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michael jackson x f!reader ââââŕ¨ŕ§ââââ ⥠wc: 4.3k
synopsis: childhoodbsf!mj and reader in a hot tub... what can go wrong? (or right :D)
cw: smut, switch!michael, hot tub sex, dry humping, dirty talk, praise, tensionnn, mutual pining, michael jackson being a whimperer (surprise), creampie
based off bad!era mj but any era works (i think)
the hot tub lights cast soft blue ripples across the water, reflecting against the stone around the edge of the patio. the early summer night air brushed against your damp skin coolly in contrast to the heat of the water, while music drifted faintly from somewhere inside the house. overhead, the sky was dark and cloudless, a soft breeze moving through the otherwise still night.
michael leaned back nearby with his arms resting along the edge of the hot tub, curls damp around his face, while he watched you with obvious amusement.
âyou know,â he said casually, brushing wet curls back from his forehead, âfor somebody always talkinâ big, you scare real easy.â
you looked over immediately. âi do not.â
michael laughed softly under his breath.
youâd known michael long enough to recognize that exact look in his eyes before he even said anything else. the one that usually meant he was about to annoy you on purpose.
the two of you had been attached at the hip since childhood. your families blurred together so often growing up that half your memories included michael somewhere in the background of them â sitting beside you at family parties, showing up to your house unannounced (and vice versa), dragging you outside in the middle of summer evenings because he was bored and wanted company. somewhere along the way, physical closeness had stopped meaning much between you years ago.
hugs.
leaning against each other.
holding hands.
cuddling while watching movies.
being close to michael had never required thought.
leaves rustled softly in the night breeze.
michaelâs eyes suddenly shifted past your shoulder.
the teasing look on his face faltered, his mouth flattening slightly as his attention fixed on something behind you.
ââŚwait.â
you narrowed your eyes at that. âmichael.â
âno, seriously.â his brows furrowed now while he stared harder behind you. âwhat is that?â
you rolled your eyes.
âi hate you.â
âiâm serious,â he insisted, though the corners of his mouth twitched slightly. âright there.â
you turned your head despite yourself.
your eyes scanned once. twice. nothing.
you started turning back toward him with an unimpressed look already formingâ
michael lunged forward suddenly with both his hands toward the water behind you.
a startled squeal escaped you as you grabbed onto him on pure reflex, your arms wrapping tightly around his shoulders while you nearly climbed halfway up him in a panic.
michael burst into loud laughter. bright and boyish.
âoh my god!â you gasped out, still clutching him while he laughed harder against your shoulder. âyou are actually evil.â
âit was funny!â he argued through laughter.
âit was not funny!â
you smacked his shoulder lightly, trying not to laugh and failing miserably once his laughter got worse.
michaelâs laughter had always been contagious. it was impossible to stay mad at him for long when he was laughing like that.
âyes it was,â he grinned. âyou shouldâve seen your face.â
âyou practically climbed into my lap,â he added.
âi trusted you!â
âthatâs your own fault.â
âoh my god, shut up.â
another laugh escaped you before you could stop it.
michael pointed at you instantly.
âsee? youâre laughinâ now.â
you groaned dramatically, letting your forehead fall briefly against his shoulder while his laughter softened into quieter little giggles beneath his breath.
eventually, both your breaths started to settle.
except neither of you moved apart.
your arms still rested loosely around his shoulders. michaelâs hands still held your waist below the surface.
comfortable. normal.
well, it shouldâve felt normal.
instead, the silence that settled between you suddenly feltâŚheavy somehow.
different.
your forehead still rested lightly against michaelâs shoulder while the water moved softly around you both, rippling between your bodies.
neither of you spoke.
you could feel michael breathing now.Â
not just the movement of his chest beneath your hands, but the actual rhythm of it. slow at first, then slightly uneven when you shifted subconsciously closer.
his hands tightened around your waist. small. almost unnoticeable.
except you noticed it immediately.
your brows pulled together faintly.
slowly, you lifted your head from his shoulder.
michael was already looking at you.
the patio lights reflected faintly in his eyes while water dripped from the curls hanging around his forehead. his expression had gone strangely still now, his hands warm where they rested against your waist.
neither of you moved apart.
youâre not sure why.
usually moments like this broke naturally on their own. one of you would laugh. tease the other. splash water. say something stupid.
instead, michael just kept looking at you.
your eyes flicked down toward his mouth before you could stop yourself.
bad idea.
because the second your gaze dropped, michael noticed. his brows pinched for a fraction of a second.
then, before you could really process it, michael looked away first.
his jaw flexed.
you felt his throat move against your arm when he swallowed.
ââŚchrist,â he muttered quietly under his breath.
heat crawled slowly up your neck. you swallowed once before forcing out, âwhat?â
michael shook his head once, almost like he was trying to clear it.
ânothinâ.â
his voice sounded lower now. rougher.
the water shifted softly around you both when you adjusted yourself, your legs brushing against hisâ
michael inhaled sharply.
the sound froze you.
oh.
your heartbeat stumbled hard in your chest.
because suddenly you could feel it too.
the reaction pressed unmistakably against your thigh.
heat rushed instantly to your face.
michael went still beneath your hands.
for a second, neither of you said anything.
michael laughed quietly under his breath, though it sounded more embarrassed than amused now. one hand came up to cover his face as he looked away.
ââŚ.mâsorry,â he murmured.
your brows pulled together slightly.
of course he was apologizing. that was so michael.
when heâs struggling to keep himself composed, he still sounded more concerned about crossing a line than anything else.
you'd be lying if you said his reaction to you wasn't turning you on.
 ââŚ.donât apologize,â you breathed.
michael looked at you. his curls hung damp against his forehead now, water dripping slowly down the side of his neck while his hands stayed fixed carefully at your waist like he didnât trust himself to move them anywhere else.
he looked away again, exhaling sharply through his nose, almost like a disbelieving laugh at himself.
âjust... give me a second,â he murmured. "it'll go away."
michael took slow, controlled breaths like he was genuinely trying to calm himself down.
then before you could overthink it, the words slipped out softly.
ââŚ.do you want me to help you?â
michaelâs eyes shut briefly while a quiet breath escaped him, almost strained. unfortunately for him, the boner he'd been trying so hard to kill came back tenfold.
one of his hands slid higher instinctively along your waist before stopping there hard enough to make your pulse jump.
âiââ
he cut himself off.
his head tipped back slightly instead, exposing the long line of his throat while he stared up toward the sky for a second like he was physically trying to pull himself together.
it only made him look worse.
or better.
no definitely better.
water glided slowly down the column of his neck while his chest rose unevenly beneath your hands.
finally, michael looked back at you again. wrecked.
he swallowed once before replying quietly, âyou donât have to do anything.â
your heart hammered painfully against your ribs.
âi know,â you whispered.
âiâm asking if you want me to.â
for a second, michael just stared at you.
then slowly, his forehead dropped forward until it rested gently against your temple.Â
his eyes closed.
his lashes brushed softly against your skin.
the flush along his neck had darkened now, spreading toward his jaw while his breathing stayed uneven against you.
when he finally spoke, his voice came out rough and quiet.Â
ââŚiâm a gentleman.â
your chest tightened at the sound of it.
the words seemed to hang between you for a moment.
slowly, you lifted one hand from his shoulder, cradling his face gently until he looked at you again.
his eyes were dark now.
unfocused almost.
still trying so hard to hold himself together for you.
your thumb brushed lightly against his cheek before you leaned in just enough to press a soft kiss against the corner of his mouth.
michael inhaled sharply, head tilting instinctively to chase your lips.
then he was kissing you properly.
one hand slid up the side of your neck as he pulled you closer, the kiss hard and messy, like heâd been trying not to do this for far too long.
your noses bumped awkwardly together between breaths, both of you laughing softly into the kiss before it melted right back into something hotter.
michael bit gently at your bottom lip, tugging it between his teeth.
a soft sound escaped you before you kissed him again.
his hand dragged back down your body until it settled low on your waist, fingers spreading carefully just above your ass.
careful and still hesitant. you could feel it.
your hands slid down his arms slowly until they covered his, guiding them lower.
michael broke the kiss at that.
the sound you let slip when his hands finally squeezed your ass made his head drop against yours.
âyouâre gonna kill me,â he muttered breathlessly.
you pushed your hips closer against his.
michael let out a shaky breath as your hands slid up the back of his neck, fingers catching slightly at the damp curls near his nape.
when he kissed you again, it felt almost desperate now.
like he physically couldnât stop himself for more than a few seconds at a time. his nose bumped softly against yours between kisses while his hands tightened around your body, guiding you higher on his lap beneath the bubbling water.
the pressure of his hips against yours pulled a gasp from your throat.
your fingers tightened instinctively at the base of his curls as you broke away from the kiss for air.
âmichaelââ
he kissed the corner of your mouth before you could finish saying his name, breathing hard enough now that you could feel it against your skin.
âi know, baby, i knowâ he murmured softly.
you nuzzled your face into the crook of his neck. he smelled like chlorine and the faint traces of his cologne, warm amber and soft florals mixing with the heat of his damp skin.
michaelâs hands guided your hips against his beneath the water, the movement slow at first before his restraint started slipping little by little.
soft sounds escaped you against his neck while michaelâs breathing turned rough near your ear, his grip tightening every time you pressed closer to him.
âbabyâŚâ he breathed, almost strained now.
the name sent warmth blooming low in your stomach.
this was the first time heâd ever called you that, and you loved the way it sounded coming from him.
his groans started mixing with the breathier moans spilling from your lips as his hands squeezed more firmly at your backside, the bubbling water sloshing harder around you both as he buried his face against your shoulder.
every slow drag of your hips only made the ache low in your stomach worse.
but it still wasnât enough.
you needed more of him.
âwant more,â you whined softly against his neck.
michaelâs hips stuttered against yours at the sound of your voice, a quiet groan escaping him.
âyeah?â he murmured breathlessly, pulling back just enough to look at you properly.Â
strands of damp hair clung messily near your cheeks while your lips looked swollen from kissing, slightly parted every time another shaky breath slipped out of you. your eyes were glossed over.
you looked completely ruined.
just for him.
âiâll give my sweet girl whatever she wants,â he said lowly, with a rasp slipping into his voice.
something about hearing him say it made your thighs press tighter around him. if michael noticed, he didn't mention it.
âanything she asks for.â he added.
âanything?â you responded in a whisper.
michaelâs eyes stayed fixated on yours for a second before he repeated it quieter this time.
âanything.â
your stomach tightened hard at the sound of that.
âwant you inside me,â you whispered sweetly, your hips pressing against his again at the thought of him giving it to you.
michael bit down on his lip, a crooked smile pulling at the corners of his mouth.
you sounded so desperate for him.
and god was he just as desperate for you.
maybe worse.
even now, with your body pressed against his and his restraint hanging by a thread, he still tried to collect himself before he spoke again.
because he was a gentleman.
or at least he was trying very hard to be one.
âgo on, take what you want,â he murmured roughly.
your hands immediately reached for the waistband of his swim shorts, tugging them down enough to free his dick.
though you couldn't see much through the bubbling water, you felt him. his warmth, his thickness, his length.Â
the weight of him against your hand alone made your breath catch.
michael groaned softly under his breath, his head falling briefly against your shoulder while his hands tightened instinctively along your thighs.
you shifted carefully onto your knees to give him room while he pulled your swim bottoms aside.
the feeling of him brushing against your bare pussy made you arch into him.
âfuckâŚâ michael hissed quietly, breathing turned heavier near your ear as his hands slid lower along your thighs to steady you.
your face buried closer into the crook of his neck while another broken sound escaped you.
âmichaelâŚâ your voice cracked softly.
the slow push of his tip alone already had your head spinning. he barely gave you room to breathe.
âfuuck, baby,â he groaned into your shoulder, dragging the words out low and strained. âyouâre so fucking tight.â
you nuzzled closer into his neck with a shaky whimper.
âsâtoo big, michaelâŚâ you hiccuped softly.
you were ruining him.
the way your voice broke at just the tip being inside you was doing something dangerous to his self-control.
âshh, itâs okay, baby,â he murmured gently, one hand stroking your damp hair.
his other hand slid lower against your thigh before tightening carefully at your hip.
"tell me if it hurts," he murmured, lips brushing softly against your temple.
then he started easing you down onto him properly.
slow.
your mouth dropped open at the stretch as he lowered you inch by inch, his grip firm enough to guide you while still giving you time to adjust. every small movement made another uneven breath leave your lips.
the heat of the water around you only made everything feel more overwhelming. his cock felt impossibly warm inside you, thick enough that each inch made your body tense before slowly relaxing around him.
michaelâs forehead pressed against yours as he watched every reaction on your face.
âthatâs it,â he whispered hoarsely. âdoinâ so good for me.â
another inch.
your fingers tightened against his shoulders, a soft moan escaping before you could stop it.
his own breathing was wrecked, rough against your skin while his hands trembled slightly where they held you.
like he was using every bit of control he had not to lose patience and pull you down all at once.
instead, he kept guiding you carefully.
letting you feel every inch.
the stretch burned for a second before melting into warmth, your body slowly yielding around him while soft broken whimpers left your throat.
âfuck,â michael groaned quietly, eyes squeezing shut for a second. âyou feel so fucking good.â
you buried your face deeper into his neck as another wave of fullness hit you.
then finally your hips settled flush against his.
both of you gasped at the same time.
michaelâs head fell back against the edge of the tub with a low groan while his hands gripped your hips hard enough to leave marks.
âholy shitâŚâ he breathed.
you could barely think.
he felt everywhere. warm and deep and overwhelming, filling you so completely that all you could do was sit there for a second trying to breathe through it.
his hands softened again, thumbs rubbing slow circles against your hips.
âyou okay?â he asked quietly, though his voice still sounded wrecked.
you nodded weakly against him.
âmhmâŚâ
a small smile pulled at michaelâs lips before he kissed the side of your head gently.
âgood girl.â
you almost sobbed at the praise. his voice alone could make you cum.
michael stayed there for a second, just holding you against him while both of you tried to recover from the feeling.
his chest rose against yours, shaky breaths fanning across your skin while his hands stayed fixed carefully at your hips like he still couldnât believe this was real.
then slowly, he rolled his hips upward once.
the movement was shallow.
experimental.
but the drag of him inside you still pulled a broken moan straight from your throat.
michael actually whimpered at that, the sound muffled against your skin, before a strained groan followed right after.
âfuckâŚâ
his grip tightened.
âthat okay?â he asked quietly, his own voice already sounding completely gone.
you nodded quickly before heâd even fully finished asking.
âplease,â you whispered.
his mouth crashed against yours again while his hips rolled into you harder this time, deeper, the movement making the water slosh violently around both of you until it spilled over the edge of the hot tub, soaking the concrete.
your fingers tangled tighter into the damp curls at the back of his neck as he kept rocking you against him slowly, every thrust deep enough to make your stomach tighten.
he couldnât seem to stop kissing you between breaths.
messy kisses.
desperate ones.
little broken sounds slipping from his mouth every single time you clenched around him.
âyou feel so fucking good,â he breathed shakily. âchrist, babyâŚâ
his restraint kept slipping in pieces.
each movement growing rougher than the last, your body meeting his like you both couldn't stop chasing the feeling.
you moaned again. soft and breathless right against his mouth.
âyeah?â he rasped. âthat feel good?â
you could barely answer â or could barely hear him, to be honest.
the way he was making you feel left your head completely fuzzy. every deep drag of him inside you made your thoughts melt together until all you could focus on was him.
when you didnât respond, he tugged you down harder onto him.
a high moan tore from your throat instantly. a sound you wouldâve never thought youâd be capable of making.Â
and if michael wasnât fucking you so good, you probably wouldâve been embarrassed by it.Â
he pulled back just enough to look at your face, watching your expression.
âtell me.â
it didn't sound demanding.
if anything, it sounded like something he needed to hear.
ây-yesââ you gasped helplessly. âyes, yes, feels so goodââ
he leaned closer to your neck and started kissing, sucking, biting, leaving marks all over your neck.Â
michael cursed softly under his breath at the feeling of you clenching around him.
âshit, baby⌠youâre squeezinâ me so tight.â
all you could do was moan as he dragged your hips down onto him through another deep thrust that made your entire body jolt.
the praise only made the heat low in your stomach tighten harder.
another soft whine slipped from your throat before you could stop it, your face burying deeper into his neck out of instinct.
michael groaned at the sound.
âthose sexy fucking soundsâŚâ
his hips rolled up into yours again, harder this time, and your grip on him tightened hard enough to sting.
one of his hands slid up your body, long slender fingers brushing teasingly against your chest before nudging your swimsuit top up just enough for your breasts to spill out. the cooler night air nipping at your damp skin.
"so perfect." he breathed.
he leaned in, his mouth closing around your left nipple with a slow, warm suck that pulled a breath from your lungs. at the same time, the knuckles of his other hand dragged against your stomach, your ribs, the underside of your breasts, teasing every inch of sensitive skin on the way up. he cupped your breast, squeezing gently before rolling your nipple between his fingers in time with the slow pull of his mouth.
every suck, every soft bite, every flick of his tongue had your body arching into him.
you couldnât hold the sounds back anymore.
every thrust of his hips pulled another sound out of you.
little whimpers.
broken moans.
breathy gasps right against his ear.
âfuck,â he groaned softly into your skin, almost dazed. âkeep makinâ those sounds for me, baby.â
you couldnât stop even if you wanted to.Â
his mouth shifted to your other breast with a worn groan while his hand slipped lower between your bodies.
the second his thumb brushed against your clit, your entire body jerked in his arms.
âoh my godââ
the cry that left you was loud enough to echo slightly off the stone around the hot tub.
âmm, that it?â he rasped, thumb circling you again with shaky desperation. âthat what you needed, baby?â
you nodded helplessly against him, barely able to breathe properly now.
the feeling of him thrusting up into you while his thumb rubbed slow, messy circles against your clit was too much all at once.
your thighs started trembling around his waist.
âmichael, please.â
âi know,â he breathed quickly. âi got you. i got you.â
he kept thrusting into you deep and slow, but the rhythm was getting sloppier every second. like he physically couldnât focus anymore with the way you kept whining against him.
âfuckâŚâ he groaned softly. âyouâre so sensitive.â
another moan tore out of you when his thumb pressed a little harder.
every little movement pulled another noise from your throat.
your eyes kept fluttering closed from the overwhelming sensation while michael watched your face completely unravel for him, his own expression looking just as gone.
âlook at me, baby. câmon,â he breathed softly.
your eyes fluttered back toward him.
the second michael saw the tears gathering along your lashes from how overwhelming everything felt, something in him completely snapped.
âfuckââ
his forehead dropped against yours with a groan so deep it almost sounded painful.
his thrusts lost what little rhythm they had left after that.
harder now.
messier.
his hands gripping your hips almost desperately while he kept kissing you between breaths like he couldnât get enough.
âclose?â he rasped against your mouth.
all you could do was nod frantically.
your fingers clutched desperately at his shoulders as another wave hit you.
it was too much.
his mouth on your neck.
his thumb rubbing against you perfectly.
the way he kept filling you so deep every time his hips snapped upward.
your thighs started shaking hard around his waist.
âi-iâm gonnaââ
âlemme feel it, baby,â michael interrupted, voice breaking. he sounded completely gone. "please..."
a soft curse slipped from him the second your body tightened around him.
âthatâs it,â he groaned. âgood girl⌠fuck, thatâs it.â
his thumb moved faster.
messier now.
like he was getting desperate too.
the pressure finally snapped.
your whole body jolted against him with a broken cry, your face burying into his shoulder while your body tightened hard around him, nails scratching at his back.
michael groaned loudly at the feeling, his hips stuttering completely for a second.
âshitââ
your vision blurred from how overwhelming it felt, soft little sobs and moans getting caught in your throat while wave after wave kept hitting you.
michael fucked you through all of it, one arm wrapped tightly around your back while his forehead pressed against your shoulder.
âfuckâŚâ he groaned shakily. âatta girl.â
then quieter, almost like the words slipped out accidentally.
âbeen wantinâ this so bad.â
you clenched around him hard at the confession.
michael groaned hard, head tipping back against the edge of the hot tub.
his lips brushed against your jaw when he looked back at you again, expression completely wrecked.
âyou donât even realize what you do to me sometimes,â he breathed shakily.
âbeen tryinâ so hard to be good.â
another deep thrust made your breath catch.
âevery time you bend over during those stupid twister gamesâŚâ he groaned softly. âor prance around in those tiny little swimsuitsâŚâ
âhonestly so mean of you.â
another broken groan slipped from him right after, his face burying deeper into your neck like he was trying to hide there.
little strained sounds kept leaving him every few seconds while his hips lost what little rhythm they had left.
âcanâtââ he choked out softly. âfuck, babyâŚâ
his grip tightened almost painfully at your hips before he finally buried himself deep inside you with a whine, warm spurts of cum filling you as his whole body went tense against yours.
you could feel him shaking slightly while he held you close, breathing unevenly against your skin as the water settled softly around both of you again.
the aftershocks rolled softly through both of you, fading little by little into soft tremors.
the world around you felt silent except for the sounds of bubbling water and uneven breathing.Â
slowly, you pulled back just enough to look at him properly again, your arms still resting loosely around his shoulders.
his curls were a mess.
lips swollen.
flushed all the way down his neck.
and the completely blissed-out look on his face made something warm burst in your chest.
the second michael noticed you staring, a breathless laugh slipped from him, his teeth catching briefly against his bottom lip when his grin widened.
you laughed too.
because somehow, even after all of that, the two of you still ended up the same way you always did.
5.1k || All my content is 18+ MDNI || C.W.: mentions of blood, mentions of guns and shootings, mentions of death/dying/coding, CPR, anxiety about partner's safety, Jack's traumatized, reader's traumatized, mentions of dissociation and compartmentalization, poor description of medical events, potentially incorrect medical descriptions/knowledge, very very light smut, angst, age gap kind of implied with Jack but not explicitly referenced, no use of y/n or related, not proofread, no beta, I think that's all but if I missed any please (nicely) let me know.
Summary: This is my Pitt-Fest-But-Not fic. Development of your relationship through vignettes of the past and conversations between Jack, Dana and Robby. There's a shooting where you work. Jack is at the ED when the dispatch comes in and is terrified when he can't get in touch with you.
A.N.: If my Robby reads like John Carter I'm sorry, except that a little bit I'm not. I feel like I'm struggling with my Jack characterization but can't tell if that's just me hating everything I do. This is my take on one of my fave tropes where reader is in mortal danger. I needed a physical location that could be associated with reader and settled on a courthouse, but what it is reader does there is not described. Probably (definitely?) needs a part two. If you get the nickname, thank you, I feel seen. If you don't I explain it at the end. This is absolutely something I would call him, in part to fuck with people who know his real name. I would love to know if you enjoyed and to hear any thoughts you'd like to share.
âHe has a girlfriend,â Robby smirks at Dana.Â
She blinks at him. âIâm sorry, I thought we were talking about Jack Abbot.â
âOh we fucking are.â Robby stifles his smirk and forces his lips to remain closed and as neutral as possible.Â
âYouâre shitting me.â Danaâs incredulous look breaks Robby a bit and he starts to laugh, tries to turn it into a cough when both he and Dana look up to find Jack staring at them as he takes his snow dusted beanie off. He gives Robby a âreally?â look even though he knew Robby would rat him out to Dana the second Robby had dragged it out of him.Â
Dana looks back at Robby. âWho? How did they meet?â
Robby holds up his hands. âYou now officially know as much as I do about her.â Dana makes a noise of vague discontent but knows Jack well enough to know Robby is telling the truth. Thatâs all thatâs been revealed.Â
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
âItâs not worth it,â you whisper. Jack blinks and looks around, unsure if youâre talking to him. He has no idea who you are, has never seen you before in his life but it appears that you are in fact whispering to him in the middle of this bookstore.Â
He raises his eyebrows. âItâs not?â
You shake your head, give him an almost conspiratorial smile. âNo, he must have gotten a new ghost writer. Itâs really bad in comparison to his other stuff. Save your time and money. Iâll give you a summary right now for free if youâre that curious.â
Jack smiles to himself a little bit as he sets the book back on the shelf. Thereâs something about you, your smile, the way you just randomly spoke to him. Heâs drawn to you. An alarm goes off in some part of his brain telling him to ignore it, ignore you, he could get hurt. He pretends to weigh his options as he turns to face you fully. âHow about for a cup of coffee?â
Your brows furrow in confusion for a moment. Thereâs simply no way this unfairly attractive man is asking to buy you a cup of coffee. âThe summary?â You clarify. âThat Iâd give for free. You want it to cost a cup of coffee instead?â You let out a nervous laugh and some part of his heart aches because youâre so adorable. âI just want to make sure I understand before I potentially make an even bigger fool of myself.âÂ
âYep.â He canât help but laugh a little. âYou give me the summary over coffee. Actually, you know what? Youâre going to have to give me a recommendation too because now Iâm going to have nothing to read.â He clicks his tongue at you.Â
âWell,â you laugh out, all breathy as you try to pull yourself together. âYou drive a hard bargain but I think Iâm willing to accept those termsâŚâ you glance at his name badge, âDr. Abbot.â You give him a full smile and Jack knows then and there heâs totally fucked in the best of ways.Â
âJack.â He smiles at you as you both begin walking towards the cafĂŠ. âCall me Jack.â
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Everything quiet enough after handoff, Robby walks out with Jack into the morning sun that does little to warm the breeze pulling leaves off the trees. âAny chance you can cover a shift on Thursday night?â Robby is asking, yes, but he knows itâs not really a question, Jack is always willing to work.
âCanât.â Jack says simply, shrugging his shoulders. âSorry.â Thereâs an expectant silence that hangs between the two as they keep walking.
âCare to elaborate?â Robby finally asks.
âNo.â Jack turns and smirks at him. âItâs none of your and Danaâs business.â
âHa!â Robby laughs. âSo itâs her, itâs about her! The ever elusive girlfriend. Will we ever get to meet her? Or does she not want to meet us? Is she real?â Jack stops walking and gives Robby one of his looks. âHoly shit, is it someone here?â
Jack snorts at that. âNo itâs not someone here. Sheâs not even in the medical field.â He sighs, half longing and half resignation of some kind. âSheâs honestly dying to meet you guys, especially you and Dana, but Iâm trying to protect her from this hellhole. Itâs hard with schedules too, to find a time.â
âThatâs such fucking bullshit,â Robby laughs. âAre you afraid to truly commit? Think bringing her here will make it too real?âÂ
Itâs a valid question but one that Jack nevertheless resents. âNo, actually, if you must fucking know Thursday is our one year anniversary. We have plans. So youâll have to find someone else to cover. But Iâll bring her around soon,â he laughs through his nose to himself at your stubbornness, âif I donât sheâs liable to just show up one of-â
âA year?â Robby laughs, incredulous. âA fucking year? How the hell did you hide it for three months before I dragged it out of you?â
Jack ignores him. âAlso, Iâm moving to days. Itâs better for us.â Heâs so nonchalant about it, just states it like heâs saying the sky is blue, like itâs not going to make Robbyâs eyes widen and mouth drop open like it does.
âI donât,â Robby huffs a laugh, âI donât even know where to fucking begin.â
âThen donât.â Jack smirks, starts to walk again while Robby stays frozen, running a hand through his hair. âGo do some actual work.â
âI thought you found comfort in the darkness?â Robby yells after him.Â
Jack slows and turns around but keeps walking backwards, one hand holding the strap of his backpack to keep it over his shoulder. He glances down at his phone and the photo of you that is now his wallpaper. He smiles to himself a little, yells back. âGuess I find it somewhere else now.â
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You giggle, honest to god giggle and Jack could lose his damn mind as he nibbles at your collarbone. âYou know if my anatomy class had been this fun, I might have become a doctor too.âÂ
Youâre laying on your back in bed as Jack kisses your sweat slicked skin all over as you both come down from your last round. Heâs taken to 'teaching you anatomy' like this, identifying different parts of the human body with his mouth.
âHmm,â Jack hums against you. âIâm glad it wasnât then. Fuck doctors.â He starts to kiss down your chest.Â
âThat has become quite the favorite pastime of mine, yes,â you smirk. âFucking one specific doctor, actually.âÂ
âGetting fucked by one specific doctor more like it,â he murmurs into your sternum. He kisses laterally, lips hitting your breast and moving towards your nipple.Â
âI think weâve established what those are,â you moan softly as he takes your nipple into his mouth. You let your hands run through his salt and pepper curls that you adore so much.Â
âCan never be too thorough.â You giggle at him again and can feel him smile against you. âBut fine, you want something new?â You nod, let your nails scratch gently at his scalp.Â
âNipple,â he kisses your nipple and then down your torso to right above your belly button, âto navel is no manâs land.â He continues to lavish kisses on the soft skin of your stomach before looking up at you when you donât respond.Â
âI canât tell if youâre fucking with me or not.â You eye him with mock suspicion.Â
He laughs and itâs your favorite sound in the whole world, you swear. Well maybe second, only behind hearing him tell you that he loves you.Â
âIâm not. Nipple to navel is no manâs land. Itâs a real thing. Itâs one of the worst places to get shot or stabbed because thereâs so many organs that could be hit and the place weâd expect to get hit would depend on whether the person was breathing in or out at the time, whether their lungs were inflated or deflated. And we generally have no way of knowing. It can be difficult to get clear imaging.â He starts kissing lower, down below your belly button, rubbing his stubble along your skin to tease you as he gets lower and lower. âItâs never a good time. Lots of poor outcomes.â
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Itâs supposed to be his day off and yet Jack finds himself staring at the board and running a hand over his face. âItâs still so fucking weird seeing you here during the day and it not meaning something catastrophic has happened.âÂ
Jack turns to look at Dana. âIâve been working days for a month now and itâs my day off.â
âYou can go, weâre fine for now,â Robby nods at Jack. âThanks for the brief assistance brother.â
âNo, no,â Dana interjects, âheâs not allowed to leave until we nail down a time to meet his girl.âÂ
Robby raises his eyebrows and starts to tilt his head and open his mouth to agree with Dana. A dispatch comes through before anyone can say anything else and Dana grabs it, pinning Jack down with her eyes, daring him to leave before discussing meeting you.Â
âSaved by the bell,â Jack huffs, taking his stethoscope off and starting to walk away.Â
âShooting at a courthouse,â Dana relays to Robby, ânot a mass cas, just a few people, two a little iffy, one theyâre already doing CPR on, a few caught in the race to get out. Two dead on the scene.â
It takes a few seconds for Danaâs words to truly register with Jack, but when they do his hearing fades to only a sharp ringing in his ear. This wasnât happening. Heâd been so reticent at the beginning of your relationship, waited so long to give in and define it and hand his heart over to you, terrified heâd lose you because of himself and who he was, his imperfections, his past, his trauma, his PTSD, his baggage, as he thought of it. He feels so stupid now, in the moment, not having worried about how he could lose you from a random act of violence, that in the moments he canât be there to protect you somebody could come in and rip you from him. Just like that. With the pull of a trigger.Â
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
âYou know, I can confidently say this is the most unique date Iâve ever been on,â you tease Jack.Â
âHey,â he pants, âme teaching you CPR is a great date.âÂ
âIt would be better if you took your shirt off,â you whisper and wink at him before letting your eyes linger on his arm.Â
âIf I did that youâd be so distracted youâd learn nothing,â he smirks at you, sweat glistening on his skin just a little. Just enough to drive you nearly feral for him.Â
 âI think Iâve got the compressions part down, but I may need more help learning the mouth to mouth part.â
He rolls his eyes at you. âYouâre ridiculous.â
âYou fucking love it,â you shoot back at him, leaning into his space and bumping him with your shoulder.Â
He canât help but kiss you. âYes,â the word is muffled against your lips, âyes I do.â He gives you a firmer kiss this time before he pulls away. âBut really. You should know how to do it, just in case. It will help you feel in control in the moment if the need for it ever arises. Youâll know what to do.â
You bite your lip and smile at him.Â
âWhat?â He eyes you with suspicion.Â
You shrug. âNothing, I just love you so much. Sometimes it overwhelms me, how much I love you.â
He can see it in your eyes, how much you love him, can almost feel it physically squeezing him like a tight hug. Heâs really not sure what he ever did to deserve you or your love. âI love you too, Doll.â
âI love you more, Peter.â Your face pulls up into that usual self-satisfied and silly grin you get sometimes when you call him that nickname. Itâs a recent thing. Youâre calling him it more and more though, itâs becoming a natural way of referring to him. From anyone else he would hate it, hearing it between another couple would make him roll his eyes. But from you? He loves it more than youâll ever truly know.Â
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Jack spins around.
