Honestly the washing hands thing is so real LMAO
Jack abbot get in line imma fight you for our girl
─ Dr. Samira Mohan x fem! reader || WC: 3.2k
SYNOPSIS: You and your friend, Samira Mohan, tread the line between friends & something else. During a night out, you both get a taste of what that something else might look like.
CONTENT/WARNINGS: MDNI/18+. NSFW. SMUT. Alcohol consumption (everything is consensual). Sort of Dom! Reader/Sub! Samira (both are switches & fems though). Girls kissing passionately! Nipple play. Dry Humping. Fingering. Dirty Talk. Flirting. Making out in the backseat of a cab. Samira has a crush on reader & vice versa. Samira & Reader are residents at The Pitt (R3s). Samira & Reader are close friends & around the same age (29). Touch deprived! Samira Mohan. Both Samira & Reader are bisexual.
A/N: I truly can't explain how this happened, but lets just say I locked in so hard I blacked out. I just want to love on Samira Mohan, so I did. MOVE JACK IT'S MY TURN! I also took some inspo from the scene in Black Swan where Natalie Portman and Mila Kunis kiss, lmao oops. I made both Samira & reader bi considering I'm bi so I could relate to it and I hope others are able to enagge with it as well! (I almost psyched myself out of posting this okay be nice). Proof read by moi. Reblogs, comments, and likes are always appreciated. <3
NAVIGATION | MASTERLIST | AO3
If someone had predicted where the night took you both, you would’ve laughed in their face.
It was supposed to be a simple night out for drinks. Both you and Samira had finally gotten a couple of days off; more like you forced the girl from going back to The Pitt when they didn’t need any help. You always told her the same thing: “If you keep going at this rate, you’ll get grays before you hit 35, hun.” She would only roll her brown eyes at you, a cheeky dimple poking out on the side of her face as she laughed it off.
It wasn’t anything out of the ordinary, two close friends sharing quality time with one another after their workdays ended. That was how it started anyway, through brief conversations and minor interactions with the resident whenever your shifts aligned. You could see right through her, how her job was all she had, how all she knew was the chaos of the PTMC to match the havoc of her psyche. Albeit, her gorgeous smile and kind demeanor hid it well for the most part, at least when Robby wasn’t grilling her, but when you urged her to go home to prevent an adrenaline crash, she actually listened to you most times.
Samira would bring tea in advance during the mornings you worked together, repeatedly warning you that your heart would give out with all of the caffeine you consumed on a daily basis. You simply shrug at her and chug the liquid out of your thermos, watching her as you do. It'd make her grimace, grumble even, but you’d take it so long as you got something.
“You should listen to me, you know. Try some tea, it won’t kill you as quickly.” Samira lectured, trying to bribe you with using brown sugar instead of the agave sweetener she likes.
“I’m not letting you take my coffee away from me, sorry. We will just have to accept our differences.”
“Forgive me for caring about your health. Let’s just hope I’m in the room with you when you’re tachycardic.”
Lunch times were your favorite, often opting to sit outside with Samira for a breather, sharing bits and pieces of your meal together, whether it came from home or you ordered it in advance. At night, when it was time to call it a day and repeat the cycle the next morning, Samira would be there to walk with you back to your place, or you would take her to hers. You’d give each other a rundown of the day, of the chest tube you had to put in or the new case study Samira was looking into and finally got to use in practice.
These little moments always eased your nerves after dealing with so much intensity on a daily basis, and it only took a couple of late-night walks to realize you liked Samira’s company, and more so you wanted it outside of working hours. On one particularly hard shift and a relatively quiet stroll, you knew you didn’t want to be alone, and even with the reassuring squeeze on your shoulder, a part of you craved her calming presence to tether you to the Earth.
“You want to go out for a drink? I know a good bar nearby. They make good margaritas.”
She nodded silently, offering an understanding smile, and walked side by side with you the entire way to the bar, stayed with you for the rest of the night, and even rode in the cab back to your apartment. When you woke up with a hangover the next morning, you were surprised to find Samira hovering above you, wiping your forehead with a cool compress, soothing the throbbing in your temples before the wave of nausea hit you.
“Wanted to make sure you were okay. You went a bit hard last night.”
The rest was history.
Tonight, she took your advice and said yes to your invitation for drinks at a club downtown, another location you had mentioned to her a while ago. Samira, ever the overthinker, came by your place to get ready, bringing a bag with some outfit choices, seeking out your input. She didn’t say anything when you told her to wear the halter top and mini skirt, coming towards her to hike her skirt even higher and align her boobs closer to the center of her chest, giving them a push-up effect.
“You’re a pretty girl, Samira. You’ve got legs and a face that can start wars, use them. If you flirt with the bartender, maybe we’ll score and get ourselves some free drinks.”
You told her that with a playful smile and a slight twinkle in the corner of your eye, your dark lashes emphasizing the flare. Samira watched you finish the touch-ups on your makeup, the heeled boots and leather pants you wore did everything to sell a fantasy of you she got to witness firsthand. She’ll never admit to watching the way the curve of your ass looked in the stretchy material of your pants, or how the low neckline of your top revealed the little pieces of ink along your shoulder and arms that were usually hidden under your scrubs. She occupied herself with grabbing the rest of her belongings and throwing them in her purse, oblivious to how you eyed her from afar, re-applying the last bit of your lip gloss before calling the Uber.
At the club, it was another story entirely. You held her hand on your commute and reassuringly squeezed her wrist when you started to woo the bouncer, batting your lashes at him and brazenly puffing out your chest. It seemed to work when security let you both in, leading Samira further inside and ignoring the people who bitched outside about you two skipping the line.
Some flirting with the bartender and three cocktails later, you and Samira were on the dance floor, swaying your hips to the upbeat song filling the space around you. You don’t think you’ve ever seen your friend so relaxed, so free; inebriated yes, but enjoying herself nonetheless. Samira’s face was craned up to the sky, the bass of the beat thrumming through her entire being, rushing from the top of her head to the balls of her feet. Her hair bounced with the rest of her, loose waves spinning around with every bop of her head and twirl of her hips.
You followed her lead, holding her waist and guiding her movements from behind. She laughed at the feel of you, clutching your wrist and bringing your hand to the middle of her lower body, keeping her in place while you synchronized the circular gyration of your bodies. Meshing to her back, she could feel you pressing up behind her. Tossing her head back over your shoulder, she granted you a whiff of her perfume, giggling in her ear in the process, teasing her with the ghost of a bite on the side of her neck.
Samira pivots on her heel and turns to face you, smiling wide as she throws her arms over your shoulder and around your neck, your hands taking their natural place on her hips, beckoning her to you. She was all teeth and dimples as she rolled into you, dancing chest to chest, eyes on you and tuning everything else out. Neither of you cared for the other people in the space with you, honing in on the way she felt in your hands, the material of her skirt, the open back of her halter top, the ease with which she danced with you under the dim lighting.
Closing the gap between you, whatever was left of it, her nose grazed the tip of yours, barely tasting the vodka on her breath. You watched her face, how her gaze drifted from your eyes to your mouth and rapidly returned back up. It was subtle; you’d almost miss it if you blinked too fast, and thankfully your strict attention made sure you caught it.
“I’m having so much fucking fun.” God, she was drunk, you think anyway from the way there was more black than brown in her eyes. To you, she’s never looked prettier, smiling without a care in the world under bright shades of pink and purple.
“I bet. That’s the liquor talking.” Placing a hand on her back, you sensed the faint shiver that washed over her. “You got a couple of eyes on you, sweetie. Think these guys want a dance.”
“I’d rather not, thank you very much.” She didn’t even bother to acknowledge the men in question who had been eyeing her up and down all night, opting to keep her regard on you the entire time. “I very much prefer dancing with you.”
Pride bloomed in your chest, fighting the urge to steal a kiss right then and there. You held off, your hands treading dangerously close to her lower spine, sneaking towards the waistband of her skirt.
“Good, that means I don’t need to worry about you scurrying off with a stranger and leaving me behind.” Samira laughs hard then, loud enough to filter through the music in the club. You savored the scene in front of you, taking her in as if she hung the moon and the stars, as if she were that.
Must’ve been the tequila catching up with you.
“Trust me, that’s not happening.” Her knuckles rasp along your jaw, the tip of a nail poking your chin and skimming your bottom lip, pulling away to move a loose curl behind your ear. “I couldn’t leave you behind, that’s a federal crime.”
You sure fucking hoped that was the case.
It was about 2 am when you and Samira called it a night, heading to your place and resting into one another in the backseat, tumbling into bits of cackles as your sense of direction remained skewed from the alcohol still coursing through your veins. Her head rested against your shoulder, your hand on her thigh to keep her nearby, absentmindedly painting circles into her soft brown skin. Her head lifts to look at you, doing your best to ignore the way the haze in her eyes sends a surge of warmth through your body.
“What?”
“Nothing…” Her voice trails off, leaning more into you in the backseat.
“If you have something on your mind, Samira, you can tell me. Probably the best time considering I’m seeing two of you right now so I won’t remember.” You both giggle again, the sound ringing in your ears with her sudden close proximity.
“Just wanted to say I had a lot of fun is all.” She beams shyly at you, breathing heavier in your direction and placing a hand on your side to keep her from sinking into the cushion of the seat.
“Yeah?” You quirk your face in amusement, the corner of your lips curling upwards at her eager nod.
“Yeah.” Her forehead is against yours, beaming almost to herself, boldly glancing at the shiny gloss still on your lips.
“You’re so silly,” shaking your head, your goofy expression was mirrored by an intoxicated Samira Mohan, both ends of her mouth flexing with a chuckle.
“Your fault. I forgot how many shots we had.”
“It was two big ones, but shit, I might be wrong I lost count.”
The bubble of comfort you found yourselves in extended beyond the backseat of the Uber, the hand on your side wandered up to stroke your forearm aimlessly, focusing on the tattoo on your bicep. Samira hums at the feel of your skin, following the intricate lines the ink left behind, trying to learn the story behind it and the patience you needed to endure the needle piercing into your flesh over and over again. It was strangely intimate, close enough to feel her light exhales on the side of your cheek and her heart pounding in her ribs.
“Samira.”
“Hm?”
“If you want something, tell me before I think I’m reading this wrong.” Taking a hand to the back of her neck, your thumb caressed her nape, causing her to bite her lower lip.
“I think…I want you to kiss me.” Her big brown eyes were glazed over when she met your gaze, the sight alone sending your heart racing.
“You think?” God, you could hear your pulse in your ears, or was that your second heartbeat? “Gotta be better than that.”
“Please, just kiss me.”
Fucking finally.
Tilting forward, your lips mesh together like you’ve been dreaming about all night. The kiss was messy, clumsy even as Samira’s brain caught up with the rest of her, slithering her tongue along your bottom lip to ask for permission to taste more of you. Opening your mouth, your tongue quickly found hers, swirling around it while holding her face with a hand on her jaw. She sighs happily against you, her exhale landing on your top lip while attempting to bring herself closer to you, sitting with one of her thighs between yours.
The Uber came to a stop in front of your apartment complex, forcing you to part from her with an embarrassed grin. You reiterate a hasty thank you and take Samira’s hand with a coy smirk, speed walking into the lobby of your building to catch the next elevator up. Swiftly grabbing your keys for the front door and unlocking it as fast as you could, you shut the door behind you as Samira kicked her heels off and tugged you forward for another kiss.
“Hold on, hold on. Let me…fuck…wash my hands.” She was busy staining your cheeks with her lipstick, touching any part of you she could get her hands on.
“Mood killer,” she jokingly muttered over your lips, landing a few kisses down the column of your throat and biting at the juncture of where your neck meets your shoulder.
“Old habits die hard. Plus, do you know how nasty clubs are? You’re supposed to be the smart one here, darling.”
Smooching her pout, you were able to peel off your boots along the way to the kitchen, rinsing off your hands with Samira next to you doing the same. Impatient as ever, she dragged you to the couch once the paper towel flew out of your grip, sitting you down and crawling into your lap with your arm wrapping around her waist. She practically climbs over you, needy lips finding yours again and humming at the feel of you, her palms riding up your chest and landing on your shoulders before running through your hair.
A moan punches out of her, instinctively shifting her hips over your thighs as her skirt rides up her body, revealing more of her to your greedy hands. Littering kisses down her neck, you went to undo the knot of her halter top, jerking the material down to expose her breasts to your eager sight. Kissing along her collarbone and sternum, she arches towards you, presenting more of herself without shame. Deciding to provoke her a bit more, your lips glide over the swells of her breasts, grinning at her unsteady exhales, a sign that she was anxiously lusting for more with every smooch you give her.
“Stop teasing me.” She almost sounded like she was on the verge of tears, desperation laced in her tone the more you dragged this out.
“Can’t I have a little fun with you?” You quipped, eyes widening a bit when she took one of your hands and placed it on her ass cheek under her skirt, guiding you over the thong she wore underneath.
“Touch me.” She damn near growled against your lips, a hunger unfamiliar to her overriding her senses.
“Yeah? You need me to make it better, Samira?” She nods, gasping the second your free hand reaches up from between her inner thigh to stroke her cunt through her panties, marveling at the wetness already soaking through the cotton. “Need me to touch you right here, hm?”
“Fuck, yes, please,” she cried out, bucking her hips to grind into your hand, bumping into your fingertips at the right angle that would give her aching clit more of that delicious friction.
Not wasting another second to toy with her, you plucked her thong to the side and gravitated to her slick pearl, the first contact of your fingers against her forced a whine out of Samira as she closed her eyes and deepened the curve in her back. She didn’t care how desperate she sounded, her whimpers and breathless keens turning your living room into a choir for you to enjoy, reveling in every mewl she willingly offered you. Rubbing circles over her clit, her hips bucked into your hand, oblivious to your lips inclining back to her breasts, wrapping around one of her nipples.
“Fuck, fuck, fuck,” Samira clutched at your head, keeping you in place as your tongue flicked over her saliva-covered breasts, clenching around nothing with her arousal dripping down your fingers.
