That's it. That's the whole show.

if i look back, i am lost
Keni
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸
ojovivo
wallacepolsom

bliss lane

KIROKAZE
Stranger Things
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Product Placement
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Misplaced Lens Cap
we're not kids anymore.
noise dept.
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
sheepfilms
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todays bird
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@batsratswrites
That's it. That's the whole show.

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i love they made jane good with kids, they could have gone the opposite way and make him dislike them (since they remind him of his daugther), but not only does he LOVE interacting with them, but he also taps into their imaginative world and even offers to play/take care of them when the parents are too affected/distracted by the murder that just happened
quick Teresa Lisbon sketch bc the mentalist and sourdough are my winter hyperfixations this year
any tips or feedback are appreciated!
just please be kind about it, haven't drawn in a while and i'm trying to get back to it, forgot how frustrating it is when it doesn't look like the reference JKASGFHAM đ
funny how i named my blog batsratsWRITES and i haven't posted a single thing i've written here, but apparently we've shifted to drawing??
won't be changing the name tho
quick Teresa Lisbon sketch bc the mentalist and sourdough are my winter hyperfixations this year

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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greatest dynamic in the world IS strange, eccentric asshole and their normal and polite friend who on closer inspection is actually worse in deeply weird and unexpected ways
ya'll know what i need? more Cho fics STAT thst man is FINE and FUNNY and i need him bad
The mentalist really is a top tier feminist tv show - like the sexy no-nonsense brunette with the gun saves the silly pretty blonde boy over and over and over again
I hate the outcome but I need to post this or else I'II never finish it ECK but I LOVE ALT OSC AND I WILL DO MOREEEE TRUST MEE
oscarâs laugh at the end sounds just like lando đ

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i have genuine tears in my eyes rn from laughing so hard
Why is everyone freaking out about Lando rn??? I thought something bad happened and it's literally nothing đ
in reference to this sometimes it really does make me insane to think about because
Lando really did it his way
he never changed, never compromised, never broke or bent to the constant barrages of criticism and speculation and mockery
he stayed true to who he's always been, despite so many people trying to say otherwise about changing and arrogance or ego or what the fuck else, he wasn't a dick (in his words) because he didn't want to be
he didn't play mind games, he wasn't rude or snide in his interviews, he didn't have a manager saying things to the media, feeding little things constantly
he was nice, he was polite, he was hard working, he was accountable (often more than he should've been), he was as resilient as he's always been in the face of being called mentally weak or defeated and ultimately he won without needing to change himself
he did it his way, he was just Lando
The đŹ couple of all time
Son having more brain than his fuck ass father

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if i wanna stay alive (you should never cross my mind) ⸝ lando norris x reader .
featuring lando norris , spy au , fake dating tw blood , weapons , character injuries , minor character deaths word count 11.8k authorâs note LANDO NORRIS MONACO GP WINNER WAOWWWWW !!!!! i have about a billion requests in my inbox but idk . something about this artwork of lando by @artist173 made my brain go brrrr and suddenly i had almost 12k words of agent lando norris . this was genuinely a feverish write and i hope everyone enjoys this as much as i enjoyed writing it ! please come tell me what you think or send in a request <3 also hoping to have the birthday build - a - fic up sometime next week ! title is from killshot by magdalena bay .
Youâre not surprised heâs already here. In fact, you kind of expected it. Thereâs something about him that suggests heâs always just arrived before you, just finished charming his way out of a dilemma he created for himself, just smirked like the world is a game and heâs two steps ahead of whoever heâs playing.
You enter the briefing room, and right on cue, Agent Lando Norris spins around in one of the swivel chairs, holding a paper cup of burnt coffee like itâs a martini (shaken, not stirred). âWell, well, well,â he drawls, eyes bright. âIf it isnât my favorite rival.â
Youâre not rivals, not really â just trained together, sparred and surveilled each other too many times to count on your way to becoming full-fledged agents. The joke is still funny, though: a reminder that youâve both made it, as concrete and tangible as the shiny access badges clipped to your clothes. So you just grin and play along, raising an eyebrow as you drop into the seat across the table from him. âThis is awkward. I have at least three other rivals I like more.â
He gasps, faux-devastated. âAnd here I thought I was your number one boy. You wound me.â
âYouâll live,â you tease, checking your watch. Youâre right on time, meaning your handler is late. Sheâs never late, which means something is up. Something big. Youâre trying to figure out what it is, what you could possibly be here for, which you could probably do better if Lando wasnât flirting your ear off.
âCome on. You know you missed me,â he says, chin in hand, leaning against the table with far too much amusement flickering in his eyes for an 8 AM briefing.Â
âI saw you last Monday at the mass casualty response training,â you respond dryly, leaning in to mirror him across the table.Â
âExactly. Last Monday,â he emphasizes, like it proves something. âIf I didnât know any better, Agent, Iâd think you were avoiding me.â
You smile, saccharine. âIf only I could be so lucky.â
âStop being so mean to me, or I swear to God Iâll fall in love with you,â he replies lightly, ridiculous grin on his face. Something warm blooms in your chest, which you promptly stamp down until it can never reach your brain again.Â
âGood, youâre both here,â Agent Beatrice Hale says as she walks into the room, and you and Lando both straighten up in your seats immediately. Youâve been through eight months of grueling training, nearly two years now in the field executing the most dangerous missions in Europe, and the sight of your handlerâs sleek grey bob and crisp pantsuit is still the scariest thing youâve encountered on the job. âLetâs get started.â
The high-tech glass screen behind her flickers to life with a photo: a man, mid-fifties judging from the salt-and-pepper hair. Heavyset, with a slight paunch that not even his exceptionally tailored suit can hide. His smile is too white, almost wolfish. Itâs the kind of face you instinctively donât trust.
âThis is Gabriel DuPont,â she says, dropping two thick dossiers on the table. âPublicly, heâs the billionaire tech CEO of DuPont Industries. Humanitarian. Philanthropist. Privately? Heâs running one of the most sophisticated arms smuggling operations weâve seen in the last decade.â
âWe have a team on him, donât we?â Lando asks before you can open your mouth to say the same thing. He flashes a quick smile at you, like he knows youâre going to be irritated that he beat you to it. âRussell and Hamilton.â
âHad a team,â Hale says matter-of-factly. âTheyâve gone dark. Havenât checked in for forty-eight hours. HQ is assuming theyâre compromised.â
The room falls into a tense silence. Landoâs jaw ticks, and the strangest memory floats to the front of your mind: an early day in training, Lando much smaller and skinnier than he is now, practically getting pulled through an obstacle course by a tall, lanky guy.Â
George. Compromised. You blink, hard, and the memoryâs gone.
Itâs part of the job. You all knew it when you signed up. But something about Haleâs businesslike tone makes your heart twist in your chest a little bit.
âOkay. So whatâs the new plan?â you say, exhaling through your nose slightly to calm your heartbeat.Â
Hale just smiles, clicks to the next photo. Itâs a sprawling oceanside estate, all floor-to-ceiling windows and smooth white stone. âA softer approach. DuPont is hosting a weekend-long charity gala at his estate in Monaco. The guest list is small â business partners, old-money moguls, politicians with questionable morals. Headquarters has arranged an in: a wealthy couple, invited last-minute after a strategic seven-figure donation.â
You look at Hale. Then the twin dossiers on the table in front of you. âNo,â you say. âNo, no, no.â
Lando, of course, is beaming, leaning back until his chair nearly tips onto two wheels. You have to fight the urge to kick it out from under him. âWell. This is the best mission Iâve ever been assigned.â
âNo arguments,â Hale says, and you groan. âYouâre the only pair of agents who fit the profile. We have enough archived photos of you together from training to build a record. You have chemistry ââ
âWe have history,â you correct. âThereâs a difference.â
Hale smiles, and itâs ice. âIt will read as familiarity, comfort, trust to the outside world. Thatâs all we need,â she says, voice clipped, and you sink back into your chair.
