âFive minutes ago,â Jack says, already moving toward you. âYou walk? I wouldâve picked you up.â
âI was trying to surprise you,â you say, smiling. âRobby wasnât supposed to be part of it.â
âShocking,â Robby mutters.
You barely register himâbecause Jackâs right there, closer now, and you really do not care about some cleansing shit anymore. You grab his shirt and pull him in, kissing him quickâwarm, familiar, a little rushed like youâre making up for lost time in a single second.
You pull back just as fast.
âYou look like shit,â you tell him, joking and dry.
âYeah,â he says, softer now. âYou look⌠really good.â
His hand slides up, brushing through your hair, lingering there a second longer than necessary.
You clear your throat, stepping away first. âOkay, how bad did he fuck the sauce?â
âI did not fuck the sauce that bad,â Robby says.
You move to the stove, peering in, grabbing a spoon. Taste. Pause.
ââŚItâs not that bad,â you admit. âMaybe a bit more sugar, not enough salt.â
Robby throws his hands up. âOf course it does. Why not throw chocolate in there while weâre at it?â
âDonât tempt me,â you say lightly.
Robby exhales, grabbing his jacket. âAlright. Iâm off. Danaâs gonna love that I delayed my shift because I was domestic here.â
âTell her I said hi,â you call.
âIâm not telling her anything,â he mutters, heading out.
He pauses at the door, glances back at the two of youâat the way youâve both unconsciously drifted closer again without noticing.
âDonât give him a heart attack. At that age you never know,â he adds.
âOut!â Jack says.
Robby leaves.
The door shuts.
And just like thatâ
Itâs quiet. No monitors. No pages. No interruptions. Just you and him. You donât move at first, still standing by the stove, spoon in hand. Heâs leaning against the island, watching you. Really watching you.
âDay Thirty Two, by the way,â he says.
âReally? Didnât notice,â You shrug.
He nods, coming up besides you, watching as you stir the sauce.
âThis is gonna take ages. He didnât reduce anything. Useless,â You murmur, mostly sarcastic, as you look at it.
âOh, you know Robby,â Jack sighs. âCanât do anything right.â
You put the lid on top, lowering it to a simmer. You hum to yourself, feeling Jackâs eyes on you.
âCâmere,â he says.
You step in between his legs, your gaze dragging over him as his hands catch your waist, pulling you in. His grip is heavy, grounding, sliding over your hips like heâs relearning the shape of you after weeks of not touching.
âThis alright?â he asks, quieter nowâthough his hand dips, squeezing your ass through the thin fabric of your dress.
You nod.
âSpeak,â he adds, low.
âYes.â
That does something to him. You see itâjaw tightening, breath shifting, his eyes darkening as they move over you slowly, deliberately. Chest. Lips. Eyes again.
âWhat am I gonna do with you?â he murmurs.
His hand comes up, sliding to the back of your neck, fingers spreading there, warm and steady. He tilts your face up, thumb brushing along your jaw, holding you in place like heâs taking his time deciding something.
You canât quite read him. Itâs too much at once.
His thumb drifts lower, pausing at your bottom lip. You hesitateâbarelyâbut he notices.
âGo on,â he murmurs, giving a small nod.
You do. Tongue slow, tentative at first, wrapping your mouth around the digit, then steadier, your focus slipping as his breathing changesâsubtle, but not enough to hide it. His shoulders pull back slightly, tension running through him like heâs holding himself in check.
He exhales, eyes still locked on you.
âYeah,â he mutters under his breath.
âWant another?â he asks after a second, voice rougher now.
âMhm.â
He moves his index and middle, thumb dropped to your chin, your saliva coating your jaw slightly as you suck the digits. He watches you for a beat longer, like heâs considering pushing it furtherâthen drags his hand away instead, jaw tightening again.
âBedroom,â he says, quieter, but it lands just as firm.
His other hand slides down your side, lifting the hem of your dress just enough to make his gaze dipâbrief, restrainedâbefore he turns you, your back to his chest, guiding you away.
âIâm running on an adrenaline high from work, Iâm gonna fuck you, then weâre gonna cuddle and sleep for twelve hours,â he adds, voice low behind you. âThat sound good to you?â
You turn your head, looking at him behind you. âLove you too,â You give him a quick kiss to his lips, feeling him smile from that.Â
You head down the hall, already pulling the dress up and over your head, not looking backâbut you can feel his eyes on you until you disappear.
Behind you, the stove clicks off.
A second later, you hear him moveâquick now, like whatever control he had left is running out.
âYou know, I was talking to Santos about our whole⌠challenge,â you start, slipping your dress off and draping it over the chair. You catch your reflection in the mirror, thumb swiping under your eye to fix the faint smudge of mascara. âTurns out she lasted all of ten days before she slept with Garcia.â
He huffs a quiet breath against your shoulder, voice rough where it meets your skin. âSo all that torture for nothing?â
âTortureâs dramatic,â you murmur, but thereâs a smile tugging at it.
âYou did it on purpose,â he counters, hand sliding up to cup your tit, squeezing through the fabric of your bra like heâs testing a theory he already knows the answer to. âWalkinâ around in those⌠stupid shorts, the yoga, that little nightgownâwonât even kiss me, wonât even touch me.â His thumb drags slow, deliberate. âYou know what that does to a man? That kind of taunting?â
You let your head tip back against his shoulder, soft, unbothered on the surface even as your breath shifts. âI think Iâve got an idea.â
âYeah?â His mouth finds the space under your ear, kisses turning slower, heavierâless rushed now, more deliberate. He sucks at your neck, groaning low when you push back into him, feeling the way heâs already half-hard under your touch.
