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confirming their romantic relationship while also asserting boundaries that the status is ours to know but the relationship itself belongs only to them is so important actually
Summary: You were just supposed to cover the press conference. Write a clean, professional piece. Get in, get the quote, and definitely not fall for the cityâs most flammable superhero.
You swore you were the one woman in New York who wouldnât fall for the Human Torch.
Oh, how wrong you were.
Tags: Fluff, witty banter, âI Swore I Wouldnât Fall For Himâ, Johnny is a loverboy at heart, she doesn't know he had her at first interaction, getting together, no spoilers for FF:FS. No descriptions of reader. No mentions of Y/N
A/N: I'm back!! And as expected Johnathan Lowell Spencer Storm has infiltrated my head and living in it rent free. If you have any requests, suggestions, or thoughts, feel free to send me a message. Reblogs are appreciated. Please do not steal or cross-post it on another platform without asking. Thank you.
Word Count: 10.7k
masterlist
The cameras clicked like cicadas on a summer night, all chirping in rhythm to catch the perfect angle of the Fantastic Four. You stood near the back of the Baxter Buildingâs press room, notebook in hand, heels clicking softly against the polished floor as you edged closer.
This was your first time covering them â the Fantastic Four. Three years into their rise, and still, they looked like theyâd stepped out of a comic strip and into technicolor reality. The press called them explorers, heroes, geniuses. You called them your assignment.
Reed Richards, ever the picture of precise intellect, adjusted the microphone like he was recalibrating a telescope. Beside him, Susan Storm stood poised in light blue, all calm and practiced charm. Ben Grimm, rock-skinned and stone-faced, gave the occasional grunt that counted as a full sentence in his world. And then â of course â there was him.
Johnny Storm leaned back, with his arms crossed. He didnât even blink. He looked like he belonged in the sky â or maybe just on the front cover of a magazine. Probably both.
You rolled your eyes before you could stop yourself.
âThank you all for being here,â Reed began, his voice clipped and professional. âWeâre happy to report that the Mad Thinker has been officially turned over to the authorities, along with his robotic enforcers and classified tech. As of 0600 hours this morning, he is in custody.â
A round of polite applause followed, tinged with the kind of awe that only came with the phrase âMad Thinker neutralized.â
You took notes. Clean, detached. That was your job. You werenât here to fawn or flirt or feed the fandom. You were here to write a clean feature for The Daily Observer. One that made your editor forget that this was your first major assignment. One that didnât give the Human Torch a single ounce of the attention he so obviously craved.
Except, when it was time for questions, and Johnny finally leaned forward to speak, your pen hesitated mid-stroke.
"Guess he didn't think that far ahead," Johnny said with a smirk, referring to the Mad Thinker. A few reporters laughed. His smile deepened â satisfied, but not smug. âNot even his big brain could predict the Human Torch flying through his security grid at Mach 2.â
You didnât laugh. But your eyes flicked up, just for a second.
And he caught you.
His gaze landed on yours like sunlight through a magnifying glass â warm, focused, too sharp for comfort. He cocked his head slightly, curious. Amused. Like he already knew you didnât like him, and he found it funny.
Your spine straightened. You looked down, scribbled something unimportant, and didnât look up again.
Not even when he said, âWeâve got time for one more question,â and Reed nodded.
Not even when he added, âLetâs hear from the new face in the back.â
You froze.
Oh, you hated him already.
You lowered your notebook slowly. The entire room turned toward you, the chorus of murmurs dying into anticipation. Damn him.
You cleared your throat, standing straighter. âJohnny Storm,â you began, deliberately skipping the title, âyour maneuver through the Mad Thinkerâs drone grid â you mentioned flying through it at Mach 2. Given the adaptive AI those drones are equipped with, what was your contingency plan if the AI recalibrated mid-flight and blocked your exit trajectory?â
Silence.
It hung in the air like static â thick and heavy with implication.
Johnny blinked once.
Then leaned into the mic.
âWell,â he drawled, grinning, âI figured if it came to that, Iâd just punch through the wall and make my own exit. Yâknow, big flamey boom â very cinematic.â
A few people chuckled. You didnât.
Reed, however, stepped in without missing a beat. âTo clarify â the team ran multiple simulations prior to Johnnyâs entry. I programmed a counter-scrambler pulse that temporarily blinded the AIâs recalibration process. It wasnât just a brute force plan. Johnny was operating with full sensor override and two automated failsafe routes if the main trajectory failed.â
You nodded, polite. âThank you, Doctor Richards. But the question was for Mr. Storm.â
Reed hesitated â just long enough for you to feel the ripple of surprise move through the room. Then he nodded once, stepping back from the mic.
Johnny leaned forward again, that lopsided grin creeping back onto his face like it lived there.
âWell,â he said, voice lower now, just for you, âguess I gotta brush up on my tech lingo if I wanna impress the press.â
âYou could start with not dodging questions,â you replied, just loud enough for him to hear.
The smallest twitch touched the corner of his mouth. Not offense. Not irritation. Just interest. Huh.
âDuly notedâŚ?â He dragged the word out like an invitation.
You flipped your notebook shut. âYouâll read it in the byline.â
And with that, you sat back down.
You didnât see him watch you as the next question was called â but you felt it. Like heat from a fire you werenât supposed to enjoy.
The morning after the press conference, the Baxter Buildingâs kitchen smelled like burnt toast. Johnny lounged in the living room, flipping through the dayâs stack of papers.
Reed was already dissecting a gravity anomaly from the upper stratosphere, Sue was reviewing her own quotes with the cool detachment of someone used to headlines, and Ben was elbow-deep in a bowl of protein-enhanced cereal. Johnny skimmed until his name popped out.
âFantastic Four Thwart Thinkerâs Terror Once Again!â
One paper described Reedâs leadership as âflawlessly calculated.â Another hailed Sue as âa vision of grace and tactical finesse.â Even Ben got a glowing paragraph about âraw strength tempered with loyalty and control.â
Then came his part.
Johnnyâs jaw moved a little slower as he read.
ââwhile Johnny Storm, ever the Human Torch in name and temperament, played his usual role of chaotic spectacle. Though undeniably brave, one wonders how much longer recklessness can be mistaken for confidence.â
He blinked. Re-read it. His chewing stopped altogether.
âHey, Stretch,â he said, lifting the paper and squinting at the byline, âyou remember that new reporter? The one with the notebook and the spine made of steel?â
Reed didnât look up. âHmm? The one who cornered you about the AI drones?â
âYeah. She wrote this.â
Ben grunted without looking. âWhat, she get your flame-retardant undies in a twist?â
Johnny folded the paper and tossed it onto the counter. âJust funny how I save the day in a ball of fire, and all I get is âreckless spectacle.ââ
Sue took a sip of her coffee. âMaybe sheâs not wrong.â
He turned. âEt tu, sis?â
She shrugged. âShe didnât say you werenât brave. She just said youâre the kind of brave that forgets plans exist.â
âShe called me a âspectacle.â Thatâs basically âshow ponyâ in journalist speak.â
Reed finally looked up, adjusting his glasses. âShe also made you sound like you belong in a pulp serial. That kind of language sells papers.â
âThanks, that really soothes my ego.â
But he wasnât angry.
If anything, he was... annoyed that it got under his skin at all.
