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Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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decided to start watching interview with the vampire ,,, when louisâ brother passes away ,,, and he says âthat was the last time i saw the sunâ ,,,, very âlast time i saw my brother, last time i saw the sunâ type beat
captain america: the winter soldier is great because the russo brothers were like âwe want to make a comic book version of the manchurian candidateâ and the us military was like âno youâre gonna make recruitment propanganda for the us military industrial complexâ and sebastian stan was like âdisney has tricked me, broadway trained sebastian stan, into being here, so iâm going to portray a closeted homosexualâ and chris evans was like âiâm in a wet t-shirt contest!â
2007: Johnny Storm in Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer
Chris Evans filmography
A messy Rabbot compilation

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NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN. (2007) dir. Ethan Cohen, Joel Cohen
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From Geocities user atfof.

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PLANET EARTH II 2.02 âą Mountains
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abbot looking at robby | THE PITT 1.01 (đ)

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White Feather Hawk â Jack Abbot
part oneá”á” â part two â part three â part four â part five â part six
pairing â jack abbot x fem!reader
summary â loving jack always had a price. you just assumed youâd seen the worst of it.
warnings â 7.1k words. MINORS DNI!! explicit sexual content (unprotected piv sex), divorce, ex-spouses with a major case of unresolved feelings, toxic relationship dynamics, codependency, alcohol use, unexpected pregnancy, discussion of abortion and reproductive choice, crying, emotional distress, also the past relationship details are left vague
authorâs note â whipped this up bc i could not stop thinking about this plot đŹ yk i love a gooood angst + this one should be multiple parts!!
If you knew your ex-husband was going to be at the bar, you would have gone straight home. The only point of getting drinks after a shift was to stop being a person whoâd had that shiftâto sit in a sticky booth with people whoâd seen the same bad day and let it dissolve into something cheapâand Jackâs presence anywhere had the effect of making you more yourself, not less; a woman performing being completely okay for an audience of one whoâd seen you cry over burnt lasagna on your two-year-anniversary and had the terrible indecency to remember it.
But you didnât know. Dana had said a few of them were going to the bar after the night shift took over, and youâd heard it would only be a few of them and not done the thinking on whoâd be working the night shiftâyouâd assumed him, because he was always there, always fucking there. So you walked in already loosened, your badge clipped to your waistband, and you were three steps into the warm beery dark before you saw the back of his head in the corner booth.
He was nursing a bourbon heâd probably make last the entire night and he was half-listening to Langdon tell some story, his leg stretched out into the aisle, and he hadnât seen you yet. You had a second. You could have turned around and texted Dana some bullshit excuse of getting the full eight hours and walked back to the parking lot to go home to your dog and half your bed.
You never did, though. You told yourself afterward it was because the leaving wouldâve told the table something. But the truer thing, the one you didnât want to look at directly, was that an evening without Jack had started to feel like a room with the bulb burned out. Youâd gotten that bad.Â
âThere she is,â Dana said, twisting around in the booth, already sliding to make room. âSit. I saved you the good side. It doesnât wobble.â
You sat, and the good side put you diagonal from Jack, close enough that his stretched-out leg was a fact you had to arrange your own legs around under the table. He hadnât acknowledged you yet. He was letting Langdon finish; Jack always let people finish, it was something that made patients trust him and made you, toward the end, want to put a plate through the wall because heâd let you get to the bottom of sentences youâd have killed to be interrupted out of.
But you watched the back of his neck change as his shoulders went from loose to aware. When he turned, his eyes found yours like a bad number on a monitor, faster than he couldâve chosen. For half-a-second, before his face caught up, he looked so completely undefended. Then it was gone and he looked at you like you were weather he'd been told about.Â
âHuh,â he breathed, picking his bourbon back up. âThey let your department fraternize with the help now, or are you slumming?â
âDana kidnapped me.â You reached over and took the lime off his rim. Heâd never once in his life used itâhe hated citrus in bourbonâand only got it because Marlene behind the bar had been putting it in each time. Jack had decided somewhere around your wedding that debating her on it was more than what the lime was worth.Â
You bit it and set the rind into his napkin where it went, where it had always gone.Â
His eyes tracked you as you did it without any comment. The better half of five years of the lime and heâd never once said anything, only bought you the garnish on his own drink.Â
âHow was your floor?â you asked.
