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Polar Nightmares
His therapist in Pittsburgh had told him once that he thought Jack preferred nights because the darkness was a source of comfort for him, and Jack didn't think he was wrong. He usually wasn't, which was the annoying part about therapy. A lot of people were scared of or disliked the dark, which he understood, but he’d never found it scary, even before he'd started working nights all the time. Jack thought it was a lot worse to see all the shit that was coming his way in the light, in a lot of ways, whether that was mortars or MVAs. All of that meant that this polar night thing Darrow suddenly had going on was just fine with Jack in terms of what he was doing and how he was doing it, but he knew that wasn’t true for most people.
Robby, in particular, had been getting incredibly fucking grumpy. He’d come over to Jack’s apartment after he finished another shift of caring for people who had been injured “running into shit because no one remembers to carry a goddamn flashlight or even just use the flashlight function on their fucking phone”. Jack had fed him huevos rancheros, given him a beer, and let him complain, then sent him off to shower and go to bed. Jack’s own body clock wouldn’t let him sleep for a few hours yet, so he read a book on the couch until he thought he could sleep.
When he went to his bed, he fell asleep easily in the new sheets Robby had given him, but he was also almost immediately dropped into a nightmare. He was back in Afghanistan but it was Sarajevo but it was Iraq. There were IEDs but there were missiles but there was friendly fire from tanks. He smelled burning cloth and hot metal and gasoline. He tasted sand and blood and sweat as he tried to tourniquet everyone and everything. He didn’t have enough supplies, enough time, enough skill. Soldiers were dying and Robby was dying and Diane was dying and neither of them should have been there. No one should ever have been there. He called out for suppressing fire, for more supplies, for anything that would slow the blood and death.
Robby, in particular, had been getting incredibly fucking grumpy. He’d come over to Jack’s apartment after he finished another shift of caring for people who had been injured “running into shit because no one remembers to carry a goddamn flashlight or even just use the flashlight function on their fucking phone”. Jack had fed him huevos rancheros, given him a beer, and let him complain, then sent him off to shower and go to bed. Jack’s own body clock wouldn’t let him sleep for a few hours yet, so he read a book on the couch until he thought he could sleep.
When he went to his bed, he fell asleep easily in the new sheets Robby had given him, but he was also almost immediately dropped into a nightmare. He was back in Afghanistan but it was Sarajevo but it was Iraq. There were IEDs but there were missiles but there was friendly fire from tanks. He smelled burning cloth and hot metal and gasoline. He tasted sand and blood and sweat as he tried to tourniquet everyone and everything. He didn’t have enough supplies, enough time, enough skill. Soldiers were dying and Robby was dying and Diane was dying and neither of them should have been there. No one should ever have been there. He called out for suppressing fire, for more supplies, for anything that would slow the blood and death.

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Jack touches his face and it's so unexpected that Robby just blinks and then, after a moment, leans his cheek into the touch without really thinking about it. He doesn't try to pull away, anyway, because Jack obviously needs the reassurance.
"No blood. I'm okay. Just a nightmare, man." He can imagine the kind of things Jack was dreaming about.
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"Fuck, sorry," he said immediately, since he'd apparently woken Robby up with his fucking nightmares and then made it worse by touching his face without asking. His smartwatch was still making noise and he looked at it before silencing the high heart rate alarm.
"A hundred and twenty. Shit, no wonder I feel like ran a fucking marathon."
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"Don't apologise," says Robby and he doesn't pull back, even when Jack takes his hand away. He stays crouched at the side of the bed. "What do you need? Water? A washcloth?"
Mostly, he just wants Jack to be calm.
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The images of Robby were still behind his eyes and he closed them, hoping that would make them float away.
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Even though he's awake, Jack still sounds on the verge of hyperventilating and Robby needs that to not happen. He shifts, sitting back on his heels so that he's a bit more stable.
"You need me to breathe with you?" he asks, voice pitched low and calm in the dim light.
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Robby doesn't even justify that with a response. He just straightens up, his hands coming to rest on his hips for a moment.
"Shift your ass over, man," he says. "And then we can do some box breathing."
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He rolled with effort away from the edge of the bed, or at least tried to. He'd somehow gotten all twisted up in his own sheets.
