âđđđâ
𣲠. Ýâ âš oh little miss gracie
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if i look back, i am lost
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
One Nice Bug Per Day
wallacepolsom
Peter Solarz

pixel skylines

Kiana Khansmith

â

çĽćĽ / Permanent Vacation
Not today Justin


blake kathryn
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Xuebing Du
occasionally subtle

â
trying on a metaphor
Cosimo Galluzzi
seen from Maldives

seen from Malaysia

seen from Italy

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seen from Indonesia
seen from United States
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seen from Germany

seen from Spain

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@222gracie
âđđđâ
𣲠. Ýâ âš oh little miss gracie
nineteen hufflepuff pink lips gold jewelry reading libra the sea tulips watermelon gum strawberry wine by noah kahan love letters pinky promises sunsets kiss stains
² ² ² masterlist

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Missing Robb Stark every day btw
United In Fear (Part One - Soulmate!Robb)
Pairing: Robb Stark x Reader; Soulmates AU (because Game of Thrones just didnât have enough fantasy drama for me)
Word count: 7.6k
Warnings:Â Angsty fluff, someone getâs punched but itâs not super dramatic
Summary:Â The names were the greatest mystery in Westeros. Each kingdom had their own telling of the story. None of the kingdoms could agree on where they were from or how they came to be. Each thought a different god, their own interpretation of religion, was responsible, but all seemed to agree on one thing: they were a gift.
Notes: so the thing is right⌠I didnât really mean to write this. It just sort of came out. Long story short. Itâs an idea I had. If people like it, Iâll finish it. It will probably take 3-4 Parts to complete the story arc I have in mind. Each part about this long.
It wasnât her banner or her looks that tipped Robb Stark off that she was (Y/n) Lannister. It was her being. The way she dismounted her horse while all of Winterfell still knelt before Robert Baratheon, as though everyone, even the King, was beneath her. The way she took her brotherâs helping hand as if Lannister blood was the only thing worthy of touching her skin. The way her chin never dipped, always keeping her head up and her gaze held high. The way her feet glided over the ground with quick, sure steps that spoke of how little she wished to touch Northern soil. The way she never met the gaze of anyone, save her siblings, Robbâs father, and the King. (Y/n) Lannister could not have hidden her identity even if she tried, and she most certainly did not try.
She kept beside her brother as the King motioned for them to rise and greeted Robbâs father. Her eyes took the time to wander over the keep, and she kept her expression unreadably passive wherever they went. She made no acknowledgment that anything important was happening around her until her sister exited the carriage. (Y/n) released her brotherâs arm and stepped forward to stand at the queenâs right hand.
âMy queen,â Ned Stark said as he bent to kiss Cerseiâs offered hand.
âMy queen,â Catelyn echoed with a curtsy.
Cersei greeted both with a weary, but polite nod. âMy sister,â Cersei stepped aside, positioning herself in front of Robb, and held out her hand for introductions, â(Y/n) Lannister, Lady of the Rock.â
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also on ao3. link
"Oh, shit! No way. David Bowie. Y'all! We are so back." "Wally came up with this. Makes us do it at every reunion." School Spirits s02e06: Ghost Pointe Blank

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Nice to each other
steve harrington x fem!reader friends to lovers
Here we are, back again, fighting whatâs in front of me.
summary: Despite being best friends for the past four years, you and Steve have never truly spent a Halloween together. Always at separate parties, separate dates. This year though, the two of you decide to keep it quiet both of you tired of the humiliation ritual that is dating.
The plans were simple: horror movies and pass out candy.
Youâd be more excited if it wasnât for the kiss the two of you shared drunk on a dare at Eddie Munsonâs bonfire a week ago. A kiss the two of you have refused to talk about at all costs, A kiss you canât seem to quit thinking about no matter how hard you try.
WC: 14k
warnings: 18+// Steve & reader are in their early to mid 20âs, stubborn idiots in love, classic we donât want to ruin the friendship yearning, drinking, mentions of smoking, kissing, literally non stop tension, slight dry humping if you squint.
authorâs note: This fic is inspired by Emily Henryâs People We Meet On Vacation, except for itâs in Hawkins with Steve, and revolves around their Halloweens over the years told between flash backs and current time. I had a lot of fun writing this, I hope you have just as much fun reading it.
the blue
friends!to!lovers, childhood!bestfriends
jealously, yearning, angstish, fluff, love confession
ââââââââ đđđ ââââââââ
Clark Joseph Kent had a scatter of freckles across his shoulders that only showed themselves in summer, rising to the surface when the sun deepened his tan. They reminded you of constellations â tiny, private stars that only you ever seemed to notice.
He preferred to write his drafts by hand before typing them, the looping script of his thoughts spilling across the page in uneven lines. Youâd seen those pages before, ink smudged on the side of his hand, coffee rings on the corners. When he was trying not to cry, he sniffled twice. Always twice. As if the second one would undo the first.
You were sure, with every bone in your being, that you would know Clark Kent until the sun burned itself out and the Earth fell quiet.
But that was a truth youâd learned to tuck away, neat and small, living somewhere between your ribs. You brushed it under the rug the same way you always had â pretending it was normal. Because it was normal, wasnât it?
Youâd known him your entire life. Your childhood homes sat a mile apart, his surrounded by fields and open sky, yours tucked against a narrow gravel road that led nowhere in particular. You sat next to each other in third grade, shared the same torn bus seat in eighth, and posed for prom pictures so unbearably awkward that you still begged your mom to delete them whenever you visited home.