âYouâll be posing as newlyweds. Wealthy, nauseatingly in love, enough money and clout to catch DuPontâs attention,â she continues, sliding the files across the table to you both. She doesnât say the words, but all three of you know whatâs implied. And enough attractiveness to keep it, should it come to that.Â
âNewlyweds? Wow,â Lando says. âShould we get matching pajamas, babe? Maybe a coupleâs massage?â
âI will strangle you in your sleep,â you say flatly, opening your dossier and pointedly not looking at him.
From the corner of your eye, his grin gets even wider. âThat wouldnât be very wifely of you.â
You flip through the dossier, pages and pages of a life carefully constructed for the two of you. Mr. and Mrs. Sinclair. Young heir to a telecommunications empire and his aristocratic wife. Just the right amount of wealth and pedigree. Vacation home on Lake Como. A cocker spaniel named Beckham.Â
You canât do this. Youâre going to vomit.
âYouâll have twenty-four hours to prepare before you fly to Monaco, and twenty-four hours to prepare there before the gala. Any questions?â Hale asks, and Lando raises his hand like a schoolboy. She gives him a look. âThere are three people in this room, Agent. Donât make me call on you.â
He turns to you, his smile slow and so obnoxious. âIâll accept the mission on one condition.â He pauses dramatically, and you raise your eyebrows at him as if to say get on with it. âYou have to promise not to fall in love with me for real.âÂ
You roll your eyes, but your grin gives you away. âDonât worry, Norris. I think Iâll manage.â
âHoneymoon?â you say, throwing a stress ball at Lando.
âOi. Donât damage the asset!â he laughs, catching it a second before it smacks into his face. âMaldives, two weeks. Cheval Blanc. Waterfront villa, of course,â he says automatically, tossing it back to you. Youâre sitting on the floor of a briefing room you commandeered earlier in the day to practice your covers, a sprawl of Chinese takeout boxes between the two of you. âWhat are my hobbies?â
You grab the ball out of the air with one hand, the other preoccupied with taking a bite of your sesame chicken. You think as you chew, swallowing down the bite before you answer. âGolf. Collecting expensive cars. Youâve recently started playing padel, getting pretty good. Whereâd we meet?âÂ
He catches the ball and falters, massaging it between his hands. âIt was that bar, umâŚâ
âLando,â you groan, pinching the bridge of your nose. âWe met at Claridgeâs. I was there for an engagement party for my cousin, the earl, and you were there for an after-work drink. I spilled champagne on your leather briefcase and offered to buy you a new one. You said no, but asked if you could have a drink with me anyway. Youâve messed it up three times now. Go read the paragraph on it in the file.â
âI hate us,â Lando says in reply, kicking aimlessly at his dossier. âLike, sorry, but our covers are such wankers. Claridgeâs? That place is so posh.â
âOkay, Glastonbury boy,â you snort, and he chucks a pen at your head.Â
âI mean it! Weâd never go there,â he protests as you dodge it, giggling. âIâd take you on a way more memorable date than that.â
âRight. I know you, Norris. Youâd take me to Mother Kellyâs pub down the way because itâs close to the office, make me split the check for two pints,â you deadpan as someone knocks on the door.Â
You stand up, missing the way Landoâs eyes dim slightly at your words. But thereâs no one there when you open the door. Just two stupidly expensive pieces of luggage, stuffed to the brim.Â
âOh, mint,â Lando says enthusiastically, scrambling past you to pull his inside and unzip it. Clothes practically spill out of the aluminum suitcase, overflowing with silk shirts and brand-name leisurewear. He whistles lowly, pulling a button-up polo out of the bag. Itâs a white crocheted thing, red and blue piping on the collar and sleeves. âLook at this.â He strips his standard-issue black tee over his head, unbuttoning the polo and slipping it on.
Youâd left your suitcase by the door, completely unexcited to look at whatever trophy-wife designer dresses the costuming department had chosen for you. Youâd do every mission in your own beat-up jeans and a tank top if you could. You wish you had it in front of you now, though â wish you had anything to distract from the way your mouth goes dry at the smooth, muscular expanse of Landoâs chest, the white a brilliant contrast against his tanned skin.
He grins at you like he knows exactly what youâre thinking, the shirt settling around his torso with a lazy flourish. âHow do I look?â
You swallow hard. âLike youâll threaten to call daddyâs lawyer if the caviar on the yacht is lukewarm.â
He does a slow, exaggerated spin on his heels. âAdmit it. Your husband is hot.â
âEat your dinner,â you say fondly, tossing a fortune cookie at him.Â
He catches it, cracks it in one hand as his eyes flick down to read the message. âOoh. âRomance may be closer than it appears.ââ He waggles his eyebrows at you.
âThat is not what it says,â you laugh, getting to your feet to try to snatch the paper from him. Heâs too quick, though, holding it above your head with one hand and grabbing your wrists with the other. Â
âMaybe not on paper,â he grins, eyes flashing with amusement, âbut definitely in the room.â
You have to admit, being a nepo babyâs wife isnât so bad.Â
You knew MI6 had money, but youâd never seen them spend it like this. When the taxi came to pick you and Lando up from headquarters, you thought theyâd taken a wrong turn before they got to Heathrow. Instead, they directed you to a small terminal, ushered the two of you onto a literal private jet. Buttery leather seats, personal TVs at every angle, the works. Neither of you are new to the agency anymore, but you couldnât help your excitement, playing poker and raiding the gourmet snack drawers for the entire flight. When you landed, a shiny silver exotic convertible was waiting for you at the hangar; you know next to nothing about cars, but Lando spent about five minutes circling the thing, telling you every spec, and you could have sworn you heard him squeal like a little girl when he finally settled behind the wheel. Even the clothes theyâve given you for the day arenât nearly as bad as you expected â a pair of designer jeans, platform sneakers, and the softest sweater youâve ever felt. Although there is the ring to contend with, a solitaire diamond that must be at least five carats ostentatiously set high on a silver band. It feels weighty on your hand; you keep spinning it around your finger like itâs going to ground you, a real reminder of how unreal all of this is.Â
But the hotel trumps it all.Â
When you first pull up to the historic building, youâre mostly just glad to be out of the car. Lando drove like a complete maniac, fast and fearless, and the roads from the private airport in Nice to Monaco weaved through the mountains in a way that made your stomach twist. You step out of the car, catching your breath, and let Lando lead you with a hand on the small of your back into the hotel, where you promptly lose it again.Â
The lobby is stunning, low-slung red velvet couches scattered around the circular room underneath a chandelier thatâs bigger than your apartment hooked to an intricate stained-glass domed ceiling. It feels like youâve stepped into a bygone age, or a work of art, or maybe the drawing room from Titanic. You clutch Landoâs arm a little tighter as you walk together to the reception desk. This is it. The first test.Â
âNormally Iâd be all about you marking your territory, but your nails are kind of cutting off my circulation right now,â Lando whispers in your ear. You giggle and blush, playing it off as a sweet nothing from your husband, and loosen your grip.Â
âBonjour,â the front desk clerk welcomes you. âName, please?â
âSinclair. Shouldnât you already know that?â Lando tosses off casually, with all the unearned arrogance of the idle rich, and you stare. Heâs good. Better than you expected him to be, even. âWe have the â it was the Diamond Suite, wasnât it, baby?â
At the pet name, you step on his toes hard, and he somehow manages to turn the grimace into a smile. âI think thatâs right,â you drawl poshly, not even looking at the poor desk clerk. âBut the butler did the bookings.â
The clerk offers you a polite smile, white-gloved fingers flying over his keyboard. âAh, oui. I see your reservation here,â he pronounces, Monagesque accent rounding the vowels in an unfamiliar way as he slides two keys across the marble counter. âHere are your room keys. Bienvenue Ă lâHermitage.âÂ
âBaby?â you hiss under your breath as you thread Landoâs fingers with yours and make your way to the elevators, pulling your suitcase behind you. âWhat are you playing at, Norris?â
âIâm sorry,â he says, with the tone of someone who is absolutely not sorry, not even a little bit. âWould you prefer sweetheart? Muffin? Snugglebug?â
The doors slide open with a soft chime, and you yank Lando into the elevator. Lovingly, of course â like a newlywed who canât keep her hands off her husband, not like a girl trained in six different martial arts styles. âI thought we said no pet names,â you say through a blinding smile as the doors click shut.
