31 | cis bi polyamorous woman | fandoms | plants | pets | coffee slut
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
Text
tracing back lucky stars
dr. robby x f!attending!reader masterlist content: 18+ mdni, sexually explicit content, infidelity, swearing, angst, usual medical canon events (not much tho), mention of alcoholic parent, other mentions of death, grief, age gap (less than ten year gap) words: 15.4K synopsis: this fic spans over a decade and follows our reader from first meeting robby in a chance interaction in florida as a resident all the way to 2024. all events take place prior to season one. this is inspired by when harry met sally, as requested from one of my beloved anons. lots of will they won't they, robby being oblivious to his own feelings for like ten goddamn years, i guess slow burn ish??? a/n: hi my friends, can't explain just how much fun i had writing this so huuuuuge thank you to the anon that requested it!! i really hope you love it. they will live in my brain space for quite a while i think. title is taken from song lucky stars by haim. as always thank u for being here!! <3 syd
2013Â
As you stood at that rental car counter, you decided you hated the south. You hated the way southerners pretended to be nice, but really probably hated your guts. The way they smiled at you and crooned with their syrupy sweet voices that bless your heart, they thought you were a little soft in the head. Everyone always loved to say northerners were assholes, but to you they were just honest. You had infinitely more respect for the guy from Philly who flipped you off in traffic and screamed out his window that you drove like a ninety seven year old lady with glaucoma than the man in front of you who was giving his best Aw Shucks expression as he told you he would not rent his last car to you.
âMaâam, as Iâve already explained to you, I cannot rent you that car, itâs a manual.â
âAnd as Iâve already explained to you, Martin, I know how to drive a stick.â
âIf thatâs true,â He said slowly, âThen why did you select âautomaticâ for preferred transmission type on the rental form?â
You sighed and let your hands rise and fall loudly with a smack onto the counter, âBecause the year is two thousand and thirteen and I assumed that there would be an automatic car available.â
You were running very low on patience after the morning youâd had. After spending the weekend at an emergency medicine conference, you had gotten up at four in the morning to make an early flight back to Pittsburgh. But lovely, beautiful Panama City, Florida had fucked you over from the moment you woke up this morning.Â
The hot water in your hotel room had been out and youâd been forced to take an icy shower. You spilt orange juice all over the outfit you planned to wear to the airport and so were forced to instead wear denim shorts that rode just an inch too high. The iced coffee you had made yourself behind schedule to buy before getting to the airport was knocked from your hand by an inattentive cyclist. And you had broken the heel on one of your cowboy boots on your way into the airport. So you hobbled up to bag check only to find out that your flight was cancelled and could not be rescheduled until tomorrow.
You couldnât wait until tomorrow. You were an R3 and you had a double shift tomorrow and you needed this flight to get back to Pittsburgh at a reasonable hour so you could get whatever sleep possible before reporting for shift. So you really, really needed this fucking car if you had any hope at all of both getting some sleep and making your shift.
âIâm sorry, maâam, Iâm just not comfortable renting you the vehicle. Now, I really need to take care of the next customerââ
âOh, Jesus, fuck, Iâm trying to give you money for a service!â You pushed your credit card and license across the counter, âPlease just rent me the car so I can go home!â
âExcuse me,â The voice behind you was rough and warm, and oddly familiar. It took you less than thirty seconds to place him.Â
You had listened to him speak at the conference for an hour about how to deliver bad news to patients with the right amount of empathy. You remembered specifically how soothing you had found his voice and found it unsurprising that he would seem so good at delivering bad news. He could probably tell you he had stolen your identity and all money from your bank account and you would thank him.
âSorry to interrupt, but I overheard youâre also heading to Pittsburgh?â He said to you and then turned to your newly minted nemesis, Martin, âI can drive stick, I could drive us both.â
Well, smooth voice or not, he could get fucked if he thought he was going to steal your rental.
âExcuse me,â You said, turning to the doctor who was way taller in person than you remembered him being on stage, âBut youâre not taking my rental.â
âMaâam, as Iâve said, itâs not your rental.â
âMartin,â You said, your voice high and strained as you whipped your head back towards him, âCould you mind your own goddamn business, please?â
âIâ Sorryââ Doctor Soothing Voice interjected again, âI just, I heard you were going to Pittsburgh and itâs the last rentalââ
âSo you thought youâd steal it from me?â
He laughed and scratched the back of his head, âNo, I thought we could split it.â
Ordinarily, you may have been more polite. You had really enjoyed his talk. But you were very angry and your ankle was throbbing from when you had broken your heel. You wanted a peaceful drive by yourself.
âI donât share cars with strange men, thatâs how you end up on Dateline.â
He nodded, âYeah, fair enough. What if we grab a coffee first?â He turned to Martin and slid a fifty dollar bill across the counter, âYouâll hold the car for us?â
You watched as Martin pocketed the fifty, nodding politely at Doctor Soothing Voice and you glared at him, upper lip beginning to turn up in disgust. You could already be on the road by now if it wasnât for this sexist pig who thought women couldnât drive stick.
âIf you keep staring at him like that,â Doctor Soothing Voice whispered from over your shoulder, âYou might actually end up on Dateline when they find his body.â
Accepting defeat, you sighed. Grabbing your bags, you began walking away from the counter.
âHave a beautiful day, maâam.â Martin said as you walked by.Â
You gave a short laugh and started to turn back around, âOh, you son of aââ
âNope.â Doctor Soothing Voice gently took your shoulders and turned you back in the direction of the door, âJust keep walking.â
Once outside in the oppressive humidity, you shook his hands off you, âYou know, I could have handled that myself.â
He nodded, smiling, âI have no doubts on that front.â He gestured down to your heel-less boot, âWhat happened to your boot, you get in a brawl with a condescending horse?â
You snorted, âA doctor and funny. Though, I guess unsurprising since you work in an ER. If anyoneâs gonna be funny itâs emergency medicine doctors. How else do we cope with the horrors?â He frowned at you in silent question, âOh. Sorry. I should have said, I was at the conference, I saw your talk. Though your name is slipping my mind at the moment.â
He raised his eyebrows and you saw the way his eyes traveled down your legs and back up again, âYou were⊠Here for the conference?â
âWhat, so, because I wore cowboy boots and booty shorts to the airport you think theyâre gonna take my medical license away?â
He laughed, âYouâre right, I apologize. Of course you can still practice medicine in booty shorts.â He held out a hand for you to shake, âIâm Michael. Robinavitch. You could also just call me Robby, if you want, thatâs what I go by in the ER.â
You shook his hand and gave him your name, âIâm an R3, I work at UPMC Presbyterian.â
âHuh, what are the odds?â He ran a hand through his hair, âSo you knew who I was and still refuse to get in a car with me?â
You started rolling your suitcase towards the Dunkinâ across the street, hobbling as you went, âJust because youâre a good doctor doesnât mean youâre not also a deviant. People are layered and nuanced. And sick.â
His mouth was twitching towards a smirk again as he followed after you. Something about you was very intriguing to him. âNuanced like how youâre an R3 wearing booty shorts and cowboy boots to the airport?â
âYes, exactly.â You looked both ways at the crosswalk in front of the Dunkinâ before stepping into traffic, âBesides, I need an iced coffee if Iâm about to endure fifteen plus hours in a car with a stranger.â
Robby continues to watch you from behind, eternally amused by your uneven gate, âDonât you have other shoes?â
âYes, well, Iâve hardly had the time to dig into my suitcase to find them now, have I?â You turned and walked backwards so you could look at him, âDo you criticize all your residents like this?â
He frowned, âThat wasnât a critique, you just look uncomfortable. Do you get this defensive with all your attendings?â
You turned away from him and he watched your shoulders heave with a sigh, âNo. Believe it or not, Iâm not normally like this. Must be something about you that gets under my skin.â
âWell,â He smirked and held the Dunkinâ door open for you, âYou have about fifteen hours to figure out what it is.â
***
âWhen was the last time you drove stick?â Robby was holding the keys up just out of your reach. You knew he was trying to see if you would jump for them, but you would not be humiliated. You crossed your arms and glared at him instead.
In the last half hour you had changed your shoes and drank half your iced coffee while Robby filled out the rest of the paperwork for the car.
You shrugged, âI donât know, more than ten years ago?â
He scoffed, âOkay, youâre definitely not driving then.â
âWhat, like you drive a stick super often?â
âYes, actually, the car I own at home is a manual.â
You laughed, âOh, okay. Youâre one of those guys?â
He blinked at you, still smirking, âWhat does that mean? One of those guys?â
You walked around to the passenger side door, opening it, and standing on the step so you could look over the roof at him, âYou know, one of those guys who only drives a manual and thinks theyâre better than you for it. And like, probably owns a fucking motorcycle or something that he works on in his garage with his own two hands and talks about like itâs his child.â
You watched with glee as his face reddened, âOh my God, you do have a motorcycle, donât you? And a leather jacket?â
âGet in the car,â He said, still blushing as he opened the driverâs side door.
Very pleased with yourself, you ducked into the car.
***
âHowâd you learn to drive stick?â He asked once they were on the road.
You were eating a donut with your feet propped up on the dash, the window open and blowing in your hair, âMy dad taught me.â
He nodded, âAre the two of you close?â
âNo,â You said, mouth full of donut, and then swallowed, âHe was an alcoholic.â
âOh,â Robby said, âIâm sorry for your loss.â
âOh, heâs not dead, heâs just dead to me.â You turned to him and smirked as he was blushing again, âItâs okay, I havenât spoken to him in almost ten years. Iâve moved on.â
He nodded and cleared his throat, âSounds like that mustâve been⊠difficult.â
Your smile widened at his attempt to comfort you. Commiserate, even, âWe are strangers in a car for fifteen hours together. We donât have to do all this.â
He shrugged and turned to look at you briefly while stopped at a red light, âIsnât this sorta the whole point of being alive though? Getting to know strangers?â
He had very intense, very warm, brown eyes. The kind of eyes that seemed to look right through you on first glance, that made you itch to break his stare. For just a moment, your smile slipped, and you tore your gaze from his to look out the windshield, âThe lightâs green.â
After a few moments of silence, you cleared your throat, âSeems like nowâs a good time to mention that I am engaged, by the way. So if you were thinking about falling in love with me in the next fifteen hours, donât.â
You heard him chuckle next to you, âDonât worry, I wasnât planning on it. Youâre not my type.â
You choked on your iced coffee and turned to look at him, âExcuse me?â
âWhat?â He laughed, âAre you shocked that the booty shorts didnât work on me or something?â
You felt your face flush and you turned away from him, âNo, I just⊠men donât have a type.â
He scoffed, âWhat are you talking about?â
âMen will fuck any woman who shows even a little bit of interest in them. Itâs why theyâre incapable of being just friends with women.â
He raised his eyebrows, âYou donât think men and women can be just friends?â
âI donât think straight men and straight women can be just friends because the man will always be secretly thinking about fucking her.â Robby was shaking his head, âWhat, you disagree?â
He laughed, âYeah, of course. I promise I am not thinking about fucking you even a little bit.â
You smirked, âOkay. Well, I guess we can be friends then. At least until you prove me right.â
âWonât happen.âÂ
You grinned, âFriends forever, then.â
He laughed, âYeah, sure. Friends forever.â
***
The sun was beginning to set when Robby pulled back on the highway after stopping for Wendyâs, french fry hanging from his mouth.
âI could drive, you know, for a little while.â
âSâokay,â Robby said, food in his mouth, âI like the driving. Prefer it, actually.â
You nodded, âYeah, that tracks with the whole thing you got going on.â
He laughed and gave you a quick glance, âYou are such a know-it-all, you know? Anyone ever told you that? What thing do I have going on?â
You tossed a chicken nugget in your mouth before answering, âIâm not a know-it-all, I'm just really good at reading people.â You swallowed, âYou have control issues.â
He ran a hand over his face, slightly shaking his head, âAnd how did you arrive at this conclusion?â
You shrugged, âItâs just sorta written all over you. The way you stepped in at the rental counter, the way you insist on driving, even in your talk at the conference you told a story when you were a resident where you ended up stealing a patient from another, more senior resident because you thought you knew best.â
He scoffed, âYes, but I was right.â
âThat time. Iâm sure youâve done that before and been wrong.â Heâs quiet and when you look over at him, his jaw is clenched. Oh. Youâve pissed him off. âI didnât mean to upset you, itâs not necessarily a bad thing. We all have quirksââ
âLike you being an insufferable know-it-all?â He said sharply.
You went quiet. You werenât offended, exactly, moreso caught off guard that you had triggered him so easily when it hadnât been your intention.Â
âSorry,â He said after a moment, sighing, âThat was unnecessary.â
You nodded, âLetâs take a break from talking for a while.â You leaned forward to start fiddling with the radio before sitting back and humming along.
Robby drummed his fingers against the steering wheel, but for the most part, the two of you sat in companionable silence for roughly a half hour.
Until Robby cleared his throat, âIâm sorry for snapping at you, I know I have control issues. Guess it was frustrating hearing it from someone who doesnât even really know me.â
You shrugged, âItâs okay. For what itâs worth I have been told Iâm an insufferable know-it-all.â
He smirked, âAnd does your fiancĂ© love that about you?â
You snorted, âNo. Thereâs nothing a man hates more than a woman who thinks she knows more than him.â
The comment struck him as a little too honest. And he thought, perhaps, there was a note of hurt in your voice.
âHow long have you been together?â He asked mildly.
You sighed and he saw you examine the ring on your finger out of the corner of his eye, âWe dated for three years and got engaged about six months ago.â
He nodded, âYou have a date in mind for the wedding?â
You became uncharacteristically quiet and he worried he had pushed too hard, but then, âNo, um, we still canât agree on a venue. And then we just decided maybe it would make more sense to wait until I finished my residency.â
âOh,â He said, âWell, yeah, that seems reasonable.â
You cleared your throat, âWhat about you, Robby, you have anyone at home?â
It was not lost on him that you had redirected the conversation away from yourself, but that was fine. It wasnât his business anyway.
