haiiii this is my blog intro <3 i made this account to post my writing (˶𖦹﹏𖦹˶)
౨ৎ you can call me lau! i go by she/her
౨ৎ men and -16 plz dniii
౨ৎ i <3 sevika and ellie
౨ৎ english is not my first language!
౨ৎ i'm very uncomfortable with personal questions! pls don't ask my real name, bday, location, etc etc etc ❤︎ ive had bad experiences with privacy invasion before ! thank uu
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Sypnosis: Your little kitten decided it's time for you to meet your neighbor.
જ⁀➴Tags: neighbor!ellie, modern au, no smut just fluff, mischevious kitty.
While walking to your apartment in the afternoon with a pounding head, you heard mewling. Short, high pitch and consistent mewling that sounded like a cry for help. You looked around only to see a very tiny kitten, with its head stuck in a pipe.
After immediately crouching down, you slowly reached for the kitten. It’s mewling got even louder, you furrowed your brows in worry as you tried to slightly tug on the little kitty and pull it’s head out safely. After struggling for 5 minutes and a few strangers curiously peaking from the side to see what you were doing, the kitten was in your palms, shaking and crying.
“shh I got you kitty… It’s okay..”
The kitten's neck and head was wet, weakly mewling every time you pet it gently. You carefully wrapped it around a tissue and headed to the veterinarian clinic. It was snuggling your palm and meowing every now and then.
Weeks later you came from work, ready to enjoy your alone time with Peony, the little kitten had grown and gained some weight since then. Your goal was to make her even chubbier.
Usually she welcomed you the second your front door opened, however she wasn’t anywhere to be seen tonight which made you worry. After quickly hanging up your coat, you closed the door and placed your bag in the frontier, the pacing began. You checked every inch of your apartment.
“Peonyy…where are you baby… I brought catnip… please come out…”
Your eyes welled up with tears, why would she even run away when she had everything here? Lots of food, warm and cozy bed and a loving owner.
You wiped your tears away trying to keep yourself logical instead of breaking down right there. A loud and looong honk pulled your attention to the window. It was left open completely. You always left it slightly agape for air circulation but never fully on. The window lead out to the stairs in case of a fire or an emergency.
You slowly slipped out onto the staircase and started looking. Deciding to go downstairs first, you couldn’t find Peony.
As you walked up back to your floor, there was someone calling out softly.
“Hi… hi… what are you doing here? Are you lost?”
The sound of a little bell jingling immediately had you padding your way upwards. Peony’s collar had a bow with a little bell in the center. Once you made it up, you were welcomed with the sight of an auburn haired girl, sitting at the edge of her window while holding Peony.
She gently scratched the kitten’s neck with a tattooed hand, a whole arm actually. She looked up and got startled for a second. You had been standing there with the relief of finally spotting your kitty. You had forgotten how to interact.
“Oh hi…I’m so sorry she escaped, she has never done this before and I’ve been panicking. I’m glad you found her..”
The girl chuckled and slowly handed out the kitty to you. Peony extended it’s paws and placed them on your shoulder. She seemed content after making you almost have a heart attack.
“It’s alright, I could tell she belonged to someone by the collar, I’m Ellie by the way…”
You finally faced Ellie directly, and you were flushed immediately. You had never seen her around, because if you had you would’ve definitely met her. She was beautiful, almost handsome in a way.
“I’m y/n, nice to meet you, I live downstairs..” You murmured.
You actually hit it off with Ellie, she invited you to hangout a couple of days later. Then a real date, and a couple of more.
It felt like a blessing that you had Peony, and Peony lead you to Ellie. Now you were in Ellie’s apartment, laying on her bed as you two watched a documentary. Peony was curled up between you.
“Nooooo, that eagle is going to catch the rabbit…”
“That’s the law of nature baby, it has to eat the rabbit so it can survive.”
“I don’t care, cmon bunny you can make it!!”
The rabbit hopped towards a tree hole. Right as it was about to enter the safe zone the eagle caught it in its clenched claws. You pouted and snuggled into Ellie
. Peony had gotten up and now was watching Ellie’s fish, named Eugene, swim around in it’s fish tank.
“This is so unfair…” you murmured. Ellie simply squeezed you in her embrace and placed a small kiss on your temple.
“Oh you’re going to hate me then..” Ellie sighed out. You lightly furrowed your brows.
“Why so? Do you like eagles?”
“Not that.. I just, back in Wyoming I used to hunt rabbits with my uncle’s rifle.”
“Ellie what the fuck!!” Peony jumped back into your lap again, pushing it’s head into your palm.
“I know, I don’t think I’ll be doing it again since I will be thinking of you when I see another rabbit…”
‧₊˚ ⋅ ❤︎ . . . smut◞ weed◞ lowkey porn without plot because i didn’t include any in the last part◞ ellie not knowing what to do with her hands◞ ellie is so cute
♡◞. . ⊹₊ ˚‧ — sequel of “just a dare” — i made sure to include smut this time. please enjoy. requests are open you guys!!
word count — 1.9k
part i
—
just a dare sequel
—
ellie’s forehead stays pressed to yours, breath hot and shaky against your mouth like she is still deciding if this is real. the tv flickers uselessly in the corner, some old movie neither of you gives a shit about anymore. her hand grips your hip tighter, fingers digging in just a little, calluses rough from years of holding bows and knives and guitars.
"okay," she breathes, voice low and rough, almost cracking. "that was not enough. not even fucking close."
she kisses you hard then, tongue pushing in like she is scared this moment might slip away if she does not grab it. the nervousness is still there in the way her breath hitches and her shoulders tense, but underneath it is that ellie intensity. the same one that drives her through infected and worse. once she lets herself want something, she commits, even if it terrifies her. she pulls back just enough to reach blindly for the nightstand, knocking a half empty glass over with a dull thud. she does not even flinch.
"this first," she mutters, grabbing the half smoked joint and lighter. the flame catches quick, lighting up the freckles across her nose and the thin scar through her eyebrow. she takes a deep drag, holds it till her lungs burn, then leans down and presses her mouth to yours, shotgunning the smoke slow and thick into you. her hand slips under your shirt at the same time, palm warm against your side. you inhale together, exhale the cloud between your faces, and the weed starts hitting. warm, hazy, loosening the tight knot in your chest and making every brush of skin feel heavier.
"fuck," ellie says quietly, voice already gravelly as she takes another hit and passes it to you. her green eyes watch you closely while you smoke, half lidded and dark. "you look good like this. all relaxed. been thinking about this shit way too much lately. like stupid amounts."
it is blunt, a little awkward, pure ellie. she has never been smooth with this stuff. she sets the joint on the ashtray edge carefully, then yanks your shirt up and off, tossing it toward the floor. her own tank follows after a second of hesitation, revealing the lean muscle and old scars that map her torso. she pushes your pants down roughly, impatient now, muttering a curse when the fabric catches on your ankle. her own clothes come off fast after that, kicked somewhere off the side of the bed.
she crawls over you, knee pressing between your thighs to spread them, but she pauses there, hovering. her eyes flick over your face like she is checking for any sign you want to stop. "you sure?" she asks, voice low. when you nod she lets out a shaky breath and kisses you again, deeper this time, one hand sliding up to cup the back of your neck.
ellie’s mouth moves to your neck, open and warm, sucking lightly at first then harder, like she is leaving proof that this happened. her hand palms your breast, thumb brushing over your nipple until it tightens, and she makes this quiet, surprised sound in her throat when you arch into her. she grinds her thigh against you, slow and experimental, feeling how wet you are getting.
"shit. you are really into this, huh?" she mumbles against your skin, half embarrassed, half awed. the weed makes everything feel slower and more intense, every touch lingering. she spends time on your chest, mouth switching between your tits, biting gently then soothing with her tongue, like she is learning what makes you react. her hips keep rolling against your leg, leaving a slick trail on your skin, her own breathing getting ragged.
she does not drag it out forever. ellie has never been great at patience once she is decided. she slides down your body, pushing your thighs wider with those strong, scarred hands. she stares for a second, ears red, then leans in and licks a long stripe up your pussy. the groan she lets out is low and real, like she was not expecting how much she would like it.
"fuck, you taste good," she mutters, almost to herself. then she is really on you. tongue circling your clit, two fingers sliding in easy, curling careful but firm. she builds a rhythm, mouth messy and focused, short hair tickling the inside of your thighs. when your hips twitch she presses her forearm across your stomach, holding you steady without being rough about it. "just stay with me. wanna feel you."
it is intense in that ellie way. all her attention narrowed down to you, like nothing else in the world exists right now. the weed stretches it out, turns every lick and thrust into something deeper. she adds another finger, stroking steady, sucking your clit until your thighs start shaking and you come hard, moaning her name. she keeps going through it, gentler but not stopping completely, drawing it out until you are breathing shaky and oversensitive.
she finally pulls back, lips shiny, chest heaving. she wipes her mouth with the back of her hand and crawls up to kiss you, letting you taste yourself. it is sloppy and desperate and so her.
"you okay?" she checks quietly, forehead against yours again. her hand is still between your legs, fingers moving lazy. when you nod she exhales in relief and reaches for the joint. she takes a long hit, then offers it to you, watching the smoke curl from your lips.
"turn over," she says after a minute, voice rough. you do, and she settles behind you, chest to your back, one arm wrapping around your waist. she kisses the back of your neck, grinding against your ass slow while her hand sneaks between your legs again. "this good?" she asks, fingers sliding back inside you from behind. the new angle makes you gasp and she curses under her breath, hips pressing tighter.
she fucks you like that for a while. deep, steady strokes, mouth on your shoulder, free hand roaming your body. it is not rushed. she takes her time, thumb finding your clit, building you up again until you are pushing back against her hand, coming with your face buried in the pillow.
ellie flips you onto your back after, breathing hard, face flushed down to her chest. she looks at you for a long second, something vulnerable flickering across her expression. "i want you to.. on my face. if you want.. only if you want."
you move up and she pulls you down gently, hands on your hips guiding you. her tongue is eager but a little uncoordinated at first, figuring it out, then finding what works. she moans into you the whole time, vibrations rolling through your body, hands squeezing your thighs and ass. you brace on the headboard, rolling your hips, and she takes it, licking and sucking until you come again, thighs trembling around her head.
she helps you down after, both of you sweaty and sticky. ellie is soaked, breathing heavy, but when you reach for her she catches your hand. "wait. just c’mere." she pulls you close instead, kissing you slow while her own hand slips between her legs. you watch her touch herself, then join in, fingers sliding through her wetness. she is sensitive and vocal in a quiet, broken way. little gasps and curses, hips jerking against your hand.
"fuck. right there, do not stop," she mutters, forehead pressed to yours, eyes squeezed shut. she comes hard like that, clenching around your fingers, body shuddering against you with a muffled groan into your neck.
afterward you are both wrecked, tangled together under the blanket she eventually pulls over you. ellie’s arm is wrapped tight around your waist, face buried in your neck like she is hiding. the room smells like weed and sex and the faint whiskey from earlier. she is quiet for a long minute, thumb tracing absent circles on your hip.
"that was yeah," she says finally, voice hoarse and a little shy. "you good? i did not get weird or anything? i just. i have never really done a lot of this before. not like this."
you reassure her and she relaxes a fraction, pressing a soft kiss under your ear. "good. cause i am not letting you leave tonight. seriously. stay." she huffs a small, awkward laugh. "fuck that stupid dare. this feels real. scary as shit, but real. you are staying, right?"
"yeah. i am staying."
ellie smiles against your skin, small and genuine, the kind she does not show many people. she reaches for the joint one last time, sharing a lazy hit with you between slow kisses, the high wrapping around both of you soft and warm. her legs tangle with yours, protective even in sleepiness, and for once she lets herself just exist here. no guilt, no ghosts, just the two of you in the hazy room, hearts slowing together as the night stretches on. the weed keeps everything floating, so she pulls you even closer, her body warm and solid against yours. she runs her fingers slowly up and down your back, tracing old scars of her own in her mind while feeling yours under her touch.
minutes pass like that, lazy and quiet except for the low hum of the tv. eventually she shifts, propping herself up on one elbow to look at you properly in the dim light. her hair is messy, sticking up in places, and her cheeks are still faintly pink. she studies your face like she is memorizing it, green eyes soft but still carrying that familiar intensity.
"you are really here," she says, almost like she cannot believe it. "with me. after all that dumb game shit." her thumb brushes your cheek, gentle in a way that contrasts everything that came before. she leans down and kisses you again, slower this time, no rush, just deep and lingering. the taste of smoke and sweat and each other lingers between you.
she does not stop there. her hand trails lower again, sliding between your legs with a question in her eyes. you nod and she touches you carefully, fingers circling your clit with the kind of patience she shows when she is fixing something important. she watches your reactions closely, adjusting every time your breath catches or your hips move. it builds slow under the weed haze, warm waves instead of sharp peaks, until you come again with a quiet moan against her shoulder.
ellie follows soon after, guiding your hand back to her, whispering soft instructions and curses under her breath until she trembles and presses her face into your neck. afterward she stays draped over you, heavy and content, one leg hooked over yours to keep you close.
the joint gets lit one final time for a shared, lazy pull. she blows the smoke gently toward the ceiling before turning back to kiss your forehead. her voice is sleepy now, rough around the edges but warm.
"stay," she repeats quietly. "please. i do not want this to end yet."
you promise again and she finally relaxes completely, body melting into yours as the high and exhaustion pull her under. her arm stays wrapped around you, protective even in sleep, and the room fills with the steady sound of her breathing mixed with the forgotten tv. for tonight, in this small hazy space, ellie williams lets the weight of everything else fade, holding onto you like you are the one thing worth keeping close.
‧₊˚ ⋅ ❤︎ . . . nsfw/ smut◞ needy needy ellie◞ ellie needs u so bad◞ omg she’s so needy◞ neediest top ever.
♡◞. . ⊹₊ ˚‧ — drafts drafts drafts
word count — 276
thinking about morning sex with a horny ellie williams .
the early morning light hits soft through the cracked window. ellie wakes groggy and presses hard against you under the blankets. her hand slides under your shirt quick and you turn a bit.
“stay,” she mutters. her voice is soft but groggy. “need you, babe.”
she hooks her leg over yours and grinds slowly, and you can feel how wet she is even through her panties. her fingers dig into ur hips. “fuck. missed this.” her breath catches when you start touching back. she kisses your neck like she’s hungry. like she needs more.
ellie pushes closer. hips rolling desperate. “touch me please.” her hand moves lower. strokes you firm. “yeah. just like that.. fuck.” she groans low. body hot and needy.
“don’t stop.” she presses her face into ur neck. “so wet for you.” her fingers slip inside you. thrusting steady. “so good.” she squeezes her eyes shut in pure bliss.
