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Dr. Michael “Robby” Robinivitch
06/14/2025
⭒ Mrs. R by @youvebeenlivingfictional
For as amicable as the divorce had been, the two of you had problems. When Michael was stressed, he shut you out from the source of it, determined not to bring it home. But as hard as he tried, the strain and drain of his work hung on him. You’d wanted to be a safe space for him, but as the pressures of his job mounted, he’d never allowed you to be.
⭒ Mrs. R part 2 by @/youvebeenlivingfictional
You can’t remember the last time you and Robby were this close.
⭒ Mrs. R part 3 by @/youvebeenlivingfictional
Robby had sent a 💡 text two days ago—his new shorthand to ask if he could come over. You’d declined, cited previous plans, and proposed tonight instead.
So here he is, and there you are with your head full of muddled feelings and unasked questions.
⭒ Mrs. R Part 4 by @/youvebeenlivingfictional
It’s late—but for all of your qualms about whatever the hell you and Robby are or aren’t, for better or for worse, in sickness or in a health, for richer or for poorer, you still care about him.
⭒ Mrs. R Masterlist by @/youvebeenlivingfictional
⭒ Residuals by @eureka-its-zico
you and Robby spent seven long years together until the day it ended. You’ve done your best to create space; to become invisible. You can’t miss what you don’t see. Unfortunately, the universe (Gloria and the Board of Directors) seemed to have missed the memo.
⭒ Residuals Pt.2 by @/eureka-its-zico
⭒ Residuals Pt 3 by @/eureka-its-zico
⭒ Tension at The Pitt by @aquaholicsanonymousworld
Being a surgeon at The Pitt meant handling chaos with a level head. You were used to high-pressure situations, fast decisions, and—unfortunately—inappropriate comments from trauma patients. What you weren’t used to was Dr. Robby getting tense over it.
⭒ Second Shift by @/aquaholicsanonymousworld
You and Dr. Robby were once inseparable—two brilliant, wildly competitive med students who fell in love between rotations and sleepless nights at Cook County General. But that was years ago. He went to Pittsburgh. You stayed in Chicago. And that was that. Until now. You’ve just been offered the department head role at a top trauma center in Pittsburgh. And on your first day, you finally realize why the offer sounded so familiar.
⭒ The Sound of Her Cry by @/aquaholicsanonymousworld
⭒ A Ray of Fucking Sunshine by @science-hoes
After a patient injures the Reader, Robby patches her up and reassures her.
⭒ Angel Kisses by @/science-hoes
Robby comes in on his day off with a minor injury, and the Reader ends up much closer to him than she had anticipated.
⭒ we’re hanging on by threads by @hxrtnett
in which the aftermath of the pittfest tragedy brings you and robby back together for few hours
⭒ Dr. Robby Headcanons by @mind-empty-just-fictional-people
⭒ Piece Of Heaven by @/mind-empty-just-fictional-people
⭒ Hurling Bedpans by @/mind-empty-just-fictional-people
⭒ the archer. By @velvetpucks
⭒ come undone. By @/velvetpucks
⭒ Push & Pull by @writing-girlie
The young intern is drawn to her mentor, as they work together in The Pitt but when feeling start to form what started as admiration turns into quiet, unresolved tension.
⭒ Stuck Here Like Me by @that-sarcastic-writer
in the wake of the chaos, you’re there to pick up his broken pieces. Takes place during 1x13 so spoilers if you haven’t seen it yet
⭒ Not Enough by @thepencilnerd
⭒ sticky-notes and leftovers by @/thepencilnerd
⭒ Glasses Be Damned by @/thepencilnerd
⭒ And Through It All by @/thepencilnerd
⭒ Healing hands by @nfr-girly
⭒ Heaven in Hiding by @miraclesabound
You can’t fix what happened to Robby during this shift, but at least you can make your arms a haven for now.
⭒ Gala by @aworldinsideaperson
Dr. Robby and Charge Nurse!Reader, attend a fundraising Gala for the hospital.
⭒ Coming Home to You by @/aworldinsideaperson
Robby finally makes it home from the worst shift of his life to the only thing that could possibly ease his heartache.
⭒ Heartbeat | [1/3] by @asxgard
You get called in to assist with the mass casualty event on your day off and you’re grateful to be there when your husband finally breaks.
⭒ Healing | [2/3] by @/asxgard
⭒ A Lesson in Vulnerability by @asxgard
A pregnancy scare forces you both to lay your cards on the table.
⭒ Instincts and Ice Cream by @sabrinajenre96
⭒ rose scented scrubs by @oceantornadoo
⭒ Whatever You Say, Fruitcake by @abbotjack
Myrna’s being Myrna. Somewhere between the chaos, you and Robby manage to come up for air.
⭒ Pretty Damn Close by @silens-oro
Mike gets a reminder that he very desperately needed.
⭒ Stay with me by @mercvry-glow
⭒ Married Name by @tedmustache
Robbie decides to casually reveal their marriage in the most dramatic way possible.
⭒ Peace by @xximperioxx
⭒ Lead The Way by @traumaone
after over a year of pining over Robby, reader gets into a relationship to try and get over him, and gets cheated on. Robby (after putting up with a snippy reader) comes to the rescue
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Happy birthday Noah Wyle 🫶🏽 (lol literally this edit was on my fyp back in March and I gasped and I was like who is this man??? because he’s SO fine. So if it wasn’t for this edit I wouldn’t have started the pitt or er.🙂↕️😂)
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😂
At my hospital, if you get a parking/traffic infraction from the campus police, your direct supervisor gets an email about it. I can just imagine all of the emails Robby gets about his delinquent residents and attendings as chief of the emergency department.
