Chapter Text
ten years ago…
The city was still asleep when he closed the door behind him.
No one saw him leave—not the landlord, not the neighbor who always smoked on her balcony, not the woman he loved, still asleep down the hall with the bedroom door cracked open just enough for the light to spill in.
Robby stood in that silence for a long minute, the chill from the hallway seeping into his bones like penance. Then he turned the key in the lock and walked away.
The air outside was the kind that burned in your lungs.
Pittsburgh was cold in the fall, but this was the kind of cold that made everything sharper—clearer. Unforgiving.
His bag was slung over his shoulder, his steps steady but slow, like maybe the weight of what he was doing hadn’t settled in yet. Or maybe it had, and he was just trying not to feel it.
He didn’t take a cab. He walked the ten blocks to the station with his hands in his pockets and his jaw clenched tight.
The city was gray and heavy, the sky the color of steel, and every street corner felt like it might shout her name back at him if he let his mind wander too far.
He had written her a note. It was short. Too short.
Something about needing to go. About not being who she thought he was. About not being enough.
He hadn't signed it.
He told himself it was better this way. Cleaner. Less to untangle.
She wouldn’t have to look him in the eye and see the mess of a man too afraid to stay. She wouldn’t have to see him crack apart under the weight of what he couldn’t say: I love you, but I don’t know how to deserve you.
Because that was the truth, wasn’t it?
He loved her. God, he loved her so much it made everything inside him ache. But love wasn’t always enough, and he was already unraveling—already halfway gone in ways that scared him.
She had plans. She had brightness. She talked about future things like they were inevitable—like there was a place in them carved out for him. Like he belonged.
Michael didn’t know how to belong.
And she—she kissed him like she believed he’d always come back.
He left like he knew he never would.
He remembered the way she’d pulled him close the night before, bare legs around his hips, her breath soft and warm against his skin. She kissed him like the world was still safe.
Like it was forever. Like it was just the two of them in that tiny apartment and the future didn’t scare her. She whispered something against his collarbone—something like don’t go far, something like see you in the morning—and he’d shut his eyes so tight it hurt.
She kissed him like she believed in him. And it broke something in him, because he didn’t.
After, she curled up against him and fell asleep fast, trusting him to stay.
He spent the whole night awake beside her.
Watching the ceiling. Watching her chest rise and fall. Memorizing the shape of her hand resting on his chest like she was anchoring him to something good. Something real.
And then, right before the sun came up, he kissed her on the forehead, like that could make up for everything he didn’t have the courage to say. He got up without a sound, packed only what he needed, left the note on the kitchen counter where she’d find it after coffee.
At the station, he stood on the platform with a coffee in one hand and guilt in the other. The train was delayed. Of course it was. The universe was cruel like that.
He didn’t cry. Not really. But his chest hurt in that splintered, hollow way grief lives in.
If she had woken up…
If she had asked him to stay…
He didn’t know what he would’ve done.
But she didn’t. And he left. He let the train carry him away from the only thing that had ever felt like home, trying to convince himself he was doing the right thing.
He never turned around.
And he never saw the light flick on in the apartment just moments after the train pulled away.
He never saw her wake up, heart hammering, reaching for the empty space beside her.
He didn’t see the light flick on in the apartment just minutes after the train pulled away.
Didn’t see her reach across the bed for him, only to find cold sheets and silence.
Didn’t see her walk barefoot into the kitchen, rubbing sleep from her eyes, only to stop short at the note waiting for her like a knife on the counter.
She read it once. Then again. And again, like maybe the words would change if she stared long enough.
They didn’t.
And the life she thought she was building—the one she’d let herself believe in, with the man she’d trusted enough to love without hesitation—cracked down the middle, quiet and sharp.
There was no warning. No fight. No goodbye. Just an empty bed, and a note, and the sound of something breaking that she couldn’t name.
He didn’t know what she looked like in that moment.
Didn’t know the way she slid to the floor, back to the counter, note crumpled in her hand, trying to breathe around the hollowed-out space where he used to be.
He didn’t see her cry.
All he knew was that he had left.
And he hated himself for it.
five years later…
Michael hadn’t meant to come.
He told himself it was just dinner. Just a few familiar faces. Just something to fill the silence that had started to feel like its own kind of punishment.
It wasn’t nostalgia, not exactly. Nostalgia required sweetness, and he’d scraped most of that out of himself years ago.
But the invitation had come anyway—some old friend from undergrad, or med school, or residency, someone he hadn’t seen in years but still had enough of his email to keep him tethered.
“Come by if you’re in town,” it said. “It’s been forever.”