âItâs for authenticity,â he says, all innocence. âIâm newly married to my beautiful wife. It would be weird if I didnât call you something sweet.â
You sigh, running a hand through your hair as you relax against the velvet-tufted wall. âBaby is fine. Maybe love. But if you call me snugglebug during the gala, I will push you off the balcony.â
The soft smile that crosses his face is enough to make you instantly regret what youâve agreed to. âThatâs the spirit, baby.â
The hotel room is, predictably, absurd. Polished wood floors, expensive furniture, floor-to-ceiling French doors that frame the harbor like a million-dollar painting leading to a balcony that spans the length of the suite. Thereâs a fireplace. A grand piano that you know damn well neither of you can play. And in the middle of the room, the biggest, most opulent bed youâve ever seen, stacked with pillows and enough throw blankets to outfit the entirety of your agent class.Â
You both stand there in silence for a moment. Then you clear your throat, dropping your bag. âYouâre sleeping on the floor.â
âNo way,â Lando says, pouting as he runs a hand through his dark curls. âCâmon. Weâre two ridiculously attractive, very emotionally mature adults. We can share.â
You snort, looking at him like heâs sprouted a second head. âLando. What would give you the impression that Iâm going to share a bed with you?â
âWhat if the roomâs bugged?â he says, shrugging his shoulders. âOr what if DuPontâs got drones outside, or something? Doesnât exactly sell the cover if youâve got me curled up by the fireplace like a golden retriever.âÂ
You open your mouth to respond, then pause, because â well, he does have a point.Â
âItâs for the sake of the mission,â Lando tries like he still needs to convince you, looking at you with wide eyes, and you promptly shut your mouth again. You donât say anything, technically, but itâs like he can read you like a book, smiling triumphantly in the face of your silence.Â
âYou could at least pretend to be disappointed,â you say evenly. An admission of defeat if youâve ever heard one.
He flops on the bed, starfishing his limbs over the expensive mattress and grinning up at you in a way that makes your heart do something annoyingly unprofessional in your chest. âIâm heartbroken, baby. Truly.â
âThatâs it. Weâre making a pillow wall tonight.â
The rest of the day is quiet, the kind of day you normally hate on missions. Youâre a field agent â every second of inactivity feels torturous, precious time you could be saving the world that just slips through your fingers. You can tell Lando feels the same, if his relentlessly bouncing knee is anything to go by. So the two of you go over the mission plan until the words begin to blur together. Exit options. Likely locations of incriminating evidence. The note on the final page: In the event that any agent is compromised, retreat. Do not attempt rescue.Â
Lando reads the note, promptly slams his dossier shut, and insists on ordering one of everything on the room service menu just to piss off Hale. You donât argue, especially not when truffle fries and miniature cheeseburgers start showing up at the door every fifteen minutes. Somewhere in between the lobster and the lava cake, you admit youâd never seen the Mission: Impossible movies, and Lando, eyes bright, declares you have to have a marathon. You end up sitting on the bed for hours, pillows between you as you eat popcorn, mocking the ridiculous CGI and the fact that the movies get absolutely nothing right about your line of work just to annoy Lando. But heâs a good sport about it, even joins in after a while as the TV light flickers off your bare legs and the moon rises over the harbor.Â
You must have drifted off some time during MI:3, because when you open your eyes next your side is pressed against the pillow wall, thereâs a crick in your neck, and your head is resting on Landoâs shoulder. Heâs still asleep, curls slightly mussed and lips parted, brows furrowed the way they are when heâs concentrating on a mission briefing. He must have slept that way all night, you realize, just so he didnât disturb you.Â
Something about the idea makes your heart ache in your chest.Â
âFifteen minutes before we need to leave for the gala,â you call through the door, applying your lipstick with a practiced hand. âPlease tell me youâve at least started to get dressed.â
Youâd commandeered the bathroom nearly an hour ago under the pretense of complicated hair and makeup â costuming had left detailed instructions in your suitcase, and you were expected to pull them off effortlessly. Lando, of course, could probably start putting on his suit five minutes in advance and still be fine. It was infuriating sometimes how easy it was for men.Â
Still, when you catch your reflection in the mirror, you canât help but feel like the extra time was worth it. Your hair, normally pulled back neatly, tumbles in voluminous waves over your shoulders. The subtle hints of makeup accentuate your face, making your eyes more luminous, your cheekbones sharper. The delicate earrings and necklace catch the light, make you sparkle. And the dress. Oh, the dress â a floor-length, fitted black velvet creation with a shocking slit up the side, tailored to perfection on your curves, equal parts structured and sleek.Â
You look dangerous. You look like someone else entirely. Or maybe like a version of yourself you donât let out very often.Â
âAlmost ready. Can you help me with my tie?â Lando calls back through the door, snapping you out of your thoughts.Â
âYeah, one second,â you reply, grabbing your holster and snapping it around your thigh, just above the top of the slit. The perfect finishing touch. You blot your lips once in the mirror, then push the door open, heels clicking against the floor with a purpose. That is, until you stop short, breath catching in your chest.Â
Landoâs standing near the window, half-turned towards the setting sun, pulling the bow tie around his collar. The tux fits him too well, all clean lines on broad shoulders and crisp black on white that makes his tan skin glow. Heâs freshly shaven, jaw sharp, and his curls are gelled back in a way that makes him look older, more polished.Â
Youâve always known Lando was attractive. Itâs not news, but itâs not something you let yourself dwell on. Not in your line of work, when letting your guard down even for a second can cost more than youâve ever been willing to give. But this â the tux, the hair, those eyes that canât quite decide what color they want to be? The effect is striking. You sort of canât stop looking at him.Â
âStill need help?â you croak, voice hoarse for some reason, and when he turns at the sound of your voice he straightens so fast you think he might give himself whiplash.