At the end of every month, he prints them all out, stands at the central desk hub, puts on his old man glasses, and reads them out like a herald in town square as a way to shame them for cluttering his work email inbox.
“On the 3rd of the month, Samira Mohan parked outside of the designated parking lot lines. Photos attached. Fined $50.”
“Frank Langdon was pulled over for going 40 in a 15 miles per hour zone. Fined $75.”
“Dennis Whitaker parked in attending parking spaces three times this month. Fined $50 each time.”
“Jack Abbot ran a stop sign last week in front of the children’s outpatient surgery clinic. Fined $50.”
“On the 14th, Heather Collins parked in the covered parking garage intended for patients. Fined $25.”
“John Shen failed to report his new license plate number to the Department of Parking and Transportation. Fined $25.”
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Haunted
Inspired by the song “Haunted” by Beyoncé
Dr. Jack Abbot x Female OC
Vibe: Grief. Lust. Emotional repression. Ghosts of the past. What could’ve been.
⸻
She smelled like late-night rain. That was the first thing Jack noticed when she slipped through the door, wordlessly, and leaned against the wall of the dim on-call room like she didn’t even need an invitation. Her scrubs were damp, her eyes glassy, and that damn necklace she always wore—a simple gold crucifix—glinted when the hallway light flickered behind her.
“I paged you,” he said, voice low. Rough. Like gravel after too many cigarettes and too many years pretending not to care.
She didn’t answer.
She just looked at him. And in that silence, Jack felt it. That same ache he thought he buried months ago. The one that curled around his ribs every time he saw her take a trauma like it was personal. The one that whispered she’s slipping through your fingers and you’re too proud to stop her.
“You didn’t answer,” she finally said.
He stared at her. “Yeah. I didn’t.”
Something bitter cracked between them, quiet like thunder before the storm.
Jack leaned back on the cot, hands laced behind his head, pretending he was unbothered. Like he hadn’t memorized the smell of her shampoo. Like he didn’t dream about that night on the rooftop—the one where she’d cried into his chest, whispered secrets into his collarbone, and left before sunrise like a ghost that only existed when the world was asleep.
She stepped closer, slow. Measured. Like approaching a wound that hadn’t stopped bleeding.
“Why do you do that?” she asked. “Act like we didn’t happen.”
“Because it’s easier than pretending we still could.”
That made her flinch, but only for a second. She was steel under all that honey. That’s what made her dangerous. Not just brilliant. Not just beautiful. But terrifying. Because she saw him—all of him. Even the ugly parts. And she never looked away.
“I’m not here for that,” she said finally, voice like velvet over something jagged. “I’m not here to fight.”
“Then what?” he asked, eyes searching hers. “You came here looking like a ghost in a hospital full of them. What do you want from me?”
“I don’t know,” she whispered. “To feel something, maybe.”
That broke something open in him.
He sat up, boots hitting the floor hard, and suddenly she was inches away. The air between them was thick—humid with grief and unspoken things.
“You wanna feel something?” he said, voice cracking like dry wood. “You think I don’t?”
“You act like you don’t.”
“That’s because every time I do, you vanish.”
She didn’t back down. She never did.
“I was grieving.”
“I was too!”
Their breaths tangled between them. The walls echoed back nothing but silence, like the hospital itself was holding its breath.
Jack reached out, fingers ghosting the edge of her jaw. “I don’t know how to be near you without wanting everything.”
Her lips parted, but no sound came. Her hands found his chest, tentative, like a pianist about to strike the first note of a requiem.
“You already had me,” she said. “You just didn’t know what to do with it.”
Jack pulled her closer. “I still don’t.”
Their mouths met like a crash. Not a kiss—a collision. All teeth, all hunger, all aching months of pretending like they hadn’t burned for each other every damn second.
The world melted away. No monitors. No codes. No traumas. Just her. Just him. Just the ghosts they’d tried to outrun slamming into the present.
Clothes were stripped like confessions, hands trembling not from lust but from grief. From longing. From things unsaid.
They moved together like it was muscle memory, like the rhythm of their bodies was the only thing that ever made sense. She gasped his name like a hymn. He buried his face in her shoulder like it was sanctuary.
It wasn’t gentle. It wasn’t pretty. But it was real.
When it was over, she laid with her head on his chest. His fingers traced her spine, over the spot where he knew she carried her pain.
“Why does it always feel like we’re haunted?” she asked softly.
“Because we are,” he answered. “By the version of us that got it right.”
Her eyes met his. “Is it too late?”
He swallowed hard. “I don’t know.”
The rain picked up outside. Somewhere in the ER, a trauma bay alarmed. Life kept moving. It always did.
But for a few seconds longer, they stayed still. Skin to skin. Scar to scar.
Not healed. But maybe—maybe—not bleeding anymore.
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Hi i watched the pitt and it brought me back to say....exs!reader (surgical resident, early-mid 30s) x jack abbot who basically have the same energy as abbot and walsh do.....reader being annoyed at abbot flirting with mohan and constantly getting into arguments with him on shift and it gets to a point where reader switches to day shift and then abbot gets pisseeddd
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i need more content for the pitt i’ve read almost everything 😩
pitt writers feel free to tag me in your works!!