âNo,â He said, âNo, itâs just been me for a while now.â
You nodded, âHowâs that going for ya?â
He smirked, âNo one to make a victim of with my control issues, so itâs alright.â
You smiled and then yawned, âCould you talk for a while?â
He huffed a laugh through his nose, âAbout what?â
âAnything. Medical procedures. Hell, give me your talk again.â You yawned a second time, âAnyone ever told you you have a very calming voice?â
âOh, so my talk put you to sleep?â
âNo,â You settled back into the car seat, pulling the lever to recline it slightly and resting your head against the door, âYour talk was very good, actually. You just have a nice voice. Itâs how I recognized you earlier. But now, yes, I would like you to put me to sleep if you donât mind. I have a double tomorrow.â
Robby smirked and looked at you out of the corner of his eye. Your eyes were already closed, head leaned against the window, arms crossed across your chest.
âAlright,â He said eventually, âIf you insist.â
***
It took only about twenty minutes of him talking, redoing the talk he had done the day before, before he noticed you had drifted off. When he could safely get a look at you, he saw your mouth slightly agape and you were snoring softly. It shocked him how endearing he found it, how oddly comforting it was to drive with someone dozing off in the passenger seat.
You had entered your address into the GPS a couple of hours ago and with the street lights illuminating the inside of the car, he pulled up outside your apartment building.
He hated to wake you, you really did look so peaceful, the street lights giving your face an artificial glow.Â
He stared at you a beat too long before he reached a hand to your knee and gave it a light squeeze, âHey, youâre home.â
You stirred, what sounded almost like a mewl crawled out your throat as you came to and Robby fought a smile. âHome?â You asked sleepily.
âYes,â He leaned away from you, allowing you to wake fully, âYou fell asleep.â
You blinked the sleep from your eyes and looked around, âWell,â You dragged your arm at the corner of your mouth, wiping away the drool that had collected there, âI think itâs safe to say youâre no deviant, Michael Robinavitch. Thank you for getting me home safely.â
He smirked and got out of the car to help you with your suitcase, âAnytime.â
Having all your things, you looked from your apartment building back to Robby, âSo, weâre still friends?â You asked, smirking, calling everything back to your earlier conversation.
A slow smile made its way across his face. The answer was yes, but he was beginning to wonder if he had more than fifteen hours with you if the answer would eventually be no.
âYes,â Was all he said, though. You were engaged. Someone elseâs. âFriends forever, like I said.â
Your smile widened and you laughed, âGood, excellent. Maybe Iâll see you around then, Dr. Robby.â
He nodded, hands stuffed in his pockets, âI hope so.â
And then he watched, leaning against the car, as you made your way towards the apartment building. You didnât look back at him. He waited until you were safely inside before climbing back into the car and pulling off the curb.
***
2018
Normally, you could only be found at a local bookstore, but every one you had checked as of late was missing the one book you wanted. So that was how you ended up at Barnes & Noble that day. You were crouched in front of the shelf, looking intently at the spines to locate the title you were looking for and so didnât notice that someone was now standing next to you.
Successfully locating the novel, you pulled it from its shelf and rose to standing, beginning to read the blurb on the back cover.
Which was how you found yourself face to face with Michael Robinavitch after not seeing him for five years.
âOh,â You said, âHi.â
Quickly, you realized it was more than likely he had completely forgotten about you. It had been five years since you had shared that rental car up to Pittsburgh and you hadnât seen him since. He hadnât changed all that much, though his beard was a bit more unruly than you remembered.
But then, his face lit up in recognition, âHi,â He said, seemingly shocked, but pleased to run into you, âI almost didnât recognize you, your hair⊠itâs⊠different.â
You smirked, âOh, you hate it.â
âNo,â He said quickly, âNo, I actually think it suits you more than the long hair.â
You smiled, âNice save. Just as charming as I remembered.â
He shook his head, a flush working its way up his neck, âYou still at Presby?â
âYes,â You nodded, âIâm an attending now, though.â
âGood, thatâs good,â You noted the way his eyes fell to your left hand and you knew what he was looking for, âDid you get married, then? You said you were waiting to finish your residency.â
It was shocking to you that he remembered you had said that. At the same time, it sent an ache through you to think about that relationship.
âI did get married,â You said slowly, looking down at your empty ring finger, âWe got divorced about a year ago.â
âOh,â He sighed, âIâm⊠Iâm sorry, I shouldnât have asked.â
âNo, itâs okay.â Instinctively, you placed a hand on his forearm, meant for reassurance. But his eyes stared down at your hand, and self consciously, you pulled away, âWe probably shouldnât have gotten married in the first place,â You shrugged, âBesides, relationships will probably always be doomed for me. Emergency medicine doctors suck at marriage.â
He barked a short laugh and shook his head, âYou canât think like that.â
âHey, Iâm just going by the empirical data,â You tilted your head to the side and narrowed your eyes at him, âAre you⊠in a relationship? I didnât see a ring.â
He gave you a lopsided grin, âIâm actually here with my girlfriend, Janey and her son, Jake. Wandered off by myself while they were looking for a book for him for school.â
Oh, it pissed you off the way your stomach sank. He had always said you werenât his type anyway. He was probably actually telling the truth. It figured the only honest man youâd ever met wouldnât be into you.
Granted, you didnât really know Robby, only the version of him that lived in your head from that fifteen hour car ride that you revisited every so often. More so since your divorce finalized. But it was just loneliness, you assured yourself. You had created a version of him in your head that didnât exist. The man you occasionally pined after was not in front of you, just someone who looked like him.
âThatâs lovely, Robby. Iâm happy for you.â
He laughed, âYou just said ER doctors canât keep a relationship.â
You shook your head, âStupid and self deprecating. Itâs just a coping mechanism. Iâm sure youâre really great at it. Being a boyfriend.â
He scoffed and scratched the back of his head, âI donât know about that, but Iâm trying.â He nodded to the book in your hand, âWhatâs that?â
You flipped it in your hand so he could see the cover, My Year of Rest and Relaxation by Otessa Moshfegh.Â
âUh, just a book I heard about online,â You shrugged.
âWhatâs it about?â
You shrugged again, smirking, âA woman who is so sick of everything she gets her psychiatrist to prescribe her enough pills to sleep through a whole year.â
He tilted his head slightly as he looked at you. You had worked with many an ER physician in your career and while in med school. You knew what it looked like when someone was assessing you for injury.
âShould I be concerned?â He asked. His tone was casual, but his posture was anything but.
Your grin widened, âYou should always be concerned about me.â You joked, but his frown deepened, âIâm fine, Robby. Itâs just a book.â
It wasnât totally true. You had sought the book out because you suspected you would relate to the protagonist. Maybe too much. But he was a stranger. He didnât need to hear about your suicidal ideations.
âYou still drive stick?â You asked, anxious to move the conversation away from yourself.
He laughed and shook his head, âNo, I finally have an automatic like the rest of the population.â
You laughed, âOh, no. Bummer. Youâre just like the rest of us peasants now. Do you at least still have the motorcycle?â
âSold it a couple years ago.â
You winced, âMan, youâve really let yourself go.â
He laughed and ran a hand over the back of his neck. You didnât want to leave, but you felt the longer you stood here talking to him, it threatened to disprove the belief that he could not be as lovely as you made him out to be in your head.
âSo,â You said finally and held your fist out to him, âStill friends?â
He gave you a lopsided grin and pressed his fist to yours, âFriends forever,â He repeated the words from five years ago and for a moment it felt as if no time had passed at all, âLike I said. Though I hope to see you again sooner than five years from now.â
âYeah,â You said, âMe too.âÂ
***
2023Â
Robby had zero desire to meet the new attending Gloria had hired. Whoever it was, they had been hired behind his back and with no warning to him until they were three days out from when they were supposed to start. If Gloria had hired someone behind his back, it had to mean that whoever it was was in her pocket. Or at the very least, Gloria thought that person was in her pocket. And that was enough for him to stay far away from whoever it was.
But what he hadnât been expecting when Gloria came downstairs, new attending by her side as she gave a tour, was you.
He stopped short and stared dumbly as you and Gloria approached him. Unfortunately for him, he was unable to stop the stupid smile that spread across his face at the sight of you.Â
âDr. Robinavitch.â You said, once you were close enough. Your smile was wide enough to mirror his, âItâs good to see you again.â
He laughed, âWhat the hell are you doing here?â
âYou two know each other?â Gloria frowned, looking back and forth between you two.
âSort of.â You said, âWe met at a conference ten years ago.â
Sort of was an accurate way to describe whatever this repeated crossing of paths seemed to be between the two of you.Â
âOh.â Gloria seemed less than pleased at this revelation, âLovely. Well, Iâll leave you in more capable hands then. Come find me if you need anything.â And then she was gone.
Robby shook his head at you, âIâll ask again, what the hell are you doing here? Presby get too small for you?â
âUh,â You shrugged, âI just⊠really needed a change.â
He smirked, âAnd⊠knowing I was here probably made it more enticing?â
You laughed, âYou caught me. Thought it was finally time we became actual friends.â
Robby could not explain how pleased he was that you were here. It was stupid that he cared. He hadnât seen you in five years. And before that brief exchange, he hadnât seen you for five years before that. So really, he hadnât seen you in ten years. And yet, he was traipsing you around, introducing you to everyone, laughing a little too loudly at your jokes, like he was a fucking teenager.
Until he was walking you home at the end of the day. Until you mentioned Dean.
âThatâs great,â He said when you said it, that you were seeing someone, âSo you think youâve broken the ER doctor curse, then?â
You shrugged, smirking, âProbably not. But I really like him. It feels good, right now.â
âGood,â He said, âYou deserve that.âÂ
And he meant it. You had looked so sad the last time heâd seen you. And even before that, the first time you met, you had struck him as something of a wounded animal. Defending itself with jokes and pessimism. You deserved to be truly happy.
âAnd what about Janey, how is she?â
He sighed, âUm, we broke up shortly after the last time I saw you. It seems the curse of the ER doctors is still with me. But I still get to see Jake, her son, so I feel really lucky about that.â
âIâm sorry.â
âItâs probably for the best,â He rubbed a hand over the back of his head, âIâve been a fucking wreck since covid anyway.â
You nodded, âYeah. Itâs been a rough couple of years.â The silence stretched between the two of you. Neither of you brave enough to break it with the horrors you experienced during the pandemic.
Finally, you cleared your throat, âDid you lose anyone?â You asked quietly.
He swallowed thickly, then nodded, âOur Chief of Emergency Medicine, Dr. Adamson. My mentor.â
He heard your sharp intake of breath next to him, âI heard about that. I didnât realize you were close. Iâm so sorry, Michael.â
Something about you using his first name undid him just a little and he had to focus very hard on his shoes and his steps to keep the emotion at bay.
âWhat about you?â He asked instead, âWho did you lose?â
Because you had to have lost someone. Almost everyone had. Especially if you worked in a hospital.
You sighed deeply, âOur charge nurse, Liz. She was like a mother to me. Sheâd been charge since I was a resident.â
âIs that why you left Presby?â
âI watched a lot of people I loved and deeply respected burn out and hospital admin did nothing about it. I know too many nurses and doctors both that decided to retire early or completely change careers.â You shrugged, âI donât know. It felt like I was watching my entire department crash and burn.â
He shook his head, âItâs so fucked.â
âThat weâre here and theyâre not?â Finally, he met your gaze. Your eyes were warm and impossibly open as you looked at him. If he looked closely enough, he could see his own grief mirrored back at him. He gave you a slight nod.Â
âYeah,â You sighed and looked up at the moon, âIt is fucked.â
After a few minutes of walking in comfortable silence, you stopped in front of an apartment complex, âWell, this is me. Thank you for walking me home, though it was completely unnecessary.â
Robby shrugged his shoulders up to his ears, âLet me feel useful, will you?â
You laughed, âAlright. See you tomorrow, then, Dr. Robby.â
He watched you go inside and as he walked away from the building he found himself thinking that he wished youâd call him Michael again.
***
It went like that for weeks. Robby walked you home after every shift, though you insisted it was unnecessary. You talked about everything and nothing. The shift, the hard patients, the ones you lost. To books and music and film. To childhood stories and first loves. It was finally starting to feel like you knew each other, rather than just a projection of each other ten years ago that lived in your respective brains.
But it wasnât long before he noticed the way you seemed to be shrinking every time he saw you. Your smile just a little less genuine, the spark in your eyes dimmed ever so slightly. And he was too afraid to ask you why.
Instead, Robby started showing up outside your building in the mornings, an iced coffee in hand for you.
A few weeks of watching the two of you walk into the ER together, all smiles and laughs, and Abbot couldnât keep his mouth shut anymore.
âSo,â He said as him and Robby were walking through the ER for handoffs, âYou gonna tell me about your girlfriend or am I gonna have to torture it out of you?â
Robby gave him a quizzical look, âWhat are you on about? Iâm not seeing anyone.â
âOh, okay, so youâre just buying iced coffees every morning for anyone these days?â
Robby laughed, âAre you accusing me of being a harlot because I occasionally buy my colleague a coffee?â
âSo sheâs not your girlfriend?â
âNo.â
âOkay. But youâre sleeping with her?â
Robby huffed and shook his head, âNo. Weâre just friends.â
Jack narrowed his eyes at Robby, âFriends who⊠Occasionally sleep together?â
âOkay,â Robby sighed, âWeâre done with this conversation.â
Robby walked away and Jack scoffed, turning to Dana, âIâm not crazy, right? Theyâre definitely sleeping together.â
Dana rolled her eyes, âNo, actually. She has a boyfriend.â
âRight,â Jack said emphatically, âAnd the boyfriend is Robby.â
Dana cracked a smirk, âNo, you idiot. Sheâs seeing someone outside the hospital.â
Jackâs eyes widened, âYouâre not kidding? With the way they look at each other?â Dana just continued smiling at him, âAlright, well, no one should be surprised if Robby walks in here one day with a black eye.â
âWhoâs punching Robby?â You asked, approaching the hub, âWhatâd he do now? Is it Mohan? Because, I gotta tell ya, Iâd pay to see that.â
Jack laughed, âNot Samira, your boââ
Dana smacked Jack lightly in the stomach, cutting him off, âYou eat anything today, kid? You look peaked.â
You frowned, âI just got here. Are you saying I look like shit?â
âThereâs donuts in the lounge, sweetheart.â
âWell,â You pushed yourself off the hub, unable to turn down a donut, regardless of Danaâs implications, âYeah, okay.â And disappeared towards the lounge.
