dudes over on reddit consuming hbowar in a "woah the military is so cool. guns go pew pew. killing people is based" way. trite. boring. us on tumblr however? "woah these men were put in situations difficult beyond their wildest dreams and coped via being homoerotically close with one another in ways they would never dare to be under regular circumstances". enlightened. woke.
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Summary: A medic who keeps accidentally insulting her lieutenant one too many times, a lieutenant who pretends he's not affected, a squad that decided they're basically married and the aftermath.
Word count: 18k of madness (I'm sorry for this)
A/N: There's so much that didn't make the cut and I might post snippets later if you guys want xD I'm also sorry for how long this took. (Also I love this gif. how does one even look this adorable while exasperated) I'm so happy I finally got this fic done, it's been sitting in my drafts for so long.
Warning: Medical inaccuracies, sexism, military inaccuracies probably coz I don't know shit about that stuff.
Disclaimer: This is a fan fiction based on the HBO War series Generation kill and purely on the actors' portrayals of the real veterans. I do not in any way mean any disrespect to them.
Ray always managed to bring out the worst in you. Last time he had somehow twisted the conversation in such a way that made you the number one public enemy of vegans. In your defence, whatever you had said was strictly coming from a medical point of view, but Ray, in all his glory, promptly held his high horse just to piss you off. And it pained you to say that he succeeded, like he always did.Â
The desert sand was simmering under the burning sun, not unlike every other afternoon, but something else flowed with the breeze on that particular day. The humvees were already covered, the camouflage shielding you and the men from the heat but not the frustration or the restlessness that lingered over the camp.
The failure of the past mission was still hanging over everyoneâs heads. The convoy was meant to skim on the edge of a hamlet. It was supposed to be quick and easy, with no contact between the locals whatsoever. But just like most of everything that went on around here, it all went to shit as soon as the Captain decided to raid for prisoners, despite the fact that the recon fireteam had already conducted surveillance and confirmed that the village only housed women and children.Â
Of course, the raid had been unsuccessful, but Encinoman obviously got away with a gentle slap on the wrist despite having blown up innocent people in their own homes, while the team leaders had to crack open their brains to look for ways to catch up on the precious hours they had lost over a fruitless mission.
You wiped down the dust clogging Bradâs wound using a cotton pad, biting down on the inside of your cheek as Ray went on and on about how the reason you were all here was, for the lack of better words, because of the drought of good pussy. You had given up trying to shut him up, so as you and Brad shared another exasperated glance, you bundled up the used cotton on the ground between your legs and rummaged through your rucksack for some bandages.Â
Ray paused in his nonsense, and turned to look straight at you, âSeriously. You could have a life. An actual normal life. Like normal people jobs, normal people showers. And yet here you are. With us. Thatâs either dedication or brain damage.â
You looked up to the hood of the Humvee, where he sat sprawled against the windshield, still fumbling with the bandage you had yet to wrap around Bradâs ricochet wound which had been left to fester for days before Ray finally bullied him into getting it checked out. âAnythingâs better than my dad trying to pimp me out to an Army Major,â you said, as casually as someone picking pineapple toppings off a pizza.Â
The words landed like a grenade.Â
Ray let out a blistering laugh, then he froze mid-gesture, ration pack halfway to his mouth. âYouâre shitting me, you serious?â he said when a smile didnât crack your face like it usually did when you joked around.Â
âI donât know, Ray. You think I like being in this shithole surrounded by ballsweat and pea brained incompetent officers whoâre eventually going to get all of us killed?â you said, unimpressed. The Captain didnât even know what danger close meant, but you werenât going to say that out loud.Â
âHeadâs up,â Brad finally murmured beside you, the low timbre of his voice making your hands go still. Footsteps grating against the sand reached your ears, and you held back from squeezing your eyes shut and cursing out loud at the thought of someone, especially any one of the officers, hearing your blasphemous words.Â
âHowâs the wound, Brad?â Lieutenant Fick asked.Â
For a moment, you were grateful you had your back to him, because no words coming out of your mouth would have justified your bold statement. You knew he probably wouldnât say or do anything about it, but still, the bruising implication laid heavy in your words.Â
You kept your eyes on anything but Rayâs delighted gaze upon your demise, his lips pursed to prevent the start of the laughter that threatened to slip through the seams of his mouth. Fick stopped beside you, close enough for your arm to keep brushing against his leg. You froze for a split second at the sudden contact, then reminded yourself that stopping wasnât an option, not when you had just given an officer a reason to NJP your ass.Â
You swallowed a sigh. He had definitely heard every word, but despite it all, his face was calm and unreadable. There was not even a flicker of reaction in his bright eyes. Â
Brad looked down his wounded arm, an unknown glint in his eyes shining as he met yours for a heartbeat. âItâs fine. Docâs here got it under control.â
Fick nodded, then his eyes shifted to you. You could feel the weight of his gaze burning a hole on the side of your face, so you busied yourself with wrapping Bradâs arm, jaw clenched so tight it could shatter your teeth. You refused to look up, as mortification at what you saidâ even if you meant itâ swirled in your chest.Â
The Lieutenant moved on as quickly as he appeared, already scanning his maps as if you hadnât just insulted him behind his back, like how the popular girls in high school would their own friends. Except this time, the consequences were definitely going to be worse than getting your relationship wrecked by a so-called best-friend.Â
Ray exhaled, eyes wide. âHoly shit. He heard you. He definitely heard you.â
Brad adjusted the bandage, unfazed. âAnd chose not to respond. That should worry you more.â
Your stomach tightened, but you levelled a murderous glare at Ray. Fick hadnât scolded, hadnât defended himself, hadnât even acknowledged the words, and somehow, that was worse, because now you couldnât tell what he was thinking.Â
You snatched the used cotton pads you had squished into a ball from the ground before hurling it at Ray. âThat was your fault! If you had actually shut your whiskey tango trap like I told you toââ
âHey! Thatâs a biohazard you just threw at me, the last thing we need around here is a pandemic.â Ray exclaimed, eyes widening as he waved his arms around dramatically.Â
âEpidemic.â
âOkay, listen here, you little piece of shitââ
âEnough, you two.â Brad intervened sternly.Â
You scoffed, âWhatever, I didnât do shit. You got a problem, you gotta take it to Ray buddy over here.â you said, stuffing your medkit and zipping it quickly so you could dip out of here and find someplace quiet for some well needed self-loathing sessions.Â
The second time it happened was several weeks after the first. You had done your best to stay out of the Lieutenantâs line of sight, successfully, until you couldnât anymore. Yes, you had bribed Doc Bryan with jalapeño-and-cheese ration packs so he would take your place delivering reports on the teamâs overall health, but that was beside the point.Â
If the Lieutenant noticed anything, he kept quiet about it, and that gave your still very fresh wound some balm, at least for now.Â
You were walking around trying to find Rudy to check up on his headache when you came upon a little field burner and a battered steel pot someone âprobably Bradâ had set up stuttering angrily.
The smell had hit you before you even saw the coffee, sharp, burnt, and offensive enough to make your stomach turn. It wasnât the usual âfield coffeeâ scent, which was bad enough. This was something worse. Acrid. Like someone had tried to boil dirt and shoe polish.Â
Curiosity (and the faint hope of caffeine) pulled you closer to the glow of the field burner. Ray crouched beside it like he was conjuring fire, and Trombley hovered with nervous fascination.Â
âPlease tell me thatâs not coffee,â you said, eyeing the dented canteen cup bubbling with black sludge. You shared a look with Doc Bryan, who you only noticed once he shifted in his seat on top of a crate with a look that said donât ask.Â
Ray grinned proudly, âLiquid motivation, Doc. One sip and youâll be awake for days.â
Bryan gave a dry snort. âOr dead in two hours, Flip a coin.â
Bradâs smirk tugged at the corner of his mouth. âGo on. Taste test. Is it Corpsman-approved?âÂ
Against your better judgement, you took the cup. It smelled worse up close, like burnt tires and despair. But pride was a dangerous thing in this squad (and so was peer pressure.) You tilted it back, forced a sip, and gagged instantly, coughing in your sleeve.Â
âOh my god,â you rasped, wiping your mouth. âThatâs not coffee. Thatâs mud that lost a fight with battery acid. Who the hell brewed this shit?â You furrowed your eyebrows, getting ready to scold the life out of whoever thought it was a good idea to brew that health hazard knowing it would most likely make the men sick by the end of the day. All you had for stomach cramps was painkillers, and that combined with coffee was a disastrous recipe for explosive diarrhea.Â
Silence.Â
The kind of silence that made your blood run cold.Â
You froze, cup still halfway to your lips, as the menâs gazes slid past you. Slowly, you followed their line of sight, and prayed it was anyone but Lieutenant Fick. Hell, you would probably sleep better if it was Godfather himself.Â
Sure enough, Fick stood just beyond the Humvee, canteen still in his hand, posture calm and perfectly straight. âI did,â he said, as if that was supposed to make you feel less fucking horrible at what you just said. Again.
Brad, that bastard, sharpened his grin like a predator smelling blood and Bryan just pinched the bridge of his nose, muttering, âJesus ChristâŠâ under his breath.Â
Your face went hot. âSir.â It came out like a squeak.Â
Fickâs eyes met yours for the first time in days. Steady. Too steady. He didnât sound angry when he spoke again, just even and clipped, which made six feet under sound like a very nice vacation spot at the moment. âItâs noted.â he said simply, before turning and walking away, boots crunching against the sand.Â
The squad held their breath until he was gone, while your face drained out of colour.Â
Then Ray exploded, wheezing with laughter. âOh my god! Youâ you just told the Lieutenant his coffee tastes like battery acid!â He doubled over, clutching his stomach. âAw man, this is exactly like last time, you know⊠the âincompetent officers are going to get us all killedâ part?â Ray sounded like a whining cat when he tried to mimic you, but you were far too horrified to cuss him out.Â
Waltâs jaw dropped. âWait, you said that?! And he heard it?âÂ
Doc Bryan finally spoke, confused as hell. âWould someone care to explain just what the fuck is going on?â
The squad jumped in, talking over each other while you tuned them out, eyes fixed on the moon, hoping it could just swallow you whole. After a few minutes of the moon failing to make you disappear from the face of the earth, you sat down on the sand beside Doc Bryan, side leaning against the crate he was perched on. You were still very much in a daze when he spoke again.Â
âYou know,â he started, voice low, dry, and just amused enough to sting, âIâve seen a lot of things in the field, but watching someone insult the Lieutenantâs coffee while heâs standing five feet away? Thatâs new.â
You let out a groan, burying your face in your hands.Â
Bryanâs smirk grew. âHe always hears, and he definitely knows everything that goes on around here.â He nodded to Ray, who had wasted no time to give Doc the full review of how you had humiliated yourself the first time minutes ago. âThatâs why youâve been bribing me. Admit it.â
âFine,â you muttered, cheeks burning. âI didnât want him to think I was disrespectful. Or incompetent.â
He shook his head, but the faint amusement in his eyes made you feel slightly less doomed. âDisrespectful? Maybe. But not incompetent. You know your stuff. Thatâs why he probably didnât even react.â
Before you could respond, you noticed a shadow stretch across the sand. Fick was there, standing quietly a few paces away.Â
But even with his back turned to you, you felt your stomach sink and every nerve in your body scream.Â
Bryan nudged you lightly. âRelax, heâs not gonna bite you. Well, not physically, anyway.â
You swallowed hard, âMentally is worse.âÂ
Then, Rayâs muffled laughter came from the other side of the Humvee. âDocâs still flustered! And here I thought we were done.â
Brad smirked, shaking his head, clearly enjoying every second. âGuess the Lieutenantâs coffee has some lingering effects.âÂ
You closed your eyes. Coffee had never been so terrifying, especially when it was made by someone who made your heart stutter like a broken espresso machine.Â
The desert was rarely quiet, but that night came close. The humvees ticked as their engines cooled, and the occasional shuffle of boots on sand blended with the faint scratch of Wrightâs pen on his notebook.Â
He had started with questions about your shitty childhood, then about your even shittier father. Then, the conversation landed on the statement that had somehow kickstarted the whole insulting-LieutenantâFick streak you had going on. You clarified, yes your father was definitely going to get you married to a military man who had won more medals than he had hair on his head, and yes, you absolutely joined the Navy out of spite to piss off your Army father, and working with the Marines was just the sweetest cherry on top you could have ever asked for.Â
You had given the reporter the stink eye after he asked about your dadâs reaction (in truth, it hadnât been that bad, he had only thrown you and your childhood dog out the house. It could have gone worse, he could have beaten you to death and buried you in the backyard.) and Wright finally understood to drop the topic after that, demonstrating emotional intelligence most of the guys here lacked.Â
You were half-reclined against your pack on the ground, eyelids drooping, when he opened his mouth again after a few minutes of blissful silence, this time pestering you with questions about triage, kits and field sanitations. âSo, when you say field sterilization, do you mean boiling the instruments, orââ
You let out a sleepy sigh. âItâs the same answer it was five minutes ago, Wright. Yes, boiling. Yes, iodine when available. No, I donât carry a fucking autoclave in my pack.â
He scribbled furiously. âRight, right, butââ
You rolled over, presenting him with your back, and mumbled, âI swear to god, if you ask me about urine recycling one more time.â
That shut him up, at least long enough for you to knock out cold. The kind of sleep that dragged you under fast and hard, muscles going slack, brain finally blessedly quiet. It was the best sleep you had in a while.
