#but pre derry when he's not doing so good it would probably have the opposite effect on him mentally than what he's going for lol
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headcanon that richie wears perfume (as opposed to cologne) because it's a subtle way that he can put a queer little spin on his gender performance that in most cases even a homophobe will probably not notice, especially since he'll always also be smelling like cigarette smoke and, most of the times that he'd be meeting fans, sweat since he would probably have just been on stage
#probably something like vanilla or amber notes because that's even more subtle (and often unisex) than like florals or fruit#not to mention... he'd probably feel some type of way about wearing fruit notes lmfao#i mean after derry maybe he'd go for fruits specifically because of that#but pre derry when he's not doing so good it would probably have the opposite effect on him mentally than what he's going for lol#hc#richie tozier#it#jack facts
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what if the closest we get to the moment is now | Ethan Ramsey x MC
WC: 10k+
Rating: Mature
Content: N*FW, contains semi-graphic medical scene (nothing too bad, but I don’t know everyone’s level of comfort with these sorts of things)
Summary: An OH AU where everything is a little bit different, but also very much the same; or, Ethan is an ER attending and MC is a paramedic, but they still manage to fall in love. Title taken from Katie Herzig’s Closest I Get.
+ + +
He sees her three times before he learns her name.
The first time is at the intersection of State and Congress, which he approaches with that tight feeling in his chest. It’s the feeling that only comes from jogging the three-mile route from his apartment, where he goes up around the government center and back down Bowdoin, before taking a lap around the Common. Then there’s the historic facade of King’s Chapel and the less-historic Chipotle on the corner, where he can choose to extend his route by taking Water Street up to Congress and circle back to his apartment.
Which is the route Ethan takes this morning with Jenner at his side, dawn slowly approaching as the sky shifts from that deep blue to a hazy gray.
The only light comes from the streetlamps and the headlights of the delivery vans and buses that idle at the major intersections. State and Congress being one of those -- his last one, actually, before he crosses to return home.
The appearance of another jogger at the intersection isn’t strange. Though he purposefully goes for his runs before five a.m., he knows he isn’t the only one with the same exercise preferences (or the same work schedule). There are others he sees along his route sometimes, though he doesn’t know their names, as he’s never been inclined to strike up a conversation while waiting on a light change before.
The woman in front of him is much the same; he spots the earbuds at the same time he hears the humming. She paces back and forth on the sidewalk, trying to keep her heart rate up. Ethan moves closer to the curb and into her peripheral, making her aware of his presence so he won’t frighten her by hovering behind.
“Morning,” she says to him, offering a quick smile. He returns the motion, suddenly unsure of himself, as he finds that he wants to say something back.
The light changes, cutting off any chance of a reply.
And then they’re crossing and he’s watching the way her ponytail swings in the beam of the headlights and the white piping down her leggings that frames tall, shapely legs that end in a pair of bright orange sneakers and then, suddenly, they’re on the other side.
Where she goes right and he goes left.
He thinks of her once more that day, hours into his shift, before deciding that he probably won’t see her again.
+ + +
The second time he sees her is at Derry Roasters.
It’s the local coffee shop down from the hospital that he frequents when, instead of pulling out every follicle of hair one-by-one, he goes to drink expensive lattes to escape the doe-eyed nuisances that are his interns.
Ethan is nearing the front of the line when he spots her at the back. Instead of running gear, she’s dressed in a black T-shirt and navy cargo pants, clearly dressed down out of some uniform. Her hair is pulled back in that same ponytail; she runs her fingers through it, her wide eyes giving off an overwhelmed vibe. It’s been years since he’s actually looked at the scrawling cursive above his head, having ordered the same drink so often that the baristas automatically charge him for a Vienna as soon as he steps up to the counter. In theory, he could take his drink and get back in line, sidle up to her, and offer his suggestion. Maybe she would chat with him, maybe he would get to know her name.
Maybe he would promise to see her again to share a coffee at a later date.
Before he can test such a theory, a young man darts into the shop and straight over to her. Ethan is trying to place where he’s seen the man before, but then the bartisa calls out his order and his pager is buzzing and he’s shoving down the disappointed feeling in his chest when he sees the young man’s head dip down to whisper in the woman’s ear.
He takes his coffee and goes, thinking of her twice more that day, and hopes that he’ll see her again.
+ + +
The third time he sees her is in the ER.
There’s a traffic jam of stretchers in the receiving bay, filled with the hypochondriacs or the psych evals or the people who called a closed doctor’s office, only to be told by the secretary’s voicemail to call 911 or visit the ER if any of their (usually minor) problems persist. Several paramedics are holding the wall, as if helping out in any way would inconvenience them.
Ethan is helping a nurse transfer in the fourth victim of a six-car pile-up when that ponytail catches his eye.
Down the hall, the young woman is leaned over a stretcher, one hand on an older man’s shoulder to keep pressure on a bandaged wound, while the other rests on his arm. She says something to the man, whose worried frown ticks up into a half-smile as he nods. Standing on the opposite side of the stretcher is the same young man from the coffee shop, who Ethan now recognizes as Rafael, one of their regular paramedics.
The nurse takes over the accident patient and Ethan returns to the line, shuttling the new patients in and signing off for the intakes. It takes him six minutes to get to Rafael and his new partner, who immediately launches into her patient’s status.
“Henry here took a fall, he’s got a five-inch gash along his clavicle.”
Ethan takes the copy of the report she hands him and assists with transferring Henry over to a bed. His gaze flickers down to her uniform where, pinned above her heart, a nametag reads S. McTavish. Before he can think of a way to find out her first name, a code blue sounds from on down the hall.
Rafael and McTavish are long gone by the time Ethan steps back out into the receiving bay, where another nurse has joined to help the first, leaving him to resume his duties.
It isn’t until hours later that he remembers the copy of the report he handed off to the nurses station. Rifling through the intake folder, he retrieves the document and is pleased to discover her first name at the top, written out in neat print: Sloane.
+ + +
As if the universe has designated him a break, he starts to see her everywhere.
Aside from the daily drop-bys in Edenbrook’s ER, he runs into her at the market one Thursday, and then the liquor store that same afternoon. Their interactions are short -- awkward in that way that barely-colleague ones are -- though he manages to make her laugh at his terrible joke in the wine aisle, so he considers the whole trip a success. He runs into her again at Carson Beach, where he runs Jenner so the Boxer-mutt mix will release some of that pent-up energy she’s infamous for. That breathless feeling hits him again when he sees her pass by on the HarborWalk, then circle back around and jog towards them across the sand, her orange sneakers kicking up little clouds behind her.
“Doctor Ramsey, hi!” she greets, flicking back the long rope her hair is braided into. Her skin glistens with sweat from her mid-morning run.
“Good morning, Miss McTavish,” he returns, keeping his eyes pointedly on the flush staining her cheeks and not letting it drift downwards to the shorts she wears that look as if they were sculpted on. He wouldn’t know, of course, as he certainly wasn’t checking out her backside when she jogged past earlier.
“And who might this be?” Sloane is already kneeling, so he doesn’t get a chance to stop her before Jenner knocks her down into the sand.
“Jenner, off!”
His dog perks her head up at the command, then resumes her wet kisses across Sloane’s neck. From underneath the mound of wet dog comes laughter, which eases some of his anxiety.
“Oh, she’s just a big ol’ girl, aren’t cha? Aren’t cha?” Sloane shoulders Jenner off her so she can sit up, ruffling her dark fur where it’s coated in sand. Ethan tosses a frisbee down towards the water and uses the distraction to help her back onto her feet.
“I’m sorry, she usually isn’t--” he cuts himself off with a sigh. Sloane follows his gaze and starts chuckling at his dog, who has abandoned the frisbee and is now trying to chase down a clump of seaweed in the water. “Actually, she’s a real pain in the ass. But I am sorry she knocked you over. I’m out here to tire her out so she’ll behave.”
Sloane flaps a hand at him, quieting his apology.
“Don’t worry, my dog Relay is the same way.”
Ethan watches his own dog give up on the seaweed and wade back onto the shore, trying to think up a response. “I’m from South Carolina,” she continues to explain. “About an hour outside of Hilton Head, so I take him to the beach as much as I can. Except for when I went to college in Columbia.”
“What did you study?”
“Pre-med. And then I went to Northwestern for med school, but that didn’t work out. So, I thought I’d try Boston out for a while, see how the north coast will treat me.”
He wants to ask how she went from studying medicine in the Windy City to responding to heart attacks on the east coast, but can’t come up with a way to do so that would be polite.
“How are you liking Boston so far?” he asks instead.
Her gaze leaves the stretch of blue water in front of them to meet his own, her mouth rounding into a smile. Standing this close underneath the bright sun, he can see the freckles that dot her nose. They fan out in small strokes across her cheeks.
“It’s interesting.”
“Just ‘interesting’?” he teases, shifting his stance in the warm sand, which brings him a few inches closer. Sloane doesn’t move away, though. Instead, her shoulders roll in a lazy shrug as her smile widens.
“Jury’s still out on a final verdict. For now, interesting.”
“Well, if you need any recommendations, let me know. Though,” he gestures to the beach surrounding them, “I can see you already know some of the sweet spots.”
“Thanks, Ramsey. I might just do that.”
“Of course. And it’s -- you can call me Ethan.”
“Okay, Ethan. Then you can call me Sloane. Deal?”
“Deal.”
+ + +
He doesn’t see Sloane again until the next Thursday, and even then their moments together are a few, too-brief moments in the ER.
The Fourth of July weekend keeps both of them up to their eyeballs in emergencies. He’s starting to see why Doctor Mirani always insists on taking the next week off. Just when he thinks he’s seen it all, someone manages to stick a firework in a new orifice.
When his shift is reaching its eleventh-hour, the receiving bay mysteriously empties, and the waiting room starts to clear out. It is, of course, when one of the interns from diagnostics uses the Q-word, which sends a shockwave of groans through all the staff. True to the nature of the universe, calls from emergency dispatch flood in about a ten-car pile-up in the tunnel. Ethan pushes off the nurses station to prepare for the oncoming storm when Kendra, his charge nurse, hangs up the phone.