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The Archer by Taylor Swift is so Dr. Robby coded
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the archer.
dr. michael “robby” robinavitch x reader
- based on the archer by taylor swift -
⸻
“I’ve been the archer, I’ve been the prey…”
⸻
The boy couldn’t have been older than sixteen.
He came in with a pulse and a name, and by the time your gloves were soaked and your chest ached from compressions, he had neither.
You’d worked him anyway.
Ten minutes. Fifteen. More.
Until the monitor screamed flatline and the room fell quiet—too quiet.
You didn’t pronounce. You couldn’t. Dana did, gently, as if the sound of it might break you.
You stood there while the rest of the team cleared out. Blood caked your gown. His blood. Your hands trembled as you peeled off your gloves. You stared at your palms like they were foreign objects, like they were weapons you didn’t remember loading.
Across the bay, Robby leaned against the wall with that unreadable look he wore like armor. He’d been watching you the whole time.
And he stayed.
Even when the others left. Even when silence settled like a curse.
“Hey,” he said softly.
You didn’t look at him.
“He reminded you of Jake, didn’t he?”
The name hit like shrapnel. You forced a breath.
“They always do.”
There it was—your truth, bare and bleeding. You didn’t bother dressing it up.
You turned away, shoulders stiff, arms crossed like you were keeping your organs in place. But Robby stepped forward. Close. Too close.
“You don’t have to carry it alone,” he said.
“I’m not.”
“You are,” he snapped—frustrated, not unkind. “You carry it like it’s stitched into your spine. Like you’re afraid if you set it down for one second, everything’s gonna collapse.”
Silence.
You hated how well he knew you.
“I don’t know how to let people love me,” you whispered. “Not really.”
That stopped him.
“I’ve been building walls since I was twelve,” you went on. “Every time I start to feel safe, it feels like I’m pulling a bowstring—tight, dangerous. Like getting close is just a setup for the shot I don’t see coming.”
Robby’s voice dropped low. “I don’t think love is supposed to feel like a threat.”
“You don’t get it,” you laughed bitterly. “I’m the archer. I’m the prey. I sabotage every good thing before it can leave me.”
He stepped in again. One more inch and you’d be touching. You could feel the heat of him—steady, grounding, familiar.
“I get it,” he said. “You think I don’t? You think I haven’t driven people away with my own bullshit? My temper? My guilt? You think Jake doesn’t see it?”
He looked down, jaw tight. “You’re not the only one who’s scared of being left.”
You blinked. That part you hadn’t expected.
“You’re… scared?”
“Of course I’m scared.” He met your eyes. “You think it’s easy loving someone who won’t let you in?”
That one hurt.
You opened your mouth, then closed it.
And in that second, everything you’d been holding back came rushing out—your breath hitching, your chest caving, your hands finally unclenching.
“I don’t know how to let it be easy,” you confessed. “I don’t know how to believe you’ll stay.”
He didn’t hesitate.
“Then don’t believe it,” he said. “Just let me stay anyway.”
You stared at him.
And then, finally, you cracked.
One tear. Then two. Silent, burning. You didn’t sob. You just folded forward like a structure collapsing on itself.
Robby caught you.
His arms wrapped around you, tight, steady, real. He smelled like clean scrubs and too many late shifts. He pressed his cheek to the side of your head.
“I see you,” he murmured. “Not just the surgeon. Not just the fighter. I see you.”
You clenched your fists in his scrub top like you needed to hold on or float away.
“I’m tired of fighting,” you admitted. “But I don’t know how to stop.”
“Then don’t stop,” he said. “Just fight next to me instead of alone.”
⸻
You ended up in the on-call room, lights off, sitting on the edge of the mattress with his head resting on your shoulder. You were both quiet—worn down but not shattered.
Not this time.
Your fingers threaded through his curls like prayer beads, like maybe if you kept moving, the world wouldn’t stop.
“You think Jake knows how broken I am?” you asked after a while.
Robby shifted. “Jake thinks you’re a goddamn superhero.”
You huffed a laugh. “I’m no one’s hero.”
“Yeah,” he said, voice warm and low. “You just save lives every day and still think you’re the villain. Real dark twisty of you.”
You smirked. “Shut up.”
He tilted his head to look up at you. “I’ll shut up when you admit you love me.”
You froze.
He didn’t flinch.
“Robby—”
“Don’t panic,” he said, gently this time. “I don’t need you to say it back. Just… let me say it. Let me love you. However you’ll let me.”
You swallowed hard. The bowstring inside your chest finally went slack.
And for the first time in a long time, you didn’t feel like running.
You turned toward him, brushing your fingers along his jaw. His eyes fluttered shut under your touch. There were still bloodstains on your hands, but he didn’t pull away.
“I don’t know how to do this,” you admitted.
“Then we’ll figure it out together,” he whispered. “Just don’t shut me out.”
You nodded.
And for once, you didn’t aim. You didn’t prepare for the shot. You didn’t brace for the hurt.
You just leaned in, pressed your lips to his, and let it be real.
⸻
Outside, the world spun on. Another ambulance. Another trauma.
But in that room—just for that hour—two surgeons stopped surviving and started something else.
You didn’t need to be the archer.
Not when someone finally put down their own weapon just to hold your hand.
⸻
END.
