pairing: Jack Abbot x surgeon!f reader
summary: when Jack arrives in the ER in his SWAT uniform, he is surprised to see a new surgeon. and right away, he takes a liking to your brazen tone and notices your skills. he finds you intriguing. except, you hate everything about his hobby, and you arenāt afraid to let him know.
warnings: ACAB! her attitude gives enemies-to-lovers vibes, but Jack is mostly flabbergasted; mentions of a shootout, deaths and guilt; some hurt/comfort (while heās shirtless...), PLOT TWIST. also, I added one slur (to indicate that the character is racist, not because I would ever use that word irl). P.S. please donāt get offended on Jackās behalf. heās fictional, he can take it. / words: 7K / authorās note: guys, I know no one asked for this... but it came to me in a dream. it was also fuled by the rage I feel daily bc I have to work with men. and yes, I love it when Jack is touch-starved and yearning ā” READ ON AO3 / MASTERLIST
Sweat tastes like salt, and gunshots smell like fireworks, and the loud sounds still echo in his head. Jack takes deep, measured breaths. The car shakes as it takes a turn, but he is staying calm. Collected. He keeps his hand on the bag valve and presses rhythmically to force more air into Hiroās lungs. His gaze is focused on the deep wound on his neck, the bandages soaked through.
Blood is just blood.
Wet, warm, staining the skin with crimson.
TheĀ splattersĀ of itĀ driedĀ upĀ on his hands and vest.Ā Itās been a while since he had to treat an injury this bad. Out in the field, under active fire, with the adrenaline blazing through his bloodstream.Ā Except,Ā that feeling he once loved and chased has recently become less thrilling. More unnerving. And underneath the layers of the synthetic fibers and his years-old restraint, a heaviness has settled in his chest. Jack knows itās not about the bleeding ā at least, not the one he did manage to stop.
Because as they ride through the tunnel, the light flickers ā from bright to dull fluorescent one ā and Hiroās face is momentarily replaced by someone elseās.
Someone way younger, in his twenties, his eyes widened in horror, his mouth opening to push the panicked words out. His teeth are colored redĀ ā
Then Jack blinks. The sunlight floods the car again.
āHow are we doing back there, doc?ā Levington asks him from the driverās seat.
āThose damn beaners got him good. But your guys will patch him up, right? 'Cause Iām supposed to be one of his groomsmen, and let me tell you, those tux rentals aināt cheap āā
āLev, can you just shut the fuck up and step on it?ā a gruff voice interrupts.
āGot it, Sarge!ā
The engine roars.
The weight in Abbotās chest sinks deeper. But he is nothing if not pro at pushing his emotions down. So he does just that.
They ride straight to the ambulance bay, and two paramedics help them transfer Hiro on a gurney. The numbness in Jackās wrist gives way to tingling as he moves his hand a little; he keeps his fingers clasped around the bag. He keeps his calm. Pretending that he doesnāt feel the pain stinging his shoulder blade, a deep graze where the bullet missed him.
And thereās some relief in coming into the ER, a safe space with the well-known faces ā Robbyās the first to greet him, already on alert.
āIntubated neck wound, sats not great,ā Jack explains, his hands moving on autopilot ā one pressing on the bag, the other checking Hiroās pulse. āYou got a trauma room open?ā
āTrauma 1,ā Robby nods, helping to move the gurney in the right direction. āWhatās the story?ā
āOfficer Hiro, high-velocity GSW. Warehouse robbery gone sideways,ā Jack lists, avoiding further details.
Because if he says more, heāll have to deal with questions he has yet to find the answers to. Because heās used to making clean cuts, having a clear conscience, taking a clear course of action. But the truth is messy. And he doesnāt have time for that.
Instead, Abbot takes notice of Hiroās barely moving chest, just as they roll the gurney in, Santos and Perlah already in the room.
Trinityās gaze flits between two men in uniform, not with dismay but with her usual curiosity. With the excitement some might consider odd. Jack doesnāt.Ā He also wonders whenĀ wasĀ the last time his job made him excited.Ā He canāt remember.Ā Definitely not today.
āDid you do this intubation?ā Santos takes the bag from him.
āUnder active fire, yeah. I go in with the team in case thereās an injury,ā Jack tells her casually, a pair of scissors already in his hands, the metal blades hastily cutting through the bandages.
āThatās badass,ā Trinity notes with a small grin, her eyes bright with amusement.
Jack only shrugs. His face expression stays unfazed. Behind it, thereās a roaring concern: with how much air heās been pumping into Hiroās lungs, they should inflate way more.Ā They should make his chest rise and fall,Ā a steady breath-like pattern.Ā A vital pattern.
The monitor goes off.
āSats down to 85,ā Robby warns.
A respiratoryĀ failure meansĀ thatĀ they have to act fast.Ā It also means that he missed something. And getting confirmation hurts Jack way more than being shot at.
āShit, his tracheaās transected,ā he grunts as he removes the dirty bandages, āI didnāt notice.ā
āSo if we intubate again, it will come straight out the wound,ā Trinity guesses from behind his shoulder.
āBingo. Need another plan,ā he takes the plastic tube out of Hiroās mouth, and she promptly puts the mask on him, with the same bag attached to it.
Itās the same working principle: her fingers squeeze the bag, the air goes in. And Jack helplessly watches as it leaks through the neck wound, blood bubbling at the edges.
The beeping doesnāt stop.
Robby shakes his head. āSats down to 83.ā
āHeās not moving any air,ā Jack mumbles, āCanāt send him up like this.ā
Robby catches his gaze, hums, thinks it over. āHow about a neonatal mask?ā
āA neonatal?ā Santos sounds confused. āBut how can it āā
āPut it to his neck,ā Jack realizes. āSeals the wound, allows the air to go where itās supposed to.ā
Trinity nods. Then runs up to the supply cabinet, and just a tiny bit of her excitement does rub off on him. Jack lets out a breath, sweat beading on his brow; his heart is still restless with worry. Seconds drag out while he waits, and the neonatal mask actually works ā sats climb up to 98, the oxygen finally filling up the lungs. But Abbot knows itās not a permanent solution.
Robby knows, too.Ā He steps back toĀ give aĀ callĀ toĀ the OR.
Jack figures out a way to keep his hands busy in the meantime: a syringe with a needle and two ampules he asks Perhal for ā lidocaine for numbing and epi to reduce the bleeding. He carefully works around the wound, peppering it with injections, as Trinity checks up the lungs.
āGood lung sliding, no pneumo,ā she reads the monitor.
This is good news. They are unfortunately followed by Robby hanging up the phone with a loud sigh.
āThe OR is packed, they can take him in 20 minutes at best.ā
āWish I could say I am surprised,ā Jack huffs, feigning a tone that will not give away how much he hates it ā wait, and uncertainly, and feeling like heās failing someone. āItās always on this day when people collectively decide to lose a few of their limbs.ā
āMore like a few of their brain cells,ā Perlah mutters, earning a laugh from Santos.
āThink he can hang in there for 20 more minutes?ā Robby asks.
āI donāt want to sit and wait,ā Jack counters and puts the syringe away. āAny suggestions?ā
āMineĀ would beĀ to sit and wait.ā
āThatās just lazy, man.ā
āWell, sorry Iām not a wellspring of ideas, some of usĀ beenĀ working since 6 a.m.ā
They arenāt seriously bickering ā itās just a way to keep Jackās mind distracted, an impromptu grounding technique. Robbyās aware, so he plays along. Jack welcomes it.
āWhat do you thinkĀ IāveĀ been doing? Does this camo make it look like I returned from a vacation?ā
āIām starting to think you just enjoy watching people shoot at each other.ā
āSays the guy whose definition of fun is riding a bike without the damn helmet.ā
āWhich only happenedĀ once, meanwhile you continuously āā
The door swings open, putting their conversation to a halt.
And then a smile stretches Robbyās lips as his eyes land on someone else.
āDo you ever take breaks?ā
āDo you?ā you quip and hastily throw on a gown. āCause you arenāt leading by example, thatās for sure.ā
Jack instantly turns to the sound. He doesnāt recognize your voice ā confident,Ā brazenĀ even ā nor your hair color. He only glimpses your profile before you put a mask on, your movements quick, honed. Not hesitating once. Heās yet to learn your name, but your dark scrubs give him a hint: youāre a surgeon.
The one Robby already seems acquainted with. He keeps his gaze on you while you reach for the gloves.
āAnd why is it always you who comes down to us?ā
āThat is a weird way of sayingĀ thank you.ā
āI just donāt want our promising new hire to burn out too fast. And I am seeing some troubling signs.ā
āWhat you are seeing is eight hours of sleep paired with a healthy dose of caffeine. Not that youād know what it looks like,ā you scoff at Robby, mirth in your voice. āAlso,Ā promising? What a compliment.ā
āWeāve only been working together for two weeks, I canāt go soft on you. Or people will start talking,ā Robby steps back to let you take his place, like he is used to it. Like there is a rhythm you two have learned to fall into.
āDonāt flatter yourself,ā you tell him bluntly, but your attention is on Hiro ā you quickly look over his bloodied chest and wounded neck, a slight furrow between your brows. āThe neonatal mask was a good call.ā
Then finally, you spare Jack a glance.
Your eyes catch on his uniform for a perceptible few seconds, then dart up to his face. And Jack involuntarily, immediately tenses. Because it feels like he is staring down the barrel of a gun, and your gaze isĀ loaded. Like there are words you want to fire at him, a shot that will be deadly.
His heartbeat stutters.
But you donāt say a thing.
You silently look back at Hiro. And suddenly, a thought comes to Jackās mind: something about you is incredibly familiar.
Robby stands right behind you, oblivious to any tension and still smiling. āYou arenāt gonna let me win, will you? Emery warned me āā
āYou bring her up so often, Iām starting to suspect you have a crush, Robinavich,ā ā you throw a look at Trinity, āSantos, help me cut down a 6-0 ET tube,ā ā then, back at Robby, āSorry to break it to you, but you are not her type.ā
āIs it the beard?ā
āAmong other things,ā you chuckle.
Jack really wants to interfere with your banter ā it feels like things are slipping out of his control: no one is asking for his opinion or his help, although itāsĀ hisĀ friend who is about to bleed out on the table.
But youāre a natural at multitasking.
You talk while your sharp gaze does the inspection, while you draw up a plan. You tell Trinity where to cut the tube and ask for clamps, your fingers pulling up the mask from Hiroās neck, your gloves already covered in his blood.
āThe problem must be in my erratic working schedule,ā Robby muses teasingly, watching you work.
Your eyebrows flicker up at his remark. Behind your mask, thereās an expression that Abbot guesses is a smirk. āNo, Iād say itās more about your pathological refusal to commit to a serious relationship and instead fucking around and calling itĀ casual. Which does sound funny coming from a man in his fifties,ā you deadpan.
Perlah gives Robby a pointed look,Ā not hiding thatĀ sheĀ does agreeĀ with you.Ā Santos is trying very hard (and failing) to hold back a laugh. And unexpectedly, despite his whirlpool of emotions that are far from funny, Jack feels his mouth smiling too.
You keep your focus on the wound and add nonchalantly: āPlease tell me you havenāt been casual with anyone in this room.ā
Robby is blushing ā profusely, from his ears to his cheeks. āYou overestimateĀ my charm.ā
āIām yet to find any. But somehow that doesnāt stop so many other women,ā you tsk. Then mercifully grant him some reprieve. āHis sats will tank,Ā heās in need ofĀ an airway. Trinity, come help me with the tube.ā
āAllow me,ā the words come out before Jack can rationalize them, his body leaning slightly toward yours across the table.
Like he is following a pull.
You donāt object. But now that he is standing closer, Jack catches how your eyes dart to the side, your brows pinched together. Almost as if you fight the urge to look at him again, to say something.
But for the second time, you donāt.
And even though Abbot is not inclined to think about it too hard ā of how he looks and how he carries himself, and what effect it might have on people ā he cannot help but wonder if your discomfort comes from that.Ā Maybe you also feel the pull, maybe youāre trying to be professional about it.
He doesnāt mind the quiet. It drapes over you two as you work in accidental tandem: Santos gives Jack the tube, and he waits patiently for you to find the distal trachea. He checks the monitors.Ā AlthoughĀ heās drawn to keep his eyes on you. As much as Abbot is still worried, he is also undeniablyĀ intrigued.
His tension slowly eases ā
Until the door creaks open, and Levington clumsily pushes half of his body in. The holster on his hip bumps against the wall, theĀ handle of the gunĀ making a dull sound.
āHowās it going, guys? This one didnāt kick the bucket yet?ā
Jack doesnāt want to get distracted ā or worse, to distract you. Not when youāre concentrated on the task, the metal shanks bloody and gleaming as you rotate them, trying to grip the windpipe and leave everything intact. Abbot looks up at Robby.
Robby first looks at you.
He then loses his smile and the amiability he usually uses around patients.Ā WhichĀ is weird. He turns to Levington.
āItās better if you wait outside, and weāll update you once heās out of surgery,ā Robby says dryly. His voice drops slightly when he adds, āShould be more careful with the gun.ā
āThe safetyās on,ā Levington brushes off, then chuckles. āWouldnāt want to shoot myself in the leg and end up on the table too.ā
āWeapons of any kind arenāt allowed in the ER,ā you say without looking at him, way louder than Robby.
And thereās a stark change in your tone ā itās lacking playfulness, it is completely void of any warmth, each word spoken so firmly that you sound almost... Angry. Jack catches on to that.
Levington doesnāt.
āOh, Iām a big boy, I can handle āā
āWasnāt exactly a suggestion,ā you cut him off. āYou arenāt allowed in here, period.Ā GoĀ flash your gun some place else. Am I being clear?ā
For just a second, you do look at him, a brief turn of your masked face in his direction.
And Levington ā six feet tall, almost two hundred pounds of chiseled muscles and blissful ignorance ā flinches under your stare. He throws both hands up.
āS-sorry, already leaving,ā he stutters and backs out of the room.
The sats drop down to 91.
āI got it,ā you say in the same second.
Jackās part is easier: he only needs toĀ placeĀ the tubeĀ in.Ā Gently, securely. His face inches closer to yours, his gaze grazing the high points of your cheeks, the lines of your throat. You surely can feel him staring, but you donāt move away. Eventually, he does.
āIām in. Balloon up.ā
The chestpiece of Robbyās stethoscope glides over Hiroās chest. The number on the monitor is climbing up. Everyone shares a sigh of relief.
āGood breath sounds,ā Robby confirms, a corner of his mouth curling. āNot bad, you guys.ā
But when Jack tries meeting your gaze, you donāt give him the satisfaction, your face not softened one bit. Nor is your voice when you say coolly:
āGood thing that whoever shot him couldnāt aim for shit.ā
That scratches off some of Jackās pretense. Most of his nonchalance. Because you masterfully fish out not only the trachea, but also the damned memories he has been trying to suppress.
The rows of corridors, the piles of packaged and hastily abandoned goods. Shadows that move across the floor, hide behind structured rows of shelves. Hushed conversations. Hectic decisions. They are on the run.
Hiroās voice booming.
āKid, you donāt even know how to use that thing! Just put your weapon down!ā
Shots fired ā intentional, precise, hitting the targets as expected. But one is sudden, accidental, the bullets ricocheting off the metal with bright tiny sparks.
Hiro gets hit.
His hand clasped weakly over his neck, red pouring through his fingers until Jack can apply more pressure. Until they rush him out of the building.
There are two dead bodies left behind.
The third one is still fighting against the imminent demise. Convulsing limbs and bloodied teeth and scared eyes ā looking straight at Jack.
Robbyās palm on his shoulder brings him back.
āāĀ donāt have to stay for this,ā he repeats, āWe can take it from here.ā
He sounds more cautious, like he can finally feel that somethingās off. But he canāt figure out what exactly. Robby steps to where youāre standing.
āIāll sew the trachea to the skin. Canāt let you do all the work around here.ā
You donāt argue. But your gloved hand brushes Hiroās half-naked body, your fingers moving to his side. You pull away the piece of his torn t-shirt. There is a spot beneath his ribsĀ āĀ big, blooming violet.
āMissed a bruise. Left upper quadrant.ā
Santos picks the ultrasound transducer. āWasnāt he wearing body armor?ā
āHigh-velocity projectile doesnāt have to penetrate to damage,ā Jack notes.
He stays to help Robby with suturing.Ā You take the transducer from Trinity, maneuvering your body andĀ yourĀ handĀ to moveĀ around AbbotĀ so you canĀ get an image while still keeping your distance.
AndĀ thisĀ doesnāt feel like you are fighting an attraction to him, no. It comes off as avoidance. Dislike even.
But why?
āNo fluid in the suprasplenic space. Looks like a subcapsular hematoma of his spleen,ā you say, ignoring Jackās existence as if your arm isnāt bumping into his.
āSo he needs an abdominal CT,ā Santos suggests.
āCT angio of the neck first. Then CT chest, abdomen, pelvis.ā
āGeez, I wonder what the other guy looks like,ā Trinity mumbles.
Abbot pretends he didnāt hear the question. But now that heās the one ignoring something obvious, you glance at him. He feels it ā your gaze comes with the safetyĀ off. And he remembers that he also has a gun. The chances that you havenāt noticed arenāt very high. WhichĀ may be whatās been bothering you.
āHow did that even happen?ā Santos wonders, and this one time Jack wishes she could beĀ lessĀ curious. Trinity adds, a tad bit awkward. āI mean, if itās not a top secret.ā
Since everyone is staring at him, he canāt help but talk.
āSome guys naively thought today was the day to rob a goods warehouse. Didnāt think about how long it would take to load the appliances,ā Jack explains half-heartedly. āThey panicked when the SWAT rolled in. All hell broke loose.ā
āHis recovery will also feel like hell,ā Perlah nods toward Hiro with a small, sympathetic frown.
āGood thingĀ someone elseĀ didnāt catch a bullet,ā Robby remarks, both disapproving and concerned, his gaze fixed on the wound.
Out of the corner of his eye, Jack notices you move away. AsĀ if you arenāt very interested in this discussion. But Perlah is ā she squints at Jack, and thereās more confusion than disapproval in her words:
āWhyād you volunteer for something like that?ā
You snap your gloves off, one then the other; then your mask.
āMy therapist said I needed a hobby,ā Abbot says.
Itās an excuse packed as a joke, but both work poorly ā there is a glaring proof of how unsafe the job is, with Jackās hands still on Hiroās wounded neck. Proof that it isnāt just a fun, carefree pastime.
Because thereās no enjoyment in watching someone die.
And Jack has seen too many deathsĀ already. He doesnāt know how long he can keep pushing it all down, deeper, until he will start cracking at the seams. So he has made it into a habit to talk his way out of situations he struggles to process.
āI mean, they just need someone to help them if things go south,ā he continues, seemingly unruffled. āItās a high-risk job. These guys put their life on the line.ā
There is a sound ā a huff mixed with a laugh, not airy and mirthful but instead cold and sharp. The sound comes from you.
āDo theyĀ really?ā
His head snaps in your direction, and thereās no hiding how flabbergasted he is by your tone. You give him no chance to recover.
āYou mean the men in military-style tactical gear who usually show up armed to the teeth? In teams, with vests, shieldsĀ andĀ helmets? Which, by the way, they get paid really well for. So how high is the risk exactly?ā You glance at Hiro. āAt least this one came in one piece. How many were brought in body bags today thanks to you?ā
The room goes silent.
Jackās face grows hot. And only now, belatedly, he realizes: for you, there is no pull. The only urge youāre fighting is to tear him to shreds.
Correction: youĀ arenātĀ fighting it.
āShit happens,ā Abbot tries to argue. āYou point a gun at a police officer, and theyāre allowed to engage.ā
āAre they allowed to negotiate first? Or do you usually prefer to skip that part? Sorry, my bad ā notĀ you, your team buddies.ā
The truth is, heās not really involved in the decision-making. He stays backĀ andĀ he follows orders, and there is no time to question them. He does sometimes, though. It has been happening more often.
You stare him down like you can read his thoughts.
āAreĀ youĀ allowed to help the other guys? Like, if some criminal is bleeding out on the pavement. Or does the Hippocratic OathĀ apply only to the upstanding citizens with a clean record and high morals?ā
His heart pounds, no doubt fueled by adrenaline thatās triggering the bodyās āfight or flightā response. Jackās always been a fighter, he has learned to be ā he went from jumping into fights at school to jumping out of helicopters straight into war zones. But none of that experience can help him.
His vest, his self-restraint, his wit are suddenly all useless against you.
āThere are priorities of life. Civilians first, then the acting officers,ā Jack forces out, because it feels unbearable not to fight back or at leastĀ try to. āThe criminals come āā
āArenāt they innocent until proven guilty? Pointing a gun at someone isnāt against the law.ā
āShooting at people is.ā
āUndoubtedly, yes. Shouldnāt they be prosecuted for that?ā
āUndoubtedly,ā Jack echoes, not wryly but warily, like heās afraid to walk into a trap. He does.
āWould be hard to do that when they are dead,ā you note swiftly, your voice level, but your gaze is burning. AlwaysĀ on him. It makes Jackās grit falter, so when you change topics, he is caught off guard.
āWhereās that warehouse you mentioned?ā
Robby is finishing the stitches, his brown eyes glancing between you two with ever-growing apprehension. Perlah and Trinity are gazing at you like they just got front row tickets to some drama show. Jack doesnāt find any of this entertaining.
āIām not sure I can disclose that information.ā
You let out a hum. Dismissive. Like thatās exactly what you expect from him, like your expectations of him arenāt very high.
āSince he didnāt bleed out, and your hand didnāt fall off from pumping air into his lungs, it canāt be too far. The warehouseĀ in Millvale sounds about right.ā
Abbotās jaw clenches. YourĀ mouth twitches, as if youāre about to sneer.
āIsnāt that the one owned by Amazon? Iām sure one of the worldās richest men is ugly crying over a few boxes of packaged goods someone tried to steal from him.ā
Thereās so much tension in Jackās face, he is about to start grinding his teeth.
āI donāt think we should let people steal whatever shit they want.ā
āAnd I do not encourage stealing,ā you retort, easily grinding on his nerves, āIām saying you should take guilty people to court. Not kill them on the spot.ā
āYou ever heard about self-defence?ā
āYou ever tried not shooting people in the head?ā
āI donāt shootĀ anyone. Or give orders to.ā
āBut you work for the men who do. Kinda sounds like you donāt have a problem with it.ā
An irritated deep sigh burns his throat, but Abbot holds it back. So you push on.
āIām not judging,ā but it sounds likeĀ you are. āThe job probably pays well. Wouldnāt hurt to get an extra check in this economy.ā He doesnāt buy into you being conciliatory. You prove him right when you add. āI heard that ICE is hiring.ā
Thereās an immediate shift in the air. The silenceĀ deafening, all eyes on Jack again, as if he hasĀ to actually prove that heādĀ neverĀ consider that job offering.
āSince youāre so fond of law enforcement āā
āIām not gonna joinĀ fucking ICE,ā Jack hisses as he fully turns to you.
Your words send redness creeping across his cheeks, the color of both embarrassment and indignation. You turn a blind eye to his feelings.
āOh, you have a moral compass? Would you look at that.ā
The guilt is back, and now it takes the shape of a dumbbell, the weight so heavy, itās threatening to crush his chest. At least, thatās what it feels like. His voice comes out a little strangled.
āYou seem to like rushing to judgment.ā
āI was merely asking. ICEĀ lovesĀ recruiting cops.ā
Itās in this moment when Robby tries to interfere. He walks closer, his eyes moving from Jack to you and back. āGuys, maybe you should āā
āThey will recruit any uneducated douchbag, it has nothing to do with what the SWAT does,ā Abbot insists.
āThe unit of the public institution that is responsible for quarter of a million civilian injuries a year? I think my judgment is just fine,ā you say, adamant in your aversion. āThose are the same guys who do forced-entry raids and treat human rights like a suggestion they are free to ignore.ā
āThey donāt āā
But Abbot finds himself unable to finish that sentence.Ā WeĀ wants to sayĀ they arenāt like that, except he actually canāt be certain. He and Hiro did form a surprisingly tight friendship, but Jack has never cared to hang out with the rest. He has a schedule and a full-time job, he gets tired faster, he sometimes feels too old to get their jokes.
Heās getting irritated at how effortlessly you can sniff out his hesitation.
āYou donāt know that for sure.ā
āBut you donāt know it either, do you?ā you challenge.
For him, it takes a lot of effort ā to push back his emotions, to stop himself from bluntly askingĀ Did something happen to make you so uncompromising?Ā There is a lot of sense in what youāre saying. But Jack sticks to his own version of truth.
āFrom my experience, many of them are not bad people.ā
It backfires. AsĀ quickly as if he stepped on another mine. You tell him, ruthlessly straightforward:
āFromĀ myĀ experience, half of them choose that job to flaunt their power, the other half just love cosplaying their old army days because they are adrenaline junkies who canāt be left alone with their thoughts.ā
Your words land like a punch into his sternum. Because you read him like youāve got a PhD in Jack Abbotās supposedly complex internal turmoil. HeĀ exhales sharply. Takes a breath and bristles.
āAre you a therapist now too?ā
āAm I wrong? Sorry, did it hit too close to home?ā
āGuys!ā Robby barks out, and that does shut you both up.
You and Jack look at him, and he glances intently at the table. At Hiro, who you two almost forgot about. You only now notice that heās starting to wake up, his eyelids fluttering as his head moves slightly to the side.
Abbot is sombre and distrustful ā he doesnāt want any of your prejudice to hit Hiro, whoās in no shape to argue orĀ to even speak. He watches you with narrowed eyes. You briefly check ā the fluids Hiro is hooked up to, his stitched-up neck. And you donāt look at Jack at all.
āWelcome back to consciousness,ā you keep your voice down ā and youāre believably polite. Perfectly amiable. āYou may feel some discomfort in your throat, there is a tube placed there to help you breathe. Itās temporary, and we will take it out during surgery. It wonāt take long, and you wonāt feel a thing. You may want to stay out of karaoke for a while, though.ā
Hiroās lips curve up a little at the corners.
Jackās guilt could take half of the room. The floor. (The building?)
He makes his face look less sour as he walks closer. It helps that he is genuinely happy to see Hiro doing better. (Most importantly, not dead.)
Jack pats him on the shoulder, although the touch barely lands. āYouāre gonna be okay, Hiro. Youāre in good hands.ā
Your argument (or was it a fight?) has momentarily gone from sizzling to smoldering. Robby moves to stand between you, a self-proclaimed referee.
āWhatās the plan?ā
āThe Radiology first. Head and Neck will have an OR ready with thoracic standing by,ā you explain.
āHow soon can they take him?ā
āWeāre still backed up with Westbridge patients, but I can speed things up. Letās start with CT.ā
āCan I ride up with you?ā Trinity asks, never apologetic for her ambitions.
And you must like it, because you give her a half-smile as you nod. āThe more the merrier.ā
It stings Jackās pride a little how easily you get along with people. With anyone but him.
He helps to transfer Hiro on a gurney, and you two stand shoulder to shoulder for a moment. You only level him with a glare. Your eyes unreadable, your body moving out of the room like you wishĀ to never share it with Abbot.
The spaceās left empty, save for him and Robby.
āWhat the hell was that?ā Jack says under his breath, eyes still glued to the place where you were standing.
āThat was our new surgeon,ā Robby informs him casually, his tone suggesting you and him work pretty well together. āShe likes to come down between the surgeries to check up on the critical cases, see if she can help. No idea when she managesĀ to actually take breaks, but Iām not complaining.ā
Jack watches as Robby pulls down his gown, feeling his emotions simmer, his cheeks still warm. āThatāsĀ notĀ what Iām asking.ā
Robby sends him a glance, then lets out a long exhale.
āWish I could give you an answer,ā although he doesnāt sound too bothered by the lack ofĀ it. āLast week, a couple of cops brought in one of theirs, tried to stick by while he was on the table. And she almost dragged them out of the ER with her own hands,ā Robby takes off his gloves and tosses them into the trash can. āTo be fair, their buddy did shoot himself in the thigh, and they all reeked of beer. So she didnāt seem totally unreasonable, and I didnāt want to push her. Maybe sheās anti-gun, maybe something happened to her? Hell if I know. Itās none of my business unless it affects her job. And it doesnāt. You saw it too.ā
Jack canāt argue with that.
He also canāt stop thinking about it ā your voice laced with aversion, your words biting, your eyes never shying away from his. You. He doesnāt know how to stop thinking about you.
Robby must see in his face ā or maybe heĀ justĀ knows him well enough to guess.Ā He asks Jack quietly:
āShe did get under your skin, huh?ā
Jackās mouth is set into a straight line. He cannot master a reply, and Robby knows better than to force one out. He briefly closes his eyes, bringing his hand up to rub his neck.
āListen, Iām as clueless as you are. But if you want to get some inside scoop, maybe try askingāā
āDr Robby?ā Mel peeks into the room. āSorry, weāve got a trauma incoming. A 12-year-old kid, a firecracker exploded in his hand.ā
āNot again,ā Robby grumbles. āAnyone ever thought of banning those fucking firecrackers? I think we should.ā
āStart a petition, Iāll sign it,ā Dana chuckles as she walks by.
Robby relents and steps toward the door, his hand landing on Jackās shoulder to give it a supportive squeeze. Unknowingly, he touches his wound, and Abbot barely manages to hold back a groan.
This time, the pain in his back lingers.
And when heās left alone, in the room that smells like blood and antiseptics, what lingers on his mind is the thought of you.
Jack looks for an empty exam room so he can quickly change and clean the wound.Ā He doesnāt want to ask for help, knowing how busyĀ this dayāsĀ been, which alsoĀ serves asĀ an excuseĀ for himĀ to stay for a few hours.
He tells himself it has nothing to do with you. It sounds like a lie.
Jack tiredly removes his sweat-stained long-sleeve, wincing when the material drags over his bruised shoulder blade. He takes the holster off, makes sure the gun is safely placed inside, then slowly pulls up his t-shirt. He barely has time to take it off when he hears quick footsteps approaching.
āMr Diaz?ā Samira calls out, loud and excited. The door clicks open. āMr Diaz, I have a surprise for you,ā she yanks the curtain to the side. Her eyes widen a little at the sight of Abbot, her tone quickly dulled to apologetic. āSorry.ā
āItās okay,ā Jack says, a bit self-conscious, hands fumbling with the t-shirt.
Mohan pays him no mind, looking around the room. āHave you seen my patient? Orlando.ā
He shakes his head. āThis room was empty.ā
She curses under her breath, and her face crumbles into an expression of unease thatās borderline on panic. Her eyes wander back to the hall, unsure, until they stop on someone Jack canāt see.
āHave you seen Mr Diaz?ā
āThe diabetic? Heās up in the med-surg. Theyāre gonna put him on an insulin protocol and monitor him for a couple of days.ā
Jackās fingers clutch the t-shirt tighter at the sound of your voice. He takes a step back and almost stumbles when he sees you. Thereās a short pause while Samiraās scrambling for words.
āWait, are youā Are you sure? He refused to get admitted, I barely could talk him into staying here, in the ER.ā
āYeah, it looked like he wasnāt gonna stay for long, because I caught him on the stairs in his hospital gown,ā you say, a small chuckle tucked in after the last two words. āHe seemed very agitated and definitely not in the best shape to leave. So I called for a psych consult.ā
āOh. I didnāt think about that,ā Samira sighs, shaking her head, no doubt already taking all the blame. āI shouldāve thought about that, I didnāt evenāĀ Thank you so much.ā
Remarkably, as you approach her, your demeanour changes ā your voice goes softer, and so does your gaze; your palmĀ caresses her shoulder in a soothing manner.
āThatās not on you. Todayās been pretty rough, and you have to juggle dozens of cases. You canāt think of every single thing,ā and you wait until Samira looks at you, until she breathes out withĀ somewhat of aĀ relief. āBesides, I wasnāt the one to persuade him, itās all Kiara.ā
āGuess I need to thank her too,ā Samira mumbles, a bit bashful, way more hopeful.
You nudge her in the direction of the elevators, a hint of a smile on your lips ā sincere and friendly, something Jack wishesĀ heĀ could get from you. Your gaze follows Samira as she walks away. You add:
āMaybe grab a snack on your way up. Iām pretty sure I havenāt seen you sit downĀ onceĀ since the morning.ā
Mohan is out of Jackās sight, but she does something to make your almost-smile turn into a wide one, your eyes crinkling at the corners as you laugh. Jack has to sit down. Heās quick to memorize it ā joy on your face, the sound of your laugh, your whole stance relaxed, if only for a couple of seconds.
He doesnāt wait for the inevitable change that will come once you see him.
Abbot averts his gaze and reaches for the medkit to take out everything he needs ā alcohol wipes and cotton swabs, a tub of Vaseline, gauze pads and band-aids. It is an easy process. And yet, all he can think about is that he didnāt hear you leave. That the door is open.
And even now, after you argued, after you glared at him, after you made it evidently clear how much you hate his principles and choices, the pull is still there. So he glances up.
To find that youāre already looking at him.
Your face unsmiling and emotionless, no softness in your voice when you say:
āYou are Hiroās emergency contact.ā
Jack nods and holds your gaze for a long moment.Ā Then looks away, picking a cotton swab to scoop up aĀ globeĀ of VaselineĀ with it.Ā Heās definitely skipping a few steps. His heart skips ā not just one beat, but a couple ā as you confidently move into the room.
āNeck angio is negative. A small splenic injury, but no free fluid in the abdomen. Heās getting prepped for the surgery,ā you tell him flatly.
Nothing in your voice or face suggests youĀ findĀ his companyĀ enjoyable.Ā So Jackās expecting you to turn and go away.
You donāt.
Your gaze sweeps over his body, from his shoulders and chest down to his hands. You suddenly step to the wall to grab a pair of gloves. Before he even thinks to ask what youāre doing, you move closer and take the cotton swab from him.
Then your fingers graze the raw skin on his back.
Jack goes rigid all over.
You donāt ask questions, silently examining his wound. And Abbot doesnāt expect you to be particularly gentle with him. He almost wishes that you wonāt be.Ā If you are rough, then your presence will be something heĀ justĀ needs to tolerate.Ā Sit here and wait for you to get it over with.
Thatās not what happens.
Because despite your sharp voice and unfriendly attitude, your hands are warm. He feels it even through your gloves, heās startled by that feeling: you touch him ā and goosebumps riseĀ upĀ on his back. You must notice, it would be hard not to. But you donāt comment on it.
You work fast, as you always do: you useĀ a wipe soaked in alcoholĀ to clear the wound, pressing it firmly in a patting motion over the graze.Ā You ditch the cotton swab,Ā choosing toĀ apply the Vaseline with your gloved finger, spreading it carefully in a thin layer.Ā And every time you come in contact with his skin, his bodyās drawn to lean into your touch. AĀ treacherous, unfathomable yearning. Of course, Jack stops himself. Heās sitting with his hands crossed over his chest, mentally counting seconds, hoping his torture will be over soon.
Hoping youāll stay for longer.
Hoping heāll somehow manage to erase this moment from his memory. And already knowing that he wonāt.
You cover his graze with a gauze pad andĀ putĀ four band-aids at theĀ corners of the fabricĀ to secure it in place.Ā You smooth it out with your thumbs ā
and then youāre done.
Then comes the part where Jack searches for the right thing to say. His arms still locked together, his heartbeat erratic, just as his thoughts are. He only manages two quiet words:
āThank you.ā
āDonāt mention it.ā
And thereās no stalling on your part because you promptly step away, the gloves off, the shield of your indifference already up.
āI mean that. Donāt bring this upĀ ever, it was just a one-and-done,ā you tell him, and now you do turn away, and he isnāt audacious enough to reach for you. But as youāre about to leave, you stop. āAnd itās three, by the way.ā
His shoulder doesnāt hurt, but something in his chest does. It claws its way out, spills into his arteries and veins, and fills him down to his bones: guilt. Jack knows what youāre about to tell him.
Still, he asks:
āThree what?ā
āThree dead bodies,ā and when itās just the two of you, you are less feisty, and you mostly sound tired. Not of your job, he thinks; no, it must be something else ā personal, painful, haunting. But you look at him with the same heavy gaze. āThey were diverted here from Westbridge. Two were in their mid-thirties, GSWs inĀ headĀ and chest. Probably died fast. The third one was seventeen. Two bullets in his lungs, one in his spleen, one in his arm. Isnāt that too much? He wasnāt a rapist or a murderer, he was just a kid. There should be hope for someone like him. Rehabilitation, reintegration into society, a second chance,ā you yourself donāt seem hopeful as you give him the explanation. āInstead, he had to lie there and wait for the blood to fill his lungs while choking on it. But hey, your friend? He will be fine. He was wearing a vest,ā and this is so much worse ā when you address him not with anger but withĀ disappointment. āAs were you.ā
You donāt wait for him to come up with a reply, and Abbot watches you walk out into the hall.
His guilt stays.
He sits with it, puts clothes over it, gets on his feet and carries it around as he goes back to the nurse station. He picks a chart, but heās having a hard time focusing on names and numbers. The noise of the ER is muted while heās deep in thought.
Itās not a hobby, and thereās rarely any enjoyment in it, and everyone (his therapist included) has found ways to tell him that they do not approve. So why does he keep doing it?
Should he keep doing it?
Someone is walking up to him ā Jack catches movement out of the corner of his eye.
āHi there,ā Emery leans on the table, hands in her pockets. āMet the new surgeon?ā
Jack barely registers the question, not really in the mood for talking. āYeah.ā
āThis is the part where youāre supposed to tell me that Iām the more talented one,ā she smirks and tilts her head a little, trying to catch his gaze.Ā Despite itĀ beingĀ evidentĀ thatĀ his attention is elsewhere, she continues.Ā āOkay,Ā talent runs in the familyĀ would be a nice second option.ā
It takes Jack a second to understand what she just said. And that does make him turn his head to look at her. āWhat family?ā
āShe didnāt tell you? I saw you two talking, so I assumed you knew.ā
Walsh stares back at him, one of her brows raised, like she is waiting for a punch line. But Jackās face is a canvas of indeniable confusion. Slowly, a smile tugs at her lips, a little bit amused ā and very satisfied that sheās the one to tell him:
āSheās my half-sister.ā
He lets her words sink in. And then it hits him ā the familiarity he noticed came from you and Emery having the same eyes. The same eye shape and, most importantly, the same gaze ā direct, intense and unapologetic. That made him feel like he owed you an apology, but he is yet to figure out what for.
āWow, Jack Abbot rendered speechless, thatās a new one. What, did she leave that good of a first impression?ā Emery chuckles.
That is one way to put it.
Jack is not sure how to tell her that you made him reevaluate the choices he was dead set on.Ā The ones he kept making for months.Ā But he canāt have this conversation with her now, here, when heās in disarray and operating on barely five hours of sleep.
He manages a smirk. āMaybe talent does run in your family. Hard for me to tell when Iāve barely worked with you.ā
āMemory loss is one of the symptoms of senility, youĀ know,āĀ sheĀ pats his arm with a mocking sympathy but with no offence. āIāll make sure to make our every interaction memorable for you from now on.ā
Thereās a glint in her eyes, not threatening but invigorating, and thatās what Jack has always liked about her: even if their methods clash, even when they argue (which happens often), Emery never holds a grudge.
āCanāt wait for it, Dr. Walsh,ā Jack grins.
She flips him off on her way to the elevator.
His phone vibrates.
Jack pulls it out of his pocket and looks down at the pop-up on the screen.
Levington:
You still up for next Friday? Weāre placing bets, mineās on some gang shit. Havenāt gotten one of those in a while, seems sus.
The same questionĀ starts flashingĀ through his mind, like a red light at aĀ crossroad.Ā Should he keep doing this?
Hiro will still be in recovery, and heās the only one Jack usually hangs out with.Ā Except,Ā no one takes on that job to hang out, and all the common reasons donāt resonate with Jack: he isnātĀ onĀ it for the money, he doesnāt go out on calls to render justice, his morals have become quite flexible over the years.Ā Theyāve got enough time to find another medic for the task. And he really should find himself a better hobby.
So Abbot bites the bullet and types a short reply.
Sorry, something came up, I have to pass on this one. Iāll text Sarge.
He turns on silent mode and puts the phone away.
It comes to him way easier than heād imagined. The harder task will beĀ to not give inĀ when heās alone in his apartment, when heās got day-offs and not too many friends to spend them with, when heāll have to dissect his logic for his therapist.
The hardest will be trying to talk to you.
If not for giving an apology, thenĀ justĀ to offer you an explanation.Ā It feels important to let you know he isnāt who you think he is, to get a chance to make things right. To get a chance to be in your proximity for any reason, really.
Because deep down, he grows infatuated with that jarring contrast ā your words harsh, but your fingers gentle.
Your voice cold, but your touch warming his whole body up.
And somehow, he craves both.
ā§ soooo is this anything? would anyone want a part 2?
the idea behind the fic was to explore how a personās views can change with time and/or under some dire circumstances. but also what itās like to fall for someone whoās done things in the past you donāt agree with. I think it would be interesting to find out why Abbot joined the army and how it affected him, but also why he decided to help the SWAT team. because I have a sneaking suspicion that the show will not answer any of these questions... aaanyways, I didnāt want to write a super long oneshot, I think itād work best as a three-parter, so this is the first one. sorry thereās no smut, I know thatās what everyone cares about these days. I spent almost a week debating if I should even post this fic. but itās been on my mind for a while, and I just want to move on lol but thank you to the few people who will read this <3 (also, to clarify ā yes, reader does have her reasons to hate cops. but the statistics I mentionedĀ are very much real).
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
ā Live Streamingā Interactive Chatā Private Showsā HD Qualityā Free Actions
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
pairing: Jack Abbot x surgical resident!reader
summary: your workās been leaving you exhausted, but youāre struggling to fall asleep, you barely can relax. Javadi recommends you an audio erotica app. and it does help you unwind. until you realize that the orgasmic raspy voice in your headphones belongs to one of your attendings ā none other than Jack Abbot.
warnings: implied age gap (that you can ignore); mutual pining, Jack isnāt that good at flirting when he catches feelings. he compensates for it with his other talents š smut {dirty talk, masturbation, praise kink, teasing, fingering (with two hands, idk if thatās a thing?), piv, aftercare}; Park is an unintentional wingman, Javadi is the bestest of friends / words: 13K / authorās note: this was suuuper unplanned, I wrote the whole thing in a couple of days. is the smut too detailed? maybe. idc ā” READ ON AO3 / MASTERLIST
Late in the evening, the cafeteria makes for a perfect place for naps.
With day and night shifts overlapping, everyoneās busy with the paperwork and greetings, and thatās when you prefer to slip away. You arenāt alone at this uncommon hiding spot ā Santos already dozed off at a table further off, earbuds in, hood up. She can sleep anywhere and anytime. But you arenāt that lucky.
You spent ten minutes genuinely trying ā deep breaths, and meditation, and counting sheep. Now youāre just sulking, helpless against your permanent exhaustion. You catch the footsteps first ā quick, quiet, a woman on a mission. The door creaks just a little when it opens.
Closes.
You know the quiet wonāt last long.
āI can feel you staring. Youād suck as a spy,ā you say, grudginglyĀ opening one eye to see Javadi leaning on the fridge door.
She shakes her head ā half disapproval, half concern. āYou know, each time I see you here, Iām not sure if youāre asleep or dead.ā
āAnd they let you talk to suicidal people like that? Maybe I plan on walking out of the nearest window.ā
āYou wonāt make it that far,ā she chuckles and hands it to you ā her peace offering: a frozen Butter Pecan Swirl, topped with whipped cream and sprinkled with crushed nuts. Itās like an orgasm in a cup (a huge one), which you are happy to accept.
Javadi sits right next to you, concern still very present in her deer-like dark eyes. āI think even the patients on a psych hold look better than you do.ā
āWow, that comparison really cheered me up. You should be thankful, by the way,ā youāre savouring the icy, jarringly sweet drink. āIf I didnāt look like death, youād still be dreaming about getting into surgical residency. My eyebags changed the course of your life. Youāre welcome.ā
āI am forever in your debt. Iāll pay it off with coffee,ā she smiles and leans back on the wall, stretching her legs out ā black scrubs pants, grey sneakers, a sigh of relief.
And you think ā suddenly and stupidly, because thatās how your brainās now wired ā of that one time Jack brought you the same drink. Sat with you on this same spot. Looked at you with his eyes crinkled at the corners, his usual smirk turned into a softer smile. You donāt even remember what he talked about, but the feeling stayed: of just how calm his presence made you. How comforting it was.
For a good minute, your coffee loses taste.
You blink. Take another sip. Look up ā and see him walking through the door. And then it feels like youāre losing it in general. You pinch yourself. He doesnāt disappear.
āLong time no see,ā Jack says, very much real. Casual. He goes to look for something in the fridge, a crumb of time for you to get yourself together. Then he looks back at you. āTough shift?ā
Tough week. Or month. Actually, lifeās been pretty tough since you stopped working by his side. But you remind yourself that it was your decision.
āBearable,ā you say, pretending to take interest in the thick swirls of syrup on the inside of your cup. Hoping heād take a hint. And yet, despite him being good at many things, Jack is perpetually bad at leaving you alone.
You left him first. You thought heād hate you.
Instead, you hear his voice tinged with warmth:
āDidnāt you just patch up the guy with a ruptured aorta? That was badass.ā
His compliment feels like a glass of water, and youāve been parched with thirst.
āYeah,ā you meet his gaze, because youāve missed him terribly. Heās looking at you like he hoped you would. And you canāt help the smile. āI guess it was.ā
He doesnāt stop there. He comes a step closer, crossing his arms over his chest ā unreasonably, sinfully buff arms ā and stares straight at you:
āRemind me whereād you learned that clamping trick?ā
Heās being smug now, and you have missed this too. Slowly, the room is narrowing to the small space he takes. A smirk tugs at the corner of his mouth. āI might have more tricks up my sleeve. Can teach you somethin' else.ā
He holds your gaze. Pins you to the spot with his. And just as always, he makes you feel like no one in the world exists except you two ā
But you arenāt really alone.
You catch movement out of the corner of your eye. No doubt, itās Javadi wishing she could blend in with the wall. And when you snap back to reality, Jack follows.
He clears his throat, taking a step back. āTeach you in the ER, I mean. If you want to orāor if you ever decide to come back, you know. But no pressure or anything.ā
āIāll keep that in mind, Dr. Abbot,ā you tell him, in the politest tone that you can master. Already grieving that small moment you knew could never last.
Javadi can barely wait for him to leave ā before her face breaks into a smile. āAw, he has a crush on you.ā
āWhich you have told me a dozen times, and Iāll continue to reply that no, he doesnāt,ā although your own face treacherously heats up.
āHe flirted with you just now.ā
āHe flirts with everyone. Heās like an energy vampire, thatās why he doesnāt look his age.ā
Trinity groans somewhere behind you. She takes her earbuds out and sits up, stretching her shoulders. āTo be fair, his flirting isnāt that impressive.ā
āI think half of the ER would disagree,ā Javadi eagerly retorts. If thereās one thing these two donāt ever get tired of, itās bickering.
āOh no, he is charming. With everyone but her,ā Trinity turns to you with a shit-eating grin. āWith you, heās awkward. Which, donāt get me wrong, is hilarious to witness. But Crash does have a point ā heās totally into you.ā
āDid you two just agree on something? I must be hallucinating.ā
Javadi rolls her eyes. Santos just huffs a laugh. She grabs her backpack, smartphone and an already opened silvery-blue can.
āHeās also been very moody since you moved to the upper floor. Just saying,ā she winks at you and walks out, loudly gulping her Red Bull.
Your mood hasnāt been good either. It gets a little worse once you realise you reached the bottom of your frothy drink. And somehow, your second wind didnāt kick in.
āCan you develop a high tolerance to coffee? I feel like I should be way more awake. This cup is literally the size of a newborn.ā
āBabe, you know thereās barely any coffee in it,ā Javadi says, no judgment, just a little bit of pity. āYou just crave sugar because your body needs some fuel to continue functioning.ā
āBut what if coffee isnāt working anymore... Whatās the next best option? Cocaine?ā
āYou canāt afford cocaine.ā
āIāll sell a kidney.ā
āCanāt do that either, you need them both.ā
āI didnāt say I would sell mine.ā
The laugh she gives you sounds half-hearted. Her face looks serious when she notes. āI know that humour is your defensive mechanism, but sometimes itās okay to actually talk about whatās bothering you.ā
āIām very bothered by the amount of unsolicited therapy you keep bringing into our friendship,ā you quip. And your regret is instant. āSorry, I genuinely donāt remember the last time I slept for more than five hours.ā
āHas Park been riding you too much? You know you are allowed to take breaks, even if he doesnāt think so.ā
āNo, itās not that I donāt have free time, I justā I canāt fall asleep. I drag my feet and doze off ten times a day, but the second my head hits the pillow ā nothing. My body is not... bodying or whatever the fuck itās called.ā
And then you watch her worry bleed into a different expression. She looks at you, a little coy, a little bit excited.