He'd been flamed before, literally and figuratively. But something about the way she wrote it â so clean, so sharp, like she wasnât trying to insult him⌠just calling him out â it stuck.
Johnny leaned back, arms folded behind his head.
âAll right,â he muttered to himself, a smile tugging at the corner of his mouth, âgame on, byline.â
The Daily Observer newsroom buzzed with the usual mid-morning chaos â the clack of typewriters, hum of fax machines, and cigarette smoke curling toward the ceiling like it had deadlines of its own. Reporters darted between desks, arguing over column space or chasing coffee that tasted like burnt despair. Your desk was tucked near the back, wedged between the city beat editor and a storage closet that had mysteriously started leaking toner last week.
You were rereading your latest draft when a shadow fell across your notes.
You didnât even need to look up.
The air smelled faintly of fire.
You sighed, set your pen down, and slowly lifted your gaze.
Johnny Storm stood there â in the middle of the bullpen â like he hadnât just walked into the lionâs den with zero clearance and a ridiculous amount of self-confidence. Dressed in a bomber jacket and aviators pushed up into his hair, he looked more like someone on his way to a photoshoot than a surprise visit to a newsroom.
He gave you a smile that probably melted at least three interns behind him. âHey.â
You stared at him for a long beat.
Then: âYouâve never had PR training, have you?â
He blinked. âWow. Not even a good morning?â
You leaned back in your chair, arms crossing slowly. âYou think walking straight into the bullpen of the cityâs most stubborn newspaper â unannounced, by the way â is the best idea to change my opinion of you?â
âMaybe not best, but Iâd say boldness counts for something.â
You tilted your head. âSo does common sense.â
His grin didnât falter, but there was a flicker of hesitation behind it now. Just a second. Just enough to tell you that he didnât come here only to be charming â he actually cared about what you wrote. That stuck with you more than it should have.
âI just figured,â he said, stepping closer and lowering his voice so only you could hear, âsince you already called me a reckless spectacle in print, maybe I should live up to the part.â
âYou know that wasnât personal, right?â you replied, quiet and cool. âThat was professional observation.â
âAnd here I thought journalists were supposed to be unbiased.â
âI am.â You pointed to the article. âYou think I wrote that to get under your skin?â
âMission accomplished,â he said, with a smirk.
You studied him â really studied him this time. The golden-boy posture was still there, but something else simmered underneath. Less flame, more... frustration? Not anger. Not arrogance. Something genuine.
âSit,â you said, motioning to the empty chair across from you. âIf youâre going to try to argue your way into a rewrite, youâll need better lines.â
He looked surprised for a second. Then he pulled out the chair and sat down like it was a negotiation table at the Future Foundation.
You picked up your pen again, tapping the end against your notepad.
âStart talking, Torch.â
He sat down like heâd just won something. Legs spread, arm slung casually over the back of the chair â like he didnât just march into a den of cynical columnists with a mission taped to his chest.
You raised a brow. âSo. Talk.â
Johnny opened his mouth⌠then closed it again.
You watched him falter, just slightly, like the words werenât lining up the way he rehearsed them. The bravado dimmed by a notch, the way a flame might lower when the wind shifts.
âI guess I justâŚâ He scratched the back of his neck, expression almost sheepish. âI thought maybe you misunderstood me.â
âI quoted you exactly.â
âRight, no, I meanânot the words. Just⌠what they meant.â He leaned forward a little, lowering his voice. âIâm not trying to be some reckless hothead out there.â
You didnât say anything. Let the silence stretch.
He looked down at your notebook, like maybe it would help him organize the jumble in his brain.
âYou write like someone who actually thinks before they speak,â he said. âAnd the way you wrote about the others â you got them. Sueâs calm. Reedâs brain. Benâs grit. It was⌠fair. It was real.â
You tilted your head. âAnd you didnât feel represented?â
He hesitated again.
âI didnât feel seen.â
That surprised you. Not because it was dramatic â but because it wasnât. There was no fire in his voice. No defensive snap. Just quiet truth. Like he was finally saying something he didnât let out often.
You watched him carefully. âSo you came here to⌠what? Change my mind? Charm me into writing a nicer paragraph next time?â
He met your eyes. âNo. I came because I donât want to be a punchline in the press just because I donât talk like a science textbook.â
You almost smiled.
Almost.
âMaybe stop acting like one, then.â
That made him laugh â a real laugh. Not the smug kind from press conferences or photo ops. This one was low, quick, and caught him off guard.
âI walked right into that,â he said.
You finally leaned back in your chair, tapping your pen once more before setting it down.
âIâll say this,â you murmured, voice softer now, âyou care more than you let on.â
Johnny looked at you â just looked â and for once didnât smile. He just nodded.
âI care about the mission. I care about the team. And yeah,â he added, eyes flicking to your notepad again, âI care about how weâre remembered.â
You sat with that for a moment. Then picked up your pen.
âIâm not rewriting the article,â you said flatly.
âDidnât ask you to.â
âButâŚâ You met his gaze again. âIf youâre really not the guy I described, then prove it next time youâre out there. Show me something I have to write about.â
He stood, slower this time. âYou got it, Byline.â
âAnd for the record,â you added as he turned to go, âyouâre lucky none of the editors saw you walk in. A man literally on fire wouldâve caused less panic.â
He grinned, one foot already backing toward the hallway. âThen Iâll save the fire for next time.â
You rolled your eyes again, but this time⌠you were smiling too.
The streets still smelled like scorched pavement and ionized air.
Broken glass glittered on the sidewalks, cordoned off by bright orange pylons and the occasional floating police drone buzzing around like oversized flies. The Red Ghost had made a mess of Midtown with his intangible tricks and hyper-intelligent apes â again. But the Fantastic Four had driven him off before anyone was seriously hurt.
Now the smoke was clearing, the crowd was thinning, and your notebook was nearly full.
You were crouched beside a frazzled street vendor whose hot dog cart had been overturned by an invisible monkey. She spoke with a tremble in her voice but kept glancing down at her half-burnt umbrella like she wasnât sure what to be more upset about.
You nodded, murmured something comforting, and jotted down the last of the quotes. Then you stood, brushing soot from your pants and squinting up through the haze.
That was when you felt the heat before you saw him.
âCareful,â a familiar voice called above you. âYour shoes are standing in the middle of a melted bike rack crime scene.â
You turned slowly, not surprised in the slightest to see Johnny Storm hovering just a few feet above the street, his body still faintly glowing with post-battle embers. He landed with a soft thud beside you, steam curling from his shoulders like breath on a winter day.
You stared at him.
He grinned.
âHey, Byline.â
You raised a brow. âAre you gonna keep calling me that?â
âOnly when youâre working,â he said, brushing soot from the sleeve of his uniform. âDidnât think Iâd see you out here this fast.â
âIâm a journalist. You lot punch holes in buildings, I show up to document it.â
âFair.â He looked around at the half-destroyed plaza, then back at you. âSo⌠I was thinking. If youâre not too busy cataloguing melted lampposts, maybe you could do something different.â
You narrowed your eyes. âDifferent how?â
He gave a small shrug, more casual than cocky. âInterview me.â
You blinked. âYouâre asking me to interview you?â
âI figured I owe you one good headline before you make me the villain in another paragraph,â he said with a half-smile. âBesides, Reedâs great, Sueâs diplomatic, and Benâs Ben. Iâve got stuff to say, too. Might as well say it to someone who doesnât let me off the hook.â
You studied him for a moment, then flipped open your notebook to a fresh page.