âJack you can still go, weâve got it covered.â Robby looks at Jack for a minute and then meets Danaâs eyes as she looks to him after taking her own look at Jack.Â
âWhat courthouse?â Jack asks. Itâs quiet, controlled and clipped and almost missable in the chaos of the ED. Heâs not looking at either of them, staring past them at a wall with a chest heaving more and more by the second as his face grows paler.Â
He tries to keep it together. Dana will say the name and it wonât be your courthouse and heâll go straight to your actual courthouse, grab you, take you home and never let you leave. A perfectly reasonable reaction, he thinks.
âJack-â
âWhat fucking courthouse?â Itâs louder this time, almost enough to pause the chaos of the ED.Â
Jackâs voice drips with what sounds like rage to most of those who hear him but is unmistakably fear to Dana and Robby.Â
Neither of them have ever seen Jack like this, this scared, struggling this hard to keep it together, truly raising his voice for anything other than to quiet down an unruly patient. His eyes find Danaâs and theyâre glassier than sheâs ever seen them, the intensity of his gaze making it painfully clear heâs hanging on every word and the wrong ones will shatter him.Â
She swallows and opens her mouth and Jack knows what sheâs about to say before she even says it. And she does. The name of your courthouse.Â
âIâll triage.â He says it before Dana has even finished, the words hollow and breathless and commanding all at once. He spins and starts off to the bay doors with nothing more. He obviously knows from the report Dana gave that they wonât need triage. He just needed to get out of there and try to create an excuse to stay in the ambulance bay. He knows Robby wonât let him, that Robby and Dana already know youâre at that courthouse, could be a victim.Â
Robby and Dana share another look, So you work at a courthouse. This courthouse. âFuck,â Dana mutters, âI really hope we donât end up meeting her today.â
Jackâs hand dives in his pocket as he strides to the ambulance bay. He already knows in his heart that thereâs not going to be a text from you saying that youâre okay. He hasnât felt his phone buzz. He never even kept his phone on him until you.Â
Even though he knew he wouldnât have any messages, waking his phone and seeing none hits him like a freight train all the same, right in the chest. It threatens to bring him to his knees, make him sick, but he canât. He sets it all aside. If you do come out of one of the ambulances he can hear in the distance youâre going to need him at his best. But what if youâre one of the two people dead at the scene? He has to shove that out of his mind too, canât give into the complete panic that threatens to consume him.Â
Disassociate. Compartmentalize. Do the job. ABC. Assess. Stabilize. Repeat.
His fingers fly across his phone automatically, calling you having become so routine. He prefers it so much to texting, hearing your voice, communicating more directly. âCall me,â he starts, âthe second you get this message. Or fucking text me,â his voice breaks, âplease. Fucking please.â He hangs up and calls again, knowing heâll get your voicemail again but trying anyway because itâs all he can do.Â
Heâs helpless, powerless, he canât do anything to try and save you and that threatens to swallow him whole.Â
Your voicemail recording telling people to leave a message plays again and all Jack can wonder is if this is all heâll have left of your voice in his life. Your voice on your mailbox, maybe some voicemails youâve left him, videos, voice memos youâve sent. All distorted by recording, not your real voice. He canât remember what your real voice sounds like all of the sudden. What your laugh sounds like, how you sound when youâre sleepy or in the throes of pleasure or telling him you love him. God, did he even tell you he loved you the last time he saw you, when he said goodbye?Â
âI need you to call me,â he says into the phone again, pauses. âI love you.â He takes a ragged breath in and speaks through his teeth. âI love you so fucking much, so you have to be okay and you have to fucking call me.â
He sends a series of texts asking you to call him or text him or call the hospital or do anything to let him know youâre okay, asking if you are okay, asking where you are as though youâre going to respond. He already knows youâre in the back of one of those ambulances because of fucking course you are, because heâs not allowed to have anything good in his life apparently. How could he be so stupid to think differently? Â
âHey, we donât need triage for this. The numbers are controlled.â Robby walks out to stand next to Jack in the ambulance bay. âIf you want to stay you can, but you canât wait out here to see who shows up, you have to-â
âYeah, yeah, jump on the first patient that pulls up, I know, I got it,â he interrupts Robby.Â
Thereâs a silence as Robby passes him a gown and ties for him before he does the same for Robby.Â
âJack, if sheâs in one you cannot-â
âLike fuck I canât.â Itâs just a statement. Cool and collected and a projection of indifference. It scares Robby more than if Jack had yelled.Â
âNo, actually brother, you canât. Iâm telling you right now. Youâre not working on her. We donât work on family, on significant others, and you would tell me the exact same thing. Itâs too risky, youâll be too clouded.â Robby watches Jackâs jaw clench and roll as he stares out at the street.Â
He wants to argue that of course heâll be clear, heâll be focusing on saving you, heâll have never been so clear in his life. But part of him knows that seeing you like that on his trauma table, your blood all over the table and him and his hands might make him freeze.
âFine.â Jack whispers. âBut if sheâs,â Jack has to pause and take a shuddery breath. âIf sheâs gone or really going and itâs inevitable you have to let me in. You have to let me try to save her. You have to let me code her, Michael.â
He can taste the rising bile in his throat just at having to talk about coding you.
The first ambulance pulls up before Robby can respond and Jackâs on it so fast Robbyâs surprised Jack doesnât get smacked in the face by the door opening.Â
Itâs not you. Itâs someone who is very much not you and is clearly one of the iffy ones.Â
Disassociate. Compartmentalize. Do the job. ABC. Assess. Stabilize. Repeat.
Jack forces himself to go emotionally numb as he listens to the paramedic rattle off vitals and history, trying so very hard to focus on this, something he can do, even if itâs not for you. By the time they hit trauma one Jackâs fine and in full swing, running it like he would any other trauma. Nobody on the team in the room with him suspects anything is amiss. Â
He hates the way he canât see the otherâs who come in, that he has to stay with this patient until theyâre stable and canât go looking for you. He chastises himself for not having brought you here before or at least having you meet Dana and Robby. They donât even know what you look like, couldnât identify you.
âJack!â He glances at Dana who stands at the door as he preps for the chest tube. âWhatâs her name?â
He yells your name at her, impassive and stoic as he reaches for the scalpel, ignoring the looks everyone throws each other at the slightest tremor in his voice.
âIâll look for her.â Dana promises. He doesnât respond. He canât. Heâll fall apart.Â
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The restaurant youâre at has to be the fanciest place youâve ever been to. Itâs the hottest place in the city and you have no idea how Jack snagged reservations here for dinner to finish out celebrating your one year anniversary.Â
The lighting and low hum of other patrons talking to each other and glasses and silverware and plates tinkling is cinematic. You feel like the main character. But then thatâs always how Jack makes you feel.Â
âI got you something.â He pulls out a wrapped rectangular object.Â
You click your tongue and tsk at him. âWe said weâd do them at home! I didnât bring yours!â
âI know. I have something for you at home too.â His eyes sparkle in the flickering candle light, a little smirk pulling up. âI didnât mean for it to be a double entendre, but both are true.â You snort a laugh at him and take the gift from him. âOpen it.â Heâs still smiling, eyes still sparkling, but thereâs something there. Heâs nervous. It makes you even more curious.Â
You carefully unwrap the object until it reveals itself as a hardcover book. That same one Jack had in his hand a year ago and that you told him was bad and gave him a summary of over coffee.Â
âOh, Jack,â you say softly, eyes getting a little watery. Itâs so perfect. So sweet and sentimental. The book that brought you together, that gave you each other. Itâs almost like a physical representation of the foundation of your relationship in a way.Â
âYou have to open it,â he instructs you in a whisper.
You raise an eyebrow but do as he says.Â
âMove in with me?â is written on the blank first page.Â
You look between the page and Jack. âIs this?â You look back at the page and then up at him again. âAre you really askingâŚ?â
He nods. âMove in with me. Or move somewhere with me, we can get our own place, it doesnât have to be my apartment. We basically live together anyway at this point. Letâs just make it official, yeah? Wherever you want, you can decorate however you want. Just as long as itâs our place.â
You bring a hand to your mouth for a second before using your napkin to dab at the inner corners of your eyes to stop the tears from falling and look back at him.Â
âYouâre a romantic, Jack Abbot,â you hum all dreamily.Â
âYou better not tell anyone. Canât have you ruining my street cred.â He smirks, but his expression and the way he fidgets show heâs still anxious. âSo?â
You realize then you never actually answered him. Sniffling a little laugh and letting a few tears fall you give him his answer, voice thick and full of emotion. âYeah, I think Iâm willing to accept those terms. Iâd love to move in with you⌠Peter.â
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
He hears you counting to yourself before he sees you. âOne, twoâŚâ
Itâs not loud, just said in a normal voice, softer if anything because of how youâre panting, but Jack is so on edge and so desperate to find you heâd subconsciously been listening closely to his surroundings, military training kicking in. His head snaps to you and he doesnât even know what to think when he sees you being rolled in on top of a gurney, performing CPR that would rival the quality of his own.Â
âWhy is she..?â He hears Robby question the paramedic as you roll in.Â
âShe was performing them just as well as we could and it was better to just scoop and run,â the paramedic explains. âShe must have had one hell of an instructor.â
âPeter!â You yell, without looking up, not sure if heâs still here. Youâre so used to it by now that the nickname is just what comes out of your mouth as you look for him. Heâd texted you to let you know he was going in for a bit. Â
Jack could sob and the entire team in the room with him can feel a crushing tension shatter. Maybe he does get a little teary just from the sheer relief. He tells himself itâs sweat in his eyes.
âYeah Doll?â He yells back, not giving a fuck about everyone hearing him call you Doll, and you calling him Peter, knowing full well heâs going to have so much explaining to do about this entire situation, the confusion in the room palpable.Â
âIâm okay!â This time he does laugh to himself.Â
âYeah Iâd say so,â he mutters, smiling. Heâs still anxious to see you, get his own eyes on you, feel you with his own hands.Â
Itâs only about thirty more seconds before his patient is stable enough and he can rip his gloves and gown off and start putting fresh gloves on as he walks into the trauma room youâd been wheeled into. Normally heâd yell out for someone to talk to him or ask what theyâve got but not this time. This time he doesnât even care about whoâs on the table, only the person who came off it. Only you.Â
Youâre standing to the side now, watching Robby and the rest of the team work, impassive as pink tears stream down your face from the dried blood on it. Youâre just so fucking overwhelmed by everything and now that youâre not doing CPR everything thatâs happened is hitting you at once.Â
Jack says your name as he moves to you, needs his hands on you.Â
âAre you hurt? Were you hit?â He rushes out. His voice brings you back and you look up at him with wide, terrified eyes. He goes to look you over but you latch onto him, hugging him tightly, shaking a bit.Â
âIâm fine, Iâm okay, Iâm, Iâm sorry,â you start to rattle off, fisting at his scrub top and clinging to him like heâs the only thing keeping you tethered to reality. In the moment he might just be.Â
He hugs you back just as hard, kisses the top of your head. He doesnât care who sees right now, all he cares about is you. âItâs okay, you have nothing to apologize for. Iâm just so fucking glad youâre okay. I thought⌠I thought you wereâŚâ He doesnât have to finish, you know what he means. âI canât fucking lose you. I love you way the fuck too much.â
Youâve been so wrapped up in each other neither of you have noticed that Robbyâs patient, the one you were doing CPR on, has started to code again. âAbbot, need you here!â
You let him go, nod at him. âGo on,â you whisper, âIâll be right here. Iâm okay. I love you more.â Jack nods at you and walks over, jumping in and assisting Robby.
Itâs once youâre out of Jackâs arms, away from his warm body and more grounded in reality that you notice how cold you are, how youâre swaying because he was supporting you far more than you realized, how lightheaded you are, how your abdomen and chest really fucking hurt. You chalk it up to the adrenaline wearing off and being sore from the chest compressions you just did.Â
On the other side of the room an instrument tray gets knocked over, metal hitting the floor in a loud clang. It startles you, makes you jump and twist quickly to see what it was, if it was another gun, another shot. You feel something almost tearing, a sharp pain across your abdomen and lower chest, a feeling of sticky warmth against your shirt.
You sway a little, start to realize how much worse the pain is now. Itâs bad enough that you canât even make noise to express the pain. Thereâs no air in your lungs, you swear. You realize your lightheadedness is now much, much worse, that youâre shivering from how cold you are. Or are you just shaking? You canât tell. It doesnât make sense. The room isnât even that cold. You shouldnât be so cold. Not unless.
You pull your shirt up slowly and look down and run your hand over your skin and sure enough, thereâs a bullet hole seeping blood, about half way between your nipple line and belly button, skin now covered in a dark bruise.Â
You cough a little, itâs quiet. It starts feeling like thereâs water in your lungs. Like you canât get any oxygen in even though youâre in a room full of it. The metallic taste in your mouth is what manages to seep into whatâs left of your consciousness next. You cough again, into your hand, and feel something wet hit your skin. Blood.Â
It hits you. Youâre drowning in your own blood. Thatâs why it feels like you canât breathe. Youâve been shot. In a bad place, one of the worst places, Jack had told you that night. You get scared, feel your heart pounding. It feels like youâre dying. You donât want to die, donât want to leave Jack. Youâd just finished moving into your new place together, were going to spend all weekend unpacking and painting and getting furniture where you wanted it. You were going to make your home.
Time. You were supposed to have more time together.
âHey, Jack,â you slur softly, struggling to keep yourself standing. Luckily he hears you. Your use of his first name and the slur to your voice has him panicking again already. Time slows as he turns around to take you in, eyes going from your face and the blood coating your teeth and trickling from your mouth as you try and smile reassuringly at him, down to your torso where youâre still holding your shirt up just enough for him and everyone else in the room to see the bullet hole and bruising marring your skin. âI think, I think Iâm not good, itâs not good.â Your vision tunnels so fast you can just barely see Jackâs expression of sheer abject unadulterated horror and panic as you get out your last words. âNipples to navel⌠no manâs land.â
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Peter. Peter Rabbit by Beatrix Potter. Yes, I worked in a bookstore through college.
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pairing: steve harrington x reader
summary: itâs the age-old fall from grace: high school royalty faceplants into reality, and the burger king crown starts hanging heavy. (sailor hat, in his case.) heir to the hawkins high hierarchy, ruler of keggers and hallways alike, steve harrington used to be untouchable. now? he's shaking under your hands, bleeding from battles no trophy could ever commemorate. you've stitched together plenty of broken people beforeâbut never one that left a scar in you, too.
warnings: 18+ mdni, piv sex, oral (m!receiving), touch/praise-starved!steve, hurt/comfort, blood, injury, mutual friends/enemies-ish to lovers, hair washing, massaging, praise kink, body worship, sexual tension, forced proximity of sorts, reader isnât fond of steve at first, mostly S4 canon but fix-it, angst, domestic fluff, found family, happy ending
a/n: another steve harrington character study dressed as a fic, what the hell else is new? | playlist âŹ.á
They donât take him to the hospital. They bring him to you.
Which is, objectively, stupid. Â Â
But apparently, hospitals ask questions. And youâpart-time party medic, occasional dispenser of prescription-only painkillers (for legitimate anxiety and migraines, thank you very much)âyou donât.
Youâre halfway through a rerun of M.A.S.H., sucking the soul out of a cherry popsicle. Youâre braless. The house is quiet. Peaceful, if a little tragic. Exactly the way Fridays are meant to be.
Until the knocking starts.
Correction: pounding.
Panicked, frenzied, FBI-doesnât-need-a-warrant kind of pounding.
You groan and peel yourself off the couch, popsicle stick still dangling from your lips. You are not emotionally equipped to accept salvation or Thin Mints right now.
But when you open the door, itâs not a solicitor.
Itâs Robin.
Robin Buckley, looking like she just got shot out of a chimney. Her cheekâs streaked with soot and something red that is very much not Kool-Aid. Â
You blink. Yank the popsicle out of your mouth with a wet plop.
âDonât freak out,â she blurts, before you even ask.
Which is Robin Buckley-speak for: Start freaking out immediately. Shit is on fire, metaphorically or otherwise.
The last time she said that, you ended up faking an asthma attack so you could ditch pep band and hit up Dennyâs for the $1.99 Grand Slam. The time before that, you drove through three counties to rescue her cousinâs âemotional support ferretâ from a petting zoo in Muncie.
This time? Sheâs brought a car with her.
A sleek maroon BMW, purring at the curb, passenger door flung wide open.
Inside: Limbs. Denim. Blood.
A boy.
Slumped sideways in the front seat, head tilted back at an angle that screams whiplash or maybe already dead.Â
You squint.
âWho the fuck is that?â
âŚ
Steve Harrington.
Steve Harrington is bleeding out in your driveway.
You donât know him. Not really.
Knew of him, sure. Back in high school, he was all Farrah Fawcett volume and varsity swagger. Heir to the Hawkins High hierarchy, ruling keggers and hallways alike. He had rich parents and a bimmer he didnât pay for. Threw parties like they were some kind of divine rite.
But then? Senior year hit him like a metaphorical truck. Or maybe a literal one. Hard to say.
Because somewhere between the scorched-earth gossip of graduation and the literal scorched-earth of the mall burning down, Steve Harrington dropped off the map.
Poof. King Steve: dethroned.
Burned out, like the very mall he used to work in.
You missed that whole implosion. Spent that summer in Chicago drowning in vending machine coffee and disaster drills, chasing your EMT cert while trying not to puke during ride-alongs.
You came home to find that Hawkins had gained a mall, lost a mall, and started blaming everything weird on âgas leaksâ again.
And Robin Buckley had Steve.   Â
Her little sidekick from the ice cream wars. Who, allegedly, once confronted a creeper in the food court for harassing her. Ruined his pretty face doing it, too. Walked around with a purple shiner for weeks after that summer ended.
He now stocks tapes with her at Family Video, where helping customers ranks somewhere between abusing the label maker and arguing over who gets to abuse the label maker.Â
You ran into him once, alone, in the cereal aisle of Melvaldâs.
Dark rings under his eyes. Hair still doing that gravity-defying thing.
He smiled. You didnât smile back.
You didnât care. Â
Itâs the age-old fall from grace: high school royalty faceplants into reality, and the Burger King crown starts hanging heavy. (Well, sailor hat, in his case.)
But now, heâs here.
Dying on your lawn.
Ruining your Friday.
âŚ
Up close, he looks worse.
Biblically bad.
Like, plague-of-locusts, hail-from-the-heavens, Lamb-of-God-who? kind of bad.
His jeans are shredded, shirt gone entirely. Bright red ligature marks around his throat like someone tried to strangle him with a piano wire. Thereâs ash in his hair, and something black smeared across his jaw that youâre really, really hoping is just dirt.
His eyes flutter.
Then, absurdly, he smiles.
âH-hey. Heard you know first aid?â
You stare at him for a beat. Then toss your popsicle stick into the grass.
âYeah. Try not to bleed out on my porch, Harrington.â
He snorts. Gives you a weak thumbs-up.
Then promptly goes limp.
âŚ
âItâs called compensated shock,â you grunt, dragging six-feet-too-much of unconscious prom royalty into your living room. âHe looked okay âcause his body was pumping him full of adrenaline. Now itâs wearing off.â
Robinâs on the other end, doing her best to help, which mostly means not helping.
âOh my god, yeah,â she babbles, smacking his sneakers into the doorframe. ââshit. He got all woozy at Skull Rock earlier.â
You pause mid-haul. âSkull Rock? Like, the makeout spot?â
Robin makes a face. âYeah, but not for us, gross. Thatâd be like making out with my brother. Anyway, Steve invented Skull Rock! Took Heather C. there in tenth grade. Remember her? The girl with, like, thirty scrunchies and that creepy obsession with Mr. Connorâsââ
âRobin.â
âRight! Sorry! Panic talking!â
Steve groans from where youâve deposited him on the couch, more pained by Robinâs volume than the probable internal bleeding.
You ignore him. âWhy were you actually at Skull Rock?â
âUhh walking? You know... trees. Friendship.â
You level her with a look.
She claps her hands. âAnyway! You can fix him, right? Youâre, like, certified!â
You glance down at Steve.
His lips are blue at the corners, breath hitching in those tight, silent gulps that mean pain and refusal to show it.
âYeah,â you say quietly. âMaybe.â
âŚ
You do fix him.
Because youâre a sucker. Because you trained for this. Because your hands know what to do even when your brain is screaming.Â
And maybe, just maybe, because Steve Harrington keeps making these soft, miserable, apologetic noises every time he flinches.
Like heâs sorry.
Sorry for bleeding. For being in pain. For existing.
You hate that.
You also kind of hate how he looks like thisâhot, in that tragic, beaten, dog-left-out-in-the-rain kind of way that hits your brain like a chemical imbalance.
You strip off his vest first (Dio patch on the back, which, huh, maybe he has changed) and find a makeshift bandage beneath it, half-dried and crusted with old blood. You peel it off. It comes away with a wet schlorp like opening a bottle of dollar store wine.
And something inside you goes still.Â
These are... bite marks.
Not scrapes. Not scratches.
Bites.
His flesh looks shredded, like a rottweiler got bored of chew toys and decided to sample teenage boy instead.
Except: youâve treated dog bites. This is not a dog bite.
âJesus christ,â you whisper.
You look up at the boy collapsed on your couch: sweaty, shirtless, andâoh, now heâs got a belt in his mouth.
Robin jams it there. âFor the pain,â she says, helpful as ever.
Steve groans around the leather, eyes fluttering. Looks like he wants to die.Â
Youâre still staring at the worst bite, wondering if itâs actually moving, when you ask, voice low:
âSomeone want to tell me what the fuck did this?â
Robin freezes. Eyes the belt like sheâd rather choke on it herself than answer.
âUh⌠bats?â She offers weakly. Â
You blink. âBats.â
âLike. Big ones? Really big?â
You stare at her. Then at Steve. Â
You donât believe her.
But also⌠you kind of do.   Â
Because whatever this thing was, it didnât just attack.
It fed.
âŚ
âOkay, but likeââ Robinâs pacing like sheâs trying to wear a hole in your rug. âHe was fine earlier. Like, maybe not fine fine, but, you know, Steve-fine. And then we got out of the Upâuhâthe woods, and I was driving him back and he justâŚâ
She makes a dramatic fainting motion. Nearly brains herself on the coffee table.
âSo, it could be rabies? Or tetanus? Or maybe one of those parasite things that lay eggs in your stomach? Orââ
âRobin?â you cut in, sharp as the pair of shears in your hand. âThereâs towels and vodka in the kitchen. Go.â
âRight. On it.â
She skitters away like a gremlin set on fire, the thud of cabinet doors punctuating her panic.
You turn back to Steve.
His pulse is thin, fluttering weakly under your fingertips, but itâs there.
âHarrington. You with me?â
His hand twitches once, thumb up.
âŚ
He doesnât scream.
You wish he would.
Because you know this hurts. You know that when you pour antiseptic into wounds this deep, itâs supposed to rip sound out of a person. A yell. A curse. A sob. Something.
But Steve just⌠takes it.
His jawâs locked tight enough to bend steelâno belt, miracle he doesnât shatter a molarâand his throat works once, twice, swallowing back whatever wants out. His whole body trembles, shoulders twitching, knuckles bone-white, yet his voice stays sealed inside him like itâs chained there.
You kind of hate him for it.
Because you know this type.
Boys who bleed quiet. The beautiful, tragic kind who carry pain like itâs a penance.
Youâve seen them before, at crash sites, in the backs of ambulances.
Itâs not bravery. Itâs habit.
A mask.Â
And Steve Harrington? Heâs been wearing his so long, itâs practically fused to the bone.
Still, Robin squeezes his hand like sheâs coaching him through labor. Eyes locked on the ceiling, because sheâs still pretending sheâs never seen boobs or blood or the inside of a human person.
You press gauze to the worst of the bites, just under his ribs, angry and wet and oozing something thick. You have to lean your weight into it.
Steve joltsâfull-body, every muscle locking under your palms. His hand lashes out, fast and blind, gripping the leg of your jeans until his knuckles go pale. Â
Then, just as quickly, he lets go. Eyes squeezed shut. Shame radiating off him like heat.
âShit. S-sorry.â
You donât answer.
You canât.
âŚ
It takes two hours.
Three full rolls of gauze. One regrettable vodka break, just to keep your hands from shaking.
It's not pretty. Not even close. But it's enough to keep him breathing, which, all things considered, feels like a decent win for a Friday night.
Now, heâs bandaged. Shirtless under your exâs old hoodie, the one with the weird bleach stain and the hole in the sleeve, but Steve fills it out like it was made for him.
Of course he does.
In the kitchen, Robinâs hunched over your tiny sink, scrubbing dried blood and whatever else is staining her forearms that awful color. Â
As soon as sheâs done, you grab her by the sleeve and tug her into the hallway.
âTalk.â
Robin sighs, long and loud. Tries to stall by running a hand through her hair, only to grimace when it sticks up with dried sweat.
ââŚDemobats.â She mutters.
 âIâm sorry?â
âDemobats,â she repeats, like thatâs a word people just know. âFrom this place called the⌠Upside Down.â
You wait. Thereâs no punchline.
ââŚYouâre serious.â
She nods.
And then it all spills out.
Demobats. Some guy named Vecna. Russians. Underground government labs. Scoops Ahoy, for christâs sake.
You lose the thread somewhere around âtelepathic hive mind overlord.â
But you donât interrupt. Because Robin may be a lot of thingsâloud, chaotic, deathly allergic to social cuesâbut sheâs not a liar.
And thereâs a half-dead boy on your couch with holes the size of teacups to prove it.
âSo,â you say slowly, âthat job at the mallâŚâ
âYeah. Secret Russian lab.â
âAnd you were tortured?â
 âI mean, mostly Steve?â She winces. âBut, uh. Yeah.â
âJesus christ, Robin.â
âI know,â she groans, dragging both hands down her face. âI know it sounds crazy. I didnât want to drag you into this, okay? But I thoughtâhe looked bad. Worse than before. And I couldnât exactly walk into the ER and say âHi, my best friend got eaten by mutant bats from another dimension, please ignore the blood trail.ââ
She huffs, blowing hair from her eyes, and squints at you. âYou donât believe me.â
You snort. âNo. I do. And I think you shouldâve called me sooner.â
âWell, I thought he was fine. He was fine. Until we got in the car and he started slurring his words and, like⌠blinking wrong. Then I panicked.â
You glance back toward the living room. At the boy who didnât scream. Curled on your couch, twitching in his sleep like heâs stuck in a loop he canât wake from.
Robin follows your gaze, voice softening. âLook, I know heâs not exactly your favorite person, but⌠thank you. Really.â
You roll your eyes. âHe was bleeding out, Robs.â
She gives you a look. The kind that says she knows you better than you want her to.
You scowl.
âGo. Shower. You smell like a burnt tire.â A beat. ââŚYou want something to eat?â
Robin doesnât answer. Just throws her arms around you in the tightest, sweatiest, most Robin hug imaginable. All elbows and bones and bloodstained sleeves.
You stiffen. Then sigh.
âLove you,â she mumbles into your shoulder.
You hold her tight for a second. Then let go.
âYou owe me, Buckley. Big time.â
⌠Â
Robin crashes in your bed, dead to the world in ten seconds flat.
You stay on the couch next to Steve.
Not close. Just close enough. So if he does something stupid like stop breathing, youâll notice.
You keep a cool cloth on his forehead. Check his pulse every half hour. Whisper a soft âmotherfuckerâ every time he twitches, because if he wakes up and asks if you were worried, you want to be able to say no with a straight face.
You stay up.
Because someone has to.
âŚ
Itâs almost 3 a.m. when he stirs.
Your head snaps up, heart launching into your throat like a flare. Your hand goes automatically to the bucket, the cloth, the mental checklist of emergency procedures youâve memorized so well theyâre practically sewn into your DNA.
But then his lips part.
Just a cracked breath through the dryness, small and quiet and impossibly fragile.
âDonât⌠donât let âem go back.â
Itâs barely a whisper. It slams into you like a freight train.
You donât know who âtheyâ are, but you know exactly what he means.
Youâve seen this kind of thing before, too. In the shaking hands of people who left something behind where no one could follow. This is what happens when the body survives, but the rest doesnât.
And goddammit.
Goddammit, you didnât want this.
Didnât want some pretty, broken boy bleeding all over your couch. Didnât want this guilt. This terrifying protectiveness. The quiet, suffocating weight of whatever this is clamping around your ribs like a trap you walked into willingly.Â
Didnât want Steve fucking Harrington, of all people, to break your heart without saying a single word.
But he looks so young like this. Pale cheeks, sweat-damp hair sticking to his forehead. Heâs curled in on himself like heâs bracing for another hit, one hand fisted in your throw pillow. Â
Without thinking, you lean forward.
Brush his hair back. Cool his skin with your fingers.
âSteve,â you whisper.
No answer. Just a tiny, broken noise. Almost a whimper, almost nothing.
Your throat tightens.
You reach down, and carefully, gently, pry his fingers free from the cushion. Thread yours through the empty spaces.
His grip grows impossibly tight, fingertips paling where they press between your knuckles.
âYouâre okay. Youâre safe.â
And slowlyâlike thawing ice, like a held breath finally let goâhe stops shaking.
You stay like that, hand in his, until the sun starts bleeding through the curtains.
âŚ
Robin once told you that you get off on fixing people.
She meant hearts. You meant bones.
Youâre starting to think maybe she was right.
âŚ
You wake to yelling.
Not normal yellingâwhisper-yelling. The kind of frantic, hushed bickering thatâs somehow louder than regular voices.
ââŚcanât just walk out, Steve!â
âItâs not that bad, justâgive me a secondââ
Thereâs the unmistakable rustle of struggling. A pained grunt. The telltale shuffle of someone stumbling sideways, seconds away from faceplanting.
âOh my god, what is wrong with you?!â
âIâm fine,â Steve grits out, in the exact tone people use right before they pass out on you.
âAnd where exactly are you gonna go, huh? Enlighten me.â
âJustâIâll go back and change, and then weâllââ
âNope. Absolutely not. You canât even see straight, Harrington.â
âYes, I can.â
âReally? Okay. How many fingers?â
âWhy do you always do that?â
âBecause it works!â
You groan loudly, dragging an arm over your face.