You turn suddenly, hands braced on his shoulders, guiding him back until his knees hit the mattress. âI lied,â you admit, pressing him down to sit. âAbout not touching myself.â
His brows lift, something amused and dark flickering there as his hands move instinctivelyâreaching behind you, unclipping your bra with practiced ease. âYou? Lie?â he mutters, watching as you pull it off and toss it aside. âWhat happened to Miss Wellness Mary Magdalene?â
You barely get a breath out before his hands are back on you, over your tits, fingers pinching at your nipples, rougher now, less patientâpalming, shaping, like heâs reacquainting himself. His mouth follows, pressing to your tits, tongue warm, stubble dragging just enough to make you jolt.
âItâs bullshit,â you breathe, the words breaking as he closes his mouth around your nipples, the sensation sharp and grounding all at once. âI was miserable the whole time.â
âYeah?â
âMm. The vegetable soup was shit. I miss my phone. Yoga is boring. I like tequila,â you say, feeling his chuckle vibrate against your skin as he kisses over your sternum.
âWhat else?â
âI like sex,â you tell him, whimpering as his teeth drag over your nipple briefly, the sharp tug making your core clench. His other hand travels over your stomach to the pink panties, fidgeting with the sides of the material over your hip.Â
You climb onto him, knees spreading wide beside his thighs, your body hovering just above his. âI really like it when you touch me. I like touching you. I like whenââ He cups your clothed pussy, his palm pressing firmly against the damp fabric.
âYou like that?â he wonders, voice low and almost casual, watching as you moan at the contact, your arousal soaking through the panties instantly. âSpeak, sweetheart.â
âYou know I like that,â you gasp, grinding down against his hand instinctively.
He nods. âDamn right I do,â His fingers slip beneath the edge of your panties, tracing the slick folds of your pussy with deliberate slowness, teasing the entrance before pushing one thick digit inside you.Â
The intrusion is warm and welcome, stretching you just enough to make you clench around him. He curls it slowly, stroking that sensitive spot deep within your walls, the pad of his finger rubbing in firm, unhurried circles that make your thighs tremble and your breath hitch.Â
You rock against his hand, chasing the building pressure. He adds a second finger without warning, scissoring them gently to open you up, then pumping them in and out with deliberate thrustsâshallow at first, then deeper, his knuckles brushing your clit on every inward slide.
His thumb finds your clit, circling it with rough, insistent pressure, alternating between tight loops and light flicks that draw out breathy cries from your lips. The wet sounds of his fingers fucking you fill the room mingling with your moans as he watches your face intently, eyes dark with hunger, drinking in every twitch and gasp.
âHow about this? You like it when I fuck you with my fingers?â he asks, his voice a gravelly rumble, free hand gripping your hip to steady your grinding.
âMhm,â you whine, riding his hand harder now, your pussy fluttering around the invading digits as they twist and probe, hitting that spot again and again.
He slides in a third finger, gently stretching you out, the fullness making you gasp as he kisses at your neck, lips hot and sucking lightly on the skin. You moan into his mouth when he claims your lips in a messy kiss, tongues tangling as his fingers maintain their rhythmâcurling, thrusting, spreading you wider with each pass.Â
He varies the pace, slowing to a torturous drag that lets you feel every ridge and vein on his fingers, then speeding up to plunge deep and fast, his palm slapping wetly against your mound.
âThatâs right, atta girl, doinâ so well, arenât you?â he murmurs against your throat, nipping at the pulse point while his thumb resumes those relentless circles on your clit, pressing harder now, building the ache into something electric.Â
He watches as you ride his fingers, your juices dripping down his wrist, the obscene squelch growing louder with every movement.Â
âWhatâd you think of when you touched yourself, honey? You thinka me?â
You nod frantically, words caught up in your moans, your walls clenching tighter around him. âUh-huh,â you whine as he curls his fingers deeper into you, hooking them to stroke that bundle of nerves with precision, his other hand sliding up to pinch and roll your nipple, adding sparks of sensation everywhere.
He keeps you teetering, easing off just when you get closeâpulling his fingers almost all the way out before slamming them back in, thumb pausing its circles to let the tension simmer. Then he ramps it up again, fingers pistoning faster, thumb vibrating against your swollen clit. Sweat beads on your skin, your breaths coming in short, desperate pants as the coil in your belly winds impossibly tight.
âCâmon, baby, let go fâme,â he murmurs, kissing at your neck with open-mouthed presses, his teeth grazing your earlobe.Â
He feels as you tense and tighten around his fingers, hips bucking erratically, thighs quivering you come undone, jaw agape as your body stills over him, warm and melting.
âYou come when you touch yourself?â he asks, quieter now.
His hand leaves you, trailing over your hips as he guides you back onto the bed. You go easily, breath unsteady, the anticipation settling into something heavier as you lie there, bare and waiting.
You shake your head.
âYou?â you ask, your hand drifting instinctively over yourself, fingers trailing over your core, testing the sensitivity, your eyes flicking back to him.