āI might have an idea. But I need you not to laugh at me.ā
āVic, I am physically closer to a zombie than to a human being. If thereās any way to help me fall asleep faster, Iāll try it.ā
āOkay, thereās this app... With a collection of audios. Recorded by men and women, you can pick. They sort of play out different imaginary scenarios, like meeting you for the first time and getting to know each other. And maybe, like, kissing or āā
āJust to clarify, you recommend that I listen to some porn?ā youāre trying to drag out some of the whipped cream with a straw.
āItās not porn!ā she hisses, adorably ashamed. āI mean, not always. They arenāt all explicit. The ones Iāve listened to, they were... Really immersive. And it just feels nice. Helps to take your mind off things. I donāt know, I kinda thought youād be into it.ā
āMasturbation? I feel like I should be offended.ā
āNo, the whole... Talking thing.ā
With your mouth full, you raise a brow at her, somewhat confused.
āI mean, isnāt that why you liked working with Abbot? He was explaining everything to you, always talked you through the procedures and stuff. And now you are super annoyed because Park barely speaks. Just glares at people.ā
āI assure you, Iām not at all annoyed that my attending does not turn me on.ā
Javadi giggles, leaning toward you. āSo what youāre saying is that... Abbot turned you on?ā
āYou know what, now I actually want to kill myself.ā
āNo, you still have an hour of your shift left. And then,ā she rubs your arm with small, comforting circles, back to her serious self. āYou will come home, take a scalding shower, just as you like it, pop in a couple of melatonin gummies, and get some sleep.ā
āThose gummies donāt do shit. I ate four last time and then stared at the ceiling for two hours.ā
She playfully nudges your shoulder with hers. āWell, thereās always another option,ā Javadi laughs at your grimace and gets up. āI need to go back to other unstable people. Text me when you get home. Iām serious.ā
āWill do, mom.ā
She flips you off on her way out.
Whatever little caffeineās been in your drink, it helps you look less dead and more like a person who can be trusted with a scalpel. The OR floor is quiet and cool, and from afar, Park can be mistaken for a statue: a tall body made of sharp lines and muscles, staying completely still as he looks through a patientās file.
He waits for you to reach the nursing station. Gives you one quick look, his eyes deep blue, cold like ice.
āGot enough coffee to keep you standing? Donāt want to scrape you off the floor.ā
You give him a dry chuckle. āWhen have you ever scraped me off the floor?ā
One corner of his mouth moves up, merely an inch. āFair,ā he says, his gaze back to the tablet. āIād like for it to stay that way.ā
āSo whoās the last one for today? Anything exciting?ā
āMale, 63, a proximal humerus fracture. Itās all in his file. Iāll see you in ten.ā
Big fucking thanks for the detailed reply.
āThey say that brevity is the soul of wit, but no one tells you itās also such a mood killer,ā you mutter, not bothering to keep your voice down.
Park makes a sound thatās more of a long hum than a real laugh. He throws the words over his shoulder: āIāll let you do the CRPP.ā
āThanks, Iām smiling on the inside.ā
He never really smiles. Or says more than he needs to. And sometimes youāre thankful that he doesnāt: it unironically makes him almost the perfect mentor for you.
Unlike the previous one.
You may never admit it out loud, but youāve come to enjoy working with Park. Heās harsh at times, yes, but he is also quick and talented and not that bad at teaching. The problem isnāt that he doesnāt talk much. You donāt mind doing your own research, and youāre actually okay with him being closed off.
The real problem is Jack Abbot. Who has been driving you insane.
At first, there were no signs of trouble.
You picked the night shift for your rotation because youāve always been more of a night owl, and you enjoyed the challenge that comes with the variety of traumas. You two clicked from day one ā Jack carried just the right amount of confidence to seem trustworthy, but his male ego didnāt get offended by someone elseās talent. He smiled at you and made small talk and always offered answers to your questions. He also smiled and talked to literally everybody else, so you didnāt think much of it. At least, you tried not to. You told yourself that you came to the ER to learn, that you wouldnāt allow your feelings to interrupt your job.
Even when said feelings turned into a crush. That felt like an addiction.
It started with you waiting. Wanting. More of his words, his gaze, his flattering attention. Jack always knew exactly how to land a compliment ā his words were short, sure. Accompanied by that hint of a smile. Heād stand close, just on the edge of inappropriately close, his steady voice providing guidance. Heād push you when he knew that you could handle it. Heād tell you all the necessary steps and walk you through them and somehow make you feel like you succeeded on your own. āYes, thatās the move.ā āLook at you taking risks, kid.ā āGoodā ā
ā āgirlā, you wanted Jack to add.
So good for him, you wanted him to think.
You wanted him. God knows, you wanted him so badly.
It didnāt help that Shen soon started calling you āJackās favoriteā. Sometimes in front of Abbot, who hasnāt denied it once. Ellis discreetly (so she thought) tried leaving you alone with him more often. And even Crus once told you that you were the only resident Jack paid so much attention to.
It couldāve been a picture-perfect start of a love story, if only not for one crucial piece missing: Jack never crossed the line.
Even after youāve caught his gaze lingering, his hands reaching for you, his warmth grazing your shoulder or your spine. On more than one occasion. And still, it led nowhere. There were no accidental touches, no flirting outside of the ER, he didnāt even try to get your number.
Inevitably, it made you feel self-conscious. Stupid. Pathetic even. Whatās worse, his presence was distracting, and losing focus was the one thing you absolutely couldnāt do.
So you looked for a way out thatād let you save your dignity and your career. Switching to surgery helped you with both. Despite the fact that you had to restart your year. Despite seeing the very obviously hurt expression on Jackās face when you informed him. He didnāt try to stop you, though. You didnāt tell him why exactly you were leaving. Instead, you dived right into work: from dealing with small fractures and arthritis to sports injuries, torn muscles, spinal disorders and crushed bones. It was in no way easy, but it felt empowering ā knowing that you could fix something so strong and weighty, the living tissues made of minerals and collagen, the bony structure that allows people to move.
And on the rare occasions your paths crossed, Abbot kept being friendly. But you kept your distance.
Even if deep down, you still missed him.
His gaze, his guidance. Most of all, his voice.
It takes you two more days to finally give up and ask Javadi about the app.
Hey, so that app thatās totally not audio porn... Can you please give me the name. And then forget I asked.
Actually, forgetting might not be enough. Next time you come over, Iāll need you to swear on the Bible.
Thereās no way you have a Bible at home.
Well, another option is a blood oath.
Iām this š¤ close to admitting you into our psych ward.
Just say you miss me and want to see me more often. Thereās no shame in it!
Please, get fucked (literally š).
You click the App Store link she sent, then press on the newly downloaded icon on the screen.
The layout is pretty simple ā pale colors, normal-sized fonts, a short video guide. You donāt waste time and tap on the male voices' section to look through their audio titles. They arenāt at all exhilarating. A Trip to the G-spot (thanks, been there), Hold on to my nuts! (yikes), Your Daddyās Home (double yikes), The Song of Praise and Cum (this calls for a lobotomy). You spend another minute on it, already battling frustration ā and youāre about to log off, when finally a title catches your attention:
A Helping Hand.
āOkay, a little on the nose,ā you mumble to yourself.
It is a series of recordings, about half an hour each. It seems that he is relatively new, but heās got great reviews. His nickname is Nightcrawler. He has no profile photo. His bio says: āI guess, this is my new hobby.ā
Youāre positive that it wonāt work on you.
You take a shower, put on your pajamas and your noise-cancelling headphones. You sit in bed, your back against the pillows. With zero expectations (except maybe to find it all ridiculous and cringe).
You press play.
At first, thereās just silence.
And then he starts, his voice unhurried like a rustle of the wind:
āHi, baby. You look so tired,ā he murmurs. āYouāve had a hard day, I can tell.ā
You pause immediately. But not because you hate it. It startles you ā how much you like him from the get-go, how just a sentence of this strangerās voice made heat flash in your stomach.
You try to sit a little straighter. Then press play again.
āAll that tension in your body, that slight soreness of your muscles... We really need to do something about it, honey. I canāt have you going to sleep so tense.ā
Yeah, you donāt want that either.
His every quiet word strikes home: your limbs are heavy with exhaustion, your mind is clouded with it. You let out a breath you didnāt realize that you were holding. And you donāt think that him saying all that is a hell of a coincidence. Instead, it actually feels nice: for someone else to talk about your struggles. For it to sound like understanding.
āDonāt worry, I can fix that. You just lie down and listen to my voice.ā
So you slide lower in your bed, the pillows now behind your head and shoulders. And when he asks to close your eyes, you do.
You follow every single one of his instructions. His raspy, gently voiced commands: heās telling you to take deep breaths, to slowly stretch out your arms and legs, to draw small circles over your temples, to put your hands lower and massage your neck. Heās telling you he wishes he was there to help you. That he would know exactly where to rub and press. And that his fingers wouldāve felt much better.
Then heās instructing you to put hands on your chest, to run them up and down your body to get your blood flowing. You do just that. And soon you feel your skin prickle with warmth.
āNeed you to relax, to shut off that beautiful brain of yours,ā he says, with a controlled and hushed insistence. āDonāt think about anything. Itās just you and me, sweetheart.ā
Your thoughts are light; thereās nothing on your mind but him. Your muscles pliantly unravel as he continues speaking. About how warm your skin must feel, how pretty you are looking ā laid out for him on your bedcovers. And thereās another feeling that feeds off his voice: a spark of fire that grows and spreads and makes you ache for more.
You hear him telling you to move your hands down to your stomach. He says he wishes he could touch you there, to slowly drag his fingers down to your navel ā
āWish I could feel how wet you are right now.ā
Your eyelids flutter open.
You probably shouldāve predicted this turn of events. And truthfully, you arenāt as opposed to it as you thought you would be. Youāre just not sure it will work. But when you slide your hand beneath the waistband of your panties ā
you find the fabric in between your legs already soaked.
All that from someone talking to you nicely?
There must be something in his voice.
That same voice whispers:
āTouch yourself.ā
Barely a second passes before you do.
This isnāt your first time, but somehow, it feels very different. More satisfying. Way more intimate. Pads of your fingers move against your clit, exactly how he tells you:
āwant you to go slow for me, baby. rub it in circles, ju-ust like that,ā
āapply more pressure with your index finger ā feels good, yeah? cāmon, donāt stop,ā
ānow move a little lower, feel what a mess youāre making. I know you must be drippingā.
Heās right, you are. And then your eyes fall shut again, a whimper tumbling from your lips.
āI bet youād feel so tight around my fingers,ā he says hoarsely, making you clench around nothing.
If he was here, in your room, youād shamelessly beg for more. A long-forgotten pleasure starts coiling in your stomach.
āWant you to put a finger in,ā he orders. āImagine that itās mine.ā
You start with one. Just one, and yet, itās getting difficult to focus on his words. And fleetingly, with your chest heaving, you wonder what his fingers would feel like. As if he reads ā or guesses ā where your thoughts are wandering, he tells you, a smirk heard in his voice:
āBut mine would be a lot thicker, so I need you to add another one,ā ā you slip the second finger in, and he lets out a hum, like he can see you, ā āThere you go. Donāt rush it, weāve got time. Iād never rush it with you, honey.ā
Despite you trying to move slowly, youāre getting dangerously close to cumming. You want to drag it out, you do, but he is making it too hard. When he is whispering to spread your legs wider. To set a rhythm, to start moving your hips a little. When he is telling you that youāre doing so good.
When he wants you to use your free hand to touch your nipples. When he says, teasingly, how much he wishes he could put his lips on you.
When you can hear him sigh, like all this also turns him on.
āWant you to go faster,ā his words come out in low grunts. āYes, keep going, donāt stop. Keep fucking yourself. Need to get you loosened up and ready for me. Fuck, your cunt would feel so perfect wrapped around my cock āā
Your orgasm crashes over you, sudden and shuddering.
Youāre gasping, too loudly to hear what he is saying, your body floating in the waves of bliss. It takes a moment for you to catch your breath.
The audio ends abruptly on his own heavy breathing.
You are left stupefied and sweaty. And satisfied beyond description. Your headphones end up thrown across the bed, but youāre too tired to move an inch. It is a very pleasant kind of tired.
Before you know it, you are fast asleep.
Whatās meant to be just a one-off soon turns into a habit. And you donāt really feel ashamed about it.
There is a certain thrill to it ā having a secret you donāt want to share, the one thing you canāt wait to get home to. It does help you to take the edge off, yes: with just his words, he makes your tension melt away, makes all the worries disappear. Leaving you dazed and gasping at the thought of how good heād fuck you.
But sometimes, as you come down from your high, your thighs wet and hands trembling, and he is soothing you back into consciousness ā the strangerās voice reminds you of Jackās.
It canāt be him, of course.
You wish it was.
You also wish you could move on. Unstitch him from your memories that heās been woven into, his face and arms and words seemingly always on your mind. They shouldnāt be, not when your feelings are so obviously one-sided.
So, since youāre able to wake up well-rested, you start to pile on more work.
You take your time to learn about non-invasive treatments: you get to know the PTMCās physician and psychiatrist, you print out studies about injections and post-operative care, you spend your breaks leafing through the countless pages. You learn fast. You grab at every chance to practice. You ask to scrub in on some of Garciaās cases, youāre lucky to assist Javadiās mother a few times. And even though you feel that Parkās a little bit suspicious of your ardor, he asks no questions.
You donāt see Jack. Heās still on nights, and you are mostly up in the OR, and even when you do come down, you do your best to stay away. You hope that a tight schedule and your daily orgasms will be enough of a distraction. That at some point, your crush will quietly die down.
Itās no surprise that youāre working on the 4th.
And itās predictably a shitshow: the waiting room is packed with patients, swamped with the summer heat, every new injury is worse ā and way more gruesome ā than the other. You deal with fractured, broken bones, you get to help with torn-off fingers, bashed-in skulls and penetrating wounds. You rush from one OR into the other. You barely get time to take a breath. And once you finally do, you get called down to the ER.
āLook who it is. Since when does surgery send its best residents to us poor mortals?ā Robby puts on a smile to greet you.
āGarcia is still operating on Howard, Parkās dealing with your water slide case. Iām just happy to treat someone with intact bones for a change.ā
āCanāt promise it will be a pretty sight.ā
āDidnāt count on it.ā
He cackles, his gloved hand pointing toward the sliding doors the gurneys come through. āHereās the reason we called for a consult. Yours is the one with Old Glory jammed in his chest.ā
And in the next second, your own chest tightens, anxiety bruising your ribcage like a seatbelt in a crash. Because the aforementioned patient is rolled in by Jack.
He doesnāt see you yet. You canāt help but notice ā the tension roped around his back, the sheen of sweat around his forehead, faint sleepless shadows spilled under his eyes. Reflexively, you step out of the way so he can move down the hall without bumping into you. So you can stay unnoticed.
The injured man is in the middle of a screaming match with some guy whose cheek is slashed in half.
āIām gonna take that thing out of my chest and shove it down your ass!ā
āYou hit me with a fucking Rolling Rock, man!ā
āBecause you are a cheater! And now my chest fucking hurts!ā
āYouāre the one who broke the rules! You know every detail must be āā
āTake yours into trauma 2 before I go deaf on one ear,ā Abbot mumbles to Ellis, then tries to shush his patient. It isnāt working.
And you can tell that Jack is low on patience.
He grips the gurney with both hands and pushes it into the room, his voice coming out low and clipped:
āSir, we are gonna get you more pain meds, but you need to shut your fucking mouth.ā
It is a quick remark, maybe a little out of his character ā too blunt, too rude; although acceptable under the current circumstances. And in the never-ending noise and busyness of the ER no one would ever waste their time on lecturing him. You arenāt even sure they heard.
But you freeze. As if a bomb just went off. The world around you is momentarily devoid of all the other sounds.
It isnāt the specific words, but the emotions you could hear behind them ā intensity Jack usually reigns in, the punctuated heat of anger that slipped through his āshutā and āfuckingā. You arenāt surprised he said those words. Or used that tone. Or lost his self-restraint for a few seconds.
Youāre struck by the realization that you have heard him talk like that before.
āIf his heart was damaged, he surely wouldnāt be yelling,ā Robby comes up to you, eyeing the rowdy patient. āBut the stabbingās definitely within the cardiac box. What do you think?ā
āCardiac box it is. Iād bet on a pneumothorax,ā you say, on some miraculous autopilot. But you arenāt looking at the patient.
Jack grabs the scissors to remove the manās clothes, his hands working around the wooden stick he is impaled on; his gaze grazes you. On accident or maybe out of habit Jack hasnāt managed to unlearn. He turns to throw away the ruined, blood-stained fabric ā then stops. And then his eyes come back to you, this time with purpose. He meets your gaze, his own confused a little, one of his brows crawling up. Because youāre staring at him, and he has no idea why.
Itās almost funny to imagine how youād explain to him your stupor. Hey, Jack, is there a chance you like recording steamy audios? 'Cause I believe that Iāve been getting off to the sound of your voice.
But at the moment, you arenāt laughing.
You make an effort to drag your gaze away, your heartbeat loud in your ears. This canāt be happening. It cannot actually be him.
āDo an ultrasound to get a confirmation, Iāll go up to prep the OR,ā you say to Robby flatly, eager to leave the room, to have a minute to yourself.
You take the stairwell, thoughts rushing as your feet are. And very quickly, your shock gives way to irritation. Surely, Jack is allowed to do whatever in his free time. But now that you suspect itās him ā his low voice that is so masterful at saying all those dirty things ā you donāt think youāll be able to relax. It would also be kinda inappropriate to continue listening to that.
But then you spend another seven hours on your feet. Three surgeries, two breaks (about ten minutes in total), a lot of blood and bones, a few of Parkās dry words. You miss the fireworks, the get-together with your former colleagues, the friendly chatter that maybe couldāve helped you to unwind. And by the time you cross the hall of your apartment, you find it hard to care about propriety.
You put the headphones on, fully aware that youāre about to hear Jack.
It doesnāt ruin things for you. It only turns you on instead.
Because itās not some random guy ā itās Jack who puts you on all fours. Jack who tells you to put your fingers in your mouth. To suck them, to then take them deeper, to gag on them, just like he couldāve made you gag around his cock.
āAss up for me, baby,ā he instructs, his every word now carrying more weight ā you cannot stop imagining him being here, whispering it all into your ear. āBet your pussy is wet enough to take two fingers right away. Cāmon, be a good girl. Show me.ā
You never even think about reaching for your toys. You donāt need to: not when his voice alone makes waves of heat roll through your body, makes you pulsate with want, moan with longing.
āWant you to think of my cock slowly stretching you,ā Jack rasps, āBecause itās all I think about,ā and youāre imagining his chest pressed to your back, the sounds he would make while thrusting deep, deeper, relentless movement of his hips, his lips grazing your neck, āI know youāll take my cock so well. Like it was made for fucking you.ā
His big hands roaming over your body. His hot breath on your skin. Him, him, it has always been him.
āIād make you feel so good. Until you drip all over my cock. Until youāre sobbing for me to fill you up,ā he whispers heatedly. āI will. Just so I can fuck my cum back into you when we go for round two. I know my girl is always greedy for more.ā
And he is right, you would be.
āLike you were made for it. For me.ā
You cum as hard as always, breathless and shaking. And this time, with his name helplessly gasped against your pillow. A few long seconds after that, in your sweet postorgasmic haze, you get a very clear thought: you still want Jack, now more than ever.
And you two really need to talk.
You press Call before you can come up with yet another argument for why this is a bad idea. She picks up in four seconds, but you donāt let her say a word.
āHey, so do remember when you guys went out last time, and I couldnāt go because of that leg amputation thing, and you told me you ended up in some new bar, with those big plants or whatever, and Abbot was there too?ā
āWow, are you already on cocaine?ā Javadi laughs.
āNo, I just had a good night of sleep, so please keep up. Youāre coming to the same bar this Friday, right?ā
āYep, thatās the plan. You decided to join us?ā
āIām thinking about it. But Iām gonna be at least an hour late, cause Iād have to get home to change and then āā
āOr you can just come right after work. The place isnāt that fancy. You can do casual.ā
āI donāt want casual. I wear jeans 360 days a year, itād be nice to actually feel pretty for once.ā
āOh, cut the crap, I know youād look great in anything!ā
āThatās very kind of you to say, but Iām not calling to discuss my wardrobe. I was wondering if you can... If by any chance Jack shows up again āā
āO-ooh.ā
āNo, donāt oh at me. You donāt even know what Iām about to ask.ā
āIf Abbot shows up, Iām gonna tell him that you are coming too, so heāll stay and wait for you.ā
āOkay, you can add mind-reading to your resume, you witch.ā
āYouāre both kinda predictable,ā Javadi notes with a chuckle. āWhen he came last time, he left immediately after he found out you werenāt there.ā
āOr he just remembered he left the stove on and didnāt want his flat to burn down. Itās not like he explicitly told you why he was leaving.ā
āHe didnāt need to,ā she argues. āHe came in, went straight to the bar where we were hanging out, ordered a beer and managed the small talk for barely a minute before he flat-out asked if you were there. Looked like a kicked puppy when I told him you didnāt come. Wished us a good night and took off, didnāt even take his beer.ā
That does sound like he came to see you. You find it cute. But only for a moment ā until you get a stinging thought: if he wanted to see you outside of work, why has he never asked you out?
āIāll text you when Iām done,ā you say, trying to sound unconcerned, unruffled by the possibility of your months-long feelings being reciprocated. āThe spinal fusion should take about three hours.ā
āUgh, it sounds so cool when you say it, but then I remember what that process actually is like.ā
āIt is pretty cool.ā
āAnd I am very glad you think that,ā sheās quick to reassure. āGo fuse some vertebrae, so weāll have something to drink to!ā
The surgery takes four hours.
It is a slow, meticulous procedure accompanied by Parkās curt advice and your own strategic guesses ā and usually, something like that would leave you drained. Hardly in the mood for socializing. But this evening, you step out of the OR with a wide grin.
āGood call about rotating the metal plates,ā Park says, his voice emotionless. Like heās not sure himself that itās a compliment.
Still, you take it.
āThank you, I did some reading beforehand,ā you tell him, throwing away your dirty gloves and gown. āShould help with healing, too. But knock on wood, weāll see what his post-op scans show.ā
And youāre already doing some non-work-related calculations in your head. 10 minutes on filling out the patientās file, 10 more for ordering a cab and waiting for it, then if youāre lucky, youāll be home in 20 ā
āAbbot was right about you.ā
That makes you stop. Makes an uncomfortable feeling settle in your stomach. You havenāt seen Brendon and Jack talk once. And you cannot imagine them talking about you.
You turn to Park, not smiling anymore:
āCare to explain?ā
āHe wrote you a recommendation letter. Didnāt he tell you?ā he casually clarifies. āNot that I asked for it. But he delivered it himself, four pages in Times New Roman,ā the straight line of his mouth curves a little. Almost a smirk, but not unkind. And he does seem sincere when he adds, āAbbot was right, you are great. Glad to have you on our team.ā
āHold on. I just want to get a few facts straight,ā and your tone is astonishingly calm, despite it feeling like your blood is simmering. āSo he came to you. With a printed-out letter. And then what, you guys talked?ā
āYes. About the letter.ā
āAbout me, you mean.ā
āThe letter was about your competence and skills. What else was there to discuss,ā he deadpans. āIs this interrogation over?ā
āOh, come on, that was only two questions. Donāt act like I am waterboarding you,ā you huff, hands on your hips.
Park breathes out through his nose, then shakes his head. Youāre half expecting him to grouse about it some more. But he does what you expect the least.
āHe talks about you, you talk about him,ā Park muses coolly. āYou guys just need to fuck it out.ā
He shoves his own gown in the trash, turns on his heels and leaves.
And under other circumstances, you wouldāve been so glad to hear it. Jack talked about you! Jack seems to care!
Except, he had a perfect chance to actually show you that. But on your final day in the ER, he barely said a word. It stayed stuck in your memory, the last nail in the coffin where your hopes were buried: Jackās weird avoidance, no jokes, no flirting, none of his usual penchant for eye contact. He spent the whole shift painfully indifferent to your departure. Only once you started saying your goodbyes, he came by to wish you luck. To say that he was sure youād do great. Two sentences was all he managed.
And yet, he had no trouble talking about you with Park?!
Youād really like to get a fucking explanation.
You donāt go home to change. You come straight to the noisy bar, in your plain jeans and baggy shirt. And wrapped up in anger. You scan the crowd for familiar faces and spot Victoria from afar: some tipsy guy is cornering her, wildly gesticulating with his hands. She doesnāt really seem scared, mostly annoyed. But you are in no mood for being civil.
You unceremoniously walk up to them and grab the stranger by the shoulder to pull him back.
āHer face clearly suggests sheās not interested. Get lost.ā
āHello to you too,ā he whistles, leering at you. āYou wanna be our third, babygirl? Iām always down for... some new experiences.ā
āI can help you with that. You ever heard about a comminuted fracture? Itās when a bone is broken in two or more places. Which you are about to experience if you donāt leave in 10 seconds.ā
āYouāre into human anatomy? Thatās hot,ā the man grins drunkenly, but his flirting sounds less sure.
āIām an orthopedic surgeon. There are 3 longĀ bonesĀ in your arm, 27Ā in yourĀ hand. Which one would hurt more when broken, how do you think? Youāve got seven seconds. Six āā
āGeez, fucking chill, girl,ā he mutters and steps back to hastily retreat.
Javadi snorts a laugh. āThank you, he was so annoying, I just didnāt want to make a scene. Youād think the "Letās go, lesbians!" t-shirt would help him get a hint but āā and then she takes you in ā your searching gaze and furrowed brows and pursed lips. āWhatās wrong?ā
āWhereās Abbot?ā
āIt depends. Am I gonna be an accomplice to murder if I tell you?ā
āYou may be a witness.ā
āI donāt think thatās any better,ā but luckily, she knows you well enough to figure out that thereās no point in questions. Javadi holds both hands up in surrender. āOkay-okay, last time I saw him, he was at the bar.ā
You go for it, barrelling through the crowd like an icebreaker through the frozen water. You notice Trinity, Dennis, Mel, Frank and Jesse nearby. You only have eyes for one man in particular. But at the long table where the drinks are being poured and paid for, there is no sign of Jack. You stop and wait; one minute, two, three pass by. And just as quickly, your determination crumbles.
You wanted him to tell you that he needed you to stay, all these days back, in person. You wanted him to wait for you today. Both times, he didnāt.
It makes you feel self-conscious again. Stupid. Even more pathetic.
You turn around, suddenly too overwhelmed by your own feelings.
The music is too loud now, the smell of alcohol mixing with sweat and perfume, and making your head hurt. You faintly hear someone call out your name, but you donāt stop, too desperate to get back to the exit. Too tired of waiting for the one thing that clearly isnāt meant to be.
The street is quiet, and the air is cold; it doesnāt help to cool you down. Youāre walking a thin line between infuriated and upset. It gnaws away at you ā that you spent so much time delusionally sure that Jack felt something for you. Cared for you. You think about his watchful gaze on you, the tension hung between you two, his hands he kept a little bit too close, his words that guided you through surgeries and orgasms, his goddamn voice ā
You are so deep in your frustrations, you miss the sound of the door opening, the footsteps rushing toward you.
āHey,ā he says it carefully, and yet, you flinch. You turn around to find Jack standing at armās length already. Black jeans, grey t-shirt and black denim jacket; he looks unfairly handsome. He also looks concerned. āIs everything alright? The way you left got me worried.ā
āYeah, everythingās just peachy.ā
But Jack ignores your sarcasm ā or rather looks right past it, reading the very clear displeasure on your face. āIs it Park? Did something happen?ā
And his concern doesnāt sound feigned.
It all comes to your mind at once ā the unsaid words, unresolved tension, the longing gazes thrown at each other, the shamefully short distance your bodies never crossed. It roars your emotions to a boil.
āWhy does everyone assumeā You know what? Park is actually perfect,ā you snap at him. āHe barely speaks to me in the OR, he hates small talk, he is allergic to long sentences and, I suspect, to any sign of real human emotion. So I just clock in every shift to spend 15 hours trying to help people with very little to no guidance. And turns out, I still rock! Even when my mentor is as emotionally evolved as a toothpick!ā
āOk-kay,ā Jack draws, āIām not sure if thatās a good or a bad thing?ā
āItās freaking amazing. Especially compared to the alternative,ā and then you step to him, your palms angrily pushing against his chest. āBecause you made me feel like I couldnāt breathe!ā
Your hands donāt hurt him. But your words do. His eyes go wide, heās speechless for a moment. Then slowly, very quietly, Jack says:
āWait, what?ā
āYou wrote me a recommendation letter, but you couldnāt say a word when I was leaving? After the months we worked together, all you could manage was good luck? The hell is wrong with you?!ā and his shell-shocked expression only spurs you on. āYou act all nicely, youāre glued to me in the ER, with your advice and your attention and yourā your smirking! And whatās with the intense eye contact? How was I supposed to work with you looking at me like that? You know how hard it was for me to focus?! Itās not like I was holding scalpels half of the time!ā you huff angrily.
Still, he isnāt moving.
āSure, it didnāt mean anything to you, you donāt like me like that. And I love surgery, Iām glad I transferred, I wouldnāt want to waste my time on someone who is emotionally mute. But then I find out ā oh, youāre actually very talkative! And itās not like I wanted to find out, I just needed something to help me unwind, anything, because itās been so damn exhausting ā not just the job, but also you and your mood swings and your stupid voice andāā you cross your arms over your chest and add, with an unbridled boldness, āAnd honestly? After everything, I should be the one you lend a helping hand to.ā
The dim streetlights can offer some discreteness ā but not enough to cover the flush of color that spreads over Jackās cheeks. You donāt back off ā instead, you take your phone out and click the appās icon to show it to him on the screen. His gaze flicks down to it. Then back to your face.
You stare at each other.
And then you think: he is about to tell you youāre an idiot. A sleep-deprived one, because it wasnāt really his voice. He has no clue what you just talked about, he obviously isnāt on any apps nor is he ā
Jack breathes out a laugh.
He clasps his hands behind his back, the muscles of his chest pulling his t-shirt tight. His gaze is locked on yours. Then it falls lower ā to your lips, then your neck, your chest and stomach, leaving a hot trail down your body.
āIt got that bad, huh?ā a corner of his mouth twitches up. Not condescending but amused. And then his voice drops ā to that exact honeyed murmur that dragged so many orgasms out of you. āFācourse, I can help you out. Shouldāve asked me sooner, sweetheart.ā
The sound knocks the anger out of you. The air, too.
You knew he sounded good on audio, when his words reached you through the headphones, when he so charitably helped you reach your high.
But in reality, heās lethal.
When this same voice is paired with his gaze, with the intensity and confidence that youāre disarmed by. Entranced by. When Jack comes closer, you stay frozen.
āMine or yours?ā he asks calmly.
āW-what?ā
āMy place or yours?ā
You catch small specks of golden light lost in his hazel eyes. You blink twice to stop staring. āMine is about 40 minutes away.ā
Emotion flashes across his face ā surprise thatās borderline on worry. He lets it slide. He takes your hand in his, firmly, putting his fingers between yours.
āI live much closer. My car is parked around the corner,ā Jack notes and leads the way, carefully pulling you along.
You let him.
You know itās impolite to gawk, but you canāt help it ā youāre pretty sure his hallway alone can fit half of your flat. It is a spacious, very minimalistic place: tall walls, a lot of lights and very little furniture. You guess that he hand-picked each piece ā from wooden shelves and cupboards to small colourful pouffes. You also donāt think he spends too much time in here.
āSo how many roommates do you have?ā you ask cautiously as you get out of your shoes.
āNone,ā Jack chuckles. āItās my apartment.ā
āYou live here by yourself? This place could fit a football team,ā your own chuckle is nervous. As is your involuntary blabbing. āIām serious, 11 full-grown men could stay here, and half of them wonāt even see each other. Is there a bowling alley somewhere? A golf course? Ten jacuzzis? āā
He wraps his arm around your waist, pressing your back into his chest. Solid and warm, and rendering you silent.
āHow about I do the talking,ā his breath scatters against the side of your neck. Both of his hands find your hips, and very slowly, he turns you to face him. His eyes look a shade darker when he says, āIāll walk you to the bedroom.ā
And then his mouth is on yours.
There is no build-up and no hesitation ā he kisses you so hungrily and deeply, like heās been starving this whole time. Just like you were. Your shuddering breath turns into a moan. His lips move seamlessly, matching his insatiability to yours, in a deliberately slow pace that leaves you dizzy, heated, panting. Your memory is wiped clean of every other man youāve kissed before him.
You can only crave more.
Jack starts walking without breaking the kiss. He gently pushes you forward, his hands maneuvering your body around the furniture and into doorways ā youāre blindly following his lead. Until he stops you.
He tsks against your lips. āCareful, you almost ran into a wall.ā
āWell, itās not like I can really see āā
Jack silences your protests with another kiss, one of his palms laid flat over your spine to steady you. Not once do you take a peek at your surroundings, entirely too focused on the movement of his mouth, and with his every touch, your heart grows louder.
All of a sudden, your legs bump into something ā and in a second, your back hits layers of bedcovers, the fabric silky to the touch. You exhale shakily, taking a couple of seconds to collect yourself. The task proved to be impossible under his heavy stare.
The room is dim, drowned in the colors of the sunset that sinks in through the big uncovered windows. He took the jacket off somewhere along the way, and you watch as the coppery light sneaks into his curls, contours the lines of veins and muscles of his arms, his body standing right next to the bed, legs almost touching yours.
You guess that he is stalling in case you want to stop.
āArenāt you gonna tell me what to do?ā you want your words to sound like a challenge ā instead, they come out as a plea.
You donāt mind. Thereās nothing on your mind but him.
Jack gives you just a ghost of a smile, a low hum coming from deep in his chest.
āAsk me nicely,ā he says, in that gravelly voice that makes desire spark up in your bloodstream.
And he already knows that he wonāt meet resistance ā Jack leans over the bed, palms firmly gliding up your thighs until he finds the zipper of your jeans. He takes the slider between two fingers but doesnāt pull it down. And youāre glad that you arenāt standing, because the way heās staring at you makes your whole body weak, your bones and muscles turning liquid.
āPlease, Iāll do anything,ā you whisper.
You do not need to ask him twice.
Jack yanks the slider down and pulls your jeans ā down to your knees, then fully off. He parts your thighs with his leg, his gaze drawn to your panties, to where the fabric is already dampened with your arousal. You watch him slowly wet his lips, your body shivering in anticipation of his touch. And then heās climbing on the bed, his body propped up on his arms, his weight between your thighs. He doesnāt hover over you ā because heās equally impatient: instead, he leans down to eagerly capture your mouth with his.
His lips trap you in place ā while his hands undress you: his fingers are unbuttoning your shirt to take it off, then sliding beneath your cotton tanktop, dragging it up over your ribcage ā
then Jack sucks in a breath.
His words are muffled, his lips brushing yours:
āNo bra?ā
āI donātā donāt like the feeling of it,ā you explain bashfully.
That earns you a pleased smirk. He actually pulls back to take a look, to hastily pull your last piece of clothing off. Then Jack ducks his head.
āAnd howād you like this?ā he asks before catching your nipple into his mouth.
You cry out at the sensation, and Jack uses one hand to pin you to the bed. He pulls more sounds out of you, swirling his tongue around your nipples, biting and sucking at them, his hunger mixed with admiration. Your heartbeatās pounding in your ears, the pleasure surging through you like a heat wave ā
But unexpectedly, Jack pulls away.
He reaches out to click the lamp on the nightstand. The light is faint, warm, draping your shadows over the silk. Jack lies down on his side, keeping his face close to yours.
āShow me how you do it.ā
āYouā Um. You want me to show you howāā
āTouch yourself for me,ā he orders.
Blood rushes to your cheeks. But you comply, too eager for his praise. For all of his recorded promises to finally come true.
Jack watches raptly as your hand moves lower, slowly, just like he taught you the first time ā until your fingers dip under the fabric of your underwear. You bite your lower lip, stifling a whimper, feeling the arousal leaking out of you. You spread your legs wider, the thin cotton not leaving much to the imagination as you start toying with your clit.
Jack swallows noisily, his breath uneven. But his voice stays measured. āI want these off. Need to see you, baby.ā
You hook your thumbs under your panties and tug them off, a bit too hastily, but Jack makes no attempts to slow you down. Although unvoiced, his own desire is so palpable, it sets your nerves on fire. And when the cool air grazes your wetness, you canāt help but moan.
You do not wait for his command ā you spread your legs further apart, your fingers drawn to rub your aching clit. You feel Jackās cheek pressed to your shoulder, his gaze glued to your hand.
āSo whatās the preference? Do you like circling it or just the up-and-down motion?ā he muses with a grin. āI see, I have some room for improvisation,ā and then his breath skates up your throat, the words mouthed against your pulse point, āYouāre doing so good for me. You can pick up the pace.ā
You do immediately, your movements quick and frantic, and Jackās not keeping his hands to himself. He cups your breast, pinching your nipple into a peak, rolling it expertly between his fingers, his lips wrapped tightly around the other one. Your back is arching into his touch, heat pooling in your lower belly, your fingers gliding faster up and down your slit ā and then one slips inside.
Jack pulls his mouth off with a pop. āWould you look at that,ā his voice is low, teasing, āYour pussyās drooling all over the bed.ā And then he smiles, hungrily baring his teeth, grazing your collarbone with them as his palm lies flat on the inside of your thigh. āGo ahead, make yourself cum.ā
He is still clothed, and the material of his t-shirt rubs constantly against your naked skin as he continues his arousing, agonizing torture. You feel him everywhere ā Jackās warm breath on your neck, your cheek, his mouth placing kisses along your jaw. His hands are steadying your body as your two fingers plunge into your cunt, as youāre so diligently coaxing yourself into an orgasm. But somethingās missing.
āWhatās wrong? Your fingers arenāt enough?ā Jack taunts. āDoes my girl want me to help her?ā
You nod desperately, rocking your hips into your hand, trying to get some extra friction, trying and failing to reach that sweet high on your own. He easily catches your wrist, forcing you to halt all movement, your moans reduced to needy cries.
āTell me what you want,ā Jack whispers, lips to your ear.
āI w-want your fingers. Need your fingers inside me, please āā
But just as youāre about to pull your hand away, he covers it with his.
His wide palm firmly cups your mound, pushing your fingers back into your clenching hole. Jack drags his index and middle fingers through your folds, collecting your creamy arousal. And then he eases his slicked digits into you.
He watches as your lips part in a silent moan, your thighs twitching involuntarily as youāre adjusting to the fullness. With two of your fingers already in, it is a very tight fit.
āRelax for me. I know you can take all four,ā Jack coos, although his voice gets a bit strained as he feels your walls clamp down around him.
Your hand stays limp, so he pulls his thick fingers out ā then ramms them back in, knuckles-deep. A choked cry leaves your mouth; but you donāt try to crawl away from the intrusion. He puts your fingers between his and starts moving them all together, unhurriedly, carefully stretching your wet cunt, the heel of his palm grinding against your clit, your juices trickling down on the bedcovers.
Before you even realize youāre doing it, you push your hips back against his palm.
āYes, just like that,ā Jack murmurs. āFeels good, doesnāt it? About to get even better.ā
This time, only his hand is moving while heās staying still, drinking you up ā your body quivering, skin bathed in a sheen of perspiration, your pussy slurping around the unrelenting fingers. The sounds youāre making are downright obscene, loud moans mixed with incoherent pleas as youāre getting lost in the pleasure he gives you so freely.
Jackās other hand comes up to turn your face to him:
āEyes on me.ā
And as you look at him through lidded eyes, he curls your own fingers inside you, pushing them up against your G-spot. The sudden pressure drags you into a climax, so powerful, youāre blinded for a second, your lungs emptied with a long-drawn exhale as you keep soundlessly mouthing his name.
Jack pulls out his fingers first, then yours. Your hand is drenched and numb, and you barely register as Abbot brings it to his mouth. He licks your fingers clean, one by one, and you are coming to your senses at the sight: his mouth sucking in your digits, your wetness smeared across his lips, his gaze piercing as he keeps eye contact. And just like that, it threads through your veins and bones: your craving for him youāre yet to satisfy.
Before you can even ask him for a kiss, he leans in to give it to you.
Itās hot, itās messy, his tongue darting between your lips, your hands tugging at his t-shirt, then sneaking under it to feel him tense under your touch. One of his hands grips your hip, the other moving back between your legs, where youāre still sensitive, making you whimper into his mouth.
āWanna get a proper taste,ā he mumbles, his lips already trailing lower.
But you have something else in mind. You close your legs and clutch his t-shirt, your fingers roughly crumpling the fabric, making him meet your gaze again.
āJack, Iām very grateful for the offer, but I need you to fuck me,ā you donāt bother hiding your impatience. āAnd please, take your damn clothes off.ā
He grins, and this is a command he is willing to follow. Jack brings a hand behind his neck to grab the collar of his t-shirt and pulls it up over his head in one swift motion. Your eyes rake over the broad planes of his chest, his toned arms, his freckled skin flushed pink. Before he can think of his next move, you straddle him, leaning to nibble at his neck, your fingers tracing his flexing muscles.
āSomeoneās very eager,ā he notes with a chuckle.
And yet, the gravel in his voice is thinned out by his own keenness. When your gaze drops down, you see his cock straining against the coarse fabric of his jeans.
āMakes two of us,ā you note cheekily and palm him through the denim.
His chuckle turns into a low, long groan. Like he is breaking character, like it is not as easy for him to keep his feelings under control.
You hide your smile, taking his jeans off to throw them on the floor, barely half a minute before youāre climbing back onto his lap. The bulge is now even more prominent beneath his boxer briefs: heās thick and big, way bigger than you thought, than you imagined, than youāve ever had. Your mouth parts on the inhale; you are dazed just from the look of it. You feel yourself already getting wet again.
Your words are stumbling out, while your brain is still somewhat functioning:
āI have an IUD, Iām clean. Havenāt been with anyone for a while.āĀ
āMe neither. For way longer than you probably,āĀ Abbot admits in a half-whisper, watching you attentively. Getting as drunk on the anticipation as you are.
Your fingers go for the waistband at his hips when you catch faint light glinting off the metal. Your palm briefly lies under his scarred knee.
āThis okay?ā
Him leaving the prosthesis on, you mean. But it is getting harder to put words into coherent sentences.
Jack gets it. āYeah, māfine. You want me to...?ā
Remove it, is what he wants to say.
For just a moment, it comes up to the surface: his lack of confidence, not necessarily in himself but maybe in how he can be perceived, in what he looks like in your eyes. Being so close, so open, naked.
But this has always been exactly what you wanted.
āI couldnāt care less,ā you whisper and tug down his briefs to free his cock.
Then you look down, and your breath hitches.
He is thick, fully hard, the tip red and already weeping. And instantly, you wonder how he tastes. How warm, how heavy heād feel in your hand. When you reach it impulsively to wrap around him, Jack stops you, his voice a low warning:
āWe both know I donāt need that.ā
You almost want to whine. But you smother your discontent and move your hands up to his shoulders, holding your hips up, hovering just above his girthy length. A sigh spills from your mouth when his cock brushes your slick entrance ā
And right then, Jackās hands clamp around your thighs. His grip not bruising, but it is firm enough that you canāt move. Canāt lower yourself on him.
āNow, where are your manners, sweetheart?ā he asks, playfully cruel.
He knows youāre trapped. You know it too. To prove his point, he rubs his tip against your clit, more slickness gushing out of you at the mere contact. You do let out a miserable whine, your thighs are shaking. But he stays unmoving.
And so you beg. Just like you thought you would.
āI want you, please, I want you so fucking much,ā your words pour out rushed and heated, all in one breath, āWant you to fuck me, Jack, please, been thinking about it for months. Before the app, when we were still working together, each time youā you stood next to me or leaned closer during surgeries or talked me through them orā fuck, it was anything, everything, I could barely focus, only kept thinking how much I wanted you to touch me, please-please-pleaseāā
Jack hums. His hands relent. He repositions them so he can guide you instead of stopping you.
āMonths, huh? I know the feeling,ā he murmurs, with unexpectedly raw honesty.
It lingers. It almost sounds like a confession. But you do not get time to catch the meaning of his words before he starts pushing his cock into your throbbing warmth.
You gasp. Heās easing you down slowly. As your nails dig into his shoulders, his grip tightens; but he keeps composure. Jackās watching you ā your eyes screwed shut and brows pinched together, your body shifting, mouth gulping air as youāre allowing him to stretch you open. He moves one of his hands to draw light circles on your clit, to help you take him, all of him, until youāve bottomed out.
Your body stills. He feels you clench around him, your pussy gripping him so tightly, he chokes back a groan. Your forehead dips forward, helplessly.
āYou areā sābig, so-o āā
āBreathe for me,ā Jack instructs, both palms secured at your hips, sounding a little out of breath himself. He watches as your chest rises and falls, the uneven cadence of inhales and exhales. He mercifully gives you a minute to adjust. āNeed you to start moving, baby. Yeah?ā
You scramble for an answer, all your words slurring out into whines, your body barely used to the stretch. But you want to be good for him. And so you lift your hips. Just a few inches. Then sink onto his cock again, trembling at the overwhelming ache of being stuffed so full.
The pause lasts for barely three seconds.
Then your hips start moving up and down on their own, because it feels too good to stop, because the ache is quickly dissipating into pleasure.
āThere she is.ā
He lets you find and set the rhythm, at first more grinding and slow, your pussy swallowing him whole each time. As you let the sensation build, as it spreads and turns searing. Euphoric. And your head tips back with a moan.
āLook how well youāre taking me,ā Jack praises, his voice husky with lust. āJust like I knew you would.ā
His hands grip harder at your hips, and without warning, he starts bouncing you on him. His pace is quicker, harsher, the fat head of his cock rubbing against the spot that makes your vision blur. Jack leans closer to rasp the words into your ear:
āWho do you think I thought aboutāā his fingers move down to open your legs wider, āWhile making all these audiosāā and he plunges deeper, āFor my favorite girlāā and your moans pitch louder, āAfter her tiresome shifts?ā
Youāre too cockdrunk to even think of a reply. Youāre only capable of moving your hips in time with his, nails scraping at his sweat-covered skin, your slick oozing down to his balls.
āIāmā Iām close,ā you mewl. āMāgonna cum, Ja-ack.ā
āThink I should let you?ā he says through gritted teeth, his own control already slipping.
āP-please,ā you stutter out weakly as his hips snap up, āWanna cum, wannaā want youā t-to make me cum, please.ā
A grunt escapes him, and Jack adjusts his hold, his chest heaving against yours, skin rubbing against skin. His mouth latches onto your throat, each word punctuated with a trust:
āThatās a good ā fucking ā girl.ā
His hands drop lower to cup your ass, giving it a squeeze ā and then the world around you spins as he effortlessly flips you on your back.
Your legs fall open for him, and he manages to keep his cock nestled so perfectly in your fluttering hole. He doesnāt slow down for a second: Jack shifts his weight on his left leg, angling his hips a little to hit that spot inside you over and over, making your eyes roll back in your head. The room fills with your breathy moans, your cunt squelching around his thick length, your body caged under his weight. In stark contrast, his lips are weightless ā against your chest, your collarbones, your arm, mouthing pet names or more praises ā or just the letters of your name, you honestly canāt tell. The meaning of his words escapes you.
āYeah, thatās right. Need your head empty,ā Jack groans, breath ragged, his pace relentless. āNeed you to only think about how good Iām fucking you.ā
He surely is.
Your whole body tenses.
You are so close.
And then you feel his forehead against yours, a pressure of his fingers on your clit, a command given with the utmost softness:
āLet go, baby. I got you.ā
The second orgasm tears through you, white-hot and all-consuming. You cum with a sob falling from your lips, your fingers scrabbling at his shoulders as your pussy spasms wildly around his cock. He fucks you through it, he does try to last a little longer, but the combination of all this ā the way you look, feel, finally his ā pushes him over, his own pleasure so intense, heās powerless against it. Jackās hips jerk as he cums, filling you up, his broken groans pressed into your neck.
The room is still.
You wait for your breath and heart to calm. His hand brushes a loose strand of hair out of your face, and he whispers, still a little breathless:
āYou good?ā
You nod first. Then open your mouth:
āThat wasāā you have to swallow the slight hoarseness of your voice, āLiterally the best sex Iāve ever had.ā Three heartbeats later, you add with a tired laugh. āDonāt let it get to your head.ā
āToo late.ā
You feel him smile against your cheek before he places a kiss there.
Jack pulls out carefully, leaving you empty ā you have to stop yourself from reaching for him, from chasing his familiar warmth. You quietly watch him clamber off the bed and pull his briefs up, then close your eyes so he wonāt catch you staring. You listen to him walk out of the room, and suddenly, a realization kicks in: his footsteps sound uneven.
Like he is limping.
Jack comes back with a wet towel and gently cleans you up, then helps you put your panties on and brings you a glass of water. And every time you look at him, your gaze catches on how he is obviously leaning on his healthy leg.
You slowly stretch your neck and shoulders, then tap on the spot next to you. āCome here.ā
Jack sits down, a little bit unsure where this is going. And very much tense in the exact place you thought he would be. You move your hands to his right knee and feel his hamstrings flex involuntarily.
āYou spend too much time on your feet,ā you say, working your fingers over his muscles. āAnd you put too much pressure on it. Your leg feels like itās made out of concrete.ā
Without even looking, you can tell that now heās tense all over.