âDo I need to put you two in a time-out? Because I swear to god, I will.â
Instant silence.
When you peel your arm back, Steveâs frozen midâescape, one shoe on, looking like a kid caught stealing from the cookie jar. He glances your way, sheepish.
âHey,â he says, like he didnât just almost eat your tile. âYouâre up.â
âUnfortunately.â
Robin flaps a dramatic hand at him. âPlease, please talk some sense into this idiot before I duct tape him to the wall.â
You sit up, and immediately regret every decision youâve ever made. Your spine crackles like bubble wrap. Your skull is pounding. The entire living room looks like a crime scene: blood-crusted towels, empty gauze packets, that one lonely vodka bottle rolling under the coffee table like a sad tumbleweed.
You squint at Steve. âSit down.â
âIâm good.â
âYouâre not.â
âI just need toââ
âNow, Harrington.â
You donât raise your voice. You donât have to. Itâs the tone youâve used on half-conscious college boys insisting they can âtotally drive, man.â
Steve blinks. Then sighs, slowly lowering himself onto a kitchen chair.
Robin hovers like a human seatbelt, and he bats her away with a feeble flap of his wrist. Still, he grips the edge of the counter like itâs the only thing keeping him vertical.
You scrub a hand over your face. âCoffee? Or are we all just committing to bad decisions today?â
âŚ
The coffee is yesterdayâs.
Bitter, burnt, practically an oil slick in a mug.
You pour three cups anyway.
Steve drinks it black, which tracks. You clock the way his hands tremble as he brings it to his lips and file it away without comment.
Robinâs already rattling off the story again, filling in details she left out the night before. You get more names now. Places. Dates. Vines that slither like snakes. The gate under Loverâs Lake. You get the part where Steve dove in, headfirst, no hesitation.
Well, you already got that part last night, but Robinâs repeating it, and youâre starting to think maybe itâs not for you this time.
Steve just listens, quiet. Winces at certain beatsâjaw tic here, hard blink thereâbut doesnât interrupt.
You lean against the counter, sip your bitter sludge, and ask, casual as you can:
âSo, you just jumped in. No plan? No backup?â
He shrugs, eyes on his mug. âDidnât really have time to think about it.â
âClearly.â Â Â Â Â
He looks up at you then. Runs a hand through his still-matted hair, blood-sticky at the roots, and releases a quiet breath.
âThank you. For last night.â
You raise a brow. âDidnât really have a choice, Harrington. It was either that or explain to the cops why thereâs a dead body on my couch.âÂ
He huffs a weak laugh.
âBy the way,â you add, sipping again, âdo your parents know about all this monster-hunting extracurricular bullshit?â
Robin makes a sound like a choked squirrel.
âOh fuck! My parents! Shitshitshit.â
Sheâs already halfway out of her chair, tripping over her shoes while she scrambles for her jacket.
âCan youâ?â she gasps, eyes wide.
âYeah, yeah. Iâll cover.â
âThankyouthankyouthankyou!â She barrels over, grabbing your face and planting a comically loud kiss on your forehead. Then she turns and grabs Steve in the same breath.
Gives his face a little shake.
âIf I come back and find out you even thought about sneaking out, I will tell everyone you still sleep with a nightlight. Got it?â
You snort into your mug. Steve glares at her. âRobinâ"
âGot it?â
He scrubs a hand through his hair, rolling his eyes. âWhatever.â
She releases him, then points at you. âYouâre in charge. Donât let him do anything heroic.â
âOh no,â you deadpan. âHowever shall I bear the weight of such responsibility?â
Robin snorts, slaps your shoulder, then bolts, keys jingling like cowbells as she shoots out the door.
âWaitââ Steve squints after her. âAre youâRobin! You canât just take my car! Youâre not evenââ
Slam!
ââlicensed.â
You both sit in the silence she leaves behind. Steve stares out the window, listening to the screech of his precious bimmer as it peels down the street.
Then he turns back, eyes flicking to the trauma floor that used to be your living room. Â
He clears his throat. âSorry about your, uh⌠couch. And the carpet.â
You follow his gaze. The stains are bad, probably permanent. It stings a little, looking at them.
It hurts worse looking at him.
Steve Harrington, bruised and bandaged and slouched in your chair like heâs trying to disappear into the seams. His stupidly wide, puppy-dog eyes look like theyâre about to apologizing for breathing your air.
You blink.
Then slowly, slowly, lean forward across the island.
âHarrington.â
âYeah?â
âStop apologizing for almost dying. Itâs weird.â Â
He opens his mouth. Closes it. Lands on a sheepish smile instead.
You hate how it softens his face, how it creases the corners of his eyes.
âAnd for the record,â you mutter, lips concealed behind the rim of your cup, âyouâre not the worst thing to stain that couch, so. Youâre fine.â Â
He blinks, brow furrowing. âWhatâs⌠that supposed to mean?â
You shrug. âWouldnât you like to know.â
It takes him a second to process it. Then he snorts quietly, eyes flicking to the side.
You take another sip, watching the pink rise in his cheeks as the sun filters in through the window.
And if youâre smiling tooâwell, he doesnât have to know.
âŚ
You try to make pancakes.
Try being the operative word.
Thereâs flour in your hair, batter on the counter. Somewhere, the smoke alarm is just giggling with anticipation.
Steveâs still in his spot behind the island, watching you glare down a lumpy pile of batter.
Itâs distracting.
Itâs fucking annoying, is what it is.
Pancakes arenât hard. Whisking is not rocket science. And yet, it feels impossible with him sitting there, doing that thing with his eyes. All soft and brown and bruised, like you saved his life and now he doesnât know how to deal with it. Â Â
âHowâs it going?â he asks, voice pitched deliberately neutral.
You donât turn around. âFine.â
A beat.
âYou sure?â
You slam the next pancake into the pan. It looks like something you'd peel off a sidewalk after a hot summer day. You stare at it, furious.
Behind you, thereâs the scrape of a chair.
âI said Iâm fine,â you warn.
He ignores that.
Limps over to you instead, his gaze finding you like a physical thing. Warm. Curious. You catch him in your periphery as he stops beside you, close enough that the heat from the stove mixes with the heat of his skin. Suddenly, the kitchen feels about fifteen degrees hotter.
âHere,â he murmurs.
Before you can object, his fingers wrap around yours, gentle and coaxing as he eases the spatula from your grip.
Then: flip.
One smooth flick of his wrist. The pancake lands perfect. All golden and fluffy.
You blink at it, betrayed.
âI was handling it.â
âSure,â he says, lips twitching. âLooked like it.â
He flips another. Doesnât even look this time.
You narrow your eyes. âOkay. How are you doing that?âÂ
He shrugs, adjusting the burner dial like heâs lived here his whole life. âCook for myself a lot.â
You pause. Thereâs something in the way he says itâoff-hand, casual, but quiet enough to leave an echo.
You file that away, too.
âOf course youâre good at pancakes,â you mutter. âProbably make soufflĂŠs and like, caviar waffles or some shit.â
âCaviar waffles? Thatâs a thing?â
âI donât know. You tell me, rich boy.â
He just snorts quietly at that, eyeing you sideways. âWell, my French toast is pretty solid. Could show you next time, if you want.â
You glance over, arching a brow. âWow. Is that line always so subtle?â
He meets your gaze, smirk tugging at his split lip.
âI donât know. You tell me.â
And fuck, it lands.
It lands hard, right in the soft space under your ribs. That warm, twisting feeling that makes your breath hitch and your stomach go stupid.
You turn away before your face can betray you, yanking open a drawer for a fork.
And then, as if the universe decided to throw you a bone, the kitchen landline starts to shriek like itâs being murdered.
You lunge for it like a lifeline.
Itâs probably Mrs. Buckley, confirming her daughter crashed at your place, again.
âHello? âŚYou WHAT?â
Robin groans on the other end. âYeah. Possibly until college.â
âRobin, you canâtââ You lower your voice, turning away from Steve and cupping the receiver like heâs not standing two feet away. ââyou canât be fucking grounded right now.â
âI know! But my mom saw the blood on my jeans and I totally panicked. I told her it was ketchup. Ketchup, dude. Now sheâs got Toby posted outside my room. Heâs just sitting there with his Legos, but he will scream if I so much as leave to go to the bathroom. So... yeah. Itâs gonna be a while before I can sneak out. Are you⌠are you okay to stay with him for a bit? Heâs trying to pretend heâs fine, but heâs definitely not.â  Â
You glance back.
Steveâs standing at the stove, peering at his stomach while waiting for the next pancake to bubble. His hand drifts down and starts poking at one of the bandages under his hoodie. Slow and gentle, like it wonât count as touching if heâs polite about it.  Â
You stretch the phone cord and smack his hand away.
He startles. Blinks at you like, Seriously?
You raise your brows like, Try me.
You sigh into the receiver: âYeah. I got him.â
âUgh, youâre the best. Just donât let himâohh, crap, I gotta gâ"
Click.
Steve doesnât turn when you pad back into the kitchen.
âShe grounded?â
âYep. Possibly until retirement.â You pause. âYou donât need to call your folks?â
He hesitates, just for a second. Then shakes his head. âTheyâre out of town.â
Then, with a one-handed spin of the spatula, he flips the pancake onto a plate.
You glance at the growing stack. They look obscene. Youâd punch someone for a bite.
In your head, you run through the math.
Ten days. Minimum.
Ten days before the stitches can come out. Before he can walk out of here without ripping something open. Longer if he keeps poking at his bandages like that.
God help you. Itâs gonna be a long week.
âŚ
Breakfast is awkward.
No other word for it.
Steve eats like heâs on a timer. You eat like youâre trying not to notice.
Trying not to notice the way he keeps sneaking glances at you. Little flicks of his eyes over his plate, always quick, always subtle, never quite fast enough.
Trying not to notice the way he winces. Quiet flashes of pain, there and gone, just long enough for that crease to cut across his brow before he smooths it away.
When both your plates are emptied, he clears his throat.
âHey, do you⌠you mind if I use your bathroom?â He gestures vaguely to his face. âJust need to clean up a bit.â Â
His hair is still matted. Thereâs soot smeared along his jaw, a faint line of red where the bloodâs dried and half-wiped away.
You nod, mid-sip. âSure. First door on the left. Just donât get the bandages wet.â
âGot it,â he nods, starts to riseâthen stops halfway, jaw flexing tight.
âActually, uhâŚâ His hand slides to the back of his neck. His eyes shut briefly. âCan you give me a hand with this? I canât reallyâŚâ
He doesnât finish the sentence. Doesnât need to.
The white-knuckle grip on the hem of his hoodie tells you enough.
You blink, setting your mug down, and push your chair back without a word. Â Â
He doesnât meet your eyes as you reach for the bottom of the hoodie.
The fabric peels up inch by inch, sticking to where the gauze bled through, catching where raw skin clings to cotton. He winces, raising his arms awkwardly, the stitches along his sides clearly pulling. So you move gently, painstakingly slow.
Your knuckles graze his stomach, andâ
Jesus.
Heâs warm. Muscle corded tight under skin that flushes easily, even with all the bruises blooming across his ribs like bad watercolors.
You get the hoodie off.
His chest is bare.
And now youâre standing close. Way, way too close.
His breath brushes your cheek when he exhales. You glance up, just on pure instinct, and find his eyes already on you.
You both freeze.
Thereâs a beat where everything narrows. Where sound drops out. Â
Your hands hover midair, still clutching the fabric, close enough to feel the heat radiating off his skin.
Close enough to trace the moles scattered across his chest. Â Â
You donât.
You look away so fast it nearly gives you whiplash.
âTowels are under the sink," you mumble. "Iâll get you some new clothes.â
Then you take a quick step back. Like distance will save you from whatever the hell that was.
Steve blinks. Once. Twice. Then nods, eyes flicking away. âThanks.â
He disappears down the hall, barefoot and bruised.
You stand in the silence with his hoodie clenched in your fists, your pulse trying to beat its way out of your throat.
âŚ
Thereâs an old joke your friends like to make.
That youâre a sadist.
That you chose the EMT life because you enjoy it. The blood, the pain. The broken bones and the chaos. Things normal people flinch away from.
But in truth, theyâve got it backwards.
Youâre not a sadist.
No. What you are is a fucking masochist.
Because thereâs no other explanation for why you keep doing this to yourself. Why you let yourself get this close to people you shouldnât. Why you torture yourself, again and again, with things you know better than to want.
Why youâre standing outside your bathroom door right now, ears tilted, listening to someone who shouldnât mean anything to you rinse the blood off his skin.
You told yourself you were just finishing the dishes. That the stovetop needed wiping down. That there were chores to do, reasons to move around.
But your feet kept wandering. Back to the hallway. Back to him.
Back to this spot in the hallway, where you can feel the warmth bleeding under the door. Where you can hear the faucet running in short, irregular burstsâon, off, on again.
You picture him hunched over the basin. One hand braced against the counter, the other shaking under the strain of movement. Jaw clenched. Shoulders bowed.
Something twists low in your stomach.
You roll your eyes at yourselfâbecause god, youâre patheticâand raise a fist.
A light knock.
âYou good?â
A pause, then:
âUh, yeah. Just⌠hang on.â
Thereâs a clatter, a quiet shit. Then the door creaks open.
And Steveâ
Well.
Heâs wet.
And shirtless. And pink.
Flushed from the steam, maybe from embarrassment. Because his hairâThe Hairâis half-lathered and sticking up in foamy tufts, like a soggy cat caught mid-bath. A single drop of water slides slow down the hollow of his throat.
Your gaze follows it.
The sweatpants you gave him ride low. Damp at the waistband, pulled snug across his hips in a way youâre absolutely not thinking about.
He gestures toward the sink, sheepish.
âI, uh⌠canât really bend right now. Tried to rinse it out, butââ He winces, fingers grazing his sides. âThe stitches are kind of a hard no.âÂ
Your eyes drop, unbidden, to the bruises blooming purple-black across his ribs. The way his chest lifts a little faster when you step closer.
You should walk away. Turn around. Go wipe down the goddamn stove like you told yourself you would.
Instead, you say:
âSit.âÂ
He blinks. ââŚWhat?â
âOn the floor. Back against the tub.â
Thereâs a pause. His brows draw together like heâs trying to figure out the punchline. Â
You donât blink.
He exhales sharply, jaw flexing. âNo, itâs okay, I canââ
âSteve.â
It lands heavy. The weight of it surprises even you.
His first name, in your voice.Â
Youâve only said it once before, when he was unconscious, twitching under bloodstained gauze, fists clenched against a nightmare you couldnât reach.
But now, he hears it. And something inside him goes quiet.
He studies you for a second longer, then sighs, shoulders dropping.
Wordlessly, he lowers himself to the tile.
One hand braced on the edge of the tub, the other on the floor, every movement stiff. His back hits the porcelain with a soft thud. Â
You kneel beside him and roll up your sleeves.
âLean your head back.â
He shifts, uneasy. âSeriously, you donât have toââ
âI know.â You pick up the cup beside the sink and check the tap, waiting for the water to warm. âJust tilt."
Thereâs a long pause.
Then he does.
His head tips back against the curve of the tub. With his throat exposed, the worst of the bruising shines a mottled red-black beneath his jaw. His lashes flutter, lips parting just slightly.
The first pass runs slow and gentle down his scalp. He flinches.
âToo hot?â
He blinks, breath shallow. âNo. Sâfine.â
So you pour again. And again. Slow rivulets trickling through his hair, carrying blood and soap and grime down the drain. His hair start to fall naturally again, dark strands slicking to his forehead.Â
Itâs just the water at first. Rinsing out grit, loosening stiff knots and matted roots.
Then you lather the shampoo between your palms, and sink your fingers into his hair.
And thatâs when it happens.
The shift.
Steve Harringtonâking of easy charm, Mr. Everythingâs Fineâgoes completely still.
Not in a relaxed way. Not in a sleepy way.
No, he goes rigid.
His breath falters. His jaw locks. You can see the muscles in his neck ripple with tension.
And when you sweep a thumb absently behind his ear, chasing a line of foam, he jolts.
A full-body shiver, running shoulder to spine.
You clear your throat, voice catching before you force it steady. âBeen a while, huh? Since someone did this for you?â
His response is delayed, a low rasp. âUh huh. Long time.â
Then, after a beat:
âUsed to be my momâs thing. When I was a kid.â
Your hands still in his hair. He goes stiff the second he says itâjaw clenched, lips pressed tight, hands curling in his lap.
You blink, then resume drawing slow circles over his crown.
âThat mustâve been nice,â you say quietly.
He doesnât answer. Just breathes through his nose and keeps still.
So you keep going.
Rinse. Lather. Repeat.  Â
And with each pass of your hands, his breathing changes.
His head rests heavier against the porcelain. His lips part around soft, even breaths. His eyes flutter shut.
Then, he leans.
Barely enough to notice. But you feel it, the subtle tilt of his head toward your hands.
Like a plant bending toward light.
You wonder, not for the first time, how long itâs been since someone touched him like this. How long heâs gone without care, without softness.
And maybe thatâs why this hurts so much.
Because youâd had him pegged, hadnât you?
The hair. The charm. Pretty boy, ladiesâ man, heartbreaker.
King Steve.
But this? This isnât him.
This is the After.                                                                                      Â
The aftermath of Russians and monsters and lakes with no bottoms. The man who throws himself between danger and kids that arenât his, time and time again. Like heâs got something to prove. Or maybe something to atone for.
The one who apologized for bleeding on your floor.
This is someone whoâs forgotten how to be held.
And right now, heâs under your hands. Throat bared. Hair dripping. Leaning into your touch like heâs starved for it.
And that slow, sinking weight in your stomach settles for good. That gut-churn of realization that you barely know anything about the man who nearly bled out on your couch last night. Â
You try to swallow the feeling down. Try to keep your focus on softer things: dripping water, steam-soaked light, the silky-smooth slip of his hair between your fingers.
But every time your hands leave him, even for a second, you feel it. The tension in his frame. The hesitation in his breath. Like heâs bracing for it to end.
And each time you returnâthumb grazing his temple, palm cradling the back of his neckâhe breathes in. Relief, sharp and silent, tucked between the ribs.
You reach for the conditioner next, fingers trembling a little as you work it through. When you tip his head back, he goes easy. Pliant. Trusting.
And then a quiet thought hits you. Â Â
A hunch, really.
You let your fingers drift lower. Past the crown. Down to the nape of his neck. The hair there is softer, damp strands clinging to skin gone tight with tension and bruising.
You trace gently around the worst of it. Avoid the dark, angry lines where something had closed around his throat.Â
Strangled. Thatâs what Robin said. Â
You press into the muscle just beneath it, right where the pain likes to live.
Steve shudders. His head lifts from the tub with a breath, caught on something sharp.
But you donât let up.
You continue pressing in slow, deep circles, growing firmer.
Thereâs a sound, then. Sharp. Brief. A strangled thing, torn between a groan and a gasp.
He tries to stifle it a second later, clearing his throat.
âToo hard?â you ask quietly.
His voice comes cracked. âN-no. Justâitâs fine. You donât have toâŚâ
The rest trails off when you move to his shoulders next, thumb kneading into the dense muscle. Youâre not a massage therapist, but you know anatomy. You know where pain settles when itâs been left too long. How it tucks itself into the tender parts: the base of the neck, the hollow beneath the collarbone. Â
And god, heâs full of it. All the signs. All the tells.
He lets out another shaky breath, lips sealed around a sound he doesnât let out.
And there, just for a moment, you let yourself look.
At the bruises. The thin cuts just beginning to scab. The water gliding over his collarbone, beading into the curve of his chest.
That thick, molten part of your brainâthe masochist, the idiot, the one who says yes when she should absolutely say noâflares hot.
It wants to lean in.
Wants to touch your mouth to his skin, right there, at the slope of his throat.
Just to see if he tastes like lavender and heat. Just to see if he lets you.
To kiss him slow enough to wash the ache from his mouth. Replace every sharp thing heâs swallowed with something soft.
God, youâre losing it.
You drag your thumb again along the base of his neck. His lashes flutter.
Then, from the corner of your eye, you see itâhis hands shifting in his lap.
Cross. Adjust.
You glance down without thinking.
And oh.
Oh.
The sweatpants donât hide much. Not like this. Not with how heâs sitting, loose-limbed and open, the fabric soaked and clinging in ways it wasnât meant to. Theyâre pulled taut across the breadth of his thighs, darkened in patches where the waterâs seeped through.
And beneath that?
Yeah.
Your breath stutters. Heat rockets up your neck.
You yank your gaze away, fumbling for the faucet and filling another cup. Your hand trembles as you lift it, rinsing out the conditioner.
His hair sticks to his forehead. Without thinking, you smooth it back.
His eyes flutter open.
And the look he gives youâŚ
Itâs quiet. Devastating. Tucked somewhere tender and deep, pressed hard against bone.
Softer than longing. Sharper than want.
It's something that aches.
You donât know what to do with it.
So you just keep your hands in his hair.
And you rinse. Â
âŚ
You rinse long after the conditionerâs gone.
After his breath has evened out and the waterâs cooled to a gentle trickle, steam curling around your ankles like fog.
The bathroom smells like lavender and heat and skin that isnât yours.
When you reach for the towel and bring it up to his head, he leans.
Blot, pat, smooth. The towelâs too soft, your hands too careful. You graze the shell of his ear, the edge of his jaw, feeling the quick flutter of his pulse beneath your thumb.
His eyes are still on you.
âThanks,â he says, quiet. Â
You nod, not trusting your voice.
The steamâs thinning now, but the air still clings.
Too warm. Too full of something unsaid.
His breath brushes your cheek.
Youâre too close.
Itâs too much.
You could kiss him.Â
God help you, you could.
Just one lean forward. Thatâs all it would take. His mouth is right thereâslightly parted, pink and swollen in the middle where heâs been biting down.
And the look on his face isnât just gratitude. Not just relief.
Thatâs want.
And worse? Itâs yours too. Itâs in the pit of your stomach, burning upward. Itâs in your hands, your chest, your throat, curling behind your teeth like smoke with nowhere to go.
You pull back abruptly. The towel slips from your hands and lands in his lap with a soft thud.
âOkay,â you say, voice tight. âYouâre good.â
Steve blinks, like you just dragged him up from underwater.
His throat bobs. âCool. Yeah. Thanks.â
You stand too fast. Your knees pop. You donât look at him when you speak next. âYou should lie down for a bit. Keep pressure off the stitches.â
He nods, a little too slow.
You grab the towel again and press it against his chest. Not hard, but firm enough to make a point. Whatever it is.
Then you turn.
And you walk out.
You donât need to look back to know heâs still watching you go.
...
It starts the way summer storms do.Â
Not with thunder. Not with rain.
With pressure.
The kind that presses close to the skin, wrapping around like a second layer. That hair-raising, skin-prickling tingle. Right as the birds go quiet and the trees hold still and the sky forgets how to move.
Stillness so absolute your skin buzzes with it.
The moment before it tips.Â
Itâs here now. In this room.
In the narrow inches of couch cushion between you. In the weight of the blanket tangled over your legs. In the single, unspoken brush of his thigh against yours.
The TV plays to no one. A dull flicker of static and synth beats, some late-afternoon rerun neither of you are really watching. The glow of it pulses dim blue across his skin, the shadows deepening where his jaw tightens every time you move.
The room smells like clean skin and new sweat. Yours. His. Both.
His voice breaks the quiet.
âHey, how long âtil the stitches come out again?â
âTen days.â
âHm. I like this show.â
âKnight Rider?â
âYeah. Itâs cool.â
âNo. Itâs dumb.â
âWhat? Câmon, the car talks.â
âExactly.â A beat. âHow do the stitches feel?â
âUh, good. Yeah. Theyâre fine.â
âYou hungry?â
âNo, you?â
âNo.â
And it builds, again. That low, rolling kind of stillness.
Storm pressure. Â
It crawls up your spine. Pools hot behind your ears. You fidget with the hem of the blanket, rolling your shoulder back into the cushion like you can shake it loose.
You canât.
The blanketâs too warm.
Heâs too close.
And heâs watching you. You donât have to look to know. Â
ââŚYouâre doing it again.â
âHm?â
You turn your head. Meet his gaze full-on. âLooking at me like that.â
His lips part. âLike what?â
Your eyes drop to his mouth.
His pinky brushes yours.
And just like that, the storm breaks.
âŚ
Steve leans in first.
The same way he had in the bathroom, instinctive and unthinking. Like something inside him keeps tipping forward and youâre the only place left to fall.
Only this time, you donât let him do it alone.
You meet him halfway.
His nose nudges yours. His breath fans hot across your cheek.
And then your lips meet.
A question and an answer, exchanged wordlessly.
Thereâs no clean edge between want and need, no way to separate gentle from hungry. One second, itâs the cautious warmth of shared breath, the nextâ
Itâs the pull of his hands. The low, wrecked sound he makes in his throat when your fingers slide up his neck, threading into the damp hair at his nape. Â
Heat. Ozone. The bright-white zing of electricity rocketing down your spine.
You move forward without thinking. He shifts to catch you, hands spanning your hips, guiding you into his lap. You straddle him, careful to avoid the bruises across his stomach.
His breath is hot. His lips are plush, a little chapped from the way heâs been chewing on them all night.
Wordlessly, you reach for the hem of your shirt, tugging it over your head and letting it fall behind you. Cool air rushes over your skin.
Steve goes still. âGod, youâreâŚâ He breathes, throat working around the rest of the words when you take his hand and guide it upwards. Across your stomach, up your ribs. His thumb grazes over your nipple, soft and reverent, and your breath hitches.
You tug him back into a kiss, hips starting to drag across his lap. The hard press of him burns heat through the cotton of your sleep shorts.
âGood?â you breathe against his mouth. Â
âYeah,â he rasps. âFuck. Yeah. You?â
You nod, catching your breath.
But he doesnât stop looking at you
And thereâs something about the way his gaze lingersâsoft, searchingâlike heâs waiting for more than just an answer to a question. Something he doesnât know how to say out loud.
But you know.
You just⌠know.
The same way you knew when your hands were in his hair earlier. That quiet ache. That silent pull in him, desperate and soft.
So you give him what he doesnât know how to ask for.
Your hand slides up to his chest, pressing over his heart. Itâs pounding. So is yours.
âYou feel so good, Steve,â you whisper, close enough for him to taste the words off your lips. âYouâre so good. So fucking good.â
He shudders, pulling you in tighter, groaning with his lips buried against your neck like he needs to hide the sound somewhere safe.
Still, you donât stop.Â
You reach for his hand and slide it lower, under the waistband of your shorts. His fingers slip through your slick heat and go still.
âJesus,â he breathes.Â
You kiss his temple, then his cheek. Frame his jaw with both hands and lift his gaze to yours.
âFeel that?â you murmur. âThatâs for you. All for you.â
He lets out a strangled sound, nearly pained, and surges up to kiss you again. His fingers start to stroke through your heat, finding the rhythm, learning you. When his thumb grazes your clit and starts to circle, you gasp, hips jerking into his touch.
âShit, babyâŚâ he breathes.  Â
And that wordâ
Itâs soft. Unconscious. Slipped out before he knew it was there.
You donât think he even realizes he said it. His eyes are blown wide, focused only on you: the way your hips grind, the way you cling to him when his fingers push deeper.
Still, thereâs that tremble in his voice.
Like that word came from somewhere deeper than he meant to reach. Like it cracked off the part of him thatâs always waiting to be turned away but still dares to offer softness first.
You roll your hips again, chasing friction, but your focus has shifted now. Youâre watching him insteadâflushed and open beneath you, mouth parted, eyes locked to your face like youâre something heâs trying to memorize.
And it guts you. The honesty of it.
How easy it is to see now.    Â
That this is someone who aches for closeness. Reaches for it before he even realizes heâs doing it. Who says baby like itâs the only word he knows for want.Â
Your chest grows tight. The heat in your stomach twists into something unbearably tender.
You roll your hips one last time, savoring the drag of him against you, then shift off his lap. His hand slips from your shorts, reluctant, trailing warmth up your stomach.
His eyes follow you as you slide to the floor. Your knees sinking into the carpet, fingers hooking in the waistband of his pants. He lifts his hips andâ
You blink. Your mouth goes dry.
Because heâsâ
Wow. Okay.
Noted.
Itâs not just the sizeâthough, yeah, thatâs definitely part of it. Itâs the weight of him. The flushed color, the dusky warmth. Velvety skin stretched tight over thick veins. The way he sits heavy against his thigh, curved just slightly, leaking at the tip and twitching under your gaze.
You swallow hard.
âWhat?â He stirs, uncertain. âIs somethingâŚ?â
You look up at him, eyes wide. Â Â
âJesus, SteveâŚâ you breathe. âJust. Holy shit.â
His brows pinch together, concern flickering across his faceâuntil he sees your expression.
And there it is.
That grin. That stupid, boyish, shit-eating grin.
âOh,â he says, trying to play it off. âYeah?â
You narrow your eyes, desperately trying to hide your smile. âDonât get cocky.â
He raises a brow. Â
You realize your mistake immediately. Your cheeks flare hot.
He laughs, breathless. Looks down at you all soft and pleased and fond. It makes you want to bite him until he forgets how to smirk entirely. Kiss him stupid and never let him go.
âShut up,â you mutter.
âDidnât say anything,â he says, still smiling.
You roll your eyes and yank his pants the rest of the way down.
He quiets instantly.
Because your hands are on him now.
You stroke his thighs first, warming up the sensitive skin there. Pressing soft kisses along the inside, inching higher and higher until heâs twitching under your mouth.
âYouâre so pretty like this,â you whisper. âYou donât even know, do you?â
He makes a strangled sound, part laugh, part disbelieving groan. His hands flex where they rest against his thighs.
You reach up and guide one to your hair, eyes still on his.
âYou can touch me,â you murmur. Â Â Â Â Â
His fingers curl, tentative. âYou sure?â
You nod. âI want you to. Want you to feel this.â
Then, without looking away, you lower your mouth to him.
Slow. Wet. Base to tip, dragging your tongue along the underside. He jerks, whole body going taut. Â
âJesus,â he hisses. âOkay. Okay.â
You take your time. Because no one ever has, it seems. Not like this. Â
Your fingers wrap around the base, tongue gliding along the ridge, licking the salt beading at the tip. Every twitch, every shudder, every wrecked baby whispered from above becomes something you file away silently, cataloguing the way he unravels.
And Steve unravels beautifully.
You glance up through your lashes, watching the way his stomach trembles, how his throat works. All the control heâs trying so hard to hold on to.
Then finally, you wrap your lips around him.
Just the head at first, sucking slow and sweet. You circle your tongue around the crown and let out a soft hum.
âFuck,â he whispers. âBaby, your mouthâshitââ
His voice keeps catching like he doesnât quite believe it. You get the sense he hasnât been cherished in this way, either. Adored. Worshipped.
So you double down.
You ease off for a breath, kissing the flushed tip, thumb gliding over the sensitive skin there. Then you sink deeper, lips sliding lower, jaw loosening, tongue tracing the underside as you stretch around the thickest part of him. Â
You keep going until heâs pressed up against your palate, brushing the back of your throat. You breathe into it. Let the weight of him sit there, hot and thick and yours.
âShit, shitââ he pants. âIâm notânot gonna last if you keepâ"
You pull off with a soft pop, lips slick and swollen. A line of spit follows you from the flushed head of his cock.