He gives a short shake of his head, rolling his neck once like heâs trying to keep himself together.
âStill got enough in you?â you murmur, a little teasing. âOr did that shift kill you?â
He huffs a breathâhalf laugh, half something tighter. âIâd find the energy,â he says, stepping out of his scrubs, not taking his eyes off you. âDonât worry about that.â
You watch him move, slower now but deliberate, like heâs pacing himself instead of rushing it.
âYou wanna take that off?â you start, glancing down to his prosthetic.
He follows your gaze, then looks back at you. âIn a minute,â he says, already leaning over you again. âWanna make sure I remember what you taste like first.â
He slides a pillow beneath your head, then gently eases your knees apart. You give a small nod. When his tongue traces slowly across your center, your body responds instantlyâback arching, breath catching. His palm presses firmly against your stomach, keeping you anchored.
âStay still fâme, can you, baby?â He murmurs against you, barely enough for you to hear.
You gasp his name between ragged breaths, managing to nod yes, your fingers threading through his salt-and-pepper curls. His mouth moves against you with deliberate patienceâsoft yet demandingâand your lungs empty completely, replaced by something molten and urgent.
 âAtta girl, you feel good yeah, baby?â He hums.
You nod fast. Your thighs tremble against his shoulders as he tastes you with unhurried determination, as though time has ceased to exist beyond this bed, beyond this moment. When his tongue finds that perfect rhythm, that perfect spot, coherent thought dissolves into desperate pleas that barely form words.
He groans against your center, vibrating against you as you claw at his nape, nails digging into his sun-kissed, freckled skin with desperate urgency. âGod, fuck, I missed this,â you say,Â
His tongue, slick and insistent, flicks against your clit, drawing out your orgasm with relentless precision. You feel the heat of your release coating his tongue, his lips, and he devours it hungrily, as if it's the sweetest nectar he's ever tasted.
âPlease, please, fuck,â You mumble, brain foggy as his tongue sweeps over you with a kind of desperation of a starving man.Â
His fingers digging into your hips, holding you in place as he feasts on you. You can feel his hot breath against your sensitive flesh, his tongue delving into every crevice, every fold as you come undone, moans loud to the point where you throw your hand over your mouth, biting down into your palm.
You let out a shaky breath, head back as he kisses your inner thighs, gentle, stubble coated in your orgasm before he climbs back over you, kissing you, deep, as you taste yourself on his tongue.Â
âOnce I wake upâafter fucking youâobviously,â He murmurs against you, sloppy tongues colliding. âIâll do that for three hours, until you canât walk, alright?â
You moan at the thought, nodding. You believe him because heâs done it on many occasions. You think he just likes doing it to get you to go to sleep sometimes or knock you out and he can take care of you or something. That and he just entirely gets off on you.
âFuck willpower,â He says against you as he briefly tests your folds with fingers over your sensitive clit, watching your mouth open in a small whine, lashes fluttering, another hand pulling your body even closer, as you wrap your legs around his waist. âFuck being cleansed, alright?â
âMm,â You say, watching as he swallows, youâre watching maybe the toll of his shift start to come back physically and you move your hands to his cheek, away from whereâd he place them above your head.Â
You donât say anything, just still him briefly, eyes wide, a nod, a check in. He nods, mouth twitching in a smile.
He hooks his thumbs into the waistband of his boxers, pushing them down with a practiced ease born from years of undressing after long shifts. His cock hard and eager, his breath hitching as you wrap your hand around his length, your touch sending electric shocks through him.Â
You spit into your palm, the wet sound echoing in the quiet room, and he groans, a low, guttural sound that vibrates through him. Your hand moves over his cock, slick and smooth, your fingers tracing the veins, your thumb rubbing over the sensitive head. He curses under his breath, a string of words that would make a sailor blush, his hips jerking forward, seeking more of your touch.
âShit⌠fucking hellâ You keep doing that this is gonna a lot quicker than I mentally planned for.â He tells you.
âWhatâd you mentally plan for?â You chuckle, a low, sultry sound that sends shivers down his spine, your hand never pausing in its slow, torturous rhythm.
âWell, six hours of foreplay,â he moves his cock over your pussy, gliding it over your folds, amused by your gasp of a moan. âSix hours of shower sex, kitchen, couch, each. Obviously six⌠emotionally⌠intelligent, beautiful conversation about life and marriage. Ever thought about wanting a third?â
âI donât know, have you?â You murmur, watching as he taunts you as he moves his cock over your pussy, the head slipping through your folds, coating itself in your wetness. You gasp, your back arching, your hips lifting to meet him. He groans, his eyes fluttering closed, savoring the feel of you.
âChrist,â He murmurs, absentmindedly, then, with a slow, steady push, he slides into you, his cock filling you completely. You moan, your nails digging into his back, your body arching into his. âMaybe. I donât know. We can talk about this later.âÂ
Heâs still for a moment, body hot and warm above you as his hand grips onto your hips. You let out a shaky breath and smile. âYou alright there, old man?â
âHeavenly,â he says quite earnestly, leaning to kiss you down at your neck. âMissed this. God, itâs like youâre made for me. So goddamn perfect.â
You clench slightly at his words, hearing as he groans at that, vibrating against your skin. A moment passes before you start getting desperate for action.
âPlease move, baby,â You ask, looking up at him with eagerness.
