i woke up just in time, now i wake up by your side
hello! this is for the (final!) @b99fandomeventsāi canāt believe how far these two (and this show) have come, and iām gonna miss them so much. i got to write this for @amydancepants-peralta, who wanted a fic where jake and amy have a disatrous first date, and then amy decides to transfer to chicagoājake has three days to convince her to stay.
enjoy! (you can also read this on ao3.)
Itās their first date, and itās a disaster.
Neither of them has said anything in the ten minutes since theyāve sat down. Jake buries his nose into the menu, hoping that he looks occupied enough with choosing an entrĆ©e to excuse the heavy silence that has settled over the table. A few feet away, in the other side of the booth, Amy does the same thing.
A young man in a pressed suit and tie approaches their table, a small, nervous smile on his face. āAre you all ready to order?ā
āYes!ā Amy nearly leaps at the chance to talk to someone who is not Jake. Jake tries not to feel too hurt by the desperate excitement in her voice. āIāll take the chicken piccata, please.ā
Jake lingers around the chicken parmesan but ends up going with a steak, because heās determined to show Amy and maybe himself that he can eat like an adult. They pass their silk-embossed menus to the waiter, sip their waters, and suddenly itās too quiet again.
āYou got a haircut,ā Jake notices, wringing his hands nervously under the table.
āIt looks nice.ā
āThanks.ā
There is a beat of silence that stretches just a little too long, and then Jake says, āThis is awkward.ā
Amy chokes out a laugh. āYeah.ā
Another moment passes. Jake swallows the non-existent saliva in his mouth. Their waiter, mercifully, returns with their food a few minutes later. Jake doesnāt want him to leave. He does, of course, and then theyāre left in that terrible silence again.
Jake makes it through half his steak before speaking again. āShould we, um, just get really drunk?ā
Amy grimaces, reaching for her water. āI donāt think so.ā Her voice is quiet, almost defeated. āIf we canāt do this sober, whatās the point?ā
Something twists uncomfortably in Jakeās stomach, but he stabs his fork into his a piece of broccoli anyway. - Itās the day after their first date, and Amy asks for a transfer.
Jake learns about this through a wail from the evidence lockup that he hears from a good twenty yards away. He bursts through the door, frantic, to find Charles curled in a ball on the ground, rocking back and forth.
Charles gets out the details in between sobs, or at least enough details that Jake gets most of the picture. Amy put in a transfer to Chicago, itās been granted on account of an emergency vacancy that needs to be filled, and she has three days left at the Nine-Nine.
āThree days,ā Charles gasps, tears streaming out of his eyes. āThree days, you have to convince her to stay, Jake, you have toāā
āHold on,ā Jake says desperately, watching Charles dab at his face with a completely saturated tissue. āLet me get you another box of Kleenex.ā
He opens the door to leave and runs straight into the source of Charlesās despair, in the flesh.
āOh,ā says Amy.
Jake closes the door behind him before Charles can see her and have a heart attack, then crosses his arms. āIs it true? Are you leaving?ā
Amy has the grace to look self-conscious, shuffling her feet and shoving her hands in her pockets. She nods, and Jake feels strangely like the walls are swimming around him.
It just makes sense, she says. She has family there, and New York is too crowded, too expensive, and maybe Chicago is a better place to live anyway.
āIs this because of me?ā Jake demands. āBecause ofā¦you knowā¦our date?ā
āNo, of course not.ā She doesnāt look at him as she says it.
Jake scoffs before stalking past her into the bullpen, ignoring her half-hearted call of his name. He blinks back the hot, furious tears forming in his eyes, and internally he starts a calendar. - On Day One, Jake calls in sick to work.
He responds to the ār u ok??ā texts from Charles, Rosa, Gina, and Terry with a copy-and-pasted āIām ok. Just feeling gross.ā He ignores the ones that mention Amy. He also pretends like he doesnāt notice that Amy hasnāt sent him anything.
The morning is spent mindlessly scrolling through his social media beneath his blankets, with no regard for time or his grumbling stomach.
At noon, Charles posts a picture of the squad from Halloween with the caption āGonna miss my favorite Halloween-hater. #SayonaraSantiago.ā Jake decides heās had enough Instagram for the day and finally hauls himself out of bed.
He orders a pizza, then turns his phone off and the TV on. Inadvertently, the pizza becomes both lunch and dinner and one Die Hard movie becomes a marathonāand before he knows it, the sky outside his apartment is dark.
āWell, that was productive,ā Jake mutters, brushing the pizza crumbs off his lap before standing up to toss his trash into the garbage.
On Day Two, they arenāt talking to each other.
Amy looks up almost timidly as he walks out of the elevator, then waits until he reached his desk to let out a small, hesitant āHi.ā
Jake grabs the file waiting for him on his desk and walks out of the bullpen without looking at her.
So, strictly speaking, this is mostly his fault.
That fact does not do anything to quell the mixture of anger and hurt writhing in his stomach. He spends the day furiously completing paperwork in an empty interrogation room, jabbing his pen so furiously into the paper that he rips a hole in an I-918 and has to start over.
