JACK CHARACTERS FUCKING YOU IN A DELICIOUS HEADLOCK BLURB ⋆𖦹⋆ˎˊ˗
eighteen plus, minors do not interact!!
remmick loves the game of it all. he wants to see how much of those inky black dots he can get you to see before completely passing out, see how stupid he can get you. his arm is iron around your throat, a vice of muscle and possessive intent that locks you in place as he fucks you like he’s trying to brand you from the inside out. your nails dig uselessly at the forearm caging you, at the slick heat of his skin, but it only makes him grunt—low, filthy, approving. each thrust is brutal, dragging you back against him, forcing out strangled sounds you can’t hold in. his lips ghost your ear, a rasping, dangerous purr, “feel that?” the words rough against your ear as his arm cinches tighter, forcing a gasp from your lips. “that’s me holdin' ya here. makin' sure you remember who you belong to. 'cause when I let go—if I ever let go—you won’t be walkin' away. you’ll be beggin' for me to put you back where you fuckin' belong.”
lion kaminski gets more whiny when he gets you like this. it's addictive and almost rewarding that his strength is being used to please you and the thought alone has his brain fogging up. his free hand is fisted in your hair, dragging your head back just enough for his mouth to hover over your ear, breath hot, unsteady. he’s fucking into you like a man starved—deep, rough, punishing in the way only he can be, like he’s trying to bury himself somewhere no one else will ever reach. “mine,” he rasps, voice breaking on the word, “you hear me? nobody else gets this. nobody else gets you.” his other hand brands your hip, holding you still as if the thought of you slipping from him—here, now—might kill him outright.
roy goode adores how you take it in this position, so much so that a part of him gets sentimental. he makes it a point to make you aware of it, even in your fucked out state. his forearm cinches around your throat, hauling you back into the solid wall of his chest as he drives into you, each thrust rougher than the last. his breath is hot and uneven against your ear, words spilling out like he can’t hold them in anymore. “look at that doll,” he rasps, voice frayed. “that’s me—holdin’ on for dear life. ‘cause if I lose you…” his jaw tightens against your temple, the sound he makes raw and near broken, “…if I lose you, there ain’t nothin’ left worth stayin’ alive for.” his hips slam forward hard enough to rattle the boards around you, and his arm tightens until you can’t do anything but take him, trapped in his need. “so don’t you dare leave me. don’t you dare.”
patrick sumner breaks with every thrust, not used to the closeness and trust of this position. he's talking through it all, desperate and devastatingly pathetic. his forearm braces tight under your jaw, hauling you back into the hard line of his chest, his hips driving up into you with a pace that feels like punishment—on you, on him, on everything he can’t control. his breath is ragged against your ear, almost a snarl as he forces the words out, “you think I’d survive without you?” his voice cracks, guttural, as if the thought itself is poison. “i wouldn’t. i’d rot. i’d beg for death before i’d watch you walk away.” his grip tightens fractionally, a shiver running through him as if the confession cost him blood. “stay right here, with me. i’ll never let you go.”
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Jack O'Connell in suspenders - a saga.
God bless the wardrobe departments for putting this man in suspenders in EVERY role! Maybe it's his idea....idk...
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you were only supposed to mind his appointments and type his reports, not dig up the fact that your quiet english employer is a cashiered army doctor from a cursed whaling voyage… and definitely not push him hard enough that he snaps and takes it out on you. (wc : 20.7k) ao3 link.
゛notes ⸝⸝.ᐟ⋆ based on this request ! jen, genuinely thank you for this idea 😩 i actually rewatched the north water while i was writing this (like repeatedly—almost 4 times). i also got the book so i’m happy to start that ! ignore any historical inaccuracies/dialogue misuse please… also, for the sake of the interview bit, reader's first language isn't english or german ( js vibe).
゛ contents ⸝⸝.ᐟ⋆ secretary!reader. rough / angry sex. boss–secretary power imbalance. post-canon!patrick. mentions of laudanum / opium use. implied violence / death at sea. obsession and invasive curiosity from reader. manhandling. desk sex. very light spanking. light hand on throat. unprotected p in v. creampie. messy sex. patrick cries after sex (yep). guilt / low self-worth. emotional vulnerability. mdni 18+
The advertisement had been brief, almost terse, as if whoever wrote it disliked the idea of asking for help:
Secretary required for medical practice. Must read and write English and German, possess neat hand, and maintain discretion. References preferred.
You read it twice in the window of the newspaper office, breath fogging the glass.
The winter light on the street was thin and grey; tram bells clanged somewhere up the avenue, and coal smoke lay over the city in a low, stubborn halo. Behind the reflection of your own face, the words stood stark and promising. English and German. Neat hand. Discretion.
You had all three.
So you went.
The address led you to a respectable building on a quieter street, a few turns away from the noisier thoroughfares. Not quite a grand boulevard, not quite a back alley; a place for people with modest means and tidy reputations. The brass plate beside the door read in crisp, newly-etched lettering:
Dr. Patrick Sumner
Arzt
Someone had polished it recently. You could see your own gloved hand when you reached for the bell.
A narrow-eyed porter answered and looked you up and down, taking in your coat, your boots, the way you held your shoulders. He did not quite sneer, but you had played this game long enough to recognize the little shift in his mouth that meant he was weighing your worth like a parcel on a scale.
“Regarding the advertisement,” you said before he could ask. “For the secretary.”
He hesitated, then stepped back.
“You may wait in the front room,” he said. “Doctor is with a patient.”
The waiting room was small but clean. Two stiff-backed chairs stood against the wall, a narrow table between them holding a vase with three sorry-looking carnations and a German newspaper folded to the society pages. A boiler ticked faintly in the corner, its warmth slow to reach the edges of the room.
The air smelled faintly of carbolic and wool, with an undercurrent of something metallic that made you think of a butcher’s shop after closing.
You took off your gloves finger by finger, tucking them into your pocket, and sat.
The muffled murmur of a voice carried through the door to the inner office, low and steady, threaded with another voice higher and strained.
You could not catch the words, only the cadence: question, answer, instruction, reassurance. The tone people trusted even when they did not trust their own bodies.
You hadn’t expected a foreign doctor.
The name on the plate had hinted at it, though; English, perhaps, or Irish. Men like that were either very good or very bad at reinventing themselves abroad. The advertisement’s demand for English as well as German suggested he had not entirely left his old life behind, whatever it was.
The latch clicked. The inner door opened.
For a moment, all you saw was the patient—a stooped man with a cough that shook him from shoulders to boots, clutching his hat in one hand and the other pressed to his chest.
He shuffled past you toward the outer door, murmuring a thick-accented thanks, eyes fixed on the floor as if ashamed of the air he took up.
Behind him came the doctor.
He was broader than you expected, and younger. Not young exactly, not fresh, but not yet worn to the thinness you had seen in some older physicians who had spent their entire lives in crowded wards.
His dark hair had been combed with brisk efficiency, though a few strands, some grey, had already slipped free at his temple. His shirt cuffs were spotless; his waistcoat was buttoned, his cravat tied with unassuming care. The lamplight caught on the faint sheen of fatigue at his brow.
He looked first at the patient to make sure he did not stumble, one hand half-extended as if ready to catch him, then at you.
The pause stretched hardly longer than a blink, but you felt the weight of it. The measuring. The question. His eyes were pale in a way that surprised you, grey-blue under straight dark brows, their tiredness doing nothing to blunt the keenness of his gaze.
“Miss?” he said.
“Regarding the advertisement,” you repeated, rising to your feet. “You sought a secretary, Doctor Sumner.”
Something moved behind his expression—recognition of the words he himself had written and sent into the world, perhaps, to see who they might draw.
He nodded, once. “Yes. Of course. Come in.”
He stepped back to hold the inner door open for you. As you passed, you caught a closer sense of him: soap and starch, a faint echo of tobacco, and under that the ghosts of less civilized scents that clung no matter how well a man scrubbed.
You took in the office in a swift glance as you entered. The desk broad, well-made, worn at the edges by years of other hands. The shelves, half-filled with medical texts in German and English, a few older volumes with English titles worn to ghosts on their spines. Glass-fronted cabinets with neatly arranged instruments that winked in the light. A single framed print on the wall, something pastoral and unremarkable, as if someone had chosen it deliberately for how little it said.
He gestured toward the chair opposite his desk.
“Please,” he said. “Sit.”
He rounded the desk, the movements efficient, and lowered himself into the chair on the other side.
For a moment the only sound was the faint tapping of his fingertips against the blotter, as though he were reminding himself of the proper order of things: interview, questions, decision.
“You speak English,” he observed. “Your accent is good.”
“My father insisted upon it,” you replied. “He said where I'm from was not the whole world.”
“Wise man.”
“He is dead,” you said, not unkindly. “But he was.”
A faint, almost imperceptible twitch at the corner of his mouth. Not quite a smile; more like an acknowledgment that you had matched his tone and returned it with your own.
“I am sorry,” he said, with the automatic politeness of someone who has had to say such words enough times that they no longer know what else to offer. “How is your German?”
You switched languages mid-breath, answering him in crisp Hochdeutsch, then sliding easily into the local Berlin inflection that softened certain consonants.
You explained where you had been born, where you had gone to school, the offices you had worked in, the ledgers and letters you had handled. You told him of the insurance company that had folded last year, the solicitor’s clerk who had tried to pay you in promises instead of coin, the aunt who had taught you to keep your handwriting small, neat, and quick.
His gaze did not wander once while you spoke. He watched you with the unblinking focus of a man listening for symptoms beneath the surface of someone’s words.
“And your references?” he asked when you paused.
You slid the folded pages from your bag and laid them on the blotter. He took them with careful fingers, smoothing each sheet before reading.
You had seen men skim such letters in less than a minute, looking only for the shape of praise, not the substance. He read every line.
“Diligent… accurate… discreet,” he murmured, translating softly from German as he went. “Exceptionally quick at figures… temperament could be more docile.”
You lifted your chin.
“He did not say that to my face,” you said.
“He would not,” Patrick replied without looking up. “Men who expect docility rarely do. This one—” he tapped the line “—was written by Herr Weiss?”
You nodded. “He prefers women who nod and smile and say ‘yes, Herr Weiss’ and nothing else. I prefer employers who do not fall asleep into their soup at noon.”
That earned you a more visible flicker in his expression. It passed for amusement, or something near it.
“I do not eat soup at noon,” he said. “So perhaps we shall suit one another better.”
“It would be difficult to suit me less.”
He set the letters down, aligning their edges with unnecessary precision. His gaze lifted to you again, lingering a moment longer this time, not in rudeness exactly, but with the thoughtful reserve of a man deciding whether to ask something he is not sure is his business.
“Are you married?” he asked.
The question sat oddly in the room, plain and abrupt after the rhythm your conversation had found. You shook your head.
“No.”
His eyes dropped briefly to the papers in front of him, then rose again.
“Well,” he said, with a formality that did little to soften the awkwardness of it, “you are young. You still have time.”
You looked at him for a beat, unsure whether he meant it kindly or merely as one repeats something the world says often enough that it begins to sound like sense.
“I suppose,” you said.
A small silence followed. It was not a comfortable one, though not quite unpleasant either; only faintly peculiar, as if the question had revealed a seam in him he had not intended to show. Patrick cleared his throat softly and returned the letters to the desk, restoring them to their tidy stack before continuing.
“You understand that this practice is new,” he said. “I have only recently come to Berlin. We are still establishing ourselves. The work will not always be steady. Some weeks will be very busy, others quiet. I cannot promise a fortune.”
“I am not asking for a fortune,” you answered. “Only for regular wages and work that will not rot my brain entirely.”
His brows lifted, faintly.
“You find medical administration stimulating?”
“I find not starving stimulating,” you said. “And I am very good at not letting mistakes slip past me. Most doctors I have met need someone to tidy in their wake.”
That drew a real reaction, subtle but unmistakable: a small stiffening in the line of his shoulders, the barest narrowing of his eyes.
You had touched something there, though you were not yet sure what.
“Most doctors,” he repeated slowly. “How many have you met?”
“Enough to know that they are all men,” you replied, “and that they all think their time is worth more than anyone else’s, and that most of them write as if their pen were a knife. I can read it, and I can make it legible.”
He let out a breath through his nose, somewhere between resignation and reluctant amusement.
“Very well,” he said. “I shall endeavor not to disgrace my profession’s reputation among you further.”
“You would have to work harder,” you said, and saw again that fleeting look—half startlement, half something darker that tugged at the corners of his mouth before he set his features back into their proper arrangement.
Silence settled for a moment, filled with the distant clang of a tram bell outside and the muffled thud of carriage wheels on slush. He steepled his fingers, studying you over the tips.
“There are certain… requirements,” he went on. “You will handle patient records. You will read correspondence intended for me. You will see names, conditions, histories. Some of them will belong to people of influence. Their privacy must be absolute.”
“Of course.”
“Discretion is not merely politeness here, Miss. It can be a matter of—” He hesitated, looking for a word, then chose, “—survival.”
The way he said it made you think he was not speaking only of patients.
“You will find I am very good at not repeating what I know,” you said. “Unless it is necessary.”
“Nebulous word, necessary,” he answered. “Who decides what falls under it?”
You let your gaze flick deliberately from his face to the letters on the desk, to the shelves behind him, then back.
“Whoever is paying me,” you said. “And, perhaps, myself.”
For the first time, his stare sharpened in a way that was not purely professional. It carried curiosity now, and something wary beneath it, as if he had recognized within you a familiar breed of stubbornness.
“I see,” he said softly. “You will wish to know certain things, then. To decide for yourself. Is that it?”
“I like to understand where I work,” you said. “Whom I work for.”
It was almost nothing, the shift you saw then, but you had a good eye for such things. The smallest tightening around his mouth; the very faintest line appearing between his brows. As if the words “whom I work for” had struck a place he would prefer remain untouched.
“I am a physician,” he said, just a shade too quickly. “I studied in England. I have practiced in London and elsewhere. My qualifications are in order. My patients are improving. For the purposes of your position, that is all that need concern you.”
“Elsewhere,” you repeated. “A very generous description.”
He did not answer that. His gaze drifted away for a fleeting second, to the window where pale daylight pressed against the glass, then back.
“Can you begin tomorrow?” he asked.
You had expected another question, another test. The directness of it startled you almost as much as his earlier moment of imprecision had. Your heart, which had been keeping a brisk, steady pace, stumbled once before righting itself.
“Yes,” you said. “I can.”
“Good.” He rose, you followed suit. “We begin at eight. You will see to the files, the ledger, and any letters that have arrived. I will explain the rest when you are here. Speak to the porter about the hours and wages on your way out.”
You smoothed your skirt, gathering your gloves once more.
“Doctor Sumner,” you said as you slipped them on, “do you want me to call you Doktor or Doctor?”
His mouth twitched again, as if caught between two languages.
“Doctor is sufficient,” he said.
“Then you may call me by my surname as well,” you replied. “If we are to keep up appearances.”
“Appearances,” he echoed, with a gravity that made the word feel heavier in the air. “Yes. We must keep those up.”
He walked you as far as the waiting room door. From there, you could see your breath already misting faintly on the other side of the glass entrance, the shadows lengthening on the street.
You paused with your hand on the latch.
“Until tomorrow, Doctor,” you said.
His gaze rested on you for a heartbeat, cool and steady, though you sensed something moving under its surface.
“Until tomorrow,” he answered.
You stepped out into the winter street with the new job settled in your pocket and his voice settled uninvited somewhere in your head, threading through your thoughts as you walked back past the shops and the stalls and the people who did not know there was a foreign doctor on a modest Berlin street whose past had been folded up and tucked away like a letter in a drawer.
You did not yet know what he had done. You only knew that his eyes looked like someone who had seen a horizon with nothing beyond it, and had lived long enough to walk away.
You also knew that no man who guarded his history so fiercely could possibly be as spotless as his references claimed.