âAll right,â you said, uncapping your pen. âWhat are the teamâs plans on catching the Red Ghost? Or are you just going to wait around until he crashes another brunch hour?â
Johnnyâs posture shifted, just slightly. Straighter. Focused. His grin faded â not into a scowl, but something serious. Intent.
âWeâre triangulating the residual energy signatures from the primate phasing tech,â he said. âSueâs helping Reed map out a possible pattern in the Red Ghostâs movement based on his prior attacks. Itâs not random â heâs testing different types of tech defenses, seeing what reacts to his phase modulation. Heâs not just stealing â heâs scouting.â
You blinked, surprised at the sudden shift in tone. It wasnât over-explained, but it was technical. Clear. Strategic.
âSo this wasnât a one-off.â
âNo,â Johnny said, meeting your gaze. âHeâs escalating. And next time, we wonât just be reacting. Weâll be ready.â
You stared at him a beat longer than you meant to, then jotted the words down â slower this time.
âWell,â you said, a touch more genuine than youâd planned, âyou obviously came prepared.â
He gave a crooked smile, but didnât say anything right away. Just let the silence settle.
Then: âTold you I wasnât all spectacle.â
You gave him a sideways glance. âOne quote wonât change my mind overnight.â
âThen I guess Iâll just have to keep giving you better ones.â
Then, casually â too casually â he said, âMaybe⌠we could talk more. Over some coffee?â
You looked up at him. Not sharply. Not cruelly. Just⌠professionally.
âNo.â
And just like that, the moment cracked.
He blinked once, fast, and straightened a little like heâd been bracing for impact. There it was â the end of the attempt, the polite rejection. You could see it settle behind his eyes.
But before he could nod, turn it into a joke, or retreat behind the easy charmâ
âMaybe ask me,â you said, sliding your pen behind your ear, âwhile Iâm not at work.â
His head tilted slightly. Brows lifted.
The faintest flicker of a smile returned, slower this time. A little stunned. A little boyish. Like the fire hadnât gone out, just dimmed long enough to make room for surprise.
âOh,â he said. âRight.â
You raised an eyebrow. âYouâve heard of boundaries, havenât you, Storm?â
âVaguely,â he said. âIâm trying this new thing where I respect them.â
You hummed, not fully smiling â but not hiding the twitch at the corner of your mouth either. âLet me know how that goes.â
He took a step backward, hovering just an inch off the ground now, arms crossed like he was resisting the urge to take a victory lap.
âIâll see you around,â he said, warmth curling into his voice.
âNot if I see you first.â
He laughed â short and surprised â before blasting off into the sky, a streak of orange light burning through the last of the smog.
The city hummed in low light as the workday dissolved into evening. Neon signs flickered to life, casting their glow on chrome bumpers and damp sidewalks. The Daily Observer office emptied out one tired body at a time, heels clicking and shoulders loosening under trench coats and rolled-up sleeves.
You stepped out the glass doors with your bag slung over one shoulder, rubbing the back of your neck as you finally â finally â clocked off.
And there he was.
Johnny Storm, leaning against a deep blue Pontiac GTO parked just outside the building like heâd stepped out of a magazine spread. The headlights were off, the street quiet. He wore a bomber jacket over a white tee, no flame in sight â just a casual confidence, hands in his pockets and a grin playing at the corners of his mouth.
You stopped on the last step and stared at him.
âYouâre really persistent, arenât you?â
Johnny pushed off the car with a shrug that was almost bashful â almost. âI waited until you were off the clock, didnât I?â
You narrowed your eyes. âThatâs dangerously close to âstalking.ââ
âI prefer the term âtimed entrance,ââ he said. âAnd before you accuse me of another headline-worthy stunt â this isnât an ambush. Itâs an invitation.â
âTo what?â
He nodded toward the passenger door. âCoffee. Conversation. Possibly a slice of pie so good it makes you rethink your whole evening.â
You raised an eyebrow. âYou drive around with a backup pie plan?â
âWouldnât you, if you were trying to win over someone who called you a cocky spectacle in print?â
You exhaled through a quiet laugh, surprised even at yourself. The part that wouldâve bristled, retreated, shut the whole thing down â it didnât speak up this time. Instead, you glanced at the car, then back at him.
This was definitely a date.
And surprisingly, you didnât mind.
You stepped forward and opened the passenger-side door. âJust so you know,â you said as you slid into the seat, âif the pie is bad, Iâm writing a review.â
Johnny grinned as he rounded the front of the car and climbed in. âThatâs fair. But youâll probably be too impressed to hold a grudge.â
You shot him a look as he started the engine. âDonât push it, Storm.â
He just chuckled, the engine rumbling to life beneath the neon skyline, and pulled away from the curb like he had all the time in the world.
The diner Johnny picked wasnât flashy. It sat tucked between a laundromat and a 24-hour flower shop, its windows fogged just enough to make the neon signs outside blur like watercolor. Inside, it smelled like coffee, butter, and cinnamon â a place where time moved slower. A place you didnât expect Johnny Storm to know about.
You slid into the booth across from him, still not entirely convinced this wasnât a joke or some bet heâd made with Ben Grimm. But then the waitress came over, already knowing his order. You raised a brow at him.
He just shrugged. âTold you. Great pie.â
The first few minutes were casual â light teasing, a few too many glances at the menu you werenât actually reading. Then your reporter instincts kicked in.
âSo,â you said, leaning forward a little, âwhy hero work? Out of all the paths someone could take after getting hit with cosmic radiationââ
Johnny cut you off with a grin. âHold up. Nope. Not tonight.â
âWhat?â
âIâm not letting you interview me,â he said, pointing his fork at you. âYou do that with everyone else. I wanna flip it this time.â
You leaned back, crossing your arms. âYou wanna ask me questions?â
âExactly.â His smile softened. âI mean⌠if thatâs okay.â
You blinked, surprised. âFine.â
He took a sip of his coffee like he was preparing for something important. Then:
âWhere are you from?â
You blinked again, not expecting such a normal question. âSyracuse.â
He nodded like heâd guessed right. âUpstate. Cold winters, right?â
âBrutal,â you said with a slight smile. âScraped ice off windshields half my life.â
Johnny laughed softly. âOkay. And whatâd you study?â
âJournalism. Minored in international studies.â You glanced at your pie, cutting it slowly. âI thought I wanted to be a foreign correspondent. Cover wars, revolutions... real stories.â
âIs that why you became a journalist?â
You hesitated. It was rare someone asked that and actually wanted to hear the answer.
âSort of,â you said. âI guess I liked the idea that people could read something and understand the world differently. That I could help make sense of the chaos, even a little. Shine a light on things people didnât want to look at.â
Johnny watched you closely. Not in that performative, flirty way he had in front of cameras. It was quieter now â like heâd turned something off and let something else show through.
âThat makes sense,â he said. âYouâve got that kind of presence.â
You smirked. âWhat kind?â
âThe kind that gets people to talk. Even when they werenât planning to.â
The conversation had drifted to music by the time his watch beeped.