You have seen Jack take the prosthesis off, short moments of reprieve that he allows himself too rarely for your liking, only after particularly long shifts. He isnāt shy about his disability, but he doesnāt like bringing attention to it, youāve noticed. Like living with it isnāt hard, like itās not that big of a deal. You also know that heās got no one to take care of him.
You take your time massaging the scarred tissue, mostly applying pressure with your thumbs as they move from the socket up, then back down. And you know that itās working when you hear him exhale, his breath a little ragged. Relieved.
āI try to take breaks, but you know how it is. Weāre always busy,ā Jack counters, with that same boyish stubbornness you canāt possibly be angry at.
āShenās an attending now, which is supposed to make your job easier. Donāt act like the ERās gonna blow up if you sit down for 10 minutes,ā you turn your head to look at him.
Jack doesnāt meet you with defiance ā heās sitting with his shoulders slumped and gaze mellow, way too relaxed to hide it. The sight is so endearing, your heart lurches behind your ribs. You fight the urge to kiss him. Instead, your fingers glide down to the edges of the prosthesisās socket. You do not push it; you let him decide if he wants to be this vulnerable with you. Jack just gives you a nod. A small, barely noticeable movement. Also an immeasurable sign of trust. You carefully remove the artificial limb, then take the sock off to let his skin breathe. Your touch lingers: you lightly trace the white uneven scars, faded reminders of something horrible he managed to survive.
He lets you.
Silence fills up the space between you two, and you donāt know what to do next. Technically, you only needed sex, and Jack didnāt say that it would happen more than once. This would be the perfect moment for you to thank him and head out.
So you remove your hands ā
Jack puts his arm around you, firmly. His lack of hesitation helping yours to fade away. He scoops you back, until youāre pressed to him, your back met with his bare chest. His chin is placed on your shoulder, his words warm:
āYou really like it in surgery, donāt you?ā
āI do,ā you answer honestly. āWay more than I thought I would. I was afraid itād be too challenging, too much pressure, too many new things to learn... But itās not that hard. And I love learning.ā
He laughs, a soft low sound you love just as much. āEven with an attending whoās as emotionally evolved as a toothpick?ā
āI think us working together is mutually beneficial, actually. Parkās teaching me how to mend bones, Iām giving him lessons on how to hold a conversation for longer than a minute.ā
Jackās smile is tickling your neck as he pulls you back into bed, so effortlessly, like he has done it many times. You readily curl up against him, resting your palm over his chest. He tugs the blanket up to cover you, his fingers gently moving from your shoulder to your collarbone.
But then your eyes meet his, and it is a discovery you never thought youād make: he looks self-conscious. He is the one searching for words to put his feelings into.
āYou said I made you feel like you couldnāt breathe,ā Jack recalls.
āI didnāt mean literally... I guess I was a little bit dramatic,ā you avert your gaze. Okay, maybe you shouldāve found a better way to tell him how you felt. Preferably without it looking like a crash-out.
āNo, itās not that. Itās justāā his hand cradles the side of your face, gentle and reassuring. āFrom the first day you came to the ER, with your humor and your curiosity and your quick thinking... To me, you were like a breath of fresh air,ā he skims his thumb over your lower lip, his touch light, his words heavy with the emotions heās been holding back for months. āIām sorry I didnāt tell you sooner. I was working up the courage.ā
His heartbeat is hushed under your palm. Steady with certainty. It radiates from him like light, your insecurities melting away under his gaze like snow under the sun.
After a moment, you speak up: your voice is teasing. āFunny how you had just enough courage to record raunchy audios.ā
āMy therapist said I needed a hobby. Unfortunately, I suck at golf,ā Jack leaves a kiss on your forehead. āBut you were the one who gave me the idea.ā
āUm, for all the great ideas I am famous for, that one definitely wasnāt mine.ā
His chest vibrates with laughter. āYou donāt remember it? Your third week in the ER, the nightcrawles on a night out. I walked you out to wait for your cab, and you said ā and I quote ā that Iāve got a very soothing voice. That I should narrate audiobooks or something.ā
You cover your face with your palm, groaning. āOh my god, I canāt believe I said that out loud. I had five shots of tequila. I hoped you would forget.ā
āI didnāt,ā Jack says and pulls your hand away. āEverything you do and say is very memorable to me,ā he presses his lips to your wrist. Then puts your hand back on his chest and holds it there, his thumb brushing yours. And out of nowhere, very nonchalantly, he asks. āSo, does it actually take you 40 minutes to get to work?ā
āYeah. Give or take,ā you tell him vaguely.
He doesnāt buy it. āAnd if weāre being more specific?ā
āCloser to an hour,ā you admit reluctantly. āBut the rent is pretty low, and most of my neighbours are nice, and I finally got my shower fixed last week so āā
āYou can move in here.ā
Your words die down in an instant as you stare at him, trying to discern a hint of humor, of pity, of anything to suggest he doesnāt mean it.
āYou arenāt serious,ā you mumble, but his unblinking gaze confirms that he is. āNo, I reallyā I canāt.ā
Jack props his head up on one hand. āWhy not?ā
āBecause itās your apartment. Youāre living on your own, and I wouldnāt want to bother you orā or take up too much space.ā
āDidnāt you say this place can fit a football team? So unless youāre gonna bring another 10 people with you...ā
āNo, itās just me,ā you say timidly and hesitate for a few seconds. But since youāre out of arguments, the only thing youāre left with is the truth. āI donāt want you to regret it later on.ā
āI wonāt regret it.ā
āYou barely know me.ā
āI know you plenty. We worked together for half a year.ā
āYeah, but that was us in the hospital. Which isnāt exactly informative, because I can be a total mess in my everyday life. What if you come home to find my clothes lying around everywhere? What if Iāve got questionable coffee preferences or weird food habits?ā you absentmindedly draw circles on his skin, stumbling over the excuses you are nervously coming up with. āAnd then weāll start getting into fights because I was too tired to iron the bedsheets or I accidentally took your favorite t-shirt or ate your favorite ice cream because I got my period and acted bitchy or āā
Jack tilts your chin up, the small movement making you close your mouth. A smile pulls at his lips, soft just the rest of him ā now, in this moment, with you: soft touch of his strong hands, soft grey curls, a little ruffled (totally your fault), soft gaze that is a vortex of green, amber and gold. His voice carries the same softness when he says:
āYou usually take your coffee black with just a splash of soy milk. But when youāre tired, you go for these obnoxiously sugary drinks that barely have any caffeine in them,ā his smile grows wider. āYou do not throw things around, not when the inside of your locker is strategically organized by shelves. Your only weird food habit is thinking a protein bar can be considered a full meal. I donāt iron my bedsheets, you can wear any of my t-shirts, and Iāll make sure to stock up on ice cream. Iāve never seen you being bitchy, but you can get a little uncooperative when youāre upset or nervous. Which I can handle,ā but there is no pressure behind his reasoning ā instead, he adds with hope, his eyes not leaving yours, āI know enough, and Iād love to learn the rest. If you let me.ā
The feeling rolls all over you, familiar and very long-awaited one: of calmness that his presence always brings you. Of just how comforting it is to be with him. Jack makes it sound too easy for you to harbour any doubts.
āOkay,ā you manage quietly.
And when your hands cradle his face, he leans in first to close the distance.
You kiss him slowly, like you are trying to spell out your gratitude, your ever-growing fondness, your feelings you are still afraid to name. He holds you close like he can understand exactly what your lips are saying. You want to drag this moment out for longer; but then a yawn bubbles in your throat.
āYouāre not leaving this bed until you get at least eight hours of sleep,ā Jack notes, more caring than stern, his nose bumping into yours. And you can tell his eyelids are already drooping. āWhat time do you need to wake up?ā
āMānot working tomorrow. Turned off my alarm already,ā you mumble.
āGood,ā he nods with his eyes closed, wrapping both arms around you ā and then adds in a tender whisper, āGood girl.ā
You smile into his chest, happily and drowsily, and you know youāre about to fall asleep. And just before you do, you think:
no, this definitely isnāt a one-time thing.
ā§ dividers by @/strangergraphics, @/saradika-graphics, @/omi-resources, @/cafekitsune;
ā§ I usually donāt like diving a fic into shorter āpartsā, but it felt right in the moment, and I hope it didnāt ruin the pacing of the story? ngl I was super horny when I wrote the smut part(s), so maybe I went a liiittle overboard... also, yes, this fic was supposed to be shorter, but then I added a shit ton of softness at the end, I COULDNāT HELP MYSELF!
ā§ English isnāt my first language, so feel free to message me if you spot any mistakes. reblogs and comments are very appreciated!
pairing: Jack Abbot x lawyer!reader
summary: Victoria calls you for help when Mateo is unlawfully detained. Jack gets a chance to see you in action ā and he reacts to it in a very unexpected way. (or, alternatively: Jack finds out he has a competence kink)
warnings: š one racist cop, lots of legal talk (more like arguing bc ACAB. letās pretend itās accurate); Jack is horny and feral AND in love, hence smut (oral, fingering, piv); domestic fluff and a shameless amount of softness / words: 12K/ authorās note: based on this blurb. idk why Iāve been so nervous to post this, but I hope youāll love these two just as much as I do ā” READ ON AO3 \ MASTERLIST
The recipe called for four tomatoes. Jack knows because he double-checked. Then triple-checked, since he hasnāt followed any recipes in years, and this one seemed fairly simple. A no-brainer. Which didnātĀ actuallyĀ mean he shouldnāt use his brain ā he knows that now. He may have needed to realize that sooner.
Not maybe;Ā definitely.
For one, when he didnāt pay attention to the cooking time (four hours). Then failed to notice the number of servings (six) (he was supposed to cook for two). Then kinda-sorta-accidentally bought double the amount of tomatoes (they were on sale!) (he got irrationally scared he wouldnāt have enough). Itās one of these mistakes ā or maybe all of them combined ā that got him to this. This abomination of a meal. Jack stares inside the cooking pot with pure anguish, like something died in there. It surely looks like it color-wise: instead of deep brown, the sauce is unmistakably, blood-bright red. Even if not dead yet, his confidence is definitely wounded. And what can be a fatal blow is him creeping into suspicion that itās not nearly as spicy as itās supposed to be.
Jack covers the culinary crime scene with a lid, a low groan stifled in his mouth. Diagnosis: dumbassery. Or color blindness? HeĀ hopesĀ itās either or. He contemplates his options. One: use his skilled hands (he is still working on being humble) to carefully scoop out the excess sauce with a spoon. Two: admit defeat and order takeout.
But Jack Abbot is notoriously incapable of giving up.
He rummages through shelves and drawers, selecting cutlery like itās surgical tools, and in the noise ā of metal clinking against metal, of his own anxious thoughts ā he misses it: the sound of your key.Ā The key he gave you just two weeks ago. Jack stops his fussing just in time to hear the front door close, to catch your footsteps, quiet like a catās. He feels his heart skipping a beat. He doesnāt turn to face you, because then comes his favorite part: you press yourself to him, your chest against his back, your arms wrapping around him tightly. Jack momentarily stills. He cannot help but close his eyes, eagerly soaking up your warmth; you smell of green apples and ocean, fresh like the waves washing across the beach at dawn. He used to dream about this: your scent, your arms, you coming here, to his apartment. Sometimes he canāt believe his dream came true. You plant a kiss between his neck and shoulder, and it does help to make this feel more real.
āHello, handsome,ā you murmur. āCan I get a sneak peek of dinner?ā
His back tenses in agitation. Begrudgingly, he lifts the potās lid.
āItās for birria tacos,ā Jack says, pensive, like he is having doubts. āThatās not how itās supposed to look, is it?ā
To his relief, you donāt immediately break up with him. Instead, you smile, your lips brushing his cheek. āIt looks like meat stewed in sauce. And I think itāsĀ veryĀ appetizing.ā
āIt looked a little better in the picture,ā he sighs, his tone letting the frustration in. āAnd by a little, I meanĀ hell of a lot, and I āā
You put your finger under his chin to turn his face to you ā and kiss him. And all Jackās worries burst like soap bubbles. It has become his cure for everything: the soft, unhurried movement of your mouth against his, your hand that traces soothing patterns on his back, the tenderness that leaves him breathless. You smile into the kiss, too. He loves it ā that small twitch of your lips as their corners curl up, like he is making you so happy, you canāt help it. He could kiss you all day.
āIām telling you, it looks great,ā you reassure him, pads of your fingers caressing his jaw. āAnd I really appreciate the effort.ā
Jack hums, calmed and contented, the sound muffled by your mouth when you peck him on the lips again. One of his hands settles at your hip.
āNot sure the spice level will be to your taste, though,ā he chuckles.
But you can tell by his studying gaze that itās an actual concern of his. Itās something you are still getting used to ā him putting so much care into everything, without question, all the time. Your fingers travel up to brush through the grey curls at his temple.
āItās not necessarily a bad thing. Iām looking forward toĀ notĀ seeing you cry into your plate,ā you tease.
āI didnāt cry,ā he argues, not aggravated but abashed. āThat curry thing wasĀ spicy. They labeled it with four out of five hot peppers on the menu.ā
āVindaloo,ā you recall. āThe waitress thought you were about to have a heart attack.ā
Jack huffs a laugh, then tugs you closer with both hands. You watch a hue of pink spreading over his freckled cheeks.
āI was trying to impress you,ā he tells you, voice raw with sincerity that warms your heart.
āYour dedicationĀ wasĀ impressive,ā you bite your lip to bite down a giggle at the memory. āBut I would prefer you not to suffer.ā
A corner of his mouth twitches up. With barely covered amusement, with an uncovered gratitude: he hasnāt had a single bad day since you two started dating. His own happiness is sometimes overwhelming. (Heāll gladly suffer through a thousand more spicy dishes just to hear you laugh).
āYour wish is my command,ā he isnāt even trying to be subtle with his feelings. He never is ā heĀ wantsĀ you to know. You do. It would be impossible not to.
āThen Iām wishing for a taste test,ā you say, your gaze mellow, your whole body relaxing against his.
Jackās hand only leaves you for a few seconds ā to grab one of the spoons he laid out. You take it, enthusiastically leaning over the pot to carefully scoop up a piece of meat and bite right into it.
He takes this moment to get a better look at you. (HisĀ girlfriend; the word makes his blood rush).
His eyes catch on your blouse ā a dark, deep red, the same silk that you like, the fabric hugging your upper body just the wayĀ heĀ likes. His gaze glides up, over the dip between your collarbones, over your neck, the bowed lines of your lips ā a drop of sauce glistens in the corner of them while youāre chewing ā
Then, you moan. The sound low, drawn-out, very satisfied.
āOh, this isĀ good.ā
Jack feels his face flush. āYou canāt be serious.ā
āWhen it comes to food? I always am,ā you retort cheekily, and he uses his thumb to wipe away that oily drop. A smile tugs at your mouth when he reluctantly removes his finger. āGonna start telling everyone Iām dating a doctorĀ andĀ a chef.ā
āSays Gordon Ramsay,ā Jack mumbles, fully aware that his cheeks now likely match your blouse. Itās something he is still getting used to ā you being generous with praise, with kindness, with showing him appreciation.Ā All the time.
āExactly,ā you insist softly. āSince Iām Gordon Ramsay, IĀ knowĀ what Iām talking about. So your objections are overruled.ā
Thereās barely any space between you ā his hands back on your waist, your body half-turned but still touching his, your shoulder to his chest, two ribcages leaning into each other. Jack fixes his gaze on your lips.
āI think I want a taste test too,ā he says, barely a warning. More of a confession ā before he moves to close the distance between your faces.
You meet him halfway.
Thereās more intention and way more intensity: itās in the eagerness he kisses you with, in how you snake a hand into his hair, and Jack hastily pulls you flush up against him. He can taste it ā the burning flavour on your tongue, the heat of cinnamon, cumin, coriander, chiles. (To be fair, he only knows the names becauseĀ heĀ added them). He savours it: you and your softness, pliancy, desire that overtakes you two shamelessly fast. You donāt fight it; you kiss him until your lips are wet and tingling, until you have to stop to gulp some air.
Jack doesnāt move away ā instead, his mouth moves to the side, under your cheekbone, then to that small spot behind your ear that makes you breath heavy.
āThis was supposed to be the part where we build the tacos,ā you whisper as his kisses (predictably,Ā much to your delight) start shifting lower.
āIāll be quick.ā
āYouĀ neverĀ are.ā
He grins, his words tickling your neck. āAnd you never complain about it.ā
Thatās true, you donāt ā youĀ canāt, not when heās so adept at touching you exactly where you want to, and your body is already heating under his hands. His lips find your collarbone, his fingers readily unbuttoning your blouse. Button by button. And that sweet, dizzying anticipation hums under your skin, in tact with your heartbeat, a low and rhythmic buzzing ā
Like a phoneās. Yours.
āSomeone is calling,ā you mutter. You both turn to the sound of the device persistently vibrating on the kitchen counter.
The caller is unknown ā itās just a number on the screen, without any name or photo, but you donāt hesitate to take it. You swipe right and pick up the phone, freeing yourself from his embrace so you can focus better. Jack feels a little smug about being the reason you canāt think straight.
He keeps an eye on you as you answer the call. It takes about three seconds for your features to relax.
āOh, hi, Victoria! Of course I remember āā
But itās cut short ā your greeting first, then your tranquility, and Jack watches your smile disappear. You listen closely to what the caller has to say, with that same concentration you shift into when it comes to work. For a long moment, nothing in you moves, nothing betrays your thoughts or feelings. But Jack knows what to look for ā and so he can discern it in your face, as if you mentally flip a switch: your gaze hardens as your brows pinch together, lips thinned into a straight line.
This isnāt just concentration, this is you planning, strategising, picking criminal code articles to use. To weaponize. This is the look that tells him it must be somethingĀ bad.
āVictoria, I need you toĀ stop,ā you tell her with an even tone. āNow, please take a deep breath for me, okay? In through your nose, out through your mouth.ā
Your fingers move to button up your shirt. You take another step away from Jack. Without thinking, he closes the pot and puts it off the stove.
āTell me, are you safe in there? WereĀ youĀ hurt?ā you delicately choose your words. āOkay, thatās good. Can you walk me through the events again? I donāt need all the details, just the basics will do.ā
You rush out of the kitchen to grab your bag and take out your laptop, tapping away at the keyboard as you look something up ā names, profile pictures, streets on a city map. Jack watches you in worry, in a helpless wonder. And it takes an embarrassing amount of seconds for his mind to throw him a hunch: Victoria.Ā Thatās not Javadi, right?
Jack catiously taps you on the shoulder, then whispers her last name to you ā unsure, like a question. You simply nod. The furrow in between your brows stays.
āYes, they absolutelyĀ cannotĀ do that,ā you tell her, chest rising on a long inhale, like youāre holding back a sigh. āDo you know which room heās in right now? I need you to put me on speaker and then walk into that room. Donāt knock and immediately tell Mateo to stop talking. After Iām done, walk out, donāt speak to anybody and wait for me somewhere nearby. Alright?ā
Jack stands close, his fingers carefully working on fastening your last two buttons. He wants to somehow make it better, easier for you; he canāt. That thought stings like a thorn.
You take another deep breath. You wait. Your free hand curls into a fist you put behind your back. But when you talk, your voice comes out unfazed.
āThis is Mr. Diazās attorney, and IāmĀ very curiousĀ why you didnāt allow him that one call he has the right to make. Mateo, did they explain your rights to you?ā
You roll your eyes at the reply. Jack figures itās aĀ no.
āWhich means anything he says or has already said is inadmissible in court. Are there any injuries I need to be aware of, apart from a possible nose fracture?... Well, I hope it stays that way. Iām twenty minutes away, Iāll be there in fifteen. Which interview room?ā
You end the call without any pleasantries to spare. And you can feel Jackās stare, so you spill it all out before he even puts the words into a question.
āSome inadequate patient was pissed that they didnāt fix him in record time, so he threw a fit, got his ass kicked out of the ER ā and didnāt think of anything better than to wait for Victoria outside. Apparently, to share more of his dumbass complaints. HeĀ grabbed her,ā your voice wavers ā a tiny giveaway of how upset you actually are. But you push the emotions down. āI donāt know what his plan was, but thankfully, Mateo showed up. They got into a fight. The cops were driving by, and for someĀ stupidĀ reason, they decided Mateo was the one to blame. So they took him in. Ignored all of Javadiās explanations. The other guy got away.ā
Jack frowns. āHow the fuck is that legal?ā
āItās not. Itās just how cops do their job,ā you huff, grabbing a blazer you left hanging on a coat rack.
āWhat was it about a fracture?ā Jack looks for his car keys.
āThe guy clocked him on the nose, Javadi said it wasnāt that bad. But then one of the cops slammed Mateo face flat against their car. And I suspectĀ thatĀ kind of impact can break bones.ā
He canāt stop an involuntary grimace as his mind paints that picture; you are correct in your suspicions.
āCan they arrest him?ā
āThey willĀ not,ā you say, certain, unwavering. With just a bit of anger peeking through. āThey are stalling and trying to intimidate him into a confession of some sort. They have no legal grounds to even hold him there.ā
Jack goes to take his jacket; there is no question that heāll drive you. But then he absentmindedly looks at his watch, and what stings him this time is guilt.
Itās 9 pm.
This was supposed to be your first evening together in the last five days. He thinks about the excitement you brimmed with when you came in.
He also thinks about the meat thatās getting cold, about your hectic schedules that never align, with him being on nights and you being so busy you sometimes forget to eat. He leaves you voice messages that serve as a reminder. He sneaks protein bars and fruits into your bag, he learns to cook for you, something that would bring you joy after an exhausting day. It is the only goal, itās at the core of everything ā to get to see you, smiling, happy.Ā His. Your face relaxing only when you fall asleep with his arms wrapped around you.
He hoped that his apartment would be the only place where you wouldnāt have to worry about a thing.
āI didnāt give your number to anyone at the hospital,ā Jack tells you quietly. āIām sorry you have to deal with this off the clock.ā
You shake your head and look at him, eyes softening for a brief moment as you reach out a hand to caress his arm, a touch that says thereās nothing to be sorry for. āShe knows Iām Cassieās lawyer, so she called McKay for help. I am actually glad she did.ā
You give yourself a look-over in the mirror: everything still sits impeccably, no crinkles on the fabric of your clothes, no stray hair, nothing to give away just how long of a day youāve had. And youāre unusually quiet, which Jack finds unsettling.
āGlad why?ā
āThe police station Mateo is at has a reputation. That cop who dragged him into the car, I think I know who that is. Wasnāt his first misconduct. Hopefully, it will be hisĀ last.ā
That almost puts a smirk on Jackās face; it doesnāt feel appropriate, so he stays serious. He asks you for the stationās address to be useful.
āItās less than ten minutes away,ā Jack muses.Ā He can make it there in eight.
āI love a good old element of surprise,ā you say, matter-of-factly, already texting someone, feet moving toward the door. But then you pause and glance at him again. He can almost see the wheels in your head turning fast, faster. āAny chance youāve got a pair of scrubs at home?ā
He doesnāt have to ask why.
You two donāt talk during the ride ā you make calls and send messages, gaze mostly focused on the screen, only short sentences leaving your mouth:
Yes, got it. Just send me the whole thing. No, I donāt think so, not today. But please look up the chiefās number.Ā And text me when you reach the hospitalās security.
Jack figures itās your secretary on the line. He would be lying if he said he wasnāt feeling nervous. Also a little bit protective. He knows Javadi ā a 4th-year medical student, smiley and sometimes clumsy, that wide-eyed girl whoās capable of outsmarting half of the ER. He likes her, Robby likes her, there is a solid chance sheāll get a job offer at the PTMC. Heās trying not to think what couldāve happened if Mateo wasnāt there to help her. He keeps his focus on the road.
Out of the corner of his eye, Jack also watches you.
Heās seen you angry ā in that uncovered, fervent kind of way, when the emotions spill out of you, and heās allowed to witness it, because heās earned your trust. He doesnāt ever patronize or pity you, he loves it ā that you are caring, empathetic, tenacious in your pursuit of justice. Heās also painfully aware of how unjust the system is. He has been witness to that too: self-righteousness people in power use to cover their prejudice, the poison of which still slips through ā itās in the cruel treatment and harsh words, in the belief that certain skin color and gender grant you impunity and liberties the others can be stripped of. And itās not easy appealing to the law when your opponent doesnāt believe in human rights.
So Jack is glad he will be there for you to offer some support. He also cannot help but feel a bit of pride: whatever are your feelings, you donāt have any trouble keeping them in check.Ā He knows youāre fucking good at this. Heās dying to see you in action.
Your ride only takes seven minutes. Jack quickly parks, opens the door for you, fixes the badge clipped to his chest and grabs his first-aid kit. All the police stations are the same to him: greyed out walls, the smell of sweat and beer, the never-ending echoes of footsteps and voices. You lead the way.
The cop at the front desk ā seemingly fresh out of the academy, a little chubby, visibly bored ā stops slouching in his chair when he sees you. He tries to act cool, tries for his voice to sound more solemn. His act barely lasts a minute.
āYou are here for that nurse guy?ā he asks while checking your ID. āDamn, they roughed him up.ā
āThen itās a good thing Iām coming with a doctor,ā you note, merely polite. āI thought you guys also had one?ā
āYeah, our doc is here... Somewhere. But they were in a rush to question your client, I guess. Just gave him a few paper towels to stuff into his nose, he had to walk all the way up to the interview room with his head tipped back to stop the bleeding. It was painful to watch.ā
āIt surely sounds painful. Also, isnāt that use of force a littleĀ extreme?ā
āTell that to officer Nordwin,ā the guy huffs.
āI plan on doing exactly that,ā your voice stays steady, but now there is an edge to it. A coldness. And your promise doesnāt sound empty.
The guy looks up at you from his computer and drops his smile immediately. It dawns on him that maybe he told youĀ too much. He only gives Abbotās ID a glance, then points you in the right direction, with not very concealed concern.
You donāt waste time on pointless goodbyes, and now you move with purpose, a bit quicker. Jack has to keep up ā still, he is opening the doors for you, and his eyes scan the corridors for threats, out of habit.
You spot Javadi from a distance: sheās all alone on some cheap-looking beam seating, hands clasped together, one foot nervously tapping on the floor. She looks unharmed but pretty shaken up. The second you come up to her, Victoria springs to her feet.
āIām so sorry, I didnāt know who else to call,ā she babbles, her words frantic, eyes glistening with fear. āMy mom doesnāt know that Mateo and I are a thingā I mean,Ā dating,ā and she would go freaking ballistic if she finds out, because Iām supposed to be focusing on my studies, and my residency, and if I call my dad, he will tell her, and that isĀ the last thingĀ āā
āDeep breaths,ā you remind her, keeping your tone quieter, softer. āYou donāt have to worry about anything, now that Iām here. Did they take your statement?ā
āNo,ā she tells you on a long, shuddering exhale. āI kinda feel like they forgot about me. Is that bad?ā
āIt means you get a chance to have me by your side when the time comes. Which isĀ good,ā you reassure.
Her repose barely lasts a second ā before her eyes go woeful and teary. āThey were so rude with him, soĀ harsh,ā she whispers. āOne of the cops in particular, I didnāt catch his name. He didnāt even let either of us explain, just grabbed him, and I thinkā Iām pretty sure he broke Mateoās nose. I did my best to stop the bleeding on our way here, but they were rushing, and the car kept bouncing on the road, I couldnāt see anything back there.ā
āThey made you ride in the back of the police car with him? In theĀ cage?ā you clarify, your voice veiled with the same steeliness Jackās only now discovering.
āI donāt have my own car, and they didnāt want to wait, they just shoved him in there. And I couldnāt leave him alone. I thinkā Iām not sure, but I think they are mistaking him for someone else. But he didnāt do anythingĀ bad, heāhe just tried to help me,ā Victoria insists, already bordering on desperation. Because her prior explanations clearly fell on deaf ears.
āHe did the right thing. Youāve got yourself a hell of a boyfriend,ā Jack steps in, lowering his head a little so he can catch her gaze. He waits for her to register his words, to realize he means it. āIāll check his nose, make sure itās nothing serious, alright?ā
āThank you, Dr. Abbot,ā Victoria breathes out, a wobbly smile on her lips. She wipes her nose and moves back a little, then points toward the row of doors down the corridor. āThey took him in the last room on the right.ā
You turn your head to find what room she means. And narrow your eyes at the number written on it.
āThatāsĀ where he is?ā you ask, gaze boring holes into the wooden door, like it offended you somehow.
Javadi nods. Then hesitantly asks: āShould I go with you?ā
āThere is no need. You stay here, maybe get yourself some water from the cooler. Iāll try to make it quick,ā you promise, and she lets out a small sigh of relief.
You turn to Jack, eyes meeting his ā and under the bright fluorescent lights, he picks out new shades of you: you are decisive, steadfast, cool-headed. And he gets a peculiar inkling:Ā maybe you didnāt bring him for support. Maybe you will not need it.
āI donāt want you talking to them,ā you explain hastily. āYou are only coming in to check on Mateo. You are allowed to take your time and do whateverās necessary. I want it confirmed that he was hurt, and they didnāt do anything about it.ā
āGot it,ā Jack says and follows after you.
But what he thinks ā playfully, holding back a smile ā is that he likes youĀ bossy. He also canāt help but appreciate the way your hips sway as you walk. He clears his throat and clears his thoughts just as you push the door open.
The interview roomās got no windows and no air conditioner, stuffy and small. Your eyes instantly find Mateo ā heās sitting at the table with his hands cuffed, half of his t-shirt stained with blood, red streaks of it dried under his nostrils, all over his chin. He smiles at the sight of you and winces; his nose is definitely broken.
There are two cops standing with him ā one in plainclothes, older, a police badge secured on his belt. The other wears a uniform, blond hair slicked back, his tan clearly fake, too orange.
āThis is officer Nordwin, and Iām detective Harrelson,ā the older man reacts first, a bit surprised. He goes for a handshake. āWe didnāt expect you for another few minutes, that was fast.ā
You do not shake his hand, donāt even glance at it. Your gaze lands on his face ā your words land like a punch:
āThis is a negotiation room numberĀ five. You canāt count to five? Or is there another reason you gave me the wrong number?ā
Jack freezes at the door.
Mateoās brows shoot up at your remark.
Thereās an immediate shift in the room. Like someone just brought a bazooka to a gunfight. Except, these men didnāt expect a fight at all.Ā Neither did Jack.
The younger cop is quick to take offence. āHell of an introduction. How about you tone down your attitude, and then we can talk,ā he bristles, his body leaning just a little in your direction.
Jack tenses up. He has to fight that dog-like instinct to interfere any time he thinks you are in danger, or mistreated, or someone just looked wrong your way. But you stay calm as ever. Your tone is polished down to civil when you say:
āI simply donāt want us to start on the wrong foot. Anyone here has a law degree?ā
They donāt. And you are very well aware ā because in just a second, youāre back to being firm and unapologetic:
āSo itāsĀ just me. Which meansĀ IĀ will do the talking. You need āā
āMaybe I should repeat myself,ā Nordwin sneers. āI donāt think āā
āIām sorry no one ever taught you that it is rude to interrupt people. Never too late to learn,ā you cut him off, then quickly pull up an empty chair and sit down next to Mateo. āTake off his cuffs.ā
The cops share a look. You keep eye contact with the older man.
āIs Mr. Diaz under arrest? Is he posing a threat? The answer to both of these questions isĀ no. So you need to uncuff him,ā you insist. āOr you can giveĀ meĀ the keys, and I can do your job for you.ā
Harrelson studies you for a few seconds. At last, he goes to sit across from you and gives the other man a nod. Nordwin does very little to hide his scowl. You make a point to keep your eyes on him, like heās a toddler who may need your guidance. The cop hates it. You find his reaction satisfying.
Mateo rubs his wrists once they are freed, and you notice that he is breathing through his mouth.
āDr. Abbot?ā you call out. Nonchalantly, two syllables of his last name stripped off of any warmth you usually address him with at home.
Both cops turn their heads to him. And by the looks on their faces, Jack realizes: they didnāt even notice him before. Because all their attention has been drawn to you. He canāt really blame them.
Abbot snaps into a doctorās mode: he puts the gloves on, then takes a penlightĀ out to check Mateoās nasal septum. Then does the hand examination. It is too quiet in the room for him to talk, so he just gives the nurse a wink. He also cannot stop himself from glancing at you, which you ignore completely.
Nordwinās now seated too. He watches Jack suspiciously. āI didnāt know lawyers now play dress-up.ā
āHeās an attending physician at the PTMCās emergency department. Look for a big plastic card clipped to his chest, itās hard to miss,ā you deadpan. āDo you happen to know the symptoms of a deviated septum or septal hematoma?ā
The corner of Mateoās mouth curls up in an unvoiced approval. Both cops shake their heads no.
āNeither do I, andĀ thatāsĀ why he does need a doctor. A pity that you donāt have one here.ā
āWe do,ā Harrelson retorts, albeit reluctantly. āThe precinct put new protocols in place this year.ā
āSo it was a conscious choice to refuse him medical care? Good to know.ā
The old man exhales sharply through his nose. His gaze flicks to Mateo and stays on him, like heās assessing damage and weighing their options. Whatever his conclusion is, he decides to play it nice.
āListen, it was an honest mix-up with the room number,ā Harrelson gives you a tight smile. āAnd we appreciate that you were able to join us on such short notice. Now, how about I lay out all the facts, so you can...Ā get the drift of things.ā
Your jaw shifts. Barely. Followed by a movement of your brows ā up, quick. This is a new expression Jack is yet to find the meaning of. He somehow instantly knows he doesnāt want to ever get that look from you. His thumbs lightly press on the sides of Mateoās nose. His tension doesnāt ease up.
Harrelson takes your silence as agreement.
āOfficer Nordwin and his partner were on patrol this evening. We had to bring in a few extra cars because thereāve been reports of car thefts in the neighborhood. The officers heard sounds of a struggle and obviously had to check it out. As theirĀ dutyĀ requires,ā he notes with just a touch of condescension. āUpon approaching the hospital area, they saw two men involved in a physical altercation. And one of them, as per officer Nordwinās recollection, matched the description of a suspect in a recent theft. The decision was made to take him for questioning. Mr. Diaz, unfortunately, did sustain an injury, but it was clearly not life-threatening.ā
Nordwin chimes in to argue. āWasnāt even a real injury, it wasĀ nothing. He just āā
As if on cue, Mateo yelps. Jack mumbles an apology and grabs an instant ice pack to put over his nose. Both cops are startled, both staring at the nurse.
You donāt even flinch. āDoesnāt sound like nothing to me.ā
Harrelsonās confidence falters a little. He moves his eyes to Jack. āPushed the bone back in its place, doc?ā
āThat I did,ā Abbot replies through gritted teeth while wiping the dried-up blood off Mateoās face.
āAny of you ever got your nose broken?ā you ask coldly.
Nordwin nods, all smug, like it is something he takes pride in. āI did, actually.ā
āThat makes sense,ā you say without even sparing him a glance. āI take it, compassion isnāt one of your jobās requirements. But youĀ clearlyĀ arenāt qualified to make statements regarding the severity of someoneās injury. Unless youāve got a medical degree, which I sincerely doubt.ā
His nostrils flare at your reply. A treacherously bright redness creeps up his neck and ears. You couldnāt care less about his anger.
āWhatās the description of the suspected thief you mentioned?ā
Harrelson shoots the younger cop a glance. Nordwin forces out:
āMale, in his thirties. Around 5' 11", medium build, dark hair at shoulder length.ā
āHalf of my Facebook friends match that description,ā you tell him, unimpressed. Then you start firing off your question with no concern for his growing discomfort. āAny chance your forensic artist did a better job?ā
āWe are still working on the identikit.ā
āBased off what?ā
āVideo footage. He was caught on CCTV.ā
āAny DNA on the crime scene? Partially recovered fingerprints? Eyewitnesses?ā
The silence hangs in the air, way more uncomfortable than the swelter of the room; you do not let it stretch.
āSo, to summarize, you have no detailed description and no sketch, no real forensic evidence and no witnesses. Which begs the question, why exactly you thought to connect two absolutelyĀ unrelatedĀ incidents.ā
This is a tone Jackās never heard you use ā uncompromising, sharp, commanding. And weirdly enough, heās latching to your every word. Whatās even weirder is that Abbot āĀ whoās worked in pitch dark, under fire, in all weathers and all hours of the dayĀ ā has trouble focusing on anything but you. The tension coils somewhere in his stomach.
āI also find it interesting that you prioritized the unproven connection over the very real threat a man posed to a defenseless woman. And the twoĀ dutifulĀ officers just let that man go,ā you punctuate, and this time, youāre looking straight at Nordwin.
Heās only able to hold your gaze for a few seconds before averting his. He is not winning this staring contest. Or this argument ā youāll make sure of both.
āIād like to get my facts from each party involved,ā you turn to face the nurse. āMateo, how about you tell me what actually happened.ā
NotĀ tell us, justĀ you, Jack notes. He closed his med kit and took off the gloves, now standing just a step behind you, not to draw attention. His gaze keeps coming back to you ā to trace lines of your profile, down from your focused eyes to cheekbones to lips. Heās always found you beautiful, but in this moment, something makes his undeniable attraction grow tenfold.
The orange-faced cop chuckles dryly. āIām sure he will be unbiased.ā
āI donāt think your name is Mateo. So Iām not talking to you,ā you easily dismiss him. Your eyes stay on the nurse, and you give him a nod to prompt him to start talking.
Mateo tells everyone what Jack already heard from you.Ā About the impatient man who came in with an unspecified chest pain, then got progressively annoyed, lashed out at a couple of doctors and was escorted by the security andĀ ā
Jackās only catching pieces of his story. From where heās standing, he can catch the scent of your perfume. He also notices that you are leaning slightly against your chair, one hand tucked into your pantsā pocket, the other lying on the table. There is no stiffness in your body, nothing that would suggest youāre nervous or unsure. Instead, you flourish under pressure. Jack finds it hot. He finds it hard to look away.
āā He got out his car keys, and I didnāt want that asshole to just get away, so I grabbed 'emāā
āSpeaking of the connection,ā Nordwin points out. āThe man yelled that he was trying to steal his car.ā
āThatās not true!ā Mateo eagerly protests. āHe yelled that street theft was allĀ us latinosĀ are good for, and I said I didnāt need his damn car, but I wonāt let him just drive off like nothing happened. And thatās when you walked up to us.ā
You cast the cop an openly disdainful glance. āA man holding someone elseās keys to stop that person from escaping made you think heĀ steals cars for a living?ā
Nordwin grows redder, but he cannot come up with a reply. The older cop side-eyes him. The look on Harrelsonās face suggests he does not think too highly of his colleague.
You gesture for Mateo to continue and listen to him talk, despite already knowing all of it. You want to show him that his story matters. You want him to speak up the truth. You only get distracted when your phone vibrates ā you take it out to read a message on the screen. Then take a moment to ponder over it.
Nordwin tries poking at you. āBad news?ā
āNot for me,ā you counter, looking at him like a rottweiler would look at a hysterical lap dog. And you keep looking while you ask, āMateo, when officer Nordwin tackled you, did you or Victoria try to explain the reason for the fight?ā
āWe did,ā he answers, obviously displeased. āMultiple times.ā
āDid he have any questions for the other man involved in the fight?ā
āNo.ā
āDid he check on Victoria or show any concern for her well-being after she got assaulted?ā
āNo.ā
āOkay, IĀ get it,ā Nordwin snaps. āHeās your client, and you are on his side. But you and I both know that in the end, itās his word against mine.ā
āNo,ā you state simply, your stare unblinking, your restraint unmatched. āIt will be your word against the surveillance footage from the parking lot.ā
The copās annoyance ebbs a little, eclipsed by his surprise. āThey have cameras at the parking lot?ā
āYes, itās where they park those big white cars that cost up to three hundred thousand dollars each,ā you explain coolly. āI sure hope you arenāt up for a promotion with that lack of critical thinking.ā
There is no comeback he can think of.
Jack almost wants to laugh. But then he feels that his own face is burning, and his heart rate went up, flutteringĀ warmly in his chest. The tension thatās been building in him forces the realization out ā the molten truth that rises to the surface, like magma from the depths of Earth:
he isnāt watching you out of worry, or in anticipation or amusement.
Instead, Jack is extremely, unspeakablyĀ turned on.
He takes a breath and takes a step toward the wall, so he can use it for support, pressing a palm to it. To something cold and steadying. But this new spot grants him a better view ā of the curve of your lower back, your hips and thighs. That lookĀ so goodĀ in those tight pants youāre wearing. He briefly squeezes his eyes shut, he makes an effort to stop staring at your ass.
The cops, thankfully, are busy worrying aboutĀ theirĀ asses. You give them enough reasons to be.
āThe hospital security is looking through the footage as we speak. But I can give you a quick summary of whatās in there: an aggrieved man approaches a med student half his age. He starts harassing her, not only verbally but also physically, grabbing her by the arm. He is then interrupted by the studentās boyfriend, who tries to resolve the situation, but also gets assaulted by that man. The fight attracts the attention of the patrol car. Instead of trying to de-escalate the conflict or make any attempts to understand whatās going on, one of the officers decides to detain the boyfriend, while also using excessive andĀ unnecessaryĀ force to do so,ā you stare Nordwin down as you speak. āMy favorite part is when the offender walks away, and the police doĀ nothing.ā
There is a ringing silence. Almost as loud as Jackās heartbeat. Nordwin is seething, red all over; and yet, he doesnāt meet your gaze. Harrelson tries to mitigate their failure. āWe are already looking for that man.ā
āDefine looking.ā
āExcuse me?ā
āThat was just two words, which one do you need me to explain? Define?ā you arenāt making this into a joke ā you talk to him like he is actually stupid. āBecause it seems to me that you are definitelyĀ notĀ looking for the person who assaulted two health workers. The man you targeted instead is one of the victims, who did nothing wrong.ā
āHe is so innocent, he had to get his attorney involved?ā Nordwin quips.
A pause falls in the room, and he canāt help but gloat, thinking he caught a gap in your defence. Thinking it is his chance to finally walk over you. Instead, he walks into a trap.
āHis girlfriend called me. You know, the one that was attacked,ā you tell him sharply. āAnd what exactly isĀ sheĀ guilty of?ā
You sit up straighter. Thereās danger in how swiftly your whole body moves, in how your eyes bore into him, in just how easily you own the room.
āPlease, donāt be shy, I really want to know your reasons,ā you push, throwing each word at them like daggers. And you donāt miss. āA man walks in on his girlfriend being assaulted. What do you think he shouldāve done? Watch her get beaten? Raped? Shouldāve just given you guys a call and patiently wait for someone with a badge to show up. Since the policemen would never let the attacker get away, right?ā
Wrong, your tone implies. Your gaze confirms. Both cops stare at you, dumbfounded and speechless.
āBut hey, the policeĀ didĀ show up. And the two officers present at the scene failed to assess the situation, didnāt identify the real perpetrator, didnāt bother questioning the third person, who was both a victim of the attack and a witness to the fight,ā you list, unbothered and unyielding. āInstead, they wrongfully presumed my client guilty and detained him by force, which was criminally disproportionate to the nature of his presumable offence.ā
Mateo turns his face to Abbot and mouths āwowā. Jack manages to give him a small nod. He knows that heās not winning any arguments if you ever decide to talk to him like that. Heād be too stunned to speak. Just like he is right now.
You stand up from your chair abruptly. Nobody else moves.
āLetās cut the crap. You had no real grounds for detaining him and not a single damn reason for using force. The mere insinuation that heās complicit in some theft is not only unfounded, but also defamatory andĀ will beĀ treated as such,ā you put your hands on your hips, your blouse red like fire, your eyes and words burning no less. āSo let me save us all some time and tell you what happens next. You will let Mr. Diaz go, drop your ridiculous allegations, own up to your fuck-up and apologize like men. Or I will sue you, your station, and the whole police department for ā letās see,ā you hold up your right hand and start counting on your fingers. āFailure to intervene in misconduct, use of excessive force, racial discrimination, slander, failure to provide medical help, intentional infliction of emotional distress and mental anguish... And thatās what I just came up with on the spot. When I wake up tomorrow after a good night of sleep and have my morning cup of coffee, I willĀ doubleĀ this number,ā ā
and then you lean over the table, your palms pressed flat against it as you look Harrelson dead in the eye,
āAre youĀ catching my drift?ā
Jack thinks that never in his life has he wanted to kiss someone as much as he wants to kiss you. Here, now, when youāre arguing and harsh and fuming, with deadly gaze, sharp on the tongue. His eyes are helplessly fixed on your mouth. His want doesnāt stop there ā itās only spreading, itāsĀ abyssal.
And he would gladly kneel in awe between your legs.
Jackās thinking of how your voice will crack when heās eating you out, of your leg muscles tense and shaking while you ride his face, of how your slickness will drip all over his tongueĀ ā
A chair creaks against the floor. Abbot snaps out of his daydreaming to see that Nordwinās glaring at you.
āIs that a threat?ā
āThat is a promise,ā you say with simple, cold-blooded assurance.
You pull back and stand by Mateoās side. The young copās trying very hard ā his neck vein bulging, his mouth smirking ā to be intimidating. āYou think you can handle me?ā
You couldāve laughed at him (youĀ shouldĀ ā heās looking really fucking stupid, Jack notes). Instead, you let him feel the weight ā of your words and your confidence thatās built on crushing men like him:
āI charge nine hundred dollars an hour because IāmĀ veryĀ good at handling things. And you better believe I do deliver on my promises.ā
His smirk fades. Nordwin opens his mouth ā then closes, failing to master a reply. Before he tries again, Harrelson puts his hand up (which very clearly reads as āPlease, keep your mouth shutā). The old man looks like he is mentally composing his resignation letter. Still, he picks a conciliatory tone:
āAlright, point taken. Weāll get in touch with the PTMCās security and ask the hospital to give us that patientās name. Typically, you would need someone to report the incident first, but since the officers actuallyĀ saw the fight,ā he sends Nordwin a disappointed glance, āThat is enough to start the investigation. Weāll obviously need a witness statement from Mr. Diaz and his girlfriend.ā
āOnce they receiveĀ medical evaluation and get some rest,ā you emphasize, you tone brooking no argument.
Harrelson doesnāt bother holding back a sigh. Heās got no wish to argue. āYes, of course. Itās been an eventful evening,ā heās mostly looking at Mateoās nose as he adds, āMr. Diaz is free to go.ā
You gesture for him to get up. But your eyes stay on the detective. Your looming presence forces the old man to meet your gaze. You pull a white paper rectangle out of your blazerās pocket with two fingers ā and throw it on their table.
āHereās my card. Donāt evenĀ thinkĀ about contacting my clients directly,ā and then your mouth stretches into a smile. Teeth-baring, bright, only a tad mocking. āApology means verbal acknowledgement of failure, in case that word wasnāt in your vocabulary. But youāve got enough time to practice until tomorrow.ā
You let Mateo walk out first, your head held high as you stride out of the room behind him. Jack has to summon all his self-control to keep his eyes up as he follows you.Ā His girlfriendĀ ā fierce and competent and nothing short of perfect. That image of you is a revelation. It makes his blood rush.
It makes desire spread through his whole body like a blaze.
The walk to his car takes barely a minute. Victoria keeps checking on Mateo, her hand carefully wrapped around his arm, her eyes two pools of adoration. He keeps smiling at her, despite his broken nose. Youāre on the phone with Robby, who is still on shift. Jack lets the lovebirds take the back seat while he waits for you. He puts his hands in his pantsā pockets to fight the urge to touch you.
āRobby will meet them, he wants to do the evaluation. Apparently, the cops are already trying to contact him,ā you let out a chuckle, turning off your phone. The sunset drapes a veil of violet over the blushing sky. You can hear chatter, cars honking, the noises of the city full of life. But your remark is met with silence.
ā...Jack?ā
His face expression is unreadable. He blinks and looks up from your blouse to meet your gaze.
āUm, yeah,ā his voice is quiet, almost...Ā strained. āLetās get out of here.ā
He walks to open the car door for you, but it feels like he keeps some distance. You sit and watch him go around to take the driverās seat, his gaze purposefully rooted to the ground.Ā Something is off about him.
āI canāt believe you made them apologize,ā Victoria gasps, in equal parts shocked and pleased. āYou werenāt afraid?ā
āThey werenāt the worst people that Iāve dealt with. And I only askedĀ them to,ā you correct her. āYou both are yet to hear those apologies. Seems like the bare minimum after the way they treated you.ā
Jack starts the engine. Out of habit, his hand moves to the side to check your fastened seatbelt. He feels it briefly with his fingers. But he doesnāt look.Ā Maybe heās just uncomfortable with other people in the car.
āWill they do anything about that Nordwin guy? Like, put him on suspension?ā
āHe shouldāve been suspended months ago,ā you note, although you do not plan on giving her the details.
Sheās had a rough day as it is, and you know that she only needs a long, hot shower and a good nightās sleep. Everyone in this car does. Your gaze involuntarily flits to Jack. The broad canvas of his black t-shirt tightens a little with his every breath, his hands both on the wheel.