“Dispatch is sending us a few that Mass Kenmore couldn’t take.”
Ethan scoffs, biting his tongue from making a rude comment about the rival hospital.
“What’s on the menu, then?” he asks, reaching over the desk for his coffee.
“A tractor-trailer hit an ambulance,” Kendra relays with a frown. “They’re sending over the two medics and the driver to us.”
The coffee in his mouth suddenly feels like lacquer, thick and cloying in his throat as he swallows.
“Did they say what company the ambulance was with?”
Kendra shoots him a curious look at the question, obviously wanting to know why he cares, but she’s been working alongside him almost as long as he’s been at Edenbrook. She can tell when he’s going to keep mum, especially when it comes to gossip.
“No,” she finally says, “sorry.”
The pile-up victims arrive first, with their herniated discs and second-degree facial avulsions and grade-three contusions -- enough to keep him busy, hopping from bed to bed to oversee the interns as they fumble about.
Then he’s back at the nurses station to book the avulsion into the next-available OR, while also sending a queasy-looking intern to the bathroom and performing another sweep of the immediate area for any familiar paramedics, when a voice sounds over his left shoulder.
“You’re a regular Mark Greene, huh?”
The anxiety in his chest ebbs away. Relief rises and crests across his shoulders, which ease down when he turns to see Sloane, her hands tucked into the pockets of her EMS jacket, leaning against the counter next to him.
“I’m afraid I don’t understand.”
Her mouth opens to contradict him, then abruptly closes as she runs a critical eye over his form. He resists the urge to straighten under the sudden scrutiny.
“I pegged you as a man who prefers the classics, as opposed to HIPPA-violation hook-up primetime, but,” her shoulders bounce in a quick shrug, “we all have our guilty pleasures.”
Ethan clears his throat. Then, for good measure, clears it again.
“I can assure you that I have no idea what you’re talking about.”
“Oh, come on -- you can’t tell me you’ve never watched a single episode of ER or Grey’s. There’s nothing more entertaining than tearing a show like that apart.”
A nurse interrupts to get his signature on a report, giving him a chance to steer the conversation away from his watch history of medical dramas.
“Can I ask why you’re loitering in my ER in the first place?” Following the motion of her elbow, Ethan finally notices Rafael sitting in the corner. One of his interns is suturing up a wound on her partner’s waist, while several of the other interns stand around and ogle the young man’s physical attributes. They scurry off to the far corners of the department when he reminds them that drooling is not a part of their job description.
“Superman got a little banged up earlier,” Sloane explains, concern flitting across her face. “One of the walls buckled in when we were retrieving the other two medics from their rig. It’s like the thing was held together by spot welds and promises.”
Although ambulance construction isn’t his expertise, he is rather gifted in the art of observation. Which is how he knows that Rafael wasn’t the only one injured on the job, if the way Sloane is favoring her right side is any indication.
“Have you been seen to?” he asks, biting back the urge to roll his eyes when she seems surprised at the question.
“Oh, no -- it’s just a scratch, don’t worry.”
She wavers under his gaze, the one he uses to quietly bully patients into telling the truth. Within a minute, she’s hopping up onto an empty bed. The wince when she moves to take off her jacket tells him that his instincts were correct. Just below the cut of her sleeve is a four-inch laceration that she’s covered with two loops of gauze and a scrap of medical tape.
He busies himself by tending to the wound, trying to ignore the heat of her body and the little hitches of her breathing when he applies the antiseptic. This close, he can smell the coffee on her breath and the minty scent of her lip balm. His mind drifts to how such a combination would taste on his own lips, before he shoves the thought deep, deep down. When he glances up, though, he sees a similar hunger dancing through her eyes. Something base and egotistical uncurls from his chest at the sight.
“I could’ve done all this myself, you know,” she teases, watching as he fastens a piece of tape across her new bandage.
“Yes, I saw your handiwork,” he reminds her with a playful scoff. “Is that how they’re teaching students to bandage wounds at Northwestern?”
Sloane laughs at the gentle barb and slips back into her jacket.
“It’s what they teach to the ones who drop out, I guess.” She’s grinning as she says it, but her gaze drops to the floor for a brief moment, the movement telling him there must be a story there. Now isn’t the time for it, though he suddenly wishes that it were, if only to spend a few more minutes with her.
And if wishes were horses, beggars would ride, he reminds himself as he leads her out into the hall. “I’m surprised you remembered,” she says.
“Just… paying attention.”
+ + +
Late September in Boston is his favorite. When the heat of summer has peeled away and the promise of blistering cold is still some distance away, when all of the summer tourists have flown back home and the autumn ones haven’t yet arrived.
When the rain is more than just relief from the stagnant warmth, such as it is on this morning. The pavement is slick and dark with it, giving Ethan something to focus his attention on as he approaches the last intersection before home. Given the weather and people’s affinity to avoid it, he’s only seen a handful of runners out this morning, so he’s surprised when he spots someone already standing at the corner. Their figure is draped in a dark jacket, their hood up against the rain. It’s only because of the orange sneakers and the hound dog at their side that he knows it’s Sloane.
“Good morning.”
She whirls around at the sound of his voice. He enjoys watching the surprise on her face shift to joy, as she moves her hood back to take him in.
“And here I thought that Relay and I were the only ones crazy enough to be out in this mess.” Sloane gestures to the Bluetick hound at her side, who is busy sniffing Jenner’s backside.
“No, I thought I’d start my day off by getting the both of us drenched so my apartment smells like wet dog the rest of the day.” His sarcastic remark gets a huff of laughter out of her, which makes him want to grin like an idiot.
He doesn’t, but only just barely.
The light changes and they jog across to the opposite corner. “Well,” he begins, trying to think of some way to continue talking to her (but without offering to follow her home, which would come across either sexist or creepy). “I hope you--”
“Do you want to get breakfast?” she asks. “I know a great place off Amherst that opens in about--” she raises her fist into the air so the jacket’s sleeve will slide back enough for her to peek at her watch, which he shouldn’t find endearing, but he does. “--ten minutes.”
“Do they allow dogs?”
“They have a covered patio.”
“I’m not sure if that would protect us from the rain.”
“It’ll let up.”
Ethan glances pointedly at where the sun is struggling to break through the overcast sky. He thinks of the day ahead he’s already planned, about the laundry that needs to be done and the counters that need cleaned and the fridge that needs a purge. Then he looks back at his side where Sloane stands, who seems unable to resist ribbing him gently as she waits for an answer. “Come on, you’ll enjoy being spontaneous for once in your life. I promise.”
Sloane is right on two counts. The first is that the place does serve great food. The second is that the rain does let up about twenty minutes after they arrive, allowing them to watch as the city around them wakes up. Lights in the law offices next door switch on; cars clog up the avenues and block the intersections; people in business attire head off to work, passing people in delivery uniforms who have already been on the clock for several hours.
“Why did you become a paramedic?” he asks, genuinely curious to know something more personal than general shop talk or the way she takes her coffee (both topics which they covered already).
Sloane’s eyes narrow as she chews on a piece of toast, thinking over her answer.
“I like helping people.”
“I’m not some layman, so I’m not going to accept such a boring answer,” he tells her, and enjoys the little twitch of her lips as she gives into a grin.
“Good, because I’m going to tell you the real reason. Or, well, the major one.” Taking a sip of her coffee, she continues, “I like the uncertainty of it. I could go on a call and help an old woman back into her bed, or I can go on a call and talk a man down from the brink, or I can go on a call and help the rescue squad cut open a burning car and pull a person from certain death.”
“You like the unknown,” he surmises.
“Exactly!” she nods, gesturing with her fork in agreement. “I arrive to situations where everything has gone to hell, and I’m like the eye of the storm, keeping everything cool and calm and copacetic. It’s like an adrenaline rush.”
“You would be a good ER physician.”
She shrugs at the comment, though a flash of something passes across her face, so fleeting that he can’t put a name to it.
“I don’t know about that -- I like being out in the field. And with my crappy luck, if I did become a doctor, I’d wind up being placed at Mass Kenmore.” She makes a face at the idea. “Then I’d have to deal with the raccoons.”
“Raccoons?” he questions.
Her fork pauses on its way to her mouth.
“Oh, my god!” she hisses, leaning towards him across the table. “How do you not know about the raccoons? It’s, like, an infestation over there. One of them even got into our rig once when Raf was driving and got under the pedals. We would’ve ended up on the other side of the 93-North ramp and in the river if I hadn’t pulled the e-brake.”
“In the middle of the highway?”
“There’s no shoulder on the ramp, I had no choice!” She’s giggling over the rim of her coffee cup as she defends her actions, using the cup and his silverware when he requests a recreation of the scene.
She was right on a third count, Ethan realizes, as he watches her tale unfold, interrupting occasionally to ask for clarification.
He is, in fact, enjoying the spontaneity of saying yes.
+ + +
“You’re like my little Georgia peach.”
“I’m not from Georgia.”
“Oh, baby, say something else to me.”
“Touch me again and I will strap you to this stretcher.”
“That a promise, Peach?”
Ethan finishes checking over the fractured tibia in the fast track bay and ducks out into the hallway, having heard enough of the conversation.
“What seems to be the problem here?” he asks. Both Sloane and a man on the stretcher next to her look up at his arrival.
“I’m waiting on a bed to open up,” she explains, her jaw clenched tight.
“I hit my head,” the man moans pathetically, lifting a hand to touch his bandaged forehead.
“That’s because you drank too much and ran headfirst into a parked car, Junior.”
“Oh, so you do know my name?” Junior leers up at her, abandoning his injured head to reach for Sloane again. “Say it again for me, Peachy.”
Ethan decides it’s well past time for him to step in, doing so before Junior can get close enough to grab her.
“Sir, I’m going to need you to keep your hands to yourself.” Ignoring the man’s drunken babbling, Ethan glances around for a resident to dump the man onto. When none appear in sight, he beckons a male nurse over to help assist with the transfer.
“It must be my lucky day,” Junior crows as they wheel him down the hallway. “Two McDreamys all to myself.”