That, more than the wages, more than the warm room and the steady hours, was what made you sure you would return.
The days that followed did not so much begin as slide into place.
You learned the habit of his footsteps before you learned half the streets between your boarding room and the practice.
He arrived before you on most mornings, the faint print of damp on the tiled floor leading to his office, coat already hung, lamps already lit against the grudging dawn.
The street outside would still be shaking off sleep, carts rattling over cobblestones, milk boys shouting half-heartedly, but in his rooms there was only the scratch of his pen and the soft hiss of the boiler.
The porter handed you a key on your second day.
“For when I am late and you are not,” Patrick said, as if that were a likely reversal. “There is no need to wait in the cold.”
You did wait in the cold once or twice, just to see what it did to him.
The first time you arrived after he did, cheeks numbed, lungs stinging from the air, he looked up and his eyes swept over the damp edge of your hem, the way you held your arms in against yourself as you wrestled your gloves off.
“You should wear thicker stockings,” he said, turning back to his paperwork.
“You could start paying me more,” you answered, setting your bag down on your little desk. “Then I might.”
For a moment you thought he would pointedly ignore you. Instead he dipped his pen, wrote another line, and said, without looking up, “If you take ill, you will be no use at all. I would prefer not to have to train a second secretary in as many months.”
“That sounds very nearly like concern,” you replied, rolling a sheet of paper into the typewriter.
“It is self-interest,” he said. “Do not mistake it.”
You did not. You did, however, notice that on the following week, when you hung your coat in its accustomed place, there was a small paper-wrapped parcel waiting on your chair: woollen stockings, plain but thick, the type sold by the dry goods merchant three streets over.
He did not mention them. Neither did you. You simply wore them, and pretended the extra warmth did not feel like a concession you had won.
You learned his handwriting the way one might learn a foreign script.
At first it was a tangle of loops and angles, impatient strokes that cut through letters or left them half-formed.
By the end of the week you could decipher his reports with scarcely a pause, fingers flying over the keys as you translated his scrawl into orderly lines.
“I have seen worse,” you told him one afternoon, when he apologized—stiffly, awkwardly—for the state of a particularly hurried note scribbled between patients. “I worked for a lawyer once who wrote as if the ink were trying to escape the page.”
“He is not alone in that,” Patrick said dryly. “Medical schools ought to add penmanship to the curriculum.”
“And manners,” you added.
He sent you a flat look that held the ghost of some deeper humor.
“Have you applied to teach there?”
You met his glance over the top of the page.
“I am already improving one doctor,” you said. “The faculty would be too much work.”
He did not laugh, but his mouth did that small, reluctant shift again, the movement so brief that if you had not been watching for it you might have missed it.
You learned the rhythm of the days.
Patients in the morning, a brief lull when he closed his door and you heard the steady murmur of his voice reading journals or letters from abroad, then another wave of people in the late afternoon.
Women with headaches and unspoken terrors, men with coughs that rattled their ribs, children with fevers that painted pink flags on their cheeks.
There were the respectable sorts—the wives of shopkeepers, the clerks with ink-stained fingers—and there were those whose clothes did not match their stories, whose hands bore calluses that spoke of lives he never asked them to confess.
He was not the same with all of them.
You saw it first with a sailor.
The man had walked in with a limp and a scar down one side of his throat, red and stretched, as if it had been made by something that did not care whether the knife cut clean. He smelled faintly of tar and stale sweat and something offshore you could not name. When he sat down, the chair creaked under his weight.
“Been told you’re foreign,” he said in crude German, squinting at Patrick. “Thought you might know how to fix what your folks broke.”
Something passed behind Patrick’s eyes, fast and hard. He smoothed it away with deliberate effort.
“Sit,” he said, voice even. “Tell me where it hurts.”
Later, when the man had gone and the waiting room had emptied, you brought in the chart to be filed.
Patrick was standing at the window, one hand braced on the sill, staring out at nothing you could see.
“Is everything all right, Doctor?” you asked lightly, though something in the line of his shoulders made your own spine tighten in answer.
He did not turn at once. “Fine,” he said, after a moment that lasted longer than it should have. “It is cold. That is all.”
You did not remark on the fact that his hand on the window frame was white at the knuckles, or that he seemed to be holding himself as if expecting a blow.
Instead you asked, in the same pleasant tone you used when inquiring about ink supplies, “Shall I post your letter to London this evening? The one to the Society.”
His gaze cut to you then, sharp and abrupt, as if he had forgotten that anyone else inhabited the room.
You saw it again—that quick flash of calculation, the weighing of what you knew, what you might guess, what you could prove.
“Yes,” he said. “Thank you.”
You learned his silences, too. Some were mild, only the pauses of a man thinking before he spoke. Others were jagged, the quiet of a cliff edge. Those came when you touched a nerve.
“So you studied in London,” you said one slow afternoon as you typed up an essay he had written for a journal, something about fevers in confined quarters.
“Yes.”
“On your own or with a patron?”
“On my own.”
“That must have been difficult,” you ventured. “I imagine there were not many—”
“There were enough,” he said.
You paused with your fingers hovering over the keys.
“Enough what?”
“Enough difficulties.” The words came out clipped. “Type the sentence, if you please.”
You did, but you stored the reaction away.
London was a room you would return to; you could see the locked door in his face.
You discovered, to your surprise, that he took very little for granted from you.
He did not assume you knew how to file his notes; he showed you the system, then stepped back and let you adjust it when you pointed out three redundancies. He did not thrust letters at you with a muttered “answer this”; he told you the gist of the reply he wished to make, and allowed you to shape the language, correcting only where necessary.
“You are straightforward,” he commented once, scanning a letter you had drafted in his name.
“I do not see the profit in being anything else,” you replied.
“Most people do,” he said. “You are an anomaly.”
“Anomalies are useful,” you said. “They show where the pattern breaks.”
“That is not always a comfort,” he murmured, half to himself.
You saw him angry once, though not at you.
A supplier had sent inferior bandages, the weave too loose, the cotton too thin.
You found the parcel in the morning post and left it on the side table until he had finished with his first patient. When he opened it and saw what lay inside, a change came over him as swiftly as if someone had turned the temperature of the room.
“These will not do,” he said, voice stripped of its usual weary civility.
“They look adequate,” you said, more to taste the reaction than because you believed it. “Surely they are better than nothing.”
“Nothing,” he said curtly, “would at least not give the illusion of protection. These will unravel at the first strain.”
He reached into the box, seized a roll, and pulled. The bandage tore with shameful ease. The sight made something low in your chest tighten. Not only at the thought of poor materials but at the way his hand moved, abrupt and precise, as if used to testing the strength of things that might fail.
He dictated a letter to the supplier that afternoon with a scathing clarity you had not yet heard in him. His words were not loud, but they cut.
“You wish me to send this?” you asked when you had finished typing, lips twitching despite yourself at the phrasing.
“I wish him to understand that I will not have my patients’ wounds wrapped in rags,” he said. “Nor my practice associated with charlatans. Yes, send it.”
“You have a talent for insult,” you observed. “Dressed up very prettily in professional language.”
“Insult is cheap,” he said. “Truth costs more.”
“You pay in blood or reputation?”
“Both,” he said, and for a heartbeat he seemed to forget you were there.
There were smaller moments, too, less dramatic, that etched themselves into you perhaps more deeply.
Once, when a child with scarlet fever had been carried in by a frantic mother, Patrick had worked for two hours without pause, the set of his mouth grim as he cooled the boy’s skin and coaxed medicine between his teeth.
You had seen doctors more distant than him, hiding whatever they felt behind professional detachment.
He did not detach this time. He folded everything in instead, drawing his concern so tight it might have cut him from the inside.
When the crisis passed and the boy’s breathing eased, the mother burst into tears in the middle of the waiting room, clasping Patrick’s hands and pressing them to her lips. He stood, stiff and embarrassed, then gently freed himself and directed her toward the chair.
“Thank her,” he said when she had gone, and you stared.
“For what?” you asked.
“For paying,” he said. “For trusting. For existing. I do not know. People like to be thanked.”
The admission was so bald that you laughed, then covered it quickly with a hand.
“I shall write her a note,” you said. “In your name. You may sign it and pretend you thought of it yourself.”
“I would be lost without your guidance,” he said, so dry that it took you a moment to decide whether he meant it as a jest. You chose to take it as one and wrote the letter anyway.
You began, inevitably, to test the borders of his patience.
When you noticed that he avoided leaning back in his chair fully, you asked one day, “Is the upholstery to your disliking, Doctor, or are you simply unused to being at ease?”
“Chairs are more treacherous than they look,” he said without missing a beat, eyes on his notes. “One grows wary.”
“That sounds like the voice of experience.”
“You are very fond of implying I have lived some rich, scandalous life,” he remarked. “You will be disappointed to learn how dull it has been.”
“And yet here you are,” you said, “a foreign doctor in Berlin with no wife, no family, no stories that you will admit to. It hardly screams dullness.”
“Some stories are not suitable for offices,” he said quietly.
“Then you should not leave them lying about for the imagination to trip over,” you answered, and felt the tension flare in the air between you as surely as if someone had struck flint.
He gave you tasks and you did them, quickly, accurately.
You brought him tea when his hands shook after a difficult case, pretending not to see the tremor. You ironed the creases out of his correspondence with London and Hull and places whose names he did not let you read, though you saw the postmarks when the letters arrived. You filed his reports, stamped the dates, sealed envelopes, minded the waiting room when the porter had to step away.
On the fourth week, he came in later than usual, collar askew, hair damp as if he had washed it in too much haste. His eyes were red at the rims, not from drink—you had seen enough men drink to know the signs—but from a night that had not included adequate sleep.
“You are late,” you observed, before you could think better of it.
“You are early,” he countered.
“I am exactly on time.”
“Then the clock is wrong,” he said, setting his bag down with more force than necessary.
You watched him strip off his gloves, fingers stiff. A faint bruise bloomed just under his jaw, half-hidden by his collar. Your gaze snagged on it; your mind leapt.
“Rough night?” you asked, tone almost casual.
His jaw flexed.
“I slipped,” he said.
“On someone’s fist?” you said. “Or did a staircase take offense at you?”
His eyes cut to you, and for an instant there was nothing weary in them, nothing civilized. It was a flash, a bare slice of something raw and coiled and ready to do harm.
“Do you find it entertaining,” he asked, voice low, “to gnaw at every scrap I do not freely give you?”
You felt the pulse at your throat stumble, then recover. Every instinct suggested you should lower your eyes, murmur an apology, retreat. Another, stubborn as a stone in a shoe, suggested otherwise.
“I find it difficult not to notice when a man who claims his life is dull arrives with fresh bruises,” you said evenly. “If you wished to be dull, you should try to hide the evidence better.”
The silence that followed had edges.
Then, unexpectedly, his mouth tilted in something very nearly like a smile, though it did not reach his eyes.
“Duly noted,” he said. “I shall try to be more boring for you in future.”
“I will believe that when I see it,” you replied.
You did see, over time, how much effort it cost him to pass for respectable.
You saw it in the way he measured his words in front of patients with money, how he took care to speak formally with matrons who could ruin a practice with gossip over coffee. You saw it in the way he damped his accent down when he dictated letters to certain societies, how he straightened his cuffs until the linen cut into his wrists.
Once, after a particularly long evening surgery on a dockworker whose leg he had fought to save, you came back into the office to find him still at the basin, sleeves rolled past his elbows, scrubbing his hands as if the skin itself offended him.
“Doctor,” you said softly. “He will live.”
“For now,” he answered, not looking up. “I cannot keep him from the river forever.”
You stared at the water reddened in the basin, the way it swirled down the drain. He had already washed the worst away, but the smell lingered, rich and iron-heavy, beneath the antiseptic.
“You are very thorough,” you said. “Another man might have sent him to the hospital and gone home to bed.”
“I have no bed that calls to me,” he said. “Hospitals do what they can; I do what I must. There is a difference.”
“And what is that difference?”
“Responsibility,” he said simply.
The word sat between you with more weight than it should have.
In all of this, you nurtured your own quiet curiosity, feeding it on scraps.
You asked innocently about his references, watching which names he allowed to rest on his tongue and which he swallowed back. You commented on English weather with feigned ignorance, just to see whether his eyes softened or hardened when he spoke of it. You mentioned ships passing on the Spree, their masts cutting the sky like black lines, and marked the way he went very still for a moment, as if he were listening for something far away.
Nothing in those early days was overtly scandalous. There were no slammed doors, no shouted arguments, no scenes. Only glances that lingered too long, questions that cut too close, silences that threatened to spill into something else.
You told yourself you were only amusing yourself, that a little prodding would do him no harm. You told yourself you were too sensible to become fascinated by a man whose past was stitched together from evasions.
Still, when you lay in your narrow bed at night and stared up at the cracked ceiling, it was difficult to push aside the image of his hands braced on the edge of his desk, knuckles white, or the way his voice roughened nearly imperceptibly when you suggested that perhaps he was not nearly as respectable as he pretended to be.
You had not yet pushed him far enough to prove it.
You would.
You did.
At first it was only little things, done in the spare minutes between patients, when the typewriter was quiet and the clock ticked loud in the small office.
You re-read his references.
They had impressed you on that first day because they existed at all; most men in his position would have relied on charm and a firm handshake, not a neat portfolio of letters stamped and sealed.
Now, with weeks of watching him behind you, you looked at them with a different eye.
The English letters were brief and careful. Dr. Patrick Sumner has been known to us these past years as a competent and diligent practitioner, one read, the paper heavy with the faint scent of old smoke.
The signature at the bottom belonged to a London physician whose name you had seen once in a medical journal on his shelf. The words were arranged politely, all very proper. You could almost hear them spoken in a drawing room while glasses were filled and no one said exactly what they meant.
Another spoke of his work “in Hull and other postings,” with no specifics, only a vague mention of “service at sea” that could have meant anything from a naval commission to tending sick sailors on a river barge.
You ran your fingertip along the line, frowning, and imagined a ship in your mind’s eye, fog and ice and something worse.
His German references were fresher, and thinner.
A professor from the medical faculty vouched for the soundness of his examinations but admitted they had not known him long. A colleague from a clinic on the other side of the city praised his “industry and seriousness” and said nothing at all about friendship.
They all agreed on one thing: he worked hard. They disagreed, or said nothing, about where, exactly, he had been before they met him.
You did not have the luxury of endless idle inquiry. Wages had to be earned, ledgers balanced, appointments kept.
Yet whenever the stack of letters dwindled or the door to the waiting room stayed shut a little longer than expected, you found your eyes returning to the small collection of clues he had allowed you.
You began a list, as you might for a puzzle or a set of household accounts.
On a scrap of foolscap you kept tucked at the back of your drawer, you wrote:
Hull – mentioned once, then avoided.
London – truth, but not whole truth.
At sea – “service,” “river,” “ships,” never explained.
Whale oil – flinched at smell.
Gunshot scars? – shoulder? leg? must confirm.
Left-handed with bottle, right-handed with scalpel.
Beneath those, a question in darker ink: What happened north?
You did not know that there was a north to think of, not in fact, only in the way his gaze sometimes seemed to travel in that direction when the weather turned and the air in Berlin bit sharper than usual.
On those mornings you found him at the window with his hand unconsciously pressed against the glass, as if testing its strength, and you felt the hairs rise along your arms under your sleeves.
You had no intention of being reckless. Curiosity was a luxury women like you could rarely afford without cost. Still, there were ways to learn things without stepping too far out of bounds.
You started with the simple matter of addresses.
One afternoon, when he left a stack of correspondence on your desk to be sorted, you noticed that one of the English envelopes bore a return address from Hull. The name printed in the corner was familiar—Baxter & Sons, Shipping and Provisioning—in heavy, slightly faded ink.
You had seen it before in his file of references, on an old letter that vouched for Dr. Patrick Sumner in careful phrases. The paper there had been different, thicker, older, but the name was the same, right down to the little flourish on the final r.