ââCourse, whatever you want, sweetheart,â He kisses your lips softly, before moving.
Pulling out slowly before sliding back in, his pace steady and sure. With each thrust, he swallows your moans with his kisses, his hands tangling in your hair, his body pressing you into the mattress. You can feel every inch of him, every ridge and vein, and it's perfect.Â
His tongue dances with yours, exploring your mouth, tasting you. His hand tangles in your hair, his grip firm but not painful, tilting your head back to deepen the kiss. You moan into his mouth, your body arching into his, your nails digging into his back.Â
He pulls back, his breath ragged, his eyes dark with desire. "You feel so good," he murmurs, his voice hoarse. "So fucking good."Â
You can only nod, your words lost in the pleasure that's coursing through your veins. He starts to move faster, his hips snapping forward, his cock sliding in and out of you with increasing urgency. You can feel the pleasure building, the tension coiling in your belly, your pussy clenching around him.Â
His hand travels from your hair to your face, cupping your cheek, keeping your eyes on him. You gasp, your eyes fluttering closed, your body arching into his touch. He groans, his cock twitching inside you at the sight of you losing yourself in his touch.Â
He gently moves two fingers down your chest and stomach, landing at your core, above where he fucks you. He circles your clit, his touch firm and steady, drawing tight circles that make your hips buck off the bed. You let out a low moan, your body tensing, your breath coming in short gasps.Â
He can see your arousal coating his cock, your slick gathering around the base, and it spurs him on. He leans down, his lips finding your ear. "You like that, don't you?" he murmurs, his voice low and rough. "You like feeling me stretch you, filling you up?"Â
âYes, yes, mhm,â you try, nails moving from his back to his biceps, hard and taught beneath your touch.
He starts to move faster, his hips slamming into you, his cock sliding in and out of you with increasing urgency. You can feel the pleasure building, the tension coiling in your belly, your pussy clenching around him.Â
His weight edges off just enough, bracing more through his arms and left side, breath going a touch uneven where it presses against your shoulder. Not stoppingâheâd push through it if you let himâbut compensating. You feel it.
Your hands slide up his back, slower now, anchoring âTake it off, baby,â you murmur softly, glancing down toward the prosthetic. âYouâve had it on too long.â
He eases to a stop, controlled, careful not to jostle you as he shifts his weight fully off. You guide him back with you, hands steady at his sides, both of you moving without needing to overthink itâthis part practiced, familiar.Â
He settles against the pillows with a small exhale, rolling his shoulder once as if resetting himself. You stay close, one hand resting at his hip, the other brushing briefly up his chestâgrounding, not rushing him.Â
He reaches down, undoing the prosthetic with efficient movements, years of muscle memory. Thereâs no awkwardness to it, no self-consciousnessâjust a small release in his face as it comes free. You take it from him without comment, setting it at the foot of the bed like you always do.
âBetter?â you ask, thumb tracing idly along his side.
He nods once, eyes flicking back to you, something softer under the edge of want. âYeah. Câmere.â
You shift back over him, settling in close again, your knees bracketing his hips, easy and familiar. You lean down to kiss him, long and sweet, less immodest as your other ones, maybe. Just maybe, as his hands immediately find your ass, helping your back arch into him, cock still hard as you slide over it, folds wet and sensitive.
âGod, youâreââ He groans as you bite at his bottom lip, pulling it back, as you kiss down his chest. âGonna be the death of me.â
You lean down, your tongue flicking out to taste his skin, tracing a path down his chest, over his stomach, until you reach the V that leads to his cock. You look up at him, your eyes meeting his, and you can see the anticipation in them.Â
You take your time, your tongue sliding over his shaft, from base to tip, feeling him pulse under your touch.Â
âGreat way to go,â he murmurs as he watches you.
You take him into your mouth, feeling him slide over your tongue, your lips stretching to accommodate him. He groans, his hand finding your hair, not pulling, just gripping, as you take him deeper, your mouth warm and wet. You can feel him, hard and throbbing, and you know he's close, with how his arms tighten and tense, fingers tighter on your scalp.Â
You pull back, your tongue flicking over the head of his cock, tasting the precum that beads at the tip. You sit back, straightening your spine, and look at him. His eyes are on you, hungry and intense.Â
You spit on his cock, watching as the saliva slides down his shaft, making it glisten in the soft light. You rise up, your knees bracketing his hips, and lower yourself onto him, feeling him slide into you, inch by inch.Â
âOh, fuck, fuck, fuck,â you whimper as you settle on top, nails over his chest.
He groans, his hands finding your hips, holding you in place as he thrusts up into you. You can feel him, deep and hard, filling you completely. You start to move, your body rolling and grinding against him, your hips moving in a slow, steady rhythm.Â
His hands roam over your body, one staying on your hip, guiding your movements, the other trailing up your stomach, over your breasts, squeezing them, his thumb brushing over your nipple. You gasp, your head falling back.
His thumb circling your nipple, sending jolts of pleasure straight to your core. He starts to talk you through it, his voice slow and steady, a counterpoint to the fast, hard rhythm of your bodies. "You're so fucking beautiful, riding me like this. God- so tight and wet for me, arenât you, sweetheart?"Â
His words send a shiver through you, your body tensing, your breath hitching in your throat.Â
âYeah? Yeah, thatâs right, thatâs right," he mutters. âCâmon, baby, right there fâme, youâre doing so good.â
âPlease,â you moan, hips grinding down against him.