His mouth opens, then closes again. âWhoa.â
You raise an eyebrow, trying not to look as pleased as you feel. âThat all you got?â
âI justâŚâ His eyes drag down your body for one excruciatingly slow moment. Then he blinks, shakes his head slightly like he got hit. âShit. You look stunning.â Thereâs none of the usual flirtation or teasing in it. Just something quiet, awestruck, and it makes your throat tighten unexpectedly.Â
âDonât get sentimental on me now, Norris,â you say, voice as light as you can possibly make it as you cross the room, hands reaching up for his tie. Itâs muscle memory at this point â the back-and-forth fold, the loop, the gentle tug. Youâve done it before for other missions, with other partners, but never quite like this. Never with his eyes tracing over your face like heâs trying to memorize it. Never when youâre standing so close you can smell his cologne, something spicy and ineffably Lando. Itâs intolerable, really. You wish your heartbeat would calm down a little bit.Â
âThere,â you say, straightening the stupid tie slightly as you finally, blessedly pull the knot tight and step back from him. âNow you look somewhat presentable.â
His mouth quirks up at the side, like he can hear your thoughts. âHigh praise.â
You donât respond, hands clammy as you turn towards the door. âCome on. Weâll be late.â
You should be nervous. Itâs natural. In fifteen minutes, youâre going to walk directly onto the home turf of a very dangerous man, a man who compromised two of the finest agents in Britain.Â
But you know your pulse is thrumming under your skin for an entirely different reason.Â
The moment you and Lando step into the place, you kind of want to gag. The mansion is modern, clearly expensive, and a pantheon of bad taste â all ugly pop art and tributes to the genius that is Gabriel DuPont. After the third lifesize ice sculpture of the billionaire in as many rooms, youâre wondering how nobody has investigated him sooner. The place just feels dirty, illicit somehow. Like underneath the shiny exterior, thereâs something rotten waiting to be unearthed.
You know what the two of you are looking for: offshore account statements, connections with other known underworld figures, money that disappears in your fingers like invisible ink. Landoâs meant to distract DuPont, keep him talking for long enough for you to make your way to the office and copy as much of the information as you can find.Â
As you approach the door to the main ballroom, Lando rests his hand on the small of your back. âYou ready?â he ducks his head, speaking into your ear, and your skin prickles at the sensation.
You nod. âLetâs do this.âÂ
His grin washes over you like the nicest kind of champagne buzz as he pushes the door open and guides you into the room. The place is teeming with Europeâs elite. You recognize several heads of state and at least three kingpins on the MI6 Most Wanted. Lando laces his fingers with yours, squeezes your hand tightly, and you let out a breath you didnât know you were holding.
You do your rounds, fake laughs bubbling from your mouths like the golden liquor in your flutes. Lando plays the room like he was born to it, that smooth, relaxed charm of his illuminating every conversation. He brushes your hair out of your face, dances close to you, rests his hand low on your back when you pose for photos. When someone asks how long the two of you have been married, he leans in close again, like itâs gravity. âFeels like forever, doesnât it, baby?â he says lowly, in a way that makes your breath catch.Â
Itâs easy, pretending like this. Maybe a little bit too easy. You keep catching yourself smiling at him in a way you donât have to fake at all.
âThis isnât working. We should split up. Weâll cover more ground,â you say quietly after your third turn around the room. After all, a girl can only take so many inane conversations with tech-bro CEOs who think NFTs are a personality trait before she starts to crave a little action.Â
Lando, to his credit, doesnât fight you. He just nods, taps his ear lightly, and a burst of static explodes somewhere near your temple. âComms on, yeah?â
âComms on,â you reply, tapping your ear back and nearly managing to tamp down your giggle when you see him flinch.Â
âIâll get you back for that,â he warns, but heâs grinning.Â
You smile back, peeling off into the crowd without a backward glance. âIâd like to see you try,â you tease through the comms, making your way to the bar.Â
You settle there, watching Lando thread his way through the crowd towards the east wing and DuPontâs private rooms. Youâre just turning to order a drink when you see him.Â
Gabriel DuPont is standing on the balcony, overlooking the back garden like heâs surveying his kingdom. His hands press against the railing with force, knuckles white. Thereâs an anger you recognize there, a rage that unsettles you. The other thing you recognize is that this is the best chance either of you will get.
âTarget spotted. Iâm going in,â you speak, walking purposefully towards the other side of the room.Â
Landoâs voice is in your ear almost immediately. âWhat do you mean youâre going in? Where is he?â
âBalcony. South end, facing the garden. Iâm fine. Just â execute Plan B. His office, now,â you whisper through your teeth as you approach DuPont.Â
âCopy,â Lando mutters. Thereâs a pause, static echoing in your ear, then: âBe safe, yeah?â
âAlways,â you murmur as you step through the double doors. Showtime.Â
âExcusez-moi. You wouldnât happen to be the host tonight, would you?â
DuPont turns, and for the briefest moment his eyes drop to your exposed leg. You hold your breath until he smiles, sharklike, and you know you have him fooled. To him, youâre just another bored housewife with a little too much money to spend. If only he knew. âOui, câest moi. EnchantĂŠ. Sinclair, yes?â
You blink, surprised he knows you enough to recognize you by face. Headquarters have clearly done their job. You laugh politely, stick out your hand to shake. âThat is my better half, I suppose.â
âAnd where is your mysterious husband tonight?â he asks silkily, lifting your hand to his mouth and kissing your knuckles. You try to ignore the way your skin crawls.Â
You inch closer, touch his chest lightly, fingers brushing over his lapel. âWith all his time spent at the office, I stopped asking that question a long time ago.â
Landoâs voice crackles to life in your ear. âYou donât need to remind me. Iâm already there. Got some stuff already.â He chuckles. âThis shit is too easy.â
DuPont watches your face, cruel eyes darting over your features, and you school your expression into something neutral, presentable. âHe is a silly man, to leave you alone looking like such a vision.âÂ
His hand falls heavy on your waist, and you manage not to recoil at the touch. You giggle, instead. âYouâre too kind, sir.â
âTell me,â he purrs, inching closer, âdo you dance?â
You smile, sultry. âI used to, before I married a man with two left feet.â
âPlease, allow me to prove myself,â he smirks, guiding you back into the ballroom. âI promise not to step on any toes.â
âI hope you didnât intend that double meaning,â you say as he pulls you too tight to his body, waltzing slowly to the string quartetâs music. He merely laughs in response, a hoarse sound, like heâs not quite used to doing it.Â
Thereâs a crackle of static in your ear. Then Landoâs voice, tight through the comms unit: âWell. Donât you two look cozy.â
Your jaw ticks, concentrating on the steps. âIâm sure my husband would know itâs extremely valuable for us to make this connection. So he wouldnât mind,â you add, like itâs an afterthought to your earlier comment. Itâs for Landoâs benefit, of course, but DuPont canât know that.
He smiles, eyes narrowed. âWell. You may want to keep him on a tighter leash,â he says softly into your ear, turning you so you have a perfect view of Lando at the bar. A gorgeous, leggy blonde in red is smiling a little too brightly at him, touching his arm like he belongs to her. Something hot and ugly coils in your stomach at the sight.Â
You force a smile. âOh, sheâs just a shiny toy. Iâd just hope heâs not too distracted to do what we came here for.â Lando looks up then, hearing your words in his ear, and your eyes lock for a moment over DuPontâs shoulder. The moment feels charged, electric â like you canât be the first to look away, or something will snap.
âThank you for the dance,â DuPont murmurs in your ear, smile tight, and you nearly jump. To be honest, youâd half-forgotten he was there. Didnât even hear the music stop, too busy staring into someone elseâs eyes from across the room. Â
âOf course,â you say, eyes fixed solely on Lando and the blonde. DuPont kisses your hand again and walks you off the dance floor to the bar, offering to get you a drink. You nod, and as soon as he steps away, you hiss into the comms. âWow, Lan. Red really suits you.â
âYou seemed busy,â he snarks back to you. âPractically on top of DuPont. Had to entertain myself somehow.â
âIt wasnât real, Lando. Itâs the plan,â you say, voice clipped.Â
âYeah. Mine was, too,â he replies, all innocence.