#dr. michael robinavitch#dr. micheal robinavitch x reader#dr. robby#dr. robby x reader#hbo max#the pitt#the pitt x reader
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come undone.
dr. robby x reader
⸻
The door slammed behind them like a final verdict. No words. Just heavy breaths and the lingering scent of trauma—burned flesh, old blood, antiseptic, loss. Her hospital badge clattered against the floor, lanyard snapped from her neck as she kicked off her shoes with a fury that felt nuclear.
He stood there in silence, watching her. Jaw tight. Chest heaving. His scrub top was splattered—trauma red, IV blue, something unholy brown on the hem. He hadn’t even washed up after they called it on the girl in trauma three.
Neither of them had.
He opened his mouth.
“Don’t,” she warned, her voice low. Raspy. Dangerous.
Then she was on him. Fist in his collar. Lips crashing into his like she wanted to devour him or break him or maybe both. It was teeth and tongue and heat. A kiss that wasn’t really a kiss—it was war.
Her back slammed against the wall hard enough to rattle a picture frame. Robby didn’t even register it. His hands were already up her sides, under her ruined scrub top, palming the warm, soft skin beneath like he’d die without it.
“I need you to fuck me,” she hissed against his mouth, biting his bottom lip until it bled. “Right fucking now.”
Robby groaned—deep, guttural—and lifted her into his arms without another word. Her legs wrapped around his waist, locking them together as he stalked through the apartment toward the kitchen. It wasn’t graceful. It was unhinged.
He sat her down on the cold marble counter, not even bothering to sweep the unopened mail and leftover takeout to the side. She pulled his head down, kissing him again like she was angry—angry at him, at the world, at herself for not being able to save that kid.
And he gave it all right back.
Her scrub top was ripped in two. Literally. Robby’s hands tore the seams down the middle, exposing her to the warm glow of the kitchen light. She wasn’t wearing a bra. She never did on long call nights. He stared for just a moment—long enough for her to squirm.
“Robby,” she growled.
He leaned in, licked the sweat-slick valley between her breasts, bit her left nipple gently before sucking hard, eliciting a breathless gasp. Her hands clawed at his waistband. She got the drawstrings loose, shoved his pants down. His cock sprang free—thick, heavy, already leaking with need.
“Condom?” he panted.
“Drawer,” she choked out, nodding toward the kitchen island. “Hurry.”
He yanked it open like a man possessed. Fumbled. Found one. Tore it open with his teeth and sheathed himself in seconds.
She’d already shoved her scrub pants and underwear down her thighs, exposing glistening folds and the trembling heat of her arousal.
He groaned at the sight. “Fuck, you’re so wet.”
“For you,” she gasped. “Always.”
Then he was inside her.
One brutal thrust, and she cried out—loud, raw, head thrown back as her heels dug into his lower back.
He paused for a split second, lips brushing her jaw. “Tell me if it’s too much.”
“If you stop, I’ll kill you.”
He didn’t stop.
He fucked her like he meant it. Like he needed to feel her clench around him to erase the sound of flatlines and screaming mothers. His hips snapped against hers, each thrust harder, deeper, rougher. The wet slap of skin against skin filled the space, along with her whimpers and moans—desperate, unrestrained.
She met every thrust with a roll of her hips, clinging to his shoulders like she was trying to crawl inside him. Her body arched into his touch, into the way his mouth moved down her neck, sucking bruises into her collarbone, marking her as his.
“You’re mine,” he growled.
“Yours,” she panted, nails dragging down his back hard enough to draw blood. “Only yours.”
The pressure was building—fast and dirty. She reached down between them, fingers finding her clit, rubbing tight circles as he fucked into her relentlessly.
“God—Robby—I’m gonna—” she choked.
“Let go,” he whispered, voice wrecked. “Come for me, baby.”
She shattered.
Her whole body clenched around him, spasming as she cried out his name, head falling forward onto his shoulder. He followed seconds later with a strangled groan, spilling into the condom as he buried himself to the hilt, holding her tight as their bodies trembled together.
For a long moment, they just breathed. Sweat cooling. Arms wrapped around each other like they were the only two people left in the world.
Then he pulled out gently, knotted the condom and tossed it into the trash. She leaned back on her hands, hair wild, chest still rising and falling erratically.
“I ripped your scrubs,” he said softly, almost sheepish.
“I don’t care.”
He bent down and kissed her knee. Then her thigh. Then her lips—slow this time. Tender. Reverent.
“Let’s clean you up.”
He scooped her into his arms again and carried her to the bathroom. Set her down on the edge of the tub and ran warm water over a soft towel. She watched him in silence, something vulnerable flickering in her eyes as he knelt and wiped between her thighs, gentle as ever.
“Come here,” she whispered once he finished.
They crawled into bed. She curled into him, head on his chest, fingers tracing circles over the faint scar on his ribcage. One from a knife wound, months ago. He let her trace it in silence.
“I lost her,” she said finally. “The twelve-year-old.”
“I know,” he whispered.
“I—I thought we had her. I thought—”
“You did everything right.”
“No, I didn’t. I hesitated. Just for a second.”
“Hey.” He cupped her jaw, tilting her face to meet his. “You are the best trauma surgeon I’ve ever seen. You’re allowed to break. You’re allowed to grieve.”
She blinked, and tears slid down her cheeks.
He kissed them away.
“Even when I’m… like this?” she whispered. “Dark. Angry. Fucked up?”
He smiled, brushed her hair back. “Especially then. That’s when you’re real.”
She buried her face in his neck, clung to him like he was her anchor in the storm.