You don’t think you’ve ever heard her curse so much before, groaning around her perky nipple and nipping at it lightly, moving to give the other neglected breast equal attention. Keeping your thumb on her sensitive nub, you plunged a digit inside her, noting the loud moan turned to a whine when you burrowed another, curling them to the roof of her entrance.
“How does that feel, pretty girl?” You mumbled, grasping her hip to keep her steady above you, keeping your eyes on her the entire time.
“So good, so damn good.” She was lost in the pleasure, stars fired under her eyelids as she fucked your hand, chasing her own pleasure. “God…I’m going to cum.”
“Yeah?” You upped your ministrations, pressing your thumb harder against her clit and pumping your fingers with more force. “Come for me, ‘Mira. Want to feel you around me. Just let go, baby.”
A few more drives of your fingers and Samira’s cunt tightened around your digits as she fell into release, crying into your mouth when you snatched another bruising kiss, swallowing all of her little noises for yourself. She came much faster than you both anticipated, but you didn’t mind, not when she slumped against you and struggled to catch her breath. Her head rose to peer at you chuckling below her, slipping your soaked fingers out of her twitching entrance and clasping her shaking thigh.
“What’s so funny?” Samira blinks slowly at you, cupping both of your cheeks and holding your face in her palms.
“Just didn’t think you’d sound like that. You’re loud.”
“Shut up.” Heat creeps up to her face and you laugh harder, squeezing her ass affectionately.
“I don’t mind.” You kiss her slowly once more, biting her bottom lip playfully and coaxing a huff out of her. “Kinda want to see just how loud you can get, if you’re up for it.”
Samira was never one to back down from a challenge, humming in competitive intrigue. A lone finger moves over the neckline of your top, tracing over the lining that still kept the rest of your body hidden from her curious eyes. Tugging at the side of your top, she stares down at you, smirking as the same ravishing throb she felt before beats between her legs.
“Show me what you got.”
It was going to be a long night.
©️ ovaryacted 2025. Please don’t repost, copy, translate, or feed into any AI. Support your fellow creators by reblogging, commenting, and liking!
Mood:
THE TITLE OF THIS EPISODE????
Even GRRM was not this brutal 🙃🙃🙃
THE LAST OF US — 2.05 “Feel Her Love”
thinkign about characters i like being sweet and tender with each other
I need a mutual to let me brain rot about a very specific idea I have for Jack Abbot x doctor!reader. An outline of events, if you will.
I can’t get this out of my head:
Jack sees the shock on your face before he hears the words he had just said to you.
When had the wind been this defeaning? Or was it the silence?
“J-Jack…you don’t…don’t say th-”
“I’d do it with you. Have kids.” He said again, more definitely this time. More concrete. More real. He thinks about all the time he’s spent alone, of the kind of life he could’ve had had things been different. How you’re a different person, a different doctor, more fierce in every way when a child patient comes through those doors.
And fuck, if it doesn’t make his heart squeeze when he thinks what that can be like with you.
“We don’t have to get married.” He says, eyes watching how your throat constricts and your lips wobbles, tears threatening to free fall again.
His face leans in closer to yours, how it normally does whenever he’s seen you doubt yourself and willed every bit of confidence in you.
“But I want this for you, I want this with you. That asshole down there made you feel like you had to choose one thing and give up another, but you don’t have to give up anything with me. You can have it all, and I want to make that happen for you, if that’s what you want.”
Lord knows he’d rather chew sand than let himself be this vulnerable again.
But with you, he didn’t have to be afraid of anything at all.
Currently watching my 401k spiral in real time is making me spiral 😭
𝐥𝐞𝐜𝐭𝐮𝐫𝐞𝐬 – 𝐦. 𝐫𝐨𝐛𝐢𝐧𝐚𝐯𝐢𝐭𝐜𝐡 (𝐟𝐥𝐮𝐟𝐟, 𝐬𝐦𝐮𝐭; +𝟏𝟖) | what a fucking delight it was to write this, as someone who has a big fat crush on this ^ man right here and as someone who is also a lifelong steeler fan. this one goes out to @ovaryacted (who pretty much beta-ed the first handful of pages for this), @heavenbarnes (who maybe might have been bitten by the robby bug?? no pressure to read babes), @jackabbotsfakeleg (who is the first fellow steelers fan i found on tumblr; this team is my doom but i love them!), plus all the robby fiends
warning(s) include language, inappropriate relations (?),age gap (reader is 25ish/2nd year med student, while robby is pushing 50), he fell first and harder, sexual tension, reader is a steelers fan and from pittsburgh, (american) football talk, baltimore ravens trashing, injury (mentioned), smut, penetrative sex (p in v), oral sex (f receiving), handjob, nipple play, bodily fluids, big dick/down bad!robby, special appearance at the end; she's thick, guys... sitting at 5.2k words!
Medical school lecture halls are just as chilly as Robby remembers.
The air feels a little less clean, a little more human, but still. There’s a nip to the air that takes him back to his Monday-Wednesday-Friday EMED 851 lecture. Part of him wishes he had worn one of his hoodies, though that would look a little weird with the button-up and slacks he has on. The light blue–cornflower, the tag reads–top and black bottoms feel odd, tugging at Robby’s skin in a way that his scrubs and cargos don’t.
There’s a wide array of students scattered across the seats of the room. To his surprise, most of them listen to him ramble about airways with attentive eyes and scribble down whatever they can catch. Good. That means that they’re maybe halfway serious about this shit, which earns them 2% of the qualification needed to work in emergency medicine.
Other than a lull of awkward silence at the very beginning plus a few verbal stumbles in the form of curses that cause the class to giggle while he apologizes and gathers himself, the doctor is pretty solid.
There’s only one other time he flounders, if he should even call it that. It was more of an unforeseen pause. Nothing more than the tick of a few seconds when his eyes lock with yours for the first time today.
You’re already staring in his direction, waiting for him to finish the word that collapses surprisingly easy on his lips at the sight of you. He blinks, a strange flush ricocheting across the skin of his face when you blink at him, even throwing in a little grin just as he snatches back his composure with a distracted um.
The shirt you’re wearing is nice. Simple and fitted. Cap sleeves stop right below your shoulder and reveal intricate lines of ink that swirl back under the fabric in loops that make Robby wonder more than he should. You’re wearing shorts, too. Huh. He’d have half a mind to question how your exposed legs bear the nippy air of the hall, but it doesn’t matter. You make it work–and well–the material cutting off just a little higher than he initially realized.
Zipping his eyes back up to yours, he warms at how you’re picking at your bottom lip; your other hand now using your pen to write down something you remember him saying a few moments earlier.
Covering his gulp with a fast wipe at his beard, Robby somehow finds a way to push out the words that have been stuck in his throat for what feels like longer than the brisk five seconds that have passed since he spoke last.
His head tilts, barely, and his lips twitch into a small smile, dragging his stare from you to the carpet beneath him so he can speak again. Robby plays off the mistake as him thinking–about the question itself and not how you are unmistakably the prettiest thing in this room.
Eleven. That’s how many times he glances at you between then and the end of his lecture. The first three times were a genuine accident, and boy, did they feel like one. Goosebumps flutter across the back of his neck, which he’s rubbed enough times that some of the students probably think there’s something wrong with the tendons there. Robby almost agrees, with the way they keep allowing him to swivel and study you.
The more it happens, the oops of peeking at you, the longer it takes for him to look away. By the end of his knowledge-packed but run-on sentence answers, Robby’s stare cements to you. You’re nodding, legs crossed, and unintentionally drawing patterns with the pad of your finger across the skin of your thigh. For some reason, he’s fairly confident in the fact that you probably don’t even realize you’re doing it.
“Any more questions for Dr. Robinavitch?”
Dr. Robinavitch. Professors, man.
Robby doesn’t try to stop himself from glimpsing in your vicinity. Not right at you but close, so his peripheral can catch any possible movement of your hand raising. His eyes burn with an unsettling eagerness while he waits for something to happen. What the fuck is wrong with him? What the fuck is wrong with you for wearing shorts that fit that well even while you’re sitting?
Your hand stays where it is, arm propped against the side of your seat, fingers fiddling with the pen he can tell you’re trying not to click. The small pang of disappointment that rises inside him squashes away in seconds, and he prays that his ears don’t start to hue red after you hold his stare the longest you have for the entire class.
Looking at him through your lashes, you wait. And wait… and wait. A smirk barely ghosts across your mouth, and Robby rips away his stare. Throat bobbing while he swallows, blinking faster than he means to, he looks to the professor.
“Think they’re ready to kick me out, Dr. Hummel. I’ve probably rambled for long enough, yeah?” Robby shrugs. A sheepish smile warms his face when the room echoes with a healthy applause, and Robby almost recoils at the sound. There’s no way Hummel didn’t tell them to do that. And all he can do is stand and take it, hands tucked into his pockets, his thanks an awkward nod and embarrassed grimace-flavored grin.
Robby tries not to blush when he spots you clapping along with everyone else. He tucks his chin, feeling a little silly with how satisfying it feels to know he’s spoken well enough for you to show some appreciation. Or maybe you’re just doing it to be nice. Either way, you’re making the attending pinker than usual.
Class wraps in a daze.
Dr. Hummel leaves Robby lingering to the side, a wave of shuffling backpacks and zippers echoes throughout the hall. There’s a reminder announcement about a research paper due two weeks from today… or is it a presentation? Robby doesn’t listen hard enough to verify.
A sprinkle of pupils, glowing with a luster that only presents itself after their final class of the week concludes, come up to formally greet Robby. All with names he’ll try to remember but won’t. Bright-eyed and buzzing more than he thinks one would be after an hour and a half long lecture on airways, but hey. He appreciates the eagerness, even if it’s a little much.
Doing his best to be polite, Robby tries to seem as if he’s actively listening–nodding, humming, and throwing in a smile for good measure. He catches a few of the words being smattered his way, but he’s already forgotten them by the time the students leave him be. A sigh of relief sinks out of his nose when he turns his head to find you still in the room, only just now standing from your chair and sliding a thick notebook into your bag.
A line of spit gets caught in his throat when he sees you adjust your shorts, subtly tugging at where they’ve ridden up in between the warmth of your thighs–warmth of your thighs? Fuck, Michael, get it the hell together.
Robby coughs loudly into the crook of his elbow before pivoting to find you gliding his way. His heart jumps as you head right for the man, and his mind races to search for something to say. Hi? Nice to meet you? I really like those shorts?
His mouth opens to speak, though he quickly settles it into a kind grin as you scoot past him with a smile of your own.
“S’cuse me,” you pronounce gently, and Robby’s throat bobs.
“Of course,” he nods, voice huskier than he means for it to be as he takes a polite step to the side. You gift him one last breath-snatching smile before floating out of the hall without a second look. A long hum seeps from Robby, his fingers reaching to scrape at the nape of his neck.
Fuck, he needs to change out of these clothes… and maybe receive a beating of some kind for how long he let himself gawk at your ass just now.
Unfortunately, Robby doesn’t find the courage to ask anyone to smack him across the face the entire walk to his car. He does, however, have enough sense to unfasten the button that’s been digging into his skin since he threw on the shirt.
The man could cry happy tears when he pulls into the Panera Bread parking lot to find it close to empty. Surprising, considering that it’s the middle of the day on the UPMC campus but hey. He’s not complaining. The less college students in line between him and his overpriced iced green tea and tomato basil BLT, the better. In fact, he might splurge and go for a brownie, too… maybe that’ll clear the fog you’ve spelled him under.
His mind wandered for the whole ride over–swirling with blurry images of you and tingling with unanswered questions. Robby even stumbles through his order a few times, though the embarrassment over that is briskly wiped away when he turns his head to find you sitting at one of the tables.
Of course, you’re here.
Of course, you’re here and snacking on chocolate croissants and sipping coffee while reading off the screen of your laptop with the most delightful expression of intrigue he’s ever seen.
You aren’t real… you can’t be because only dreams are this coincidental.
Teeth grinding, Robby scans the area around you. Empty, other than an older man stirring his tomato soup and a mother and daughter sharing a frosted cookie with a pair of soft smiles. Robby’s eyes crinkle at the sight, shifting in his place at the counter in deep thought.
He guesses it’ll be a short wait for his food, as it always is. Then all he needs to do is fill his cup at the machine, wait for his number to be called and he’s home free… no matter how tempting it would be to tip over your way and say a quick hello. There’s a voice in the back of his head chanting for him to swallow the nerves and fucking do it, yet he still isn’t sure what’d he start with. What do you say to a young woman you’re certain will haunt you for the rest of you life–
“Dr. Robinavitch? Hi…”
It takes Robby a second to look at you. Even without, an odd feeling tightens Robby’s chest. He finally turns, swallowing through a tickle in his throat, just barely blinking away how his eyes try to water as you approach him carefully. Dear lord, someone please help him–your voice. All you’ve said is his name and a simple, normal hello yet he’s already turning into a puddle of nothing.
“Oh, please. Everyone just calls me Robby,” he holds his hand out for you to shake but regrets it immediately at the spark that ignites when your palms touch. Clenching his teeth at the feeling, Robby masks his tight jaw with a warm smile. “You were just in my lecture, if I remember correctly.”
Robby feels dumb when he tags on the question at the end. There’s no doubt surrounding whether he’s remembering correctly, as he’ll never forget you or those shorts even if he were to try.
“Yeah, for Hummel’s class. I’m actually glad I ran into you again. I really enjoyed you coming to talk to us today. And I’m sorry, I feel like I should’ve said something before leaving class but I couldn’t think of any cool questions to ask you afterwards but, uh, yeah. Having an actual attending from an ED come to talk to you about using a mac versus a miller is much more pleasing than reading about it in some textbook at three in the morning.”
A small chuckle lightens his face. “That’s very kind of you, ‘m glad you liked it. Is ED your main interest?”
“One-hundred percent. I mean, I won’t even start my rotations for another year but that’s definitely the end goal.”