You turned the envelope once between your fingers, feeling the cheapness of the stock. The lettering of the address itself—Herr Doktor Patrick Sumner, Berlin—was unmistakably his: that lean rightward slant, the way he pinched his ts narrow. Only the printed corner mark belonged to Baxter & Sons.
At the end of the day, on your errand to post the practice’s letters, you slid the Hull envelope across the counter with the others and leaned in while the clerk weighed them.
She was a young woman with a sharp chin and an excellent memory for names; you had watched her sort whole crates of envelopes by street and district without once checking the ledger.
“Have you had many letters from this firm?” you asked, tone light. “Baxter & Sons, Hull?”
She glanced down, lips moving briefly as she read, then frowned.
“Not lately,” she said. “We used to see that name now and then. Old stock, I think. Closed some years ago. There was a bankruptcy, a death, if I remember. One hears things.”
“No one there now?” you asked, adjusting the angle of one of Patrick’s Berlin envelopes as if that were your main concern.
“Address is still on the books,” she said, licking a stamp. “But if they are sending letters from it, they are sending them from ghosts. Why?”
“No reason,” you said, offering a small smile. “I only thought I had heard the name before.”
Back at your desk, when the lamps were lit and Patrick had retreated to the examination room, you slid open his reference file and drew out the Baxter letter.
The paper was older, edges softened by handling, the ink browned with time. The letterhead matched the envelope exactly: Baxter & Sons, Shipping and Provisioning, Hull, the same little ornamental scroll around the name.
The handwriting that followed, however, was not the same as on the envelope. The reference itself—Dr. Sumner has served with distinction—was written in a rounder, more deliberate script, one that had tried very hard to look like a High-born, English gentleman’s hand and not quite succeeded. Certain strokes tugged sideways, certain curves pinched together in a way you now recognized.
You had spent weeks watching him sign prescriptions and ledger entries. You knew how his pen moved when he was being careful.
You laid the letter on the blotter and studied the closing line. Yours, faithfully, and beneath it Baxter in that same not-quite-convincing hand, the ink a little darker there, as if the writer had gone over it twice.
He had spoken, in that fabricated voice, of Patrick’s “reliability aboard ship” and “experience with men injured in difficult climates.” He had mentioned “service rendered in extremity” and “qualities of endurance.” The phrases were tailored to impress a committee, to suggest hardiness and experience without naming anything that might be questioned.
Nowhere did he mention dates. Nowhere did he give specifics that might be checked. Nowhere did he say I continue in practice here or you may write to me with inquiries, the way honest referees often did.
You ran your finger along the forged signature once, feeling the faint indent the pen had left in the paper.
Baxter was not a doctor. Baxter was not alive. Baxter, as far as Berlin was concerned, existed only as a printed name on old letterhead and as lines Patrick had put into his mouth.
He had invented, out of a dead firm, a man willing to swear that Patrick Sumner was exactly the sort of respectable physician Berlin thought it needed.
You folded the letter and slid it back into its place, your heart beating a shade faster than it had moments before.
You wondered, not what Baxter had seen him do, but what he had done that made it safer to borrow the authority of the dead than to let the living speak for him.
You took to arranging his day’s letters in such a way that you could note the places they came from. London recurred, of course, as did Berlin’s own districts. Once in a while a name from further afield appeared—Manchester, Aberdeen, a northern port you recognized only because you had once traced a ship’s passage on a map for an insurance clerk.
You did not open any letter not addressed to the practice.
That would have been too much, even for you.
You did, however, read every scrap that bore the clinic’s name, and filed away the mentions of him you found there: we are glad to hear you are settling in, pleased to learn your health is improved, trust your new circumstances are more salubrious than the last.
More salubrious than what, none of them said.
It was not all letters and absent histories. You watched him.
You observed how his accent thickened when he was tired, vowels drawing longer, consonants softening, the English creeping in around the edges of his careful German. You noticed that he never sat with his back to an open window. You saw the way he checked the lock on the front door twice most evenings, fingers turning the key, then turning it again as if to reassure himself that the barrier would hold.
You began to test him in small ways that had nothing to do with direct questions.
One chilly morning, as you warmed your hands around a cup of tea in the office, you remarked, “Berlin complains bitterly about winter, but it could be worse. My aunt knew a man once who sailed near Greenland. He said the cold there could crack your teeth in your head if you breathed too deep.”
Patrick’s pen halted for a fraction of a beat above the page.
“Then your aunt knew a foolish man,” he said without looking up. “Teeth do not crack so easily.”
“You have been there, then.” You took a deliberate sip, watching him over the rim. “Near Greenland. Or somewhere like it.”
“I have read,” he replied, “as any educated man might. Do not mistake book-pages for biography.”
“Perhaps,” you said gently, “the mistake is believing you have only ever read about such things.”
He finished his sentence, set the pen down, and folded his hands on the blotter.
“If you are determined to make yourself a nuisance,” he said, “you will at least be efficient about it. Fetch the patient list for this afternoon.”
You fetched it, but you carried the taste of the exchange with you for the rest of the day.
There had been a hairline fracture in his denial, a hair’s span of extra breath taken before he spoke. Enough to suggest that the words on the page and the shape of his memories overlapped more closely than he cared to admit.
You experimented with topics.
Ships drew him taut as a bowstring. When a patient from the docks came in smelling of pitch and sea-salt, his gentleness wrapped tighter, grimmer.
You once remarked, when the man had gone, that you could see the fascination sailing held for some, all that horizon, all that room to run.
“You romanticize,” he said, too sharply.
“Do I?” You turned in your chair, eyebrow lifting. “I simply repeat what others say.”
“They are liars,” he said.
“Liars about the sea?”
“Liars about what it takes,” he answered. “About what it costs.”
You did not push further that day. You only added another line to your paper: Hates ships. Has been on one.
On another evening, as you shut the windows against a particularly bitter wind, you remarked, “It is remarkable how a city holds heat even in winter. All that brick and stone. Even when it is cold, it is not… empty.”
Patrick glanced up from his journal.
“You speak as if you have compared it with somewhere that was.”
“Have you not?” you asked. “You have been in cities all your life?”
His mouth tightened.
“Not all,” he conceded.
“Then where else?” You leaned one hip against your small desk, hands folded, making your inquisitiveness look as casual as possible. “If I am to know what addresses to put on letters, I ought to know the ones you consider home.”
He closed the journal with unnecessary care, as if containing something that might otherwise spill.
“Home,” he said, and the word sounded foreign on his tongue. “A flexible concept. Hull. London. Berlin now.”
“Only those?”
“Is that not enough for you?”
“For a man of your age and experience?” you said. “Hardly.”
He looked at you then with a flatness that told you you had touched something sharp.
For a moment you thought he would tell you to pack your things, to take your cleverness and your doubts and leave him to his patients and his ghosts.
Instead, he said, in a tone like cold water poured over coals, “You will address letters to the rooms in London and to the practice here. That will suffice.”
You curtsied a fraction, mocking and respectful at once.
“As you wish, Doctor.”
You were not foolish enough to go prying in his lodgings, or to follow him when he left the practice.
That path led to trouble far greater than any answered question could justify.
But the city had ears, and mouths, and you knew how to listen.
The porter, for instance, had been there longer than Patrick had.
Men like that saw everything and believed nothing unless they could count it in coins.
One evening, as you both lingered by the coat rack while Patrick finished with his last patient, you remarked that the doctor seemed settled now, that he must have arrived with a great deal of confidence to set up without any family nearby.
The porter snorted softly, adjusting his cap.
“He came with a bag and a box of books,” the man said. “Looked as if the train had chewed him and spat him out. Rented the rooms upstairs by the week. I thought he would last a month. Then the letters started coming, and the patients, and here we are.”
“Letters from where?” you asked, as if only curious about the postage.
“England, mostly.” The porter shrugged. “Some from further north. Strange stamps. Your English doctor knows people, that is certain. Or owes them.”
“Owes?” you echoed.
“If a man’s eyes look like that,” the porter said, “he has debts. Whether anyone comes to collect is another question.”
You turned that over in your mind as you walked home, boots slipping a little in the slush.
Debts could mean anything: money, favors, guilt.
You thought of Patrick’s careful letters, his precise hands, the thin grooves at the corners of his mouth that spoke of too many sleepless nights.
At a cheap café you sometimes patronized on your free afternoons, you overheard, by chance, a pair of medical students discussing a “foreign doctor in Mitte” over their beer.
“Took the examination twice,” one said, laughing. “Imagine that. As if one round of questions from old Gammel were not torture enough.”
“Still,” the other replied, “he passed, and they say he has references from London. Some whaling doctor, I heard, which must have been an education. Blood and blubber, what more could a man want. No wonder he looks half-dead all the time.”
You stirred your coffee and looked down into its dark surface, hiding the flicker that passed across your face.
Whaling. North. Ships. Hull. Blubber. You added each of those to your list in your head before you ever had a chance to put pen to paper.
Back at the practice, you carried on being exactly what you were supposed to be: brisk, efficient, annoyingly attentive.
You reminded him of appointments, corrected a date on a chart he had mis-written, pointed out a discrepancy in the ledger that meant a supplier had overcharged.
“Are you determined to make yourself indispensable,” he asked once, dry as dust, “or is it accidental?”
“I would not wish to be easily replaced,” you said. “Who else would tell you when you have made an error?”
“Most people would have the sense not to,” he said.
“Then you have been surrounded by flatterers,” you answered. “I am a corrective.”
To all of this you added, in ink, under your previous question:
What happened north that a man spends this much effort building walls around it?
You did not yet have an answer.
You knew only that each time you pushed, even lightly, you felt the structure of his composure creak a little, as if there were something vast and heavy leaning against it from the inside, pressing to get out.
It’s Tuesday, which feels wrong somehow. Tuesdays should be for dull work and middling weather, not for tipping something off balance.
The day has gone long.
A child with a stubborn fever kept him an hour past his last scheduled patient, and then a woman came in at the end with a pain she could not name, clutching at her ribs as if she feared something inside her might break through the skin.
By the time he has seen her, written her prescription, soothed her anxieties enough that she could put her gloves back on without shaking, the street outside is already soaked in dusk.
You have stayed because you always stay on days like this. There is always more to type, more to file, more to straighten in his wake. The lamps are burning low, their wicks trimmed short to eke out the oil; the shadows on the wall have lengthened into blurred, unfamiliar shapes.
He closes the door on the last patient with a careful hand and lets his shoulders sag for a moment once it has clicked shut.
You see it from your little desk, that brief surrender when he thinks no one is looking. Then he notices you still at the typewriter, fingers curled around the carriage return lever, and his posture draws tight again like a pulled stitch.
“You should have gone home an hour ago,” he says, crossing the room to his desk and shrugging out of his coat. His voice is roughened by the day, the edges sanded down by too many words.
“So should you,” you say. “But then who would write all your reports?”
“That is what tomorrow exists for.”
“Tomorrow already has a list.”
You tap the stack of half-finished notes at your elbow. He follows the motion with his eyes and exhales, something between a sigh and a humourless laugh.
“Very well,” he concedes. “We will ruin both of our evenings at once.”
You keep working, the clack of the keys and the soft slide of paper filling the quiet.
He moves about the office tidying in his particular way—cap on the ink bottle, ledgers squared, instruments in their cabinet aligned with fastidious care.
You hear the faint clink of glass as he straightens a jar, the low creak of the floorboards as he crosses to the window to check the catch.
It’s only when you begin to gather the finished pages that you realize how late it has become.
The clock on the wall marks the hour with a dull, tired clunk. Outside, the street noise has thinned to occasional wheels on stone and the distant shout of someone closing up shop.
You slide the last sheet from the typewriter and smooth it with your palm.
“That is all for tonight,” you announce.
“Leave the rest,” he says. “We will manage.”
You stack the papers neatly, aligning each edge.
As you do, your gaze catches on the corner of his desk where his reference file sits, its folder slightly askew from where he must have consulted it earlier.
The knowledge of what you found in it the other day—toothless Baxter, conjured out of a dead firm and a forged hand—presses at the back of your tongue.
You have not mentioned it. Part of you had intended never to do so. Another part, the part that writes lists on foolscap and cannot leave puzzles half-solved, has been waiting for the right angle.
Perhaps it is the lateness, or the lamplight that makes his face look more bare than usual, lines carved deeper at the corners of his mouth. Perhaps it is the way he has been unusually quiet all afternoon, moving through his tasks with mechanical precision. Whatever the cause, when you open your mouth next, discretion does not come out.
“You are very good at arranging appearances,” you say lightly, sliding the stack of reports across his blotter. “Even your references are neat. Almost too neat.”
He glances up from the ledger he has been closing.
“Is that praise,” he asks, “or suspicion?”
“You never did say how you came by your letter from Baxter & Sons,” you continue, as if turning over a trivial curiosity. “I happened upon the name at the post. Interesting firm. Or rather, not a firm anymore.”
His hand stills on the ledger cover.
“Is that so,” he says. His tone has gone very flat.
“The clerk remembered them.” You move a little closer, hand resting on the back of the spare chair as if that is the thing that drew you. “Provisioners near the quay in Hull. Closed some time ago. Bankruptcy, tragedy, no one quite sure. Yet here they are, writing handsome letters on your behalf as if nothing has changed at all.”
The silence that follows feels thick, as if the air has gained weight.
He doesn’t answer at once. Instead he finishes the action he began, shutting the ledger and setting the pen down with exaggerated care. Only then does he lift his head fully to look at you.
“You have been making enquiries,” he says.
“You told me discretion was a matter of survival,” you reply. “I thought it wise to understand whose names are attached to this practice. Lest someone come knocking and discover we are employing ghosts.”
“That letter is in order,” he says, low. “It satisfied the authorities. It satisfied the Society. It is all it needs to be.”
“It satisfied people who do not live in this city,” you counter. “It does not satisfy me.”
His jaw tightens—a muscle jumps there, a small, betraying movement.
“And what would satisfy you?” he asks. “A sworn deposition from the dead? A notarized account of every step I have taken since birth?”
“A truth that is not stitched out of corpses and old letterhead would be a start,” you say, sharper than you intended.
The scrape of his chair is sudden in the quiet room, loud enough to make your heart leap once in your chest. He stands, not quickly, but with a deliberation that makes the movement feel heavier.
“When you were engaged here,” he says, coming around the desk, “the conditions were clear. You would be paid for your work. You would maintain discretion. You would not pry into matters that do not concern you.”
“You said discretion about patients,” you remind him, pulse beginning to pick up as he closes the distance between you. “You said nothing about overlooking forged references.”
He stops in front of you, close enough that you can see the faint reddening at the edges of his eyes. The lamplight throws the hollows beneath his cheekbones into sharper relief.
“That letter does you no harm,” he says. “It keeps this practice open. It keeps you in work. Whatever offense it gives your moral sensibilities, you may set it aside.”
“And what does it keep from view?” you ask, stepping into the danger because you cannot help yourself now. “What is it hiding that could not bear the light if the letter were honest?”
“Enough.”
His hand moves, and for a brief, braced fraction of a second you think he will seize your arm. The thought drives a thin line of heat down your spine, part fear, part something knottier.
But he does not touch you. His fingers close instead around the back of the chair you have been using as a prop, knuckles whitening as he grips it hard enough that the wood creaks faintly.
“I have told you before,” he says, voice low, “you know nothing about what you are speaking of.”
“Then explain it,” you say, stubborn. “Tell me why you would rather put words in the mouth of a dead shipping clerk than let a living man of medicine vouch for you. Tell me why you think no one will notice the dates do not line up. You are not stupid, Doctor. So what are you?”
His eyes flash.
For a moment there is no weary courtesy in them at all, no practiced patience. There is only something feral and grey and exhausted with being cornered. It hits you like a gust off cold water.
“Careful,” he says.
The word is low, almost soft. It lands in the space between you like a hand on the back of your neck.
