Hello and welcome to my writing blog. My name is Budd, and I am the owner of this account. If you are in the Obey me! Fandom you may or may not have seen some of my content already. I mainly write fan fiction for Obey me however you may or may not see some other stuff form other fandoms that you may or may not recognize. I am a Black College student who is currently majoring in engineering, Iâm 20 years old, my favorite color is pink, and I go by they/them pronouns.
Iâm a pretty chill person so Iâm not gonna be insane about my rules, any sort of bigotry will not be tolerated (racism, homophobia, transphobia).
I will write NSFW/Smut, however I will only really write for Dom!MC, Sub!MC MAY pop up once in awhile but it mostly depends on how I feel, though most of the time I will ask you guys to keep it Dom!MC when requesting.
Speaking of requests and asks, I do take them! Along with drabbles and thirsts. However if I say requests are closed I will not be taking any, unless itâs something Iâm really really interested in.
I post whenever I feel like it, remember I am a person with feelings and a life outside of the internet as well.
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I am reaching out on behalf of my dear friend, Mohamad S., who is facing one of the most challenging times of his life. Mohamad is 37 years old and left his homeland in 2015 in search of a safer and better future. Heâs a kind, hardworking man, and his small family has always been his greatest priority.
Living abroad, Mohamad has recently endured unimaginable loss and financial strain. Amidst the ongoing conflict in his homeland, his mother passed away, leaving behind his sister and her five young childrenâthe last remaining members of his immediate family.
As the situation worsened, Mohamad managed to help his sister and her children escape to safety in Egypt, covering their immediate needs and securing a temporary refuge for them. Since then, he has been fully responsible for providing everything they need to survive during this transition.
In his efforts to support his family and cope with this devastating loss, Mohamad has found himself deeply in debt. To make matters even more difficult, he recently underwent knee surgery, which limits his ability to return to work for the foreseeable future. This has made it even harder for him to manage his financial responsibilities and the pressing need to provide his family with a stable future.
Mohamad is now working to bring his sister and her five children to join him in Belgium, where he hopes they can find stability and opportunity after all theyâve endured. This transition, however, requires significant resources that he is currently unable to meet alone.
For privacy reasons, we are not sharing Mohamadâs full name, as he has chosen to keep his identity discreet. While he initially refused the idea of asking for help, I couldnât stand by and watch him struggle alone. I insisted on doing this for him because he deserves a chance to overcome these challenges.
Your contribution will help Mohamad repay the debt incurred during this difficult time, cover ongoing living expenses for his family, and assist with the costs involved in bringing them safely to Belgium.
Mohamad has been a good friend of mine for years, and Iâve always admired his resilience and generosity. Any support, no matter the size, will make an incredible difference in helping Mohamad and his family rebuild their lives after these painful experiences.
Thank you for reading his story and considering helping a man who has always done everything he can for his loved ones.
Adam
â Vetted by Association: @bilal-salah0
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I am reaching out on behalf of my dear friend, Mohamad S., who is faci⊠Adam Bin Ali needs your support for Help Mohamad reunite his family
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OM! Mc has a family back in the human world. Diavolo and Barbatos are the only ones truly aware of this. Perhaps not just aware, but simply the only ones to think of it. The brothers are a bit too self absorbed to consider the idea. It's only when Mc mentions a silly story about their family that, for once, the dining hall in the House of Lamentation falls completely silent.
In only a moment, Mc is bombarded with questions about their family and home life, each of the brothers' voices overlapping into a cacophony of noise. Asmo is the first to mention photos, specifically baby photos and the crowd goes WILD. In an instant, the brothers are making plans to visit the human world, packing bags, brawling over who will get to keep what photos and who gets to stand next to Mc in the portal. Mc learns very quickly that perhaps next time, they oughta keep their mouth shut.
tags: mullet!stan pines, fem!reader, mentions of alcohol and smoking, nsfw, sexual themes, depression, ptsd, drunk sex, hurt/comfort, fluff and angst, inspired by cigarettes after sex songs, so I recommend to listen some while reading that :)
Stan hasn't been himself since the portal swallowed Ford up.
His life is ruined, his mind is ruined, everything is ruined. Every single night, heâs hunched over the journals, Fordâs stupid, cryptic notes that Stan canât figure out, canât understand, but wants to. It's like trying to read in the dark. He knows thereâs something in them, some answer, but itâs out of his reach and every time he thinks about his brother being gone, his chest tightens, that guilt slamming into him so hard he feels like he canât breathe so he drowns in his own tears.Â
Stanley knows heâs not the smart one, never was, and now it feels like heâs lost every chance to make things right. The lab is his prison. The cigarettes are his only escape, one after another until the ashtray overflows, the smell of smoke permanently clinging to everything in this place. His eyes burn from lack of sleep, the bags under them deep and dark and he doesnât bother to clean himself up anymore. Whatâs the point? Heâs all alone. Again. Â
Tonight, something changes. He canât sit in that goddamn lab for another second, canât stare at those useless pages with his head spinning. So, he stumbles out into the cold and ends up at the bar down the street â the only place still open this late.Â
When he walks in, heâs already halfway drunk and you spot him immediately from across the room. Itâs not hard; the guyâs a walking disaster. His coat is rumpled, hair a tangled mess, and his eyes are empty, hollowed out like heâs already lost something far more important than money. You've seen a lot of people sink to the bottom, but this guy sank even lower than most.