āHeās done it before? So itās not a one-time thing,ā Mateo muses. āIt should at least raise some questions if there is a pattern.ā
āOf course, there is a pattern. He looks like a guy whoād fuck his cousin to make sure his kids are the right shade of white,ā you comment, not meaning for your words to bite. They do. It does earn you a glance from Jack. It also makes him grab the wheel tighter.
āI think weāre paying that man too much attention,ā you add, calmer this time. You turn a little in your seat to look at them. āRobby said Mateo needs a head CT, but they will try to speed it up. Just hang on for a little bit, an hour tops.ā
Mateo nods, his arm resting on Javadiās waist. He cocks his head at you. āSpeaking of paying.ā
āNo,Ā donāt.ā
āIām serious,ā he tells you, with naive and sincere stubbornness. āYou saved my ass out there. Feels fair to cover your hour fee.ā
āMateo, I know your heart is in the right place, but I need you to think with your head. Youāre telling me you donāt still have student loans to pay?ā you get your answer when he drops his gaze. You give him and Victoria a small smile. āBetter spend your money on the things that matter. I can afford to help people out for free. You owe me nothing.ā
Javadi whispers a timid āthank youā, her hand rubbing Mateoās leg. You notice just how fast the colors of the city flash behind the windows. It feels like Jack is speeding.
āIf you have extra money, order some takeout tonight. Thereās a nice Indian place on Eloise Street,ā you mention, eyeing Abbot. āBe careful with the spicy dishes, though, they arenāt for the faint of heart.ā
You only catch a flicker of his mouth, an almost-there smirk. Itās not enough to put you or him at ease, and you are still left clueless about whatever troubles him. He stays out of all your conversations and runs a yellow light three times.
When you reach the emergency department, Robby is already waiting outside. Jack stops the car right next to him, and he yanks the closest rear door open.
āJesus Christ,ā he frowns when he sees Mateoās face.
āItās not as bad as it looks,ā the nurse tiredly chuckles as Robby helps him out.
āWish I could say itād get better in the morning,ā Robbyās brown eyes immediately move to Javadi. āYou alright, kid?ā
āIām fine. This one got the worst of it,ā she sighs and steps out of the car, readily clinging to her boyfriend.
Mateo pulls her closer, his fingers caressing her shoulder. āOh come on you guys, itās just a nose. I will survive, no need for coddling.ā
āMe, coddling? Just wait until you see Evans. She may try and strap you to the hospital bed,ā Robby cackles and waves at you. You wave back and roll down your window.
Mateo asks him in a hushed voice, clearly touched. āDana stayed too?ā
āOf course she did. Better not keep her waiting,ā Robby then pats him on the back and motions for them both to go inside.
He keeps an eye on them for a few seconds before turning to you. The brunet has to lean down, poking his head inside the car. Heās grinning.
āI think you should know that I just got off the phone with Chief Burgess. He wanted to apologize on behalf of the police department,ā Robby crinkles his brow at you. āWhat the hell did you do in there?ā
You shrug. āMy job?ā
Robby canāt stop a laugh, eyes glinting with amusement. āJack patched up one of their guys after Pittfest, they all praised Abbot as a hero. And then you come out of nowhere and stir things up, so much so that they had to get the chief involved. You two make quite a couple.ā
Jack doesnāt look amused. He stares at Robby from his seat, his gruff tone hinting that heās in no mood for talking. āAny more sentiments you feel the need to share?ā
But Robby doesnāt take offence. He takes a step back, still smiling, his gaze darting between you two, like he sees something you are yet to notice. āGonna go check on our local Zorro. Enjoy the rest of your evening, guys.ā
And Abbot hits the gas without another word.
He keeps his eyes front, taking the turns on autopilot, taking deep breaths that somehow feel too shallow for his lungs. His heart is hammering. His muscles taut like strings. And now that youāre all alone, you cannot help but ask:
āAre you okay?ā
By every definition of okay there is, heāsĀ very farĀ from it. And Jackās always believed he could rein in his feelings, but clearly, you challenge that belief.
Your palpable confusion is quickly turning into guilt.
āI know it took longer than planned. Iām sorry āā
āNo, donāt be. You did great, I just āā Jack takes another breath (he is just trying not to fuck you right here in his car). āWant to get home faster.ā
He has to stop at a red light. His jaw ticks. And then his hand moves to your leg, in an attempt to offer you some comfort. (In hopes that it will also ground him). But under the thick fabric of your pants, thereās the same tension thatās been tormenting him. Unwittingly, he makes you nervous, he can feel it. He also knows what he can do to make it better.
The ride back passes in a blink.
He parks the car. He takes you by the hand once you are out. He leads the way ā into the lobby of his apartment building, into the elevator; his fingers tightly intertwined with yours. You watch him, searching for some hints, waiting for him to talk to you when he finally locks the front door from the inside.
Instead, Jack drops the keys on the side table in the hallway and darts into the bathroom to wash his hands. Youāre left guessing. You know heās usually open to any conversations, but you arenāt sure how to start this one. You hear that he turns the water off. You have your questions at the ready:Ā is he upset about something? Is he feeling worn out?
Jack is on you before you can utter a word.
His lips crash into yours, hot, eager, unquestionablyĀ hungry. It is the kind of hunger he can no longer curb: he grabs you by the waist, his touches desperate as his hands move to cup and squeeze your ass. It makes you gasp. But you meet him with zero hesitation ā your fingers curl into his t-shirt to pull him close, two wild heartbeats colliding when your chests do. You kiss him with the same amount of need and desperation. Until your lungs burn, and you pull back to suck in a shaky breath.
āThat was theĀ hottest fucking thingĀ Iāve ever seen,ā Jack rasps, his mouth already on your neck.
Your mind stumbles over your thoughts as his lips find your pulse point. Someone should study the way his kisses lower your IQ. Belatedly, you guess whatās going on:
āThe legal talk turned you on this much?ā
āYou have no idea,ā he mumbles as he untucks your blouse, his fingers back to working on the buttons, way more impatient than last time.
āAnd here I was worriedāā your voice trembles when his tongue traces your collarbone. āWorried that I went too far.ā
Jack lets out a short laugh. āI didnāt even know you had it in you,ā his tone is warm and teasing. āYou just walked in and tore them into pieces. Never seen cops looking soĀ dumbstruck.ā
The gloom around you is diluted with a faint golden glow, a small lamp on the wall being the only source of light. Its glimmers sneak into his silver curls.
āI thought about apologizing for dragging you into that mess,ā you tell him as his hands move to the waistband of your pants.
Jack stops. He locks his gaze with yours. His eyes are a dark shade of green, a restless sea thatās churning with emotions. He moves his face closer to you:
āI thought about fucking you at the police station,ā he tells you in a low voice, dragging your pants down to your hipbones, āAnd in the car,ā his fingers brush your naked stomach, āAnd at the parking lot.ā
When you pull him into another heated kiss, you know that you wonāt make it to the bedroom. Jack proves you right: he blindly sweeps things off the table with one hand ā then pushes you to sit on it, lips never leaving yours. He shoves your pants down to your knees, and then you wiggle your legs out of them, the piece of clothing falling to the floor. You catch his lower lip between your teeth, pushing a groan out of him. Jack hooks your panties with his fingers, and his thumb slides to caress the inside of your thigh. Itās hard to choose between the need for air and your need forĀ him.
Jack makes the choice for you when he pulls back. Barely a fraction of an inch. Your hand keeps grasping his t-shirt, your noses touching.
āIāll buy you a new pair,ā he whispers vaguely.
And then he rips your underwear off, thin lace torn into a few useless pieces. You are still struggling to catch your breath, youāre watching in a daze ā how Jack is sinking to his knees, how he pushes your legs apart, his big palms gliding up your thighs, his gaze fixed on where you are already wet and wanting.
āThis is what Iāve thought about the most,ā Abbot avows. And he is ready to devour.
He glides two fingers through your folds and parts them, making your hips jerk forward, smirking appreciatively at how responsive you are. Without a warning, Jack leans in and licks a broad stripe up your slit.
āFu-uck,ā you breathe out, one hand immediately coming down to grip his shoulder.
His tongue moves firmly from your entrance to your clit. Then back down and back up, repeated motion that allows him to taste your wetness, to drag more sounds out of you. He loves you vocal, loves you loud, he loves the stutter in your voice that comes when he is making you feel good. He knows exactlyĀ how to.
Jack seals his lips around your clit, making the pleasure jolt through you, so sudden that your head falls back, hitting the wall. He hears you wince. He flicks his tongue over your bundle of nerves, then gently sucks on it ā turning your wince into a moan. And Jack starts lapping at your cunt, obscene wet noises filling the hall, while his forefinger rubs small teasing circles at your weeping hole. He does not push in, doesnāt yet need to: your hips already buck into his mouth, your nails digging deeper into his shoulder ā until his steady efforts throw you over the edge. Your legs shake, your walls clenching around nothing as your arousal coats his tongue. He doesnāt find it satiating.
āOne more,ā Jack mutters hungrily between your legs.
His hands come up to pull you closer to the table edge, toĀ him. He leaves a soft kiss on the inside of your thigh. āLean back on the wall, donāt want you to hurt your head again,ā and then he glances up at you ā your chest heaving and face blissed-out, so he taps on your knee. āSweetheart.ā
āYeah-yes, leaning back,ā you echo incoherently, your shoulder blades pressing against the stable surface.
Jack gives your other thigh a kiss. He keeps his gaze on you as he moves his two fingers up and down your leaking cunt ā before pushing them both in, one fluid motion, up to the very knuckles. Making you cry out his name. His pace is slow at first as he stretches you open, letting your orgasm build again, letting you put a hand into his hair as your hips move to meet his thrusts. And then he expertly curls up his fingers to hit that spongy spot that makes your vision blur.
āWasnāt planning to,ā he grins against your thigh. āC'mon, honey, want you toĀ soak my face.ā
Jack fucks his fingers faster into you as he drinks up the sight: your eyes are half-lidded in pleasure, the red blouse open, and breasts ready to spill out of the bra. He adds a third finger ā and barely a second after, he sucks hard on your swollen clit. Your mouth falls open in a silent cry, hand tugging sharply at his curls. He doesnāt care that it hurts, and he doesnāt let up, his lips and hand working in tandem to make you come undone. It only takes four āĀ fiveĀ more quick flicks of his tongue ā and you are trembling all over, his mouthās flooded with your release. Jack doesnāt miss a drop. He licks you clean, shamelessly groaning at the taste, waiting for you to come down from your high.
āT-too much,ā you tell him breathlessly, your fingers caressing his scalp as he pulls back. His mouth and chin are drenched, but Abbot doesnāt bother wiping them.
He has to lean a little on the table to get back on his feet. Jack thinks you need a moment ā of silence and reprieve ā but your hands tug him closer by his t-shirt. You pull it up and over his head, and then the softness of your lips touches his chest. Jack feels his heart leap. Warmth spreading through his bloodstream. Your kisses slowly travel higher, to his neck, over his throat and jawline.
āWe really need to take this to bed,ā you press a teasing whisper under his ear.
He doesnāt answer you with words ā instead, Jack hoists you up, one of his hands secured under your ass, the other pulling you into a kiss. You wrap your legs around his waist. This kiss is slower, the tenderness woven into your shared breaths, the space around you growing dim as he brings you into the bedroom.
The night already slinks in through the floor windows, with glittering streetlights under the indigo sky. You lose his t-shirt and your blouse somewhere along the way. Jack lowers you on the bedcovers, and you impatiently pull down both his pants and boxers, his body flinching when you brush his cock. Heās hard, painfully so, heās been like that ever since he kissed you in the hall.Ā You know. Youāre trying to be gentle as you marvel at him ā flushed, thick and leaking in your hand ā you give him a slow stroke, and then another one, watching his stomach muscles tense ā
Jack stops you.
āDonāt,ā he says huskily, closing his fingers around your hand to move it away. āTonightās aboutĀ you.ā
He dips his head down, bringing his mouth back to yours, his palms cradling your ribcage to lay you down on the bed. He skims his fingers up your sides, then finds your bra strap with ease. The piece of underwear flies somewhere on the floor. The air is cooling against your heated skin ā Jackās lips paint it with goosebumps. He leaves kisses between your breasts, unrushed featherlike teases, and then he seals his mouth over your nipple.Ā One, then the other. And he is relishing the way youāre arching into him, the way your body instantly reacts to light strokes and firm touches of his hands (heās very skilled in that, indeed). Jack moves to take the condoms from the nightstand ā
āIām on the pill.ā
His breath catches. You can tell ā his chest just freezes on the inhale. You reach a hand out to him, gliding your fingers up his arm.
āBeen on it for a couple of days, just didnāt know when to mention it,ā you explain quietly, watching him take your words in, watching astonishment bloom on his face. Your voice drops to a whisper. āI missed you.ā
It seems like your confession gives him air: his lips part as he takes a breath, his gaze on you. His hand catches your wrist. He leaves a kiss on the inside of it. You use that same hand to draw him closer, his muscles countroured by the moonlight as he comes back, as he holds himself over you, his eyes shiny and filled with adoration.
āMissed you too, missed youĀ so much,ā Jack murmurs.
He lays his forehead against yours, his lips grazing the corner of your mouth. He doesnāt want to close his eyes, he wants to see your face ā when he nudges your legs open, shifting his hips to drag his cock through your soaked folds. He watches the desire swell in you as you spread your thighs wider, your arms looping around his neck. And you both shudder at the contact.
You hold your breath when he starts pushing into you, inch by agonizing inch ā and your walls suck him in.Ā Wet, tight, heavenly. Jack sinks his teeth into the lower lip, the sharpness of the bite helping him hold on for a little longer. Until his cock is fully seated in you, bare for the first time. Jack makes a choked sound.
This is the closest he has ever been to awestruck. This is the closest he can be to you.Ā And you feel absolutely perfect, just like he knew you would.
āYouāreĀ so warm,ā he says, his voice already wrecked. āI need toā just give me a minute.ā
He hides his ragged breath in the crook of your neck, nudging his nose against the spot where your pulse is trashing under your skin. The rising of your chest suggests your breathing is equally unsteady. Because you have been wishing,Ā achingĀ for it, too ā this fullness, and this intimacy, and nothing in between you two. He feels your walls spasm around him. His long exhale skates across your shoulder as he looks down, his gaze moving to where youāre joined together. Jack canāt help but pull back ā only a little, only to catch a sight of his cock glistening with your arousal. And then he snaps his hips forward, back into your heat.
āFuck, this feelsāā so good,Ā too good, a tipping point he doesnāt know how to come back from; Jack canāt find the right words.
āI know,ā you say, your own voice tremulous. Your palm skates up from his neck to his cheek to make him look at you, and your words are a plea:
āWant you to move, please, I justāĀ Please, Jack.ā
Your wish is his command.
He props himself up on both elbows and leans closer, covering your lips with his ā to drink the whimpers that escape you as he starts moving. Jack knows he wonāt last long, but he is trying not to rush it: he sets a steady rhythm, his thrusts measured as he fucks youĀ deep. And you lose all your self-restraint with him. You kiss him back, mouth desperate and open to let your breathy moans out, your nails scraping down his back, your hips pressing against his.
And Jack is losing himself in the feel of you.
āYouāre squeezing me so tightly,ā he growls, pumping in and out faster, harder. And watching as your head falls back against the pillow, the dim light sparkling on your sweat-covered skin. His hot breath trails up your throat, his voice a low rasp tucked behind your ear. āPerfect, you feel fuckingĀ perfect.ā
He can tell that you wonāt be able to hold off much longer.
Itās in the way you cling to him, supple and surrendering, your mouth opening to gasp for air and to breathe out his name. Itās something he can almost see ā a radiant, intense heat that mounts up in you, unstoppable and all-consuming. He sneaks a hand between you two, thumb firmly circling your clit.
āI need you to cum,ā Jack mouths at your skin, āCum for me.ā
He feels you pulse under his thumb, and then the orgasm ripples through you, making your body shiver, your juices dribbling down his cock. And he canāt help but follow right behind. Jackās hips stutter, breath hitching as he fills you up, a little dizzy from how overpowering this new sensation is ā of your warmth, of your walls milking him. He canāt remember if heās ever cummed this hard.
Jack drops his forehead to your shoulder, waiting for his heart and breath to steady. He feels your hand brushing his elbow, signaling for him to lie down. Which he is grateful for (he doesnāt want to pull out just yet). Jack shifts his weight a little to the side so he wonāt crush you, draping an arm across your hips, head resting at your chest.
The silence settles for a fleeting moment. You run your fingers through the damp grey curls that frame his face.
āSo,ā he hears you say, mirth in your voice. āYou have a competence kink, huh?ā
Jack breathes out a laugh. He doesnāt even ask if competence kink is a thing ā his own reaction is proof enough of that.
āGuess so,ā he leaves a kiss under your collarbone, before his gaze darts up to yours, his eyes crinkled at the corners. āOnly when it comes toĀ you.ā
You smile at him, so brightly that his heart swells. And Jack feels himself smiling back.Ā Because youāre making him so happy, he canāt help it. His gaze moves to your mouth, his faceās about to follow it ā
Your stomach growls. You groan.
āWould it be a bad idea to have tacos this late at night?ā
āItās bad to go to bed with your stomach growling, thatās for sure,ā he moves closer, meaning to peck you on the lips. But it inevitably turns into a proper kiss, because he is too eager for you, too comfortable in your embrace. He pulls back only to whisper softly, āLet me clean you up.ā
āNo, you stay here, youāve been on your feet all evening. Iāll be quick.ā
He slips out of you, and your body slips from under his as Jack moves to the side. You hastily get out of bed, keeping your thighs together, so nothing drips onto the covers. He doesnāt bother holding back his smirk as he watches you hurry in the direction of the bathroom.
His smile fades as he wonders when was the last time you ate.
Jack sits up, stretching his arms and legs, no tension pulling at his muscles, his whole body warmed up. He grabs his briefs and puts them on, catching the sound of your approaching steps. You leave the light on in the hall. You come back with a glass of water ā and wearing his t-shirt. It is the view heāll never get tired of: your hair down and your face softened, your curves barely covered by his clothes. That now will smell of you (at least, thatās what he hopes for).
āWant me to bring your crutches?ā
Jack shakes his head and leaves the emptied glass on the nightstand. āIām good,ā he leans forward a little to rest his forehead against your stomach. āI was thinking, I can switch to days next week. And then on Friday we will get off work around the same time,ā his arms wrap around your legs. āI still owe you a date.ā
āTechnically, weāve been onĀ a fewĀ already.ā
Judging by technicalities, heād argue that what you mean werenāt exactlyĀ dates. It first happened one random evening, when he decided to give you a ride home, and you excitedly asked him to pull over next to some street food truck. You told him it was the best jerk chicken in the city (you were right ā it was so good, Jack licked his fingers clean). You two soon made it into a habit to grab a bite on his days off or when youāre free from work. You go to places that he hasnāt heard of ā some tiny cafes, food carts and family-run stalls, bolivian, korean, mexican, ingredients and dishes he could barely pronounce. And Jack, whoās never had the appetite for something new, is suddenly so keen on trying all of it.Ā With you.
Your fingers trace unknown shapes on his upper back. āThisĀ can be a date, too.ā
āTacos at my apartment? That doesnāt sound very romantic,ā his words are hushed as his lips ghost over your navel.
āIād take this over any fancy place,ā he can discern a smile in your voice. āI also know that dates usually start with food and end with sex, but Iām okay with the reversed order,ā you add, running your fingers through his hair.
You feel his mouth moving higher, stitching a kiss into the cotton fabric, right below your heart. āThen we can start at a restaurant and finish here.ā
āYou donāt actuallyĀ have toĀ pick anything expensive,ā you say quietly, with the sincerity that almost sounds like concern.
And Jack is thankful for the darkness of the room that hides his heated cheeks.Ā Okay, so flying you to Paris on the weekend is a no-go. Noted.
āI hope to pick something youād like,ā he tells you just as honestly.
āIām pretty sure Iāll like any place if youāre there with me.ā
Jack tilts his head back, chin pressed against your stomach, eyes looking up at you like youāre his source of light. He lets himself enjoy this moment, save it in his memory, another snapshot in his mental album. He hopes to get at least a million more.
He stands up, slowly, palms following the contours of your legs to settle at your lower back. āHow does Friday at 9 sound?ā
āSounds like a plan,ā and you are smiling when you kiss him. You taste like happiness; it takes you two a while to pull apart. āNow I just need to find a dress. But first,Ā weĀ need to eat.ā
And as you tug him by the hand to lead toward the kitchen, he thinks he needs to ask Shen about the new restaurant that he keeps bringing up.
Jack also needs to find the words and the perfect moment to tell you that he is in love with you.
ā§ FYI: I was inspired by a scene from āLandmanā that YT recommended me (I havenāt watched the show; that scene deals with SA, beware if you wanna look it up);
ā§ this oneshot is a second part of my mini series:
part 1: mad about you;
part 3: love-filled (WIP);
(I will probably post the series masterlist soon bc I need to keep things in order lol).
ā§ dividers by ME, @/omi-resources and @/cafekitsune;
ā§ the ULTIMATE birria tacos recipe š
ā§ MASTERLIST ā”
ā§ English isnāt my first language, so feel free to message me if you spot any mistakes. reblogs and comments are very appreciated!
JACK ABBOT, whoās got a competence kink.
only when it comes to YOU. š
Jack, who is well aware that usually itās his competence that people find attractive. arousing, even. and he tries being humble because, well, itās not something he can really control. he loves his job, and he happens to be great at it. (he also knows he looks ridiculously hot in these t-shirts that fit tightly around his chest and shoulders. itās like an added bonus to his skillset.)
Jack, who is surrounded by a lot of gifted people. so many of his colleagues are equally as great (some ā even better than he is, which he is ready to admit). he isnāt threatened by someone elseās talent ā nor is he enthralled or bothered in any other way; it simply never had any effect on him.
Jack, who believes that youāre also good at what you do, even though he hasnāt witnessed it in person, since you work in a different field. he knows that youāre smart and witty, itās one of many things he loves about you. and you love that he makes you feel so safe, you donāt have any reason to be tough or show him your true grit.
until one day, Jack gets a chance to watch you do your job. it happens randomly, and while he is excited, heās also pretty chill. he is prepared to be proud, very. to shower you in compliments and kisses. but when he actually sees you in action, it takes about five minutes for him to be the opposite of chill.
turns out, at work you arenāt warm and sweet and smiley, like you are with him. you are unyielding, unapologetic, brazen. your voice alone carries so much authority, it is impossible to look away.
Jack stands and stares at you. and stunned doesnāt come close to what heās feeling. because your wit bites, and your gaze burns, and youāre so confident, heās seeing grown men speechless. you leave grown men speechless.
Jack thinks this is the hottest fucking thing heās ever seen.
and heās unspeakably turned on.
your every feature is ten times more alluring. your lips when youāre punctuating words. your eyes when you stare people down. the contours of your breasts he can discern under your blouse as you lean over the table, your hands pressed firmly to the wooden surface. the small curve of your lower back, your hips and legs that look sinfully good in those tight pants youāre wearing.
and he was down bad already, but now? he is in awe, his self-restraint melting like butter.
Jack wants to fall down to his knees and eat you out, right then and there. heād let you use him, ride his face, tug at his hair until heās drenched in you. he would do anything to get a taste, to watch you ā fierce, commanding, competent and nothing short of perfect ā unravel in his hands and come undone for him ā
but Jack canāt do any of that. it takes him an embarrassingly great effort to get himself together. and wait, and do nothing, his every nerve taut like a string. so when youāre done, and he can finally take you home, he all but runs straight to his car.
āare you okay?ā you ask with palpable concern after he fastens your seatbelt.
Jack mumbles something barely coherent. he grips the wheel with one hand, so tightly that his knuckles are all white. his other hand rests on your leg, so he can ground himself a little. while heās putting the pedal to the metal.
Jack really needs to get to his apartment faster. so he can properly explain his feelings to you. not only with his words.
P.S. hereās a full-on ONESHOT ABOUT THIS! (includes speechless and lovesick Jack Abbot š) MASTERLIST ā”
titus? dbf?? guard dog????? well BARK BARK GRR WOOF
thank you for the ask, Hannah! (@pope-codys, you too š¤)š
ā§ this is my first fic where Iām adding an age gap (and a big one!). not gonna lie, Iām nervous about writing someone so young. I donāt want to dumb her down, but she will be more⦠inexperienced, in some ways;
ā§ Iām gonna play with Titusās character a little. he will be freaky and funny in my other oneshot, but in this one, I want him to be different. more closed off, more dangerous, less insecure. seemingly managing to control his temper and his urges⦠that is, until he canāt anymore. because love brings out the best and the worst in him ā”
ā§ this will be an AU (with no satanic worshipĀ lol)
(yes, seeing Shawn covered in blood gave me lots of inspiration :)
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
ā Live Streamingā Interactive Chatā Private Showsā HD Qualityā Free Actions
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
pairing: Jack Abbot x lawyer!reader
summary: it was supposed to be a one-night stand but Jack canāt stop thinking about you. what he expects the least is for you to arrive at his ER ā and not as a patient.
(or, alternatively: Jack meets the right person at the right time. and he lets love in)
warnings: š descriptions of injuries / smut (some teasing, fingering, p in v), Jack being touch-starved and a little rusty (or so he thinks ;). an unexpected amount of domestic fluff, mentions of Jack losing his wife and being shy about his prosthesis / words: 17K / authorās note: I love me a bossy reader but most importantly, I wanted to write someone who can appreciate Jack for the hot man that he is (yes, I got carried away with smut and softness... OH WELL) {read on AO3} >> PART 2 ā” MASTERLIST
There is a feeling thatās been growing roots in Jack ā itās agitation thatās akin to premonition. His recent shifts have been too quiet, uneventful, downright boring. With hands trained to save lives, Jack has to spend his nights treating mild burns and accidental cuts, a few drunkards with bruises and concussions, appendicitis being the most exciting diagnosis he made this week. Any sane doctor would be glad to get a break, but Jack finds it annoying.
Because he needs work to keep his head busy, to have something else occupy his thoughts. He wants his hands sweating in gloves, covered in blood ā so heād have an excuse to wash them clean, so heād get a chance to scrub off the feeling of your body under his fingersā
Jack shakes his head, a movement barely visible, quick like a flinch. He tries shaking off the memories of you ā and he keeps failing. Because it feels like they are tucked away in every corner of his flat, and even when exhaustion manages to drag him into sleep, you are the only thing he dreams of. He always wakes up hard. His bedcovers all wet, breath heavy, mind clouded, heart pounding. And what he brims with is not lust but yearning, so strong that heād go to the other side of town on foot if he could get another chance to see you.
But heās got no address he can come to, and no phone number he can dial just to hear your voice.
So Jack saddles himself with work ā however temporary this fix is, heās got no other in the meantime. He picks up extra hours, covers extra patients. It isnāt nearly enough. And he is mildly annoyed at this predicament heās stuck in, at the repeating cycle of the same bland days ā nothing to challenge him or bring a speckle of relief. Or keep his mind from wandering back to that moment with you ā itās not the filthiest he can remember but the one he wishes to relive the most:
the hair around your face is damp, and youāre a little breathless ā he feels your chest heaving, still pressed to his, arms wrapped around his neck, a tight embrace neither of you wants to break. The bedroomās dark but he forgot to draw the curtains, and the gloaming light traces your curves and sparkles on your skin thatās glistening with sweat, still heated in every place he touched it. And Jackās completely spent but somethingās kindling in his ribcage ā a fire breathed into the embers, the warmth he thought heād never feel again ā itās growing every time he looks at you ā and every time you glance right back at him, and smile at him, and kiss him, andā
āWill you stop fidgeting?ā Dana snaps at him mid-yawn. āItās 7 am, and just looking at you gives me a headache.ā
āThen look somewhere else,ā JackĀ flings back. He instantly feels guilty and puts the tablet down. He doesnāt know where to put his hands, fingers unwittingly tapping on the table.
āOh, someoneās snappy,ā but she doesnāt take offence ā instead she turns her chair to him, eyes slightly narrowed. āYouāve been walking around all tense and brooding these past few weeks, donāt think I havenāt noticed. Wanna talk about it?ā
āItās nothing,ā Jack mumbles. He almost grimaces at his own lie, at how far from reality it is. So he grudgingly sprinkles some truth in: āI guess Iām just bored. Havenāt got much to do. Itās been too quiāā
Dana springs out of her chair and covers his mouth with her palm. āNope. My shift just started and you already want to jinx it? How about you save that enthusiasm until the night rolls in, and then you can have planes falling from the skies for all I care.ā
āI see you finally took matters into your own hands,ā Robby strides in with his backpack and takes off the sunglasses, his brown eyes on Dana. āWas he trying to pass on his existential crisis?ā
āCan we muzzle him?ā
āAnd put him on a leash? I thought about it. But he will probably escape, and weāll have an angry dog on the loose and barking,ā he grins, gaze darting to Abbot, and Dana laughs.
āYou think youāre so fucking funny,ā Jack mumbles.
His agitation ebbs a little ā enough for him to take a breath as he stretches his back. But your touches must be etched into his muscles because heās momentarily reminded of your fingertips ghosting his shoulder blades, of your lips trailing for the pulse point on his neck ā and what was once a bliss is now a torment he is powerless against. Abbot exhales with exasperation.
The phone rings. Dana loses her smile and gives Jack a glare. āThis better not be a mass casualty event,ā she whispers before picking it up. But her concerns arenāt brought into existence ā her face is only half-focused, mostly apathetic as she informs:
āA shooting at the county court. One victim, GSW to the chest and āā her brows knit together at whatever details sheās receiving. āSo itās two?... Well, it aināt nuclear physics, just count them. Iād like to know how many people weāre getting... Alrighty, weāll do the counting ourselves,ā she hangs up and clicks her tongue.
McKay runs by to say hi before resuming the heated conversation she is having on the phone. Langdon comes in unhurriedly, hands in his pockets, his eyes drawn to the board. Santos is next, Whitaker trailing after her ā heās always half-asleep, sheās never not excited to get to work.
āAny interesting cases this morning?ā
āWaiting for a GSW. Apparently, the main witness on some case ā shot in the chest and leg, itās not looking good. Said they couldnāt use a D-fib on him because heās coming with a company.ā
Robby sends Dana an inquiring glance. āWhat is that supposed to mean?ā
āFuck if I know. I havenāt even gotten my first cup of coffee yet,ā she looks at Jack ā pensive, stiff, barely listening to her ā and snaps her fingers in his face. āHey, midnight ranger, isnāt it time for you to clock out? Weāve got a whole team, weāll manage. Go home.ā
āI plan on doing that once I finish the paperwork,ā he replies flatly, tapping on the screen.
āIf thatās what you are into, you can do mine too. Wanna also file my taxes while youāre at it?ā
āIāll gladly tell the IRS to lock you up for tax fraud to get you off my back,ā Abbot deadpans, earning a dry laugh from her.
āGunshot is boring,ā Langdon muses.
Danaās laugh turns into a groan. āNot this again. Why canāt you guys enjoy the peace and quiet?ā
āI mean, if he doesnāt die, heāll go straight to the OR, not much for us to do. I was hoping for something moreāā he suddenly stops talking. There is a sound of wheels gliding across the floor, and a pause sweeps over the hall ā the conversations die down, the movements halted ā and then Jack hears Frank muttering: āWhat the hell?ā
So Abbot absentmindedly follows his gaze. And just like everyone around him, he is left speechless.
The gunshot victim is a man: mid-sixty, stubby-looking, pale-faced and breathing only by some miracle. But he isnāt wheeled in alone ā there is a woman sitting right on top of him, her stark white blouse doused with blood, one of her hands pressed to his chest, three of her fingers shoved into his wound. The crimson droplets glisten in her hair, the same color smeared over her hands up to the wrists, but sheās not scared or appalled. Thereās not a single crack in her composure, no quiver in her body or her face ā
Jack recognizes you in barely a heartbeat.
And he is frozen not out of surprise. Heās marveling at you like youāre under a spotlight and heās in a daze, and there is no one else left in the hall. Because you look the exact same you did all these days back, the first time that he saw you. The one time heāll never forget.
Jack met you over three weeks ago (24 days to be exact, not that heās been counting). It was supposed to be a one-night standā
No, actually, scratch that.
It was an evening Abbot didnāt plan on spending with anyone but a glass of whiskey. It was the only remedy that he could think of after the shift he had.
A couple was brought in at 4 am: in their early thirties, newlywed ā theirĀ car swerved offĀ the road, rolled over four times before hitting a tree. The guy died at the scene, his wife crashed twice on the way to the ER. She was three months pregnant. Jack spent oven an hour coding her; she spent twice as much time in the OR. Two blood transfusions, one kidney out, three broken ribs, dozen of stitches on her stomach and her head. He watched her being transferred to the ICU, then he made calls to notify both families: there were heartbreaking cries, prayers he feared would be left unanswered. Jack came up to the roof to catch his breath ā the air outside was moist and stifling, the sky draped with the clouds the sun couldnāt plough through. It was his day off but he didnāt leave ā instead Jack walked the stairs and halls until his legs ached, until he could do nothing else but pass out in the call room.
He wakes up in the evening, hardly rested ā the female patient still hasnāt woken up. And there is a chance she never will. But if she does, he knows that the reality will hurt her worse than broken ribs and bruises.
When he walks out of the ER, the rain is pouring and his head is pounding, and he thinks if he just goes home, the silence would feel too suffocating to let him fall asleep. Heās too distraught to change out of scrubs, he cares not about the cold droplets hitting his face like needles. He wipes them off and runs into the closest bar ā heās met with semi-darkness and cool air, no blaring music and no flashing neon signs. The quiet is comforting, veiled with the faint sounds of jazz, the place smelling of wood and orange peel and liquor. Itās too early for the crowds to swarm it, but Jack pays no attention to the few people that came in. He strides straight to the counter and orders whiskey ā double with no ice, then picks a small table in the farthest corner. Heās a few steps away from reaching it when his eye catches on your blouse ā silk, silvery, fitted so well around your waist. But he doesnāt allow his gaze to linger. Thatās not what he came for, thatās not what he is interested in.
He sits down with a heavy sigh and a heavy heart. He takes the first sip, then the second one. The alcohol spreads slowly through him, wicks up the bitterness of disappointment threatening to clot his blood like poison. Jack breathes a little easier by the time he drinks half of his glass. His gaze sweeps over his surroundings ā distractedly, uncaring ā before itās drawn to you again.
Youāre sitting on a bar stool with your back to him. You brought your work with you ā a small black laptop on the counter, the keyboard soundless under your fingers, eyes on the screen. Occasionally, you reach for the same lowball glass ā with ice and lemon, half-full ā he guesses itās a gin tonic. You are too locked in to take notice of whatās going on around you. With each new minute Jack finds it harder to look away.
He tells himself the lighting is to blame ā it scatters all over your blouse, drips over every crinkle, making the fabric look like moltenĀ metal, like white gold. Itās neatly tucked into the waistband of your pants: dark blue, formal, perfectly tight around your thighs. His eyes snag on them ā he feels a flash of hunger, a heat that swiftly spills into his bloodstream.
On the periphery of his vision, Jack sees a guy coming your way. He wears a smirk, eyes roaming over you ā he takes a moment to appreciate your curves too, before his gaze lazily moves higher, to your face and to whatever youāre working on ā
And then he yelps.
A few heads turn in his direction, but you donāt move a muscle, donāt even send him a half-glance. The guy abruptly loses all his feigned determination. But Jackās determined like no other.
Because now he is curious. Now he has a better reason to keep looking.
Jack straightens on his seat. He searches eagerly for clues ā but you donāt give them out easily: no badge, no uniform, no logo of the company you work for. And thereās confidence in your relaxed pose and posture, a hint of cockiness in the slight curve of your back. Two more guys try to hit on you: the first peeks through your shoulder and retreats with a horrified grimace, the second one manages a word or two before you cut him off, and he has to leave with nothing.
And Jack doesnāt even try to rationalize his actions ā the pull he feels is the mere reason he stands up, glass in his hand, eyes fixed on you.
He gets the explanation for everyoneās dismay when your laptopās screen comes into his view. Itās crime scene photos ā bright, brutal, bloody: a dead body, deep and frantic wounds left by a knife. Jackās seen enough of those in real life to not be bothered. But he thinks itās impressive how unbothered you are.
He leans on the counter, one stool in between you, his voice nonchalant. āThat looks like someoneās getting buried in a closed casket.ā
āYes, 17 stab wounds do that to a person,ā you reply curtly, fingers flying over the keys.
His eyes flick down your profile and over every feature of your face ā your cool demeanor invites no conversation. His gaze darts back at the stained flesh and scattering of cuts.
āItās not the stabbing that killed her though.ā
āCorrect,ā you still refuse to spare him a glance.
But Jackās not used to giving up so fast. And maybe he is champing at the bit to glimpse a part of you no one in here was in luck to see.
āMost wounds are in her stomach area. Was she pregnant?ā
Your fingers pause at his remark ā for just a moment, yet he notices. A corner of his mouth curls. You keep typing but your voice loses a layer of indifference.
āCareful, you already sound smarter than the entire defense team.ā
āNow I am tempted to continue. The suspect is a male, I reckon? A boyfriend or a husband?ā
You huff a laugh at his insistence. Jack takes half a step closer. And then you turn to get a look at him, at that man who dared to move into your space.
Your gaze is direct, dissecting ā like he is on the operation table, and youāre about to masterfully cut him into parts. It is a gaze that doesnāt make apologies for bluntness, it can effortlessly give warnings and make treats. But you choose to show him mercy.
āShe wanted to get married. Naively hoped a baby would encourage him to.ā
āAnd he never wanted kids,ā Abbot deduces, not hiding his disapproval. āDid he try an impromptu mix of pills for an abortion?ā
āThat would require some research and also him having more than one brain cell,ā your disapproval sounds like dislike. āHe just emptied half a bag of heroin into her tea. She, unsurprisingly, ODāed. Instead of calling 911, he tried to cover it up.ā
āSo his one brain cell wasnāt present,ā Jack gives a snort of disgust. āAnd whatās his lawyerās take?ā
āHe claims she took the drugs herself, then caused a fight. While being on the brink of death, yes,ā there is a furrow in your brow, your tone sharp, simmering. āHe wants it classified as a third-degree murder, so in a decade his asshole client can walk out on the promise of good behavior. I want him charged with two counts of first-degree murder. Life sentence with no parole.ā
You take your cocktail and finish it in barely two sips, then ask the bartender for a third one. You catch Jackās gaze, and he notes incredulously: āYou seem stone-cold sober.ā
āCan say the same about you.ā
He looks down at his whiskey like he almost forgot he had it. āItās actually my first.ā
You look at him like you are making an incision and carefully assessing his internal damage. When you get your drink ā poured over lemon slices and crushed ice ā you swiftly move the glass to him. āYou should give mine a try.ā
āIām not sure mixing drinks is a good ideaāā
āTrust me on this,ā you insist, eyes darting to the badge on his black scrubs, the syllables of his last name softly rolling off your tongue. āDr. Abbot.ā
The sound ripples through his chest, like you just pulled a heartstring that no oneās touched in years. āJack,ā he corrects. āLess formal.ā
He asks for your name in return and takes your cocktail, gives it a swirl then has a sip. Jack raises his eyebrow at the taste. He tries some more to get a confirmation.
āThis is... plain water?ā
You nod with a small smile, without a hint of shame. āI donāt enjoy being drunk. But if I sit here with a bottle of Perrier, that would raise questions.ā
āSo you ask to make it look fancy, like a cocktail,ā Jack figures out, then chuckles. āAnd you suggest that I stop drinking.ā
āYou havenāt touched your glass in the last 10 minutes. My guess is that you donāt really want to.ā
When your eyes meet, he feels like you can see right through, bypassing all the locks heās been meticulously putting over his emotions. Itās strange, itās very new to him. Itās also somewhat thrilling.
Jack finally sits on the bar stool next to you. There is a small space between his legs and yours ā he doesnāt cross it. You donāt move away. His hand stays clasped around his glass.
āThe first half of it felt nice. Like maybe it could dull things down a little. But I donāt like getting drunk, too.ā
āHaving trouble at work?ā you ask simply, with no pity and no pressure.
He thinks it over like he is looking at the baggage ā of his past and present, bad and worse, deciding what bag he can open first. Which oneās less scary. āI work night shifts. The last one was pretty rough.ā
But you prefer to start with the worst one ā eyes trained on the ring heās wearing. āSo you came here to blow off some steam instead of coming home to your wife?ā
The words hit him ā not like a punch but like a stream of ice-cold water. He isnāt hurt, heās startled ā by how fast you notice things, how straightforward you are with voicing them. Nothing escapes your eye, no matter how deep itās been buried. And itās the grave that he almost laid himself in.
The ring was once a promise, then a wound ā after his wifeās death, the metal band only reminded of the pain, of how impossible it seemed to ever heal. He knew the exact time she passed, he counted days and hours he managed to survive alone. It was unbearable and crushing, it felt hopeless. Now he only thinks about her once a year.
Jack doesnāt ponder over his answer for too long. He shares the truth as if heās offering his palms ā so you can read the lines and see the scars he usually keeps hidden.
āIām a widower. This is just...ā he twists the ring slowly with his thumb. āOut of a habit, I suppose.ā
You turn your whole body to him, your back straight and hands locked together. Like you are about to interrogate him. āAnd how long youāve been a widower?ā
Jack doesnāt break eye contact. āFive years.ā
āWhat happened?ā you hold his gaze with ease.
āGlioblastoma. She was gone in seven months.ā
He sees it flicker across your face ā the ache of sympathy for him after what heās been through. The unexpected understanding of what it feels like.
āThat is a tough one. It doesnāt leave much at the end,ā your voice softens and so does your gaze. āItās hard to watch someone die like that. Iām really sorry.ā
āSomeone you knew also had it?ā he takes another guess.
Heās on a luckyĀ streak ā you drop your gaze because heās right again. He wishes that he wasnāt.
āMy mentor, the first man I worked for. The best one, I think,ā your finger traces the cold rim of your glass. Jack almost reaches out to take your hand. āHe was too busy to take care of himself, got diagnosed when it was too late for any treatments. He made it to eight months.ā
Jack moves his whiskey to your water, clinks his glass with yours. The look you give him offers an apology. He doesnāt need it ā the words he gives you only offer kindness:
āIām sorry you had to see that too.ā
There is a lull in your conversation but itās not awkward, isnāt heavy. It feels like clearing up the space the grief used to take up. It feels a little bit like hope.
Jack clears his throat and points at the gruesome photos on your screen. āAre you even allowed to open these in public?ā
You chuckle dryly and roll your eyes. āThe caseās been all over the news because his daddy is some pop music producer. You can find the photos on TMZ.ā Then you consider him ā a night-shift doctor, a tired man, a stranger who tasted the same pain you did. āAlthough you are probably too busy for stuff like that.ā
You close your laptop with one hand, your sharp attention now all on him. Your knees brush his, and you donāt seem uncomfortable with it.
āWhat happened to you at work?ā
Jack lets out a sigh, twiddles with the black band of his watch. āGot a car crash victim. Not sure she will pull through. She also lost her husband and her baby so waking up wonāt be much of a relief either.ā
āWas there anything you didnāt do? That couldāve saved any of them?ā
āNo,ā he says without a doubt, although with sadness. āHe died on impact. She was three months pregnant, so the baby didnāt have a chance.ā
āWhich means that none of it is your fault. You didnāt kill anyone, you are actually the reason she did get a chance to live,ā you tell him calmly.
Jack shakes his head. āMaybe she wonāt.ā
āMaybe she will.ā
āYou are being optimistic,ā he argues, a tad glum.
āIām being rational. Give it a try,ā you retort.
āYes, Iām sure that some good-old rationalizing will make me feel a lot better,ā his words donāt bite, but thereās frustration in his gaze, in how he rubs the back of his neck.
āOkay, Iāll do it for you,ā and then you lean to him, one knee sliding in between his two, your perfume redolent of bergamot and jasmine, fresh and a tad sweet. Jack is dumbfounded by how close you are, how casually you do it. He makes an effort not to follow the streak of light that sneaks down your neckline. Your eyes are set firmly on him like youāre dead set on changing his whole world. He lets you.
āHow many patients did you treat this week? I donāt need the exact number, an approximate will do.ā
āI donāt know, over 40. Maybe 50.ā
āLetās say itās 45. How many of them died? Just those two?ā ā he gives you a short nod. You move an inch closer so he can hear you over the other voices that already fill the bar. āHow many of them were women of fertile age?ā
āWhat?ā he blinks with pure puzzlement, his hand going from his neck back to the counter, bumping into yours. āHow would I know that, I donāt reallyāā
āIn the US, females outnumber males by less than 1%, and about one-third of them are over 65. Which means around 16 women you treated probably can have kids,ā the space between you is shortened by another inch. āLetās say 10 of them want to and they will. Thatās at least 10 babies that will be born because you didnāt fuck up. 10 babies after just one week of you being a good doctor. 40 babies after a month and 480 in one year.ā
He doesnāt bother with the counting ā instead, he notices: the fragrance youāre wearing also has notes of peach and lilies. And your close presence and your voice make all the noise around him disappear.
āYouāre good with numbers,ā Jack says with quiet fascination.
āIām good at recognizing shitty people,ā you tell him plainly, your thumb brushing his wrist ā on accident, he thinks, but his whole arm warms up. āIāve dealt with doctors who maimed their patients like it meant nothing. Iāve seen them make the stupidest mistakes they didnāt think twice about. But if you care too much, you need to rewire your brain to make it easier to function,ā and when your palm covers his hand ā itās unmistakably intentional, it is a feeling he forgot existed: the comfort of a simple touch. āSo next time things donāt work out ā not even because of something you did, but because shit happens, ā instead of wearing sackcloth and ashes, think of the dozens of chubby babies and dozens of families you gave a chance at happiness because you did everything right.ā
You tell it to him like itās indisputable, the truth thatās carved in stone. Deep down, he is aware that heās good at what he does and bad at taking credit for it, sometimes downright refusing. But he couldnāt argue with you even if he wanted. Because Jackās struggling to get his head together ā the struggle comes from your hand still being pressed to his. And now that he knows the feeling of your skin, itās hard to act like just one touch will be enough. Like he isnāt in dire need of more.
āIāve never thought about it like that,ā Jack manages, and it isnāt a lie. The truth lies deeper: he never thought heād want someone like that, never imagined feeling so touch-starved.
āYou should. Maybe youāre single-handedly responsible for keeping this cityās population up,ā you smile at him, and itās sincere. But youāre looking at him like heās an open book and his feelings are as clear as ink on paper.
And you donāt take your hand away, and Jack can feel the pull again. He welcomes it.
āYou keep saying things like that, and it will get to my head,ā his voice gets low too ā and itās him who is leaning forward.
Your gaze isnāt wavering from his. āAnd whatās the worst thing that can happen?ā
He doesnāt waver when he says: āIāll dare to take more risks.ā
āWhat will the first one be?ā
āAsking if I can take you home.ā
You arenāt surprised and arenāt scandalized. You donāt even take time to think. āAre you suggesting I should wrap up my work session?ā
āI think you already did,ā a smile ghosts Jackās lips.
The effect whiskey had on him was fleeting. You are way more intoxicating. Your palm is at his elbow, and his pulse is racing, and for how rational and logic-driven he usually is, this time he doesnāt want to be: he thinks of taking you away from prying eyes, he thinks of kissing you, he thinks he can give one-night stands a go ā
There is a sound of sottish laughter, then something splashing and someone cursing. Not much liquid gets on your blouse but Jack gets on his foot like heās about to get into a fight. The guy who spilled his cocktail on you is too slow-witted to access the threat. You quickly put yourself between them, your hand blindly finding Jackās, your fingers on his wrist. And instantly his anger goes down by half.
The clumsy partygoer sends you a smirk. āYour man looks like he wants to say somethin'.ā
āAnd you look like someone who doesnāt want to be thrown out of the bar on a random Thursday. Keep walking,ā you tell him in a tone so cold, he sobers up, losing his smirk. The guy apologizes incoherently and darts away to blend into the crowd.
When you turn to Jack, he is already looking at you. āAre you okay?ā
āIām pretty sure it was a Mojito, and he mostly spilled the ice. It wonāt even leave a stain. Iām just gonna pay a visit to the hand dryer in the bathroom,ā you put the laptop in its slim black bag and leave a few bills on the counter. āYou probably should wait outside,ā and then your hand glides lightly over his chest, like youāre smoothing out his shirt. āWouldnāt want any drinks spilled on you.ā
And as Jack watches you walk ā each step with purpose, hips swaying ā he surely feels like he needs some air.
By now, the rain has eased, and through the thinned-out clouds he can see wisps of sunset, beads of pink and yellow. And in the chill of the approaching night, his confidence wanes just a little. Isnāt he too old for this? Arenāt you too good for him? How long has it been since he had someone in his bed? The last one he actually knows a clear answer to. Itās hardly reassuring.
Jack catches the sound of your heeled boots before you come out ā with no stain on the blouse, no hesitation in your gaze. He knows the more he waits, the less likely he is to go through with it. So he says it ā quickly, like ripping off a bandaid:
āMy apartment is just around the corner.ā
And he thinks you are about to decline. His misperception lasts for barely five seconds ā and then your face splits into a smile: not pitying, not forced, but bright like the sunlight heās been missing. Your words come out a tad pensive:
āYou know, I was having such a bad day when I came to the bar.ā
āWas?ā Jack echoes, eyes on you, all his uncertainty replaced by skin-prickling excitement. He will have you, even if only once. Because you want this, too.
