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Summary
' Michael ‘Robby’ Robinavitch knocked gently on his new neighbour and ex-roommate’s – Jack Abbot’s – new front door, though he knew Jack wouldn’t answer, already turning the handle to come inside. The lights in Jack’s apartment were always off, and Jack was always just… sat. On the bed, in his wheelchair, on the faded old couch that had come with the accommodation…
He just looked like he’d given up with life, allowing himself to slip through the cracks and hiding in his darkened one room apartment that the army had dumped him in. '
Jack and Robby's relationship becoming stronger as Robby gets Jack through his recovery, with little regard to his own basic need for rest and self-care.
Series
Bookmarked by scorns
04 Jun 2026
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Summary
Jack's heart stopped.
Walsh demanded that the intercom be cut off.
Robby had to watch his husband die.
Every single second counted.
Robby couldn't hear what was going on.
Robby couldn't see the monitors well enough to discern exactly what was happening.
Robby desperately wanted to run, to pass out, to dissociate, to simply die than to face what was next, but he had to be present, he had to bear witness.
Or,
After their lives are finally settling into some semblance of happiness, Jack nearly dies.
Series
- Part 2 of The Last Sin-Eater
Bookmarked by scorns
29 May 2026
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“About time you called.”
“Where’s Jack?”
"You need to turn your ass around right now and haul it home. He needs you.”
(Jack got put through Trauma 1's door, Robby was not okay, Ellie was going to haunt them both.)
Bookmarked by scorns
25 May 2026
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Summary
Robby has already been gone for 3 months now. Jack is either busy in the ER or doing every SWAT shift he can. Dana is tired of all of this and also worried. Everyone is trying to keep up.
And Robby decides to make his big return on the night shift of Halloween.
Bookmarked by scorns
25 May 2026
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Summary
The moment Robby realized, he wanted to kick himself for not picking up on it sooner. It was glaringly obvious now that he had the terminology to describe his husband.
The way Jack was overly intense with eye contact, the way he never seemed to know where to put his hands when he wasn't holding something, the way he would ramble nonsense when he was nervous, his obsession with M*A*S*H and honeybees, his flat tone that came off as perpetually sarcastic.
OR
The people in Jack's life coming to the realization that he's on the spectrum.
Bookmarked by scorns
25 May 2026