“i need it so bad baby.” she says it like she’s almost about to start crying. like it’s too much but never enough. like if you don’t make her cum right now she might go crazy. you giggle sleepily at her neediness. always so needy.
she grinds harder and you respond with the same amount of pressure. breathing heavy, and it feels like both of ur bodies have synced to be one. “cum with me.” her free hand grips your hip. pulling you tight. “pleasepleasepleaseplease. fff- ohmgod ohmgod.. don’t stop.. please don’t stop.. fuckfuck..”
ellie trembles n moans into your skin. “mmmgh..” she keeps moving through it. soft and intense. then collapses against you. still touching. “one more..?”
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cunnilingus (e receiving), cursing, sub!ellie, illusions to ellie being more so inexperienced. men dni !!
— !
The sounds that filled Ellie’s room were just lewd.
She had her eyes squeezed shut cause she was convinced of she looked at you she’d cum. And god she was already so close.
You’d really only been going at it for a minute. But she was already so worked up from the fact it was you on her.
She knew she looked pathetic, reduced to just whines and curses. Ellie was giving her everything to not cum right now. But you were just so hot and she was just so overwhelmed. She wasn’t quiet at all. Groans fell from her lips, pants and whines. She was so gone.
You let your lips wrap around her clit, sucking firmly to really get her.
She was embarrassed how close she was. The fact she could already feel the knot in her stomach. She was so sensitive. Everything felt enhanced. Her body was warm.
“Fuck— I’m so close baby.” She whispered. Her legs were trembling. She really wanted to drag this out. Cause It really hadn’t been long. But the way your tongues swirled around her little sensitive clit and the was you would hum every so often sent vibrations up her body.
But really it was a lost cause. Her orgasm hit her quickly. Rushed and messy. A chocked moan pushed past her lips before she mumbled something along the lines of “shitbabyimcoming”
Her little hole clenched around nothing as you sucked it clit through it. It seemed to last forever too Ellie.
Once she came down from her high, opened her eyes and saw the expression on your face…
Summary: in which ellie's got a big fat crush on you but is too awkward to really do anything about it, you work at the coffee shop down the block from your uni, and your friends do everything in their power to make it happen
~
juni's note: small teeny tiny hiatus 0:)
Nyleah's back at it, and our losers are taking some baby steps forward
synopsis ; just obsessing over the idea of getting cunt slaps from abby anderson
tags ; cunt slaps , rough fingering , dirty talk with a little bit of degradation & praise kink and free use , squirting
Abby’s hand holding you on her hand, one of her muscular arms easily trapped your frame to lay flat over her lap while the other delivered brutal slaps to your poor pussy. Your vulva was sore already with distinctive red handprints decorating your skin. Your sobs were broken and mixed in with moans because she didn’t focus on slapping your pussy.
She stopped to finger you ever once in a while and somehow that only made this all the more torturous because in the middle of her brutal pussy spanking, her thick fingers shoved in your tight cunt and stretched you out deliciously. Your pussy made all the lewd sounds in the world and it didn’t help you were wetter than you’d ever been from something so humiliating— cunt slaps and relentless fingering.
“Your stupid little body knows nothing but to get horny, isn’t that right, pretty girl?” Abby asked, rubbing your swollen cunt for a few seconds before landing another harsh slap.
You cried out in pleasure mixed with pain. Two fingers bullied their way in your pussy and rubbed against your inner walls roughly making your cunt clench and drool shamelessly around the digits.
“Dirty little slut getting turned on from getting her pussy slapped and fucked,” Abby spat on her fingers and shoved in three at once.
You gasped, back arching as your pussy squeezed. Abby groaned and curled all three of her fingers at once making you squirt. The scene was fucking filthy— your pussy convulsing and squirting your release all over Abby’s lap and hand, your eyes rolled back in bliss as your legs fell open.
Abby leaned back, smirking, “my pretty little fucktoy.”
an: um first time writing something like this so be nice😖
now playing: an eater matt martians
✉︎ synopsis~ellie is a little too obsessed with her favorite writer
✉︎ scoops~obsessed fan!ellie x writer!reader
✉︎ flavor~dark chocolate
✉︎ allergy warning~ dark content, stalking, breaking in, obsessive behaviors, fighting, use of chloroform, and implied kidnapping
✉︎ swirl~one-sided love
✉︎ serving size~onshot (1741 words)
“Thank you for coming,” you say with a smile, handing over an autographed copy of one of your best sellers, ‘Mystic Mistakes’.
Making the ‘Heart of Glass’ series wasn't easy. Hours of your time spent staring at a bright computer screen, the blinking cursor taunting you. Months of submitting weeks worth of work to publishers, only to be criticized and rejected in no less than twenty minutes. Days where you wanted to completely give up, convinced you’d never make it big and that writing was just a “silly little hobby,” as your mom liked to call it.
But it was all worth it.
It was worth stumbling across fans cosplaying your characters on your fyp. It was worth seeing thousands of fanfics inspired by your books, no matter how widely inaccurate the characterizations were. It was worth having a line of fans wrapped around the block, eager to meet the creator of their favorite series.
A girl steps up to your table.
She’s wearing a green baggy short-sleeved shirt paired with baggy, dark blue jeans. Her face is covered in freckles standing out against the red tint coloring her pale cheeks. Her eyes are a striking light green that contrasted the dark circles under her eyes.
The way she looked at you was different from the way your other fans looked at you. Her gaze looked primal, hungry even. It unsettled you. You brush it off, and smile up at her.
“Hi, what’s your name?”
“Um—Ellie,” she says quietly, avoiding eye contact as she extends her book towards you.
You take the book opening it to the first cover, “How do I spell that.”
“E-l-l-i-e.”
You write each individual letter to form her name and finish it off with a little heart beside it.
“Here you go.” you hand the book back to her with a smile.
“T-thank you. Um, I had a question about Faun’s backstory behind her discovery of her magical powers and how it could be tied to her lover, Willow. And-“
“I’m sorry,” you interrupt gently. “I’d love to answer your questions, but there’s a long line of people waiting. Maybe you could email me your questions.”
“But everyone else got at least three minutes.” ellie’s tone turned colder and her eyes turned disturbingly dark. “And I still have two more minutes.”
“Like I said—Ellie, is it?—you can always shoot me an email, and I’ll respond as soon as I can.”
“You promise?” she asks quietly.
Her question catches you off guard, but you quickly recover wanting to end this as quickly as possible. “I promise.”
❀⋆.ೃ࿔❀⋆.ೃ࿔❀⋆.ೃ࿔❀
“Home sweet home.” you let out a tired sigh, as you shut the front door behind you.
For the past three months, you’ve been touring the country promoting your newest book and today like everyday was as packed as ever.
You sluggishly walk over to your king-sized bed and flop onto it.
Ping!
“Ughh.” you groan at the notification, and dig in your pocket to retrieve your phone.
A message from your manager, Kat.
kat: sorry to tell you this so late, but can you check your email as soon as possible? Books Galore messaged you proposing a collaboration, and I need to know if you're interested. Kisses🫰🏽
you: ok will do that now
You click off messages and go to your email, and are about to dig for the collaboration, until a certain subject line caught your attention.
“You promised”
“What the fuck is this?” you say under your breath as you open the interesting email.
You promised. You promised that you would respond. But you lied. You looked me dead in my eyes, smiled at me, and lied. Do you know how much I love you? How much I adore you? Much more than any one of your fucking fans, that’s for sure. And I’ll prove it to you.
-e.
‘E? Whose e? And what promise are they talking about?’ You rack your brain for a couple minutes until you put the pieces together. Your stomach dropped when you realized who this person was. That girl, Ellie. Your hands are shaky and clammy as you dial Kat’s number. She answers after three rings.
“Did you read the email?” she asks.
“Um—no not yet. But do you remember my meet and greet that I had a couple months ago in California?”
“The one for ‘Mystic Mistakes’?”
“Yea. There was this certain fan there. She rubbed me the wrong way from the moment I met her, and I should’ve trusted my gut.”
“Why? What’s wrong?” Kat’s voice grows a little more worried when she hears the shakiness in your voice.
“When I checked my email, I got this message from her. And it’s really disturbing. It’s freaking me out.” you say, your voice cracked as fear wells up in your chest.
“Ok,breathe. Just sit for a second and breathe.” she instructs and you do just that. You close your eyes, taking a deep breathe in before slowly exhaling it. You do it a couple times before you re-open your eyes. Slightly calmer.
“How are you feeling now?”
“Still freaked out but a little less panicked.”
“I don’t blame you. Can you send me a screenshot of the email?”
“Yea. Give me a second.” You go to your email and screenshot the message, sending it to her.
“I see why you’re so spooked. Even reading it gave me chills.”
“I don’t know what-“
Knock. Knock.
The sound freezes you mid-sentence.
“What’s wrong?” Kat asks.
“Someone knocked on my door.” you whisper into the phone, your eyes glued to the door.
“Just stay put. I’m going to call the police.”
“Wait.”
“What?”
“Let me check first.”
“Why? For all you know, it could be that girl behind the door!”
“And for all you know, it could be just some hotel worker bringing me the food I ordered a while ago. And it wouldn’t be a good idea to cause a scene if nothing bad ends up happening. It would be bad publicity, and I don’t need that right now when I’m on top of my game right now.”
“…I guess you’re right. Just a peak.”
“Ok.” you say, before getting up and walking to the door. You move aside the gold peep hole covering and look out straight into the hotel hallway. Nothing. You look to the sides and it was the same outcome. Your eyes glide down an land on a silver serving platter sitting in front of the door.
“I was right.” you chuckle, relief washing over you, “it was just my order.”
“Ok, well if any other issues arise just call me.”
“You know I will. Bye bye.”
“See you tomorrow.”
You hang up the phone, shoving it back into your pocket before unlocking the door. You bend down to grab the platter but stop mid crouch when you see a boot in your peripheral vision. Your blood runs cold. You look up slowly to see Ellie standing over you while, smiling wildly.
“Gotcha.”
You spring up and immediately try to slam the door shut but Ellie’s hand grabs onto the door, fighting to pull it open.
“Open.The.Fucking.Door.” she grunts.
“Go the fuck away!” you yell, using all your might to shut the door. Ellie’s strength overpowers yours and she manages to force her way in.
You stumble backwards, eyes frantically scanning the room for an alternative exit.
Ellie walks into the room quickly and closes the door. She smooths out the stray strands on the top of her head before turning around, that same twisted smile plastered on her face.
“It’s so good to see you again.” she says, walking towards you with her arms extended.
You back away, clattering into the nightstand behind you.
“Not a hugger? I get that.” she shrugs. “Did you get the emails I sent you? I wasn't sure if they went through.” she scratches her head.
You don’t respond, still too frozen with fear for your lips to form a sentence.
“Oh, sorry. I don’t know if you remember me.” She laughs awkwardly,” I went to your book signing a couple months ago.”
“…”
“That probably doesn’t help. You meet hundreds of people everyday. Sorry, I’m just-“
“H-how did you find my hotel?” you interrupt, trying to steady your voice.
Ellie brightens up immediately, she looked like a kid in a candy shop. “Well it was pretty simple I just-“
As she talks, your eyes drift to the metal clock sitting on the nightstand. A plan starts to hatch in your mind. You slowly reach behind you and grip hunk of metal.
“-and now here I am!” ellie finishes proudly.
“So, what’s the plan now? Are you gonna kill me.” you say, you tighten your grip on the alarm clock.
“No no no.” A hurt expression etched onto her face, upset that you would even think she was capable of such an inhumane act. ”I would never hurt you. You're my other half. My soulmate.”
In one swift movement you rip the clock out of the outlet ,and with all your strength, hurl it at Ellie’s face. It clatters with her left eye causing her to cry out and stumble backwards, cradling her injured eye.You take the chance to bolt for the door, your fingers brush against the cold door handle until, but was roughly pulled away by your shirt. Your back collides with her chest and she immediately wraps her arms around you.
“Where the fuck do you think you’re going, bitch?” You thrash wildly against her stern hold trying your hardest to separate yourself from her. You scratch, bite, and hit at her arms but it was no use against her firm grip.
“I did all of this for you and this is how you thank me?” her voice drops dangerously low. “Thank the love of your life?” Her grip tightens.
You continuously struggle not wanting to give up and Ellie just chuckles at your weak attempts. She slips a hand into her pocket pulling out a blue rag. Before you could react it's quickly pressed tightly over your mouth and nose. Your racing thoughts start to slow, your limbs start to feel heavy, and your sporadic movements slowly turn sluggish. The room begins to spin.
“Shh, just go to sleep, sweetheart.” Ellie’s voice sounded slow and distant as if you were under the water. You stare up at Ellie’s twisted face before your vision went black.
⋆ ˚。⋆୨୧˚ mean!soccer!ellie hitting from the back after a bad game
mean!soccer!ellie who comes home from a disappointing match one night to you waiting in the bedroom, arms wide and ready to comfort her, though your plans are immediately thrown out the window the second she walks in. her hair tousled, fists clenched, face pissed. a low, heavy “get on the bed.” is all the indication you needed to know that this was going to be a long night.
mean!soccer!ellie who has you bent over on all fours in no time, pounding into you from behind at a pace nothing short of relentless. your arms are practically shaking as she whispers filthy little praises into your ear, relishing in the way they only seemed to get you wetter. “did you wait up all night for me, baby? you’re so-mmf-fucking-sweet.”
mean!soccer!ellie who only teases and taunts the more you arch into her, mocking the muffled, fucked out moans you screamed into the pillow. “a-ah, fuck! ellie-!” “‘ah! fuck ellie!’” she practically laughs out, “could you be any louder? god, you’re such a needy fucking slut.’
mean!soccer!ellie! who takes it all out on you—all the day’s exhaustion, all the pent up frustration—channeled into your poor, sopping cunt. she grins meanly, deft fingers digging into the flesh on your hips, forearms flexing as she moved you up and down her strap.
mean!soccer!ellie whose hand comes down to smack your ass like she really means it. sparing you no mercy as she thrusts into you. the chorus of wanton moans bring ripped from your throat only egging her on. “you like that, baby, hmm?” when you only moan in response, “of course you do.”
mean!soccer!ellie who swears she can feel every inch you tighten around her, groaning just as shamelessly, as her thrusts grow sloppier, pace quickening. “yeah, baby? is that good? fuck, you’re so-hah-goddamn tight.”
mean!soccer!ellie whose relentless pace makes you cum embarrassingly quick, though her taunts are barely intelligible through the haze of pleasure clouding your thoughts as you ride out your high.
mean!soccer!ellie who keeps going long after you come, unforgiving pace only further intensified by the growing sensitivity, driving you absolutely insane. “aw, baby, is it too much? you can take it, can’t you? mhm, that’s right, you can take it. that’s my girl.”