“Why,” you ask quietly, refusing to drop your gaze, “are you afraid I will say something you do not already say to yourself?”
His grip on the chair tightens. You hear a faint crack—whether of wood or of some taut thread in him, you cannot tell.
“You amuse yourself,” he says, “in prodding at wounds you do not understand. You stand in a warm room in Berlin and play at detective with other people’s survival. You have never watched blood steam on ice in air so cold it flays your lungs. You have never had to choose which man lives long enough to damn you when you sleep. You know nothing of what it takes to crawl back from that and put on a clean shirt for the benefit of clerks.”
The words come sharper, faster, as if some valve has slipped. His accent thickens around them. It’s not the polished speech he uses with patients but something rougher underneath.
You swallow, throat suddenly tight. The images he throws at you are harsh, but what grips you is not the description; it is the way his mouth shapes the last line—crawl back—as if he still feels stone under his hands.
“So there is something to crawl back from,” you say, softer now, more certain. “Thank you for confirming it.”
He makes a sound under his breath that is not quite a laugh.
“You twist everything,” he says. “Do you have any idea how dangerous that curiosity of yours is?”
“I know it unsettles you,” you reply. “Which suggests I am not entirely wrong.”
His expression shifts, anger refracting into something more complicated—frustration, yes, but also a weary kind of despair.
“You will stop this,” he says, and now he does let go of the chair to lift his hand between you, palm up, as if making an offer or issuing a plea. “You will come to this office, you will do the work you are paid for, and you will leave the rest. Or you will find employment elsewhere. There is nothing in my past that will improve your life to know, and there is much that could threaten it.”
The threat is not directed at you; you hear that clearly. It hangs over the sentence like a shadow, aimed at some group you cannot name. Men he has wronged, men who would like to wrong him. Authorities who would not trouble to distinguish.
“You underestimate me,” you say, because backing down now would mean accepting that warning.
“I do not underestimate you at all,” he says. “Quite the contrary. If you were stupid, I would not be having this conversation. You would not have noticed the letterhead. You would not have heard the lies breathe. You would file what you are given and sleep at night.”
His hand drops. For the first time you notice that his fingers are trembling, almost imperceptibly, as if the effort of holding himself together has begun to exhaust his reserves.
“Is that what you do?” you ask, unable to help yourself. “Sleep at night?”
He closes his eyes briefly, lashes a dark fringe against his pale skin, then opens them again. When he speaks, his voice has gone quieter.
“If you continue,” he says, “you will push me past civility. I do not wish that. Neither should you.”
The words land in your body as much as in your ears. There is a note beneath them you have not heard from him before, something that is not anger alone. Heat stirs low in your belly, unwanted and undeniable, answering to some edge in his tone you cannot pretend to mistake.
“I am not afraid of the truth,” you say, though your pulse is beating hard in your throat.
He leans in then, only a fraction, enough that you can see the tiny scar just at his hairline, the place where something once split the skin. His eyes are very clear.
“And I am not afraid of losing your good opinion,” he answers. “I have survived worse than the displeasure of one clever girl. But I am trying, very hard, to be the man I have written in those references. Do you understand?”
It is the first time he has admitted it so plainly—that the version of himself on paper is an aspiration, not a record.
Something in your chest shifts.
“You could start,” you say quietly, “by being honest with at least one person in this city.”
His jaw works, as if he is grinding down words he cannot bear to let out.
For a heartbeat you think he might do it, that he might reach past the anger and pull something raw and true into the open. Then whatever battle is taking place behind his eyes concludes on the side of retreat.
“This conversation is over,” he says. “Go home. It is late.”
“And if I do not?”
“Then I will blow out the lamps and let you sit in the dark,” he says, with a flash of sharp, almost cruel humor. “Perhaps the company will suit you.”
You want to say more. You want to push him until that careful mask cracks entirely. Instead, you step back. The room feels suddenly small; the smell of coal and old antiseptic presses close.
“As you wish, Doctor,” you say.
You fetch your coat, your gloves, your hat. You feel his gaze on you as you pull them on, a mixture of censure and concern, perhaps, or calculation, or an unwilling fascination that mirrors your own.
At the door, hand on the latch, you pause and look back over your shoulder.
“Baxter is not the only ghost in this practice,” you say. “You know that, do you not?”
His lips press into a thin line.
“Go home,” he repeats.
On the street, the night air bites at your cheeks. Snow has started again, fine and dry, dusting the pavement and the shoulders of your coat.
You pull the fabric closer around you and walk, heart still beating too fast, replaying the sound of his voice when he spoke of blood on ice and teeth cracking in the cold.
He had warned you away.
He had also shown you, more clearly than ever, that there is something there worth finding.
After that night in the office—the one where you pressed too close to his forgery and he warned you to stop—you move around each other more carefully.
He’s cooler with you in the days that follow. Not cruel, not overtly; Patrick does not slam doors or raise his voice.
His punishment is absence.
He keeps conversations to the barest professional minimum, speaks to you through notes and memos more than words.
When you make a small jest, the sort that would once have earned a flick of his mouth, he lets it fall between you untouched.
If he means to freeze you out, he miscalculates.
You grew up in rooms colder than this.
You respond with faultless efficiency. Every report is timely, every letter perfectly phrased. You anticipate his needs before he names them, set the instruments out before he asks, refill the medicine bottles without comment.
You do not apologize. You do not back down. You simply refuse to vanish.
The stalemate begins to crack not with some grand gesture, but with a cut.
It happens on a busy morning when the practice is overflowed with patients.
A woman’s child has vomited all over the exam room floor, the porter has been called away to help in the stairwell, and Patrick, already thin with strain, reaches too quickly for a tray of scalpels.
You hear the clatter from the waiting room. By the time you reach the doorway, the instruments have been righted, but there is a dark streak on the side of the tray and a brighter one along his palm.
“You should have left that to the porter,” you say, leaning on the jamb.
“He was not here,” he answers shortly.
Blood runs along his thumb in a neat line, pattering onto the floor.
“Sit down,” you say.
“I am fine.” He reaches for a cloth.
The cloth brushes the cut; blood wells fresher. His mouth pulls taut.
“Sit,” you repeat, more firmly. “Before you bleed over the next patient.”
For a moment it looks as though he will refuse out of sheer pride. Then, with a small, exhausted exhale, he gives in and lowers himself to the chair by the window.
You fetch the little tin of carbolic and a clean bandage from the cupboard. When you take his hand, his fingers are warm and still faintly damp from the water he splashed over them.
“Careless,” you murmur, more to the wound than to him.
“I was distracted,” he says.
“By what?”
He looks at you, and something in that gaze suggests a litany too long to name. He does not answer. You do not press. You dab the cut with antiseptic, ignoring the way his hand flinches under yours.
“Hold still,” you say. “You stitch other people without mercy.”
“Stitching myself is more efficient,” he replies under his breath.
“Not when you use the wrong hand.”
You wind the bandage, feeling the steady beat of his pulse beneath your fingers. When your eyes flick up, you find his already on your face.
The room has gone very quiet around the two of you, the bustle outside the door dimmed to a distant hum.
“This is unnecessary,” he says.
“So are forged references,” you answer mildly. “Yet here we are.”
A breath-hitch that might be annoyance, might be the ghost of a laugh.
You tie the bandage off, neat and snug, and do not immediately let go. His hand is heavier than you expected. He looks down at where your fingers encircle his wrist, the white of the bandage stark against his skin.
“Thank you,” he says at last, the words stiff but sincere.
After that, the ice thaws an inch.
He still avoids anything resembling confession, but he stops treating you as if you have grown a second head.
When you venture a small comment about a patient—“He will pretend he did not hear your instructions about diet” or “She will not take the draught as prescribed”—he listens instead of shutting you down. Once or twice, he even concedes that you are right.
“Your judgment is sound,” he says one evening, reading a note you have written in the margin of a report. “I had not considered that factor.”
“I doubt that,” you say.
“I had not considered it fully,” he amends.
You learn that he hates storms in a way that goes beyond ordinary discomfort.
One night, rain comes with a fury that rattles the windowpanes, wind shoving at the glass as if it wants to be let in.
The last patient leaves in a rush, clutching his hat to his head, muttering about flooded gutters. You go to latch the windows more tightly, fingers working the iron catch.
When you glance back, Patrick has stilled.
He stands in the center of the room, shoulders drawn in, eyes fixed on nothing in particular. A flash of lightning throws him into sharp relief for a brief instant; the thunder that follows makes him start as if struck.
“Are you all right?” you ask.
“Yes.”
The answer is too fast, too flat.
“Storms bother you,” you say, more observation than question.
He swallows. “They are… distracting,” he concedes. “One remembers other noises.”
You think of a ship’s timbers groaning. Ice grinding. Gun shots.
“You could wait it out here,” you say, keeping your tone practical. “There is no sense walking back to your rooms while the streets are rivers. I can make tea.”
He hesitates, then nods once.
So you sit in the little inner office while rain drums on, two cups of weak black tea steaming between you.
You talk about nothing of consequence: the difficulty of procuring decent paper at a reasonable price, the way Berliners complain about the cold as if they have never seen a winter before, the ridiculousness of a patient who insists on three opinions and then ignores all of them.
Several times, his gaze goes distant at a particularly loud crack of thunder. Each time, you draw him back with some trivial remark.
“Of the two of us,” you say lightly at one point, “I am the one whose roof leaks. I should be the one glowering at the sky.”
His mouth tips.
“Perhaps we can divide the labor,” he says. “You may glower, and I will endure.”
It’s not much. But it is something: an admission that he is enduring, that the noise chews at him.
You file it away.
There is a morning when you catch him sleeping at his desk.
You arrive earlier than usual, the sky outside still pale with the late winter dawn. The porter has not yet lit the stove; your breath ghosts in front of you as you shrug out of your coat.
His office door stands slightly ajar. You tap once and push it open.
He’s slumped in his chair, head tipped back against the wood, mouth parted slightly. One hand rests on his chest, the other hangs loosely over the arm of the chair. On the desk before him lies an open book in English, its pages splayed, a pair of spectacles he rarely uses set beside it.
It takes you a moment to realize he is not simply resting his eyes; he is deep asleep. The kind that arrives not by invitation but by ambush, seizing a body when it has been refused too long.
A sensible person would leave him. Instead, you step quietly into the room. The lamp on his desk is still burning, flame turned low. You adjust it, trimming the wick, then glance back at him.
Without the usual tension in his face, he looks younger. Not soft—there is too much carved into him for that—but less armoured. A small line between his brows suggests the dreams are not entirely kind.
You take the coat from the stand, the one that always smells faintly of tobacco and the street, and drape it over him. His shoulders twitch, his hand jerks, but he does not wake. His breathing evens again.
“Sleep,” you whisper, more to the room than to him. “For once, just sleep.”
You close the door quietly on your way out and go to make coffee strong enough for two.
After that, he’s less surprised when you anticipate his needs.
He comes in one afternoon rubbing his temple and finds the ledger and pen already laid out, ink refilled, blotter cleared. He pauses, then nods to you.
“Thank you,” he says. “You are… efficient.”
“I have my moments,” you answer.
He begins, slowly, to offer you his own.
Snatches at first. A remark, as you both walk down the stairs one evening, about the smell of the docks in winter being better than in summer, “when the rot rises.” A comment about Indian heat—“It is not just hot, it is thick”—that slips out before he tightens his jaw.
In between, there are touches, small and careful, that do not quite trespass and do not quite stay innocent.
Your hand brushing his as you both reach for the same stack of notes. His fingers steadying your elbow when you slip on the wet tiles near the entrance. The time you stand too close behind him as you spell out a foreign name in a journal, your breath on his neck making him still just long enough for you to notice.
Each contact adds a new line to the map between you.
You do not stop digging. You only change your tools.
His gaze lingers on you a fraction longer than usual when he wishes you good night.
You stay later and later, not always by design. There is always more to do, some chart to finish, some cabinet to lock. Sometimes you leave at the same time and walk part of the way home together, your steps muffled in the snow.
“Berlin suits you,” you say once, watching his breath fog.
“Berlin tolerates me,” he answers.
“Is that not the same thing?”
“No,” he says. “But it is enough.”
You file that away as well: his sense of what he is allowed, what he is owed.
He has warned you, and for a few days you tell yourself you will be wise, that you will treat his past as you treat a patient’s sealed file—handled carefully, only when required. You do your work, you keep your place, you let his silences sit.
It does not last.
Curiosity, once it has tasted blood, does not starve quietly.
You start with the obvious: if the present is fabricated, some record of the real version must exist somewhere. Men like him do not simply appear. They are made, and the world keeps receipts.
On your next free afternoon, you take yourself to the university library instead of the café.
The reading room is dry and dust-heavy, its tall windows begrudging slivers of winter light. German students bend over their books, murmuring Latin to themselves. You present your letter of introduction from the practice—it is easy enough to obtain; Patrick is not the only one who can forge when necessary—and ask, in your best formal German, for any recent English medical registers and the London papers.
The clerk raises an eyebrow but shrugs and leads you to a shelf where the English volumes squat in neat, foreign rows. You run your finger along the spines. Medical Directory for England, Scotland, and Wales. 1856. 1857.
You pull one down and find the S’s.
There he is. Sumner, Patrick, M.B. The letters march in tidy black print. Qualifications from London, appointments listed in small type. Assistant surgeon attached to a regiment whose name means nothing to you beyond its number. Below that, a terse note in smaller font, added later in a different hand.
Cashiered. See Gazette, 18—
You feel your heart jump once, a misfire in your ribs.
You’ve lived long enough around soldiers and their widows to know what that word means. Not honorably discharged. Not quietly retired. Thrown out. Stripped. Spat back into the world with a stain that does not wash.
You make a careful copy of the entry in your notebook, hand steady despite the way your pulse flutters. Then you ask, as casually as you can manage, whether the library keeps English government notices.
The clerk, who has seen odder requests from foreign students, directs you to a series of bound gazettes. The pages smell of old ink and coal dust and something else—panic, perhaps, or that might just be your own breath.
You find the date. It takes longer than you expect; the cramped print swallows names whole. But then there it is, squeezed between promotions and mundane appointments.
Assistant Surgeon Patrick Sumner, found guilty by court-martial of conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman, is hereby cashiered from Her Majesty’s service.
No particulars. No explanation. No detail that would satisfy anyone asking what, exactly, he did that was so unbecoming.
You sit with your fingers pressed to the paper for a long moment, letting the words settle. So: he was army. India, you think, remembering a half-formed remark he once made about heat that never lifts even at night. Not a passing fancy but a career, or the start of one, cut short.
Cashiered.
You picture him in a uniform that does not suit him as well as his current sober suit, shoulders squared under braiding, eyes younger but already tired. You imagine some tribunal reading charges out in a dry voice while he stands before them, stripped not only of rank but of the fiction that he is anything other than what they think he is.
You leave the library with ink on your fingers and his name written twice in your notebook, once as the directory spells it, once in your own hand, underlined.
The next thread comes not from paper but from mouths.
Berlin has a way of collecting Englishmen. Some are there on business, some on study, some, like your employer, for reasons that are less easily named.
On a Sunday afternoon you find yourself in a cramped beer hall near the river where foreign students like to sit and mangle each other’s languages.
You have come, apparently, to practice your English with a girl from Manchester who wants to perfect her German swears. The table next to you is occupied by two men in tweed, one of them already flushed with drink.
“… told you, didn’t I?” he’s saying, his words slurring together. “Ran into Baines in London before I came out. Said there was a chap, name something like Sumter—I think—that he knew from the regiment. Bad business.”
You still, cup halfway to your mouth. The name is too close not to be who you think it is.
“Bad business in what way?” his companion asks. “Lost a limb? Deserted?”
“Worse.” The drunk one leans in conspiratorially, though his volume does not decrease. “Whole mess with the funds, some native business. They hushed the ugly bits, of course, not for his sake but for the regiment’s. Couldn’t have it all coming out in the papers. Cashiered him fast as you please. Last Baines heard, he was on some whaler, of all things.”