Dana turned back to Jack, who was rubbing his stomach dramatically as if heâd actually been injured, âCould you not cause trouble on my shift? Go home.â
âFine, fine,â Jack backed away, headed to the lockers, âBut you know Iâm right.â
Dana watched Robby as he tracked you with his eyes into the staff lounge, âMan, could you at least try to be less obvious?â She said under her breath, shaking her head.
***
The shift hadnât been so terrible. You hadnât lost anyone today and had only gotten yelled at by one patient, and she had been high out of her mind so you didnât really count it. Still, you were in your head. Or, on your phone. Dean had been MIA for a couple of days now and you were supposed to meet him at his place after your shift, but he hadnât answered any of your texts or calls.
He had been distant lately. This wasnât the first time he had disappeared for days on end only to show up later and act like it wasnât a big deal. You were growing tired of it, of the games. You were forty years old now, you thought once you were this old the men would quit playing games. I mean, fuck, he had you, so what was the vanishing act about? What was he trying to prove?
Grabbing your things from your locker and placing your headphones over your ears, you pressed play on your music and began the walk back to your apartment. You turned the music up loud enough to drown out the thoughts that tornadoâd around in your head.
Loud enough that you didnât hear the man who came up behind you and squeezed your shoulder.
You screamed and jumped backâ Only to see it was Robby standing there, hands up as he backed away from you, concern all over his face.
âFuck,â You swore and bent over your knees, trying to catch your breath after tearing off your headphones.
âSorry,â Robby said softly, âSorry, I thought you heard me, Iâd been calling after you for a while.â
You straightened, âItâs okay.â
âYou, um,â He shoved his hands in the pockets of his hoodie, âYou left without me. You usually wait.â
âOhâIâSorryâIââ You sighed, frustrated with your stammering, âIâve been in my head all day, I justâŠâ You sighed, âSorry, I wasnât thinking.â
âHey,â He lowered his head to force you to meet his eyes, a gentle smile on his face, âItâs okay. Whatâs going on with you?â
You hesitated and then looked away from him, starting to walk again. He fell into step beside you, patiently waiting.
âWould it be weird to talk about my dating life with you?â
He shook his head, âNo. Why would it be weird?â
Right, because he wasnât attracted to you even a little bit. As he was always so quick to remind you.Â
You liked being friends with Robby, but working in the same ER you could no longer deny that you found him very sexy. Especially when he caught a rare diagnosis. Or he very calmly and gently explained a procedure to a resident while alarms were beeping around them and nurses were shouting out vitals.
Even just watching the way he rubbed hand sanitizer into his hands between patients had you imagining his hands in⊠very inappropriate situations.
And all the while you had to remember that he was not, and would never be, into you like that. And also, you had a boyfriend. A very sexy boyfriend in his own right, though my God, could he answer the fucking phone?
âNo reason,â You sighed, âI donât know, um, Deanâs just been a bit distant lately. He hasnât answered my calls or texts in a couple of days and weâre supposed to meet up today.â
He nodded, âAnd youâre thinkingâŠ?â
You shrugged, âI donât know. Heâll probably break up with me soon. Or just ghost me. Thatâs what they usually do.â
He frowned, âThis happens to you often?â
You smirked, âI know. Hard to believe with how charming and likable I am that I canât keep a man.â
Robby didnât laugh, though, just kept walking and silently staring ahead.Â
You let the silence stretch and fold between you, Robby clearly holding something back, but refusing to acknowledge it.
âYou got something to say?â You said, more casually than you felt.
Robby clenched his jaw and let another few moments of silence pass, âNo.â
You gave a short laugh, âOkay.â You said, stretching out the word, âI mean, you can say it, whatever it is. Weâre all friends here.â
He shook his head, âI just wonder why you keep choosing men who clearly donât respect you or even like you very much.â
His words stunned you to a stop. He kept walking for a few steps before realizing you stopped and he turned back to face you.
At the look of surprise, and even hurt on your face, he sighed, âLook, I⊠I didnât mean that to come out so harsh, I just donât understand it. I mean, it was clear even ten years ago from what you said about your ex husband that he didnât give you what you needed. And now youâre with this loser who canât even be bothered to answer a text.â He ran a hand over his face, âYou could probably have any guy you wanted in all of Pittsburgh, but instead you seem to purposely pick men that disappoint you.â
You scoffed and started walking again, âOkay, so itâs my fault that men treat me like shit?â
âReally?â He fell into step beside you again, âThatâs what youâre gonna take from what I said?â
âHow else am I supposed to take that?â
He scoffed and shook his head, âI just wish youâd see that you deserve better.â
You laughed and slowed to a stop, âRobby, Iâm fucking forty years old. Iâm divorced. Iâm obsessed with my work. Iâm an insufferable know-it-all, as you know. Iâm not easy to love. I donât exactly have men breaking down my door to be with me, alright? Dean is⊠Not perfect. But heâs all I have.â He stared at you with a look you couldnât quite place, âWhat?â
He shook his head and looked down at his feet, âNothing. Nothing. Iâm sorry for what I said⊠Itâs not my business.â
You bit your lip, fighting with the tears that seemed to threaten to overflow. And maybe Robby would think that the tears were just because he crossed a line, but it was more than that. There was something so fucking hurtful about this wonderful man in front of you, who had been so clear that he did not want you, making a whole speech about how you deserved better. Had he not ever once considered that good, decent men just did not love you and never had? Going all the way back to your father who would have done anything for a bottle of scotch but couldnât remember to pick you up from school?
âHey,â He said gently, stepping closer to you when he noticed your watery eyes, âIâm sorry, okay?â
He dropped his backpack to the ground and pulled you into his arms, âIâm sorry,â He repeated into your hair, arms tightening around you and anchoring you to his chest. He smelt of clean laundry and fresh pine deodorant. You closed your eyes and for a moment, allowed yourself to be comforted. To imagine what it would be like to be loved by someone like him.
Just for a moment.
***
You sat at your kitchen table, leg bouncing, fingernail gnawed between your teeth as you stared at your phone. It was nearly 9PM and still nothing from Dean.
This was ridiculous. You felt like a teenager waiting by the phone all night. You were just going to show up at his apartment, as planned. Maybe his phone was broken. Maybe a family emergency had come up.
But your earlier conversation with Robby was still playing in the back of your mind. Maybe you should just swear off men for good. Get a cat and dedicate yourself entirely to work.
Sighing, you stood and grabbed your car keys from the hook by the door.
***
You had knocked on his apartment door about ten minutes ago, giving up after a couple of tries. You leaned against the wall beside his door, trying yet again to call him, but it was sent to voicemail. You swore as you hung up, and as you did, the elevator at the end of the hall dinged and you heard the doors sliding open.
A feminine laugh floated down the hallway and you ignored it, still looking at your phone, until the laugh was replaced by silence. No walking. No voices.
You looked up and saw Dean, arms wrapped around a blonde that was easily at least a decade younger than you, probably more, mouth gaped open as he stared at you, âWhatâre you doing here?â He asked eventually.
What were you doing here? Chasing after a man that didnât want you, just like Robby said. The tears that burned your eyes were not tears of sadness, but anger and humiliation. You sighed and pushed yourself off the wall, âDonât call me. Iâll drop off your things next week.â
âBabyââ
âOh, and just a word of warning,â You turned to the blonde, âHeâs terrible at eating pussy.â You said, voice full of venom.Â
And then you ducked into the stairwell.
***
You had made it back to your apartment building and after turning the ignition off in your car, had begun uncontrollably sobbing, head resting against the steering wheel.
When the crying began to slow to just hiccups, you took out your phone and dialed Robby.
He answered on the second ring, because he was reliable. Unlike any of the men youâd ever been with.
âHey,â You sniffled, âYou were right about Dean. He doesnât like me⊠or respect me.â
You heard him breathe for a moment in the silence as he processed what you had said, âAre you crying?â He asked finally.
You laughed and wiped your nose on your sleeve, âYeah, I know, itâs fucking pathetic. Itâs just so fucking typical that he would cheat on me with some hot blonde in her twenties and just, like, think I would never find out! He didnât even try to hide it. Knew we had plans tonight, andâ Or, I donât know, maybe the plans were so insignificant to him he really forgot. I guess on top of being really goddamn annoying Iâm also extremely forgettable.â You lightly banged your forehead against the steering wheel.
âYouâre not annoying or forgettable.â He said gently, almost sweetly.
âYouâre just saying that because Iâm crying and you have to be nice to me.â
You thought you heard a quiet laugh, âI remembered you after two brief encounters ten years ago. Thought about you quite often after both run ins, in fact. I would say that makes you pretty memorable.â
Robby was many things, but you knew him to always, always be honest. And so his words sprung new tears from your eyes. What were you going to do when some perfect woman inevitably fell in love with him and he wouldnât answer calls like these late at night? When you were spiraling and a fucking mess?
âDonât think I didnât notice that you didnât dispute the fact that Iâm annoying.â
Another short laugh, âYou are passionate and assertive and intuitive and very funny. None of which I find annoying.â
Your chest felt warm at his praise, âYou said I was an insufferable know-it-all the first time we met.â
He sighed, âI was stupid then. Besides, I didnât know then that you used your teasing as a shield to keep the attention off yourself.âÂ
His revelation shocked you into silence and for a moment you just sat there, listening to his breathing. It was scary to be known and your instinct was to lash out, but you instead counted your breaths.
âAre you home?â He asked finally.
âIâm in my car, parked outside my complex.â
âOkay, Iâll be there in a few minutes.â
You frowned, âWhat? What do you mean?â
âI started walking over when I heard you crying. Sorry, is that not okay? Should I turn around?â
âNo,â You said quickly, too quickly, and you squeezed your eyes shut in embarrassment, âNo, I mean, you should come. I would⊠I would like it if you were here.â
âOkay,â He said softly, âIâm gonna hang up now.â
âOkay.â You murmured and waited until the line cut out before you lowered the phone from your ear.
True to his word, Robby strolled into the parking lot just a few minutes later. When he saw you get out of your car and lock it behind you, he quickened his pace until he was in front of you, pulling you into his arms. Much like he had earlier that same day.
And again, you allowed yourself to be coddled. Allowed it when he kept an arm around your shoulders as he led you into your apartment building. Ignored the flutter in your stomach when he pressed a kiss to your hair and told you you deserved better.
A couple of hours later, youâre on the couch, both pleasantly tipsy from the bottle of wine you had opened and the tears had long since dried. Your feet were in his lap and while the two of you talked, his hand had been unconsciously running up and down your leg.
He hadnât seemed to notice, but you had.Â
âDid you say anything to him? When you left?â
You shrugged, âI told him Iâd drop off his things.â Then you laughed, âI might have said something sort of awful to the girl though.â
He smirked, âWhatâd you say?â
You hesitated only a moment, flush building up your neck as you stared at the wine glass in your hand, âI told her that he was terrible at eating pussy.â
Thereâs a second of silence and then Robby bursts out laughing, âIs it true?â
You chuckled, still looking down at your wine glass, for some reason unable to look at him when talking about this, âYes. He never made me come.â
Robbyâs laughter died out and the hand on your leg stilled, âNever? Not even once?â You shook your head slowly, âHow long were you dating?â
âAbout six months.â
Robby let out a low whistle, âFuck.â
You nodded, âYouâd be shocked the number of grown men who are clueless when it comes to knowing their way aroundâŠâ You trailed off and cleared your throat, âAnyway, most men are pretty bad at it, in my experience, if they even like it.â
He exhaled heavily through his nose, âI just think maybe you have terrible taste in men.â
This again. You rolled your eyes, âAs I said, the pickings are slim. Beggars canât be choosers. Who would you have me sleep with, hm?â
When you looked up at him he was looking at you intensely. If you didnât know any better, you would say hungrily. But just as soon as you were starting to wonder what it was he was thinking, the expression was gone and he stood from the couch, tossing your legs to the side.
âI should probably get going. Itâs getting late.â
You tried not to seem too disappointed, âRight. Of course.â
You stood and led him to the door, âThank you for coming,â You said as you opened the door, âYou really didnât have to.â
âI know. I wanted to.â
You smiled and nodded, âThatâs what friends are for, right?â You said, self deprecatingly. You hadnât meant for it to sound sarcastic, but you knew he must have heard it anyway.
He nodded and looked anywhere but at you. He was acting very strange. âRight, yeah. Friends.âÂ
You frowned, âMichael,â You said finally and his eyes snapped to yours, âDid I⊠Did I do something to upset you?â
He shook his head and then his eyes fell to your mouth, âNo,â He said, gaze never straying from your lips, âIâm just tired.â He insisted.
âOkay,â You said slowly. He was drunk. Whatever was going on in his head right now meant nothing. Maybe he was staring at your mouth or maybe you had something in your teeth.
âStill friends?â You asked softly.
That joke. That stupid fucking decade old joke, still a shared line between the two of you, coiling ever tighter as time went on. And now it was fraying.
His eyes met yours and this time there was no mistaking the hunger in his gaze. You had mere moments to process the fact that Robby was looking at you with raw, unadulterated desire before his hands had grabbed your face and his mouth crashed into yours.
You gasped in surprise, but he was undeterred, his mouth hurriedly exploring yours as he moved you out of the threshold of the door and kicked it shut behind him. Beneath your initial shock, your body reacted. Robby was a man you had pined for on and off for more than a decade, and he was kissing you like you were a fresh stream and he hadnât had water for so long that he couldnât remember what it even tasted like. It took little more for the arousal to begin pooling in your stomach, for the ache between your legs to grow and expand.
But then, he licked into your mouth at the same time he lightly pushed you down on the couch and you could feel the way you dripped into your panties.
âTell me to stop and Iâll stop.â He said breathlessly as he crawled over you.
You could only shake your head, watching him above you like this. You were so full of want, you leaned up to kiss him againâ
But he pulled back.
âI need to hear you say it.â He said, his voice husky.
You swallowed, âDonât stop.â You breathed.
It was enough. His mouth latched back onto yours, tongue making dizzying strokes against your own, and you were embarrassed when a whine escaped you. You tried pulling him by the shirt, needing him closer. At the same time, you wiggled your hips down until you felt yourself press against the knee he had slotted between your legs, seeking pressure and friction for your throbbing center.