Stan doesnât notice you at first. He barely notices anything as he stumbles up to the bar, hands trembling as he grips the counter. His cigarette hangs loose between his fingers, half burnt and about to fall, but heâs too out of it to care. He leans heavily against the bar, head down like the weight of his own body is too much.
âWhiskey,â he grumbles. âwhateverâs cheap.â
The bartender glances at him, sizing him up with a frown. Stan looks like he hasnât slept in weeks, hasnât eaten much either. Itâs written all over him, the sag of his shoulders, the unsteady sway when he tries to straighten up.
The bartender slides the glass toward Stan, but before he even picks it up, heâs already mumbling something under his breath, little grin pulling at his lips. âDonât think I got the money for this, pal.â
He downs the drink in one go, barely wincing as the burn hits his throat and for a moment, you think he might get away with it. But the bartenderâs patience is wearing thin. He scowls, leaning in with narrowed eyes, clearly not in the mood to deal with Stanâs shit tonight.
âIâm not running a charity here,â the bartender snaps. âyou pay or you leave.â
Stan grins, and itâs the saddest, most pathetic thing youâve ever seen. âWhat, no freebies? Guess Iâll have to put it on my tab.â he laughs, but thereâs no humor in it.Â
The bartender looks about two seconds from throwing Stan out on his ass and for some reason, you find yourself moving before you even realise it. Sliding off your seat, you walk over. Stan doesnât notice you until youâre standing right next to him, and even then, his gaze is unfocused, blurry as fuck.Â
Before things get ugly, you step in, sliding a couple bills across the counter, âIâll cover it.â
The bartender takes the money without a word, though you can feel the tension of the situation, heâs definitely bothered and not in the mood. Stan looks at you, bleary-eyed, like heâs trying to figure out if youâre real or just another hallucination. His mouth twists into that lopsided grin again, but thereâs something softer about it this time, like heâs genuinely surprised someone bothered to step in.
Heâs too drunk to notice the bartenderâs scowl as you grab him by the arm, hauling him to his feet. He stumbles, almost dragging you down with him, but you manage to keep him upright, though just barely.
âHey, thanks, sweetheart,â he slurs, blinking at you like heâs trying to clear the fog in his head. âdidnât know Iâd be gettinâ free drinks tonight.â
He tries to stand up straighter, but the alcoholâs got a firm grip on him. His body sways dangerously so you reach out, grabbing his arm to keep him steady. Heâs heavier than you expected, way too much, his body leaning against yours as you pull him away from the bar.
âCome on,â you mutter, dragging him toward the door. âletâs get you out of here before you piss off anyone else.â
Stan stumbles along beside you, his steps unsteady, barely able to keep himself upright. Heâs mumbling something under his breath, words too slurred to make out, because heâs so fucking drunk, but you can tell itâs nothing good. Outside, the cold hits you both like a slap to the face. The winter air is brutal, biting through your clothes and cutting through the haze of alcohol thatâs been clouding Stanâs head.
âJesus, itâs freezing out here,â he mutters, blinking against the cold. His breath comes out in visible puffs, his flushed face suddenly looking even redder in the harsh chill. Then he looks at you. âSo what, you my babysitter now?
This time you have to shove him back against the wall just to keep him upright. His back hits the cold brick with a dull thud, and he lets out a low, drunken laugh, his head tipping back to rest against the wall.
âOhh, you gonna pin me here? gotta say, Iâm not usually into this kinda thing, but for you, sweetheart, I might make an exception.â his body sags, leaning heavily into the wall as he looks at you with half-lidded eyes. âor are you just waiting for me to do something stupid?â
Your brows furrow at that, irritation flaring in your chest. âWhat are you talking about?â
Heâs a mess, a complete disaster, but thereâs something about him that makes it hard to walk away. Maybe itâs the way heâs still trying to crack jokes, even when heâs clearly drowning in his own misery. Maybe itâs the way his hands tremble, even though heâs trying to play it off like he doesnât care.
Heâs quiet for a moment, his eyes half-lidded as he stares up at the sky. Stan chuckles. âWell, I could just. . . yâknow. Throw myself off a cliff. Put an end to all this crap. Whatâs one more dead Pines, huh?â
Heâs not joking anymore. Thereâs something raw in his voice, he sounds way too hurt, too honest, too broken that makes your stomach twist. You donât really know what to answer on that. You arenât that good at supporting people, but supporting drunk guy? Heâll barely hear what youâll tell him.Â
You pull a cigarette from your pocket, lighting it up with quick movements, because cold air stinging your fingers. Stan watches you through half-lidded eyes, his breath visible in the frigid air.
âHey,â he mutters. âmind if I bum one off ya?â
You hand him a cigarette without a word, and he takes it, his fingers still shaking from cold or. . . as he lights it. He leans back against the wall, the smoke curling around his face as he exhales slowly, closing his eyes for a moment.