The next thing you knew, someone was shaking your shoulder. Persistent, firm. You couldnât even remember what you were dreaming about, but the disappointment at being awakened told you enough, a bed as soft as a cloud and no men pestering you about bruises, scrapes and stings while they peed or shat.
You didnât bother lifting your head. With a groan, you dragged your pack over your face and muttered into the fabric, low and sharp, âFuck off, Iâm trying to sleep.â
The warm hand on your shoulder stilled. A beat of silence.Â
Then a voice, that measured, calm and unmistakably not Wright's voice of the Lieutenant. âCorpsman. Thereâs a casualty. Youâre needed.â
Your eyes snapped open. The pack slid off your face.Â
Fick crouched over you, helmet shadowing his features, expression carved from stone. His eyes, pale and unreadable, met yours and held.Â
âOh shit, sirââ You shot upright so fast you nearly cracked heads with him. Your pulse spiked, heat flushing your cheeks, not because he was a lovely sight to wake up to, but because you had just told your superior officer to fuck off. âI thoughtâ I didnât meanââ
He didnât flinch from the closeness, nor did he step back despite invading your personal space. In fact, he didnât even acknowledge the colourful words that left your mouth. He rose smoothly, and you shamelessly missed the warmth of his hand on your shoulder. âGet your kit. This way.âÂ
Then he turned, already striding into the dark, as if you hadnât just told him, flat-out, to fuck off.Â
You sat frozen for a half-second, heart in your throat. Then came the cough, sharp and awkward.Â
You twisted to see Wright sitting cross-legged with his notebook, eyes wide as dinner plates, the same as yours. He looked like a kid whoâd just watched someone mouth off a drill instructor, except it was so much worse. It felt like willingly stepping into a field full of land mines.Â
And leaning against the Humvee, Poke, who must have also been dozing before the commotion, now stared at you, eyebrows raised, lips quirking like he was struggling not to laugh. His sleep had magically vanished as soon as youâd opened your mouth.Â
You stood up quickly, hands flying around to gather your kit and your helmet before you clenched your jaw. âNo one hears about that, reporter. You hear me?âÂ
Wright held his hands up immediately, palms out, eyes flickering nervously in the direction Fick had gone. âNot a word. Promise.â
Poke snorted. âOh, thatâs never staying a secret, devil dawg.â
You threw Poke a dirty look for good measure, and hurried after Fick, stomach in knots as you replayed the moment.Â
Oh, you were so fucked.Â
It had been two days since the disaster with Fick. Two days since you had muttered the fatal words in your sleep-deprived haze. Two days of carefully avoiding eye contact with the Lieutenant, convinced every second that he was just waiting for the right moment to dress you down.
But no moment came. Fick stayed calm and unreadable, like always. He gave you orders, you followed, and not once did he bring up the fact that youâd cuss him out to his face.Â
You started to breathe again. Maybe, just maybe, it would stay buried, with only you, Wright and Poke taking the incident to the grave.Â
Which is why, when Ray slid in the seat next to you during a lull in patrol, wearing the grin of a man who knew something you didnât, your stomach clenched in unease.Â
âSoâŠâ he drawled, drawing the word out, âyou planning on telling all the officers to fuck off, or was Fick just a warm-up?â
You blinked in shock. âWhat?â
Brad, posted on the other side of the humvee, didnât even look up from cleaning his weapon. âGuess sheâs branching out. Brave move, insulting the Lieutenant again. First it was his competence, then his coffee, and now this. One more strike and youâll be digging your own grave.â
Your mouth went dry. âHow the hell do youââ
Ray barked a laugh, doubling over dramatically. âYou shouldâve seen your face just now. Priceless. Donât worry, little gremlin, your secretâs safe with us.â
âSecret?!â you hissed, voice low. Your eyes darted automatically towards Fick, who stood a few yards away with Doc Bryan, talking over some paperwork. âI didnât tell anybody, how the fuck do you even know?â
Brad finally looked up, smirking like a cat whoâd cornered a mouse. âLetâs just say not everyoneâs as good as keeping their mouth shut as youâd like.â
That was when you saw him. Poke, lounging a few feet away, pretending to busy himself with a rifle check. The way he was moving was too casual. Too smug. The man didnât even bother to look up.Â
âPoke.â Your voice was sharp enough to cut steel.Â
He just hummed innocently.Â
Ray was wheezing now, slapping Brad on the shoulder. âOh man, this is gold. She thought it was a secret.â
You clenched your jaw. âIâm going to kill you, Poke.â
The teasing hadnât stopped all afternoon. Every time Ray so much as looked at you, he cracked up again. Brad had delivered three different one liners about your âcareer prospectsâ and Poke wouldnât even meet your eyes. He just sat there grinning like the goddamn cheshire cat from Alice in Wonderland.Â
You were starting to wish a stray bullet would catch you already.Â
So when Doc Bryan called your name later, his voice low and even, you half-expected another round of humiliation. He motioned you over, away from the others, into the narrow shade of a humvee.Â
You trudged after him, muttering, âIf this is another jokeââ
âItâs not.â His tone cut you off immediately. Bryan crossed his arms, gaze steady. âI need to ask, did you actually tell Fick to fuck off?â
Your shoulders slumped, and you found yourself leaning against the humvee door for support. âYeah, kinda. But I thought it was the reporter waking me up to pester me with all his questions again. I didnât even look,â you murmured, fingers playing with a thread sticking out of your sleeve.Â
He sighed, rubbing a hand over his jaw. For a long moment, he just studied you, like he was trying to decide how mad to be. You both held the same rank, yes, but Bryan had taken you under his wing seeing as he had much more experience, and sometimes he felt like a dad with an unruly daughter impossible to tame. Finally, he said, âYou know youâre lucky, right? Anyone else, youâd already be NJPâd.â
You winced. âI know.â
âFick doesnât let people talk to him like that,â Bryan went on, quieter now. âBut heâs letting you get away with it. Which means either he thinks youâre useful enough to tolerate it, or he's waiting to see if you crash and burn.â
That sent a cold shiver through your stomach.Â
Bryan caught it, softened just a little. âLook, Iâm not saying this to scare you. I just donât want you doing something stupid and ending up on the wrong side of the chain of command. Youâre young and good at your job. Donât ruin it.â
For a second, you wanted to argue that none of it had been intentional. The first jab hadnât even been meant for him, the second, well, you had no excuse for that, the coffee was awful and you stood by it, but the third, surely he would understand the circumstances, wouldnât he? Itâs not like you were waiting for him to wake you up to insult him to his face?
But Docâs expression, serious, protective, almost fatherly, damped all your arguments down.Â
You exhaled, the urge to call him dad as a joke rushing out of your throat, but you chickened out last minute, scared he might give you a piece of his mind. âThanks, doc.âÂ
He nodded once, sharp and certain. Then his mouth twitched. âStill, though. Fuck off? To the Lieutenant? Jesus Christ, youâve got balls.â
You groaned, shoving his arm. âNot you too!âÂ
The day had been cursed from the very start.Â
Stafford was the first problem. Youâd barely rolled out of your rack before he was hovering in your space, holding an MRE pouch like it was a bomb.Â
âDoc,â he said, frowning, âis it safe to eat the cheese spread if it smells weird? Like, weirder than usual?â
You blinked at him, half-asleep. âStafford, itâs four in the goddamn morning.âÂ
He pressed on. Dead serious. âNo, but smell it. Smell this and tell me if itâs gonna kill me, bro.â
You pushed the pouch he was shoving in your face back toward his chest. âIâm not sniffing your cheese spread. Go ask Bryan.â
âBryan always makes a fuss. Youâre chill.â He grinned like that was supposed to be flattering.Â
âIâm not the MRE quality control department.â
He trailed after you as you tried to leave to brush your teeth, still waving the pouch. Finally you spun on your heel and snapped, âStafford, if you shove that cheese in my face one more time, Iâll make sure youâre shitting blood for a week.â
That shut him up for a while.Â
Next came the makeshift breakfast. You spilled your only halfway-decent instant coffee all over the sand when Manimal barrelled into you like a wild horse. âAccident,â he claimed, though the grin plastered across his face said otherwise.Â
Then, while restocking supplies, you discovered one of the IV bags had punctured during transport, leaking sticky saline all over the inside of your medkit. That took you forty five minutes of cleaning while Brad leaned against the humvee, unhelpfully commenting, âYou know, that looks like a skill issue.â You just bit the inside of your cheek, convincing yourself that sneaking some laxative in his canteen wasnât going to make you feel better.Â
Later, youâd stitched up a Marineâs busted lip, only for him to pass out cold in the chair, nearly taking your entire tray of freshly cleaned instruments with him. By the time youâd gotten him stable, your gloves were ripped, your knees ached, and you had puke and blood all over the front of your shirt. You even had to hold your breath to avoid throwing up yourself.