“I love you, Robby.”
“I love you more.”
They fell asleep like that—legs tangled, skin still warm from the afterglow, hearts beating in time.
And for the first time all week, she didn’t dream of trauma bays or monitors flatlining.
She dreamed of home.
Of him.
⸻
#dr. michael robinavitch#dr. micheal robinavitch x reader#dr. robby#dr. robby x reader#hbo max#the pitt#the pitt x reader
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slow night in the pitt
dr. micheal “robby” robinavitch x nurse!reader
—————————————————————————
The ER was quiet. Not the eerie kind of quiet that signaled a disaster brewing—but the kind that meant, for once, the universe had given them a goddamn break. Most of the patients were stable, the waiting room wasn’t overflowing, and the nurses weren’t drowning under a tsunami of admissions.
Christina had just finished handing off a post-op report when she felt it—that heavy stare. That heat crawling up the back of her neck, making her stomach flip. She didn’t have to look to know who it was.
Dr. Michael Robinavitch.
She could feel him watching her from across the nurses’ station, arms crossed over his broad chest, the hint of a smirk tugging at his lips. That cocky, self-assured smirk that made her want to slap him—or kiss the hell out of him. Maybe both.
She had no idea when this thing between them had started. Maybe it was all the arguing, the sharp words exchanged over patient care plans, the way he always pushed her buttons just right. Or maybe it was the way he looked at her when he thought no one else was watching—like he wanted to devour her.
And she let him.
The storage room was dimly lit, the only sound the quiet hum of the fluorescent light overhead. They barely made it inside before his hands were on her—urgent, rough, desperate.
His mouth crashed against hers, all teeth and heat, swallowing the moan that slipped from her lips as he pressed her back against the supply shelf. Metal trays rattled, but neither of them cared. His hands roamed down her body, fingers digging into her waist as he pulled her closer, as if he couldn’t stand even an inch of space between them.
“Been watching you all damn night,” he murmured against her lips, voice thick with desire.
Christina smirked, letting her nails drag up the back of his neck, fingers tangling in his dark curls. “Yeah? And what’re you gonna do about it, doctor?”
His eyes darkened at that, and before she could blink, his hands were everywhere—pushing up her scrubs, gripping her thighs, lifting her onto the edge of the counter.
“This,” he rasped against her throat, teeth grazing skin.
Her breath hitched. Heat pooled low in her stomach as his hands pinned her in place, pressing his hips against hers with just enough pressure to make her gasp.
“Robby,” she bit out, voice strained, hands fisting the fabric of his coat.
He hummed in response, trailing kisses down her jaw, his breath hot against her skin. “You sound so pretty when you say my name like that,” he murmured, his voice dripping with hunger. “Say it again.”
Christina clenched her jaw, refusing to give him the satisfaction. But then his fingers slid beneath the waistband of her scrubs, teasing, taunting, and her resolve shattered.
“Robby,” she gasped, arching into him.
His mouth was everywhere—kissing, biting, claiming.
“Good girl,” he breathed against her skin, voice wrecked. “Now let’s see what other sounds I can pull out of you.”
And when he finally gave her exactly what she needed, she had to bite down hard on his shoulder to keep from moaning his name loud enough for the entire ER to hear.
Because this—this fire, this desperation, this need that burned between them like an open flame—was dangerous. Addictive.
And she was absolutely fucked.
Christina sucked in a sharp breath as Robby’s hands moved with purpose, his fingers dipping lower, teasing the waistband of her scrubs. Her pulse pounded in her ears, drowning out the quiet hum of the fluorescent light.
“You gonna let me have you right here, nurse?” he murmured, voice thick with hunger.
A thrill shot down her spine.
She shouldn’t. They were in the damn storage room, for God’s sake. Anyone could walk in.
But the heat in Robby’s gaze? The way his fingers brushed her skin, barely touching but enough to set her on fire?
She didn’t care.
“Lock the door,” she breathed.
A smirk tugged at his lips. “Yes, ma’am.”
The soft click of the lock barely registered before his mouth was on hers again—hungry, impatient, demanding. He kissed like he worked in the trauma bay—fast, precise, relentless.
Christina gasped against his lips as his hands finally slipped under her scrubs, palms skating up her thighs, thumbs pressing into the soft skin.
“You’re so warm,” he muttered, voice wrecked, lips trailing down her jaw, her throat, lower.
Her head tipped back against the shelf as his mouth found the sensitive spot just beneath her ear, teeth grazing, tongue soothing, his hands gripping her thighs just right.
She arched into him, fingers yanking at the buttons of his coat, shoving it off his shoulders. He let it drop to the floor without a second thought, his hands already pulling at her scrubs, dragging them down her hips.
“You always this impatient?” he teased, voice smug.
“Shut up,” she snapped—right before she kissed him hard enough to steal his breath.
He groaned, low and deep, his fingers digging into her hips as he pressed against her, the hard length of him making her dizzy with need.
“Fuck,” he rasped, voice strained. “You feel how bad I want you, sweetheart?”
Christina’s nails bit into his back. “Then do something about it.”
His eyes darkened.
“Gladly.”
His hands yanked her forward, spreading her thighs wider, and before she could bite back the desperate, shameless moan that slipped from her lips—
He was on his knees.
Her breath hitched as he pressed open-mouthed kisses down the inside of her thigh, his hands gripping, holding, controlling.