Neither of you speak after that. Thereâs nothing to say. You donât know how to start a talk either. Is it even needed?
Stanâs a complete mess, the kind you don't want to get too close to. But as you stand there, cigarette smoke curling between your fingers, you canât tear your eyes off him. Heâs slumped against the wall, looking like heâs got the weight of the world on his shoulders or maybe thatâs just the whiskey. You wonder why the hell you bothered to drag him out here in the first place. Heâs a disaster and his weird comments arenât helping, they just disturb you.
You take another drag, feeling the bitter taste of nicotine hit your lungs, and for a moment, you think about just walking away. Heâs not your problem. Youâve done your good deed for the night and the cold air is starting to bite at your skin. Just leave him here. Heâll figure it out, or. . . he wonât. Either way, itâs not your concern.
But just as youâre about to turn and go, Stan mumbles something under his nose. Itâs faint, too quiet to catch.
â. . . shouldâve never messed with the damn portal.â
You blink. Portal? The word echoes in your mind, thatâs surprising, intriguing. What the hell is he talking about? You glance at him again, but his eyes are fluttering shut, his body slumping further against the wall.
âHey,â you say, stepping closer. âwhat did you just say?â
Stanâs lips move, but no sound comes out, heâs completely out of it. Your eyes widen in shock as you say âhey, manâ louder to get him back to his senses, but before you can react, his knees buckle and he collapses, dead weight against the cold ground.
âHoly shit!â you drop your cigarette, your hands immediately going to his shoulders, trying to shake him awake. His head lolls to the side, completely out cold
Of course. Of fucking course! Heâs drunk off his ass, hasnât slept, probably hasnât eaten anything substantial in days. You run a hand through your hair, staring down at him, your mind racing.
Youâre not sure what the hell to do with this guy. You donât even know him. But something in your gut twists, something telling you to stay, to not leave him lying here like this.Â
***
Heâs strange, sure. But why does that word âportalâ keep sticking in your head?
Days pass, but your thoughts keep drifting back to him. That night, his ramblings, the look in his eyes before he passed out. You shouldnât care. Heâs just some guy, a random drunk you stumbled across. But youâve always been a curious person. You keep thinking about how broken he looked, how utterly wrecked he seemed and you wonder what couldâve driven him to that point.
Youâre out in town again, aimlessly wandering the streets of Gravity Falls, and without even realizing it, you find yourself back at the bar where you met him. Itâs the same cold winter night, what makes your body shake from chill no matter how many layers youâve got on.
You stand outside with a cigarette, your breath mixing with the smoke. Your mindâs still on him, on that weird stranger. You canât help but wonder if heâs alright. Probably not? Guys like that donât bounce back easy.Â
You take another drag, exhaling slowly, your thoughts swirling. You think about how he stumbled around, barely able to stay on his feet, and for some reason you smile. Itâs ridiculous, really. Heâs such a loser. But there was something strangely. . . cute about it all. God, why are you even thinking about him
Suddenly, the door to the bar swings open, and a familiar figure stumbles out into the cold. You blink, and sure enough, itâs him. That drunk weird guy. Same red jacket, same disheveled look, but this time he doesnât seem quite as far gone. Still drunk, but not teetering on the edge like last time.
The bouncer gives him a shove, muttering something about not coming back without cash and Stan nearly trips over his own feet before catching himself. He stands there for a moment, muttering insults and then his eyes land on you. His gaze lingers, squinting through the haze of alcohol, and recognition slowly dawns on his face. He straightens up, well, as much as a guy like him can, and adjusts his jacket, trying to look somewhat presentable.
âWell, well, if it ainât my guardian angel,â he says with a grin.
You raise an eyebrow, flicking the ash from your cigarette. âdidnât know angels had to drag drunks out of bars.â
Stan laughs, but itâs more of a low chuckle. âdo I know you? I feelââ he hiccups. âfuck, feel like I should know your name. . .â
âI never told you, dummy.â
Stan stares at you for a moment, processing that, and then he smiles wider. âAh, right. Guess I canât forget what I never knew.â he winks, but itâs sloppy, and you canât help but smile back.
He takes a step toward you, leaning against the wall beside you. âYâknow, I gotta thank ya for payinâ for me back there. âSpecially since that whiskey was crap. Worst Iâve had in years.â
You snort, glancing at him from the corner of your eye. âYeah, and thatâs why you drank all of it, right? real convincing, man.â
He chuckles again, running a hand through his brown hair. âWhat can I say? Gotta give every drink a fair shot. Even the bad ones.â
You shake your head, a smile tugging at the corners of your lips despite yourself. The guyâs a mess, sure, but thereâs something oddly charming about his complete lack of shame. Heâs so human. Flawed and ridiculous, but human. And funny.
For a while, neither of you say much, just standing there under the night sky, the snow crunching beneath your feet as you walk slowly down the street. The cold bites at your skin, but it feels less harsh with him beside you, talking about nothing in particular. He rambles about the bar, about the bartender, about how heâs been kicked out of worse places, but thereâs an ease to it, like heâs just talking to fill the silence.