It wasnât loud, just a sharp beep-beep that cut through the low hum of the diner. Johnny glanced at it with a sigh, and just like that, you saw his posture shift. He was still sitting in front of you, but something behind his eyes had already left.
âShit,â he muttered, rubbing the back of his neck. âIâm so sorry, Iââ
âYou have to go,â you finished for him, not even madâjust⌠mildly surprised. âRight. Saving the world and all that.â
He looked sheepish, standing up, pulling out his wallet to toss a few bills on the table. âI really didnât want to leave. Not now. This wasââ he paused, then grinned. âFun.â
You tilted your head, fingers tapping the side of your coffee mug. âIs this gonna be a pattern?â
You didnât mean for it to come out like that. But his smile turned lopsided, cocky in that infuriatingly charming way.
âSo thereâs gonna be a next time?â
You rolled your eyes, sipping your coffee to hide the smirk tugging at your lips. âThatâs not what I said.â
âDidnât have to.â He took a step back, right before pushing out the door. âIâll make it up to you, Syracuse.â
You shook your head, watching him flame on in front of the diner and fly away with style.
You didnât know what surprised you more â that he had to leave⌠or that you kind of hoped there would be a next time.
You were halfway through transcribing your notes from a city council hearing when a voice called out from just beyond your cubicle wall.
âSomeoneâs got fancy mail today,â the mail guy sang, leaning over the divider with a mischievous grin. âBaxter Building, huh? You got friends in high places or something?â
You blinked, reaching for the envelope he held out. Thick, expensive stock. BAXTER printed in bold navy lettering at the top.
âOh god,â you muttered under your breath.
âIs this what happens when you write about superheroes? They write back?â he teased, laughing as he walked away.
You tore it open. Inside was a folded cardâof course it was glossy, and of course there was fire-printed trim on the edges. Typical.
You scoffed. But your lips tugged into a smile before you could stop them.
It was so Johnny.
Ridiculous. Dramatic. Bold.
âŚCharming.
You tucked the note into your drawer before anyone could sneak a peek, and returned to your typewriter, trying to remember what the deputy mayor said about parking enforcement while your brain was already halfway to Saturday.
The Baxter Building loomed as impossibly tall and sleek as she rememberedâthough it felt different this time, somehow. Less like the intimidating center of scientific innovation and more like⌠a place she was invited to.
You approached the security desk, where a man in a dark suit stood behind a glass panel. He looked up, not unkindly.
âCan I help you?â
You held up the invitation. âIâuh. I have an appointment. With the Human Torch.â
He arched a brow, then glanced at the envelope in your hand. The moment he saw BAXTER in bold font and the ridiculous fire-themed trim of the invitation, something flickered in his expression. Recognition. Amusement, maybe.
âName?â
You gave it. He checked his screen, nodded.
âYouâre on the list. Elevator to your right. It'll take you straight to the top level. Enjoy your⌠lunch.â
The pause was deliberate. You didnât blame him.
âThanks,â you muttered.
As you stepped into the elevator, the doors closing around you, you took a breath and tried not to think about the fact that you were on your way to have lunchâwith Johnny Storm.
Not an interview. Not a headline.
Just⌠lunch.
And maybe that was what made your pulse skip a little.
You stepped into the living quarters, still holding onto the last remnants of skepticismâbecause no way Johnny Storm had actually cooked anything himself.
But there he was.
Dressed in a now-spotted white shirt, sleeves rolled up, a dish towel hanging off one shoulder like he was hosting a cooking segment instead of whatever this chaos was. The smell hit you firstâsomething tomato-based, maybe? It wasnât awful, just... suspicious. A sleek robot you recognized from news clipsâHERBIEâstood beside him, handing over utensils with mechanical grace.
Johnny turned when he heard your footsteps. His face lit up immediately, a little too brightly, like a kid caught with his hand in the cookie jar.
âYouâre early!â he said, then caught himself. âI meanâyouâre right on time. Totally on time. I just thought I had, like, five more minutes to make this less of a disaster.â
You raised an eyebrow, arms folding across your chest as you took in the sceneâthe splatter on the stovetop, the open container of sauce, the cutting board with... were those strawberries?
âYou call this cooking?â
He grinned sheepishly. âOkay, first of all, rude. Second of all, Benâs usually the one who handles the food part. But I thought Iâd try.â
HERBIE beeped and rolled over to you, offering a glass of water. You accepted it without breaking eye contact with Johnny.
âAt least someone here knows what theyâre doing,â you muttered.
Johnny put a hand to his chest, feigning offense. âHerbertâs just following my lead, thank you very much.â
HERBIE beeped againâthis time, with a tone that sounded oddly like an apology.
You bit back a smile. This was already ridiculous.
He finally declared the meal doneâwith an exaggerated âTa-da!â and a proud look at his slightly overcooked but still recognizable pasta dish. Then he pointed at his stained shirt, muttered something about âpresentation,â and jogged upstairs to change, leaving you alone in the sleek Baxter kitchen with HERBIE watching over the food like a judgmental sous-chef.
You leaned against the counter, eyeing the plates. The food didnât smell bad, but you werenât getting your hopes up. Still, the thought of Johnny Storm actually making you lunchânot catered, not restaurant takeout, but his own clumsy, messy attemptâmade something flutter in your chest. You pushed it down.
He came back ten minutes later in a clean tee that hugged him in ways that felt a little unfair for lunchtime. He moved like he hadnât just nearly set the place on fire twenty minutes ago, sliding into the seat across from you like this was just a regular Saturday. Maybe it was.
You took your first bite, preparing yourself for the worst.
It was... edible.
Actually, kind of decent.
You blinked at him across the table. âWaitâthis isnât terrible.â
Johnny grinned, leaning forward like heâd just won a bet. âHigh praise. Iâll take it.â
âDid HERBIE actually cook it while you stood nearby and took credit?â
He put a hand to his heart. âOuch. You wound me.â
You both laughed. It came easy. Effortless.
The conversation flowed just like it had at the gala. He asked about your week, what stories you were working on, and you asked about his latest missionâthough he kept it vague. The banter was there, the teasing, the gentle nudges. It felt like another date, not that either of you had called the first one that out loud.
He never made it feel like he was showing off. Not the apartment, not his name, not the security you had to pass just to sit across from him. He just looked at you like he genuinely wanted to be here. With you.
You hadnât expected that. But here you were.
And you werenât rushing to leave.
Somewhere between the last few bites and your second glass of water, the conversation drifted into quieter, more thoughtful territory.
âSo,â you started, poking at the last piece of garlic bread with your fork, âwhat was it like⌠the first time you went to space?â
He blinked, caught off guardânot because you asked, but because of how gently you had. You werenât asking for the spectacle or the news headline. You really wanted to know.
And something in him shifted.
Johnny leaned back in his chair, eyes softening, mouth tugging into a quiet smile that wasnât showy or flirtatious. Just real.
âIt was⌠insane,â he said after a beat. âBut not in the way people think.â
You tilted your head, curious.
âI mean, yeah, it was loud and chaotic. Reed was spouting numbers no one but him understood, Sue was trying to keep everyone calm, and Ben was yelling about how the thing looked like it was held together with duct tape. And maybe it was.â
He laughed a little to himself. His gaze wanderedânot away from you, but somewhere just behind your shoulder, like he was watching a memory replay.