The heat was unrelenting a few hours later, and sweat stuck your fresh cammies to your skin. And of course, Doc Bryan had wandered by just in time to notice your fraying temper. He gave you one of his long, knowing looks, like he was about to say something comforting, but then someone else yelled for him, and he left you alone with your bad mood and three different marines complaining about stomach cramps from bad MREs. You were running on fumes and irritation when the next casualty came in, another marine with some shrapnel caught in his side.Â
You snapped into medic mode, ripping your kit open and kneeling beside him. Hands moved fast. Gloves, gauze, clamp. But then you realized, you couldnât see shit. The fading desert light and the shadows from the humvee made it nearly impossible to work.Â
âHold the light here, please!â you barked to nobody in particular, gesturing sharply. Someone lifted the beam closer, but it wavered, catching you straight in the eyes. You let out a hiss, blinking furiously as tears filled your eyes. âNot in my face, on the wound! Do you want me to stitch blind?â
The light steadied. You worked furiously, patching the Marine as best you could, jaw tight, and sweat stinging your eyes. When you finally sealed the dressing, your shoulders slumped. The marine would be okay, but your nerves were shot.Â
You exhaled, turning to glare at the figure holding the light, the one you were so sure would be Stafford, ready to rip him a new one, only to realise it wasnât him.Â
It was Lt. Fick.Â
Your heart dropped. He was crouched there calmly, flashlight still steady on the Marineâs side.Â
For a long, painful second, you just stared. Mouth open, completely frozen. Muttering under your breath, you quickly gathered your supplies, cheeks hot. âThank you, sir,â you mumbled stiffly, not daring to meet his eyes.Â
Fick gave a single nod, switched off the flashlight, and stood. No lecture, no reprimand, not even a flicker of irritation. He just moved on, like you hadnât just bossed him around. Even the injured marine stared at you like you just killed his dog.Â
From the sidelines, Ray let out a low whistle as the Lt left. âUnbelievable. She cussed him out mid-casualty and he didnât even blink.â
Poke walked up to you from his spot next to Ray and clapped you in the back, almost sending you toppling over the marine still laid out on the sand. âCareful, doc. One of these days, youâre gonna realise youâre rewriting the chain of command one meltdown at a time.â
You groaned, and your face twisted like you had just smelled something foul. You shoved the kit shut with more force than necessary, shrugging his hand off your back with pure annoyance. âShut up.â
And just when you thought it was over.Â
âYo, doc?â Staffordâs voice piped up from behind the group. He was holding the same cheese spread pouch of the morning like a goddamn trophy. âSo, uh, still not sure about it. Can ya, ya know?â
The guys lost it.Â
You lost it (not in the fun way.) But deep down, even through the frustration, a tiny, reluctant thought flickered in your mind. Anyone else wouldâve been roasted alive for half of today. Fick had just⊠let it slide. You swallowed, he was either really waiting for you to fuck up so bad to send you straight home with your tail tucked between your legs, or he just didnât like you enough to bother dealing with you and your stupidness. Maybe he was even hoping you would catch a stray bullet one of these days so you could no longer insult him. That made your heart ache, but you guess you deserved it for being such a jerk most of the time.Â
Either way, something told you that it couldnât happen again, so you either had to keep your mouth shut till the end of this deployment or find a way to apologise for all the grief you had been causing him lately.Â
You approached cautiously, your sweaty hand grasping the sling of your rifle, heart still racing from the chaos of the day. The desert sun was even lower now with shadows stretching across the sand, and your chest felt tight with lingering adrenaline.Â
Fick was there, standing calm and silent, and for the first time you werenât sure if you should speak or walk away.Â
Gunny was with him, leaning casually against the humvee. When he noticed you approaching, he straightened, gave a subtle nod, and stepped aside, close enough that he could hear every word, but far enough to give you a bit of space.Â
âLieutenant,â you began, voice low, almost uncertain.Â
Fick didnât turn immediately, his posture measured, gaze ready. You could feel the quiet weight of him before you even saw the look in his unblinking eyes, analyzing and calm.Â
âAbout earlier,â you continued, fumbling. âI didnât mean for any of it to get out of hand. I justââ
Fick finally met your gaze. âYou mean the Light?â His tone was even, almost casual, but it carried weight enough to make you straighten.Â
âYes,â you admitted quickly. â And before that⊠I didnât mean to make things worse.â
He studied you quietly, tilting his head slightly. âYou did your job. Thatâs what matters. Everyone else wouldâve frozen. You didnât.â
You blinked, startled by his calm. âRight, I just donât want to screw up again.â
He held up a hand. âRelax. I donât need apologies. I need competence. Youâve proven you have it. Thatâs enough.â
Your heart skipped a beat. The desert seemed smaller, somehow charged. His gaze didnât waver, and the quiet patience in it made your chest tighten.Â
âOkay,â you murmured, stepping back, trying to anchor yourself.Â
He gave a faint nod. âGood. Now focus on the next patient. Everything elseâs secondary.â
You nodded, collecting yourself before walking away. Gunny returned to his casual lean against the humvee beside Fick, and the desert grew even quieter.Â
Then when you were gone. Gunny grinned, loud enough for Fick to hear, âMan, sheâs got trouble written all over her. Think youâre enjoying that, sir?â
Fickâs glare was instantaneous, sharp enough to make Gunnyâs grin falter slightly. âOut of pocket, Gunny,â he said flatly.Â
Gunny raised his hands, still smirking. âJust making observations, sir.â
Fick shook his head, expression unreadable, but the faint tension in the air remained, a subtle charge left behind by both the chaos and whatever was happening between you and him.Â
You were checking up on Bradâs healing wound when Fick appeared. Thankfully, you had your mouth shut this time, tuning out Rayâs idiotic rumble as you finished wrapping the bandage around Bradâs arm.Â
The Lt walked up, his boots crunching softly on the dirt.Â
âWalk with me,â he said, staring straight at you, clipboard in hand.Â
Despite having apologized the night before, your stomach did that familiar flip. Your heart was racing, palms a little sweaty, your accidental insults still fresh in your memory. You had apologised yesterday for all the mistakes that had gone sideways, but you couldnât shake the nervous anticipation. Maybe today was the day heâd finally lose it.Â
The squad immediately perked up all around, exchanging glances and smirks. Ray leaned against the humvee, grinning at Brad and Wright. âOh man, sheâs finally getting dressed down. About time.â
Wright, ever the quiet observer, raised an eyebrow, âIs this about the sleepy fuck off?â he asked quietly, leaning towards Ray, whose grin only widened in amusement.Â
âYou didnât hear? Our little gremlin here bossed the Lt. last night like he was a boot.â
Brad smirked, shaking his head nonchalantly, âMy moneyâs on her trying to argue her way out.â
Ray let out a laugh, âOr cry, either way, itâs gonna be memorable.â
You threw a glare past your shoulder before following Fick toward a quieter spot, heart still hammering. He was calm and measured, focused solely on his notes. When you were both out of earshot, he handed you the clipboard, his eyes briefly meeting yours, steady, and for a moment your anxiety doubled. âCheck the logs. Make sure no oneâs overhydrating. Bryan flagged a few cases. Thatâs it.â
Your shoulders loosened slightly, confusion mixing with relief. You nodded, removing a pen out of your pocket before turning to the logs and scribbling down some notes, realizing your pulse was finally slowing.
The moment you came back from your talk with Fick, the guys were already whispering. Ray leaned on the Humvee, smirking like he had just caught you doing something illegal. âShe survived. Didnât even break a sweat, Whatâs your secret, huh?â
You ignored him, checking everything was in its place in your pack.Â
Brad tossed in dryly from the passenger seat, his arm propped against the window of the opened door of the Humvee, âApologies must work better for you than they do for the rest of us.â
That got a chuckle from Wright, who added just loud enough for you to hear, âMaybe itâs because she actually means hers.â
You looked up, swallowing an exasperated sigh. âYouâre all hilarious.â
Ray wasnât done like usual. Hours later, on patrol, he fell in step beside you, lowering his voice conspiratorially. âSo whatâd he say? Did he use the Dad voice? Or was it more like, âIâm not mad, just disappointed?â â
You glared at him, muttering, âRay, I swearââ
He cut in, grinning like the devil himself, âRelax. Youâre fine. Obviously. Favourite student privileges and all that.â
Brad, who was unfortunately just ahead, didnât even look back. âThatâs the difference. If it were us, heâd have stripped paint with his tone. With you? He talks casualty reports.â
You rolled your eyes so hard it almost hurt.Â
By the time the sun had set, it had spread. Trombley sat on the ground across from you, unsuccessfully hiding his grin as he stirred his MRE. âYou know itâs funny. Lt actually smiled after you walked away. Canât remember the last time he did that when one of us screwed up.â
You threw him a dry look, one that said âYeah, I totally believe youâ before Ray slapped the crate he sat on, laughing. âYouâre special, Doc. Teacherâs pet!â
You flushed despite yourself, slamming your canteen down. âI apologized. Thatâs all. Nothing else to it.â
You paused for a moment, silently chewing on the biscuit that had less flavour than a wet cardboard, and your mind wandered. Teacherâs pet, yeah right. The drill sergeants back in boot camp loved you so much they would punish every twitch of your lips with push-ups, extra runs and drills. It wasn't exactly your fault you couldnât keep a straight face, was it? You would laugh at every stutter or stumble, and cry in pain in bed at night, all because them getting in your face had you cracking up. You had never been anyoneâs favourite, hell, you werenât even your parentsâ favourite, so you couldnât even fathom being, least of all, the Lieutenantâs.Â
Even as you replied Ray, you couldnât slate the quiet weight of Fickâs gaze earlier. Heâd looked at you longer than necessary, the tiniest flicker of understanding in his eyes before he turned back to the reports.Â
And when Brad caught you staring into your coffee a little too long, he just smirked. âNothing else to it.âÂ
You swore under your breath and shoved the rest of your food into your mouth just so you could leave earlier, letting all the squadâs teasing to fester in your absence instead.Â
The past few days had gone by so quickly the squad barely had the time to ponder on your newly bestowed title. It gave you some time to breathe, but as soon as Fick so much as glanced your way again, the school girl giggles would start again. It didnât matter where you were, even in the midst of a lead shower the squad would remain relentless, throwing that damn nickname around whenever the Lieutenant was less than two feet away from you.Â
The latest mission had taken quite the toll on all of you, so when Godfather announced the battalion were being pulled off the front line for a little rest while RCT 1 went ahead to maintain it, you all let out a collective sigh of relief. Â
Your day had been going great so far. You were in line for chow, for one, tray in hand, eyes flicking over the offerings. It was actually a proper mess tonight, real food, not the usual MREs, and that alone made the place buzz with energy. Someone, god bless their soul, had managed to scrounge fresh rations from the supply line after a successful resupply mission. It was a rare threat, and everyone could feel it. The smell of hot food, the clatter of trays, the tiny moments of normalcy in a deployment that rarely allowed it.Â
You were already distracted by the scent of steaming eggs and proper coffee when you sensed someone close behind you. You glanced over your shoulder, Fick had somehow slid in right behind, silent as always. You felt your stomach tighten in anxiety, the hand gripping your tray suddenly tense, like any sudden movement would result in you unconsciously insulting him yet again. You looked ahead, part nerves, trying so hard to act casual.Â
Then Gunny appeared at your side, tray balanced expertly, eyes glinting with mischief.Â
âDonât worry, doc,â he said, loud enough for a few marines around you to hear. âIf you canât finish yours, Iâm sure the Lieutenantâll clean up your mess. Manâs been doing it all deployment.â
Ray, a few steps away, snorted, almost dropping the contents of his tray on Brad, who just offered an icy glare from his seat at the edge of the makeshift table. âHoly shit, Gunny, savage.â
Poke shaked his head, grin tugging at his lips. âHeâs not wrong.â
Your cheeks flared hot. âI havenât made that many messes,â you snapped, gripping your tray tighter. Your eyes wandered to Poke, who just grinned harder under your glare.Â
Gunny leaned in, mock-serious. âLight incident? The fuck-off? Coffee? Should I go on?â His grin widened as the twinkle in his eyes intensified with each passing second, and you tried your hardest not to squirm under his gaze. Â