âSlow.â He turned the glass a quarter-turn on the table, an old tell, the thing his hands did when he was trying very hard to keep his words scarce. âKnock on something.âÂ
âBut I like watching you suffer,â you drawled.Â
He huffed at that. âI know.â
That was it. He was good at letting things sit, it was the worst of his habits, the way he could absorb a thing you said and just hold it instead of returning it. Half your sentences to him used to end in a silence you'd eventually have to fill yourself. You'd forgotten how much work it was. You'd forgotten you used to do all the talking and call it conversation.
âYou got Kevin this week?â Dana asked from beside you.Â
Jack, without a beat of hesitation, said, âSheâs got Kilo this week.â
Javadi, the new and curious med student in the ER, looked between both of you with furrowed brows. âSorry. Kevin or Kilo? Is thatâare those two dogs?â
âOne dog,â you said.
âYup. One dog,â Jack agreed.
âThen whyââ Javadi started.
âHis nameâs Kilo,â Jack said.
âNo, his nameâs Kevin.â
Javadiâs head went between you as though she was watching a tennis match. The table laughed because theyâd heard this a hundred times and it never stopped being funny to them; the divorced two doing their oldest bit, the one argument that had outlived the marriage that spawned it.
âHis papers say Kilo,â Jack said in Javadiâs direction.
Robby, whoâd been completely invested in his own drink, said, âAnd your papers say divorced.â
âAnd we very much are, thank you,â you said, picking it up before the laugh had finished.
Jack stayed silent then. Robby, heâd have something for. But this was you saying it, easy and completely certain in front of everyone. The leg that had been stretched into your space this entire night drew back slowly, a small retreat nobody at the table except you couldâve felt. He turned the glass a quarter-turn.Â
Youâd done it on purpose. Youâd felt the whole night immediately tilting into the warm dangerous fiction of it and youâd reached for the one sentence that would shut it, and youâd swung it at the only person whoâd actually feel the blade.Â
The facts of your divorce were no concern to anyone but the two of you at the table, but you could feel Jack flinch inwardly by the announcement that blanketed it all; that you now lived in separate homes, that the dog was scheduled like a custody hearing; that the word âweâ had a tense and it was past. None of it was news. Heâd signed the same papers you had in the same flat conference room, with the same pen the mediator kept clicking until you'd wanted to scream. He knew the facts better than anyone. And still you'd watched him wince when you said it out loud.
He'd built a whole life on the difference between a thing being true and a thing being spoken; it was how he ran a trauma bay, how he told a family the worst news in the world in a voice that never broke, how he'd ended your marriage without ever once saying the words that would've made it real, just withdrawing by degrees until you were the one who had to say them for him. He'd made you do that too. He made you do all the saying. And now you'd said this, and he was sitting there absorbing it the way he absorbed everything, quietly, like he'd decided long ago that taking it without a sound was the least of what he had coming.
âJust fucking do it, Jack.â
And he didâfinally, finallyâpush into you with a single long stroke that dragged a sound out of both of you, his coming out through his teeth, and yours into the pillow. His forehead came down between your shoulder blades. He stayed there for a second, breathing, one hand splayed wide over your hip and the other braced into the mattress beside your hips. His weight settled onto the left leg the way it always settled, a decision his body stopped having to make years ago. You could feel him shaking with the effort of not moving yet, of dragging it out, because he always did this, he always made you ask twice.Â
âChrist,â he breathed into your spine. âYou feelââ he started, and let the words die as his teeth gently pressed into the bone at the top of your shoulder. It was then he started to move.
He fucked like he did everything else with his hands; he was methodical, attentive, and so devastingly present. He went in believing there was always a correct rhythm, and he intended to find it just to ruin you with it. Heâd learned by repetition until it stopped requiring thought, until he could play you without looking, and the worst partâthe one youâd never say out loudâwas that it worked. It always worked. He knew the exact angle that made you stop being a person with opinions about him.Â
That long stroke dragged slow on the way out and snapped deep on the way back in, and your whole body misfired around him whether youâd given it permission to or not.