âYou need help, honey? Just ask,â He sits up, his chest pressing against yours, his breath hot on your neck. He reaches between you, his fingers finding your clit, rubbing tight circles over the sensitive bundle of nerves.Â
You whine, your body arching into his touch, your hips moving in time with his fingers.
âCâmon, words for me,â he says, breathing heavily against you as he finds himself closer to the edge at how you clench down on him, tight and warm.
âWanna cum,â you pant, your body tense, your breath coming in short gasps.
âAgain? So greedy,â he mocks. âGo âhead, you can do itâ
His words push you over the edge. You move, your body rolling and grinding against him, your hips moving in a fast, frantic rhythm. You can feel it, the pleasure snapping, your body convulsing, your nails digging into his back, your mouth open in a silent scream.
"Good girl," he groans, his body tensing, his cock pulsing inside you. He follows you, his release hot and hard, filling you completely.Â
You collapse onto his chest, your body spent, your heart pounding in your ears. He wraps his arms around you, holding you close, his body still trembling with the aftermath. You can feel his heart beating in time with yours, and you know, in this moment, everything is right.
You stay there a little longer than you mean to, half sprawled over him, your cheek pressed to his chest, skin still warm, damp, real. His arm is draped around youâloose now, heavy with exhaustionâbut his fingers keep moving anyway, absentminded, tracing slow patterns over your back like he canât quite stop touching you yet.
Like he doesnât want to.
You draw lazy shapes over his shoulder, connecting freckles you already know by heart, like itâs something youâve done a hundred timesâbecause you have.
âI love baseless temptations,â you murmur.
Jack lets out a quiet laugh, the sound low in his chest, vibrating under your cheek. âYeah,â he says, voice rough but easy. âMe too.â
Thereâs something softer in it now. Not the edge from before. Just⌠him.
You shift slightly, listening to his breathing settle, feeling the way his body gives into the mattressâfinally. Like heâs been holding himself upright all day and only now gets to stop.
âFourteen hours,â you mumble, almost to yourself, remembering your insane schedules. âAnd you still managed toââ
âDonât finish that sentence,â he cuts in, dry.
You grin against his skin. âI was gonna say âimpress me.ââ
âSure you were.â
âI was,â you insist, lifting your head to look at him properly. âHonestly, I thought youâd pass out.â
He cracks one eye open at that. âHave a little faith.â
âI do,â you say, brushing your thumb over his jaw, softer now. âI also have eyes. You look like you got hit by a truck.â
âFeel like it,â he mutters.
âMm.â You lean down, press a brief kiss to his chestânothing urgent, just there. âStill did good.â
He exhales a quiet laugh at that, head tipping back. âChrist. Itâs alright, Iâll probably crash in twenty minutes. Took tomorrow off, at least.
You watch him for a secondâreally watch him. The lines of tension finally easing out of his face, the way his shoulders have dropped, the way he looks⌠settled. Not asleep, not yet. Just here. With you.
It hits you again, softer this time, how much of him is usually in motionâpulled in a hundred directions, needed everywhere at onceâand how rare it is to have him like this. Still. Letting himself be here, with you, without reaching for the next thing.
You smooth your hand over his chest, slower now, grounding.
âYou gonna keep up the meditation thing?â he asks, voice rough with the edge of sleep.
You huff quietly. âProbably not.â A beat. âUnless youâre suddenly interested.â
âMm. I think Iâll stick to therapy,â he murmurs. Then, after a second, a little more awakeââYou still think I need other hobbies?â
You glance at him, mouth curving. âNo. Iâm actually very supportive of your current hobby.â You lean in, kiss him soft. âBig fan. Please continue exclusively.â
He laughs into it, low and tired, something easy settling back into him.
âIâll be right back,â you add, brushing your thumb along his jaw. âGonna clean up, check the spaghetti. Youâll eat something, then weâll watch Housewives in bed. Deal?â
âI can help, Iâllââ
ââStay,â you cut in gently, pressing him back into the pillows. âIâve spent a stupid amount of money while I was out this morning, this is more for me than it is for you, trust.â You tell, already slipping out from under the sheets.
You move around the room in one of his old shirts, easy, familiarâtidying, grabbing what you need, the quiet domestic rhythm of it settling everything back into place. Itâs almost meditative, in a way that none of the actual meditation ever was. This is the version that works for you: him in the bed, you in the room, the soft comedown of it all.
When you come back, he hasnât moved much. One arm over his eyes, breathing slower now, like heâs finally letting himself drop. You sit beside him, brush your hand over his chest again, then pass him a bowl.
âEat, quick, before it gets cold,â you say.
He obeys, because of course he does, getting through a few bites before setting it aside with a quiet exhale.
You keep going, perched cross-legged beside him, the normalcy of it comforting after a month of physically pushing him away to be cleansed, when ironically, you feel more cleansed than ever to be near him.
Thereâs a pause.
âSo,â you begin. âWhat was that thing you said? Earlier? About a third?â
He chuckles. âI was just kidding, hon,â he says, a little rough, like heâs not fully back yet. He presses a lazy kiss to your head. âWhy?â
You tilt your chin up slightly, watching him. âI donât know.â Your head ring vaguely with Santosâ words from the other day. He reads pretty quickly where your train of thought is going.