āI think my night might be way better,ā you come closer as you give him confirmation: itās in your mellow gaze, in fingers raring to touch him ā they graze his arm, shoulder, base of his neck. The smile never leaves your face. āYour apartment sounds like a good start.ā
And Jack wants to kiss you so fucking badly. But not on the steps of some overcrowded bar.
Not while youāre rushing through the drizzle, and your hand catches his, and he holds onto it without thinking. Not at the bus stop where you take a break, and you soak up the fading sunshine with your eyes closed, your skin glowing, his heart skipping a beat, twice. Not in the lobby of his building you walk through hand in hand. Not in the elevator ā not even when you press the top button without asking.
āHow did you guess?ā he wonders, his gaze focused on your lips. He catches you looking at his before you give a reply.
āI just prefer the top floor, too.ā
Jack lets you in first and locks the door behind him, not in a hurry but a little bit on edge. Heās trying not to be self-conscious about every part of his apartment. You take your shoes off, your laptop and your phone left on the hinged shelf at the entrance. And then you take it all in, but you arenāt scrutinizing or perplexed or judging. You look around like itās exactly how you pictured it, like everything about his place makes sense.
The contrast of light walls and dark parquet, a small amount of furniture ā minimalistic, spotless, simple. But there is a scattering of things that catch your gaze. A stack of old CDs and a small Sony player, the plastic case already rubbed off at the corners. A tier of books with countless bookmarks tucked between the pages. A pile of med journals and printouts of studies with his jotting in the margins, a dozen multi-colored pens stacked into a whiskey glass. A coffee table that you can tell was made by hand ā black walnut wood, coarse-grained, a few tool marks around the apron. You delicately trace them with your finger in silent appreciation of his dedication and his skill. Jack barely can remember why he was even worried.
And then you step into his bedroom, and he can think of nothing else.
Itās half-dark, the floor windows left uncovered because he was in a rush to leave. You keep the lights off. You walk to where the twilight is bleeding through the glass, the hues of red and violet covering the floor. The dim light contours the collar of your blouse, the specks of silver shimmering like moonlight on the water. Jack is so mesmerized, he doesnāt catch it right away ā the way your fingers move down to the row of buttons. You turn to face him with the first one carelessly undone.
āI thought youād want to take this off yourself,ā you then unbutton the second one ā and look him in the eye. āDo you?ā
āYou canāt seriously have doubts,ā he rasps, his pupils blown wide, mouth craving yours ā or any part of you that you can give him.
Your hands stop. And then your voice drops, beckoning. āWhat are you waiting for?ā
Jack crosses the distance in a heartbeat.
Itās not a crash ā it feels like itās a fusion, your body molding perfectly against his as soon as he pulls you closer by the hips. You meet him not with hesitation but with need, your lips sure, soft, searing ā he kisses you back so fervently, it makes his head dizzy. It makes him want you more. Your every move sets fire in him, and you tend to it with skill: you grip his shirt with one hand, the other tracing up his spine ā until it settles at his nape, your fingers threading through his hair, and his breath hitches. You only pull away to give him air and guide both of his hands up to your blouse. His frail composure barely lasts another minute while he works the buttons ā until he sees your bra: thin black lace.
āYou wear this on a random Thursday?ā Jack groans, then dips his head to leave hot open-mouth kisses down your chest. He tugs at the lace slightly with his teeth, and you tug at his hair.
āTry not to tear it apart,ā you tell him, half a joke and half a warning; but your tone suggests that you wonāt mind.
His lips find yours again because he canāt stop craving them, hands wandering under your blouse as he walks you blindly to the bed. Youāre a step away, and his imagination already paints the picture ā your body naked and writhing under his mouth ā but then you grab into his clothes, maneuvering him to turn ā and in a second he is pushed onto the mattress. Time freezes for the shortest moment as you look him over, your lips parted, your fingertips skating up his cheek, and Jack leans instantly into your touch. With the same hand you bring his mouth back to yours, and now you share the same hunger: you straddle him and tug at the black scrubs and the white t-shirt he wears under, and Jack is fumbling with your bra clasp, too eager and too lost in you ā
The painās not sharp but sudden. It shoots from his knee up to the hip, and Jack flinches with a hiss, breaking the kiss.
āWhatās wrong?ā you instantly pull back, studying his face.
Jack feels blood rushing to his cheeks. He shifts uncomfortably in place. āItās my leg.ā
You look down. āWhich one?ā
He stifles an embarrassed sigh and grudgingly hitches up his right pant leg, revealing the prosthesis. āMy muscles cramp up sometimes when I bend the knee,ā Jack moves one hand down to help stretch his leg forward, the metal frame catching the light.
You keep your eyes on it as you say musingly: āOh, you are full of surprises, Dr. Abbot.ā
You make a face he canāt match to an emotion ā is it regret? Are you disappointed? Will you leave now? But then you reach your hand to where the prosthesis meets the limb and carefully trace the scarred tissue. Your touch is light at first, but slowly you apply more pressure, your thumb and middle finger massaging the sides of his leg.
āDo you need to remove it?ā you ask, not bothered in the slightest.
āNot yet,ā Jack breathes out in relief, feeling the pain and tension fading ā as is his shame.
And when he meets your gaze, you read him once again: his fears, his insecurities, everything heās used to hide and overthink. And your eyes sparkle with an intent to prove him wrong. You move your fingers up his leg, unhurriedly, unwavering, making a teasing stop to dip your thumb under the waistband of his pants. He almost bucks up his hips. You hitch his shirts up and drag over his head, then throw aside with one quick motion ā and when your fingertips skim under his navel, Jack lets out a quivering exhale. Your hands slide up his chest, his every muscle tensing under your touch, your body leaning closer inch by inch, until he feels your breath fanning his face.
Your words are quiet but they burn his mouth: āThere isnāt a part of you I donāt find hot.ā
Jack canāt think of a time he ever felt so wanted. He also canāt do much thinking when you are kissing him, your tongue darting between his lips, your hips grinding against him, and he is getting harder with each second, with each movement.
āSorry, shouldāve told you sooner,ā he mumbles when you break apart. āDidnāt want to ruin the moment.ā
Your laughter tickles in the crook between his neck and shoulder, your lips mapping a route to the hollow of his throat. And then your kisses travel higher ā the slope of his jaw, the spot behind his ear ā and he is aching to get more, and he can never get enough.
āYou canāt possibly ruin this,ā your eyes are locked on him again so he knows that you mean it. āYou barely touched me, and Iām already soaked.ā
Jack sucks in a breath. His palm moves to lay flat against your stomach, then glides behind your waistband, to where youāre waiting for his touch. He feels the wetness through the lace ā you spread your legs wider ā and he pushes the black material aside to find you slick, warm, already throbbing.
His eyes look a shade darker in the amber of the dusk. āThis all for me?ā Jack asks dazedly, his finger teasing at your entrance.
āWanna do something about it?ā you murmur.
He slips a finger in, drawing a moan from your lips ā the sound goes straight to his cock. His other hand moves to your hip, presses you into him so you can feel the bulge beneath his pants. And then Jack starts thrusting into you, precise and fast, his tentativeness melting away like ice on fire.
āHow am I doing?ā his tone teases.
And he already has his answer ā itās in the sounds you make, in how your hips are moving eagerly to meet his finger. He adds a second one and hears you gasp.
It fuels his confidence like nothing else. He leans to you a little, his voice is thick with lust. āTake the blouse off. I donāt want to ruin it.ā
Although he sounds pretty ruined himself. And you arenāt shy about reveling in it. Slowly, you let the silver fabric fall halfway down your back ā and then your fingers run over your bra and tug roughly at your nipples. Jack watches, spellbound, not blinking, as they harden under the lace.
At last, he yields to his desire since it can no longer be contained. And Jack is nothing if not ravenous for you.
He pulls your bra straps down with his teeth ā one then the other ā and then his lips are on your skin, leaving a wet trail between your breasts; he pumps his fingers in and out, and they go knuckles-deep. He adds a third, his tongue flickering over your nipple before he gives it a light bite ā and you are withering, and struggling for breath, and pleading ā yes, please, Jack, d-donāt stop ā and he can cum just from you gasping out his name. It doesnāt take much longer: he hits the right spot, not randomly but expertly, his thumb pressed to your clit, his every stroke commanding you to let go ā and you do. Your mouth falls slack and your whole body stills, like you are struck by lightning, electric currents rippling through your veins until your blood is sweltering like youāre caught on fire.
Your thighs tremble when he pulls his fingers out. And through the half-closed eyes, you watch as his tongue darts to taste your wetness that his hand is drenched in. You reach for it without warning and lick his fingers clean. Jack groans at the sight ā and then youāre swallowing that sound with your mouth. The kiss is messy, tongues and teeth ā your blouse and bra join his clothes on the floor before Jack lifts you off him and drops on onto the bed. He gets your pants and panties off, tosses aside and spreads your legs ā you are left fully naked, and he drinks you up: your skin the heat is rising off, the parts of you he is desperate to put his mouth on. He readily bends towards you, his kisses climbing higher ā from your calf to your knee to the inside of your thigh ā
āCome up,ā you whisper like an order, and he obeys with bated breath.
Your lips collide, and there is intensity that makes the world around him fade, the vestiges of his old doubts reduced to ashes. You donāt feel like a blaze that scorches and leaves marks ā no scratches on his back, no bruises where you touch him ā instead, your hands are tender. And he is melting all the same. So when you push him on his side, then on his back, and sit on top of him, Jack voices no complaints.
You arenāt hasty with his remaining clothes ā you drag the pants down first, careful around his prosthesis, curios about the traces of his past: your fingers run over the scar on his left knee, over the other on his thigh. And then your eyes move to his briefs, to the sharp outline of his cock. You pull the fabric down to free him ā thick, leaking, reddened at the tip. It takes you one ā two ā three slow strokes ā and Jack is trembling all over, his quiet exhale breaking into a low moan.
He points at the bedside table, stumbling over the words. āI forgot toā You shouldā Top drawer.ā
You find them in the bottom one ā a couple of condoms shoved into the corner like he thought theyād never be of use. You pick one, sit back on the bed, and tear the wrapper open. And then you put the condom in between your lips and teeth. You purposefully keep eye contact as you get lower ā and take him in your mouth, pushing the condom slowly over his cock. Jack flinches, and his head falls back, a loud gasp ripped from his throat.
āF-fucking hell.ā
You hollow your cheeks on your way up, then pull off and use your fingers to roll the condom down to the base. He stays still, hands clutching the sheets so hard, the lines of veins pop on his arms, his stomach muscles tense ā as is his voice. āDonāt,ā Jack pleads through gritted teeth, āI wonāt last a minute.ā
A grin touches your lips like you already knew he wouldnāt. Your hands go higher so he can take a breath. Your fingertips ghost across his chest, unspooling stiffness from his body and waiting for his reticence to vanish like dew in heat. And when it does, Jack pulls you closer by the arm, pulls you into a kiss that steals the air from your lungs and tastes like pure need. And itās a need you share.
You promptly grind your hips against his, coating his cock in your arousal, only a few quick moves before you lift your thighs and slip him inside. A shudder travels through your body as he stretches you, as he finally fills you, the pleasure so intense it stuns you both. It takes you a good minute to regain your senses. You roll your hips a couple of times and then start riding him ā and almost effortlessly, you find the rhythm that leaves Jack in raptures. It feels electrifying, all-consuming, desire flaring up his every cell, spreading down to his bones. And then youāre both aflame.
Jack sits up, hands roaming over you ā his fingers on your hips to help you move, then toying with your nipples to make you gasp. His lips are on your throat where your rugged breath mixes with moans. You try to find the words for it ā this feels s-so ā fuck, Jack, you are sooo ā but you are too overwhelmed to speak, and he is too transfixed on you to care. He feels that youāre getting close ā your pace quickens and your voice quavers, hands clinging to his shoulders for support. And he is barrelling toward his orgasm just as fast. He breathes you in and holds you tight, heat trapped between your skin and his as you are arching into him, so soft and pliant and cock-drunk.
It is the friction of your body against hisĀ that throws you over the edge ā you cry out, face buried in the curve of his neck like you are seeking shelter, unraveling so helplessly and willingly like heās the only one allowed to have you like this. And in a second the orgasm rips through Jack ā euphoric, blinding, emptying, the closest that heās ever been to ecstasy and to losing his mind.
You are both panting, limbs entangled, your chest still pressed to his.
āI think I need a moment,ā you mumble, your fingertips grazing his shoulder blades.
āYeah, same,ā Jack breathes out. āFeeling a little rusty after all these years.ā
He doesnāt register the meaning of his words until you slightly pull away. The room is slipping into darkness, but he can see emotions in your eyes, like glints of the sun setting: amazement first, too obvious to hide ā was he alone for five whole years? But then there is empathy and an unspoken gratitude ā for you being the one that he decided to let in.
You move your hand to cup his face, a smile pulling at the edges of your mouth. āYou are very far from rusty, Dr. Abbot.ā
Jack leans in first, like he canāt help it ā your lips meet his like you want nothing else. And you kiss him so softly, so unhurriedly, it is the kind of fondness that soothes wounds. When he draws back, he is suffused with peace, like all the damage heās been carrying no longer weighs on him.
Jack puts the blanket over you, up to the very shoulders, and pecks your lips. āStay right here.ā
Begrudgingly, he slides out of you and snaps off the condom, then pulls up his briefs and staggers to his feet. He finds your panties and helps you put them on, his palms following the contours of your thighs like heās appreciating art. Jack chugs some water in the kitchen, then pours you a glass ā and on his way back, he rummages through his wardrobe and drags out a clean t-shirt.
āIn case you want something to sleep in,ā he offers as you empty the glass. āI donāt know ifāā
You take the shirt without question and put it on ā and then you take his hand and pull him into bed. He lies down on his back and takes off the prosthesis, letting it slide down to the floor. You drape your arm over his chest and snuggle up to him, already heavy-eyed. You trace his shoulder with your finger, then press a small kiss on it.
āI really like your arms,ā you murmur sleepily.
He really likes holding you in these arms, Jack realizes. He is amazed at how easy it comes, of how much he doesnāt want to let you go.
And it feels ridiculous to ask but he canāt help it. āWhat about my arms?ā
He can tell by your slowing breath that you are dozing off. Still, you manage in a whisper: āThey are very... steady.ā
He thinks about asking for your phone number. And then his mind is flooded by the faded fantasies that promptly take on color: tables for two at restaurants, fresh flowers wrapped in kraft paper, your hands that fit so well in his. Jack gently brushes a stray hair from your forehead when his eye catches on his wedding ring. He looks at it for a few seconds ā but the metal band has long lost its meaning. So Jack takes the ring off and carefully turns in bed to put it in the top drawer. And then he tugs you closer, your body warm against his as he falls into the comforting embrace of sleep.
When he wakes up, the warmthās still there.
His legs are humming, but he isnāt weary, like all the tensionās been unweaved from his sore muscles. Like heās just had the best sleep in months. But when his hand moves to the side, he finds the bed empty ā and instantly heās overcome with what feels like loss, although he knows it shouldnāt. Because one-night stands arenāt supposed to last. Your scent still lingers on the pillowcase ā crisp, clean, raindrops caught in the petals at the sunrise. He turns his head to breathe it in, eyes slowly falling shut ā
And then Jack hears it.
The clinking.
The sound usually made by forks, knives, plates. The sound thatās coming from his kitchen.
Jack rubs his eyes and sits up, the remnants of his sleep dissolving in the air. He notices his clothes left neatly folded on the dresser, the prosthesis propped against his side of the bed. And his heart rushes at the thought: you did this for him. And you didnāt leave.
He gets up and gets dressed ā but his every move is quiet. Quieter than usual. It is anxiety that turns into anticipation with every step he takes to where the small noises come from. And then he walks into the kitchen like he is walking into a dream he never thought would come to life.
The place is sunlit, the bright rays sprinkling specks of gold on every surface: the metal handles of the cupboards, the scuffed edges of the chairs, the glass table, and the plates on it. And then thereās you, bathing in sunlight, legs bare and hair loose ā and his breath catches at the sight. You move around like youāve already been here, like itās a habit you just naturally follow: preparing a breakfast for him, in his kitchen, in his clothes. You are still wearing the t-shirt ā it hangs loosely around your shoulders but sits tighter at your hips. Jack thinks heād like to see all of his shirts on you.
āDid I wake you up?ā you ask without turning to him, still stirring something in the pan.
āNo,ā his voice is hoarse from sleep. His nose picks up the smells of sizzling bacon, of something frying, sweet and spicy. āI see, you found the spatula. I genuinely thought I lost it.ā
Jack hears the smile in your voice. āItās not too complicated of a system youāve got in here.ā
Is there a system? He wasnāt aware. He unintentionally says it out loud, and you laugh softly.
āI mean, I see the logic behind it. Knives in the top drawer because you use them the most. Sometimes instead of forks, Iām guessing, because the forks were pushed so deep into the second drawer, like they hadnāt seen the light in weeks. Teaspoons stored in one of your three mugs since you only use them to stir coffee. Two tablespoons were probably left there by accident ā and these are all you have, so I suspect you are no fan of soups,ā you turn the stove off and move the pan onto the metal trivet, the sun beams skimming up your legs. āI do appreciate that you store all plates and bowls in one place. Although that is the only cupboard that doesnāt creak, so I am a little bit concerned by how often you actually use your dishes. The spatula was in the frying pan, by the way.ā
Jack feels his heart swell with a feeling he is yet to name. You look at him over your shoulder as if you didnāt sort through his decades of chaos in a minute. āCome here, try this.ā
And you donāt have to ask him twice because heās always eager to cross the distance.
Jack walks closer, his chest brushing your back, arm circling around your waist. You scoop some food and bring it into his mouth. And almost instantly, involuntarily, he canāt hold back a hum of satisfaction.
āWait, what is this?ā
He sees your lips curling into a smile. āFood, Jack. Eggs and bacon and the two tomatoes that looked edible.ā
āThatās not how they usually taste.ā
You fully turn to him, another spoonful disappearing into his mouth. āEver heard of the word flavor? You do know spices exist, right?ā
He is a little torn between wanting to kiss you and stealing yet another bite. āI just use salt.ā
āI figured. Your salt container is almost empty,ā your smile grows wider. You wipe the corner of his mouth with your finger. āBut I found a jar of Taco Seasoning in your top cupboard, so I guess you have your moments of enlightenment.ā
āGot it for free when I bought a new frying pan. Half a year ago,ā and you two move as if you share an instinct: he takes you by the hips, and you step back, ass pressed against the counter ā and then you swiftly sit on it, and he stands in between your legs.
You pick a crispy bacon strip ā he bites off a half and you eat the rest. His hands stay on your thighs as you give him two more.
āWhat did you do with the bacon?ā
āI baked it,ā your phone buzzes nearby but you ignore it, instead reaching for the pan. Jack takes it, and he doesnāt bother with the plates: he feeds you scrambled eggs himself with the utmost diligence. On the fourth spoon you lean to peck his lips, and a smile breaksĀ across his face, eyes crinkling at the corners. And suddenly he is so palpably aware of how much he wants more mornings spent like this. With you.
You give him more bacon, and he canāt refuse it, your fingertips brushing his lips as he takes hungry bites. āIt feels less greasy. In a good way.ā
āBecause I didnāt add too much oil. There is already fat in bacon,ā you take the spoon from him and scrape the leftovers off the pan, maneuvering the food into his mouth before he can protest. āJust so you know, I think that not having toasted bread at breakfast is a crime. Iām only cutting you some slack because you had a tough shift.ā
Heās struggling to hide a grin. Jack drops the dishes in the sink, then moves closer to you, hands clasped around your waist. He leaves a light kiss on your shoulder.
āWhere did you learn to cook?ā
āA lot of my clients are immigrants. They often bring me meals as a thank you, and I always ask what they put in,ā you gently comb your fingers through the grey curls framing his forehead. Jack leans in, and you bump your nose into his. āNow, Iām not gonna open a Mexican restaurant anytime soon... But I do know my spices.ā
Your phone buzzes again, and when Jackās gaze falls on the screen, he reads the words out loud without a second thought.
āYou just received a file called SA (identified 14/01ā20),ā and then his smile fades. āDoes that mean sexual assault?ā
Immediately, your face changes ā from relaxed to focused: you quickly get off the counter and grab your phone. Jack manages to catch the names of two more files: 10/21ā40, 18/41ā60.
āThatās classified,ā you donāt sound angry but your tone loses its warmth.
You get another notification, your face tensing with concentration. Jack doesnāt want to interrupt but thereās an inkling tugging at his chest.
āIt must be something bad,ā he remarks.
āIt is,ā you tell him matter-of-factly, eyes on the screen. It takes a long moment for you to add. āInvolves sex trafficking. Thatās all I can say.ā
A bad feeling creeps over him like frost. Heās got no explanation for it, no real reason to ask questions. So he keeps them to himself. āSounds like a difficult case.ā
Jack isnāt sure you can hear him, your finger sliding over the screen as you keep reading, mindless of the minutes flying by. In about ten you finally look up, gaze distant, wheels in your head turning, some kind of critical decision taking shape. And then itās not exactly a relief ā but clarity that he sees in your eyes, courage and sharp resolve.
āFor almost a year it was an impossible case. Now I think Iāve got a real chance at it,ā you share with him, half a confession, half a hope. āI have to go,ā you sigh, then put the phone down and move to take the clean plates left forgotten on the table.
Jack catches your hand. āDonāt even think about it. Iāll do it.ā
He watches you run toward the bedroom, then he pensively takes the plates away. And the unnerving questions keep swarming his head: how dangerous exactly is your job? Are there any safety measures you should take? Do you? Itās probably not his place to ask. It doesnāt make him any less concerned.
He looks at the jar of Taco Seasoning. He thinks of you folding his clothes, easing his fears. Of your laugh brushing his shoulder. Of how easily you fit everywhere in his life, like you are the only part that heās been missing. He really should ask for your number.
You run back fully dressed ā the pants you look sinfully good in, the blouse glistening like liquid silver. Your collarbones peek through, and Jack wants to place a kiss on each.
āYouāre now out of mouthwash, so hereās a reminder,ā you place a post-it note on his fridge, a few words you wrote in cursive. āAnd I almost forgot my phone.ā
You rush to take it, you are just about to leave. But then you turn on your heels and quickly walk back to Jack, eyes on his mouth ā until your lips are too. The kiss is soft for barely a second ā and then itās hot and deep, and Jackās mind instantly goes blank.
āDonāt forget youāre the best doctor in town,ā you smile against his mouth.
You walk out, and heās left standing in the kitchen, wrapped up in pure bliss. His lips still tingle from the kiss, his body warm all over, the time melting away under the bright sunlight. But soon the realization cuts through his oblivion like a knife through cotton:
he didnāt get your number.
He has no clue where to find you.
Jack literally facepalms himself. And unsurprisingly, he doesnāt find you outside when he runs out of his flat, out of the building. And there are no crumbs that he can follow. Of course, he goes back to the bar ā you paid in cash, no card info, they didnāt even ask for your ID. The bartender assures that youāve never visited before. When Jack learns there are over 7000 lawyers in Pittsburgh, it feels like a lost cause. But heās not used to giving up so fast. So he spends his free time searching the web: he googles law firms in the area, looks through the countless photos on their sites. And every time heās in his kitchen, he stares at the blue note left on the fridge:
Buy a mouthwash (and some bread. Carbs are good for you!)
He buys both. One of his pillows smells like you, and he sleeps on the other; your perfume fades in 11 days. And in two weeks his hope starts fading too. He does attempt to look for the bright side of things ā now he has something to remember, a reassurance that he isnāt too old for trying something new ā but all the memories inevitably lead to one conclusion: he doesnāt want to try again. He just wants you.
And maybe there is a slim chance that you will come back to the bar, Jack tells himself. He goes there in his free evenings, his order boringly the same: just water, but throw some ice and lemon in. The bartender takes pity on him and doesnāt charge him half the time. And Jack keeps looking through the faces on the streets, in the ER, even while heās driving down the road.
But never in a million years he expected this.
The people heās surrounded with also find your current situation unexpected. You look up at them, gaze filled with the same unswerving perseverance. Your tone carries just the right amount of sharpness:
āDoesnāt E in the ER stand for emergency? Can we move?ā
You donāt see him yet. Jack still canāt look away.
LangdonĀ comes to his senses first. He grabs fresh gloves and rushes to you. āOkay, what am I looking at?ā
You glance at him like he is looking stupid.
āGunshot wounds. We stopped the bleeding from his leg, about 30 minutes ago. But the other one was worse, blood started spurting everywhere. And you canāt put a tourniquet over the chest. So I improvised.ā
Frank quirks a brow. āAnd your first instinct was to stick your fingers in him?ā
āYou want me to remove them?ā
āDo not!ā Robby firmly cuts in. āDr. Langdon just poorly phrased his appreciation for your quick thinking,ā he glowers at him. Then finally, they wheel away the gurney you are on. āLetās take you to trauma#1.ā
Your shoulders fall a little ā just enough for Jack to notice, your free hand holding tight toĀ one of the side rails. He reads it in your body language: the tension from the inconvenient position, the stress of not knowing what happens next. As you pass by, for only a brief moment your eyes meet. And itās pathetic how much he cares what you think. If you remember him. If youāve been reliving that one night too. He discerns glimmers in your gaze ā of recognition and surprise, of what he dares to believe is joy ā
but then you break eye contact. And Jack follows you with zero hesitation.
The manās blood pressure plummets on your way to the room. When you are all in, Robby does his best to navigate the turmoil:
āThe bullet mustāve nicked an artery. We might need to open him up.ā
āTheyāll do that in the OR. If he lives for that long,ā Frank says while intubating.
āShouldnāt you take the bullet out?ā Jesse is putting an IV line in.
āWhat are his chances?ā you ask quietly. They donāt hear it, but Jack does. Heās standing at the doors, eyes darting from the patientās vitals back to you. The one person that he cares for is not the injured man.
āWe donāt have time to look for a bullet. Once she takes her hand out, heāll bleed out within 5 minutes,ā Frank notes grimly.
Robby is looking at the ultrasound image on the screen: heart and lungs miraculously unharmed. āThen we have 5 minutes to clamp the artery.ā
āIt can also be 2. We donāt know how much blood he lost,ā Frank glances at the gurney doused with crimson. āMy guess is that itās a lot.ā
āDo you have anything to offer apart from your pessimism? Weāll clamp the artery and hook him to another blood bag, thatās the plan.ā
āAnd if he goes into cardiac arrest?ā
āIs that a serious question?ā
āWe canāt use a D-fib while her hand is in.ā
āThen sheāll take it out, thatās not exactly a complicated process.ā
āDo we know if heās a donor? Because chances are that āā
āHe canāt die!ā you snap, and thereās so much emotion in your voice, the room goes quiet for a moment.
Jack steps closer, then grabs a gown and gloves on autopilot, but his gaze is riveted to you. Youāre only looking at the man who very much is on the verge of dying.
āHeās got a family. Heās been married since 22, she is the love of his life, they have two kids ā both miracle babies, a boy and a girl, and they love them to pieces. And he knew that testifying publicly would be dangerous ā but he still agreed. He said what if that was my baby, what if someone did that to her? How can I stay silent?ā you recollect ruefully but your words are measured. āHe canāt die. Not just because I have my whole case built on his testimony but because he was brave enough to do the right thing when no one else wanted to. I canāt let him die for that. Please, you have to do something.ā
āDamn, I wish you were my lawyer,ā Frank blurts out.
And you answer in an instant, not even looking at him. āDeal.ā
ā... Really?ā
āSave him, and Iāll help any of you, doesnāt matter whatās it about. I take cases pro bono, so it will be one of those.ā
LangdonĀ narrows his eyes as if he doesnāt buy it, his voice a mix of skeptical and wry. āCan I have that in writing?ā
If looks could cut, Frank wouldāve been hemorrhaging on the floor. You glance at him from under your brows, your stare is withering and sharp, a blade thatās glowing red. His face changes like heās regretting everything he said. And Jack canāt stop the thought: you can be drenched in blood and fuming ā and he still wonāt look at anybody else.
āMy hands are a little busy at the moment,ā you tell Frank dryly. āBut you have my word. Now the ball is in your field.ā
Jack makes a step to you. āYou are into soccer?ā
When your gaze darts to him, it isnāt cutting ā but more so daring. āIām into winning.ā
āMakes two of us,ā Abbot notes smoothly.
Robbyās eyes move from you to Jack, like he can glimpse something he doesnāt know what he should call. Frank looks between you like heās connecting two big dots barely an inch apart. He bites back a smirk.
The monitors get loud as the man goes into cardiac arrest. Robby immediately pushes the ultrasound machine away. āYou need to remove your hand now.ā
āIāll help her down,ā Jack rushes up to you, and you watch as the others cut off the manās clothes, preparing defibrillator pads, an intubation tube, clean cloths.
When theyāre ready, Robby grabs a hemostat ā and steps close. āOkay, move.ā
You take your fingers out ā Jack hooks his arm around your waist and swiftly drags you backward. Your legs tingle from the rush of blood, your feet a little bit unsteady when you stand. Jackās palm lays firmly at your lower back, his voice quiet.
āYou alright?ā
You freeze for a few seconds, staring straight ahead ā at the blood pouring, staining the skin, the metal pads, the gurney ā the D-fib is charged once ā twice ā electric shocks sent to the heart. Then Jesse charges the machine again ā and on the third attempt the loud beeping gives way to a more measured sound. The intricacies of dealing with a bleed are left to your imagination because you canāt see anything from behind the doctors' backs.
You slowly turn to Jack, as if youāre still thinking over the answer to his question. You canāt come up with a reply concise enough to fit all of your feelings in. You just nod ā he doesnāt push for more, his hand on you drawing small circles.
āThe bathroom is down the hall to your left. You can hang out at the nurse station while heās in here.ā
You look down at your blooded shirt, then at your palms. āDo you think heāll make it?ā you ask him in a whisper, unprompted, knowing full well that he wonāt lie.
And Jack doesnāt.
āAt his age and with how much blood he lost, it is a miracle heās still alive. Which I think means heās actually got a chance. If they manage to stabilize himāā
Robby half-turns to look at him. āJack, we really need an extra pair of hands here!ā and thereās an urging in his voice, a red splatter on his gown.
āGuess now Iām a part of the saving team,ā Abbot mumbles, changing gloves again, wishing he could give you more ā if not a promise then at least some hope.
Surely, Jackās had his fair share of cases more unhopeful ā heās usually good at keeping a cool head, heās skilled enough to keep his nerves in check. And yet, he feels a pinprick of anxiety: this case is different because he canāt allow himself to fail you.
But when Jack glances at you, the look you give him is not expectant ā itās encouraging. āSeems like his chances just got better,ā you manage a small smile. āIāll let you get to work.ā
Him being able to shift focus to the patient is actually another miracle. And work he does: there is more blood because the arteryās too fragile ā they change the clamps, they try the wound packing; itās equally unhelpful. Jack ends up sticking his own fingers in while Robby calls Garcia. She shows up not only quickly but also uncharacteristically excited.
Yolanda flips open anĀ instrument container she brought in. āAortic hydragrip clamps, theyāre gentler. Should work,ā then she sees Jack and chuckles. āOf course, youād be the one to clamp it with your hand. Just like in the good old military days?ā
āCanāt say Iāve missed those,ā Abbot remarks, and he is void of bitterness: the military did give him plenty of experience so itās not something he regrets. But he is honest when he says he doesnāt want to go back.
And neither does he want any memories to pop up, so Jackās mind hooks on the task that calls for his attention. They move with coordination honed over the years: he takes his hand out ā Robby goes in with the clamp ā Jack takes the second one ā the ruptured artery is occluded in barely 20 seconds. They watch it for 10 more to make sure no more blood is coming out.
Robby allows himself a sigh of relief while Jesse suctions the excessive blood. Langdon inspects the leg wound: the bullet went right through, the boneās intact. He checks the tourniquet ā good placement, tight enough, so he just leaves it on.
Garcia comes closer, with an unbothered kind of curiosity, like a catās. āI heard the man made quite an entrance.ā
Frank huffs. āYou shouldāve seen his lawyer.ā
āThe one in the blooded shirt? Oh, yeah, sheās hard to miss,ā Yolanda smirks, dark eyes darting to you.
Jack canāt stop himself from looking in the same direction. Youāre in the hall talking to Dana, your hands folded over your chest. The blood on you dried up; still, it strikes the eye ā a big splotch of dark maroon on the white fabric, and every time Jack looks at you, it startles him a little.
āWhat now?ā he asks. Mostly to make Garcia stop staring at you.
She does, her gaze on the unconscious man again. And her decision-making process is rather quick. āSuture the origin of the artery with pledgets on the aortic wall, then do a bypass between the ascending aorta and the subclavian. For the anastomosis, Iām thinking a termino-lateral type would do the job.ā
Itās rare for Frank to be impressed by someone, yet his tone suggests that he most definitely is. āYou can do all that?ā
She stares him down silently. Then she looks at Robby. āYou shocked him how many times? Twice?ā
āThree times. 11 units of blood used so far.ā
āThis is one hell of a lucky man if Iāve ever seen one,ā she notes, then looks down at her pager. āThe OR will be ready in 5. Check the clamps again, I donāt want him to bleed out in the elevator. Iāll go talk to the lawyer and bring her up in the ICU. Weāve got a room for him so she can wait there.ā
She turns to leave, and LangdonĀ glances after her, then mutters, mostly to himself. āWhy does everyone keep giving me weird looks today? Like Iām saying something stupid.ā
āItās because you are,ā Garcia snickers before going through the doors.
Robby and Jesse check the vitals and the instruments' position, but Jack only catches bits of their conversation ā because heās watching you again: you listen carefully to Garciaās explanation, the concern on your face dissolving slowly. But not entirely ā it would be too soon for that. Garcia walks you to the elevators and out of Jackās sight; still, his eyes stay on the spot you stood at.
He wishes that he was the one to talk to you. And he wishes he could do much more.
Jack comes back to reality when he catches movement ā the gurney being wheeled out of the room.
āWait, I can āā
āNo, itās fine, Iāll ride up with him,ā Robby assures. āYour shift ended hours ago, just go get some rest, man.ā
Jack needs no persuasion ā he all but runs out, removes the gown and gloves, then goes to the staffās kitchen. Heās out in five minutes but he stops at the stairs as an idea lits up in his head. Jack walks back to the lockers, unlocks his and takes out a spare clean shirt. He has to slow down then, imagining the likely steps: it takes a minute to get to the upper floor and get you to the right room; a few more minutes for you to ask more questions while the man is being prepped. The surgery will takeĀ at least 2 hours ā he doesnāt want to waste a second of that time.
Jack finds you sitting in the hall, typing away at your smartphone, fidgeting slightly in your chair. And his determination is diluted with unease ā should he interrupt you? Would you even want to chat? He tells himself that he can manage some small talk, that itās not a big deal. Heās good at this.
Jack walks toward you, trying not to give away his haste. āSo, do you stick your fingers into all of your clients?ā
You turn to him, your face swept with confusion.
Oh no. He isnāt good at this at all.
āFuck, sorry. I donāt why I said that, it was āā
And then you laugh. Itās quiet, more so a sound of relief, a little bit amused by him. But you arenāt irritated or displeased.
āBelieve it or not, that was my first time. And hopefully, the last.ā
Jack takes your calm voice as a good sign. Almost instinctively, he sits right next to you, as if the very thought of putting any distance in between you is downright absurd.
āCoffee. Figured youād need it,ā he hands you a plastic cup, and your fingers brush his when you take it.
And Jack is painfully aware that the brown-colored drink hardly tastes great. But you take sips with zero fuss.
āA caffeine IV wouldāve been great, but this is the next best thing. Thank you so much,ā your gaze warms up. Then it drops to the piece of clothing he is holding.
āI thought maybe youād like to change into something that isnāt drenched in blood? I keep a clean t-shirt in case I get some fluids on me. Itās not the most fashionable choice, I knowāā
You take it before he even finishes the sentence ā your thumb gently brushing the folded cotton fabric, your face breaking into a grateful smile. Jackās eyes are drawn to it, and he remembers so distinctly how your lips taste. And you look like you know he does.
āWish I could put it on right now. But Iām counting on my blooded shirt to make me look more intimidating to the DA. Once he wakes up and deigns to text me back.ā
Jack moves closer, lowering his voice like heās protective of a secret you are about to let him in on. āWhat do you need the DA for?ā
Your smile widens as if you find his curiosity endearing. āI need to get Bruno into witness protection. DAās recommendation will help speed up the process.ā
āWill the prosecutor back you up on this?ā
āHe passed out in the court at the sight of blood. Heāll back me up just fine.ā
āSo whatās the overall plan?ā he drapes an arm across the back of your chair. You donāt mind.
āIām Brunoās legal representative, I can apply for the program on his behalf. Theyāll also need his family to complete an application form. So once the DA gives me the green light, I have to make a beeline for the closest police station, then dash to their apartment, deal with the paperwork, and help his wife pack. Maybe she can visit him once heās out of surgery.ā
āShe must be pretty shaken up,ā Jack muses.
You reign your feelings well but he still catches hints of them: sadness, disappointment. Guilt. āThe worst part is, she didnāt even sound surprised when I called her. Wasnāt upset with me either. She just asked, Will he pull through? And I had to make her believe that he would.ā
He moves his hand up, his palm grazing your back, words sitting on the tip of his tongue: itās not your fault, you arenāt the one to blame. You helped to save his life. But you shake off your misery, so easily like itās a long-established habit.
āHowās your tough case, by the way? Did she wake up?ā
You are deflecting, he can tell. He also has no wish to make you more upset so Jack holds back his consolations.
āShe did, got her discharged a week ago. And the rehabilitation seems to be going well.ā
Your grin very clearly says I told you so but you donāt say the words out loud. Instead, you place your hand above his knee ā the right one, your touch not fleeting but reassuring and warm. The smile leaps out of him before he can stop it. āHowās the asshole with no brain cells?ā
You let out a long-drawn sigh. āHe fled the state. Which was a violation of the bail conditions. Then his attorney tried to flee, got wasted on the flight to CincinnatiĀ ā one of the CBP officers clocked him at the airport because he kept dropping his carry-on. Turns out, he snuck in a hunting knife, a whole-ass 6-inch blade. And then he got into a fight with them. Mind you, he is 5ā3 and had a half-bottle of whiskey in him. I canāt even begin to comprehend that level of dumbassery. I had to visit him in jail four times before the court assigned a new lawyer to replace him. I donāt want to board another plane for at least a month.ā
Jack doesnāt say anything at first, but his mouth twitches like heās suppressing laughter. And then he can discern something unlooked-for in your face ā the very evident abashment. āSorry, I didnāt mean to vent.ā
He leans to you and caresses your back. He wishes he could kiss you ā on your forehead and cheeks and corners of your mouth, to smooth out every line of worry on your face. So that you donāt hesitate to open up again.
āWasnāt a vent,ā Jack argues. āI am actually very invested now. How did he manage to bring a knife on board?ā
āBribed a couple of nut heads from the PIT security,ā you share gladly. āI asked him, Man, ever heard about checked baggage? Who in their right mind puts knives in a carry-on? And he told me ā dead serious ā that TSA is infiltrated by a gang of international smugglers, so he canāt trust them.ā
āOf course you asked,ā Jack notes warmly.
āI mean, heās absolutely useless as a lawyer, at least I had something to laugh at. Besides, the Boone county jail can easily rank first in the list of the dullest places in the States.ā
āSo itās the lack of brightness thatās the main problem, not that itās packed with criminals,ā Jack shakes his head in disbelief. āWorrying about you must be someoneās part-time job.ā
You are startled for a moment. And then youāre beaming. āIs this you casually trying to find out if I have a boyfriend?ā
āGuilty as charged,ā Jackās hand stops at your back, his gaze a cautious revelation. āBut I donāt do casual.ā
āNeither do I,ā you tell him quietly, resting your chin on his shoulder. āAnd I wouldāve never come to your apartment if I had anyone waiting for me at home.ā
Your faces are separated by some minuscule inches. This is your second meeting ā and yet, to Jack it comes as second nature: holding you close and leaning in, settling into your space as easily as you do in his, like two stars that fall into each otherās orbit. His hand is on your waist and yours moved to his shoulder; he can smell blood on you but then your scent cuts through ā jasmine and bergamot and peaches, things they donāt have in hospitals, the fresh sweetness that makes him think of spring and sun. And everywhere you touch him, he feels lighter. In just a second his lips will be on yoursā
Someone blows into the hall ā very decisive and walking toward you, by the sound of it ā but stops midway, so suddenly you hear screeching of the rubber soles against the floor. Then the footsteps retreat, and everything is quiet again, no other visitors or interferences. And yet, the momentās gone. Jack canāt hold back a groan. You bring your fingers to his face, your thumb skating over his jaw, your body still so close to his. But your watchful eyes dart behind his back.
āThe redhead keeps coming back like sheās looking for an excuse to start a conversation. What does she need a lawyer for?ā
āThatās Cassie. Sheās in the middle of a custody battle over her son. Her ex-husband is a douchebag with a douchebag girlfriend, so itās messy.ā
You look at Jack again. āAnd whatās the deal with that other doctor? Dark-haired, overly confident. Mildly annoying.ā
āFrank,ā he chuckles, his index finger drawing numbers on your lower back. āHis marriage is in shambles, been like that for a while. But Abby loves him, and heās not a bad dad. If it ever gets to a divorce, I donāt think sheāll take the kid away from him.ā
You ruminate on this but not for long. āCan you please tell Cassie that I wonāt bite her head off?ā
Jack doesnāt want to move away from you so he only tilts his head back, not in disbelief but in careful wonder. āYouāll help her?ā
And he can tell from your firm gaze that you arenāt doing this to please him ā you want that case, you are already going through the strategies and options in your head, you grab at every chance to help people like hungry dogs grab bones. āI have about half an hour before the DA gets out of bed. Plenty of time for her to give me the details. Besides, I really enjoy going against douchebag exes.ā
āWhy is that?ā Jack asks with a grin.
You shamelessly grin back at him. āThey usually come with douchebag lawyers. Itās always fun to kick their ass in court.ā
And as on cue, there are footsteps again ā your face confirms itās the same visitor, and Jack gives in: itās for a good cause, after all, and he will get more time with you later today. His palm brushes the side of your waist, one touch replacing all the words he is afraid to say too soon: Iāve missed you, I want to spend many more days with you. He has to get up, holding back a sigh, before his feelings burst out. Jack turns around ā and, unsurprisingly, Cassie is standing sheepishly at the end of the hall.
āSorry, did I interrupt you guys?ā she asks him with an awkward smile when he comes closer. āCause it seemed likeāā
āJust go talk to her,ā he grumbles. When she doesnāt move, Jack softens his approach. āSheāll be happy to help you out, McKay.ā
Cassieās smile turns grateful, and then she strides across the hall to you. Jack offers you some privacy and takes the stairs to the ER. And even though exhaustion is already nipping at him, heās in no hurry to go home, he doesnāt even feel the weight of it. He also doesnāt notice Danaās gaze that lands on him when he comes in. Heās blithely unaware for about 15 minutes ā Jack gets himself a cup of coffee, relaxes in the quiet of the empty kitchen, stretches his legs and arms.
Dana walks up to him the second he comes back to the nurse station.
āNow, will look at that. A smile on your face? I must be dreamin',ā she teases, always astute in her assumptions. āItās the hot lawyer, isnāt it?ā
Heās battling a smile, indeed. āIām not having this conversation with you.ā
āWell, you see how my mouthās moving? This means Iām talking, and you are giving me replies. Which does sound like a conversation to me,ā Dana playfully bumps his shoulder. āHey, she ticks all the boxes: smart, brave, stubborn. Did I mention that sheās hot?ā
Jack doesnāt meet her gaze as his face gets warm. āCanāt argue with any of that.ā
Princess peeks curiously at them from behind the monitor. Dana cackles. āJesus, are you blushing? Thatās so cute. Iām marking this day in my calendar.ā
āWhat are we celebrating?ā Perlah swings by.
āDr. Abbot apparently got himself a date,ā Princess reveals, wiggling her brows.
āWith the lawyer? And she agreed?ā Perlah asks in a doubtful tone.
āFrank said they were flirting in the trauma room,ā Dana informs them conspiratorially, earning two hums of approval ā and one groan from Jack.
āAre you aware Iām still here? Langdon has no clue what heās talking about,ā but his voice doesnāt sound angry ā heās in too good of a mood for that.
āI hear someone spreading slander behind my back,ā Frank stops by.
āItās hardly slander when youāre an asshole,ā Princess glares at him. āOnly a senile patient would flirt with you.ā
āIs this open hostility at a workplace?ā he fakes a gasp. āI donāt need anyone to flirt with me, Iām married. And if youāre talking about the lawyer, she surely seemed thrilled to leave this place.ā
Both Jack and Dana look at him. She is the one who asks. āWhatās that supposed to mean?ā
āJust saw her at the parking lot. She ran out and got into a cab so fast, like someoneās chasing her. Or maybe she is chasing someone? Wouldnāt put it past her.ā
āWell, no chasing needed for our cowboy,ā Dana chuckles with her gaze on Abbot. āDid you choose where youāll take her? Want me to ask around for recommendations so you can text her a couple of options?ā
Jack wants someone to smack him in the head, hard. Because he surely needs to straighten up his mind. Not asking for your number the first time could be blamed on a lapse of sanity, but two times in a row? Thatās what you would call a rare level of dumbassery.
As Dana sees his face fall, her own gets visibly confused ā then shocked upon realization. āWhat, you donāt have her number?ā
And everyone instantly mirrors her concern.
āYou didnāt take it?ā
āWhy wouldnāt you?ā
Jack is flabbergasted for a second. āWhy is this a public discussion?!ā
āMan, we were rooting for you!ā Langdon throws up his hands.
āThey were placing bets on how long itād take you to get her number,ā Dana snorts.
āThey,ā Frank mimics her. āAs if you werenāt!ā
Jack wearily covers his face with both palms, not in despair but with disappointment. In himself. Thereās still some hope for him to cling to ā theyāve got Bruno up in the OR, and you will probably come back to visit him. That was your plan, right? And what will his be if you never show up?
āWhat are we mourning over?ā Robby nonchalantly comes by.
āMy loss of 100 bucks,ā Frank walks away, disgruntled.
āI only bet 15, youāre real bad at counting!ā Dana shouts after him. Then she gives a joyless explanation. āNo one won, though.ā
Jack looks at Robby through his fingers. āWere you involved in this too?ā
āNah. I said youād probably need a third chance.ā
Abbot lowers his hands, brows furrowed in incomprehension.
āOne of the ICU nurses saw you two getting all cozy with each other,ā Robby keeps his voice down but still elicits a few giggles. He stares at Perlah and Princess, and they pretend to get back to work. āI figured you wouldnāt do that on day one. So there must be some history between you. And you know what they say, third timeās the charm,ā he pats Jackās shoulder reassuringly. āDo you at least know the name of her law firm?ā
He is already taking lungfuls of air for a heavy sigh ā because of course he didnāt ask about the firm, he is the top contender for the dumbass of the month award ā but then the elevator dings. And Cassie walks into the hall, cheery as she hasnāt been in months.
Abbot gets an idea. And now he has more than a delusive hope.
āI know where I can find it out.ā
McKay doesnāt take much convincing. She tells him that you gave her your assistantās number ā itās not the answer he expected, but Jackās grasping for straws. He makes the call with no delays, and the assistant picks up almost instantly. Sheās got a thick accent that isnāt American, the vowels in her speech sound a little shorter. But her English is pretty good and so are her manners ā because no one before has told Jack to fuck off so courteously. Whatever arguments he brings to get your number, she just refuses to relent: yes, sir, I understand the urgency. But you must know itās private information, and I cannot verify your identity over the phone. Yes-yes, Iāll check the hospital website. But your photo doesnāt come with a voice recording, does it? That is unfortunate. You see, we really value our attorneys' privacy and safety. And thereās been a disturbing accident... Which I canāt talk to you about. Yes, I will let her know you called. I promise, sir. Yes, Iāll tell her that you called four times, that is an important detail, indeed.
And Jack is back to square one ā still no clue where to find you, no last name and no address he can look up on Google. Bruno stays in their ICU for just one afternoon, and then Jack comes to work to learn he was transported to the other hospital ā by helicopter and with a police escort that was too tight-lipped and fast to bother. Which robs Jack of the only hope he had, and he is too worn out to drown himself in work. So he takes two days off, gets eight hours of sleep, gets busy with mundane chores that make for a poor distraction.
His doorbell rings around 6 pm. Heās not expecting anyone ā Robby is still at work, and a few other friends heās got wouldāve announced their visit. So Jack thinks someone mustāve gotten the wrong door, and he opens it without even looking in the peephole.
Instead of seeing some unbidden stranger, he sees you.
Youāre standing at the door of his apartment. Wearing his shirt. The dark material is tucked carefully into your jeans, your hair undone. You greet Jack with a smile, a little tired and leaning on his doorframe.