His palm slid up from your hip to flatten between your shoulder blades and pressed, folding you down into the mattress, taking the choice out of your spine. And the new angle had you gasping into the sheets because heâd done it on purpose; he always did everything on purpose, and now he was hitting that place that made your fingers curl and your thighs shake and a thin embarrassing whine climb out you that youâd have died before making it sober.Â
Jack felt the exact second your control went and he leaned into it, hips grinding deep and unhurried, holding you right there on the edge of too-much like he was reading everything under your skin.Â
âThatâs it,â he drawled out, his voice low and even, the bastard, like he had all night, like he wasnât already wrecked behind the voice. âYeah, Iâve got you.â And he did. He had you exactly where he wanted you and you let him, because no one had ever taken you apart this precisely, this patiently, like your falling apart was the only thing on his list and he intended to do it right.
The dog tags swung forward and dragged close across your back when he leaned over you, then warm when they settled against your skin, and you thoughtâstupidly, with the part of your brain that shouldâve been offlineâthat you used to fall asleep listening to that chain shift when he breathed. You thought there had been a version of this where afterward he stayed. You shoved that thought down. You arched your back into him instead and he made a punched-out noise, low in his chest, his grip going tight on you to leave the marks.
âSlow down,â he muttered more to himself than you, but he didnât. His hips stuttered out of their careful rhythm because this was the one place his composure failed; it was the one place where the sealed-up, gallows humor, watching-you-over-the-glass version of him came apart at the seams.Â
Youâd figured this out over the months. This was the only place Jack was honest. Heâd never say the things across a table, in daylight, with his clothes on. But here, with his cock buried inside of you and his composure shot, the truth leaked out of him in fragments he wouldnât be accountable for later.Â
âMissed this,â he got out, ragged, his mouth at the back of your neck now, words pressed into your hairline like he could bury them in there. âMissed you, fuck. Youâve got no idea, sweetheart, the things IââÂ
âDonât.â You didnât want it. You wanted it so badly your chest ached and that was exactly why you didnât want it, because you knew what it was worth in the morning, which was nothing, which was a text about whether youâd remembered to walk Kevin. âJack. Donât talk. You canâtââ You let out a gasp as he pressed his hips completely flush against yours, chasing you to the hilt, as if he could physically expel the words out of you. âCanât fuck me into being with you again.â
You felt him falter at the words, just for a beat, the rhythm catching like youâd reached back and put a hand flat on his sternum. He slowed, dragged himself almost all the way out and held there, trembling, his whole weight coming down over your back so his mouth was now at your ear and you could feel everything against the shell of it.
âI know,â he said, words ragged. âI know I canât. Doesnât mean I canât try.â
His hand moved around the dip of your waist, and he pulled out of you slow, the loss making you bite down on a sound. Then he was rolling you, one palm flat and insistent on your hip, turning you under him onto your back like it was the easiest thing in the world.
âNoââ You got an arm up, forearm against your own eyes, because you knew what he wanted, and you werenât going to give it to him. The face, the looking. From behind, you could keep it what it was; turned over, youâd have to be there for it. âJack, leave it. I donâtââ
âHey.â He held your wrist, thumb working into the soft inside of it where your pulse was going stupid. âCâmon. Move the arm.â
âNo.â
âYou wonât evenââ He let out a low laugh, disbelieving, almost wounded. âYouâll let me do every other thing but you wonât even look at me?â
âThatâs different.â
âYeah.â He went quiet for a moment, and his hand slid up the inside of your thigh, holding you open, patient as anything. He knew exactly what the looking was and exactly why you were hiding from it, and he was going to wait you out. âI know it is. Move the arm anyway.â
He braced over you on his arm, the other hand drawing slow idle circles high on your thigh, his cock notched against you and not pushing in, just there, the threat and promise of him, while he looked down at the arm over your face. You could feel him watching.
So you did move the arm, mostly just to spite him by giving him exactly what he wanted. His face was right thereâjaw tight, eyes gone dark and fixed on you like you were the only lit thing in the roomâand the second you met it, the slight smugness melted clean down the middle and there was just the wanting underneath, naked and his.
âThank god,â he breathed before pushing back into you. His eyes tracked your face scrunch up at the familiarâtoo familiarâpleasure like heâd been starving for exactly this. His hand left your jaw and found your knee, hooking it up higher over his hip. Heâd always known your left hip sat wrong, that this was the angle that didnât ache after; the same way you knew, without ever being told, to take the weight off his right side, the two of you arranging yourselves around each other the way you always had. âKnew you were in there somewhere.â
âDonât get sentimental, Jackâ you said, breathless. âYouâll pull something.â
He huffed a laugh against your jaw. Your hand had gone to his left shoulder and you pressed your thumb into the knot that always sat under the blade after a long shift, working it slow while he moved in you. He groaned low and helpless at the unexpected mercy of it.