âHypothetically. If you had to pick someone.â You ask.
He looks at you properly now, narrowing his eyes just a fraction like heâs trying to read the angle. Like thereâs definitely a wrong answer here and heâd quite like to avoid it.
You just hold his gaze, completely neutral.
A beat passes. Something unspoken flickers between youâquick, familiar.
Who would you pick?
Who do you think Iâd pick?
Are we about to say the same name?
ââŚRobby,â you both say at the same time.
Thereâs a pause. Then Jack lets out a quiet, disbelieving huff of laughter, shaking his head against the pillow. âJesus Christ.â
You grin a little, unable to help it. âI meanâobjectivelyââ
âHeâd be⌠fucking insufferable about it,â Jack cuts in immediately. âYou know he would.â
You refrain from commenting, leaving your spaghetti aside, as you open your computer. Jack groans, dragging a hand over his face. âHeâd give me notes or something.â
Youâve got Housewives on your computer. Itâs obviously the New York one, still early days - Season 4.
âSo what happened in the mid-season finale again?â You ask as you settle against him.
âI barely remember, honestly,â He sighs. âRamonaâs being difficult, someone brought the wrong wine, itâs a mess. Cindy is great, though.â
His arm tightens around you again, a quiet, grounding squeeze.
The episode keeps playing. His commentary gets more frequentâdry, half-interested, pretending heâs above it while very clearly tracking every single detail.
You let it happen, tucked into him, warm, fed, a little tired in the best way.
Cleansed, in a way none of the yoga or herbal tea ever managed. Just thisâhim, you, the low hum of something ridiculous on screen, and the easy, familiar weight of being exactly where youâre meant to be.
a/n: i love this song! I got this though from when i watched a robby x abbot tiktok edit to my man on willpower, and if im desperate for inspo i go to my tiktok edits and see if i can spur some ideas, and i was like, oh maybe abbot like not fucking you or something because of some self care thing and i was like, god heâd never do that. heâs fucking whenever, life is short, he would want to treat his partner as much as he can mentally and physically handle i think. And then i was like. Wait, lets switch the beatâŚ. anyway i had to restrain myself from writing more orlike writing everyday and unpacking different interactions. i wrote a scene where'd try to seduce you with his "slutty pyjamas" (his army uniform) and you gaf or something but i felt too much 2nd hand embarrasment. im so tired i have triivia to go to now i have no idea if this is good i just want it done so i caan study and work on the lawyer series!

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Unknown Etiology
Pairing:Â Jack Abbot x Resident!Reader
Summary:Â You pass out at work. Jack already knew that was going to happen. Still scares the shit out of him.
Word count:Â 2.2k
Warnings: Fainting, light angst, medical inaccuracies perhaps
a/n:Â Small bedtime fic based on this request because who doesn't love knocking out in public and having Jack come to the rescue yayyy <3 love you enjoy sweet dreams
Masterlist
It started as a headrush as you got out of bed. Nothing serious. Nothing too alarming. You figured it was from poor sleep or standing up too fast. The black spots in your vision dissipated after a few hard blinks, and you went on about your day. You ate breakfast at 4 pm, because that was normal on a night-shift schedule, and got to work just fine.Â
The hospital florescents were a little more jarring than usual, and maybe the noises in the Pitt were grating on your ears, but you chalked it all up to a really terrible nightâs sleep. You were tired, fatigue settling into your bones as your shift began, so it made sense that everything felt off. People were known to have off days, on occasion.Â
Jack Abbot was very attentive to your off days.Â
His eyes narrowed the second you stepped into the Pittâor, rather, stumbled into the Pitt. You were favoring your left side just a hair, your toe catching on the vinyl tile, and he could tell it wasnât on purpose. Jack scanned you for injuries and found none.Â
Patient presents with an unsteady gait. Unknown etiology.Â
Stumbling into the first shift of four was not inherently unusual. Jack filed the information away. He met you in the hall after rounds and pretended he wasnât double-checking the amount of weight you were putting on your right leg.Â
âGood weekend?â he greeted, bumping his shoulder into yours. âSaw on Instagram that you went to that fancy coffee shop downtown. Thought we were supposed to go together.âÂ
You huffed out a laugh, knocking your head to the side. âYou actually go on Instagram?â
âYou told me to follow you.âÂ
âYeah, but I didnât know you were keeping it up with it.Â
âOnly yours,â Jack hummed out. âBut I am very with the times.âÂ
âRight. And Iâm Oprah,â you laughed.Â
âI can get with Oprah,â Jack nodded, arms crossing over his chest. âVery wise.âÂ
You started to roll your eyes and offer Jack the slap on his arm that he was vying for, but you blinked too hard instead, a quick squeeze to settle yourself. Jackâs expression faltered, his hands reaching towards you. Not too closeânot obviousâbut enough to do something if he needed to.
You focused back in on him before he could point it out.Â
âIâll let you know if I hear Oprah is on the market,â you breathed out, patting Jack on the chest as you continued down the hall.Â
Patient demonstrates periods of inattention and difficulty focusing, possibly due to fatigue, weakness, presyncope, etc. Differentials to be assessed.Â
He was trying not to hover. You hated hovering, and Jack could tell he was pushing it. He was letting his gaze linger a bit too long when he caught you across the room and stood too close every time you got up from your chair. He was analyzing the depth of your breaths through subtle counts because he was pretty sure you werenât taking full ones, but he couldnât quite confirm it.Â
Something was up.Â
But he was pushing it.