And for some reason, you donât mind it. His company is strangely nice. Despite everything.
As you walk, you glance over at him, still trying to figure out what it is about this guy thatâs gotten under your skin. Heâs weird, yeah. Definitely not what youâd call put-together.Â
He catches your gaze and smirks, a little lopsided but softer this time. âWhat, you like what you see?â
You laugh, shaking your head. âNot even close.â
***
Over time, you start to see Stanford Stan more regularly. It's never planned, never some formal arrangement. Heâs just there, outside that same dive bar, smoking under the dim streetlight or wandering down the streets with his red jacket pulled tight against the cold. And every time, you find yourself walking beside him, talking about nothing and everything.
Itâs not like youâre close, not really. He doesnât open up, never gives you much more than surface-level comments or dumb jokes to deflect anything too personal. You only know what he lets slip, and even that feels like more than you should. He insists his name is Stanford, though something about it always sounds. . . off.Â
Stanley thinks heâs idiot. Itâs a role heâs playing, a mask heâs not ready to take off, wonât take for for the next thirty years.
One night, after youâve met up for what feels like the hundredth time, you finally ask him why heâs always drunk when you see him. Itâs been bugging you for a while, how every time you meet, he reeks of whiskey and stale cigarettes, eyes glassy, speech slurred, sometimes flirting with you or winking dumbly at you. Youâve tried to ignore it, but tonight the question just slips out.
Stan pauses, cigarette halfway to his lips. You think heâs not going to answer, but then he takes a drag, exhaling slowly before speaking. âHelps me think,â he mutters. âkeeps the noise out.â
You raise an eyebrow. âNoise?â
He shrugs, leaning back against the wall, his eyes scanning the street. âYeah. The crap up here. Some people got quiet minds, yâknow? Not me. Gotta slow it down.â
Itâs vague, cryptic. You donât push for more. Youâve learned by now that pressing Stan doesnât get you anywhere. He only shares what he wants, and even then, itâs always layered in something else, sarcasm, a joke, some offhand comment that makes it hard to tell whatâs real and whatâs just him deflecting.
Nevertheless, there is something in the way he says it that does not leave you indifferent. The way he looks when he mentions his thoughts, as if there's something more hiding under the surface that booze and cigarettes can't hide. You wonder whatâs rattling around in his brain, what kind of shit heâs trying so hard to drown out.
Time passes, and your strange friendship, or whatever it is, continues. Nothing changes. You meet up, you talk, you walk through the streets of Gravity Falls, smoking and trading stories. Stan makes jokes, you laugh, and somehow, despite everything, you find yourself growing more comfortable around him.
But he never lets you in, not really. You can only guess at whatâs going on in his life, at whatâs driving him to the bottom of a bottle every time you see him. Itâs frustrating in a way, how closed off he is, how he seems determined to keep everything buried. Thereâs a part of him thatâs afraid to let you see the real him, afraid to show just how broken he really is.
You start to ask him more personal questions, though he always dodges them with some half-assed joke. Like the time you asked him about his hair. His mullet, to be specific. Itâs a mess, now unruly and overgrown, and you canât help but wonder why the hell he refuses to cut it.Â
âWhy donât you change a haircut?â you ask teasingly. âyou look like you havenât touched it in years.â
Stan just grins, flicking his cigarette into the street. âAh, what can I say? Chicks dig the mullet.â
What you donât know is that Stanâs too scared to look at himself in the mirror.
The way he avoids mirrors, the way his eyes flicker away if he catches his own reflection for even a second. Itâs not about the hair, itâs about something deeper. Every time he sees his reflection, itâs not his face he sees, itâs Fordâs. If he cuts his hair, changes anything, heâs worried heâll lose himself completely, that heâll become the brother heâs spent his whole life running from. Itâs not something heâd ever tell you, though. Thatâs way too deep for the guy who lives behind a wall of bad jokes and alcohol.
Stan never talks about his past. Youâve asked, but he always deflects with a joke or changes the subject. The most youâve gotten out of him is when something goes wrong, he drops something, or his stupid car wonât start, or even when he just stumbles over his own feet. Heâll shake his head, muttering to himself, âScrew-up. Always been a screw-up.â Itâs weird, like itâs the only thing he knows how to be.
It bothers you. You donât get it. Yeah, heâs a mess, but this weird obsession with calling himself a screw-up, like itâs some kind of mantra, doesnât make sense to you. You donât know where itâs coming from, but every time he says it, you see a flash of something bitter in his eyes, like heâs heard those words so many times theyâve become part of him.
What you donât realize is that those words are burned into him. His father used to call him a screw-up, over and over until it became his identity. And then there was Ford, his golden child of a brother, the smart one, the successful one. Stanâs always felt like the lesser of the two, never quite measuring up, always stuck in his brotherâs shadow. Heâs spent his whole life trying to live down to that title, like itâs all heâs worth. Stan was a kid, who heard those words over and over until they stuck, until he couldnât see himself as anything else.