âMouthy,â he managed to say. âEven now.â
âYouâre soâso insufferable.â
His mouth found the corner of yours and his hand slid up your ribs so his thumb could catch the underside of your breast exactly where he knew; your back came up off the mattress for him. âYou married me anyway. Whatâs that say about you?â
You got your fingers to his hair and scratched once at the base of his skull, the thing that used to put him to sleep in under five minutes, something youâd done about a thousand times in a bed you no longer shared. You watched his eyes go briefly unfocused with how much his body remembered it meant being safe. You hated that youâd done it.Â
The easy heat in him went somewhere graver, and his hand came up to cover yours where it rested in his hair. He pinned it there, keeping the touch on him, like he couldnât bear for you to take it back.
âWhyâd youââ His hips stuttered. âWhyâd you have to go, huh?â
âDonât,â you said quickly, and your hand came out of his hairâyou made it come down, fighting the pin of his fingersâand you planted your palm against his chest to put an inch back between the two of you. âDonât talk. Justâshut up. Jack, shut up andââ
He took in a breath, lips still parted like he wanted to talk. Youâd expected it. Jack was fabulous at saying everything important while inside you or when he was halfway asleep.
âYeah.â He nodded shakily. âYeah. Okay.â
He got an arm under the small of your back and hauled you up into him, and the next stroke was just deep and selfish, like heâd stopped trying to make his point and now was only trying to get somewhere. The slow ruinous tenderness burned off into something with no thought left in it, and your body surged up to meet itâGodâyes, this, you could do, this didnât ask you for anything youâd sworn off. This was just the white-hot animal fact of him and you could be all the way in without losing a single thing.Â
âThere,â he ground out, forehead dropped to yours, both of you breathing into the same inch of air. âThereâfuckâthere you go.â
Your mind went black. That was the mercy of getting it like this; the part of you that counted the times heâd said your name, that totted up what the morning had cost, went quiet, drowned clean in the simple overwhelming good of him. You grabbed at his back and pulled him in past where there was room and made a strangled noise.
His hand found yours where it was fisted in the sheet and laced through it, knuckles white, pinning it down beside your headâneeding the anchorâand you gripped back just as hard. The bed was loud. Neither of you cared. You'd gone past the place where you could have stopped even if the smarter version of you had walked in and ordered it, both of you just chasing the finish now with a kind of grim mutual desperation, like if you got it done fast enough you wouldn't have to deal with what it was.
âClose,â you breathed. âJack, Iâm closeââÂ
âI know. Câmon, let me feel itââ His hand let go of yours and dropped between you, fingers finding you without a second of searching, the muscle-memory of you deathly absolute. âBeen thinking about this all night.âÂ
He worked you up to the edge with his face buried in your throat and his hips snapping. The whole thing finally cresting into something neither of you could've talked through if you'd tried.
You went over first, the peak tearing through you with your nails dug into his back and your spine bowed clean off the mattress. He fucked you through every second of it, hips ramming, dragging it up past the point you could stand. And right at the end of yours his rhythm broke and went erratic, deep and grinding and graceless, and you felt the exact moment it caught him.
His arms hooked tighter under the small of your back and hauled you up into him so there was nowhere for him to go but deeper, like the thought of any distance between the two of you right now was a thing he couldnât tolerate. Your legs wrapped around the backs of his thighs anyway, your heel pressed into the base of his spine.
âGonnaââ His voice came out shredded, into your throat. âSweetheart, Iâm gonnaâfuckââ
With a low broken sound, his whole weight crushed down and his hips gave those last helpless grinding pushes, burying himself to the hilt, spilling into you with his face shoved into your neck and his hand fisted in your hair. He continued moving even then, small, greedy rolls of his hips, working himself deeper through the aftershocks, wringing every second out.Â
âGod.â He shuddered out the word against your pulse, hips still flush, seated as deep as he could get. His arms came around you completelyâthere wasnât any inch he wasnât holdingâand he stayed there long after he finished, unwilling to give up the last of it. Greedy even now, especially now. Jack would take every second he was handed and a few he wasnât.