“Whaler?” the friend repeats, laughing. “Doctors travel in strange company.”
“Ship was called the Volunteer, I think,” the drunk says. “Or something like it. Left Hull for the ice. Baines said he thought the man must have gone mad to sign on for that after India. Heat to cold. Out of the frying pan, eh? There was talk the voyage didn’t go well. Lot of gossip. No one knows quite what happened, only that not many came back, if any at all, and any who must've had to be ruined men.”
Your hand tightens on your cup, knuckles straining under the skin.
The Volunteer. Hull. Whaler.
You watch the foam in your beer settle as the men drift on to other topics, their conversation snagging on politics and women and the price of coal. You do not look at them again. You do not trust yourself not to stare.
Back at your room that night, you write the new words in your list.
Army surgeon – India. Cashiered. Funds?
Whaler – Volunteer, Hull. Few to no survivors. “Ruined men.”
You underline ruined twice.
The picture sharpens. It’s still drawn in ink and rumors, but the lines begin to connect.
A young man in uniform, too clever for the dull grind of regimental medicine, turning cleverness to theft, or at least being accused of such. A court-martial. A disgrace. Then a whaling ship in the north, ice and blood and something worse, the last hail-Mary scramble of a life already off its axis.
No wonder he has had to build himself a new man out of forged letters.
You test pieces of it against him like pressed flowers against a living plant, seeing what matches.
One afternoon, when the waiting room is empty and the kettle is singing softly on the stove, you mention India as if it were an idle subject.
“I read a story the other day,” you say, setting a cup of tea on his desk. “About a soldier who served in India and said he still wakes thinking he is there, even years after coming home.”
Patrick’s hand, reaching for the cup, stops for a fraction of a heartbeat.
“India is sticky,” he says. “It clings. In clothes, in lungs, in dreams. Some men never get it out of them entirely.”
“You speak as if from experience,” you remark, watching him over the rim of your own cup.
“I speak,” he says, “as a man who has read more than one story.”
You let it pass, but only on the surface. Inside, you add another faint line, connecting his too-quick answer to the gazette’s terse notice.
On another day, you take the long way back from an errand and walk down by the river where the barges tie up. There is a tavern there that smells of tar and fish and cheap beer, frequented by sailors and dockers. You are not foolish enough to go inside alone, but you linger near the door long enough to overhear fragments as men go in and out, their words carried on smoke and laughter.
“… was on a Greenlander once,” one man is saying as he stubs out a cigarette. “Not as far north as the Volunteer went, mind you, but bad enough. Heard some tales about that voyage, though. Black, they say. Ship never right from the day she left Hull.”
“Was that the boat with the English doctor gone half-touched?” his companion asks.
“Something like that,” the first man grunts. “Baines—different Baines from the one at the hall—said there was a surgeon aboard who’d already been put out of the army. Said he was cursed, the lot of them. Came back wrong.”
You step away then, before they can look up and see you hovering.
The river smells of rot and iron and distant snow. You close your eyes briefly and picture a ship trapped in a white world, surrounded by nothing but ice and the things that live beneath it.
Volunteer.
In the days that follow, you notice more. Now that you know to look, it is easier to see.
A scar along his shoulder when his shirt gapes unexpectedly as he reaches for a book on the higher shelf—pale and ragged, not from a neat surgeon’s cut but something more violent. The way he goes still as stone when a patient mentions an army posting. The odd mix in his manner with men who bear themselves like former soldiers: a familiarity that speaks of shared training, overlaid with a distance that says he no longer counts himself among them.
In the library again, you find, tucked in a corner of an English shipping list, a brief notice from a few years back.
The Volunteer, Hull, returned from northern waters after an unsuccessful season. Loss of several hands reported. Rumors of difficulties at the ice refuted by the owners.
Rumors. Difficulties. Words that smooth over rot.
You sit there, the book heavy in your lap, and imagine him on that ship, not yet the man you know but the seed of him. Court-martial behind him, disgrace a fresh scar, laudanum perhaps in his pockets, walking onto a deck that smells of whale oil and old wood, thinking he will outrun himself in the fog and the cold.
Back in the practice, you watch him deal with blood.
Once, when a man comes in with a mangled hand from a factory machine, fingers crushed and split, Patrick sets his jaw and works with a focus so intense it seems to narrow the world to the table and the wound.
You have seen surgeons flinch before they hide it. He does not flinch. He leans in. Only afterwards, when the man is bandaged and sent away with instructions and a bottle of medication, do you see him step into the little washroom and brace his hands on either side of the basin for a moment longer than strictly needed.
“Was that worse than a whale’s eye,” you ask from the doorway, unable to stop yourself, “or about the same?”
He looks up sharply, water beading on his lashes.
“Where do you hear these things?” he asks, the question nakedly annoyed.
“Men talk,” you say. “They drink and they talk about ships that went too far north and came back less than they left. About doctors on those ships. About cashiers and courts and ruined men who somehow make their way to Berlin afterwards.”
He straightens slowly, wipes his hands on a towel, and turns to face you fully. The fatigue in his face is no longer just from the surgery; it is the deep-down kind that comes from digging out graves you had tried to leave undisturbed.
“There are a great many ruined men in Europe,” he says. “You will wear yourself out trying to catalogue them all.”
“I am only interested in one,” you say.
His gaze holds yours for a long moment. You see the calculation there again, the old instinct that weighs whether you are a danger. You also see, just for a flicker, the shadow of someone standing on ice under an endless sky, listening for cracks.
“You know just enough to be burned by it,” he says at last. “And not nearly enough to understand.”
“Whose fault is that?” you ask. “You have written your own story in such careful lines that there is no room for anything human between them.”
“Sometimes,” he says, quietly, “the human parts are the worst.”
You add that to your mental ledger as well.
You do not confront him outright. You do not say, I saw your name in the Gazette or I know you were thrown out. You do not say, They talk of the Volunteer like a ship cursed, and they speak of its surgeon in the same breath. You are not ready to lay all your cards down. He is certainly not ready to lay down his.
Instead you keep gathering.
The time you pass a newsvendor and see an old paper in the pile, its date smudged but legible. A column about conditions in India, mentioning in passing a scandal with army doctors and missing treasures. No names given, but the echo is enough.
The day he drops a small vial of laudanum and it shatters on the tiles, the smell rising like a ghost. His reaction is swift and quiet; he cleans it, disposes of the glass, but his fingers tremble just enough that you pretend not to see.
The evening he comes in later than usual, hair damp with melted snow, eyes red-rimmed in a way that does not quite look like lack of sleep.
Piece by piece, a shape emerges.
Patrick Sumner, army surgeon. Patrick Sumner, court-martialed. Patrick Sumner, ship’s doctor on the Volunteer, voyage whispered about in beer halls and at student tables, details warped by distance and the love of a good horror story. Patrick Sumner, now reinvented as a quiet, respectable physician in a Berlin street, propped up by forged references from the dead and polite letters from the living who prefer not to look too closely.
You keep all of it in your head, in your hidden notes, in the way you hold yourself around him.
The lamps burn low, wicks pinched to make the oil last. Outside has sunk into that muffled hour when the street sounds come in as if through wool. You have loosened your collar, pushed your sleeves up a fraction. Ink stains your fingers. The typewriter sits silent now; you have already fed it enough sheets for one day.
Patrick is at his desk, the last of the day’s files open in front of him. His waistcoat is unbuttoned, shirt creased at the elbows, tie tugged slightly askew. He looks tired, but not in the soft way most men do after a long day. He looks like someone who has kept himself upright through sheer refusal and is now trying to decide whether to allow gravity a say.
“You can leave that,” he says, nodding toward the pile you are squaring. “It will wait.”
“So will my bed,” you answer, aligning a corner with unnecessary neatness. “It is not going anywhere.”
“That is precisely the point,” he mutters.
You slip the last folder into place on the shelf behind you and wipe your fingertips with your handkerchief, pretending that is all that keeps you there. Your heart is a steady thump in your chest, but there is a lift to it, an edge.
You did not mean to do this tonight, not in any precise way. There was no grand plan, no marked date in your head. But you have the weight of the notebook in your bag, the memory of thin print and muttered bar-room talk, and here he is in front of you, worn and raw and real. There will not be a better moment.
You turn back to him and say, in a voice that sounds conversational even to your own ears, “I met your name in a book the other day.”
He looks up, pen pausing above the line he is drawing.
“In what context,” he asks, guarded already.
“A directory,” you say. “One of those thorough English volumes that list every doctor in service. There you were among them. Sumner, Patrick, M.B. Manchester, London, a regiment number… and a note that you no doubt hoped no one would ever bother to read.”
His jaw tightens very slightly. “And yet you did.”
“I am thorough,” you say. “It mentioned that you had been removed from Her Majesty’s service. Not retired. Not honorably discharged. Cashiered.”
The word lands like a coin on stone between you.
He sets the pen down with care. “You have been snooping in foreign records. Congratulations. You have learned that your employer is not respectable.”
“Oh, I did not need a book to tell me that,” you reply. “The book simply gave me the proper word for it.”
The chair makes a low sound against the floor when it moves back as he stands.
“Is this your aim?” he asks, circling the desk with that measured prowl you have begun to recognize. “To collect labels for me until you have enough to satisfy your curiosity?”
“I like a complete set,” you say. “Cashiered in India. Then a whaling ship.”
His eyes flash for the first time, something sharp cutting through the flatness.
“The Volunteer,” you continue, because you have decided that if you are going to press, you might as well press all the way. “Out of Hull. Men in beer halls still trade stories about that voyage. About bodies on ice and seals screaming and sailors who supposedly came back less useful than the carcasses they cut up.”
He’s very still now, only his breathing giving him away.
“You have been listening to drunks,” he says. “An impeccable source.”
“Drunks, directories, gazettes.” You count them off on your ink-stained fingers. “For a man who insists his life is dull, you have left an impressive trail of wreckage.”
He steps closer, until the desk is between you in name only.
“What precisely do you want from this recital,” he asks, voice low. “Shall I applaud your research? Shall I tell you you have been very clever, that you have managed to stitch together a little of what men whispered about me in places I no longer belong?”
“I want,” you say, “for you to stop pretending that the only version of you that exists is the one you wrote in those letters.”
His mouth twists. “And what good would that do you?”
You meet his gaze steadily.
“It would mean I am not working for a lie I cannot see,” you say. “It would mean when I sit at that typewriter putting your name at the bottom of letters, I know whose name it actually is. It would mean when I hear someone say there was a doctor on the Volunteer who survived when better men did not, I do not have to wonder whether I am watching him wash his hands in the next room.”
He makes a harsh sound, more exhale than laugh.
“Better men,” he repeats. “You imagine there were better men on that ship.”
“There were certainly other men,” you say. “The talk in the taverns suggests not many of them came back. You did. And then you forged a dead firm’s letter to vouch for you because no living soul would do it.”
His temper edges in, tone roughening. “You have a very high opinion of your own safety,” he says. “Throwing those names about in rooms that have windows.”
“We are alone,” you point out. “Unless you have ghosts tucked in your cabinets along with the scalpels.”
You see the moment something in him snaps out of its groove.
He moves around the corner of the desk, not in a rush, but with an intent that sends a hot thread running straight through you. You could step back; you do not. He comes to a halt in front of you.
“You think this is a game,” he says softly. “You come here with your little facts, your scraps of gossip, and you set them on the table like cards. You prod at things you do not understand. For what? To see me flinch?”
“No,” you say, and your voice sounds a shade rougher than you intended. “To see you stop lying to my face.”
He looks at you for a long moment, then down at your mouth, then back up.
“What would you like me to say?” he asks. “That I stole what was not mine? That I walked men into death and crawled out over them? That I have done things in cold and heat both that would curdle the little curiosity you cling to so tightly?”
Your heart kicks. “Yes,” you say. “Say it. Own it. Stop hiding behind polite German phrases and contrived references and ask yourself why you feel the need to play at being gentle when we both know there is nothing gentle about you.”
Something dark and hungry flickers over his face before he can choke it down.
“You truly do not know when to stop,” he murmurs.
“Then stop me,” you say.
His hand catches your jaw, fingers strong and unyielding, tilting your face up. You gasp, more from the suddenness than any real pain, and your hands go automatically to his wrist. His grip is not cruel, but there is nothing tentative in it, either. There is a throbbing line of heat down your spine that has very little to do with anger.
“Is this what you wanted,” he asks, thumb pressing into the soft place just in front of your ear. “You dig and dig until something ugly shows its teeth, and then you stand there looking surprised.”
“I am not surprised,” you manage.
You hold his gaze, feel the question in his fingers, the storm building in the set of his shoulders. You lick your lips, the smallest flick of tongue, and see his eyes track the movement.
His mouth is on yours before you can drag in another breath.
It is not gentle. His lips crash against yours with weeks of swallowed temper behind them, teeth clipping your lower lip, breath hot and harsh.
For the first heartbeat you do not yield. Your palms come up against his chest in a startled, instinctive brace, fingers fisting in the linen of his shirt as if you might shove him back and force a measure of sense into the moment. You turn your face just enough to break the seal of his mouth, breath catching sharp between you.
He does not let you get far.
His hand slides from your jaw to the back of your neck, broad palm cradling the base of your skull with a possessive firmness that stops just short of pain. The hold there steadies you, pins you, asks nothing softly.
The fight goes out of your hands before it leaves your body. Your grip on his shirt changes from resistance to clutching, and when he kisses you again, harder this time, you give way under it.
Your mouth moves beneath his, opening when his tongue pushes in, meeting him there at last, matching the pressure with one of your own.
A groan vibrates against your mouth—his or yours, you cannot tell.
When he lets go of your jaw it is only to get his hands on you elsewhere. One stays at the back of your neck, holding you where he wants you, the other drags down over your shoulder, thumb brushing the swell of your breast through your dress. He squeezes, testing, fingers digging into soft flesh until your breath stutters.
You break the kiss only because you have to, head tipping back, air coming in sharp little pulls. He takes the opportunity to bend his head to your throat, lips and teeth scraping along the thin skin there. The first scrape of his teeth makes your knees go loose.
“Patrick—” slips out before you can catch it, less accusation than plea.
He murmurs something filthy against your pulse, words hot and damp.
His hand at your breast moves, thumb hooking under the buttons that march down the front of your bodice. He yanks. Two buttons pop, one skittering to the floor.
You gasp, half scandalized, half thrilled.
“It took you long enough,” you manage, swallowing a shaky laugh.
He huffs against your throat, not quite amusement, more disbelief.
“You are insufferable,” he says. “Standing there with ink on your fingers and my history in your head, looking at me like that.”
“Like what,” you breathe.
His hand slides into your loosened bodice, fingers finding bare skin, cupping your breast fully now. His palm is hot, callused. When he drags his thumb over your nipple, it tightens under his touch, a direct line of sensation straight to your belly.
“Like you’ve been imagining this while you were supposed to be typing,” he says.
Your own hands finally stop clutching at his wrists and begin to roam. You bunch your fingers in his shirtfront, feeling the muscles there tense under the linen. You slide one hand down, over the flat of his stomach, lower, to the waistband of his trousers.
You undo the buttons with quick, clumsy fingers, the way you might open a drawer you have no business looking into. Beneath, you find him already hard, straining against the fabric. When you curl your hand around him through the last layer, he swears softly into your skin.
“Oh,” you say, and you cannot help the little curl of satisfaction in your voice. “You have been thinking about this, then. All those late nights at your desk, Doctor.”
His hand closes around your wrist, not to push you away, but to feel your grip as you squeeze harder.
“Little clerk with her hand on her employer’s cock,” he mutters, almost to himself. “God help me.”
He reaches down, forcing your fingers aside. For a second you think he will drag your hand away entirely. Instead he fumbles his fly open, frees himself, and then pushes your hand back around him bare.