It had been forever.
And Michael—idiot that he was—had found himself driving across the city through the soft December dusk, half hoping the offer had expired by the time he arrived.
Pennsylvania never changed much. It was gray and clumsy in the winter, still bitter enough to make your bones ache if you didn’t move fast enough. The streets were slick with slush. The streetlights glowed gold on the pavement. Somewhere in the distance, carolers sang just off-key.
But the house? The house was warm.
Not just in the literal sense—with its firelight flickering behind windows, the sharp glow of a chandelier, the steam rising from pots in the kitchen—but warm in the way that made your chest hurt.
Laughter spilled from the porch. Music floated through the cracks in the windows. He could see the silhouettes of coats being shrugged off, cheeks kissed, wine poured.
He parked across the street and left the engine running.
He told himself he just needed a minute. Just a minute.
And then—he saw her.
Through the window. Like a movie he had no right to watch.
She was wearing soft pink, not scrubs but something casual and delicate, like the inside of a seashell. Her hair was up. A few strands curled against her neck, the way they used to when she rushed from the shower and didn’t have time to dry it all the way.
She looked older—but in the kind of way that hurt, because it meant time had passed without him. Because it meant she had kept living while he had buried himself alive.
She was talking to someone, laughing. There was a wine glass in her hand. A freckle he remembered just barely visible near her collarbone. When she smiled—God, when she smiled—it twisted something in his ribs.
He should’ve left. Should’ve never come.
But instead, he sat there, drowning in it.
In her.
It had been five years.
Five years since he left.
Five years since she kissed him like she believed he’d come back.
And he had left like he knew he never would.
That last night haunted him. The way she had wrapped herself around him like she was memorizing him. The softness of her lips, trembling just slightly. The way her hands had lingered against his back, as if she could keep him there by sheer will.
She had whispered, “See you in the morning,” into the curve of his neck, her voice barely audible, casual like it meant nothing at all.
And he had kissed her like he believed he could make that true.
But it was like she knew what was coming, on some deeper level. Like her body had braced for it before her mind could catch up.
There was no morning for them. Not after that.
No safety. No stability. No staying.
He had packed too fast. Left without enough. Told himself it was better this way—for her, for them. That she deserved more than someone already half-destroyed.
It hadn’t mattered. It had broken her anyway.
It had broken him.
He looked away from the window, throat tight. A dog barked somewhere nearby. He couldn’t breathe.
Michael reached for the door handle.
Just do it, he told himself. Go in. Say hello. Apologize. Pretend to be someone who deserved to walk through that door.
But then he looked up again—just as she turned, laughed, leaned against the counter like she belonged there—and everything in him stalled.
Because she did belong there.
She looked happy. Or at least… okay. Stable. Surrounded by light and warmth and people who hadn’t vanished when things got hard. What right did he have to walk back in now, five years too late?
None. Absolutely none.
He dropped his hand from the door.
And drove away.
He didn’t see her turn back toward the living room.
Didn’t see the small boy—curly-haired, pajama-clad—pad over and raise his arms.
Didn’t see her scoop him up and nuzzle her nose into his cheek like it was the easiest, most natural thing in the world.
Didn’t see the boy giggle, and press his hand to her face, and whisper something that made her laugh even harder.
He didn’t see any of it.
All he saw was her silhouette, soft and golden, disappearing behind curtains as he turned the corner and left her behind again.
He told himself it was better this way. Cleaner. Safer.
He told himself she had moved on. That she didn’t need him. That he didn’t need her.
But as the city lights blurred past his windshield, as the ache in his chest settled deeper, more permanent—
Michael knew he was still lying.
To her. To himself. And to whatever part of him that still woke up some nights thinking she was there.
present day…
There was a rhythm to emergency.
You breathed in crisis. Bled urgency. Learned to function in the eye of the storm.
And Dr. Robby had made a home in the storm.
That morning had been like any other. Fast. Messy. Loud.
A cardiac arrest. A teen with a bullet in his shoulder. An elderly woman with a stroke mid-grocery run. The ER moved like it always did: fast and fractured.
Until it didn’t.
Until everything stopped.
The moment he heard her voice.
“Move! He’s crashing—give me the crash cart, and get respiratory down here, now!”
He froze mid-step, the trauma form in his hand suddenly weightless.
That voice. Familiar. Unshakable.
He turned toward the chaos at trauma bay two—and there she was.
Pink salmon scrubs stained with something dark. Her hair half pulled back, half falling out. Her hands fluttering between the boy on the gurney and the nurse trying to get a BP cuff on.
And her eyes—God, her eyes. Were wild, terrified.