And yes, you knew he was Superman. Youâd known long before the world ever did. He was thirteen when his heat vision first sparked â a startled yelp and a scorched hole clean through the back of the barn. Fourteen when his breath frosted over your bike on a July afternoon, the two of you staring at the ice-crusted handlebars in stunned silence before collapsing into laughter. And fifteen when he took you flying for the first time, soaring over the fields until the wind burned your eyes and your screams turned into laughter of your own. He laughed so hard he nearly dropped you into the pond by Walker Lane.
He was your best friend, the missing half of every thought you couldnât quite finish on your own. And when he got his job in Metropolis, it didnât even feel like a question, of course you followed. You packed your bags and found an apartment just three blocks away, telling yourself it was for convenience, for comfort â for anything but what it really was.
Youâd lived with this feeling for as long as you could remember, keeping it neatly caged beneath years of habit and self-control. You were polite to his girlfriends, even friendly. You gave him dating advice when he asked, laughed when he complained, and smiled through the ache when he called someone else beautiful. You even introduced your own dates to himâtrying to prove something, maybe to him, maybe to yourself. A show of friendship. A stamp of approval. Maybe even a quiet, sideways confession.
But that confession never came.
He stayed steady as everâtalking about sports and economics when the guy you were seeing tagged along for drinks, rubbing slow circles into your back when things inevitably fell apart. He never hinted, never slipped, never said anything that made you think he wanted more. Not even a whisper.
And for awhile, that was fine, until it wasn't.
ââââââââ đđđ ââââââââ
You admired Lois Lane.
She was a damn good reporter â sharp, fearless, the kind of woman who seemed to belong in every room she walked into. She was brilliant, confident, always two steps ahead of everyone else, and you respected that. You really did.
What you didnât admire â what actually made your stomach twist â was the way Clark admired her too.
They went out often. He never called them dates, but you knew better. Anyone with two eyes knew better. The way he laughed when she teased him, how his voice softened when he said her name â it was enough to make your chest ache.
The bar was packed tonight, a low hum of chatter and clinking glasses pressing in from all sides. Shoulders bumped yours as you wove through the crowd, murmuring quick apologies, trying not to spill anyoneâs drink or betray how much you didnât want to be there.
You exhaled in relief when you spotted the booth in the back corner. Smushed inside were Jimmy, Cat, Lois â and, of course, Clark.
Clarkâs face lit up the moment he saw you. That same bright, unguarded smile heâd been giving you your whole life. The one that used to feel like it belonged to you alone.
You slid into the booth beside Jimmy, forcing a grin as your knee bumped the table. Across from you, Clark and Lois sat side by side, his broad shoulders brushing hers every time he laughed.
You told yourself not to notice. Not to care. Not to stare at the space between them â or lack of one.
But you did.
âLook who finally made it!â Jimmy teased, slinging a heavy arm around your shoulders.
You laughed, leaning into his touch for a moment before pulling back. âSorry â all my kids got picked up late,â you said with a tired smile.
âNo worries!â Lois chimed in, swirling the straw in her drink with an easy grin. âIâm sure you had a long day.â
You winced â just slightly, but enough that you hoped no one noticed.
You werenât a reporter, or a writer. Hell, you werenât even an intern.
You worked at a daycare â lead teacher, twelve toddling one-year-olds who thought finger paint was a food group. You loved it, every sticky hug and crayon-streaked drawing. But sitting here, surrounded by the Daily Planetâs best and brightest, always made you feel smaller somehow. Like youâd stumbled into a world you werenât built for â one Clark fit into perfectly.
You managed a smile anyway. âThings always get crazy on Fridays, but I manage.â
Lois nodded, the corner of her mouth quirking. âI bet. Daycare trenches sound terrifying.â She lifted her glass, brows raised in playful sympathy before taking a sip.
âIâm sure youâre great with them,â Clark said, and when you looked up, he was already smiling at you â that same easy, warm smile youâd known your whole life.
You tried to ignore the way your breath caught, how your chest seemed to tighten at the sound of his voice. You opened your mouth to respond, maybe to deflect with a joke, but Loisâs laugh cut in before you could.
She launched into a story about deadlines and Lex Luthor â fast, sharp, and confident â and just like that, the attention of the table shifted toward her. Clark leaned in slightly, listening, and you were left clutching your drink.
You laughed when everyone else did, though you couldnât have repeated a word Lois had said if someone had asked. Her voice filled the space â confident, animated, magnetic â and you could see why people gravitated toward her. Why hedid.
Clarkâs arm rested behind her on the booth, not quite touching but close enough to make your stomach twist. His eyes stayed on her as she spoke, the same look youâd once thought was yours â that quiet, undivided focus he gave when he really listened.
You stared down at your drink, watching the ice melt into thin ribbons of water. The sounds around you blurred â laughter, glass clinking, music thudding through the floorboards. It was all too much and not enough at once.
You told yourself you were being ridiculous. That this was fine. That you were happy for him, for them. Youâd told yourself that same lie so many times it shouldâve settled by now.
But it didnât.
It burned â low, quiet, and constant â sitting heavy in your chest. You could almost feel the edges of it, sharp and hot, scraping against your ribs.
You looked up again, and Clark was laughing. Not the polite kind, but the full, unguarded kind â head tilted back, eyes soft, completely at ease. Lois touched his wrist as she said something else, and he didnât pull away.
You downed the rest of your drink in one go, the burn settling deep in your chest as you pushed yourself up from the booth.
Jimmyâs arm slid off your shoulder, and even Cat looked up in surprise.
You hitched your bag higher on your arm, forcing a smile. âSorry, guys â gotta go! Iâve got a conference in the morning.â
Jimmy blinked, then grinned. âAh, damn. Donât keep forgetting about us.â His smile softened a little, and he leaned over to press a quick kiss to your cheek. âSee you soon, okay?â
âYeah,â you murmured, trying not to let your voice shake. âSee you.â
âWant me to walk you home?â Clark asked, already half-standing, concern flickering across his face.