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Smoking scene with ellie and dina but instead with abby muahaha
CW: boot licking, d/s undertones, fem reader, top!abby, bottom! reader, fingering (r receiving), oral (r receiving), porn with plot, weed smoking, ABBY IS A MUNCHERR, humiliation/degradation/praise, lowkenuinely piss kink (WHO SAID THAT)
MMDNI 18+!!
wc: 4.6k
The snow fell hard, thick wet flakes sticking to the ground like glue. The wind thrashed around violently, causing your hair to whip in your face. The frozen strands stinging your cheeks. The squall blurred your vision further, altering your balance. You held on to Abby tightly, lest you be lost forever to nature's brutality.
A building had come into sight, like a glittering mirage in miles of hot desert. Abby recognized the worn library. She had apparently been several times over the course of the years, sneaking out to party with her friends. That didn’t sound like the Abby you knew now, but you held your comment.
You both hastily made your way inside, pushing open the doors and closing them quickly.
You sighed, grateful to be out of the harsh wind and cold as you wiped the excess snow off your beat-up jacket. It had more than a few holes and offered little shelter from the freezing air.
Abby was still on high alert, scoping out the library with her usual careful precision. She handled everything with such care and intensity. Watching her closely, your stomach did flips.
You had only met Abby this year and were still considered a newbie to the Salt Lake crew. The two of you had become friends quickly, bonding over her vast collection of worn books. Abby let you borrow any that you wanted as long as you kept her up to date with your thoughts. She even encouraged you to notate, responding to her little comments in the margins.
The two of you spent a lot of your free time together. Abby was always very conscious of you, knowing your schedule and where to find you when you needed quiet. She kept a list in her mind of all the things you liked. Bringing back lavendar scented soap from patrols, or grabbing you an extra roll from the canteen. Your feelings for her progressed rather quickly.
Abby reappeared, signaling that everything was clear. She always made sure you were safe.
You looked around the open space, rows of heavy bookshelves full of rotting books. You hummed wistfully, imagining an earlier world where you and Abby could spend hours in the quiet library reading together.
The two of you fell into a steady rhythm of sweeping for supplies. The library, though threadbare, had a larger stockpile than you had thought. Abby had mentioned that some older ex-fireflies would hang out here after patrols.
You found yourselves combing through the bookcases, picking one or two to bring home in your pack.
Abby noticed suddenly that one of the bookcases against the wall was blocking a door. The two of you shared a look. Your curiosity was piqued. She positioned herself, using the strength in her arms and back to push the heavy bookcase out of the way. You cursed the thick jacket she wore for blocking the view of her muscles contracting as she worked.
Warmth spread in your belly as you watched, eyes wide….”Do you need help?” you asked meekly.
She let out a breathy chuckle as she finished pushing, smirking at you, “Wouldn’t want you to hurt yourself, sweetheart.”
You swallowed thickly at the pet name, as she turned the door handle.
“Wait!!” you exclaimed. She turned, eyebrows perked up.
"We don’t know what’s in there,” you fussed.
She smirked again, “Don’t worry, I’ll keep us safe.” You believed her wholeheartedly, face flushing.
The door opened to a staircase leading to a basement. You both walked down the concrete staircase slowly, your boots echoing loudly.
You broke the silence, "What do you think is down here?" you asked Abby genuinely.
You could hear the smile in her voice, "It's obviously a sex dungeon."
You scoffed loudly, slapping her shoulder. "I hope it’s a sex dungeon," you joke lightly. Abby snorts, turning her head to look at you behind her. Her blonde braid whipping down her back, you suppressed the urge to tug.
"You're a freak", she says, a wide smile lighting up her face. You can't contain your matching grin.
Abby approaches the doorway at the bottom of the stairs with you in tow. She presses her side to the door, her hands gripping the pistol, shoulders cocked back taught. Abby shoots you a look over her shoulder, nodding to you silently. You nod back. She pushes the door open with her right hand. You hold your breath in anticipation. You hear abby’s laughter fill the hall.
Your eyebrows scrunch together in confusion, peeking behind her shoulder to find the room filled with rows of dead weed plants.
…“What the hell?” you say in between laughter.
Abby looks to you, “Looks like we were both wrong.”
The two of you enter the room, Abby still cautious. She scanned the room efficiently as you roamed around in wonder. There were hundreds of plants. Some fully grown and suspended from the ceiling to dry. Others just seedlings placed under growing lights. All left neglected, you wondered for how long.
Paraphernalia littered the room, tall bongs, short ones, even a bong with a gas mask attached to it. You snorted to yourself, that is quite inventive you thought.
Abby’s voice broke your train of thought. “Looks like we weren’t too far off,” she said, holding up old VHS tapes.
Your eyebrows raised in confusion, walking closer to her. Her shoulder brushed yours.
“Dong of the wolf,” she snorted, “Smash Brandi’s cooch.”
You looked at her, puzzled. “Porn films,” she smirks.
Your mouth formed an O shape before laughing loudly, “That is incredibly stupid,” you muttered.
She smiled. You moved over near the couch, a table sat in front with a jar filled with cones.
“Here we go”, you said as you reached for the jar.
“Does weed you go bad?” you asked. Abby shrugged in response. You shrugged back and went to open the lid, failing miserably. It was practically glued on.
Abby watched your struggle in amusement, “Having a hard time there?” she teased.
You scoffed, handing the jar to her abruptly, “Go ahead then, show off.”
She took the jar from you, smirking. “I will”.
At some point, her jacket had been shrugged off. You watched as the veins in her hands popped with exertion, the muscles in her arms tightening. You nearly drooled. She opened it rather easily, looking up at you with a cocky grin on her face.
“I loosened it for you,” you griped.
She hummed in agreement, sitting down on the couch, “Might as well get comfortable,” she commented. Taking a joint from the jar.
“We’re gonna be stuck for a while, right?”, you asked, sitting down too. An entire cushion distance away from her.
She looked over at you, “Totally trapped”, wiggling her eyebrows, gesturing to the joint. She fished for a lighter from inside her bag. Abby brought the filter up to her lips, lighting the tip of the joint.
You pushed your hair behind your ears, biting your lip in anticipation. Abby inhaled deeply before exhaling, broad shoulders slackening.
She handed the joint over to you, fingers brushing. You hit it gingerly, coughing only slightly, before passing it back. You welcomed the familiar feeling of lightness washing over your body. Everything loosened, giggling and chittering with Abby as you passed the joint back and forth.
She looked at you closely, "Can I ask you a question?" she asked somewhat earnestly.
You nodded, eyes transfixed on her beautiful face.
Blue eyes twinkling with mischief, "Do you remember that night when you kissed me?"
Your face flushed, heart sinking. The stinging feeling of humiliation washing over you. You had willed yourself to forget about that night.
You had been incredibly drunk, stumbling to your room alone after a night of drinking with the Salt Lake crew. Abby suddenly appeared at your side. Steadying you with an arm around your waist and chivalrously walking you home.
She helped unlock your door, walking you in. Before, much to your horror, you threw up on her boots. The contents splattering all over the tile of your kitchen floor. She had swiftly moved you to the bathroom, holding your hair back gently and rubbing soothing circles on your back. You hysterically cried and blubbered endless apologies as she soothed you.
You had seen another side of Abby that night, squinting up at her blearily from the toilet lid, the harsh lighting making a halo out of her golden hair.
Later that night, after she had tucked you in, you had begged her to stay with you. She lay next to you, telling a story of antics from when she was a teenager. You watched her lips intently, willing yourself to not be dizzy.
You thought of how soft the plush pink would feel on your skin, a warm feeling spreading over your entire body. Your body moved without thought, leaning your face forward and kissing her softly.
Her eyes widened, not expecting the contact. She pulled away slowly from you, not wanting to take advantage of your drunken state. She brushed a strand of your hair out of your face.
She smiled softly at you, "You need to sleep". In that moment, your mind was too preoccupied by the feeling of her lips to even process any feeling of embarrassment. You fell asleep quickly as Abby petted your head. Waking up mortified as you turned over to two pills and a glass of water by your bedside. A small note scribbled, "Take these or else."
You attempted and failed to school your face into a neutral expression. Her smile widened wolfishly.
You groaned and covered your face, “Please, Abby, don’t do this to me,” your voice muffled by your hands.
She laughed loudly, a boisterous sound. “Why not?” she teased, “You’re the one who kissed me.”
“I was hoping you forgot, and we would never mention it, ever.” You moaned in embarrassment.
She shook her head at you, amused, “I wasn’t nearly as drunk as you, sweetheart.”
Your stomach flipped again at the pet name, you pulled your hands away from your face, looking up at her through your lashes. “You make me wanna go back outside in that blizzard.”
“No one is stopping you”, she smirked
You scoffed, willing yourself to look away from her. She watched you intently. A softer look took over her face, and she shook her head.
“What if I don’t want to forget?” She paused, shifting closer to you, “Do you still want to kiss me?”
You looked at her with wide eyes, unbelieving. You nodded yes quickly.
“Words, angel,” she said firmly, tucking a piece of hair behind your ear.
Your whole body was buzzing, the weed making you feel like you were floating. Your panties were definitely soaked. You drew in a deep breath. “Yes, yes, please.”
Her face was so close to yours. You could see every freckle dotting her pretty face, the length of her fluttering lashes. You felt her breath fanning your flushed face as she leaned in, connecting her lips to yours.
You kissed her back enthusiastically. Shifting quickly, pulling yourself onto her lap without daring to disconnect your lips from hers.
Abby smiled into your mouth, “Eager,” she chuckled, pulling you closer into her by your waist. You whimpered at the feeling of her hands finally on you.
She licked into you, deepening the kiss as you moaned into her. Her steady hands began to roam over your curves, sliding down to your ass and squeezing the flesh there, before heading to the front and palming your large breasts. You were already panting.
She pulled away quickly, a string of spit connecting your lips, “Can I take this off?” she grunted.
You acted quickly, tugging at the hem of your shirt and bringing it over your head, left in your bra. She looked at you hungrily, "This too,” she rasps. Reaching behind you to undo the clasp. Your heavy breasts spill out, the cold air tightening your nipples instantly.
She growled at the sight, quickly taking them in her large grasp, pulling at your sensitive nipples.
You throw your head back, whining. She took the opportunity to lick up your now open throat. Her teasing tongue made its way back down, leaving sloppy kisses on your breasts, before sucking down harshly. Your nails sank into her broad shoulders, grinding down desperately in her lap. Easily becoming lost in her touch.
She pulls away slightly, looking at your face, “God, you’re so pretty, baby,” she rasps.
“Fuck abs,” you pant, “Please touch me,” you whine impatiently.
She smiles, “Yeah, you want me to touch you, baby,” she says, still tweaking your nipples. You roll your hips again, taking your lip between your teeth.
Her hand moves to the back of your head, gripping your hair in her fist tightly. Bringing her lips to the shell of your ear, “Gotta make sure you’ll listen first,” she paused pressing more kisses onto your neck, “That you’ll be good for me.”
You nodded fervently, “I'll do anything, please.”
She grinned at your breathy voice, “Anything? Hm?”, she chuckled. Having you exactly where she wants you, “Then get on your knees, baby,” she mumbled.
You quickly climb down from her lap. Kneeling onto the small carpet in front of the couch, just in front of her spread legs. You run your hands down the top of your thighs nervously, waiting in anticipation. She takes her time observing you, the curve of your neck, the slope of your shoulder. She could spend hours watching you, so eager to please her.
Abby broke the silence, grasping your chin, “Look at me, baby.” You look up at her through your lashes, folding your hands in your lap. She smiles down at you, already so obedient for her.
She cocked her head to the side, then gestured to her foot with her chin. “Kiss it.”
Your eyes widened slightly, eyes flicking down to her boot and then back up to the ardent look on her face. You slowly bent down, hovering your face over the leather.
She smirked down at you in anticipation. You felt yourself sink deeper as you kissed the tip of her shiny boot tenderly. You would do anything she asked of you.
“Good girl,” she cooed softly. You keened at her praise, the warmth engulfing you. She pet your head approvingly as you leaned into her calloused palm.
She lifted her boot slightly, the bottom of it now hovering in front of your face, “Now lick it,” she says avidly. Your body burned, humiliation curling down your spine, feeling open and raw. The degradation making your cunt flutter.
She raised her eyebrows expectantly at you. You stick out your tongue shyly, licking from the heel to the tip. Whimpering as Abby groaned at the sight of you worshiping her. You pulled back hesitantly, looking at her for approval.
“So obedient,” she hummed in approval, as if you were a dog. Your body burned impossibly brighter, words sticking in your throat. All you could do was stare up at her reverently, awaiting your next command.
“Up,” she motioned with her hand. You rose slowly, now standing in between her spread legs. Signaling with her finger for you to spin around, you did.
You heard her shift, standing up as well. Front now pressed to your back. Her thick arms circled you, rough palms sliding over your soft stomach and squeezing. You shuddered as she kissed your shoulder. Abby's hands slid lower, cupping your cunt through your jeans. You gasp softly.
She carefully unbuttons your pants, shimmying them down your legs before helping you step out of them. Abby's movements were controlled and confident. It made you feel small, cared for.
She cupped your cunt again, your wetness seeping through the thin cotton, “So wet already,” she purred into your ear. “Dirty little girl, you liked licking my boot, huh?”
You shivered at her words, nodding your head a small “uh-huh” escaping your throat.
She spun you around suddenly, positioning your body to kneel on the cushions, hands bracing the back of the couch for support. You breathed out shakily, Abby's unadulterated strength making your pussy gush.
She gathered your hair in her fist before tugging, making your spine arch. Your ass automatically pressed against the front of her crotch as she thrusted forward. Her cool belt buckle came in contact with your warm pussy. You yelped at the sudden sensation.
She rocked her hips again, belt buckle now grinding on your throbbing clit. pleasure licking up your spine, you moaned wantonly. Your hips moved in time with hers, chasing the delicious friction.
She growled through clenched teeth, “Fuck baby, wish I had my strap, I’d ruin this pussy.”
You whimpered at her words, craning your neck over your shoulder to look at her. Babbling needily, "Please fuck my pussy, Abby, please".
She hummed in consideration, pulling your panties down with one hand over the curve of your ass. She slapped down at the supple skin, hard. You flinched, squeaking. Both hands gripping either cheek as she pulled and pushed them apart roughly.
Your head dropped in humiliation as you whimpered. Her one hand left your skin, coming back down again in a powerful CRACK. You cried out, back arching in pain. Abby pulled back again, roughened palm coming down repeatedly in three quick successions.
You groaned in pain, whining out an "oowwwwwwe" in a high-pitched tone. Abby snorted, mocking you with the same inflection.
You whimpered at her mocking, "You're so mean." You fussed.
"Aww, poor baby," she said in feigned sympathy, voice syrupy sweet. Soothing at the prints on your plush skin. You couldn't help more slick leaking out of your fluttering hole due to her teasing.