You roll your eyes, even though he canât see you. âWhatever. Do you have the drive or not?â
Thereâs a long pause. âUh, yeah. But we may have a problem,â Lando says tightly. âSecurity guards by the main entrance clocked me, I think.â You scan the room, watching the way the guards are speaking low and urgent into their walkie-talkies, and swear under your breath.Â
âYeah, youâre burned. DuPont must have said something. Fuck.â
âThought you had eyes on him?â Lando asks, voice low as he heads towards you. When he glances over his shoulder, the guards begin to follow him, walking slowly like thereâs nothing wrong.Â
You grimace, smoothing your dress. Glance over to the bar, even though you know DuPont wonât be there. âGot distracted.â
âReally? By what?â he says, and even though heâs walking full speed towards you trying very hard not to get noticed by several highly trained security guards, you can hear the smirk in his voice.
âYouâre insufferable,â you say through a blinding smile when he reaches you, linking your arm around his. âBest exitâs the kitchen, I think. Through the north corridor.â
The two of you make your way there quickly but casually, guards following at a steady distance as if to avoid a scene. You push through the swinging kitchen door, and the second it closes behind you, Lando grabs a frying pan off a rack.
The first guard bursts through the door seconds after you. You take him low, sweeping his leg and smashing the butt of your gun into his temple when he loses his balance. Lando catches the second one in the jaw with the pan, then follows up with a right hook that sends him crashing into the prep table. Another crashes through a side entrance. You turn and kick hard at his chest, stiletto digging into his skin, and he staggers back with a wail.
The guards keep coming, but youâre holding your own. You and Lando move like a well-oiled machine, practiced and precise, backing each other in the carefully choreographed routine of combat. Youâre steps from the back stairwell, from freedom, when a guard youâd taken out earlier comes charging forward, something silver glinting in his hands. Youâre a second too late realizing itâs a knife.
Youâre turning to the side, calculating the best place for you to take the hit and keep moving, when Lando shoves you out of the way, swinging wildly towards his temple. The guard falls hard, and Lando flinches backwards, something clattering out of his hand to the ground and skittering across the tiles. You barely have time to turn and lunge for the drive before the last guard is scooping it up, running full speed back down the corridor and disappearing through the swinging doors.Â
âFuck,â you say, running a hand over your face. âWe lost it.â
âNo time. Weâve got to get out of here,â Lando replies, pulling you down the back stairs and out the door into the quiet night. You run all the way down the moneyed gravel driveway toward the car, breath burning in your chest and ankles twisting beneath you.Â
You donât realize anythingâs wrong until you round the corner, the silver car gleaming in wait for you, and Lando stumbles against you. You catch him like a reflex, and he exhales sharply. When you pull your hand away, itâs red with blood.Â
âYeah,â he grimaces sheepishly at the look on your face, cheeks pale in the moonlight. âI may have gotten a little bit stabbed.â
You limp back into the darkened suite, shutting the door quietly behind you and leaning against it to catch your breath. Landoâs already making his way to the bathroom, shrugging off his jacket as he goes. His dress shirt is sliced open where the security guardâs blade caught him â a clean slash to his right ribs, fresh blood still staining the expensive linen a bright crimson.Â
âCounter. Shirt off,â you call over your shoulder, kicking off your heels and rummaging through the minifridge, cold fingers closing around one of the tiny bottles of vodka. You slam it shut behind you, follow him into the bathroom where heâs obediently stripped off the shirt. You kneel to inspect the cut, hands tracing delicately over the edges of the wound; thankfully, itâs shallow enough that your extremely limited medical skills can fix it.
âYou know, if you wanted to see me shirtless, all you had to do was ask,â he grins down at you, voice thin but cocky as ever. âDidnât need to nearly blow our covers to do it.â
Itâs not funny. You donât know why heâs smiling. You snatch a cotton pad off the counter, douse it in the vodka, press it to the cut hard. He hisses, jaw clenching, and something about the reaction eases a little of the tension in your shoulders.Â
âYou shouldnât have done that,â you say, fixing your eyes on the cut so you donât have to look at his face, the way his eyes are laughing even now. âTaken the hit for me.â
âRight, next time Iâll let you get stabbed, then,â he replies lightly.Â
You slap the gauze to the cut more forcefully than necessary, just to make him feel the ache. âHe was my guy. I couldâve handled it. You canât put the mission in danger just to keep me from getting hurt.â
Lando flinches, and you canât tell whether itâs from the pressure or from your tone of voice. You want to shrink away from it yourself when you hear it â the sharpness, the tender underbelly of it threatening to claw its way to the surface. âI get hit and Iâm the one getting yelled at? Not even a thank you for my heroic sacrifice. Chivalry really is dead,â he sniffs.
You look up at him incredulously, tearing the bandage open with your teeth and smoothing it across the gauze. âDo you think this is funny?â
âI mean, a little,â he shrugs, smirking. You get to your feet, backing away from him like the separation will give your lungs the room they need to breathe. âI know we lost the drive, and Iâm sorry, but weâll get it back, and Iâm fine. Allâs well that ends well, yeah?â
âYou donât get to say that. You could have been killed. What, do you think if you bleed enough for me Iâll be impressed?â
âDunno. Would you be?â he teases, eyes bright.Â
âJesus,â you hiss, cheeks burning, and his smile grows impossibly wide.Â
âRelax. Iâm kidding,â he rattles on, swinging his feet against the counter like he doesnât feel the way the walls seem to be closing in around you, breath heavy and aching in your chest. âHonestly, I donât know what youâre getting so worked up about, it was barely a scratch ââ
âBecause I thought I was going to lose you!â you snap without thinking, the uncomfortable truth scratching out of your throat like a shard of glass.Â
The room keeps the words alive, sound echoing over and over off the tiled walls. At least they finally, finally knock the smile off his face. Instead he just stares at you, eyes wide like youâve sucker punched him. And then, before you do something stupid like cry in front of Lando Norris, you storm out of the bathroom.Â
Youâre in your pajamas under the covers by the time he comes back to the bedroom a few minutes later, joggers slung low on his hips and toothpaste flecking the corner of his mouth. He walks around the bed without a word, grabbing the remnants of the previous nightâs pillow wall off the floor.Â
âItâs okay,â you say too quickly, and Lando just looks at you, something unreadable brewing in those stormy eyes. âWe donât need to. I donât want it to crowd the cut,â you add, as if itâs purely logistical. âMedical exemption for one night.â
Itâs a weak excuse, probably the worst lie youâve ever told, and both of you know it. Lando drops the pillows in his arms, and you can see his soft smile even in the twilight darkness of the room. âSure. Keep telling yourself that.â
The adrenaline thrumming through your veins is wearing off, leaving exhaustion in the empty space it abandons. You tell yourself thatâs why you donât have the energy to roll your eyes at him, as he slips underneath the covers carefully, trying not to disturb the bandages. Despite the lack of pillows between you, the bed feels smaller than it did before, warmth radiating off his body. You lay there, staring at the ceiling, not touching him, trying very hard not to unravel the fragile composure youâve managed to hold on to.Â
âYou know, people typically close their eyes as a prerequisite to going to sleep,â Landoâs voice sounds teasingly from somewhere beside you. When you turn to look at him, his eyes are already on your face. âYou okay?â
âFine,â you say, throat croaking for some reason.Â
His face softens. âNo, youâre not.â
He inches hesitantly toward you, like if he goes too fast youâll bolt, and wraps an arm around your waist, pulling you gently into his chest. You exhale shakily against his skin, burying your face in the crook of his neck. He smells like sweat and cologne and the unmistakable coppery scent of blood. You donât cry, wonât allow it. But you let yourself lean into him a little more, enough to feel the steady rise and fall of his chest all over your body. Enough to remind yourself heâs still breathing.