âItâs okay,â you smile, breath warm against his skin. âDonât have to. Just want you to feel good.â
He stares down at you, cheeks flushed, eyes glassy.
Then, suddenly, breathless and earnest:
âWait, can Iâcan I get you off first?âÂ
You pause, stunned. Â
You blink up at him, hand still wrapped around the base of his cock. âYou donât have toââ
âI want to,â he says, quick and pleading. He cups your jaw, stroking your cheek. âPlease. Let me?â
You hold his gaze a moment longer, drowning in that quiet, unspoken vulnerability he carries, one youâre learning to name without words.
Then, finally, you nod.
âOkay.â
You crawl back into his lap, shorts discarded somewhere behind you, it doesnât matter where.
What matters is the way his hands settle on you again, calloused palms sliding around your hips, drawing you closer. You feel the thick heat of him pressed between your thighs, sticky and flushed and aching.
You roll your hips teasingly, gliding against him before reaching down to line him up. The head of his cock nudges, presses, catches. Then slowly, inch by inch, you sink down.
The stretch is immediate. Hot and all-consuming. You clutch at his shoulders, mouth falling open as you let your weight sink deeper, not pausing until heâs fully seated.
Your thighs tremble where you straddle him.
Steve groans low, one arm tight around your waist, the other gripping your hip.
âShit, are youâ?â
âIâm okay,â you breathe, laughing softly into his skin. âJust⌠gimme a sec. Youâre kind of a lot, Harrington.â Â
He kisses you, rubbing circles into your back while you adjust. The burn softens. The fullness remains.
And when you start to moveâlifting your hips, rolling them back downâyou feel him everywhere.
âGod,â you pant, âyou feel so good.â
You kiss his jaw, his throat, burying whispers between breaths.
âCan feel you so deepâfuckââ Â
The rhythm builds slowly. Wide circles, deep grinds, savoring the way his cock hits just right.
And the more you give himâYou feel so good, Fucking me so well, Low how you feel inside meâhe melts a little more beneath you.
âShit, right thereââ you gasp, hips stuttering when his hand slides between your bodies, pressing into your clit.
âCome for me,â he whispers, voice rough. âPlease. Want to feel you.â
His fingers circle faster. Â
And your body breaks.
You cry out, nails digging into his shoulders, every muscle clenched and trembling as the orgasm crashes through you. You collapse against his chest, shaking, gasping his name, everything hot and white and so much.   Â
He holds you through it, breathing hard against your temple.
âThatâs it,â he pants. âThatâs it, baby, Iâve got youâfuckââ
Youâre still trembling in his lap when you feel him thrust up into you once, twice. He pulls out with a sudden gasp, groaning your name, spilling hot and thick across your stomach, shuddering with the force of it.
You kiss him through the haze of your own come-down, legs still trembling, fingers tangled in the sweat-damp hair at his nape.
âJust like that,â you whisper. âYouâre perfect like this, Steve. So good.â
His breath stutters against your cheek. His body, still pulsing with aftershocks, presses into yours like he canât stand the space between.
And even after the world goes still, after the stuttered breaths give way to silence and the hum of the TV creeps back in, you keep touching him. Stroking his hair, brushing sweat from his brow, pressing soft, open-mouthed kisses anywhere your mouth can reach.
And in the hush that follows, you murmur things youâve never said aloud. Not to anyone.
Things too raw for daylight.
Things meant only for him.
âŚ
You never ask him to stay.
Not when he wakes beside you the next morning, bare-chested, sleep-warm, hair sticking up in a dozen directions. Not when he wanders into your kitchen wearing nothing but rumpled boxers, whisking eggs for French toast like itâs an inside joke youâve shared forever.
Not when you start leaving the sugar bowl out because thatâs how he takes his coffee: one teaspoon, no milk. Not when you slip a second toothbrush into the cup by the sink, bristles leaning together like theyâve been kissing too. Â
He never asks. You never offer.
âŚ
You learn the little things first.
That he hums when he cooks, usually something dumb from the radio, sometimes dumber jingles from the worst commercials. That he wipes down your counters when he thinks youâre not looking. That he folds your laundry better than you do, big hands careful with worn-out cotton and delicate lace. It gets to you, the way he touches your things like they matter.
And sometimes, you catch him staring again.
Only now, you donât look away. Â
Youâll be across the room, pretending to read, eyes dragging over the same sentence for the fifth time because you can feel his gaze on you. Heâll be leaning in the doorway with his arms crossed, wearing that stupid smug expression he pulls when he knows exactly what heâs doing.
âSeriously, Harrington,â you mutter, eyes on the page. âTake a picture.â
He doesnât blink. âIâm good. Like this view better."
You roll your eyes and throw a sock at his face. He catches it one-handed, smug.
Then he moves.
Three steps. Thatâs all it takes.
Three steps until your backâs against the mattress, his weight pressing you down, mouth dragging hot across your collarbone. His hands sneak under your shirt, warm palms sliding up your ribs. His lips chase yours like itâs a promise heâs been dying to keep.
âYouâre annoying,â you whisper, breath hitching as he nips at your neck.
He grins into your skin. âYeah? You gonna kick me out, then?â
You donât.
You kind of never do.
âŚ
The days bleed together after that. Â
A quick stop at his house to grab spare clothes turns into a silent pause in front of his dresser. His fingers hover over a framed photo: faces you donât know, smiles frozen mid-laugh.
He doesnât explain. You donât ask. You just wait by the door until he turns and threads his fingers through yours.
He doesnât let go the whole ride back.
A grocery run on day three turns into a dumb argument in the pasta aisle. Youâre ranting about canned tomatoes; heâs trailing behind you like a sulking toddler, forearms slung across the cart handle, sneaking cookies into the basket when youâre not looking.
You scowl at checkout. He grins.
âYouâre gonna thank me later,â he says.
You do.
First with a mouthful of chocolate and a grudging laugh.
Then again, ten minutes later, when your 'thank-you's come in the shape of his name and a fistful of his hair between your thighs.
âŚ
Eventually, the domestic stops feeling borrowed.
It starts to feel owned. Â
You vacuum, he sweeps. You cook, he washes up. He steals bites of dinner while itâs still sizzling and you smack him with a spatula, pretending to be mad.
He says, âOw,â even when it doesnât hurt. You say, âAsshole,â even when itâs not true.
On the fourth night, you both sit cross-legged on the living room floor, scrubbing blood out of the couch cushions with baking soda and half-assed prayers.
Heâs watching you. Again. Â Â
You glance up. "What?"
He shrugs, smiling a little. âNothing.â
âSteve.â
âI justâŚâ He hesitates. Looks down. âI like this.â
You raise a brow. âCleaning your blood out of my furniture?â
He shuffles forward, bringing his cushion closer to yours.
âYeah,â he says.
But itâs not what he means.
You both know that.
âŚ
The sex changes, too.
In the mornings, itâs quiet. Slow. All languid stretches and sleep-warm skin, coaxing sighs from your lips as the sun peeks through the blinds.
But at night? Heâs something else entirely.
He fucks you like he needs it to survive. Like youâre his last breath. Gripping your thighs, your hipsâholding you open, holding you still, driving into you like heâs trying to memorize the shape of you forever.
And as the bruises fade, so does his hesitation.Â
He knows you now.
Knows what makes you beg, what makes you break. Where to bite, where to suck, where to press until your voice is raw and your nails leave crescent moons down his spine.
One night, he pins your wrists above your head, breath ragged.
âSay it,â he murmurs, grinding deep. âTell me who makes you feel like this.â
You break on his name.
He swallows the sound with his mouth and doesnât stop until your thighs are shaking.
And afterward, he stays.
Inside you. Around you.
He never pulls away first.
âŚ
Not all nights are easy.
Some nights, you wake alone.
You find him in the kitchen, framed by the glow of the open fridge. The light catches the tired slope of his shoulders, the untouched glass of water going warm in his hand. Â Â Â
You donât ask. Just step in behind him, press your cheek between his shoulder blades, and wrap your arms tight around his waist.
He breathes out. Sets the glass down. Closes the fridge.
When he turns, he doesnât speak. Just lets you hold him.
Lets you guide him back to bed.
âŚ
Your mornings are different now. Â
You wake in shirts that smell like him. Brush your teeth while he showers, fog curling across the mirror. He laughs at something stupid from behind the curtain, and you laugh back, still half-asleep.
It all happens so slowly you almost miss it.
The toothbrush that isnât yours. The second pillow with its permanent dent. The pair of shoes you stop tripping over by the door because youâve learned to walk around them.
Heâs etched himself into your life in the smallest of ways. Fit through the cracks with warm hands and boyish grins and quiet looks in the daylight.
Like maybe he was meant to be here all along.
âŚ
Somewhere between day seven and eight, you stop keeping count.Â
Because every morning, you tell yourself heâll probably leave soon.
And every night, he gives you another reason to believe he wonât.
âŚ
Like tonight.
Youâre wrapped around each other, skin still damp with heat, covers shoved somewhere near the foot of the bed. His hand rests on your back, fingers splayed. Yours curls against his chest, cheek pressed to the slow, steady rhythm behind his ribs.
It would be so easy to stay here.
To let the quiet stretch. To pretend the heaviness in your chest is just exhaustion, not the weight you've been carrying since the night you dragged his bleeding body across your living room. Since you sat awake beside him, watching every shallow breath, waiting for the next one to come.
But the questionâs been sitting on your chest for days now. And with the weight of him beside you, it presses too hard to ignore.
âWhyâd you do it?â
He doesnât answer right away, and you wonder if heâs already fallen asleep. But then his chest rises under your cheekâa careful, deliberate breath.
ââŚDo what?â Â
âThe lake,â you murmur. âYou jumped in first. Why?â
Heâs quiet for a beat too long. You glance up to find the tight underside of his jaw, his eyes fixed on the ceiling.
âI donât know,â he sighs, dragging a hand through his hair. âSomeone had to go. And I was the best swimmer, so. Didnât really have to think about it.â
And you believe him. Itâs the part that hurts the most.
That he didnât have to think. That throwing himself in came as naturally as breathing.
Because somewhere along the way, Steve Harrington decided that his pain was worth less than everyone else's.
You shift closer, hooking your chin on his shoulder. His thumb draws slow, thoughtful circles against your spine.
âSteve,â you say quietly. âYou know itâs not about being a hero, right? You donât have to keep throwing yourself in front of everything just to prove yourself.â
His hand stills.
âIâm not.â Â
âNot what?â
âA hero. Iâm not.â He lets out a bitter huff, eyes looking at something past the ceiling. âI was⌠just kind of a selfish asshole for a long time. Didnât care about much. Or anyone. And even after I tried to fix it, it justâit never felt like enough. Still doesnât.â
You watch him, the weight of his words like pressing down on a bruise.
âSo what, you jump into lakes now to make up for it?â
He almost smiles. âKinda. Yeah.â
Then, quieter:
âI donât know, itâs like, if Iâm not the one stepping up, then⌠whatâs the point, you know? What the hell am I even good for?â
Your heart aches. Because god, how long has he carried that? How many times has he thrown himself in just to keep from drowning?
You see it then, the fracture that runs through him. Spiderwebbed across everything he is, everything he was. A wound so old itâs fused to him. Clotted over, never cleaned. Â
The weight he carries isnât something he puts on; itâs something that grew with him.
Years of being told he wasnât enough. Not smart enough. Not serious enough. Just the boy with the car, the smile, the house too big for how small it made him feel.Â
That kind of doubt doesnât heal. It burrows deep.
Sinks its teeth in. Festers. Â Â
Until guilt turns into remorse,
Remorse turns into habit,
And habit drags on as penance.
So he made himself useful.
Built his worth out of protection. Of stepping up, stepping in, taking the hit before anyone else could.
Diving first. Bleeding first.
Hurt first. Hurt worst. Hurt instead.
Thatâs where his value lives. Not in being loved, but in being needed.
You lift yourself up until you're eye to eye, cupping his face, thumbs brushing the tops of his cheeks. Â
âYouâre for you, Steve.âÂ
He blinks, brows knitting.
âYou donât have to earn it. Being loved. Being cared for. Thatâs not something you have to prove.â
His eyes search yours, like heâs trying to make sense of the words.
Then, slowly, his shoulders ease. He cups the back of your neck, drawing you in. His exhale against your lips sounds like a weight being untethered.
You stay like that for a while, breathing together, fingers laced at his chest.
Eventually, he sleeps.
You donât.
You stay awake, tracing the lines of his face in the dark. The peace that sleep gives him. The stillness that never lasts. Â
You watch as his brow smooths. As his lips part. As his lashes flutter once, then settle into stillness.
You stay up. Â
Because someone has to.
âŚ
You get used to the quiet.
Used to Steve padding around the house in socks, humming half a tune under his breath.
To the way he opens every cupboard before finding the cereal thatâs been in the same spot for days.
To the way he claims half your couch, half your bed, half your toothpaste.
You get used to someone elseâs heartbeat in your space.
So when the knocking startsâthree sharp raps that rattle the woodâit takes you both by surprise.
Steveâs already halfway to the door when you follow, tugging your sweatshirt over your head.
Youâve barely turned the knob before the door bursts open.
âGuess whoâs officially un-grounded and here to collect her idiot boy? Oh, and lookâI brought backup!â
Robin barrels in first, followed by two figures: a curly-haired kid drowning in a bright yellow baseball cap, and behind him, a taller shape in black denim and leather. Eddie Munson, wearing that same smug grin you remember vaguely from high school.
Youâve heard about them, of courseâSteveâs strange little apocalypse crewâbut hearing about it is one thing, seeing it is another.
âHeâs alive!â Robin crows, flinging her arms around Steve.
âTook you long enough,â he mutters into her shoulder.
âUh, excuse me. Your fault,â she shoots back, jabbing a finger in his chest. âGrounded, remember?â Then she turns to you, eyes sharp with curiosity. âSo? How much trouble was he?â  Â
You glance over at Steve. Heâs already looking back, mouth tugging at the corner like heâs daring you to say something first. Thereâs a kaleidoscope of memory that flashes between you in the space of a blink.
You look back at Robin and shrug, casual as ever. âNot much. He folds my laundry now.â
Robin gasps. Eddie lets out a low whistle.
âWell, shit,â he drawls. âSteve Harrington, domesticated. Didnât think Iâd live to see the day.â
Steve rolls his eyes. âYou guys are hilarious.â
But his ears are pink by the time you close the door.
âŚ
After a round of burnt grilled cheeses, the kitchenâs a mess of crumbs and chatter.
Robin perches on a stool, slurping tomato soup straight from the pot. Eddieâs straddling a chair backwards, drumming on the counter. Dustin paces, orchestrating what sounds like a full-scale military operation using a butter knife and a salt shaker.Â
ââIâm saying if we shift the rendezvous point closer to the treeline, we can cut our response time in half. Minimum.â
Steve leans against the fridge, nodding like heâs catching every third word.
Youâre at the sink, rinsing dishes, the voices behind you fading into a comfortable humâuntil Dustin steps in beside you, tone low and careful.
âSo⌠heâs okay to come back now, right?
You glance over your shoulder.
Steveâs got his shirt hiked up for Robin and Eddie to see, scars catching the kitchen lightâpale and raised, still tender from where you pulled out the last stitch two days ago. Robin wrinkles her nose, groaning about how she's lost her appetite.
You turn back to Dustin. âI mean, no fever, no infection. Doesnât seem to be actively dying. So yeah, Iâd say heâs good.â
Dustin beams. âAwesome.â
You hesitate. Then, before you can stop yourself:
âActually⌠I was thinking I could come with you guys this time.â
The room goes still.
Robin lowers her spoon. Eddie looks up. Even the sink seems to hush.
Steveâs voice breaks the quiet.
âNo.â
You turn, incredulous. âExcuse me?â
âNo way,â he says, pushing off the fridge, crossing the kitchen with that particular brand of determined worry youâve come to recognize. âYouâre not going.â
You blink at him like, Seriously?
He raises his brows like, Try me.Â
You sigh, turning off the water. âI wouldnât be going in. Just close enough to help. You know, in case someone ends up bleeding to death again?â You shoot him a pointed look.
He ignores it, jaw working like heâs gearing up to argue again. But Dustin cuts in.
âWait, thatâs actually kind of genius,â he mutters thoughtfully. âYou could be our medic. LikeâEddie, dude, she could be like our cleric!â
You frown. âOur what now?â
âD&D thing,â Eddie smirks. âHealing spells. Keeps the rest of us idiots alive.â
You laugh softly. âSure. Okay. Cleric.â
But Steve isnât laughing.
âWait, justâhang on,â he steps forward, catching your wrist. âCan I talk to you for a second?â
âŚ
The hallway is narrow and dim, lit only by the slant of light spilling in from the kitchen.
You lean against the wall, arms crossed, watching him pace three slow steps before stopping, running both hands through his hair.     Â
He doesnât look at you. Doesnât speak.
You wait.
Finally, quietly: âYou canât come with us.â
You narrow your eyes. âYouâre not the boss of me.â
âI mean it.â His voice is low. Firm. But itâs not angry. Not that sharp, flinty tone you remember from high school, when he used to wield confidence like armor. No, this is something else.
Fear.
You tilt your head, voice softening. âSteveâŚâ
He exhales through his nose, more of a tremor than a breath. âYou heard what itâs like down there. You saw what happened last time.â
âI did. Thatâs why Iâve decided to go.â
His eyes snap to yours, incredulous. âAnd you didnât think to talk to me about it before?â
âWhy? So you could freak out and tell me no?â
âIâm notââ He cuts himself off, jaw flexing. âI just canât ask you to risk that. Itâs not fair.â
âYouâre not asking,â you say quietly. âIâm offering.âÂ
For a moment, neither of you moves. He stares at you like heâs searching for somethingâsome argument, some loophole thatâll make you stay here while he walks back into hell. Like if he keep fighting back, maybe he wonât have to admit what this really is.
But when he speaks, his voice isnât tense anymore. It just trembles. Â
âI canâtâI canât lose you in there. You get that? I canât. I justâŚâ His eyes flicker away, toward the shadowed doorway behind you. He swallows hard.
â...I just got you.â
The quiet stretches. You gaze at him, heart heavy.
His shoulders are tense when you reach for his hand. His fingers twitch in yours, like heâs ready to pull awayâbut he doesnât. He never does.
âSteve,â you start gently. âI know youâre scared. I am too. But I canât just sit here and wait while you...â you take a breath, squeezing his hand. âIf thereâs a chance I can help, Iâm taking it.â Â Â
He looks down at your joined hands, your fingers laced tight. His thumb drags slow, absent circles against your skinâonce, twice, like heâs trying to memorize the feel of it. The fight drains out of him with a sigh that sounds too big for his chest.
He steps forward wordlessly, and pulls you into his arms. His chin drops to the top of your head. You press your cheek to his chest, feeling the wild rhythm of his heart start to slow.
âFine,â he murmurs. âBut youâre staying up here. Radio only. And youâre not going anywhere near the gate, you hear me?â
You smile into his shirt. âDeal.â
âŚ
Itâs almost 3 p.m. when he stirs.
The sunlightâs lazy this time of day, all thick and golden, caught in the slow spin of dust motes above the coffee table. The air smells like coffee and the lavender candle you lit this morning. Youâre curled sideways on the couch, a book open but long forgotten on your chest.
âJesus,â comes a voice beside you, rough with sleep. âHow long was I out?â
You smile, already watching. âCouple hours.â Â
He squints at the light. âYou let me nap that long?â
âYou needed it.â
Steve rolls up from where he was buried in the couch, a soft pillow line stamped across his cheek. His hairâs flattened on one side and sticking up in the back. You reach out and comb your fingers through the mess. It fluffs up worse for it, but he sighs and leans into your hand anyway.
He trades the throw pillow for your stomach, draping a heavy arm across your waist. You rest your palm on his shoulder, thumb tracing the ridge of his collarbone.
The house hums around you: the low buzz of the fridge, the steady tick of the clock, the soft creak of settling wood. Itâs a silence that no longer feels hollow.
You let it breathe. Â
Itâs been three weeks.
Three weeks since you stood on the other side of a collapsing gate, heart in your throat, waiting for their silhouettes to break through the mist.Â
Three weeks since the air finally stilled, the ground stopped shaking, and the last portal sealed itself shut behind Eddie, behind Robin, behind all of them.
Three weeks since you checked every pulse, cleaned every wound, counted every head, and realized, miraculously, that no one was missing.
That everyone made it out. Alive. Together.
Three weeks since Steve stumbled out of the wreckage and into your arms and didnât let go.
The bruises have faded since then. The stitches dissolved. The nightmares are fewer now, further between. Â Â
And Steve hasnât left. Not once.
You're not sure when it stopped being temporary. When duffel bags became dresser drawers, when his shaving cream started living on your bathroom counter, next to the ceramic dish that holds your rings. When the dent in your couch, the dip in your pillow, stopped feeling like borrowed space and started feeling like home.
He still has his edges, the instinct to fix, to shield, to throw himself in front of the next disaster before it happens. But youâve learned how to slow him down. To be the hand that pulls him back before he burns himself out.
And heâs learning to let you.
Youâre halfway lost in that thought when he pokes your side.
âHey,â he murmurs. âYou okay?â
You hum. âJust thinking.â
âUh oh,â he teases, voice still scratchy with sleep.
You smile, ruffling his hair. He groans and nips playfully at your stomach. When your laughter settles, you say it, quietly:
âI was just⌠thinking about what you said.â
He stills, blinking up at you. âYeah? Whatâd I say now?â
âAt the gate.â
Thatâs all you have to say. You both remember.
The roar, the smoke, the sting of blood and dirt. The ground giving out beneath you when he finally made it outâonly to tell you he had to go back. One last time. To help the others out. To step into the jaws of a place that wanted to claim him for good.
I know! I know! JustâI need to tell you something. No, I know, just listenâ
You remember the chaos closing in, the sky fractured by fire and screaming metal, and his handsâsteady, impossibly steadyâas he caught your face. His voice cracking on the words:
I love you. I need you to know that, okay? I love you.
You stare at the book laying on your chest, swallowing hard. âI never said it back.â
Steve looks at you for a long moment.
Then, softly: âYeah, you did.â
âWhen?â
He smiles, tracing a quiet pattern along your waist.
âNot out loud. But you did.â
You think back.
To the tremor in your hands as you let his fingers slip away. The hitch in your breath when the walkie crackled with his voice. To how tightly you held on when he staggered out with the others, bruised and shaking and breathing, and realized you could finally breathe too.
Every heartbeat since has felt like a promise.
Maybe words wouldâve failed then. Maybe he heard it in all the ways you refused to let go.
Your fingers find his jaw.
âStill,â you whisper. âI want to say it now.â
He tilts his head, waiting.
And you do.
Softly, firmly, the words falling easy like theyâd been waiting inside you all along.
And when he says it back, you feel it in your chest long before you hear it.
âŚ
The house is still too small. The front door still sticks when it rains. The couch still carries the faint stain from that first night.
But itâs home.
More than it ever was. More than it ever couldâve been without him.
The proof is everywhere: his Ray-Bans next to your keys, a battered boombox on your plant windowsill, the Polaroid Robin took where heâs smiling at you instead of the camera.
Some nights still weigh heavy on him. When even rest wonât stay kind.
But on those nights, he finds you. He always will.
And somewhere between the grocery runs and movie marathons, between loud songs in the kitchen and quiet kisses before bed, it stopped feeling like borrowed time.
Itâs just time, now.
Yours.
Together.
âŚ
Robin once told you that you get off on fixing people.
She meant hearts. You meant bones.
Maybe she was right. Â
But maybe thatâs not such a bad thing.
You've named it something else now, anyway.
âŚ
epilogue
You stretch, set the book aside, and head for the kitchen.
Youâve got prep to do for night.
Steve moves in behind you, hair still rumpled, sleeves pushed to his elbows. He leans his hip against the counter, flipping through the Playerâs Handbook Dustin left last week, brow furrowed like heâs cramming for a test.
âI swear,â he mutters, squinting, âyou need a math degree to play this game.â
You laugh, laying a neat row of apple slices beside a bowl of pretzel sticks and M&Msâfuel for the chaos to come. âYouâll live.â
âNot if Eddie's dragon eats me.â
âWell, maybe you should listen to your cleric tonight, then.â
He grins, stealing a slice from the tray, then slides closer until heâs flush against you. His hips trap you against the counter, chest warm against your back. He leans into the crook of your neck, lips grazing your ear.
âYou know it's kinda hot when you boss me around, right?â
Before you can roll your eyes, he catches you by the hips and spins you around, grin breaking wide and easy. You love how it softens his face, how it creases the corners of his eyes.
Soon, the party will be hereâarms full of sodas, dice clattering in boxes, voices overlapping in familiar chaos. The house will fill with laughter, with the easy rhythm of shared lives.
But for now, itâs just him.
Rumpled hair. Soft smile. Apple-sweet kisses and the honey-gold hush of afternoon light.
And the sun keeps pouring in. Â Â
pairing: clark kent (superman 2025) x reader
summary: clark is light in ways the world doesnât always notice. he makes breakfast for dinner, reads to you when youâre sick, peels oranges like his mom used to, and sunbathes on the fire escape like a houseplant that loves way too hard. he doesnât say âi love youâ until the light is just right and youâre wrapped up in him like a second skin, but he shows it every day in the way he stays. inspired by the orange poem by wendy cope. (or alternatively: 4 times he showed you he loves you + 1 time he says it)Â listen to the playlist here.
word count: 11.1 k. oops. i swear this was only supposed to be 8k words but unfortunately, i'm insane.
content warnings: 18+ mdni, fem!reader, established relationship, piv sex, character study, dom/sub undertones, switching (reader and clark take turns domming/subbing), marking kink, hair pulling, big soft men who are whipped for you, soft but kind of unhinged sex, size kink (clark picks up the reader/pins them down), nipple play, unprotected sex, oral (fem!receiving), outdoor sex (sex against a tree), face riding, public sex, use of pet names, tooth-rotting fluff, my love letter to midwest summers!
Your boyfriend photosynthesizes.
Well, that's the joke, anyway.Â
Youâve said it so many times now it might as well be printed on a T-shirt. My Boyfriend Is Solar-Powered! in Comic Sans. Or maybe Papyrus. Whatever will annoy him the most. Haven't really decided yet.
It started out as a throwaway line, one of those things you kind of just say when youâre half-awake and fully-annoyed because heâs hogging the sunny spot in the kitchen again like a smug, six-foot-four housecat with insane shoulders and even more insane bedhead.
But the first time you said itâlike, actually really said itâhe was standing by the window, shirtless, holding his coffee in that chipped blue mug that says "My Son's a Smallville Elementary Grad!" and somehow survived a farm, a college dorm, three apartments, and a move cross-country.Â
The light was doing that thing it loves to do in the morning, all golden and warm and syrupy, catching on his collarbones and the slope of his neck like he was painted by fucking Michelangelo. He had one hip braced against the counter, the other leg crooked, like someone told him to look as unintentionally hot as possible while waiting for the kettle filled with your guys' tea to boil.
You blinked at him, still clutching your own mug and not yet caffeinated enough to regulate your mouth, and said, âDo you ever feel like⌠like a plant?â
He raised an eyebrow. Blew on his coffee. You can see the way his breath fogs up slightly, that super breath of his doing just enough to cool down his coffee to the perfect temperature. âThat a dig?â
âNo. Itâs just. Youâ" You waved vaguely in his direction. "Well, you just kinda look like youâre charging.â
That got a huff of a laugh. âWhat, like a phone?â
âNo,â you said, and grinned into your mug. âLike I said, a plant. Like you're photosynthesizing.â
After that, it became a thing.
He always smiled when you said it. Looked down at himself, half-amused, half-embarrassed. âI mean,â heâd say, âyouâre not wrong.â Or: âSomeoneâs gotta keep the plants company, y'know?"
But he never corrects you. Never laughs it off like itâs ridiculous.
Because it isnât.
Youâve seen the truth of it, slow and subtle and layered in all the small things. The way heâs just a smidge lighter on his feet after a sunny day, how he runs warmer, more golden, like someone turned the saturation up to a hundred. The way his voice softens, deeper, when heâs been in the sun too long. The way the shadows under his eyes seem less sharp after just an afternoon spent lying on the roof, pretending heâs napping when you both know heâs just... breathing.
And the bruises. Thatâs the part he thinks you donât see.
You do.
They heal so much faster when heâs been drenched in the sun. Youâve watched the inky blackish-purple fade to this sickly yellow in the span of a couple hours and tried really, really hard not to stare.Â
Youâve said nothing when he limped into bed one night after a particularly difficult battle and rolled out of it the next morning like absolutely nothing had even happened. Sometimes he winces and pretends itâs nothing. Sometimes he⌠forgets to pretend.
And still, you never say thatâs not normal out loud, even though itâs not. Because he isnât. Not in the way that matters. Not in the ways that make you love him.
You love him like a long exhale. Like a secret thatâs safe with you. Like the song you play on repeat in the car, the one you never get sick of, even though it makes your throat tighten every time.
Sometimes itâs peaceful, like when your ribs finally uncages and let someone else in for the first time in your life. But sometimes, sometimes it's just so fucking devastating.Â
Because heâs Clark. And Superman. And most importantly, he's yours.
And it feels too big. Too fragile. Like trying to hold water in your hands. You want to keep him safe, but you also want to keep him. The real him. The him that leaves you sticky notes that say âeat something, pleaseâ and walks around humming old Mighty Crabjoys songs and insists you donât have to fold my socks, seriously, who folds socks?
But you lie awake sometimes watching him breathe, thinking to yourself, How do I love someone that belongs to the world?
And the answer is: you just do. One day at a time. One morning at a time. One sunlit moment in the kitchen at a time.
That Monday morning, itâs the same as always.
You pad into the living room half-asleep, dragging your feet and wearing one of his T-shirts that hits you mid-thigh. Heâs already up, standing barefoot by the window, coffee in hand, arms folded loosely across his chest like heâs holding himself together in case he gets pulled apart again later.
Pause in the doorway. Watch him for a second. The light pooling around his ankles. His shoulders lift, just barely, when he hears your steps.
He doesnât turn.
âGuess what,â you say.
He smiles, small and crooked. âHmm?â
You cross the room. Slide your arms around his waist from behind and press your face between his shoulder blades, where the sunâs been warming him for at least half an hour.
âYouâre glowing again,â you murmur. âMust be that high-potency sunlight. You hogging the sun again?â
He laughs, the sound low and warm. âYou caught me.â
âYouâre a danger to local crops,â you whisper. Feel the goosebumps rising underneath his skin. âThe cornâs jealous.â
âOh no. Not the corn.â He turns a little, just enough to look down at you. His eyes are so fucking blue at that moment. âShould I apologize to the corn?â
âAbsolutely. Itâs your fault they canât compete. You're literally the reason why Iowa's GDP is going down.â
He leans in. Brushes a kiss to your temple. âIâll draft a formal statement for them later.â
You stay like that for a minute. Him holding you. You pressing your nose into the slope of his back, breathing him inâsunshine and laundry and that faint green note thatâs uniquely Clark. Like basil, or clean leaves. Like something still growing.
And you think: This is the part he doesnât say out loud.
This is how he tells you.
Not with words. Not yet.
Your boyfriend photosynthesizes. And maybe itâs not the kind of love you can pin down, or explain, or protect. But itâs real. Itâs alive.
And you love him.