âI ordered repeat labs for our guy with jaundice. And the tox screen in South 15 came back clear, so we have to re-evaluate the cocaine hypothesis,â you prattled off, hands on your hips as you gazed up at the board. âAnything else I shouldâokay, what?âÂ
Jack had forgotten to look away as you turned your head and looked at him. You had caught him having a staredown with your well-being and did not seem amused by the analyzing gaze. The attending righted his posture and blinked.Â
âWhat? Whatâs up?â Jack asked, trying and failing to feign innocence. He raised his hands in mock surrender when you gave him a hard look. âI was listening to you. What, is it illegal to look at you while you talk?âÂ
âYou were not just listening to me! Youâve been all⌠assessing all shift. So quit it.âÂ
âI have not been assessing,â he lied, trailing after you down the hall. Damn, you were moving fast. âYouâve just been a little off, is all. Iâve been keeping an eye on it.âÂ
You waved him off and changed course for the bathroom. âWell, donât. Iâm fine, Jack. Donât be weird.âÂ
Jack pressed his hands against his chest. âIâm not being weird. Youâre being weird. Thatâs why I was concerned.âÂ
You spun to face him, arms crossed and expression fixed into an oncoming lecture. When you and Jack began exploring your obvious feelings for each other, you made it clear that you didnât want anyone to know. Not until things were sure and you were more established in your role as a doctor. You didnât want people to think you were messing around with an attending just for the relationship to crumble and your career to be lost in the aftermath.Â
Jack was fine with waiting. He had absolutely no plans of letting your relationship crumble, but he was fine with the cautious approach. Things were still new, and if you wanted to wait until you felt more secure with him, he was going to do a damn good job providing that.Â
But your breathing was off; he finally caught it as you eyed him down in the hall, and that was concerning. He was officially entering concerned doctor territory, and you were officially entering leave me the hell alone territory. The combination was not ideal.Â
âJustâkeep your distance, okay? People have been eyeing us all shift. I want to continue pretending there isnât gossip flying around the day shift nurses, but that canât happen if you give them something to gossip about.â âBut if you justââÂ
âJack.âÂ
He raised his hands again. âAlright, my bad.âÂ
You pushed into the bathroom, door swinging shut behind you, and Jack let his head hang, sighing into the abyss.Â
Patient with ongoing dyspnea that cannot be assessed in a medical setting. Patient resistant to treatment and going AMA.Â
It came to a head three hours in. Jack saw the way you kept blinking and pressing your hands against your head, shaky fingers threading by your scalp and creating pressure. A headacheâyou had a headache, you kept stumbling, and Jack knew you were having trouble breathing. He tapped his palms against the counter in a nervous tic and listed out every differential in his head.Â
It didnât help that you kept glaring at him. And avoiding him. Jack couldnât keep an eye on you if you were hyperaware of his presence, but he couldnât exactly slink around the ED unnoticed, so he did what he could. He tracked the movement of your shoulder as you stood with your back to him, and he kept a ready stance when he saw you stumble in the hall. He was one more hand flex and grimace away from telling Lena to keep another eye on you, but then you caught yourself against a wall, expression pained, and he figured his action was warranted.Â
He jogged across the Pitt, hands immediately finding your shoulders and head lowered to search for your eyes. They were unfocused when he got there, blinking againâhe was trying to catch you amidst the blinking.Â
âHey, you alright?â he stressed, tracking the way your hands shook as he steadied you.Â
âYeah,â you affirmed, trying and failing to push away. A small group of nurses had gathered, concerned faces looking on. âYeah. Iâm justâmaybe I need to eat something orââÂ
You went limp, effectively stopping Jackâs heart in the process. He hauled you against him with a long âwhoaâ that sent the entire ED on alert and cradled your neck as he tried to get your eyes back open. Your head only rolled in his hand, and his breathing felt punctured.Â
He said your name and did not get an answer. âOkay. Okayâsomeone get me a bed and a room cleared,â he calmly ordered, gaze never leaving your face, arms secure around you. He turned his head to mirror each time you lopped over. âI need you to try and open your eyes, y/n. Can you do that?âÂ
A bed was wheeled into the hall, and Jack lifted your legs from the ground to lay you in it, quickly walking alongside the small team that had formed. He swiped his flashlight from his chest pocket, assessed your pupils, then moved down to your lymph nodes as you were settled into a room.Â
âOkay, vitals and get an IV for stat labsây/n? Come on, let me know you can hear me, sweetheart,â Jack called out, checking your pupils again, flashing the light too many times than was necessary.Â
It was the third pass that got you to respond. You groaned, bringing your shaking hands up to push his flashlight away. Jack felt all of the air leave his lungs, a weight dropping to his feet and keeping him rooted to the ground. His head hung again, and he glanced up after a steadying sigh. You were wincing at the overhead light in the room, face an unnatural shade, but more alert and conscious.Â
âFuck. Okay, you scared the shit out of me,â Jack accused. He cupped your face and raised his brows. âYouâre fine? Really?âÂ
You let out a muffled sound. âSorry. That was weird.âÂ