She ran two bulky fingers through your soaked slit, sighing pleasently at the warmth.
“Mmmmm,” she groaned, “This all for me, baby?”
“Y-yes,” you whimpered, already squirming. You whined as she teased your hole
“Your pussy belongs to me now,” she growled, "Do you understand?"
"Yes, please, Abby", you whined.
She pressed her pointer and ring finger into your tight cunt, your walls pulling her in instantly. You moaned loudly, legs already trembling as you clenched tightly onto her thick fingers instinctively.
Abby ran her other hand up your back, grounding you. She let you adjust to her fingers for a moment. Bending forward over you, nibbling on your earlobe. “Relax,” she teased.
Your breath came out in a pant, attempting to relax your body for her. She rewarded you by slowly pulling her fingers out and pushing them back in, pressing somewhere devastating.
You moaned, mouth hanging open lewdly. She kept a steady rhythm, your cunt already squelching loudly. Your nails dug into the couch for purchase, cheek pressed against the rough cushions. She added a third finger. You couldn't contain the noises leaving your mouth, the overwhelming pleasure building faster than you could control.
Just as you were about to burst you heard her gravely voice.
“Hold it.”
You sobbed, “I can’t-t”, voice breaking.
Her fingers slowed to a stop. You sobbed harder, tears spilling from your lash line, heavy and hot.
She rubbed your lower back soothingly before removing her fingers from your warm cunt. You gasped at the loss of her. You couldn’t whine for long, as she shoved her thick fingers past your open mouth. You gagged around them, tasting your slick, more tears spilling down your plump cheeks.
She coos in mock sympathy, “Didn’t you hear me, baby?” She keeps curling them slowly, fucking your throat. “This is my pussy now, you cum when I allow it.”
Your cries are muffled, gagging again around her. She considers you for a moment before removing them, getting off to your tear-stained face.
“I-im sorry, I'm sorry,” you sobbed, “please, I’ll be good.”
She grinned brightly. “Good girl,” she hums, kissing you sloppily, tongue curling in your mouth. She pulls away for a moment, gripping your face in one hand. Your pink tongue lolled out as she spat on it, both moaning in unison.
Her fingers entered your fluttering hole again. You sobbed in relief at being stuffed once more.
“That’s it, baby,” Abby grunted, “Taking me so well.”
Your legs trembled uncontrollably. The only words that could escape your mouth were babbled pleas.
“Hold on for a little longer, baby.”
She added a fourth finger, stretching you to the brink. Your mouth fell into a silent scream, feeling owned by her. Your clit pulsed wildly.
Abby's arm wrapped around your head, pulling you back against her. The crook of her elbow caged your throat as four fingers bullied your cunt. The headlock dizzying as she whispered filth in your ear.
“Aaghh, gonna c-cum” you cried.
“That’s it, baby cum all over my fingers.”
The release hit harder than a line of coke. Walls spasming and tightening around her fingers. Slick gushed from your hole, splattering onto Abby’s hand and your stomach. Her teeth met your shoulder, marking you as your body continued convulsing in white-hot pleasure.
Abby loosened the headlock, allowing your breathing to try and steady as you came down. She kissed over your shoulder, tongue soothing her teeth marks. She muttered praises into your skin as she gently removed her fingers. You took in a shaky, deep breath, tears now dry and sticky on your face.
Abby helped maneuver your body around to face her, taking in your wrecked expression and smiling.
“Did that feel good, angel?” she cooed, peppering kisses on your tear-stained face. You could only nod, words trapped in your throat.
“Think you can handle more?” she smirked devilishly.
Your glassy eyes widened, shaking your head side to side fervently. She snickered at your whiny disposition.
Your body had been completely drained of energy, but it betrayed you anyway. Clit already pulsing frantically at the mere thought of her touch.
"Take it off," you murmured, gesturing with your head to her shirt. She raised her eyebrows humuoursly at your request. You pouted at her sweetly.
Abby rolled her eyes fondly, shuffling her flannel off. Clumsily finding the hem of her shirt and pulling the long-sleeved henley over her head.
You gawked at her arms unabashedly. Her smooth skin covered in freckles. Your eyes roamed to her small chest, bound tightly with a sports bra. Trailing further to the toned planes of her stomach, torso ending with a patch of light hair trailing down to her boxers. You nearly drooled.
"Need to taste this sweet pussy" she growled, sinking down to her knees. She gripped your thick thighs roughly, pushing your knees up toward your chin. You squeaked in embarrassment, cheeks flushing as she bared your cunt to herself.
Her breath fanned over your still-dripping pussy, glistening and fluttering. She watched you greedily, licking her lips.
You peered down at her over your chubby tummy. Her blonde hair still braided neatly down her back, no sign of even breaking a sweat. Her eyes betrayed her composure, though. The usual baby blues were blown black by her wide pupils. She watched you as if you were her prey, the intensity of her gaze making you feel small.
“Prettiest pussy I’ve ever seen,” she murmurs almost to herself, before spitting lewdly.
You whimper at her filthiness, impatiently wiggling your pussy in front of her face. She rolled her eyes in amusement before lightly smacking your spread open folds. You jumped in shock, moaning at the pain and pleasure twisting in your gut. Your clit pounded, begging for release. You cried out pitifully as she spanked you right on the pink muscle, legs trembling uncontrollably.
She scoffed, "You like this," she observed, unbelieving. It was as if you were made for her. You gasped as her fingers came down again, your wetness spattering lightly.
Abby smiled wolfishly, teeth glinting, before leaning in and tasting you. She swiped the strong muscle from your flutering hole up your slit to your clit. She latched onto the stiff bud, sucking sharply. You moaned, hands immediately tangling in her hair, mussing her braid.
Abby devoured your pussy, sucking and slurping on your folds, moaning at the taste of you. Nothing in that moment could pull Abby's mouth away.
Her nails sank into your plush thighs sharply, the other hand pushing three fingers into your gummy walls. You gasped breathily, unable to handle the writhing pleasure.
A sudden uncomfortable fullness started to creep into your abdomen as she fucked you deep and slow. Your hips twitch and roll onto her defined nose.
You gasp in horror as the overwhelming sensation of having to empty your bladder took over. You squeak, legs kicking instinctively in panic. Almost accidentally whacking Abby in the head with your socked foot.
“Wait, wait, Abby," You breathe in sharply, "I have to pee.”
She grunted, unpahsed, “Hold it.”
“No, no, I mean it,” you try to push her head away from your pussy.
Abby pulls back ever so slightly. A cocky smirk plastered on her face.
“Then pee”, she said plainly, shoulders shrugging.
Mouth reattaching to you. Her fingers keeping a steady rhythm despite your cries. Your hand smacked the top of her shoulder in protest, squeezing with your nails. Abby growled as you broke skin, fucking you deeper in retaliation.
“A-ah Hah” “Abby! Oh!”, you whined helplessly.
She scraped her teeth lightly against your clit. Your back arched as piss leaked out against your will. You clenched up painfully, trying to hold the rest.
“Ah! Stop, Abby, please,” you sob. “I can’t hold it”. The pleasure built to a peak regardless of the humiliation burning through you.
Abby didn't relent, still working you through it. Head lifting to watch you come undone. “I got you, baby,” she mutters sweetly, “Just let it go”.
She brushes her calloused thumb against your throbbing clit gently. The tension snaps, your mouth falling open in a cracked sob, squirt and hot piss spurting from between your legs. Abby moans at the sight, her hands and chest covered in the warm liquid.
You moan and hiccup through the unbearable pleasure, legs shaking uncontrollably.
Abby coos her praises tenderly as you begin to come down. Rubbing soothing circles on your hip. She kisses up your tummy, the sensitive skin prickling. Abby's face hovers over yours, taking your lips in a delicate kiss. The weight of her torso grounding you.
You sigh into the kiss, opening your mouth wider to allow her to swallow you whole. Her arms wrap around you, swadling you in her warmth. Your eyes flutter, body coming back to you.
Abby helps you sit up on the couch. Grabbing her shirt from where she threw it on the ground and gently wiping you.
You jumped slightly, whimpering.
She stopped suddenly, eyes watching your facial expressions carefully.
"You okay, baby?" she whispered.
You nodded and swallowed, voice hoarse. "Yeah, just sensitive."
She nodded, cleaning you up carefully. Assisting you in pulling up your panties and putting on your shirt. She moved to wipe herself off too, taking her sports bra off and buttoning up her flannel halfway.
You watched in awe, her perky tits stiff from the cold. Your mouth wattered, even spent and sore, you ached for her. Abby lies down on the opposite end of the couch, motioning you forward. You lie between her open legs, head resting on her chest. You press your cheek further, nuzzling into her warmth. She wraps her buff arms around you, palm rubbing up and down your skin. She kisses your forehead tenderly as your eyes flutter closed.
"Proud of you, sweet girl," Abby whispers in your hair. You clung to her tightly, drifting easily in her embrace. The humiliation still buzzed just below your skin. The feeling of being owned and protected blurring seemlessly.
A/N: I'm SO sorry this took so long. I've entered this weird phase where im hating absolutely everything I write. I have so many almost finished wips in my drafts,,, I just need to get over myself and post them
content :: mdni 18+ content ;; sexual themes, fluff, angst, comedy, forbidden romance, good old lesbian yearning (lots of it), homophobia (openly expressed/implied), closeted reader, afab reader ⸺ men dni, swearing, bullying, mild violence/fighting, descriptions of injuries, typical highschool drama, reader is going through it, reader's boyfriend being an ass x100 (he says "dyke"), descriptions of marriage + religion, reader's mom is basically a trad wife ngl, modern au, songfic, multiple part fic,, lmk if i've missed anything !!
word count :: 14.9k
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synopsis :: there are things you don't look at directly. you've built an entire life around this — the closed door, the light off, your hand never on the handle. it's load-bearing. it holds everything up. this is the week something starts pulling at the seams. and by friday night, standing in the wreckage of everything you thought you were — you realise the door has been open the whole time.
LET’S TALK ABOUT WHAT YOU ARE.
Not who — what. The distinction matters, or at least it has, for long enough that you've stopped questioning it. Who is a question with soft edges, a question that leaves room for revision, for nuance, for the kind of interiority that gets messy if you look at it directly. What is cleaner. What is a category. What can be maintained.
And what you are, by every available metric, is this: the girl everyone wants to be standing next to.
You have held this position for long enough that you no longer remember auditioning for it. It is simply the shape your life took, the way water took the shape of whatever contained it — and the container had been built early, built well, built with the specific architectural intentions of a family that understood reputation as infrastructure. Your mother's voice on the phone, still, even now: how you present yourself is how the world will treat you. Your father at the dinner table, the particular set of his jaw when he disapproved of something, which was a language you had learned before you learned to read. The church on Sundays, the handshakes, the careful and cultivated performance of a family that wanted to be seen a certain way and had impressed upon their daughter, through years of repetition and example, that this was not performance but truth. That what you showed was what you were. That the distance between the two was not something you acknowledged.
So: what you are.
You are the girl at the centre of every room you walk into, the fixed point around which other things arrange themselves. You are the one people check before they laugh, the one whose opinion lands first and lands heaviest. You are the good clothes and the straight spine and the lip gloss reapplied between every class, the face that is always composed and the voice that is always level and the expression that gives away exactly what you want it to give away and nothing else, curated with the precision of a gallery that knows which pieces to put on display and which to keep in the back.
You have a boyfriend. He is tall and square-jawed and belongs to the correct social taxonomy, which is the thing that matters most about him, if you are being honest with yourself, which you are not, which is something you are very practised at.
You have friends. They laugh when you laugh and follow where you lead and occupy the space around you like punctuation — useful, structural, there to make the sentence make sense. You are fond of them the way you are fond of things you have always had. You don't think about them in the spaces between, the way you don't think about breathing. They are simply there, and you are simply glad, and the feeling is warm and uncomplicated and sits at a manageable distance from anything that could be called intimacy.
Your life, in other words, is a thing that has been arranged. Carefully. Over a long time. By hands that were partly yours and partly other people's, and you stopped being able to tell which parts were which sometime around fifteen and haven't tried to untangle it since.
It is, by any reasonable measure, a good life. A correct one. Properly fitted.
You don't look at the seams.
And then there is the other thing.
The thing you have been not-thinking about with such regularity and such focused determination that the not-thinking has become its own kind of thinking, a negative space shaped so precisely like the thing you're avoiding that it functions as an outline.
Her.
You had seen her before you'd seen her, which was the way these things always worked and the thing you would never say aloud to a living person. She had existed in your periphery for a while — another body in the hallway, categorised and filed and dismissed with the automatic efficiency of a brain that has been trained to sort things quickly. Dark clothing, beat-up shoes, the particular energy of someone who operated just outside the social ecosystem you inhabited, neither fighting for entry nor visibly wounded by the lack of it. The kind of person you looked through rather than at, the way you looked through glass.
The first time you'd actually looked: October. A Tuesday, or maybe a Wednesday — the specific day had since blurred at its edges, details worn smooth by the number of times you'd turned it over. You had been walking to class and she had been walking in the opposite direction, board tucked under one arm, reading something — actually reading, an actual book, in the middle of a crowded hallway, navigating entirely by some internal pedestrian sonar, which should have been annoying and was inexplicably not. The book had a rocket ship on the cover. She had a streak of what might have been paint on her jaw and hadn't noticed. Or had noticed and hadn't cared. You could not, in the moment, determine which.
She had looked up.
Not at you — or not at you, not deliberately, just the reflexive upward glance of someone checking their trajectory, the automatic course-correction of a person navigating by peripheral vision. But for the half-second before she'd looked back down, her eyes had passed over your face, and something in them had been entirely, disarmingly unperformed.
That was the word. Unperformed. Like looking at someone who had never learned the choreography, who moved through the world in the original steps before anyone had told them how it was supposed to go. It was the most alien thing you had ever encountered in a school hallway. You had thought about it for three days and then told yourself, firmly and with conviction, that you had stopped.
You had not stopped.
The dynamic that followed was the result of a logic you understood at the time and have stopped examining since: she was a problem in the way that things you couldn't categorise were problems. The solution to that kind of problem, the one your life had trained you to reach for, was distance. Elevation. The careful and practised deployment of cruelty not as malice but as architecture — a wall that was also, from the outside, a statement of your position. A reminder, directed partly at her and partly at yourself, of what was what.
It worked. Or it worked the way things worked when they were functionally effective and fundamentally insufficient. She flinched, sometimes, or almost flinched, or did the thing that was more controlled than a flinch but lived in the same neighbourhood. And something in you registered it and did something you didn't look at directly.
The problem was the other times.