“Robby,” she gasped, legs threatening to close around him, but his hands kept her open. Kept her right where he wanted.
“So pretty,” he murmured against her skin. “So perfect for me.”
His breath was hot against her core, teasing, taunting, ruining her.
Then his mouth—oh, God, his mouth.
She barely managed to slap a hand over her mouth before the moan spilled out, her entire body tensing, shaking, unraveling as he worked her over with skilled, practiced, fucking ruthless precision.
Like he had all the time in the world to take her apart.
Like he lived for this.
Her fingers tangled in his hair, pulling, tugging, hips bucking against his mouth, but his grip held her down, forcing her to take everything he gave her.
“You taste so fucking good,” he groaned against her, his voice vibrating exactly where she needed it.
Christina trembled, toes curling, back arching, falling apart so fast she couldn’t stop it—
His tongue flicked, his hands tightened, and she shattered—hard, fast, devastating.
Her sharp, muffled cry echoed in the small room as waves of blinding, mind-numbing pleasure crashed over her.
Robby didn’t stop—not until she was shaking, panting, barely able to hold herself up.
And when he finally stood, lips swollen, eyes dark with satisfaction, she grabbed him by the collar and yanked him back in.
“Your turn, doctor.”
And she made damn sure he didn’t walk out of that storage room in control.
Christina’s breath was still ragged, her body humming from the way Robby had just taken her apart, but she wasn’t about to let him have all the control. Not when she knew exactly how to break him, too.
His chest was rising and falling hard, his lips swollen, his pupils blown wide with hunger. And that smug little smirk? The one that said he knew exactly what he’d just done to her?
Yeah, she was about to wipe that clean off his face.
“You look too proud of yourself,” she murmured, sliding her hands up his chest, fingers teasing the collar of his scrub top. “We can’t have that, can we?”
Robby’s smirk deepened. “That so?”
She didn’t answer. She just pushed him back, flipping their positions so his back hit the supply shelf, metal trays rattling behind him.
He barely had time to react before her hands were on him—urgent, greedy, untying the drawstring of his scrubs in one swift motion.
“Fuck—” he exhaled, his head tipping back as she shoved his pants down just enough to free him.
And God, he was already so hard for her.
Christina’s fingers wrapped around him, tight, teasing, deliberate.
“Jesus, nurse,” Robby gritted out, his hips jerking into her touch.
She smirked. “Something wrong, doctor?”
His jaw clenched, hands gripping her hips so tight she was sure she’d feel it later. But she didn’t care.
Not when she could see him falling apart.
She stroked him slow, torturous, too light—just enough to drive him insane.
“Christina,” he warned, his voice low, desperate, wrecked.
She leaned in, pressing a slow, lingering kiss to his throat, feeling his pulse pound beneath her lips.
“Tell me what you want,” she murmured, breath hot against his skin.
Robby groaned, head dropping forward, his forehead nearly resting against hers. “You.”
That single word sent a fresh wave of heat crashing through her.
She didn’t waste another second.
She sank to her knees.
Robby swore under his breath, his fingers immediately tangling in her hair, his breath sharp and uneven as she took him in her hand, pumping slow, teasing, torturing.
“Christina—”
She flicked her tongue over the tip, and his entire body jerked.
“Jesus fucking—”
She smirked up at him, eyes dark with mischief. “Something wrong, doctor?”
Robby’s control snapped.
His fingers tightened in her hair, his breath coming out in a shaky exhale as she finally—finally—took him into her mouth.
His sharp groan filled the room, his grip on her hair guiding her, his hips barely holding still as she worked him over with slow, deliberate precision.
He was wrecked—his head tipped back against the shelf, jaw clenched, veins prominent in his throat, his entire body strung tight.
And she loved it.
“Fucking—Jesus, Christina,” he groaned, voice wrecked, breathless, desperate.
She didn’t stop. Didn’t let up. Took him deeper, hollowed her cheeks, tightened her grip—until his breathing turned ragged, his body tense as a live wire, his fingers trembling in her hair.
“Baby—fuck, if you don’t stop, I’m gonna—”
She didn’t stop.
His deep, broken groan was all the warning she got before he lost it, hips jerking, body shuddering, coming apart in her mouth with a curse so filthy it made her thighs clench.
She swallowed every last drop.
And when she finally pulled back, lips swollen, breath heavy, grinning like she’d just won the lottery?
Robby collapsed back against the shelf, panting, looking at her like she was gonna be the death of him.
“Holy fucking shit,” he rasped, running a hand through his messy, sweat-damp curls.
Christina wiped the corner of her mouth with her thumb, smirking. “Still feeling smug?”
He let out a breathless, helpless laugh.
“Yeah,” he said, voice ruined. “Because I just found out what I’m doing every time we get a slow night shift.”
Christina rolled her eyes—but when he **yanked her into his lap, kissed her hard, and pressed her against the storage shelves like he was already **ready for round two?
She realized she wasn’t done with him yet, either.
#dr. michael robinavitch#dr. micheal robinavitch x reader#dr. robby#dr. robby x reader#hbo max#the pitt#the pitt x reader
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let me be there.
dr. micheal “robby” robinavitch x hawaiian!nurse reader
⸻
The ER was quieter than usual when Dr. Michael “Robby” Robinavitch grabbed his bag and pulled on his jacket. The day’s chaos had finally ebbed into a lull, leaving him with a quiet exhaustion that settled heavily on his shoulders. He walked through the emergency room one last time, past the nurses’ station, the trauma bays, and the bustling halls filled with patients and colleagues, before heading toward the exit.