Ray bursted out laughing, loud and unrestrained, while Brad tried to tame the smirk at the corner of his lips, failing miserably.Â
You clamped your mouth shut, wishing you could vanish into your tray. You made no move to glare at Gunny, because if anything, the look in your eyes would just pour oil into the already burning pan.Â
And then there was Fick, his face calm as stone, tray in hand. There was not a flicker of amusement in his face. He didnât offer a single twitch, as if Gunny hadnât just dragged him into the joke. You stole a glance at him again, a small part of you expecting intervention, maybe a sharp glare, or a muttered warning, but nothing. He remained impassive.Â
That made the heat in your cheek spread even faster. Now the squad was laughing at your expense and Fick, the one person you were trying not to antagonise again.Â
For a while, your brain couldnât stop circling back to what the squad kept saying, the âteacherâs petâ comments, the way they watched your interactions with Fick with a magnifying glass, the subtle smirks and nudges they thought you didnât notice whenever the Lt. was around. You hated that it got under your skin, and yet, here you were, feeling the heat creeping up your neck, cheeks burning hotter by the second.Â
From that single line from Gunny, it snowballed.Â
Now, every damn thing you did was fair game. Every action Fick took in your vicinity, no matter how small, became another âproofâ of you being his favourite.Â
Two days later, you and Fick had been bent over the hood of a humvee, the map spread between you. He spoke in that calm, clipped tone of his, pointing out possible CASEVAC points, tracing routes with a finger. You were scribbling notes as fast as you could, trying not to smudge the ink with your sweaty palm, hyper-aware of how his elbow brushed yours every now and then, or how nice his hand looked, which made you feel like a victorian man seeing an ankle for the first time.Â
It was almost, dare you think it, normal. Professional.Â
And then Gunny walked by.Â
He slowed just enough to glance at the map, then at the way you were unintentionally leaning in towards Fick. The moment you glanced up and saw that diabolical smirk of his plastered all over his face, you knew you were about to be the butt of the joke again.Â
âCareful there, Doc. Keep hovering like that and folks are gonna start thinking youâre his shadow.â
Your pen froze mid-word. You blinked at him, caught completely off-guard, because you had expected another joke about Fick cleaning up your mess, or you being his âfavouriteâ but not whatever the hell Gunny had just spewed out. Before you could even roll your eyes, Ray seized the opportunity and pounced.Â
âOh shit, Gunnyâs right. Look at that! Two heads bent over a map, real cozy-like. Husband-and-wife planning the road trip.â
Rayâs words hit like a sucker punch.Â
Your head jerked so fast your helmet strap pinched your chin. Heat climbed into your face, pooling hot at your ears. Husband and wife? Planning a road trip? You could feel the blood rush under your skin as though Ray had physically smacked you with words.Â
Your mouth opened, a sharp retort already forming, but nothing came out. The ridiculousness of it stuck in your throat, caught somewhere between outrage and the kind of laugh youâd never let them hear.Â
Instead, you snapped your gaze back to the map, pretending to be absorbed in the lines Fick had been tracing, through your hand hovered frozen with the pen. Every muscle in your jaw went tight enough to ache, your teeth grinding against words you refused to give them.Â
The silence was its own kind of reaction, and Ray, the hyena he was, fed on it instantly, breaking into wheezing laughter at your expense.Â
You forced yourself to look down, shoulders squared but your cheeks burned traitorously hot all the same.Â
The stiff line of your shoulders gave you away instantly, and out of the corner of your eye, you caught Fick glancing up. A flicker of his gaze, like he had catalogued the twitch of your jaw and the flush in your ears in the same way he catalogued terrain features. He didnât say anything, and angled the map closer to himself, freeing you from holding it down with your left hand while you jotted down notes in the notebook he had handed you, which you later realised was his own.Â
It was a small gesture, quiet as the man himself, but it gave you something to do with your hands besides clutching the map like it had personally insulted you and your entire bloodline.Â
Brad didnât even look up from his rifle before letting out his dry snark. âExcept one of them actually contributes.â
Your jaw dropped. âExcuse me?â
Gunny reached over and clapped you on the shoulder like it was all good fun. You pursed your lips in annoyance, letting the force of his clap sway you into his side. âRelax, shadows donât talk so much.â
Your pulse thudded in your throat. You shoved the pen into Fickâs hand harder than necessary, the fleeting heat radiating off his skin a small comfort against the humiliation. âSir, youâre really not gonna say anything?â
He didnât even look up. âStay focused.â
That was it. Two words, like nothing had happened.Â
You gritted your teeth, knuckles white on the notebook, every instinct screaming to storm off or swing at somebody. Instead, you bit down hard on your tongue, stepped out of Gunnyâs hold and bent over the map again, forcing yourself to stay focused while their laughter echoed in your ears.Â
But the damage was done. Gunnyâs throwaway jab had given them all the ammunition they needed.Â
The next blow came on another grimy morning, the kind where sand grit your teeth before youâd even said good morning. You had been wary ever since the âshadowâ jokes started, always bracing for the next round of teasing.Â
So when Fick handed you a mug of coffee, actual coffee, not muddy ration sludge, or the mud and acid combo he had brewed weeks ago, you hesitated. He just offered it like it was the most natural thing in the world.Â
âPromise it doesnât taste like mud that lost a fight against acid this time,â he said casually, and, oh how much you wanted to crawl into a hole and die right there.Â
You took the mug before you could second-guess yourself, muttering a small embarrassed thanks in return because he had actually remembered your exact words about how the coffee he had brewed was the most horrendous thing in the world.Â
That was all the opening Gunny needed.Â
âDoc,â he drawled, slow and knowing, âyou gotta stop looking at him like that. Itâs coffee, not a love potion.â
You sputtered, nearly choking on your own spit, mug halfway to your mouth. âIâm notâ shut up!â you snapped, hiding behind the steam.
Ray, always at the scene of crime, immediately bent over howling. âOh my god, sheâs actually flustered over coffee!â
âLt. makes drinkable coffee once and itâs like a hallmark movie out here.â Brad replied, still jotting down whatever he was in his notebook.Â
âFuck you guys,â you muttered under your breath, a scowl on your face because of course they would twist your embarrassment into something else.Â
Gunny clapped his hands, grinning like the devil himself. âAlright, men. New call sign for the doc. Caffeine Crash. Canât operate without Lt.âs brew.â
âCaffeine Crash. Oh thatâs staying.â Ray wheezed.
Brad smirked, finally flicking his eyes up. âCould be worse. At least itâs not âShadowââ
Stafford, perched on the back of the point vehicle slurped his own cup of coffee and added dreamily, âIf the Lt offered me coffee, dawg, ya can bet Iâd marry him on the spot.â
âJesus Christ, Stafford,â Brad muttered, rubbing his temples.Â
Ever since Gunnyâs jabs, everything had subtly shifted. At first. It had been relatively harmless, just the usual ribbing about you being Fickâs golden child, the one who always got the nod, the one everyone noticed. Even the nasty jokes didnât hit that hard, but with each quip, the insinuations became sharper, threaded with more meaning than before. Every sideways glance, every exaggerated smirk from Ray or even Brad seemed to hint at something beyond mere favouritism. And then came the t72 tank incident, the one that would forever cement your standing in the squadâs eyes.Â
The stink of sickness and swamp was thick. Marines groaned in pain, sweat running down their pale faces. You were crouched beside Bryan, trying to coax Brunmeier into drinking water.Â
âCome one, Brunmeier, wake the fuck up,â Bryan said, trying to nudge him upright.Â
âI got the shits, doc.â Brunmeier moaned.Â
âThat makes fourteen in the platoon,â Bryan muttered, disgust written all over his face.Â
Then, Griego stomped in unexpectedly, drawing back the camo draped over the humvee, chin high and voice sharp. âWhatâs this I hear about a t72 tank on our perimeter?â
Bryan broke away from your gaze to look up at the Gunnery Sergeant, his eyes narrowing, âItâs fucking blown, Gunny. We had optics on it.â
âReyes!â
Rudy jolted upright. âAye, Gunnery Sergeant.â
âWhat kind of piss-poor team leader are you, not checking out an enemy tank sitting on your doorstep?â
Rudy swallowed hard. âRoger that. Being Iâm the only man not down with the shits, Iâll take out a patrol.â
Griego shook his head. âNo, you put the hammer to your team. Like Godfather saysâ malingering spreads like a yeast infection unless you nip it in the bud.â
You shot to your feet, heart pounding with fury, not able to take his bullshit anymore. âAre you blind, Gunny? Look at them. They canât even stand up without puking. But sure, letâs march them through a swamp for your little pissing contest.â
âYeah, these men canât fucking walk,â Bryan added, glaring. Lovell, hearing the commotion, quietly approached and stopped just beside Rudy as they exchanged quiet words, both glancing at Griego in equal parts exasperation and frustration.Â
Griego turned his stare on you like a gun barrel. âIf they canât, then maybe you should go with them, corpsman. Or is running your mouth easier than the job?â
âOh, Iâll do the job, Gunny,â you snapped back, voice sharp enough to cut. âThe actual job. Keeping marines alive. Not this make-believe bullshit so you can look good kissing battalion's ass.â In hindsight, maybe you shouldnât have gone off the rail like that, but you werenât going to sit back and watch him be the reason you lose Rudyâs entire squad in that goddamn swamp.Â
That hit harder than you expected, because Griego stepped closer now, towering over you, no doubt trying to intimidate you into eating your words. His lips curled. âCareful. Just because your Lieutenant lets you mouth him off doesnât mean Iâll tolerate the disrespect. Iâll smoke the shit out of you if you everââ
âGunny.â
That single word seemed to paralyse Griego right where he stood. Lieutenant Fick had arrived, silent until now. His face was blank, but his eyes flicked from you to Griego with an alarming sharpness before he turned, facing the rest of the team sprawled beside the humvee.Â
âRudy,â Fick said, his voice unsettlingly cool.Â
âYes, sir,â Reyes answered quickly. He remained stiff, rooted in his spot even after Lovell and his team took off.Â
âWhere the hell is Lovellâs team?â
âTheyâre out inspecting the t72.âÂ
âA tank? Where?âÂ
âIn the swamp. The blown-out one. Gunnery Sergeant Griego informed us that you wanted a patrol. My teamâs down with the shits, so Lovell took it.âÂ
âTheyâre covering your ass, Nate,â Griego interrupted.Â
Fick turned, slow, deliberate. âWhat the fuck is going on here?âÂ
Griego squared up, all false confidence. âHow would it look like if that tank was operational?â
Fick stepped right into the little space left between you and Griego, tone razor sharp. His back brushed against your shoulder for a few seconds too long, and you felt yourself stepping back and forcing your breath to even out again. âIâll tell you how it looks. Like an incompetent moron climbing up the asshole of his company commander by inventing a bullshit mission. Did you seek my authority before tasking my platoon?â
âI did. Woke you forty mikes ago to affirm the order.â
âI havenât been to sleep in thirty-six hours,â Fick said sharply, then his jaw clenched as he looked to the side for a second, as if remembering. âI thought I was dreaming,â he snapped. His jaw flexed again, and he leaned, voice dropping low, âAnd sheâs right, these marines are combat ineffective. If you think Iâll let you endanger them because you donât like getting told off, youâre out of line.â
Griegoâs face flushed dark. âSo youâre condoning insubordination, Lieutenant?"
âIâm condoning competence,â Fick fired back. âDoc called bullshit, and she was right.â
The air hung heavy. Griegoâs nostrils flared, his mouth opening, then closing when he caught the iron in Fickâs stare.Â
âYou can fuck with me all you want,â Fick finished, tone flat, lethal. âBut do not fuck with the men and my corpsman. Iâm putting it down, Gunny. You picking it up?â
Bryan caught it. The slight emphasis on my. He looked up, his eyes searching for yours as you did your best to casually avoid his gaze.Â
Griego broke first. His jaw twitched. âAye, sir.â He turned and stalked away, but not without throwing you a glare that could rival even that of Bradâs.Â
You were still bristling, adrenaline hot in your blood. When you glanced at Fick, his face had already returned to that maddening calm, but the smallest flicker of acknowledgment passed between you.Â
Behind you, Bryan muttered under his breath, âJesus, someone hand me pop-corn next time.â
After that the squad had enough fuel to actually work a hypothetical tank. But of course, it wasnât the only thing that happened that seemed to solidify the squadâs claim that Fick actually treated you differently.