âBut then we broke through,â he said. âPast the clouds. Past the blue. And it just⌠opened.â
He gestured vaguely with his hands, like he was trying to shape the size of the universe.
âIt was the quiet that hit me. The kind of silence you canât even describe. And the starsâthey werenât twinkling or cute or whatever. They were alive. Like watching a fire that never went out. There were so many of them, and I felt like I was just⌠nothing. A spark. A breath.â
You stared at him, almost forgetting to blink.
âIâve never felt so small in my life,â he continued. âAnd I loved it. That kind of smallnessâit humbles you. And thenâŚâ He chuckled, shaking his head. âThen we got hit with cosmic rays and everything changed. But that momentâthat first break into spaceâthat still lives in my chest.â
His voice had softened by the end. He looked at you again and found you watching him with quiet awe.
Youâd seen Johnny Storm smirk and pose for cameras. Youâd seen him flirt and laugh and play up his reputation.
But thisâthis was the fire.
And it had nothing to do with his powers.
After lunchâsurprisingly edible, despite your doubtsâJohnny wiped his hands on a towel, told HERBIE to âclean up,â then he offered his arm dramatically and said, âMadam Journalist, would you care for the grand tour?â
You tried not to smile, but didnât stop yourself from accepting.
He led you into the common room firstâthe one youâd seen in pictures but never expected to step foot in. The sunken lounge area was a cozy crater of plush teal seating, curved like a spaceshipâs command deck. A fireplace on the center, doubling as a TV console. The tables were sleek white, dotted with forgotten magazines and half-eaten snacks. The walls arched in warm wood panels that made everything feel strangely futuristic and homey.
Johnny jumped over the back of the couch to land beside one of the yellow stools, grinning like a kid in a candy store. âThis is where Ben and I fight over the TV and Sue pretends not to be watching.â
Then it was the labâless cozy, more âANSA meets mad scientist.â He showed off a few gadgets he claimed to have helped build, tossing around science terms like he actually knew what they meant, you suspected he did, but exaggerated for flair. He hovered near buttons he didnât press and screens that blinked codes you couldnât read.
When you raised a brow at one of his particularly grand gesturesâsomething about a neutrino stabilizerâhe caught it.
âDonât roll your eyes at me like that,â he teased, nudging your arm as you walked. âYou know Iâm impressive.â
You rolled them anyway. But it came with a quiet little smile.
Eventually, the tour wound back to the elevator near the front. You checked your watch, sighing. Time to go.
âThanks for today,â you said as you stopped at the elevator, bag slung over your shoulder.
He leaned on the frame beside you, arms crossed casually, looking every bit the boyish hero with too much charm for his own good. âAnytime. Seriously. I mean that.â
You nodded, reaching for the elevator button. Thenâimpulsivelyâyou leaned in and pressed a quick kiss to his cheek.
Just a soft touch, a flash of warmth.
By the time he turned toward you in surprise, you were already stepping into the elevator, calm as ever.
âSee you around, Storm,â you said as the doors started to close.
He stood there stunned, his hand drifting up to where youâd kissed him, the faintest smile blooming on his face like it couldnât help itself.
ââŚYeah,â he murmured. âSee you.â
With every date, the walls came down.
Not all at once, of course. You still rolled your eyes when he got too smug, still shot down his more ridiculous one-liners with a well-placed look. But the lines between professional skepticism and personal affection blurred a little more each time.
Eventually, you exchanged telephone numbers. Written on the back of a matchbook you kept in your purse, and his scrawled on a napkin that lived pinned to your corkboard.
You told yourself you were just getting to know him better.
You told yourself someone needed to stay objective around all that fire.
You told yourself you were the only woman in the city who wouldnât fall for Johnny Stormâs charm.
Oh, how wrong you were.
You got spotted together a handful of times. First, coming out of a downtown restaurant, laughing at something he said. Then again in the park, sharing a hot dog under the early autumn sun. And then at a late-night movie, when he tried to wear a hat and sunglasses as if that would stop anyone from recognizing him.
The headlines started coming fast after that.
âThe Human Torchâs New Flame?â
âJohnnyâs Got a GirlâBut Who Is She?â
âBlazing Romance!â
Your name appeared in fine print under photos where your face was slightly turned, or blurry, or hidden by sunglassesâbut that didnât stop it. A few gossip rags even tried to dig through your background. One misspelled your name. Another called you âplucky.â You were still mad about that one.
Your coworkers had a field day.
Every time you walked into the newsroom, at least one person would clear their throat and hold up the morning paper like it was a trophy. The whispers werenât cruelâjust amused. Wide grins. Wiggling eyebrows. A few wolf whistles when you passed the bullpen.
Even your editor joined in once, muttering, âBetter make sure our fire alarms are up to date.â
Youâd sigh, flick your press badge onto your desk, and mutter the same thing each time, fighting a smile.
âMind your own business.â
Of course, that only made them laugh harder.
But in the quiet momentsâwhen the tabloids were silent, and the crowds were goneâit was just you and Johnny.
Talking on the phone late at night, your voice low as you curled the spiral cord around your fingers. Sitting close on your couch, listening to one of his records crackle while he tried to explain how a rocket launch works in too much detail. Sneaking glances at him across diner booths, thinking about how stupidly warm he always was, like he was made to be held.
Each date stitched the two of you closer together.
You, the no-nonsense journalist. Him, the fireproof heartthrob.
And even if the whole city had their opinions, you knew the truth of it:
You hadnât fallen for the idea of Johnny Storm.
Youâd fallen for himâmessy, loud, brilliant, kind.
And there was no denying it now.
You were supposed to be covering a gala.
That was the entire reason you were hereâtucked into a sleek, borrowed dress, notepad and micro-recorder hidden neatly in your clutch, playing polite while industry bigwigs talked about progress and philanthropy like they werenât drinking champagne that cost more than your monthly rent. The venue gleamed, all chrome and glass, bathed in soft light from floating chandeliers and robotic servers weaving through the crowd with practiced ease. You were halfway through mentally drafting your openerââProgress is plated in gold and served with a smile.ââwhen the windows rattled.
It started with a low boom.
Then a tremor.
Then screaming.
The crowd moved like a single, terrified organismâheels clattering, glasses shattering, voices rising in chaos. Someone yelled about the Red Ghost. Someone else screamed about the apes.
And that was when you saw them.
Out past the crushed cars and fractured pavement, under the strange glow of the cityâs skyline, the Red Ghost stood like a specter rebornâgaunt, furious, with that deranged spark behind his eyes. His super-powered apes crashed through structures with terrifying ease, one of them ripping a streetlight from its socket and flinging it toward the building like it weighed nothing. The gala crowd surged again, pushing toward emergency exits and shattered doors. You tried to follow, but something caught your eyeâa child, maybe six or seven, crying near the base of a toppled sculpture.
You didn't hesitate.
Your heels cracked against the marble as you ran toward him. You scooped the boy up and covered his head with your hands just as another explosion ripped through the street outside. The blast knocked you clean off your feet, sending you tumbling across the floor. Marble crumbled beneath your palms. The child wailed and clung to your arm, but he was alive. You were alive.
Barely.
Smoke filled the air. Your ears rang. Somewhere above you, the ceiling groaned.
And thenâ
A streak of fire tore through the sky.