You canât fix whatâs already broken. But that doesnât stop you from trying. Something about Stan makes you want to help, even though you know you canât. Heâs too far gone, too buried in his own mess. Still, you keep coming back. Maybe out of curiosity, maybe out of some sense of hope.
***
Another night, another round of drinks. The two of you sit at the bar, glasses clinking against the wood, the air is filled with the smell of cigarettes and alcohol. Stanâs already a few drinks in, and youâre not far behind. You laugh at something he says, probably another dumb joke, but youâre not really paying attention. Your mind is clouded, your body is hot from drinking, and before you know it, your gaze slides over his lips.
Itâs stupid. Youâre both drunk, and this is Stanford, the guy who can barely keep his life together, let alone maintain a relationship. But the way he looks right now, disheveled and messy, his lips curling into that cocky grin, makes your heart race.
His lips. Your lips. Apocalypse.
The kiss happens fast, messy, without warning. One minute youâre sitting there, and the next, his lips are on yours, rough and dry. Itâs not graceful, not soft. Itâs desperate, like heâs been holding something back for too long, and now itâs all spilling out at once.
The kiss deepens, but you donât care. His mouth moves against yours, hungry, needy, like heâs searching for something, like thatâs what he needed all those years. Human touch and someone else's warmth.
Youâre both drunk, of course. Maybe thatâs the only way it couldâve happened.Â
Stan tastes like smoke and cheap liquor, the bitterness lingering on your tongue as his hands slide up your back, pulling you in. You can feel the heat of his body, the way his chest presses against yours.
Somewhere in the back of your mind, you wonder if this is a mistake, stupid drunk accident. But then he kisses you harder, his hand tangling in your hair and all thoughts of logic fly out the window. This isnât about fixing him. You donât care about anything except the fact that Stanford, the complete disaster of a man youâve somehow gotten tangled up with, is kissing you like the worldâs about to end.
His hands are rough, clumsy as they cup your face, and itâs all heat and desperation, like neither of you know what the hell youâre doing, but you donât want to stop.
Youâre not sure how it happened so quickly, one second, you were sitting at the bar, laughing, your lips crashing into his, and now youâre pressed against the cold wall of the bathroom. The neon lights of the bar barely make their way out from under the door, flooding the room with a dim glow as Stan presses you against the sink.
Stan kisses like an animal, like heâs trying to lose himself in the moment, drown out everything thatâs weighing on him. Like heâs searching for some kind of escape. The alcohol has dulled his brain, but not enough to make him forget. He needs something more, something real to pull him out of the relentless spiral of thoughts, of portals, journals and the constant gnawing guilt.
Stan needs to lose himself in something, anything else. And tonight, that something is you.
His big hands are on you, one sliding up your back, fingers curling into your hair, tugging you even closer as he deepens the kiss. He groans into your mouth and you feel how his hard cock presses through his jeans as he pushes you against the sink in the bar's bathroom. You feel like youâre burning from the inside out, every nerve igniting under his touch, his mouth trailing down your jaw, leaving a scorching path along your skin.
You barely notice when the door creaks open, someone stepping into the small, dimly lit room.
âBathroomâs occupied, unless you wanna watch, but thatâll cost you.â Stan snaps, irritated as he glares at the stranger. The man stutters away quickly and the door slams shut with a loud bang.Â
Before you can say something, heâs kissing you again, hard, desperate, rough, demanding.Â
You moan into his mouth, tangling your finger in his brown hair, tugging him closer, and the word slips out between your breaths. âStanford. . .â
Stan freezes and that name seems to knock all the alcohol out of his blood. It feels like something heavy and wrong between you, Stan's gaze is blank, like he's not here at all. Itâs his brotherâs name, the one heâs stolen, the one heâs buried himself under. You look at him and see something in his eyes. Regret. Guilt. That endless pain thatâs been eating at him for as long as he can remember. You don't know what's going on, but you want to solve this damn mystery so badly. What's wrong with this man?
But then itâs all gone, replaced by that cocky grin.
âStanâs fine, sweetheart. Trust me.â
His hands fumble with your pants, yanking them down roughly, desperately, his fingers massaging and rubbing you through your underwear. Youâre already soaking, practically trembling from his touch, and he groans when he feels it, his fingers sliding through your wetness.
âShit, youâre so wet for me,â he growls. âfuckinâ perfect, baby.â
You moan, head tilting back, the sensation overwhelming as he slides two fingers inside you, rough and fast. Heâs not gentle, not tonight, thereâs no time for that, no point for that too. Heâs desperate and it shows in the way his thick fingers pump into you, the heel of his hand pressing against your clit in the most delicious way.
âSt-Stanââ you moan, looking down at his fingers thrusting into you.
âPlease, donât say it, donât say that name,âmeanwhile, Stan thinks, hoping your drunken mind has figured it out.
ââfuck me,â your last words make him breathe a sigh of relief. Good girl. And then heâs yanking your panties down as he have you bent over the sink, your palms pressing into the cold porcelain and you barely have time to register the sound of his belt hitting the floor before you feel the thick head of his cock pressing against your entrance.