“Well, good. That’s good, um… sorry, one sec,” Robby’s cut off by the calling of his number, but raises a gentle hand with a pleasant smile in hopes that you’ll stay put. He mumbles a small thank you to the worker that slides him his bag, turning back to you with a lick to his lips. “Like I was saying, that’s great. We could always use more people like you in the ED.”
Wait. Shit. People like you? The man hasn’t even known you for that long and has talked to you for even less. He finds himself lucky when you decide not to think about the statement as hard as he does, accepting the compliment with a small grin.
“I appreciate that, Robby. Hopefully at least one of my clinicals ends up being in The Pitt. I can’t even imagine all the things I’d learn as your MS considering that all it took was a class of you speaking for me to fill up two pages of notes.”
Is he as red as he feels?
“Ah, hearing that, I’m sure you’d fit right in wherever you end up. Secretly kinda hoping it is in my ED at some point, though.” And not just because you’re a knockout and a half. “Just over the short time I’ve talked to you, you seem stellar. Good listener, pretty, cares about the details.”
Wait. Shit, that second one is a slip and much too obvious to just glaze over like his last one. You’re blinking at him in a way that itches his insides, and he exhales a rough breath. Shaking his head, he dips his nose in an embarrassed hang of his head.
“‘M sorry,” he starts with a breathy laugh because it’s all he can do. “That wasn’t appropriate of me, I’m sorry. Your good looks have nothin’ to do with your abilities.”
Suddenly, it feels like karma is having its way with Robby. Was there a door he should’ve held but didn’t? A thank you he forgot to tell someone? There must be because he’s usually quicker to control himself around someone that’s piqued his interests as much as you have.
When he tilts his gaze back to you, there’s something in your face hinting at something he doesn’t let himself attempt to decrypt.
“Jeez, I’m really eatin’ it today, aren’t I,” Robby squirms with a sheepish smile. “And that feels like my cue to leave you to you’re studying before I am forced to have you gag me.”
“Oh, I’m not studying. I mean, I should be but your answer to that one question Jeremiah asked has me knee deep in an article about the history of clinical airway management. Also, I didn’t take you to be into that kinda stuff, but I’ll make sure to be gentle if you really want me to.”
Brow line raising in a flutter of rousing excitement, Robby allows himself a full grin. You match the toothy-smile, leaning with something that looks like anticipation with another wring of your hands.
What a well-dressed, witty, gorgeous geek you’re proving yourself to be.
“I, uh, I actually know of a few other studies you might be interested in,” Robby suggests, a wave of poise centering his thoughts and reprioritizing his intentions. “...if you've got the time?”
The next sixty-ish minutes pass devastatingly fast. A few more people have populated the Panera dining room but Robby’s too high on your presence and one and a half cups of iced green tea to care.
“You’re making this up, you gotta be.”
“I swear, Robby,” you hold up your hands. “I will admit, losing to the ratbirds–at home, in OT–does tend to cloud one's judegment, but enough to think they have the upperhand against a metal lightpost? All Dad saw was red and I ended up waiting in the ER with him while he waited to get his fingers re-set. We we’re at chairs for a while and then brought to the back, and the thing I remember the most was this hum hanging in the air the entire time. Even though I was only around five, that shit was… addicting. Not as electric as a Steelers home game but pretty close. The nurse and my dad kept having to tell me to stay behind the curtain but, of course, I didn’t. ‘Cause, you know. Children. But watching all those people come in broken just to have people like you give their everything to try and fix them… that’s when I knew I wanted to be an emergency physician.”
The corner of Robby’s lips quirks up as he watches you. You stare back at him with held breath before ripping your eyes away to the half-eaten piece of brownie he’d offered you. A little dry but completely worth it with how your hands brushed when he passed you the sweet.
“So basically what I’m hearing is that the Baltimore Ravens are the reason you were able to find your purpose in life so early on…” Robby eases out, rubbing a hand across his beard in anticipation of the response he’s fishing for. He gets it and more when your face wrinkles into a cute grimace and you flinch with a shudder.
“You put it that way, and it almost makes me think I should drop outta med school to move to Canada.”
Your words pull a deep chuckle from Robby, who’s feeling warm at how the two of you are leaning and talking. Bodies relaxed and bellies content with sandwiches and baked goods, the dance you’re both performing is becoming more difficult by the second.
He’s starting to feel less and less sorry about how the side of his shoe keeps knocking against yours, even doing it once on purpose as a thanks for when you notify him of a loose crumb in his beard. The tips of your fingers keep creeping towards each other but Robby blames that on the smaller scale of the table he’s joined you at. You got up, once, for napkins and the man had to take in a deep breath at the swing of your hips. He’s not sure he looked away fast enough either. At least, that’s what the smirk that dashes across your face reveals to him.
“So,” Robby starts after a comfortable lull in the conversation, pausing to clear his throat. “Are all of Hummel’s students this awesome or did I just get lucky runnin’ into you again?”
Flattery. The age old tactic and Robby makes sure not to lay it on too thick. In all of his bumbling and slip ups from earlier, he’s maganed to regain some of his bravado. It returns to him slowly but surely as he starts to unravel you. Not by much but enough to finger out what makes you tick; which jokes to draw out, what subjects (medical or otherwise) gets you going, which throw of his timbre embellishes the shine in your eyes.
“Mm, most of them are pretty cool. Some are also the biggest assholes you’ll ever meet but what’s any place without a few of those?”
“Heaven,” Robby answers with an unbothered shrug of his shoulders and you bob your head in agreement.
“Preach,” you grin, popping a corner of brownie into your mouth. “They were on their best behavior today with you being there but trust me, they’re incapable of going twenty four hours without creaming their pants over making other people feel like shit.”
Wow. “Oh, yeah?”
“For sure. Dr. Hummel should have you come around more often, though. Maybe next time you can snap a few egos in check.”
You’re into whatever this is, Robby can feel it. It’s in your eyes, that don’t notice their lingering on the hair that’s peeking out at the top of his exposed chest. In your voice, that’s lilting in a manner that’s ringing through the thick fog he entered the building with to guide his ship closer to your sweet taunt.
Robby’s quicker than the hesitation his words want to bite back on, tilting his head to give you a quick once over before flicking them away with a grin that’s smugger than he means for it to be.
“Oh, that’s definitely something I’d consider as long as you're still sittin’ front row.”
Your lips curl upwards and Robby is buzzing at the win. It makes his chest puff a little, too, and his head starts to feel a little funny when he catches you staring again.
“Hey, uh,” just do it, Rob, “why don’t we exhancge numbers? You know, in case you ever feel like conversing more over slightly-stale bread and the best passion papaya iced green tea on this side of the Mississippi.”
Taking a second to think, you sniff.
“While I have had better passion… papaya iced green tea–” you recite the words with a subtle unsureness, laughing a little at the nod Robby encourages you with.
“You got it,” he reassures you, voice rasping with obvious amusement before letting you continue.
“–I’d love to keep picking your brain. I will warn you, though, since the age of eleven, I have somehow managed to, uh, shift every conversation I’ve been a part of to the topic of the Pittsburgh Steelers at some point, so if that’s not your thing, then…”
Your words melt into a stronger laugh than you expected to leave you, and it wraps arround the high-pitched giggle trickles out of Robby.
“Oh, I’ve dealt with worse, sweetheart,” he winks, pulling out his phone from his back pocket and opening it before sliding it your way. He holds his breath the entire time you add your contact, eyes flicking to his screen where he sees your name along with a simple :). He huffs at the sight, plucking the device back into his grip. “Much, much worse.”
“Yeah? Like what?”
You add a smirk and tip of your head with the question. Robby’s soaring.
The following hours prove to be just as indelible as your shorts, and it’s all because of you.
You’re more than special, and Robby sits undisputed in that fact as he commences the third round of the night. The slide into you is just as good as the first and the second. You’re on top this time, your hands clutching his face to rub at the thick of his beard while you sink down onto him.
Robby holds your waist, hands light but still there as he splits you open. A noise breaks from his throat when you sit fully, and he rests his forehead against yours. While you take a second to adjust, Robby peeks down past the pudge of his belly to where the two of you meet, groaning at the sight of you stretcehed around him.
Eyes flicking to yours, Robby tightens the arm he has around your waist to tug you until your breasts are flush against his chest. You cling to him at the shift, hips barely lifting before collapsing back down onto him with a shuggering grunt.
Your body keeps the same languid speed, Robby helping you just barely with a hand splayed just above your ass.
“Fuck, you’re so deep,” you pant out against his mouth. “And fucking huge. I should’ve known considering how you walked into class earlier, though.”
“Shit,” Robby moans. “Really?”
You bob your head, hand reaching to grab at Robby’s shoulder. The muscle holds strong under your squeeze, you answer him during another rock of your hips.
“Mmhm. You just… oh, fuck, you walk like it’s big. Which it totally is, by the way.”
“So you’ve said,” Robby ribs, adding a few bucks of his hips that yanks a squeak out of you. “Actually screamed it a few times, too.”
“Well, can you blame me–”
You’re interrupted by Robby, who surprises you with a steep roll to the side. Now hanging over you, Robby pants through a groan. He’s gonna feel that tomorrow but the chance of a strained back isn’t gonna stop him from trying to get you to keep making those sounds that have him seeing stars.
He takes the miracle of his cock remaining inside you even after the change of position, hitching both of your legs back as far as they’ll let him and jerking you with a thrust. It’s deep and driving, intentional enough to make you feel every inch and vein of his swollen member. You wail out right next to his ear and he smiles against the tattoo on your shoulder in victory. He still doesn’t know what it is. You won’t tell him and he got tired of guessing.
“No, I can’t,” Robby throws back, hips falling into a pattern of sharp thrusts. You feel bottomless and it makes his stomach clench. “Eyes on me, baby. Right here, okay?
Robby meets your stare as soon as you crack open your lids. He tightens the snap of his hips, allowing himself to indulge. Call it a habit but he likes to look… observe the way your mouth parts as you puff out air every time your clit hits his pelvis… how your brows pinch together and eyes water as he pounds into the spot it only took him a total of seven thrusts to find… how your hands reach for his neck, squeezing when you hear him flutter your name out on a gruttal moan.
You especially like him loud, he’s found. Not bold enough to ask for it, Robby had the pleasure of figuring the phenomenon out on his own. It didn’t take long, thankfully, as he got embarrassingly close to blowing a vocal cord when you tongued at his nipples and skillfully jerked out his cum onto your stomach. Afterwards, his taste buds found your slit a sopping mess of slick and cream, which he slurped away at until you tugged him up by the hair and kissed your juices from his mouth.
The first time he’d fucked you, it was slow. A loitering exploration of every indent and ripple inside your hole, every mole and freckle of your skin. You’d already come once against his tongue after he’d convinced you that no, you were not going to die if he didn’t kiss you right then.
(‘What about her, hm?’ He’d asked with a finger ghosting across your clit. ‘Nothin’ wrong with being a little greedy but I gotta show her some love, too, alright? She’s much too pretty to ignore, even with you givin’ me those eyes…’)
However, it’s the first time you peak around him that the sky parts. Heaven calls, singing songs of eternal delights but Robby declines the offer. His soul finds the symphony of you falling apart much more satisfying. Ever more gratifying, as it’s his name flooding from your lips. Not God’s or some boy in one of your classes in those cold ass rooms–his.
The second time you’d come around him hits both of you like a train. He’d gotten you trapped on your side, leg hanging in the air helplessly. Neck stretching, you’d bit at his tongue a few times when he’d upped the speed of his hips, warning Robby that you were gonna come again. After you added on a whine that you did not want him pulling out when he came, he flipped you into a rough prone bone, pounding you until your pussy creamed with his cum and your ears heard nothing but dial tones.
This time–the third time–Robby lets himself get lost in it. Uses his mind and body for the sole purpose of calling forth and tying your euphoria to his. A perfect ache is throbbing a pulse through his cock, and the man can only plunge himself in and out of you with mindless, hoarse grunts.
Robby executes it flawlessly, the seaming of the end of your climax grazing just over the start of his. You cry out unintelligible words, grabbing at him like he’ll disappear if you don’t and trembling as he works to milk out your release for as long as he can.
“That’s my–fuck… yeah, that’s my sweet girl,” Robby pants, still rocking you as his thrusts melt into a sloppy chasing of his own end. His sweet girl. That’s exactly what you are now, regardless of what happens after this. “Gonna fill you up again. Make you nice and full’a me.”
The only warning Robby’s able to give is a long, choked swear before he starts to spasm, sack twitching as he surges out rope after rope of a plentiful load. He uses a few more thrusts to fuck the cum deeper before joining your lips in a tired kiss. When you run your hands up his back to rake your nails through his hair, Robby groans.
Hips still, his softening cock remains a welcome intrusion. His eyes flicker shut at your appreciated touch across his scalp, the man melts completely into you, hoping it takes a long while for your breaths to return.
Robby’s mind is completely still. Numb, even, and there are only figures of you. Clenching his eyes, he sighs before mumbling something so muffled that he has to repeat it.
“I said,” he begins with a kiss to your jaw, “the Ravens might be my new favorite team.”
Robby feels your inhale pause and lifts his head to look in your eyes. A short laugh wheezes out of him when he finds you already staring back, your face a cross of complete and utter confusion and a little bit of hurt.
“What on earth could have possibly compelled you to say that to me?”
Your question starts strong but falls apart with giggles at how Robby keeps laughing. The two of you shake with stupid giggles, and Robby has to take a second to remember where he was going with this.
“Only ‘cause they led you to me. No Ravens, no angry dad. No angry dad, no ER visit. No ER visit, no grand revelation of wanting to become a doctor in emergency medicine. It’s simple, I’m a little surprised I had to explain it.”
“...you think you’re funny, don’t you?”
“Oh, baby, I know I am.”
“Hello?”
Robby blinks, and wants to glower at the fingers Jack snaps in front of his face until he remembers he’s supposed to be answering something. A question. He’s supposed to be answering a question.
Which question?
Fuck if he knows.
Who asked it?
Fuck if he knows.