The building's front cracked wide open in a burst of light, and figures descended like gods. Sueâs forcefield shimmered in the dust, Benâs voice boomed as he barreled into one of the apes, and Reed stretched across the wreckage, directing civilians to safety.
Then came Johnny.
He flew in a comet of flame, banking hard through the ruined archway, flames licking at the smoke. His expression was tightâfocusedâuntil his eyes swept across the wreckage.
And landed on you.
There was a flicker of disbelief on his face, then something sharpâpanic, maybeâcutting through the bravado. He dropped the flame mid-air, landing hard in front of you. You could see the moment he registered the dust on your face, the scrape on your brow, the child clinging to your side.
âYou?â he breathed, stunned. âWhat the hell are you doing here?â
You blinked at him through the dust, chest rising and falling.
âI was working,â you rasped, your voice hoarse. âI didnât exactly plan for gorilla warfare.â
Johnny swore under his breath. Then he knelt beside you, his hands checking your arms, your side, like he wasnât even aware he was doing it. âAre you hurt?â
âNothing major.â
He looked at you like that wasnât good enough.
Another crash echoed from outside. He flinched, eyes flicking toward the chaos, then back to you.
âStay behind the barrier,â he said, rising to his feet. âReedâs pulling people out. Iâll be back.â
You nodded, still holding the child.
Then Johnny turned, and with a roar of flame, shot back into the smoke.
You didn't have time to process the way Johnny looked at youânot when the building groaned again, not when another blast from outside shattered the last intact window. He was gone in a flash of flame, and the child in your arms whimpered as you stumbled to your feet.
âCome on,â you whispered, voice rough as you tightened your grip. âWeâre getting out of here.â
Smoke swirled in thick waves as you made your way through the ruined lobby, weaving past debris and toppled furniture. Your heels were long gone, left somewhere in the chaos, and your knees stung with every step, but adrenaline kept you moving. Emergency responders were beginning to push through from the far sideâdrones first, scanning for vitals, followed by medics calling out over the noise.
You passed the boy to one of them, ignoring the sting in your palms as you steadied yourself against a cracked column. You were shaken, bruised, and probably inhaling a lifetimeâs worth of concrete dustâbut alive.
Outside, the air was sharper, colder. The sky above the city flickered in orange and red, lit not by the neon lights of the skyline but by fire. You joined the crowd of survivors gathering at a safe distance, behind hastily raised barriers and the metallic hum of a forcefield dome deployed by ReedTech units. People clutched each other, crying, coughing, whispering in disbelief. Cameras from hover news drones blinked red as they hovered, broadcasting the chaos to every home in the city.
And there, right in front of it all, they stood.
The Fantastic Four.
Ben charged first, unstoppable in a suit that barely held together over his rocky frame. He tackled one of the apesâa massive one with cybernetic implants along its spineâsending both of them crashing through a concrete wall like it was paper.
Sue moved like light itself, her shields flaring in perfect synch with every attack. She pushed back rubble with invisible force, guided civilians to safety, protected a pair of officers pinned under a crumbling awning without breaking stride.
Reed extended high above the scene, body arcing and twisting as he flung some kind of tech device toward the Red Ghostâa trap, maybe. A pulse erupted from it, briefly flickering through the air, but the Red Ghost phased just in time, his form flickering like static. His maniacal laugh echoed across the block.
And then Johnny.
You spotted him above the others, a streak of fire trailing behind as he looped through the air, darting between attacks, drawing the apesâ attention like a comet refusing to fall. Every burst of flame from his body lit up the street like fireworksâcontrolled, precise, nothing like the chaotic flair you remembered from the first time you saw him in action. This wasnât showmanship.
This was war.
You couldnât tear your eyes away.
He banked hard to avoid a projectile, then scorched down the side of a building to protect a group of people still trying to flee. He shouted something to Benâthen flicked a blast of flame so fast and sharp it seared the ground in a line, forcing one of the apes to retreat.
A woman near you gasped. Someone whispered, âThatâs the Human Torch,â like they were seeing him for the first time.
And for some stupid reason, your heart skipped, and you smiled.
You swallowed hard and stayed behind the barrier, watching the chaos unfold with a journalistic eyeâbut this time, it wasnât just about the story.
It was about him.
And whether or not he made it out in one piece.
It last longer than you'd hope.
The Red Ghost had fallen, neutralized by one of Reedâs devices. The apesâwhat was left of themâwere either tranquilized or subdued, dragged into containment pods that sealed with a heavy hiss. Emergency lights painted the scene in flashes of blue and red as more responders arrived, swarming the wreckage with stretchers, scanners, and press drones.
You stayed where you were, arms crossed tightly against your chest, watching the dust settle with a hollow thrum in your ears. Your dress was torn at the hem, your knees scraped, and your hair probably looked like youâd crawled through a wind tunnel. But none of that mattered.
You scanned the sky for flame.
And then you saw him.
Johnny dropped out of the air in a smooth arc, landing just beyond the emergency barrier with his suit still smoking faintly around the collar. His hair was tousled, soot streaking across his cheek, and his brow glistened with sweat. But he was upright. Whole. Breathing.
Your heart punched your ribs in relief.
He looked aroundâeyes darting past crowds and medics and shattered architectureâuntil they landed on you.
You didnât hesitate.
You shoved past the barrier and met him halfway, the momentum pulling you forward until your arms wrapped around him, solid and warm and alive. You didnât care that he was sweaty or scorched or smelled like smoke. Your cheek pressed against the fabric of his suit, and for a second, you let yourself breathe.
He hugged you back instantly, arms winding around your shoulders like muscle memory. âYouâre okay,â he murmured, half to himself, half to you. âGod, youâre okay.â
You pulled back just enough to look up at him. âAre you okay?â you asked, eyes scanning him, checking for injuries, burns, bruisesâanything. âDid you get hit? Broke anything important? I swear if youââ
Johnny grinned.
That maddening, familiar grin.
âYou were worried about me,â he said, smug and sing-song.
You rolled your eyes, but didnât let go of him. âDonât make me regret it.â
âYou care,â he teased, voice warm and soft now. âThatâs cute.â
You gave him a gentle shove, but your fingers curled back into the sleeve of his suit like they didnât quite want to let go. âYou almost got vaporized, Torch.â
âAlmost is the key word,â he said, then added with a wink, âBesides, canât die before we make it official.â
You gave him a look.
He wiggled his eyebrows.
And despite yourselfâdespite everythingâyou felt your lips twitch upward.
The office buzzed in that usual midday lullâtypewriters clacking, phones ringing, someone two desks down arguing with a source who apparently âdidnât say it like that.â You sat hunched in your cubicle, half-finished coffee going cold beside your elbow as you typed out a rough draft for an exposĂŠ that had nothing to do with supervillains, collapsing buildings, or fiery superheroes.
You were almost grateful for the normalcy.
Almost.
Then a shadow loomed over your desk.
ââA blaze of brillianceâcontrolled, focused, the Human Torch proved himself more than just a hothead that night.ââ
You turned, already cringing a little.
Johnny Storm stood there in a leather jacket, tousled hair, and the unmistakable smirk of someone who knew they were being quoted.
Tucked under his arm: a folded copy of The Daily Observer. Your paper.