âFuck,â he mutters as he lines himself up. âIâm gonna fuck you right here, right now. And youâre gonna let me, arenât you?â
You moan, nodding, pressing back against him, desperate for the stretch, to feel him inside you because your brain can't think of anything else but getting fucked hard in the bathroom of a bar. âPlease, Stanâ please, use me!â
And he obeys, slamming into you, burying himself deep in one rough, brutal thrust that actually hurts, but your drunk state doesnât care much. You gasp, his cock fills you so completely you can barely breathe, you cry out, your body arching, but Stan's hand is holding you back, pressing on your back to keep you in place and he groans. Itâs overwhelming you, a mix of pain and pleasure and you canât stop moans that escapes your lips as he starts to move, his cock sliding in and out of you with rough thrusts.
âHuh, oh jesus fuck, baby, yer tight,â Stan grits out between ragged breaths, his voice hoarse. He pulls back only to slam into you again, harder this time, his hips snapping against yours with a brutal rhythm that has you gasping.Â
âStaaannâ!â you whimper his real name again, your fingers gripping the edge of the sink for dear life, his cock so deep itâs like heâs claiming every part of you. âOh, fuck-fuck-fuck!â
âmy fucking god, baby,â he groans, his dick hitting that spot deep inside you that has your body trembling. His fingers find your clit, rubbing in quick circles as he fucks you harder. âyou feel so fuckinâ good, doll, so tight around my cock.â
Of course, there's a mirror hanging over the sink, and Stan glances up, wanting to see your fucked-out expression, how gorgeous your face looks when he's pounding into you like this. But, almost spitefully, his eyes land on himself instead. He wants to look away, he should look away, but something makes him stop. For the first time in years, the reflection staring back at him is someone else. Not his twin. Not his nerdy brother. No, not Stanford. Ford would never end up like this. Never get so fucking dirty.
Stan sees himself for what he is. What he's become. Hair disheveled, drunk, filthy, fucking in a bar bathroom. Ford would never be like this. Stan, you piece of shit, you're a disgrace to your brother's name, Stanley thinks.
But then your moans reach his ears, pulling him back, reminding him where he is. Thank God the bar music is loud enough to cover you. He blinks, realizing he's let the pace slip, and his hands tighten on your hips, his grip hard enough to bruise, grounding himself.
Youâre a mess of moans and gasps, your body shaking, your warm walls tightening around him as the pleasure builds. âStanâ fuck, Iâm gonnaââ
Stan leans into you as much as the position allows, one hand tangling in your hair, tugging hard enough to make the roots sting, though in your drunken haze, you barely even feel it.
âDo it,â he growls, his breath hot against your neck. âCum for me. I wanna feel you cum on my cock.â
And you do, the orgasm rips through you, your body convulsing as you cry out, your walls squeezing around him what makes Stan groan, his fingers digging into your hips, thrusting harder, faster, chasing his own release. You can feel him throbbing inside you and then heâs pulling out, his hand wrapping around his cock as he strokes himself, his cum spilling hot and thick onto your skin.
***
The days began to stretch into weeks. Time wasnât something you paid attention to anymore, not since that night. You could still feel him sometimes, his rough hands ghosting over your skin, the taste of whiskey and cigarettes lingering long after heâd left, his groans, the way he said your name. It hadnât been anything gentle or romantic that night, just bodies lost in drunken hunger. And after that, you hadnât seen much of him since, not like before.
You couldnât help but wonder if maybe that night had ruined something between you. Maybe it had been a mistake. Maybe heâd felt nothing, and youâd been stupid to think it couldâve been anything more. The way his lips had pressed against yours, hungry, desperate, hadnât felt like love. He was drunk, did he even know who he was kissing? Your anxiety was growing, your thoughts were fighting one another. It wasnât love. It had been something else entirely, it was raw and messy. You knew it wasnât love, just a night. It wasnât tender or slow; there were no whispered promises of endless love, marriage, kids, whatever âall happyâ people have. Just a desperate fuck, not some grand confession of feelings. Whatever had been between you before â it felt like it was ruined, as if that thing in the bathroom had burned everything else to ash.
Stanford had disappeared, leaving you with silence and your own thoughts, and you believed that he regretted it. Maybe it was just too much for him.Â
However, Stanley, he couldnât shake the feeling of your lips on his, the way they were so warm, because no one had ever kissed him with that kind of passion before. He wasnât used to that, to being touched like that. His entire life, he believed nobody really liked him. Not like this. Hell, even his own family had given up on him at some point. Except for his mom, sheâd always tried to love him, even when he couldnât love himself.Â
He tried to ignore the way his chest ached when he thought about you, tried to drown it out with more cigarettes, more drinks, he tried, but failed because nothing worked. Every time he closed his eyes, he saw your face. Stan was getting attached to you, he knew it, even when he didnât want to admit it. Even without alcohol, without the nicotine to calm his nerves, he knew he wanted you and your presence. It wasnât just lust. It was something deeper, something that scared the fuck out of him because he wasnât used to it. And maybe thatâs why heâd been avoiding you. Because how the hell was he supposed to deal with feelings he didnât even know how to name? Stan always felt that people didnât love him, they tolerated him.