His heart slammed against your ribs. His breath dragged itself slowly back down. For a moment, you let him have it. You let him stay heavy on and inside you, and you stared at the ceiling.Â
After a minuteâbecause thatâs all you could grant him, a mere sixty secondsâyou put your palm flat on his chest, over the spot where the dog tags had settled cold against his skin, and you pushed.
He came up on his forearms and he looked down at you. That was the hundredth mistake of the night, letting him be that close to your face with the lights of the street coming through the blinds in stripes across him. He looked at you the way he looked at you in the one place he ever did, like you were something he'd been allowed to hold and was already being asked to set back down, and the wanting in it was so total and so useless that you had to look at his collarbone instead.
Then his fingers came up to your chin, tilting your head up gently to meet his eyes again. âI wish you werenât so cruel to me in front of people.â he said, voice coming out so rough.Â
You knew exactly which part of the night he was talking about. Heâd carried it the whole way hereâthrough the parking lot, through the drive, through all of this, your body still humming with himâand heâd held onto it the entire time, only to let it out now because now was the only time he could.
âItâs not cruel if itâs true,â you said. âNobody thought it was cruel.â
âNo, nobody thought anything.â He caressed your jaw just slightly, and you stilled under the grazing touch. âI still felt it.âÂ
Maybe it was the hour, or the drinks still thinning in you, or just the unbearable fact of him looking at you. Regardless of what it was, the lid you kept on the old thing slipped, and you didn't get it back down in time.
âDonât talk to me about cruelty, Jack,â you said quietly, holding his eyes even though you could feel your own burn. You could do it for once, because he was the one that looked like he needed a collarbone to fix his gaze on. âIt was your cruelty that did this.â
His thumb stopped at your jaw. And then, instead of the stillness youâd expected, his hand slid back into your hair and his arm came around you and he pulled you in, the whole weight of him bearing down. His face went into your neck.Â
You froze under him, suddenly hating him all over again for making this harder and harder each time.
âGo home,,â you said, and it came out lower than youâd wanted it to.
He let out a shaky breath against your skin. âIâd like to stay with you for one night. If you asked.âÂ
Your hands came up to his shoulders. You gently pushed. âIâm asking you to go.â
He came up off you slow, by degrees, and the cold rushed into every place heâd just been. He never argued; he only gave you offers where with the condition of you having to ask welded into them. He sat up on the edge of the bed with his back to you and reached for his shirt off the floor.
People at the hospital had a word for you and it was âdifficult.â Youâd made peace with it years ago. What you didnât have a word for was the tired. Youâd been tired before; this had a different grain to it, bone-level and sitting-behind-your eyes. Twice this week the floor had gone soft and far away when you stood up too fast. Youâd put a hand on the counter and waited it out and told no one.
You hadn't eaten, either. The granola bar was still in your bag. So when you stood up from the workstation to walk the corrected units down yourself, the room didn't gray at the edges this time. It dropped. The whole thing tilted bright then dim, your hand reached for the counter and missed it by an inch, and the next clear thing was the floor being closer than it should be and a hand hard around your arm.
âOkayâIâve got you. Sit.â Dana, you recognized. Of course it was Dana; she had a sixth sense for the exact second a person stopped standing upright. She steered you down to a chair before youâd finished falling. âHead down. Between the knees. Youâve told a hundred people to do thisâdo it.â
âIâm fine,â you said, voice coming out depleted. âI just got up tooââ
âYeah, youâve been getting up fast a couple times this week.â " Her hand was on the back of your neck, two fingers at your pulse, and she wasn't looking at your face, she was looking at her watch, counting, and the professionalism of itâthe way she'd switched you from colleague to patient without asking your permissionâmade something cold go through you. âWhenâd you eat, hon?â
âI ate.â
âWhen?â When you stayed silent, she said, âThatâs what I thought.â
She straightened up and you heard her turn. âHey! Somebody grab Robby. No, heâs notâjust grab him.â She turned back to you, and gentler than you wanted, in a way that told you exactly how bad you looked, she said, âWeâre gonna put you in a room. Donât make a face. Weâre gonna put you in a room, run some fluids, check a couple things. If itâs nothingâthank godâthen itâs nothing, and you can be insufferable about it for weeks. But you went down, sweetheart, and Iâm not arguing with you about it.â
You wanted to argue; you wanted to refuse the chair and go back to work instead of occupying a bed at work. But you were so tired. You were tired, and some animal part of you had already known that for two weeks and had been waiting, with a patience that frightened you, for someone to make you stop.