âItâs okay,â he murmurs into your hair, fingers tracing small circles on your back soothingly. âIâm okay. âM not going anywhere, yeah? Gonna keep annoying you for as long as I can.â
You huff out a small sound, half laugh and half breath hitching in your throat. âYou say that like itâs something for me to look forward to.â
âCome on. Donât pretend you donât love it,â he says as his fingers brush over your bare shoulder.Â
You pull back just enough to see his face, eyes searching over the small, pleased smile you find there. âI could live without the stab wounds.â
âCouldnât live without me, then?â he says, voice low, tongue pushing against the corners of his mouth the way it always does when heâs being cheeky. You wish your eyes werenât following the motion.Â
Your cheeks heat in the darkness, like heâs discovered something you should be embarrassed of. âDonât push your luck, Norris.â
âWouldnât dream of it,â he says, grinning that ridiculous grin as he rolls back onto his back. You stare back at the ceiling, pretending not to hate the space between you. âJust⌠glad youâre okay.âÂ
That should be the end of it. You should close your eyes, go to sleep, pretend his ridiculous flirting doesnât affect you. Pretend you know exactly whatâs been for the mission and whatâs real. Pretend you never let the tiny part of your heart with his name on it crack open in front of him tonight.
âLando?â
He turns back to you, and the look in his eyes nearly knocks the breath out of you. âYeah?â
Thatâs when you kiss him. Itâs hesitant at first, more of a question than anything, like all the uncertainty youâve been carrying all evening has no place else to go. But then Lando sighs against your mouth, his hand coming up to cup your cheek in a gesture so sweet that it makes your heart ache, and assurance settles in your chest like it wants to make a permanent home there. He tastes like peppermint, mouth warm and soft against yours, tongue pushing at the seam of your lips. As your mouth moves slowly against his, your hand traces gently down his side, and he winces as your fingertips graze over the cut. But then you pull your hand away like an apology, and he fucking whines against your lips like heâll die if your hands arenât on his skin.
âLando,â you breathe into the sliver of space between you, nose brushing against his. âI donât want to hurt you.â
His pupils are blown wide, black bleeding into watercolor irises. âPlease,â he whispers back, so reverent that it shatters something inside you. âYou can hurt me however you want.âÂ
So you pull him on top of you like itâs something inevitable, like the mission was always leading here: to his hands braced on either side of you, to the low throaty sound he makes when you wrap your legs around his waist, to the way his breath hitches against your mouth as you roll your hips against his. You let him take you apart, all mouth and hands and an impossible sort of tenderness; let yourself fall to pieces underneath the warmth and the weight of him, over and over again.Â
Afterwards, when the silence settles between the two of you like gunsmoke after a shootout, Lando falls asleep almost immediately, face pressed against your shoulder and arm flung across your waist like itâs second nature. You lie there perfectly still, your chests rising and falling in sync, letting the weight of giving him something you canât take back settle into your bones.
Youâre awake before the sun. Really, youâre not sure you ever fell asleep, hovering fitfully in that twilight zone where everything feels like a dream or maybe just a warped version of reality. You wish that was the case â you keep pressing your eyes shut like if you try hard enough, you can erase the entirety of last night, like you can just take back the biggest liability you can imagine. Like you can go back to a world where you didnât admit that Lando Norris means something to you.
But when you open your eyes again, youâre still there, pressed to Landoâs side. His breath is warm on your neck, lashes brushing against your shoulder, the sunlight glowing golden on his bare skin. Heâs beautiful. Itâs terrifying. Suddenly, his arm around your waist feels less like care and more like another restraint you have to work your way out of. You slip out of the bed, extricating yourself from his embrace as delicately as you can. Put on your MI6 t-shirt and make coffee on autopilot. When you take the first sip, you wince at the bitterness. It tastes like punishment, the type you deserve for letting yourself want something you can never, ever have.
The sheets rustle lazily behind you, and when you turn, Landoâs already propped on his elbows looking at you, eyes crinkling at the corners with affection and something that looks a little like triumph. âMorning,â he says, voice still rough with sleep, and the grin he gives you is blinding. âJust checking â does this mean I get to kiss you without a cover story now, or do I have to call you Mrs. Sinclair to get you to come back to bed?â
You can hear the mattress creak as he shifts, sitting up a little more, and for a moment you picture what it could be like if you were a different girl. You could make him a cup of coffee, crawl back into bed, kiss him and let it mean something without risking his life and yours.Â
âFunny,â you say instead, voice tight. âJust part of the mission, yeah?â
Confusion flickers over his features, and you force your eyes away. You canât look at him. Wonât. âWhat are you talking about?â
You keep your eyes trained on the horizon, grip your mug tighter so he canât see your hands shake. âI know itâs nothing special, so letâs not make a big deal out of it. You flirt with everyone, Lando. Itâs, like, your thing.â
He laughs, sharp and disbelieving. Itâs the worst sound youâve ever heard. âI really, really donât.â
His voice is heavy with the self-defeat you recognize from a particularly bad score in training, when heâd get in a mood so black heâd swear he wouldnât make it to the agency. Back then youâd comfort him, help him train, get him out of his head. Anything to keep yourself from hearing the way his voice shattered around the edges.Â
You donât know what to do when youâre the one whoâs caused it.Â
The silence between you stretches for another long moment. Lando runs a hand through his messy curls, expression shuttered. âIs that what you really think of me? That I just â shag my way through missions?â
âI think it doesnât matter what I think,â you say, trying very hard to keep your voice level. âI get it. We made a mistake, got carried away. It didnât mean anything.â
âMaybe not to you,â he mutters, and it lands like a kill shot.
âLando,â you try, but he interrupts you before you can finish.Â
âI knew you would do this, you know? Knew the second it felt real youâd fucking â shut down, like you always do.â He laughs helplessly. âCouldnât stop myself, though, could I? âCos Iâm such a fucking flirt that I just fall into bed with everyone who looks my way.â
You step forward, and he flinches away from you. âLan, I didnât mean to ââ
âYes, you did,â he snaps, eyes alight. âYou freaked out and couldnât handle whatever this is, so you decided to make it feel small for yourself. Make me feel small, too. Well, congratulations, agent. You fucking nailed it.â
He pulls his shirt over his head, not even bothering to turn it right side out, and gets out of bed.Â
âWhere are you going?â you say, voice small as you watch him move.Â
âAnywhere but here,â he mutters back, stalking towards the bathroom and slamming the door shut behind him so hard it makes the crystal in the chandeliers tremble. You stare at the door frame, listening to the shower run until the coffee goes cold in your hand.Â
Wonder if when he said you could hurt him however you wanted, if he ever pictured this.
The invitation arrives a few hours later, a personalized summons on heavy ivory cardstock that feels like wealth beneath your fingertips. Mr. and Mrs. Sinclair, you are cordially invited to an exclusive dinner on the Kickback this evening, hosted by Gabriel DuPont in recognition of your generous support.Â
And at the bottom, a note, inked in the cruel, thick penstrokes of your target himself: I truly hope to see you both there.