âLet me guess,â you said dryly. âYou read it fifteen times and had someone frame it already?â
âTwenty-three, actually. And Iâm still waiting on the frame,â he replied, pulling the paper out with a flourish. âBut reallyââa blaze of brillianceâ? Youâre gonna make me blush.â
You leaned back in your chair, arms crossed. âI was being professional.â
He raised an eyebrow. âThat was professional?â
âYes.â
âBecause it read more like someone with a slight crush.â
Your eyes narrowed. âI couldâve just called you ârecklessâ again and left it at that.â
âBut you didnât,â he said, stepping into your cubicle like he owned the placeâwhich, technically, he did not, but Johnny had never let small things like boundaries stop him. âYou called me focused. Smart. A hero. Thatâs basically poetry, coming from you.â
You grabbed your coffee, took a sip, and made a face. Cold.
âI call it âobjective reporting,ââ you said.
âRight,â he said, tapping the paper. âTotally objective. Nothing at all to do with the fact that I saved a bunch of people, including youâand maybe looked insanely cool doing it.â
You let the silence hang just long enough to make him twitch.
Then you smirked. âYou did look cool,â you admitted.
He blinked.
âOh my Godâsay it again,â he said, clutching his heart like youâd just proposed.
âDonât push your luck, Storm.â
Too late. He was beaming now, folding the paper carefully like it was a love letter. âIâm getting this laminated.â
âGreat. Hang it in your bathroom.â
âI was thinking above my bed, actually.â
You rolled your eyes. âYou came all the way here just to fish for compliments?â
âNah,â he said, shrugging. âI came to ask if youâre free for dinner. But the compliments are a very nice bonus.â
You paused. Your fingers curled slightly around your mug.
âYouâre asking me out. Again.â
He tilted his head. âYou gonna say yes?â
You studied himâstill smug, still cocky, still every bit the firestorm heâd always beenâbut underneath it, there was something softer in his eyes. The same look he gave you after pulling you out of rubble, after promising you he was okay.
You set your mug down.
âWhat time?â
The knock came at exactly six-fifteen.
You were still smoothing down the fabric of your dress, glancing one last time in the mirror, when it soundedâtwo sharp knocks and a pause, like he was trying to be both confident and considerate. You opened the door with a breath caught halfway in your throat.
Johnny Storm stood there in a white tee and charcoal jacket, hair slicked back just enough to pretend he hadnât spent five minutes tousling it right after. He held a bouquet in his handsâvivid, almost comically large, all fire-colored blooms in reds, oranges, and golds.
You blinked.
He beamed. âYou like them?â
You raised an eyebrow. âDid you rob a botanical garden on the way here?â
âTheyâre thematic,â he said, holding them out proudly. âLike me. On fire. But in a romantic way.â
You took them, fighting a smile as you buried your nose in the blooms. They smelled like summer evenings and warm hands. âYouâre ridiculous.â
âYou say that every time you see me.â
âBecause itâs still true.â
He offered you his arm with an exaggerated flourish. âYour ride awaits, Byline.â
Dinner was surprisingly quietâtucked away in a retro-style rooftop restaurant with soft jazz humming from corner speakers and skyline views so clear it looked like the city had paused just for the night. You picked at a dish you couldnât pronounce. Johnny ordered something with way too much heat, then insisted it was âbarely spicyâ until he nearly choked on it.
You laughed. A lot.
And when the check came, he insisted on covering itâsaid it was his turn, said it like he genuinely meant it, like it wasnât some macho gesture but just⌠him wanting to give you something.
Afterward, neither of you were ready for the night to end.
So you walked.
Central Park stretched quiet under the early evening stars, its pathways lit by the soft golden glow of vintage lampposts. Leaves rustled gently, and the buzz of the city felt like a distant hum.
Johnny walked beside you with his hands in his pockets, jacket open to the breeze. Every now and then, your fingers brushed as your arms swungâand each time, he didnât pull away.
âYâknow,â he said after a few minutes, glancing sideways at you, âI think this is the longest Iâve gone on a date without being interrupted by a supervillain, a fire, or Reed needing me to hold a wrench.â
You smirked. âDonât jinx it.â
âI wonât. But if a portal opens up and a robot army marches out, I just want it on record that I tried to have a normal night.â
You laughedâsoft and real.
Then it got quiet again, but not uncomfortably so.
Just enough quiet to notice the warmth in your chest, the way your steps slowed, the way you wanted to say something before the moment passed.
You stopped near a bench, looking out toward the pond where the moonlight shimmered against the rippling water. He stopped beside you.
âHey,â you said softly.
Johnny looked at you, hands still tucked in his pockets. âYeah?â
You hesitated.
Then, with a sigh, you said, âI didnât think this would happen.â
His brow creased. âDinner?â
You gave him a look. âThis. Us. You.â
Johnny tilted his head, curious but quiet.
âI thought I had you figured out,â you continued, voice low. âThought you were just ego and fire and headlines. I told myself I wasnât gonna be the type to fall for that. For you.â
He was silent, eyes fixed on you now.
âAnd I donât know how it happened,â you added. âBut⌠I really like you, Johnny.â
Your words hung in the airâbare, brave, and terrifying.
Then, slowly, the corner of his mouth lifted.
âYeah?â
You nodded.
He took one hand out of his pocket, stepped closer, and said, so quietly it made your heart stutter, âGood. Because Iâve liked you since the moment you called me reckless in front of a hundred reporters.â
You let out a breathless laughâhalf-relieved, half-overwhelmed.
Then he cupped your cheek gently, eyes searching yours. âCan I kiss you?â
You didnât even answer.
You leaned in.
And the kiss that followed was warm and slow, more tender than either of you expected. It tasted like rooftop wine and burnt pepper, like all the things you hadnât let yourself feel until now. His hand slid to your waist, anchoring you gently. Your fingers curled into the lapel of his jacket like maybe youâd melt without something to hold onto.
When you finally pulled apart, your forehead rested against his, and for a second, the world stopped spinning.
Then you smiledâsoft, teasing, fond.
âWell,â you said, voice barely above a whisper, âThe Flaming Hearts is really gonna hate me now.â
He laughed, arms looping around your waist. âThey already do. I read the forums.â
You snorted. âYou read your fan forums?â
âI like to stay informed,â he said with a wink.
You groaned, burying your face in his chest. âGod, Iâm dating a dork.â
âYouâre dating this dork,â he corrected, smug as ever, resting his chin atop your head.
You stayed like that under the Central Park skyâwrapped in warmth and something that felt like maybe, just maybe, the start of something real.
It had been a few months since that first kiss under the quiet glow of Central Park.
Since the night you let your guard down and finally let him in.
Now you were his. Officially.
Not that the tabloids had let you forget it. Every coffee run, every blurry sidewalk kiss, every slightly windblown post-battle cuddle was plastered across newsstands like you were part of a pulp serial. Youâd stopped reading them after âThe Torch and the Truth-Teller: A Love Story in Flamesâ hit the stands.
But today wasnât about that.
Today, the city was nervous.
The Frightful Four had made themselves known in a very public, very destructive way the day beforeâleaving Central Avenue cratered, several civilians injured, and even the Fantastic Four pushed to their limits. The new villains werenât just chaos for chaosâs sake. They were calculated. Aggressive. Dangerous.
So, of course, the press conference at the Baxter Building was standing room only.
You stood near the back, arms folded around your notepad, trying not to feel weird about covering a press event for a team you technically had dinner with twice a week. Your press badge still held weight, but now it hung alongside a relationship that blurred lines more than you liked to admit.