Resigning himself to the harassment he’ll be dealing with for the next hour, Ethan helps the nurse get him transferred into a bed. It’s another ten minutes before he can escape to return the stretcher to Sloane, who flashes him a grateful smile. Her hand brushes against his as she takes the stretcher from him and he convinces himself that the tingling sensation across his skin must be from the carpal tunnel he’s suddenly developed.
“Thanks again for the save, McDreamy.” With a wink, she’s off and gone, disappearing through the doors of the ambulance bay.
Across the hall, Kendra looks up at him from the nurses station and raises an eyebrow. He orders her back to work, scoffing when all she does is smirk in response.
+ + +
He thinks the knock at his door is something else at first.
Four thumps against wood drift over to where he lies, slumped on the sofa. It’s his noisy neighbors, he’s sure. The music he put on returns to its full volume once the racket ceases, allowing him to sink back into himself.
The thumps sound again, somehow harsher this time. The noise gets Jenner’s attention, who trots over to the front door and sniffs. Whoever is on the other side causes her to race back over and bark excitedly at him.
“Who is it, then, Lassie?” Ethan shoves himself up out of the hole he’s burrowed into and crosses the room.
That it’s Sloane standing on the other side of the threshold is a surprise (one of two that he’s received today, though this one is infinitely better than the other). “What are you doing here?”
“I thought you might need this.” In her hand is a bottle of liquor that, upon his closer inspection as he takes the bottle from her, is his favorite brand of scotch. “Everyone is going to send flowers, but I thought I’d bring over something you’d actually use.”
He doesn’t ask how she found out; the staff in the emergency department were well-known for their inability to keep mum on anything. The tragic diagnosis of his mentor and best friend definitely would have been the daily fodder. “Kendra gave me your address,” she explains, having somehow read his mind. Her now-empty hands wring together, then disappear into her pockets.
Ethan backs up, swinging the door wider to wave her inside. She stops just inside the entryway and succumbs to Jenner’s demand for belly rubs. He can feel her eyes on him as he goes to the kitchen to pour them each a glass. “Are you listening to cello covers of The Smiths?” she asks.
“If I knew who they were, then yes. But no, this is just an instrumental collection I selected at random.”
“Well, at least it isn’t Patsy Cline.”
“Good thing that you weren’t here an hour ago, then.”
He enjoys hearing her little huff of laughter as she comes to stand next to him in the kitchen. Handing her the other glass, they sip in companionable silence for a while. The sky outside his loft mellows to a brilliant orange, the clouds piped in pinks and purples. Sloane moves to the tall windows to take in the view; the light traces the features of her profile, outlining her in gold. It isn’t just the liquor in his stomach that suddenly warms him to the core.
“Your place is really nice.” After giving the open space an assessing spin, Sloane turns back to face him. “I’m glad to see that it actually looks lived-in.”
She moves to the bank of bookcases along the far wall, where photographs are symmetrically-spaced across the shelves. Ethan follows to study the pictures with her. There are a few from childhood, most with his older sister Allison, the two of them shoved next to each other in front of various American landmarks, their matching shirts stamped with cheesy phrases like South Dakota ROCKS! and Yellowstone National Park: Where the Wild Things Are!
She picks up the one of them pointing back at Mount Rushmore with bored-looking faces. Ethan remembers his mother insisting on the pose while they whined about how hot it was. Just as he remembers lying in their motel room that night, listening to his parents argue about cheating out in the parking lot. He’d been too young to understand, but being the older and wiser sibling, Allison had turned on their little box TV and let Johnny Carson drown them out.
“When I was little, I thought the mountains were naturally formed like that,” Sloane admits with a self-deprecating grin.
“That… explains some things.” He chuckles when she whacks him in the arm with the picture frame, before she sets it back onto the shelf and eyes another one. It’s a photo of Harper, Chris, and him at a dean’s dinner party, all of them in the fanciest attire they could swing on a medical student’s budget. They’re all wide-eyed and bushy-tailed, eager to make their mark in medicine.
Ethan wonders what it says about him that he’s kept this photo up on his shelf, despite the fact that both of the people in it are technically his exes -- Harper being the longest and most recent, and Chris being a one-night stand that multiplied into several more before ending abruptly. He wants to believe that it shows he can remain good friends with his previous partners -- but it’s probably a testament to his lack of other friends in his life, he realizes.
Though she’s not an Edenbrook employee, Sloane knows enough about the hospital through the gossip mill (that always seems to start in his department and then work its way through the rest of the facility) that she recognizes both faces.
“You went to school with the chief of medicine and the chief of nursing?” Her eyebrows dart up at his answering nod. “Wow, is there a fast-track placement at Columbia that I can get in on?”
Ethan snorts over the rim of his glass.
“Sure, if you can become one of the dean’s kids, they’ll make you chief innovation officer.”
“I’m sensing that you’re not just making up an example here.”
“Nepotism is afoot at every hospital, but it runs rampant at Edenbrook.”
As if shelving away the cheery turn the conversation has taken, she places the photograph back. His throat tightens at the next one down. Sloane is staring at it as well, biting at her lip, as if torn on whether or not she wants to expose the elephant in the room. “You’ve sufficiently liquored me up,” he reminds her. “Ask away.”
“That’s not why I brought--”
He waves a hand at her, cutting off her defense; he knows what she wants to know, what everyone asked him all day long at the hospital ever since the meeting this morning.
“Ask.”
Still, she hesitates -- but before he can demand again, she finally speaks.
“Do you want to talk about it?”
“Jesus, Sloane, just get to it.”
“That was my question,” she snaps back.
Realization washes over him. He forgets, sometimes, that she’s not one of them. She’s an outsider, looking in. She’s not interested in adding coal to the gossip mill to keep it churning; she’s not eager to know how long Naveen has or who’s going to take the now-vacant chief of emergency services position, or any of those pointless details.
She’s worried about him. It’s been so long since someone has that it takes him a moment for it to sink in.
“Oh.” He clears his throat, then clears it again, thinking it over. Does he want to talk about his mentor and best friend and the two months he was given to live? Does he want to talk about how everyone will expect him to accept the empty seat Naveen will leave? Does he even want to give up the long, grueling hours and getting his hands dirty and the adrenaline rush of saving a patient’s life -- all so he can sit behind a desk and nod at people? “No, not really,” he admits, surprising himself with the answer.
Sloane nods once and turns from the photo of Naveen and him, moving over to the barely-used, big-screen television.
“Are you savvy enough to have Netflix on this, or are we gonna have to haul out the VHS player that I definitely know you have stored away somewhere?”
Brushing dust from the photograph, he prepares to respond to her smartass remark with one of his own, when she makes a weird, strangled gasping noise that has him spinning around.
To see her holding a box set of ER season one, betrayal carved into the set of her jaw. “You have the entire series on DVD and you let me stand there that day and make a fool of myself with my excellent references?”
“You called me a regular Mark Greene,” he defends, “and I said I had no idea what you were talking about.”
Sloane rolls her eyes as she drops down onto the couch. She reaches for one of the four remotes that seem to come with every piece of technology he buys and, without him needing to explain, turns off the music and connects to the DVD player.
“What, I suppose you think you’re Doug Ross?”
“Clooney’s a good looking man.” He settles down onto the couch next to her, though he gives her enough space to not make her feel crowded. “I wouldn’t be opposed to such a comparison.”
“You realize the only way to settle this is with a marathon.”
“I’ve got nothing but time.”
It’s the quiet, he realizes, that must’ve woken him up. The television screen is dark, having shut off due to inactivity. With the only light spilling in from the kitchen, it takes a moment for his eyes to adjust to the darkness of the living room. Scattered across the coffee table is the evidence of their impromptu watch party: a half-eaten bowl of popcorn. a quarter of a pepperoni pizza, and two empty glasses.
Curled up next to him is Jenner, who blinks awake to watch him collect the dishes as quietly as he can. Because curled up next to Jenner is Sloane, who has her face nestled between the cushion and a blanket he’d found for her when the Christmas episode, combined with his surround sound, made her cold.
“Stay,” he whispers at Jenner. She wags her tail as he gets up, but obeys the command.
“I should go home,” comes Sloane’s voice, muffled against the cushion she was snoring on seconds prior. There’s that feeling again, like his heart is suddenly too big for his chest cavity to hold, when her body contradicts her words by snuggling even deeper into the blanket.
“You can stay,” he murmurs, reaching out and tucking a piece of her hair back behind her ear. “I’ll wake you up early so you can get home and get ready before your shift.”
“Gotta day off,” she tells the cushion, a yawn finishing out the slurred sentence.
“Then we can go get breakfast at that place off Amherst again. Deal?”
The quiet of his living room stretches on as he waits for an answer. When none comes, he straightens and starts to head for the kitchen, sure that she’s fallen back asleep.
And then, so soft that he almost misses it for running the water: “Deal.”
+ + +
Annually, Boston EMS hosts a gala to raise funds for the upcoming fiscal year.
As one of the leading hospitals in the city, Edenbrook always receives an invitation to attend. And thus far, as the emergency department attending, Ethan has always declined the RSVP, as he can’t imagine anything more mind-numbingly boring than being stuffed into the overcrowded ballroom of the downtown Marriott with the city’s elite.
So, it’s no surprise that when Harper receives the invitation that she throws it into the trash without ever consulting with him. Honestly, he doesn’t blame her at all. It does make the whole situation rather awkward, though, when he asks her to dig it out of her trashcan so he can send in his response.
It doesn’t take him long once he arrives at the function to find Sloane.
She’s surrounded by her station, obvious even from a distance away due to the way they interact with each other. Ethan takes his time, though, circling the ballroom and letting himself be dragged into tedious conversations with the mayor and the police chief and every other person he didn’t come here to see. It had been their agreement, Harper’s and his, since she had rifled through her trash for the invitation after all.
By the time he’s done with his due diligence, Sloane and her company have moved over to the long bank of windows that overlook the wharf. He takes a moment to appreciate her figure in the dress she wears, the cut of the neckline dipping just low enough to catch his attention. Her gaze flickers up to scan the room and Ethan gets the pleasure of watching her spot him. A brilliant smile spreads across her face as she waves him over, unlooping her arm through her co-worker’s to reach for him and drag him into their circle.