The times she didn't flinch. The times she looked back at you with those eyes that didn't perform and said something dry and quick and sideways that arrived in your chest at a completely unacceptable angle, finding a gap in the architecture, slipping through before you could close it. The times she laughed, which was — the way she laughed was not the kind of laughing you had learned, the socialised, considered, context-appropriate kind. Hers was a whole-body thing, a sudden and unguarded eruption, the kind that had no interest in being observed and therefore carried some quality that observed things rarely had. Some quality that made you want to look at it longer than you were allowed to.
You didn't know what to do with that.
More specifically: you knew exactly what to do with it, which was nothing, which was what you had always done, and it had always been sufficient before, and now it wasn't, and you didn't have another plan.
What you did know — the thing that had settled in you like sediment, slow and gradual and now at the bottom of everything — was that you could not stop thinking about her. And that this was a sentence that meant something. And that what it meant was something you were not, at this time, prepared to mean.
So you kept it in the same place you kept everything that didn't fit the arrangement: somewhere below language, below examination, in the unlit room you walked past every day and did not open.
You did not open it.
You were not going to open it.
You were absolutely, categorically, structurally—
"Y/N."
You came back into the room like a stone dropped into water: sudden, graceless, displacing everything around the point of re-entry.
Asher's room resolved itself around you — the posters, the desk, the lamp throwing its amber circle against the far wall, the general aesthetic of a person who wanted you to know he had taste and had curated his surroundings accordingly. He was sitting on the edge of the bed across from you, the ice pack you'd been holding to his face somewhere on the bedside table now, the ice long since melted into usefulness. His nose had committed to a new shape for the time being, swollen across the bridge in the specific way of something that had been hit hard and recently, the skin around it beginning the slow, declarative process of bruising.
You were supposed to be helping with that.
You had apparently stopped helping with that somewhere around the part where your brain had walked itself down a corridor you hadn't meant to enter and lost track of the present entirely.
"You've been somewhere else for like twenty minutes," Asher said. Not a question. The particular delivery of someone who had been trying to get your attention for long enough to have passed through patient and come out the other side as something with edges.
"Sorry," you said. The word was automatic, clipped, an incision and not an expression of feeling. You reached for the ice pack, found it defeated, set it back down. "I was thinking."
"About what?"
"Nothing." You smoothed your hand across your skirt, an old tic, the physical equivalent of a comma. "It's not important."
He looked at you. Asher's looking was a different quality of looking from most people's — it had a narrowed, acquisitive quality to it, like he was checking inventory, running a count, making sure everything that was supposed to be there was accounted for. "You've been weird since lunch," he said.
"I'm fine."
"You're doing the thing."
"There's no thing," you said.
"The face thing," he said. "Where your face does—" he gestured vaguely at your face, which you were fairly certain had not been doing anything, which was precisely the point, which was exactly what you'd been trained to guarantee. "You've been doing it since the cafeteria."
The cafeteria. The word landed at the bottom of your stomach.
"I'm fine," you said, and the second one came out flatter than the first, filed down to its barest functional surface. "I'm sitting here, aren't I? Drop it."
"Was it the thing with that girl? With Williams?"
You said nothing.
"Because I handled it," he said, and the handled it carried a specific weight, a satisfaction with itself that settled against your skin the wrong way, like a fabric worn backwards. "She won't be bothering you."
"She wasn't bothering me," you said, before you could route the sentence through any of your usual filters.
A beat.
Asher's eyes did the narrowing thing again. Slower this time. More deliberate.
"Then what was it?"
"It was nothing," you said. "She had something, I gave it back, it was ten seconds of my life. You don't need to—"
"Are you thinking about her?"
The question dropped into the room like a match.
You opened your mouth.
You did not have time to decide what to put in it.
"Because you've been checked out since that cafeteria thing," he said, and his voice had shifted register, had moved out of the conversational and into something that lived closer to the ground, heavier at its base, the vocal equivalent of a hand pressed flat to a surface to steady it before pushing. "And I want to know if it's because of her —"
"Asher—"
"Because I'm telling you, Y/N—" he was on his feet now, and the room was suddenly smaller for it, the walls closer, the lamp's amber light less warm and more jaundiced, "— I am telling you, if you've got some kind of soft spot for that — for that girl, who is clearly — I mean, it's obvious what she—"
"Don't," you said.
He didn't.
"She's a dyke," he said.
The word hit the air and stayed there.
Your hand moved before the rest of you had agreed to it.
The slap landed across his cheek with a sound like a door slamming in an empty house — clean and final and reverberating in the silence that followed, filling every corner of the room, bouncing off the posters and the amber light and the walls that had gotten too close. The impact moved through your palm and up your wrist and into your arm, a straight live current, and your hand hung in the air for a moment after, suspended in the ringing quiet, before you brought it back to your side.
Asher's head had snapped sideways with it. He turned back slowly.
His face was a study in something you had never put there before. Not the anger — that was already building, you could see it coming in the way weather came in, on the horizon, gathering — but underneath it, in the layer before the anger had finished assembling itself: shock. Genuine, unperformed, structural shock. The expression of a person who had been certain of the floor plan and had just found a room they didn't know was there.
You looked at him.
He looked at you.
The room between you was a held breath.
And something was moving in you — not the anger, or not only the anger, which was there, running hot beneath the surface — but something older and less nameable, something that lived in the unlit room you didn't open, that had heard the word and come forward, pressed itself against the door, rattled the handle with both hands, and you could not let it out, you could not look at it, you could not stand in this room for one more second with his face and his word and the way the amber light was suddenly unbearable —
You moved.
Your bag was on the chair by the desk and you crossed the room in four steps and had it over your shoulder in two more, your hands moving with the automatic efficiency of a person whose body had decided what was happening before their mind caught up, gathering the scattered pieces of your belongings from the desk and the floor with the rapid, urgent precision of someone evacuating, which was what this was, which was what you needed this to be.
"Y/N—" His voice, behind you. Recalibrating. Looking for the script to this scene and finding nothing. "What— what did I— what are you—"
You did not answer.
The door opened. The hallway on the other side was ordinary and lit and completely indifferent to what had just happened inside the room, which was exactly what you needed from it. You pulled it shut behind you, and the click of the latch was the smallest possible sound for something that needed to be a wall.
His voice came through it, muffled. Your name, twice. A question you didn't stay to hear the end of.
You walked.
The hallway stretched ahead of you and you moved through it with your spine straight and your chin level and your bag over your shoulder and your hand, at your side, still faintly stinging — a small, bright, persistent signal, a reminder of what you had done, which you could not take back, and could not explain, and were not, under any circumstances currently available to you, prepared to examine.
The exit was at the end of the hall. The door was heavy. You pushed through it and the afternoon outside was cold and open and the sky above it was the particular shade of grey that had nothing to say for itself, that simply was, vast and uncommitted and not asking anything of you.
You walked into it.
Your hand was still warm.
You did not think about why.
The street was the same street it had always been.
This was the thing about your neighbourhood that you had always found either comforting or suffocating depending on the day — its absolute, unwavering commitment to being itself. The same oak trees lining the same pavement, roots pushing up through the concrete in the same places they'd been pushing for years, slow and patient and entirely unbothered by the infrastructure they were quietly dismantling. The same houses behind the same fences, the same amber windows in the early evening, the same smell of someone's dinner and someone's lawn and the particular quality of air in a street that had decided what it was a long time ago and saw no reason to revisit the decision.
You walked through it and felt, as you sometimes did, like a figure moving through a painting that had been finished without consulting you.
Your hand had stopped stinging.
You were thinking about that. Specifically, you were thinking about the fact that you were thinking about that — the stinging, the absence of it now, the way your palm had felt in the half second after the slap, which was a word you were and were not prepared to apply to what you had done, which you had done, which had happened, which was a set of facts you were in the process of arranging into something that made sense and finding the pieces uncooperative.
Why, you thought, and it was the cleanest possible version of the question, stripped of all its context, just the word sitting in the middle of your head like a stone in an empty room.
Why had you done that.
The answer that offered itself first was the easy one, the one that fit inside the container of your existing self-concept without requiring any renovation: he had been rude. He had used a word you found distasteful. You had standards. You had been raised with a specific and detailed understanding of how people were supposed to speak in your presence, and he had violated it, and your hand had enacted the consequence with the swift, impersonal efficiency of a clause in a contract being enforced. That was all. That was the whole of it. That was a thing that made sense and had clean edges and required no further excavation.
You held this explanation up. Turned it over.
It was the right shape. It covered the right surface area.
It was not, in the way that things sometimes were not despite every effort, enough.
Because the word had landed and something had happened in you before your hand had moved — something underneath the distaste, below the standards, in the unlit room, at the door — something that had heard the word applied to her specifically and had reacted not with the measured, considered disapproval of someone with aesthetic objections to poor language but with something that was faster than thought and angrier than principle and entirely, devastatingly personal.
Applied to her.
Her.
And there it was. There she was. The thought of Ellie Williams arriving in your head with the inevitability of a tide that hadn't asked permission, the same way she'd been arriving all day, all week, in the in-between spaces and the unguarded moments, a frequency your brain had apparently been tuned to without your knowledge or consent. Ellie in the cafeteria — close enough that you'd felt the warmth of her through your clothes, close enough that you'd heard her breath change, close enough that the world had contracted to a very small radius that contained only the two of you and something electric and unnamed that had absolutely not happened and that you were not thinking about.
The warmth of her.
The thought arrived and your stomach turned — a complex, compound motion, not a single thing but a layered one, a reaction built of several reactions stacked on top of each other and inseparable at this point, and you pushed it away with both hands, pushed the whole thing back into the dark with the focused, practiced revulsion of someone who had found something where it wasn't supposed to be and was removing it by its edges, carefully, without looking at it directly.
Gross, you thought, and the thought was a door. Absolutely not. No. That's—no.
You were not thinking about how close she had been.
You were not thinking about the warmth.
You were not thinking about her at all, in fact, because she was Ellie Williams, who was a footnote, a nuisance, a loser with a cracked skateboard and a battered journal and paint on her jaw — probably, you had not checked — and you were you, and the distance between those two coordinates was not just geographical but categorical, dimensional, a gap so fundamental that the concept of a bridge didn't apply, and this was fine, and you were fine, and the street was the same street it had always been, and you were almost at the door.
You were fine.
The house received you the way it always did: with the specific warmth of a place that had been heated to the right temperature and filled with the right smells and arranged to the right standard and maintained in that state through consistent and deliberate effort, the warmth of a home that was also a performance, comfortable precisely because the performance was so well-rehearsed that it had long since ceased to feel like one.
The hallway was clean the way it was always clean, which was to say immaculately, which was to say your mother cleaned it the way she did everything — with the thoroughness of someone who understood that the surface of things was not superficial, that the surface of things was, in fact, the entire argument.
She was at the dining table.
She was always at the dining table in the early evening, at this specific hour, in this specific light — papers spread in front of her, reading glasses she claimed not to need sitting on the end of her nose, the small neat cup of tea at her elbow that had been part of this image for as long as you could remember, as structural to the composition as the table itself. She looked up when the door opened, the way she always looked up, the automatic maternal orientation of a woman whose inner compass pointed toward you regardless of what else was happening, and her face arranged itself into the particular expression it kept specifically for your arrivals: warmth, relief, assessment, all running simultaneously.
You offered her a smile. Tight. Calibrated.
Her eyes moved across your face with the patient, practised speed of someone who had been reading you since before you had learned to edit yourself for her, and who retained, despite all your editing, a fluency in the original text.
"What's wrong?" she said.
"Nothing," you said. The word was a reflex, smooth as a worn stone, something you'd produced so many times it had lost all friction. You set your bag down by the stairs and unwound your coat with the careful, unhurried movements of someone who was fine and had nothing to conceal and was simply coming home on a regular Tuesday. "I'm just tired."
She held your face in her gaze for a moment longer than the answer warranted. Then she settled back, the way she settled when she'd decided to let something go rather than chase it — not because she believed it, but because she understood, as the two of you had understood for years, the location of the boundary and both stood on their respective sides of it.
"Were you at Asher's?" she said, picking up her pen, returning to her papers with the smooth transition of a woman who could hold two conversations with different parts of herself simultaneously.
"Yes," you said.
And there it was — the thing her face did at the mention of his name, the small, involuntary brightening, a kind of light that came on behind her eyes like a lamp in a window, warm and welcoming and pointed outward, toward the future she had apparently already furnished and moved into while you were still standing in the hallway.
"He's such a good boy," she said, and she said it the way she said things she believed completely — without inflection, without self-consciousness, with the confident serenity of someone stating the position of the sun. "His family, too. You know his mother and I were talking after church last Sunday—" she turned a page, didn't look up, the conversation apparently requiring only a fraction of her available attention because it was, to her, that settled a subject, "—she said he talks about you constantly. Constantly. I told her, I said, Karen, that boy is going to marry my daughter, you watch."
The word marry entered your body through your sternum and detonated there.
Not loudly. Not dramatically. It was a small, interior explosion — the kind that happened in the bones, in the walls of things, in the load-bearing structure — and the aftershock moved through you in a slow, seismic wave, rearranging the furniture of your immediate future in your head into an image you stood in front of and looked at and could not locate yourself inside.
Married. To Asher. In a church, presumably, which was the only kind your mother had ever acknowledged as real, before God and family and the entirety of the social world you'd been raised inside, standing in white beside the jaw and the crossed arms and the word he'd said today in his bedroom, the word that was still somewhere in the air of that room, sitting at the bottom of the sentence it had been dropped into, unchanged by your having left it behind.
Married. To him. For the duration of a life that stretched ahead of you like a corridor you hadn't chosen in a building you didn't recognise.
"And you know what I told her," your mother continued, serenely, turning another page, "I said that the most important thing a young woman can do is find a man who is grounded. Who has direction. Because the world will tell you all sorts of things about what you should want—" she glanced up briefly, the glasses catching the light, "—but at the end of the day, a good home and a good husband are what last. Everything else is just—" she moved a hand, lightly, dispersing smoke, dismissing the everything else with the efficiency of a woman who had long since sorted it into a pile she didn't visit, "— noise."
You looked at her.
At the way she sat — straight-backed, settled, entirely at home inside this life that had been built room by room over decades, furnished with the right things in the right order, a cathedral built to a blueprint she had received and trusted and reinforced every Sunday in the actual cathedral, alongside your father and his handshakes and the community of people who all agreed on what things were for.
You thought about the corridor again. The one that stretched ahead. The doors in it — one of them already labelled, apparently, from the outside, by hands that weren't yours.
Something in you that lived in the unlit room pressed against the door with both palms.
You smiled.
It was a good smile. It had been refined over years of deployment in exactly these situations — warm enough to satisfy, tight enough at the edges to signal the conversation's preferred length, communicating fine in every available register with the convincing fluency of someone who had been saying fine since before they knew the word for what they weren't saying instead.
"Ha," you said. Which was the shape of a laugh without being one. "Yeah."
Your mother looked at you.
You picked up your bag.