It takes every part of Robby’s being to not look to the right because that’s where you’re sitting with a wide smile just barely hidden beneath your palm. Eyes boring into him, you stretch your crossed legs and reposition.
“E-even though that might have looked like a stroke, guys, it was not… I don’t think,” Jack picks up for Robby with a pat to the later man’s shoulder. “It’s actually something we in our profession call getting old, but please don’t worry. I’m going through it, too. Apparently, not as fast as this guy, though.”
The rest of the room lightens with a chuckle so Robby’s laughs along with them. It’s fake and ugly but the pause gives him a chance to zip his eyes your way and back.
And, of course, Jack catches him. Hell, he knows Robby well enough to have already seen the way that his hand clenches into a fist every time you move so much as an inch.
As Dr. Hummel attempts to return order to the slightly distracted class, Jack gives Robby a silent not bad, Rob. At all, though a little more decorum wouldn’t hurt.
Robby bites at his tongue, completely pink.
© 𝐬𝐮𝐩𝐞𝐫𝐡𝐨𝐞𝐯𝐚
I’m of Aymara/Quechua descent but mannnnn the way I felt so happy seeing my communal people 🫶🏽🫶🏽🫶🏽
the choctaw vampire hunters in sinners, photographed by eli joshua adé, smpsp.
pairing: Michael Robinavitch x Senior Resident!Reader
wordcount: 1.8k
warnings: angst, reader is purposefully petty, mentions of robby being an asshole, age gap, mentions of injury (care pile up, car crash), mentions of death
synopsis: Robby loses his temper on you, and you're not quick to forgive, then tragedy strikes, and Robby's not answering his phone
note: some of you may notice that I took down the smut drabble I posted yesterday, I wasn't happy with it, so I took it down, but please accept this in its place. there will be a part two!!
!! not proofread so apologies for any mistakes !!
I’m your attending, and you’re my resident. Act like it.
Robby had spoken those words over a week ago.
It had been in the middle of a close to mass casualty event, a blood soaked emergency room crowded with victims from one of the worst car pile ups you’d ever seen.
You had never performed an emergency c-section before, especially not on someone who had been actively bleeding out. It would’ve taken too long to call an attending in for help, so OB walked you through it over the phone, Garcia assisted, and both the mother and the baby had made it through (relatively) safe and sound. It had been a victory, a save worthy of celebration in the form of too many cocktails, until Robby found out.
He’d given you the grace of scolding you away from prying ears, but that hadn’t lessened the burn.
Robby had been too harsh, way too harsh.
You lacked discipline, didn’t respect the chain of command, didn’t respect him. When it came down to it, you were too much of a cowboy, too flexible with the rules of medicine. You were ‘too much like Abbot in the worst ways’.
Tears had threatened to spill, burning and insistent, but you’d blinked them back.
You had avoided his eyes when you’d told him that you had saved more patients today than any other doctor, that you had been the one to pick up the slack when others had faltered, that he had no right to pick and choose when he thought you were qualified enough to handle things on your own.
You had successfully avoided him for the rest of your shift.
Day One
Meet me out front before your shift. Please.
The message comes through just as you leave your apartment building.
You scare the living daylights out of a flock of pigeons with how hard you slam your door.
You don’t respond to his messages, but you do wait outside the doors to the ED, ten minutes early to your shift, pacing back and forth like a mad woman.
Robby walks up five minutes later, headphones in and sunglasses on. Usually that sight would make your heart flutter, but in this moment, it infuriates you.
“Do you need something, Dr. Robinavitch?” You keep your voice clip, painfully professional.
He flinches, but tucks his sunglasses into the front of his hoodie. “I owe you an apology.”
“Yes, you do.”
Robby sighs. “Tensions were high, I was struggling to keep it together, and I took it out on you. It was completely unfair, and I’m sorry.”
It’s completely genuine, almost heartbreakingly sincere. Somehow, you still don’t completely forgive him.
“Thank you, Doctor. I appreciate it.” Not really. “I guess I’ll see you inside.”
You brush past him before he can get another word in.
Robby follows you through the ER, hot on your heels, but you don’t turn around. You ignore the strange look from Lupe, let the door almost smack him in the face on the way through, skip past your usual morning debrief with Dana and head right towards the nearest patient.
You should forgive him, you know you should. It’s not reasonable to stay so angry about something that had been spoken in the middle of a crisis, but in this moment, you don't care.
You were beyond capable, better than most that had come through this program. Abbot had known that the moment he’d met you, and you thought Robby knew, but maybe he didn’t. He deserved to be ignored, shown the error of his ways, at least for the rest of your shift.
Maybe it’s cruel, but you’re feeling cruel today.
Day Three
He walks through the door with two coffee’s. One completely black, his order, and one with two creams and two sugars, your order.
“Abbot told me you came in early this morning, figured you didn’t have time for a coffee.” It’s a casual lie, an excuse to talk. You never drink coffee before noon.
“Thank you, Dr. Robinavitch.” You don’t take the cup from his hand, don’t even look him in the eye.
Once again, it’s cruel. But you’re still feeling hurt, inadequate.
Robby pushed his way between you and your desk, nudging your chair back just far enough to step between your knees.
“What can I do to earn your forgiveness?” His eyes are unbelievably warm, and it’s almost enough to make you crack.
“You’re forgiven.” You shrug, reaching around him to grab your coffee. “I’m just working on my ‘respect problem’ you had so much to say about.”
“Buttercup, I-”
“It’s Doctor,” You interrupt, pushing up from your chair till the two of you are almost nose to nose. “or my first name, or nothing. Respect goes both ways”
Robby doesn’t back down, and neither do you. It’s tense, probably awkward for many of the nearby bystanders, but it’s the closest he’s been to you in days. He smells incredible, spices, leather, and the slightest hint of antiseptic . He always smells good, but something about being upset with him seems to elevate it.
“Pull it together, you two.” Dana calls out, a phone pinned between her ear and shoulder. “Incoming trauma, two minutes out.”
“On it.” Robby responds, his eyes not once leaving yours. “Buttercup’s leading.”
You all but stomp towards the ambulance bay, annoyance weighing down your shoulders.
“Am I actually leading this, or are you going to take over the minute the patient comes through?”
“Oh, this is all you.” Robby hands are harsh as they tie the back of your gown. “I’m not even gloving up.”
“Let's see how long that lasts.”
Robby, surprisingly, stays true to his word. He hovers by the door, hands behind his back, and doesn't question your decisions. You stabilize the patient in record time, handing them off to the nurses with a strange sense of satisfaction boiling in your stomach.
You turn towards Robby, a cocky smirk on your lips as you tear off your gloves. “See how incredible I am when I’m not being pestered by questions?”
Robby laughs, rough and deep.
“Believe me,” He whispers under his breath, his eyes locked on you as you practically strut out of the trauma room. “I’m well aware of how incredible you are.”
Day Five
“I’m covering Parker on the night shift for the next couple days.”
Robby pauses. “And who’s going to be covering you?”
“You have Langdon, Collins, Mckay, and Mohan, not to mention King, Santos, Javadi, and Whitaker. You don’t need me here.”
“Sure, but I want you here.”
You frown. “No you don’t. I’m not being nice to you this week.”
“No, you’re not,” Robby agrees. “But that doesn’t mean I want you gone.”
“I appreciate that,” You do, really. “But I want to be gone for a little bit.”
“If Abbot were here he’d be telling us to talk out our problems.”
You laugh. “Then let’s be glad he’s not.”
Day Seven
Two days later, you’re somehow back where you started, covered in blood, surrounded by patients in need of treatment, but Robby’s not there, unreachable, actually, and it’s driving you insane.
Abbot tells you a transport crashed through a nearby cafe, decimated the entire building and grievously injured around thirty people. You ask the name of the cafe out of pure curiosity, and Abbot says The Filter. It’s ridiculously overpriced for drinks that aren’t even that good, but it’s Robby’s favorite.
Every sunday night since you met him, Robby has sat in one of the window seats of that cafe, drinking a cup of expensive tea, and decompressing before heading home. And tonight is sunday night, Robby just handed his patients over to Abbot, and bid you both goodbye before heading for the same cafe that had just been taken out by a transport, and he’s not answering his phone.
You’ve been unbelievably immature all week, taken out your frustrations on him, and now he might be gone. He might’ve died thinking you hated him.
Medical work is done through deep breaths and the threat of tears. You check every patient's face for too long, hoping not to recognise his features beneath the blood and debrief. He doesn’t come through the ambulance bay, and he doesn’t call.
Once all the patients are stable, Abbot sends you out for air and you don’t fight him. You shed your gown and gloves, slipping your sweater back on, and wander through the maze of gurneys till the fresh air hits your face.
Your throat is so tight you can hardly breath, and still, the screen of your phone is blank. No missed calls, no texts, not even an email.
You can hear the sound of feet scuffing on pavement, but you don’t look up. It’s probably a paramedic returning to their rig, a nurse coming out for a smoke break, a-
“Did you guys get everything handled, or do you still need help in there?”
It’s Robby’s voice, rough, and warm, and so familiar it makes you want to cry, and you do.
“You’re…” Your voice breaks. He’s in front of you, standing tall and completely intact, his brows furrowed in concern and confusion when he catches sight of the tears streaming down your face.
“What happened? Are you okay?”
You can only respond in sobs, your chest aching as the tears you’d been forcing back all night finally come free. Robby pulls you against him, his face buried in your hair as he whispers quiet hushes. You cling to him, press your head to his chest and cry even harder when you hear the steady beat of his heart.
“I thought you were dead.” Your words come out in a hoarse whisper, muffled against the fabric of his shirt.
“Why would I be dead?”
“The transport crashed through the cafe you go to every Sunday, and you weren’t answering your phone.” You choke back another sob, desperate to get your words out. “I thought you were going to die thinking I was mad at you.”
“Oh… Oh, I'm so sorry.” He holds you tighter, running a hand through your hair in an attempt to calm you, but it only makes you worse.
“You have nothing to apologise for, I was being ridiculous.” You pull away, wiping your nose on your sleeve.
“That’s not ridiculous, I would’ve gone down the same road.” Robby keeps his hands on your shoulders, reluctant to let go of you.
You look up at him, tears brimming your eyes, but you blink them away. “I’m sorry.”
Robby smiles, far too fondly for how you’re guessing you look right now. “I know.”
You stare at each other in a few seconds of comfortable silence before speaking again. “Everything’s mostly handled inside, we just have to get our shit together and prepare for the rest of the night.”
“I’ll come inside and help.”
“You don’t need to.” You try to argue, but it’s half-hearted.
“I know,” Robby nods, his hand lifting to wipe a few stray tears from your cheek. “But I want to.”
if he looks at me like that i am asking what we are because like...
A Year of You
part three of the life we grew series (part one ✧ part two)
summary : Jack experiences the life he never thought he could have—one small moment, one milestone, one quiet act of love at a time. Through first steps, long winter nights, and the ache of watching her grow too fast, he learns that family isn’t something you find. It’s something you make—and hold onto with everything you have.
word count : 11,658
warnings/content : 18+ MDNI! marriage intimacy including smut, emotional vulnerability, parenting milestones (first words, first steps, first birthday), marriage-coded affection, strong family themes, soft but explicit depiction of married sexual intimacy, very husband-coded and dad-coded Jack Abbot energy.
MONTH ONE
It’s the first night home from the hospital when Jack realizes no amount of emergency training prepares you for a seven-pound newborn screaming at 2:00 a.m.
You’re crying, too.
Soft, exhausted tears you wipe away with the heel of your hand while trying to figure out the damn swaddle that looked so easy in the maternity class.
Jack watches you for a second from the nursery doorway, heart caught somewhere in his throat. Then he steps in, limping slightly from the long day and the prosthetic pinching at the socket, and kneels awkwardly next to you on the carpet.
“Move over, honey,” he mutters, hands gentle as he scoops up the baby—your baby—his daughter—like she’s something sacred.
"You’re doing good," he says, voice low, rough around the edges. "We’re just outnumbered, that’s all."
You let out a low, breathless laugh and lean into his side, drawn in by instinct more than thought. Jack smells like the hospital—something sharp and sterile clinging to his skin—but beneath it, there's a rougher pull: warm skin, worn leather, the dark, carved scent of mahogany and teakwood.
“C’mon, little bean,” Jack murmurs, voice low and rough with exhaustion. “We’ve made it through worse nights than this.”
You snort under your breath.
“She’s five days old, Jack. What worse nights?”
He shifts the baby higher onto his shoulder, the motion easy, instinctive, like she’s already been part of him forever. Without missing a beat, he deadpans, “You ever been stuck inside a Black Hawk during a sandstorm?”
You smack his arm, half laughing, half crying again, the sound breaking loose before you can catch it. Jack just grunts, the barest curve tugging at the corner of his mouth. He rocks the baby gently, his palm splayed wide over her tiny back like he could shield her from the whole world if he tried hard enough.
“You’re not in a war anymore, Jack,” you whisper, the words slipping out before you can stop them.
He doesn’t look at you. Just leans down, pressing a kiss to the soft, downy hair at the crown of your daughter’s head.
“No,” he says, so quietly you almost miss it. “But I’m still fighting for something.”
The first month is a mess.
The kind of beautiful mess Jack would throw fists for if anyone ever tried to take it from him.
You both live in pajamas now. The kitchen has surrendered first—an open graveyard of half-drunk coffee cups, takeout containers, and meals nuked just enough to be edible. Some nights, you collapse into bed with the baby between you, swearing you’ll move her to the bassinet as soon as you can feel your legs again.
Jack, somehow, turns out to be better at diaper changes than either of you expected.
“Field dressing a sucking chest wound’s harder,” he mutters at four a.m., hands steady as he peels back the tabs of a fresh diaper. You’re blinking back tears over the latest catastrophic blowout, but Jack just shrugs, casual, like he's back in the desert again. “You just gotta respect the shrapnel.”
You’re better at feeding her—at being soft, patient, warm, even when you’re dead on your feet.