One afternoon, you were slouched against the humvee, helmet tipped back, exhaustion making your eyes burn. Fick, who just happened to pass by, glanced down. Instead of telling you to get up like he would with anyone else, he tugged your chin strap tighter with a quiet, âDonât nod off like this. Unsafe.âÂ
Pappy nearly dropped his rifle watching it happen.Â
By nightfall, the whole squad knew, just like how they gossiped about Fick handing you his canteen on patrol a few days later, or the gas mask incident after that.Â
The alarm had shrieked, and chaos erupted, âGas! Gas!â someone yelled. You barely had time as the thick acrid cloud of smoke filled the air, stinging noses and eyes.Â
Instinctively, you reached for your mask, but someone beside you, Christensen, fumbled. Without thinking, you caught the gas mask that slipped from his hands and shoved it into his face first, making sure it was sealed and safe. Then you quickly donned your own, fumbling with the straps. But you were a split second too slow and the smoke had already burned its way into your lungs.Â
When the alarm finally stopped, you ripped the mask out of your face, slightly thankful that it was just smoke from a nearby artillery strike instead of an actual gas attack that would have completely fried your insides. Your coughing had finally subsided, though your lungs still stung. You sat on an overturned crate, head titled back as you tried to steady your breathing. Fick had insisted you rest, hovering close, his calmness helping you breathe better.Â
âSlow breaths,â he said, crouching in front of you. His canteen was already in his hand, steady as he guided it toward you. âNot too fast. Youâll choke it back up.â
You took a sip, water running down your chin. You tried to swipe it away with your sleeve, but his hand was already there, his thumb brushing the drip from your skin before he seemed to realise what he had done. His hand lingered half a second too long.Â
âBetter?â His voice was low, even, but his eyes stayed fixed on yours.Â
âYeah,â you rasped, throat sore but steady. âThanks.â
Thatâs when Brad, Ray and Bryan rounded the corner, their conversation cutting off instantly. They froze in unison, like they had stumbled into a scene they werenât supposed to see.Â
Rayâs grin spread like wildfire. âHoly shit. I knew it.â
Brad pinched the bridge of his nose, groaning softly. âFor fuckâs sake, Ray, donât start.â
You coughed, jerking upright and glaring. âItâs notâ just shut the hell up.â
Fick rose smoothly, towering over the three like nothing had happened. His voice was clipped. âWeâre Oscar Mike in five. Mount up. Now.âÂ
The weight in his tone made even Ray falter, though he still grinned as he backed away. âSure thing, Lt. But you canât kill the image burned into my brain. Yikes.â
Doc Bryan just sighed, muttering under his breath how they were all children.
They left, laughter echoing faintly, leaving you with Fick again. He studied you, unreadable, then crouched back down at your side.Â
âDonât let them get to you,â he said quietly, passing you the canteen again.
You flushed hot, but not from the gas or the coughing. You nodded stiffly, trying to focus on your breathing instead of the way his voice softened just for you.Â
Later that night after the convoy had stopped for a quick rest, the three of them were sprawled around a crate, passing a warm can of Coke Brad had somehow snuck in his pack back and forth. The stars overhead were sharp, desert air cool now that the sun had gone.Â
Ray couldnât stop grinning. âDid you see that? Our stone-faced Lt, practically hand-feeding her water. Thumb to the cheek, like some kind of rom-com. I almost puked.â
Brad smirked faintly, more subdued. âYeah, and she didnât tell him to fuck off this time. Iâd say thatâs progress.â
Doc Bryan shook his head, exasperated. âYou two are unbelievable. Somebody nearly gets their lungs fried, and all you can talk about is whether or not Fick brushed his damn hand across her face.â
Ray pointed at him with the Coke can. âYou saw it too. Donât act like you didnât. Iâve been waiting weeks for actual solid proof, and there it was.â
Bryan rolled his eyes, but he didnât deny it.Â
Brad leaned back, thoughtful. âWhat kills me is the difference. One of us screws up, he dresses us down like weâre twelve. But with her? She cusses him out, ignores him, nearly bites his head off, and he justâŠâ He shrugged. âTakes it.â
âTakes it?â Ray snorted. âHe likes it. That man hasnât raised his voice at her once. Not even after the light fiasco. Meanwhile, Captain America breathes wrong, and Lt is on him.âÂ
Bryan sighed into his hand. âYouâre all going to get yourselves in trouble.â
Ray grinned wider, kicking at the dirt. âTrouble for boosting morale? I donât think so. In fact, maybe Gunnyâs gonna make me the vice-president of the Doc-Lt fanclub.â
By the next day, the smoke incident shouldâve been long forgotten. Your throat was less raw and the ache in your lungs was gradually fading. You had convinced yourself that what happened with Fick had just been one of those moments, fleeting, necessary, and not worth dwelling on.Â
Except apparently the squad had been dwelling on it for you.Â
Ray leaned over the hood of the humvee while you were scribbling down notes on the medical logs. He watched you for a while, waiting for your glance, but when that didnât come as fast as he would like, he cleared his throat dramatically, then gasped. âDoc, doc, I canât breathe! Save me! Oh no, if only someone would cradle my chin and feed me water like a delicate baby bird.â
You paused your writing for a split-second, swallowing an exasperated sigh. You were a fool to think they wouldnât make it a big deal, and the complete silence since you sat down should have been a dead giveaway of the incoming explosive round of teasing.Â
Brad deadpanned from his seat in the humvee, âYouâre not pretty enough.â
Ray pointed at him, smug. âSee? Even Brad knows docâs got a type. Tall, blond, officer, fond of mapsââ
âShut up,â you snapped, slamming down the clipboard hard enough to echo.Â
That only made Rayâs grin stretch wider.Â
Poke strolled in, ever the opportunist, and chimed in from where he just sat down with his gear. âFunny, though. Smoke clears, lungs burning, and whoâs the one crouched in front of you? Not me. Not Ray. Sure as hell not Brad.â Your eyebrows furrowed at his words, the retort about them not giving a fuck about you almost choking to death dying at your lips as Rayâs voice cut the air.Â
âExactly,â he said, grinning wide. âItâs always Lt. Always. Like clockwork. Makes you wonder, huh?â
You let out a sharp exhale, putting down the pen before glaring at Ray. âYeah. Makes me wonder why I havenât smothered you in your sleep yet.âÂ
Your reply only set them off harder. Ray laughed so hard he had to brace himself on the humvee.
âYou know itâs funny,â you said flatly. âWhen Lt scammed those RCT idiots for gun lube to bail Brad out, not a peep outta any of you. Guess itâs scandalous only when heâs helping me, huh?â
That stopped them cold.Â
âThat was different,â Brad said smoothly.Â
âOh yeah? How?âÂ
âHe wasnât holding my damn hand while he did it.â
And then the laughter broke again.Â
Ray threw his hands up. âLtâs not out here holding just anyoneâs hand, man. Docâs got the exclusive contract.â
You pinched the bridge of your nose, resisting the urge to throw something, preferably at Rayâs smug face. Yesterday you had almost choked to death. Today you were starring in a goddamn soap opera. You stood up abruptly, gathering your things as your scowl deepened.Â
âI swear, you people need a fucking hobby,â you scowled, strapping your helmet back on and rounding the humvee to leave.Â
âOh, we have one, dawg. Itâs pissing you off until you admit the Lt likes you better than any of us,â Poke cried out, digging the butt of his rifle deeper into his cheek to hide his grin.Â
That evening, you had made it your mission to avoid the squad at any given cost. From what you have heard, theyâd finally quieted down, and you found yourself hiding behind Rudyâs humvee, staring at the dirt. Your chest still hurt from the coughing, but you would rather die than admit that out loud.Â
The crunch of boots on gravel made you glance up, sudden anxiety at being found by any one of the jokesters tightening in your chest. You let yourself relax at the sight of Bryan, bringing the back of your head to rest against the humvee again.Â
He dropped down onto a crate opposite you, elbows on his knees, watching you with that steady medicâs stare. The one you couldnât squirm away from.Â
âYou gonna tell me why you let them wind you up so easy?â he asked, voice low.Â
You frowned, because of course he heard about it. âTheyâre jackals. Thatâs what they do.â
Bryan didnât say anything, only tilted his head, unimpressed. You looked away, partly ashamed because it felt like you just got caught stealing cookies from the cookie jar. âTheyâve been on you for weeks now. Lt this, Lt that. Now yesterday happens and theyâre off to the races. You let it get under your skin every time.â
You crossed your arms, glaring at the ground. âBecause itâs bullshit. Because they act likeâŠâ You trailed off, heat creeping up your neck.Â
âLike what?â he pressed.Â
Your throat tightened. âLike thereâs something there.â
He didnât react right away. He just studied you calmly. Finally, he leaned back. âAnd?âÂ
You snapped your eyes up to him. âAnd nothing. Jesus, Bryan.â
He gave the faintest shrug. âIâm not asking to get in your business. I'm asking because you act like itâs the end of the world every time someone mentions it. Makes me think theyâre closer to the mark than you want them to be.âÂ
You opened your mouth to argue, but the words melted on your tongue. Bryan shook his head, like he had already read your silence.Â
âJust donât let âem run you ragged,â he said finally. âThey smell blood in the water and theyâll never let go. You know that.â He tapped the crown of your helmet once, as if snapping you out of your sulk. Then, he stood, dusted his hands off his trousers, and walked away, leaving you sitting there with your heart thudding too hard for comfort.Â
You told yourself it didnât matter. That it was just noise, all the teasings, the looks, the half-jokes thrown around camp. You learned to swallow them whole, to act like it didnât get under your skin. If you pretended long enough, maybe youâd start to believe it.Â
At least, thatâs what you told yourself.Â
Griego had started dropping them like landmines in your path ever since he got dressed down by Fick on the night of the tank incident, casual, cutting remarks buried under the guise of humor. Little jabs meant to see how far he could push before you bit back.Â
You got good at dodging them for a while until Griego decided to get messy.Â
The sun hadnât even fully cleared the horizon yet, pale light stretching over the camp. You were kneeling by the Humvee, tightening the straps on your pack before roll-out, when that aggravating voice of his sliced through the quiet.Â
âYâknow, doc,â he drawled, loud enough for everyone to hear, âIâm starting to wonder, maybe the Lieutenant keeps you close cause youâre easy on the eyes. Sure as hell ainât for your discipline.â
His words hurt worse than any punch you had ever gotten to the gut.Â
The world didnât stop, but it might as well have.Â
Rayâs head snapped up from where he was checking his gear. âThe fuck did you just say?â
Bradâs notebook slammed shut with a sound like a gunshot. His eyes went flat and cold as he looked at Griego.
Even Pappy, usually quiet as stone, muttered under his breath, âThatâs outta line, Gunny.â
Griego just smirked, pleased with himself, like he had found exactly the wound he wanted to press on. âWhat? Canât take a little truth?â
You could feel every muscle in your body tighten, your hands curling against your thighs. The fury rose fast, but before you could speak, Ray was already on his feet.Â
âThatâs not truth,â he snapped. âThatâs you being a bitter asshole cause LT called you out.â
Brad didnât need to raise his voice. âYou want to take shots at an officer, go ahead,â he started evenly, âbut you donât pull that shit on her.â
That did it. Griegoâs grin faltered, the weight of the squadâs collective stare settling heavy on him.Â
You remained there in silence, jaw locked, staring hard at the dirt as your ears burned. But when you looked up, when your eyes swept across the squad, you realised something had shifted. There were no laughs or teasing from the squad. Not this time.Â
The story made its way up the chain faster than anyone admitted to spreading it. By afternoon, it had already reached Gunny, And by the time the humvees rolled to a stop for the evening halt, Fick knew too.Â
He didnât say anything at first. He just walked the line of parked vehicles, clipboard in hand, checking things that didnât really need checking. Gunny followed a few paces behind, silent long enough for it to start feeling deliberate.Â
Finally, he broke the quiet. âHeard there was a little excitement this morning.â
Fick didnât look at him. âYou heard right.â
Gunny made a low sound in his throat, half amusing, half warning. âGriego running his mouth again?â
Fickâs jaw tightened. âHe crossed a line.â
âThat so?â Gunny said, though his tone made it clear he already knew. âAnd whatâd you do about it, Lieutenant?â
Fick stopped, turned just enough for Gunny to see the look in his eyes. âThe squad handled it.â
Gunnyâs brow lifted. âYou lettinâ the boys deliver justice now?â
The Lieutenant exhaled through his nose, that quiet, measured kind of frustration that meant he was holding something back. âThey were right to. He made it personal.â
That earned him a look. The kind of look that said donât make me say it out loud.