The heat of him in your palm makes your mouth go dry. He’s thick and heavy, pulsing against your skin as you stroke, slick already at the tip. You swipe your thumb there and he grunts, hips jerking.
“Is this how you imagined it,” you taunt, voice low. “Me on my knees in your nice clean office, taking what you pretend you do not want?”
His thumb digs harder into the tendon of your wrist.
“You will not be on your knees,” he says. “I have spent too long looking down on you behind that desk. Turn around.”
You hesitate only long enough to let him see that you are choosing it. Then you do as he says.
The edge of his desk bites into the front of your thighs as you press against it. Papers slide under your hands, crackling. He gathers your skirts in both fists, hauling them up, up, until the cool air hits your stockings and the bare skin above them.
“Of course,” he says under his breath. “Of course you would wear these while you sit there giving me orders.”
“You bought them,” you remind him, fingers clutching at the far edge of the desk as he drags the fabric higher still. “If you dislike them, Doctor, you have only yourself to blame.”
He curses again, rougher this time. His hands find the tops of your stockings, thumbs stroking along that band of skin where garter ends and thigh begins.
He hooks his fingers into your drawers and yanks them down. They snag at your knees; you kick them aside, pulse pounding so hard you can feel it behind your eyes.
Patrick pauses behind you, just long enough to make you crazy, taking in the view he has been denied all these weeks.
“Smug little thing,” he says quietly. “Do you get wet digging through men’s filth, or has it just been me?”
You throw him a look over your shoulder, hair coming loose, breath fast.
“Find out,” you say.
His hand slides between your thighs, fingers finding you already slick, lips swollen and sensitive. The low sound he makes when he feels it is half groan half laugh.
“Oh, you have been waiting,” he says. “Dragging me over the coals and all the while—”
He slides two fingers through your folds, pressing where you are soft and open, then circles your clit. Your hips buck, an involuntary jerk against the desk.
“Patrick—”
“That’s it,” he mutters. “Say my name when you are doing something worthwhile with that mouth.”
You try to glare at him over your shoulder, but it dissolves into a gasp when he pushes one finger into you, the angle shallow, testing. He is not gentle—not cruel either. He moves with intent, and soon, another finger joins the first, stretching you, dragging against the ache inside you that has been building for weeks.
You rock back onto his hand, shameless.
“You talk so much,” he says, fingers pumping. “Let us see how long you last when there is something other than questions to occupy you.”
“You’re—your arrogance is astonishing,” you gasp. “Cashiered from one profession and still manages to be insufferable in another—”
He pulls his hand away abruptly. You whine, an undignified, desperate sound.
“Say please,” he says.
You grip the desk harder, panting. Pride and need war in your chest for a few ridiculous heartbeats.
“Go to hell,” you say.
His hand comes down on the curve of your ass, a sharp crack that sends a line of fire spreading outward. You yelp, swearing, heat blooming under his palm.
“You have earned that,” he says. “Standing there waving my sins in my face until I have no choice but to put you where you clearly wanted to be.”
“You are the one who—”
The second smack lands lower, over the fuller part of you, making your legs wobble. He soothes the sting with his palm, massaging, thumb straying down between your cheeks in a way that makes your breath catch.
“Last chance,” he says, voice gone hoarse. “Ask me.”
You squeeze your eyes shut, forehead lowering briefly to the cool wood of the desk.
“Please,” you say finally, the word dragged out of you. “Patrick. Please.”
He lets out a rough sound that might be a curse, might be your name, and his grip shifts from your hips to your waist.
“Turn around,” he snaps.
You barely have time to straighten before he hauls you bodily, hands firm at your sides, spinning you to face him. The room tilts for a moment, then the edge of the desk bites into the backs of your thighs. He pushes, and you go with it, palms splaying behind you for balance as he lifts you onto the blotter, papers crumpling under your weight.
“Here,” he mutters, crowding in, forcing your knees apart with his hips. “I want to see you when you ask for me like that.”
Your skirts are already bunched up from before; he shoves them higher with a vicious efficiency, baring you to the lamplight and his gaze. Cool air licks at your thighs, at the wet heat between them. You feel obscenely open on the polished wood, stockings rolled and biting into the soft flesh below your knees.
He steps between your legs and drags you to the very edge, dragging you forward until your cunt is snug against him, until there is nowhere else for you to go. One of his hands clamps around the back of your neck, steadying you, thumb pressed against your pulse; the other slides down, fingers splaying over your inner thigh, pushing it higher.
“Look at you,” he says, and his voice is ruined, scraped raw. “Ink on your fingers, my secrets in your mouth, and your legs spread on my desk.”
You glare up at him because you cannot think of anything else to do, breath coming fast. He answers by tightening his hand at your neck, pinning you in place.
“Say it again,” he orders. “Say please. Look at me when you do it.”
You swallow, lips slick, heart pounding against the heel of his hand.
“Please,” you whisper, meeting his eyes. “Patrick. I want—”
His mouth returns to yours, swallowing the rest of the sentence.
While his mouth takes yours apart, his hand leaves your neck and drops between you. He catches the back of your knees, dragging your legs wider, forcing them up until your heels hitch against the edge of the desk. You’re half-lying back, half-held upright by his grip on you, the angle helpless.
“Hold on,” he tells you.
You grab the sides of the desk until your fingers ache.
The first press of him against you knocks the air from your lungs. He doesn’t bother with careful nudging; he lines himself up and drives in with one hard thrust, forcing his way past the resistance of your body. The stretch burns in the best, worst way, your cunt opening around him as he sinks deep.
A strangled sound tears out of you, much too loud in the small office.
“Fuck,” he groans, head dropping for a second, eyes squeezing shut. “You—Christ.”
He is big and unrelenting, filling you to the hilt, hips flush to the inside of your thighs. It feels as if he’s wedged up against your spine, deep enough that your whole body is tuned to where you’re wrapped around him.
“Patrick,” you gasp, fingers scrabbling for purchase, desk biting into your back where you’ve slid.
He pulls back and slams in again, no gentleness in it. The sound of him hitting you—skin on skin, the wet, filthy slap of it—rings off the walls. He sets a pace that is ferocious from the start, hips snapping forward, using the grip on your legs to drag you onto him harder.
Each thrust drives a sharp little cry out of you, your body jolting, the edge of the desk digging into your lower back as he pounds into you.
You feel utterly taken, pinned open wide while he uses you, the angle letting him fuck deep and fast, everything inside you stretched around him.
“This what you wanted?” he bites out between thrusts. “You dig and dig until I snap and now—”
Another brutal stroke, and your head falls back, a gasp torn from your throat.
“—now you get exactly what you’ve been asking for.”
He punctuates the words with his hips, driving every syllable into you. The desk shudders under the assault; pens and papers go skittering to the floor. One of his hands drops from your leg to your waist, fingers clamping down hard enough you know you will wear his grip for days.
You cling to him and the desk both, pulled back and forth on his cock, helpless to do anything except take it.
“You look so sweet at that little typewriter,” he grinds out. “All neat and disciplined. And all the while, this—”
He shifts his angle, dragging against a place inside you that makes stars explode behind your eyes.
“—this is what you were built for.”
“Don’t stop,” you gasp, past caring how you sound. You can hear yourself, breathless and wrecked, but you don’t recognize your own voice.
He laughs, a short, disbelieving bark.
“Stopping is not the problem,” he says. “The problem is not ruining you completely.”
His free hand slides up between your breasts, shoving your bodice aside more fully, rough fingers closing around your breast, thumb scraping over your nipple. The double sensation—him slamming into you from below, his hand squeezing your breast, calluses catching on sensitive skin—tips something precarious inside you.
Your thighs twitch, wanting to close around him, but he holds them open, forearms braced under your knees now, using the leverage to fuck into you even harder. You can feel how wet you are, how every thrust drives a slick heat up your spine.
“Look at me,” he grunts.
Your head snaps forward, eyes dragging up to meet his.
His hair has fallen out of its careful order, damp at his temple. His cheeks are flushed, jaw clenched, eyes blown wide and black with lust and something uglier, something like relief twisted into it. He looks wild, nothing like the contained man your patients see.
“All this time,” he says, punctuating each phrase with a deep thrust that makes you yelp, “you sitting in my office, poking at things that could get you killed… and you had no idea this was the safer part of me.”
His rhythm turns vicious, almost punishing. The desk thumps against the floor with every snap of his hips, and you’re past thinking now, fingers digging crescent moons into the wood. Every nerve you have is trained on where he’s driving into you, over and over, deep and fast and filthy.
You feel your climax barreling toward you with frightening speed, all the nights of wanting and imagining and not touching yourself enough to take the edge off pooling into this one brutal, relentless rhythm.
“Patrick—” you choke. “I am going to—”
“Do it,” he orders, cutting you off. His his hips somehow pick up speed.
Your whole body bows, back arching off the wood, a cry ripped out of you that might carry to the street if anyone happens to be passing. Your cunt clamps around him in tight, pulsing waves, everything clenching unbearably hard. There's a heat crashing through you so fiercely you forget how to breathe for a moment.
He swears, a filthy, strangled sound, as you squeeze around him.
“Oh, you’re—Christ,” he grits out. “That’s it. Milk me then.”
He doesn’t slow, doesn’t give you time to come down. He fucks you through it, into it, dragging every last spasm out of your body. The overstimulation borders on unbearable, your nerves sparking, but it keeps you pinned in that white-hot place until you’re shaking.
His fingers bruise into your hips again, yanking you flush to him as he rams in as deep as he can go. He holds there, buried to the root, a torn-off groan spilling against your open mouth as his cock kicks inside you.
You feel the hot flood of him spilling into you, thick and heavy, pulsing in deep surges that your over-sensitized body drinks in helplessly.
He stays like that, locked against you, breath harsh and uneven, forehead pressed to yours, as if neither of you quite trusts your legs.
For a moment there is nothing except the sound of your breathing and the faint hiss of the lamps. Then he draws in a long, ragged breath and eases his grip on your thighs. You feel him start to soften inside you, each slow pulse sending a fresh, lewd trickle of warmth slipping out, wetting the tender skin between your thighs and the wood under you.
He pulls back, finally, cock sliding out of you with a slow drag that makes you shudder. You feel the loss sharply, empty and stretched, his spend leaking out in a heavy, sticky spill that you know is going to stain everything it touches.
Your legs are trembling; your stockings are crooked. Your bodice gapes where he popped the buttons, breast tender where his fingers have been. Papers under your palms are wrinkled and damp at the corners; a droplet of something—ink, sweat, you—spatters the blotter.
You drag in a breath, then another, trying to find words that haven’t been knocked out of you.
Across from you, Patrick takes a step back, just far enough that he isn’t pressed between your knees anymore. His trousers are still open, shirt askew, hair disordered. His chest rises and falls sharply, fingers flexing once at his sides as if he isn’t sure what to do with his hands now they’re not on you.
His gaze drops to the slick mess between your thighs, to the slow roll of his cum slipping out of you onto his desk, and something in his expression twists.
The lamplight throws all his sharp angles into relief, hollows under his eyes, the long line of his neck, the jump of muscle at his jaw.
His gaze keeps slipping—down to the state he has left you in, back up to your face, away again. Shame moves over his features like a cloud across a too-bright sky. It is an odd thing to see on him, raw and unguarded, now that the heat has burned out of his temper.
“You should—” he begins, then stops. His voice sounds roughened, scraped bare. “You should fix your dress.”
There is something almost absurd about the remark, after what he has done to you.
You huff a laugh that is more exhale than amusement and reach clumsily for your bodice, fingers clumsy at the torn line of buttons. You get one fastened and give up on the rest, breath still uneven.
When you look up again, his eyes are on your hands. The sight of you fumbling at your clothes, trying to restore some semblance of order to yourself on his ink-stained desk, seems to land in him like a blow.
He moves before you can read the decision on his face.
Two strides and he is there again, between your knees, crowding your space. You stiffen on instinct, but he is not reaching for your hips this time, not for your throat.
His hands come down, one on either side of you, palms planting on the desk, arms braced so he can lean in without tipping you backward.
You feel the heat of his body close again, but it's different now. There's no thrust in it, no forward drive. He bows his head, shoulders hunching.
Then he lowers his face into the curve of your neck.
He misses, slightly, cheek bumping your jaw, breath catching as if he has misjudged the distance. His beard scrapes your skin as he adjusts, pressing his forehead and nose into the place where your shoulder meets your throat, burying himself there as if the lamplight is too much for him.
At first you think he is simply trying to catch his breath, that the weight of him is only exhaustion. His heartbeat is a hard, restless thump against your chest, ribs expanding against your ribs.
Your hands, which had been hovering awkwardly in front of you, land without thinking on his shoulders, then slide up into his hair, still damp at the temple.
“Patrick,” you say softly, not sure whether it is a question or a warning.
He inhales against your skin, a long, shaky pull of air that seems to rattle all the way down. You feel it more than hear it, the way his chest shudders. His fingers curl against the wood beside your hips, knuckles going pale. For a moment he holds himself rigid, as if by sheer will he can make the next part not happen.
Then something gives. A flicker, like a tremor at the edge of your awareness. His shoulders jerk once, almost imperceptibly. You feel the breath he lets out against your neck, and this time there's a brokenness in it, a sound half-swallowed.
He tries to choke it back; you can feel the effort. The muscles along his spine go taut under your hands, as if he is bracing for impact. But the pressure inside him has nowhere to go now that he has loosened his grip on it, and you are too close not to notice when it finally spills.
The next breath he drags in hitches sharply, catching at the top as if there is something lodged in his chest. When he exhales, a small, helpless sound slips out of him, muffled against your skin. His fingers claw at the desk, nails digging into the scarred surface. The entire frame of him trembles, once, twice.
You realize, with a slow, strange shock, that he is crying.
Not loudly. Not with the grand, racking sobs you have seen from widows in waiting rooms. It comes like everything else in him does—tight, contained, trying desperately to be dignified in a situation that does not allow for dignity.
His breath stutters against your throat, damp heat blooming where his mouth presses. Another shiver runs through him, then another, the movements slight but unmistakable. The sound in his chest is thin and raw, that particular ruin a body makes when tears are being forced past teeth that do not want to let them through.
You simply sit there and hold him, hands sliding more securely into his hair, fingers combing through the dark strands at the nape of his neck.
He leans into it without seeming to mean to, head angling closer, nose crushed against your collarbone now, as if he could burrow under your skin.
“… should not have—” he manages, words scraping out in a low rasp. “Should never have touched you.”
“That seems a bit late to fret over,” you murmur, because you do not know how else to respond to an apology delivered with his face pressed into your neck.
He huffs a broken sound that might be a laugh if there were any humor in it. His shoulders shake again. You feel something wet and hot seep into the hollow just above your collar—the salt of it mingling with the sweat already cooling there—and for a moment your throat tightens, unwanted sympathy slipping in under the door of your irritation.
“You do not understand,” he says, voice muffled. “You have no idea what you are tying yourself to, sitting here with me. You should have left it alone. You should have left me alone.”
The words are harsh, but there is no force behind them, no push to actually dislodge you. If anything, his grip on the desk tightens, anchoring himself in place. The ruin in his tone undercuts the sting; it sounds less like a rejection than a confession.
“You say that,” you answer quietly, “and yet here you are. Crying into my neck.”
“Do not,” he says, breath snagging. “Do not make light of this.”
“I am not.” You ease one hand down, off his neck and onto his back, palm spanning the tense muscle there. He feels smaller like this, head bowed, shoulders hunched, the height he carries himself with folded in. “I am making it bearable.”
He trembles again, a whole-body shiver this time. For a passing second he presses closer, as if he could crawl through your ribs and hide. The idea that this man, who only minutes ago had you spread on his desk, driving into you with fury and heat, could also be this—small, frightened, leaking tears into your skin—unsettles something deep in you.