“You didn’t tell me you were coming!” she chides, her elbow playfully nudging his side.
“It’s not typically my kind of scene.” It’s the truth, though it’s more of a deflection from the real truth, which is that he moved his schedule around and dry-cleaned his suit just to come here and see her. He hasn’t had enough drinks to spill that secret.
“Yeah, I have to say I’m pretty surprised to see you here, Doctor Ramsey.” Rafael gestures to the throngs of guests that surround them.
“Well,” one of the women shrugs, “I’m sure this is what the ER on New Year’s looks like.”
“The people here have more clothing on than our typical New Year’s patient, but sure.”
The group laughs at his poor attempt at humor, while Sloane shakes her head at him, though he can see her lips twitching from holding back a grin. He is soon introduced to the rest of the station: the training EMT Sienna, the station supervisor Elijah, and two of the firefighters Bryce and Jackie.
Though Sloane always seems to have the ability to merge into any environment, Ethan is glad he gets to see her amongst her people, still in her element despite the champagne and fancy attire. Her witty attitude and infectious demeanor are like magnets, drawing in people from other stations into their circle.
He can’t help but notice, though, that she keeps him close to her, either with a hand on his back or by looping her arm through his. Delight at her touch simmers low in his stomach over the course of the evening, a feeling he can’t blame on the alcohol this time.
After the live auction is over and the dessert plates have been cleared away, the guests start to slowly trickle out. Their table is one of the first to leave, deciding to continue the party at a little hole-in-the-wall bar down on the wharf. It’s how Ethan comes to be standing on a rickety pier, dressed to the nines, sipping on a draft beer at ten p.m., well past his usual bedtime.
There’s a brush of warmth against his arm. He looks down to see Sloane leaning against the railing beside him, squinting out at the dark water.
“Thank you for coming.”
“Of course. Anything to help our city’s finest.”
She gives a soft snort over the rim of her drink.
“You’re impossible.”
“You like impossible.”
“You’re right.” She’s smiling as she says it, leaning into his arm. He moves his hand from the small of her back and wraps his arm around her shoulders, bringing her into his chest. She lets out a contented sigh.
“Can I ask you something?”
“Of course,” she hums.
“Why did you drop out of med school? From what I see on a daily basis, you’d have your pick of residencies.”
For a long moment, there’s only the muffled pop tunes bleeding through the bar and the rhythmic churn of water against the pier and none of those things are her response. He fears that he’s finally stumbled upon the one topic that had warning signs all over it not to approach, and that he barreled right through every one of them.
“My sister got sick,” she eventually says. “She went to the doctor on a Tuesday and she was diagnosed with stage four Hodgkin’s lymphoma by the next Wednesday. Her girlfriend split soon after and the only family we have to speak of can’t be trusted any farther than you can throw them.” She sucks in a breath, her fingers clenching around the drink she holds. “So, I moved back home and took care of her. But loan holders don’t care about why you dropped out, they want their monthly-minimum -- and with no decent-paying residency to lean on, I had to figure out something. I ended up hiring a caregiver to be with Sydney in the afternoon and evenings, so I could go work my retail job and then go to night classes to get my EMT certification.
“I spent a year working for the local EMS and learned how to be adaptable to any situation. My partner taught me how to drive a rig at sixty miles-an-hour while taking hairpin turns on county roads. I helped deliver babies at both Texaco stations in town, fought brush fires with the volunteer fire department, waded into the river to rescue an idiot teenager who decided to try out drifting during Hurricane Matthew. I’d gone into the job to keep a foot in the door within the medical field, but suddenly…”
“...you loved it,” Ethan finishes for her. Beside him, she takes a sip of her drink and nods.
“Exactly. Then, in the last week of January 2017, my sister died. And a week after her funeral, after all the extended family stopped coming by and pretending to care, I’m sitting in her living room on the floor, and I’m organizing her finances to start the process of selling her house. I get to this envelope that just has ‘Read this’ written across it. So, I mean, I opened it, of course -- and there’s a letter from Sydney to me that she’d written probably a month prior to her death. In it, she tells me that she’d saved up money during all those years I was away at school for us to go on a trip together.
“But with her cancer treatment going nowhere, that was no longer an option. She wrote about how my work stories made her laugh, about how obvious it was that I loved what I did, but that I didn’t deserve to be stuck in our hometown for the rest of my life, carrying her dead weight around. Her words, mind you -- her dry humor would rival even yours. And then she went on about how she didn’t want me to be fucked over by quitting school for her, how she wanted me to continue my education, and that she wanted me to use our trip money to go back to school. So, I called up a realtor, spent three months keeping the house from looking like anyone lived in it, sold the place, and within the next week I was living in a duplex out in Lower Roxbury and enrolled in a paramedic course at Northeastern.”
Ethan lets the story settle, lets the noises of the evening fill up what little space remains between them.
“Thank you for telling me,” he eventually says. Pressed against his side as she is, it doesn’t take much for Sloane to dig her elbow into his ribcage.
“Okay, I told you my story. Tit for tat, as they say.”
“No one actually says that.”
“C’mon, I know stalling when I hear it. Tell me something I don’t know.”
Wracking his brain for something to say, he spits out the first thing that comes to mind: “I wanted to be a diagnostician.” Sloane perks up at the statement, shifting to look up at him. “Before, you know, during my early days of medical school. I had it all planned out, signed up for all the seminars to attend so I could rub elbows, narrowed down my list of where I would spend my residency. All before I started my first year.”
Dragging in a breath, he continues, “And then one day during my first year, I’m waiting for the subway, and this man falls onto the tracks. At first, no one moves. We’re all stunned into place, watching, as if we’re waiting on him to jump back up onto the platform by himself. Someone finally moves, and then a crowd runs to the edge and they’re all yelling for help and for police and for a doctor. It’s stupid, but the word ‘doctor’ finally spurred me into action. I jump down there with two other people. The man was impaled on a section of broken track, so we not only have to get him off the tracks, but I’ve also got to make sure he doesn’t bleed out in the process. There’s no time to worry over the puncture wound while we’re all in the path of a soon-to-be oncoming train, though, so we simply had to pull him off the metal. It was… intense. We carry him over to the stairs and get him laid out on the ground, where I can finally take a look at him.”
“How bad?”
“The metal had sliced through his fourth intercostal.” Ethan brushes his fingers across the same spot on her back. “So, not only am I dealing with a chest cavity wound, but as I’m talking to the guy and trying to get information out of him, I can hear his breath getting shorter and shorter.”
“Pneumothorax?”
“Exactly,” he nods. “And all I have on me is a backpack full of textbooks. So, I borrow this woman’s pocket knife and another woman’s bicycle pump to create a makeshift chest tube. By the time I got it up and running, the paramedics arrived and carted him off.”
“I have a question,” Sloane interrupts.
“Hmm?”
“You said you borrowed the bike pump… the woman really wanted it back after all that?” Ethan feels her shoulders shake with contained laughter as he scoffs at her terrible joke. “Okay, okay, sorry -- back to the story. So, is that what made you change your field?”
“It seems juvenile, looking back, for one moment like that to matter so much--”
“No, it makes complete sense!” she insists, tipping her head back and closing her eyes as she tries to think of how she wants to convey her point. “It’s like… you sit in classrooms all day and you poke at cadavers and you can name every muscle in the body, but it’s nothing compared to the real thing. You’re a conductor and the patient’s life is this symphony you get to control. That rush -- it makes you take leaps you wouldn’t normally take.”
Her eyes open in time to spot the look of contemplation on his face. There’s something else, though, in the set of his jaw, in the ragged breath he takes in.
“Or risks that are worth taking,” he says. His other hand drops from the railing as he turns into her, gathering her even closer. Sloane moves readily, easily into the circle of his arms. “Like this.”
He leans down and she stretches up, meeting for a kiss that goes on and on -- until there is only the sound of the surf, steady underneath their feet.
“Yeah,” she agrees, and Ethan can feel the words against his lips. “Exactly like that.”
+ + +
“Make it harder.”
“Hmm.”
“Levator scapulae.”
“Mmm-hmm.”
“Trapezius… supraspinatus… rhomboid major… come on, this is Anatomy 1010 stuff.”
“I’m beginning to think that we should have agreed to ‘if Sloane complains about my seduction technique, she forfeits the competition.’”
“If you have to say the words ‘seduction technique’ out loud, then it’s probably not working anyway.” The words are barely out of her mouth before she’s squealing with laughter as Ethan digs his fingers into her ribs, tickling her there. “Inter… intercos -- intercoastal.”
The mattress dips as he shifts, dropping down to skim his lips across the skin covering the muscle she labeled. So far, she’s gotten all of them correct -- which means he’ll have to make this game of theirs a little more difficult. Shifting again, he centers his weight onto his left hand and distracts her with a lazy kiss against her lower back. He smirks at her bored sigh. “Latissimus dorsi.”
“Mmm, no, I want you to think… deeper.” His lips touch the spot again, his tongue dipping out to taste the skin there, warm and salty sweet. Tracing the outside of her thigh with his other hand, pleasure clutches at him when he sees the muscles in her leg twitch as his fingers stroke further inward, closer and closer.
“Iliocostalis?” Maybe it’s his imagination, but some of the confidence has left her tone, replaced by that low, breathy voice she uses -- the one that could get him to move mountains, if only his work schedule would allow it.
“Very good,” he murmurs, his fingers dragging two heavy passes across her inner thigh, where her abductor muscle tenses at his attention. She squirms against his bed, spreading her legs a little wider, silently urging for his touch to come a little closer. Unable to resist any longer, Ethan sinks two fingers into her. He groans as she clenches around him. Shameless little gasps fall from her mouth as he slides in a third finger, her hips gently rocking against his bed as she begs.
His name on her lips could be an aphrodisiac, could be sought after like the maca root, could convince men and women alike to traverse 3,000 feet into the mountains to seek out. It’s his luck, then, that she’s chosen to let him have the taste of her.
He curls down over her to nip at the skin of her waist.