But Robby pulled away, âI donât think so.â He said, âThink I want to show you how a real man eats a meal.â
Were you dreaming? You felt like you were dreaming. Because there was no fucking way Michael Robinavitch was towering over you, obvious erection growing in his pants as he tugged your ankle to bring you to the edge of the couch. There was no goddamn way he was lowering himself to his knees in front of you, eyes never leaving yours.
But he was. And he tugged your shorts down over your knees. When you went to wiggle out of your panties, he stopped you, âNot yet.â
Slowly, he kissed and sucked his way from the side of your knee, up your inner thigh, until you were impatiently wriggling beneath his mouth. He said nothing, only wrapped an arm around one of your thighs to still you.
Finally, he turned his attention to your clothed pussy, running a finger down the damp spot at your center and sighing when your back arched.
âYouâre so easy to rile,â He murmured, âItâs a mystery he couldnât make you finish. Itâll probably only take me a couple minutes. Isnât that right, sweetheart?â
The pet name went straight to your head, blood pounding in your ears. Your only response was a breathy sigh as he began delicately kissing you over your underwear. He began to apply a bit more pressure and you could feel his hot breath through the flimsy fabric.
When you felt his tongue, still over that fucking fabric, you moaned loudly, frustrated, âMichael.â
You felt the smug fucker smile against you before his fingers slipped under the cloth at your hips, pulling down. You lifted your hips eagerly to allow him to pull them off you.
Mercifully, he didnât tease you any longer, his mouth was back on you immediately. If you were eager, he was desperate now, shoving his tongue deep in you and lapping up your juices. His hands held your thighs down so firmly when you squirmed, you thought heâd probably leave bruises.
He moved his mouth up to your swollen clit, humming against it as he pushed a finger inside you. You were so tight around his fingers, getting wetter and tighter as you approached your climax. With every flick of his tongue, every stroke of his finger, you felt yourself lose a little more control.
When he added a finger you thought maybe your brain was so overwhelmed with the pleasure it had forgotten to trigger your lungs to breathe. But a moment later, he sucked on your clit just hard enough to send you toppling over the edge and you were gasping for air.Â
When he felt your orgasm rip through you, he released your hips, finally allowing you to grind against his mouth. He moaned at the taste of you while you tugged him by the hair closer to you, impossibly closer.
When it was over, he pulled away from you, rising up to kiss your mouth, the taste of you still on his tongue. He kissed his way up your jawline to your ear.
âHow was that?â He murmured against the shell of your ear.
You were still seeing stars from the intensity of your orgasm, âHow do you think?â You gasped.
You felt him laugh against your neck and then his body pulled away from yours. You mourned the loss immediately, but clenched your fists at your sides to stop yourself from reaching for him.
âCould I use your bathroom to clean up?â He asked.
You frowned and looked to his pants, still clearly tented from his erection, âItâs at the end of the hall, but let meââ
When you reached out to palm him over his pants, he jerked away. Rejection coursed through your veins and instantly, you knew you were flushed with embarrassment.Â
âItâs okay,â He said and smiled at you, but it seemed strained, âI just wanted to make you feel good. Iâll be right back.â
He turned and walked towards the bathroom without waiting for your reply.Â
You were still half naked on the couch, feeling confused and hurt as the high of your orgasm left you. What kind of guy made you come like that on the first try and then didnât want you to touch his cock? What sort of fucked up point had he been trying to make?
***
Robby splashed water on his face, washing the remnants of you from his mouth and beard, and then looked at himself in the mirror.
Oh, youâve done it now, man. He thought, Youâve absolutely fucked it.
Heâd ruined everything. One brief lapse of self control and their entire friendship was now set to implode.Â
But you had looked so goddamn sad on that couch and when he heard that loser not only had cheated on you, but couldnât even make you come, it had flipped some primal, animalistic switch in his brain.
Until all he could think about was you coming undone under his mouth while you moaned his name.Â
Still friends? You had asked at the door and he couldnât stop himself. He couldnât say the practiced words and finish the damn joke like he always did. Friends didnât wonder what the otherâs pussy tasted like or what they sounded like when they came.
What was an orgasm between friends? Maybe he could still salvage it. Maybe they could just pretend it never happened.Â
He wasnât prepared to lose you, not when you had just showed up at PTMC after he had spent years thinking about you. Wondering how you were doing. If you were still here or if you had moved away. If someone was finally loving you how you deserved.
The two of you were drunk. It hadnât meant anything. You would regret it in the morning and he would graciously act like he didnât know what you were talking about. Heâd give you a few days of space and then heâd show up again with an iced coffee and walk you to the hospital. And everything would go back to normal.
It had to. He wouldnât accept anything else.
***
Robby had left in a rush that night after he came out of the bathroom, giving you a quick hug and a kiss on the forehead as he did.
You were left feeling confused and hurt, that he had rushed out like that after the way he kissed you and touched you. Tasted you like you were a fine wine to be savored. Then turned around and acted like nothing happened. Like he had just done you a favor.
Your thumb hovered over his contact on your phone for a couple days after. You both had four days in a row off of work, a rare blessing. You typed and deleted many texts. And then there was a knock at your door.
Fuck, was he here? Maybe to apologize, to explain why he ran out like that. He was scared, he wanted you, he was in love with you. You felt like a lovesick teen for hoping.Â
More likely, he would say it was a mistake and it wouldnât happen again. And you would accept it even if it broke your heart because you had no other choice. You could either have this much of him or none at all.
But when you opened the door, it wasnât Robby standing in the hallway with flowers and coffee.Â
It wasâ
âDean?â
***
Robby was pacing outside your apartment building with your iced coffee in hand. It had been four days since he last saw you. Four days of replaying that night in his head, getting off to the thought of how you felt and tasted. The way you sounded so desperate for him when you moaned his name.
But that was behind him now, he could forget about it if it meant keeping your friendship.
He froze when he heard your building door open and turned to lookâ It was you.Â
You hadnât noticed him yet, staring at your phone and headphones over your ears. He watched as your lips parted slightly in concentration, tongue darting out to wet them.
He swallowed and averted his eyes. It turned out it wouldnât be so easy to pretend like nothing had happened.Â
Heâd keep trying though.
Finally, you looked up and you gave him a confused look as you pushed your headphones off, âHi,â You said slowly.
He smiled and held out your coffee. Still frowning, you took it, âWhat are you doing here?â You asked softly as the two of you began the walk to the hospital.
âWhat do you mean?â He asked, staring ahead. He could feel your eyes burning holes into the side of his face, but he kept his focus ahead of him. It was all easier if he just didnât look at you. âWe do this every morning.â
âRightâŠâ You said slowly and then scoffed when he didnât say anything further, âOkay. Fine.â
âWhat do you mean, fine?â
âI mean if you want to act like everythingâs fine, like you didnât get me off on my couch a few nights ago, then okay. Iâll do the same.â
He inhaled deeply through his nose and kept looking ahead, âOkay. Great.â He could hear the irritation in your voice, but he ignored it, âHow was the rest of your time off?â
He could feel you staring at him again, and then he thought he noticed you shake your head in his peripheral.
âIt was fine.â You said finally, then you cleared your throat, âActually, Dean showed up with flowers a couple of days ago. Said it was a mistake and begged me to take him back.â
Robby gave a short laugh, âWouldâve paid to see the look on his face when you told him to fuck off.â
You didnât laugh with him. Didnât say anything at all, in fact, and he felt his stomach twist with dread, âYou did tell him to fuck off, didnât you?â He asked quietly.
Still, you said nothing. Finally, he turned to look at you, but you were staring intently ahead. The tips of your ears red with what he assumed was embarrassment. Perhaps shame.
He scoffed, âYouâve gotta be fucking kidding me.â
âThe last thing I need right now is you on your high horseââ
âDo you have no goddamn self respect, is that it?â He spat, voice rising, âYou chase after men who hate you because you hate yourself?â
You stopped walking then, your whole face flushed with either anger or embarrassment, maybe both.Â
âYou have no fucking right to talk about the men Iâve been with when you behaved just like all the rest the other night!â
âMe?â He ran a hand through his hair in frustration, âWhat are you even talking about?â
âYou fucking ran out of my apartment, leaving me half fucked, and acted like it was no big deal. Donât call. Donât text. Then you show up at my apartment with a fucking coffee like nothing happened! Like it meant nothing!â Tears of frustration pricked your eyes, âAt least with Dean I know what Iâm getting, with you⊠itâs⊠itâs hot and cold and I never know what the fuck youâre thinking or what you wantââ
âI want to be friends.â He said quickly, âI want to be your friend, I want you to be happy.â
You nodded and looked up towards the trees, willing the tears back into your eyes, âRight. Friends. Friends donât lead each other on.â You said, lip curled, and then you continued your walk to the hospital.
He stared after you, stunned, and then jogged to catch up to you, âI told you from the beginning you werenât my typeââ
You were drowning. It would have been kinder for him to have tied a weight to your foot and shoved you in the river.
You turned and placed your empty hand on his chest and shoved, âFuck. You.â He was much larger than you and you had a coffee in your other hand so he remained sturdy, though he fell back a step. Tears were streaming down your cheeks now, âWeâre not fucking friends. Weâre not anything.â You shoved the iced coffee back into his hand, âJust leave me alone, okay?â
Robby stared after you as you stormed off, jaw clenched and melted iced coffee in his hand.
***
Jack and Dana watched as you stormed into the ER, face red and splotchy. Your cheeks shined with tears under the fluorescent glow of the lights above. Robby strode in only moments later, a melted iced coffee in his hand that he tossed in the trash by the entrance as he walked over to the hub.
You were rushing around after stopping at the lockers, draping a stethoscope around your neck as you ambled right into Robbyâs path, causing the both of you to stop short to avoid a collision. Jack and Dana watched as the two of you stared each other down for a few seconds, tension palpable, before you stormed off again. Robby stared after you for a moment before running a hand down his face.
Jack and Dana exchanged a look before Jack stepped to Robby and clapped a hand on his back, âHey man, why donât we get some air?â
Robby sighed, âI just got here, Jack.â
âAnd yet you already look like youâve been through the ringer, so humor me.â He said and steered the other man by the shoulders to the stairs.
Once on the roof, Robby leaned over the railing and Jack joined him, his eyes roving over Robby, âWhat happened?â
Robby sighed, âWhat are you talking about?â
âCome on, man, whatâs going on with you and Y/N? You ran after her at the end of the last shift. Now you walk in separately and if looks could kill, my friend, youâd be six feet under right now.â
He shrugged, âI fucked up. Crossed a line I shouldnât have. I hurt her without meaning to. Now she wants nothing to do with me.â He looked at Jack and smirked, âThatâs it.â
âSo whatâre you gonna do about it?â Jack asked, turning his attention back to the Pittsburgh skyline.
He laughed, âNothing. She told me to leave her alone, so that's what Iâll do.â
Jack shook his head, âI donât buy it.â Robby looked at him incredulously. âThe two of you have been drawn to each other like magnets over the last, what, ten years? And youâre just gonna let her walk away?â
Robby smirked, âI already told you, itâs not like that with her. Weâre just friends.â
âWhat line did you cross, then, huh?â Robby didnât answer, jaw clenched as he avoided Jackâs stare, âIâve seen the way you look at her, man,â Jack shook his head, âItâs not friendly.â
Robby was terrified that Jack may be right. That all this time he had been convincing himself you were just a friend, he had been falling for you instead. He knew the way the staff talked, not just Jack. Again and again, he dismissed them as rumors, a bit of lightness to keep everyoneâs head above water. But what if there had been truth to it?
He had been so scared of losing your friendship he didnât stop to think that the reason he was so scared was because maybe he cared for you more than just as a friend.
And if that was true, he had wasted so much time and energy fighting against it only to lose the war anyway.
Robby rubbed at his beard and shook his head, âWell, it really doesnât matter because I fucked it, so.â He pushed himself off the railing and started walking towards the door that led back to the Pitt, âI should get back down there. Go home.â
Alone on the roof, Jack heaved a sigh, âI should really be getting paid extra for these free therapy sessions.â He murmured to himself before he walked back to the door.
***
For weeks, Robby tortured himself by reliving your last conversation in his head. The realization that you were hurting and he was the reason, it made him feel sick at times. In addition to that, after his conversation with Jack on the roof, he realized too late that he was in love with you. He thought about telling you many times, but it was so clear you wanted nothing to do with him, he thought it would probably just hurt you more.
The one time he had followed you out of the ER at the end of the shift intent on finally telling you, he had walked out to see your arms twined around Deanâs neck, your mouth smiling into his. His stomach had twisted and he could hear the blood pumping in his ears. It was wrong, it felt all wrong seeing you wrapped around him like that. He knew he had fucked up his chance with you, but it hurt worse that his fuck up had pushed you back into Deanâs arms.
 He did his best to stay out of your way, but it was difficult. Since you were an attending yourself, he didnât need to be involved in all of your cases, but there were times when you begrudgingly asked for a consult. Or a really rough trauma came in and it was all hands on deck.
It was uncomfortable for everyone on those cases. The unresolved tension between you two acted like a whirlpool, extending out and dragging unwilling participants to the center. You would bicker over treatment plans or silently glare at each other over patients.
Once, when he had walked in to you performing a thoracostomy with a warm water lavage, he thought he might fire you from how frustrated he was.
âWhat the fuck are you doing?â
âHypothermic drowning victim, troponin levels suggested there was a cardiac event, Iâm clearing the clots and rewarming with warm saline.â You said calmly without looking up from the patient.
âDid you consult cardio?â
âThere wasnât time.â
âYou could have at least fucking called me.â
You looked up at that, and then back down, âHeâs back to sinus and at normal temp.â You said and began to deglove, âIâm not going to apologize for saving a patient.â
He followed after you as you walked back to central, âYou and I both know youâre supposed to call in your chief attending for approval whenever you want to do some crazy procedure that is outside the standard of careââ
âIt wasnât outside of the standardââ
âYouâre not a fucking cardio attending,â He said, louder than he meant to. Others turned to stare at the two of you, âLook,â He said, lowering his voice, âYou can hate me all you like, but we have to work together when weâre here. And that means,â You had rolled your eyes here and he had to move his head to force eye contact with you, âThat you consult me before you do anything that is considered outside the norm. Got it?â
You sighed, âLoud and clear, boss. Can I go now?â
He stared at you a moment longer and his eyes fell to your mouth. He hadnât meant to stare, to recall the way your mouth felt against his or how soft and pliant your lower lip was when he pulled at it with his teeth, but thatâs what he found himself doing.