Jack watches you from across the couch sometimes, nursing her with your sweatshirt slipping off one shoulder, and he thinks about how he almost didn’t get this.
How easily it could’ve gone the other way.
And he aches.
God, how he aches.
At her two-week checkup, Jack nearly decks a stranger.
You’re pushing open the door to the pediatrician’s office when it happens—some old guy with too much time and too little shame leers and says, “Bounced back fast after birth, huh?” His eyes drift lower, lingering where they have no business being.
You freeze, the words catching in your throat.
Jack doesn’t.
He moves without thinking, sliding in front of you with the kind of quiet, coiled force that doesn’t ask twice. It’s instinct, muscle memory, something deeper than thought. His frame blocks you from view, every line of his body taut with warning.
“Move along,” Jack says, low enough to rattle the floorboards.
The guy doesn’t argue. He takes one look at Jack—at the broad set of his shoulders, the dead-calm heat in his eyes—and stumbles off without another word.
Your fingers find Jack’s wrist, a light touch, grounding him before he slips somewhere darker.
He flexes his hand once, twice, the tension bleeding out slow. Then, wordlessly, he threads his fingers through yours, squeezing once.
He doesn’t say anything.
He doesn’t have to.
On the nights when the house feels too small and the baby won’t sleep unless she’s moving, Jack drives.
He straps her into the car seat so carefully you'd think she’s made of glass, adjusts the rearview mirror just to catch a glimpse of her, and drives the empty streets of Pittsburgh while you nap in the passenger seat, a ratty Allegheny General hoodie drowning you to the wrists.
Jack hums under his breath to fill the silence.
Old Johnny Cash songs. Some half-forgotten lullaby he doesn’t realize he knows.
You wake up once at a red light and find him staring at the baby in the mirror like she’s the first sunrise he’s ever seen.
You don’t say anything.
You just reach across the console and wrap your fingers around his wrist again.
Jack squeezes back.
Always back.
By the end of the first month, the house is wrecked, your work email has 235 unread messages, and Jack is one wrong word away from brawling with the guy at the grocery store who keeps asking if he needs "help carrying his bags" because of the limp.
Some nights you fall asleep on the couch with the baby breathing soft against your chest, too worn down to even shift her to the bassinet. Tonight’s one of those nights.
Jack walks in from the kitchen and stops when he sees you there—both of you curled into each other, the porch light casting a soft glow across the room.
Slowly, carefully, he lowers himself down. Not onto his knees—he plants himself into a sitting position, legs stretched out, leaning his good shoulder into the side of the couch so he’s right there, steady and close.
He brushes your hair back from your face with the backs of his fingers, so gently it almost doesn’t touch.
You stir at the contact, your voice thick with sleep.
"You’re tired too. Let me take her."
Jack shakes his head.
"No."
It’s soft. Absolute. Final.
He reaches up, sliding his hand over your shin, anchoring himself to you. His other hand comes to rest lightly on the baby's back, fingers spanning nearly her whole body.
"You’ve done enough today, baby," he murmurs, voice rough and low, barely stirring the air.
"You both have."
Jack tilts his head against the couch, eyes slipping closed. He doesn't need to say it—how much this moment means, how deeply it roots itself inside him.
The weight of it—the love, the exhaustion, the brutal, perfect ache of having something to lose again—presses deep into his bones, his chest, his blood.
And he lets it.
Finally, finally, he lets it.
MONTH TWO
The second month of her life feels quieter—but not easier.
The house settles into a strange rhythm: sleep in broken stretches, coffee going cold on the counter, laundry half-folded before someone cries (you, him, the baby—any of the above).
And Jack, god love him, tries to hold it all together like he's still back in combat—shouldering it, swallowing it, limping through it even when it's bleeding him dry.
You wake up around 3:00 a.m. to the soft, rhythmic creak of footsteps.
The baby’s crying had pierced your dream, but what keeps you awake is the sound of Jack pacing the living room—steady, stubborn, relentless.
You get out of bed and creep toward the hallway, heart aching at the sight you find:
Jack's shirt is rumpled, hanging loose over sweatpants. His hair's a wreck. He's moving with that stiff, exhausted limp he gets when he’s pretending everything’s fine. When it's been rubbing wrong all day and he hasn't said a word about it.
Your baby is pressed against his chest, tiny fingers clinging to the fabric of his t-shirt, and Jack’s rubbing her back in slow, soothing circles, murmuring nonsense under his breath.
You stand there for a second, heart splitting open inside your chest.
He’s trying so hard.
He’s carrying all of it.
And you’re not about to let him do it alone.
"Jack," you say softly.
He startles a little, blinking over at you with that war-tired look he gets sometimes, like he forgot he's allowed to have backup now.
You cross the room without hesitation.
"Hey," you murmur, gentle but firm, sliding your hands around his forearms. "Give her to me, baby."
Jack opens his mouth to argue—but you’re already untangling the baby from his arms, lifting her carefully against your chest.
He lets go with a shuddering breath he didn't even realize he was holding.
You bounce your daughter lightly, whispering soft, nonsense words into her ear while you use your free hand to tug Jack down onto the couch beside you.
"You’re limping bad," you say, thumb brushing over the line of tension at his brow. "You’re running yourself into the ground."
Jack huffs, looking away like he’s embarrassed, like admitting to needing anything is too much.
But you don’t let him.
You tilt his face back toward you with two fingers under his chin—gently, insistently.
"You don’t have to earn this, Jack," you whisper, so low it barely stirs the air. "You already have."
He closes his eyes like the words hurt—and heal—all at once.
You settle your daughter into the crook of one arm, and with the other, you start tracing slow, soothing circles against Jack’s wrist.
Just touching him.
Just reminding him you’re here.
That you’re not going anywhere.
Jack leans his head back against the couch, breathing you in. He doesn't say anything for a long time.
He just lets himself be touched.
Be loved.
And somewhere around the fourth circle you draw against his wrist, he shifts closer and drops his forehead to your shoulder with a heavy, broken little sigh.
You turn your face into his hair and close your eyes.
In the second month, the baby starts to smile for real.
Real, gummy, lit-up smiles that make Jack feel like some knife's getting twisted deeper and deeper in his chest every time he sees them.
She smiles biggest when Jack talks. It doesn't matter what he's saying. He could be reading off the damn grocery list, and she lights up like he’s singing Sinatra.
You catch him one afternoon standing in the kitchen, holding her in the crook of his arm like it’s second nature now, explaining in a deadly serious tone why the Pittsburgh Steelers are going to break his heart again this year.
“Listen, kid, it’s tradition. You root for them, they let you down. Builds character.”
You grab your phone and snap a picture before he can bark at you not to.
Jack scowls, but you see the faintest twitch of a smile he can’t fight back.
He wants to remember this.
You both do.
The second month also brings the first real fight since bringing her home.
It’s stupid.
It’s exhaustion and hormones and pride, the way all stupid fights are.
You leave the car seat in the wrong spot—tilted funny, not latched all the way into the base—and Jack’s voice cuts sharper than he means it to when he points it out.
“She’s tiny, for Christ’s sake, you can’t just—”
“I’m trying, Jack!” you snap back, tears already stinging because you’ve been running on fumes for weeks and you hate feeling like you’re screwing up.
“Yeah? So am I.”
You’re both breathing hard, the kind of thin, angry breaths that never come from real hatred—only from fear.
Only from love.
You turn away, chest heaving. Jack grips the counter, knuckles white, wrestling the instinct to bark something else, something mean just to end it.
Instead—he exhales hard, walks over to you, and wraps his arms around your shaking shoulders from behind.
You don’t fight him.
You crumble.
"I’m sorry," he says, rough against your ear. "You’re doin’ good. Better than good."
His mouth presses to your temple.
"I’m just... scared, honey." It guts him to say it out loud. It tears something wide open. But it’s the truth.
You turn in his arms, grab two fistfuls of his t-shirt, and bury your face against his chest.
Jack just holds you.
Breathes you in like it’s the only thing keeping him standing.
At her two-month appointment, the pediatrician grins and says she’s perfect.
You hold Jack’s hand in the sterile white room, squeezing so tight he must feel the bones grind together.
He doesn’t pull away.
He squeezes back.
Hard.
In the car afterward, Jack drives one-handed with his other hand curled protectively around your thigh, thumb tracing slow, steady lines into your jeans.
You lean into his shoulder at the stoplights, both of you blinking back tears that neither one of you says a word about.
That night, when the baby finally sleeps and the house goes still, you coax Jack into the shower first, insisting you’ll handle the night feed if she wakes.
He tries to protest.
You kiss the protest right off his mouth, slow and deep, until he’s dizzy from it. Until he forgets how to argue.
And when he comes back. you’re waiting for him in bed, the baby curled between you like the only piece of heaven either of you has ever touched.
Jack hesitates for half a second in the doorway, looking at you like a man seeing home for the first time.
Then he crawls in beside you, tucking you against his chest, wrapping his hand around both you and the baby like he can physically keep the whole world at bay.
"You’re my best thing," you whisper into his skin.
Jack's arms tighten around you instinctively.
You feel the rumble of his voice more than you hear it when he answers.
"You two are mine," he says hoarsely.
"My only thing."
And for the first time since she was born, all three of you sleep through the night.
Together.
Whole.
MONTH THREE
The first real laugh doesn’t come from you.
It doesn’t come from the hundreds of stupid faces you’ve been making, the toys you bought, the songs you sang off-key.
It comes from Jack.
Of course it does.
You’re sitting on the floor one slow Sunday afternoon, sorting laundry, when you hear it—a sharp, surprised little giggle that bubbles out of your daughter’s mouth like she’s just been given the whole damn world.
You snap your head up so fast you almost get whiplash.
Jack’s standing over the bassinet, freshly showered, shirt slung loose over his broad frame, cradling her under the arms and bouncing her so carefully.
She’s looking up at him with those big, bright eyes—utterly delighted just to exist in his arms.
And he’s looking at her like she’s gravity itself.
Jack bounces her again. She squeals, full-body, gummy-mouthed, hands flapping.
Jack grins—a real one, crooked and wide and rare—and chuckles under his breath.
"You like that, huh?" he mutters, voice going soft the way it only ever does for her. "Yeah, you would. Tough little thing."
You don't realize you’re crying until Jack glances over and sees you.
His grin fades, replaced by that worried furrow between his brows you know too well. "Hey. Hey, honey, what's wrong?"
You crawl over the laundry, heart a molten, useless mess, and surge up to kiss him—just grab the collar of his stupid, soft t-shirt and haul him down into a kiss so full of love it knocks both of you sideways.
He catches you with one arm, the baby cradled between you, and lets you sob into his mouth without complaint.
Lets you cling.
Because he knows.
Of course he knows.
"I love you," you breathe against his jaw when you finally surface.
"I love you so much I don't even know what to do with it."
Jack presses his forehead to yours, breathing hard.
"You’re doin’ fine, baby," he says hoarsely.
"You’re doin’ perfect."
Jack starts pulling on his black scrubs again.
Not full-time.
Not yet.
Just a couple shifts. Just enough to feel like he’s still the guy who shows up when it counts.
You watch from the kitchen doorway, the baby warm against your hip, as he adjusts the fit of his prosthetic with practiced, impatient hands. The grimace flashes across his face for just a second before he smooths it away.
You shift the baby higher, heart aching.
"You don’t have to prove anything, Jack," you say softly, voice thick with sleep and worry."You’re already everything we need."
He exhales slowly through his nose, scrubbing a hand over his jaw, his movements stiff with exhaustion.
Then he shakes his head once — small, stubborn, final.
"I gotta do it for me," he says simply.
No drama. No explanation. Just truth.
You don’t argue.
You just step closer, barefoot across the tile, and reach up to cup the back of his neck — that vulnerable, familiar spot you’ve loved for years — pulling him down into a slow, steady kiss.
"Come back safe," you whisper against his mouth.
Jack leans into you for a second longer than he means to, his hand sliding instinctively over the baby's small back, grounding himself in you both.
"Always," he promises, voice rough.
You let him go — but not before slipping a small, folded scrap of paper into the chest pocket of his scrub top when you hug him goodbye.
A stupid, crumpled love note, already warm from your palm.
He doesn’t find it until hours later — after he’s stitched up a kid with a broken bottle wound, after he’s cleaned puke off his boots, after he’s barked orders across the trauma bay like muscle memory.
It’s almost 3 a.m. when he sinks down onto a bench in the stairwell, legs aching, head heavy.
Jack fishes the note out absentmindedly, thinking it’s a scrap of gauze.
But when he unfolds it, it’s your handwriting — messy and rushed, like you couldn't get the words down fast enough:
We miss you. We love you. Come home to us.
Jack stares at it for a long second, the breath catching thick in his chest.
He presses the heel of his hand against his face — hard — willing the burn behind his eyes to back off.
Then he folds the note carefully, tucks it back into the pocket over his heart, and pushes himself upright again.
One more patient.
One more hour.
One step closer to home.
The baby starts reaching this month. Grabbing everything. Blankets. Your hair. Jack’s dog tags, which he sometimes wears tucked under his shirt when he needs grounding.
The first time she grabs them—those worn, cold little pieces of steel swinging free when Jack leans over her bassinet—he freezes.
She wraps her tiny fist around the chain and pulls. Hard.
Jack just stands there, staring down at her like she’s cracked open his chest with one touch.
You come up behind him, pressing your hand to the small of his back, feeling the shudder that goes through him.
"You okay?" you murmur.
Jack swallows.
Nods.
"Yeah," he says roughly.
"Yeah, she’s just... strong."
You curl your arms around him from behind, forehead pressed to the sharp line of his spine.
"You’re allowed to be soft too, y'know," you whisper against him.
"She's allowed to make you soft."
Jack closes his eyes and lets the weight of your words settle into his bones.
Late one night, after a particularly brutal shift, Jack comes home bone-deep exhausted. You meet him at the door, baby asleep on your shoulder, wearing nothing but his oversized hoodie and a pair of fuzzy socks.
Jack stares at you like he’s forgotten how to speak.