âItâs a test,â you say, pacing back and forth from one edge of the bedroom to the other, bare feet sinking into the rug like quicksand. Landoâs perched on the edge of the bed, running his thumb over the embossed lettering. âHe suspects us.â
âOr a trap,â Lando mutters, tossing the card at the nightstand. âYacht anchored in the middle of the harbor? No one to hear us scream?â
âIt doesnât matter which one of us is right,â you sigh, running a hand through your hair. âWe have to go. Itâs our only chance to get the drive back. We donât have a choice.â
âWe never do,â he says quietly. His hair is still damp from the shower, curls sticking to his forehead, and he looks exhausted. Not in a way that shows, not to anyone else. But youâve known him long enough to know the tired set of his jaw, the red-rimmed eyes that make your chest ache to look at.Â
You turn, crossing your arms over your chest. âAre you going to be able to do this?â
He raises an eyebrow. âWhat do you mean?â
You look out over the water, not sure you can face him when you ask what is sure to rank as the most pathetic question of your life. âI mean are you still mad at me?â you ask, biting the inside of your cheek until you taste copper.Â
When he answers, itâs completely devoid of emotion. âWhy would I be mad at you?â
Itâs worse than if heâd shouted. Youâve screamed and bickered and fought over the years enough times to know Landoâs dramatic reactions down to the letter, know the way his moods rage intensely and then dissolve like a summer storm. This â the cool detachment, like youâre a stranger he happened to stumble into a mission with â this is new. It lodges somewhere behind your ribs like a lingering bruise.Â
âDonât worry,â he adds, standing up and grabbing his watch off the dresser roughly. Youâve seen him handle a Glock with more tenderness. âIâm not going to let you down.â
The words, unspoken, hang in the air between you two. Not like you did to me.Â
When you pull up to the harbor, the yacht looms ahead of you, a sparkling vision of teak and chrome. Staff in creamy white jackets hand you champagne flutes the second you step off the dock and direct you to a table at the bow of the boat, where DuPont is holding court with the other couples. Itâs a small party, full of people wearing designer labels and icy smiles, sipping expensive wine and pretending to be relatable.Â
The two of you mingle. Lando kisses your cheek when someone makes a joke about newlywed bliss. You laugh and rest your hand on his chest â if the phrase includes sleeping with the best friend you have and then shutting down emotionally to keep you both safe, then sure, itâs newlywed bliss. Through it all, Lando keeps his hand wrapped together with yours, like heâs trying to remind you heâs not going anywhere. Youâre grateful for the kindness, even when it feels like twisting the knife of guilt thatâs already stuck in your chest.Â
Youâre introduced to another couple, an American CEO and his third wife, very blonde and very surgically enhanced. She eyes Lando like heâs on the menu, makes a teasing comment about how lucky you are. You laugh and blush as Lando says heâs the lucky one.Â
âHow did you two meet?â the woman asks, and your stomach drops. Youâre on thin ice already, DuPontâs security team watching your every move. Youâre sure theyâve noticed the tension between the two of you already. If he hesitates, even for a moment â
âWe met at a pub, actually,â Lando says casually, not missing a beat. âThis place called Mother Kellyâs. It was the day before I started my job, and I wanted to scope out the neighborhood a bit. Walked in, and there she was â this girl sitting at the bar, hair pulled back, no makeup on, drinking a Guinness. Most beautiful girl Iâd ever seen. I offered to buy her a drink, thought I was being really fucking smooth. And she looked me dead in the eyes, pointed at the pint and said âOpen your eyes, mate. Iâve already got one, donât I?ââ He huffs out a laugh. âCheeky as anything.â He pauses for a moment, and his voice is softer when he speaks again. âAnd then she smiled at me, and that was pretty much it. Iâve been gone for her ever since.â
The women at the table coo, marveling over the sweetness of the story. But you just stare at him dumbstruck, your heart hammering beneath your ribs.Â
Because thatâs not Claridgeâs. Thatâs not Mr. and Mrs. Sinclairâs story.Â
Itâs you and Landoâs.Â
You remember everything about that day. Lando, scrawnier then, a rush of dark curls and that heart-shaped smile, lounging on the barstool next to you after five minutes like you were the best of friends already. The London rain came down hard just as you were settling your tab, so you ended up staying for another drink â he could talk you into anything, even then. The two of you played darts for hours, and you won every time until the last game, when he suggested a friendly bet and then proceeded to hit six bullseyes in a row. Heâd hustled you for hours, just for a tenner and to hear the surprise in your laugh when he beat you.Â
Iâve been gone for her ever since. Suddenly, you feel dizzy, sick to your stomach at the way heâs steadfastly refusing to meet your eyes.Â
âExcuse me for a moment, ladies,â Lando murmurs to the women beside him, color high in his cheeks, and youâre too slow to stop him. He slips away with the easy charm of someone whoâs been doing it his whole life, like he didnât just turn your entire idea of him â of the two of you â inside out without a second thought.Â
You know in your bones what heâs doing. Playing the hero. Finishing the mission himself because he canât bear to see your face after he bared his soul. Youâd do the same, if you were him. Two sides of the same coin, always have been.Â
You watch the door like a hawk. Ten agonizing minutes pass. Then fifteen. And Lando doesnât come back.Â
In the event that any agent is compromised, retreat. Do not attempt rescue.
Fuck that. Youâre going in.
You push your chair back, ignoring the way it scrapes against the deck, and walk with purpose towards the cabin without even bothering to excuse yourself. You can hear the shocked whispers behind you, and a thought tugs at the rational part of your brain that itâs not how Mrs. Sinclair would ever leave a room. But if Landoâs been gone for as long as he has, your coverâs certainly been blown, anyway.Â
You let the sliding door slam shut behind you, press your eyes shut for a moment. The yacht blueprints are still burned in your mind from the night the two of you watched movies together, as clear as the sound of Landoâs laugh. You have to press your hand over your mouth and stifle a gasp at the thought you might never hear it again.Â
The yacht is labyrinthine, all twisting corridors going down multiple floors. If you were DuPont, and youâd caught Lando, you would put him in the engine room on the bottom floor, deep beneath the waves. You head for the emergency stairs, at the back of the ship. As you walk, you pass a nondescript door. You keep walking, glancing through the porthole as you go, and stop dead.
Clearly, you were wrong about what DuPont would do. Because Lando is inside, tied to a chair, arms behind his back, flanked by two guards. His nose is bleeding, one eye swollen shut and purpling rapidly. The billionaire stands facing him with his back to the door, calmly smoothing something at his breast pocket and swirling a tumbler of amber liquid, with a third guard standing ground behind him.Â
âWhereâs your wife?â he says mildly. Somehow, itâs more frightening than if he was screaming. âNot coming to save you?â
âSheâs not involved in this,â Lando lies through his teeth, words slurring together slightly. Protecting you to the bitter end, even after everything youâve done. âSheâs not like me. She doesnât know what I do.â
DuPont laughs, that strange, raspy sound again, and it sends a chill down your spine. âAgent, I didnât think youâd lie to me.â He walks closer to Lando, fluidly pulls something out of his pocket. Blind fear envelops you when you realize itâs a gun, aimed at your partnerâs head. âTell me who she is, and Iâll let you walk.â
Lando turns, spits blood onto the floor. Then slowly, deliberately leans forward until his mouth is pressed against the barrel, the cool metal pulling at the plush pink of his bottom lip. âGo ahead. Kill me,â he grimaces, looking up at DuPont through his eyelashes. âIâd die before I let you hurt her.â
DuPont cocks the gun, and thatâs when you strike.Â
One guard crumples before the door swings open fully, your shot blasting cleanly through his forehead. You donât wait to see him hit the ground; youâre already whirling around, a swift kick landing squarely to the chest of the guard backing DuPont. It stuns him enough for you to swing your arm around hard, cracking the butt of your pistol against his temple. He stumbles, back hitting the wall as he begins to slump. You grab for DuPont, but youâre off balance, and you only manage to pull his jacket off as he flees out the door.Â
Regroup. Two down. One to go. You turn, but the other guard is already waiting for you, hands steady and gun aimed at your heart. You raise your hands, like youâre caught, and he relaxes slightly. Your eyes flick over to Lando, who kicks his legs out hard and knocks the guard to the floor. You donât hesitate before you put a bullet in the guyâs chest.Â
The room would be silent, if you couldnât hear your own heartbeat pounding in your ears. You scan the room, grab a pair of scissors out of a desk drawer and start hacking at the zip ties on Landoâs wrists.Â
His head lolls towards you, blood spattered at the corner of his mouth. âYou werenât supposed to come back for me.â
You keep trying to cut through the last zip tie, but your hands are shaking too badly. âDonât be an idiot,â you say, shaking your head. âI wasnât gonna let you down.â
His smile is soft, trained on you. âYou never have.â
You finally cut through the plastic, catching him just before he slumps forward entirely. Immediately, you know heâs worse off than you thought; your arms go around his torso on instinct to hold him up and he yelps, sharp and broken, like youâve smacked him.Â
âYou okay?â you ask, trying to shift his weight carefully. Â
He groans anyway, face pale. âNo. But thanks for asking,â he grits out, somehow still flirting even with what feels like multiple broken ribs. âLetâs get DuPont.â
You balance him against the desk, pull out your walkie. âHQ, this is beta team. We need extract,â you say clearly, sliding it back into your pocket. Five minutes, and youâll be on the first helicopter back to London. âWeâre not getting DuPont. Weâre getting you out of here alive.â
Lando coughs, and thereâs something wet behind it. âWe can do it,â he insists, stubborn to the end. âWalk me up to the upper deck.â
âLando,â you sigh. âWhatâs the point? We need to cut our losses here. We donât even know where the drive is.â
âJacket,â he says, eyes catching yours, almost too sharp for someone who looks like death warmed over. âInside pocket. Saw it when you pulled it off him earlier.â
You blink once, then dive for the crumpled clothing, hands raking over the fabric. Sure enough, thereâs a little pocket stitched into the silk lining. You rip it open, pull out the unmistakable sleek black drive, stuff the thing in your bra for safekeeping.Â
âOkay,â you say, convinced. âLetâs get that son of a bitch.â
He grins back at you, only the slightest bit unfocused. âHelp me up, Mrs. Sinclair?â
You drag him back up the stairs one step at a time, his arm slung around your shoulders, your free hand gripping your pistol tight. The harbor air hits your skin like a slap, salty and electric. When you get to the upper deck, DuPont is at the bow, trying to activate the emergency launch controls on the tender. Trying to make a cowardâs escape.