"I've got homework," you said. "I'm gonna—" you gestured upward, at the ceiling, at the stairs, at the room above and the door you could close between yourself and this conversation and the corridor and the labelled door and the word in the amber-lit room and the warmth you were not thinking about and all of it, all of it — "go up."
"Dinner's at seven," she said, already returning to her papers, the subject filed, the lamp in her eyes still burning warmly for the future she'd already moved into.
"Okay," you said.
You went up the stairs.
Each step was a measured, deliberate thing, the kind of walking you did when you were aware of being watched even though you weren't, the spine straight and the pace even and the hand trailing the banister lightly, barely, the performance of composure delivered to an empty staircase because you were not, at this time, capable of switching it off.
The door of your room at the top. You put your hand on it. You opened it. You went inside and closed it behind you and stood with your back against it in the dark for a moment, the dark that was full of your things, your room, the space that was yours in a house that was otherwise a collective endeavour in a life that was otherwise a carefully maintained arrangement.
You stood in it and breathed.
The word was still there. It had followed you up the stairs with the faithful, patient persistence of something that knew you couldn't outpace it — just a word, just four letters, just something dropped in a lit room by someone who had no idea what door it would rattle when it landed.
And your hand.
The faint ghost of the sting, still there if you held your palm up in the dark and paid attention to it, a memory of a motion your body had made without consulting the rest of you, on behalf of something it hadn't named, in the direction of a girl you weren't thinking about.
Married, your mother had said. In the bright, certain voice of someone who had looked at the future and found it satisfactory.
You stood in the dark of your room.
The door was closed.
The unlit room inside you was still.
You breathed.
You did not open it.
The cafeteria was doing what it always did at lunch, which was to say: performing itself.
The noise was a living thing, a creature with no single body and a thousand mouths, conversations layering over each other in the specific acoustic chaos of two hundred people occupying the same space with varying degrees of social purpose. Trays and laughter and the scrape of chairs, the low persistent hum of the ventilation system that you had stopped hearing sometime in ninth grade, the distant percussion of someone dropping something metallic near the kitchen. It was the same as every day. The same temperature, the same smell, the same quality of light coming through the high windows in those thin, institutional strips.
You sat in the middle of it and felt none of it.
Or felt it the way you felt weather through a window — registered its existence, acknowledged its reality, remained behind the glass. You were in your seat at the centre of the table, which was the correct seat, the load-bearing one, the one the table organised itself around the way rooms organised themselves around fireplaces, and your tray was in front of you, and you were performing lunch with the automated fluency of something that had been doing this for long enough that it no longer required your actual presence to function.
Around you, the table was at full operational capacity.
"—because obviously she's going to show up in something completely tragic," Madison was saying, with the satisfied authority of someone delivering a verdict at the end of a very short trial, "because she has been making the same tragic choices since seventh grade and consistency is her brand at this point—"
"The colour blocking," Andrea said, mournfully, shaking her head the way people shook their heads at things they found aesthetically irredeemable. "The colour blocking alone—"
"Friday is going to be a field day," said Chloe, with the bright, anticipatory energy of someone who found social carnage recreational, which she did, which they all did, which was a fact about them that you had never examined too closely because it was also a fact about you, or had been, or was today at a reduced capacity because you were behind the glass and the glass was load-bearing. "Jake's parties always bring out the most inspired fashion decisions from the most unqualified people—"
"We should do a ranking," Madison said. "Like an actual list."
"I'll bring a notebook," Andrea said.
They laughed. The laugh was a shared instrument played in perfect three-part harmony, the laugh of girls who had been laughing together long enough to have developed a signature, a frequency, a sound that functioned as a closing bracket around everything they'd decided didn't count.
You smiled. You produced the right sound at the right moment. You were, to any external observer, fully present, fully participant, a note in the chord.
"Oh," Andrea said, transitioning with the smooth pivot of someone moving between two equally important subjects, reaching for her water with one hand and her phone with the other, the gesture of someone who was about to deliver information they had been waiting to deliver and was timing it for effect. "Apparently Asher's going to be there Friday."
The table's temperature didn't change.
Yours did.
Something moved through you — starting at the base of your spine and travelling upward in a cold, straight line, vertebra by vertebra, the way cold moved through metal, the way a current moved through something that hadn't consented to conducting it. Your hand tightened around your fork. A reflex, minute, invisible to anyone not specifically looking for it, which no one was.
"Yeah?" you said.
The word was hollow. A cup with nothing in it. You filled it with the right intonation, tilted it at the right angle, and it passed.
"Mm." Andrea looked at her phone, already moving on. "Heard it from Tyler, who heard it from Jake, so—" she made a gesture that communicated the reliability of that particular telephone chain and left it at that.
The table continued. Madison said something. Chloe agreed with it. The chord played on.
And you sat in the middle of it with the cold still moving through you, still travelling its straight line, and thought about Asher, and then thought about this morning, and then — because the two thoughts were connected by something taut and thin and painful as a wire pulled too tight — thought about this morning in the specific, involuntary, unwanted way that flashbacks operated: without warning, without permission, without the courtesy of a door you could choose not to open.
It had been between first and second period.
The hallway had been its usual organised flood, the tide of people moving in the predictable patterns of a school between classes, and you had been moving through it with your bag on your shoulder and your head in the space between yesterday and today, not entirely in your body yet, not fully present in the physical fact of Wednesday morning. The thinking had been soft at the edges, unfocused — the slap, and the sound of it, and his face in the amber light, and the door you'd pulled shut, and your hand in the cold air outside —
You'd heard the footsteps behind you.
Heavy. Purposeful. The specific rhythm of someone covering ground quickly and not bothering to be incidental about it. But the hallway was full of footsteps, full of purpose, full of people going places with the focused urgency of people who were already late, and you hadn't — you'd had no reason to —
The hand closed around your arm like a vice being tightened.
The world lurched. Your bag swung. Your body went backward — physically, actually backward, pulled off its forward trajectory with a force that scrambled your balance and your breath in the same motion, a hand on your arm with the closed, unyielding grip of something that had decided in advance how hard it was going to hold and was not in the business of revising that decision.
You hit the wall of the corridor beside the lockers.
Not hard. Not hard enough to hurt, not hard enough to be a thing that left a mark that wasn't hidden, but hard enough to understand the geometry of the situation immediately: your back against the cold metal of the lockers, his hand still on your arm, his face too close, too large, filling the available space between you with the particular enormity of someone standing at full height over someone who had been yanked off their axis.
Asher.
His jaw was a ledge. His eyes were doing something that had no warmth in it at all, that was all compression and heat, the look of something that had been building for seventeen hours and had been waiting for a surface to press against.
The hallway moved around you. People passing. Eyes sliding past and away in the specific pattern of a crowd that had sensed something and made the collective, instantaneous decision to be somewhere else, to see something other, to not be a witness to this particular Tuesday morning in this particular corridor.
"What was that yesterday," he said.
Not a question. A statement with a question's punctuation, the syntax of something that had already decided the answer wasn't going to be satisfactory and was asking anyway, for the form of it.
"Asher—" Your voice came out wrong. Thin. An instrument played at the wrong pressure. You hated that. You hated the sound of your own voice going thin, going small, going the direction it went when the thing you'd spent years building — the spine, the chin, the level gaze, the composure that your mother had engineered and you had maintained — started coming apart at its rivets under a specific kind of weight. "Let go—"
"I'm talking to you."
"I know, I just—" You pulled. His grip tightened. Not violently — not in a way that announced itself, not in a way that performed its intention — just with the quiet, terrible adjustment of something calibrated to meet resistance with equivalently increased force, the hydraulic logic of a thing that had no intention of releasing until it decided to. "Asher, please, you're—"
"Why did you do that." The low register. The one from yesterday, before the word, before everything — the one that was its own kind of pressure, a hand pressed flat before pushing. "You left. You hit me and you left and I want to know what that was."
"I'm sorry," you said.
It came out before you'd built it — unarchitected, unintentional, a breach in the wall, the word spilling through the gap with the undignified urgency of something under too much pressure for containment. "I'm sorry, I don't know why I did that, I'm sorry, it was— I wasn't thinking, it was just a reaction, I'm sorry, Asher, please—"
You were aware, somewhere behind the apology, of the thing happening in your body that was separate from and louder than the words: the alarm, bright and animal and pre-verbal, the one that had no language, only physics — the ancient, bone-deep calculus of something that had identified a threat and was firing every available circuit toward a single output. Get out. Get out. Get out. Your heartbeat was a fist against the inside of your sternum, too fast, arrhythmic, tripping over itself. Your vision had sharpened at the edges the way vision sharpened when the body had overridden the brain and taken the controls, when survival had stopped consulting comfort. The corridor was too bright. His hand on your arm was a world with its own weather, a small terrible climate all its own, and the people flowing past were a river you could not reach and the wall at your back was cold through your sweater and —
The burning started at your eyes without your permission.
You felt it arrive the way you felt nausea arrive — with the nauseating clarity that it was coming regardless, that the body had made a decision and the mind was late to the meeting. Your eyes filled. Not over. Not yet. But full, brimming, the structural integrity of the composure you'd built cracking along a seam you hadn't known was there, and you hated it, you hated it, hated the tears the way you hated anything that proved you were less solid than you'd constructed yourself to be.
"Please," you said again, and the word broke slightly at its centre, a hairline fracture, barely audible. "Please, I'm sorry, just— let go of my arm, please—"
A beat.
Another.
The grip released.
All at once, like a sentence ending. No gradual loosening, no negotiation, just the hand opening and withdrawing and suddenly your arm was your own again, and the cold air of the corridor was against your skin where his hand had been, and you were already moving, already turning, already finding forward with the desperate, unbeautiful urgency of something freed from a trap that understands the trap could close again.
You didn't run. You were too trained to run. But you walked the way you would have run if you'd allowed yourself, each step carrying the weight of the one that wanted to be faster, the corridor floor passing beneath you in a blur of cream linoleum, and the bathroom door at the end of the east wing was a destination and then a surface and then a thing you pushed through without stopping, and then you were inside and the door was shut—
You stood very still.
And the composure came down like a building.
You came back to the cafeteria the way you'd come back to Asher's room yesterday: in pieces, reassembling in sequence, the present returning in layers like signal clearing on a bad line. The noise first, then the light, then the table and the tray and the three girls around you who were now debating the relative merits of the DJ Jake had apparently booked, a subject that was unfolding without any requirement for your involvement and would continue to do so.
Your hand was on your arm.
You noticed this as if from a slight distance, the way you noticed things in your body when you'd been somewhere else — your fingers curled against the sleeve of your sweater, pressing gently, with the instinctive and self-soothing motion of someone pressing on a bruise to confirm it was still there. You were pressing on a bruise to confirm it was still there.
You moved your hand away.
The bruise was there regardless. You'd seen it this morning, in the bathroom after, after the stall and the composure and the putting yourself back together in the mirror with your makeup and your chin and the architecture of your face rebuilt piece by piece in the fluorescent light — you'd pushed your sleeve up and seen it there on your arm, already present, already decided, a constellation of pressure mapped in purples and greens against your skin in the shape of four fingers that had not asked permission and had left themselves behind anyway.
A souvenir. The body keeping records that you hadn't agreed to keep.
You pulled your sleeve down. Smoothed it.
"—because obviously if Tyler comes, then Jordan comes, and if Jordan comes—" Chloe was saying, with the narrative momentum of someone deep in a social map they had memorised, "— he whole thing becomes completely different, vibe-wise—"
"Different how?" Madison asked, leaning forward.
"Different better or different worse?" Andrea asked.
They had not looked at you in three minutes. This was not unusual. The table had a rhythm, and the rhythm accommodated your silences as long as your silences wore the right expression, which yours did, which was the face you'd rebuilt in the mirror, returned to service, performing at the required capacity.
Your sleeve was smooth over the bruise.
Your tray was in front of you.
And your eyes — doing the thing they did, the involuntary, low-running background scan, the search function that operated without your instruction and returned results you hadn't asked for —
moved across the cafeteria.
And found her.
Ellie was at a table on the far side of the room, her lunch tray pushed slightly to one side in the way of someone who had decided the meal was secondary, a comic book open on the table in front of her — actually open, actually being read, in a school cafeteria, with the focused and complete engagement of a person for whom the room's social architecture was genuinely background noise and not a performance of it being background noise. Her jaw was resting in her hand. Her other hand was curled around a drink she was not drinking. She'd turned a page. Her hair was doing whatever it did, which was whatever it wanted, because she was Ellie Williams and her hair had not received the memo about maintenance.
The bruise under her eye was still there.
From yesterday. From the parking lot you hadn't been in and had heard about through the specific osmosis of a school that processed information at the speed of weather. The bruise that had been the colour of a fresh storm system when you'd seen it in the bathroom this morning, that you had looked at and felt your jaw do the thing it had done, the involuntary pull of a muscle reacting to something you hadn't told it to react to.
You looked at it now, from across the cafeteria.
And thought about this morning. About the corridor. About four fingers and the shape they'd left.
You pressed your sleeve against your arm.
On the other side of the cafeteria, Ellie turned another page, completely unaware of being looked at, completely unaware of you, consuming her comic with the peaceful and entire absorption of a person who was, in this moment, exactly where they wanted to be.
Something moved in your chest.
Small. Unnameable. A frequency in a register you didn't have a word for, that lived below language in the place where the unlit room was, pressing against the door with both palms the way it had been pressing since yesterday in the amber light when a word had been said and your hand had moved before the rest of you had agreed to it.
"—Y/N, what do you think?"
You turned back to the table.
Three faces, pointed at you, waiting with the expectant patience of girls who had asked a question and assumed its answer was coming.
You smiled. The good one. Calibrated and warm at the edges and absolutely watertight.
"Definitely," you said.
They accepted this. They moved on. The chord played.
You picked up your fork.
Across the cafeteria, Ellie Williams turned another page.
You did not look again.
You looked again.
The ceiling had nothing new to offer.
Ellie had been conducting a thorough visual survey of it for the better part of an hour and could confirm, with the authority of someone who had now memorised every hairline crack and water stain and small imperfection in the plaster above her bed, that it was exactly the same ceiling it had always been. It offered no insights. It had no opinions about her situation. It simply existed above her in its flat, pale, unhelpful way, doing what ceilings did, which was nothing, which was the same thing Ellie had been doing for the last fifty-three minutes and was beginning to find philosophically untenable.
The room was Friday-night quiet. The specific quality of quiet that existed on Friday nights when you were seventeen and not going anywhere — a quiet with texture to it, a quiet that was aware of itself, that carried the distant awareness of things happening elsewhere, the low bass frequency of a world in motion beyond the walls of a room where someone was lying on their back staring at plaster.