āYou made a lasting impression on my secretary.ā
He has to take a breath and blink ā once, twice ā to make sure this is happening. There is a trace of a smile already on his face, he just canāt stop it. āYou mean she was planning on filing a police report because she thinks Iām stalking you?ā
āActually, she liked you from the moment she figured youāre a doctor. Keeps asking if you are married or not.ā
Jack puts his left hand up to show you ā readily, happily, like he removed the curse thatās been tormenting him for years. āIām not.ā
And you see that he isnāt wearing the ring. He never put it back on ā by now, thereās no mark left where it used to be, the white line faded with no trace. You watch his face for any hints of doubt or regret but he has none. The hint he gives you suggests the opposite: Jack steps back in a silent invitation, makes space for you to come in. To come back to.
You donāt rush in although it does look like you want to. Instead, youāve got a suggestion of your own.
āI feel like I know more about you than you know about me. So ask me something. Anything, whatever you want to know,ā your gaze is locked with his. āBefore I come in.ā
Because after you do, there will not be much talking. Not for the first few hours, Jack thinks. And he will gladly take ten times as long as to find out everything there is to know about you ā heāll take days, weeks, months, years. He is already sure there is nothing that can scare him away.
So what he asks about is not a deal-breaker ā more so a mystery Jack canāt wrap his head around.
āHow the hell are you still single?ā
Itās not a hard question, and itās the truth that you donāt shy away from ā as easily as he once did, you open up to him, with honesty that he can read in your voice, eyes, face.
āI work a lot. There are always extra hours, sleepless nights, late calls from my clients who have no one else to talk to. Iām bad at taking breaks. I am... not good at asking for help. And I guess Iām used to prioritizing work because thatās what Iām left with when people leave. Not everyone will have the patience for that,ā you try for your smile not to look sad but itās the first thing that you fail at. āSo Iām a handful.ā
Heās quiet for barely two seconds. Then his lips curl into a grin.
āWell, Iāve got two hands. And some say that my arms look very steady,ā he takes a step to you, and now instead of sadness, thereās glee ā in your soft laugh and in your eyes that stay on him. āI will need one thing from you, though. Before you come in,ā another step, so that heās standing right in front of you. āI need your number.ā
āGive me your phone.ā
He does ā you add the number to his contacts, then dial it so you can have his too. You hand his phone back, still smiling. āThere you have it.ā
āI plan on memorizing it,ā Jack takes a quick look at the screen and then puts the device away.
He needs his hands free, he has no other words to add. He cannot tear his gaze away from you.
āAny other questions or requests?ā you ask him quietly.
Jack shakes his head. And then itās you who finally crosses the distance.
He reaches out a hand behind your back to close the door. As soon as you hear the locker click, that same hand pulls you into him. And then he kisses you ā so ardently and deeply like heās famished, like in your absence he struggled to survive. You let him take the lead ā itās your quiet surrender, itās his most rewarding win; he savors it until youāre out of breath. Then you kick off your shoes, and Jack yanks off your t-shirt ā you stop his hands and fold the piece of clothing and leave it on the first flat surface you can find ā you arenāt sure if itās a table or a shelf because heās kissing you again, all the while you are stumbling your way through his apartment.
Jack does pause when you reach the bedroom ā the city skyline stretched out behind the windows, the light already darkening from gold to copper as the evening comes. The rays cascade across the floor and walls ā you are admiring the view, and heās admiring you. Itās soft before itās sexual: he lowers his head and drags his lips over your collarbone, then over another one. Then he moves higher ā your throat, your jaw, your cheek.
āYouāre staying,ā he murmurs.
And even though itās not really a question, you nod, fingers grazing the back of his neck. āSorry for coming empty-handed. I shouldāve brought some take-out.ā
Jack moves one of his hands down to the button on your jeans, undoes it, two of his fingers slipping in, tracing the line of your lace panties. He didnāt get a chance to taste you last time, and now heās twice as eager. āYou brought me dessert.ā
You laugh against his mouth and take his shirt off, your touches gentle but leaving goosebumps on his skin, making his heart race. He lays you down on his bed to get rid of your jeans, his voice muffled when he leaves a kiss on your hipbone.
āAnd breakfast is on me this time. Itās non-negotiable.ā
You prop yourself up on your elbows. āYou are saying thereās actual food in your fridge?ā
āA terribly big amount of food. Also picked a bunch of spices from the Mexican aisle, and I have no clue how to use half of them,ā his mouth comes back to yours, back to his new favorite flavors: of your lips, your smile, your moans he knows how to draw out. And you are both left breathless and desirous of more.
āSo you were counting on us meeting again?ā you tease.
āI was hoping for it,ā Jack says truthfully. āGot pretty close to praying, actually.ā
Pads of your fingers glide across his cheekbone. āYou donāt strike me as a religious type.ā
He doesnāt answer right away ā but not out of hesitation or the lack of words. He doesnāt need many. Heās known the answer ever since he saw you in his kitchen, heās been carrying his feelings for so long that now heās threaded with them like the night sky with bright stars.
Jack tells you with raw candor, with a faint smile. āIām not. But I believe you are a godsend.ā
You trace the freckles under his left eye, your whisper and your gaze are filled with tenderness. āI kept thinking of an excuse to show up at your apartment.ā
He lowers his face closer to yours and turns to place a soft kiss on your wrist, his hazel eyes with hints of green spilling more of his secrets: they say that heās been looking for you everywhere. Then Jack speaks with words.
āI kept thinking I was a fucking idiot for not getting your number,ā and his mouth hovers over yours before he adds, his voice hushed as if heās still not fully convinced he has you. āI want to take you out.ā
Jack looks at the specks of gold caught in your lashes and your eyes, the sunlight streaming through the glass, your bodies and his bedroom bathing in it. He feels his heart pounding.
āAm I being too old-school for askiāā
You close the gap between you, and this kiss is better than a dream: it feels like finding gravity and oxygen, like summer coming after years of winter, like now instead of hope thereās certainty, a future that is bright with possibilities. When Jack opens his eyes, he finds you smiling, and youāre brimming with it ā the undeterred fondness, the warmth that says that youāve been looking for him too.
āIād love to go on a date with you, Jack Abbot.ā
And he knows it will be just the first of many.
youād never be able to tell but this was supposed to be porn with no plot... which I am apparently fcking incapable of. ā” PART 2: āunleashedā
two gifsets that inspired this fic: x, x ā”
SHOCKINGLY, Iām almost done with another Jack one-shot, and oh my god, I love it to pieces. reading it feels like a gut punch but in the best way possible. I canāt wait to share it ā”
MY MASTERLIST
dividers by @/cafekitsune, @/saradika-graphics & me.
ā” English is not my first language, so feel free to tell me if you spot any mistakes. comments and reblogs are very appreciated! let me know if you want to be tagged ā”
pairing: Jack Abbot x ex!reader
summary: you and Jack broke up a year ago ā it was so painful, you barely recovered. when you meet again at the Pitt Fundraiser, youāre dead set on keeping your distance. he is dead set on getting you back. (or, alternatively: Jack on his knees. thatās it.)
warnings: š Jack going from emotionally unavailable to emotionally vulnerable (thanks to Robby and therapy); mentions of hand tremor and grieving; angst and LOTS of longing; sprinkle of jealousy; heated argument in the rain, explosive love confession. smut (oral, fingering, unprotected piv). NO DESCRIPTIONS OF THE READER / words: 20K / authorās note: I saw the āpick your tropesā tag game on my dashboard, and the choice was between ābreak up & make up or proposal & weddingā. no one tagged me, so I had to write a whole-ass fic about my pick. I am chill like that ā” {read on AO3} ā” MASTERLIST
This pain feels like a whirlpool, a current that drags him right down to the bottom. It doesnāt take much to provoke it ā he only needs a glimpse: of your shirt hanging in his closet, your blue mug in the kitchen cupboard, your scarf still tucked into the pile of his winter clothes. You didnāt leave too many things behind for him to hold on to. He didnāt leave you any choice.
Jack was the sole reason you had to pack your bags and get out of the apartment in tears and in such haste, you couldnāt care less what he was left with. And he can never blame you because it was entirely his fault.
He wishes that he had a valid motive, some kind of explanation to make his actions justified. Him being held at gunpoint, you being forced to cut ties for your safety, a prophecy that said you two being together would bring death to every living thing. But no threats or foretelling were involved in his decision-making. If only Jack could see into the future, he wouldāve never let you go. And he wouldnāt be standing here alone, his hands unsteady and fixing the tie for the tenth time as people rush past him, in an astir flow of dresses and tuxedos going up the stairs. He doesnāt pay attention to the noise, faces, and colors. Jack thinks about the conversation he and Robby had the day before, three sentences the messaging chain ended with:
Sheāll be there. You sure youāre ready?
Yes.
Heās sure that he canāt bear it any longer.
The chill of autumn already settles in the air, the sunset hiding behind the clouds the wind brought. Jack doesnāt really feel it. He feels instead like he canāt take a full breath, like everything in him is threaded with unyielding tension in the absence of your touch. He misses you, he never stops, it is his only constant. It also serves as a reminder of just how badly he screwed up.
Because it wasnāt a careless mistake, a rude word slipped out, an argument that snowballed into a fight. No, Jack was stupidly strategic about pushing you away. He set a goal ā and he worked toward it with grit, with rigor mastered back when he was sprinting through the ruins that smelled like blood and rot. His military track record has proven him to be experienced enough. Only, this time it was a suicidal mission. It was a grim ending to something beautiful and soft ā but never fragile.
Because you two built a relationship that was supposed to last. And you were solely responsible for that.
Jack canāt pinpoint the moment when it started ā hell, he didnāt even remember the first day you met. His life was just a blur of hours packed into tense shifts, of months that barely differed from each other. And Jack moved through each day with no demands for more. His heartās been broken ā not just by injustices and deaths, but by the loss so grave it almost killed him. He pulled himself together piece by piece. He put in countless stitches. And he has kept his heart sewn shut. The tissue scarred and hardened through the years, but Jackās been led by the belief heād never want to open up to anyone again.
He didnāt care if someone had introduced you. At best, he shook your hand or gave a nod, his gaze distant and scarcely making contact. He had no favorites, he took no part in any conversations that werenāt about work. He spent his breaks alone ā in call rooms or standing in the stairwell, his back pressed to the wall as he soaked up the silence. But somehow, in between the calls, the rush, the gowns covered in blood and gurneys screaking, he started noticing your presence. How youād hand him the things he needed before he even asked ā tools, scissors, dressings, a transducer in your palm for him to take. Your movements quick but careful, never in someoneās way but ready to step in. Small bows you left when tying bandages on kids. Your love for apples ā tart green or juicy Honeycrisp, a few to share with the others, one always saved for him.
Jack didnāt even know there were cracks in his composure until your warmth began to trickle through.
You never put it into words as if you were afraid to spook him. But unexpectedly, Jackās paperwork would be all done ā the patients' history, examinations and outlined prescriptions. The lab results were taking way less time. The radiology no longer needed his reminders, as if someone was doing that for him. And on the rare occasions that you did speak up, your short advice was meant to nudge him in the right direction, that tired man who hardly could recall your name.
Jack does remember when the realization hit him. It was the night that brought a storm in spring: a mass accident involving seven cars, three passengers in critical condition, five ā seriously injured. Jack had to stay an extra hour, which imperceptibly slipped into two. Heās struggled with a heavy headache for just as long. It got so bad, he barely could walk up to the nurse station, throat dry and vision blurring at the edges, heart thumping like heās about to pass out. But someone placed two plastic cups of water in his line of sight. He gulped them down without even thinking. In half a minute, the pain receded, taking away his dizziness and thirst. Jack turned to see who brought the saving liquid, but you just threw away the cups and left. You didnāt say a word and didnāt ask for any gratitude. As if youāve done it many times before, as if you looking out for him became a mere habit. And with the clarity that comes from being dragged back into consciousness, he managed to connect the dots until he saw a pattern, dozens of constellations formed out of your acts of kindness. Then Abbot found himself confused: why would you ever waste your time on him?
And then he started watching you as if he was stargazing.
Jack tried to rationalize his keenness: he only wanted to return the favor, it would be wrong to let your efforts go unnoticed. He made sure to greet you, gaze clinging to your face, a little bit more confident each time. A little more at ease. He wanted your opinion, he wasnāt shy about asking for your help. He paid attention to every little thing: the way you smile with your eyes first before your lips follow, the way you slightly tilt your head when listening to someone talk, the way you tend to disappear for a few minutes to rest your back against a wall somewhere in silence. Just like he does. He figured out the latter when he once rushed into the stairwell and found you there ā eyes closed, hands in your pockets, a single strand of hair loose against your cheek. He almost reached out to tuck it behind your ear.
You looked at him. With that gaze that always softened when he was around. With that faint glee he has become adept at catching.
āAm I in your spot?ā
Jack shook his head, his voice lowered to match the calm he stepped into. āAm I in yours?ā
Then your mouth smiled too. āWe can share it.ā
With how accustomed Jackās grown to his loneliness, it would seem like a challenge to let people in. But you made it so easy. Your care for him was never loud nor insistent, and he was drawn to feel it, a long-anticipated touch of sun against his frozen skin. Heād wait for you to have a meal together in the break room, your chairs moving closer over time, your voices hushed, not meant to leave the bubble you were in. You stirred up feelings in him that he had to rediscover ā anticipation, eagerness, excitement. The softness of your touch, even if only fleeting: your hands brushed ā over the operating table and the one you ate at, your shoulders touched when you were standing at the stairs, only the fabric of the clothes between you. And he began to wonder what it would feel like to remove it.
Jack didnāt fall in love with you, thatās too rushed of a verb. It felt like he kept walking toward love ā with every turn and step he took to you, with every layer of defence that he kept shedding. And when he didnāt feel like moving, youād meet him halfway.
He let his guard down completely under the roar of fireworks. Although that day didnāt exactly call for celebrations. At least, it never had for Jack.
The Fourth of July had always filled him with unease. He doesnāt hate it, heās worked on managing his feelings through the years: he stopped flinching at the sounds of firecrackers, he doesnāt get alarmed at the sight of screaming crowds, and now the fireworks rarely remind him of the bomb explosions. Heād come to barbeques his friends invite him to, heād have a beer or two, and help with grilling food and putting extra chairs in the backyard and picking up the trash after the guests go home. But heās never the one to make uplifting toasts or joke about his military days, nor does he laugh at someone elseās stories. Instead, he pushes down the memories of his own fear and helplessness, of many people who didnāt make it out alive, some ā on their own volition, because the rate of suicide among the veterans just keeps increasing. But that is not the topic you bring up over the buns and burgers. So Jack would sip on beer and give nods, silently wishing for it all to finally be over. Itās better when he is at work, the noise of celebrations cut off by the walls, the conversations held only include raw facts, and no small talks are needed.
But that day in particular went wrong from the beginning.
His air conditioner broke down while he was asleep, and his downstairs neighbours were in the middle of a break-up, by the sound of it ā their yelling woke him up, his bed a mess of sweaty sheets, his right leg cramping. He cracked his favorite ceramic mug. The coffee tasted like catās piss. The fried eggs turned out burnt. Some assholeās janky Chrysler blocked up the driveway, so Jack was forced to ditch his pickup truck in favor of the good old public transport. The bus came painted in red, white and blue, and maybe in that moment, he did hate that holiday. Then someone lit a firecracker at the bus stop, and his hand twitched. And Jack hated himself a little, too.
The ER was packed with people who evidently didnāt know how to use grills, knives, lawn mowers ā and also their brains, as Abbot muttered when he saw a guy with fingers stuck in a sinkās drainer. He pushed through the first few hours on pure spite. Because it is the easiest emotion to wear as a cover. But it was getting harder to ignore the sounds vibrating through concrete, like somethingās detonating, like the next patient would have shrapnel wounds and torn-off limbs. Ignore that his leg ached from him working flat out with no breaks, that he was getting startled way too often to blame it on fatigue.
So, his brain he was capable of using suggested he should take a breather, or the next thing going off would be his temper.
Around the sixth hour of his shift, Jack sneaked into one of the call rooms. Unnoticed, as he thought (or more so hoped). He didnāt bother turning on the light and sat down on the floor, hands balled up into fists over his kneecaps. The faint beams coming from the window danced across the walls. He slowly stretched his shoulders. He tried some breathing exercises. But there was that dull hum in his head, the tension coiling at his ribs as minutes ticked away.
The door opened, letting a streak of light cut through the darkness. Then he heard it closing. He knew that it was you just by the sound of your steps. You sat down next to him ā back to the wall, your shoulder pressed to his. Jack felt your gaze on him: a caress, a kindness that he couldnāt help but yearn for.
āIt can get pretty loud on a day like this,ā you noted, with that same subtle understanding that you always offered. Instead of pity or incomprehension most people wouldāve met him with; but not you.
He let out a deep sigh, the heaviness in his ribcage dissolving like a block of ice. The silence that you shared was never heavy.
āIām used to the noise,ā he mumbled. āI usually donāt even notice it. But itās just... it gets too much too fast. Just on this one day a year.ā
He clasped his hands tighter, with palpable frustration. It didnāt last. Because you put your forearm over his and traced his knuckles with your fingertips ā and suddenly, Jack found it easier to breathe. Unsurely, he opened one of his palms. You covered it with yours, without hesitation. His pulse sped up, so treacherously fast, he feared you would feel its beating right under your wrist. If you did, you werenāt letting on. Instead, you whispered:
āEveryone needs a break sometimes. You are allowed to take one too, Jack.ā
He turned to look at you. More colors soared into the night sky outside, and he watched as the flashing lights painted your face in shades of red and blue. The thought of kissing you has crossed his mind before, and this time, Jack was too tired to fight it. He leaned in ā but stopped an inch short of your mouth, still thinking there was a chance you wouldnāt want it. Your fingers grazed the slope of his cheekbone ā a touch that held no weight but carried an unswerving promise: you wonāt do anything to hurt him. And then your thumb settled under his chin as you closed the distance.
The world around Jack went quiet.
He didnāt hear the echoes of the fireworks, the beeping of the monitors, even his own heartbeat. You kissed him, and it felt like finding something holy in the ruins, like watching light awake at dawn. Jack melted ā and so did all his doubts and fears, and in that moment, nothing else existed but your lips. He pulled you closer, hands skimming from your waist to hips, his legs clumsily bumping into yours, which you both couldnāt care less about. What etched into his mind was not discomfort but your ragged sighs, your fingers at his nape, your tenderness that swelled into desire, like there were no clothes and shadows in between you.
You only pulled apart when you were breathless. And yet, to him the kiss felt like a lungful of air.
āYou arenāt alone in this,ā you said after a beat, your hands over his chest, close to his heart. To where youāve already made your way.
āI know,ā Jack replied quietly, arms tightly wrapped around you.
The possibility of happiness suddenly seemed so real that he allowed himself to want it. Allowed himself to think that he could have it.
And letting you into his life made Jack so happy, his chest sometimes would feel too small to fit his feelings.
He took joy in the learning process: how you would like your tea and coffee, what was your favorite color, what songs you listened to the most, what childhood memory you carried close to heart. And Jack reveled in the novelty of you. In how your hands ā gentle and delicate, precise in every move ā didnāt shy away from contact, a ghost of your warmth always somewhere at his elbow, shoulder, back. In how your touch felt, the softness of it lingered like a promise, and how your laugh sounded, equally as soft. The way your lips tasted when you were smiling. When you were moaning. When you were crying out his name. How perfect it felt every single time, whether it was just a spark of craving youād satisfy in the ER supply closet, his hand over your mouth to hush you, his cock inside you making that a challenge. Or in the twilight of his bedroom, your skin bathed in the shades of sky and slick with sweat, time pouring away as he was thrusting into you, slow and relentless, hitting the spot that made you choke on air, his lips painting your neck with marks. And after, when you were both catching your breath, legs tangling under the covers, heād always pull you into him. And Jack held you like you were his safest place. Like nothing else could feel so right. So good.
But then there were bad days, too. Not just the kind of bad thatās woven out of unfortunate coincidences that he had no control over, like changes in the weather or accidents with no survivors found. Heās seen enough of those. Heās lived through them. Because Abbot is wired to deal with unpredictable and messy, to get his hands bloody or use them to repair damage.
And yet, the worst would always be the days when Jack saw himself as wreckage.
In early years, it sounded like a mere uncertainty, an inner voice that sometimes made him wonder if heās a little bit closed off. A little too hard-headed. Too principled when itād be better to concede, too quiet when everyone around him loosens up. But then the army helped to polish his rough edges. It brought a change in him, a confidence that helped him move and work fast, and muster that unapologetic stare. And Jack was thriving under pressure. As much as he did thrive on being needed, wanted. Loved. Because after his tours ended, all the adrenaline worn off and clothes soiled with sand and gore, he still had something to look for, someone to wait for him at home.
It got harder to silence his inner voice when he lost half a limb.
His wife stayed by his side, unruffled, being supportive in any way she could. And Jack told her itās just another challenge he would pass, a temporary inconvenience heād learn how to live with. It made him feel better when he could bring her peace. Even if he was losing his. Even when it hurt to sit, to stand, to move. Even when he spent his nights awake and waiting for the meds to work, stuck in between his stubbornness and pain that didnāt feel like just a phantom. But he didnāt allow himself to share it with her ā whatās good about a man who cannot rein in his emotions? He was supposed to shield her from any misery and worries, and so he did.
Then she got sick.
And there was no shielding her from death. No way for him to stop the growth of the cancer cells that filled her blood and damaged healthy tissues until her body could no longer fight. Until she fell into a feverish unconsciousness she didnāt recover from. Throughout the long months of her suffering, Jack had to keep his own unseen, to stay strong for both of them. Heās got into the habit of suppressing his heartache, of storing up his feelings like pennies in a jar. Heās never learnt to share them ā because she died, and suddenly there was no one he could share things with.
All heād got left with was the dead weight of pain, the mass of metal stacked beneath his bones. It was so heavy that it almost drowned him, almost pulled down into the abysmal depths of grief. The only remedy that helped him stay adrift was work: the countless shifts that heād take back to back, the short hours of sleep squeezed in between. And it took many weeks for him to feel like he had moved from the edge of the abyss. But his self-doubt wasnāt just lurking in the background anymore. By then, it was a deeply-rooted creedence: he is too much to deal with ā an amputee, a widower, a loner; it would be wrong to let anyone into the ordeal his life was. He got his chance at love once, it felt good while it lasted. Heās got a job to keep him sane enough through his remaining years.
So Jack built a routine that wasnāt meant for two: he picked nights as his working hours, he bought a single bed, he had one black mug in his kitchen, one pillow and one toothbrush. Strictly one set of everything, like an attempt to prove his solitude. He genuinely never planned on breaking it.
Then you came. And soon Jack wanted nothing more than to make space for you. But he couldnāt invite you in only to show some chosen parts of him. And opening up meant that there was no hiding from the ugly truth. Since Jack thought that the reality of living with him wasnāt pretty. He almost felt bad for how smoothly things were going: the veiled secrecy of stolen glances and short minutes spent away from any prying eyes in the ER, the shared dinners in his old apartment, the eagerness of looking for a new place where you would live together. But when you found it, it seemed like all his traumas also got the invitation to move in.
A nightmare jolted Jack awake on the first day. Itās been a few years since he had one, and yet he recognized immediately that bone-chilling dread. He never figured out the reason they kept coming back ā and heās never had someone witness their aftermath: his heart pounding as he sat up, short of breath, disoriented for a moment, eyes wide in the dark. But you just rolled in bed and pulled him down into your embrace, lips following the contour of his jaw until it got less tense. And when you whispered that itās gonna be okay, a reassurance instead of questions that heād loathe, Jack did feel slightly better. Slightly less scared. He listened to the murmur of your voice and let it carry him into a peaceful slumber.
Except the nightmares didnāt go away. They soon became his guests ā frequent, unwanted: not just because of all the memories they stirred in him, but also for stirring you awake. And yet, he never saw you irritated for a second. You always held him close, and not once were you reluctant, bothered, or uncaring. Even after a full week of interrupted sleep, and after two, and after three. He got a few good days then, perhaps due to the late summer rain that poured for hours, lulling his anxiety to sleep.
Until Jack started waking up not from the frightening dreams but from the pain that was very much real. Heās heard about it ā that stumps can hurt when the weatherās harsh, something to do with barometric pressure and the expansion of the muscles. Something he hasnāt experienced before. It was so bad from the get-go, he almost fell out of bed, then barely managed to get to the bathroom, teeth clenched so heād make no noise. He shouldāve thought about the pain meds in his bedroom dresser, but with how much his leg ached, he wasnāt thinking straight. You found him sitting on the cold tile floor; it took you one glance to figure out the issue. You tiptoed out and came back with his meds and water, then wiped his sweat-covered face with a wet towel. Jack felt drained ā and even more embarrassed, so he refused to meet your eyes. You didnāt force him to. Instead, you quietly sat near, your fingers ably kneading his sore muscles.
Jack glanced at you, undoubtedly grateful. But still hesitant, still fearing your love for him may have an expiration date, and his weaknesses would only bring it closer. He forced out a chuckle.
āFirst the nightmares, now this. I am a lost cause.ā
He looked like he didnāt find it funny. Like he actually believed what he was saying. A long pause wouldāve confirmed his fears, but you replied with no delay.
āI think you are a work in progress. But so were a lot of things before they became art.ā
Jack couldāve cried right then. Just from how sure you seemed, how all his flaws that felt debilitating and just as permanent as scars, were fading with your every word. Your hands cradled his face, a whisper pressed into the corner of his mouth: letās get you to bed. And that day, he slept soundly.
Then you had to repeat the same routine for two weeks straight.
You didnāt voice any complaints, and maybe that everlasting surety of yours did seem a bit naive, but Jack wasnāt complaining either. You brought up therapy ā just once, as carefully as if you tried to walk around the broken glass. He mumbled something that resembled half a promise. Half a lie. But he convinced himself that heās been managing just fine on your support and your supply of kind words and consolations.
And yet, things still kept escalating. Just like they do if you refuse to patch up wounds and only put on bandages to hide them.
It was early September, the kitchen drizzled with the sunlight, the color of the melted butter Jack was covering the pan with ā when his hands twitched. Subtle, fast. Couldāve been written off as nothing. But he froze because it didnāt feel like nothing. And when an hour later he was putting away the plates while you were in the shower, the tremor came back. And it felt like something bad.
He took a blood test the next day, all by himself ā not even in the exam room, but in a bathroom stall, watching the crimson liquid flow, like he intended to get the diagnosis at a glance. He didnāt ā and neither did the lab: no abnormalities detected, no lack in vitamin D, or B12, or folate. And weirdly enough, he felt completely fine in the ER, hands steady on the instruments and keyboard keys and during examinations. Then he carried the groceries and held the doors for you, and on your way home, one of his hands laid on the wheel, the other ā on your thigh, unflinching. He almost let himself believe it was a one-time oddity, a stressful night and too much caffeine. He almost let himself forget. But that same day, as you snuggled together on the couch, Jack reached for the TV remote ā and saw his hand shake. Very clearly.
He zeroed in on finding the solution as if his life depended on it. Or at the very least, his job. He knew he wouldnāt be able to operate with tremor, it would destroy the only thing heās ever been good at. But every shift ended with him being equal parts relieved and mystified because his fingers didnāt flinch or shake at work. And yet, they did when he was folding laundry. When he was chopping vegetables or reorganizing kitchen shelves or helping you hang the print-out of a painting that you liked ā a swirl of bright blue waves with sunbeams shimmering on water like specks of glitter. You were too thrilled to notice that he fumbled with a double-sided tape. He felt bad for not being able to share your excitement. He felt stupid for not knowing what was wrong, why in the comfort of his home his muscles were contracting ā involuntarily, abruptly, for no reason at all.
And soon his mind was contaminated not by the fear but by the feeling of how flawed he was. And it was getting harder to suppress the tremors, to act like his control was not wearing thin. One evening, on your day off, he was making popcorn, and you were sitting on the kitchen counter, all smiley and waggling your feet and wearing his grey t-shirt that looked so good on you, he got distracted and reached into one of the cabinets without looking ā but his hand shook so violently that he dropped the bowl. It shattered: both the ceramic dish and his self-control, his face expression first horrified, then dejected, hopeless.
You paused mid-sentence, eyes caught on him. Then they moved to the floor. āYou break dishes, and I break test tubes. We are a great match.ā
It took Jack a few seconds to snap out of his despondency. āWhen did you break test tubes?ā
āLast Wednesday, at the end of the shift. Slammed a whole tray of them into a wall,ā you crouched down to pick up the pieces, and he immediately joined. āYou shouldāve seen Robbyās face. He facepalmed himself so hard, he knocked down his glasses.ā
Jack couldnāt force a smile in return. And he didnāt trust his hands not to shake again, so you did most of the work, seemingly unbothered. But once you cleaned the mess, you walked to him and took his hands in yours. And Jack knew that his secret got out in the open. You massaged small circles over his joints and palms as you examined them, then your gaze went up at him.
āDoes that happen at work too?ā
āNo, never,ā Jack whispered, his eyes downcast.
āDoes it hurt? Any ache or numbness?ā
He shook his head, and you didnāt cast doubt on his honesty.
āMight be something psychogenic,ā you mused, with no pressure but with a veiled, unvoiced suggestion: he should make an appointment with a therapist. You put your hands over his shoulders and leaned closer, your nose brushing his. āMaybe itās your subconscious hinting that you should hurry up with your next vacation.ā
That did earn you a glance and then a kiss, soft like an apology, a thank you, a desire to amend his ways. And he really intended to. His imagination rushed to paint a dreamy picture: you two on some mildly crowded beach, your skin sprinkled with drops of salty water, his hands confident and resting on your hips, sun glinting off the waves, sand golden.
Unfortunately, that image never came to life.
The downfall began with something small. Stupid. Something he shouldāve never paid any mind to.
A man was brought in in the middle of the night ā late forties, with a gaping wound on his forehead: he went to check the noises in the yard and slipped on his front porch. He had a seizure in the ambulance. His vitals werenāt good. His wife came with him, tired and timid, and she told Jack that he had trouble sleeping and refused to take his meds. That last year he had his left leg amputated, way above the knee. He got discharged from the army a month later. Jack listened closely and didnāt bat an eye. Gave her assurances that sounded sincere. But when she left the room, and he looked at the table, he didnāt see a patient anymore ā now he was looking at an amputee, a vet. Someone who couldāve easily been him. And someone he most definitely couldnāt fail.
He didnāt ā he spent an hour in that razor-focused state, his consciousness reduced to giving orders and getting his gloves stained, with everything else blurry in the background. You knew that when Jack was like that, it meant something important, something personal. So you just gave him space and let him move at his own pace; you had no trouble keeping up. He touched your elbow on his way out with an unspoken gratitude.
Jack took a ride up to the ICU where they placed the man, then had a short talk with his wife ā she kept wiping away the tears, and he didnāt want to make it harder on her than it already was. As he was heading for the elevators, he saw two nurses, their faces unfamiliar but voices loud enough for him to catch.
āPoor thing. Wonāt ever have a normal life while she is with him.ā
āYouāre being a little harsh.ā
āMore like realistic. Men like that come with a crap ton of baggage, sheās basically a babysitter before she is his wife. And they donāt even have kids yet.ā
āHe probably just needs a better prescription.ā
āSo heād stop wandering around in the dark, sure. But then sheāll have to deal with his other 99 problems.ā
āJesus, you are so sour today. Maybe he doesnāt have that many.ā
āEven if itās half as much, sheāll spend years trying to fix him. And thereās no guarantee sheāll ever succeed. So yeah, Iād recommend her to find a better match.ā
Jack shouldāve interfered. He shouldāve scolded them for being unprofessional and disrespectful. But he just stood there and waited for the elevator door to open. On his way down, their words echoed in his head: baggage, babysitter, should find a better match. Before he knew it, they dug into him like splinters. He walked out and saw you in the hall, chatting with Jesse on your break. And Abbot looked at you like you were separated by insuperable distance, like he was just a sinking ship trying to catch the last glimpse of the sun above. He didnāt want to drag you down with him.
It hurt to think he was holding you back. And Jack is not the one for public self-abasement, so heād wear a stoic face expression and pretend heās fine. But once his insecurities took root, they only grew, spreading through him like vines. Like poison.
Jack had no wish to go in for half measures. He could never be cruel, he wouldnāt even think about being rude. But he was effortlessly good at being cold. He made it seem like he didnāt pay attention ā forgetting what you asked, what plans you made, using the same excuse of feeling too worn-out. He wore a feigned indifference each time you tried to find out what was wrong. He pulled away from you ā from your touches and tenderness that he secretly craved like plants crave water. And deep inside, it felt like he was pulling out his teeth, nails, flesh from bones, a truly agonizing torture. Sometimes heād lie in bed and watch you sleep, his fingers itching to reach out. Jack would instead just lean further away. And on the bad days, heād reach for the painkillers he stocked up on, because he wanted you to break out of the habit to comfort him. But caring about Jack became your second nature, so you couldnāt give up on him so easily.
So he had to resort to drastic measures.
He mercilessly cut down the time you spent together: Jack begged Robby to switch to day shifts, then told you it was temporary. Which was a lie. Which did manage to dim down your enthusiasm, but somehow, you still held on to hope: you made time for your shared breaks, for checking up on him when your shifts overlapped. For cooking meals for him. For kissing him goodbye. For everything he thought he wasnāt worthy of, and yet, you were still giving it to him so freely. Frustration piling up in Jack was only directed at him ā but it was you he snapped at. Two weeks in, three nightmares in a row, four patients in a critical condition in broad daylight. One died. You waited outside the trauma room, but didnāt even get a chance to speak ā he breezed past you, and his words sounded like a bite:
āI donāt need you to babysit me.ā
That came out way rougher than intended. It was horribly hard not to turn around and run back to you barely five seconds after. He forced himself not to.
Jack tried to justify it by that god-awful saying ā about letting go of someone you love. It didnāt sound profound in his head. It sounded fucking stupid. But what worked wonders was a reminder that you deserved stability, and he was just a ticking bomb. He wouldnāt want you to get hit by shrapnel.
He also didnāt want you to waste any more time. So Jack made the decision to cut ties. To cut off the rope that had you tied to all the baggage he indeed was carrying.
He waited for your day off to have the conversation so you wouldnāt get upset before your shift. He came from work already sullen, distant, not even looking at you when you came into the hall to greet him. Right there and then, he told you that things between you werenāt working out anymore. That he needed a break. He barely tried to make it sound believable, and maybe that was the real cruelty: you always putting so much effort into everything, and him seemingly not caring enough.
You couldnāt even manage a reply at first, you looked shell-shocked. Your voice came out pained:
āSo none of this ever mattered to you?ā
He literally bit his tongue to stop himself from saying that, of course, it did. Jack had to hide the truth behind more lies: he said it was distracting him from work, it got too serious, too complicated. He said it with a voice so flat, he mightāve as well stabbed you. And it was hurting him in equal measure. But he acted like he had a PhD in faking.
āI will give you some time. To think about it. Iāll just go for a walk,ā he added curtly.
If he stayed for a minute longer, he would get physically sick from all the venom his words carried.
He glanced at you before turning away. It is the memory that always hits him first, carved into his mind like an inscription on the tombstone of his making ā itās your gaze. Heartbroken, clouded with tears. But you clearly looked like you did finally believe every bad thing his insecurities were telling you.
Itās for the best, Jack told himself as he walked out and closed the door behind him. You will get over it, he kept repeating as he took the stairs, as he strolled down the empty streets. It was already dark and chilly outside, the drizzle shimmering under the many street lamps. For days he thought that freeing you of him would be the reasonable choice. But in the stillness and the hues of artificial lights, it actually felt wrong. And suddenly, regret started to weigh on him, wrapped up around his ankles like chains that clank with every step.
It took him roughly 20 minutes to change his mind. Another 5 to get back to his flat. It mustāve taken you around the same time to grab the things you spent hours unpacking and run into the night. Because he came in only to find you gone.
Jack took one look around, and instantly it left him gutted: you werenāt coming back.
He almost rushed out of the building the second time. He made a step toward the door. Then stopped. For all his shortcomings, Jack did know when it was better to back off. Heās taken an entire weekend off from work, but you were getting back to the ER a day early. So Jack decided he should let you be, let you take a long-awaited break from him.
He absentmindedly took off his shoes, only one thought pulsating in his head: your presence used to light up every room. Without you the place seemed dreary. Lonely. He pulled the closet doors open to find all of your hangers empty, and it made him wince. He was about to turn away when his eyes snagged on it ā a blue plaid shirt. Heās got a similar one, and you would often mix them up: he didnāt mind when you wore his, while yours was just left hanging. Jack trailed his fingers over the cotton and held one of the sleeves up to his nose: it smelled like you ā apples and fabric softener, something so fresh and warm and making his heart ache. And then Jack wondered what else mightāve been forgotten in a hurry.
He instantly followed his hunch like he was on a treasure hunt. For pieces that would end up haunting him.
The first one was hidden by a pile of plates in the dishwasher ā your mug, with Andy Warholās bridge print and a small chip on the rim. Next were your pens that heās kept borrowing and leaving on his desk. An almost empty bottle of your shower gel. Your woolen scarf stashed on the upper shelf. The painting ā but its lower corner was crunched and torn a little, as if you tried to rip it off the wall. Jack smoothed it out the best he could, then carefully taped the picture back together. And even though he knew that mending your relationship would be way harder, he was unwilling to abandon hope.
The days couldnāt run fast enough for Jack. He knew your roommate still had your previous apartment, so thatās where you probably were crashing. Or so he told himself, at least, so that his worry would subside a little. His hours were crammed with so many almosts ā he almost texted, almost called, almost came up with an apology that was supposed to make up for the pain he caused you. But Jack believed he would have time to do that later, when you meet again. At work.
On Monday, he went back on nights and strided into the ER an hour earlier. He brimmed with nervousness but kept his posture straight and his hopes high. Jack barely made it to the locker room before Robby barged in. And he didnāt go for their usual handshake. Instead, he handed Jack a rolled-up sheet of paper.
āHey, I was wondering if you could explain this.ā
Jack took it, and his gaze fell on the lines of cursive. And then his heart dropped.
He realizedĀ in hindsightĀ that it was a logical turn of events. He shouldāve seen it coming. But as he stared at the paper in his hands, he couldnāt even read past the first sentence.
The first sentence stated it was a resignation letter.
Yours.
āWhen did sheāā that question sounded so surreal, Jack couldnāt finish it.
āYesterday,ā more wrinkles crossed Robbyās forehead. āIt was your day off, so I didnāt want to bother you. She said she got another job offer about a week ago, and she chose to take it.ā
Jack didnāt move as his eyes followed the handwritten lines. And every pain heās ever felt before ā ripping, dull, phantom ā suddenly was nothing in comparison to this.
Robby turned worried. āThe explanation that Iām getting from your face is, frankly, concerning. You two were...?ā
Jack nodded, staring numbly at your signature. Then he forced out: āYeah. We were.ā
Robby let out a heavy sigh. āI donāt know why the fuck I am even surprised. Evans suspected it months ago,ā he pushed his glasses up and pinched the bridge of his nose, clearly torn between displeasure and distress. Then he nudged the glasses back in place and glanced at Jack again. His face looked pale and tense, as if set into a brittle mask. As if another word would make him crack like porcelain. āShould I pull you off the shift?ā
The silence stretched out for an uncomfortable number of seconds.
āDonāt be absurd,ā Jack finally replied; although it took some effort.
Robby stood with arms crossed over his chest, looking at Jack with an appraising eye. He kept his thinking process to himself and just gave him a quick pat on the back. āShen is with you today since weāre a little understaffed. So if at any point you need a breakāā
āI wonāt,ā Jack cut him off. He tore his eyes away from your handwriting and gave the letter back to Robby. Jack shoved his backpack into the locker and shut the door with a loud bang. His palm stayed on the metal sheet as he calmed his breathing. Then Abbot cleared his throat. āThank you for telling me.ā
He walked out of the room in hasty steps.
He didnāt slow down for the next 12 hours.
Because it felt like if he did, his guilt would burst out, like water through a dam. And everywhere he looked, it only made him painfully aware that youād left. He hasnāt realized before how tightly you were woven into his life ā and just how empty it would be without you. He did miss your assistance, yes ā your confidence, your speed and skills; everyone else seemed sluggish by comparison. But none of it compared to how badly he missed you.
He missed the calmness that you brought, the way a single touch of yours would make his agitation fade, his hesitation disappear. He missed seeing you across the hall, he missed the moments when heād catch your gaze, your smile, your laugh. Four hours in, he walked into the break room ā and for a fleeting second, he thought heād meet you there, just like he had for weeks. Instead, he stared blankly at the table and the seat you werenāt at; Jack had to leave before his feelings got a chance to choke him. His memory mercilessly threw other reminders at him: of you standing beside him in the trauma room, you walking by his side toward the nurse station, you pausing musingly next to the snack machine, you trying not to trot to beat him to the stairs. And every time he gave in and turned to look, you werenāt there.
Jack barely could finish up his shift, avoiding others' gazes and not registering any questions. He all but barged out on the roof, into the gloom of early autumn morning. The cold readily nibbled at his skin as he gulped air; it didnāt bring him much relief. He walked up to the railing, thinking: this used to be the place he would retreat to be alone. And yet, he was reminded of you and him at dawn, rays of the sun caught in your hair, his breath caught at the sight of you.
No matter where he went, he couldnāt run away from memories. And he was seeing you in each and every one of them.
Jack leaned against the rail and pressed his forehead to the metal. And when he heard the door creaking, he just snapped:
āCan I get a fucking breakāā
It was Robby coming in.
He got two plastic cups, a can of Coke and two mini bottles of Jack Danielās, all in one hand; Jackās hoodie in the other. He tossed him the piece of clothing.
āYou surely can. Just try not to catch pneumonia while youāre at it.ā
Jack did feel warmer with the hoodie on. He watched as Robby emptied one of the bottles into a cup.
āWhatās this about?ā
āWe are gonna have a drink and a conversation,ā and Robbyās face suggested it wasnāt up for a debate. He pulled a small bag of potato chips out of his pocket. āEat some.ā
Jack stared at the label: no additives but salt. Supposedly low in cholesterol and sodium. No wonder no one was buying these.
āThey taste like cardboard,ā he mumbled with his mouth already full. He hasnāt had a bite of food since he arrived. Robby just gave him a knowing look, then poured the soda into another cup.
Jack chuckled. āArenāt you supposed to mix the two?ā
āI am supposed to be sober at work. And only one of us needs alcohol to start talking.ā
Abbot immediately lost his wit. āYou donāt have to do this.ā
āOh, I obviously planned on letting you suffer all alone,ā Robby sniped. āBut then I came back to work, and I got pulled aside four times in 10 minutes, since literally everybody seems to be wondering if you are okay. Because ā and I quote ā you kinda look like someone died.ā
Jack crumpled the empty bag of chips. āLet me guess, Shen said that?ā
āNo, it was Ellis. Shen thinks you look ill. And that thought was kindly followed by the story of his grandfather, who died of pancreatic cancer. Which isnāt the best comparison, if you ask me,ā then Robby shoved the whisky into his hand.
Jack looked at the dark liquid without much enthusiasm. But it could hardly make things any worse. So he drank half a cup in one gulp, grimacing at the taste and waiting for the burning liquor to be absorbed into his bloodstream. He didnāt know where to start at first, and how to put words into sentences that would sound coherent. He took a few more sips to help loosen his tongue. And Robby waited patiently ā until Jack could dial down his reticence under the pressure of remembrance. Then all of it poured out of him: his ignorance, your care, your kindness, and your unwavering acceptance of his failings. The trust and tenderness that bloomed behind closed doors, the joint plans and the shared apartment. The moments heās been nestling close to his heart.
The moments that didnāt stop him from pushing you away.
Out of whiskey and out of words, Jack dropped his face into his hand.
āWell, as the man who ruined two really great relationships, I must say,ā Robby put down his untouched cup of Coke. āWelcome to the club.ā
And usually, Jack would quip back. But all the quips were humorless against the truth.
āI fucked it up,ā he admitted quietly. Denying it was pointless. As was believing that you would forgive him. āShe will be better off without me.ā
āYes to the first part. Not sure about the second.ā
Robby replied so swiftly, Jack couldnāt help his skepticism. āWere you even listening?ā
āI was. Did I miss the part where she told you that she didnāt want you? That she needed a break?ā Robby retorted. āOr was that all in your head?ā
He wasnāt wrong. Robby has always aimed to find the underlying cause of problems, just like any great doctor would. But Jack didnāt seek acknowledgement of his wrongdoings ā he was aware of them. And he was fairly convinced that heās unfixable.
āYouād be great at relationship counselling,ā Jack noted flatly and looked down at his empty cup. āFunny that we are both single.ā
Robby took no offence, as if he was prepared for that exact reaction. āIām not in a relationship because I donāt want to be. Iām fine with that. And Iām fine with changing my mind when the time comes,ā he leaned to him a little so he could catch Jackās gaze and add: āBut it sounds like you love her.ā
āAnd what good did it do?ā Jack remarked bitterly and looked away.
Robby held back a sigh. He knew that trying to dissuade him would be like talking to a wall. A wall that only Jack himself was able to tear down. And no words and no reasons could ever help with that. But time should.
āAlright, no more free counselling for you,ā Robby took away his cup, ignoring Jackās attempt at glaring. āItās clear you are in no mood for some friendly advice. But as your colleague, I do encourage you to figure out whatās up with that tremor.ā
āWhat an invaluable input. Iāll look into it.ā
āAlso, Iām ordering you a taxi.ā
āIāll just walkāā
āLike hell you will,ā and Robbyās firm hand on Jackās shoulder felt like a full stop in that discussion.
Him coming down and leaving the ER and riding home ā all that left a blank page in Abbotās memory. His eyes kept closing, and it was a miracle he somehow found the keyhole. He almost fell asleep right in the hallway. But as he stood there in the grayly daylight that peeked in from the quiet rooms, Jack suddenly was riven by a feeling ā so strong, it nearly knocked him off his feet:
he missed your voice.
He missed you talking to him ā about everything and nothing, he missed the softness of your tone, simply the sound of it. He missed you so much that he had trouble breathing. So he took out his phone and dialed your number like it was his lifeline. It went straight to voicemail, which came as no surprise. But then he heard you ā a short recorded message: āHi, Iām sorry I canāt pick up the phone right now. I solemnly swear I will call you back.ā And he could swear that you were smiling at the end, and he could picture it so vividly, it made his heart swell. He hung up when the message ended and managed one deep breath. Then he called you again. And he kept calling ā as he walked mindlessly around the apartment, closing his eyes to picture you with him. At some point, when he opened them again, the painting caught his gaze. The patched-up corner wasnāt hard to notice ā a little wrinkled, with glossy tape over the paper. And yet, it didnāt ruin the whole picture. The mark left just by one mistake didnāt take away from its significance and beauty.
And as Jack stared at it, for the first time in days he felt hope flicker through his mind: maybe there was still a chance for him to fix things. To get you back. But there was no denying that he should fix himself first. Which starts with therapy ā
well, in reality, it started with a hangover.
Jack dozed off on the floor, and waking up didnāt feel nice for quite a few reasons. His head hurt, his back ached, his throat was dry. He slept for barely five hours. But then he glanced up at the painting right in front of him, and hope cut through the vines of sadness that he was entangled with. Jack knew he owed it to himself to try and find a way out of the mess heās got himself into. He also owed that much to you.
So he began searching for a therapist that very afternoon. He looked through his old messages and pulled some previous recommendations, he went through countless cups of coffee while reading the reviews. He made appointments. A couple of them, just so he could find someone heād like, since he suspected he would need a specialist for the long run. And he felt hopeful.
That feeling lasted for about a week.
Because, despite his best attempts, he couldnāt let go of his reluctance to open up. He sat through every session, in person and online, but he just never clicked with any of them. First was an ex-marine who was supposed to be the perfect choice; in twenty minutes, Jack felt like they were in a contest of whoād had it worse. It only pushed him to close off. Then came an old lady who politely asked if he could skip the gruesome details of his past because she found them upsetting. A 20-something kid who put on a navy t-shirt for their Zoom session āto show his mad respectā. A woman of his age who looked at him like she had never been this bored before.
And Jack inevitably ended up frustrated ā at them or more so at himself.
That same frustration led him to the support group meeting for the vets. Heād come to those after he lost his leg; it helped a little to be surrounded by the people who could imagine what he felt. At least, it used to help. But as he sat there and listened to the others' stories, he found it harder to relate. And even harder to speak up, to share the guilt that heās been carrying. When his turn came, Jack mumbled the first thing he could come up with: heās got a tough job and itās tiring. None of them pressed him further, nor saw through his rushed lies; except for that one guy who chaired the meeting. A few years younger, his limbs intact, a shiny golden ring around his finger ā and yet, he mustāve sensed something.
Once their time was up and Jack went for the exit, the man hurriedly followed him outside.
āHey, not to sound weird, I just wanna check up on you. Is it actually your job thatās bothering you? Sorry, you just have that look.ā
Abbot side-eyed him. āWhat look?ā
āLike you have nothing else left but work,ā the man said earnestly.