The cool night air greeted him like an old friend as he stepped outside, the city’s lights casting a faint glow against the darkened sky. Robby was tired—bone-deep tired—but it was a kind of tired that wasn’t entirely physical. It was the kind that accumulated over years of hard decisions, of lives saved and lost, and the unspoken weight that came with being the one who had to stay strong when others fell apart.
He pulled his coat tighter against his frame, the faint sound of waves crashing in the distance barely audible from the hospital’s parking lot. He’d always loved that sound, the rhythm of the ocean, a constant in the ever-changing chaos of life. But tonight, the waves seemed to mock him, each crash pulling him deeper into the same ache that had lived in him since that awful day—the day they lost their child.
Kawena, his wife, had been the only one who understood the depth of his grief. She had been there through it all, and in many ways, her grief mirrored his. She was strong, unshakable at work, but at home, she was fragile, wrapped in the same sorrow that clung to him like a second skin. It had been a year since their miscarriage, a year since they’d lost the child they had been so ready to welcome into the world. A year that had stretched into an eternity.
As Robby walked down the sidewalk, the thought of Kawena pulled him toward the dance studio. He hadn’t planned on stopping by, but something inside him tugged. The soft, haunting melody of Pua Kiele echoed in his mind, a song that Kawena had always played when she needed to soothe her soul, when the world was too much. He knew she often went to the studio to dance, to lose herself in the rhythm, to feel connected to something, anything.
The familiar studio lights shimmered in the distance, and as he drew closer, he paused. Through the windows, he saw her. Kawena. Her long, dark hair moved like water around her shoulders, and her graceful hands swept through the air, performing the hula in slow, deliberate movements. But it wasn’t the beauty of her dance that stopped him in his tracks. It was the tears on her face.
Kawena was crying.
Robby’s heart twisted in his chest. He had seen her grief before, had shared in it, but this… This was different. Her dance was always a way to heal, a way to remember their child and honor their brief, shattered dream. But tonight, there was something more—a deep, aching sorrow that Robby knew all too well.
Without a second thought, he pushed open the door to the studio, the soft chime of the bell signaling his entrance. Kawena didn’t stop dancing immediately, lost in the rhythm of her movement, her chest heaving with each breath, but when she saw him, she faltered. Her eyes, red from crying, met his, and the strength she had so carefully built around herself cracked open, revealing the pain she had been hiding.
“Kawena…” Robby’s voice was soft, but it carried the weight of everything unspoken between them. He crossed the room in two steps and gently took her hand, halting her movements. “I’m here.”
She didn’t say anything for a long moment, her breath shaky as she finally lowered her gaze. Robby cupped her face in his hands, wiping away the tears that stained her cheeks. The smell of jasmine lingered in the air from the flowers she often wore in her hair, a reminder of the love and strength she embodied.
“I’m sorry,” Kawena whispered, her voice breaking. “I just… I couldn’t stop. I couldn’t stop dancing tonight.”
“You don’t have to apologize,” Robby murmured, pulling her into his arms. “I’m right here with you. Always.”
She clung to him as if he was the only thing keeping her tethered to the present, the world outside slipping away as they held each other. Time seemed to freeze in that moment, the only sounds the soft hum of the studio and the rhythm of their breathing.
Kawena pulled back slightly, her forehead resting against his. “It’s the anniversary,” she said softly, the words barely above a whisper.
Robby nodded, pressing a kiss to her temple. “I know. I remember, too.”
Their child. The one they never got to meet. The one they had already begun to love before they even knew who they were. It had been a sudden loss—unexpected, devastating, and irreparable. The pain still felt fresh, even after a year. Some days, it felt as though it had only just happened.
Kawena sniffed, pulling away slightly to wipe her eyes. “I danced for him tonight,” she said, her voice steadying. “For our baby. For the one we never got to hold.”
Robby’s heart clenched. “I know,” he whispered. “I know. I see you, Kawena. I see you always.”
She offered him a sad smile, the kind that was full of love but tinged with sorrow. “It’s just… I don’t know how to heal, Robby. How do we heal from this? How do we move forward when it feels like we lost everything?”
Robby took her hands in his, the weight of their shared grief hanging between them. “We heal together. One day at a time. We carry them in our hearts, always. And we carry each other. That’s how we keep going.”
She nodded, her breath shaky as she leaned into him once more. “I miss him so much, Robby.”
“I do too,” he whispered, kissing the top of her head. “I miss him every day. But we’re going to be okay. We’ll find our way through this together, just like we always do.”
Kawena pulled back to look at him, her eyes searching his face, looking for the truth she needed. “Promise me, Robby. Promise me we’ll always find our way back to each other, no matter what.”
“I promise,” he said, his voice steady. “We’ll always find our way back.”
And in that moment, with the sound of the ocean just beyond the windows and the soft notes of Wena beginning to play on the speakers in the studio, Robby knew that no matter how many tears they shed, no matter how many anniversaries of pain they had to endure, they would always have each other. The love they shared, their memories, their grief—it would guide them through the darkness.
Together, they would heal.