You backed up so fast you nearly bumped into the group of girls passing by. âNo! No, Iâm good. Totally fine. Iâll see you later.â
Clark frowned, his brows knitting together. âAre you sure? Itâs lateââ
âSheâs a big girl, Kent,â Lois said, laughing as she nudged his shoulder with hers. âSheâll be okay.â
The sound of her laughter scraped against something raw inside you.
You nodded quickly, not trusting yourself to say another word. âYeah. Iâll be fine.â
And then you turned, before anyone could see your hands trembling or the way your throat tightened. You didnât wait for his response â couldnât.
The crowd swallowed you up as you pushed through the bar, the warmth and noise fading behind you until the cool night air hit your face like a shock. You exhaled shakily, gripping your bag tighter.
You told yourself you were just tired. That it wasnât jealousy or heartbreak or anything messy like that. But as the door shut behind you, muffling the laughter that used to feel like home, you knew you were lying.
ââââââââ đđđ ââââââââ
The lighting in your apartment was low when you heard the lock turn.
You froze on the couch, your half-finished glass of wine sitting forgotten on the coffee table. The soft click of the door closing followed by the weight of footsteps on the floorboards made your stomach tighten.
âHey,â his voice came quietly. âAre you okay?â
You didnât look up until he was standing in front of you, hands shoved deep in his coat pockets, concern knitting into the lines of his face.
âJust tired,â you said, eyes fixed somewhere near his collar.
Clarkâs mouth twitched â not quite a smile. âYouâve never been a good liar.â
You scoffed, throwing off the blanket draped over your knees as you stood. The movement was too sharp, too practiced. âIâm not lying, Clark.â
You brushed past him, footsteps echoing as you carried your glass to the sink. The last of the wine splashed down the drain, dark red bleeding away under the stream of water.
Of course, he followed. He always did.
âYouâve been acting weird for weeks now,â he said, voice low but steady. âYou barely come out with us anymore. You ignore half my calls.â
You kept your back to him, shrugging. âBusy.â
He sighed â that tired, familiar exhale that somehow managed to sound both patient and frustrated. âBusy with what? Lesson plans?â
You turned to face him, disbelief flashing across your features. âJust because Iâm not chasing down Lex Luthor or catching falling buildings doesnât mean Iâm not busy, Kent.â
His brow furrowed. âYou know thatâs not what I meantââ
âDo I?â you snapped, cutting him off. âBecause sometimes it feels like thatâs exactly what you meant. Sorry if I donât exactly fit into your circle of talent, Clark!â
âThatâs not fair,â he said, stepping closer, voice low but firm. âYou know I respect what you do.â
You shook your head, tears stinging behind your eyes. âRespect?â The word came out sharp, almost a laugh. âYou pity me. You listen to my stories like Iâm some kid showing you finger paint while you and Lois talk about saving the world.â
âHeyââ he started, but you didnât let him finish. You couldnât.
âI get tired!â you shouted, the words ripping out before you could stop them. âI wipe noses and change diapers! I dry tears and hold hands and sing stupid songs, okay? I donât save people! I donât write columns or interview celebrities! My name isnât on a front page, and Iâm not some respected reporter!â
Your voice cracked, but you pressed on, your throat burning.
âYou save people, Clark. You stop fires and fight aliens. Lois talks to politicians and has the mayorâs phone number.â You laughed then â short and bitter, a sound that didnât feel like your own. âAnd me? I wipe noses.â
A tear slipped down your cheek before you could brush it away.
Clark didnât move. He just stood there â eyes wide, hands hovering uselessly at his sides â while every buried insecurity, every swallowed word youâd carried for years, finally spilled out between you.
âWhy do you keep talking about Lois?â he finally asked, voice quiet in that way you hated â soft and careful, like you were something fragile he had to protect.
Your shoulders shook, a sound escaping you that was half sob, half bitter laugh. âDoesnât take a genius to see I donât measure up to your girlfriend, Clark.â
His brows knit together instantly. âGirlfriend? Sheâs not myââ
âGive it up, Kal-El!â you snapped, his name tasting sharp on your tongue. His flinch was immediate, guilt flashing across his face.
âYouâre with her every day,â you went on, voice rising. âYou go on dates, you pick her up from work, you smile at her the way you used to smile at me! You look at her likeââ
You stopped, chest heaving. The next words trembled out of you. âLike sheâs your whole world.â
âThatâs not true,â he said, stepping forward, hands out like he could calm you down with proximity alone. âYou donât know what youâre talking about.â
You took a step back. âDonât I? Iâve known you my whole life, Clark. I know every tell, every habit, every look. I know what it means when you stop meeting my eyes, when you talk about her without realizing youâre smiling.â
His voice broke through, quieter now, rougher. âYou think I wanted that?â
You blinked, stunned. âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â
âIâve been trying not to look at you like that my whole damn life,â he said, voice rising despite himself. âEvery time I thought I had it under control, youâd show up again â smiling, laughing, brushing me off like I didnât matter â and itâd all come back.â
He ran a hand through his hair, frustration pouring out in waves. âLois was easy to talk to. She was safe. She didnât make me feel like I was gonna lose my mind every time she said my name.â
You stared at him, every nerve in your body frozen. âYou donât get to say that. Not after all this time.â
âI do,â he shot back, stepping closer. âBecause itâs true.â
The air between you cracked â hot, charged, silent.
Your pulse thundered in your ears. âYouâre lying.â
âThen tell me to leave,â he said quietly. âRight now. Tell me you donât feel it too.â
You didnât move. Didnât speak.