At noon, Rosa stops by with a turkey sub, which she drops wordlessly on the desk in front of him before sliding back out the door.
At five, he has completed more paperwork than he has in the last month combined. He drops the stack of files on Terryās desk, forces a smile, and says, āFinally caught up on all those forms youāve been hounding me about.ā
Terry, his eyes piercing and slightly concerned, does not laugh. āDismissed.ā
Itās Day Three, and Holt has had enough.
He assigns Jake and Amy to label evidence in the lockup together, much to Jakeās chagrin. Amy turns and speeds off without a word. Jake turns towards Holt with a big, reproachful protest on the tip of his tongue but is cut off by Holtās raised eyebrows and stern expression.
āPeralta, you need to get over yourself.ā
āWhat?ā
āYou need to get over yourself,ā Holt repeats. āYour partner of six years is leaving tomorrow, and you havenāt spoken to her in three days.ā
Jake snorts, crossing his arms defensively. āYeah, well, sheās leaving because of me, soāā
āIām not sure that matters,ā Holt says, not unkindly. āIf you let her leave like this, you might never get the chance to talk to her again.ā
Jake stares at the ground, furiously attempting to dig a hole in the ground with his toe.
āI know you donāt want this to be the way things end.ā Holtās voice is gentle, and Jake canāt bring himself to look up. āIt would be unwise to let your pride get in the way of your last chance to save your friendship.ā
āWhatever,ā Jake mutters irritably, but something uncomfortable has begun to form in his gut. āGimme that Sharpie so I can go write case numbers on a bunch of ziplock bags.ā
Jake does not, in fact, get over himselfāat least not for the first few hours. He chooses to instead label evidence in the same furious silence that has occupied his past three days, pretending he doesnāt see the furtive, almost timid glances Amy throws his way every few minutes.
Then he walks to a bodega for lunch and realizes mid-chew that this is Amyās last lunch at the Nine-Nine, and the uncomfortable thing in his stomach grows a lot bigger.
He finally swallows his pride on his walk back to the precinct, and when he re-enters the evidence lockup the thing in his stomach has started feeling a lot more like guilt.
Amy walks in a few minutes after him, tossing a balled-up sandwich wrapper into the trash, and notices that heās watching her. āYou have something to say to me?ā
āYeah, actually,ā Jake says quickly. āI do.ā
She crosses her arms and narrows her eyes, and Jakeās heart sinks a little.
āIāuhāIām sorry,ā Jake says. āFor how I reacted, and for icing you out the past few days. It was immature of me, and stupid, and I shouldāve been an adult about it, butāwell, I guess we both know I suck at that sometimes.ā
Amy snorts, but her expression has softened slightly. āThank you.ā
āAnd Iām gonna make it up to you,ā Jake continues, almost determinedly. āWeāre gonna make this the best day youāve ever had at the Nine-Nine.ā
Amy laughs slightly. āI donāt think thatās possible, given the amount of work we have left.ā
āWho cares?ā Jake shrugs. āThe best part of work has always been the people anyway.ā
And for all the organizational skills Jake may lack, he sure knows how to delegate. All it takes is a couple text messages to a new, Amy-less precinct group chat and the rest of the Nine-Nine is off. Gina cashes in on a favor and gets Shawās to close its doors for the evening. Rosa makes a last-minute motorcycle trip to a local party store and uses a sizable amount of cash and her surprising aesthetic skill to acquire a large box of decorations. Charles says, āleave the food to me,ā and no one is brave enough to question him about it.
Jake stays with Amy on the floor of the evidence lockup. They talk and laugh as they work, reminiscing about their years at the Nine-Nine and the particularly memorable perps theyāve brought in.
Thereās also a supercut of the stuff that wasnāt work at allāthe precinct parties, Charles saving Thanksgiving, the Boyle-Linetti wedding. There are the Halloween heists, the Jimmy Jabs, and thereās the Bet, with a capital B. Neither of them mentions the last one, but Jake is definitely thinking about it.
āRemember that time Terry tried to do the full bullpen and almost knocked a tooth out?ā Amy asks, grinning widely. āI thought Sharon was gonna pull him out of the force immediately.ā
āYou have no faith,ā Jake says, shaking his head. āI knew sheād let him stay.ā
āYou did not.ā Amy points at him, narrowing her eyes. āYou were so scared when she came to pick him up.ā
āI was notāā
āSo scared. Iāve never seen a grown man visibly tremble like that, butāā
āGod, shut up.ā Jake throws a balled-up piece of tape at her, and she laughs. Itās a real one, this time, one thatās bright and infectious.
They let it fade into a gentle silence, one thatās more comfortable than the ones of the past few days.
Thereās a beat, and then Jake says, āDonāt go to Chicago.ā
He expects Amy to be surprised by this change of subjectāto recoil and give an affronted, āwhat?ā
Instead, she sighs, long and slow, and closes the manila folder in front of her. āJakeāā
āI mean, I know itās your decision, and I respect that,ā Jake says quickly. āAnd if you truly meant what you said to me earlier, about how itās important to be near your family and itās a better place for you to live and youāve grown out of New Yorkāif thatās really the reason youāre leaving, then thatās fine. Just tell me, and Iāll shut up about it and we can just have a big blowout goodbye party and you can leave.ā
Amy picks at the edge of her boot and says nothing.