⸻
#the pitt x reader#the pitt#dr. micheal robinavitch x reader#dr. michael robinavitch#dr. robby x reader#dr. robby#hbo max
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overwhelmed.
dr. michael “robby” robinavitch x hawaiian!nurse reader
⸻
Kawena stood at the nurse’s station, her eyes scanning the chaotic emergency room, but her mind was elsewhere. The fluorescent lights above her hummed softly, and the constant beeping of monitors blended with the distant sounds of doctors barking orders. Yet, despite all the noise, something inside her felt quiet, almost peaceful.
She was used to this – the tension, the pressure, the overwhelming energy of the ER. But today was different. Today, she felt a strange weight, an emotional tug that refused to be shaken. She wasn’t sure when it started, but she couldn’t deny it anymore. Dr. Michael “Robby” Robinavitch was starting to get under her skin.
Robby. The one who walked into the room with his cool, collected demeanor, as if nothing could ever phase him. Yet, Kawena had seen the cracks—the fleeting moments when his mask slipped. She had noticed how he carried himself, his methodical way of tackling every problem. But behind that calm exterior, she suspected a storm brewed, and part of her was drawn to it.
He wasn’t like the other doctors in the ER. Most of them were arrogant, always too eager to prove themselves, but Robby? Robby was different. He was observant. He noticed the little things. Like the way she tucked her hair behind her ear when she was stressed or how she took a deep breath before facing another crash. He saw it all.
But there was something else—a shared energy between them, an unspoken tension that neither of them had addressed.
As if on cue, Robby appeared at the nurse’s station, clipboard in hand, his dark eyes scanning over the board of incoming patients. He barely looked at her as he spoke.
“Kawena, the trauma patient’s ready for transport. We’ll need your team on standby.”
She nodded, her fingers brushing the edge of the board, trying to focus. “Got it. We’ll prep for the transfer.”
He hesitated for just a moment, long enough for Kawena to glance up at him. There was something in his gaze—something softer than usual. His eyes lingered on hers, and in that split second, Kawena’s heart raced.
“Are you okay?” he asked, his voice low, just above a whisper.
Kawena blinked, taken off guard. “I’m fine,” she lied. But even as the words left her mouth, she felt the weight of them. She wasn’t fine. She wasn’t even sure what “fine” meant anymore. The pressure of the ER, the expectations, the late hours… and then, there was Robby. Her thoughts were too scattered to make sense of it all.
He raised an eyebrow, clearly unconvinced. “You sure about that?”
Her eyes narrowed as she tried to regain her composure. “You’re the one who’s always running around with a thousand things on your plate. How do you handle it?”
Robby’s lips curled into a half-smile, but there was something behind his eyes, an intensity that reflected the exhaustion they both felt. “I don’t,” he said softly. “But I try.”
Kawena chuckled under her breath, the tension in her chest easing just a little. “Yeah, well, maybe you should try harder. We don’t want you burning out.”
He studied her for a moment longer, his gaze steady. Then, without another word, he turned and walked away, leaving Kawena standing there with the lingering weight of his words.
But as she watched him disappear into the ER, she realized something—something that had been growing in her chest for weeks now.
She was overwhelmed.
⸻
#the pitt#the pitt x reader#dr. robby#hbo max#dr. robby x reader#dr. michael robinavitch#dr. micheal robinavitch x reader
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i think that Oscar Piastri and Connor Bedard are brothers in another universe. 🤨
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Slapshots and Contracts Blurb:
In the quiet glow of their living room, Isabelle "Izzy" Noir and Sidney Crosby found themselves reflecting on the years they had spent together, their faces bathed in the soft light of nostalgia. As they settled into the comfort of their favorite chairs, the air was filled with a mixture of contentment and the weight of years well-lived.
Izzy, with a tender smile, began, "Can you believe it's been so many years, Sid? From the early days to now, it feels like a lifetime of memories."
Sidney, looking at her with affection, replied, "Time flies when you're having fun, doesn't it? I can still remember the first time we met."
Izzy chuckled, "You mean the time you bumped into me on your way to a meeting with the GM? I barely spared you a glance."
Sidney, grinning, added, "Yeah, and I was hooked from that moment. I couldn't stop thinking about you."
They laughed together, reminiscing about the awkward beginnings that had led to a love story for the ages. Izzy continued, "Who would have thought the star player of the Penguins and a corporate lawyer would end up here?"
Sidney, with a twinkle in his eye, responded, "Best plot twist ever."
As they delved into their memories, the couple revisited the challenges they had faced, the highs of Stanley Cup victories, and the lows of injuries and setbacks. Izzy spoke about the long nights she spent working at the law firm, and Sidney shared the pressures of leading his team both on and off the ice.
"There were tough times," Izzy admitted, "but we weathered them together. The support we gave each other made all the difference."
Sidney nodded, "Absolutely. You've been my rock, Iz. Through wins, losses, and everything in between."
They shared stories of family moments, the joy of their children's laughter, and the quiet comfort of knowing they had built a life together. The conversation flowed like a river of shared experiences, creating a tapestry of love and resilience.
In their golden days, Izzy and Sidney reflected on the beautiful imperfections that had shaped their journey. Izzy, looking at Sidney with a playful gleam in her eye, remarked, "Remember the pranks the kids used to play on you? Those were the days."
Sidney laughed, "Yeah, I couldn't escape the whoopee cushions and balloon traps."
As they continued to reminisce, the room echoed with the echoes of their laughter, the sweet soundtrack of a life well-lived. In the quiet moments, as they held hands and shared glances, Izzy and Sidney Crosby embraced the beauty of their golden days, grateful for the tapestry of love and memories they had woven together.
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