âI like you,â he started, voice breaking around the words like he was afraid they might shatter. âIâve always loved you.â
He stepped closer, words tumbling out faster now, desperate, raw.
âBecause you cry when you watch those stupid shelter ads on TV. You bake cookies every Saturday, and you call my mom on Sundays â even when I forget to. You pick flowers off the sidewalk and smile at strangers in the grocery store.â
His breath caught, but he kept going, almost helplessly.
âYou didnât get scared when I almost burned down half of Kansas with my eyes,â he said, a shaky laugh slipping through. âWhen I started to learn to fly, you promised youâd catch me if I fell."
He took another step, close enough now that you could see the flicker of heat behind his eyes â not from his powers, but from something else entirely.
âYou wipe noses,â he said softly, like it mattered more than anything. âYou give one hundred percent of yourself every single day to a job that would take ten more people â or even Lois â to do half as well. You read stories, you teach them how to talk, how to walk, how to be brave. And you stay up late researching ways to make their tiny worlds brighter.â
Your throat tightened.
He exhaled, voice dropping to something almost reverent. âYou see me. All of me. You see Clark, you see Superman, you see Kal-El â and youâve never once flinched.â
He took a final step forward, so close now that you could feel the warmth radiating off him.
âI donât want Lois,â he whispered. âI want you.â
You stood there, heart hammering in your chest, air heavy and thick between you.
And then â because if he said one more word you were certain youâd fall apart â you surged forward and kissed him.
It was messy, urgent, all teeth and tears and years of silence breaking open at once.
Clark froze for a second, like the world had stopped spinning. Then he exhaled, hands finding your face, and kissed you back â deep and desperate, like heâd been holding his breath for a lifetime.
For a moment, everything stopped.
The world outside, the hum of the lights, the faint sounds of traffic â it all fell away. There was only him, only you, and the rush of everything youâd both been too afraid to say.
When you finally pulled back, your breath hitched. His hands lingered on your face like letting go would make you disappear.
Your throat tightened. âIâve always seen you, you know,â you whispered, your breath ghosting over his lips.
âI know,â he murmured, tilting his head down toward you. âIâve always known you.â
The words hung between you, heavy and soft at the same time, and before you could speak again, his lips found yours. This time, the kiss wasnât desperate or frantic â it was steady, certain, feeling awfully like home.
I wish I could be normal about affection but my love language is merging souls.
dead sea
friends!to!lovers
fluff, pining, hidden feelings, angry love confession
ââââââââ đđđ ââââââââ
Theodore Nott had been your best friend since, well, forever.
Youâd known himâand the rest of your small circleâsince you were old enough to walk across polished floors and mumble polite greetings to people your parents wanted to impress. It came with the territory of being born into a pureblood family, something your parents valued far more than they ever valued you. To them, you werenât a person so much as proof that the family line continued.
At least you hadnât been alone in it. Theo and the others had grown up the same way, taught to sit straight, speak evenly, and never, ever show weakness. Youâd all endured the same lectures, the same expectations, and the same cold kind of love that made you question what warmth was supposed to feel like.Â
But out of that shared misery came something realâhim. Theodore Nott. Your quiet salvation in a world that demanded perfection.
Maybe that was why the sharp ache in your chest, the one that had been festering for days, burned hotter now as you watched him turn away from you, again.
A week. It had been a week of this. Dodged glances, clipped replies, and the kind of silence that felt deliberate. The easy rhythm you once shared had vanished, replaced by distance that felt crueler than any insult. His smiles had gone tight around the edges, his words polite but cold. And every time he slipped away without a word, it was as if the air left the room with him.
You swallowed hard, tightening your grip on your bag as you walked in step with Pansy down the corridor. The echo of your footsteps filled the quiet between you, bouncing off the stone walls.
âPans?â you asked, your voice coming out softer than you meant it to.
She hummed absentmindedly, her hand buried in her bag as she muttered something about a quillâor maybe a notebook.
âHas Teddy said anything about me?â
That got her attention. Pansy glanced up, meeting your eyes just as you both stopped in front of the Slytherin common room entrance. The corridor around you was empty, the torches flickering low, throwing shadows that seemed to stretch with the silence. You crossed your arms over your chest, trying not to look as small as you felt.
âNo,â she said finally, her brow creasing. âWhy?â
You gave a weak shrug. âHe hasnât spoken to me in a week. Itâs not exactly hard to notice that.â
Pansy snorted, shifting her bag higher on her shoulder. âItâs Theo. He gets moody sometimes.â
âNot with me." The words came out before you could stop them, sharper than you intended.
Pansy paused at that, lips pressing together as she studied you. âMaybe heâs mad about Evan.â
âEvan?â Your eyebrows knitted together.
Evan Hawthorn. Ravenclaw Keeper. Same year as you all. The boy youâd been seeing regularly for the last month and a half. It wasnât anything seriousânot reallyâbut it was nice. Easy. Simple.
âWhy would Theo be mad about Evan?â you asked. âThey get along.â
âDo they?â Pansy tilted her head slightly, a knowing smirk tugging at the corner of her mouth. Her eyes flicked over you like she was two steps ahead in a game you hadnât realized you were playing.
âYes, they do,â you repeated, firmer this time.
Pansy exhaled then, the tension in her shoulders softening as she looked at you. It was that rare, gentle look she only ever gave in moments like thisâwhen she dropped the sharp comments and actually seemed to care.
âI know the two of you are best friends,â she said carefully, her tone slower now, âbut have you ever, you know⌠thought that it could be more?â
âMore?â you repeated, as if saying the word might somehow make it make sense.
âMore,â she echoed simply, watching you too closely.
You blinkedâonce, twiceâtrying to think of what to say.