You press the baby into his arms without a word.
Then you wrap your arms around his waist, lean your cheek against his chest, and stand there breathing him in—hospital soap, sweat, exhaustion, love—until he finally melts against you.
Until he finally lets himself be held. He presses a kiss into your hair, breathing out a laugh that sounds more like a sob.
"Missed you" he rasps.
MONTH FOUR
Jack notices it before you do.
The shift.
One morning, while you’re wrestling a footie onesie onto the baby and cursing under your breath about the tiny snaps "Who invented these? Satan?", Jack leans against the doorframe, rubbing a hand absently over the back of his neck.
“She’s different,” he says quietly.
You look up, exhaustion written all over your face, and squint at him.
“She’s four months old, Jack. She’s not gonna start driving a car yet.”
But he just shakes his head slowly, eyes never leaving her.
“No. She's holdin’ herself different. Stronger.”
You look down—and sure enough, your daughter is sitting up better now, her spine wobbling but proud, little hands planted on her thighs like she’s ready to start throwing punches.
Jack steps forward like he can’t help himself.
He drops to a crouch—careful with the stiff pull of his prosthetic—and cups one big hand around her tiny side, steadying her without overwhelming her.
"Look at you," he murmurs, voice breaking a little at the edges.
"Look how tough you are, bean."
You watch him, heart climbing into your throat. Because you see it too. Not just the way she’s changing—but the way he is.
Jack Abbot, who once stood half a step too close to a rooftop edge because the world was too heavy, is now kneeling barefoot on the carpet, whispering praise to their baby girl who thinks the sun rises and sets just for him.
You slip your arms around his shoulders from behind, pressing your cheek against the crown of his head.
"I love you," you say simply.
Jack kisses the back of your hand.
"I know," he whispers. "And I love you back, honey. 'Til my last damn breath."
This is the month she starts teething.
You survive it through sheer grit, coffee, and the unspoken pact of taking turns walking endless circles around the house with a red-faced, furious, drooling baby in your arms.
Jack handles it the way he handles everything: quietly, stubbornly, with a fierce, aching kind of patience that makes you want to cry and kiss him all at once.
You find him one night at 2:00 a.m., swaying barefoot in the kitchen, shirtless, sweatpants slung low on his hips, the baby gnawing furiously on his knuckle while he hums some gravelly, broken tune into her hair.
You lean against the doorway and just watch him, blinking hard against the tears that well up.
Jack catches you watching. Doesn’t say anything—just crooks a finger at you without shifting the baby from his chest.
"Get over here, pretty girl," he rumbles.
You go willingly, sliding into his side, wrapping your arms around his middle and burying your face in the warm, solid plane of his ribs. He smells like soap, exhaustion, and her. Your whole world tucked into one man.
"You’re the best thing that ever happened to us," you whisper into his skin.
By the end of Month Four, she’s rolling over.
You’re standing in the living room when you hear Jack’s startled bark of laughter from the floor.
You whip around to find him sprawled out on his side, laughing helplessly, while your daughter beams at him proudly from her belly, arms and legs kicking like she just won the goddamn Super Bowl.
Jack slaps a hand to his heart dramatically.
"Baby girl, you’re killin' me!" he groans. "You’re growin’ up too fast already. Slow it down, huh? Let your old man catch up."
You cross the room, scooping the baby up into your arms. "You hear that?" you coo into her hair. "You’re makin’ Daddy emotional."
Jack props himself up on an elbow, watching you two with the softest damn look you’ve ever seen on his face. The one he only ever shows you. The one no one at the Pitt would even believe exists.
You kneel down beside him, easing your daughter into his arms again. You watch the way his whole body softens around her without thinking. How his scarred hands are somehow the safest place in the world.
"She’s perfect," you say softly.
Jack leans down and kisses the baby’s forehead, then yours.
"Yeah," he murmurs.
"So’s her mom."
You spend the rest of the evening curled up together on the living room floor—baby between you, laundry forgotten, the whole messy, perfect world you built breathing around you.
And for the first time since she was born—you’re not scared of time passing. You’re just grateful for every second you get.
MONTH FIVE
It happens by accident.
The first time she says it.
Jack’s sitting cross-legged on the living room rug, hair mussed from sleep, still wearing the black t-shirt and flannel pants he stumbled into after pulling an overnight shift.
You’re curled up on the couch, fighting to keep your eyes open, watching the early spring sunlight spill across the floorboards.
Your daughter is sitting between Jack’s legs, gripping his dog tags in one tiny fist, drooling determinedly all over them while Jack pretends to be scandalized.
"Hey, those are government-issued, kid," he drawls, grinning like a fool. "You gonna pay for ‘em with your drool tax?"
And then—like it’s the most natural thing in the world—she looks up at him, eyes bright, and squeals:
“Dada!”
The word is messy. Slurred. Half-drooled through.
But it’s real.
Clear as day.
Jack freezes.
Completely still, like something in him just snapped loose.
You sit up fast. "Jack," you breathe.
He doesn't move.
Doesn't blink.
The baby bounces in place, fist still clutching the tags, crowing delightedly: “Dada!”
Jack finally exhales, a broken, wrecked sound like he just got the wind punched out of him. He scoops her into his arms so fast she squeals again, arms flailing, laughing.
He presses her tight against his chest, hands shaking.
"You talkin’ to me, bean?" he rasps, voice thick, kissing the top of her head over and over.
"That me?"
You slide off the couch, crawling across the floor to them, feeling your heart explode into a thousand shimmering pieces inside your chest.
You wrap yourself around both of them—Jack and the baby—your forehead resting against Jack’s stubbled jaw. He’s shaking. Full-body, unstoppable tremors. You just hold him tighter.
"You deserve it," you whisper into his skin.
"You deserve every single thing she sees in you."
Jack swallows hard, arms crushing both of you close.
"You’re my whole damn world," he chokes. "You and her—you’re it."
You kiss the corner of his mouth, the scar on his jaw, the salt of tears he didn’t mean to shed.
And when the baby says it again—“Dada!”—giggling and tugging on his shirt, Jack laughs through the wreckage of himself.
Laughs like he’s got a whole new heart built from the two of you.
This month, Jack comes home earlier when he can. Steals hours when the Pitt is short-staffed but Robby covers.
You make a ritual out of it without even meaning to:
Jack coming through the door, dropping his bag with a heavy thunk, immediately seeking you out first.
He always kisses you first.
Even if the baby’s squealing for him, even if she’s kicking her legs and reaching. He presses his mouth to yours first—hard, desperate, like he’s coming up for air.
Then he takes her from you, murmuring nonsense into her hair, like he can't bear to go another second without her.
You watch him sometimes from the kitchen, heart brimming so full it feels like your ribs can’t contain it.
You let the pasta overboil, the laundry pile up, the emails from your accounting firm stack unanswered.
Because nothing matters more than the way Jack Abbot holds his daughter like she’s sacred. Like she saved him.
Late one night, the baby finally goes down after an hour of slow rocking and whispered lullabies.
You tiptoe out of the nursery, heart thudding like you just disarmed a bomb, and find Jack waiting for you at the end of the hallway.
He’s leaned back against the wall, arms crossed. That tired, crooked half-smile lifts his mouth when he sees you.
"She out?" he murmurs.
You nod, grinning like an idiot. "For now. If we breathe too loud, she’ll start screaming again."
Jack chuckles low under his breath. Then he crooks two fingers at you—small, unmistakable—come here.
You pad over and melt against him without hesitation.
Jack’s arms slide around you automatically, strong and sure, pulling you flush against the solid line of his body.
For a few minutes, you just stand there.
Swaying a little.
Breathing in sync.
Letting the world be small and soft for once.
His hand comes up to cup the back of your neck, thumb stroking lazy circles into your hairline. "Miss you," he says roughly, voice low enough that it rumbles against your chest.
You pull back just enough to look at him—really look. At the dark shadows under his eyes. The worn edges of him. And the way his whole face softens when he’s looking at you.
"I’m right here," you whisper, sliding your hands up under his old t-shirt to trace the warm skin of his back. "You always got me."
Jack huffs a soft, broken sound and leans down to kiss you.
Slow.
Lingering.
The kind of kiss that says a thousand things neither of you knows how to say out loud.
His fingers flex against your spine, like he’s grounding himself. Like he’s still a little terrified that one day he’ll blink and you’ll be gone.
You deepen the kiss, tipping up onto your toes, tangling your fingers into the short hair at the nape of his neck. Jack groans quietly into your mouth and tightens his arms around you, lifting you slightly off the ground like it costs him nothing. (You know it does—you know he’s tired and sore—but he doesn’t care.)
He kisses you like you’re oxygen. Like if he stops, the whole world will collapse.
When he finally pulls back, breathing hard, he presses his forehead to yours and just stands there.
Silent.
Anchored.
You guide him gently down the hall, fingers laced through his. The two of you slip into your bedroom, leaving the door cracked just enough to hear the baby if she wakes.
He eases onto the bed. The prosthetic comes off with a practiced, tired motion — a routine so familiar it barely registers anymore — and he sets it aside without ceremony, like he can't stand the thought of one more thing strapped to him tonight.
You slide into bed beside him, the mattress dipping under your weight. Jack doesn’t hesitate—he hooks an arm around you and pulls you in close, pressing you against the steady, grounding thump of his heart.
With his free hand, he pulls the blanket up over both of you, tucking it carefully around your shoulders like he's sealing you in. Then he drops a slow, tired kiss into your hair, lingering there for a second longer than he means to, breathing you in like you're the only thing anchoring him to the world tonight.
You fall asleep like that—safe. Held. Loved. The two of you breathing slow and steady together, with your whole world sleeping peacefully in the next room
MONTH SIX
The thing about six months is—everything starts feeling bigger.
Her smiles.
Her babbling.
The way she kicks her legs like she’s training for the Olympics whenever Jack comes home from a shift.
And your love for her—your daughter—isn’t something neat and quiet anymore. It’s loud inside your chest. It’s messy.
It’s overwhelming in the best way.
You get the morning to yourself one rare Saturday.
Jack’s still knocked out in bed, sleeping off back-to-back night shifts, and the baby wakes early, squirming and babbling in her crib.
You scoop her up before she can start crying and carry her to the kitchen, heart already aching at how much bigger she feels in your arms.
She babbles nonsense at you while you fix a bottle one-handed, bouncing her on your hip.
You talk back, just as nonsensical, just as giddy.
"Yeah? You think so? I dunno, kiddo, the market’s not looking great for that kind of investment portfolio," you joke, nuzzling her soft cheek.
She giggles—full, wild baby giggles—and you feel it shake right through your ribs. You feed her at the table, tucked into the crook of your arm, sunlight pouring across both of you.
The house is still and warm and safe.
It’s just you and her.
When she finishes, you keep holding her, rocking gently. Her little fingers find your hair and tug, clumsy but affectionate. You laugh quietly and kiss the top of her head.
"You’re my best girl," you whisper.
"My whole heart."
You don’t even hear Jack come in. You just feel the change in the air—the way the world gets steadier when he’s close.
You glance over your shoulder to find him standing in the doorway, leaning against the frame, arms crossed over his chest. Sleep-tousled hair. T-shirt wrinkled. And looking at you like you hung the goddamn stars.
"Hey," you murmur.
"Hey," Jack echoes, voice low and rough with sleep.
He crosses the room without hesitation and drops a kiss onto your hair first, then the baby's. Then he sinks into the chair beside you, resting his forearms on the table, eyes drinking you both in like he’s starving for it.
"You’re beautiful, you know that?" he says softly.
It’s not performative.
It’s not dramatic.
It’s just the truth, plain and steady, the way Jack says everything that matters.
You feel your face flush, your chest tighten.
Even after everything—even after the sleepless nights, the spit-up stains, the exhaustion—you still feel beautiful when he says it.
You still believe it.
Because it’s Jack.
And Jack doesn’t waste words.
That afternoon, you all pile into the beat-up Jeep and drive out toward the river, just to get some fresh air.
The baby's strapped into her carrier against Jack's chest, her little arms poking out. He adjusts the straps with the easy, absent-minded care of a man who would walk through fire just to keep her comfortable.
You hold hands as you walk, your fingers laced tight, your body leaning naturally into his.
Jack lifts your joined hands sometimes just to kiss your knuckles, like he can't help it. Like the love is leaking out of him at the seams.
The baby finally goes down around 9:30. You stand frozen outside the nursery door. Across the hall, Jack leans against the wall, arms crossed over his chest, watching you with that sleepy, crooked smile that always gives him away.
The 'I’d burn the world down for you' smile.
The one he thinks you don’t catch.
You tiptoe toward him, socks sliding slightly on the hardwood, and he lifts his hand—palm up, waiting. You grin, fitting your fingers into his without hesitation.
He squeezes once, slow and firm.
"Mission accomplished," he murmurs, voice low enough that it doesn't even ripple the heavy quiet of the house.
You snort quietly.
"One kid. One bedtime. And it almost killed us."
Jack tugs you gently toward the kitchen. "Almost," he says, mock serious. "But not quite. ‘Cause you married a damn machine, sweetheart."
You roll your eyes so hard you almost sprain something.
"A machine who just bribed a six-month-old with four rounds of Twinkle Twinkle Little Star and half a pack of graham crackers?"
Jack smirks as he grabs two beers from the fridge—one for him, one he opens and hands to you like he’s presenting you with fine wine instead of a Sam Adams.
"A win’s a win, pretty girl. Don’t question the strategy."
You lean your elbows on the counter, taking a long pull from the bottle, watching him. Loose, hair messy. T-shirt stretched across his shoulders. Grinning at you like he’s just happy you’re standing in the same room breathing.
He sets his beer down, then leans in until his forehead bumps yours lightly. "Still married to me," he murmurs, like it’s some grand, ridiculous miracle. "Still puttin’ up with my ass."
"Somebody’s gotta," you tease, nose brushing his. "Can't let you run around unsupervised. You’d live on black coffee and beef jerky."