“If they knew,” he murmurs against you, words catching, “what I have done. What I was. You would not be sitting here, looking at me as if I am—”
His breath hitches, the next words swallowed along with another thin, shaky sound. He’s grinding his teeth; you can feel the tension of it in his jaw where it presses to you. He does not want to say it. He does not want to make it real by naming it.
“As if you are what?” you ask, gentler than you intended.
He shakes his head, a tiny, miserable movement. Tears soak another line into your throat.
“Human,” he says at last, the word almost soundless. “As if I am still that.”
Your hand on his back tightens.
“You are wretched,” you say, because softness feels like it would shatter him, “and stubborn, and arrogant, and you lie badly on paper. But you are not empty.”
He laughs then, a short, ruined thing that turns into a choked breath halfway through. Another shudder moves through him; another quiet, unwilling tear hits your skin. You do not shush him. You do not tell him it is all right. You know better than to offer absolutions you are not qualified to give.
You just sit there, half-undressed on his desk, legs still draped around his hips, and let him press his face into the curve of your neck while whatever has been gnawing at him finally finds a way out.
After a while, the shaking eases. His breathing evens out bit by bit, though every so often you feel a little aftershock move through him, some memory catching on the edges of his ribs. He does not lift his head. You are not sure he will be able to look you in the eye once he does.
You’re the one who moves first, eventually.
Your fingers slide up into his hair again, combing it back from his forehead, nails scratching lightly over his scalp. His shoulders loosen another fraction. You tilt your head to the side, resting your cheek against his temple, closing your own eyes for a moment.
“This,” you say quietly, after a long stretch of lamp-hiss and breathing, “is not going back in whatever box you had it in. You know that, do you not?”
His answer is slow in coming. When it arrives, it is a whisper, rough and resigned.
“I know.”
“Good,” you say. “Then we will start from that.”
He lets out a breath that feels, for the first time, less like drowning and more like the first cough after being dragged from cold water.
He’s still pressed against you, face hidden, hands braced, a man who has just fucked you senseless on his own desk and then folded in on himself like a paper figure that has tasted fire.
There will be time later for anger, for questions, for all the sharp words you have not yet spent.
For now, you keep your grip on him steady and let him be exactly what he is in this moment: a ruin trying, foolishly and stubbornly, to hold itself together against your throat.
⤷ husband!patrick, breeding, slight tit sucking, riding, overstimulation, cream pie, talk of babies, p in v, praise - you can’t help but want a baby after seeing all your friends tend to their sweet babies -
The crisp winter air carried the scent of woodsmoke and decaying leaves, a fitting backdrop for the warmth that had taken root in your heart. You’d spent the afternoon with the Hendersons, cooing over their newborn son, his tiny fists waving in the air. It was a familiar, wonderful ache, one that you knew well. You and Patrick already had your own sweet joy, your daughter, a little girl of three with your eyes and Patrick’s tinge of red hair. Watching her sleep in her bed just last night had filled you with a love so profound it hurt.
You thought of your daughter, an only child, and imagined her as a big sister, her small hands carefully holding a baby, her voice whispering secrets to a new sibling. The thought completed a picture in your heart you hadn't realized was unfinished.
Now, you sat by the fire in the parlor, the house quiet save for the crackle of the flames and the scratch of Patrick’s pen. He was hunched over his desk, a good, steady man, the best father you could have imagined for your little girl. You watched the firelight catch the dark strands of his hair, and the longing intensified. A brother or sister for your daughter. Another piece of him and you.
Rising from your chair, you went to him, your hands resting on his broad shoulders. He stopped writing, leaning into your touch with a soft sigh.
"What is it, my love?" he asked, his voice a low rumble.
You leaned down, pressing a soft kiss to the crown of his head, your fingers tracing the line of his tense shoulders. "Just thinking," you murmured, your lips brushing against his hair. He tilted his head back to look up at you, his dark eyes warm in the firelight, a small, knowing smile playing on his lips.
"About what?" he asked, his voice a low vibration you felt through your hands. "About our little girl? Or about the Hendersons' new lad?"
"Both," you admitted, moving to stand beside his chair, your hand sliding down his arm to lace your fingers with his. "Seeing them today…holding their baby. It made me think."
His thumb stroked over the back of your hand. "Think what?"
You took a breath, the words feeling both terrifying and thrilling on your tongue. "I was thinking about our daughter. About how she'd be as a big sister. And I was thinking… I want another one, Patrick."
His smile softened, his gaze turning impossibly tender. He let go of your hand, his large palms coming to rest on your waist, pulling you closer until you stood between his strong thighs. "Another one?" he repeated, his voice dropping to that intimate rumble that made your stomach flutter. "Are you sure, my love?"
You nodded, your heart thudding against your ribs. "I've never been more sure of anything. I feel a little silly- the ravenous need I have for you is unlike any other, and I want to have your child again, I want to be filled.”
Patrick let out a slow breath, his eyes searching yours. Then, a different kind of understanding dawned in his gaze, a look that was both doctor and husband. "My love," he said softly, his voice a low, intimate caress. "Are you aware of what day it is?"
Your brow furrowed in confusion. "Tuesday?"
A slow, handsome smile spread across his face. "It's the fourteenth," he clarified, his hands tightening on your waist. "The fourteenth day of your cycle." He watched as the realization washed over you, the scientific precision of his words colliding with the deep, emotional yearning in your heart. He knew your body as well as he knew his own. "You're at your peak. You're most fertile."
The air crackled with a new, potent energy. It wasn't just a wish anymore, it was a possibility, a tangible, scientific fact. "Oh," you breathed, the single word full of awe.
"Oh, indeed," he rumbled, his eyes darkening with a primal heat. "So you see, my love, we have a very small window of opportunity." He surged upward, his arms wrapping around you as he buried his face in the soft fabric of your dress at your stomach. You tangled your hands in his hair, holding him close, the desperate ache in your chest finally easing, replaced by a wave of pure, unadulterated want.
He pulled back just enough to look up at you, his hands sliding down to cup your backside, squeezing gently. “It's your body telling you- it’s nature.”
He rose from the chair in a fluid motion, his strength effortless as he swept you into his arms. You wrapped your legs around his waist, your arms around his neck, and his mouth found yours in a searing kiss. It wasn't gentle or questioning; it was a kiss of agreement, of a shared purpose, deep and full of all the love you had for one another. He carried you from the parlor.
In your bedroom, he lay you down on the soft quilts as if you were something precious, his body following yours, covering you with his familiar weight. His hands were everywhere, pushing up your skirts, his calloused fingertips tracing the sensitive skin of your thighs. "You're so perfect," he murmured against your lips, his voice a reverent praise. "So ready for me. Your body knows what it wants, doesn't it? It knows it's time to be bred."
You arched into his touch, a soft gasp escaping you as his thumb found the slick clit between your legs, circling slowly. "Patrick," you whimpered, need coiling tight in your belly.
"Shh, I know, my love," he soothed, his mouth trailing down your neck. "I'll give you what you need. I'll give you everything." He freed himself from his trousers, and you felt the thick, hard press of him against your entrance. He looked down at you, his dark eyes burning with an intensity that stole your breath. "Right now," he said, his voice a low growl, “Big stretch like always, sweet girl, breathe in-”
With one slow, deep thrust, he was inside you, stretching you, completing you. You cried out, your nails digging into his shoulders.
"Your cervix is soft, open, ready. I'm going to push my seed as deep as it can go, right where it needs to be." Each soft, steady stroke was a declaration, a promise. "That's it," he grunted, his forehead pressed against yours. "Take it. Take all of me. You feel that? M’right in there, sweet girl. That's me giving you our future."
The pleasure built, a blinding, all-consuming wave. His words were a litany of praise and desire. "So good for me. Always so good. My beautiful wife. The mother of my children.”
"Tell me, love. Tell me what you want."
"You," you gasped, your head thrown back against the pillows. "You, Patrick. A baby. Our baby."
"God, yes," he groaned, his pace quickening just enough to make your toes curl. "Say it again."
"Give me a baby," you whimpered, the words tumbling out, broken by his powerful strokes. "Please, Patrick. Fill me up."
"That's my girl," he praised, his voice thick with satisfaction. "I'm going to. I'm going to flood this sweet little womb until it can't hold anymore. I'm going to make sure you're carrying our child by morning." He lifted his head, his dark eyes locking onto yours, and the raw, possessive love you saw there was your undoing. "Look at me when I give it to you. I want to see your eyes when I put our baby in you."
You blinked your eyes open, your vision blurred with pleasure, and held his gaze. The connection was electric, a circuit of pure, unadulterated need. "So so big- ngh!" You choked out, “feel so full,"
"And you're going to stay that way," he promised, his voice a low, commanding growl that sent you spiraling. "I'm not going to let a single drop go to waste. I'll keep you plugged up all night if I have to. You'll go to sleep with my seed inside you, hmm?" His hand slid down your body, his palm pressing flat against your lower belly, right above where he was buried so deep inside you, and he gave you a sweet, wet kiss to your cheek. "Right here. Ngh! S’where my come belongs-”
The thought, combined with the relentless, perfect pressure of his cock, sent you over the edge. Your orgasm crashed through you, a violent, beautiful wave that ripped a scream from your throat. Your inner walls clenched around him, a greedy, desperate pulse, milking him.
"Fuck, yes," he snarled, his control finally shattering. He drove into you one last time, impossibly deep, and his whole body went rigid. “Look at me, honey, look at your husband- let me see those beautiful eyes,”
You felt the hot, thick flood of his release, a powerful, endless surge that seemed to fill every part of you. He pulsed inside you again and again, his groans a sound you would cherish forever.
For a long moment, the only sounds in the room were your ragged breaths and the frantic pounding of your own heart in your ears. He was a heavy, welcome weight on top of you, but he didn't move. He didn't pull out.
"Patrick," you breathed, your voice hoarse. "I can't, I can't feel my legs."
A low, rumbling chuckle vibrated against your skin. "Good," he mumbled into your shoulder. "Means you won't be going anywhere." His dark eyes soft and hazy with satisfaction. "We're not done, my love."
Before you could ask what he meant, he was shifting. With a strength that never failed to astonish you, he wrapped an arm around your waist and rolled, taking you with him until you were straddling his lap, his cock still buried deep inside you. You gasped at the new angle, the way it filled you to the hilt.
"There now," he murmured, his hands coming up to cup your breasts, his thumbs brushing over your pebbled nipples. “Shhhh...” He watched you, brushing back the little baby hair stuck to your sweaty forehead.
"You're going to take another load, aren't you? You're going to take everything I have until I'm sure it's taken."
He began to move you up and down, with a slow, subtle rocking of his hips that sent jolts of pleasure through your oversensitive body. You whimpered, your hands bracing on his chest. "Patrick, I can't, it's too much."
"No, it's not," he soothed, his voice a hypnotic caress. "It's exactly enough. It's what your body was made for. To take me. To carry my child." He leaned up, capturing a nipple in his mouth and sucking gently, his tongue swirling around the peak. The dual sensations of his mouth and his hips rocking into you were overwhelming, stoking a fire you thought had been extinguished. "Just one more, sweet girl. One more to make sure. Give me one more, and I'll give you everything."
His words were like a drug, the pleasure began to build again. You began to move with him, matching his rhythm, your body knowing exactly what to do.
"That's it," he praised, releasing your nipple with a soft pop. "Ride me, love. Take what you need. Show me how much you want that baby." His hands gripped your hips, guiding you, his own hips rising to meet yours, each thrust a deliberate statement. Your husband takes your chin in his handa nd guides you to look down at the bulge in your tummy at each thrust. "Look down. Look at us. You feel me there, angel?"
Seeing him disappear into you again and again. It was the most erotic thing you had ever seen.
“Y-yes!”
"Fuck, you're beautiful," he groaned, his eyes fixed on the same sight. "My beautiful, fertile wife. Taking my cock so well." He picked up the pace, his thrusts becoming harder, more demanding. "I'm going to fill you again. I'm going to make a mess of this pretty little pussy, and you're going to thank me for it, aren't you?"
"Yes," you sobbed, the pleasure cresting, a sharp, blinding peak that stole the air from your lungs. "Yes, Patrick, thank you..."
Your second orgasm tore through you, and this time, he followed you right over the edge. With a guttural roar, he slammed you down onto him, his hips jerking upwards as he spilled himself into you for a second time. You felt the heat of it, another thick, copious flood that mingled with the first, filling you to overflowing until you could feel it beginning to leak out, trailing down your thighs.
“There- there-” he cooed between pants,
He held you there, his arms wrapped around you like a vise, his face pressed against your chest as he fought for breath. You were boneless, spent, a complete and utter mess, and you had never felt more loved.
After a long moment, he kissed you, a slow, deep kiss full of lingering passion. Patrick lifts you gently and grabs a pillow to place under your hips, guiding you to lie down.
"Stay just like that, angel," he whispered against your mouth, his hand coming to rest possessively over your lower belly. "We'll give it a little while. Let gravity do its work. We want to be absolutely sure."
Summary: when fate (and a ruptured whale carcass) throws you into Patrick’s care, the lines between treatment and indulgence blur fast as you get treated by a doctor who knows exactly where to press and how to make the body give in. Meanwhile, he finds his perfect replacement for laudanum.
Tags: No use of Y/N. Male reader. Requested by an anon, hope you’ll like this. Some science talk thrown in here. Fluff. Smut. Top Patrick Sumner. Dom Patrick Sumner. Bottom male reader. Handjob. Anal sex. Manhandling.
ℳ𝒶𝓈𝓉ℯ𝓇𝓁𝒾𝓈𝓉 - gif
Words count: 3500
Wood beneath your weight creaked faintly with every shallow shift, worn smooth by years of sailors far rougher than yourself.
A lantern swung ever so slightly overhead with the ship’s motion, casting slow lights across his face.
Which was currently far too close.
Those pale, cutting blue eyes studied you with an intensity that made your chest feel tight. He leaned in just enough to catch the light properly, one hand braced on the back of the desk you were sitting on, the other lifting your chin with firm, unhesitating fingers.
Touch precise while he examined and tried to solve whatever thing afflicted your body.
You barely registered the question he asked about your condition and symptoms.
It dissolved entirely under the weight of his gaze as your stomach lurched and throat tightened, focus caught on the flecks of darker blue in his irises, the way his beard framed his mouth or that faint scent of tobacco and clean alcohol clinging to him.
A sharp snap of his fingers clicking briskly in front of your face.
“Stay wi’ me, lad.”
The sound cut clean through the fog in your head as he had already stepped back half a pace, one hand settling near your frame beside him while the other was resting on his hip. He looked down at you now, posture loose but authoritative, expecting to be obeyed without question.
“What is it ye’re feelin’, then? Properly this time.”
Heat rushed up your neck while you let out a low, awkward hum, trying to gather yourself and drag your thoughts back into something resembling order.
“It’s—” you swallowed, your voice catching slightly, “been… constant, sir. Since we set out.”
Your hands tightened faintly in your lap as you tried to explain it in a way that made sense.
“My stomach feels as if it won’t settle, keeps turnin’ over itself.” You pressed a hand briefly to your abdomen, as if demonstrating. “Can’t keep food well, comes back up near as quick as it goes down.”
Your brow knit as you searched for the right words.
“And my head feels light. Worse when I stand or look too long at anythin’.”
You exhaled slowly, embarrassed at how much it all sounded when laid out like that.
“An’ the smell o’ things makes it worse.”
Silence followed, save for the creak of timber and the distant groan of the ship.
Sumner nodded once as a low hum left him, deep in his chest, while he looked you over again.
His fingers returned to you without warning, pressing lightly along your jaw, then your neck. He turned your head slightly, inspecting the whites of your eyes and color of your skin, checking for pallor while his knuckles brushed your cheek as he tilted your face toward the lantern.
“Mm.” He moved quicker now, lifting your wrist and turning it palm-up, thumb pressing into your pulse point, counting silently. His other hand ran along your forearm, firm pressure, testing the flesh and muscle beneath.