So you let Dana walk you to the room. You let her pull the curtain. You sat on the edge of the gurney in a department you'd worked in for over a decade and let a colleague put a line in your arm, and you stared at the corner of the blood pressure cuff and did not let yourself think the one thought that had started, very quietly, somewhere underneath the tired, to assemble itself, and would not finish assembling until Robby came in twenty minutes later with your labs and a look on his face you couldn't read, and asked you, carefully, like a man stepping onto ice, when your last period was.
Youâd seen him tell a people about death with more steadiness than he was managing right now, standing at the foot of your gurney with a tablet he wasn't looking at, asking you about your cycle like the answer was already on the screen and he was just giving you the courtesy of arriving at it yourself.
âWhy?â you asked flatly.
âJust humor me. Tell me.â
You told him and he had no reaction, and that was how you knew. Robbyâs face had gone completely neutral.
âOkay,â he said, setting the tablet down. âYour labs came back. Everythingâsâthe anemiaâs mild. Thatâs the lightheadedness and not-eating. Weâll sort that out.â He paused, took a breath in, and the cold thing that had gone through you on the floor came back and sat down in your chest and stayed. âYour hCGâs elevated.â
You felt your body run cold then.
âThatâs the pregnancy hormone,â he said gently. He was a teacher before anything, and that reflex was still on, even with you.
âI know what hCG is, Robby,â you said, the words coming out sharp, voice cracking the last word in half. You saw him nod sharply as he decided to ignore it. âIâI know what it is.â
âItâs early,â he said. âNumbers are consistent with early, which means youâve got time. Thatâs what Iâm saying. Youâve got time to think about whatever you need to think about.â He was being so careful. âI didnât put it into anything yet. I wanted to talk to you first.â
Early. Youâve got time.Â
He picked the tablet upâdone being a doctor about it now, the official part handledâand leaned a hip against the counter, and his voice changed, going off-duty.
âHey,â he said. âCongratulations.â
You nodded, your mind already distant.Â
âYou gonna tell Jack?â
Your mind sharpened. For a second, you genuinely didnât understand the sentence. Your brain refused it wholly, turned it over to look for the trick. There was no way Robby knewâthere was no way anybody knewâbecause youâd been so careful, the whole thing happened in the dark precisely so it wouldnât seep into the light, so nobody could say a sentence like that. Your stomach dropped through the gurney.
âHuh?âÂ
Robby looked at you, then shrugged. âI just figured, because you two still talk. Heâd want to know. Big life thing.â Then, he added softer, misreading your face completely, âI guess itâs really over between the two of you then?â
You felt your breath hitch in your throat. That was what people would think when it got out, that the door has finally shut. Theyâd think you were getting clear, a baby with somebody new means the Jack-of-it-all was finally done, mercifully done. That youâd moved on and met someone, that you were building a thing past the divorce you survived. This was supposed to be proof of it. The sad civilized arrangement nobody named, ended at last by a life you were starting without him.
Robby had it exactly backwards and he had no way to know it. It was the furthest thing from over. It was likely the most permanent thing that had ever happened to you, and it had Jackâs name and only Jackâs name. The thing Robby believed to be your way out was the thing that could mean thereâd never be a way out. Not anymore, if you chose to have this child. Not ever. Youâd be tied to Jack Abbot. A year and a half of getting clear by inches.
You realized Robby was still standing there and that heâd asked you something. He was waiting for an answer you didnât have the throat for.
âCan you give me a minute?â Your voice came out hoarse. âJustâa minute. Please. And donât put it into anything yet. Justâdonât let anyone know.â
Robby nodded, probably thinking you needed a beat to let the good news settle, to feel something private and large before the world got its hands on it. âCourse. Iâll hold the room, keep people out. Take your time.âÂ
His hand found your shoulder on the way past, squeezing, and then the curtain rings scraped along the rod and he was gone.Â
It all came up at once, fast and without warning. Your hand was flat on the edge of the gurney and you watched it shake, and you made it stop. You could always make your hands stop. What you couldnât do was make the rest of it stop. The rest of it was the thought you wouldn't think of, thinking itself anyway, and the worst part was the voice it came in, your own, flat, professional, the one you used to walk a frightened patient through their options without ever letting it shake. You could end it. It's early. Numbers consistent with early. You knew exactly how early early was. You knew the window, the way you knew the shelf life of a unit of platelets down to the day. You knew how clean it was, how legal, how completely nobody's business but your own. There was a door. Right now, there was still a door.