And he, quietly, completely, loves you back.
(He hasnât said it yet. But you donât really need the words to know.)
.
Clark shows you he loves you in ways so small, theyâd be easy to miss if you didnât know how to look for them.Â
But you do. You catch them in those quiet little corners of the day.Â
How he folds down the corner of your book before you can reach for a receipt or a pen. How he touches your wrist, not yanking, just there, when you step into the street without looking. How he makes a soft sound of protestâahem, maybe more like politely exasperatedâwhen you try to carry six grocery bags at once like you, too, are invincible.
And then thereâs the orange.
Youâre curled into the couch, one of his sweatshirts swallowed over your knees, watchingâbut not really, to be honestâsome long-winded documentary about volcanoes or Icelandic horses or some other quietly majestic subject that definitely feels at odds with your mood. The narrator has this super calm, soothing British lilt and the lighting is very National Geographic: all muted blues and wide drone shots and crashing waves. You havenât really spoken in close to at least half an hour.
Clark doesnât push. Never does.Â
He just lets you sit in it, whatever it is, as long as you need to.Â
But eventually, he nudges your ankle with his socked foot, like a hello, and when you glance up, heâs setting something on the coffee table with a kind of shy precision.
An orange.
Already peeled.
Not just peeled. Sectioned. Arranged.
Itâs kind of ridiculous, how careful it is. No torn rind, no mangled wedges. The peelâs just laid out like a ribbon, one continuous spiral that speaks of time and gentleness and someone who took this seriously. Each segment is placed on a napkin, still glistening with juice, like a little offering.
You blink at it.
Then at him.
Heâs pretending to watch the TV, but his body betrays him. His shoulders just slightly angled toward you, eyes flicking sideways like heâs checking the weather.
âI didnât know if you were hungry,â he says after a beat. Like heâs not sure heâs allowed to say more. âBut itâs one of the sweet ones.â
Your throat does something stupid. You reach for a slice and hold it for a second, too long, then pop it into your mouth.
Itâs still cold from the fridge. Bright, juicy, perfect. Like summer broke through the haze in your chest.
You make a noise you donât mean to. Something between surprise and relief.
Clark shifts, trying to look casual, but you catch that familiar smile tugging at the corner of his mouth.
âI was gonna ask if you wanted one,â he says, still mostly facing the TV, his face painted in blue. âBut you looked kind of⌠I donât know. Stuck. So I figured Iâd just do it.â
âYou peeled it for me?â
He finally looks over at you, eyebrows lifted. âWell, yeah.â
And somehow thatâthatâis what catches in your chest. Not the orange, not the care. He says it like itâs obvious. Like of course he did. Like thereâs a whole world of things he would do just for you without even needing to be asked.
You swallow. âYou didnât have to.â
âI know,â he says, shrugging a little. âBut that's kind of the point.â
You donât say anything for a minute. Just reach for another slice.
When you bite into it, something in you loosens. Maybe itâs the juice. Maybe itâs the tenderness.
Clark, watching out of the corner of his eye, shifts a little closer and says, voice low, âWhen I was a kid, my ma used to 'em for me.â
You glance over. Heâs staring at the documentary again, but his tone when he says it, itâs not for the Icelandic horses on the screen.
âShe knew I hated the sticky part,â he goes on. âDidnât like having all that juice on my fingers. So sheâd do it before school. Wrap âem up in plastic, tuck âem in the corner of my lunchbox next to whatever sandwich she made that day. Tuna on Fridays. Always with too much mayo.â
You smile, just a little. âYou were a picky eater?â
âNot picky,â he says defensively. âJustâjust particular. I didnât like when my food touched.â
âMhm.â
âI was seven!â
You laugh, and he finally looks at you, sheepish and warm.
âShe used to write little notes sometimes too,â he adds. âOn the napkin. Stuff like âremember your science quizâ or âyouâre stronger than you think.ââ He scratches the back of his neck. âSometimes just a heart. Sometimes that was enough.â
You watch him as he says it, and you think, Of course. Of course you grew up like that. With kindness taught into you like table manners. With love folded into your lunchboxes.
âAnd now,â you say, voice subtle, âyouâre the one peeling oranges for someone else.â
He shrugs again. âOnly for you.â
You raise an eyebrow.
âI mean it,â he says. âEveryone else can deal with the sticky fingers. You get the napkin and everything.â
You press a slice into his hand before you can talk yourself out of it.
He pauses, then leans forward and bites it from your fingers, playful but gentle. A little juice escapes down the corner of his mouth. He licks it away without breaking eye contact.
It shouldnât make your heart ache. But it does.
âThank you,â you say quietly.
âFor the orange?â
âFor the orange. And the napkin. And, you know. The general care and keeping of me.â
He smiles at that. Tilts his head toward you until your shoulders brush.âWell,â he says, âyouâre pretty high-maintenance. Comes with the territory.â
You scoff, gently ebow him. âI am not.â
He raises his brows. âOkay. Yesterday, you made me reheat the tea because it was two degrees below your ideal sipping temperature.â
âThatâs not high-maintenance. Thatâs just me having standards.â
âSure,â he murmurs, bumping your knee with his. âAnd your standards include expertly peeled fruit on Tuesdays, apparently.â
You roll your eyes, but your smile gives you away. âI just meanâŚâ You trail off, unsure how to say it without sounding too serious, too much. You chew your lip, watching the light hit his profile. âI hope,â you say softly, almost to yourself, âyou never stop doing that.â
He leans his head against the back of the couch, close enough that his shoulder brushes yours. âWhat, feeding you citrus?â
You huff out a laugh. âYou know what I mean.â
He doesnât answer for a long moment. Then he says, simple and sure, like the truth it is:
âI wonât.â
.
You donât even really remember texting him. You think you mightâve. Maybe. Who knows.Â
In the middle of your 2 a.m. sick delirium, burning up and freezing at the same time, with every single cell in your body screaming and staging some sort of mutiny, you vaguely remember opening your phone with bleary eyes and typing something half-coherent.Â
A string of emojis. A sad face, a skull, a wilted flower. Vomit emoji. You mightâve hit send. You mightâve just passed out mid-thought.
Either way, Clarkâs there when you come to.
Heâs on the floor beside your bed, cross-legged, slouched a little in that way he always is when heâs trying to make himself smaller than he actually is. Heâs doing this thing he does similar to when he's reading out his first draftsâvoice low and even, a little scratchy like he hasnât used it much today, or maybe just because itâs the middle of the night and the Metropolis is quiet for once and so is he.
You blink, once, twice, groggily, and he doesnât even look up as he says:
ââŚand then I told Jimmy that if he was going to hide in the cafeteria instead of facing Eve, he should at least clean up after his brooding, because no one wants to sit next to a scone thatâs been glared at for thirty minutes."
That's when you make a soundâhalf a groan, half a breathâand he glances up.
âOh,â he says, smiling. âHey. Youâre awake.â
God, you swear your head's a pressure cooker. Your throat feels like someone lined it with sandpaper and regret. Youâre pretty sure youâre covered in sweat, and not in a sexy, cinematic way, but more in a swampy, bedraggled, my skin might never be clean again kind of way.Â
And yet here he is, reading from what you now realize is his work notebook.Â
Not even a novel. Just⌠Clark, narrating his week.
âGod,â you croak. âI think Iâm dying.â
Clark shifts immediately, one knee bent, his hand brushing against your arm like heâs checking for tremors. âYouâre not dying,â he says gently. âYouâre just sick. Classic human stuff. I Googled it to make sure.â
âYou Googled my flu?â
âYeah. Also called my dad.â
Your lips twitch. âOf course you did.â
âHe said tea, soup, and don't try to touch your toes.â
You blink at him. âI wasnât gonnaââ
âI didnât think you would. But he insisted.â
He presses a glass of water into your hand. Holds it there, actually, like you might forget what to do with it. You sip slowly, mostly because heâs watching you with the intensity of someone monitoring the nuclear launch codes. His hand stays curved behind your back the whole time, steady and warm, his thumb sweeping once over your shoulderblade.
âStill tastes like shit,â you mutter, grimacing.
âThatâs just your fever lying to you,â he says. âGive it time. I brought supplies.â
Which is how, ten minutes later, youâre propped up like a limp marionette with three pillows, wearing one of his hoodies, while Clark, bless him, is rumbling around in your kitchen making the worldâs most dramatic instant ramen.
He hums while he works, something mellow and vaguely twangyâsomething that sounds like wide-open spaces and Sunday mornings and the kind of radio stations that only exist halfway between here and Kansas.
When he brings the bowl back, he sits on the edge of the bed and feeds you, spoon by spoon, blowing on each bite first like he thinks you might scald your tongue.
You watch him through a fever-glazed blur. âYouâre really committing to the bit.â
He raises an eyebrow. âWhat bit?â
âThe Florence Nightingale⌠Florence Kent thing.â
He grins, bashful. âItâs not a bit. I just⌠I didnât want you to be alone.â
Your stomach flips. It has nothing to do with the soup.
âAnd also,â he adds, âI brought a book, thought you might like something to listen to in the background.â
You blink at him.
âI figured Iâd read to you once the soupâs done. Unless youâd rather I make more toast. I could do toast. Or try. I mean, itâs technically one of the few things I canât mess up.â
You take the spoon from his hand. âBaby.â
âYeah?â
âSit down before you vibrate out of your flannel.â
He obeys instantly, because Clark is nothing if not obedient when you sound just a tiny bit bossy and ill. You laugh a little. Then cough a lot.
When you stop hacking, thereâs a glass of water in your hand again, and he's looking at you like heâs trying to mentally calculate your temperature based soely off your pupil dilation. You wave him off until he settles down again, until his work stories blur into white noise and you feel yourself drifting.
Later, when the room is dark except for the glow of the bedside lamp, and your feverâs burning lower, no longer trying to boil you alive but still leaving your limbs really heavy and wrung-outâyou stir, blink groggily, and find him exactly where heâs been all day: back on the floor, this time leaning against the bed frame like heâs trying to become one with the carpet.
There's a book in his hands.
You squint. âIs that⌠Star Wars?â
He doesnât look up right away. Just flips a page, calm and unbothered, like this is a completely normal Wednesday night activity. âYeah. From a Certain Point of View. Itâs like⌠likeâlittle side stories. People on the edges of the main stuff. Background characters getting the spotlight. I thought you might like it.â
âYouâre reading me Star Wars fanfiction.â
Clark glances up, grinning. âNot fanfiction. Itâs licensed content.â
âClark.â
âItâs from Jimmy.â
âClark.â
He holds his hands up in mock surrender. âOkay, okay, itâs kind of sanctioned fanfic. But itâs good. There's one from the point of view of Obi-Wanâs ghost and it made me emotional.â
You try to snort, but it comes out more like a croak. âYouâre such a nerd.â
âSays the person who cried over an R2-D2 Lego set last Christmas.â
âThat was a very moving gift and you know it.â
Clark reaches over to adjust your blanket, tucking it up under your chin with careful fingers. âI just thought it might be nice. Something familiar. Itâs kind of like comfort food, but for your brain.â
You look at himâreally look at himâglasses askew, hair flattened on one side from the couch pillow, sweatshirt stretched over his broad chest like it was never meant to fit a man built like a brick wallâand feel that weird, awful feeling twist in your chest again.Â
The one that always comes when heâs like this. Sweet and earnest and just slightly off-center in a way that makes your whole life feel gentler.
âThank you,â you rasp, voice hoarse but sincere.
He shrugs, like itâs nothing. âDonât mention it.â
Then, after a beat:
âI was gonna read the one about the cantina bartender next. He has some very strong feelings about the music.â
â. . . Okay yeah, you're weird.â
âExactly.â
He closes the book for a moment and reaches for your hand under the blanket. His fingers wrap around yours, warm and firm and callused at the knuckles. He squeezes gently.
âI know Iâm not good at this,â he says, so quietly you almost miss it. âThe taking-care-of-people thing. Not like my dad was. He used to bring orange Jell-O and put those cold cloths on my head when I got sick. He'd sit with me and hum old country songs like that could fix it. And sometimes, it kinda did.â
You squeeze his fingers back. He looks at your joined hands like theyâre something fragile.
âI donât really even know all the right things,â he continues. âBut Iâm gonna stay right here until you feel good again.â
You swallow. Your throat aches. Your heart does, too, but in a different way.
âClark,â you whisper. âYouâre doing perfect.â
He gives you this lookâhazy and overwhelmed, like maybe he needed to hear that more than he thought. He leans in and presses a kiss to your forehead, cool and steady and grounding.
âI got you,â he murmurs. âAlways.â
He reads until your breathing evens out again, then switches to hummingâbarely there, just a thread of melody tracing the shape of the room. He doesnât move from his place beside your bed.Â
You donât think he even blinks when you stir, reaching a hand out for his. Heâs just there.Â
So you dream of a cantina bartender with strong feelings about the music. Of a man with dark hair and horrendous posture and the kindest eyes in the galaxy, carrying soup and picture books and the whole weight of your heart like itâs not heavy at all.
.
It was supposed to be a date.
Like, a real date. One with proper shoes and napkins that arenât made of recycled drive-thru material. A night where neither of you had to sprint, lie, cover for the other, or show up late with leaves in your hair because someone, cough, got caught helping rescue a tour boat from sinking off the coast of Maine.
Just dinner. Just one Thursday evening. A normal, honest-to-god, pre-planned, mildly fancy dinner.Â
Youâd even made a reservation at that Italian place ou guys have been meaning to try.
Clark had combed his curls with what looked like actual intent and buttoned his shirt all the way to the top, then unbuttoned one (just one) like heâd read about the concept of casual in a book. You caught him practicing his posture in the hallway mirror before you left.
âDo I look like I own a belt?â heâd asked.
âYou do own a belt.â
âRight, but do I look like I believe in it?â
You had rolled your eyes. Heâd kissed your forehead. Youâd both agreed, silently and aloud and silently again: This time, itâs gonna stick.
Just dinner.
Just you and him.
Justâ
The sky, it turns out, had other ideas.
Youâre only two blocks from the restaurant, your heels clicking rhythmically against the sidewalk. Heâs saying something about dessertâabout how heâs never actually had crème brĂťlĂŠe and how suspicious he is of any food that requires a blowtorchâand youâre about to tell him that heâs a coward and has terrible, horrible opinions when heâ
Flinches.
Just slightly. A twitch, more than anything. Like someone tugged on the collar of his shirt from behind.
You stop. Narrow your eyes.
âKent.â
He stills, then winces, and itâs over. The wind picks up just enough to ruffle his jacket and toss a strand of your hair across your lip.
âBaby,â you say, dragging out the vowels like youâre preparing to scold a dog whoâs eyeing the Thanksgiving turkey.
âIâm sorry,â he says. âI know. I know. I justâthereâs something happening in Hobâs Bay. I think itâs Parasite again.â
âParasite?â you repeat, like that somehow makes it better. âThe guy who eats energy and punches holes through cement walls like graham crackers?â
Clark winces again, guilt washing across his face like rain.
âI can take you home first,â he says quickly. âIâll be fast. Twenty minutes. Tops.â
âYou said that last time,â you remind him.
âYes, but this time I mean it withââ he pauses, trying to sell it, ââI mean it. I've got improved time management skills. Iâve been working on it, I swear. I downloaded a calendar app.â
âOh my god, Clark.â
âI even color-coded it!â
You cross your arms. âClark.â
âI swear on my momâs ceramic cow collection.â
ââŚThe one on the microwave?â
âShe dusts them twice a week.â
You sigh, but youâre already unhooking your arm from his. Heâs practically vibrating now, trying to stand still. Thereâs a flash of green in the far-off clouds.
âI liked this dress,â you say.
âI love that dress,â he says, almost in awe. âIâm gonna come back and ruin it for you in much better ways.â
A beat. He realizes how that sounded. âI mean, likeâbecause of pasta sauce. And maybe dancing? gosh, Iâm terrible at thisââ
You laugh despite yourself. Even as the first drops of rain start to hit your shoulders. âGo, Kansas.â
He kisses your cheek. Then the other. His hands linger against your face a half-second too long, his thumbs warm even through the chill.
âIâll make it up to you,â he says, quiet now. âPromise.â
Then heâs gone.
âI know,â you reply to no one in particular, because you do.
You spend the next hour curled on the couch in the dress you never got to wear properly, the hem slightly damp from the rain and your eyeliner gently betraying you. The news cycles through static, then footage of Clark shielding a crowd with a dented bus stop sign like itâs a riot shield, eyes glowing faintly, shoulders squared. Calm. Measured. Still gentle, even in a fight. You eat a sleeve of saltines out of spite.
He texts you twice:
CLARKY <3: STILL FIGHTING THE SLIME GUY. HEâS YELLING ABOUT âTHE SYSTEMâ SO I THINK THIS IS POLITICALLY MOTIVATED.
CLARKY <3: ALMOST DONE. PLEASE DONâT FALL ASLEEP. I OWE YOU SO MUCH CREME BRUILALAE đ¨
You donât reply. He needs to focus. But you do leave the kitchen light on.
It's past ten when he gets back. He lands with a whisper on your fire escapeâso quiet it takes you a second to realize heâs there. Youâre already in pajamas at this point.
He taps gently on the window.
When you slide it open, heâs dripping. Suit ripped at the collar. A graze on his temple thatâs already healing. Mud on his boots. Eyes wide and sheepish and a little desperate.
âYouâre late,â you say.
âThe Italian place was closed,â he says, holding up a crumpled brown paper bag like an offering. "But I brought dumplings?"
Your stomach betrays you with a loud growl. Fucking saltines. He smiles, relieved.
âTheyâre from that place you like,â he adds quickly. âThe one with the crab rangoon that makes you make weird noises.â
You cross your arms. âYou think you can just bribe me with steamed buns and flattery?â
âYes?â he tries.
ââŚYouâre not wrong.â
You step back to let him in. He shrugs off the cape, moving slower than usual. His shoulders dip lower. His steps drag a little. The exhaustion sits in him like weight.
âSit down,â you say.
âI canââ
âClark. Couch. Now.â
He obeys without question, settling into the cushions like a man unraveling. You grab a towel and a hoodie from your roomâone of hisâand toss both at him. Then you disappear into the kitchen.
After a beat, he calls after you: âI missed you.â
You donât answer right away. Just finish plating the takeout, dividing the dumplings and the sticky rice and the rangoon with practiced ease. Your apartment smells like warm ginger and garlic. Familiar. Safe.
When you bring the food over, you find him curled sideways on the couch, legs too long, towel around his shoulders like a cape. He grins when he sees the plates.
âYou forgive me?â he asks, hopeful.
You hand him a rangoon. âChew before you talk.â
He does. Then says, with a mouthful of crab: âI really did want it to be a normal night.â
You look at him. At the tired, good man who flew across the city to keep someone elseâs world from breaking. At the one who brought you dumplings and rainwater and apologies on the roof of his tongue.
âI know,â you say.
He finishes chewing, then leans forward, chin on your shoulder, voice curling around the edges. âYou look beautiful, by the way.â
You snort. âYou say that now that Iâm in fleece pants with soup stains.â
âI stand by it,â he murmurs. âAlways.â
You let him curl around you then, dinner plates on the coffee table, reruns of I Love Lucy playing low in the background. He eats with one arm around your waist. You steal his dumplings when heâs not looking.
Later, when youâre both too full and too warm and too tired to move, he says it again.
âIâll make it up to you.â
You nudge his leg with your foot. âYou already are.â
He hums, pleased but tired, and lets his head fall back against the cushions. âStill wish I hadnât missed dinner. Not the food. Justâbeing there. With you.â
Thereâs a smear of sauce near his mouth when you glance over him. Heâs so unbelievably warm around the edges like thisâlike the fightâs finally bled out of him and heâs just Clark again. Your Clark.
âYou always say that,â you murmur.
âBecause I always mean it.â
You reach up, thumb brushing the corner of his mouth. He goes quiet. Doesnât blink. Just watches you like heâs trying to memorize the moment.
Thereâs a beat where neither of you speak. The kind that hums with the weight of something unspoken, blooming slow between you. Then, without moving your hand, you ask, âYou gonna let me kiss you now, or are you still trying to be polite?â
That gets a smile. A real one. A little crooked, a little shy.
âYou can do whatever you want,â he says. âYou always could.â
So you lean in.
The kiss starts off like a warning.
Your mouth brushes hisâbrief, firm, no room for questions, not reallyâand then again, slower this time. He makes a noise, deep in his chest, something caught between relief and surrender.
When your fingers slide into his hair, he tilts into it instinctively. His hands stay right where they are, just one at your waist, one braced uselessly on the couch cushion like heâs reminding himself not to move unless you ask him to.
He huffs something like a laugh when you pull back for a breath. âYouâre terrifying, you know that?â
You smile. âFlatterer.â
His hand on your waist shifts slightly, pulling you in closer. Not rough. Not needy. Justâanchoring. Your knees bracket his hips and you kiss him again, open-mouthed this time, licking into his mouth like youâre starved and this is your first taste of real food.
And Clark lets you.Â
He lets you kiss him with all the frustration of the ruined date and the tension of waiting and the affection thatâs been building in your chest for weeks, maybe months. He meets you where you areâmouth pliant, eyes closed, his breathing unraveling under your hands.
âYou always come back like this,â you whisper, teeth grazing his jaw. âAll apologies and those puppy dog blue eyes and your make-up take-out. Like I wouldnât crawl across glass to have you.â
He exhales, sharp and shaky, like your words hit a nerve. His hands tense slightly at your thighs, just for a second, then relax again. He doesnât try to flip you, doesnât shift to take control. Just looks at you.
âI mean it,â you murmur, kissing just under his ear. âYou come in, wrecked and kind and too damn good, and Iâm supposed to what? Sit next to you like my skin isnât trying to crawl off my bones just to get to yours?â
Clark swallows. âYouââ His voice is rough, halting. âYou can have me.â
He says it so quietly you almost miss it.
âYou already do,â he adds. âYou donât have to prove anything. Youââ
Your mouth is on his before he can finish. You kiss him like youâre trying to breathe him in, to memorize the way his ribs rise under your hands. His lips part on a gasp, and you take it as invitation. He lets you tilt his head back even further, lets you set the rhythmâhis hands gripping the couch cushions like theyâre the only things that can possibly ground him.
You pull back, just enough to see his face. His hairâs still damp, starting to curl at the edges, his cheeks flushed. His glasses are askew, so you reach up and slide them off. Set them gently on the side table. His eyes donât leave yours for a second.
"Stand up," you say, and he does, wordless, chest rising fast under the hoodie. He's got the towel instead of the cape draped around his shoulders, like he's still half in hero mode. You take that off.
Your fingers go to the hem of the hoodie next, lifting it. He raises his arms obediently, eyes half-lidded, focused. Heâs still in the bottom half of the suit, and your breath catchesâbecause even now, even like this, he wears it like a second skin.
But you want the man. Not the symbol.
âOff,â you say, fingers brushing the slick, faintly scorched fabric of the suitâs torso. âI want you, not him.â
He nods. Itâs so damn slight, like heâs not so sure his voice will work. His hands go to the hidden seams and he peels the suit down, exposing inch after inch of bare skin beneathâtoned and marked from the night, faint purple bruises already turning gold where his healing has started. You trail your fingers and follow him down, down, down his sternum, then lower, across his ribs.
The suit hits the floor in a gentle whisper. Boots, too. The capeâs already been discardedâsomewhere between the fire escape and your front doorâand now heâs just standing there in front of you, bare and breathless and completely yours.
âCome closer,â you say. "It's my turn."
He goes to help you, but you stop him. Eyebrows raised. "Eyes up here. I'll do it myself."
Clark watches you the whole time, not rushing, not leading. His expression open, undone. His bottom lip's caught between his teeth, eyes trained on every single one of your painstaking actions. Peeling your shirt off, your ratty fleece pants, your bra, all of it. He's enjoying this way more than he should, those eyes of his glinting in the light, but that's the intoxicating part of it.Â
When you're done, he finally speaks up, voice reduced to a hush. Wills himself to look away from your body and just look into your eyes. "How do you want me?"
You hum, turning on your feet, pretending to think it over. Really, it's just an excuse to have him look at your bare body. Tempt him a little bit. It drives him insane. Still, he doesn't break eye contact.Â
"I think," you purse your lips. "I want you underneath me tonight."
He nods. Serious. "Of course."
You lead him back to the bedroom. Not because he needs help walking, but because thereâs something in you that just wants to savor the walk. He lets you guide him backward, his legs bumping against the edge of the bed.
He sits.
Then waits.
Clark just looks so⌠perfect like this.Â
Hard, aching, weeping, cheeks pink and pupils dilated. Hands, those goddamn hands, politely by his sides. Does nothing but lay down on the mattress, just waiting for whatever you feel like doing to him. The knowingâthe seeing, does more to you than you'd like to admit.
You crawl, slowly, over his body. Fingers skirting over the freckles of his body, the light dusting of hair across his torso, the goosebumps that rise there. Anything but pay attention to his cock that's begging for you, until you're close to straddling his face, hovering there.
A pause. Those baby blue eyes, the cause of so many of your little deaths. His lips, pink and wet as his tongue swipes over them. A hint of a smile. You brush a curl away from his forehead, fingers methodical and thoughtful.
"Okay."
Once you give him the go-ahead, he's all instinct, steady hands pulling your thighs more snug over his shoulders with all of the skill and quiet confidence of a man who's been breaking you down and laying you out for a long time.Â
It's so easyâso easy to lose yourself in it. So easy when you're on top of the world.
Clark knows. You've genuinely never met a guy who enjoys eating someone out more than him. He knows all the ways to make your legs shake and your head vibrate out of its skull, all the little skills and patterns and consistencies to get you to cum within minutes, but from the way he takes his time, mouth roaming everywhereâyour thighs, your legs, the back of your kneesâ
He means to torture you. Make you eat your words. But you're gonna have the last say tonight.
You squeeze your legs around his face, bringing his attention to you, all blue-eyed innocence glancing up to you. Little shit. "Hey," you will your voice into something vaguely commanding. "How many times do you think you can make me cum tonight?"
All you get is a lopsided smile. "As many times 's you want."
"Ball park?"
He strums his fingers along your thigh. Pretends to think about it. Looking up at the corner of his eyes like he's doing mental math. "How about we start with five or six and go from there?"
"Perfect. Delightful, Kent. Alright, proceeâ"
His arms tighten around your thighs, and that's all the warning you get before he dives right in, parting your lips with his tongue and tasting all that you've got to offer, and god, if that doesn't make the slick accumulate even more in between your thighs, gushing, eyes falling closed.Â
A trooper always, Clark's mouth is warm, forming into a smile. "Baby, you taste so good. Needed this."
There's desperation in it, the way he sucks on your clit, two fingers finding themselves rocking against your cunt so that you feel nothing but full, boundless pleasure. You're so wet that his digits are sliding effortlessly, even more so as he licks you through it.
All you can do is whimper and whine, hands coming to rest up against the headboard. "Clark, Clark, so good. Don't stop. Please."
The mattress shakes around you as he grinds up into the air, barely concealed want and need and everything he hasn't said before, teeth gently scraping at your cunt. You can hear it too, his mouth working against you, his moans rising above it all. And god, the tensionâthe fucking strength of this manâthe fact that he's letting you ride his face like there's no tomorrow.
Then his tongue sweeps hot across your clit, his two fingers curling inside you at the exact moment you squeeze. And fuck, you pulse hard and come until you've got nothing left to give, just a mantra of his nameâ"Clark, Clark, babyâ"
He licks and sucks you through the aftershocks, shuddering through it all, and then it's back down to earth.
You fall down on the bed next to him, legs unable to hold you up. The only way to describe how you feel now is justâpure, fucking, boneless glee. And then you look over, and god, if that's not the best view in the worldâClark. The bottom of his face glistening, smiling in that stupid, boyish way of his, curls in his eyes and a twinkle there like he just won the lottery.Â
"What are you smiling about?"
Clark shakes his head, shrugging and looking up at the ceiling like it has the answers. "Oh, nothin'. Just happy."
This hunger, this love for himâyou don't think it'll ever go away. You don't think you could ever get sick of it, you don't think you can ever get your fill of him. You're going to want him this badly for the rest of your life.Â
But before you could spiral down that terrifying staircase of thoughts, you're brought out your stupor with one large hand trailing up your thigh. Clark's shifted so that you're beneath him, world turned upside down. He's going back down for more.
"We've got at least four more to go, sweet girl. Made you a promise, remember?"
.
Itâs honestly the quiet that gets you, at first.Â
That slow, rolling kind that doesnât sit heavy so much as drape itself across everything like an old quilt. The kind of quiet that has its own rhythm. Space between sounds.Â
Not silence, never that, but it's more akin to a hush. A pause you didnât know your life had been missing.
There are birds, sure. A lot of them, actually. Thereâs the wind, too, rattling through those wheat-colored fields, whistling past the house's warped slats like itâs trying to remember a song it used to know. But underneath it all is stillness.Â
A kind of breath you didnât realize youâd been holding, now slowly, slowly letting out.
A little more soap opera meets Hallmark originalâmaybe some mysterious family feuds and charming small-town antics. Some lingering drama about a pie contest. You fully expected someone with an old-timey name to pour you coffee at the local diner you guys stopped at and mention she âhasnât seen Clark Kent around these parts in a while.â
Instead, you got: rooster at 5:30. Floorboard in the kitchen that creaks like itâs about to file a complaint against you just for exisiting. A guest room that smells faintly like wood polish and wheat. You got Clark, elbow-deep in chicken feed at seven a.m., wearing a white t-shirt thatâs hanging on by a thread but you're not complaining.
Youâre house-sitting for the Kents while Jonathan and Martha are on a cruiseâa cruise, of all things. Clarkâs voice had been thick with disbelief when he told you.Â
âCan you believe my dad packed four Hawaiian shirts?â Then later, when they called from the boat to say theyâd already made friends with a retired couple from Branson and signed up for salsa dancing classes, Clark had stared at the phone like it had personally betrayed him.
âThey deserve it,â he says eventually, a little quiet. âTheyâve never done anything like this. I hope they stay gone the full two weeks.â
Youâd kissed his shoulder and said, âSelfishly, me too.â
Because being here, just the two of you, itâs not glamorous. But it feels like something. Something good.
One morning, early on, you found yourself squinting into the haze of a Kansas dawn, clutching a cup of coffee that tasted like burnt hope, and whispering, half to yourself, âDo⌠do the cows have names?â
Clark, already in his work boots and wrist-deep in a feed bag, turns like youâd just offered to marry him.
âOf course they do!" he says, smug. âThatâs Millie.â He points at a big black-and-white cow with the expression of someone whoâd once gone on Twitter and got traumatized. âSheâs real skittish when it rains but loves, absolutely loves cantaloupe rinds. That oneâs Donnieâheâs dramatic. Moooos like heâs dying if youâre even five minutes late.â
You blink at him. âYouâre serious.â
âDeadly,â he says, patting Millie with the same affection he uses on your lower back when you cook dinner barefoot. It makes you snort. âAlso, we donât call it breakfast here. Itâs âmorning feed.ââ
You stare. âThis is so not the rural romance novel I signed up for.â
He grins, boyish and crooked. âLet me guess. Thought itâd be Days of Our Lives but make it cornfed?â
âExactly. Whereâs the murder mystery? The barn dance? The family rival who wears all linen and says ominous things like, âYouâll never take the south pasture from me, you bastard.ââ
"You forget. It's the Midwest. We're not in the South," He scratches behind Donnieâs ear. âBut there is a someone with drama kinda like that here. Name's Barb, I think,â he says. âShe runs the Dairy Queen and once hit a deer with her truck and cried about it for a week.â
You pause. ââŚOkay. Thatâs actually kind of sad. But wholesome."