And you noticed. He watched as your frown deepened and you turned, walking away before he could say anything else.
âFuck,â He murmured to himself and laced his hands behind his neck.Â
âYou okay, Cap?â Dana asked as Robby trudged over to the hub, leaning over on his forearms.
âJust peachy.â He sighed.
âYou coming out tonight? Itâs Princessâs birthday. Everyoneâs going to Montereyâs.â
âEveryone?â
Dana smirked knowingly, âYes, I heard sheâll be there too.â
He shook his head slowly, âThen, no. I will not be going.â
She sighed, âThe two of you cannot keep going like this. If for no other reason than itâs starting to affect your work. Time to put your big boy pants on and face⊠whatever the fuck is going on with you.â
âWhat do you want me to do, huh? She wants nothing to do with me. Should I lock us in a room together and force her to talk to me?â
Dana shrugged, âMaybe, if you think thatâll work.â Robby shook his head and looked away, âCome out tonight.â Dana said, âThereâs nothing a drink or two canât fix.â
***
It was 8:30 when you walked into Monterey's, having gone home to change. You hated going out in scrubs, it felt wrong somehow.
You spotted Robby almost immediately where he stood near Dana, but pretended you hadnât noticed him as you headed to the bar.Â
It didnât seem to matter though, because he was next to you two minutes later as you waited for the bartender to return with your drink.
âCould we talk?â He asked.
Your eyes flitted up to his and you found yourself momentarily distracted by how beautiful he was. The freckles, the crinkles at his eyes. You had had to work very hard not to notice the last few weeks.Â
You turned back to the bar, âIâm waiting for my drink.â
âI can wait.â He said immediately.
You drummed your fingers against the bar top, âIf this is about earlierââ
âItâs not about work.â
You swallowed, âWell, what, then?â
He didnât say anything, eyes following the bartender as he made your drink. Once the drink was in your hand, he began walking, gesturing for you to follow as he led you outside.
It was quiet out here. The Sun just barely peeking over the skyline, a faint orange glow illuminating everything. You felt claustrophobic as he led you down an alley on the side of the building. It had felt like forever since the last time youâd been alone together.
He came to a stop and turned to you, clearing his throat, ïżœïżœHow are you?â He asked softly.
You sighed, âRobby, I donâtâThis is unnecessaryââ
âLook, I know I fucked up. I think about it every day. But I canâtââ
âSo you regret it then? What we did?â Your voice broke as you said it. There were so many layers to how hurt you still felt after everything with Robby. It was difficult to untangle most of the time, so you had just buried it. But standing here with him so close, you could feel it all clawing to the surface, demanding your attention.
âNo.â He said firmly, âNo, I donât. I regret the way I handled it.â
You took a sip of your drink and looked away from him, âI see. So you just wish you had maybe let me down easier, then? Is that it?â
He closed his eyes and pinched the bridge of his nose, âThis isnât coming out right. Iâm so fucking bad at this.â
You scoffed, âIâm just gonna go back inside, okay? Weâre good, I promise, I will make sure to consult youââ
âI love you.â He blurted out, and you froze. âIâm in love with you. Iâve probably loved you a little bit from the moment I met you.â
For a second you just stared at him, the only sound was the sound of each otherâs breathing.Â
Then, your eyes watered and you inhaled a shaky breath, âDonât do this.â It came out breathless, a desperate plea, âYou donât mean that.â
âYes, I do,â He reached out, grabbing your free hand to keep you from running.
You were shaking your head, turning to leave, then turning back when his hand tightened around yours, âYouâre just lonely, you donât want me.â
He tugged you by the hand until you were just inches from him, âI do,â He said nodding, âI love you. And I can say it as many times as you need me to to believe it.â
You swallowed, âYou said just a few weeks ago that I wasnât your type and youâve been saying it for ten years.â
He shook his head, eyes roving over your face until they settled on your mouth, âWe were both there the night I kissed you. Do you really believe that?â
Not really, no. You could still feel the urgency of his tongue in your mouth. You could still hear his reverent sighs at the sight of you naked. Still, he had pushed you away, left you alone and rejected.
Your chin wobbled, âMichael.â
His name came out in a broken plea. You werenât sure what exactly you were begging for. For him not to mean it or for him to mean it.Â
He laced his free hand through the hair at the back of your neck, âDonât be scared, okay? Iâve got you this time. I promise. I was stupid, I was so afraid of losing you as a friend I ignored the way I really felt.â
You rested your forehead against his, closing your eyes. You wanted to believe him, but you were afraid, too. Afraid heâd change his mind, like all the rest. Leave you more broken than when he found you.Â
âI love you,â He whispered and pulled back to kiss your forehead, âI love you,â He repeated, pressing a kiss to your cheek. And he went on like that, kissing your face all over as he repeated those three words and you felt like your chest was being cracked open. If he reached in to pull your heart out, to hold it, still beating in his hand, youâd probably let him take it. Youâd let him do anything he wanted if you could just stay in this moment.
Until you couldnât take it anymore and you caught his mouth with yours. He pushed you into the brick wall behind you, careful to place his hand between your head and the hard stone. The single act of tenderness had tears springing to your eyes again and you felt so fucking pathetic that you kissed him harder, desperate to drown out the feeling.
He moaned when you pulled gently at his lip with your teeth and the sound had the muscles coiling low in your belly, heat accumulating with every new taste and touch and sound.
Mouth still on yours, he frantically unbuttoned your jeans and shoved his hand down between your legs. You whimpered when he dipped a finger just barely into your entrance, his sigh in your ear sounded like relief. Like he had been dying to touch you like this for weeks and weeks, and finally he was saved.
When he pushed his finger fully inside you, you cried out and he covered your mouth with his own to stifle it.
âRobby,â You sighed as he stroked your walls, thumb coming up to rub dizzying circles around your clit, âWe⊠We shouldnât⊠I havenâtâIâm still with Deââ
âI know you were not about to say another manâs name when I'm knuckle deep inside you, right, sweetheart? You wouldnât do that, would you?â He added a finger and you wouldâve folded if it werenât for his body pressed to yours, keeping you steady, âYou feel so fucking good wrapped around my fingers like this. You gonna come nice and quiet in my hand so no one hears you?â
God, no one else had this effect on you. No one else could talk to you like this, make you soft and malleable like warm putty. It drove you insane. He drove you to the fucking brink and you knew you would still come back and beg for more. He made you insatiable.
When you didnât immediately answer him, his hand stilled and you whined, shimmying your hips against his hand.
âYou can be quiet, canât you?â He dragged his teeth down the column of your throat, sending chills down your spine.
âYes.â You sighed, âWhatever you want.â
You felt his smirk against your skin and his fingers started stroking you again. You had to stifle the moans that fought to climb up your throat as he pushed you closer and closer to climax.
âThere you go,â He said, pressing tender kisses to the side of your face, âSo close, I can feel you. Be a good girl and come for me, yeah?â
His praise sent shockwaves through your body and to quiet yourself and prevent yourself from crying out, you bit down on his shoulder.
âDid so good for me,â He murmured, pulling his hand out and re-buttoning your jeans for you as you fought the daze of your orgasm. He kissed your head and grabbed your hand, âCome on, follow me.â
âWhere are we going?â
âTo my place.â
âOhâ What about Princess?â
âSheâll forgive us once the rumors spread about why we left together.â
You fought the smirk on your face, âDean is expecting me laterââ
Robby turned to look at you, âFuck Dean, alright? Let him wait up for you and wonder where you are for once. Itâs more than that jackass deserves.â He started tugging you by the hand again and you found you didnât want to argue.
You knew it was wrong, to punish Dean the way he had hurt you, but in truth, you didnât think heâd care much when you didnât turn up tonight. You wouldnât tell Robby this for fear heâd show up at Deanâs apartment intent on fist fighting him, but you knew heâd continued cheating on you the last few weeks.Â
It didnât hurt as much as it had the first time you found out. Probably because you had been hung up on Robby.Â
Youâd break it off with Dean tomorrow. Right now, you just wanted to let Robby have his way with you.
***
Finally seeing Robby naked for the first time felt as close to a religious experience as you thought you would ever experience. In his bed, you were kissing every freckle, every scar, every tattoo you could reach while your hand was between his legs, stroking his erection.
He looked wrecked and love drunk as you worked him. Your lower lip caught between your teeth as you learned what touches had him moaning, which had him gasping for air, and which had his eyes rolling all the way back in his head.Â
It wasnât long before he tore your hand off him and pinned it above your head, pushing his tip teasingly to your dripping core, âThatâs enough of that, I think.â He said, broken voice betraying just how close to the edge you had brought him.
Quickly, you watched as he ripped open a condom and pulled it onto himself. Wasting no time, he gripped your hips and dragged you underneath him before pushing himself inside you. The stretch had you gasping, but he bent his forehead to yours, kissed you through it as he pushed into you. Every thrust was slow and achingly tender. His eyes rarely left yours, only to occasionally bury his face into your neck.
Anytime you suggested a different position, he shot you down, âNo, no,â Heâd repeat, your legs locked around his hips, âJust like this,â Heâd pant, âWant you underneath me just like this.â
When he finished, you muffled his moans with your mouth, thrusting your hips up into his when the intensity of his orgasm had him unable to keep moving through the aftershocks.
Afterwards, you stared up at the ceiling fan, your head resting on his chest.
âI love you, by the way.â You murmured when you could feel yourself drifting into sleep, âDonât know if I ever said.â
He kissed your hair and dusted his fingers over your shoulder, âYou didnât have to.â
***
2024
It was cool and cloudy in San Diego that morning. You fiddled with the ring on your finger as you stood backstage at the annual American Academy of Emergency Medicine conference.Â
Michael stood behind you, hands rubbing reassuring circles into your shoulders, âYouâre gonna do so good, baby. Nothing to worry about.â
âIâm not worried, I could do this talk in my sleep,â You smirked, âIâm just thinking about the first time I saw you here, when you did your talk.â
He laughed behind you, âWell, it wasnât here.â
âYou know what I mean.â You said and covered one of his hands with yours.
âYeah,â He said, âIf I had known my future wife was in the audience I wouldâve picked a better shirt.â
Your grin spread across your face as you looked down at the engagement ring on your finger, âAnd I probably wouldnât have worn booty shorts to the airport, but hindsight is 20/20.â
He hummed and then your name was being announced, a brief intro given, and then Michael kissed you quickly before gently pushing you towards the stage.
Later, in your hotel room, the both of you were drunk and sprawled out on the bed. Your head rested on his stomach and he had an arm draped across your chest.
He picked up your left hand and inspected it, âI love seeing this on your finger. Probably shouldâve proposed the first time I brought you home.â
You smirked, but there was a nagging thought in the back of your head. One that had been there since he got down on one knee.
âWhatâs wrong?â Robby asked, even drunk he was ever perceptive of your mood changes.
âNothing.â You said quickly, âEverythingâs perfect.â
He let a moment of silence pass, twisting the ring on your finger between his thumb and forefinger, âYou know you can tell me anything, right? Nothingâs too scary or too much.â
You did know, but it didnât stop your brain from convincing you otherwise. Eventually you swallowed and lifted yourself onto your knees so you could turn to face him.
âDo you ever think about the rate of divorce among emergency medicine doctors?â
He frowned, âNot particularly, no. But I gather you do?â
âI justââ You sighed, âI love you, obviously, so much. But IâI wonder sometimes if⊠If getting married just invites the possibility of breaking this. And⊠And what we have is really good and I donâtââ
âHey,â He sat up, âSlow down.â He paused, âHow long have you been thinking about this?â
You sighed, âI donât know, since you proposed, probably?â
He raised his eyebrows, âRight, okay.â
You deflated, âYouâre mad.â
He shook his head, âNot mad. I just wish you wouldâve told me sooner.â
âIâm sorry.â You could feel your abandonment fears dusting themselves off in your head. You had never felt as secure as you had with Robby. You had felt loved and safe from day one. Your fears that he would leave again, he proved over and over were unfounded. No one had ever shown up for you like this. And that made the prospect of losing him even scarier.
âTell me more about it.â He said, âYour fears.â
You sighed, âIâItâs okay, we donât have to. I want to marry you, I do.â
âI donât doubt that, honey.â He said gently and wrapped his arms around you so he could pull you to his chest, âBut we should still talk it through.â
You swallowed, âIf the rate of divorce for ER doctors is so high, does the rate double when itâs two ER doctors instead of just one?â
Heâs quiet a moment as he mulled it over, âYou ever think that maybe an ER doctor marrying another ER doctor lowers the rate of divorce, rather than increasing it?â
âHow do you figure that?â
âBoth people understand the crazy schedule and the difficulties of the job. And if youâre like us and work in the same ER, you see each other day in and day out, even with that crazy schedule. Being colleagues probably increases healthy communication and conflict resolution outside the ER.â
Already, you felt soothed, âI didnât think about it like that.â
âWell I have even more compelling evidence for you.â
You smirked, âWhatâs that?â
âNone of those ER doctors that got divorced were married to me.â
You laughed and turned in his arms so you could kiss him, âI love you.âÂ
After a moment, you pulled away from him slightly, gears turning in your head, âHow long of a drive is it to Las Vegas?â
Robby stared at you blankly until his brain began to catch up, âYouâre serious?â He asked, his voice breathless.