Of course youâd thought about it. Not often, and never on purpose, but sometimes the idea slipped through the cracks when you werenât paying attention. It crept in quietly, curling around the edges of your heart when Theo laughed a certain way, or when his shoulder brushed yours and neither of you moved away. It sat in your throat on long nights when it was just the two of you and the rest of the world felt far away.
But you always pushed it down. Because Theodore Nott was your best friend. Nothing more. He couldnât be. If you let it be moreâif you let yourself want moreâyou could lose the only person who had ever felt like home.
You swallowed hard, forcing your voice steady. âTeddy doesnât see me like that, Pansy.â
She huffed, rolling her eyes but not unkindly. âThink what you want,â she said, shifting her bag higher on her shoulder, âbut donât complain when he starts ignoring you. You canât have it both ways.â
Before you could respond, she turned and stepped into the common room, the tall stone door swinging shut behind her with a deep, echoing thud.
ââââââââ đđđ ââââââââ
You had a plan.
Not a particularly good oneâor even a fully thought-out oneâbut a plan nonetheless.
Slytherin had Quidditch practice tonight, and you knew it ended at eight. Theo, being captain, always stayed behind after everyone else had gone. Heâd double-check the equipment, tidy up the lockers, sometimes just sit on the benches long after the lights dimmed.
That was your chance.
You blew a strand of hair out of your face and marched toward the Quidditch pitch, the chill of the evening air nipping at your cheeks. The sound of your shoes against the gravel path echoed softly, your heart thudding a little faster with each step.
He canât ignore you when heâs cornered, you told yourself.
By the time you reached the locker rooms, most of the lights were already off. The faint scent of wet grass and broom polish hung in the air. Just as you were a few steps away, the final light flicked outâand the door opened.
Theo stepped into view, looking startled to find you there. His hair was damp with sweat, a few strands sticking to his forehead. His uniform was untucked and smeared with dirt, his knees stained from the field.
âWhat are you doing here?â he asked, his voice rough, guarded.
âWe need to talk,â you said firmly, planting your feet. There was no room for argument in your tone.
He blinked, glancing back toward the pitch as if hoping someone would rescue him. âLook, I really donât have timeââ
âThen make time, Teddy!â The words came out louder than you meant, sharp with frustration. âYouâve been ignoring me for days now!â
He scoffed, tossing his towel into his bag. âJust because Iâve been busy doesnât mean you can act like a child.â
That stung. More than you wanted it to.
His eyebrows were drawn together, a crease cutting across his forehead, but the way his nose scrunched gave him away. Youâd known him long enough to recognize when he was lying.
âYou havenât been busy,â you said quietly.
âYes, I haveââ
âNo, you havenât!â you interrupted, stepping closer. âTheodore, you have not been busy. Youâve been avoiding me. You barely look at me anymore, and when you do, itâs like youâd rather be anywhere else. I thought I was your best friend. Best friends donât ignore each other and pretend like itâs fine!â
Your voice cracked at the end, the sound echoing faintly in the empty field.
For a moment, neither of you spoke. The air between you felt heavyâfilled with all the words youâd both been avoiding. Theoâs jaw tightened, his hands flexing at his sides, and you could see the conflict flicker across his face.
He wanted to say something. You just didnât know if you were ready to hear it.
Finally, he sighed, running a hand through his already-messy hair. âYou donât get it,â he muttered.
âThen explain it to me,â you shot back. âBecause Iâm trying, Theo. Iâm really trying, but youâre not making it easy.â
Lightning cracked across the skyâloud, angry, splitting the clouds open with a jagged flash.
You felt the first drops of rain hit your cheeks, cold against the heat rising in your face, but you didnât care. Not anymore.
Theo stayed silent. His jaw was tight, eyes fixed anywhere but on you. The sound of rain began to build, tapping harder against the ground, soaking through your robes.
You laughed then, a sharp, bitter sound that didnât feel like you at all. âFine, Theodore. Donât tell me. Donât talk to me. Act like you donât even know me for all I care.â You threw your hands up, the motion half-angry, half-exhausted. âIâm done.â
You turned, determined to walk away, ignoring the chill that ran down your spine as the rain began to pour in earnest. The sky roared overhead, and for a moment, all you could hear was the storm.
Thenâ
âYou think this is easy for me?â
His voice cut through the rain like thunder, raw and loud enough to make you stop.
You turned back slowly, water dripping from your hair, eyes wide. âWhat?â
Theo stepped toward you, his boots splashing through the puddles. His hair clung to his forehead, raindrops catching on his lashes as his chest rose and fell fast. There was a tremor in his voice now, part anger, part desperation.
âYou think I can justâjust sit here and watch you be with him,â he said, his words tripping over each other, âwhile Iâm fucking in love with you?â
The world seemed to stop. The storm, the rain, the trembling in your handsâeverything froze around that one sentence.
You stood there, staring at him, your chest constricting so tightly you could barely breathe. âTeddyâŚâ you managed, voice barely above a whisper.
But he shook his head, water flying from the ends of his hair. âYou think itâs easy?â he demanded, his tone cracking under the weight of it. âWatching you laugh with him, hold his hand, pretend like he gets you? He doesnât. He canât. He doesnât know you the way I do.â
His voice broke on the last word.
âIâve been here,â he said quietly, eyes finally meeting yours, glassy with something more than rain. âFor years. Justâhere. And Iâm so bloody tired of pretending it doesnât hurt.â
The thunder rolled again, softer this time, like the world itself was holding its breath for what came next.
Theo took another step closer, his shoulders tense, rainwater running down the side of his face.
âI tried to stop it,â he went on, voice rough. âMerlin knows I did. You were my best friend. The one person I didnât want to mess things up with. But then youâd smile, or laugh at something stupid, and it was over. Every time, it was over. I kept thinking I could hide it, that it would fade, but it never did. It just got worse.â
You swallowed hard, but he didnât stop.