Jack put his hands deeper in his pockets. āItās not just work, itās... Many things. I am a hard case.ā
His curt explanation didnāt require a reply. The other man wasnāt discouraged. āI know a guy. And by guy I mean, heās in his sixties. He really helped me a few years backā.
āAs in, a therapist?ā Jack glanced at him and got a nod. āIāve tried plenty. Didnāt do anything for me.ā
āWell, will it hurt to try some more?ā the man asked with a sympathetic smile. He didnāt wait for Jackās objections ā instead, he ripped a piece off some paper flyer and scribbled down a phone number. Then handed it to Abbot. āHeās very chill. And also kinda funny. Give it a try.ā
He walked off, and Jack was left alone to ponder. His road to redemption did seem pretty unsuccessful at that point. What was there to lose? So he did make the call, although with little hope. He almost dragged his feet on his way there. And it didnāt feel like rainbows coming through the clouds on their first appointment. But Jack also didnāt feel ignored or awkward or misunderstood. That was enough for him to come again ā for his second, third, fourth sessions. That is how long it took for him to finally ease up.
To talk about you.
It happened on his fifth visit. Which turned out to be a memorable one: he has replayed it like a tape recording in his head many times since then. It starts with an unusual matter-of-fact: Jack found himself a therapist whoās nothing short of awesome.
Heās British, voice warm just like the tea he drinks (in frightening amounts), his pale blue eyes gleaming from behind the lenses of his glasses. He loves puzzles, and he makes sense of Abbotās bottled-up emotions as if heās solving a Rubikās Cube.
āYou are easy to talk to,ā Jack blurts out mid-conversation, hands wrapped around his own cup of Earl Grey. He doesnāt like the smell of it, but the warmth is calming.
āI get that a lot,ā the old man says, a smile grazing his lips. āI also find that people are more willing to open up if their previous refusal cost them dearly.ā
The hint hangs in the air, not blunt enough to be offensive. But clear enough. And Abbot takes it as his chance to spill it out. He doesnāt hold back any details ā as much as it is painful, itās also comforting: remembering you. Not that he ever stopped.
He keeps talking for what feels like half an hour. His therapist listens carefully, not interrupting. And not looking surprised.
āSo she made you feel loved, valued and cared for,ā he doesnāt say it like a question because all these are facts.
And even though Jack nods, he knows: itās not a finished thought. The endingās meant to hit him. The old man delivers quite a punch:
āAnd in return, you made her feel unloved, unappreciated and unwanted.ā
The hit lands heavier than Jack expected. It suddenly becomes so obvious: he shouldāve opened up to you. He shouldāve talked about his concerns, he shouldāve trusted you to understand them. Instead, he hurt you, repeatedly and cruelly, and pushed you out of his life. Although you were the only one he wished to share it with.
So Jack exhales the question with defeat. āI should just let her go, shouldnāt I?ā
āDoing nothing can be an option,ā his therapist replies calmly. āOr you can try and do better.ā
And he says it like itās the simplest thing, like getting dressed or doing dishes. Jack sighs and rubs his forehead. It takes a minute for him to find the words ā he wrenches the confession out of himself in a strained voice.
āSometimes I think I donāt deserve her. She is too good for me.ā
He waits for either lecturing or judgment in reply. But his therapist just asks:
āHave you tried being good for her?ā he watches Jack attentively ā and quickly adds, āIām just saying, I never pegged you for a quitter.ā
Jack lets the words sink in. Then looks at him and huffs a laugh. āReal fucking smooth, doc.ā
āBut thatās the truth, innit?ā the old man shrugs.
And his assuredness does help to ease the burden of Jackās past mistakes. The way he gets straight to the point and never runs out of ideas on how to fix things ā Jack thinks thatās why he likes him. Then Abbot catches on to a much more cardinal realization:
you never treated him like he was broken.
You loved him like there wasnāt anything wrong with him at all.
He canāt believe he ruined that.
Jack had to do a lot of learning for his healing.
He painstakingly rewired his thought process: the symptoms that heās deemed incurable were more so⦠a malfunction. Not terminal but treatable. The best treatment was patience. And he required plenty of it to deal with the consequences of him refusing help for months. Jack learned about psychogenic tremors, their underlying cause being his pent-up emotions. He tried tremor retrainment, he cut down on caffeine. He gave another chance to mirror therapy for night pains. He got on with meditation, although it did take some convincing (which sounded like āplease, do yourself a favor, donāt be such a bugger,ā ā another pearl of wisdom from his therapist. It worked).
It wasnāt easy ā not for the first month or the second or the third. But very slowly, day by day, it did get bearable. And then, somewhere between the seventh and the ninth month, Jack actually began to feel better. He didnāt need painkillers anymore, his dishware remained intact, his nightmares forgotten. Heād randomly chat with the interns and crack a joke or two, he stopped his visits to the stairs, he rarely went to the roof. It was an undeniable achievement that shouldāve filled him with joy and pride.
But deep inside, up to his throat, Jack has been filled with longing. The thoughts of you would leave him sore, like rupture of blood vessels, like he was bruised all over. He couldnāt stop thinking. He never wanted to forget ā the contours of your silhouette his eyes traced through the air, the spark of warmth that was your smile he dreamed of, the tenderness of you he missed. The taste of apples he kept buying since they reminded him of you. The scent still hidden in the fabric of your shirt: every inhale sparked up the coals of his feelings. But he couldnāt act on impulse, couldnāt barge back into your life while he was only half the man he wished to be.
So he crossed off the passing days and let the seasons pass as he continued working on himself. For you. And when his clandestine bruising hurt too much, heād call you. To listen to the same voicemail, same 14 seconds and 19 words heās learned by heart. Heās never left a message. And never truly cured his insomnia, his nights perpetually cold, your side of the bed painfully empty.
Jack waited for the change in him that he would feel with every fibre of his being. And for a chance to talk to you. Robby presented him with the latter.
The Fundraiser was Gloriaās idea, and Jack managed to avoid it for two years. She did try to talk him into coming (all donors love a sob story, and whatās sadder than an amputee?), but his few glares and dry tone discouraged her in record time. So Jack didnāt move an ear when Robby mentioned the event.
āI can look up the full list of guests,ā Robby suggested, waiting for Jack to get the clue.
It took Abbot a moment. Then his pen froze over the paperwork, eyes darting up at Robby. āYou think she might come?ā
āWe arenāt the only doctors fishing for investors,ā he chuckled. āSo itās usually pretty packed. And Gloria loves playing a hostess. Sheād drag in half the city if she could.ā
Jack mulled over the suggestion. Apart from hopeful, he was also scared. Would you still care that heās changed?
āItās been almost a year,ā Robby noted. āYou found a therapist, you unfucked your life, youāre doing good. How long do you plan on waiting?ā
Jack rubbed the back of his head. āI just keep thinking what Iād say. Never been great at speeches.ā
āYou can start with an apology,ā Robbyās voice was low but sure. As was his gaze when he met Jackās, silently waiting for the decision to be made. At last, Abbot gave him a short nod. It was too obvious for words: his wish to see you was way stronger than any other feelings.
Jack spent the whole day looking for a tie. Last time he wore one was at his wifeās funeral: the strip of fabric felt like a noose around his neck. Years later, when you went on a date, he tried it on ā and it was so discomforting that he kept squirming in the driverās seat. You took the tie off him on your way to the restaurant, no questions asked. Jack took your hand as he stopped at a red light, pressed his lips to your wrist. You leaned closer to kiss him. Your laugh spilled in his mouth when someone honked at you. And in the glow of the green light, sitting right next to him, you seemed so gloriously happy.
Jack thought about it as he was fumbling with that tie, in the apartment he was now alone in. What scared him the most was not knowing if you could let him in again. If you moved on already. He never cared about the socials, and you preferred to keep things private. Still, he checked your Facebook page ā you only changed your place of work. No added photos of your boyfriend, no changes to your ānot marriedā status. Which was a good sign. Which didnāt stop his hands from shaking each time he tried imagining what it would feel like to be in the same room with you again.
The hours leading up to the event passed in a blink. Jackās nerves havenāt calmed one bit. Anxiety bubbled in him as he drove to the hospital, as he sat in his car, forcing his breaths to even out.
He still feels anxious as he walks to the entrance and finally comes in. Itās crowded, a mess of fabrics and the shine of jewels and the fizz of drinks, the chatter never-ending, half of the smiles fake. Itās almost nauseating; Jack loosens the tie a little. One of the servers darts to him.
āSir, would you like some chamāā
āDo you have water?ā Jackās eyes impatiently move over the guests' faces.
The man pauses. āUm, just... water?ā
The teeth of agitation graze his insides. Jack doesnāt let it show. āJust a glass of water with some ice, if thatās okay.ā
āYes, of course. Iāll be right back,ā the man scampers off into the crowd.
Jack promptlyĀ moves in the same direction. Some of his colleagues greet him, some of the strangers shoot him glances; he hardly cares about either. Heās searching for only one voice and face ā yours. The server finds him in a few minutes; he pants a little as he gives Jack a lowball glass, only in place of whiskey, thereās a clear liquid and a bunch of ice. And Abbot notices how pale the manās up close, some reddness splotched above his crisp white collar. Jack almost wants to ask if everythingās okay. Instead, he thanks him and keeps going. Someone is laughing, someone is obviously drunk; some posh guys whoāve never worked a day in their lives are asking mind-blowingly dumb questions. The background music is unnecessary, incessant; someone is writing checks and making toasts, Jackās fingers go cold from the ice ā
His gaze stumbles on the hair color first. The painfully familiar lines of the neck and shoulders.
His heart leaps up. Exhale caught in his throat.
Youāre standing with your back to him, your dress dark blue and hair up, your shoulder blades left bare. And he would recognize you anywhere. It makes him stop. It stuns him: as he is staring at you, everything else ā thatās bright and loud and harsh ā suddenly grows dim.
Jack timidly allows his gaze to look you over. He was afraid youād change, but he can see it even from a distance: the same slow movement of your arms, your bearing poised, same slight tilt of your head as you are listening to someone, a hand gliding over your waist ā
a manās hand.
You didnāt come alone.
When Jack sees who the hand belongs to, everything in him sinks, the weight of heartbreak filling up his stomach. This isnāt just unfortunate ā it is a worst-case scenario, itās watching the paper boat of his hopes being completely torn apart.
Jack knows Jonathan: a classmate turned your best friend, the man who looks like he stepped out of a magazine ā tall, dark-haired, green-eyed, and with a million-dollar smile. He is a neurosurgeon who operates on kids with brain cancer, he regularly donates to charity, he owns a three-legged dog he rescued (of-fucking-course). What makes things even worse is that heās not an asshole. Heās also never brash or loud ā because he doesnāt have to be; he catches everyoneās attention like a diamond among marbles. When heās with you, his smile grows wider. And Jonathanās lips glisten like he had a kissing session not so long ago.
Jack hears quick footsteps approaching, and he already knows whoās coming. 'Cause no one radiates anxiety like Robby.
āI didnāt expect her to wait for me forever.ā
But Jack did hope heād get another chance. He gulps more water, still perfectly icy ā but on the inside, he is burning. Heās not allowed to be this jealous: you arenāt his to keep, and thatās on him. Heād rather walk through fire than watch you with another man. He cannot take his eyes away.
āYou can do it in the parking lot,ā Danaās voice comes from his left.
Jack turns to her, his face perplexed.
ā... What?ā
āI mean, he is a bit taller than you, and he works out for sure. But your military training should be good for something, right? If you want to punch him, just donāt do it here,ā she takes a sip of what looks like a Gin tonic. āI spent half an hour listening to that douchebag tech guy who wants to fly to Mars ā and who also offered to pay for our new MRI machine. Iād like to get that check by the end of the night, so please donāt fuck things up.ā
When Jack broke up with you, Dana refused to talk to him for weeks. And now she does, so technically, theyāve made some progress.
āIām not gonna punch anyone,ā Jack tells her. More like a protest, less a promise.
āOh, 'cause youāre in therapy now,ā she rolls her eyes. āIf only you started it, I donāt know, a year or two earlier. Wouldnāt be standing here throwing daggers at the other guy.ā
She isnāt wrong. Heās got no arguments in his defence nor any wish to argue. Jackās eyes are drawn to you again ā but this time, when he finds you, he can tell: you know. And he can almost see the tension straightening your shoulders, the wariness stealing away your smile. He gets his guess confirmed when you finally turn ā and look exactly where heās standing. You arenāt smiling. You manage to control your feelings, but one of them slips out for a second: pain. And Jack discerns it in your gaze, just like he did the day he left you.
You look away. It nearly unstitches all of his patched-up composure.
āYou think sheāll talk to you?ā Danaās voice comes out a tad softer, more concerned.
āOnly one way to find out,ā Jack quietly replies.
He is way more unsure than he wishes he would be. His main wish is to apologize to you.
You make it obvious you do not want to talk to him at all.
You arenāt the one to make a scene, but it is hardly subtle ā how consciously you keep your distance. You move around the hall as people wave at you and call your name: McKay and Collins gush over your dress and pepper you with questions, Princess makes jokes that get a smile out of you. Dana pulls you into a hug, and Robby greets you just as warmly. And Jonathan surprisingly isnāt a clingy boyfriend ā he keeps darting back to the bar, avoiding women of all ages who keep staring at him, which you donāt seem to care about.
But you are dead set on not crossing paths with Jack.
He tries approaching you nonchalantly, like he is merely an old friend wanting to catch up. You talk with literally anyone but him. Even with that damn server, pale and panting in your face after you stop him with a question Jack canāt hear. He spends an hour on attempts to get to you ā you move further away each time he makes a step in your direction.
Jack knows you certainly have reasons to be upset. He grows increasingly uncertain about his chances for a reconciliation. His heart rushes from what feels a little bit like panic. He gets a glimpse of you chatting with Garcia ā before he all but runs into the bathroom, into the empty room behind closed doors, to splash his face with some cold water. And then he stares at the mirror like heās trying to summon a version of himself that you might tolerate; but to no avail.
Jack takes a minute to calm down. To bolt into his head that he wonāt give up easily. He strides into the corridor with a newfound determination and his tie fixed ā
in a few seconds, the door to the womenās bathroom opens ā
and you walk outside.
You take a step away, two, three.
A measurement of time is yet to be invented for just how fast you turn to him. Like you are still aware ā unwittingly, unfailingly, always ā of his presence; you canāt help but look.
You freeze immediately. He stands unmoving. The two of you are separated by a couple of feet. But also by the months apart and the unsaid and the unhealed. Itās hard to casually break that kind of silence. And all the pre-planned speeches in Jackās head boil down to Iām so sorry and Please, donāt leave. You look like youāre about to ā
There is a sharp, loud sound followed by a dull one ā of something heavy falling. You both instantly turn your heads and find the source of it around the corner: a metal tray and a smashed bottle of champagne, a server lying sprawled out on the floor. That same white-faced man, deadly unconscious.
The awkwardness gives way to urgency: you act like not two strangers but a team, just like you were once. And you worked damn well together.
Jack runs to him and crouches down, two fingers pressing on the manās neck. āGot a pulse.ā
You take your phone out to use the flashlight and lean down to his face. āPupils reactive.ā
āWill probably have a bruise from the fall,ā Jack is examining his head and neck.
āAnd a nasty bump too,ā you add, your own hands moving quickly down the serverās body. You start searching his pockets.
Jack quirks a brow at that. āYou think heās got any meds on him?ā
āHeās diabetic,ā you explain. āHe looked pale, so I asked him if he was okay. He said it was his low blood sugar 'cause he kept forgetting to get a snack.ā
Abbot bites down a smile: you still catch on to small things he doesnāt, and people always talk to you more willingly. He wonders if youāve ever missed working with him, too. Out loud, Jack notes:
āSo he might be in a coma.ā
āI was hoping heād have glucagon,ā you mumble, with a hint of discontent.
Two other servers see you and sprint closer. Jack asks them to deal with the mess of glass and alcohol left on the floor. He isnāt moving from his spot, he knows this moment wonāt last long: you next to him, you two talking, proximity you arenāt avoiding, arenāt distressed by.
āLook for an inside pocket in his vest,ā Jack suggests.
Your fingers move to check, quickly unbuttoning the manās clothes. āBingo,ā you whisper joyfully when you find the small injection kit.
You donāt waste time on reading the instructions you already know: you mix the powder with the liquid and easily fill the syringe. He helps you out by dragging down the manās pants so you can inject the glucagon into a leg muscle. A few guests and doctors are gawking at the scene.
Jack can only look at you.
The server opens his eyes with a pained exhale. āS-shit, did I pass out?ā
Jack helps him to sit up; you do the talking. āHowās your head? Any dizziness?ā
He rubs his temple and frowns at the sight of his dirtied white shirt. āNah, Iām fine. Didnāt mean to bother you guys, gotta go clean myself up.ā
Jack holds him by the elbow as the man slowly gets up. You button back his vest and give advice. āYou need to get a head CT just in case. Or at least get checked properly. The ER is just aroundāā
āNo, I canāt afford that,ā he retorts quickly, tiredly. āI know you mean well, but itās gonna cost me a fortune. And I should get back to work.ā
But Jack tightens his grip on the manās arm. āYouāre gonna pay a bigger price if you donāt take care of your health,ā Abbot tells him in that effortlessly persuasive tone. āThey wonāt charge you for a simple check-up. Take the main exit and turn left, then look for ambulances and follow them. The ER is not that busy right now, youāll be out in under 30 minutes.ā
Itās very hard to say no under the pressure of his gaze. The server nods, a bit disoriented; but also grateful. āThank you so much,ā he utters, then clumsily adjusts his vest and moves to the exit in jerky steps, like he has to stop himself from running.
The crowd of spectators lazily disperses. Jack sends a quick text to John, eyes on the screen, but his spine tenses like a string at the cognizance: you arenāt leaving. And he can calculate the distance without looking ā itās barely an armās length, and if he reaches out his hand, he knows heāll touch you. God, how much he wants to touch you.
Jack is so stuck on his reluctance, he doesnāt expect you to speak up.
āDonāt you charge for check-ups?ā
When he turns to you, you are already looking at him. It twinkles in your gaze like the moon through clouds: hope. Like you are waiting, wishing for him to say something. He doesnāt know where to begin.
āI asked Shen for a favor,ā Jack says, holding up his phone. āBesides, heās bored out of his mind, so weāre kinda helping each other out,ā he chuckles lightly.
āShen is an attending now?ā your question is equally surprised and guilty: you and John used to be friends. You mustāve cut ties with a lot of people when you quit.
The words pile up on Jackās tongue: itās not your fault you werenāt there, no one holds that against you, everyone misses you, and heās been missing you so much it is a never-ending torment ā
āGot the job in August,ā is what Abbot actually says.
āGood to hear,ā your eyes are still on him. āGot anyone new on the team?ā
āSame old,ā he shakes his head. āWe donāt do well with change in here.ā
Your affability dissolves into an expression thatās disappointed first, then ā completely blank. Jack has no idea why. It would be great to show assertiveness, to bring back the same commanding tone he used a few minutes ago. But that would feel like playing pretend. Which he has never done with you, and he is not about to start.
So Jack allows himself the truth. And his voice softens when he says:
āYou look beautiful.ā
He catches a ghost of a smile on your lips. But your eyes arenāt smiling.
āYou look like you donāt want to be here,ā you tell him plainly.
āI do, actually.ā
āSince when do you care about socializing?ā
Since he found out youād come. But he thinks it would be too blunt to say that.
āItās for a good cause. So I figured, why not,ā Jack brushes it off. The panic is pulsating through his chest again: what did he do, how can he make this better? āHowās your new job?ā
You sigh like he made the wrong move. āPays well. Way less chaotic,ā and your voice is void of anything that can give him hope.
You used to be so bubbly and expressive, he never pushed for details ā youād give him all down to the smallest, and he heeded to every word. He cannot tell if youāre trying not to overshare or if this is just how you are now, grown out of your exuberance like it was something foolish. Something he made you regret.
āDonāt you miss the chaos?ā Jack asks swiftly.
It does seem that he manages to scratch the mask you have on: you frown, like youāre about to remind him why exactly you had to leave it all behind ā
āThere you are!ā Gloria cuts in, her long dress light pink, her voice booming from across the hall. The smile she gives you doesnāt look fake. āWhy didnāt you come say hi? I found out that youāre here from Jonathan! So lovely that you came together!ā
Sheās interrupted briefly by some old man ā a doctor or perhaps a donor, someone whoās got enough authority to matter. Your smile is nothing but polite. You smooth your dress, something you do when you are nervous or uncomfortable. Or both. But this is your way out, and Jack knows you will take it. Of course, he wishes that you wouldnāt. Heād abdicate his pride, his morals and beliefs; he is ready to beg you. But wouldnāt it be selfish to drag you into something you want none of?
He wants you back, yes. He also wants you to be happy. And maybe there is no connection between the two, maybe itās indeed too late. Accepting it wounds him. Jack pushes through; he puts his feelings under anesthesia, he puts on a smile.
āIām glad that itās him,ā he says, unprompted, his words meant only for you to hear. āYou deserve someone good, something stable. It seems like a perfect match.ā
Your face falls. And his sincerity thatās meant to be a farewell backfires. You are trying to hide it, but he can read the signs: you bite the inside of your cheek and purse your lips, eyes momentarily drawn to the floor. When you look back at him, your gaze is also wounded. Like you are in a whirlpool too, and your pain goes by his name.
Your voice comes out barely above a whisper:
āI didnāt want it to be perfect, Jack. I just wanted it to be you.ā
He is left standing ā staggered, speechless ā as Gloria takes you by the arm and speedily leads you away. You disappear into the crowd, youāre on your way to a much better future, and Jack is on his own. Because in real life, not everyone gets their happy ending.
Except, this doesnāt feel final. This feels like a mistake.
The Fundraiser is in full swing: the main hall packed with people, every glass surface dappled with light, beams flashing in the air like confetti. Gloria thanks everyone for being in attendance, her speech a faraway echo, soon drowned out by the cheering. Some lone guests brush by him, but Jack stays in the quiet, at a distance, deep in his thoughts. They churn in him just like the clouds outside the windows ā dark grey, crawling over the sky, over the faint shades of violet and red. The colors dim at the horizon, but not his doubts: they only rise, like water vapor rising in the air. He never told you just how sorry he was. Maybe he should have. Abbot picks up his glass that he left on the floor, half-full still, the ice melted. What clinks through his head are the words: why didnāt he tell you? What if it couldāve made a difference?
Someone walks up to him, slowly, with purpose. And Jack expects Robbyās or Danaās sympathetic face, or maybe that poor server coming back. But itās none of these people.
It is Jonathan.
āTired of trying to charm old millionaires for a paycheck?ā he smiles at Abbot and steps closer, a glass of red wine in his hand, smelling so strongly of perfume, he mustāve soaked himself in it.
He seems relaxed and harmless. And yet, Jackās rigid, like he is looking for a catch.
āI donāt have much charm in me,ā he doesnāt bother with a smile. āNot a problem for you, I reckon.ā
But he speaks with no bitterness. Primarily because it seems impossible to hate him: Jonathan is fun, lighthearted, witty. Heās everything Jackās not.
āOh, I donāt need charm for that,ā the brunet chuckles. āI just mention kids and cancer in one sentence, and that does it. Saves me a lot of time so I can spend it in a more pleasant company.ā
Yours, Jack assumes. Heās trying not to picture you and Jonathan together, doing the things youāve done with Jack.
āYou shouldnāt leave her waiting, then,ā he forces out, swallowing his jealousy.
He raises his glass with an unspoken toast ā to your happiness, Jonathanās luck. Jackās loss. Heās waiting for the picture-perfect man to leave him to his misery.
But Jonathan is in no rush to go. And weirdly enough, his face is actually... amused.
āYou are aware weāve been friends for years, right?ā he narrows his eyes a little. āEver since the uni. Has she told you how we met?ā
Okay, this is where he draws the line. Jack doesnāt need to listen to how easily it was to fall in love with you. He knows already. And Abbotās never been nonchalant about his feelings. How do you tell a man that you are mad about his girlfriend? Jack tells himself heāll keep his mouth shut until heās out of water.
He takes a sip. Thereās barely a couple left.
How farās the parking lot?
Jonathan is oblivious to his internal struggle. Or maybe heās just unconcerned. āIt happened at the end of the first semester,ā he recounts, smoothing his green silk tie with manicured fingers. āI got so smashed at one of the parties, I actually forgot where the dorm was. Passed out somewhere in the bushes, Iām not kidding. A dozen people mustāve walked by me, but she didnāt. She helped me up, let me crash in her room. When I woke up with what probably is the worst hangover Iāve ever had, she brought me coffee. And then she told me that if drinking and partying were all Iām good for, I should drop out,ā he drops his glee, his serious expression hinting at how much weight your words held. āBelieve it or not, that conversation changed my life. And in our uni days, she was my closest friend. I knew I could rely on her because sheās so... straightforward. Funny. Kind. Iāve always got enough attention from the ladies, sure. But I valued kindness and sincerity way more,ā then he looks Abbot dead in the eye ā and punctuates, āBecause I was a closeted gay.ā
Jack chokes on water.
Jonathan doesnāt even flinch.
āYou know, I keep hearing how good a doctor you are, and I do believe it to be true. But man, you fucking suck at picking up social cues,ā the brunet gives his wine a swirl and lists. āIāve got a suit thatās tailored to perfection. I dodged every womanās attempt to flirt with me and spent the evening making heart-eyes at the bartender. I am literally wearing lip gloss. If I wanted to be any more gay, Iād have to jump your bones. And honestly, I would rather lick the pavement. No offence.ā
āNone taken,ā Jack says under his breath, wiping droplets of water off his jacket, utterly confused. āWhy didnāt she tell me that? I thought you two were dating. And she didnāt correct me.ā
Jonathan holds a pause and holds his gaze, as if heās hoping Abbot can figure out himself the explanation that is so glaringly apparent.
āYou shattered her heart, Jack,ā the brunet tells him, not with reproach but with honesty. āIām surprised she said a word to you. She once promised me she never would.ā
Thatās when it hits him like a blinding spotlight: you did grant him a chance to make things right. And he just wasted it.
Or did he?
āI really need to go,ā Jack mutters. He makes a few rushed steps away before abruptly turning on his heels. āDo you know whereāā
āI left her with Evans,ā Jonathan readily informs him and adds with a sad half-smile. āYou may need to do some groveling.ā
Jack offers no reply because he is already on the move. But he knows he will kneel and crawl and wear his feet off to the knees to merit your forgiveness.
Anticipation gets his blood pumping as he sprints through the crowd, through the cacophony of sounds and a swarm of colors, his eyes dartingĀ all over the place, looking for you. His pulse competes in speed with passing seconds. It maybe takes him five minutes or just a half of one ā before he spots Dana. Whoās standing at the bar alone. Her plastic smile has almost worn off; it dies completely as she notices Jack coming. She meets him with hissed words and an accusatory tone.
āGeez, I ran out of talking points, she just left! What took you so long?!ā
āYou knew Jonathan was gay?ā Jack canāt help his bafflement. His body is already turning in the direction of the lobby.
She groans and yanks away his glass he totally forgot about. āAnybody with eyes would know that! Now hurry up!ā
He doesnāt need to be told twice.
Abbot careens into the lobby just in time to see you grabbing your black coat. Youāre leaving earlier than planned ā that much is clear from how hastily you move, from how pensive and distant your expression is. Just as you turn, your eyes fall on him ā and in an instant, you put on a mask again, only this one is cold and stern and so defensive, you donāt allow him to say a word.
āI donāt want to talk to you.ā
āI know, I know,ā Jack agrees humbly, ruefully. āJust give me a minute, I āā
āWe already had one pointless exchange of pleasantries, and now Iām going home,ā you pop on the coat without looking at him, putting the collar up like itās your armor.
There is a rumbling outside, the sound creeping close, closer. A car alarm goes off. You go towards the exit.
āItās gonna rain any minute now, you should wait it out,ā he tries to persuade you, following behind, but you refuse to spare him a glance.
āIām sure Iāll survive. Thank god for Uber,ā you pull your phone out, heels clicking on the polished floor.
And his resolve is melting into desperation that pours into his abdomen, heavy like molten rocks. Burning like magma.
āI talked to Jonathan. Actually, he did most of the talking,ā Jack manages to keep pace. āAnd he kinda came out in the process. So I know you arenāt dating.ā
āI didnāt say we were, you made an assumption. Good to know you still like those.ā
Affliction flickers through his voice. āI wish youād told me sooner.ā
āBecause the thought of me dating someone is an intolerable torment,ā you sneer at him over the shoulder, still not slowing down.
The answer flies out of his mouth before he even thinks about it:
āYes.ā
Three-letter word ā thatās what it takes for you to stop and turn to him. But when you do, it isnāt out of confusion or surprise. No, Jack is getting a different emotion from your sharp exhale and knitted brows and flaming gaze.
And Abbot realizes heās never seen you truly angry. He sure does now.
āWow,ā you draw, eyes boring into him, the phone in your hand forgotten. āDo you even hear yourself right now? You donāt get to have any opinions on my love life.ā
Jack looks like you just hit him in the face. Like if you actually did, it wouldāve hurt him less. He takes a breath so heās got enough air for all the words he must let out.
āI want to apologize. I know I treated you horribly, and I never shouldāveāā
āThanks, I feel whole again,ā you cut him off and turn your back to him, as if his words are idle. Meaningless.
You venture out into the street, a gust of wind tearing through the layers of your dress and coat. The sky is swallowed up by grey clouds and autumnās gloom, the silence hanging in the air is eerie like a premonition.
Jack catches up to you, and desperation rises up in him under the pressure of his awakened fears, of his sleepless yearning.
āCan you stop for a second?ā
āWhy, so you can heap me with some excuses? As if Iām still supposed to care,ā you say, voice brimming over with emotions ā he can hear fury and offence. But the pain is there too.
āI just want to explaināā
āFor months Iāve been waiting like a goddamn idiot for your text or your call or your visit,ā you wander on to the parking lot, seething and so obviously hurt. āBut you never reached out, didnāt even leave me a single message. You moved on so fast, like I was just a bump on your road.ā
āThatās not whatāā
āAnd then you come and tell me I hurt your feelings?ā you whirl around, face tear-stained, each word a shard of glass that cuts him. āAnd how dare I not inform you that Iām still pathetically single? Why would I do that, Jack? Who the hell do you think you are to make any demands?!ā
Lightning cracks fiercelyĀ in the sky, silver electric pulses threading through the darkness. Wind roughens up the trees and tears wilting leaves that swirl down in the air.
You notice none of it.
āYou were the one who broke up with me! You didnāt do shit for things to work out, you didnāt care about my efforts, you decided for both of us because, of course, you always know better. So you donāt get to have any feelings about it now, after a year of radio silence! After you made it so clear you didnāt want me,ā your voice breaks.
And itās not anger that flashes across your face but sadness, inordinate and undeniable, like your heartbreak is fresh. Because, oh god, you still have feelings for him. And everything in you screams how much you want it not to be true.
You wipe the tears off your cheeks, not realizing that some of it is rain ā the first few drops fall down, their patter just a murmur in the foliage. But it is getting louder. You shamefully avert your gaze. You sound dejected when you speak.
āAt least have the decency to leave me alone. Why canāt you just leave me alone? Why didāā
āBecause I canāt fucking breathe without you!ā Jackās voice roars like thunder, like eruption, a force of nature breaking loose.
You instantly turn back to him, your gaze linking with his. It makes you stop. It stuns you: when heās with you, everything else ā crowds, faces, storm brewing above ā suddenly grows dim. You gape at Jack like he just cut his chest open with bare hands.
And then he offers you his heart.
āI canāt move on, I am incapable of it, there wasnāt a day in the past year that I didnāt spend wishing I could go back and fix this! You think I donāt know I fucked up? Iād still remember it with my skull cracked in half! Iād have to get amnesia to forget it ā and then it would come back to me the second I get back home. Because every part of it, every inch of it is stained with you.ā
His eyes are riveted to you, and you are rooted to the spot. The rain comes down harder, but you are only hearing what pours out of Jackās mouth.
āI still have the apartment. The one you helped me pick, the one we lived in. Thereās the same bed we shared, the same shower, the same kitchen where you made me breakfasts. And I see shadows of you on every wall, I hear echoes of your voice, I wait for the sound of your key. And itās suffocating. But I keep renewing the lease because thatās all I have left of you.ā
You are looking at him like you donāt recognize him. And truthfully, you canāt: the Jack you knew buried his feelings deep. He never shared them ā not when he woke up in cold sweat, not when his hands shook or his mood dropped. He never even told you that he loved you.
But this Jack talks to you like he canāt even think of stopping.
And he lays all his feelings bare.
āI wake up wanting you, I suffer through each day wanting you, I canāt sleep at night because lying there awake without you is unbearable ā and if I close my eyes, I dream of no one but you, which feels worse than stepping on a landmine. Because I know that Iāll wake up alone. And itās been tearing me to shreds.ā
His voice is hoarse, his usually impenetrable expression collapsing into one of undeniable remorse. You donāt move when Jack allows himself a step to you.
āI didnāt come here to argue with you. And Iād never want to hurt you. Not again,ā Jack needs another breath before he shares his reasoning ā fervid and candid and certain in its brevity. āI want you back.ā
Your clothes are getting wet, his too. But all youāre feeling is how your fury and defiance disintegrate around the edges, turning to dust the rain washes away. And after everything Jackās put you through, you canāt hate him, canāt fight him, canāt reject him.
And he canāt stay away from you.
āIād crawl through hell for you if it gets me another chance. Iād cut off my arm up to the shoulder, Iād give up my career, Iād move cities and cross countries and swim across oceans. Tell me what to do, and Iāll do it.ā
The sky lights up, white flashes on an indigo canvas. Your heartbeat thunders in your ears. Jack pleads:
āTell me you can give me a second chance.ā
āPlease.ā
āTell me.ā
You try to say something, but no words come out. And in this moment, you donāt want to talk. You want to feel something, you search for solid proof that this is real ā for something grounding and tangible, like an embrace. Or like a kiss.
You dart to him without thinking.
His hands catch you midway.
His lips meet yours with no resistance and no hesitation.
Itās soft first, not out of reticence but out of tenderness ā Jack holds and kisses you like youāre fragile, a treasure heās afraid to damage with his fingerprints. But that is hardly satisfying for how much youāve missed him. You pull him closer, you want the kiss to deepen ā and he obliges you, his tongue skating across your lower lip. You almost lose the sense of time, mindless of the wind and raindrops dripping in your mouth ā you only feel the heat of his, the need for him, the way your lungs burn from the lack of air, from the intensity of him.
Jack has to pull away first, his own breath heaving. The rain is trickling down your cheeks, and he brushes a few drops away. āYouāre gonna catch a cold, we canāt just stand here,ā and then he grabs onto an idea, the way a drowning man would grip a straw. āI still have some of your things. The drive to the apartment is onlyāā
āAbout nine minutes,ā you whisper, eyes searching his, like maybe there is a reason hidden there for you to turn down his offer. He doesnāt want you to. You know that you donāt want that either.
āC'mon, letās get you in the car,ā Jack takes you by the hand and leads the way.
And you comply. You know heās sober ā his tongue didnāt bring the taste of alcohol, no bitterness of whiskey or the spiciness of rum. He just tasted like Jack. You press your lips together like youāre savouring it (you actually are).
He spots his pickup truck and helps you get in first, then takes the driverās seat. Jack turns the heater on and keeps his gaze away from your wet clothes that cling to every curve of you. He fights the urge to take the tie off ā you catch his fingers drumming on the wheel, his shoulders tense, eyes sometimes darting down, trying to be discreet. To you, he isnāt. This goes on for a minute, two; the roads arenāt busy, and he is driving fast.
A red light stops him at a crossing. Jack shifts a little on his seat. Tries for a deep, calming inhale ā
You lean to him.
Your hands move on their own accord, out of habit you never unlearned: you skillfully loosen the knot, pulling the thin tail of the fabric out, then carefully unfold his tie. Jack sits mellowed and motionless, his gaze tracing your face ā wet eyelashes and lines of your nose and cheeks down to the parted lips. He knows if you allow him another kiss, he will have trouble stopping.
But you pull back. And he steps on the gas.
Heat floods in through the vents, and you silently watch the city through the rain-streaked window. Youāve missed a lot about Jack, and Danaās words skate through your mind: āhe has been working on himself, heās really changed.ā But itās impossible to change the past, to act like his behavior didnāt scar you. You donāt know if you can let him in again. And yet, the truth thuds in tact with your heartbeat: you want to, you want to, you want to.
He parks as close to the apartment building as he can ā the walk up to the entrance is barely half a minute. He doesnāt take your hand, he gives you space. But he still holds the doors for you, and you can feel his palm hover over your lower back when you go up the stairs. And you expect to see the flat changed too, you keep imagining how he revamped the place and rearranged things, new paint over the old, over the traces that you left. Just so his memories donāt loom in every corner.
But then Jack turns his key and lets you in. And it feels like you traveled back a year.
Because nothing is different. Everything looks exactly how you left it.
Jack locks the door behind you, and for a moment, he just stands here. You feel his gaze on you, while yours is wandering ā over the same furniture, same colors, green apples in the white bowl in the hallway, because you used to grab a couple before leaving. And he remembered it. You.
Warmth roots deep in your chest.
You toe off your shoes and wiggle out of your semi-dry coat. Jack carefully pops it on a hanger while you amble around. Itās like a walk down memory lane: you can recall how he assembled every shelf, his brows wrinkled in concentration, his sleeves rolled up, you shamelessly admiring his tensing muscles instead of reading the instructions (not that he needed any). You think of him refusing to let you lift a single box, of how you cheerfully unpacked them ā taking out clothes and books and new things meant for just the two of you to share: soft cotton towels and fresh bed linen and dinnerware sets. He didnāt show any emotions when you were shopping; but when you were alone, Jackās feigned aloofness vanished ā he smiled softly at you, one arm secured around your waist, his short hums of approval pressed into your shoulder. You smile at the memory.
And then you glimpse the painting ā bright blue wave, still in the same spot on the bedroom wall. You canāt help but come in.
The gap between the heavy curtains lets barely any light in, but you manage to find the bedside lamp and flip the switch on. The yellow glow spreads all over the room, over the printout. You notice instantly: he fixed the corner you almost ripped off. You didnāt mean to ā you were heartbroken, you were in a rush, you thought heād hate it if you left it. You also absolutely had to leave before he came back, so you didnāt have time to properly untape the whole thing. But Jack took care of it like it was more than just a piece of paper. Like it held meaning to him simply because it did to you.
The warmth in you grows, like snowdrops at the edge of winter.
You take a better look around ā thereās the dresser you used to put vases with flowers on, the dark blue bed cover you spent many days under, the fluffy bedside rug he bought you because the floor always felt cold. Belatedly, you see a thick spine of what looks like a book left on the nightstand. But you know itās a photo album. One of your gifts to him.
Itās something you found startling when you got to know Jack ā he barely had any photographs. As if the whole idea of capturing lifeās moments seemed alien to him. Or maybe he didnāt want to have reminders of everything heās lost. But you wanted to remind him of all the good bits life was still full of. You chose the first three photos: Robby in heart-shaped glasses he put on as a joke, Shen in a white gown he had to wear for an hour when they ran out of scrubs, Trinity grinning next to sleeping Frank after she drew a mustache on him, with Dana laughing in the background. And Jack loved it. He was way more selective, but he did add dozens of polaroids as the months went on ā you turn the pages and see familiar faces, the people you loved working with. The image you remember last was of you and Jack: you dozed off on his shoulder, his arm casually tucked behind your back, his eyes on you. Walsh snapped the photo sneakily and sent to you, although you blatantly denied all her suspicions.
But the collection doesnāt end there ā you unexpectedly discover a few more photos.
Of you.
Theyāre from his phone, you guess ā some shots are blurry, definitely made without you knowing. The first one is you cooking with his shirt on, knees bare, and hair in a messy bun, a grin curling the corner of your mouth. Then comes a photo of you standing at the ERās exit, probably waiting for him, your tired face soaking up the sun. Then itās you chatting with McKay at the nurse station, you sitting in a call room reading, you sniffing candles in IKEA, you hugging a sad kid who got his leg broken, you petting stray cats at the farmerās market. But itās the one Abbot put at the end that makes your breath catch in your throat. He took a picture of you sleeping ā your back and shoulders peeking from the bedsheets, faint sunlight glittering over your naked skin. The shadow of his hand covers your closed eyelids. And the realization bolts through you so violently, it makes you shiver: you donāt know how to stop loving him.
You canāt.
All of a sudden, the air feels warmer. You know that Jack walked in ā you feel him staring. You always do.
āI wasnāt sure you would keep this,ā you say, your fingers gliding over the edges of the album.
āOf course I did,ā he replies quietly, fondly.
You turn to look at him.
He brought your plaid blue shirt, his tie and jacket discarded somewhere in the hall. Your gaze unhurriedly traces his face ā the wrinkles faintly scattered at the corners of his hazel eyes, lines of his nose and cheekbones and curve of his lips. But in his features, you are also seeing weariness, the kind that doesnāt bother with pretence. And in the ambience of soft light, after so manyĀ truths unveiled, thereās still one answer you are seeking.
āWhy didnāt you leave a message?ā you wish youād sound more collected; you donāt. You cast your eyes back to the polaroids as you dig out the memories that are less pleasant. āI got notifications after your every call. I had to buy a second phone eventually because I got too tired of waiting for you to say something.ā
And you donāt see Jack opening his mouth and closing before he reads between the lines: you couldāve turned off notifications, you couldāve changed your number. Instead, you waited. For many months.
For him.
āAt first I thought it would be too soon,ā he confesses, a pained edge to his tone. āI knew I hurt you. Figured youād want some time away from me. It felt wrong to disturb you, to offer excuses that would be pointless without fixing the real issue. Which was all in my head,ā Jack admits. āIt took me a while to get hold of myself. I didnāt want to give you some half-assed apologies and I... What I need to tell you, I didnāt want to say it over the phone.ā
He doesnāt turn it into a performance, you do not hear him move or even make a sound. For a few seconds, you wait for him to say more. But then you glance at Jack ā
and see him on his knees.
Your heart stutters.
The sight brings you no satisfaction. Because you are imagining the edges of his prosthesis dig into his skin, his upper leg pressing into the hard metal at this uncomfortable angle. And just a thought of him being in pain is what you still canāt bear.
āJack, your leg will hurt ifāā
āI donāt care,ā he breathes out, eyes not leaving yours. āI love you.ā
His voice is roughened by sincerity. Youāve never seen him so exposed, so unashamed about being vulnerable.
āI donāt remember what itās like not to love you. And itās the only thing I know wonāt change,ā the words fall out of him, steeped in devotion that slowly binds your wounds. āI knew I loved you before I even kissed you. I shouldāve told you then. I shouldāve told you that so many times.ā
You cross the space between you, barefoot and up to your throat filled with longing. Jack rests his head against your stomach, one of his hands finding your lower back. Like he needs you to ground him. It only takes one touch ā for your body to cave in, to ask for more, a treacherous response that only he elicits. An exhale shudders out of you as youāre anchoring yourself to him, so you wonāt be carried away by currents of desire. But itās already swelling in your core.
You feel the warmth of his mouth when Jack speaks up again. āI was afraid that if I said it, it would make it real. Would mean that I dragged you into my mess. Even though you deserve so much better.ā
You look down at him ā at his broad shoulders slacken in defeat, the damp grey curls with a dusting of white. Instinctively, you thread your fingers through his hair. āYou didnāt drag me anywhere. Iāve always been exactly where I wanted,ā and your voice wavers in a confession of your own, āBut you hurt me so badly.ā
He doesnāt answer right away. Jack slowly turns his head, his other hand tracing your leg up to your hip. Both of his palms lay flat against your back. And then he nuzzles you, inhales you through the thin fabric of your dress, as if heās been deprived of air. His muffled words burn your skin.
āI hurt myself too,ā but then he looks up and meets your gaze and whispers, āI want us both to stop hurting,ā in that low voice that makes your knees buckle.
Your craving for him has been crooning in your chest, and now the heat of him ā his gaze, his touch ā is making your blood sing. You lower yourself down to him, shift closer to him, your fingers falling on his jaw. Jack leans in, letting his face fall into your hand. His eyes seem darker in this lighting, deep umber with the specks of green, with the same sheen of need. Youāve never seen a man more handsome.
And you want him to kiss you like he doesnāt plan on stopping.
āWhat you said at the parking lot, I feel that too,ā you murmur. āI wake up every day wanting you.ā
His lips crash into yours ā or maybe yours crash into his ā itās hot and frantic, it loosens the last remnants of your self-control. You grasp his shirt as youāre struggling to undo the buttons, snapping a few off until you bare his chest and feel his skin, his muscles taut under your palms. Jack makes a sound ā a groan you swallow, his teeth grazing your lower lip before his tongue is sliding against yours. The kiss is deep, dizzying. There is no grace nor shame in how your body presses into his, in how his hands clutch onto your hips, in how you barely keep balance until you two part to catch your breath.
Your voice is shaky. āWe shouldāā
āThe bed, yes,ā Jack rasps.
But his mouth trails for yours again, and you canāt keep your hands off him, canāt fight this all-consuming need.
The bed is barely twenty feet away ā you stumble toward it. Youāre kissing like you are starving for each other, leaving a trail of clothing on the floor. His shirt goes first, then he pulls down his pants, his mouth lowered to your throat, to where the jugular vein thuds under your skin. Your jaw falls open with a gasp ā just like he knew it would; his hands are quick to steady you, his grip tight as his lips move up. His breath brushes the spot beneath your ear; he stops there. You canāt hold back a whine and turn your face to kiss him, eyes already dazed. But as Jack teeters on the edge of no return, an inkling takes shape in his mind: this is the closure that you didnāt get last year. This is the grand finale to the story before the curtain drops. Before you leave for good. Because you didnāt promise him you wouldnāt.
And yet, it doesnāt stop him. Nothing could. His love is a gratuitous surrender, an offering of the best parts of him, even if it leaves him hollow. If this is what your last shared memory is, heāll make it worth your time.
Jack kisses you with his mouth open, his hand pressed to your nape, his lips devouring you like he canāt get enough ā you let him, you melt into him. And everything in you is reeling. He only breaks for air when you are out of it, your lips swollen, your palms roaming over his naked chest. Your senses are reduced to just the feeling of him ā his hands peeling away your dress, the soft press of his mouth at your collarbones, between your breasts, the way his tongue circles your nipple ā then his lips close around it, his fingers tugging at the other ā you feel the wetness pool between your legs, your body prickling with warmth. Your dress slides down to the floor ā the second you step out of it, Jack locks his arm around you and lifts you ā itās barely three heartbeats before he lays you on the mattress, pushing you up until your head reaches the pillows. His mouth comes back to yours.
Desire courses through you freely and burns brighter with his every kiss, his every touch, skin pressing against skin. His hands make their way lower ā his perfect, big, firm hands, their roughness molded into softness when they are on you; his lips follow. He leaves a damp trail over the hollow of your throat, over your heaving chest, right over your heart. Over the ridges of your ribs (each one, like he is counting). Then he centers his path, a kiss placed at your belly button. Then his exhale skims right above your underwear.
He pulls back ā just a little. Just to get a better view. You know the thin cotton does nothing to cover your arousal ā Jack eyes the wet spot at your center, dragging his fingers up your thigh. Then he presses his thumb right where youāre already aching for him.
Your breath comes out in gasps. Your heart lurches, threatening to bruise your ribcage.
Jack doesnāt hesitate or stall or tease you.
He slips your panties off in one smooth motion, then his hands slowly push your legs apart. Cool air touches you before he does, and goosebumps spring up on your skin. You hear Jack swallow loudly as his eyes drop between your thighs. He seems transfixed, pupils blown wide, a vehemence that comes from hunger. Or from reverence.
He bends his knees and sinks down on the bed like he is at the altar. And he lowers his head in worship.
Jack spreads you open with his practiced fingers, flicking his tongue over your clit, then tracing a line lower ā to lick whatās dripping out of you already. A moan breaks from your throat, hips jerking down involuntarily as your hands clutch the bed sheets. He drags his tongue back up ā and then buries his face between your legs, no warning given before he starts eating you out like heās having a feast. It is a calculated mess: the way he licks and sucks, obscenely unapologetic, and pleasure sparks off through you, intoxicating and setting every nerve alight. There is no questioning his skills ā Jack knows your body like it was made for him, like he has mapped it with his mouth so many times, heād find and follow every contour in the darkness. He doesnāt use his hands yet. He doesnāt need to: not when he wraps his lips around your clit, the pressure in your stomach building up, your orgasm barrelling towards you deliciously fast ā and then it crashes right through you, your body trembling all over, Jackās name lustily rolling off your tongue.
He doesnāt stop.
One of his palms glides to the inside of your thigh, rubs a few soothing circles on your skin. Then his thumb carefully strokes your swollen bundle of nerves ā and you donāt come down from your high, instead reaching a torturous plateau: you are still sensitive and gasping, and yet insatiable for him, your hips instinctively, needily grinding against his hand. He starts with just one finger ā thick, long, and pushing into you with ease. Jackās breathing hitches when you clench around him, and almost instantly, he adds a second, knowing youāll take it, knowing how much you love being stuffed full of him. You answer with a long-drawn moan because fuck yes, you do.