She wasn’t supposed to be here.
Not in this city. Not in this hospital. Not on this day.
She was yelling something about sats. Chest pain. A fall.
“He got hit—he was riding to school and some jackass blew through the stop sign—he wasn’t moving, he was cyanotic, I couldn’t find a pulse—so I just started compressions, I didn’t wait for the ambulance—”
Her voice cracked. “I was right next to him and I didn’t react fast enough, fuck—I should’ve seen it coming, I should’ve grabbed him—”
Someone—Whittaker, already gowned up—stepped in beside her. “We’ve got him now. You have to step back, let us work.”
“He’s my son.”
The words cracked something in him.
The boy. Robby saw him clearly now. Pale. Unconscious. A small bruise blooming across his temple. Dark lashes stuck together from oxygen tubing, blood, and sweat.
He couldn’t look away.
Because something inside him twisted hard—like recognition, like guilt, like some ancient ache that had been sleeping for ten years and woke up screaming.
The boy looked like her. Same cheekbones. Same curve of the jaw. Even the soft dip in his left cheek, like it had been sculpted by memory. But the eyes—
They were closed now, but when they’d fluttered open briefly under the lights—
Brown.
Not hazel, not green. Not hers.
His.
It was a stupid thing to fixate on, maybe. But in that split-second, his brain flooded with it. The timeline. The math. Ten years since he left. The kid—what, eight? Nine?
The breath Robby took didn’t make it to his lungs. It caught somewhere deep in his chest, behind his ribs, sharp and sudden like broken glass.
He took a step back without realizing it, hand coming up like he might need to steady himself on something, anything. The edge of the trauma board. The counter. The wall.
He felt the air shift beside him before he heard the voice.
Dana.
She didn’t say anything right away. Just appeared at his side like she always did when things went sideways—silent, sharp, steady. Her eyes flicked from the boy to Robby’s face and back again.
“You okay?” she asked quietly, too low for anyone else to hear.
Robby didn’t answer.
Didn’t know how to.
Because his mind was spiraling now. Backward. Forward. In every direction at once.
She hadn’t seen him yet. She didn’t know he was there. But that didn’t stop the crash. The sound of her voice cracked through him like a whip, and now this—this kid, with her face and his eyes—it was too much.
“I think—” he tried, then stopped. Swallowed hard.
Dana gently guided him toward the side wall, just out of the direct chaos. “Just breathe for a second. I’ve got it. I’ve got eyes on the board.”
“I need—” he started again, but his throat closed up.
“Hey,” she said, softer now. “It’s okay.”
But it wasn’t. It was anything but.
Because standing there, watching that boy fight for breath, watching her fight like hell to keep him here, Robby felt everything he had buried start to claw its way to the surface.
The weight of the note he left.
The sound of the train pulling away.
The memory of her asleep, the light spilling into the room, her hand on his chest like she was anchoring him.
He’d thought that version of himself was dead. Buried under work and years and choices he couldn’t take back.
But now—now it was like the past had ripped itself open and demanded he look.
The room blurred for a second. He blinked hard. Tried to focus.
He heard her voice again, still panicked.
“Why the hell aren’t we intubating?! He needs to be intubated!”
Whittaker again, calm and unmoved. “He’s stable enough to scan. You can come with us if you stay out of the way.”
A voice behind his left shoulder now—one of the paramedics.
“She brought him in herself. Collapsed on the street. She didn’t wait for the ambulance—drove like a maniac to get him here. Said she didn’t trust the timing.”
He still hadn’t moved.
The whole world had narrowed to the sound of her breath, the strain in her voice, the way her hand shook as she pushed hair from the boy’s forehead.
Then—quiet. A new voice. Softer. Dana again, back in the room now.
“He’s going to be okay. He’s stable. We’ve got him.”
She exhaled for the first time.
Just once. Then pressed a hand to her chest like she needed to physically hold herself together.
And that’s when someone said her name.
Soft. Familiar.
The sound of it—her name—snapped Robby out of whatever fog he’d been standing in.
That was all it took.
He moved.
Through the flurry of techs and doctors. Past Mohan adjusting the IV, past Whittaker calling out a page to peds. His footsteps were too loud, or maybe the whole room had just gone silent when he stepped in.
She turned at the sound of her name.
And saw him.
For the first time in ten years.
The recognition hit like a punch. Not loud. Not dramatic. Just… undeniable.
Her face went still.
Not surprised. Not angry.
Just raw.
As if she’d been bracing for this moment for years without knowing it.
He opened his mouth. Didn’t even know what he was going to say.
All that came out was her name.
And everything else fell away.