âSee?â
The days fall into a rhythm, eventually.Â
You weed the garden (poorly). He fixes the gate (obscenely well). You help collect eggs and try not to let on that the chickens genuinely unsettle you. Clark, that menace, just laughs every single time one flaps in your general direction and you flinch like itâs going to demand your wallet and keys and job.
One Friday afternoon, you find yourself washing strawberries at the sink while Clark scrubs paint off the porch railingâsome old project Jonathan started and never finished.Â
You glance up and heâs standing there in the sun, t-shirt stained, face flushed, humming some old country song under his breath, and your chest physically hurts from how much you love him.
âYou wanna do something dumb?â you ask, voice louder than it needs to be, just to get his attention.
Clark looks up, squints against the light. âAlways.â
Itâs not fancy.Â
Twenty minutes later, youâre both in the back pasture, far enough from the house that itâs just you and the cows and the sound of summer in every direction.Â
Thereâs a plastic grocery bag between you full of things neither of you should technically call lunch. Two kinds of chips (barbecue for you, cheddar for him). A Diet Dr. Pepper, sweating in the heat. One sad gas station brownie. And a couple of oranges, wrapped carefully in plastic wrap.
You lift an eyebrow as you start to unpack. âYou know we have actual food, right?â
He shrugs, pulling the chips open. âThe grocery storeâs like forty minutes away,â he says, like that explains everything. âDidnât wanna leave you.â
Your mouth opens, ready to toss something casual backâsomething about sandwiches, or homemade pasta salad, or literally anything with proteinâbut then you see how gently heâd wrapped the oranges. How he packed napkins, remembered your favorite chips, brought two plastic forks for the brownie like it was a birthday cake.
So instead, you say, â...I like barbecue,â and your voice is quieter than you mean it to be.
He glances over, chin on his shoulder, smiling like itâs the easiest thing in the world. âI know.â
You eat like kids. Cross-legged on the blanket, crumbs everywhere, licking orange juice off your thumbs. You wipe your hands on your pants. He stretches out on his side, elbow propped, watching the clouds like theyâre moving too slow. His knee brushes yours and doesnât move away.Â
You think you feel a mosquito bite. You donât really care anymore.
âI forgot what this feels like,â you say at one point, picking salt from the corners of your lips. âJust⌠doing nothing. On purpose.â
He hums. âItâs good for you. Stillness.â
âYou sound like your mom.â
âSheâs smarter than I am.â
âYou said that last night when I told you to take a nap.â
âSee? Pattern holds.â
You lean back on your elbows and look at him, really look. Light getting caught in his lashes. Heâs watching you, too, like thereâs nowhere else heâd rather be. Like the world could ask for him and heâd still choose to stay here, sweaty and dumb and mosquito-bitten and happy beside you.
He peels another orange with a practiced hand, splitting it down the middle and handing you the sweeter half.
âThanks,â you murmur.
âSometimes I miss this, y'know?â he says, around a bite of an orange.
You glance over.
âNot the chicken poop or the mosquito bites,â he adds, âbut the...quiet. The not-having-to-be-everything-all-the-time. Out here, youâre just...you. You fix the fence. You make a mess. You listen to cicadas and complain about the humidity and your ma yells at you for tracking dirt inside.â
You tilt your head. âYou ever think about staying? Settling down here?â
He doesnât answer right away. Just plucks a blade of grass and spins it between his fingers.
âSometimes,â he admits. âBut then I thinkâthis is what shaped me. But itâs not all I am. The worldâs loud, and itâs messy, and it needs things. But thisâŚâ He looks at you. âThis is what I miss when Iâm out there.â
You nod. Reduced to speechlessness, because it's so tender and perfect and so him that it hurts.
Clark finishes the orange. Wipes his fingers on a napkin, then on his jeans when that doesnât do the trick. You lie back on the blanket with a quiet sigh, letting the sun press into your skin, the breeze lift the sweat at your temples.
It couldâve ended there. Couldâve been just a quiet kind of golden. But then you nudge his ankle with yours.
âBet I could outrun you,â you say lazily, like youâre not poking a bear.
Clark huffs. Turns his head toward you, amused. âThat so?â
âMmhm,â you say, stretching. âYouâve been slacking. Porch paint and chicken dutyâs got you soft.â
He squints at you. âYou really wanna start this?â
âYou said yourself, Kansas. Nothing to do out here but complain about the heat and cause a little trouble.â
He smiles slowly. The kind of smile that curls at the corners. Dangerous only someone so gentle and kind can be.
âAlright then,â he says, sitting up. âYou get a ten-second head start.â
Your eyes go wide. âWait, reallyââ
âNine,â he says, already grinning, already counting.
You scramble to your feet. âOh my god, you are not seriousââ
âEight.â
You bolt.
The grass is taller in some spots and it catches at your ankles, slows you down. The air is thick with sun and the hum of everything living. You turn left, laughing, hair sticking to the back of your neck, and glance behind you just in time to see him loping after you, easy and unhurried, like heâs letting you win.
Which is worse. Infuriating. Fucking ass.
âKENT!â you shout over your shoulder. âI swear if you let me win Iâm gonna trip myself just to spite youââ
âThen you better run faster!â he calls back, but heâs laughing too, bright and open and young in a way he doesnât always let himself be in the city.
You make it halfway to the barn before he catches you, just a hand on your waist, barely a tug. You spin with the momentum and half-collapse against him, breathless, wheezing from the run and the heat and the sheer absurdity of it all.
âYou cheated,â you gasp.
âI didnât even use my powers.â
âThatâs worse.â
He leans in, resting his forehead against yours, both of you flushed and sweating and smiling like idiots.
âYouâre fast,â he murmurs, voice low. âBut I know how you move.â
You roll your eyes, still catching your breath. âDonât say stuff like that unless you wanna get kissed.â
âMaybe I do,â he says, quiet now.
Oh, if that doesn't make you wanna ruin him. When you lean in, he tastes like oranges and sweat and something warm you canât name.
âYouâre always holding back,â you murmur against his mouth. âLet me have you.â
Clarkâs breathing stutters.
âYou have me,â he says, like itâs a promise. Like itâs been true since the first day you met.
Your teeth graze his lip, just enough to make him gasp. âThen act like it.â
Now thatâthatâdoes something to him.
His hands slip quickly under your sundress, palms mapping the curve of your back, hungry and greedy all at once. Your head tips back when his mouth finds your neck again, hot and open and just a little bit wild. His teeth scrape the spot just beneath your ear and your fingers clench in his curls, hard.
The bark digs into your shoulder blades. You can faintly feel the ground disappearing from under you. Grass sticks to the backs of your calves. The sky overhead is lazy and blue, clouds like pulled cotton, and none of it, absolutely none of it, matters.Â
Not the cows, not the heat, not the fact that you're pressed up against a pecan tree in the middle of a Kansas pastureâjust this. Just him.
It doesn't take long for it to escalate.Â
You're not normally a fan of thisâquickies, anyway, you'd rather take your time, break him down methodically, piece by piece, but you think you'd actually combust if you don't have him right there, right at that second. And damn it, you will.Â
You will.Â
Your hands scramble to wrench his shirt off, a mad dash to get as close to his skin as possible. He helps you, your pretty boy, your sweetheart, your sunshineâchuckling when the fabric inevitably gets caught between his head and shoulders.Â
"Clarkâ" you glare at him, not really annoyed with him but his stupid, stupid shirt. "Get itâplease, get it offâ"
"So impatient," He grins. He helps you anyway, giving you that final push to get the shirt off his head. And then ou're like a moth drawn to a flame, nipping at his skin, sucking little love bites that you know he adores into his chest. "Baby, sweetheartâ"
"Sweetheart, babyâ" You kiss his collarbone, hands going to undo his belt, the metal clinking from your actions. "Need you now."
Clark nods vigorously at that. "Yeah, yeahâokay."
He readjusts, free now from his belt, jeans dropping low, and he's scooping your thighs up so you're flush against the tree for leverage. The bark of the tree's rough and it'll leave some truly horrendous marks later, but he's pushing your dress up around your waist, cock situated and ready at your entrance.Â
A breath. A look between you. And then he sinks you down, no prep, no foreplay, just him and the burn of taking all of him bare.
You make an embarrassing noise when he bottoms out, yelping and wrapping your arms around his neck. Clark slows down, pressing kisses on your forehead and muttering small little praises. "You're doing so good. You feel amazing, baby, you just let me know when, I'll waitâ"
Fuck, that turns you on more than it should've. You clench around him, mouth parting in a quiet moan. "Now, I'm ready now. Move, Kent."
His hand hitches your leg up higher for a better angle, andâyeah, if that's not the hottest thing in the world. The tenderness mixed with the way you know he's about to utterly destroy you. He rolls his hips, once, twice, until he sets a punishing rhythm.
He moves, hard and deep inside of you, always a stretch widthwise. Always feels like a rearrangement. Every single vein, every twitch, every agonizing inch as he gets to work fucking you like your life depends on it.
And the tree shakesâit fucking shakes, leaves falling all around youâwhen his pace gets punishing and relentless. All you can do is take it, legs shivering and hands scrambling to hold on to something, anything.
The strap of your dress has fallen down your shoulder at this point, and Clark takes the opportunity to wrap his hot mouth around your exposed nipple, eyes falling closed. "Tastes like heaven."
"Clarkâ" You shudder, his ruts turning more and more shallow. "Need more, I needâneed help, pleaseâ"
He nods against your skin, letting go of your nipple with one wet pop. A hand skirts down between you, wordless, and rubs hard circles against your clit, never twisting, just a constant, almost vibrating pressure that wrenches more desperate gasps out of you.
You love him.
It hits you the hardest at that moment, when he grins and you can feel those tell-tale signs of your orgasm shuddering closer, so impossibly close that it makes your knees weak. Like your body canât hold the thought anymore.Â
Months of this, this agonizing need to tell him, to show him. And suddenly itâs all you can feelâthis pressure behind your teeth, this wild, unspooling thing clawing to get out. You didnât plan on it. You don't meant to. But itâs already there, clawing its way up your throat with a kind of ferocity that feels unstoppable.
You pull back a breath. Just enough to get the words free. Try to get lucid fast.
âIââ
But then his handâs on your cheek.
Soft. Certain.
âWait,â he says, and itâs gentle, but firm enough to stop you.
You freeze, stunned. Like someone hit pause on your entire brain.
âWâWâWhat?â you whisper, barely breathing. His pace doesn't break. Still pounding into you like he doesn't see right through you. His eyes flicker between yoursâquiet, careful, like he sees exactly where you were going. Like he caught the words mid-flight.
âNot yet,â he murmurs. âNot like this, baby. Not while I'mânot against a tree.â
âI don'tâI don't mind,â you whine.Â
He laughs under his breath. "No.â
You must've pouted, must've frowned, or⌠or something, because Clark's expression goes soft. He tugs you closer, hips going deeper this time until your head falls back, like an apology.Â
You're so close, so goddamn close, and fuck, if he's not determined to make it up to you. Focus redirected to the sole goal of making you finish harder than you ever have before. Another broken moan slips out of you.
And you're still overtaken by this need to say something, something to encapsulate this feeling inside of you. So instead, you say the next best thing, âYouâre mine,â you say, fierce and true and sure.
Clark nods. âYours,â he echoes, like itâs gospel.
You come around him like that, muscles wound up tight, him working himself into you fasterâfaster, until he pulses inside you. It's all warmth, his shoulders shaking like a leaf, you holding onto him like the old tire swing on a tree. Chests heaving. Sweat pooling underneath your knees. But he doesn't let go.
He pulls back just a tad, just enough to rest his head against the crook of your neck. His curls tickle your skin, just slightly. "Hold me tighter?"
You're still quivering, traitorous legs twitching, but you do. You wrap your arms around him and squeeze until he sighs, relaxed and spent and all the things that you let go unsaid.Â
The cows, thankfully, have the decency not to interrupt.
.
Heâs on the fire escape again.
You donât see him at firstâjust the corner of his shirt sleeve through the window screen, fluttering gently in the breeze like a flag someone planted in a place they want to stay.
You step closer.
And there he is.
Sitting on the metal grate, knees drawn up, socked feet tucked against the warm steel, one arm draped loosely over the railing like he forgot the rest of the world exists. His head's tilted back against the sun, eyes closed, face subdued in that way it only gets when no oneâs watching.Â
Or maybe just when you are.
His shirtâsome washed-out old thing from Central Kansas A&Mâis rumpled and crooked on his frame like he pulled it out of the laundry basket and shrugged it on without thinking. One sleeve's shoved all the way to his elbow, exposing the freckles on his forearm.
Youâre barefoot, cradling a sweating glass of lemonade in your palm, still in sleep shorts and one of his too-big sweaters again. You hadnât meant to come looking for him. You just woke up and felt the space beside you was empty, not in a sad way, just⌠hollow. Cool.Â
You followed the pull of it until it led you here.
He doesnât move when you open the window. Doesnât speak. But his eyes blink open, lashes catching the light. He looks at you, and that alone does something to your insides.
Itâs the kind of look that hits low and blooms slow.
Not a spark, but a sunrise.
His smile when he sees you is small. A little crooked, like maybe heâs not so sure itâs okay to be this happy about something so simple.Â
Like you just standing there, sleepy and squinting and probably still with pillow creases and hints of drool on your cheek, is his favorite part of this whole Saturday.
He lifts a hand and stretches it toward you.
Palm up.
Fingertips flexing.
âCâmere,â he says, voice warm from disuse. âItâs nice.â
You donât hesitate.Â
You climb carefully, your lemonade forgotten on the windowsill, and ease down between his legs. The fire escape creaks beneath you but holds. Of course it does. He shifts to make room for you like he already knew exactly how this would fitâyour back against his chest, his knees bracketing yours, arms folding around you like second nature.
And you just sit like that, folded into him.
His chin hooks over your shoulder. His breath brushes your neck. One of his hands rests against your stomach, just above the hem of your sweater, warm through the fabric. The other finds your thigh, fingers drumming lazily against the denim there.
And you breathe. In and out. Slowly. Like maybe you forgot how before this.
âYou been out here long?â you murmur.
He shrugs behind you. âI dunno. Long enough, maybe.â
You lean back into him, let your head fall onto his shoulder. âGet what you needed?â
Thereâs a long pause. Not like heâs unsure, just like heâs letting the quiet fill in some blanks first.
âYeah,â he says finally. âI think I did.â
You let the silence stretch after that. Itâs not awkward. Itâs just⌠Clark.Â
Which is to say: itâs safe.
The sunlight spills golden across the alley, catching in the curls at his temple. Today, he smells like clean cotton and cedar and whatever fancy soap he borrowed from your shower. His skin's warm.Â
You rest your hand over his where it sits on your stomach. His thumb traces a lazy circle just under your ribs, like heâs mapping out the shape of you in his mind.
âI used to sit like this back home,â he says after a while, voice soft. âNot on a fire escape, obviously. We had a roof. And a swing. My dad always left it out a little too long, so in the summer it was warm to the touch by the time I got to it.â
You hum, eyes slipping closed.
âHe used to say it was good for me. Sunlight. Said I always looked like a weed after a storm when I stayed inside too long. Pale and strung out and grumpy.â
âGrumpy?â you smile, turning your face a little to glance at him. âYou?â
âOh yeah,â he grins. âPouty little farm boy, hair sticking up, refusing to eat my vegetables unless they were corn.â
âLet me guess,â you say. âMartha snuck green beans into casseroles when you werenât looking.â
He makes a pleased noise. âBingo. Said it was her secret weapon for keeping me out of trouble.â
âThat and the swing?â
âThat and the swing.â
You settle again, your cheek to his shoulder, the metal warm beneath your thighs. You wonder if this is what he felt like, back thenâsitting outside in the golden quiet, the weight of the sky pressing gentle on his shoulders, like a blanket he didnât know he needed.
âIsnât it a beautiful day?â he says suddenly, like it just occurred to him.
And it is.
But it wouldâve been, anyway.
You twist slightly, enough to catch the line of his jaw, the slope of his nose. Heâs not glowing. Not exactly. But something in him is bright.Â
And youâyou love him so goddamn fiercely in that moment it feels like your ribs might crack from the inside. Like your heart is blooming against them, stubborn and wild and wholly his.
You lace your fingers with his where theyâre still resting against your chest. His grip tightens. Not possessive. Just⌠sure.
Heâs quiet a long time.
Then, like heâs been trying to time it right: âI love you.â
Just that.
Just the words, tucked into your collarbone. No fanfare. No build. Just truth. It roots into you like sunlight in soil. You donât speak for a long moment, trying to get your lungs to work again. Your body. Everything else. Because itâs a simple sentence, but it feels like something tectonic and holy.
Eventually, you turn, content and sure.
âI love you too.â
His head drops forward until his forehead presses to yours. You feel him exhale, shaky but smiling.
âI kept trying to find the right time,â he says. âI didnât want it to feel like⌠I donât know. A checkpoint. Like I had to say it because it was next on the list.â
You smile, thumb still brushing his skin. âSo you went with the middle of the fire escape, during golden hour, while Iâm in your hoodie and havenât showered since last night?â
He shrugs. âYeah. Felt right.â
You sit like that for a while, sun on your skin, his breath on your neck. The world feels quieter with him this close. Still.
Eventually, when the light starts to dip low, painting the fire escape in rust and gold, you shift to get up.
He doesnât let go. Not immediately. His hands stay at your waist, his fingers patient where they rest at your sides. Anchoring you.
âYou look good in this light,â you murmur. âLikeâtoo good. Itâs kind of rude, honestly.â
He huffs a laugh. âYeah?â
You nod. âLike you belong in it.â
He looks at you for a long moment, something intimate and private in his eyes.
Then, âYouâre not wrong.â
You tilt your head. âWhat, that you photosynthesize?â
But he just shakes his head, slow.
âNo. Just⌠I think itâs you,â he says, almost like heâs surprising himself. âYou make everything brighter.â
And itâs stupid, and itâs a little embarrassing, and you kiss him anyway. Because heâs warm and real and saying the kind of thing that would make anyone else roll their eyesâbut with him, it just lands.
Tastes like the last light of the day and something sweet and earthy beneath it. Like coming home.
⢠synopsis. youâre only here to try and understand why buckyâs suddenly gone off the rails and joined a new team, leaving you, sam and joaquĂn in radio silence. the last thing you expected was to find comfort in a stranger. a kind stranger named bob.
⢠contains. spoilers for thunderbolts*, takes place during the 14 month later period. nothing too crazy, mostly plot. reader is described as female. bob is a cutie!! reader and joaquĂn are sambucky children of divorce :(
⢠wc: 9.7k+
⢠authorâs note. wrote this with a vague idea and a dream. i don't know. don't ask pls.
You were here strictly for business.
The lobby was all polished glass, military-grade charm, and propaganda dressed in gold. Cameras flashed like fireworks along the crimson carpet, catching every inch of shine from designer suits and sharp smiles. A towering digital screen looped the promo again: "The New Avengers: Built for Tomorrow." You watched from the fringe as the montage played, the images slicing together in quick successionâJohn Walker throwing the shield with over-practised precision, Yelena Belova dismantling a room of dummies in under twelve seconds, and Ava Starr phasing through a concrete wall with a smirk. Hero shots. Sanitized. Manufactured. All of them.
You didnât blink as you were ushered to an elevator.
Growing up, the Avengers Tower never really felt real to you. Sure, youâd seen the photos, the documentaries, the endless footage of press conferences held on its front steps. Hell, youâd even walked past it with your parents whenever you visited New Yorkâbut it still felt like it belonged to another world entirely. Untouchable. Almost mythic.
You never imagined youâd walk inside.
And yet now, riding the elevator up with a slow-climbing hum and nerves that prickled beneath your skin, all you felt was dread.
It was a strange kind of emptinessâthe feeling of finally reaching something you once admired, only to realize it had been gutted and repainted in someone elseâs image. The marble floors had been waxed clean, but the history here wasnât. You could still feel the ghosts under the polish. Somewhere between the seams of the rebuilt walls and reprogrammed elevators, there was once a legacy. Real one. But it didnât belong to the people in charge of this event.
You were crammed in with a handful of Congress members and defence contractors, all of whom smelled like cologne and quiet greed. Congressman Gary was there too, smiling too much, already half-drunk from the limo ride there. (He said it would be the only way heâd survive an entire night listening to people praise Valentina Allegra de Fontaine). Gary had been the one to suggest your attendance might smooth things over. It might make the New Avengers feel like someone from Samâs camp was willing to listen. Get on their good sideâthat whole thing.
But you were here for an entirely different reason. His invitation was exactly what you needed to get in, though.
Underneath your gownâsleek, formal, and designed to draw no conclusionsâyou had a mic stitched into the seam of your strapless bodice. Hidden, but live. Your earpiece buzzed softly with JoaquĂnâs voice, casual as ever.
âIf Sam finds out weâre doing this, weâre so dead.â
You bit the inside of your cheek, trying not to be overheard as the elevator operator gave a rehearsed speech about the towerâs restorationâhow it stood now as a symbol of âunity, rebirth, and strength.â You resisted the urge to roll your eyes. The tower didnât feel like a symbol. It felt like a stage.
âHeâll take away your wings at most,â you murmured, gaze fixed forward. âRelax.â
You could practically hear JoaquĂn pouting through the comms.
âI just got them back.â
âThen letâs not make a scene. Gary said itâd be good optics to have someone on our side here. Weâre doing Sam a favour.â A pause. Then, quieter: âIâm surprised you didnât want to come with me. Youâre cleared for field work.â
âNo, thanks. As much as I adore red carpet politics, I donât think I can be in the same room as de Fontaine without committing a felony. Might get myself in trouble.â
âAnd I wonât?â
âYouâre better at smiling.â
âYouâve never seen me smile.â
âExactly.â
You exhaled through your nose, the tiniest edge of a grin forming before you could stop it.
âJust... try not to piss anyone off for five minutes, yeah?â
You didnât answer. The elevator chimed. The doors slid open with a muted ding, and you stepped into a wall of flashing lights and artificial warmth.
The event space had been reconstructed on the upper floors, a showroom designed to impress donors and government officials alike. White marble floors stretched endlessly beneath towering banners that hung from the ceilings like monuments. Each one bore the new emblem of the teamâsleek and stylized, but hollow. You could see the press eating it up already.
A digital display behind the podium read:
WELCOME TO THE FUTURE.
MEET EARTHâS NEWEST MIGHTIEST HEROES.
Your stomach turned.
âYou still with me?â JoaquĂn asked.
âYeah.â You nodded once, moving deeper into the room as your eyes scanned the crowd for familiar faces. âIâm here.â
âIâm gonna need camera access,â he said. âThereâs a chip tucked under the gem on your bracelet. If you can slide that into an outlet somewhere, Iâll be able to map out the floorâs electrical system. Should help me locate the control room.â
âGuy in the chair,â you muttered, lips twitching into a faint grin. It was impressiveâhis gadgets, his confidence. Typical JoaquĂn.
Congressman Gary had vanished into the crowd, but you didnât mind. Better alone than attached to a man who introduced you as a pet project. You plucked a glass of champagne from a passing tray, the cold stem grounding in your fingers, and sidestepped toward the edge of the room.
An outlet revealed itself by a floor-length curtain. You knelt, as if adjusting your heel, and casually broke the gem from your bracelet, slipping it into the socket with practiced ease.
âOkay,â JoaquĂn said, voice clearer now. âGive me a minute to get my bearings. While Iâm working on this, try not to look like a loser in the corner. Mingle or something.â
You scoffed under your breath. âEasy for you to sayâyou can talk anyoneâs ear off.â
âYou calling me annoying?â
âYeah.â
âWow. Go see if you can find Bucky while I work on this, would you?â
Right. Bucky Barnes.
You werenât here to mingle. You werenât here to sip champagne or shake hands or sweet-talk your way into the New Avengersâ good graces. You were here for Sam. And more specificallyâfor Bucky. Wherever the hell he was hiding.
The plan was simple enough in theory: Get a read on what Valentina was playing at. Try to talk to Bucky. Get ahead of whatever fallout was brewing between him and Sam before it turned into a full-blown civil war again. Youâd offered to go because no one else would.
JoaquĂn was trying to stay neutral (and failing). Isaiah had dismissed Bucky as a long-lost white man with too many ghosts. And Sam refused to speak to Bucky since the news broke about the New Avengers. And Bucky hadnât said a damn word back.
So here you were. You were the only one left who might still be able to stand in the space between them without setting off alarms, even if you were biased.
You still didnât understand how Bucky could do it. How he could go from testifying before Congress about accountability and reform, to standing beside Valentina Allegra de Fontaine like she hadnât personally undone everything theyâd fought for. Like he hadnât been there when Ross tried to throw his friends all in cells. (Sure, you weren't there for it either, but Sam told you all about it; the accords were one of the reasons the Avengers broke up.)
Valentina wasnât just dangerousâshe was calculated. Clever. The kind of dangerous that worked in the shadows, smiling for cameras while quietly tying strings around peopleâs necks. She had her ex-husband arrested, sabotaged Wakandan outreach missions, and picked through the wreckage of post-blip heroes like she was drafting a fantasy football team. The fact that she now had a unit of enhanced individuals marching under her payroll and calling themselves the New Avengers made your stomach turn.
And Bucky was one of them.
You believed Valentina was guilty the second Bucky first mentioned sheâd recruited John Walker. Walkerâwho had murdered a man in public, with blood still wet on the shieldâand somehow walked free. Charges vanished. Headlines redirected. Now he was being repackaged as a hero again, and Bucky was standing next to him like nothing had happened.
You couldnât wrap your head around it. No matter how many angles you looked at it from, it didnât make sense. And the more you thought about it, the more it burned in your chest.
What was he thinking?
Why hadnât he said anything?
Why wasnât he here?
You pulled in a slow breath as you stepped further into the room, letting the sound of clinking glasses and diplomatic small talk wash over you like static.
The room was grand in a gaudy wayâshiny surfaces and marble floors that reflected the chandelier light too harshly. Everything screamed polished excess, like they were trying to distract from the blood under the polish.
You tried to scan the crowd for Bucky, but there were too many faces, too many government suits and PR smiles, none of them him. You told yourself that when you did find Bucky, heâd have some kind of explanationâsomething to loosen the knot in your chest, something that could push down the rising anxiety. Something that could explain how the man you once trusted was now parading around in a suit under Valentinaâs thumb.
Instead, you found Congressman Gary. Or rather, he found you.
He was already three glasses of champagne deepâfive, if you counted the shots youâd seen him down on the wayâand he beamed like heâd found a shiny toy in a sea of suits.
âThere she is,â he said, slinging an arm around your shoulder like you hadnât just been avoiding him for fifteen minutes. âYou have got to meet some of these people. Big names. Big wallets.â
You were too polite to shrug him off, even as he dragged you into a circle of De Fontaineâs investors. Their grins were just a little too sharp, their eyes a little too eager. The way they looked at you made your skin crawl, like you were a chess piece they hadnât quite decided how to play yet.
You smiled tightly. Shook clammy hands. Answered vague questions. Nodded while they spoke about âopportunities,â ârebuilding legacy,â and ârebranding heroism.â
One man leaned in closer, his breath thick with bourbon. âYou know,â he said, voice oily, âwith your background, youâd be a perfect candidate for the new team. Valentina has a real eye for talent, and weâre building something bigger than what came before. Something better. You could help shape it from the inside.â
You swallowed your disgust with a sip of champagne. âIâm not really looking to join anything right now.â That was a lie. You already had a seat in the team Sam was putting together. But he did not need to know that.
He chuckled, as if that wasnât an answer.
âOkay, Iâve got eyes,â JoaquĂn said suddenly in your ear. His voice broke through the haze like a rope thrown across stormy water.
You exhaled in relief. âExcuse me,â you told the group, already turning away. âI need to grab a drink.â
They nodded, already moving on to the next opportunity in heels. Gary wasnât too happy, though.
You drifted from the circle, walking slowly toward the open bar. On the way, you passed a tray of themed hors dâoeuvresâtiny âAvengerâ sliders with edible logos, cupcakes shaped like shields and guns.
A mounted camera in the corner caught your eye, its red light blinking lazily above a velvet-draped sculpture.
âSee me?â you muttered.
âYeah, I see you,â JoaquĂn replied.
âStill no sign of Barnes.â
âScanning crowd pings now,â he said. âEither heâs ghosting the place or he got another haircut and I canât recognize him. Which would be so like him, by the way.â
You sighed and accepted another drink from a passing server, something dry and too expensive, and kept moving.
You figured youâd shaken at least six hands tonight that belonged to people whoâd love to see your head on a stickâif not for the lucrative optics of you standing here at all. You were an opportunity to them. A symbol. A bargaining chip in a war they didnât even understand.
Your dress caught suddenly.
You stumbledâonly a step, but enough for the chilled drink to slosh dangerously near the edge of the glass. You turned on instinct, hand rising to fix the silk scarf that had slipped from your neck and shoulder.
A man stood behind you, wide-eyed, hand half-raised like heâd been about to catch you.
âIâIâm so sorry,â he stammered. His voice was low, a subtle rumble barely audible over the layers of clinking glass, conversation, and ambient music. ââstepped on your dress. Sorry.â
You blinked, caught off guard.
He looked like he didnât belong here. Not in the way the others did. No glossy name tag, no designer smugness. His suit was clean, but not flashy. Understated.
âItâs fine,â you said quickly, instinctively adjusting your scarf where it had slipped from your shoulder. You shook out the fabric of your dress around the ankles, heart skipping in the echo of that voice. Something about the way he said itâapologetic, soft, like he genuinely meant itâcaught you off guard.
âSorry,â he mumbled again, even quieter this time, eyes dropping to the floor. His dark hair fell over his face, almost like he was trying to shrink three sizes. You could hear a faint, awkward laugh in his voice. âUhm⌠yeah. Sorry.â
He didnât linger. Just turned and slipped back into the crowd before you could even process anything. No second glance. Just a gentle pivot and a few long strides back into the crowd, swallowed instantly by the sea of shoulder pads, press passes, and sharp perfume.
You stood there for a second, staring after him.
He moved differently from the others. No performative swagger. No politicianâs posture. No tray in his hand, so heâs definitely not a server. He was quiet in a way that made you feel like youâd imagined him, like heâd only brushed through this reality for a second before vanishing into another.
You didnât recognize him.
And you should have.
For all the files youâd scoured, the profiles and photos, the research youâd buried yourself in to prepare for tonight, youâd made it your job to know every player in this room. Who to watch. Who to avoid. Who might be useful.
But not him.
You turned back toward the bar, but your mind didnât follow. Not entirely.
Who the fuck was that?
You were just about to ask JoaquĂn to pull a facial scan when something in your periphery stopped you cold.
John Walker.
He was only a few steps away, mid-conversation with some high-level sponsor, until his gaze landed on you. And then he froze.
The look that crossed his face was quick, recognition, discomfort, maybe a flicker of guilt, but he buried it just as fast, turning away without a word. He pivoted like a man avoiding a ghost, ignoring the way the sponsor he spoke to called after him.