“Longissi -- no, fuck -- serratus posterior inferi--”
All at once, Ethan pulls away. Self-satisfaction floods through him as Sloane groans in frustration, rolling underneath him so that she can glare directly at him.
“You know the rules,” he tells her with an easy shrug, as if he’s done with their game (as if he isn’t hard as a rock, staring down at her, pissed-off and naked in his sheets). He’s expecting her to do quite a number of things, all towards the goal of getting her way. What he isn’t expecting is for her to wrap her legs around his waist and use all of that hidden strength she possesses to tug him down on top of her, where she proceeds to kiss along his jaw and nip at his shoulder. “What are you doing?”
“You tried your seduction technique,” she says. “Now I’m trying out mine.”
He feels every inch of her smile as she drags a hand across his chest, down over his hip, and around the base of his cock. Arousal is a hot poker to his sternum, drowning everything else out. His awareness tunnels until it’s only her (and her touch and her breath on his skin as she chuckles and the slick slide of her thighs against his hips and it’s all too much and not enough at the same time).
“I think it’s working,” he chokes out, talking about too many other things that he can’t put names on yet.
“Hmm… you know what?” she grins, beating him to the answer. “I think so, too.”
+ + +
It all starts when the waiting area empties out. A rare sight on a rainy Friday afternoon, when car accidents and ankle sprains typically fill the lobby to the brim. Such a rarity, indeed, that the interns collect at the double doors to take in the scene.
Ethan clears his throat, enjoying the way they all spin around in a panic at the noise.
“What’s say you all find something more productive to do with your time than stare out at the parking lot -- unless you’ve decided to abandon your medical careers and become meteorologists?”
Marisa, one of the more vocal interns, grabs a handful of her breast and tilts her head.
“There’s a thirty percent chance that it’s already raining.”
Some of the group laughs, while others glare. Ethan doesn’t bother asking about the pop culture reference and shoos them all away with threats of inventorying the supply closets if they don’t find patients to care for.
Sidling up next to him, the pediatric specialist stares out at the rainy day. Tucked into her elbow is the clipboard she’s never seen without. The interns all think it’s full of patient charts and motivational quotes. Ethan wonders what they would think of Ines Delarosa if they ever found out that hidden between the hand-outs on SIDS and the importance of handwashing is the newspaper’s sports section. Because, aside from being the state’s leading pediatric emergency physician, Ines is also a die-hard Bruins fan -- she’s even got the season glass seats to prove it (and a ridiculous amount of memorabilia, which he only knows about because he graciously attends her Halloween party every year).
“It is odd to see it so s-word,” she says, dodging the wrath of the ER gods by avoiding the word.
“If it keeps up, maybe you can get off early and snag a good seat at the game.”
Ines chuckles and shrugs her shoulders.
“A girl can dream.”
He turns from the doors to see that the interns are following his commands when Ines makes a concerned noise. Glancing back out the window, he spots the flashing lights of two cop cars as they streak down the street, followed quickly by a third and a fourth. After the eleventh he quits counting. “There’s a whole squadron heading east,” Ines calls out to the room. “Anybody know anything?”
“I’ll check Twitter,” Kendra suggests, her fingers flying across the keyboard. Both doctors watch as the screen loads, reflected in her horn-rimmed glasses. Ethan’s stomach tightens as her dark eyes go wide behind the lenses. “Oh, shit.”
It takes seven minutes for the first victim to arrive. From then on, the ambulance bay resembles a floodgate, filling up with concussions and internal bleeding and broken bones. It’s an all-hands-on-deck situation, with staff from every other department coming to assist. Even Chris and Harper come down to help -- and it’s almost like med school all over again with the three of them working together, side-by-side. Any awkward relations between them are buried deep in the wave of such a disaster.
Ethan spends the two minutes he can spare explaining the card system to the interns before handing each of them a stack. As he races from one bed to another to oversee the critical cases and get them transferred into the next available OR, he notes the lack of black cards. He can’t help but hope that it’s a good sign, and that the accident wasn’t as catastrophic as it could have been.
But with each new patient’s stuttering recount of the disaster, he finds that hope slowly dwindling. A partial tunnel collapse, they say, repeating what the news anchors have been relaying on the screens in the break room, where they’ve set up a makeshift triage for the less critical. One patient tells him about the crunching noise of the impact, while another one cries over the terrified screams of those trapped in between the layers of rubble.
It isn’t until the third hour (or fifth or sixth, he isn’t sure; time is a construct that he only becomes aware of when he has to call a time of death) that he finally gets an opportunity to talk to Sloane. He’s caught glimpses of her before now, rushing in and out of the double doors. This close, he can see the dust and grime that coats her jacket, the reflective strips splattered with black sludge. Streaks of the substance are smeared through her hair and down onto her neck.
“Hey,” he reaches out, cupping her cheek in his hand and drawing her eyes up from the transfer report she’s scribbling on at the nurses station. “How are you holding up?”
She bites at her chapped bottom lip, dragging in a breath as she thinks over a response.
“It’s… bad,” she tells him. “Out there.”
“It’s amazing, though,” one of the interns pipes up from where they’re hovering nearby, “that so few people have such serious injuries.”
Sloane meets the remark with silence and Ethan knows there must be countless victims that she had to overlook in order to get to those that would have a chance of survival. Placing her hand over his, she turns her head and presses a quick kiss to his palm.
“I’ve gotta get back out there.” She gives his hand a squeeze before she pulls away, back into the rush of bodies and out the door. Sloane McTavish, once more unto the breach, he thinks as he watches her disappear.
By the mid-afternoon, the ER’s lobby is no longer just a home for the injured. Loved ones come in droves, in fast-moving packs across the parking lot and through the entrance to clog up the reception desk. They demand to know if their brother or partner or best friend are safe within the hospital, their panic bouncing between one another and magnifying when the staff can’t give them the answers they need.
From inside the curtained-off cubicle where he’s working on a patient, Ethan can hear Harper giving a speech to the crowd. It’s sympathetic, but not coddling; assertive, but not aggressive. Her ability to sway a large group of panicked patients into understanding the reality of the hospital’s situation within two minutes is why she excels at being the chief (and why Ethan would never be able to do what she does -- he would’ve been mauled the minute he opened his mouth).
“You need any help?”
His head snaps up to see Sloane hovering at the gap in the curtain. Maybe it’s the fluorescent lighting, but she looks paler than last he saw her. Her knuckles are white where she grips the curtain’s edge, he also notes. “Raf is restocking our rig,” she continues. “He said for me to take a quick five and grab something to drink.”
“Take five means to sit down and get some rest,” Ethan points out.
“If I sit down, I’m gonna fall asleep.” She takes a long drink from the styrofoam cup in her other hand and grimaces. He can’t help but worry about how much coffee she’s ingested -- enough that there are fine tremors in her hands, her body running on caffeine and cortisol.
Finishing off the suture, he calls for a nurse to start the discharge process and guides Sloane over to an empty seating area.
“Sit down, honey. I’m going to get you something to--”
Her muffled cry of pain cuts him off. Ethan drops down onto one knee in front of her and cups her chin, forcing her glassy eyes to meet his. “Hey, hey, what’s wrong? What hurts?”
“Nothing.” She shakes her head. “I’m fine, I--”
“Don’t give me that bullshit. What hurts?” He reaches for the zipper on her jacket when she snags his wrist and pushes him away.
“I told you: I’m fine. It’s just a scratch.”
He frowns at her hurried assurances.
“Forgive me, but I’ve heard that one before. I didn’t buy it then, either. Let me at least check you out.” His authoritative tone seems to sway her. She drops his wrist and inches forward in the chair; her pained wince as she does so worries him further. He’s got her zipper halfway down when a voice calls out from behind them.
“Slo, you ready to roll?”
Before he can stop her, she’s yanking her zipper back up and shoving past him to join her partner.
“Yeah, I’m all set.”
Ethan gets to his feet and prepares to coax her into getting checked out when Rafael glances between the two of them and smirks.
“Aren’t there supply closets for this kind of thing? If you need to get a leg over, partner, I can go grab a snack real qui--”
Sloane knocks her fist into Rafael’s arm, ignoring his fake cry of alarm as she turns and heads for the double doors.
“She’s injured,” Ethan tells him. “Keep an eye on her.”
Rafael quickly sobers, his grin falling away. He nods once before jogging back down the hallway and through the exit.
The rescue squad has reached the third section of the tunnel, Kendra tells him at some point in the early evening (or he thinks, at least; he hasn’t had the time to look out a window and actually take in the position of the sun in several hours). The opening brings a new flood of victims, their injuries more critical, given their extended time underground without aid.
Most of his interns are holding up surprisingly well, given the sheer influx of patients and the higher amount of critical codes. Ethan’s found only a handful of them having a pity party in the on-call room. His brain is too fogged to stumble his way through an original speech, so the one he gives is ripped straight from Doctor Greene. None of them seem to notice, though, solidifying Sloane’s claim that his interns are all fans of Hugh Laurie’s medical drama instead.
His thoughts turn once more to his girlfriend as he leaves an intern to wipe away their tears and moves back out into the hallway. The few times he’s seen her he’s been too busy with a patient to get close enough to check on her. Reaching into his pocket for his phone, he’s about to resort to texting Rafael again to get a status when he spots her across the room.
She’s standing at the nurses station and staring down at a report. The pen in her hand moves back and forth in short strokes across the page, too sloppy to be anything legible. Even from where he stands, he can see the choppy rise and fall of her chest. Hurrying past a cluster of waiting gurneys, he pushes his way through the hallway traffic to reach her side. He calls her name as he rounds the counter. The lack of reaction in her drives that stake of worry down farther into his chest. Gripping her shoulder, he gives her a little shake.
“Sloane, hey, look at me,” he urges.
His breath catches in his throat when she complies; her pale face is clammy, her lips tinged blue. Blinking heavily up at him in confusion, she tries to take a step back. His instinct already has him shouting for a bed. He’s moving even before she can collapse, catching her before she hits the floor. He loops an arm under her knees and another around her back, fighting back the wave of panic when her head lolls to the side.
Kendra rushes over with a bed; they wheel her into the closest open room, a team of nurses racing in behind them.