âI thought if I stayed away, it would help. That maybe Iâd get over it, or at least stop thinking about you all the damn time. But then Iâd see youââ his voice broke again, hands curling at his sides, ââand all I could think about was how it wasnât me making you smile like that.â
âTheoââ you started, but he shook his head, cutting you off.
âI know you donât feel the same. I know that. And I swear, I wasnât going to say anything, I justââ His words were tumbling out now, fast and uneven. âI couldnât keep watching you with him, like Iâm invisible, like none of it matteredâlike we donât matterââ
You didnât let him finish.
Before he could say another word, you stepped forward, closing the space between you and pressed your lips to his.
For a second, everything stilled. The rain, the thunder, the chaos in your chestâall of it fell away.
Theo froze, eyes wide, a small sound caught in his throat. Then he exhaled shakily against your mouth, his hands hovering before finally settling at your waist, as if he was afraid you might disappear if he held too tightly.
When you finally pulled back, both of you were breathing hard, rainwater dripping down your faces.
âThatâs not what you think,â you whispered, voice trembling. âItâs never been easy for me either.â
Theo blinked, staring at you like he wasnât sure if heâd imagined it. His lips parted, but no words came outâjust another breath that sounded half like a laugh, half like disbelief.
He looked at you for a long moment, rain dripping from his lashes. Then he stepped closer, slow and hesitant this time. His hand lifted, fingertips brushing against your jaw, barely thereâlike he still wasnât sure he was allowed.
âTell me to stop,â he said quietly. âAnd I will.â
You didnât.
Instead, you leaned into his touch, eyes closing as the storm around you faded into something softerâsomething almost peaceful.
For the first time in weeks, maybe years, the silence between you didnât feel heavy. It felt like relief.
masterlist
theo nott đ§¸đ§¸
numbers from heaven
dead sea
mattheo riddle đˇď¸đˇď¸
growing pains
clark kent đđ
the blue

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growing pains
mentions of established!relationship
slight angst, fluff, pining if you squint
ââââââââ đđđ ââââââââ
There was an intimacy that lingered in the silence of never speaking to someone again.
It was almost frightening, the weight of knowing someone you would never exchange words with again. To pass them in a hallway, in a crowd, in the quiet corners of memory, and carry the knowledge of how they liked their tea, or how their body had once felt pressed warm and steady against your own. That kind of knowing wasnât meant to vanishâit lived inside you, tucked behind your ribs where no one else could see.
Because you hadnât just known Mattheo Riddle. You had seen him.
Seen the stories carved into his scars, kissed the bruises life had left behind, heard the sound of his laughter when he forgot for a fleeting second that joy was something forbidden to him. You had memorized the way his gaze softened when it fell on you, like you were something untainted, something pure.
But all relationships unravel eventually, donât they? Especially the reckless ones born in adolescence. You werenât even sure if you could pinpoint the exact moment the threads began to fray. Was it in the sharp edges of your arguments? Or in the silences that stretched? Or maybe the beginning of the end had been there from the very start, the first time his lips touched yoursâdestined to burn out because neither of you knew how to keep a fire without letting it consume.
When people asked, you had an answer rehearsed, easy enough to say without cracking: growing pains. That was what you called it. A tidy phrase, tucked behind a small smile. A year of deflection, of assuring your friends you were fine. People change, needs shift, and not all loves are meant to last. Thatâs what you told them. Thatâs what you told yourself.
The hallways felt narrower today, shadows stretching longer as the edge of winter crept into the stone. Your breath curled faintly in the cold air as you hurried from Potions, twisting through familiar corridors toward Transfiguration. If you didnât make it soon, all the good seats would be gone.
This was one of the few classes you shared with the SlytherinsâMattheo among them.
By now, the two of you had perfected an unspoken ritual: polite avoidance at all costs. In the first weeks of term, his friends had snickered when you walked in, trading knowing looks that made your stomach twist. But as time passed and nothing ever happenedâno words, no glances, no slip-upsâthose smirks dulled into indifference. They stopped expecting anything. And so did you.
You slid into your usual place, third row from the front, offering your tablemate a soft smile before laying out your books and parchment. McGonagall swept to the front, robes trailing behind her as she launched into the lesson, her crisp voice carrying over the scrape of quills and rustle of pages.
But the words blurred together, background noise against the restless tap of your fingers on your quill. You were almost grateful for the haze of distractionâuntil McGonagallâs tone sharpened, commanding attention.
âA reminder, students. You will begin a project today. Partners have been pre-selected. You will have two weeks to complete it, and I expect nothing less than your best work.â
Your stomach dropped. Pre-picked partners. Two weeks. You drew in a sharp breath, silently bargaining with every god and ghost Hogwarts had ever housed. Surely there was a way out. Surely fate wouldnât be so cruel.
âNott and Greengrass.â
âChang and Berkshire.â
âRiddle and Y/L/N.â
For half a second, the room felt weightless. You swore you felt every head in the vicinity turn just slightly, curiosity prickling the air. You didnât dare look back.
The rest of the lesson seemed to pass as though spoken underwater. McGonagallâs voice had dissolved into a dull hum. Your head felt heavy, words sliding past your ears like static.
Maybe there was still a chance. You could ask McGonagall for mercy, couldnât you? Beg for a new partner, promise her youâd work harder, study longer. A bit of groveling, maybe even a tear well-placed if it came to it. Surely she couldnât expect you to survive two weeks partnered with him.
But the lesson ended before you had managed to come up with a plan. The scrape of chairs filled the room as students packed up, voices rising in chatter around you. You stayed rooted in your seat, staring at the wood grain of the desk as if focus alone might make it all go away.