Outside, the sky had gone the deep, committed blue of early evening, the last of the daylight pressed out thin at the horizon like something being slowly extinguished. The streetlight outside her window had come on an hour ago and was throwing its orange geometry through the gap in the curtains, a long parallelogram of amber light stretched across the floor, reaching toward the foot of her bed like something trying to get her attention.
She ignored it.
She looked at the ceiling.
The party, she thought, would be loud. This was a fact about parties that she felt was underappreciated in the general cultural discourse around them: they were loud. Wall-to-wall sound, the kind that pressed against the inside of your skull and made thinking feel like wading through wet concrete. The music would be the specific genre of music played at parties, which was music that had been engineered for maximum impact at maximum volume and minimal everything else. There would be people she didn't know doing things she didn't care about in rooms that smelled like beer and someone's idea of a good time.
She hated parties.
This was not a recent development or a complicated position. It was simple, foundational, load-bearing: she hated parties the way she hated pop quizzes and mandatory participation and the particular social algebra of rooms full of people performing versions of themselves at high velocity. She had always hated them. She had a well-developed, extensively field-tested, deeply principled objection to them. She had told Greg once, with the conviction of a woman nailing something to a church door, that she would rather spend a Friday night watching a documentary about deep-sea geology than go to a party, and she had meant it, and she still meant it.
She meant it.
She was absolutely certain she meant it.
You'd never get in anyway, loser.
Ellie closed her eyes.
The ceiling, deprived of her attention, ceased to matter. The room went dark behind her eyelids, and into the dark — with the faithful, infuriating punctuality of something that had been making this journey multiple times a day for seventy-two hours — came you.
Not dramatically. Not in any way she could build a defence against. Just: the bathroom, and the fluorescent light, and the way you'd been standing at the mirror when she'd walked in, assembled and composed and completely, transparently, heartbreakingly not fine. The pink at the rim of your eyes. The way your jaw had tightened at the sight of her bruise, a reflex, a small and involuntary mechanical thing, the body reacting before the owner could redirect it. The corner of your mouth moving toward something it decided not to become. The lip gloss, and your fingers in your hair, and the particular way you'd said there's a party to the mirror, to the wall, to the air three inches to the left of any acknowledged intention —
The party you hadn't invited her to.
The party she wasn't going to.
The party that was, she noted, checking the clock on her phone with the forensic attention of someone who had been checking it every eleven minutes for the last hour, starting in approximately two hours and forty minutes.
She put the phone face-down on the mattress.
She looked at the ceiling.
You'd never get in anyway.
The thing about that sentence — and she had turned it over so many times in the last three days that the surface was worn smooth, that she knew the weight and temperature of every word in it — the thing about that sentence was the anyway. The anyway was the tell. The anyway was the structural giveaway, the load-bearing word, the one that did not belong in the mouth of someone who genuinely didn't care. You said anyway when you were patching something. When the sentence needed reinforcement that the content alone couldn't provide. You said anyway the way you said it's fine — to close something that wasn't.
She had a thesis about this. The thesis lived alongside all the other things she kept in the basement, and it was responsible for a not-insignificant portion of her current ceiling-staring.
She sat up.
Not purposefully. Not with the decisive, forward momentum of someone who had made a decision. More like a plant moving toward light — unconscious, cellular, the body preceding the brain by several seconds and the brain arriving after to find the body already in motion and making the pragmatic choice to catch up.
She sat on the edge of the bed.
Her room sat around her in its Friday night configuration — the band posters casting their familiar shadows, the guitar against the wall with its fracture line running soft in the dim light, Gerald on the desk in his eternal posture of not having feelings about anything, which Ellie was beginning to find aspirational. The glow-in-the-dark stars on the ceiling above her had started their slow, patient luminescence, the three of Orion's Belt burning their quiet green, small and faithful and entirely indifferent to what she was about to do.
She looked at her wardrobe.
The wardrobe looked back.
"I hate parties," she told it.
The wardrobe had no response to this.
She stood up and opened it.
The outfit took seven minutes. This was not because she agonised over it — she was constitutionally incapable of agonising over clothing in the way she understood some people to be constitutionally incapable of parallel parking, a fundamental incompatibility between the self and the task — but because she had to find the specific jeans, the good ones, the ones that weren't ripped at the knee for reasons of deliberate aesthetics but were ripped because she'd actually fallen off her board in them and they'd become ripped jeans through lived experience rather than retail decision, which was philosophically important to her. She found them under a hoodie she'd forgotten she owned. She pulled them on. She looked at the band shirts on the hanger, ran her eyes along them, selected the Hole shirt on the basis that it was clean and had a structural integrity she trusted.
She looked at herself in the mirror on the back of the door.
Same Ellie. Bruise under the eye now in its second act, moved from the deep purple-red of the first two days into a yellowish, fading thing, a painting that had decided to dissolve. Hair doing what it did. Green eyes that were currently performing the specific expression of someone who had made a decision they were not entirely prepared to defend.
She picked up her jacket from the floor.
She found her shoes.
She put her hand on the door of her room and stood there for a moment — one breath, two — in the threshold between the room and the hallway, between the ceiling and the ceiling's alternative.
You'd never get in anyway.
"Watch me," she said, to nothing, to the room, to the three stars above her making their patient, useless green light.
She opened the door.
The hallway was dark.
The house at this hour was a different architecture from the daytime version — smaller somehow, the shadows thickening the walls, the familiar surfaces reassembled by low light into something that required more careful navigation. From downstairs came the sound of the television, the low blue murmur of it, a news anchor's voice cycling through the cadence of whatever disaster the world was processing tonight with the same unhurried professionalism it processed all of them. The laugh track of an old sitcom cutting across it. The specific acoustic mix of a television keeping someone company in the way television kept people company when the house was otherwise quiet.
Ellie moved down the hallway with the practised silence of someone who had done this before. Not often. Enough. She knew which floorboard outside her room caught if you stepped on it too close to the left edge and distributed her weight accordingly, a calculation performed without conscious thought, the body's memory being more reliable than the brain's in certain areas. She knew the third stair from the bottom had a voice, and she skipped it. She knew the front door needed to be lifted slightly in its frame while the handle turned, or it dragged against the weather strip and announced itself to the whole house.
She knew these things the way she knew the texture of the park's concrete, the weight of her board, the precise angle of a kick turn in the dark.
At the bottom of the stairs, she paused.
The living room was an amber-and-blue tableau: the television screen painting the room in shifting light, the couch a landscape, and on it — in the posture of a man who had been watching television with firm intention and had been defeated by the Friday evening in the specific, gradual way that Friday evenings defeated people — her dad.
Joel was asleep in the way he always fell asleep in front of the TV, which was emphatically and without embarrassment, his head tilted back at an angle that suggested a conversation between him and gravity that gravity had been winning since approximately nine-thirty. One hand still held the remote in the loose, residual grip of someone who had meant to keep watching and had been overruled by their own biology. His chest rose and fell with the deep, even rhythm of someone deep in it, far from the surface, not coming up anytime soon.
On the TV, someone was explaining something about interest rates. Joel did not appear to have opinions about this.
Ellie stood very still in the doorway between the hallway and the living room.
She looked at him. The way the television light moved across his face — blue to amber to blue — softening him the way sleep softened everyone, dismantling the daytime version and leaving something quieter, something that reminded her of photographs from when she was small. The lines of him. The familiar geography of a face she had known her entire life.
She felt a brief and specific kind of tenderness that she would absolutely not be examining right now.
She looked away.
She moved through the room on the outer edge, close to the wall, where the floorboards had better manners. She picked up her board from where it rested against the wall by the door with the careful, two-handed reverence of a person handling something that mattered. She tucked it under her arm.
The front door: lifted in the frame, handle turned, eased open with the millimetre-by-millimetre patience of someone for whom this was not their first mission and who had the spatial memory of every groan and catch in the mechanism. Cold air arrived through the widening gap, the night pressing in at the edges, carrying the smell of late October and concrete and somewhere, distantly, someone's woodfire.
She stepped through.
She eased the door shut behind her.
The night received her.
The street at this hour was a different country from the daytime version, re-lit by the amber logic of streetlights, familiar surfaces made strange and interesting by the removal of the sun's context, the way darkness was always an editor — cutting the extraneous, leaving the essential, making the ordinary into something you could look at longer without knowing why.
Ellie stood on the front step for a moment.
The air was cold and clean in her lungs, a cold that had the particular quality of October air that had been waiting all day and was now getting on with it. The street stretched in both directions, the amber lights in their patient rows, the pavement shining slightly from rain that had passed through earlier in the afternoon and left the world marginally more reflective.
She set her board down.
The wheels met the pavement with their familiar greeting — that first rolling sound, the small percussion of urethane on wet concrete, a note she could have identified blind, in a crowd, at any hour. Her foot found the deck. Her other foot pushed off, once, and then she was moving, the cold air filling in around her, the streetlights pulling her forward one by one into their circles of amber and releasing her into the dark between them.
She was going to a party.
She hated parties.
She was going anyway.
The board hummed beneath her, faithful and fast, and the night opened up ahead like something that had been waiting to be entered, and the party was twenty minutes away, and you were probably already there, and the bruise under Ellie's eye had faded to yellow at the edges but still announced itself when the light hit it right, and she pushed off again and let the momentum take her, let the cold air drag at her hair and the familiar physics of forward motion do what it always did, which was make the thinking simpler, which was make everything that lived in the basement feel momentarily, mercifully far away.
She skated.
The city moved around her, indifferent and luminous and vast.
Somewhere ahead of her, a party was beginning.
Somewhere in it, probably, you were standing in the light the way you always stood in the light, like it had come specifically for you, like it had been waiting.
Ellie pushed off harder.
The wheels sang their low, continuous note against the wet pavement, and the streetlights came and went above her like a countdown, and the night was cold and wide and completely uninterested in her odds.
She went anyway.
"—are you serious right now—"
Your voice had teeth in it. The good kind, the kind that had been sharpened on something real, that weren't performing their edges but had earned them, and they were out, all of them, because the alternative was doing something with your hands that you'd already done once this week and lightning didn't strike the same place twice, or it did, but you were trying to be better than that, you were actively in the process of trying to be better than that, and it was going poorly.
"Y/N, I'm telling you, it was nothing—"
"Nothing," you said, and the word in your mouth was a coal, a bright burning thing, "—she was practically in your lap—"
"We were just talking—"
"With her hand on your chest—"
"She's just—" Asher spread his hands, the universal gesture of a man buying time while his brain caught up with the situation, "—she's just like that, she's just friendly, you're being—"
"Don't," you said, and the word was a wall, a sudden vertical thing dropped between his sentence and its destination, "—do not tell me what I'm being."
The party churned around you, indifferent and enormous and entirely disinterested in the specific geography of your disaster. Jake Brown's house was at capacity in the specific way of a Friday night party at capacity — every room a different weather system, the music a living creature occupying every available cubic inch of air, the bass a second heartbeat running under everything, slightly too fast and slightly wrong. People were arranged in the configurations that parties produced: clusters at the walls, bodies on the makeshift dancefloor in the living room, figures on the stairs treating the staircase as stadium seating for the event of everyone else. The smell of beer and something sweet and underneath it the humid, close smell of too many people in too many rooms.
You had wanted to be here tonight.
You had needed to be here — needed the noise and the crowd and the specific analgesic quality of a party, which was its ability to replace the inside of your head with the outside of everyone else's, to drown the thinking in decibels until it was temporarily, mercifully inaudible. An escape. An exit hatch from the week that had been sitting on your chest since Monday morning like something with mass.
Instead: this.
Instead: Asher across the room, twenty minutes ago, his hand at the small of a girl's back, her fingers spread against his chest, the two of them arranged in the specific geometry of people who had decided something about the available space between them. Twenty minutes ago. The sight of it landing in your chest not with the shattering, dramatic impact of something unprecedented but with the dull, leaden thud of something that had, somewhere below the level of language, been anticipated.
He was still talking. The words were coming out in the specific formation of words deployed defensively, arranged to cover as much ground as possible with maximum velocity, the verbal equivalent of someone throwing their coat over a puddle and asking you to pretend the puddle wasn't there. It was nothing, you're reading into it, you're paranoid, you've been weird all week, I don't know what's gotten into you—
His hand reached for your waist.
The touch landed and your body's response was immediate and architectural — a recoil, not dramatic, not violent, but total, a full-system rejection, every part of you that his hand made contact with contracting away from it the way a plant contracted from the wrong kind of light.
You shoved him.
Both hands, flat against his chest, one sharp motion, and the drink in your other hand went with it — a wide, amber arc that described a perfect parabola through the air and resolved itself against his shirt with a sound that was deeply satisfying and would cost you something later and you did not currently care.
"Y/N—"
You turned.
The crowd that had assembled itself around the two of you— hungry-eyed, phone-adjacent, the specific alert stillness of people who had scented something interesting and positioned themselves accordingly, turning the radius of your disaster into an informal amphitheatre — registered your turn and readjusted, a ripple moving through the watching bodies. Whispers ran between them like electricity between contacts, quick and bright and fed by what they'd seen, and you felt the weight of them the way you always felt being watched, which was completely and in every direction, the awareness of eyes a second skin.
You had approximately ninety seconds before this became a story.
You were already moving.
The crowd thinned near the front door — people having migrated inward toward the heat and the noise and the action, the entrance hall thinning to stragglers who hadn't committed to the party yet or had committed and were now reconsidering. You put your shoulder into the space between bodies and pressed forward, moving with the fixed, forward-facing momentum of someone who had identified a destination and was not taking questions about it.
The door was ahead. The night was on the other side of it. You needed to be on the other side of it.
You were almost —
The collision happened without warning.
A body, coming from the outside as you were going toward it, the door opening inward at the exact moment of your arrival, and the impact was solid and immediate — shoulder to shoulder, the jolt of two trajectories meeting without negotiation, your bag lurching on your shoulder. You stumbled a step. Your mouth opened, already loading the full payload of the last forty-five minutes behind the first word, ready to discharge it at whoever had just —
You looked up.
The word didn't come.
The loading stopped.
The party kept going behind you, the music still its thumping, wall-to-wall creature, the crowd still whispering, Asher somewhere behind you still wearing his drink — and in front of you, framed by the open doorway with the cold of the night at her back and the party's light falling across her face from the front, stood Ellie Williams.
Something happened to you.
It was small. It was instantaneous. It was the kind of thing that happened in the body faster than the mind could run interference — a loosening, somewhere in the chest, a single beat of something that was not any of the things you were currently made of, the knot of the last forty-five minutes releasing one thread before you caught it and pulled it back, before the architecture reassembled and the walls went up and everything that had briefly, accidentally, involuntarily softened in you re-hardened into something you could stand behind.
Your eyes moved over her. Once. Just once — down and up, a half-second inventory, the jacket and the jeans and the band shirt and the bruise under her eye that had faded to a watercolour version of itself and was still there, still present, still making its editorial comments. The skateboard tucked under her arm. The cold air in her hair.