âYeah, you think? Weirdâtold you you were the one being weird.â Jack glanced at your vitals on the screen. âYouâre tachy and your blood pressureâs pretty low. Any ideas?âÂ
âMy mouth hurts,â you mumbled out, gaze blearily trying to focus on the screen. âMaybe⌠ow, Jack.âÂ
âSorry, sweetheart. Okay, yeah, not counting on your medical opinion right now. Letâs get some ibuprofen on board and push fluids until we get the labs back. I want a head CT to rule outââ Jack paused as he looked around the room. Half of the nurses were honing in on Jackâs hands on your face, the other half were smirking at the man himself. Jack looked back down at you, at how hard you were trying to focus on him, and he figured he would deal with the rest later. âHey, weâll get this all sorted, alright?â
About twenty minutes later, you were sitting upright and much more cognizant. Jack had the lights dim in the room and a bag of pretzels glued to your hand even though your blood sugar came back normal, and he found you just as he left you as he pushed back inside. He hadnât really been able to focus since you went down, so stalking the lab for your results was easy.Â
âLabs came back,â Jack revealed, sitting on the edge of your bed. Youâd given up on making him leave you alone after his second visit to your room. âWanna take a wild guess?âÂ
You groaned, shoving another pretzel in your mouth. âNo. Just tell me.âÂ
âIron-deficiency anemia. You honestly might need an iron infusion with the levels youâre at. How long have you felt like this?âÂ
âSeriously?â you sighed. âI fainted because I donât eat enough legumes?âÂ
âHey, this is serious,â Jack chastised. He leaned in closer and took your hand in his. âItâs not just a little deficiency. You were down for the count for a while there. We gotta get this figured out.âÂ
âWe?âÂ
Jack took in the color returning to your face and intertwined your fingers with his. âYeah, sweetheart, we. Unfortunately, I think I kinda gave us away when you passed out. Forgot I was supposed to be playing it cool because you looked almost dead.âÂ
âThatâs a little dramatic.â You puffed out your cheeks with a loaded breath. âSo⌠everyone knows?â
âThereâs about a 95% chance itâs made its rounds. And been sent out to many day shift nurses who have probably sent it toââÂ
âOkay, okay. Everyone knows.âÂ
You slumped back against the bed, pretzel bag crinkling as it fell beside you. Jack hadnât let go of your hand, and with the clammy pallor it still resembled, he didnât have it in him to let go. He had been right to worry this morning, and his slow action was eating at him.
âIâm serious, though,â Jack began. You cracked an eye open. âYour ferritin levels are alarmingly low. Weâll have to think about infusions and then go to supplements after we get you more regulated.âÂ
âI can just call my PCP andââÂ
âIâd like to help. I can help.â
You paused, lingering humor and frustration wiped from your expression. Jack watched emotions flit across your face and saw each settle as your hand twitched in his. Just slightly. Enough to almost be a squeeze.Â
âYou donât have to do that,â you softly said. âI know it freaked you out that I fainted, but you donât have to take on some huge responsibility when it comes to me. We only just started seeing each other.âÂ
Jack smiled, brows coming together. He patted your hand as it rested in his. âYeah, well, Iâd like to continue seeing you for a long time. So let me have some responsibility.â
'code blue' masterlist (a pitt one-shot event)
a universe featuring robby x charge nurse!reader, frank x resident!reader and jack x emt!reader - each one-shot follows a shift of one of the couples, but the other two may pop up in the background of each! the one-shots will also be standalone (ie. you can only read frank's if you want, but i would recommend reading all for the added universe lore :))
robby and charge nurse!reader (nickname: pulse) - you and robby have worked together for years. the 'parents' of the emergency department, there's rarely a problem that you both can't solve. except for that of your relationship. sure, you slept together that one time, all those years ago, but it didn't mean anything, right? it's totally normal to accidentally moan your favourite nurse's name in bed with another woman.
frank and resident!reader (nickname: page) - when you started your r2 year at ptmc, the last thing you expected was to be ridiculously infatuated with your senior resident. it's against all your principles, but you can't quite let it go. besides, there's no way he feels the same. a harmless crush never hurt anybody, and you're sure the butterflies will go away with time. until they don't. and frank's gazes start to linger.
jack and emt!reader (nickname: skipper) - jack abbot is too old for you. completely and utterly. it's something you've been trying to tell yourself since you first met him at twenty-five. now, at twenty-nine, there's still nobody that does it like him. he's the only person that understands your drive, your complete marriage to your work. maybe he flirts back a little, but you're sure it's just platonic. until your life is in danger, and everything's suddenly on the line
year one.
NYE. Frank and Page.
year two.
Valentine's Day. Robby and Pulse.
Fourth of July. Jack and Skipper. // part two
Halloween. Robby and Pulse.
year three
Groundhog Day. Jack and Skipper.
Thanksgiving. Frank and Page.
Black Friday. Robby and Pulse.
Christmas Eve. Jack and Skipper.
year four
Easter. Robby and Pulse.
Mother's Day. Frank and Page.
year five
New Year's Day. Jack and Skipper.
Christmas. Frank and Page.
if you'd like to be tagged in any or all, pop me a message/ask/comment here! 18+ only, no ageless blogs
I adore this series; each pairing is so lovely! I canât wait to see where each of these couples end up!!