âWalker just made a hard left into the hors dâoeuvres,â JoaquĂn muttered in your ear, low and amused. âYou see that?â
You exhaled, more irritated than surprised. âWeâre not here for him.â
âYeah. I think he knows that too. Thatâs why heâs pretending heâs got important shrimp to eat.â
That pulled a faint smile from you, biting down the urge to laugh.
Typical. The last time youâd seen Walker in person, he was seated in a courtroom with his jaw clenched so tight you thought heâd snap a molar. Youâd testified in his case, alongside Sam, Bucky, and everyone else who had to witness what happened in Madripoorâwhat he did to that man in the square. The shield, slick and red. The silence afterward, heavier than any explosion.
You never fought him. Never had to. But you'd been on opposite sides of that mess, and he knew it. Hell, youâd spoken directly to his discharge. Your words were probably still echoing in the back of his skull.
The way he turned away just now⌠yeah. He remembered you.
âIâm surprised he didnât start barking about national security,â JoaquĂn quipped in your ear again. âDo you think we should trail him?â
You hesitated. You didnât want to. Just the idea of following in Walkerâs smug footsteps made your jaw clench.
But JoaquĂn pressed, âHe might know where Bucky is.â
And that was the problemâhe was right. And you hated how much sense it made. Of course, Walker would know. You also hate how Walker and Bucky were probably friends now.
A camera flash caught your eye, and you instinctively straightened your posture, smoothed your expression. No time for a scowl, even if thatâs all you wanted to wear.
You adjusted your gown, tugged lightly at the hem, checked the wire hidden at your waist, and started walking in the direction Walker and that ugly barret he wore had vanished.
The crowd shifted around you like tidewaterâpolished politicians and strategic handshakes, investors with too-white smiles and drinks that cost more than your rent. Every few steps, someone waved. A few shook your hand like they knew you, like you were an old friend theyâd been waiting for. A woman asked for a photo. Another leaned in and whispered, âAre you joining the new team?â like it were a secret worth selling.
You deflected with a nod and a vague smile, each interaction leaving a layer of static behind your eyes.
It was strange how quickly the attention shifted now that you were in the spotlight. Recently, youâd spent most of your career standing behind Isaiah while JoaquĂn and Sam did the talking. You liked it there. It was quieter. Easier to breathe. Now, suddenly, they were holding out chairs for you at the table.
The whole thing felt like theatre. Scripted and glassy. Lines rehearsed. Costumes ironed. Every player doing their part beneath the blinding stage lights.
You still werenât sure what was worseâthat Bucky accepted Valentinaâs funding, or that he and his new friends let her call them The Avengers.
Sam was right to be angry. He should be. Heâd already turned down President Rossâ private offer to hand him the reins of a military-funded global response team. The same offer that Valentina had repackaged, repurposed, and handed off to people who were too coward to say no.
âHeâs on the east end, talking to Ava starr and another woman. I think sheâs Valentinaâs assistant. Ohâshit. He just pointed at you.â
Your chest tightened. You turned too fast, momentarily losing your bearings in the rotating lights and mirrored walls. Eastâeastâ
And then someone stepped into your path.
A wall of a man appeared in front of you so suddenly, you nearly collided with him; broad-shouldered and bearded, dressed in a burgundy suit that looked just a size too tight across his chest.
He smiled widely, eyes bright like heâd been waiting for a moment like this all night.
âI know you,â he said, voice thick with a Russian accent. âIâve seen you on the televisions. You shake hands with the new Captain America.â
You blinked. âIâuh, yeah.â
âAh!â He laughed, clapping one heavy hand to your shoulder with surprising gentleness for a man who looked like he could punch through drywall. âVery brave of you. Very good. You look different in person. In a strong way. Like a panther. Or mongoose.â
You tried for a diplomatic smile. âThanks, I think.â
âOh! Where are my manners,â he said, dramatically straightening and offering his hand. âI am Alexei Shostakov. The Red Guardian.â
You knew that, but you didnât know heâd be so... loud.
You took his hand, his grip warm and firm. âPleasure to meet you, Alexei.â
âKind. Very kind,â he said, eyes gleaming. âYou remind me of my daughter! You have same fire in eyes. Around same age, tooâyou could be friends! Yelena is always looking for new friends.â
Yelena Belova. That name lit something up in the back of your mind. Youâd seen the files. The attempted murder of Clint Barton. Her brief status as an independent threat before being absorbed, quietly and conveniently, into Valentinaâs new game.
And suddenly, Alexeiâs smile widened even more.
âYelena!â he bellowed, cupping his hands to his mouth as if you werenât standing in the middle of a very public, very polished gala. âCome meet new friend!â
Several heads turned. Cameras flashedâbright, blinding. You winced against the burst of lights, regretting everything from your dress colour to your decision to show up at all.
But it was too late. He leaned in beside you, one arm suddenly draped over your shoulder like you were posing for a family Christmas card. âSmile!â he boomed, and before you could protest, he struck a dramatic flex, biceps pressing into your back like steel girders.
You caught a whiff of expensive cologne and vodka.
In the corner of your eye, a flash of short, bleached blonde hair was making its way through the crowd with frightening determination. Elegant, yesâbut there was no mistaking the sharpness in Yelena Belovaâs gaze. She wore a sleek black suit like it was made of knives, a funky eyeliner design, hair slicked back and every step carved with purpose. And beside herâ
Your heart dipped.
Valentina Allegra de Fontaine.
Poised. Smirking. Watching everything.
âBe careful. Yelena is coming your way with Valentina.â
Thanks for the warning, JoaquĂn. Delayed. But thanks nevertheless.
You stood up straighter, willing your heartbeat to slow down even as Valentinaâs eyes zeroed in on you like a predator clocking a foe.
Wonderful.
You leaned slightly toward Alexei, trying not to seem as panicked as you felt. âCan I ask you something? About Bucky Barnes?â
âAh!â he exclaimed, cutting you off before you could finish the question. âBucky! Yes, yes. The Winter Soldier. Very cool. Very handsome. Like Soviet James Dean.â
You blinked. âI meanâdo you know where he is?â
But Alexei was already on another tangent. âWe fought in Uzbekistan once, did you know this? I threw him through a door. He did not like that. But I like him. I like him very much. Quiet, serious type. You know he never answers my texts?â
âRight. Yeah. That tracks.â
And thenâ
âOh, what a pleasant surprise,â said a voice sharp as champagne fizz and just as bitter. De Fontaine. She cut into the conversation with the smoothness of someone who was always in control, grinning like she knew a secret you didnât. A glass of bubbly dangled between her fingers, catching the light just enough to draw attention. As if she needed help with that.
âI was just about to introduce you all,â she said, placing a perfectly manicured hand on Yelenaâs arm as the blonde finally joined your little nightmare circle.
âWhat is this?â Yelena asked flatly, eyes flicking between you and Valentina.
Valentina didnât bother to answerâjust gave a smug little hum and tugged Yelena closer, corralling her between you and Alexei. The four of you shifted automatically into position, an unspoken reflex in rooms like this.
You could feel the cameras turning like sharks in bloodied water.
Flashes burst across your vision. The moment was already capturedâyour stiff shoulders, your frozen smile. A picture-perfect lineup of cooperation.
And you could feel it: this wasnât a coincidence.
This was intentional.
Valentina leaned in, voice cool and sugary against your ear as more bulbs burst. âI am so pleased to see you here,â she cooed, âconsidering how close you and Sam are.â
âI mean, I had to come congratulate you,â you said tightly, lips barely moving. âRecreating the Avengers. Thatâs⌠big.â
She beamed at the cameras, teeth white and wolfish. âSomeone had to.â
âOf course.â
Another flash. Another frozen pose.
You winced. Sam is going to kill you.
Valentina fielded the sudden swarm of questions like she was born in front of a podiumâdeflecting, redirecting, charming. Every answer was deliberate, each word chosen like a chess move. Stability. Legacy. Global confidence. Alliances.
They lapped it up like champagne, snapping photos, nodding, laughing. You stood beside her, barely blinking, jaw tight behind your polite smile.
You werenât meant to be part of this show. You were supposed to be on the outside looking in from the in the crowd.
When the flashes finally began to die down and the clamour shifted elsewhere, Valentina turned with that too-perfect, too-white grin. She glanced at Yelena and Alexei like she were dismissing children.
âWould you two mind?â she asked, breezy as ever. âIâd like to have a quick little chat.â
Yelenaâs gaze flicked toward you. Not unkind. But cautious. Reading you like a live wire.
âIs everything all right?â she asked, her brows subtly knitting.
âOh, everythingâs perfectly fine,â Valentina replied before you could speak, her hand already at your back. âGo fetch a drink. Mingle.â
It wasnât a suggestion.
You barely had time to glance back at Yelenaâat the slight, suspicious narrowing of her eyesâbefore the crowd swallowed her and Alexei whole.
Your earpiece crackled to life. âSheâs taking you to the balcony,â JoaquĂn said, voice low and taut. âThere are no cameras there. I wonât be able to see, but I can still hear you.â
There was a pause, then: âIâll keep looking for Bucky.â
You barely managed a breath of relief before Valentina cut in, sharp and smiling.
âBuckyâs not here tonight, if thatâs really why youâre here.â
You stiffened mid-step.
JoaquĂn swore in your ear. Something heavy hit a surfaceâmaybe his fist against a tableâand you heard the scrape of a chair.
âWhat do you mean?â you asked, your voice light, falsely sweet. âI came to celebrate you.â
You crossed the threshold to the balcony.
It was quieter out here, eerily so. The muffled pulse of the gala was dulled by glass and distance. The cold kissed your skin through your dress. You could feel it biting at your exposed arms, but you welcomed the sting. It was honest.
Below, the city stretched like a glowing circuit board. Skyscrapers hummed with light. Traffic moved in golden veins. It was beautiful in the kind of way that felt removed. Untouchable.
Valentinaâs heels clicked once against the stone floor, then stopped.
âCut the bullshit,â she scoffed, voice low now. âWe both know thatâs not true.â
You turned your head, slow and steady. Her eyes were already on you. Unflinching.
âWhereâs your friend?â she asked casually. âThe little Mexican one?â
You flinchedâjust barely. Your jaw clenched tight.
Valentina smiled wider at that.
You opened your mouth to answer, to lie, to throw her off, to say something clever, but she leaned forward before you could, voice barely above a whisper.
Her lips were close to your collarbone, eyes locked on your chest. On the mic she couldnât see.
âHola, JoaquĂn,â she murmured, velvet-smooth. âÂżCĂłmo estĂĄs? Howâs the arm? Still broken?â
She pulled back with a grin full of satisfaction. JoaquĂn didnât respondânot a breath. But you felt the burn of it in your gut. He heard her. She knew he was listening. And that was the whole point.
She got what she wanted. You could see it in the eyes, the tilt of her head, the calm sip from her glass, the curl of smugness just under her lipstick.
Valentina turned her back to the railing, facing you fully, her glass catching the amber light of the city. Her smile didnât crack once.
âYou know,â she began, like she was catching up with an old friend, her voice silked with charm, âyou donât have to keep playing both sides. Itâs exhausting, isnât it?â
You said nothing. Not because you didnât have something to say, but because the words wouldnât form. Your brain was too busy calculating exits, signals, whether JoaquĂn could hear any of this, or if he was already doing something stupid like storming into the gala uninvited.
âYou show up with a wire,â she continued, waving her champagne flute like it weighed nothing, âa dress like that, pretending youâre just here to smile for the cameras.â
Her eyes dipped slowly, then back up.
âYou do look stunning, by the way,â she added casually. âBut we both know youâre not here for the press or to butter yourself up to me or my team. Youâre listening. Recording. Digging...â
The flute met her lips again. Sip. Deliberate.
âLooking for Barnes,â she said. âLike heâs going to whisper some grand truth thatâll fix whatever little crisis your friends are having.â
You could feel your jaw tighten. Every word she spoke landed like pressure against a bruise you didnât want to admit was there.
Valentina tilted her head, studying you with the kind of gaze that belonged in an interrogation room, not a rooftop party. âYouâre sharp,â she said. âGood instincts. Itâs why Sam keeps you close, right?â
Still, you stayed silent. Because anything you gave her, sheâd twist. She already was.
âBut let me ask you something,â she said, voice a shade lower, softer. âWhatâs loyalty really worthâif the people you serve are always the ones left bleeding in the dirt?â
A pulse of heat shot up your neck. You didnât move, but she saw it.
Of course, she saw it.
âAnd for the record,â she added, twirling the stem of her glass, âI donât have anything against Sam Wilson. Poor guy. I pity him, actually. The shit heâs put up with just for carrying that shieldâGod.â
She clicked her tongue with exaggerated sympathy.
âIâd kill to have Captain America on my team. The real one. Not Walker. That man is a pathetic as it gets. Hair-trigger temper, zero emotional intelligenceââ
âSam would never work with you,â you said, sharper than intended.
Valentinaâs smile widened because you finally said something worthwhile. âOh, I know,â she said, almost gleefully. âHeâs a purist. One of the last. His morals are steel-tight. Fucking unshakable. A real Boy Scout. Steve Rogers made a good choice.â
And that was the part that hurtâthe part that made you swallow back a flicker of doubt you hadnât expected to feel.
âWhereâs Bucky?â you asked, voice quieter now. âI just want to talk to him.â
She didnât even hesitate.
âBuckyâs not missing or anything,â Valentina said. âHeâs busy. Doing a job for me in Pennsylvania. Cleaning up some loose ends, you know the deal.â
You felt it before you could stop itâthat tiny, invisible shift in your expression. Something cracked. Something gave her an answer you hadnât meant to give.
âThat supposed to scare me?â you asked, though it already kind of did.
âNo,â she said. âItâs supposed to make you think. About options. About what someone like you could do with the right resources. With the right funding. Imagine it: you with your own team. Autonomy. Access. No more red tape. You make your own shots. We clean up whatever mess you leave behind. And, get this, you even get paid for it.â
You glanced toward the city, anything to avoid her eyes. Lights. Windows. Warmth. All of it felt so far away.
âAnd if I say no?â
âThen someone else says yes.â
She stepped back, brushing something from her blazer sleeve. âJust think about it,â she said, all silk and sugar again. âWe could use someone like you. You belong in rooms like this, you know. Not chasing ghosts, or waiting for Wilson to approve your next move. Youâre already breaking. I can see it. You wouldnât be here tonight if you werenât. Iâm sure Captain America wonât be happy seeing your name in the headlines tomorrow morning: The Next Potenital Avenger.â
Her smile held, framed in the cold, glittering dark of the balcony. Then she turned and walked past you, the soft graze of her shoulder against yours more intimate than it had any right to be. A mockery of closeness.
âEnjoy the rest of your evening,â she said, already stepping back through the doors. âTell Sam I said hi.â
The glass door shut behind her with a quiet click.
And the cold came in fast.
Not just the air, but the after. The silence. The wrongness of being left alone up here, the wind biting now that you werenât so focused on not showing fear.
Your body finally remembered it was yours. Your fingers hurt from gripping the railing too hard. You eased your hands free, flexed them, saw the white draining slowly from your knuckles. You still couldnât feel them.
Your mic hissed faintly to life, and JoaquĂnâs voice filtered through the static like someone calling out to you underwater.
ââŚyou okay?â he asked, strained. Urgent.
You didnât answer right away. Your mind was still racing through what Valentina had said, how easily sheâd dodged your defences, how easy she was to turn your presence into a publicity stunt, how well she knew youâor at least thought she did.
She must be blackmailing Bucky. That must be it.
You kept staring out at the skyline like it might give you an answer. It didnât. Just glass and steel and lights that blinked too slow to feel alive.
âNo,â you finally muttered.
It didnât come out strong. It came out cracked. Like the inside of your chest had gone hollow, and you were just now realizing it.
JoaquĂn exhaled through the comm, like heâd been holding his breath.
âI think legal action is our next step,â he said, tone snapping back into focus like a lifeline. âWe can sue them for the name. Trademark it. Or maybeâmaybe Sam tries to talk to Bucky again? Weâve still got options.â
You didnât respond. Not yet.
The railing under your palm felt like ice. You blinked hard, fighting back the sudden sting in your eyes. Not from fear. From frustration. From the way every word she said still echoed in your head, sticky and sharp, leaving splinters behind.
You dragged in a breath.
ââŚthat fucking bitch,â you scoffed.
âYeah⌠I donât like Valentina either.â
You jumped.
The voice came from somewhere behind you, softer, unsure. You spun around on instinct, stepping away from the railing.
That man.
The one who stepped on your dress earlier. He was sitting now, low in one of the patio couches near a sleek electric fireplace that flickered lazily against the dark. The flames glinted off the patio doors and caught the edge of his profileâbrown hair, downturned mouth, eyes wide like he was the one who got caught.
You hadnât noticed him when you came out here. And now that you really looked⌠you realized why.
He wasnât trying to be seen.
He sat in the farthest corner of the couch, hunched slightly, knees close together, hands clutched like he didnât know what to do with them. Like someone had planted him there and told him to wait. The firelight danced across his face, softening him. He didnât look threatening. Just... startled. And oddly apologetic for existing.
He offered a small, nervous smile. âSorry, I didnât mean to, like⌠scare you.â
There was genuine concern in his voiceâconcern for you, not about you. That was rare.
âItâs fine,â you said, because you didnât know what else to say.
âWhoâs that?â JoaquĂn's voice cracked through your earpiece.
You didnât answer right away.
Your eyes stayed on the stranger, and for a moment, you debated whether or not to even breathe too loud.
âI donât knowâŚâ You muttered.
âOkay, uh⌠Iâll try to do a voice match or somethingâsee if anything comes up. Keep them talking.â
The man mustâve noticed the way you were half-turned, the way your fingers brushed against your ear.
He shifted slightly. âWhoâre⌠whoâre you talking to?â
You froze. And then, with a wince: âUh⌠just⌠myself. Thinking out loud.â
There was a pause.
âOh,â he said. âYeah. I do that too. All the time, actually.â
You werenât sure what to do with that. You werenât sure what to do with him.
He looked different now compared to earlier. Still awkward, still nervousâbut less like he was trying to shrink into himself and more like he was trying his best to meet you where you were. His eyes held yours this time. Not for long, though. They dropped to his hands and shoes after a while. But it was long enough to feel it.
You took a cautious step forward, angling yourself toward the fire, toward him, but still keeping a healthy distance.
âYou um⌠You know Valentina?â you asked. Stupid. Of course, he did. Everyone at this party did.
âUh⌠yeah. Something like that,â he said, rubbing the back of his neck. âI wasnât like⌠eavesdropping or anything. Itâs justâthereâs a lot of people in there. And itâs⌠quieter out here.â
He hesitated, then added: âIâm Bob, by the way.â
His voice wavered, but not from dishonesty. He said his name like he wasnât sure it would mean anything to you. Like he just told you his name to be kind.
You gave him a nod. Not a smile. But not cold either.
âHi, Bob.â
A beat passed.
You debated telling him your name. JoaquĂn would probably advise against it. But you werenât feeling tactical anymoreâyou were feeling tired. Bruised in a way you couldnât name. And maybe you just needed to feel like a real person again. Like someone who wasnât being puppeteered.
So, after a pause, you gave him your name.
Bob blinked. Then he offered a small, shy smile that cracked at the edges.
âCool. Hi,â he said, breathless. His brows furrowed as his gaze dropped lower, his eyes catching on your waist, your hips. âUhâsorry again, about your dress. I didnât mean to step on it earlier. You looked like you were in a rush and Iâwell, I was definitely in your way.â
You felt your lips twitch. The barest curve, not sharp or defensive. A faint grin. Delicate. âItâs alright,â you said. âBound to happen at places like these.â
His head tilted slightly, curious. âYou come to stuff like this often?â
âNot often. Just sometimes.â
And it was only then that you realized youâd stepped closer.
Your arms had casually found their place against the back of the couch across from him, hands gripping the cool metal frame as your scarf drifted with the breeze behind you. You werenât leaning in exactly, but the distance had shrunk.
When did that happen?
You tilted your head, letting your eyes linger a little longer now, more curious than guarded. You assessed him with a little more attention now.
âIâm guessing you donât come to these events much?â
Bob immediately shook his head, a nervous, breathy laugh escaping his lips like it was running away from him. You could see the cloud of it in the cold night air, swirling and vanishing between you.
âGod, no. This is my second one and itâsâitâs been a lot. I think Iâm gonna ask to just stay in my room next time.â He gave a little shrug, slouching a bit. âItâs not like I do much anyway. I mean, Iâm allowed to talk to people, and I like talking to people, but Iâd rather not sometimes.â
That made you blink. Allowed?
The word snagged on something in your mind. There was something disarming about the way he said it, like he didnât mean to offer that information but also didnât think it was worth hiding. You couldnât tell if he was joking, oversharing, or both. But it was too strange to ignore. Like it slipped past a filter that wasnât built right. It made you hesitate, if only for a breath.
But he wasnât watching your reaction. He was staring at the flicker of the fire, letting the silence sit between you like it belonged there.
You folded your arms gently across your chest, the smooth material of your dress whispering beneath your fingertips.
âYou seem to be talking just fine with me,â you pointed out, softer now.
Bob looked down at his hands. Then back at you. Then away again.
âI⌠wellâŚâ he stammered, voice catching on another shy, almost embarrassed laugh.
And then you saw it.
The blush. A warm pink crawling up from the collar of his white shirt to the apples of his cheeks. Subtle, but not subtle enough to miss. Especially not in the glow of the firelight, which danced over his skin like it had a crush of its own.
âI⌠yeah, I... I donât know. Some people are easier to talk to than others, I guess.â
Your mouth twitched before you could stop it.
âYeah,â you said, âIâd say so.â
The smile that tugged at your lips came easier than you expected. Not just polite. Not guarded. Honest. Probably the first one youâd let slip all night.
Seriously, who the hell is this guy? And why did he make the night feel a little less awful?
He was cute. Not the kind of handsome that announces itself the second someone walks in the room, but the kind that sneaks up on you, quiet, awkward, totally unsure of how much space he takes up and trying not to be a bother. Like he wasnât used to being looked at for too long and didnât know where to put himself when he was.
Youâd seen a lot of people in this world wear confidence like a costume. Bob didnât even try. He wore uncertainty like a second skin, and somehow, it made him feel⌠real.
You liked the way he didnât crowd you. Didnât puff out his chest or pretend to have all the answers. He sat with his knees slightly knocked together, most of his hands swallowed by the sleeves of his jacket, like even they were too bold to leave out in the open. Maybe he was anxious. Maybe a little broken in the places that never healed right, but he felt safe. Your gut told you so.
And that made you more nervous than anything else tonight.
You caught yourself watching him again. The way he kept his hands mostly hidden in his sleeves, shoulders rounded forward. His suit was clearly tailored but still seemed a size too big, like someone had tried to wrap him in something expensive just to prove he belonged. And still, it worked.
His hair was brown and shaggy, a bit longer than most people would have it at these events, barely even styled, but you kind of liked it. It gave him a strange charm, even if the loose curls hid his eyes whenever he ducked his head.
You werenât used to thoughts like this. Not ones this soft. Not ones that fluttered in your chest like nervous birds. Not often. Not like this. Not here. Not in places like these.
You came for Bucky. That was the plan. Show up, find him, talk. Clear the air. Maybe start patching things up with your broken little found familyâcracks and all. But Bucky wasnât here. Valentina played you like a fiddle, and now the whole night had soured. Tomorrow, youâd wake up to press statements and headlines, scrambling to explain why your name wouldnât be on the next New Avengers roster. Youâd spin it clean, of course. Thatâs what you did.
But none of that mattered yet.
In this strange little pocket of quiet, just outside the hum of power plays and champagne politics, you kind of just wanted something normal. Not mission normal. Not cover-identity normal. Real normal. A conversation that didnât hinge on leverage or patriotism. A moment that wasnât already weaponized.
Maybe you could stay for another half hour before you disappeared and joined JoaquĂn in the van downstairs, counting your losses.
And maybe it was the firelight, a flicker here, a flicker there, warmth and glow dancing in the night that influenced you. But you found yourself leaning forward a little more, walking around the couch, smoothing your hands down the front of your dress. You straightened your spine, trying to will yourself into being brave.
âWould you...â You paused, âum. Do you wanna grab a drink with me?â
Bob blinked, eyes flicking up to meet yours. He sat up straighter at the invitation, startled, like a puppy hearing its name for the first time. His lips parted. For a split second, you swore he looked excited. Maybe even hopeful.
But then he deflated.
His shoulders fell, his expression shifting to a quiet sort of apology as his eyes darted away. âI... I canât. Sorryââ
âOh.â You blinked, trying not to let your smile falter.
âI want to,â he rushed to say, almost stumbling over the words. âI do.â
âItâs okayââ
âNo. No. I would. Itâs just... IâmâIâm sober now.â
Your mouth opened. Then closed.
âOh.â
âIâm sorryââ he added quickly, like he was terrified heâd ruined something.
But you shook your head, even stepping a little closer without realizing it.
âNo. Donât be sorry,â you said gently. âSeriously. Congratulations. Thatâs a big deal.â
He smiled at that, small and grateful. A little crooked and thin-lipped. It was cute.
âThanks.â
You hesitated a moment, then tilted your head. âCan I ask how long?â
âUhâŚâ He scratched the back of his neck, eyes flicking upward like he was counting the months with the stars. âI think about a year now. Iâve only really started keeping track since I moved here, so... maybe like, seven? Eight months?â
You smiled softly, your heart unexpectedly warm.
âThatâs still a long time.â
He gave a sheepish shrug, and his cheeks pinked again, like he didnât quite know what to do with your praise. Like no one gave it to him often enough for it to feel normal.
âSome days feel longer than others,â he said, the corner of his mouth twitching at his own tease.
You couldnât help the laugh that bubbled out of you, quiet, but real.
âWhat are youâŚ?â
JoaquĂnâs voice fizzled to life in your ear, cracking the quiet like a crowbar to glass.
âAre you flirting right now?â
You froze, the smile instantly tugging at your lips again despite yourself.
When you didnât answer, he laughed.
âOh my god, youâre totally flirting right now! Itâs so bad, but you so are! Who even is this guy?â
You turned ever so slightly, subtle as you could manage, and pressed a knuckle into your ear to mute him. Your cheeks warmed in tandem with Bobâs.
Bob blinked. âSorry⌠did I, umâwas that weird?â
âNo, no,â you said quickly, maybe too quickly. âThat wasnât you.â
He just nodded, like your word was more than enough. Like you couldâve told him the moon was fake, and heâd say, huh, never really thought about that before.
You moved to take a seat across from him, the fireplace crackling softly between you like a low, slow heartbeat. The warmth of the flames painted him in golds and ambers, the flickering light catching the softness in his eyes and the loose fall of his hair.
You fidgeted with your fingers out of instinct. And across the fire, he mirrored the motionâthumb twisting around his knuckle, pinky tapping rhythmically against the inside of his sleeve. There was something strangely reassuring in that shared nervousness, like you were both waiting for the same storm to pass.
You let out a quiet breath, tension easing from your shoulders. âYou said you moved here? Like, New York?â
âYeah,â he said, nodding. His shoulders dipped too, visibly relaxing just a touch, like your voice permitted him to breathe. âI⌠uh, I lived in Malyasha for a while. But Iâm from Florida. Born and raised. Whereâwhere are you from?â
You tilted your head slightly, watching how intently he tried to keep eye contact and how quickly he broke it again. âI flew in from Washington.â
âD.C.?â he asked, and you nodded.
His eyebrows lifted, eyes wide for a split second. âWow. Do you work in the White House or something?â
You huffed a laugh, smiling into your words. âSure. Something like that.â
His head bobbed along with the answer.
âSo youâre like⌠a really important person here.â
You laughed again, this time wider. Your teeth showed. It surprised you how easily you let your guard down. âI wouldnât say that.â
But he was smiling too, softer now. Less anxious.
âYou are,â he said, more sure of himself now. âI saw the way people looked at you tonight. Notânot that I was watching you or anything⌠just, itâs hard not to. Youâre, umâŚâ
You saw the moment he lost his words, saw them spill and scatter like marbles across a floor. His blush deepened, blooming across his cheeks in a full, unmistakable deep red colour. He ducked his head, eyes falling to his shoes again, and you watched him fight a shy, apologetic smile.
ââŚI can see why theyâd want your picture.â
And just like that, your heart softened.
You leaned in a little, elbows resting against your knees. âThank you, Bob. Youâre really sweet, you know that?â
Bob looked up again, startled by the compliment, his mouth parting slightly like he didnât know what to say to that. You werenât sure if anyone had ever told him that before, and if they had, you could guess they didnât mean it the way you did now.
He didnât belong here. That much was obvious. Not with people like Valentina, not with cold smiles and polished lies. Not with mercenaries, politicians, and millionaires who hide behind their money. You could see it in the way he sat too stiffly on a velvet chair meant for lounging, in the way he tugged at his sleeves or tucked his hands away when he felt exposed.
âWhatâre you doing in a place like this, Bob?â
He blinked, tilting his head like he wasnât sure what you meant.
You smiled, eyes squinting a little as you leaned forward more. âI mean, are you like, a sponsor? Investor?â
The words didnât even sound right on your tongue, not when directed at him. The image of him swirling champagne and talking stocks was so laughably out of sync with the shy guy currently pressing himself into the couch cushions like he wanted to disappear.
âI donât think youâre here for the politics,â you added, and there was a touch of something playful in your voice.
He chuckled softly, eyes crinkling at the corners. âMe? Gosh, no. I donât⌠I donât do politics.â He scratched the back of his ear, sheepish again. âThatâs Buckyâs thing. Iâm here for my friends.â
And just like that, your whole world tilted.
Your smile dropped before you could stop it. A subtle shift, but you felt it everywhere: in your spine, in your lungs, in the weight of your hands resting suddenly still on your knees.
You straightened. Slowly.
ââŚYou know Bucky?â
The question came quieter than you intended, and Bob mustâve heard the change, the sudden stillness in your voice. His smile faltered, and he went still, too, sensing the tension without understanding it. His posture shrank, as if unsure what heâd stepped into, as if trying not to take up more space than he already had to upset you.
He nodded, a cautious kind of affirmation. âYeah. Heâs my friend.â
That stunned silence stretched long between you.
âI⌠I know heâs your friend too,â Bob added quickly, the words spilling out like he was trying to fill the void before it grew too wide. His voice was quieter now, softer around the edges, almost apologetic. âI heard you talking about him to Val, IâI thought maybeâŚâ
You werenât sure why he kept talking. Maybe because you hadnât said anything. Maybe because your smile had disappeared too fast, and he could feel the way the mood had shifted even if he didnât know why. His nervous ramble wasnât meant to hurt, you could tell that. But it did. It did because the moment he said Val, something in you knotted tight again.
The warm glow youâd felt around him moments ago started to dim, curling in on itself like a candle snuffed out mid-flicker. Your heart gave a small, stupid lurchâembarrassed at how quickly youâd let your guard down. Of course he knew Bucky. Of course he was close to Valentina. The pieces slid together too easily now, fitting into a picture you didnât want to look at.
You tried to pull yourself back together, quickly and quietly. You reminded yourself this wasnât supposed to be about comfort. It wasnât about soft smiles or normal conversations or maybe asking someone out for a drink. You came here with a mission, no matter how personal it was. To find Bucky. To set the record straight. Thisâthis moment of peace with a stranger who felt safeâwasnât supposed to happen.