Heās slow at first, sliding his fingers in up to the knuckles, dragging his gaze up to your face. Itās a debauched sight, a mesmerizing one: the way you spread your legs for him, head falling back against the pillow, a string of wanton sounds spilling from your lips. He watches your reaction closely as he expertly hits the spot that makes you keen and squeeze your eyes shut, hips grounding down into him harder. Jack takes this moment to ease another finger in, his hand already slick with you, his cock straining against his boxer briefs.
And he is picking up the pace, his three fingers stretching you wider, wet sounds filling the dimmed room.
āThis feels good?ā his voice is quiet, ragged.
He doesnāt plan to. Heās memorizing it again: your scent, your taste, the tremble of your legs he unspools the tension from. This perfect, sweat-covered image of your naked body ā heād paint it on the inside of his eyelids if he could. And Jack can tell youāre getting close: words incoherent, muscles pulling tighter. It takes just four swipes of his tongue ā and then youāre cumming with a silent scream, back arched, thighs clamped around his head. He works you through it, patient and waiting until your legs relax again, so he can pull his fingers out.
You feel the aftershocks hum through your body, the satisfying rush of blood ebbing a little. But you are not yet satiated. And when you look at Jack, he is already staring at you, gaze dark, unblinking. He keeps eye contact as he licks his fingers clean, his chin and mouth drenched in you, cheeks flushed. You think, with anxious excitement:
he will not give you anything that you donāt ask for. You have to be straightforward about what you want.
So you tug at his hair to bring him up, to kiss him, the growing urgency you want him to join in on. He moves up purposefully slowly, your legs still open under him, his palm grazing your hip up to the waist, his touches featherlike and fleeting, unseen lines that wonāt turn into marks. Jack hovers over you, sturdy and still, but heās not teasing. Up close, with your faces mere inches from each other, heās softer ā like heās marveling at you, like he is reverent, like heād believe in you like he never believed in God.
And yet, he is still holding back.
You put a hand up to his chest, fingers splayed wide, appreciative of how heated his skin feels. His pulse leaps ā you do feel it. Your hushed words brush his lips:
āI donāt want just your hands, I need more. I need all of you.ā
And then abruptly, your fingers travel lower, over his tensing stomach and down to where heās hard and leaking through his briefs. You palm him through the fabric, eager, with just the right amount of pressure. Just how he likes it. His hips stutter, a groan stifled in his throat. You easily slip under the elastic and free him ā so thick and heavy in your palm, you have to bite your lip to hold back a grin. You wrap your hand around the base without even looking and give his cock a few slow strokes; with each one, Jack gulps more and more air in. Unraveling.
And you say ā bluntly, ardently, right into his mouth:
āI want to have you raw.ā
Jackās eyes go wide. Emotions ripple across his face ā amazement bordering on disbelief. He grabs both of your hands and pins them above your head, a strong grip you canāt free yourself from. This silences you for a second. And then you watch intently as his resolve gives way to his desires, to something almost primal, inescapable. That mirrors everything youāre feeling. You shamelessly arch into him, bare breasts rubbing against his broad chest.
āPlease, Jack,ā you writhe ā in agony, in need. āI want to feel you. Want you to fill me up. Leave me so full, Iāll leak all over the bed. Please, please, pleaāā
His mouth shuts you up, a kiss so searing it knocks the air from your lungs. You taste yourself on him ā you also taste his desperation, the fevered hunger he is at the mercy of. Him and you both. There is no space between your bodies, and you can feel his length against your thigh ā you plea again, and his hands dart to nudge your legs further apart. Your own hands ā freed and impatient ā tug at his briefs; he yanks them down to his knees before his cock finally presses at your entrance. His tip slids through your folds until heās coated in your wetness, until youāre whimpering and begging and bucking your hips forward.
But all the words escape you when he pushes in.
He eases into you, unhurried, inch by inch, his thickness stretching you and filling you until he bottoms out. You are so overwhelmed, it feels like you canāt take a single breath. Jack gives your body a moment to adjust, his forehead pressed to yours, his palm against your cheek. And then he rolls his hips experimentally, just once. A sound tumbles from your mouth: loud, throaty moan. And suddenly your lust for him eclipses every other feeling.
You link your hands behind his neck, locking your gaze with his. And you donāt need to say a word for him to move. He starts slow, but he thrusts deep, the way he knows you love, the way that makes your hips cant up to meet his rhythm. You feel him everywhere ā the friction and the weight of him, breaths shared between two mouths, the pleasure mounting in you so fast, your head is swimming. And you are pliant in his hands, and you know he did ruin you for every other man. Youād let him do it all over again.
Jack takes his time, determined, each thrust unleashing pure bliss in you. He manages to keep control ā until he moves his eyes down to where you are joined, where youāre soaking him.
āYou are taking me so fucking well,ā he praises breathlessly.
And then his thrusts start growing rougher, sweat dribbling from his temples, his lips tasting like salt when you catch them with yours. You bite his lower lip ā he almost wishes you drew blood and left a mark heād wear for days. A gift, a memory, proof that you allowed him to have you one last time. He also wishes he could make this last, but heās as wrecked as you are. And you are back to begging.
Jack moves his mouth to your neck, and his hand snakes between your bodies to trace tight circles on your clit. He doesnāt need to ask you or to wait for long ā he barely even needs to touch you ā you fall apart with a full-body shudder, a cry muffled against his shoulder. And you squeeze him so tight, it tips him over. The orgasm rips through him, hips jerking as he spills inside you, your body clinging to his, welcoming everything he gives you. Down to the last drop. Until heās emptied, and the room feels colder. And somehow emptiness feels heavy.
You stay like this ā tangled together, your labored breathing the only sound in the silence. And Jack suspects that once you slip out of your daze, you will regret this. Him. He watches as you calm your breath, he keeps his weight braced above you as he is trying to compose himself. As if heās bracing for the impact of your rejection.
You sigh with your whole chest. Then look at him, your words measured, the decision made:
āI canāt give you a second chance.ā
His face doesnāt react, not right away. His eyes do ā they are much greener now, and pain sweeps through them like an underwater current. Like something thatās about to swallow him. And he will let it drown him willingly.
But then you put your thumb under his chin. To make him pay attention when you add:
āāIf you donāt start talking to me. If you donāt let me in that overthinking head of yours,ā your voice isnāt commanding but conciliatory, the same softness you always have for him in spades. āBecause I donāt want to second-guess your every move. Or watch you distancing yourself from me over something you mentally blew out of proportion. I canāt help you if I donāt know whatās going on, and I hate not knowing.ā
He doesnāt talk. Doesnāt move. You arenāt even sure he is breathing. In the faint golden lamplight, Jack is a marble statue, as though his brain short-circuited at your suggestion. As if he canāt believe your words are real.
Your hand cradles his face, like all these months back. Your touch is just as warm and soothing.
āJack, can you take a breath for me?ā you ask quietly, your words grazing his lips.
A few long seconds pass before he blinks and breathes in ā and his chest shudders on the inhale, like all the walls heās built around his heart are finally collapsing. Heās blinking rapidly, eyes glistening. He never looks away.
āYes,ā Jack whispers, his voice colored with relief. āYes, to everything you said. Iāll do it. You wonāt have to ask again,ā and then his head drops to your shoulder, and his mouth presses repentance and kisses into your skin. āIām sorry, Iām so sorry.ā
āYouāve apologized enough,ā you say softly, arms moving up to hug him ā but then he shifts his weight, and your thighs flinch. Because heās still inside you.
You hiss, Jack stops. He drags his lips back, a barely audible apology left somewhere at your collarbone because he just canāt help it. He gets up and almost stumbles, one foot caught inĀ his own briefs that dangle somewhere at his ankles. You laugh and help him pull them up; Jack leaves a kiss on the crown of your head. He comes back with a wet towel, sits next to you, and opens your legs gently to wipe you clean, his hands careful where you are most sensitive. Where you are filled with him.
And while he is attentive, heās relaxed, like all the tension bled out of him with sweat, like an enormousĀ weight has been lifted from his shoulders. You watch him and you wish so strongly that he could always be like this. And when heās not, you wish you could be there too.
And something prompts you to blurt out:
āIām still on the pill, by the way. So no accidental babies, donāt worry.ā
A smile splits across his face. Real, evident in both corners of his mouth. He doesnāt fight it, he doesnāt give you a reply until heās done. Jack pulls your underwear back on and crawls into the bed with you ā he is still smiling when he says:
āI wouldnāt mind if you werenāt.ā
And you should laugh it off or leave for later, but you canāt. Responsibilities that come with kids usually come hand in hand with marriage. Youāve never talked about either. Although youāve wanted to ā you thought about it, dreamed about it, and Jack has always been the one you could imagine your life with.
Now youāre afraid it all may crumble like a sand castle. He reads the worry from your gaze and pulls you closer, arms on your waist. And this time, Jack lays the foundation for a home he wants to last for years.
āI want everything with you,ā he says simply, warmly. āI want to come home to you, I want to fall asleep and wake up next to you. I want you on your day-offs, and I want to be in trauma rooms with you. If thereās a spot for a night-shift attending at your hospital, Iāll transfer,ā he leans to place a kiss over your shoulder. Lips soft, words firm, gaze ā both, always on you. āI want to marry you ā in a cathedral packed with guests or have a courthouse wedding, it doesnāt matter, take your pick. Iād love for us to have a kid one day ā but Iāll be just as happy if we donāt. I know that I will love you under any circumstances, through good and bad, and everything else life throws at us. And I donāt ever want to be without you.ā
You only realize youāre crying when his fingers sweep the tears from your cheeks.
āI thought you hated weddings,ā you sniffle.
āI said I didnāt care about them. But I do care about you,ā he skims his thumb across your cheekbone. Then places a kiss there, too.
Before you know it, you are smiling. And these are definitely happy tears. The dreams you deemed delusive come back to your mind ā and they are not about diamonds or white dresses: instead, you picture waking in his arms. In an apartment of your own or maybe in a house. And you do want a kid ā at least one ā with his bright copper curls and freckles and that cheeky crooked smile he had when he was little.
And in the morning, you will tell him that Gloria said sheād gladly have you back.
But right now, you have other words to say. You drop a light kiss on his jaw, your tears dried up, face beaming when you tell him:
āI love you.ā
Jackās smile quivers. As does his voice. āNo, donāt say it. Not now,ā he shakes his head and drops his gaze, like heās afraid youāll notice his one fear he doesnāt yet know how to pacify. āTell me again later, when Iāll deserve that. I hope I will.ā
You put your index finger over his cheek and turn his face a little so he can meet your eyes again. Youāre speaking with them, too.
āI loved you then, and I love you now. You donāt need to work for it. You just need to accept it. You need to let me love you, Jack. Thatās what you deserve.ā
You look out for the furrow of his brows. For shades of doubt or for some objections to make his mouth twitch. But even if they try to, Jack doesnāt let them ā because he chooses to believe you. Because heās not about to waste his second chance. He takes your face in his hands, his eyes in awe of you, in love. He kisses you ā deeply, unhurriedly, like itās a promise no words are needed for.
And then it feels like deja vu, the sweetest dream thatās coming true ā you bring him into your embrace, under the bedcover you pull over his back. More kisses tucked between his face and neck. His arms stay wrapped around you, and heās wrapped in your warmth, in calmness he forgot the feel of. Jackās breath tickles your skin as his eyes finally dip closed.
And it feels like coming home.
ā§ I totally imagined Jonathan Bailey as Jonathan;
ā§ the title is a quote from a song. I also made a PLAYLIST for this fic šµ
ā§ hereās the thing thatās been on my mind: headcanons about Jack finding his therapist (that savvy old man I keep mentioning in my fics). would anyone want to read that? I even have a face claim.
ā§ dividers by @/firefly-graphics and @/uzmacchiato.
ā§ MY MASTERLIST
ā” English is not my first language, so feel free to tell me about any mistakes. comments & reblogs are very appreciated! let me know if you want to be tagged ā”
pairing: Jack Abbot x resident!reader
summary: He is puzzled with you first, then vexed, and he canāt understand his feelings. In an attempt to get to know you better (or maybe to get you out of his head), Abbot accidentally crosses the line. (or, alternatively: what if Jack met someone similar to him in many ways. traumatic past included) ā” {read on AO3} ā” MASTERLIST
»»» part 2
warnings: <rivals> to friends to lovers, slow burn, mentions of blood and injuries / Iām hinting at the age gap but you can ignore it / some complicated feelings and a LOT of Jackās thoughts (his poor therapist will need a raise); assault. ANGST. / words: 7K
authorās note: this is my first fic for āThe Pittā. I binge-watched the show in 2 days and didnāt plan on writing anything but my inspiration decided otherwise. Iāve never had a beta reader in my life, please be kind. ā”
Early at dawn, the sky is just the right color ā the darkness slowly dissipates, deep purple at the edges, black fading into blue. If he squints and looks above the roofs, he can pretend heās looking at the ocean. Heās been toying with the idea for some time but itās more of a dream, a comforting mirage: him getting a small house by the beach, waves crashing softly in the distance, clean blue water blending into the bright blue sky. Heād wake up to the sunrise, take lugs full of cooling salty air, walk in the sand that glistens under the foaming swash. Heād probably adopt a dog ā someone to pass his days with, just so the silence doesnāt get too heavy, doesnāt weigh on him when he canāt sleep at night.
A passing car honks down the street, loud and sudden, and Jack flinches, opening his eyes. Thatās when the perfect image always falls apart. He is afraid he will get lonely with just a dog and with nothing to do, he will be going up the walls, bored out of his mind. But he doesnāt know how not to be alone. And some days he wishes that he did.
The air in Pittsburgh doesnāt carry any scents at this morning hour, and Jackās gaze wanders down to the tree leaves writhing in the wind. He absentmindedly rubs his wrists when he hears the door creaking behind him.
āYou know, security is getting worried about you,ā Robby chuckles, his steps slow. āI heard the guys making bets on how many times a week youāll come here.ā
āSays the man who likes to brood in my spot,ā Jack huffs without looking at him.
āMe, brooding? No idea what you are talking about.ā
Robby gets to the roof edge but stays behind the railing, leans on it and slowly stretches his arms. His tone lets empathy in when he speaks up:
āTough night?ā
The sky is overcast, a mush of white and grey clouds the blue barely peeks through, and Jack sighs as he turns away. āRemember you told me about the kid who ODād on Xanax laced with fentanyl? The parents sat by his bed hoping heād wake up by some miracle,ā Robby only nods when Jack throws him a glance. āIām dealing with one of those.ā
They both lost patients before, and both know that it doesnāt get easier with time. You have to tuck your grief away to walk into the room with their loved ones, offer apologies that carry little meaning, take even more grief in because this isnāt about you and this loss is not for you to carry. But they do carry it ā Robby memorizes lifeless faces, Jack never forgets the names of everyone he couldnāt save.
āBrain dead?ā
āYep,ā Jack drawls, hands gripping the metal rails. āHeās got three sisters, and all three were begging me. And I stood there feeling absolutely useless.ā
Robby watches as his friendās knuckles turn white. āIf you couldnāt do anything then there was nothing that couldāve been done. And Iām really sorry.ā
If only words could bring people back from the dead, Jack thinks bitterly but doesnāt say it out loud. He doesnāt want to sour Robbyās mood. And he canāt help but notice ā it used to bother him way more, it sometimes would eat him alive; now Jack is mostly numb.
āIāll sleep it off,ā he mumbles.
āNot staying for the welcoming party?ā
It takes a few seconds for the reminder to pop up in Jackās head: a new senior resident, today is her first day. After Collins took maternity leave, Robby spent hours on the phone, glasses pressed to the bridge of his nose as he flipped through the applications, always unsure, never satisfied. And then he got a call and drove across the city to another hospital to meet her in person ā he came back beaming. Jack mustāve zoned out so he didnāt catch the details.
āDonāt think I have a very welcoming face.ā
āShouldāve seen the guys she worked with. I thought her chief of surgery would literally fist-fight me after I offered her the job,ā Robby cackles.
It stirs Jackās curiosity a bit. āSheās that good?ā
āI believe she is. Skilled, confident, havenāt heard a single bad thing about her,ā and even though his voice is certain, Robby dithers, bringing a hand to the back of his neck.
āBut... ? I sense a but coming.ā
āNo-no, sheās great, really, and I made up my mind. Itās just that⦠She comes off as quite stubborn, and I feel like she is used to flying solo,ā his eyes dart to Jack. āReminds me of someone I know,ā a smile grazes his lips, an unvoiced comparison he canāt help but draw.
Jack doesnāt see it, his gaze set somewhere on the horizon. āWe all have to be team players here, thatās how it works,ā he says dismissively. āIām sure sheāll learn.ā
The streets are getting busy, filling with people talking, rushing, making endless calls ā and with more honking and more sounds that all merge into one unpleasant noise. And Jack is getting really tired.
āI should go back. Donāt want anyone to scare her off,ā Robby puts a hand on Jackās shoulder, a friendly but firm grip. āIād also rather not waste my time on scraping your frail body off the pavement. Let me walk you out.ā
āFrail body? You are three years older, you bag of bones,ā Jack quips, and they share a laugh, and it warms up his heart a little.
But the warmth fades as they get inside, into the weave of corridors, into the crowd of nurses and other doctors pacing, the lighting bright and harsh, the smell of antiseptics clinging to the walls like mold. And it is not as overwhelming as itās tiresome; once he is out on the street, Jack takes a few deep breaths. Itās hardly a relief.
As he passes by the park, exhaustion already on his heels, he suddenly picks up a sound, something between a whine and a small woof. Jack looks around to find the source peeping out from behind the bushes ā brown eyes, wet nose, grey fluffy ears, one marked with a white spot. When Jack takes a step closer, the stray puppy immediately runs off.
On his way home he gets some dog treats and throws them in his bag. He tries thinking of pet names but nothing comes to mind. And when he falls into his cold bed, thick curtains not letting any light reach him, he dreams of standing on a long road framed with grass, a murmuring of waves heard through the mist. But he canāt see the ocean.
It keeps raining, and they have to close the roof ā āMerely a precaution, sir, we donāt want anyone to slip. I heard the weather is supposed to clear up in a few days,ā one of the guards assures Jack. His mood these days is just as gloomy as the sky. But heās a man of habit, so every time Jack wants to get out to the roof, he instead gets more cases, drinks more coffee, barely a few words squeezed in between that arenāt work-related.
At first, he only catches glimpses of you.
On the days when your shifts overlap, he sees you tearing along the hallways, your hair up and your face focused, removing gowns to quickly put on fresh ones, your hands either in gloves or carrying the charts. You donāt speak much, and very few times Jack gets to walk past you, he is slightly puzzled by this combination of quiet and fast-paced.
Your first week is nearing its end when Dana prompts Jack to make a proper introduction. She calls him uncooperative and calls for you herself when she sees you leaving trauma#1. You swiftly come by the nurses' station and glance up at the board ā and then you finally face Jack, your gaze so piercing, it catches him off guard. He clears his throat and manages a greeting, a bit coolly.
āNice to meet you, Dr. Abbot,ā you tell him calmly, offering a hand. And you donāt look away, and your handshake is firmer than he would expect. The next thing you are holding is another chart, eyes following the lines of words and numbers as you step away, Whitaker barely keeping up.
āShe is so fast, sheās almost flying. Beautiful,ā Princess notes approvingly, and Perlah hums in agreement.
Their voices snap him back into reality, and Jack inhales sharply, only now realizing his gaze is still on you. He looks down, pretending he needs to fix his watch. āWhat is this, a fan club?ā
āAw, no need to be so jealous. You will always be our favorite old white doctor,ā Princess teases.
Perlah gives her a side-eye. āI thought Dr. Robby was our favorite.ā
āWell, yes. But I have a soft spot for men in existential crisis,ā Princess winks at him.
Perlah rolls her eyes. āThey are all in existential crisis.ā
āAnd I wonder why,ā Jack deadpans, then picks a case just so heās got an excuse to leave. And maybe an excuse to pass by the room youāre in, your gloved hands already stained with crimson.
He starts watching you more often, an impulse he canāt necessarily explain.
Heās careful, heās not staring, but his hazel eyes always pick you out from the crowd. Heās taking mental notes: you lean on doors with your right shoulder when you rush in, you scan the injured head to toe in every case, hands moving quickly in tandem with your gaze. You never raise your voice but you keep eye contact ā with the interns when you give instructions and with the patients to make sure they understand whatās going on. You are efficient with your work-ups, youāre the first one to come in and you stay late to turn your patients over to the night shift. You are meticulous and disciplined in a way he finds relatable; in three weeks' time thereās a foundation laid for him to grow respectful. But sometimes Jack canāt stop the thought: he is yet to see your smile. He is also yet to see you slip up, and that is bound to happen because no doctor is without fault.
A month in, he thinks you finally come close to failure.
A patient is wheeled in on a gurney, gesticulating, red in the face from how displeased or pained he is (probably both); still, as you talk to him, he makes pauses to listen. Thereās blood on his chest and his speech is slurring, and Jackās gaze follows you. From where heās standing, he can see you clearly, so he canāt help but glance up a few times from his computer screen. Itās all the same routine and it seems to be working smoothly ā but when he takes another peek, he sees you frozen.
Jack instantly draws near, alert and observing through the glass: the man is intubated, his shirt cut and chest bared ā and with a nail sticking right out of where his heart should be. The monitors go off as the blood pressure drops. When Whitaker makes eye contact with him, Jack takes that as an invitation to come in.
āWhat do we got here?ā
Whitaker looks half worried, half relieved. āUm-m, 41 years old male, nail to the chest, intracardiac. Prepped for the thoracotomy. Cardio is tied up with another surgery, and itās at least 15 more minutes until we can get an O.R.ā
Jack knows the patient doesnāt have that long. His gaze flickers to you but you do not meet it, and he canāt tell what you are looking at. There is no time to guess ā if youāve never cracked into someoneās chest, heāll gladly guide you. And his guidance is assertive, if a little cocky.
āItās not every day that you get to do a thoracotomy. And it can be daunting ā also, pretty risky if you ask meāā
āThen itās a good thing Iām not asking,ā you retort abruptly without even sparing him a glance.
And then you pick the scalpel and make the first incision, your hands steady and never hesitating, the confidence of a tsunami sweeping rocks away.
Jack has to take a step back because it would be childish to argue when someoneās life is hanging by a thread. And all his doubts are crushed before his very eyes the way ribs are under the pressure of a steel retractor you are holding, the metal sinking into flesh and blood to give you access to the heart. After the nail is out ā long but intact, you deal with excess fluid and with the bleeding ā and you are more nimble than he is, than heās ever seen the other doctors be.
āWell, call me impressed,ā Jack says earnestly.
The silence is a little awkward ā a couple of seconds before you give reply: āThank you, Dr. Abbot.ā
He wonders if maybe his compliment mightāve come as patronizing. What he knows for sure is that you do not need his help. But when he backs away, he sees a glint out of the corner of his eye ā dog tags left in the pile of the manās belongings on the floor. Jack has the same tags hanging on a chain around his neck. He almost doesnāt feel the weight of them but the memories they bring are heavy ā sometimes an image flashing through his mind, sometimes a nightmare stirring him awake. And mostly itās the latter.
But today, as his shift goes on, he isnāt thinking of torn limbs and collapsing buildings and bombings that looked like firecrackers in the night. Those werenāt the reasons he kept going back ā he never once craved violence, never really cared about the money. For him, it was the roar of the adrenaline and the belief that even amidst the death and ruins, he could make a change. He hasnāt felt that for a while: the rush, the determination, the power held in your hands when you are cutting into someoneās body, fixing the organs and sewing the skin together, bringing the life back in. He lacks that spark, he misses it, he wants to get it back. To prove to himself that he still can do that ā or maybe not only to himself.
So now he isnāt watching you but studying, with a diligence of a man who once had to learn how to walk again.
He starts work earlier just so he can get more patients ā but also to listen in on your case reports and trail your steps, peek into trauma rooms you run in and out of. He often finds himself holding back the questions: damn, how did you do that? How come you easily catch things others take so long to figure out? You take on complicated cases: a feeble woman who canāt hold her food down, her arms marked with a red rash; a young jogger who keeps fainting, short of breath; a man whose neck hurts, the pain radiating to his chest. And you examine them and pick the clues to solve the tangle of the symptoms ā itās Celiac disease, itās kidney failure, itās spondylodiscitis and you know exactly how to treat it. But Jack knows all these answers too. And even if they donāt click in his mind as quickly as they do in yours, itās still a victory: heās not as rusty as he thought he was, he is enjoying this. He canāt believe he almost let himself forget.
When he decides to try a day shift for a change, heās met with Danaās worried face, her wondering out loud if he feels okay. She then proceeds to ask the same question two more times, just to make sure.
āYou on day shifts may be the thing that saves Robby from a heart attack, you know,ā her face softens.
āAre you saying you guys get way more action than us night owls?ā
Dana grins. āWhat, you are already reconsidering your choices?ā
āLike hell I am,ā one corner of his mouth hints at a smirk.
The day is busy, and he can barely catch a break, but it isnāt a chore: heās equally enthusiastic about a road accident that left a guy with a skull fracture, an appendectomy, a stoned teenage with a knife stuck in his thigh, a street worker with a leg broken in two places. An hour before his shift ends, they get a lacrosse team of middle schoolers, and the staff shares an exasperated sigh; but not Jack. He fixes broken noses and split eyebrows and some nasty shoulder dislocations, then goes to talk to their coach ā a woman in her fifties, robust and perhaps too loud with her scolding. But her blaring voice cracks as soon as the kids are out of her sight. At some point, Jack finds himself holding her hand in reassurance, and she jokes that sheād gladly marry him if only she didnāt have a wife. She also promises that all the kids' parents will give the hospital the highest ranking. And they do.
Jack clocks out when the sky is colored orange, the shadows bleeding on the pavement, and his limbs hum but this weariness is pleasant. He is content, heās almost joyous ā the almost comes from you having a day off. He got to work with so many people, why would your presence make a difference? Jack persuades himself itās not the reason he takes a few more mornings.
But when he comes back the next time, and youāre already there, there is this weird feeling in his ribcage ā a spill of heat, a flutter of his heart. He blames it on the caffeine. You stand with your eyes glued to the chart while Princess lets out a big yawn.
āIf another lacrosse team comes in today, I might actually quit,ā she laments.
āSend them my way,ā you say with ease, without missing a beat.
āThatās ten people,ā she punctuates, incredulous. āWe got lucky they were just kids. Grown-up men who slam into each other while voluntarily chasing a ball scare me.ā
āIām not easily scared,ā you carefully tap on the screen, scrolling through some case report, someoneās illnesses broken into signs and terms; but you do pay attention to what sheās saying. You glance up at the nurse, your voice kind: āIf you ever need help, please donāt hesitate to ask.ā
And then you look over your shoulder as if you can feel him watching ā and itās the same as the first time: your gaze startles him, like would a fire eruption or a ball lightning. But Jackās greeting stays rooted in his mouth because Mateo sprints in:
āHey, thereās something wrong with my patientās veins, can someone take a look?ā
And you are by his side and following him out of the hall in what feels like barely a second.
āIām so grateful for you!ā Princess calls after you. Then she spots Jack too, her face expression turning smug. āOh, hello there, boss,ā and she grins like she knows a secret Jack wasnāt let in on.
Turns out, Robby showed his gratitude by taking a sick leave, the first in three years (Jack wouldāve sent him home himself if he heard Robbyās muffled coughing one more time). And it left Jack with way more shifts to cover. He readily gulps coffee from his to-go mug as he skims through the list of patients. The others join him soon: Mel smiles at everyone, the ever-optimistic one, Whitaker looks like hasnāt slept in months, and Santos teases him about something Jack doesnāt care to listen to. McKay is running late. Langton walks briskly to the nurses' station, taps on the tabletop right next to Jack.
āReady to get back in the game?ā
āIāve been in the game for more years than you can count on your fingers,ā Jack gives him a cold stare.
Frank sighs, his fingers drumming on the wooden surface, although he sounds barely concerned. āLove the positive attitude. Dr Robby surely wonāt be missed.ā
āAs if you are such a pleasure to work with,ā Dana cuts in, hands on her hips. āYou guys should redirect that buzzing testosterone into your work. No one is getting paid for whining.ā
āPreach,ā Jack huffs as he steps away.
He stops himself from immediately going to check up on you. And twenty minutes later, he is glad that he did ā you walk back, unruffled as you always are, Matteo tagging after you. His patient is an old lady with thrombocytopenia she probably ignored until it got too bad: there are bruises sprinkled on her arms and legs, a splotch of dried blood under her nose from how often itās been bleeding. You gave her a platelet transfusion but you suspect itās cancer; you order more blood tests and bring her a blanket before she even asks for it. Her eyes well up, voice shaking with heartfelt gratitude. And Jack has to remind himself that he canāt pick any favorites, he isnāt in it for the long run; but if he was to pick, it wouldāve been an easy choice. And no one lags behind today ā heās got a well-coordinated team, like gears interlocking in a clock, the harmony built out of weeks of practice. They make jokes, share work stories and snacks; but every time Jackās eyes get back to you, he canāt catch even a ghost of a smile.
He finds that you are very hard to read. And it unnerves him, maybe just a little.
He tries for his attempts to look brief and nonchalant ā a kind word here and there, a quick approving look, a dry joke ā and you offer nothing in return. As thorough as you are with diagnosing, you take no part in other conversations, you rarely take breaks or stand around. By the time the noon rolls in, Jack is fighting the urge to grab you by the shoulders: hey, take a seat and have something to eat. And tell me how can I cadge a laugh out of you, just one will be enough.
Dana waves a hand before his face, the phone up to her ear. āThereās been some gang fight at the North Side. Four victims coming in, two critical ā one shot in the stomach, the other has his head smashed in. Donāt think they both will make it.ā
Jackās bet is on the first guy but itās the head injury thatās fatal ā the victim is pronounced dead, face so disfigured theyāll need a DNA test. Mel looks away in shock, and Santos frowns. Your stare is blank and unimpressed. You volunteer to take the third guy with a pelvic wound ā heās rambling incoherently, the tight bandage over his hip already soaked; you press your hand to it on the way to trauma. Jack leaves the worst case to himself.
āWhoās down for an ex-lap?ā
āCan I run the bowel? Iāve never done it,ā Santos asks, hopeful.
āSure. Once we open the abdomen and remove the bullet, you can have your fun,ā he offers, and she runs along with joy.
Although Jack canāt imagine a procedure less joyful. Yet, he is fueled by his new-found appreciation for his job so he walks her through the steps: identify the entry wound and cut in, look for the bleeding and what the bullet mightāve hit. It missed the liver by an inch; but to confirm the damage they need to evaluate the area by hand.
Perlah peeks into the room. āIs he stable?ā
āWell, unless Dr. Santos gets too excited and makes a bow out of his intestines,ā her hands stop, and Jack breathes out a chuckle. āIām just joking, keep going. Iād say, his vitals do look promising.ā
āThen you can keep him down here for a bit. We have a guy with a balloon in his aorta, heās gotta go up first.ā
Jack blinks at her once, twice, the meaning of her words settling in. āDid someone do a REBOA?ā
āYou bet she did. And it was awesome,ā the nurse then scrunches her nose. āApart from the amount of blood. And by the way, the fourth one only has a broken rib, so no miraculous procedures needed.ā
He doesnāt find it funny and he canāt find the word for it: itās something in between confusion and offence. As soon as Santosās done with stitches, he strides out to find you.
His turmoil momentarily recedes when he sees one of the cubicle curtains stained, the deep red lurking through. Jack pulls at the material and barges in ā and then heās silenced at the sight. The area looks horrifying: bright streaks of blood left on the floor, the anesthesia trolley, the table with the instruments that you are now collecting, a few droplets smudged over your cheek. Before heās even angry, there is another feeling ā a thought, a pull: if only he could brush that splatter off your face, a few brief seconds for one briefest touch. Of course, he doesnāt.
Jack keeps his hands behind his back. āYou didnāt think you should consult with anyone first before doing a damn REBOA?ā
āWhy would I?ā your eyes are on the tools.
āBecause itās dangerous as hell and since I am the attendingāā
āI do know protocol. But I also know how fast a human can bleed out. It was a truncal hemorrhage, and you were hands deep in someoneās abdomen. Was I supposed to wait?ā
He wishes you were meaner, rougher, anything that would give him an excuse to snap. But you arenāt doing this to show off ā your tone is measured and your reasoning is simple: a man was dying and you knew how to save him. Jack realizes it is the same logic he often uses. And he canāt tell what is it that bothers him so much. If Whitaker pulled off something like that, Jack wouldāve chosen to commend him. The same goes for Santos, Javadi or King, for any other intern or resident that he can think of... Except, they wouldāve asked for his opinion or his help. You didnāt even think to.
Well, Robby warned him youād be stubborn.
āI want to be informed about any life-altering decisions. At least give me a heads-up so I am not blindsided when a nurse gushes over it in passing,ā Jack insists, head tilted slightly so he can catch your gaze.
What he really wants is for you to look at him. You grant him that one wish.
āWill do,ā you tell him simply.
But your eyes are still unreadable, a book written in a foreign language, a manuscript he doesnāt know how to decrypt.
And either out of incomprehension or rejection, his brain makes an assumption: maybe you believe that you are better, maybe you think the rules werenāt made for you. You never really gave him cause for rivalry ā you are in your final year of residency, and Jack is put in charge. But you are so bluntly independent and reserved, his every try to understand you feels like leaping in the dark. Later that day he canāt help but glimpse into your file ā thereās hardly anything of interest: you previously trained in a small clinic, in a nice neighborhood, your letters of recommendation all consist of praises.
What adds to his moroseness is that you fit really well with literally everybody else. Langdon tones down his sarcasm, listens to you like he only does to Robby. Santos discreetly brings you cases she needs advice on, McKay and Mel enjoy your company when you get a free minute. Whitaker seems to be your favorite although Jack isnāt sure why ā he deems him soft and insecure; but Dennis does a better job under your guidance. On rare occasions when heās got a day off, Javadi always takes his place.
Jack figures out everyoneās relationships by his fourth morning shift; he hasnāt gotten any closer to figuring you out. Heās fighting the grimace at how bitter his coffee is when Javadi pops out in the hall and you follow suit. He catches scraps of your conversation: something about a teen with a gashed forehead. Javadi rambles ā until you ask her nonchalantly, unprompted. āYou donāt like the sight of blood?ā
āWhat? Oh no, itās fine! Iām totally fine,ā Victoria stumbles over the words, but her denial is too meek.
From how nervous she is, Jack guesses that sheās lying. He almost wants to laugh ā before a thought comes to his mind: how come he never noticed her fear of blood?
āItās just a little disturbing sometimes... But I only passed out, like, once or twice.ā
āI used to be like that. Fainted many times during blood tests,ā you tell her quietly while entering some data.
Jack is so caught in disbelief, he canāt help a glance in your direction. But your sincerity doesnāt seem feigned. Javadi gapes at you.
āAnd how did you... what did you do to overcome it?ā
āI found myself in a situation where someone needed help and there was no one else around to help him,ā you shrug. And Jack discerns the subtle reticence behind your tone.
It only spurs Javadiās interest. āWas there a lot of blood? Like, a heavy bleeding, a deep wound?ā
Your fingers freeze over the tablet screen, your facial profile not betraying your true feelings. But Jack swears he can see the tension crawling down your body. You donāt give the answer right away, you weigh the words carefully before you say them.
āA drug overdose, he still had a needle in his arm and I mustāve missed it. Took barely a minute of chest compressions for the needle to fly out across the room. It was a lot of blood to me.ā
Javadiās hopefulness grows dim. āYeah, I donāt like needles too. I tried drawing blood a few times but the process kinda makes me nauseous, and I canāt force myself to āā
āItās different when itās someone you care about.ā
Your comment slips out involuntarily ā and immediately you look like you want to take it back. But you get it together and meet her eyes, your voice carrying just the right amount of firmness.
āListen, Iām not suggesting you should torture your family members. But you may not always have attendings by your side or someone else to take your place in case you feel like fainting. If you fall, you can hurt your head, you can hurt a patient, you can disrupt a surgery when every minute counts. I think you have a good head on your shoulders, and I donāt want to downplay your efforts. But please, figure it out. Otherwise, you wonāt make for a good surgeon.ā
You reassure her you wonāt tell anyone her secret. Javadi manages a small smile, a hushed āthank youā. It is a sweet moment, a heart-to-heart chat you bond over; itās also three times more words than youāve spoken to Jack in weeks.
But he accepts your silence ā as a challenge.
Jack keeps an eye on you, now critical, resisting the gravitation thatās been attracting him to you. Although itās hard to find the reasons to be hard on you. Whenever he has questions ā or more so when he can come up with some, you give detailed replies, and heās left with nothing to complain about. Your patient satisfaction score is high, you are never facile or reckless with your judgment; with how smart you are, you can give odds to many doctors, him included. And Jack knows he is older, with years of experience under his belt ā but he canāt in good faith wish for anyone to go through the same things he did to gain the same knowledge.
On his second week of day shifts he is still clueless about what to make of you. And Jack tells himself that he is simply looking for a connection ā except, all his attempts look like he is trying to pick a fight.
āThis is a teaching hospital. You are supposed to teach them things,ā he grumbles as he meets you outside the trauma room. You got a guy who came in spitting blood ā post-tonsillectomy hemorrhage, and things went south pretty quickly. He started choking, crashed, his airways flooded with liquid; you had to intubate him blindly. Whitaker spent an hour by your side, his questions endless ā to which you did give answers, barely ever breaking focus, but you only allowed him to use suction.
āHeāll learn plenty if he is attentive enough,ā you say, throwing away the gown, trying to put some distance in between you.
Jack doesnāt like it, he keeps pace with you. āWhitaker needs more practice, as much as he can get. Heās not supposed to stand there like some deer who wandered into the yard.ā
You whirl around, so fast that Jack comes to a stop when you are separated by merely an inch. And your gaze burns, like lava seeping through the mountainās restrain.
āAnd I needed the patient not to die on the table,ā you bite back, then breathe in ā and then add more coolly. āDennis will get his chance to shine.ā
āAnd when exactly is that gonna happen?ā
āThatās for me to decide,ā you state, like you would do a fact that canāt be questioned. āThank you for your input, Dr. Abbot, but I have to get back to work.ā
You turn your back to him and leave him standing there, and Jack almost feels helpless. And thatās the feeling he canāt stand. It simmers in him, it must be the reason his cheeks suddenly feel hot.
Dana tsks as she comes near, her brows furrowed and face visibly concerned.
āYou know how Iāve been calling Robby a sad boy? Iām gonna start calling you a pissy boy.ā
āNot the worst thing Iāve been called,ā he dismisses, a humorless escape attempt. But her fingers grab at his elbow, and he pauses with an annoyed exhale.
āIāve been watching you hammering away at her for days,ā Dana makes sure to lower her voice. āIf she was a student, Iād maybe let it slide, but she is a resident, a senior one. And nothing I am seeing suggests she isnāt doing well.ā
His eyes dart to her hand; then he glares stubbornly at her. She looks unfazed.
āJack, you will take it too far one day ā and you will regret it,ā Dana tries to reason. āShe is a good kid and sheās really good at her job. Just let her be.ā
āThank you for your input, Evans. Iād prefer to get back to work,ā he frees his arm, and she allows it. But Jack can feel her worried gaze as he walks away.
He doesnāt come home until the twilight hugs the sky, until he feels like heāll pass out on the next step. Jack wastes hours on attempts to wear himself out: he walks the entire park three times, peeping about in case the puppy comes again. It doesnāt. He stops by the bar he hasnāt been to in a few weeks, orders a beer and sips on it, his musings soon drowned out by the blasting music. The alcohol tastes weird, and the bass guitar gives him a pounding headache. He takes a walk instead of taking a bus home, two miles on foot in hopes he falls asleep as soon as his head hits the pillow.
But the thought of you cuts into his mind as easily as a nail does into a human body, and it stays there, vexing and robbing him of whatever little peace heās had.
He barely gets any sleep.
And his nights are dreamless.
Itās just another Friday, and these bring in a lot of drunks ā from parties and family gatherings, from business meetings that ran late and tense until someone reached for whiskey. Jack stays behind for paperwork, a tedious pastime that keeps him pinned to an uncomfortable chair. He briefly takes eyes off the screen, stretching his neck ā and then a noise catches his attention. Itās someone talking in a raised voice, someone who sounds too wasted to be reasoned with. Which sounds like a problem.
Jack finds the source with ease ā the nurses all glance in the direction of the trauma room, and in support of their agitation Mateo all but flies out, his face hardened at the edges. Jack gets up and gets closer, his ears open and eyes watchful.
āShould we call security?ā Dana asks warily.
Mateo brushes the suggestion off. āNo, itās fine,ā ā but it sounds like itās not. āI just need a short break.ā
āWhatās wrong?ā Jack interrupts.
And it isnāt a question but a demand for explanation Mateo canāt reject. He lets out a tired sigh.
āThe guy got drunk and couldnāt hold his liquor,Ā some passersby saw him sprawled out in an alley and called the ambulance. Came in with a nasty arm fracture. Heāll live though,ā Mateo looks back at the room with obvious disdain. āUnfortunately.ā
Jack promptly moves forward. āI will deal with it.ā
āHold on, Rambo,ā Dana interjects. And she keeps her eyes on him while she talks to Mateo. āDid he get physical?ā
āNah, heās too inebriated. Keeps trying to get up from the gurney but mostly heās all talk.ā
More can be heard from where they are standing ā itās some drunken yelling, a disarticulated chain of curse words. And then they hear something break, a dull sound of an object hitting a wall.
In a few seconds comes another one.
āI canāt just let him trash all of our equipment,ā Jack gives Dana a pointed look.
She clucks her tongue at his persistence. āItās not the equipment that I fear for.ā
āRest assured, Evans, I wonāt give him another arm fracture.ā
āI didnāt think you would, but now that you suggested it so easilyāā
āFinally someone decided to take action instead of all this talking,ā Perlah remarks, her gaze isnāt on either one of them. And Jack turns to follow it just in time to catch you running right into the room.
His heart falls. Why the hell are you even still here?
And itās barely three heartbeats before a realization strikes: you canāt go there alone. He canāt let you.
Jack bolts to you without waiting for anyoneās permission. He comes in just in time to see you dodge the trolley the patient pushed at you ā it slams into the wall and rolls over, the instruments scattering loudly across the floor. You donāt seem scared, but you are all tensed up, gaze fixed on the guy whoās screaming his lungs out.
āYou wonāt trick me! I wonāt let you experiment on me!ā
And you donāt look away once but you mustāve noticed Jack; your voice comes out low. āI think heās having an episode. He needs benzodiazepines but I canāt get close to administer them.ā
āAnd you should not,ā Jack retorts, eyeing the guy with discontent. āYou absolutely shouldnāt deal with him on your own. Not when heās flapping around and yelling like a fucking psycho.ā
āSilently watching him wreck the room didnāt seem like a good tactic either.ā
In an instant Jackās gaze is drawn to you, pulse racing as he is struggling to bite down his emotions: why would you put yourself in danger, why canāt you ever back down, why canāt he stay away? And unexpectedly you look at him, and your gaze isnāt a puzzle or a dare but an explanation: you canāt be mad at me for the thing you wouldāve done yourself. I know you would have.
The room goes quiet but only for a moment ā before another cry comes, and the patient lunges straight at you. Jackās eye catches the movement, and at the very last second, he moves to stand in the guyās way.
The drunkard crashes into him, hands swatting at the air, too uncoordinated to land a proper punch. And then all of a sudden he headbutts Jack. The pain is sharp, shooting toward his nose, but Jack manages to stay upright. He canāt see you stopping cold or the security approaching in a hurry and in worry.
Because Jack is only seeing red.
He breathes in through the mouth and grabs the man with both hands, rough and unflinching. Jack pushes him back to the gurney, then throws him on it, face flat against the pillow; his angry cries tone down to weak whimpers.
āShut the fuck up. Stop moving,ā Jack hisses into his ear.
He can taste the blood that oozed down to his lips and he can hear the sound of footsteps in the room. But he doesnāt let go.
Jack feels a hand on his shoulder ā he turns to see one of the guards, Ahmad. āMan, let us handle this. Cāmon, step away.ā
Begrudgingly, Jack does. Ahmad quickly takes his place, he and two other guards strapping the patient down; Mateo wriggles in the middle to sedate the guy. He dozes off, a dark purple bruise already blooming on his forehead, drool at the corner of his mouth.
You are still standing at the exact same spot, but then your eyes land on Jackās blooded nose, and you immediately fall out of the stupor. You rummage through the nearest drawer and get a few clean cloths, then call for Dana to bring an ice pack. The guards leave but Mateo hangs back; he pulls up a chair for Jack to sit on.
āAre you okay? Any headache or dizziness orāā
āIām fine, no need to coddle me,ā Jack waves off his concerns crankily. Mateo looks at you for some support.
āHe needs a head CT,ā you say, gaze glued to Jack. āAsk the radiologyĀ if they can squeeze him in.ā
Mateo nods and takes off with no other questions asked. The silence is now laced with tension, and while Jackās pain gradually subsides, his anger doesnāt. Heās not the one for chit-chats, and itās not a 'thank you' that he wants ā but an admission: he was right, and you were careless, and maybe this is the one time you can agree with him.
You lean over wordlessly and wipe the dried-up blood, pushing his head back to examine his nose. Your touch is light, fleeting, but his skin heats up under your hands. You take a penlight to check for septal hematoma; then your thumbs move from his cheekbones to his nostrils. Jack doesnāt wince or look away, eyes dark and boring into you, unblinking. You put a finger to his nose and move it slowly from side to side, watching closely as his gaze follows it.
And then you pull away, and something cracks in him, a line formed on the ocean floor after itās shaken by an earthquake, a force that pushes waves to crash onto the shore. And all his feelings surge up, unstoppable like a tsunami.
You look for more cloths, and only with your back to him, you finally decide to speak:
āDoesnāt look like a fracture butāā
āAre you out of your mind?!ā Jack bursts out, the stridency of his voice barely contained.
Your hands flinch at the sound. Jack misses it or maybe chooses to ignore it, too adamant in his displeasure, too wrapped up in it.
āDo you realize how dangerous it was for you to go here alone? What couldāve happened to you if security came late? Or do you just assume itās not a big deal if you get hurt? Can you for at least a second consider the consequences of your relentlessness, can you imagine how dire they might be? And what itās like for someone else to throw themselves between danger and you?ā
But then you turn to him, and his tirade breaks off, the anger ebbing instantly as he sees your face expression.
It would be easy to assume he mustāve hit a nerve. Except, it looks way worse than that.
Your gaze is swept with pain, eyes wide and bright with tears you are holding back. An inhale quivers at your lips, chest heaving like you are scarcely managing to curb your feelings. Like thereās been a wall youāve built meticulously over the years, and he didnāt just put a crack in it ā no, he tore it down completely, drove through it with a bulldozer, only a mess of rubble left behind. And he knows thatās not something an apology will fix.
Jack feels the guilt already swirling in his chest as he sits straighter, eyes not leaving yours.
āListen, I didnātāā
āI heard you loud and clear, Dr. Abbot,ā your voice is lacerating, a blade youāve armed yourself with, steel that cuts him deep. āIf my company displeases you so much, I will make sure to limit our interactions. Apologies for any inconvenience.ā
You turn away, and when he sees you wipe your cheeks with one quick motion, Jack knows he is the only one to blame. But you donāt let him see your tears nor do you wait for him to talk again. You rush out of the doors, and the words he catches arenāt meant for him:
āDana, please help Dr. Abbot with the ice pack.ā
He hears her coming in and heās almost ashamed to look ā Dana meets his gaze with arms crossed over her chest, shaking her head in disapproval. She doesnāt say a thing and puts ice on his nose with a face that looks like she would rather punch him. Jack doesnāt even try to come up with excuses ā he knows that he has none.
He fails to find you after the shift ends: you mustāve sneaked out to avoid him, and he canāt say that heās surprised. Jack walks home in the rain, not bothering to open the umbrella, the street lights drowning in the puddles underfoot, the wind biting his wet face. He can barely feel it. And in the privacy of his apartment ā a cold, half-empty space, walls void of any color ā a thought that has been lurking in his mind finally takes shape:
Jack loathes being alone.
And he messed up so badly.
»»» part 2
šµ the title is a quote from Tom Odellās āCanāt pretendā (the song is just so Jack-coded to me! highly recommend you give it a listen. the small part from 1:29 to 1:49 gives me heart palpitations and is very fitting for this chapter lol).
I didnāt specify how big the age gap is exactly. google search told me you get into residency when you are in your 30s, and Abbot is def over 40. but some like to imagine the reader younger, so I didnāt want to ruin that for you.
there are definitely some medical inaccuracies (pretty sure ex-lap isnāt performed in the ER) but I am begging you to ignore that.
dividers by me & plum98.
Ā» I plan on writing 3 parts in total (a prayer circle for my inspiration to stay with me, PLEASE). of course, there will be smut... they just have to learn how to talk to each other first.
Ā» MY MASTERLIST
Ā» English is not my first language, so feel free to message me if you spot any major mistakes. reblogs and comments are very appreciated! tell me if you want to be tagged ā”