He smirked slyly, hands sliding into his vest pockets. âLemme guessâ somethinâ about the Doc.â
Fick said nothing.Â
âHit a nerve, didnât he?â
Still nothing. Just the faint flex of Fickâs jaw.Â
Gunny chuckled in return. âYou know, you keep pretending you donât care but the second someone runs their mouth about her, you go cold as a damn virgin rifle barrel. Itâs almost admirable.â
âGunny. You need to knock it off.â
He raised his hands in defense, brows raised like heâd been accused of something truly absurd. âKnock what off?â
âYou know what Iâm talking about.â
His mouth twitched. âIf youâre talking about me motivating morale, Iâd say Iâm doinâ a hell of a job, LT.â
Fick exhaled through his nose, clearly trying not to lose patience. âItâs not morale when you turn my corpsman into the punchline of a running joke.â
Gunny cocked his head. âYou sure sheâs the punchline, not you?â
Fick blinked. âWhat?â
Gunny grinned. Leaning back against the humvee. âCome on, Nate. Youâve seen the looks, same as I have. Whole squadâs figured out you got a soft spot for her. You just donât wanna admit it.â
âThatâs notââ
âUh-huh,â Gunny interrupted. âYou keep tellinâ yourself that. But Iâve been around long enough to know what it looks like when a man keeps findinâ excuses to check on someone.â
âShe almost fried her lungs, Gunny.â
Gunny gave him a look, his eyes doing much of the talking. âRight.â
They stared at each other, a few beats too long, until Fick finally looked away first, glancing towards where you were packing medical gear into the humvee.Â
He followed Fickâs gaze, grin widening. âSee? Right there. Thatâs what Iâm talking about. You didnât even notice you were lookinâ.â
Fick just pressed a hand to the side of the vehicle and muttered, âYou done?â
He shrugged, casual as ever. âFor now. But if you donât want people talkinâ, maybe stop makinâ it so easy for âem. Oh and, if youâre gonna play favourites, ainât no shame in havinâ taste.â
Fickâs tired sigh followed him down the line, and he just barely muttered, âJesus Christ, Gunny.â
By the time evening rolled, the whole platoon had that restless silence that came whenever something uncalled for happened, but if there was anything you learned serving in the corps, it was that silence in the field was never really silent. Even when nobody was talking, there was always something, sometimes the rattle of a sling or a stray curse when someone dropped a magazine.Â
You figured the others were trying not to make it worse, but something about the lack of teasing and banter made the air feel eerie. Even Ray, the jackal who usually couldnât read the room, was tucked away in the humvee, as silent as a ghost. You were, by no means, complaining about not being the joke for once, but the silence was suffocating your brain cells better than Griego had earlier that morning.Â
Fick and Gunny were a few yards away, low voices cutting under the wind. Nothing heated, but you could feel the tension, like a wire pulled too tight.Â
When Gunny finally stepped away, he was grinning, like that particular grin that usually meant someone else was about to have a bad day. He passed you on his way out, giving you the kind of look that wasnât quite a smirk but close enough to make your stomach sink further.Â
You mentally shook the look off as he disappeared behind the humvee, your teeth biting down on the inside of your cheek as you tried to focus back into what you were doing.Â
Key word: tried.Â
Even a few hours later, as you stripped down your rifle, the thoughts kept coming back. The echo of Griegoâs words, burning a hole through your composure. Sure, it wasnât the first time youâve been accused of something like that, hell, most of the time the men didnât even bother to sugarcoat it like Griego had, and yet it still cut closer to the bone than anything else.Â
You were so deep in your head that Bryanâs voice almost had you jumping out of your seat.Â
âYou okay?â he said, voice low enough not to carry.Â
You glanced up. âFine.â
He gave you a look. âUh-huh. Funny, cause youâve been real quiet since breakfast.â
You tightened the bolt of your rifle a little too hard. âIâm just trying to work,â you said. Bryan knew you didnât like talking about how shitty your day had been, so you werenât surprised when he didnât open up the conversation with whatever happened earlier. Â
His lips twitched. âWork, huh? Not avoiding the peanut gallery?â
âWell, the peanut galleryâs been real quiet today.â
Bryan slowly settled next to you. âYou know how it goes. One marine runs his mouth, ten more follow. Half the guys are saying LT nearly bit Gunnyâs head off defending you. The other half think you two are writing love letters behind the comms tent.â
You rolled your eyes. âUnbelievable. Doesnât matter what you do out here. You do your job, they call you a cold bitch. You talk too much, youâre a brat mouthing off. You keep your distance, and suddenly youâre sleeping with the CO.â
Bryan let out an exhale. He just watched you for a beat, then said, quiet and even. âThey talk cause itâs easier than admitting they respect you.â
You let out a small laugh. âRespect me? Yeah, lotta respect that was coming out of Griegoâs mouth this morning.â
âTake it that way then, ever notice how all that assholeâs ever spewing around is you supposedly fornicating with Fick?âÂ
âWhatâs your point?â
He shrugged. âIâm saying, he ainât got shit on you, thatâs why he drops so low.â
âThe squadâs not really helping with that, are they?â
âDonât let them get under your skin. Youâve done more for this platoon than most of them realize,â he said, slinging his rifle over his shoulder as he stood.Â
You smiled despite yourself, the heaviness in your chest easing a little. âSince when did you start giving pep talks?â
He shrugged. âSince you looked like you needed one.â Bryan gave you one last glance and a quick knock on the helmet before heading off in the dark, probably to nag another marine into drinking enough water.
You let out a small exhale, fumbling with the sling of your rifle, staring at the dirt like it could solve something. For a moment, you wished you had listened to your pleading mother when she begged you not to sign your life away, but you had done what you thought best back then, and it didnât take long to realise you had just hopped from a frying pan into a pressure cooker.Â
You threw a brief glance at your watch, and gathered your things to head to the watch post.
You sat with your rifle across your knees, the weight of the day still heavy in your shoulders. The night was still cold and moonless as the hour rolled past as slowly as a sloth. You didnât remember the last time you had gotten some shut-eye, and despite that you were still wide awake, everything that went wrong lately looping, restless and unrelenting.Â
You didnât hear the footsteps until they were close.Â
âDoc.â
You didnât need to look to recognise the voice. You straightened. âSir.â
Fick crouched down beside you, quiet, scanning the horizon before glancing your way. âYouâre relieved.â
You frowned, checking your watch. âIâve got another hour.â
He shook his head. âNot anymore. Gunny shifted the schedule.â
You gave a short, humourless huff. âGunny, or you?â
He didnât answer right away, which was enough of an answer. You looked away, lips pressed tight.Â
âDoc,â he said finally, tone lower, âYou havenât stopped since dawn.âÂ
Havenât stopped working yourself away since Griegoâs comment, he wanted to say.Â
âNeither have you.â
âThatâs different.â
âIs it?â you shot back, sharper than you meant.Â
The silence that followed stretched, thin and tense. You sighed and added, quietly, âSorry. Long day.â
Fickâs gaze softened. âYeah. I heard. Griegoâs beenââ
âI can handle Griego,â you interrupted.Â
âI know you can.â He paused, studying you. âBut you shouldnât have to.â
That hit something deeper than you expected. You looked down at your hands, the dirt stuck to your palms. âYou canât fix it, sir.â
âMaybe not.â His voice softened more. âBut I can make it easier.â
You looked at him, and there it was again, the quiet gravity he carried, the calmness that helped you breathe when the smoke was still choking your lungs, the way he looked at you like he saw everything you were trying not to say.Â
âIt doesnât matter,â you said suddenly, words spilling before you could stop then. âThat even if there was somethingââ
You stopped yourself, biting down the rest.Â
Fickâs brow furrowed slightly. âIf there was something?â
You shook your head quickly. âForget it. Doesnât matter.âÂ
He kept watching you, unreadable in the dark. He stood, his hand briefly bracing against your shoulder. You froze at the touch.Â
Then, he offered a hand to pull you up.Â
âGo rack out,â he said quietly. âIâve got it from here.â
You hesitated, then took his hand. His grip was steady, too steady, and when you stood, he didnât let go right away. Just long enough for you both to notice it. You swallowed down your feelings at the contact, replaying Griegoâs words to snap you back into reality, but at that point you were far too deep. You were so guilty, you were sure the next time the squadâs teasing came through, it would be written all over your face like an SOS flare.Â
Then, softly. âGoodnight, doc.â
The day was already chokingly hot and dry, the kind of dry that made your throat ache when you breathed. The squad was milling in a lazy disarray, the chatter more alive than it had been a few days prior.Â
You and Bryan were sitting under the shade of the camo net, rolling gauze you had managed to scrounge up. The supply truck full of medical supplies was left behind in the middle of nowhere after the tires were shot to hell a few days ago, leaving you and Bryan to fend for yourself. Morale was dwindling day by day, and it didnât help that last night took your feelings to a whole new level of messy you werenât even aware existed.Â
âDevil Dogs,â Schwetje greeted as he approached, all bright-eyed earnestness that didnât quite fit the scene.Â
âSir,â Holsey said automatically, standing straighter beside the humvee.Â
The Captain nodded, hands behind his back like he was on parade. You glanced at Bryan, the urge to roll your eyes stronger than ever. âBeen through a lot these past few days. I know there are strong feelings about how things have gone. I want you to think of me as the kind of commander who not only leads, but listens. So,â he looked around the group, to you, to Bryan, to Holsey standing as stiff as a board and to Baptista sitting to your left. âI want you to talk freely. Forget my bars for a moment.â
The last part made all of you exchange subtle looks. âForget my barsâ was the kind of thing no marines actually believed.Â
He started making rounds like he was conducting interviews. âHolsey. Anything on your mind?â
The marine hesitated at first, then asked about the missing battalion colours, and Schwetje gave his careful, politicianâs answer, all about responsibility and weight of command.Â
âBaptista,â he said next, âHow are you doing?â
Baptista gave a half-grin, words tumbling out in broken Portuguese and English.Â
Schwetje nodded solemnly, as if heâd been offered great insight. âYes. Yes, it is. Thank you, Baptista.â
From behind, Griego stepped out of the Captainâs shadow, and you ducked your head just in time to avoid his gaze, your hands now tense on the gauze.Â
âAnd you, Doc?â Schwetje said. âHow are you doing?â
You swallowed, praying the question was directed to Bryan. After a few seconds of uncomfortable silence, you looked up to see that his eyes had shifted to you, and that everything you had been avoiding had somehow managed to catch you right in the middle of the limelight.
Every head turned. Even Bryanâs.
You felt your stomach drop. You were already skating on thin ice since the t72 mess. The whispers, Griegoâs snide remarks, Fickâs quiet defense that had somehow turned into its own rumor mill. The last thing you needed was attention.Â
âIâm all good, sir,â you said quickly, keeping your tone neutral.Â
The Captain tilted his head, unsatisfied. âDoc, youâve got more field time than most. Iâd really like to know what youâre thinking.âÂ
You bit your tongue hard to avoid spitting out a remark about how whatever bullshit he just said was as incorrect as his knowledge of grid designation. If anything, Bryan outranked most of the guys here based on experience alone, but of course, that ego inflated man would needle you instead of him for things he wasnât ready to hear.Â
You shifted your weight, feeling Griegoâs eyes on you, like he was waiting for you to say something that could be used against you later.