You prop Lando against the first railing you can find. âStay here,â you warn. Then you run at DuPont, tackling him before he can lower the boat into the water.Â
The fight is messy, brutal. Your gun clatters out of your hand as he backs you into the rail. The poles clatter against your skull, vision flashing white, but you hit back harder. He swings at you, wild, but youâve been hit worse, by people better trained. You twist, knee him in the ribs, elbow up under his chin. He staggers. You drive him back with everything youâve got.
And then thereâs a pair of hands grabbing his arms from behind â not steady, not strong. But enough to buy you time.
Lando.
You snap the cuffs onto DuPontâs wrists and slam him to the deck, and itâs over. Or at least it would be, if your extraction team was here, and if Lando wasnât collapsing on the deck in front of you like the effort might well kill him.Â
âFuck, did you hear me? Extract extract extract,â you scream into your walkie again, voice hoarse, then toss it aside, turning back to Lando. His skin is paling rapidly, breathing shallow. âStay with me, Lan.â
âThat takedown was pretty hot,â he rasps weakly, head lolling to the side.Â
âShut up,â you say, voice cracking in a way you canât even pretend to control. âYou just gotta hold on for a couple more minutes, okay?â
His fingers find yours, grip loose like he doesnât have the strength left in his hands. âWe got him.â
âYeah,â you nod, sniffling wetly. âYeah, we got him. And we got the drive. And youâre gonna be okay.â
He shakes his head, and you can see him fading. âWas a good last mission,â he says quietly, looking up at you through his eyelashes. âLiked being your husband.â His eyes slide shut, and you shake him slightly, but he doesnât respond.Â
âYou canât die, Lando, please,â you try to speak, but itâs interrupted by the tears that have started to pour down your cheeks. You press your forehead against his, let the warmth of his skin comfort you. âYou stupid idiot pain in the ass, I love you. Iâm sorry I was scared before, but I love you and you canât die before I get to tell you that. Please. Just â donât let me down. One last time. Donât you dare fucking die.â
No answer. All you can hear is the soft sound of the waves crashing against the hull, drowned out by your own sobs.Â
And then finally, finally, the sound of helicopter blades whirring above you.Â
The fluorescent lights hum like the worldâs most annoying hold music.Â
Youâre seated at one end of a long, steel table in a debrief room, a folder full of mission notes and clearance forms spread out in front of you. The same stale coffee is in a cup in front of you. Youâve let it go cold, same as your nerves.Â
âAll in all, despite the... irregularities, the mission was quite the success,â Hale says, looking incredibly pleased with herself. âGabriel DuPont is in custody. The drive is secure, and the information you collected has helped us pinpoint several other arms dealers in the European market. Only three dead, no civilians injured.â She clears her throat. âWeâll discuss the breaches of protocol another time, given that your quick thinking likely saved each otherâs lives.â
Across the table, Lando grins at you with the air of someone who narrowly escaped death and is prepared to make it your problem. The bruise on his eye has faded from brilliant purple to a sickly yellow. Thereâs stitches across his side and his arm is in a sling, but he looks unfairly good for someone who nearly bled out on a superyacht less than a week ago. âThank me later.â
âI saved you last,â you counter, raising an eyebrow. âTechnically, you owe me.â
âOne near-death experience and suddenly sheâs keeping score,â he says, shrugging his shoulders and smiling that stupid, ridiculous smile at you.
âIâm thrilled your trauma hasnât impacted your ability to bicker like twelve-year-olds,â Hale says dryly. âBut it will affect your working hours. For now youâre both on administrative leave. Two weeksâ recovery time, minimum. Please try not to cause any international incidents in that time period,â she sighs.Â
Lando looks at her innocently. âNo promises.âÂ
Hale dismisses you, and you focus your eyes on your folder, neatly stacking everything. You havenât really had the chance to speak to Lando since the mission ended. The ground feels unsteady between you two, tension pulling taut like a trip wire. But he doesnât seem to be interested in speaking, and you donât want to push, so you head for the door after your handler.Â
âSo, about what you said earlier,â Lando pipes up, and you turn back.
âAbout owing me? Iâll take a pint, when youâre healed up,â you say as lightly as you can, eyes tracing over his face.Â
âActually, I was talking about on the boat when you said you loved me,â he replies casually, grin on his face, and your stomach drops. âBut Iâll go for a pint whenever you want.â
âIt was â I was trying to keep you conscious,â you stutter, unprepared and voice hoarse.
His smile grows. âWell, it worked. Iâve been very conscious of it ever since.â
âOh, shut up,â you groan, but thereâs a laugh behind it somewhere.Â
He stands up, limping towards you until heâs close enough that you can see the raised pink scar by his lip. âSo, did you mean it?â His tone is still light, teasing, but you can see the question in his eyes, the way something real hangs in the balance of your answer.Â
You let your eyes flit over his face, one you know better than your own reflection. One that became your friend, your partner, your shield. One you nearly lost, that you couldnât walk away from even when every protocol told you to run.Â
You sigh, looking down. âI failed the mission.â
He scrunches his nose, and you fight the urge to kiss the wrinkle. âWhat do you mean?â
âYou told me youâd accept it as long as I promised not to fall in love with you,â you shrug. âReally messed that one up, didnât I?â
He beams at you like sunshine breaking through the clouds. âWell, it took you long enough.â
âAre you gonna kiss me, or what?â you tease, and he doesnât say another word. Just steps forward, cups your jaw with his good hand, and kisses you like itâs the only order heâll ever follow again.Â
MacGyver Project Hail Mary AU anyoneâŚ.?
Yes, Jack is Rocky. Otherwise I have no clue what roles the other characters would play.