Still, you kept it professional. You always did.
Even if Johnny winked at you the second he spotted you in the crowd.
The conference began like any otherâReed detailing the attack in his usual clinical tone, outlining the measures they were taking to analyze the threat, reinforce the cityâs defenses, and âneutralize the ongoing presence of the Frightful Four.â Sue followed up with diplomacy and calm reassurance, while Ben added something about âclockinâ that wizard wannabe next time he shows up.â
Then came the Q&A session.
You didnât plan to raise your hand. Not at first.
But the question burned at the edge of your tongue, and when Reed nodded to the press corps, your hand lifted almost instinctively.
You saw a few heads turn.
So did Reed.
He gave a tiny smile. âYes, youâgo ahead.â
You stood tall. âIn light of the Wizardâs tech matching several known Fantastic Four signatures, is the team considering the possibility of a breach in securityâor worse, that the tech was reverse-engineered from a previous mission?â
The room went silent.
Tough. Fair. Pointed.
A few reporters turned toward Reed, pens poised. Reed, after all, was the one who usually answered tech-related questions with a thousand syllables and no punctuation.
But thenâ
Johnny stepped forward.
He didnât wait for Reed. Didnât look back for a signal.
Just shifted to the mic, adjusted it once, and looked straight at you.
âWeâve already considered that,â he said, voice steadyânot cocky, not performative. âAnd Reedâs running diagnostics through every system in the Baxter Building as we speak. Weâve seen tech imitation beforeâitâs not new. But this was something else. The Wizard wasnât just copying usâhe was testing us. Learning our limits.â
He paused. The room leaned in.
Johnny continued, hands relaxed on either side of the podium. âThatâs why weâre not just going back to old defenses. Weâre adapting. Evolving. If someone wants to play smart, then we play smarter. Thatâs what we do.â
A flicker of surprise rippled through the crowd.
You felt your lips curve, slow and warm.
He wasnât improvising. He wasnât trying to steal the spotlight.
He was stepping up.
And it wasnât just about being brave. He was prepared. Thoughtful. Clear.
God, he really had been listening all those nights you stayed up editing stories and picking apart soundbites. Heâd absorbed it all.
When he stepped back from the mic, Sue gave him a quick side-eye that was both impressed and suspicious. Reed nodded, faintly approving. Even Ben muttered something like âLook at Flamebrain, gettinâ all articulate.â
Johnny didnât look at them.
He looked at you.
And when he saw you smilingâreally smilingâhe smiled back like that had been the only audience he was trying to impress.
You shook your head slightly, eyes narrowing in mock disapproval, but your grin didnât fade.
You didnât leave when the press conference ended.
While the others packed up their cameras, chased quotes, and filtered toward the elevators, you lingered near the edge of the Baxter Buildingâs main hall, pretending to reread your notes. In truth, your pen hadnât touched paper since Johnny spoke. You just stood there, professional façade cracking at the edges, watching the crowd thin and the team scatter toward their usual post-briefing routines.
Eventually, the lights dimmed to their usual state and the last guest reporter filed out. The hush that settled over the room felt differentâless urgent, less public.
Just quiet.
And then you heard footsteps.
Booted, sure, and too familiar by now.
Johnny appeared from the side corridor still in his white and blue suit, the chest insignia slightly scuffed from yesterdayâs battle. His hair was tousled, his cheeks still a little flushed from the heat of the day, but his eyesâthose troublemaking, earnest, too-honest eyesâfound yours instantly.
You didnât wait.
You crossed the space between you and your arms looped around his neck before you could stop yourself, pressing your lips to his without a word.
He kissed you back just as easily, as if heâd been holding his breath through the entire press conference and this was the first time he got to exhale. His hands rested gently on your waist, grounding. Warm.
When you finally pulled away, your forehead rested against his for a moment, both of you breathing slow in the dimming room.
âYou really gotta stop asking me the hard ones,â he murmured, his voice low and a little playful, but still soft around the edges.
You smiled, brushing your thumb lightly along the seam of his suit at his shoulder. âItâs my job.â
âYeah, well,â he said, leaning in to nuzzle your temple once, âremind me to start bringing a flashcard with smart-sounding words. Just in case.â
You laughed quietly, still close. The suit was warm under your fingersânot from his powers, just from him. Being near him always felt like this now. Like a space you didnât realize you needed.
Then, softer, you said, âYou did a great job.â
His eyes flicked back to yours, and for a second, all the cocky charm vanished. What was left was raw and real.
âYou think so?â
âI know so.â
He smiled at thatânot his usual smirk, not a teasing grin, but something gentler. Something that belonged only to you.
âYou looked proud,â he said. âWhen I answered.â
âI was proud,â you whispered.
Johnny leaned in again, kissing you this time with less urgencyâjust warmth. Familiarity. Gratitude.
You let your hands slide from his collar to the back of his neck, your fingers brushing the edge of his hairline.
âYou keep doing things like that,â you murmured when the kiss broke, âand Iâm gonna run out of critical things to write about you.â
He laughed against your cheek. âGuess Iâll just have to do something reckless again. For balance.â
You rolled your eyes, but your heart was already full.
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I canât believe this has to be said but⌠you know Sam is upset at the thunderbolts* because he doesnât want the avengers to be controlled by the government, right? Thatâs why he was on team cap in civil war. Do you know that? Itâs important to me that you know that.
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Can we just⌠normalize teens loving their parents? Like obviously youâre not obligated to if your parents are shitty, but damn, I love my mom. Sheâs there for me all the time and sure we have rough patches but honestly sheâs the greatest. Like. We need teens to know that they donât have to hate their parents just cause.
It must be nice to come from a nonabusive family. One that doesnât traumatized every emotional interaction to the point where you drive away any sign of love as a form of manipulation because thatâs all that you were raised with. đ¤ˇââď¸
but loving ur parents is already normalized and its the kids w/ abusive parents that actually have to deal with misunderstandings and ignorance from others regarding this topic.
Hey there, Iâm talking about the trope where itâs seen as super uncool to like your parents that was literally pushed on teens through the media since the culture shift in the early 60s. The post has nothing to do with abusive parents. I was abused as a kid and honestly if the trope where teens have to hate their parents to be cool died, then kids with actual abusive parents would have an easier time recognizing abuse this has been a psa
âif the trope where teens have to hate their parents to be cool died, then kids with actual abusive parents would have an easier time recognizing abuseâ
If your parents are supportive and good and cool, it is valid for you to love them. If your parents hurt you, emotionally or physically, it is valid for you to hate them.
An important note: Your parents not letting you go to a party does not count as mental torture.
An even more important note: There is a fine line between them bringing up your past mistakes so that you learn from them and them bringing up your past mistakes so that you get humiliated.
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i love how Gandalf invested in Hobbits in year one and has been pushing them ever since. Thorin, i hear you need help with a breaking and entering. Can I recommend one of these little cunts? Silent as fuck, trust me. Elrond my dude i know you're skeptical but these four chucklefucks just transported a weapon of mass destruction all the way here. Theoden, you've gotta get yourself a hobbit man, I've got a spare one here. Denathor you big prick, take a hobbit - literally this is the bottom of the range but listen to him sing. Beautiful little bastard.
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