"God fucking dammit," he snarled, low and angry at himself and the universe.
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"For Christ's sake, that's not going to help your heart rate, is it?" Robby usually steadfastly refuses to do anything for Jack when he's not wearing his prosthetic unless explicitly asked to, but this is different. Jack hasn't entirely gotten back to himself yet. Gently, patiently, Robby helps to disentangle the sheets a little.
"Better?"
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He flopped back onto the pillow away from the edge of the bed and tried to breathe normally as he stared at the texture on the ceiling of the bedroom. Robby was probably going to sit on the edge of the bed and there was room for him to do that.
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"No," says Robby pretty shortly. "You're not."
Jack's much more than that, and they both know it even, of lately, it has felt more complicated. Jack thumps back against his pillow and leaves room for Robby to sit down, so that's what he does, back against the headboard, one leg stretched out on the mattress.
"C'mon, asshole," he says. "Box breathing."
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He put a hand up to half-heartedly flip Robby off, but he also closed his eyes and started doing some goddamn box breathing. He could feel the warmth of Robby's body near but not touching him, and that helped him feel a little more calm too.
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He wants to touch Jack -- squeeze his shoulder, maybe, or comb his fingers through his hair -- but he settles for taking Jack's arm and pressing two fingers to Jack's wrist to take his radial pulse as he breathes. He knows that Jack's wearing a smart watch, but he'll always trust himself more.
"Keep going," he prompts.
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The smartwatch chimed to indicate that Jack's heart rate had fallen below 100 bpm again. Robby would take his hand away from Jack's wrist any second now.
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Jack's breathing evens out and his heart rate starts to settle, and Robby stays right where he is, two fingers pressed against Jack's pulse. They get to the point where he could have let Jack take his arm back, but Jack doesn't give any indication of pulling away so Robby keeps his wrist where it is.
"That's it," he says, voice still pitched low. Unconsciously, his breathing starts to mirror Jack's.
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Jack's pulse picked back up again and his breathing got rougher as the images started playing through his head again.
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He hears Jack's breathing slip irregular again, feels the skip in his heartbeat. It's not all that surprising, though. Panic attacks tended to linger, and Jack's definitely on the verge of one.
"Hey," he says, fingers curling around Jack's wrist, giving him some sensory input. "Three things you can hear. Go."
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"Furnace," he said faintly. "Faucet dripping. Your voice."
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"Right. Good." He keeps up the steady pressure around Jack's wrist, monitoring his pulse and holding on at the same time. "Now give me three things you can feel. Physically." He wants to wrap his free arm around Jack, but he also doesn't want to overwhelm him.
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"Fucking comfortable sheets. Air from the vent making me cold. Your hand on my wrist."
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"That's it." Jack's pulse is coming down again, and, unconsciously, Robby strokes his thumb over the fine hair on Jack's wrist. "Last one. Move three bosh parts for me."
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A tiny, mischievous part of him wanted one of his three moves to be flipping Robby off again, but he wasn't sure he had the energy for that yet. Instead he wiggled his five remaining toes and the fingers on both hands. His hands and toes tingled, which happened to him during panic attacks.
"Thank you," he finally said. "I'm good. You can go if you want."
He was not good. He knew he was not good. Robby certainly knew he was not good. He was still going to give Robby another opportunity to leave.
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"I'm good," echoes Robby because he's definitely not leaving Jack yet. He does loosen his hold on his wrist, though, in case Jack wants to take it back. "Can you scoot your ass over a little more, though? I don't think my back's going to thank me if I end up in a pile on the floor."
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"How's my pulse, doc?" he asked lightly. He could feel that it was still elevated, but it didn't feel as high as it had been.
He'd been called Doc by so many soldiers over so many years, including in their last moments of life. Medics were just always Doc, even when none of them were actually doctors.
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It's the most like himself that Jack's sounded since Robby woke up him, and Robby feels himself relax a little. Jack makes room for him and Robby shifts, shuffling down until he's lying beside Jack. His fingers stay loosely curled around Jack's wrist, and Jack's hand ends up resting on his chest.
"Better," he says. "Still a little quicker than I'd like."
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