âWith respect, sir,â you started evenly, âI donât think my opinion would change anything.â
He frowned faintly, as if you said the wrong thing on a test. âThatâs not the spirit of open communication Iâm trying to foster here.â
Griego, off the side, snorted softly under his breath. âGuess she only speaks when the Lieutenantâs around to hold her hand.â That made you freeze. You could feel your throat closing up. Then, slowly, you reminded yourself to breathe, because it had just been you and Fick yesterday. Holding hands for a split second, maybe more, but he had just helped you up, nothing more. It was totally normal and completely platonic, nothing else to it.Â
A ripple went through the group, half disgust, half warning silence. Bryanâs head turned sharply, eyes narrowing. âGunny,â he said, voice deadly low and steady, âdonât.â
Griego raised a hand in mock surrender. âJust making an observation.â You let out a sharp exhale, partly relieved because it was just Griego being Griego, not because he had witnessed anything.
Then, simmering anger, because he had the audacity to say that in front of Encinoman. âWith respect, sir,â you said again, directing it squarely to Schwetje, âif the goal is honestly, then you should know moraleâs not your problem. Trust is.â
That made him blink. A subtle flicker in the fake calm. You held his gaze for a while longer, slowly watching his composure break. You knew what he was thinking about, and what you hoped your words would do to him did exactly that. He didnât trust Fick, just like how you and anyone else on the platoon didnât trust him.Â
Bryanâs voice cut in before the Captain could recover. âSir, since youâre asking for honesty, itâs just that youâre incompetent.â
His lips parted, stunned, that same pause from your words, but now heavier with tension because your words had set the fuse first.Â
âIâm doing the best I can,â he managed, tone brittle.Â
âItâs not good enough, sir,â Bryan replied flatly.Â
You felt the air squeeze tight around the group. Even Griego looked uncertain now, eyes flicking between the Captain and Bryan instead, completely ignoring the fact that he had been the one to spark out the fire.Â
Schwetjeâs expression hardened. âAlright. Duly noted.â He turned to Griego. âLetâs move.â
They walked off, the Captainâs back rigid, Griego throwing one last sideways look that promised this wasnât over.Â
When they were out of earshot, Holsey exhaled, muttering, âJesus, doc, both of you just signed your own death warrants.â
The squad fell silent again, the tension dissolving into the heat. Somewhere far off, an engine kicked over, and everything went back to pretending to be normal, but tension still clung to the air long after Encinoman walked off. The others drifted away in silence one by one, Bryan pissed, Baptista muttering in Portuguese under his breath and Holsey pretending not to care. You stayed back to restock the humvee with the bandages, half-hoping to disappear entirely.Â
But Fick was here, arm crossed, posture too calm to be casual. âDoc.â he said, voice even.Â
You froze for half a second, then went right back to what you were doing. â...Sir.â
He folded his arms, standing a few feet away. âYou want to tell me what happened earlier?â
You couldnât even bring yourself to look at him. âNo, sir.â
âThat wasnât a request.â
You sighed, still not turning around. âThen maybe you should ask someone who actually wants to talk about it.â
There was a long pause. Then the sound of his boots crunching closer. âHolsey said Griego said something. Bryan looked like he wanted to rearrange his face. So what did he say?â
âNothing that hasnât already been said a hundred times before.â
âDocââ
You snapped the kit shut hard enough that the latch bit your thumb. But you were wound up so tight you barely felt the pain. âHe was being an asshole, okay? Like he always is. But itâs fine. Itâs done.â
Fickâs jaw worked, silent for a beat. âItâs not fine if itâs about me.â
You spun, temper finally breaking. âWhy does everything have to be about you?â
That caught him off guard, just a flicker, but enough.
âYou think this whole thing is about your reputation or your command? Itâs not. He said what he said because he wanted to make me look weak. Because I didnât shut up when I should have. Becauseââ
You stopped yourself.Â
Fickâs eyes narrowed. âBecause what?â
You shook your head, cursing under your breath. âForget it.â
âNo.â He stepped closer. âYou started that sentence. Finish it.â
You met his stare then, shoulders tight, heart hammering. âBecause Iâm already on thin ice after the tank mess, and he knows it. He knows I canât afford to open my mouth, so he keeps pushing. Thatâs it. Thatâs all.â
Fick studied you, the sharp edge in your voice, the way you were standing too still. He didnât believe you, not entirely.Â
âYou said something to the Captain this morning,â he said quietly. âHolsey mentioned itâ
You went still.Â
Fucking Holsey running his mouth.Â
âHe said you pushed back hard. That doesnât sound like someone trying to stay quiet.â
Your throat went dry. âI was trying to make a point,â you lied.Â
âWhat point?âÂ
You clenched your jaw. âThat talking doesnât fix anything.â
Fick took another step closer, voice lowering. âThat why you said it, or was it because Griego brought me into it?â
That hit dead centre, clean and quiet.
You stared at him, pulse in your throat. âWho told you that?â
âNo one had to.â
You swallowed hard, looking away. âYouâre not worth getting written up over, Lieutenant.â
It was a cheap shot, and you both knew it.Â
He huffed out something halfway between a laugh and a sigh. âCouldâve fooled me.â
You glared up at him. âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â
âThat you keep saying this isnât about me, but somehow, it always is.â
For a moment, neither of you said anything, just the wind over sand, the hum of the idle Humvee, and the sound of your heart pounding.Â
Finally, you muttered, âYou done, sir?âÂ
He looked at you for one more beat, jaw tight, expression unreadable. âYeah,â he said. âGuess I am.â
He turned, walked off towards the dark, leaving you standing there with your hands clutching the kit to avoid it from trembling, angry, frustrated and something else you didnât want to name. You blinked your tears away, moving to get the rest of the stuff into the humvee.Â
Morning came like a punishment, pale light dragging across camp, forcing you to snap out of your glower and self-induced misery.Â
You hadnât slept much. Not that anyone noticed. Marines didnât sleep, they shut their eyes and pretended not to hear the hum of the desert.Â
You were standing by Brad's humvee, trying to scrub the grime from your hands with a ration pack wipe that disintegrated halfway through. Fick was a few yards away, saying something to Gunny in that low, tight tone of his, professional, polite, completely at odds with the way heâd looked at yesterday.Â
You kept your head down. You werenât about to start another round of whatever the hell that was.Â
But apparently, the squad once again proved that subtle silence wasnât their strong suit.Â
âJesus,â Ray muttered around a mouthful of biscuit. âYou two are acting like a couple on the brink of divorceâ
You stopped mid-swipe.Â
Brad looked up from his rifle without missing a beat. âYeah, momâs pissed.â
That earned a round of snickers.Â
You turned, glaring daggers at Brad. âI am not your fucking mother, Colbert.â
Bradâs expression didnât shift an inch. Deadpan. Calm as ever. âThen why do you sound like her?â
You just stared at Brad, jaw set. âYou think thatâs funny?â
âNo,â Brad said, tone bone-dry. âBut you looked like you needed a laugh.â
It was almost enough to knock the edge of your glare. Almost.Â
You huffed, tossing the useless wipe into a trash bag. âYour humourâs as dead as your personality, Brad.â
âThank you,â he said, not looking up. âMeans itâs consistent.â
Gunny strolled to the command vehicle when the desert cooled once the sun went down. Fick sat beside the humvee, a half-empty MRE packet on the bumper next to him. He was staring at it like maybe that counted as eating.Â
He sat on the crate propped beside the humvee. âYou look like a man who just lost a staring contest with dehydrated sludge.â
Fick just muttered. âTactical reflection.â
Gunny snorted, shifting his elbows on his knees. âYou mean brooding.â
âThinking.â
âBrooding,â Gunny repeated.
Fick sighed, conceding nothing. âWhat do you need, Gunny?â
âWho says I need something? Canât a guy enjoy a quiet night with his lieutenant?â he paused, then added, âEspecially one whose jawâs been locked tighter than a humvee door all day.â
âLong day.â
âHuh.â Gunny leaned back, stretching out. âFunny how your long days always seem to start after a certain medic looks at you like sheâs ready to throw a radio at your head.â
Fick gave him a sharp look. âWatch it.â
He held up a hand, grinning. âRelax, sir. Just an observation. You two been walking around like youâre allergic to eye contact. Starting to make the rest of us jumpy.â
âWeâre fine.â
âThatâs what she said, too,â Gunny added, without mentioning the part where he pestered you unsuccessfully for answers barely a few hours earlier.Â
Fick froze, just for a second, but Gunny caught it, of course he did, and bit back a chuckle.Â
âChrist, Nate, you gotta work on your poker face. Youâd survive sniper fire, but not small talk.â
âGunny.â
âAlright, alright. Iâll just say if thereâs tension, maybe let it breathe before it turns into something stupid.â
Fick rubbed the back of his neck, holding back a sigh because the whole conversation felt silly. âAlready did.â
âYeah? How did that go?â
âAbout as well as youâd expect.â
Gunny chuckled low. âMeaning she handed your ass back to you in full sentences.â
That got the faintest twitch of a smile out of him. âSomething like that.â
âYouâre still really bad at pretending you donât care for a guy who preaches discipline on a daily basis.â
Fick looked at him, expression steady but tired. âThatâs cause I donât bother pretending anymore.â
For once, Gunny didnât joke. He just nodded once, quiet for a beat. âFigured as much,â he simply said. No teasing, no I told you so. Then, with a smirk, he added, âStill, if youâre gonna brood, do it off the damn humvee. Youâre harshing the mood.â
Fick huffed, the sound caught between a laugh and a sigh, and stood, brushing the dust from his hands. âGoodnight, Gunny.â
After that, itâd been three days of quiet.Â
The kind that sat heavy and suffocating over everything, meals, briefings, downtime since you and Fick had gone from easy rhythm to clipped, professional exchanges. It made the air thick and awkward, not just for you, but for everyone who had the displeasure of having to witness the coldness lingering.Â
Everyone noticed. In fact, it was a little hard not to when Fickâs tone pressed sharper than a freshly sharpened combat knife. Gunny had already dropped by a few days earlier, needling for answers as to why Fick looked like a kicked puppy (his words not yours) and how whatever it was that was wrong needed to be fixed because it was affecting squad morale.
Ray was eventually the first to break.Â
He groaned, tossing a rock at the humvee tire. âI canât take this anymore. They used to at least bicker. Now theyâre justââ he waved a hand vaguely between where you sat on one end of the camp and Fick on the other end â â dead-eyed and miserable.â
Walt didnât even look up from cleaning his rifle. âFeels like the parents are fighting and weâre all stuck in the custody battle.â
âShut up,â Brad muttered, though his tone had no bite.