Jack laughs, low and warm, and drops a quick kiss onto your mouth—chaste, easy. But you feel the zing of it anyway.
The way you always do with him.
Like the earth tilting a little under your feet.
You set your beer down blindly and wrap your arms around his neck, pulling him closer. Jack goes willingly, hands sliding low around your hips, thumbs slipping under the hem of your sleep shirt to find bare skin.
He grins against your mouth, voice rough with teasing. "Careful, honey. House is quiet. Baby’s asleep. Husband’s feelin’ reckless."
You tilt your head back a little, laughing softly.
"Oh yeah? What exactly is reckless gonna look like?"
Jack leans in again, bumping your nose with his. "Thinkin’ about throwin’ you over my shoulder. Maybe take you to the bedroom. Show you you’re still my girl first and her mom second."
You feel it—the way your heart slams against your ribs, the way heat flares under your skin.
God, you missed this.
Missed him like this—teasing and full of life and all that wrecking ball love aimed straight at you.
You tug his shirt higher, fingers skimming the hard plane of his back. "You’re all talk, Dr. Abbot," you whisper. "You forget—I know you."
Jack’s grin turns dangerous. "You sure about that, honey?"
Before you can answer, he sweeps you off your feet with one fast, practiced move—arms under your thighs, lifting you onto the kitchen counter like you weigh nothing.
You gasp, laughing breathlessly as your beer bottle clatters harmlessly.
Jack crowds into your space, standing between your knees, hands braced on either side of you. His eyes are heavy-lidded, burning dark under the dim kitchen light.
"You’re still my girl," he says, voice dropping.
"Always gonna be."
He kisses you then—and it’s nothing like polite.
It’s deep, dirty, teeth dragging gently against your lower lip before his mouth seals over yours in a kiss so consuming it makes you whimper low in your throat.
Jack groans in answer, sliding his hands up under your shirt, palms rough and reverent over your ribs, your back, the soft curve of your waist.
You clutch at his hair, pulling him impossibly closer, your body arching into him on instinct.
The kiss goes on and on—long, slow, greedy—like he’s trying to make up for every second the two of you have been too tired, too busy, too wrapped up in being parents to just be husband and wife.
When he finally pulls back, you’re both breathing hard, faces flushed, chests heaving.
"Love you," he murmurs, so low and wrecked you almost cry. "More now than the day I married you. More every damn day."
You kiss him again, softer this time, and thread your fingers through his.
"Same, Jack," you whisper. "Same. Always."
Jack presses another kiss to your temple, then another to your cheekbone, then one to the corner of your mouth—because he’s a man who doesn’t know how to stop once he starts.
And you let him.
You let him kiss you like he’s starving, let him hold you like you’re the only thing that’s ever made sense.
Because you are.
You always have been.
MONTH SEVEN
The late afternoon light spills golden across the living room, catching on the scattered toys and half-folded laundry.
Jack’s flat on the carpet, army-crawling after your daughter, who’s shrieking with laughter as she belly-flops toward her stuffed dinosaur.
"And she’s on the move!" Jack calls, his voice exaggerated and playful, dragging himself forward with his arms, shifting his weight carefully off his prosthetic like it’s second nature now.
Your daughter lets out a victorious squeal as she clutches the dinosaur, kicking her legs against the carpet.
Jack grins up at you from the floor, flushed and a little breathless. "Looks like the rookie’s got me beat," he says, dragging himself into a full, lazy sprawl. "Think she’s got a better crawl time than I ever did."
You’re sitting on the couch, your legs tucked under you, smiling so hard your cheeks hurt.
"Maybe if you had a binky and a stuffed T-Rex in basic, you would’ve made it further," you tease.
Jack barks a laugh, slow and rumbling.
"You tryin’ to start something, honey?" he says, rolling onto his good knee and levering himself upright in that smooth, practiced motion he’s mastered without fanfare.
"You got the mouth for it."
You arch a brow, playful.
"You wouldn't dare."
Jack tilts his head, that cocky, lopsided grin tugging at his mouth. "Wanna bet?"
Before you can move, he lunges—slow enough for you to see it coming, fast enough that you shriek anyway, scrambling off the couch.
You dart for the hallway, laughing breathlessly. Jack’s heavy footfalls thud behind you—the lighter footstep mixing with the solid stomp—and you’re laughing so hard you can barely breathe as he catches you around the waist.
You squeal, kicking your legs uselessly as he lifts you, hauling you easily against his chest.
"Gotcha," he murmurs, nuzzling into your neck, his voice a low, delighted growl.
You slump against him, laughing helplessly, your heart hammering in your chest.
His hands are warm on your hips, steady and strong. Jack chuckles low, pressing a kiss to your hairline.
"Raincheck," he murmurs against your skin. "Handle her first. Then you’re all mine."
It takes an hour to get her down.
A bottle.
Three lullabies.
Some quiet rocking with Jack swaying on his feet, his body moving instinctively to keep her settled. You watch him from the nursery door, heart aching so sweetly it hurts—the way he holds her, the way his whole body softens when she finally, finally gives in to sleep.
When he lays her gently in the crib and brushes a calloused knuckle over her cheek, you know you’re done for.
Jack straightens slowly, adjusting his balance before he turns back toward you. He’s flushed and tired and barefoot, in an old black t-shirt and sweats—and he’s the most beautiful man you’ve ever seen.
You take his hand silently.
He lets you.
Lets you pull him down the hall, fingers laced tight into yours.
The second you’re both inside the bedroom, Jack tugs you to a stop.
"You sure?" he says, voice low, serious. "Honey... we don’t gotta rush. You’re tired, I know—"
You cut him off with a kiss.
Hard.
Needy.
Full of every word you can’t fit into your mouth fast enough.
Jack groans low in his chest and lifts you carefully, steadying you against him before easing you back onto the bed.
No rush.
No slam.
Just the kind of rough, reverent touch that only he knows how to give you.
He crawls over you slowly, moving like he’s already half-drunk on you. His weight shifts naturally off the prosthetic, instinctive after all these years—but this time, he pauses. Sits back on his heels, eyes never leaving yours.
Wordlessly, Jack reaches down and unclips the prosthetic, setting it aside with a soft thud against the floor.
He exhales through his nose, rough and steady, the kind of sound he only makes when he’s dropping the last of his defenses. When it’s just you and him and nothing else that matters.
Then he’s back over you, heavier now, hotter, real in a way that steals the breath from your lungs.
Jack fits himself between your thighs, the mattress dipping under his weight, his hands bracing on either side of your head.
"You good, baby?" he mutters, voice gravel-thick, the words brushing warm against your mouth.
You nod, already arching up into him, already lost.
Jack smiles—slow, crooked, hungry—and kisses you like a man who’s got nowhere else to be. His hands slide under your shirt, fingers rough and reverent against your skin.
"You’re so goddamn beautiful," he mutters, voice wrecked.
"Been drivin' me crazy all day. Chasin’ you around the house like a damn fool."
You giggle breathlessly into his mouth, tugging his shirt off over his head.
Jack chuckles low, dragging your sleep shirt up inch by inch, kissing every new patch of skin he uncovers.
He’s warm and solid and stupidly good at this—kissing you until you’re panting, until you’re squirming under him, until you’re gasping his name.
"You’re mine," he murmurs against your skin. "Still my girl. Always."
When he finally slides inside you, it’s slow.
Deep.
A rhythm he sets without thinking—steady, grounded, devastating.
You clutch at his shoulders, your nails scraping gently over the broad planes of his back. Jack buries his face in your neck, groaning low as he rocks into you, one hand sliding under your thigh to angle you closer, deeper, better.
"God, baby," he pants. "Feels so good—always you, only you—"
You arch into him, every nerve ending blazing, every breath catching.
He kisses you like it’s the first time.
Like it’s the last time.
Like it’s the only thing that’s ever made sense.
You come apart first—soft, wrecked, clinging to him—and Jack follows with a groan that sounds like your name shattered across his lips.
He stays there, breathing hard against your skin, his body heavy and warm and so damn real on top of you.
You thread your fingers through his messy hair, stroking gently. Jack hums low, shifting carefully so he’s not crushing you, pulling you into his side, tucking your head under his chin.
"You’re my whole world," he whispers, voice cracking. "You and her. Always."
You kiss the center of his chest, right over his hammering heart.
"You’re ours too," you whisper back. "Always."
MONTH EIGHT
The house is so quiet in the early mornings now.
Jack is always the first one up. Not because he has to be—but because he wants to be.
You find him almost every morning sitting at the kitchen table, coffee in hand, the baby in his lap.
Sometimes he’s got her pressed against his chest, one hand wrapped completely around her little body.
Sometimes he’s reading aloud from whatever’s nearby—sports page, medical journal, the back of a cereal box.
This morning, it’s the latter. Jack’s deep voice rumbles through a very serious dramatic reading of the Lucky Charms ingredients list.
You lean against the doorway, grinning like an idiot, just watching them. Watching the way he sips his coffee absently between sentences, the way the baby clutches a fistful of his t-shirt, drooling contentedly.
The way Jack drops a kiss onto her hair every couple minutes without even realizing he’s doing it.
This is what love looks like, you think. This is what home feels like.
It happens on a Sunday morning.
One of those soft, slow days where the house smells like coffee and pancakes and the baby’s shrieking happily in her bouncer.
Jack’s at the stove, wearing nothing but flannel pajama pants and an old army t-shirt, trying to flip pancakes while holding a spatula and a coffee mug at the same time.
You’re sitting on the counter, swinging your legs, wearing Jack’s hoodie and absolutely no pants, grinning like an idiot.
"You're gonna burn those," you warn, sipping your coffee.
Jack glances over his shoulder, smirking.
"Negative, pretty girl. This is controlled chaos."
The second he turns back, the pancake flops halfway out of the pan, folding over itself in a sad, gooey mess.
You laugh so hard you almost spit out your coffee. Jack groans dramatically, setting down the spatula and mock-bowing to the baby.
"I'm sorry, ma'am," he says solemnly. "Your breakfast has been compromised."
The baby claps her hands excitedly.
And then—clear as a bell—she looks straight at you and says, "Mama!"
You freeze.
Jack freezes.
The whole house freezes.
Your coffee cup slips out of your hands onto the counter with a thunk. Jack turns, eyes wide, mouth falling open in slow motion.
"Did she—?" he croaks.
"Did you—?"
You slide off the counter, rushing over, scooping her up in your arms, laughing and crying all at once.
"Say it again, baby," you whisper, beaming through your tears.
And sure enough, your daughter beams back at you, kicking her little legs, babbling happily: "Mama! Mama!"
Jack’s standing frozen by the stove, coffee mug forgotten in his hand, just staring at the two of you. His face is flushed, his eyes suspiciously bright.
You turn toward him, bouncing your daughter on your hip.
"Jack," you laugh, voice thick.
"She said it! She really said it—"
You don’t even finish. Jack’s across the room in three strides, careful not to trip on the rug, pulling you both into his arms.
He hugs you so tight you can barely breathe, his head dropping to your shoulder, his whole body trembling with the force of it.
"I’m so goddamn proud of you," he mutters hoarsely, pressing a kiss into your hair, then one to your daughter’s head.
"So proud of my girls."
You blink up at him, overwhelmed with love, cupping his face in your hand. Jack leans into your touch shamelessly, his lashes lowering, his mouth soft and wrecked.
"Mama," the baby chirps again, and Jack laughs—low and broken and full of more joy than you’ve ever heard from him.
"Yeah, that’s right, bean," he whispers. "That’s your mama. Best damn one in the world."
You end up on the couch in a heap—Jack stretched out with you sprawled half on top of him, the baby curled between you, all three of you breathing each other in.
It’s messy.
It’s imperfect.
It’s everything.
The first real crisp Saturday, Jack piles you both into the Jeep.
No agenda. Just air. Leaves. Time.
He drives with one hand on the wheel, the other reaching over to hold yours across the console.
The baby babbles in her car seat, kicking her little feet at the window, and Jack keeps glancing at her in the mirror with that soft, wrecked look you’ve come to recognize.
You end up at a small park—just woods and trails and a rickety playground. Jack lifts her out of the car seat with the same appreciation he uses for the most fragile patients.
Presses his forehead to hers.
"You ready to see the world, little bean?" he whispers.
You walk the trails together, Jack keeping her tucked close to his chest, narrating everything he sees: "This is a maple tree, sweetheart. Turns red in October. Looks like the whole damn world’s on fire when it hits right."
"These are squirrels. Little thieves. Don’t trust ‘em."
You laugh the whole time, half at him, half at the sheer overwhelming joy of watching the two people you love most in the world wrapped up in each other.
Jack pulls you into a kiss when you least expect it—deep, slow, hungry—with the baby giggling between you.
Like he can’t help it.
Like loving you is as natural to him as breathing.
MONTH NINE
Jack’s the one who insists on it.
You catch him late one night scrolling through his phone in bed, looking at local pumpkin patches like he’s planning a heist.
You smother a laugh into his shoulder.
"You serious about this, Abbot?"
Jack snorts.
"First Halloween. First pumpkin. Non-negotiable."
He books it two days later—drives you both out on a crisp Saturday, one hand on the wheel, the other resting over your knee the whole time. Your daughter’s bundled in a little fleece onesie with bear ears on the hood, clutching the strap of her car seat and babbling to herself.
When you get there, Jack’s all in.
Wheeling the wagon.
Letting her "choose" a pumpkin by the scientific method of whichever one she tries to eat first.
Crouching slow and careful so she can sit in a pile of leaves while he snaps a thousand photos on his phone like a proud dad on steroids.
At one point you turn around and find Jack sitting in the dirt, legs sprawled out, your daughter crawling all over him—tugging at his hoodie strings, trying to steal his hat.
He’s laughing, full and unguarded, his face lit up in a way that makes your heart physically ache.
It happens when you’re least expecting it. Which, you’re starting to realize, is how all the big moments happen.
You’re doing dishes in the kitchen. Jack’s sitting on the floor, flipping through a toy catalog someone left at the nurses' station, pretending to be very serious about Christmas gift planning.