âHey.â
The single word cut through the noise.
Your breath caught, and you forced yourself to look up. His eyes met yours for the first time in months. The sight was jarringâso achingly familiar yet strange, like remembering the lyrics of a song you hadnât heard in years.
âHey,â you managed, the word too soft, too small, not at all the way you intended.
He exhaled sharply, not quite a sigh, not quite a laugh. Something in between. âMeet me in the library after dinner?â His voice was low, careful. âWe can knock a lot of this out in a few days. Make it, uh⌠less painless for the both of us.â
You swallowed, the faintest sting of nerves in your chest. His tone was steady enough, but there was something beneath itâsomething softer, frayed at the edges, like his chest had cracked open in the same place yours had.
You just nodded. "Sounds good."
His lips parted as if words were coming, but he thought better of it, shutting them tight before turning and leaving without pause.
You let out a breath.
One project, that's all.
ââââââââ đđđ ââââââââ
The library was quieter than usual that evening, firelight spilling low across the tables as you made your way to the back. You spotted him almost instantlyâMattheo had always had a way of filling a space even when he was trying not to. He was slouched over a stack of parchment, one arm draped over the chair beside him as though daring anyone else to sit there.
You hesitated before crossing the room.
âThought you werenât coming,â he said without looking up, voice flat but not sharp.
âI thought about it,â you admitted, sliding into the chair across from him. Your bag landed with a dull thump, and you busied yourself pulling out books so you wouldnât have to meet his eyes.
For a few minutes, there was only the sound of shuffling parchment and scratching quills. The silence was thick, awkward in all the places it used to be easy. Once, youâd filled silence with laughter, with stories that poured out until morning. Now it just pressed down, suffocating.
âSo,â you said finally, flipping a page a little too hard. âWeâre supposed to research transfiguration branches outside the standard curriculum. Which do you want?â
âYou pick,â he muttered, quill tapping against the edge of the desk.
Your jaw tightened. âYou canât even pretend to care?â
His eyes flicked up then, sharp, steady. âOh, I care. I just know youâll do it properly.â
You hated the way the words landed, because they werenât mockingâhe meant them. And that was somehow worse.
You looked away quickly, focusing on the ink bleeding across your parchment. âFine. Human-to-animal transfiguration, then. Itâs harder, butâŚâ you trailed off, biting your tongue before you filled the quiet with explanations he didnât deserve.
He nodded once. âIâll cover magical object conversions.â
Another stretch of silence. Quills scratched against parchment. Pages turned, faintly rustling in the quiet, and the library settled into its own hushed rhythm.
Then his voice cut through the bubble of quiet. âYou still hum while you write.â
The low humming you hadnât even realized you were doing stopped abruptly, leaving the sudden emptiness of sound ringing in your ears.
You swallowed, forcing your gaze upward to meet his. âAnd you,â you said, voice sharper than intended, âyou still try to make yourself seem bigger than you are.â
He let out a light, almost careless laugh, eyebrows lifting just slightly as if your words amused him rather than stung.
âNever could skip around the truth, could you?â His tone was soft, breathy, like heâd exhaled some secret heâd been holding onto for far too long.
You bristled, heart thudding against your ribs. âDonât pretend you still know me, Mattheo.â
A shadow crossed his expression for the briefest moment, then he leaned back just slightly, eyes fixed on yours with an intensity that made your chest ache. âI think Iâll spend my whole life knowing you.â
The words lingered between you, weighty and impossible. You wanted to laugh, to scoff, to shove the quill into your bag and run. But you didnât. Instead, your fingers stilled on the parchment, and for a heartbeat, all the carefully built walls between you seemed to tremble.
He mustâve taken your silence as permission, because he didnât stop.
âI know your favorite season is spring,â he said softly, voice low, deliberate, âbecause of the flowers, the colors, how everything feels alive again. You hate coffee,ââthere was the faintest smirkââand prefer tea, but only with far too much milk. That vinyl player in your room? It belonged to your mum. She got it in muggle London. You hiccup when you cry, which makes it even harder to hide, and you love the ocean, even if you hate how sand sticks to everything.â
You didnât move. Didnât breathe. Your fingers tightened around the quill, knuckles whitening, but your eyes stayed locked on his, refusing to look away.
âYou like to dance in the rain,â he said softly, âand roll around when it snows. Lilies are your favorite flowerââ
âTulips,â you interrupted, voice quiet, almost a whisper, letting the word hang in the space between you. His mouth snapped shut, and his eyes sharpened, locked on yours like he was trying to memorize every detail.
âI⌠prefer tulips now,â you added, heart hammering in your chest. âA lot can change in a year.â
He let a slow breath escape, leaning back just slightly, a faint, knowing smile tugging at his lips. âYouâre right,â he murmured. âA lot does change. But that doesnât mean I canât learn you all over again.â
!wishbone!
mentions of established!relationship
angst
ââââââââ đđđ ââââââââ
Cruel had never been a word you could place on Theodore Nott.
Cunning? Brooding? Bathed in scars and bone-deep sadness?
Absolutely.
You had properly met him last term, despite the years of whispers and rumors that trailed after him like shadows he could never quite shake. Theodore Nott was the boy everyone already thought they knewâthe Slytherin loyalty, the heir to a name as heavy as stone. His silence was an armor, his sharp looks a weapon, and his solitude a punishment he seemed resigned to carry.
That might have been the end of it, had Professor Sinistra not handpicked partners for the constellation project. Fateâor perhaps just poor luckâhad landed you with the Nott boy.
At first it was nothing more than civility. Shared parchment and neat, clipped exchanges across the table. Long hours tucked into forgotten corners of the library where you worked in silence, his quill scratching steadily while yours faltered in distraction. It was polite, academic, safe.