Ray leaned forward, grinning like a child who had found the ultimate solution to get his parents back together. âRemember Camp Matilda? When Doc saved my ass with the burner thing?â
That earned Waltâs full attention. âRight. The great âletâs cook inside the tentâ operation.â
Ray grinned. âExactly. And our dear Lt swore to command he saw with his own eyes that the burner was outside.â
âYeah,â Walt said, laughing. âCrazy how he missed the whole damn flame coming from the tent flap. Man mustâve been half-blind.â
âOr just soft,â Ray said, smirking. âCanât believe we didnât notice it before.â
That line got a ripple of laughter. Even Brad cracked a small grin, shaking his head.Â
Across camp, you froze mid-motion, your hand hovering over your kit. You would be lying if you said your heart didnât sting at the thought of those simpler times, when all you had to worry about was Sixta being on your ass for not tucking your shirttails, not Fick and the emptiness that followed the last conversation you have had.Â
âYou three got nothing better to do?â you said loudly.Â
Ray gave an innocent shrug. âJust reminiscing, doc. Good times.â
âGood times,â you echoed, deadpan. âPretty sure you almost set the tent on fire and lost your eye in the process, dipshit.â You shot Brad a look, one that said keep that buffoon from running his mouth and getting himself NJPed, because you did not risk your neck out for Ray just so he could utter those words in broad daylight where anyone with a grudge could just report back to command.Â
âYeah, but you fixed it,â Walt said with a grin. âAnd the Lt covered it. Real dynamic duo move. Canât believe we missed the signs.â
âGuess docâs our unofficial get outta NJP free card.â
That made you groan. âIdiots.â
âObservant idiots,â Ray added enthusiastically.Â
Fickâs voice cut through then, calm and quiet from where he sat. âYouâre also loud idiots. Keep it down.â
That shut them up. Mostly.Â
You caught his eye just briefly before looking away, the lump in your throat growing with each glance he took in your direction.Â
It didnât get better even hours later, when the convoy stopped near a checkpoint. Some RCT-1 officer, the smug clipboard type of guy who would probably shit their pants if he ever had a taste of live ammo bouncing off his humvee walls, started nitpicking Fickâs paperwork instead of handing over the fucking supplies like he was supposed to.Â
âYouâre late on your unit readiness report,â the guy said. âAgain. Maybe if your men spent less time âcorrecting supply protocolâ ââ
You didnât let him finish. The permanent scowl on your face was evidence enough that your sour mood and his rant was no less compatible than Ray and a full bottle of ripped fuel. âMaybe if you got our med shipments out on time, sir,â you said flatly, âLieutenant Fick wouldnât have to spend half his day compensating for your logistics mess.â
The officer blinked, thrown off by the comment. âExcuse me?â
âYou heard me,â you said. âIf you want to check compliance, start with your own department. I can forward you the timestamps.â
You could hear Ray muttering something about you being cranky since your loverâs spat but all you could focus on was the slight satisfaction that ran through your veins at the sight of the officer sputtering something about professionalism and stalking off. At this point, you might as well dish it out to people who deserved it, not like your reputation wasnât already halfway through the mud.Â
You didnât look at Fick, but you felt his eyes on you.Â
Later, when the squad spread out to refuel, he came up beside you quietly.Â
âYou didnât have to do that.â
You didnât look at him, just stared straight forward and said the first thing that came to mind. âGuess itâs compensation for Matilda.â Not for defending you against Griego, but Matilda, because you knew mentioning the tank incident again would spark back the weird dynamic you both picked up after you had insulted him (unintentionally) too many times to count.Â
Fick stopped near the bumper of the humvee, and silence choked the air tighter than the smoke had your lungs.Â
Then, quietly. âYou planning to keep this up all week?â
âDepends on what âthisâ is.â
âThe part where you donât look at me,â he said evenly.Â
You huffed. âFigured it was easier for both of us that way.â
He crossed his arms, and tried his hardest to hide the irritation hiding under his skin. âYou think ignoring me fixes anything?â
âNo, sir,â you said quietly, âbut neither does you showing up every five minutes trying to fix everything.â
That finally got a reaction out of him, a muscle twitching in his jaw. âThat what you think Iâm doing?â
âIsnât it?â you asked, finally looking up, tired, wary, braced for another round.Â
Fick watched you for a moment, gaze unreadable. âYou really donât trust me to handle Griego.â
You closed your eyes for a beat, exhaling slowly. âItâs not about that.â
He looked to the side sharply, a frustrated sigh escaping past his nose. Had the atmosphere not been so tense, you would have cracked a grin, amused by the fact that the usually calm Lieutenant was getting all worked up over something beyond his control. âThen what is it?â
âItâs about me not needing you to fight my battles. Especially not when heâs coming after me to get at you.â
Fick stepped closer, not enough to crowd, but enough that you could feel the heat off him. "That's exactly why itâs my problem.â
You shot him a look. âYou donât get to decide that.â
He didnât back down. âNeither do you.â
It was the same damn loop, pride, frustration, both of you too stubborn to step down. The air was like a live wire, buzzing with words that weren't being said.Â
You bit the inside of your cheek hard enough to draw blood, and when the metallic tang began to fill your mouth, you decided it wasnât worth it anymore.Â
âYou were right,â you muttered.Â
Fick blinked, thrown by the shift. âAbout what?â
Silence fell over the desert like the blanket of stars overhead. A heartbeat passed and for a moment you wondered if uttering the words in your mind was the best decision.Â
You gave him a brief glance, then turned back to the patch of sand you were burning holes into. âAbout Griego. About why I said what I said to the Captain.â
He stared, the edge of his posture easing just slightly. âThatâs why youâve been avoiding me?â
âI was just trying not to make it worse.â
He gave a hesitant nod. âYou donât have to keep things from me.â
You swallowed. âI kinda do, though.â
Fick frowned.Â
âIf I tell you everything. I stop pretending this is simple. And itâs supposed to be simple, right? Youâre my CO. Iâm your corpsman. We do our jobs. No one gets burned.â
The silence stretched between you again, taut and uncertain.Â
You looked up at him, voice softer. âThen you go and do things like that, step in and take heat thatâs not yours and itâs not so simple anymore. Itâs personal, and I donât know how to do personal out here.â
His eyes flicked to you, something tight behind it. âYou think I do?â
You forced yourself to smile faintly. âYou fake it better.â
He exhaled through his nose, not a laugh, exactly, but close. âYou think thatâs what I've been doing? Faking it?â
You shrugged. âYou're good at acting like you donât care.â
That one landed. You saw it in the way his jaw worked before he answered. âOnly because I have to.â
You hesitated. âI get that.â
The sharpness of the atmosphere had dulled. The air felt less like a standoff and more like the uneasy edge of a truce.Â
âFor what itâs worth. Iâm sorry it got weird, sir.â
His gaze snapped sharply to you, then he straightened and stepped closer that his shadow melted with yours. âDonât do that.â
You blinked.Â
He continued, âApologize like itâs only your fault.â
You started to look away, but he reached out just briefly, his fingers brushing your arm, stopping you. The contact was light, but enough to make your breath catch.Â
âIt wasnât one sided.â
You looked down at where his hand had been before he pulled back like the touch had burned.Â
He opened his mouth, then closed it as if he thought better of it. Fick looked away, his feet shifting slightly on the sand. You wanted to say something, anything to make the situation slightly less doomed, but seeing Fick fidgeting in real time was making your brain turn into mush.Â
He stopped, then mumbled. âNate is fine, you know.â
You blinked at him, the heat in your ears worsening as you soaked in his words. âAre you trying to fuel more rumors, Lieutenant?â
âNot intentionally,â he replied, voice soft enough that you could tell it wasnât an order or a tease. âBut Rayâs not buzzing around tonight, so I figured Iâd take my chances.â
You bit the inside of your cheek as you looked away, because you might actually combust if you made eye contact for one more second. âIs tormenting me your idea of downtime, Nate?â
He shifted closer, not enough to touch, but enough that his sleeve brushed yours when he leaned against the Humvee beside you. âYou make it sound like I donât have other hobbies,â he answered, trying hard to ignore how the way you said his name made him feel.
âDo you?â
âApparently one of them is trying to figure you out.â
That made you look at him again, fighting against a shy grin. âIâm not that easy to figure out.â
âNo,â he said quietly. âBut youâre worth the effort.âÂ
You felt your breath catch in your throat. You swallowed, forcing out, âYou say that to all your corpsmen?â
âJust the insubordinate ones,â he answered.Â
You let out a small laugh, pushing against the humvee so you could leave. You shook your head slightly as you shouldered your rifle, moving past Fick so you could leave before you did something you would regret come morning.Â
But then you stopped. Because he shifted just slightly, catching your belt loop with two fingers before you could move away completely. You almost melted away in the sand.Â
The motion was lazy, almost careless. But his knuckles brushed your hips, and every nerve in your body went taut.Â
âPretty sure thatâs not regulation,â you whispered as he tugged lightly on the loop, just enough to close the last inch between you.Â
âGood thing itâs Nate then.â
You didnât know whether to cry or laugh.Â
âThis is how people get the wrong idea,â you said, trying to sound steady but failing miserably.
âI think they already have.â He gave you a look, and you swore if you werenât already on fire, you sure were now.
The morning sun poured over the FOB, painting the dust in streaks of gold and orange. The squad moved in scattered clusters, each pretending the other didnât exist. Except you two.Â
You leaned over a crate of medical supplies, clipboard pressed to your chest, fingers tapping lightly. âYou forgot the IV kits again,â you said, neutral tone hiding the small smile tugging at your lips.Â
Nate didnât look at you. âI didnât forget. I prioritized.â
âPrioritized what exactly? Chaos?â
âPrioritized what needed attention first.â
You narrowed your eyes, but there was no bite behind it. âMobility doesnât help when someoneâs bleeding out, Lieutenant.â
âWhich is why you always bring extras,â he countered.Â
âNo,â you said, shoving an IV pouch into his hands, âI bring extras because you forget.â
He caught your eyes this time, holding your gaze a heartbeat longer than necessary. There was something in the quiet that made it eerily similar to last night.Â
âI donât forget,â he said softly.
âYouâre lucky Iâm in a good mood,â you muttered, adjusting the pack in his hands.Â
From across the lot, Ray froze mid-step. âWould you look at that?â
Stafford and Christenson followed his gaze, eyebrows raised.Â
âThe ice thawed afterall, huh?â Ray muttered slyly.Â
Fick and you. Bickering over a crate as if it was the most important argument in the world. The tone was familiar, teasing, the kind of back-and-forth that had nothing to do with orders and everything to do with each other.Â
âThat doesnât go there,â you said.Â
âIt fits,â Fick countered.Â
âIt fits wrong.â
âIt won an award in OCS.â
âFor a war crime, maybe.â you said teasingly, looking up to the Lieutenant who looked like a man disgustingly in love.Â
Ray watched, not surprised as Fick stared at you like you hung the moon and not like you just insulted him. âThatâs the look of a husband who would build his wife a whole damn house from scratch.â He put a hand over his chest like it hurt.
Your quiet laughter lingered, and Christenson nudged Stafford. âThe parents are back together,â he whispered, half-laughing.Â
When the sun dropped low and Gunny finally found himself freed from the shackles of responsibilities, he came up beside Fick, who was standing by the hood of the Humvee, arms folded, watching the horizon like it owed him answers.
Gunny nodded toward where you were sitting a few metres off, scribbling in your logbook under the glow of a chemlight. âGuess we oughta thank our resident angel for that.â
Fick sighed. âGunnyââ
âOh, donât start,â Gunny cut in. âYou canât expect me not to notice when half the squadâs been running their mouths about you two all morning.â
Fick didnât answer. His eyes drifted to you for a second too long before he forced himself to look away.Â
Gunny chuckled. âHere comes the look of a man losing the battle.â
âIâm not losing anything,â Fick said, steady but quiet.Â
Gunny took a leisurely sip of coffee. âJust curious, sir. If she showed up in her navy whites, you still think youâd keep it professional?â
Fick froze.
Gunny kept going, merciless. âHell, she wouldnât even need a dress. The whites aloneâd be enough to knock you flat.â
Fick inhaled like a man praying for strength.Â
From behind them, Bryan strolled up, perfectly timed. âI dunno, Gunny,â he said. âAt this point, I think itâd be more professional if they just got it over with.âÂ
Fick pinched the bridge of his nose, not expecting Bryan of all people, to get on the teasing train.
âRelax, Lt,â Bryan said, grin widening. âWhole squadâs rooting for you two. Boosts morale.â
âIf you two ever make it official, Iâll officiate myself. Got a speech ready and everything. âDearly beloved, weâre gathered here today to celebrate the worst kept secret in First ReconâŠâÂ
Fick shot him a look sharp enough to cut armor, but the tiniest twitch at the corner of his mouth gave him away.
Bryan saw it and grinned. âSee? Not denying it anymore.â
âDenial takes energy I donât have,â he muttered.Â
Gunny clapped him on the shoulder. âClosest thing to a confession Iâll ever get.â