There was a door. There was, right now, still a door; it was the realest door, the one that actually led all the way out that would let you walk back into the life where you got clear of Jack Abbot for good and never had to share a child or a custody calendar or a name with him. He would give you Kevin, you knew that. Over would mean over, for good, where in five years youâd be a woman the hospital remembered being married once, to the ERâs night shift attending, you know the one.
You could take that door. It was yours to take. Nobody even had to know.Â
You sat in the small bright room and made yourself look directly at the door and waited to feel the relief of it, yet it didnât come. What came instead, rising up under the grief like a second tide, worse than the first, was a thing you had no word for and no right to and could not, would not, look at straight on, was that it was Jackâs.
You wished you could see it as a curse, and somewhere in the last thirty seconds it had turned over in you and come up as something else; a small, traitorous, and warm thing. It was the exact warmth that had locked your ankles around him, the same warmth that had opened the door for him every night. A piece of him you could get to keep, that no amount of divorce could put back in its box. The one version of forever you two were going to get. And a part of you, a part you despised with everything you had, wanted it. More than the baby in the abstract. His, specifically and unforgivably.Â
You put your hand over your mouth as you felt it all come up, and you criedâthe real way, the way you hadnât since the lawyerâs office. You cried a cry that came up from the root and shook you apart, alone, in a place where you worked, with only a curtain covering you.Â
You couldnât have heard the shift change happen on the other side of the curtain. The hospital had kept turning around your little curtained box, that somewhere out there it had ticked over into evening and the day people were handing the floor to the night people. You hadnât heard any of it.Â
You hadnât heard Dana catch him at the board, and she would haveâyou know she would have triedâput a hand flat on his chest the second she saw which way he was moving. You only heard the curtain rings scrape against the rod.Â
You looked upâruined, mid-breath, your hand still pressed over your own mouth with your face holding an expression no one had ever seen you do. And there was Jack with one hand still fisted in the curtain he'd thrown back, stopped dead in the gap of it.
Heâd come in braced, almost with the same register he came in when there was a level 1 trauma, except this one was a case of lightheadedness. His sleeves were shoved to his elbow, jaw already set, and heâd walked in expecting to find blood or something else equal to that, a thing heâd be able to clean up and fix. He had a hand half-raised for it, and it stayed there, hovering, for it had nothing to fix.Â
You knew his face better than your own; thereâd never once been a thing he couldâve kept from you, not even when it felt like he was hardly your husband, especially then. You watched the readiness dissipate off of Jackâs face, watched the doctor leave him by degrees until what was left standing was just Jack.Â
Just Jack had no protocol for this; there was nothing heâd been taught to do with his face when you were crying because you didnât cry.
He of all people knew so. Heâd sat at a conference table with you while a mediator clicked a pen and you signed your name with a hand that was too steady. Heâd carried his own boxes down to the truck while you watched from the upstairs window, dry-eyed, because tears would have made it all real and you refusedâout of spite, out of the last thing you hadâto make it real where he could see.Â
His mouth opened, and his throat worked around words, any word. When he finally spoke, it was just your name, and it came out cracked down the middle, like a plea and a prayer.Â
He had no idea. It made you sob slightly louder than you wouldâve liked, the realization that he was standing there gutted with fear for you, scared past the edge of himself, and he did not know. Jack could not have known that he was the answer, that you were the answer. If heâd asked you what had happened, the whole truth would have been his name and your own; it would have been the thing youâd done together in the dark a couple dozen times and called nothing.Â
âI hate you,â you said, because the only thing youâd been capable of doing was throwing up a wall, driving him out with your own two hands. And it didnât work, because the words had come out between sobs, wet and wrong, the cruelty falling apart on the way out.Â
He didnât argue it. He never argued the ones he thought were true. He just took it the same way heâd taken every other blow youâd ever landed, without ever lifting a hand to stop it, as though heâd decided a long time ago this was the least of what he had coming.