Until it wasnât.
Until Theodore let the walls crack, just enough for you to slip through. And once you did, everything changed.
Suddenly he wasnât the sole heir to a tainted name or the figurehead of a legacy you could never untangle. He wasnât just sharp cheekbones and unblinking silences, or the Slytherin who made the air heavy around him.
He was Theo. Your Theo.
Theo, who held your hand steady as he traced constellations across the night sky with his wand. Theo, who charmed lanterns to glow softly above your bed so you wouldnât wake to the suffocating dark. Theo, who leaned close during Charms class to whisper nonsense just to make you bite back a laugh. Theo, who slipped folded notes between the pages of your booksâscribbled sketches of stars, bits of poetry, secrets heâd sworn to no one else.
For a while, you almost believed this was all he wasâthis boy who let you see him. This boy who wanted you to see him.
But some molds are carved too precisely, etched so deeply they leave scars you canât escape. Some boys are born into legacies that stain everything they touch.
And Theodore Nott had grown right into his.
Into casual cruelty. That was where he had gone. Into sharp words, into remarks spat with venom, and eyes that no longer softened at the sight of tears.
You werenât a fool. A Ravenclaw through and through, you had always prided yourself on logic, on clarity, on seeing truths where others overlooked them. But nights beneath a bruised sky had blurred reason into something else entirelyâhad blurred friendship into something more, something less, something nameless and dangerous all at once.
You had let yourself believe that people could change, could grow beyond the shadows that clung to their names. You had let yourself believe that the boy he was with youâthe boy who traced constellations onto your palms and whispered secrets like prayersâwas the boy he was meant to be.
But belief withers when it is left too long in the cold.
And yours had died a slow, bitter death.
What remained of your friendshipâif friendship was even the right word anymoreâlived only behind your ribs now, tucked into the bruised place that stung each time you dared to breathe.
And now, cornered in the astronomy tower by the boy himself, the ache you had tried so carefully to smother twisted into something unbearable.
"You're avoiding me." His voice cut through the stillness of the astronomy tower, low and firm, each word shaped with precision.
You swallowed hard, but you didnât look away. "You're not who I thought you were."
The slightest flicker crossed his expressionâeyebrows raised, mouth tightening, as though your words were both accusation and revelation. "I'm not?"
"You're cruel, Theodore."
That made him falter. Just barely. His mask cracked, shoulders drawing in before he caught himself. For the smallest of moments, you almost let yourself believe he cared.
"Cruel?" he echoed, the word tasting foreign on his tongue.
You nodded, steady though your chest ached. "You tear people down. You laugh when someone cries. You act like breaking someoneâs pride is just a day's fun. Yesterday, when Mattheo snapped that Hufflepuffâs wandâyou just stood there and watched."
His jaw worked as if he had words, as if some retort hovered on his lipsâsomething to justify it, or maybe to twist it into another of his half-truths.
"Thatâs cruelty, Nott."
The name landed like a blow. He flinched, a flash of something unguarded in his eyes before the mask slid back into place.
Nott. A name heavy with shadows, steeped in pain, stained by betrayal and broken loyalties.
One night by the Black Lake, he had whispered to youâquiet and bitterâthat he despised it, that the Nott name had caged him since birth. You had believed him then.
But now that same name stood between you, higher and stronger than any wall.
And for the first time, you realized he might never climb over it.
He stepped forward, hesitantly, as though even the act of closing the space between you carried risk. His voice was low, strained, the first crack in his armor youâd heard in weeks. "Iâm different with you. You know that."
A bitter laugh tore from your throat, sharp and humorless. It echoed in the hollow of the astronomy tower, sounding nothing like you. "Different?" you repeated, disbelief burning through your chest. "Iâm not some exception, Theodore. Donât you dare make me out to be one."
His jaw tightened, but you didnât give him the chance to speak.
"You canât go around ruining people, tearing them down just because youâre carrying the weight of your own name. You donât get to decide that cruelty is excusable simply because youâ" your voice cracked, but you forced it out "âbecause youâre nice to me."
His eyes flickered, that same almost-slip youâd seen before, but you pressed on, refusing to falter.
"Thatâs not how it works, Theodore. And Iâll be damned if I let you anywhere near me again."
His brow furrowed, his mask slipping further, a sudden panic flashing in his eyes. "You donât see itâMerlin, you donât even realize. I canât breathe when youâre notâ" He cut himself off, exhaling shakily, shoulders rigid. "I canât lose this. I canât lose you."
Your chest tightened, but you refused to give in "You lost me when you chose this. You can't say I'm different-"
"You are!" The word tore out of him, louder this time, raw, desperate. His hand twitched at his side like he wanted to reach for you, but didnât dare. "Youâre the only thing that doesnât feelâ" His voice cracked, breaking on the edges of something unspoken. "I canâtâdonât make meâ"
You cut him off with a glare, "Enough, Nott.
He stared at you like youâd just taken the air from the room, and for the first time, Theodore Nottâuntouchable, unreadableâlooked small.
"Iâm done, Theo." The words left you quieter than you intended, a whisper more than a declaration, but in the silence of the tower they seemed to echo back at you, bouncing off the stone walls until there was no space left between you where they didnât exist.
He didnât move. Didnât step closer, didnât reach for you the way you half-expected, half-feared he would. He just stood rooted to the floor, staring at you as though he could hold you there with his eyes alone.
For a moment you thought he might speak. His lips parted, the words trembling there, but nothing came.
He looked like he was drowning in things he didnât know how to say, choking on words he didnât mean, and you realized with a sharp twist of pain that maybe he never would.
And so you turned away, footsteps hitting the stone as you made your way down the stairs.
And Theodore Nott let you go.