The baby’s on her playmat, babbling to herself, surrounded by stuffed animals and teethers.
You walk into the living room—and freeze.
She’s got her tiny hands braced on the couch. Her legs wobble dangerously under her.
But somehow—God, somehow—she pulls herself upright.
Your mouth drops open.
"Jack—"
Jack’s eyes are wide, almost panicked.
Like if he blinks, he’ll miss it.
Like it’s the most fragile miracle in the world.
She wobbles, Jack lunges—and catches her gently before she tips.
"That’s my girl! You’re gonna take over the world!"
You sit down hard on the couch, heart pounding, grinning so wide your face hurts. Jack beams at you over her head, and you swear to God his eyes are shiny.
He won’t admit it.
But you know.
You both pretend it’s for her.
It’s not.
It’s for you and Jack.
Jack spends hours on the couch sketching costume ideas like he’s designing a battle plan.
Pirates?
Farmers?
Superheroes?
Jack suggests "trauma surgeons," but you veto it when he tries to strap a fake scalpel to the baby’s diaper bag.
You finally settle on a simple one: A little pumpkin suit for her.
You and Jack wear matching orange hoodies.
Jack grumbles, but secretly loves it—you can tell by the way he keeps brushing his knuckles against your side every time you get close.
At the neighbor’s block party, Jack holds her the whole time, proudly accepting compliments like he personally grew her in the backyard.
He lets her chew on his hoodie string.
Lets her grab fistfuls of his hair.
Lets her shriek in his ear without flinching.
Later, back home, you find him sitting on the floor in the nursery with her asleep on his chest—both of them still wearing their pumpkin outfits.
MONTH TEN
The front yard was Jack’s idea.
"You can’t stay cooped up in the house forever, bean," he tells her, propping the storm door open with his boot while he adjusts the old quilt he spread out over the browning fall grass.
"You gotta touch some dirt sometime. It's character-building."
You smile from the porch, arms folded loosely over your chest, heart full to the point of aching. It’s cold enough that you’re both bundled up—Jack in an old hoodie and jeans, your daughter in a too-puffy jacket that makes her arms stick out like a tiny scarecrow.
Jack crouches carefully. He sets her down on the quilt.
She sits there for a second, blinking up at him.
Then at you.
Then down at the crinkling, crunchy leaves scattered across the grass. Jack tosses her one—big and orange, almost bigger than her face. She squeals, clutching it in both hands, waving it around like a victory flag.
You laugh quietly.
Jack turns his head, grinning that slow, easy grin that still knocks the breath out of you.
And when he turns back—it happens.
She pushes herself upright.
Wobbly.
Determined.
Like the whole world’s just waiting for her to take it.
Jack freezes, one hand still half-extended like he was about to offer her another leaf.
You watch, breathless, from the porch—hands fisted in the sleeves of your sweatshirt, heart pounding.
And then—one step. Another.
Toward him.
Toward Jack.
Jack doesn’t move. Doesn’t breathe. Just stays absolutely still, arms hanging loose at his sides, his whole body vibrating with the effort not to rush forward and grab her.
When she stumbles into him—three full steps later—he scoops her up so fast you barely see it happen.
Lifts her high into the air, spinning once under the porch light, laughing that full, broken, wrecked-little-boy laugh you only hear when he’s completely undone.
"That’s my tough girl," he breathes, pressing kiss after kiss into her pink cheeks. "God, you’re somethin’ else, baby bean."
He tips his head back toward you, still holding her high against his chest—and you see it.
The way his mouth is trembling.
The way his eyes are suspiciously bright, blinking hard.
Jack Abbot, who’s been shot at, seen death on rooftops and in ER trauma bays—wrecked into soft, helpless pieces by a pair of wobbly baby legs and three whole steps.
You jump down off the porch without even thinking, running toward them, wrapping yourself around them both.
Jack catches you one-armed, pressing his face into your hair, breathing hard.
"You see that?" he mutters against you, voice rough and low. "She chose me. Took her first steps to me."
You nod, laughing through tears.
"I saw it, Jack," you whisper back. "I saw everything."
The first real cold snap hits two weeks later.
Jack makes a production out of it—dragging down tubs of winter clothes from the attic, testing the space heater, checking the baby monitor batteries like you’re preparing for the Arctic.
You find him one evening sitting on the floor of the nursery, surrounded by a sea of tiny coats, mittens, hats, and boots.
The baby’s crawling around giggling, trying to chew on every hat she can get her hands on.
Jack’s holding up a toddler-sized snowsuit with a deeply skeptical expression.
"She’s gonna look like a marshmallow," he mutters. "Can she even breathe in this?"
You laugh, sitting down beside him. "You’re gonna be that dad, huh?" you tease, bumping his shoulder. "The one who brings her to preschool wearing a parka in 40 degrees?"
Jack lifts his chin stubbornly. "Better too warm than too cold."
He glances at the baby trying to fit an entire mitten in her mouth and grins. "Besides. She’s gotta survive Pittsburgh winter. It’s a rite of passage."
You didn’t plan on getting a tree that day.
Jack says it’s too early. You agree.
But when you drive past the little lot tucked between the church and the fire station—when you see the tiny white lights strung overhead—you both say nothing.
Just look at each other.
And turn in without a word.
Jack lifts the baby out of her car seat, tucking her close against his chest inside his coat. You wander through the rows slowly, letting her grab fistfuls of pine needles, letting Jack argue seriously with the teenager working the lot about which tree "looks the most structurally sound."
You settle on a small, sturdy one.
Jack ties it to the roof of the Jeep himself, refusing help.
You know better than to argue—watching him knot the ropes with steady, competent hands, his mouth set in that focused line you love so much.
When you get home, he lifts the baby onto his shoulders and lets her "help" you string lights—her squealing laughter echoing off the walls.
Jack catches your hand as you walk past, tugging you into his side.
"We’re makin’ a good life, huh, pretty girl?" he murmurs.
"One hell of a good life."
MONTH ELEVEN
You didn't plan to make a big deal out of it.
First Christmas.
She's too young to remember.
That's what you kept telling yourselves.
But Jack...he can't help himself.
You find him at the kitchen table on Christmas Eve, hunched over a roll of wrapping paper, tongue poking out slightly as he wrestles with Scotch tape and a box that’s clearly too big for its contents.
The tree glows in the corner of the living room, soft and gold, the whole house smelling like pine and cinnamon.
Your daughter babbles from her playpen, chewing on a crinkly ribbon Jack forgot to hide. Jack just shakes his head fondly and lets her.
When he sees you standing there, arms crossed and smiling, he tries to scowl. Fails miserably.
"What?" he mutters, sticking another crooked piece of tape down. "Santa’s gotta show up somehow."
You cross the room, sliding your arms around his shoulders from behind, resting your chin on top of his head.
"You’re gonna ruin her for real Christmases when she’s older," you murmur against his hair. "Nothing’s ever gonna top this."
Jack hums low in his throat, one hand reaching up to squeeze your forearm where it crosses his chest. "Good," he says simply.
"I don’t want her ever thinkin' she’s gotta go lookin’ for somethin' better. She’s already got everything she needs."
It’s still dark when you feel him stir.
Jack’s body slides out of bed carefully, trying not to wake you. You crack one eye open and watch him pad silently to the nursery in sweatpants and a ratty old Steelers hoodie.
You follow a minute later, wrapping a blanket around yourself.
You catch the scene from the hallway: Jack crouched low by the crib, one big hand resting gently on the bars, his head bowed.
Not saying anything.
Just... being there.
Breathing her in.
He lifts her slowly, carefully, pressing his face into her hair, and you hear it—the soft, wrecked sound he makes when she cuddles into him without hesitation.
"Hey, bean," he whispers, voice cracking.
"Merry Christmas, baby girl."
You stand there, hand pressed to your mouth, heart splitting wide open.
Jack turns finally, cradling her tight against his chest. His eyes find yours in the half-light. And even though he doesn’t say anything, you hear it clear as day:
Thank you. Thank you for her. Thank you for this. Thank you for choosing him.
It starts snowing after breakfast. Big, lazy flakes drifting down outside the windows, blanketing the world in white.
Jack builds a fire in the living room fireplace, cursing gently under his breath when it smokes at first.
You bundle the baby in a ridiculous red-and-white onesie covered in tiny reindeer and sit her in the middle of the couch with a pile of pillows on either side like she's royalty.
Jack flops down beside her with a grunt, stretching out his long legs and tilting his head back to watch the snow.
The fire crackles low. The tree lights blink softly. Your daughter babbles, chewing happily on the sleeve of her onesie. You settle into Jack’s side, his arm automatically looping around your shoulders.
He kisses your temple without thinking. Without needing to.
"You warm enough, pretty girl?" he murmurs. "Got everything you need?"
You don’t answer.
You just nod, curling closer into him, breathing in the scent of smoke and pine and Jack. Because you do. You really, truly do.
The baby sleeps early, worn out by too many presents, too many relatives, too much excitement.
You and Jack stay up late.
Too late.
Sitting on the living room floor like teenagers, backs against the couch, drinking hot chocolate and eating the burnt-edge cookies you forgot to take out of the oven in time.
You talk about stupid things at first. Work. Sports. Whether the baby's going to end up a hockey player or a piano prodigy.
And then Jack gets quiet. Staring into the fire. "You ever think it’d be like this?" he asks finally, voice low and rough. "Back then?"
You know what he means.
Back when the world was a lot harder.
When he never thought he’d make it past thirty.
When you weren’t even sure you believed in happy endings.
You slide your hand into his, threading your fingers tight.
"No," you whisper. "Not like this." You turn your head, smiling soft against the firelight. "Better."
Jack squeezes your hand once, hard, and you feel him nod. Feel him breathe. Feel him let it in. The good. The love. The life he never thought he deserved.
MONTH TWELVE
The holidays are over. The tree’s gone. The stockings are packed away. The house feels a little empty without all the lights and glitter, but honestly?
You’re relieved.
You and Jack have been circling the same conversation for two weeks now: How big should her first birthday be?
Jack leans over the kitchen counter one evening, thumbing through a battered old notebook, his mouth pulled into that stubborn line he gets when he’s pretending to be casual but is actually spiraling.
"I mean..." he says, flipping a page. "We could just do somethin' small. Family. Cake. A couple of her toys. No big deal."
You lift an eyebrow at him.
"And by ‘small’ you mean...?"
Jack shrugs, grinning sheepishly.
"Maybe invite, like, Shen. Dana. Robby. Princess. Perlah. Ellis. Collins. Langdon. McKay. And maybe the rookies if they don't annoy me"
You snort, dropping into the chair across from him.
"So, basically... the entire Pitt."
Jack smirks. "You wanna tell Ellis she’s not invited to her honorary niece’s first birthday?" He taps his pen on the paper. "'Cause I’m not getting in the middle of that one, pretty girl."
You shake your head, laughing under your breath.
"You’re impossible."
Jack leans across the counter, catching your chin lightly between his thumb and knuckle, tilting your face up.
"You love me anyway."
The January sky is sharp and dark, heavy with the kind of cold that makes the world feel smaller.
You find Jack in the nursery after you put the baby down—sitting in the old rocking chair, one foot nudging the floor in a slow rhythm. He’s staring at the crib. Silent. Still.
You lean against the doorway, watching him. Watching the way the weight of the year—the weight of love—settles heavy over his broad shoulders.
Jack finally looks up, catching your eye. His voice is low, rough with something he hasn’t figured out how to say yet.
"You remember..." He clears his throat. "You remember when we brought her home?"
You nod, stepping quietly into the room. Press your hand to the back of his neck, feeling the tension there. The life humming under his skin.
"I didn’t know what the hell I was doin'," Jack mutters, a ghost of a smile tugging at his mouth. "Didn’t know if I deserved her. If I deserved you."
You slide your fingers through his hair, soft and sure.
Jack leans into it like he can’t help himself.
"You do," you whisper. "You deserve all of it, Jack. You always have."
He pulls you into his lap then, wrapping his arms around your waist, tucking his face into your neck. Holding you like you’re the only thing keeping him anchored to the earth.
And maybe you are.
Maybe you always will be.
The day of her birthday dawns cold and gray, the streets dusted with a thin layer of January snow.
You wake up to Jack already downstairs, setting up balloons and streamers with the grim determination of a man trying to fix a leaky roof mid-thunderstorm.
You find him half-wrestling a giant "1" balloon into the living room, muttering curses under his breath when it refuses to cooperate.
"You good, champ?" you tease, sipping your coffee.
Jack glares at you over the top of the balloon, but there’s no heat in it. Only love. Only joy. Only him.
"You wanna fight the damn helium next?" he mutters, half-laughing as he pins the balloon to the back of a chair.
The party is perfect.
Small, chaotic, full of noise and warmth.
The Pitt crew shows up—Dana with an armful of presents, Robby with some ridiculous talking toy that immediately gets banned to the garage after ten minutes, Shen slipping Jack a flask when he thinks you’re not looking.
Jack never puts her down.
Not really.
He lets her toddle a little—lets her show off the new steps she’s so proud of—but he’s always within reach. Always there to catch her.
You cut the cake.
She smashes her tiny fists into the frosting with a triumphant shriek. Everyone cheers. Jack laughs so hard he almost drops the camera.
Later, when the guests trickle out and the house quiets, you find Jack standing in the kitchen, wiping down the counters like he can scrub the day into permanence.
He turns when he hears you, setting the rag down. Looks at you with that look—the one he only ever gives you. The one that says everything without a single word.
You cross the kitchen, wrapping your arms around his waist, pressing your face into his chest.
Jack hugs you back immediately, fiercely. Kisses your hair. "She’s gonna be so damn good, honey," he murmurs against your crown. "You’re makin’ sure of that."
You pull back just enough to meet his eyes. "You too, Jack," you whisper. "You’re the best thing she’ll ever know."
"Can’t believe we made it a year," he murmurs. "Can’t believe we get to keep doin’ this."
"Best thing we ever did." you whisper.