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Summary
"He had nineteen names. Lived nineteen lifespans. This one —Michael "Robby" Robinavitch— might be the last. It's all a matter of perspective."
For years now, Robby has managed to resist that itch—a biological urge to erase himself and start over, indistinguishable from the desire to simply cease to exist. Now, on his final shift at the Pitt, it has returned stronger than ever. As the department crumbles around him, Robby must decide: fight to stay, or vanish onto the road. But when being reborn feels exactly like dying, the line between the two becomes blurred.
Inspired by "Run" by RedNotice, but the spin is different in many ways.
Title from Mr. Rattlebone by Matt Maeson
Series
- Part 1 of Memento Mori/Amor Fati
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Jay wakes up cuffed to a hospital bed with blood on his hands, a murder charge on his record, and no memory of what happened.
The footage is damning. The headlines are worse.
The worst part?
He’s starting to believe he really did it.But Hailey never stopped believing in him. And the rest of Intelligence? They’re about to break every rule in the book to bring the truth to light — and bring Jay home.
Whumptober 2024 Prompt Day 27: DENIAL | CCTV | exposure | “they caught me red-handed”
Series
- Part 28 of Whumptober2024
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When an old “friend” from Jay’s military days resurfaces, he’s plunged into a nightmare. Can the team find him before the damage can’t be undone.
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Jay Halstead is unraveling.
The weight of grief, guilt, and everything left unsaid is dragging him down. He’s lost people he loved, made mistakes he can’t take back, and now the past is catching up—fast.Told through a series of raw, emotional snapshots, this story traces Jay’s quiet descent into darkness. Love, heartbreak, and a devastating mistake haunt every step… and as the walls close in, the question lingers:
How much can one soul carry before it breaks?
A Jay Halstead whump story.
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Summary
After a disastrous final shift on July 4, Robby leaves for his sabbatical.
Eight days later, somewhere in the Badlands, he awakens to a dozen missed calls and messages from back home. Something terrible has happened. Frank Langdon has been shot, and he might not make it.
Consumed by worry and by guilt, Robby returns to Pittsburgh, the memory of his last, terrible conversation with Frank playing on a loop in his head.
He hopes it is not too late to make amends of his own.
“Is he dead?” Robby manages to rasp out. His body is curling in on itself. He can feel himself unravelling. It’s too familiar. It’s all too familiar. This can’t be happening. “Is Frank fucking dead, Dana?”