Still, something moved through him when the words hit, a flinch, a wince that started behind his eyes and pulled his whole face down with it.Â
He came the rest of the way to you anyway, and your hand came up between youâfar from a hit, there was nothing left in your arm to make one, just the heel of your palm landing against his chest, more sob turned outward than strike. It pushed against nothing. Jack didnât even rock with it. And then your fingers were curling into the fabric over his sternum instead, gripping when youâd wanted to shove, the same failure of your hands as two weeks ago; pushing him away and hauling him in, your body unable to decide which.
âYouââ Another blow, glancing off his chest. âWhy did we haveââ
âOkay.â He let you continue, letting the first ones land, face stricken and bewildered as he absorbed the blows for a crime he couldnât name. âOkay. Okay, heyââ
You drew back, and when your hand closed in again, his own came up and closed around your wrist. You couldâve pulled freeâheâd left you room for itâbut you let him keep holding it there against his chest where youâd been striking him.
âWhat happened,â he said, words coming out quietly, not even a question. âWhatever it is. Talk to me. What happened?â
He started to move into you, closing the space between you by inches, his other hand coming up to your face, your shoulder, somewhere, anywhere, his whole self trying to fold into your orbit the way it always had. âJust tell me,â he said, closer now, voice dropped lower, into a register it stayed it when it was only the two of you. âLet meââ
âNo.â You twisted your wrist in his hand and turned your face away from the one coming toward it. âYou canât justâI wonât let youââ
His forehead had dropped down to hover over your temple, the warmth of him crowding into every place youâd been trying to wall off. âIâm not. Iâm not doing anything. Iâm just hereâlet me be here.â
Here. Heâd said the word so softly, with so much surety, like it was a small thing to ask, like it had been a place heâd ever once been. The wall you'd been holding with both hands didn't come down so much as it went out from under you, the way the floor had two weeks ago, all at once and without your permission.
You stopped twisting away. You felt him feel the fight going out of your wrist under his fingers and felt the new alertness move through him.
âYou want to be here,â you said into his chest, where your fists were still knotted in his shirt, the words coming out muffled aimed at the fabric. Then, through a disbelieving laugh devoid of any humor, you said, âYou want to be here?â
âYeah,â he breathed out. âYeah. Iâm here.â
âFuckingââ The laugh that tore out of you was anything but one. âCongratulations, then.â Your forehead pressed down hard against his sternum, your eyes squeezed shut, because you couldnât say it and knew you were going to anyway. At least you wouldnât have to watch. âFuckâYouâre gonna be a father.â
Everything that had been moving stopped all at once; the hand at your jaw, the thumb that had been working slow along your wrist, the whole restless warmth of him trying to fold into you went motionless. For a second, he didnât even breathe.
You forced yourself to look up. You wanted, somewhere mean and small and ten years old, to see it touch Jack. You wanted to finally watch something get all the way through.Â
You got it, and it was worse than youâd let yourself imagine.
The first thing that fell of was the part that told you he was ready to fix this, fix you. It fell clean off, his brows furrowing in worry, a tell that looked too tiny for something this large.Â
For a secondâless than that, before he could pull the reins on itâsomething that had no business being there moved under the fear. You knew it because youâd felt the exact same thing only a few minutes ago, alone, the warm traitorous thing rising up under the grief. It was there, on his faceâunguarded, naked, wantingâand you watched him catch it. You watched his whole face wilt as he understood, in real time, that he wasn't allowed to feel it, that the wanting was obscene standing next to your wreckage, and you watched him put it away. He got it back behind the wall fast, the way he got everything back behind the wall.
Only his hands gave him up. The one at your jaw had started to shake.
He let out a choked sound, like he was trying to lift the words out of his chest but they kept getting stuck halfway.Â
âYouâreââ He stopped himself and swallowed, not being able to get the back half of a sentence out of his own throat. âWeâreâ?â
âYeah.â
His fingers around your wrist pulled it closer to his chest, as if he could press it through his body and into wherever the words wouldnât come from.Â
âLet meââ he said, and stopped. Every possible word was too big to get a mouth around. âJustâlet me.â His forehead came down against yours, and his eyes shut, and you felt the whole of him shaking now, not just the hand. âPlease.â
Out of the Fog (1941) dir. Anatole Litvak