With you, for the first time in a long time, Stan had felt like he mattered. Like he was seen.
It scared him a lot.
***
Spring came early that year, and with it, the world outside the window seemed to come to life. Gravity Falls blossomed with colors you hadn't noticed before â the world is painted in bright greens and soft pastel tones, flowers made their way through the ground, as if the whole town was shaking off the cold and waking up. And that's when you saw him again.
You werenât expecting to run into Stanford like this, not here, not in daylight, when spring is blooming around you. He was standing at the edge of the road, hands shoved into his pockets, a slight frown on his face like he wasnât sure if he wanted to be here. But then his eyes met yours and he didnât look away this time.
There was no alcohol, no bar lights casting shadows on his face. Just sober Stan, the man who had kissed you with so much need that it had nearly broken you.
âHey,â he called out and you immediately responded with excited âhi!â you smiled, he stood there, waiting for you to come closer. When you did, there was a long pause, neither of you quite sure what to say. His eyes flicked down nervously and you noticed it then, the subtle change, not too noticeable. Had he fixed his mullet a bit? It wasnât much, but it was. . . cleaner. Neater, like heâd put in just a little more effort. Like maybe he had been planning on running into you.
âUh, you wanna grab some coffee or somethinâ?â Stan asked, his hand rubbing the back of his neck, clearly trying to play it cool, but the way he shifted on his feet betrayed him. He was nervous. Actually nervous. You hadnât seen that in him before. âI figured we could, ya know, talk. Maybe. If thatâs somethinâ you wanna do, of course.â
You nodded, a soft smile playing on your lips. âYeah, Iâd like that.â
It was much easier to talk about the weather, or the weirdness of Gravity Falls, or how spring had made the town feel alive again. But every now and then, your eyes would meet and you exchanged awkward laughs and smiles.
âSo, uh. . . I gotta ask,â Stan started. âdid ya notice somethinâ different?â
You tilted your head, pretending to think for a moment before grinning. âYour hair? you mean you actually put effort into it?â
He smiled back at you. âYeah, well, figured Iâd try to clean up a bit. Yâknow, look a little less like a bum.â
You laughed, feeling warmth blooming in your chest. It was such a small thing, but it felt significant to you. Like heâd actually cared enough to try for you, impress you maybe. And that meant more than you could say.
***
Nights bled into days and days slipped back into nights. Time seemed to blur together, the moon swapped places with the sun over and over. And here you were, tangled in the sheets of Stanâs bed, staring at the ceiling, while the moonlight filtered through the triangle-shaped window, the soft glow of it lays over your face, feels like the world outside was holding its breath just for you.
Things between you and Stan had shifted in ways you hadnât expected. It wasnât quick or loud. At end, Stan let you get closer, but piece by piece, he was afraid you might notice if he let you too far in all at once.
The first time Stanley let you hug him, really hug him, was late in night. You werenât sure how it had happened, it wasnât planned, you reached for him first. You didnât even think about it, just pulled him close. You wrapped your arms around him, holding him carefully at first, waiting for him to tell you to stop. But he didnât. Stan stiffened at first, because the idea of being held was foreign to him, something he wasnât sure he was allowed to do. Then his face buried against your shoulder, and at first, you thought he was just tired, resting, taking what he needed and nothing more. But then you felt it. The dampness against your skin.
You realized with a sinking heart that Stan was crying.
It wasnât loud. No sobs, no gasping breaths. Just silent bitter tears soaking through your shirt, his grip tightening on you like he was afraid you might disappear, just like his brother. His body trembled slightly, now he couldnât hide anymore. It broke something in you, seeing him like this, this man felt so small in your arms.Â
He clung to you like a child, because no one had held him in years. No one, no one had hugged him like this since he left his family.
You sighed and held him tighter, feeling his tears soak into your skin. Stan wasnât just crying about tonight, he was crying for all the years heâd spent running, for all the times heâd pushed people away because it was easier than getting hurt. He was crying because, for the first time in so long, someone was holding him, and it wasnât just physical, it reminded him of what it felt like to be cared for. To not be alone.Â
Your hand gently stroking the back of his head, letting him melt into you like the child he probably hadnât been allowed to be in years. Decades, maybe. For the first time, Stan didnât feel like the tough man you knew him as. He felt small, fragile, like he was that little boy again, the one who had been left behind, pushed out of his family and told to figure it all out on his own.
Stanley pulled back, wiping his face roughly with the back of his hand, embarrassed as he looked down. But you didn't give him time to think again and regret his actions, you didnât let him feel that shame for long. You reached for the pack of cigarettes on the table, handing one to him without a word. Stan took it and you lit it for him, the soft click of the lighter the only sound in the room.