“’m fine,” Sloane mutters as Ethan jerks her zipper down. “Jus need a new… bandage--”
“Fuck,” Kendra swears.
Looking down at the bloodied mess of her shirt, Ethan can’t help but agree with the sentiment. He tugs the fabric up to expose a blood-soaked bandage, secured only by a few strips of medical tape. Peeling back the bandage, he sucks in a breath through his teeth at the jagged laceration across her lower abdomen. The one she clearly tried to pack with gauze and walk off.
“Jus patch me up an--”
“Goddammit, lay back down!” he orders as Sloane tries to sit up. “You’re not fit to do anything but try to save your own life for once. You’re in hypovolemic shock.”
“If I was, be dead already,” she argues, her words slurring together.
Kendra produces a pair of scissors and they cut off her uniform as Ethan orders for a blood transfusion, as well as a CT scan to rule out internal bleeding.
“BPs at eighty-nine, heart rate is 126,” Kendra reads out. “She’s in tachycardia.”
Fury at her disregard for her own safety roils in Ethan’s gut, compounding on the anger he already feels towards himself for letting her go earlier. Layered beneath everything is fear, thick and cold and viscous as it eats away at him.
He spends the next hour going through the motions of testing and eliminating any possibilities of further injuries. Once they get her downgraded from stage three and stabilized, Ethan allows her to give in to sleep and steps out to check on the rest of his department. Finding everyone at their posts (and no one sobbing in the on-call room), he returns to Sloane’s room.
Where he’s surprised to find her awake, albeit groggy.
“Hey,” she greets, her voice almost lost underneath the steady beeps of the monitor.
Ethan steps further into the room and shuts the door behind him, snuffing out the hospital’s incessant noise. Settling down into the chair by her bed, he reaches out to take her offered hand and brings it to his lips.
“I need you to explain to me what the hell you were thinking.”
She sucks in a breath, holding it for a long moment before letting it out. He raises his head, clutching her hand to his cheek as he watches her mull over her answer.
“I was in the first section of the tunnel,” she begins. “The one we’d already cleared. I was on my way to help Raf board someone when I heard this noise. Like an animal wailing, you know, really high-pitched and drawn out. It’s closer to me than him, so I get down on my hands and knees and I’m crawling through the wreckage and I’m calling out and I can -- I can tell it’s a kid because he starts to talk, and he’s asking for his mom, and finally I spot him and he’s… he’s just a little tiny thing.”
She pauses to catch her breath. Ethan turns his head and presses a long kiss against her knuckles. “He’s pinned underneath his mom, who we… had to move past earlier... and he’s tucked up underneath a seat. I don’t know how we missed him before, but I know I’ve got to get him out of there; he’s soaked in blood and I can’t tell if it’s his own or his mom’s, and there’s no time to try to figure it out. I finally get him out and he’s got a gash above his ear -- deep enough that I know I’ve got to hurry. And… that was it. I was going too fast, wasn’t watching all of my steps, and I’ve got him in my arms when I feel myself start to slip, but I’ve got him so I can’t stop myself, so I tucked him close to my hip and rolled into the fall and... landed onto a broken railing.”
“That you slapped a bandage over and ignored,” Ethan finishes for her. “Without letting anyone know and refusing to let me check--”
Sloane shakes her head; tears track down over her pale cheeks.
“You don’t -- Ethan, there were so many people down there, trapped and screaming and… and we were hauling out buckets of debris to get to them and sometimes, by the time we got to them, they wouldn’t be screaming anymore and I knew I couldn’t stop and sit that out, I couldn’t--”
“You’re lucky you only needed stitches and a blood transfusion. If you had gone on any longer, you would have progressed to stage four hypovolemic shock. You could have fallen into a coma from blood loss,” he hisses out, the anger from earlier returning with a vengeance. “Only a rookie would pull a stunt like this.”
She meets his narrowed gaze and it’s like she can see past his front, past the frustration; without moving, without speaking, she peels back those jagged layers to see the worry and guilt that festers below.
“This is what we do,” she murmurs. “Sometimes we forgo our own safety for the sake of others.” Tugging on his hand, she urges him to sit beside her on the bed where she can run a comforting hand through his hair and down his arm, reassuring him of her presence.
“I know,” he whispers, leaning down to kiss her forehead, then the bridge of her nose, and then her lips. All of the pressure in his head evaporates at her touch, at reassuring himself that she’s okay. “But next time, let me do it. I am closer to the ER, after all.”
Sloane lets out an exasperated chuckle, rolling her eyes at his lame joke.
“You’re lucky I love you.”
“I know,” he says, that soft smile of his making an appearance -- the one only she gets to see. “Get some sleep. I’ll be right outside if you need anything.”
Standing up, he reaches above her head and switches off the strip light. The room dims, lit only by the muted hallway lights that leak through the blinds. Leaning down, he gives her a longer, sweeter kiss, trying to pour all of his relief into it. “I love you, too,” he tells her as he tucks the blanket in around her.
“Wake me when your shift ends.”
“Okay.”
“Promise?”
“Promise.”
+ + +
He approaches the light with that tight feeling in his chest; his body’s assurance of a job well-done. Covered in a fine sheen of sweat from the summer heat, he yanks at the collar of his T-shirt and wafts it against his chest, groaning at the feel of air moving against his skin.
“Are you prepping for the marathon?” he asks between ragged breaths. “Is that why you were going so fast?”
“Wasn’t going any faster than usual,” Sloane replies with a shrug. Leaving her side, Relay trots over to sniff at Jenner and then at him, nudging his pocket with interest, where the tennis ball they toss around in the Common hides.
“Well, either you’re lying, or I’m starting to show my old age.”
“You’re not old,” she scoffs. “You’re thirty-eight.” Turning towards her, Ethan recognizes the look on her face; he immediately becomes invested in whatever she’s about to say next. “Here, I’ve got an idea: I’ll race you. If you beat me, then you’ll get a treat.”
Both dogs and he perk up at the term. “Deal?”
“Deal.”
The light changes.
They take off, jogging across the intersection and up onto the opposite sidewalk.
Where they both turn left for home.
+ + +
AN: I did some routine googling for the medical information in this, but not nearly enough as I probably should have. Take it with a grain of salt. *Fixed as of 6/2/21: changed Sloane’s dog name from Haint to Relay. Haint is a term for ghosts or evil spirits, which I learned originated from Gullah culture in GA and SC, so I feel it was appropriation for me to use it with an MC who is white / is not part of that culture. This fic also contains a real-life AU in the fact that Boston EMS does not work on the same structure as Chicago or NYC, where some ambulances reside within certain quarters at a dedicated fire station -- however, in this they do because everything’s made up and the points don’t matter.
#ethan x mc#ethan ramsey x mc#choices#open heart#open heart fic#f: what if the closest we get to the moment is now#Kaila writes things#we get to play 'will this massive wall of text show up in the tag or not?'#picture it: me; 2019; desperately wishing tumblr had the same rich text format editing that AO3 does
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Signing Losers AU
Ever since Bill was little, he’s always had difficulty speaking because of his stutter
To help him with communicating, he and his parents learn sign language
None of the other kids in Bill’s class knew sign and he hardly talked to other kids because a lot of them, like Henry Bowers, made fun of his stutter and how he talked
Then one day in pre-school Bill meets a new kid a year younger than him that also doesn’t speak
Or more accurately can’t speak
Bill notices one day though that this kid was practicing fingerspelling while sitting alone watching the other kids at recess and concludes that he must know sign
So Bill goes over to introduce himself
The kid at first is amazed that someone not only went over to talk to him to be his friend but also knew how to sign! He, much like Bill, never met another kid that knew sign
The kid introduces himself as Stan Uris and explains how an infection he had when he was younger damaged his vocal cords leaving him mute, and to communicate he learned to sign
The two click and become best friends almost instantly
A few years later, Bill’s 1st-grade class gets a new student named Richie and Bill can’t help but find him a bit annoying and really rude
He always speaks really loudly and is terrible at having proper conversations and working other students and often ignores whatever the teacher says
One day though while Richie was drawing during recess Bill walks up behind him to talk to him but Richie doesn’t respond to him
He keeps saying his named but Richie just doesn’t seem to take any notice of Bill
Bill finally grabs his shoulder and scares Richie half to death when he finally realizes that someone was behind him
Bill demands to know why Richie was ignoring him and Richie, feeling bad about upsetting one of his classmates for once, explains his situation to Bill
His dad’s genetically deaf and Richie inherited the trait leaving him unable to hear almost anything that isn’t loud really loud
His mom knew that she might have a deaf child when she got pregnant with him but the reality that he was deaf was a bit too hard to grasp for her and she insisted on teaching him to read lips and speak to make him “normal” and help him “fit in”
Richie knows it’s bullshit and so does his dad who is a proud Deaf man and insists that it was ridiculous to enroll Richie in a public hearing school instead of a Deaf Institute since Richie is way better at communicating via sign language (which he learned from his father) than orally speaking
His mother somehow won that argument though and Richie started attending Derry Elementary
His teacher’s know about his deafness and that he can’t speak or control the volume of his voice too well and is still learning how to read lips, which is his only way to figure out what hearing people are saying when they aren’t screaming at the top of their lungs at him, which Richie absolutely loathes when they do that
Richie also insisted that when he enrolled that his teachers didn’t tell his peers about him
There was no point in pretending to be “normal” if everyone already knew the truth
Once Richie’s done telling Bill his story Bill instantly feels really bad about how greatly he misjudged this kid
He introduces Richie to Stan and the three of them become great signing buddies
Next year in second grade, Bill get’s assigned to work on a project with a kid named Eddie
The two click and become fast friends, and for Eddie, Bill becomes his first and only friend
That is until Bill introduces Eddie to Stan and Richie
Eddie, unlike the other three boys, has no idea how to sign, but since that’s his friends' preferred way of communicating, insists that they teach him
It takes a while, but by the end of fourth grade, Eddie can talk to his friends in sign easily, though does have to ask what certain signs mean every once in a while
One day in the summer between fourth and fifth grade, Eddie and Bill decide it would be fun to build a dam in the Barrens
They suck at building dams, but the fact that Henry Bowers shows up, apparently having chased another one of his victims down into the Barrens, just made the day exponentially worse
That is until a young Ben Hanscom appears on the scene
He apologizes for the trouble he indirectly cause them and inquires about what they were doing down in the Barrens