You nodded, âI want to be your wife. Right now.â
His laugh was high and unbelieving as he ran a hand through his hair, âWhat about our friends and familyâ?â
âWe can have a real wedding. Maybe a year from now, we do the whole thing right, renew our vows. But I donât want to wait that long to be yours.â
He smiled, âYouâre already mine.â
You raised your eyebrows, âNot legally. Besides, donât you think thereâs something really romantic about getting married in secret, just the two of us?â
After a moment of searching your face, probably trying to make sure this wasnât some sort of mental break, he nodded, âOkay.â He laughed and shook his head, âLetâs get married.â
***
âThe only car we have left is a manual.â The woman running the rental counter had bleached waves and thick black eyeliner. She chewed gum as she spoke, âCan either of you drive a manual?â
âSorry,â Robby said, grin already spreading across his face as he squeezed your hand, âThereâs no automatics left, is that⊠Did I hear you correctly? Only a manual?â
The woman narrowed her eyes at Robby. To her, he probably seemed insane, âLook, can you drive a manual or not?â
He looked back at you, then, smiling and shaking his head, âYeah, we can both drive stick.â
The two of you had walked out of the rental store, giggling and swinging your hands between each other like children.Â
It was a five hour drive, so you bought donuts and coffees. Once in the car, you propped your feet up on the dash and stared over at Robby, who was reacquainting himself with a manual.
âYou sure you remember how to drive stick?â You asked, mouth half full of donut.
He glared over at you, but couldnât resist breaking into a smile anyway, âItâs like riding a bike.â
Placing his sunglasses on the bridge of his nose, he started the car and began backing out of the parking lot. As he peeled out and fiddled with the radio, you rolled the windows down and were surprised when tears pricked your eyes when you looked back over at him.
You thought about all the heartbreak and lonely nights the last eleven years. The times you thought youâd be alone forever, or worse, stuck in a relationship with someone who didnât want you. You mulled over all the nights you had allowed yourself to dream about that doctor you met in Florida. A fifteen hour drive that seemed to have rearranged all the planets and constellations of your life.Â
He had been your north star over the last decade, always seeming to guide you back to where you were supposed to be. Which was here. In this car. Windows down as you sang along to the radio. His hand held yours as it rested on top of the gear shift. Taking you to your wedding. Taking you home.
473 notes
·
View notes
Text
rb to give it up for laura hall and linda taylor

22K notes
·
View notes
Text
This series is super cute!
Coffee Snob (pt 3)
Summary: Robby removes readers stitches, she brings food to the Pitt as a thank you much to his coworkers glee
Pairing: Michael âRobbyâ Robinavitch x Reader
Word Count: 3.7k
Warnings: Nothing really just another super fluffy one as things start to get more serious!
Authorâs Note: I had absolutely no idea this would grow to be this many parts when I wrote the first one but I am so over the moon with the reception Iâve gotten from the first two parts so I wrote this one too! Iâm having so much fun with these two and Iâm planning already one more part I think so look out for that! As always please please please let me know what you think! I incessantly reread every comment and reblog with cute tags or extra words theyâre my favorite things seriously you all are the best!
Part 1 Part 2
Phone, wallet, keys, phone, wallet, keys.
This was the mantra that resonated through your head as you paced back and forth through your apartment, grabbing anything you could think of to throw into your bag.
Chapstick, hair tie, charger, it all got thrown in.
A book even for while you were waiting, though this had to be a new one since you discovered Robby was keeping the one you were currently reading hostage in his apartment prompting you to now possess a âRobbyâs apartmentâ book and a âyour apartmentâ book. A needlessly complicated system that somehow still worked.
You patted down your pockets making sure that at the very least the essentials were still on you.
Phone, wallet, keys.
With one last look you slipped on your shoes.
Phone, wallet, keys.
Grabbing the door handle you gave the room one last look before turning it.
Phone, wallet, keys
Phone- Robby?
Swinging open your apartment door you came face to face with the familiar physician, warm brown eyes blown open in surprise, fist slightly raised as if to knock on your door.
For a brief moment all the two of you could do was simply stare at one another, the shock starting to ware off as he slowly dropped his arm and the corner of your lips quirked up in a small smile âhey neighborâ
âHeyâ he answered softly, another silent beat passing before his eyes snapped to the bag on your shoulder, and the shoes on your feet âheaded out?â
âYeahâ you nodded, waving your arm in the air in front of you âfinally time to get these outâ
He smiled back at that, nodding his head softly âweâre on the same page then, I was just coming to get youâ
You furrowed your brow slightly at that, tilting your head to one side in a silent question, had he planned to come walk with you to the clinic?
Seeming to misunderstand your question he shoved his hands into his pockets as he spoke and gestured vaguely down the hall with his head âYeah I grabbed a removal kit before I left today, come on Iâll get it set upâ
Only then did his meaning hit you. He thought you were coming to get him to remove them. âOh no thatâs okay Iâm on my way to urgent careâ
His smile dropped instantly, eyes scanning over you briefly âwhy are you going to urgent care? Is everything okay?â
You chuckled softly at his concern, waving him off as you stepped into the hallway and shut your door behind you âyeah Iâm fine, just need to get them removed, no biggieâ
He seemed almost taken aback by your answer, a frown growing on his face as he brought his arms up to cross over his chest âI can take them out for youâ
âArenât you supposed to be back on shift in a few hoursâ You asked with a laugh, the statement being a little hyperbolic but the sentiment behind it all the same âgo rest Iâll be fine at urgent careâ
His frown only deepened at that, arms tightening in front of him âso youâre just going to let anyone go at you with a blade?â
âGo at me with a bladeâ you couldnât help but laugh at his phrasing, smile only dimming slightly as his serious façade still didnât crack âthatâs a bit dramatic donât you think? Besides Iâm fairly certain they all have medical degreesâ
âAnd you know who else does?â He countered quickly âme. They guy right down the hall. Who doesnât have a wait time and will not charge youâ
âWhoâs off the clockâ You could feel yourself start to get defensive under his disapproving gaze, not realizing how serious he would take this, desperate to make him understand where you were coming from âthis stuff is trivial I just didnât want to bother you with it but if you donât mind-â
âOf course I donât mindâ he cut you off, his tone almost disbelieving as if the statement itself were absurd âI told you to bother me with things like thisâ
âYou told me to bother you next time I was at the Pittâ Again you were on the defensive âthen it was about bothering you with work things while you were at work. Youâre off the clock now I donât want to make you do more work stuff when you donât have toâ
An almost scoff escaped him but the tension held in his stance seemed to fade slightly, brows no longer furrowed quite so severely in frustration âI meant bother me when youâre hurt. Unless it warrants a 911 call come to meâ he paused briefly, almost seeming to contemplate his next words before he spoke âI want you to come to meâ
You eyed him almost skeptically, watching his face intently, looking for any hint of mistruth âI just feel bad making you work in your free timeâ
With a dramatic groan he ran a hand through his hair at your words, giving the short strands a quick ruffle before speaking again âyou donât let me take out those stitches and from now on I wonât eat anything you makeâ
A surprised laugh escaped you at that, your own arms coming to cross over your chest as you mirrored Robbyâs posture âwhat?â
He grinned maliciously at that, nodding slightly as he spoke âI just feel bad making you work in your free timeâ
You rolled your eyes as your words were thrown back at you ânow youâre just being ridiculousâ
âCorrectâ he answered immediately starting to grow smug âthis line of logic is ridiculousâ
âItâs differentâ you shot back âI like cooking for youâ
He only raised a brow in response, shooting you a pointed look, practically daring you to connect the dots yourself âyouâre telling me you enjoy removing stitches in your free timeâ
He rolled his eyes at that, debating something in his head for a second before speaking, his voice slightly gruffer than before âI like making sure youâre okay in my free timeâ
You froze on the spot at his words, chest aching slightly as you felt your face start to flush, something Robby seemed to notice as his tone grew smug once more.
âsomething you did for me just a few days ago when I was sickâ
You narrowed your eyes back at him in response, Robbyâs expression telling you he knew he had backed you into a corner with that one âIâm making you dinner to make up for itâ
He only grinned at that, taking a small step back to allow you room to continue down the hall towards his apartment âyou promise?â
Mostly feigning a look of frustration you slipped past him towards his door with a small huff âsmug doesnât suit you Robinavitchâ
Robby only laughed in response.
-
This was ridiculous you werenât nervous to meet Robbyâs friends.
That was something people who were dating would do. Something people who were invested would do. Certainly not something a simple neighbor would do.
Maybe if you just thought of them as coworkers that would help.
For better or for worse you couldnât really dwell on your feelings about the situation, the bags your arms were weighed down with kept you from being able to debate actually going into the hospital for too long.
So fueled more by a desire to rest your aching muscles than anything else you forced your way to the ER of PTMH for the second time in about a week, already regretting the move as a familiar wave of bodies greeted you upon entry.
Before you could talk yourself out of it you made your way to the front desk, bypassing the line of waiting people and flagging one of the nurses who was off to the side doing paperwork.
âYouâre going to have to wait in lineâ she barely spared you a glance as her pen flew across the page.
âNo Iâm here to see Dr. Michael Robinavitchâ You tried to put as much confidence into your voice as you had when you had practiced this interaction earlier.
The move, however, did not have the desired effect as still the nurseâs gaze only came up to quickly sweep you for injuries before returning to her paperwork âAs I said youâre going to have to wait your turn in line, a doctor will be by to see you shortlyâ
âNo I-â you tried to wrack your brain for a way to properly convey that you werenât a patient, coming up mostly blank leaving you with only one option, one that left you with a too-high-to-be-comfortable chance of completely embarrassing yourself in the process âIâm blue tumbler girl?â
The woman behind the desk froze on the spot, pen hovering just over the surface of the paper as her wide eyes shot up to connect with yours. Your words even had the woman currently dealing with the line snapping to attention, the two woman sharing a silent glance at one another before gaping openly at you.
You tried hard not to squirm under their attention, knowing you were failing miserably in the process and instead deciding to steam-roll ahead âI just wanted to-â you started to lift the bags in your arm to show them when you were cut off by a loud buzz from the door behind you.
âYou can go ahead through that door weâll let him know youâre hereâ one of them directed you with a polite smile.
âNo thatâs okay you donât have to-â you tried to protest but the two were already huddled together from behind their desk, rapid fire whispers bouncing back and forth between the two women, both of whom sported expressions you knew would spell trouble for Robby later.
Relieved to at least have their attention off of you, you pushed your way through the door and walked through the hallways back to where you remembered the nurses station to be, coming face to face with the exact person you had been hoping to see.
Danaâs face lit up with a warm smile the minute her eyes connected with yours, dismissing the woman she was talking to quickly and making her way across the room to you, not hesitating to grab one of the heavy bags you were clearly struggling with as she engulfed you in a one-armed hug âhey kid what brings you to the Pitt?â
âDanaâ you sighed in relief as you hugged her back âI just wanted to thank you guys for taking care of me last week. I brought food if thatâs okay?â
âOf course thatâs okayâ she waved off your concern without a thought, a steady hand placed on your back to lead you to one of the side rooms as she did so âcome on Iâll show you to the break roomâ
âgood I just wasnât sure if I would just be in the way or if no one would end up wanting itâ you gladly followed her lead into the small room, placing the bag you held onto the table.
âplease with these animals itâll be gone in twenty minutesâ she shook you off again, working to start removing trays from the bags and set them out for easy access âplus Jiannaâs? Better be careful or youâll spoil them, this couldnât have been cheapâ
âahhh I-â you trailed off a bit, suddenly bashful beneath the older womanâs gaze as you helped her âI head chef there so you could say they sort of owe meâ
She whistled loudly at that making you chuckle and squirm slightly as she gave you an appraising once over. Eager to turn the attention elsewhere you reached into the bag and plucked one of the drinks from the carrier within.
âSpeaking of I came straight from work so no pour over coffee for you today but we do have a kick-ass espresso machine there soâŠlatte?â
Her eyes gleamed as she eagerly took the to-go cup from you and popped the top off, sticking her nose close to the surface and humming softly as she took a deep sniff of its contents. A quick sip later and she was putting the lid back on and bringing up a hand to your cheek, cradling your face in it as she appraised you with a lopsided smirk âI think Iâll keep youâ
You laughed through the breath you hadnât realized you had been holding as you swatted her hand away âthereâs one in there for Javadi too if she wants it. Tell her I said thank you again when you see herâ
âYou got it kidâ she winked at you as she took a deep sip of her drink, heading back out towards the door âIâll go find Robby and let him know youâre hereâ
âOh no you donât have toâ again you were stuck trying to persuade people not to bother Robby during his shift.
And again you were being completely ignored for it ânah kid youâre not slipping away from this oneâ
âPlease I donât want to be a bother I really just came by to drop off some foodâ
âThink of it as helping me out thenâ she countered, resting one hip on the door as she spoke âI donât want to have to deal with a grumpy Dr.Robby if he knew youâd been here and I hadnât told himâ
You deflated slightly at the argument, knowing you werenât going to win this one, desperately trying not to put too much weight into her words âYeah okay Iâll be hereâ
âThatâs the spiritâ she chuckled back at you as she pushed the door open and disappeared through it.
You were alone for barely two minutes before the door to the room was harshly pushed open and a familiar looking doctor was storming in.
âHey whatâs wrong are you okay?â Robby flew into the room in a rush, barely giving you time to breathe before he was reaching for your arm and bringing the injury up to his eyes to examine it âwas it the cut? Did something happen?â
You were laughing before you could think to form proper words, pulling your arm from the manâs grasp without a second thought âRobby you literally took the stitches out for me last night what couldâve possibly happened in the hours itâs been since thenâ
âA lot for the recordâ he glared at you, despite everything the corners of his mouth perking up slightly in amusement âbut you know itâs not usually healthy people who come into the Pittâ
âI just wanted to bring you guys some foodâ you forced some extra exasperation into your tone in hopes of hearing him chuckle as you gestured to the half un-packed bags on the table âIt was just supposed to be a quick thank you I didnât mean to bother-â
You cut yourself off at his look, could see the way he was gearing himself up to tell you once again that you werenât a bother for coming to see him in the ER, something you felt you could push back on since the circumstances surrounding this trip to the Pitt were drastically different than the ones before.
But hoping to spare yourself the lecture youâve already received you simply corrected yourself â-interrupt. I didnât mean to interrupt your busy scheduleâ
The smirk on his face at your correction was much too smug for your liking but you let him have it anyways, a part of you always happy to let him revel in anything that had him smiling.
Reaching into the bag closest to you, you dug amongst the boxes for a brief moment before finding the one you were looking for, pulling it out and pushing it into his hands with a soft âhereâ
He looked down at the meal appreciatively, raising a single eyebrow at you in silent question.
âRemember that recipe I told you the other day I was working on? I think Iâve got it nailed down so I wanted to have you try itâ you desperately tried to downplay the importance of it, the intimacy of Robby being the first person other than yourself to try a new recipe of yours, silently praying he wouldnât pick up on how much his opinion of it meant to you.