āBut if itās notāif youāre leaving because of what happened on our dateāI donāt want to be the reason you give this up, Amy. I know how much you love it here, and this place loves you too. Captain Holt is a phenomenal mentor to you, we both know that, and you might not get that in Chicagoāyouāve done so much good work here that I know youāre proud of, and I canāt be the reason you donāt have that anymore.ā
Amy looks at him, her eyes a stormy mix of unreadable emotions, but still doesnāt say anything.
āLook,ā Jake says, splaying out his hands in front of him. āThat date was kind of a disaster, we both know that. And I think itās because we were both trying too hard, because we cared too much. Because weāre friends, Amy, and thatās whatās most important to me.ā
He takes a deep breath, then says, āI donāt care if we never date. I donāt care if I never get to hug you, or kiss you, or do any of the things Iāve so desperately wanted to do. I just canāt lose your friendship. Youāre the best partner Iāve ever had, and an even better friend, and I would be more than happy to just be friends with you for the rest of my life. God knows itās more than I deserve.ā
āYou deserve plenty,ā Amy says softly.
Jake swallows the way that makes his chest flutter. āIām just sayingāIām laying my cards all out on the table, here. I want you to stay, and I respect it if you donāt want that. But please donāt let me be the reason for you leaving.ā
Thereās a beat of silence, and then Amy gives him a small, wistful smile that says everything Jake needs to hear.
āOkay,ā he says, taking a deep breath and wiping his hands on his jeans. āParty at Shawās it is, then.ā
Amy slaps the last label on a duffle bag, checks her watch, and stands. āIām actually taking off earlyāI need to clear up some stuff at City Hall before I leave. Iāll meet you there?ā
āOh,ā Jake says, a little dumbfounded.
Amy notices his expression and shakes her head quickly. āNo, itās notāI mean, this has been settled for days, Holt knows, I was always leaving at three today. So itās not, like, spontaneous, you know. I wouldāve told you earlier, butā"
āI was being an ass. Yeah.ā
Amy gives him that little sad smile again, and Jake wants to kick a wall. āIāll see you at the bar,ā she says, almost gently.
Jake forces a smile and nods. āYeah. Looking forward to it.ā - When he pushes through the doors of his favorite bar a few hours later, Jake is expecting loud music, streamers, andāif Ginaās Instagram stories were credibleāpossibly Mario Lopez. Instead, the bar is completely empty.
There are no balloons, no decorationsāthe only set table is in the middle of the floor, and on it sits a pizza, two salads, and two glasses of water.
āWhatāwhat is this?ā Jake mutters, mostly to himself.
āA dinner between two friends,ā Amy says, emerging from behind the bar. She gives him a small, slightly nervous smile. āAnd if it goes well, a second date.ā
Jake blinks.
āYou were right,ā Amy tells him, carrying a bottle of wine and two wine glasses to the table. āOur friendship is the most important thing, here, and it means a lot to both of us. I mean, thatās why we were trying so hard in the first place, right? Neither of us wanted it to fail.ā
Jake nods in silent assent, not trusting whatever his mouth would say if he let it.
āBut it did fail. Miserably.ā
āUh-huh,ā Jake says, somewhat stupidly.
āSo the worst thing that could happen has already happened, and weāve gotten through it. And I thinkāI think, now, having gone through the past few days, we know enough to give it another shot. As long as we set very clear boundaries.ā
āBoundaries,ā Jake repeats. āBoundaries are good.ā
āYeah,ā says Amy with a slightly amused smile. āSo, weāre friends. Really good friends. And thatās what we have to protect, above anything. So this is not necessarily a date. Itās a dinner, and weāre a pair of very good friends who are gonna eat it. And if we want to, afterwards, we can decide to call it a date.ā
āCan you do that?ā Jake asks. āLabel something a date after itās already happened?ā
āWho cares?ā Amy smirks. āSince when have you followed rules?ā
Jake swallows and shrugs.
āAnyway, if itās awkward, or weird, then we move past it. Itās a slightly awkward moment between friends that doesnāt have to mean anything. No more silent treatment, no more rash decisions, just two friends who are still friends afterwards. Got it?ā
āAfterwards,ā Jake says slowly. āSoāChicagoāā
āYeah, Iām not going,ā Amy says, her eyes sparkling. āThat was a dumb thing I did to avoid this guy I went on a terrible date with.ā
A broad grin starts to make its way across Jakeās face. āHe sounds like he sucks.ā
Amy laughs, then pulls out a chair and points at it. āSoāpizza?ā
The grin on Jakeās face softens into something smaller, something gentler. āDefinitely.ā
They each take a slice, then a bite, and Jake will never admit itābut itās the best Meat Supreme heās ever tasted.




