Eddie is initially hesitant to tell this kid what they’re doing and letting him stay with them
Henry is still out somewhere searching for him, and if he finds Ben with them, he and Bill would just become even bigger targets to Henry, and that’s not something Eddie wants to deal with
So, Eddie thinking he’s slick, signs to Bill asking what they should do
Little does he know that Ben actually knows how to sign
Being a book nerd without any friends, Ben decided to teach himself how to sign one summer with signing books from the library out of pure boredom
He was by no means an expert signer, but he could have basic conversations and he was able to figure out what Eddie was saying
When Ben responds to Eddie’s question to Bill with sign, both boys are taken back
But that’s also how they knew
He was destined to be their friend
They decided Ben was well worth the risk of possibly facing more harassment from Henry, and they invite him to come down to the Barrens the next day to help them build their dam and to introduce him to Stan and Richie
Ben accepts, happy to finally have some new friends, and is excited to start using and improving his signing abilities more, and he fits right in with the four other boys
A few weeks later, Richie is on his way to meet up with Ben when he spots one of his fellow classmates, Beverly Marsh, out by herself
Beverly being alone wasn’t an uncommon sight, seeing how she wasn’t liked by any of the other girls her age, but that’s not what really catches his attention
What catches his attention about Beverly Marsh, is that she’s sitting by herself, eating an ice cream cone, and fingerspelling to herself
But not just fingerspelling
She’s fingerspelling fast
Quicker than Richie can, and so fast Richie can barely even understand what she’s spelling, and Richie’s been practicing fingerspelling since he was an infant
Richie figures that if she knows how to fingerspell, she probably knows how to sign too
So Richie walks over, sits down beside her, and starts to introduce himself to her using sign
Beverly looks at him, surprised and confused, before stopping him
She then verbally explains to him that she doesn’t know sign
Richie gets confused, and just says “Fingerspelling” and points to her hand
Bev then, almost sheepishly, explains that she doesn’t know how to sign, but her parents did teach her how to fingerspell
Her parents both took an ASL 1 class in college, and the only thing that long-term stuck with them besides a handful of basic signs, was the alphabet
So, they thought it would be fun to teach Bev how to fingerspell, and that became their thing
They were always fingerspelling around their house, and Bev became really good at it
Richie, impressed by her fingerspelling abilities, decides that she should become his, as well as his other friends’, friend
She can tell that Richie’s a good person at heart, even if he did act obnoxiously at times, and decides to accept his invitation
She gets introduced to their group, and all feels right
Then one day, the six friends run into Henry attacking someone in the Barrens, and they instantly jump in to help him
After successfully scaring Henry away, the kid introduces himself as Mike Hanlon
They notice he doesn’t know any sign, but they can also feel that he’s just meant to be apart of their friend group, so they invite him in
He accepts and is welcomed with open arms
Over the course of the summer, Richie, Eddie, Bill, and Stan teach their new friends how to sign
Ben already had a good grasp of the language, Bev knowing how to fingerspell helped them teach her quickly, and Mike was a fast learner and picked up signing fast
By the time the new school year starts, signing is definitely their preferred language to communicate in when they’re together
They even sign to each other during school, even if it’s in the middle of a lecture and they’re on opposite sides of the room
One day, Richie decides to take his friends to a local Deaf event
Derry may not have had a big Deaf community, but Richie and his dad were still big members of it and often held signing get-togethers since most people in Derry didn’t speak the language
Lots of people at the event were enthused to see so many young kids signing, even if they could speak, and the Losers have a great time together signing at the get-together
Richie, still a big music fan even though he can’t hear most of it unless it’s really loud or has a big speaker playing it so he can feel the vibrations of the music, loves getting his friends to sign along to songs with him
They all agree that signing along with songs is more fun than singing along to them (though that may be because none of them can really sing anyway)
To conclude, the Losers all know how to sign and love signing to each other and support each other through thick and thin and agree that ASL is a great language that everyone should learn
#bill denbrough#stan uris#richie tozier#eddie kaspbrak#ben hanscom#beverly marsh#mike hanlon#the losers club#it movie 2017#it stephen king#sign language#american sign language#asl
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“ SLASHERS AND BONERS AKA A PERFECT MIX ! ”
REQUEST: lmao i feel like patrick’s the type to watch a horror movie while his s/o gives him a hand job
AUTHORS NOTE: oooops sorry for adding a mini bj in there + i realized i really do love ending on cliff hangers 🤷🏻♀️
The fifth desperate glance in the last half hour was thrown at the clock perched up on the wall above the television, a defeated sigh escaping her when the hands on the clock tauntingly reminded her that he was still an hour late from the time he promised her. Pushing herself off of the corner she was curled up in, the scarlet blanket tossed around her shoulders following in suit with her movements, she sat with her legs crossed and her back flat against the sofa, continuing to watch the slasher film of his choice as the annoyance radiated off of her.
Typical, she sourly thought and winced as the blonde girl on the television received a knife to the torso, typical of him to expect me to just wait up on him after I’m missing a party for this.
Scooping up a handful of popcorn from the bowl in her lap and tossing it in her mouth, she attempted to focus her energy on being pissed at Patrick Hockstetter’s lack of skill on being on time instead of the eerie feeling of being home alone on Halloween; the horror flick not soothing her paranoia one bit. Unaware that the boy taking over her thoughts was just outside her front door with not so great intentions in mind, Y/N allowed herself to become too engrossed in the film in hopes that it would make the time pass by faster, not anticipating that it would only make her an easier target in his newest ploy against her.
Excitement engulfed him as he reached for the house key she had lovingly left for him in the mail box, the adrenaline from his ‘fun’ with the gang still present in his body even after they dropped him off and Henry had thrown a crude joke to use protection so they wouldn’t have a mini Hockstetter running around — a small percent of Henry’s tone bordering on the serious side, sincerely not wanting to wish that unfortunate event on the town of Derry.
Tossing the brass key along the damp grass by her front door and inviting himself into the quite of her home, only the muffled sound of the television serving as background noise, he opted on mimicking the quietness of her home as he tiptoed over to her kitchen in search for the prop main eventing his idea of entertainment. Patrick grabbed a glimpse of her watching the movie intently as he sneaked over to the dimly lit kitchen, her annoyance evident with the forced expression residing on her soft facial features and the familiar frown curled into lips that he was ready to take advantage of once he got his first round of fun out of the way.
Grinning in approval at his find, the large kitchen knife splayed across the marble counter for him from her mother’s cooking fest earlier, he closed his hand around the plastic black handle and felt the extra shot of adrenaline pump up inside of him at the touch of the utensil. The familiar, exciting, feeling at the pit of his stomach filled him when he held the knife in his hand and began tip-toeing over to the living room area, the placement of the sofa providing him with a view of the back of her head — piecing together the perfect scenario for his scheme.
Patrick was aware of the fact that he was late, he knew she was probably going to throw a hissy fit even if it was only an hour, so what was the harm in making her a little more angrier? None, right?
Taking in a deep breath of glee once he was standing behind her, Patrick’s ringless hand clasped itself around her mouth and the knife-wielding one found itself at her throat, the flat side of the blade firmly pressing against her windpipe just as the killer in the movie killed off its second victim. Patrick took in the sight of popcorn kernels flying onto the carpet as the bowl fell out of her lap, her shaking body hastily straightening up and her heavy, flustered, breaths dancing across the bloodied knuckles of his large hand — the blood courtesy of the killer punch he delivered to the Stan half an hour ago.
If her body quivering under his hold as he dragged the knife across her throat mixed with the screams laced with fear of his favorite film wasn’t enough, the warmth of her fat tears dropping against the clammy skin of his palm were the icing on the cake. Patrick’s fingertips pressed harder against the side of her face as he leaned in to her; making her feel as though if she cut open her skin she would be able to see his fingertips ingrained into her jawbones from the pressure he was applying. Y/N winced in pain at the tight grip on her jaw while the tears kept rolling down, the helplessness she felt infuriating her when she felt his hair brush up against her face, blocking her the look of the culprit’s face from her peripheral view.
It was only when Patrick couldn’t keep it together anymore, his lips pressing up against her ear as he tauntingly whispered ‘guess who’ and dropped the knife on the space next to her, that Y/N’s rage towards him overshadowed her fear at the previous situation.
Dropping his threatening hold on her and plopping himself at the opposite end of the couch she had saved for him an hour prior, his long arms pulled her frightened body into his relaxed one before she could utter her string of insults his way for what she called ‘annoyingly dangerous behavior’. Her back rested against the side of the arm rest, her body sitting on one his thighs while her legs were splayed out across his, providing him a favorite view of his due to the shorts she was wearing.
Sliding a rough hand up her neck, stopping at the base of her jaw, Patrick adjusted her view away from the beige colored wall ahead of her and forced her to face the boy who put her through hell a few minutes ago for his own amusement. Face splotched with tears, the white of her eyes tainted red due to the crying he caused, Y/N’s attempt at an intimidating glare fell when she realized she wasn’t fooling anyone and instead opted for a simple annoyed expression; not realizing that it didn’t hinder Patrick’s entertainment one bit instead it added to it.
“Look at you, all made up to get fucked on Halloween like a slut.” Patrick cooed, a lanky arm holding onto her waist under her shirt and his mouth propping up into a smile when a stray tear escaped the rim of her eye.
Sloppily running his tongue along the side of her face, following the trail of the single tear, he felt Y/N shiver in disgust and want at the feeling as his finger’s slowly trailed up and down the slope of her hip, a light film of saliva layered across the skin.
“You’re such an asshole.” Y/N shook her head in disbelief at what happened and how calm he was acting, her sore eyes’ rims still littered with tears of frustration — all she wanted was a simple hookup but Patrick didn’t do simple. “Are you seriously hard over this?” She spat when she felt something poking the side of her thigh, not understanding what could possibly turn him on about her being pissed at him with tears in her eyes.