You sat together in that silence of the night, both of you smoking. You werenât drunk this time and that made everything feel more real, clear. It wasnât about the cigarettes, though. It was the quiet between you, the kind of quiet that didnât feel uncomfortable or awkward. Stan wasnât running anymore, he could finally relax, finally let himself breathe.Â
He looked up at the night sky, at the Milky Way stretching above you and smiled then, just a little, but it was there. A real, sincere smile. You hadnât seen that on him before, not like this. It wasnât the cocky grin he wore after dumb compliments or the smirk that followed some joke. This was softer. Stanley stared at the stars, his eyes reflecting the distant light and you wondered what he was thinking about. But while he was smiling, you were calm.Â
Stanford, real Stanford, heâs always been somewhere up there. In the stars, in the galaxies, in other world, always lost in science and mathematics, in things Stanley never really understood.
Nights passed like this more often, where it wasnât about the rush of everything. He didnât have to keep running anymore, didnât have to keep pretending he didnât care. Heâd gotten soft around you in a way that surprised both of you, but it felt right. He could relax now. He could let himself be vulnerable.
One night, after the smoking had long stopped, after the silence had stretched between you in that comfortable way again, the two of you ended up in his bed. Not in the desperate lust way you had before, but in a way that felt natural. Like this was where you both belonged, in each otherâs arms.
Stan was lying on your chest, his head resting against you as you calmingly ran your fingers through his hair, the brown strands slipping through your hands. He let out a long, contented sigh, relaxing into your touch.Â
You felt his breath against your skin, the slow rise and fall of his chest in sync with yours, and that made you understand just how fragile he really was. He never was the tough guy he always tried to be. Stanley Pines was was just a man trying to figure out how to feel again.
Stanâs arms wrapped loosely around you, holding on but not out of desperation this time. Just out of comfort. Out of need.
You smiled softly, your fingers still tangled in his hair. âIâm not going anywhere, Stan.â
And for the first time, he believed it and smiled.
***
It wasnât in Stanâs nature to lay everything out in some big, romantic gesture, not now. This will happen later when he gets older, much older. So there was no official conversation, no âwhat are we now?â that hung awkwardly in the air.
It happened one evening, at dusk, because at this time of day people always become more sincere and honest, the two of you sitting on the back porch, sharing the silence in the way youâd grown to love. He had that usual cigarette between his lips, the glow of the ember flickering in the dark and you were watching the stars. That's when he said it, which in his language meant âI love youâ:Â
âI think I like you best when youâre just with me and no one else.â
That was his way of telling you. You didnât need him to say the word love. You understood him well enough by now to know that what he felt was real and that was all you needed.Â
You didnât ask him to clarify, didnât push for more. Stan was never someone you could push. Instead, you waited. You knew he would tell you everything in time. He just needed to get there on his own, at his own pace.Â
Sometimes heâd disappear into the lab, working on some thing he barely explained, shrugging it off with that typical grumble about science and mathematics. âItâs all bullshit anyway,â heâd say, tossing his hands in the air. âI ainât ever understood that crap.â
âNot like my brother, heâs the smart one.â Stanley continued in his thoughts.Â
Then you started noticing the small changes. The way the bottles that once cluttered his desk and the corners of the shack were fewer now. He still drank, yeah, but not like before. He wasnât drowning himself in it anymore. It was like he was learning, little by little, how to exist without that forever haze of alcohol clouding his thoughts, feelings and memories.
Stan was still scared though. He was scared of a lot of things, scared youâd leave, scared youâd find out something about him and realise you couldnât stay. And then there were the nightmares. The ones he never talked about, but they were all the same, repeating every time. Youâd wake in the middle of the night to find him tense beside you, his breathing uneven, his hands gripping the sheets as though he was trying to hold on to something slipping away.Â
That haunted him. The portal, always the portal. Heâd never say it, at least not now. Heâs not ready yet. Heâs terrified that somehow, youâd be pulled into it too, just like Ford. That one day youâd be gone and heâd be alone again, abandoned forever.Â
But when your lips touches his in slow kiss, when you brush your fingers through his messy hair and kiss his forehead, all these fears are washed away. Youâd hold him close, feel his body relax against yours and slowly, slowly, his breathing would steady as the nightmares faded. There he stops dreaming about portals and disappearances. Instead, he sleeps deeply, peacefully, like a normal human being.
In the mornings, heâd stay in bed longer than you, his eyes still closed when you slipped out from under the covers. Heâd stretch, arms reaching out lazily, that rough voice of his so sleepy. âSweetheart, come right back,â heâd mumble. âiâve been waitinâ for you to slip back in bed.â heâd smile when heâd feel your warm body next to his.
Thatâs what made you fall in love with him harder.
The way he was always a bit softer in the mornings, not yet fully awake and not needing to be. He wasnât running anymore. Not from you, not from himself. For the first time in what felt like forever, Stan was learning what it meant to just be. To exist in the quiet moments. He still smoked, but it wasnât to escape anymore, it was just a part of him, something familiar, habit.Â
Stanley had spent so much of his life running, from his past, from laws, cops, states, from his brother, from his mistakes. But with you, for the first time, he wasnât running anymore. He was staying.
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I kinda dropped out of my obey me phase and Iâm more or less into Gravity falls as of right now. DONT WORRY, this blog wonât be deleted and Iâll probably get back into obey me soon once I consume all the media I can from gravity falls and i realize thereâs nothing left to eat. But yeah you get the gist.
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