âAhhh so you needed guinea pigsâ
You snorted at his response, relief surging through you at the joke âGuinea pig singular. Rest of the crew gets regular menu items. I wasnât going to subject them to untested materialâ
He grinned at you in response as a soft huff escaped him âjust me then that gets the risk of inedible foodâ
âPerks of being my favorite doctorâ the words slipped out of you before you could think twice, a brief panic at being too forward surging through you before you leaned into a joke to deflect the sincerity âdonât tell Dana I said that thoughâ
He chuckled at that with a soft shake of his head, the pink tint coloring his cheeks telling you the deflection didnât land completely âsheâs a nurse so you can argue the semantics of the epithet if need beâ
âGood Iâm not sure if Iâm terrified of her or in love with herâ
âYeah she has that effect on peopleâ
A silence fell over the two of you at that that for the first time with him it felt tense, but thankfully not uncomfortable, neither of you doing anything more than staring at one another before you acknowledged that one of you needed to break it. You nodded to the door behind him âI should head out, gotta start my prep here soon, but youâll let me know what you think of that yeah?â
âYeahâ he nodded in the affirmative, a soft and dare you say found smile on his lips as he moved out of your way from the door âI take me duty as guinea pig very seriouslyâ
âgood itâs always such a hassle to find a new oneâ you found yourself lingering in the doorway, hesitant to leave just yet âoh and thereâs a mocha in the bag for Javadi if she wants it as a thank you for stitching me upâ
âYouâre going to spoil my staff with all this specialty coffeeâ despite the comment you could see the appreciation in his eye, the complete lack of heat behind the jab.
You shrugged nonchalantly âgotta win them over, maybe one day Iâll graduate from blue tumbler girl to just coffee girlâ
He laughed back at that, his head ducking slightly as he did so, crossing his arms over his chest in the process.
You took a brief second to relish the sound, giving him one last look before nodding and pushing the door open with your hip, resigning yourself with going back to work when your name being called halted you in your tracks, your gaze snapping back into the break room to meet his âThank you. For the food I meanâ
You couldnât have bit back the grin on your face if you had tried âAnytime Michaelâ
-
âWhoa whatâs all this? You order us food Robby?â Langdon asked, never once questioning if the food was even meant for him, hands already digging into the bag to pull out a box, handing it to Perlah on his left without a thought.
âNo I didnât Y/N my uh-â he faltered suddenly, the words dying on his lips as he struggled for what to classify you as âY/N brought it in for us, a thank you for stitching her upâ
His tone had the two freezing before him, devious smirks passed wordless between them already making Robby roll his eyes before any words could be said, Perlah piping in eagerly with news âFront desk said blue tumbler brought in bags from Jiannaâsâ
âSo blue tumblerâs name is Y/Nâ Langdon smirked at Robby who was doing his best to tamp down his exasperation, knowing it would only spur them on further.
âI still donât understand why the blue tumbler was that big of a dealâ still the annoyance dripped from his words as he muttered them
âRobby you came into work smilingâ
âHumming evenâ Perlah pipped in, eyes already back on the bag of food as she dug through it.
âHummingâ Langdon repeated with wide eyes and a wicked grin.
âThought Abbot was going to have a stroke trying to process what he was seeingâ
âAnd holding a coffee tumbler that was definitely not your own in a death gripâ Langdon was looking much too smug for his liking at the observation.
With a deep sigh Robby rubbed tired hands deep into his eyes âI spend way too much time with you peopleâ
âDana said the coffee you had in there was good shit too. Way better than the stuff you normally drinkâ Perlah steamrolled ahead as if he had never spoken, finally choosing one of the take-out boxes and extracting it from the bag.
âDanaâs been drinking from a new green tumbler here latelyâ Langdon pointed out âplus she walked out of here with a cup that looked an awful lot like this oneâ he said as he extracted a to-go cup from the bag he had been looking in.
Robby almost regretted having to speak up about it now, knowing it was exactly what they were fishing for, running an anxious hand through the hair at the back of his neck as he did so âdonât, thatâs a mocha for Javadiâ
âHow come Dana and Javadi get coffee from blue tumbler ladyâ Langdon pitched his voice to sound almost petulant, completely ignoring the glare Robby sent his way.
âSheâs not supplying the whole floor with coffeeâ
âWould you look at that heâs already possessive over herâ Langdon was downright giddy at Robbyâs reaction, eyes cutting down to meet Perlahâs âthink Abbotâs heard about that yetâ
Robby groaned dramatically and swiped his box off the table as he made his way out the door before the other two could say anything further, muttering under his breath as he left the breakroom âwhy is he everyoneâs go toâ
804 notes
·
View notes
Text
i love being a 30+ woman in fandom. reblog if you also love being an old dame in fandom
5K notes
·
View notes
Text
Reblog if you think a woman can be complete without children
YâALL HAVE TIME TO REBLOG THIS. IT TAKES LESS THAN FIVE SECONDS.
546K notes
·
View notes
Text
So sweet. Want to hug this sad man so badly...
And you can hold me
Authors Note; HOW DID NOBODY HUG THIS MAN. I had to come out of semi retirement to give this man the hug he so desperately needs
Content warnings; none - just sad boy being sad
Note; this blog is intended for adult audiences regardless of content, by proceeding you agree that you are over the age of 18, have read any relevant content warnings, and wish to proceed.
It wouldnât run without the donations. One of the bands from PittFest had set it up, funded enough for three years without blinking an eye. A 24hr coffee cart in the emergency department. Not in the waiting room, tucked in a little alcove off the staff entrance. Protein bars, coffee, tea, fresh fruit, all arriving daily, and a staffing roster of four shifts of 6 hours each, ensuring a never-ending supply of caffeine and sustenance for busy doctors, stressed patients and parents, and the occasional late night maintenance worker.
Given the location, you lucked out on the shift you did. Six to midnight, midweek. You missed the start of the night shift by an hour, relieving your coworker who had somehow managed to get milk in her shoes barely giving you a handover before leaving as if she was being chased. The start and end of the shifts were the worst. Sleep deprived, run down doctors, nurses, custodians, all weary and thankful for your existence. You were lucky enough to have a steady trickle of customers across the evening with enough time to sketch in between if you were lucky.
They were a quiet customer based too â all too lost in their own thoughts or already on their phones requesting lab results. In the few months youâd worked here, youâd only learned a few names. Dana, the charge nurse who got a chamomile on her way out the door with the kind smile and impenetrable attitude. Whittaker, whose diet seemed to consist mostly of energy drinks of varying flavours, who reluctantly bought a banana or apple once a week when another doctor ordered him to, shy and sweet. Dr Abbott, who forces you to call him Jack and lets you experiment with weird espresso combinations and has genuinely good feedback on the flavours.
The rest passed you like ships in an inky sea, never rude or demanding, but too consumed with things far more important than sketching barista who isnât tall enough to see over the cart.
Itâs a little under halfway through your shift. Everything is stocked, all the equipment is clean, everything in its proper place you take the time to work on the jellyfish sketch that has been consuming you for the past few days. Something about the floating ribbons of tentacles has sunk its teeth into your subconscious, demanding to spill across a page. Youâve just finished enough to stretch your neck out, stand from the crappy wheelie chair tucked into the little nook behind the cart. Thatâs when you see him.
Heâs tall, clad in a hoodie over scrubs, glasses sticking out of the pocket. You immediately categorise him in shapes. The rounded slump of his shoulders, the blunt square of the fists heâs clenching at his sides, the oval rise and fall of his strong chest as he forces breaths in and out. He looks so sad. So tired and worn down, the words claw out of your throat before you can stop them.
âRough day?â
He starts, just a little, his hand coming to scrub down his jaw to hide the brief shock as a laugh follows.
âYeah, yeah⊠arenât they allâ His voice is weary, tired. You glance briefly at your watch 9:30pm. If heâs a day shift worker heâs currently sitting on hour 14, most likely without a proper break or meal.
âCoffee? Fruit? I think thereâs a blueberry muffin hiding somewhere back hereâ.
âNoâ he drags a deep breath through his nose as if even the act of speaking is costing him precious energy âThank you, thoughâ.
âYouâre welcomeâ
His head tilts curiously as he looks at you. Giving you a tight-lipped smile before he leaves out the staff exit, muffled music following him as the door swings closed.
--
He keeps looking for you. Itâs not on purpose, not a conscious decision. But every time he leaves now, he flicks his eyes to the coffee cart, looking for you. Sometimes youâre standing on tiptoe to hand a customer a coffee, sometimes youâre tucked into the corner with your sketchbook, just your shoes visible, the worn graffitied pair you seem to wear every day. He knows Dana orders tea from you sometimes on her way out after a particularly energising shift to help wind down, heâs seen the disposable cups from other coworkers. Thereâs just not a good reason to bring you up in conversation, no good reason to ask a single question about you that wonât have half the ER gossiping about how he had interests other than work.
The months since PittFest have been long. Gloria crawling all over her star emergency department, Langdon returning from inpatient, McKays schedule changing with an ongoing custody battle, the slow repair of a friendship with Collins. He didnât need anything else to occupy his mind except the Pitt, and yet you were there. A sliver of his shift spent thinking about you, about the sweetness in your voice as you jumped to offer him a kindness after a day that seemed to have none.
It was another mean shift. Sometimes the days felt cruel â as if luck had taken PTO and left the universe short staffed. Car accidents, children hurt worse than childhood ever should, a pair of scrubs swapped in a vending machine after a surprise arterial bleed when the patient lifted their hand.
It was a day when he didnât feel like anything he did was enough, the memories of all of it, Adamsons hand growing cold, the tile under his ass as tears cooled on his cheeks, the sharp points of the star digging into his palm as he clung to nothing but a brief snapshot of childhood comfort.
âAnother rough one?â Your voice breaks through it. Enough for him to start again, coming back to himself as he whips to look at you. Youâre wringing a cloth, your cheeks slightly pink.
âThey all areâ he replied, a grief laden chuckle forcing the words out, just enough to convince a stranger that heâs fine really. That a beer and a baseball game and thick sleep on his couch in his empty apartment is going to be enough to heal him, to keep him coming back.
âCoffee?... Tea?â you ask, the cloth strangled between white knuckles.
âNo muffin this time?â he asks, quirking a brow
âSold outâ You say, a shy smile blooming across your cheeks when you realise he remembers you. Itâs cute. Itâs too cute for him to notice, the sweet and cute combination of you already seeming precious to him. He tries to resist it, the pull towards that sweetness
âWant a hug?â the words pull him up short, his eyes snapping to yours as you cover your mouth in shock.
You watch his face change, a hint of amusement sparking across his features as you feel your cheeks heat. You donât know what made you say it, except the thought had occurred to you more than once, that he looked like he could use one.
âI-I⊠oh my godâ you stutter, squeezing your eyes shut, hoping to pull on some long dormant super power to rewind time by thirty seconds to keep the stupid words from coming from your mouth
âYesâ he says softly, so soft you almost donât hear it.
Looking up you see his lips purse slightly, shrugging his shoulder, the backpack strap lifting a little higher as he does.
âIâd like a hug pleaseâ He says, louder now, slowly coming towards the cart, approaching you as if you were a skittish kitten.
You nod, swallowing hard as he comes around the side of the cart. Heâs taller than you thought, towering over you as he slowly slides his backpack onto the ground, nestling it next to your canvas bag as he stands and waits.
âUm, okay⊠come, uh, come hereâ you nod, tucking yourself into the little alcove where you hide to draw sometimes, the crappy chair you rescued from the outside dumpster with your sketchbook laying open on the seat.
âPrettyâ he comments, nodding towards the sketch, another seascape, corals and bright colours, with the whip of a tail pushing sea grass across the ocean floor.
âThanksâ you say, trying to tug bravery from the hidden spot behind your rib cage. Inhaling once you find it, slipping your arms around his waist, relishing in his height so that he cant see the cringe on your face, or the heat in your cheeks as you awkwardly link your arms around his back.
You smell like sugar and sweet fruit. Crystalised pineapple and something earthy and warm tickles his nostrils as shock settles into his bones that you actually did it. He was expecting you to laugh it off, roll your eyes, tease him a little. But instead you wrapped your arms around him and fit yourself against him with a shaky inhale and now he doesnât know what to do with his hands.
Warmth is the first sensation that bleeds into him. Your forehead pressed into his sternum as you shift a little on your feet. It races through his bloodstream like sunlight through an open window before he realises he hasnât moved since you touched him.
Slowly his arms come around your shoulders, easily folding you into his embrace. His eyes shut softly as some thread between you lets you rock a little back and forth, his hands splayed around your back. His next breath feels broken, a comfort his body has forgotten and suddenly aches for breaking his ribs as your thumb skates a tiny circle on his shoulder blade.
God, when was the last time he touched a body that wasnât broken? That he wasnât trying to put back together, that he wasnât losing. He feels the muscles in his face relax as his eyes drift shut, his head tipping forward to catch more of the sweet scent of you, some burning sensation starting behind his eyes.
You feel it. The breath he takes, deep and soothing, moving you both with the force of it as the full weight of his arms around you becomes a little tighter. You try not to consider how well you fit directly into his embrace, how the tiniest twitch of your fingers seems to have lifted some weight off his shoulders, the relief in the exhale that curls around your hair. He smells like antiseptic, the sharp sting of hospital cleanser and a hint of old spice hiding somewhere underneath.
âAre your days always like this?â your voice is soft, muffled slightly by his shirt as your thumb keeps gently tracing the curve of his shoulder blade
âHugging strangers? No⊠no this is newâ He says and is rewarded with the tiniest shake of your shoulders, a tiny laugh.
âRough⊠I meanâ You say, and he can hear the smile in your voice.
ânot all of them, but today was pretty badâ
âIâm sorryâ you say instinctually âBut⊠thank youâ
âFor what?â he replied
âComing back. Canât be easy, to have so many days like this and keep coming back for more. Must feel like thereâs nobody else, that if you donât do it, then nobody will, and then people will just⊠get hurt, and be alone and scared without anyone to help them.â
He tilts his head down, eyebrows scrunching in confusion as you angle your face upwards to meet his eyes. You donât say anything, just offering him a mirrored version of the same tight lipped smile heâs given you for the last few weeks. His arms tighten around your shoulders, pulling you closer into his body as the heat builds behind his eyes.