No lesions or suppuration, skin’s sound.
His touch shifted to your hands, turning them over, inspecting the nails, beds and faint grime worked into the creases from labor. He pressed along your fingers, checking for swelling or tenderness.
Then your arms and shoulders, moving clinically efficiently, something entirely under his control that sent a welcoming heat pooling low in your gut.
“Shirt off.”
The words came flat and immediate.
He wasn’t even looking at your face when he said it, rather already reaching forward, fingers catching the fabric at your collar, tugging it aside.
“—‘scuse me?” Your breath hitched, words slipping out half-laugh and half-unintentional arousal as your hands fumbled to comply. The fabric dragged over your skin, cool air hitting your chest as you pulled it off.
He stepped in too close again, broad palms moving across your ribs and sternum, pressing, assessing. He leaned in, ear near your chest for a moment, listening to the rhythm beneath.
“Breathe.”
You did sharply at first, then slower as he repeated it.
His fingers traced along your side, pressing between ribs, checking for tenderness and possible fluid, hands warm against your skin as they traveled down your spine, pressing at intervals.
“Any cuts from the works?” he asked, voice closer to your ear now. “Contact wi’ carcass? Rot?”
“Few small ones. Nothin’ deep.” You swallowed.
“Show me.”
You twisted slightly, pointing them out as he leaned in again, inspecting each with care, checking for swelling or discoloration.
“No sign o’ putrefaction,” he murmured mostly to himself. “Good. Ye’d know it if there were wi’ flesh that goes foul quickly out here. Infection takes hold faster than a man can think. Blood turns on ye if it’s left unchecked.”
You could have listened to him for hours, especially considering the way your body was betraying you with heat coiling low as blood traveled all the way down to your dick.
The faint rasp of his beard when he moved past you got addictive to watch
He stepped away at last.
“Ye can dress.”
Relief and disappointment tangled together as you pulled your shirt back on, fingers clumsier than they should have been.
Across the room, he had already rolled his sleeve up, exposing strong forearms marked faintly by veins and old scars previously hidden unfairly by that white sweater he had on. He reached for a small collection of dried herbs, selecting them with care.
Ginger root and dried mint that he set into a mortar and began to grind.
The pestle moved in steady circles, crushing the plant matter down, constant grit against stone as the herbs broke further, releasing their oils along a scent blooming into the air.
His forearm flexed with each motion, tightening of muscle beneath skin while those veins rose more prominently as he applied pressure. A faint grunt escaped him now and again as he worked.
You tried unsuccessfully not to stare.
“…Makin’ somethin’ t’ ease the passin’, are you?” you muttered, voice quieter, edged with dry humor. “So I don’t suffer through it?”
He scoffed, a brief lift of his gaze as those blue eyes caught yours again, a flicker of amusement at the corner of his mouth. His beard shifted with it, framing the faint grin that tugged there.
“Hardly.” Voice softening just a fraction. “Ye’re not dyin’, lad. Just unused t’ the sea.”
He returned to his work, adding a small measure of water cut with a touch of alcohol to the crushed herbs, working it into a thin preparation.
“Ye’ll have plenty o’ work yet.”
You huffed lightly at that, nodding.
“Would’ve been useful t’ know before signin’ on.”
A quiet chuckle left him.
“First voyage, is it?”
“Aye, sir.”
“Patrick,” he corrected, almost absently.
The mixture had thinned now, liquid taking on a cloudy, greenish-brown hue. He poured it carefully into small glass flasks, stoppering each with a cork cap.
“It’ll settle the stomach. Ginger for the nausea, mint t’ calm it. Take a small measure when the feelin’ rises.”
He stepped back toward you, handing them over but his hand lingered as it settled on your shoulder.
“Body learns the motion, just give it time.” He said, quieter now. “If it worsens,” he added, eyes holding yours again, “ye know where t’ find me.”
The change came on you so gradually it almost felt like a trick of the body rather than a cure.
At first it was simply less.
Churning that had once twisted your insides into knots softened. The sharp, bitter rise in your throat dulled until it was nothing more than a faint, forgettable irritation and your once light head settled back into itself. The deck still moved beneath your feet but your body had begun, obediently, to match it.
Just as he’d said it would.
The draught he’d given you worked quickly, ginger’s volatile oils warming the stomach, encouraging proper gastric movement instead of that miserable, reversed churn while the mint eased the spasms and calmed the vagus nerve’s overreaction.
It was infuriatingly effective.
Within a day or two you were well, strong in your footing and steady in your stomach as appetite returned with vengeance.
You had no reason to see him again and that, far more than the sickness, sat wrong in your chest.
Founding yourself glancing toward the door of his surgery more often than you’d admit, listening for his voice and any excuse…
None came until a long enough dead whale left too long in the cold water before being brought alongside, had begun the slow unseen work of decay.
Bacteria within the gut breaking down tissue, releasing methane and hydrogen sulfide trapped beneath layers of blubber thick.
Pressure building but contained until the rupture came sudden.
A deep, wet crack followed by a violent release as the abdominal cavity split under its own strain. Gas, liquefied tissue and partially decomposed matter burst outward with force enough to send men stumbling.
You hadn’t even braced as the impact hit you square, force of it knocking the breath from you as your footing slipped and the deck lurched at the same moment, sending your body skidding hard across slick wood until you slammed into the ship’s side.
The impact jolted through your back, harsh enough to steal the air from your lungs entirely as the cold edge of the rail bit into you, open sea just beyond black and endless.
Around you, men cursed and laughed but not a single complaint left your mouth as the captain ordered you to get checked by the doctor.
The room felt and smelled the same while sitting there again in the same spot, though feeling entirely different now that you were not distracted by sickness.
Now, you noticed everything like the arrangement of his bone-handled scalpels, neatly wrapped bandages, glass vials clouded faintly by residue. The mortar from before, cleaned but still faintly stained with green along a collection of classical literature and his own desire to write poetry
Your patience wore thin far quicker than you cared to admit as you waited, every sound outside made your attention flick toward the door.
Until the latch turned and that door opened.
A flicker of recognition that softened the edge of his expression just slightly.
“Back again,” he breathed, closing the door behind him, gaze sweeping over you once. “The nausea worsened?”
You shook your head, unable to stop the small edge of something in your voice.
“Opposite, sir. Cleared near entirely.”
A pause and a small nod.
“Patrick.” He corrected the way you addressed him before turning toward his desk, moving a few things aside, clearing space as he spoke. “Tha’s good t’know. What happened, then?”
“Carcass burst,” you said simply. “Knocked me clean across the deck.”
Another practical nod as he turned back but stopped at seeing you already shirtless, garment discarded off to the side.
For a moment his gaze held, not much clinically as it dropped unintentionally across your pecs and the line of your shoulders, then back to your face.
“Ye in a hurry, are ye?” Dry and almost amused.
You shifted slightly, letting your weight settle more deliberately.
“Far from it,” you said, voice quieter now. “Captain gave me the day and I like to be very… obedient.” A faint tilt of your head. “Efficient as well.”
Something in his jaw tightened barely as he stepped forward, closer again.
“Where’s the pain?” His voice had lowered, not softer but more focused.
You nodded slightly, then turned, lifting yourself just enough to show your back.
“Took it here.”
Broad and warm hands settled on your back as he pressed along your shoulders, thumbs working into muscle with practiced certainty, testing for tension and disruption beneath the skin. His fingers traced the line of your spine, pressing at intervals and checking for tenderness or misalignment, palm flattening briefly against your back.
“Breathe.” His hand shifted with it as you did to feel the expansion and symmetry of your lungs.
He moved closer because he had to.
That was the reason.
It had to be.
Yet the closeness lingered just a fraction longer than necessary before his hand rose to your neck, fingers pressing against your pulse, firmer than needed and almost absent.
“Turn.”
You did too quickly and willingly, really wanted to show how obedient you could be.
His hand caught your jaw, steadying you as he tilted your head slightly, thumb dragged down your lower lip, exposing your gums and checking color for any signs of dehydration or systemic distress.
He released you slowly and stepped back half a pace while a low hum left him.
“Ye’re sure there’s pain?” Not a question at all as he seemed to have caught on.“There’s no contusion or sign o’ trauma beyond surface impact.”
Now or never.
You shifted again, turning fully by swinging your legs over the side so you faced him properly now.
“If what ye’re seein’ is pleasant enough,” you murmured, “does it matter much?”
Something in him responded as a low, rumbling sound left his chest, gaze moving slower this time intentionally.
“Physically sound,” he said, though his voice had changed just slightly. “Good musculature, no signs o’ malnutrition and skin intact.” Large and warm hands settled at your thighs.
“What should I do wi’ ye, then?” he asked, voice low, edged with something restrained.
You held his gaze without hesitation.
“Anythin’ ye want.”
His mouth found yours without hesitation or careful testing, coarse beard scraping against your lips immediately, dragging along the soft skin at the corner of your mouth as he adjusted the angle, something that made your breath hitch the second it deepened fast.
Your lips parted under his without thinking, a quick inhale slipping between you that he took advantage of instantly with his tongue pushed in, testing and mapping the inside of your mouth with the same precision he used in examination, only this time there was nothing clinical about it.
A low rumbling sound erupted deep in his chest that you felt as much as heard, vibrating faintly through the contact of your bodies, hands still gripping your thigh and tightening.
Fingers digging in closer to the curve of your rear, hauling you forward with strength as he pulled you flush against him.
One of your hands caught at his sleeve, the other bracing against his side while his tongue moved slipped along yours, pressing and withdrawing enough to drag against it before returning again. He angled his head slightly, deepening the kiss further, beard scraping along your jaw this time, rough enough to make your skin burn faintly in its wake.
Another low sound left him and you answered it without meaning to, breath catching, body reacting faster than your thoughts could keep up, heat pooling low, hips shifting faintly against his grip.
Thumb pressing hard into your thigh as if to keep you exactly where he wanted even as his mouth slowed enough to make you chase it when he pulled back a fraction, lips dragged once more against yours before he finally broke the kiss, breath warm and uneven as it ghosted across your mouth.
“Stay,” he muttered, voice rougher now, edged with emotions that hadn’t been there before. “An’ take those off.”
He pulled away fully, turning to the side as if he hadn’t just left your lips swollen and your head spinning.
“Need somethin’.”
You sat there for half a second, breath unsteady, wiping at the faint line of spit threatening to slip from your lower lip before fingers fumbled slightly at your belt from the lingering effect of him.
Buckle coming loose, then your trousers followed, pushed down enough to free yourself, fully and achingly hard for him.
There was no hiding it, not that you tried.
By the time he turned back, you were laid open for him, legs parted and dick standing firm, flushed and leaking faintly at the tip.
His eyes did all the comments as he stepped closer with a small tin in hand for storing rendered fats. He opened it with his thumb, revealing the pale and creamy substance inside.
“Doctor keepin’ that on hand f’ all his patients, is he?” you murmured, voice edged with teasing.
He huffed a quiet laugh, free hand coming up, unexpectedly gentle as it settled against your cheek, thumb brushing once along your skin.
“Treats cuts,” he said, tone low, casual. “Wounds or earaches if ye warm it right.”
A pause as his eyes held yours. “Or t’ help an handsome patient in need o’ his doctor’s dick.”
Breath catching as a laugh slipped out of you louder than expected, tension snapping to let it through until is hand was on your thigh again and he moved it with a firm pull upward, your leg lifted and guided over his shoulder with a low grunt of effort, making your back meet the desk fully now, wood cool beneath you as your body opened to him completely.
His fingers, smooth by the substance that melted from his warmth, pressed slow at first, testing the resistance and tension there before easing in further, slickness of the tallow doing its work as his finger slid inside you with controlled pressure and your breath broke.
Free other hand of his moved immediately and wrapped around your cock, stroking to draw another reaction from you before his focus returned fully to what he was doing.
“Relax,” he murmured, instruction and expectation.
A second finger followed and the stretch burned not for long because he knew exactly what he was doing, fingers curving precisely where he knew to find your prostate.
Soon a sharp and electric jolt tore a sound from your throat and he hummed, low and satisfied.
“Aye,” he muttered, almost to himself. “There it is.” Fingers moving again, repeating the motion and pressing into that same spot with practiced accuracy.
Of course he knew where it was.
His hand on your cock kept a controlled pace now while those sharp blue eyes took in every reaction.
“Good response,” he murmured. “Yer takin’ it well.”
The words went straight to your dick held through his fist.
By the time he withdrew his fingers, you were already trembling slightly, breath uneven and body more than ready for more.
He stepped back just enough to unbuckle his belt, all the noises between metal shifting and leather loosening felt louder despite your heart drumming inside the ear channels while being left there, open and waiting.
Then he was back along with a blunt, slick press of him at your entrance. Thick and already prepared.
He stroked himself once, eyes fixed on the way your body looked laid out beneath him before he pushed in, stretched deeper than before and fuller while your body forced to adjust around him inch by inch as he worked his way inside.
When he was fully seated a low groan left him unrestrained.
He leaned down, bracing himself over you with one arm planted beside your waist as the other steadied your hip before he moved slowly, measured thrusts drawing out the sensation and letting your body take him properly.
As Patrick began to move with a thick cock sliding in and out of your slick and eager hole, you couldn't help but let out a low moan.
He was so gentle at first, allowing you to feel every inch of him as he filled you completely. Heat radiating off of him along the way he stretched perfectly your hole, making you gasp and arch your back with each thrust.
He leaned down further, body pressing against yours, breath hot on your ear as he groaned low. "Fuck, ye feel good," he muttered, voice close to a low growl. "Tight an' warm."
Very glad to know the temperature of your anus was of his liking, you could feel the way his cockhead pressed against your prostate with each thrust, medical knowledge guiding and allowing him to hit that spot with unerring accuracy.
He knew just how to move and angle his hips to make you gasp and beg quietly for more, using all that knowledge stored inside his beautiful and haunted mind to drive you wild with that veined length of flesh.
Friction from his smooth thrusts sending jolts of pleasure coursing through your body.
His breath was coming in ragged gasps now, body pressing you into the desk, his hands gripping your hips to pull you onto him and urging you to take more.
Pleasure was building fast, heat coiling in your belly as the pressure began growing with each thrust. He was hitting your prostate with every movement, his medical knowledge guiding him, allowing him to drive you closer and closer to the edge.
With a loud groan, you came, cock spasming and shooting your load onto his white sweater, marking him in a way.
But Patrick wasn't done yet as he continued to move, hips thrusting in a steady, relentless rhythm while his cock sliding in and out of you, hammering your prostate with every movement.
“Funny thing, pleasure. Same pathways as pain but interpreted differently.” A faint, rough chuckle left his throat that mixed along a groan. “Brain’s easy t’ fool if ye know how.”
Impossible to answer him back as the grip that you held on the desk below tightened significantly, all he got back was a breathless chuckle interrupted halfway with a groan of your own.
Then, with a final groan, he came too as he moved himself flush till his groin slapped your ass and warmth pulsed in hot and thick waves pulsed deep inside of your hole, dripping out and mingling with the lubricant.
He collapsed onto you, his body pressing you into the desk, breath hot on your ear as he whispered, "Fuck, lad, ye milked me dry."
For a moment, neither of you moved before he muttered, almost thoughtful, “Body adapts quick,” voice low against your ear. “Given the right stimulus.”
Another breathless chuckle puffed warm air against his lips as you brought him closer with a soft touch to the cheek, kissing him softly and he made a low pleasant sound at the motion, lips parting together with his before you both had to step back due to oxygen already being in meagre abundance inside your lungs.
“If ye’ve no further…ailments,” he said, a faint edge returning, “I’ve work t’ be gettin’ on with.”
A pause, just long enough to mean something.
“But the door’s not barred t’ ye.”
It was the closest thing to an invitation he’d give, a small smile forming on your lips as you nodded in response.