“Oh, come on, don’t act stupid. You should know me by now, baby.” Patrick shook his head at her in disappointment, stripping her of his touch on her face and laying his arm across the back of the sofa before glancing down at the middle of his jeans and back up at her. “Are you gonna fix it? You did cause it.”
Patrick’s tone was sickly condescending, making the answer seem as if it was the most obvious thing in the world and her eyes widening in disbelief at his request, a squeeze at her side when she took too long to respond finally bringing her back to him. Rolling her eyes at him, an action he would make her pay for later when the movie was over, Y/N moved her body so she was straddling him, her face working itself in the crook of his neck to not block his view of the gory movie playing on the television.
A hesitant hand falling on his jean clad boner and cupping him, her mouth began working on sucking on the delicate skin of his neck, pausing for a moment to see if he’d stop her and continuing bruising him when he replied by wrapping an arm around her and pulling her closer. Palming his hard dick through his jeans, her teeth staining with blood from the broken skin on his neck, she felt him shiver in pleasure under her when he felt her run of her tongue against his neck and lap up the blood dirtying his skin.
Breaking free from his possessive hold on her body, she crawled off of his lap and unbuttoned his jeans, her fingernails leaving subtle crimson lines against his lower abdomen when she pulled his plaid boxers down. Wrapping her fingers around his dick, innocently looking up at him through her lengthy lashes, she slid her hand up and down his shaft while keeping her gaze fixed on him — indulging in the idea of having someone like him in such a vulnerable position.
Teeth grazing his bottom lip at the sight of her obliging to his every want, he grabbed a handful of her messy hair and pushed her face up against his dick, her lips brushing up against the tip and the pre-cum licked up by her. Hiding her grimace at the salty taste of him, she wrapped her lips around his dick and filled her mouth, her hand continuing to work at the base of his dick while her tongue danced over his tip. The hold he had on her by her hair grew tighter with each flick her tongue worked on, praises of how much of a good girl she was being thrown at her as he happily took in the sight of her back arched and her pretty little mouth filled with his dick.
His breathing grew heavier, his chest moving up and down with each breath he heavily took, Y/N preparing herself for what was about to come. Flushed lips paused around the lower half of his dick, the feeling of it poking the back of her throat quickly replaced by the warmth of his load being swallowed. Not even giving her a second to relax after swallowing his cum, he pulled her head back by the hair and brought it up so he could get a good look at her flushed face, a grin that she’d grown to love and hate meeting her.
It was a favorite sight of her: her on her knees, cheeks tainted pink from her previous action, and doe eyes looking up at him with the word obedience basically written on them.
Roughly pressing his lips against hers, a small cut forming on her lip from the forceful manner he pressed himself up with, he smirked against her when he could still taste the remains of him on her. Pressing a hand up on her shoulder when he felt her wanting to deepen the kiss, he pushed her away and began zipping up his pants and putting his junk away, hurt flashing across her face from the sudden rejection.
“We’re going up to your room.” Patrick explained, liking the way she happily obliged and raced to her room, giving him a moment of privacy to watch the final moments of the movie before following in suit — ready to remind her why the wait was worth it.
#patrick hockstetter one shot#patrick hockstetter imagine#this title is honestly true af#this title is also my halloween plans lmaooo
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Yuletide 2017: Dear Creator Letter
Dear Author,
All of the general likes and dislikes listed in the main part of the sign-up form apply, but I just wanted to use this to expound on the ships and provide some prompts. You don’t necessarily have to go with any of them, anything that fits my general likes is fine if those speak to you better than the prompts do.
Maeve Millay/Hector Escaton- Westworld (TV)
In my opinion, these two have the most interesting and complex relationship in the entire show. Its gradual development and the emotional depths it reaches as the first season goes on hits all of my sweet spots: tenderness only expressed for each other, badass team-ups, both fighting for similar causes, him willing to follow her anywhere, sacrificing for each other, the relationship starting as something kind of casual but becoming much more intense and closer to love near the end. I’m more than okay with PWP with them, but honestly they have so much more that I would be ecstatic to also see some ~emotions~ come into play with any kind of PWP (lol pun not intended).
Anyway here are a few prompts for them if you’d like to use them:
Maeve makes it back but Hector doesn’t remember anything from their relationship and she has to fight to bring him back to her
Happily Ever After scenario where Maeve is reunited with her daughter and the three of them try to make a go of being a family
Despite not knowing who she is, Hector is fiercely jealous of anyone Maeve interacts with
Maeve and Hector make it into the real world and explore what the West in reality has to offer (sleeping under the stars, enjoying nature, building a house together, etc.). Can include Maeve’s daughter for extra domestic fluff.
Eleanor Shellstrop/ Tahani Al-Jamil- The Good Place (TV)
The existence of this show is a gift and while I ship Eleanor with both Chidi and Tahani, I’m craving more stories between Eleanor and Tahani; love me some size difference. But also, I really love how opposite they are in terms of personal interests and lifestyles, but when they work together or just get along casually, they make a super sweet, adorable team.
Here a few prompts:
Tahani and Eleanor finding creative ways to get around the height difference between them
Kinda porny, but I would be down for their first time having sex where Eleanor has some experience, but is still nervous cause it’s Tahani and does her best, but Tahani hasn’t really had much experience at all so she loves whatever Eleanor is doing (I’d be mostly ok with eating out, fingerfucking, or scissoring, nothing gross that hits my dislikes)
Tahani trying to find the perfect, over-the-top to tell Eleanor how much she loves her, but Eleanor reassuring her that she doesn’t need to prove anything to her, she’s already perfect
Anything exploring the version of the Good Place where Tahani was Eleanor’s soulmate, porn, feelings, domesticity, partnering to figure out what’s happening (can also have bittersweet ending since that version gets erased)
Ethan Hunt/Benji Dunn- Mission Impossible (Movie Series)
Probably one of the most canon, but not actually canon relationships in any movie series ever, especially when you track their development from workplace acquaintances in Mission Impossible 3, to basically married in Mission Impossible 5. Kind of a Q/Bond vibe except with actual interaction through three whole movies and genuine emotional depth in their bond (and Benji gets to go into the field). Their rapport is great, the love is obvious, and just in the span of one movie they cover at least 3-4 different romantic tropes, so yeah they’re amazing.
Prompts:
Already established relationship but the team doesn’t know and they decide to get married and the team STILL doesn’t know until it comes up casually in conversation or during a mission
Ethan comes back from a mission badly hurt and Benji stays with him, dressing his wounds since they can’t risk a hospital and of course, sex happens
The old classic, pretending to be in a relationship for the sake of a mission but it’s awkward since they’re pining for each other except Benji’s trying to keep his feelings in check and Ethan wants to use this an opportunity to make a move on Benji
Ethan finds himself irrationally jealous when Benji either has to seduce someone for the sake of a mission or is close to someone else at IMF and he finds a way to stake his claim. Can either be established relationship or pining for each other.
Lorraine Broughton/Delphine Lasalle- Atomic Blonde (movie)
Oh boy, not only was this relationship simultaneously red-hot and super sweet, it was canon! The ending is garbage, but two capable spy women falling for each other in the 80s is exactly my jam and I basically want nothing but happy AUs for these two.
Prompts:
Everything in the movie still happens except that Lorraine lied about Delphine being dead. She managed to survive and as soon as the interrogation is over Lorraine disappears from the CIA and reunites with Delphine somewhere far away and two live happily ever after
Student and College Professor AU
All the ways Lorraine told Delphine she loved her and all the ways Delphine always knew
Delphine attracts plenty of attention both on purpose and by accident and Lorraine has no qualms about destroying anyone who tries anything
Eddie Kaspbrak/Richie Tozier- IT (2017 movie)
So yeah, just like virtually everyone else, I fell in love with their rapport and relationship after watching the movie. These two are basically two halves of a whole and I seriously love how much they banter and bicker but are also fiercely protective of each other. Eddie never forgets Richie and Richie would go anywhere for Eddie. I could wax poetic about how amazing the two of them are together and there’s so much potential for fanfic, especially considering there’s a whole second movie to speculate on in regards to their relationship as adults. The one thing I want to stress though, if you decide to go the PWP route, that they be consenting adults over 18. Anything lighter than that, like kissing/making out, is fine with them as pre-teens.
Prompts:
Eddie is a fierce fighter when angry and I kinda want a spin on the “protective boyfriend” trope that’s been cropping up in their fics. Richie and Eddie are cornered by bullies but they pick on Richie this time and break his glasses/hurt him and Eddie just...loses it. He fights back so savagely they’re scared off and Richie makes a big show about what a “big hero” Eddie is, but is actually in awe. Would be great if ended in fluff/kisses, can be established relationship or not.
Fic set in the future/second movie where they both come back to Derry as adults and old feelings bubble to the surface. They try not to give in, but fail especially when they face Pennywise again and decide to try and make a life together in the aftermath. (Despite the ending in the book, I only want a happily ever after for these two).
A third, Pennywise-free reunion reveals to the rest of the Losers that Richie and Eddie married and adopted a kid. Everyone gets emotional and smothers the kid with affection.
Richie has become more touhy-feely with Eddie after the summer of 1989 and Eddie, even though he knows he shouldn’t, really likes it
Holland March/Jackson Healy- The Nice Guys (movie)
They’re so married it’s ridiculous. Honestly my favorite odd couple since forever, there’s genuine love for each underneath the facades and rapport. The chemistry is perfect and their situation is perfectly set-up for Jackson to be Holly’s second dad. Anything involving them living together or figuring out how to be more than partners or just falling into married, domestic bliss without the marriage part is highly encouraged.
Prompts:
Holland has to seduce someone for a case. Jackson doesn’t deal with it well.
Holland realizes that Holly tells Jackson things she doesn’t tell him and it unnerves him until he puts two and two together and realizes she’s behaving as if she has two parents again.
Jackson and Holly make the best team when it comes to tormenting Holland.
Jackson and Holland want a nice quiet night of sex just for themselves but keep being interrupted because they have a daughter and parents never get to rest.
Thank you so much in advance for gifting me with fic, I look forward to reading it!
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