The natural end comes when you hear the squeak of sneakers coming towards your card. He pulls away from you, sucking in cool air at the immediate loss of your warmth. The customer is quick, and he watches you rise onto your tiptoes to hand him the coffee and fruit he ordered.
The awkwardness settles over you both like a blanket when youâre left in one anotherâs company again.
âGo homeâ you say softly âSleep in your bed, have sweet dreamsâ
âThatâs the best advice Iâve been given in a whileâ
âNext one will cost yaâ You say with an awkward giggle.
âHug? Or advice?â He replies, picking up his backpack and turning to go
âHugs are always free. But Iâve gotta charge you this first timeâ
âSure, whatâs the going rate?â
âa name?â you say quietly, looking away from him quickly.
âMichael Robinavitchâ he says quickly, swinging his hand out to shake yours as you reply with your own âBut everyone calls me Robbyâ
âSweet dreams Robbyâ
Itâs the first real smile heâs had all day as he nods, music filling his ears as he leaves into the sweet smelling night air. Â
--
Thanks for reading! This could easily turn into a series/obsession if there's any interest for it <3
250 notes
·
View notes
Text
SIR
PEDRO PASCAL on Jimmy Kimmel Live | March 2025
8K notes
·
View notes
Text
i contemplated on whether or not to just delete this and move on but after sleeping on it i realized that no, i will not just be pretending like i'm not being called a racial slur (n word) by some anonymous racist for doing absolutely nothing but just existing as a BLACK woman.
i don't know what this fandom's (i'm aware that this isn't the only space that this occurs in but right now i am specifically talking about the PPCU fandom) issue is with terrorizing and hating on POC but it's honestly quite fucking pathetic. we can't even exist without being sent torrents of hate and the moment we decide to speak on it, instead of things getting betterâthey get worse. why? why is is that the white people in this community feel so threatened by the mere presence of someone that doesn't look like them? why are anonymous users (who i am assuming to be cis, straight + white) up in arms every time the spotlight is shifted from them and put on to marginalized groups?
i know the answer to this, it's rhetorical really, but i still can't help but ask why? why not choose empathy and kindness over hatred and degradation?
all week i've been seeing everyone reblog the fuck nazis gifset of pedro pascal and it's actually laughable because of how rampant the racism runs in his fandom. a fandom for a PERSON OF COLOR.
and people wonder why talented writers decide to leave. why they're being run off, we already get this racism shit in our every day livesâwe should not have to fucking deal with it here as well.
and for those of you who are fake allies, display performative activism or are SILENT when things like this occur, trust, us POC take notice. you will defend your dark kinks tooth and nail but decide to remain idle and complicit when people are being sent slurs, death threats, threats of SA (i was sent a very disgusting ask wishing SA upon me that i promptly deleted but it affected me nevertheless) and just fucking hate in general.
this space has brought me so many good things which is why it pisses me off that it's becoming insufferable to even be here. it makes me not want to write or interact with anyone, which is crazy because i know i have tough skin but that does not mean i have to endure the constant hate speech that i receive. not me or any of my fellow writers and readers of color.
i'm not putting this under a read more cut. if people of color have to experience racism, then everyone can handle us talking about it. do better.
915 notes
·
View notes
Photo
If you see this on your dashboard, reblog this, NO MATTER WHAT and all your dreams and wishes will come true.
229K notes
·
View notes
Text
Thor - Sugar Daddy AU Moodboard

My first entry for @avengers-assemble-bingo! I went with a 1980s-ish theme cuz an AU where Thor is a CEO of a huge conglomerate and doesn't have time to date, so he hires himself a sugar baby to spoil.
My Bingo Card below the cut.

#thor x you#thor odinson#marvel thor#thor mcu#sugar daddy au#thor moodboard#sugar daddy moodboard#sugardaddy
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
Paying it forward (aka I'm waiting to hear about a job I really want and the anxiety is driving me mad)

29K notes
·
View notes
Text
My parents have a framed print of this painting in their living room⊠kinda want to print this out and secretly replace it and see how long it takes them to notice đ€Łđ€Ł

183K notes
·
View notes
Text
what do you mean elon musk did a nazi salute on live tv at the united states presidential inauguration twice and is now erasing the evidence off the internet by replacing the footage with the crowd cheering instead?
would be a shame if people reblogged this, wouldnât it?
167K notes
·
View notes
Text
no strings to hold me down
fwb!Joel Miller x f!Reader
Word count: 1.8K
Summary: Enjoying the freedom of being friends with benefits with Joel Miller, a new emotion flares when you see him out with someone much younger.
WARNINGS: 18+ Only! Explicit for smut. Angst. Friends with benefits relationship. Joel being a 50-something fuckboy. Reader is also in her fifties and is a tomboy type with curves. Reader has breasts and vagina, though otherwise no detailed description. Alcohol consumption. Drunk/tipsy sex. Allusions to past smut. Age difference (between reader and OMC, and Joel and OFC). Unprotected piv. No use of y/n. Reader is nicknamed "Spitfire" by Joel. (If I've left anything out please let me know)
Author's note: This started off as drabble after I watched Urban Cowboy and I really wanted to put Joel in a FWB type of relationship. Plus, I wanted to write from the POV of an older woman. We typically write about younger people in this fandom, but I wanted to explore a dichotomy between an age difference relationship and a relationship that is closer in age. The reader grapples with self esteem issues upon seeing her lover with a younger woman, as I think we can relate with. In saying that, this fic is especially dedicated to those of us "of a certain age".
"Straight Tequila Night" was also a huge inspiration for the reader. She can throw a punch with as much passion as she can kiss her man.
JOEL MILLER MASTERLIST | FULL MASTERLIST
If looks could kill, Joel Miller and that little blonde bitch he's slow dancing with right now would both be dead.
You're hoping the haze of cigarette smoke and the dim lighting can combine to hide the hurt and the jealousy in your eyes. Bitterness curls the edges of your heart inwards, blackened and ugly like dying rose petals. The tequila on your tongue now tastes bitter. You slam down your third shot of the night and nod to the barkeep for another. "No lime, no salt. This ain't a fuckin' bachelorette party," you grumble. Sighing, he pours you the bottom shelf stuff. You don't give a fuck. Whatever gets you wasted and takes your mind off Joel dancing to Tim McGraw with the latest bimbo to just turn twenty-one.
When you met Joel a few months back you clicked instantly, finding in each other a like soul, both blunt and world-weary, though where he was quiet and unflappable, you were quick to anger, a slave to your feelings, the worst ones in particular. Like right now, it's taking strength from the Lord himself for you to keep from running at that little slut in her too-short dress, who's trailing her dainty little manicured fingers along Joel's arm, his flannel rolled up to let his bicep peek out.
And if you run at her you'll knock her down, smash her teeth in. Joel wouldn't find her so pretty then.
As if to ready yourself for a fight your fist squeezes hard, your short nails making marks on your palm. The tequila hasn't caught up to mellow you out yet. Your innate anger is too inborn, too much a part of your natural existence.
That was what Joel said he loved about you. He called you "Spitfire", often right before claiming your mouth in a hot kiss, pressing you to the nearest flat surface as his hands grabbed every curve of your body. He was the only one who could tame you. He could bring you to your knees in a way no man ever had before, and he'd convinced you into doing things you never thought you'd like so much.
Not that you ever became serious. He'd found you right here in this bar, admiring your ass as you bent over to shoot some pool and had taken you home to fuck you just half an hour later. He didn't stay but he left his number. Every now and then you call, come by his place or he comes by yours, and the magic would happen all over again.
"We don't need to make this an official thing, right?" he'd said, nuzzling your ear as he thrust into you from behind one lazy Sunday morning. "Just havin' fun."
Your whole life you swore you weren't the type of girl to need a relationship, nor ever settle down. You liked having your fun where you could get it, often with cowboys like Joel. No point in fishing in such a small pond. You ran into ex lovers almost every day. No point in getting bent out of shape about it.
"Just havin' fun," you agreed, breath catching in your throat as he'd angled his hips to drive in deeper.
At fifty years old you thought men your age were past their prime while you were just finding your own groove, comfortable in your skin, knowing full well what you wanted from a man and from sex in general. Men Joel's age were supposed to be one-and-done, unable to keep up with the demands of younger lovers and content to turn on a movie or a football game after the one and only round.
But not Joel. He coaxed orgasms from you that you swear you hadn't had since you were in your twenties. When you thought he was done with his fingers, he'd use his mouth, taming you little by little until you were just a puddle on the bed.
And his dick, my god..
He made you feel like a virgin every single time, and you were far from maidenly when you met him. It's rare to find a man so god damn blessed in his jeans and knows what to do with it. You've screamed his name so loud the neighbors know who he is, and even the cops have been called by your place on a few occasions due to "noise complaints" but you and Joel just laughed it off, kept right on fucking once the squad car pulled away.
Joel was a homebody anyway, and a date with him would have felt forced. Him in a suit and you in a fancy dress, eating lobster at an ooh-la-la frou-frou kind of restaurant? Never.
So you fucked and sucked, content to be under the radar with him. Not that either of you didn't fuck other people in the meantime. You had hookups and so did he. If one of you was "unavailable" on a certain night it was basically a sign that you were heating the sheets with someone else. No harm, no foul. Just fun. Better sow those wild oats while you can still get wet, you always said.
Problem is, you've just never had to witness it for yourself. You liked to assume Joel was banging other middle-aged women. You liked to think he had a type just because he liked you: a little rough around the edges personality-wise but soft where it counted. Grandmas and PTA moms were who you envisioned Joel fucking.
Not some Miss Teen America third runner up.
The music changes, snapping you out of your reverie. Now Joel and his little tramp are walking back to their table, smiling and laughing. She's either tipsy or just pretending to be, wobbling slighlty in her pink cowboy boots, little black dress clinging to her tiny frame. What honest-to-god woman wears pink boots? Answer: someone with daddy issues and a push-up bra. You already know those booted legs are gonna be hooked over Joel's shoulder when they get home. You sink your teeth into your bottom lip, anger bubbling inside you even as your cunt clenches in envy. You know exactly how good she's gonna feel tonight.
There she is, Playmate of the Year, leaning on his shoulder and rubbing her hand on his jean-clad thigh.
In between rounds, when you're waiting for Joel to get it up again, he'd set you on his lap so you could ride his thick, muscular thigh as he sucked your nipples and left love bites on your breasts, the only evidence of your relationship that's barely visible beneath your black tank top, the hickey fading.
Does she know she's touching your seat? If she kisses him is she gonna taste you at the back of his throat?
You could easily make a scene. You could march over, demand to know who she is and to inform her politely (in your own way) that she's treading on your territory. Maybe even throw a drink in her face before slamming her head onto the table. Better yet, throw a drink in Joel's face. That'd serve him right. He'd be angry and embarrassed and you'd likely never see him again.
Caught between a rock and a hard place. Except you desperately wish that hard place was Joel right now.
A young guy approaches you and you roll your eyes. Probably fresh out of college as most of these newcomers are. He's wearing a baseball cap, blue and white flannel long sleeve, and brown cowboy boots, and he buys your next shot. It's a kamikaze, sweet in comparison to your tequila. He orders it for himself as well, probably assuming it's the strongest thing you can handle. You exchange names but immediately forget his. You don't need to know it.
You really shouldn't, but arousal stirs deep inside, the jealousy you've been stewing in all night now giving way to a desperate need to feel something good, and soon your hand is on his lap, stroking upward. It doesn't take much for men his age. He's young enough to be your son, but apparently everyone's fucking out of their generation these days.
Another glare in Joel's direction shows he's leaving the table, letting little blondie lead him to the restrooms. You know exactly what they're going in there for.
"Come on," you mutter to Baseball Cap, leading him outside to your truck.
He's eager, and it's a boost to your bruised ego when his hands roam everywhere, lingering on your tits and your ass. His tongue invades your mouth and you wonder who the hell taught him to kiss. It's not your job to fix what he's doing. All you're concerned with is riding his dick.
You taste the lime and triple sec on his tongue as you pull your jeans and underwear off then his. He's lacking in the dick department, but you're not in a mood to be picky. You can still get yourself off..
..because you're thinking about Joel and wishing it was you in that restroom, bent over the sink, or with your pants down around your ankles as he fucks you in a restroom stall against the graffiti left on the dark green laminate.
For a good time call Joel Miller.. he never says no..
You ride him hard, as if punishing him, fucking all your anger away, projecting it into passion as you usually do. His full length isn't even able to reach where Joel always could. You circle your clit with two fingers as you grind yourself against him.
How dare he? Right in front of you? Is the god damn town really that small?
It is, but you okayed the situation you're in. You brought yourself here, answering every late night text, believing each time could be a stepping stone to something more, a substantial, meaningful... relationship.
There must be something wrong with you to be feeling this way.
"Grab my ass," you tell your young guy, eager to get out of your own head, taking control of your pleasure, wresting it from the hands of this amateur, doubling down on the pressure on your clit.
By the time you're already coming, your boy toy is thrusting up into you, wheezing his pleasure into your ear as you feel the reassuring warmth of his come inside you.
Convincing him you don't want to leave just yet (at least not with him) you make your way back inside together just as Joel comes out of the restroom with his date.
From across the room you make eye contact for the first time tonight.
Heart pounding away, another man's come now seeping down between your thighs, you give Joel the smallest of smiles, wrapping your arm around the young guy who's responsible for the glow in your cheeks and the odor of illicit pleasure coming off you.
He smiles back, giving his date a slap on her pert ass while keeping his gaze on you.
Maybe it's a challenge; maybe he's simply saying "well done, Spitfire."
Later, when you're in bed and letting the tequila do its magic in getting you to sleep, your phone pings loudly with an incoming text. You already know who it's from.
1:13 A.M. Joel Miller
You up?
dividers by @enchanthings đ
taglist: @pedrospookie @itwasntimethatdidit40 @joelmillerisapunk
@la-vie-est-une-fleur29 @joelalorian @slimybeth69
@myownwholewildworld @probablyreadinsmut @lotusbxtch
@604to647
165 notes
·
View notes