He called her Val. Like they were friends. Like they knew each other beyond just work. Like he wasnât just some shy, nice guy who complimented you under his breath and blushed when you smiled at him. Jesus, were you that easy?
A strange bitterness bloomed in your mouth. Not anger, more like disappointment. At yourself, maybe. For forgetting, even just for a second, what kind of place this really was.
You stood up.
The decision was sudden, impulsive, a small motion made louder by the way Bob flinched. His eyes followed you, something tentative and uncertain flickering across his face.
You reached for your earpiece, thumb brushing over the button to unmute JoaquĂn.
But Bob stood, too. Slowly, almost clumsily, like he wasnât sure if he was supposed to follow you or stay where he was.
âDid Iâdid I say something wrong?â he asked.
You froze. Your fingers stilled over the earpiece. You hadnât expected that.
You turned, not quite facing him fully, but enough to catch the look on his face. His brows had drawn together, confusion etched faintly into his expression, and one of his hands was lifted just slightly, hovering in the air between you like heâd started to reach out and changed his mind halfway through. There were still several feet of space between you. The fire crackled low between you both, casting shadows across the expensive furniture and marble tiles.
âIâm sorry if I did,â he said, voice smaller now. âI didnât mean to upset you.â
That stopped you. âNo⌠you didnâtâŚâ You said, the words stumbling out, half-formed. You didnât know why you tried to soothe him. Maybe it was the way his eyes had gone wide or the way he seemed to dread the thought of you walking away just when he was finally starting to settle into himself. It stirred something in you. Something that made your chest tighten.
You couldâve said never mind. You wanted to. Pretend his words hadnât struck a nerve, hadnât made your heart twist in your chest. But they did. It bothered you.
Bob blinked at you. âOh,â he said, so gently it almost got carried off by the breeze.
A silence fell between you again. You wrapped your arms around yourself against the wind as you turned to look at him.
âWho are you, Bob?â
He straightened, caught off guard. âIâm... Iâm Bob,â he said. âJust... just Bob.â
You tilted your head. âThatâs it?â
He opened his mouth like he was about to say more, but nothing came out. His lips parted, then pressed shut again, the words retreating back into him like they were scared to be seen. He just shrugged helplessly. Like thatâs all he had left.
And yet he kept looking at you like he was begging you not to go. Not yet.
You sighed, bringing your fingers up to your temple, pressing cold skin to your warm forehead. There was a pulse pounding there now, dull and insistent.
âI justâŚâ You started, voice cracking faintly. âI came here looking for Bucky. I thought maybe I could get him to come home.â
âHome?â Bob asked carefully, his eyes soft.
âYeah. With Sam. With us.â You hesitated, glancing through the tall windows behind him. The light inside spilled gold across the floor, where laughter echoed and people clinked glasses without a care in the world. Your eyes landed on the group youâd been avoiding all nightâBuckyâs new team, huddled together with drinks, grinning like it was just another night to celebrate.
It made your chest hollow out.
âEver since he joined Valentinaâs little fuckass team or... whatever this is,â you said, gesturing vaguely toward the gala behind you, âeverythingâs just been so... shitty.â
You looked back at Bob, surprised to find that heâd stepped a little closer. Just enough that you could see the way his jaw twitched, like he was working through something he didnât know how to say.
âSorry,â you muttered, suddenly self-conscious. âNot to, like, dump all that on you.â
The cold bit into your arms. You rubbed them quickly, wishing youâd brought a coat.
âItâs not...â Bob started, and then, more firmly, âItâs not a fuckass team.â
You blinked. âSorry?â
âThey saved me,â he said, voice trembling just a bit. âLena. Bucky. The others. Theyâre my family. We... we take care of each other.â
You stared at him, something icy curling low in your stomach. âYeah?â
âYeah,â he said again, earnest. âI know it probably doesnât look like it from the outside, but... they gave me a chance when no one else would. They didnât treat me like I was broken. They... saw me.â
You wanted to believe that. You really did. But it felt like trying to swallow glass.
âRight,â you muttered, too tired to argue. âI have to go.â
You turned, reaching for your earpiece.
âWait,â Bob said suddenly, like heâd only just realized this was goodbye. âWill I... will I see you again?â
You paused, fingers still hovering near your ear. The balcony lights flickered faintly behind you, and the sound of the city buzzed low in the background, as if the world were holding its breath.
You didnât turn around right away.
Part of you wanted to say no. Make it easy. Clean.
But when you finally looked back at him, at the boyish worry carved into his face, the way he stood there with his hands half-raised like he didnât know whether to reach for you or let you go, you felt that ache again. The one that whispered that maybe, despite everything, he meant what he said. That maybe there was still something worth salvaging in the strange, quiet warmth youâd felt earlier. Something real.
And you desperately wanted it to be real. You wanted it to mean something.
âI donât know,â you admitted, voice barely above a whisper.
Bob swallowed. Nodded like he understood.
But his eyes lingered on you like he hoped the answer might change.
planning on making a fun post about songs iâve created in my kpop dr but iâve kept in the basement (aka my laptop) bc iâm feeling motivated as fuck about shifting to this dr
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â§âË. 5 songs iâve created in my kpop idol dr that i have kept in the basement
notes ; by basement i mean my laptop. iâve decided a little format for this so itâs easier to read and wonât get muddled up (hopefully). itâll go like this: list the song (and this realityâs artist), link to the song (all links are safe /g), a description about why i wrote the song and why itâs in the basement lolol
i fr have like 80 songs iâve listed to go along with this topic so if anyone wants multiple parts, pls lets me know!!
i posted a video version on my tiktok if any are interested in that (pls i worked so hard and long on it LMAO). i got hella motivated and dedicated to this reality again so making things about it is gonna be so fun for me heheh
okay thatâs it, hope you enjoy!! 𫶠enjoy my music tastes lol
song #1 ; too young (by sabrina carpenter)
description ; made this song pre-debut for a trainee evaluation for me to sing. i mentioned i was into song making and got asked during the pervious eval if i could write my own song,, so i did and this is it. itâs in the basement bc itâs a pretty old song (again pre-debut and i was 16) and i donât think it fits with my vibe now nor my groupâs concept so,, its stuck in the basement.
song #2 ; pushing 20 (by sabrina carpenter)
description ; this one made it on my tiktok vid but i like the song a lot and the backstory of how it came a lot so iâm gonna talk about it again đ. i wrote this a couple weeks before my 20th birthday and i finished it days afterward. idk i felt saucy turning 20 so boom song about how i felt pushing 20. yep. itâs more of a fun, play around song. it didnât feel good enough to put out anywhere tbh.
song #3 ; emotions ft. yoohyeon (by slchld ft. ripley)
description ; one of the many secret (from the public) songs i made with my members/friends. made bc i was bored and yoohyeon was in my studio with me so she joined along. this might be a special extra clip type moment in the future. yoohyeon is one of my members btw.
song #4 ; safety pin (by 5sos)
description ; made as an experiment type song during preparation for NOVAâs 3rd mini album comeback. my group has a rocker/pop-rock genre going on ykyk. it didnât get approved so itâs been shoved into the folders. :(( iâll keep fighting for her dw đŤĄ
song #5 ; stunner (by ten)
description ; freakyyyy but like,, soft freaky,, fluffy freaky i could say yk. about a life changing situationship type thing i had with a girl. alas, we are both idols so it didnât last long due to scheduling conflicts like it was way too much conflicts which was sad,, couldâve been endgame fr :((( most likely going to be in a future solo project tho. fucking love this song, i ate.
planning on making a fun post about songs iâve created in my kpop dr but iâve kept in the basement (aka my laptop) bc iâm feeling motivated as fuck about shifting to this dr
thinking i kept them in the basement bc either 1.) they donât fit the vibe of my group, 2.) are way too personal to share until the far future, 3.) waiting to be put on a solo project
planning on making a fun post about songs iâve created in my kpop dr but iâve kept in the basement (aka my laptop) bc iâm feeling motivated as fuck about shifting to this dr
method acting is a very powerful skill. using your own personal, physical, emotional self and pouring it into the character on the screen makes for a powerful performance. except when it's you and eren - you're not sure where the acting starts and real life begins.
read on ao3
the method acting playlist!!
content: actor!au, childhood friends to lovers, enemies to lovers, it was always you trope, fluff, HEAVY ANGST (i'm serious. people were ready to hang me at the stake please be warned), miscommunication (even more sorry), CELEBRITY DRAMA, taylor swift songs and smau at some parts!
triple threat
the ensemble cast
the time of your life
award show etiquette
new year's day
historic wins
the softest kind of love
sick with sadness
the sound of the applause
the met gala
ribbons release
lacy, oh lacy
my love, mine all mine
the third act
it's time to go
funeral
all too well
the new romantics
lovesick
fine line
the beach
speak now
tolerate it
all american bitch
style
better than revenge
sofia
sweet nothing
see you soon
long story short
extra blurbs, after the end of the story!:
daylight
narc
standards
the alchemy
extras (method acting fan casts, tracklists etc.):
debut tracklist
lover girl tracklist
ribbons tracklist
the lucky one tracklist
valedictorian tracklist
birds of a feather tracklist
pls comment on this post or any of the chapters if you want to be added to the taglist <3
         ( this lovely gif is by @janesfosterâ from this beautiful set ! )
FROM THE VOID, WITH LOVE Â | Â the beginning.
summary: torn from time, you have to navigate the t.v.a. with the one person who singlehandedly ruined the entirety of nycâs week. turns out you & him have a future-past. time is weird. loki, god of mischief (disputed) is infuriating.
listen to while reading:Â âmoviesâ by weyes blood
word count: 13.4k
pairing: loki / f!reader, references to established future romance
tags: enemies to friends to lovers, soulmates, we-are-in-love-in-the-future but how did that even happen, angst & comfort, redemption arc, lots of time travel, loki (2020) spoilers
a/n: so here it is â a revist to my well-loved series i wrote forever ago about these two idiots. nothing like an athiest and a god in love. this is so fun, and this fic will serve as a foundation point for the drabbles iâll write throughout the loki series run.
this collection is based on my already-existing drabbles about this pairing, which operates as the basis of their sacred timeline. that masterlist is here, and once more, the biggest thank you to @kostovasâ for keeping a chronological masterlist over the years â with over 90+ pieces, this pairing is such a large part of my blog and my growth as a writer.
as always, let me know what you think â tick, tock, bitches.
          MASTERPOST  |  AO3  |   SPOTIFY
This is not how you thought your week would go.
No, this was a little much.
You started your Monday with Loki, God of Mischief, crash landing through the lab youâd been completing your summer placement at, brainwashing your boss (and the nice agent guy who watched over the glowing nuclear cube), and, finally, stealing the one thing youâd been studying for the entirety of summer 2012 for your first official research journal outside of undergrad while pursuing your doctorate.
By Thursday, Midtown had been reduced to debris, aliens were confirmed real, the Avengers were a household name, and you were desperately trying to wrangle a stir-crazy Erik Selvig off the rooftop terrace of Stark Tower in the aftermath.
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Jason has a thing about drinking around you. Heâd kind of skirted around it for a while when you were first dating, but after a while youâd noticed he never really has more than a drink or two regardless of how much you had. The only times you ever see him drink more is when heâs downing whiskey as a pain mitigater when he needs stitches. Youâd initially assumed he just wasnât a big drinker, but eventually youâd come to realize it was more of a matter of not wanting to lose his inhibitions around you.Â
You know heâs still working on trusting himself, even sober, because heâs terrified of accidentally hurting you. But you have a hard time imagining him losing control like that in any state and youâre nearly certain heâs just being hard on himself.
Youâve been falling in and out of less than peaceful sleep for the past few hours, having trouble easing yourself while your boyfriend is still out. You at least attempted to get to bed earlier tonight because for once he isnât out fighting crime and risking injury, though you havenât found much more luck than usual.Â
You lie on your back, half ready to give up and turn on a movie while you wait.
Youâre momentarily startled to hear Dick bellow out your name, no regard for the fact that itâs nearing three in the morning and you have neighbors. Heâs not much of a shouter so youâre instantly on alert, worried that he or Jason are hurt.
You fumble out of bed and rush to the living room, surprised to find your fire escape empty. You turn, proceeding towards the front door, opening it cautiously.Â
âDick? Whatââ You donât need to finish your question because the second you take one good look at the two of them, the state of them is immediately clear. Dick, whoâs barely standing upright on his own, supports your boyfriend's weight via Jasonâs arm slinged around his shoulder.
âHey!â Dick grins at you, far more lively than he has any business being this late at night. âSorry, couldnât remember which apartment was yours.â
You nod pensively, âWell the perspectiveâs different than when youâre coming in through the window.â
He continues on past that without thought, âIâve come to deliver,â he says, gesturing up to Jason with a bit of a strain. Youâre pretty sure there were supposed to be a couple more words at the end of that sentence but you understand well enough anyway.
You nod, eyebrows raised and try to hide a smile. âThanks, Dick.â He shifts your boyfriend off of his shoulder to lean him up against the door frame, where Jason places a majority of his weight.
You eye him warily, not confident in his steadiness. He seems to hold well enough against the heavy door though, his eyes drifting around the tiled floor. Your attention shifts to Dick, whoâs clearly satisfied with a job well done and ready to go.
You tilt your head, seeing him turn away. âYou good?â
âIâm great!â He calls out with a thumbs up. You watch as he staggers away, nearly missing the exit.
You look back over at Jason, whoâs already staring at you with a soft gaze. âYouâre pretty,â he fawns, irises blown out and flickering all over your face.
âOh youâre drunk drunk.â You grin, watching him stumble forward a bit.
He shakes his head, looking a bit dizzy after, âShoulda seen Tim.â
You pause mid laugh, ââŚWho drove you here?â
He falters at that, gaze falling to the floor. âUhâŚâ He winces, âDamianâŚâ
You nod slowly, eyes wide, âWeâre gonna talk about that tomorrow.â
âHeâs better than youâd think.â Youâd hope so.Â
Well, at least heâs spending time with his brothers.
You sigh, straightening your posture in preparation for the job to come. âAlright, come on big guy,â you pull him up from his slant against the wall, hauling him into the same position heâd been in with Dickâthough youâre struggling significantly more to hold him upright. âYou gotta help me out here, Jay,â you grunt, trying very hard not to fold under his weight. You swat the door shut behind you, making peace with the fact that heâll scold you in the morning for not locking it.
He presses an uncoordinated kiss to the side of your head as you try to shuffle him along, not interested in the least in easing your labor. His self discipline isn't quite gone, but his awareness of how big he is sure seems to be.Â
You wobble from the heavy weight of his arm around your shoulders, holding onto him by his waist. You manage to get him to sidestep your cat, narrowly, though Salem hisses at him all the same. Jason takes no notice. You stumble into your bedroom with only about 30% of his usual balance aiding your effort.
He collapses onto the bed the second his legs hit the frame, pulling you down with him. You lie, somewhat awkwardly, on his chest as he holds you tightâprobably tighter than he would if he were sober. It feels nice though.
You lie your cheek flat on his chest, relaxing against him. âWhatâd you guys do? Thought you were just having an easy night.â
He takes a deep breath before answering, âRaided Dickâs liquor cââ he stops, mulling over his words. â...Bruceâs liquor that was in Dickâs cabinet.â He annunciates every word in that sentence very carefully.
You squint speculatively, âDidnât take Dick for the stealing type.â
He grumbles, âHeâs not. âLess itâs Bruce.â
You canât help the smile that breaks out on your face, âAw, you really do take after your big brother, donât you?âÂ
He scoffs at that, âI donât. Iâm the one who gave him the idea.â Yeah, that sounds right.
He taps on your cheek lightly and you pick your head up to find him looking at you with puppy dog eyes.
âWhatâs that look for?â
âCan I kiss you?â his eyes drop down to your lips, âI really wanna kiss you.â Heâs nearly whispering and you feel your heart skip several beats at the feeling of his eyes on you like this.
You press a light kiss to his lips and he practically purrs. Â
You pull back, admiring the serene expression on his face. âYou taste like whiskey.â
âI like whiskey,â he says honestly.
You smile, nodding. âI know. Donât know why, but..â
He leans in for another kiss but you parry, only letting his lips meet your cheek. He frowns grimly, attempting to chase your lips.Â
âLemme kiss you,â the pout on his face is adorable and while you hesitate to deny him, you retreat, resting your chin on his chest.
You smile wistfully, tracing his cheekbone, âYouâre drunk, baby.â
ââM not that drunk,â he tells you, though everything about him says otherwise.
Your hand falls flat on his shoulder. âYour eleven year old brother drove you here.â
He shrugs, âHe can drive the batâŚbatcar? BatâŚâ
âBatmobile,â you finish.
âThe batmobile.â he nods, as if he was seconds away from remembering. You suspect he wasnât.Â
âBruce lets him drive it?â you question, wholly disbelieving.
âNo.â
Enough said.
âYouâre gonna be hungover as hell in the morning,â you mumble, taking in his uninhibited demeanor.
He nods that off, ââS okay. Youâll be here, right?â
You tilt your head, observing him chalantly. âWhere else would I go?â
His arms snake tighter around you at that, giving you a little squeeze before relenting.Â
âI wanna marry you,â he murmurs, brushing your hair out of your face and tucking it neatly behind your ear.Â
You blink rapidly a few times, âWhat?â You push yourself up on his chest, sitting up on his abdomen.
âWanna marry you.â He repeats, eyes lidded as he breathes easy under you. âYouâre mâfavorite personâŚwant you tâbe my wife.â
Your breath gets caught in your throat. â..You want me to be your wife?â
His lips are slightly parted and his pupils are wide as he stares up at you, taking in your features carefully. ââCourse I do.â He brings his fingers up to your cheek, touching you softly with all the wonderment of a little kid. âYouâre so pretty.â
Youâre quick to return, âSo are you.â Especially right now.
He shuts his eyes momentarily, shaking his head morosely, âYou gotta stop beinâ so nice tâme,â he lets his hand fall to rest on your thigh. âDonât deserve it.â
âShut up,â you lour, âYou deserve it more than anybody.â
âNo. Not more than you,â his hands knead at your thighs like itâs an instinct. âYou deserve everything.â He closes his eyes, tilting his chin up as his head sinks further back into the pillow. âThink Iâd do anything you wanted.â
âJayââ
He continues on, âWant you tâbe happy. Wanna make you happy.â
Your face falls into an expression of dazed awe, âYou do make me happy.â
He dwindles at that, âNo, really happy. Take care of you. Build you a house, give you babies. Whaâever you want.â
He paws at your thighs, trying to get you to come closer again to him. You lay back down on top of him and his hand instantly buries itself in your hair, stroking softly. âYouâre justâŚyouâre so perfectâŚâ He turns his head to mumble against your forehead, âFeel like I dreamed you, sometimes.â
You breathe deeply against the crook of his neck, eyes feeling glassy. âI love you.â Itâs all you can get out, and itâs not enough, but itâs all of it.Â
âI love you,â he says like heâs trying to turn it into gospel. âSo much. I love you so much, so fuckinâ much.â His words start to get lost in his weary babbling.
Your chest feels full and you can distinctly feel every beat of your heart against it. Or maybe itâs Jasonâs heart. But whatâs the difference?
You press a tender kiss to the nape of his neck. âYouâre really sweet when youâre drunk, you know that?â
He hums lowly, head lulling against yours.
You still for a second, finding his breathing has slowed and his hand has seized its movement in your hair. His soft breaths fill the air as you press a kiss to his collarbone before settling in completely. âYouâre gonna love when I tell you about this in the morning,â you whisper, letting your eyes shut too.
Youâve nearly reached the peak of the slope, the uphill trek putting quite a toll on your legs. Jason insisted on holding your hand because his longer stride tends to put him several steps ahead of you. The sun beats down on your backs, the uptake in the heat of the day actually feeling quite nice compared to the chill thatâs swept over Gotham recently.
Upon arriving at the flat plane, you take in a pretty array of sunflowers and a thoughtfully placed bench.
Jason halts his steps, looking back at you. âYou need a break?â He asks, noting the way your breathing has become a bit labored.
You hum, taking a deep inhale. âJust for a second,â you say, plopping down on the bench.
He reaches behind him to fish the water bottle out of the pocket of his backpack. âDrink some water.â he says gruffly, holding the bottle out to you.
You donât particularly feel like you need water again just yet, but you know better than to try and fight him on something related to taking care of yourself. Itâs a losing battle and heâs proved it time and time again.
You take the drink from him, taking a couple sips. He eyes you with disapproval, bringing his hand up to tilt the bottom of the bottle up more. You down a few gulps, trying not to smile.
He takes the bottle back from you, taking a couple gulps of his own. Once the water returns to its pocket, he sits down next to you, hand massaging your thigh. In turn, your hand moves up to the nape of his neck, playing with the short hair there.
Despite your claim, you sit for longer than a second, listening to the birds chirping and the leaves rustling in the wind. It really is a beautiful day and Jason knew a great trail thatâs hardly ever busy. Itâs aways away from Gotham, but any excuse he can take to get the two of you out of the smog filled city, heâll take.
Between the serenity of the scene in front of you and the warmth of his touch on your thigh, your breathing steadies pretty quickly.
You peer at the path ahead, taking note of how level and easy it looked. Your hand flattens on the base of his neck as you turn to him, âI could beat you in a race.â You say decidedly.
He huffs out a laugh, meeting your eyes with a glint of amusement shining in his own. âOh yeah?â
âYeah.â You smile, nodding, âBeen waiting for a chance to prove it.â
You stand up, turning around to take his hand and pull him up with you. He does most of the work for you, pulling his weight up himself.
âYou wanna go?â He smiles, looking down at you.
âDo you wanna go?â Your smile grows impossibly, and Jason decides right then and there that heâd do absolutely anything to see you light up like that again.
You figure a sprint is your best chance, youâre not willing to bet that you can beat out a vigilante when it comes to endurance. Especially considering the uphill incline almost took you out.
You settle on a finish line about 30 feet away, and as you position yourselves to start, you feel your overconfidence begin to cave back in on you. His stature swamps you out, and it's becoming clear that youâve got no real chance here. In any case, youâve committed and this is happening.
âReadyâŚsetâŚâ both of you have the idea to start before you say go, taking off with haste.
Youâre laughing as you run, which isnât doing you any favors with keeping ahead of him, though youâre able to maintain a pretty neck and neck match.
Did he let you win? Yeah. Heâs a gentleman, of course. Heâs right on your tail though, and lifts you up from under your arms as you cross the finish line, nipping at your neck as you giggle.
He sets you back down gently, âAlright, fast girl. You need a drink?â He tucks some stray hair in your face back behind your ear.
âNo, Iâm...â You pause, scanning around. You point at a big tree along the side of the trail ahead. âYou see that tree right there?â
He glances over, âYeah?â
You take off sprinting for it without another word. And apparently cheating is a quick ticket to him dropping the act and beating you without an ounce of mercy.
Youâre sitting on a relatively level branch in a tree next to Jason, one of your legs resting on top of one of his. You swing your free leg back and forth, biting into your sandwich.
Thereâs a couple juice boxes balancing in the small space between you, both half empty. Heâd laughed at you when you picked them up from the store on the way there, but he drinks it all the same.
He holds your ziplock bag of chips out to you and you take a small handful, popping them into your mouth. When your hand moves to return to your side, he takes it in his own and presses your knuckles to his lips gently.
With a sly smile, you watch butterflies dance around each other and listen to birds singing their offbeat songs. And you think about Jason. You think about how he held you in his arms last night so you could fall asleep while he read. How on the way up here heâd held your hand as you balanced across the stones, forcing him to walk at a much slower pace than heâd probably prefer. You told him he could walk a little ahead, but heâd insisted on holding your hand so you didnât âslip and bust your head openâ in his words.
You wouldnât know it, but heâs combing through his own set of memories of you too. Itâs a bit silly to spend so much time dwelling on these warm memories about someone thatâs only right next to you, but youâve both found itâs hard to stop.
It used to scare Jason, how often you occupied his whole mind. Heâd never felt such intense adoration and devotion before that heâd nearly mistaken it for fight or flight. It was foreign and strange, and it felt like danger. But it didnât take long for the effects of his love to kick in like a drug, and now he canât get enough of you.
But you donât feel like a drug, you feel like a cure. You make him feel like himself again, like death never got a hold of him and like heâs an innocent soul anew. You treat him like it, at least.
Maybe itâs silly to fall into such a deep pit of thoughts about you when youâre right there, smiling so bright over at him and gleefully pointing out a couple of squirrels that are fighting over an acorn. But heâs happy to let you take up as much space in his head as you want.
You sit with your legs dangling off the pier, shoes cast aside so you can enjoy the cool water. Jason sits a few feet behind you, laying down against the wood of the dock, the sun beating down on his face.
The water is a beautiful blue marble reflection, and the sun radiates down on your skin, sending warmth throughout your body which combats the light breeze handily. You lean down and dip your hand into the water, letting it run between your fingers like thread.
âCan we swim?â you pipe up, looking over your shoulder at Jason.
He raises his eyebrows at you, âYou didnât know there was a lake up here.â He means he knows you donât have a swimsuit under your clothes.
You shrug, âThereâs no one up here.â
He scans around mildly, before looking at the water. âYeah, okay.â He tugs his shirt off his back, coming to a stand.
You grin, pulling up the material of your own shirt from your waist. Once itâs swept over your head, Jasonâs left in just his boxers and not a moment later youâre in a similar state.
He smiles at you, wrapping his arms around your waist and it takes you no time at all to realize where heâs going with this. He lifts you up off the ground and dives off the dock, submerging you both in the water.
You bob back up out of the water, not even trying to suppress the glee on your face. And somewhat to your surprise, neither does he.
Youâd had dinner at the manor with his family last night and you were still a bit attuned to Jasonâs closed off, stoic mood that he gets in around them. He feels something akin to insecurity when he openly emotes around them. Vulnerability, maybe. Either way, you know he hates the feeling and will avoid it at all costs so itâs nice when itâs just the two of you and he gets to act like himself.
Unlike Jason, you canât quite touch the floor of the lake, so you tread with the water wavering at your neck. The water barely reaches the start of Jasonâs shoulders as he stands before you.
He closes the small space between you before his arms make their way under your thighs, lifting you up out of the water slightly. He looks up at you with a lazy smile as you wrap your legs around his body. Your cheeks warm and you hold his face in your hands, leaning down to kiss him with heat.
He deepens the kiss, thumbs rubbing at your thighs as his head tilts back. Your thumbs stroke at his cheek in turn, smiling against his lips.
He actually whines when you pull away, chasing your lips. You rest your hands on his shoulders, simpering down at him.
âAlright, slow down, hotshot. Weâre not doing anything in a lake.â You laugh, pushing the dripping white streak back with the rest of his wet hair.
He huffs, âIf there was anyone around here I promise you would not be half naked right now.â
You push yourself off of him, dropping back down into the water. âOther people are the least of your concerns,â you say, grinning and splashing him in the face, backing away with haste.
He blinks the water out of his eyes, laughing. âThatâs how it is?â
You bite your lip as he approaches and you continue to retreat. âCanât have you losing focus.â
He raises his brow at you, wearing a smile that says that you should know that was a mistake. He proves it as he dives after you, lifting you up over his shoulder and tossing you into the water with an unfair amount of ease.
Youâre a bit hidden away in the tall grass, the scent of lavender flowers placing you in repose. Youâre laying with your head in his lap, eyes closed as he pages through his book.
Heâs reading out loud, though if youâre being honest, you havenât fully processed a single word heâs read in at least ten minutes. Heâs good at making you relax with his voice, and the amount of exercise youâve gotten in today is doing nothing to slow it down.
You canât think of when he started playing with your hair, but it feels soothing and frankly itâs making you very sleepy. Between the gravelly lull of his words and the rustling of the flora throughout the field youâre about to pass out.
âIâm gonna fall asleep.â You mumble, eyes shut.
His hand stills and he extends his book away from his body so he can see your face. âSweetheart, thereâs not a chance in hell you were awake that whole time.â
âI was,â you say, blinking up at him blearily. âI was just resting my eyes.â
He looks down at you skeptically. âHow long have we been here?â
You click your tongue, âLike fifteen minutes.â
âItâs been an hour and a half.â he says simply, flipping his book shut from the last page as proof.
âIt has nââ you look up at the sky and notice the sun is in a wildly different spot than it was when youâd first laid down. Youâre almost completely in the shadows of the trees now. âWhâwhy did you let me sleep for so long?â
He hums lowly, âYou looked peaceful.â He pauses, âPretty.â
He looks at the sky, squinting. He nudges you off his lap gently, coming to a stand. âCome on. The sunâs gonna start going down soon.â
You groan and he pulls you up to join him, your fatigue tailing after you. You lean your weight against him and rest your head on his chest, closing your eyes again. âLetâs just stay here.â
You feel him shake his head. âCanât stay here, sweetheart. Whoâll feed the strays back home?â
Heâs right. You canât leave them to dumpster dive again.
You groan louder as you pull back and stand up straight. âYou did not mention that the trail was so long.â You look down at your sore legs and try to stretch them out a bit to get energy back in them.
When you look back up at him, heâs swinging the backpack on, but he stops midway, dropping it to his side again.
He slugs his backpack over your shoulders, turning his back to you and bending down a bit. You take the hint and jump up. He catches you with ease, hoisting you up higher.
He starts down the grassy path out of the field, sidestepping flowers and bumblebees as he goes. Your head lulls to the side and ends with your cheek resting on his shoulder.
He bobs you up, âIf Iâm carrying you all the way back to the car you have to stay awake.â
âIf youâre carrying me all the way back to the car, what difference does it make?â you grumble, eyes fluttering.
âKeep me company.â
You pick your head up and press a kiss to his neck. âI can do that. What do you want to eat tonight?â
He hums thoughtfully. âYou wanna get pizza?â
You nod, pleased. âBig day for us.â
You have one arm draped loosely over his shoulder and the other lags by your side. âAre you going on patrol tonight?â You ask him.
He peers back at you haphazardly, âUh, noâwill you hold onto me, please?â
Youâre nowhere near falling, but you know thatâs not why he wants you to hold onto him. Youâre happy to oblige though. You wrap your arms around him, crossing them over each other so you can hold onto his shoulders.
Seemingly content, he continues, âNo, Iâm not. Wanna stay in with you.â
âAw. Going soft on me?â You rag.
He hums deeply, âOr maybe I'm just sick of being around Dick.â
You scoff, âWell, if youâre gonna be mean.â
âIâm literally carrying you right now.â He shrugs you up a bit in emphasis. Fair enough.
You look up and can see the pinking hues of the sky in between the leaves of the trees, glowing down softly on you. Your mouth twists into a contemplative frown. It takes you a moment to piece together where youâre at, but you eventually realize youâre only halfway back to the car. âI donât think weâre gonna make it back before sunset.â
âThatâs okay.â He tells you.
You rest your chin on his shoulder, a bemused pout on your face. âYou hate it when Iâm outside after dark.â
âI hate it when youâre alone outside after dark.â He corrects.
âAh.â You nod, thoughtfully. âBut now Iâve got my strong boyfriend to protect me, right?â
He scoffs but youâre just upset you canât see the flush on his cheeks that youâre certain is there.
Though he shows no signs of struggling, youâre beginning to feel guilty that heâs spending his day off lugging you around.
âI can walk.â You offer, pushing yourself up a bit, ready to jump down.
âI know.â He says simply, shrugging you up higher.