Something. Something. You nailed it shut.
Your eyes went flat.
"Move," you said.
Ellie moved. Stepped sideways without thinking, her body compliant before her brain had processed the instruction, and she watched you — you felt her watching you, felt it the specific way you always felt her watching you, like a frequency you'd been tuned to against your will — as you stepped past her and through the door and out into the cold of the Friday night.
The door swung shut behind you and the party became muffled, the music reduced to its bass skeleton, the human noise compressed to something shapeless and distant. The cold met you immediately and completely, the air wrapping itself around you like a correction, and you stood on the front step and breathed it in and felt the knot in your chest pull itself tight again and then tighter.
The street was quiet. Residential quiet, the Friday-night version, the one where lights were on in houses and the pavement was wet from the earlier rain and the streetlights were doing their amber, patient thing up and down the road in both directions. A normal street on a normal night, indifferent to the event happening in the house behind you and equally indifferent to whatever was happening in the cavity of your chest.
You walked to the kerb.
You sat down on it.
You put one hand over your face.
The darkness behind your palm was small and close and yours, and you sat in it for a moment — just a moment, just the length of a few breaths, just long enough to let the sound of the party exist at a distance and the cold work its way through your jacket and the knot in your chest do whatever it was going to do — and then you heard footsteps.
Slow. Uncertain. The specific acoustic quality of someone approaching in stages, someone whose feet had committed to the direction before the rest of them had caught up with the decision. They stopped very close to you and then produced nothing — no voice, no preamble — just the fact of themselves, present and silent and slightly awkward, the way people were awkward when they had followed an impulse and arrived at its destination and found no script waiting for them there.
You moved your hand.
Ellie was standing beside you.
She was not looking at you. She was looking at the road, at the specific empty rectangle of wet pavement that lay before the two of you, with the focused, studied attention of someone who found the road very interesting and had not just jogged to catch up with her bully who was sitting on a kerb with her hand over her face outside a party.
You looked at her.
She did not look at you.
You reached into your bag.
The cigarettes were at the bottom, under your phone and your lip gloss and the folded receipt from the coffee you'd bought yesterday morning and hadn't thrown away for reasons you weren't going to examine. You found the pack by touch and drew it out, and then the lighter — old, slightly dented at one corner, the metal worn at the edges from years of hands that weren't yours, lifted from your father's jacket pocket sometime in October with the casual, practised ease of someone who had done it before, who had learned the skill from necessity rather than intention.
You put the cigarette between your lips.
You lit it.
And the whole time — the whole practised, unhurried sequence of it — you kept your eyes on Ellie. Level. Unblinking. The gaze of someone who knew they were being watched and was declining to accommodate it, watching instead, measuring, conducting an assessment that lived somewhere between judgement and something less nameable, something that hadn't been given a room yet and was standing in the hallway.
Ellie was looking at the road like it was the most important road she'd ever encountered.
The silence between you was a weather system. It had pressure and temperature and the specific quality of something that was building toward precipitation.
"You look lost," you said.
Your voice came out flat. Default register. The kind of flat that was a choice.
Ellie's jaw shifted. She was deciding something. You watched her decide it. "I live here," she said.
"You live on Jake Brown's street."
"I live on a street," she said. "All streets connect. I followed the grid."
"You followed a girl you don't like to a party you weren't invited to."
She looked at you then. Finally. Her green eyes did the thing they always did when they arrived on your face, which was the thing you didn't have a name for and had been filing under irrelevant for six months, which was to land — not to scan or assess or perform looking, but to simply arrive, and stay, with an attention that had no performance in it.
"You said I couldn't get in," she said.
"And yet."
"And yet," she agreed.
The cigarette smoke drifted between you, thin and pale against the dark, dispersing into the cold air with the leisurely indifference of something that had no agenda. The party murmured behind the walls of Jake's house, bass-heavy and shapeless. The street was quiet in both directions.
Ellie lowered herself to the kerb beside you.
Not gracefully. With the particular, angular, slightly grudging motion of a tall person sitting on a low surface that they have assessed and found structurally inadequate. She sat with her knees up and her elbows on them, her board resting against her legs, staring at the road again, and the two of you occupied the kerb in the specific silence of people who have been placed in each other's vicinity by a series of events and are now negotiating what that means without addressing it directly.
You squinted at her.
She didn't look.
You took a drag.
"Your form is terrible," Ellie said finally, still not looking at you.
"My—"
"You hold it too long," she said, with the authority of someone who had opinions about everything and was distributing them freely. "Between drags. You're just letting it burn."
"I didn't realise you were an expert."
"I'm observant."
"You're annoying," you said.
"Also true," Ellie said, and the corner of her mouth moved, just fractionally, in the direction of something it decided not to become, and the movement was infuriating in the specific way that things about Ellie Williams were frequently infuriating, which was that you couldn't look at them directly without something happening in your peripheral vision.
You held the cigarette out.
You didn't know why.
Or you did know why, which was worse, which was the thing you were not currently in the business of knowing.
Ellie looked at the cigarette. Looked at you. Conducted a brief, visible negotiation with herself. Then she took it, with two fingers, and brought it to her lips with the careful, slightly too-deliberate motion of someone who had done this fewer times than they were attempting to project, and drew on it.
The cough was immediate and total. A full-body event, the kind that brought her forward over her knees, one hand pressed to her mouth, the kind of cough that had clearly been waiting for its moment and had chosen this one with no particular mercy.
You stared at her.
"Observant," you said.
"Shut up," she rasped, clearing her throat with the dignity of someone who had none available.
"You've never smoked before."
"I've smoked before."
"When."
"Before," she said, with great conviction. "Recently. Multiple times."
You took the cigarette back. "You nearly coughed out an organ."
"That was a choice," she said. "I was choosing to cough."
"You chose to nearly die."
"Recreationally," she said. "I do it for fun."
Something moved in your chest. You pressed it flat. "You're an idiot," you said.
"Known quantity," she agreed.
The smoke drifted. The street sat in its wet amber quiet. Somewhere in the house behind you, the bass changed pattern, shifted into something else, and a ripple of reaction moved through the party muffled by the walls, a hundred people responding to the same beat in the same room and none of it reaching you out here except as vibration, as feeling without context.
You passed the cigarette back. She took it with more caution this time, drew on it with the restrained ambition of someone who had recalibrated their expectations, managed it without disaster.
"So," Ellie said.
"So," you said.
"Do you actually smoke or is this also recreational."
You looked at the cigarette. At the ember at its tip, burning its small, reliable burn, consuming itself from the lit end toward your fingers with the patient, incremental progress of something that knew exactly where it was going. "I don't know," you said, and it came out more honest than you'd meant it to, flatter and more real, a sentence that had skipped the usual editing process and arrived unreviewed.
Ellie was looking at you.
"I needed something," you said. "An outlet." The word tasted insufficient. Like the label on a container that was holding something the label wasn't designed for. "Something to do with—" you moved your hand, vaguely, a gesture in the direction of everything.
"Your hands," Ellie said.
You looked at her.
She wasn't being unkind. She said it the way she said things when she wasn't performing her intelligence, just operating on it — simple and direct, the observation landing without a frame around it.
"Yeah," you said.
She nodded. Looked at the road again. "You don't seem like the type," she said.
"What type do I seem like."
"I don't know," she said. "The type that doesn't need outlets. The type that's already—" she paused, and in the pause she was choosing something, and you watched her choose it, "—already contained. Like everything's already in the right place."
The laugh that came out of you was small and involuntary and had no warmth in it — not the intercepted almost-laugh from the bathroom, not the compressed, managed kind you'd been dispatching all week, but something rawer, something that had come up from below the architecture and escaped while the door was open. A real sound, briefly and accidentally real, there and then gone.
Ellie looked at you. Something in her expression moved.
"Yeah," you said again, quieter. "Well."
You passed the cigarette.
She took it. The ember glowed orange between you, a small bright point in the dark, and the smoke rose in a thin, pale column and dispersed, and the street was very quiet, and the party behind you was a low, distant planet, and the two of you sat on the kerb in the specific gravity of a moment that had been accumulating weight for longer than either of you had admitted to and was now exerting the pressure of all that unacknowledged mass.
Ellie's shoulder was close to yours.
Not touching. But close in the way that close had started to feel like its own kind of contact — the heat of another person across a narrow strip of cold air, the body's awareness of proximity running its quiet, unauthorised computations. The gap between you was a held breath. It was a word that hadn't been said yet. It was the pause before the last note of something and the note itself, compressed together, indistinguishable.
She was looking at the road.
You were looking at her.
You were looking at the line of her jaw in the amber light, the way the streetlight caught the edge of her cheekbone above the fading bruise, the bruise that had been put there by hands you knew and the thought of which sent something through you that your body registered before your mind got a vote. Her profile in the dark. The slight furrow between her brows that was there even when she wasn't thinking about anything difficult, a permanent notation, like her face was always in the middle of working something out.
She turned.
Found you looking.
The space between you did something. Not a contraction — something more total than that. More like an erasure. Like the distance had been a word on a page and someone had drawn a line through it, slow and deliberate and irreversible, and now there was just the line, and the two of you on either side of it, close enough that the cold air between you was no longer cold.
Her eyes dropped.
For a fraction of a second — a unit of time so small it barely qualified as duration, so small it might have been imagined, so small it could have been retracted and denied and filed as nothing — her eyes dropped to your mouth.
Came back up.
And you saw it. You saw it the way you saw the pink tip of her ear, the way you saw her jaw tighten at the sight of your bruise — the things she didn't know she was showing because they happened below the level of the performance she wasn't running. And the thing was: you weren't running yours either.
At some point in the last twenty minutes — the kerb, the cold, the cigarette, the cough that had dismantled what remained of the atmosphere — you had set it down. The assembly. The spine and the chin and the level gaze and the careful, constant, vigilant curation of what your face was allowed to do. It was down. It was somewhere on the pavement behind you, and you were here without it, without any of it, just you on a wet kerb in the dark next to Ellie Williams and six months of something you'd been calling nothing pressing its full weight against the door of the room you didn't open.
The door opened.
You closed the distance.
Your mouth found hers and it was — it was soft, devastatingly, disarmingly soft, soft in the way of something that had not been built for performance but for feeling, a contact so different from anything you'd expected from a girl made of sharp edges and quick words and a skateboard and a bruise that it knocked something loose in your chest, something structural, something that had been holding a shape it was no longer willing to hold. Not a collision. Not a question. A statement, low and certain, pressed from your mouth into hers like a word you'd been holding between your teeth for so long you'd forgotten it was there.
She made a sound.
Small. Almost nothing. The sound of something that had been waiting with the patience of a person who had given up on the thing arriving and was now confronted with its arrival and had no prepared response. It moved through you like a current finding a wire.
You pressed closer.
Your hand came up — not directed, not decided, just the body following the logic of the moment with more honesty than you'd allowed it in months — and found the collar of her jacket, curling into the fabric, not pulling, just holding, just anchoring yourself to the physical fact of her the way you held onto things when the ground was uncertain. And the ground was extremely uncertain. The ground had ceased to be a reliable concept. The ground was the wet kerb and the amber light and Ellie Williams and the warmth of her mouth against yours in the cold October night and nothing else was currently registering on any available instrument.
Her hands were at her sides.
You could feel this — feel the absence of them, the specific and somehow devastating quality of hands that didn't know what to do with themselves, that had arrived somewhere without a map and were standing very still, fingers slightly open at her thighs, waiting for instruction that wasn't coming, existing in the helpless, unguarded way of something that had been ambushed by a feeling and had not yet developed a strategy for it. The most unarchitected thing about her. The realest thing. The thing that undid you in a way that the pressure of her mouth alone had not, that found a gap in whatever was left of your defences and walked through it without even meaning to.
You kissed her like you were answering something.
Like the question had been open for six months in the space between every cruelty you'd dispatched and every almost-laugh you'd swallowed and every time her eyes had landed on your face and stayed and you'd looked away first — like all of it had been circling this, like this was the centre of gravity that everything had been orbiting, and you had finally, helplessly, irrevocably fallen into it.
She kissed you back.
Tentatively at first — then not. Then with the careful, wondering quality of someone finding their footing on new ground and discovering it would hold their weight, her mouth moving against yours with a warmth that built the way fires built, from the inside out, from the small caught point of heat outward in every direction, and her hands — her hands finally moved, one of them rising from her side with the slow, uncertain quality of something that had been granted permission it hadn't expected and wasn't sure how to use, hovering at your arm, not quite landing, the ghost of a touch that couldn't commit to itself.
The cigarette had long since gone out.
The party was not a real place.
The street had stopped being a street.
There was just this — just the kerb and the amber light and her mouth and your hand in her collar and the six months of gravity finally having its way, finally collecting what the universe had apparently decided it was owed, and you let it, you let it, and that was the most terrifying thing of all, that you were not fighting it, that you had not fought it, that some part of you had put down your arms before you'd even reached the door.
You pulled back.
Not far. A breath's worth. An inch of cold air between your mouths, and your eyes opened and hers were already open, had been open, looking at you from the distance of almost-nothing with an expression you had never seen on her face before and that you would spend a long time afterwards failing to fully describe — stripped of every layer of performance and deflection and quick-witted armour, just Ellie, just her face in the light with the bruise under her eye and her collar still held in your fist and her hands finally, helplessly settled at your waist like they'd been navigating toward it the whole time and had only just arrived.
The night sat around you.
The streetlight held you in its amber circle like something precious and fragile and not yet named.
The bass from the party thudded through the walls of the house behind you, felt more than heard, the rhythm of it like a second pulse running under everything.
Your hand was still in her collar.
Her hands were still at your waist.
Neither of you moved.
The cold air between your mouths was the thinnest possible barrier — barely a boundary, barely a distinction, barely enough to constitute the space between what had happened and what was still happening in every register except the literal one. And in every one of those registers, it had not stopped. In every one of those registers, it was still going, reverberating outward in every direction from the point of impact like a bell struck once in an empty room, the sound of it filling every corner, bouncing off every wall, refusing to diminish.
Something had shifted. In the ground beneath you. In the architecture of the room you didn't open, whose door was now not just open but off its hinges, lying somewhere in the dark, and the light from inside it was falling into the hallway, and you were standing in it, and you could not step back into the dark because the dark no longer had you.
note: hey, i dont just lie on this app and actually write. so here it is: loser!ellie eats you out at a con! 1k words, no cw. oh also, yes, this is case-sensitive, not all lower caps as usual. enjoy.
summary: ellie isn't good at hiding jealousy, and going to a con with the baddest bitch alive turns out to be a very difficult task for ellie's feelings. what to do? well - she has to assert dominance somehow, right? so she finger fucks you, but things don't go as planned for this loser...
· · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·
“Fuck, El, what’s up with the sour mood all day?” You ask. All day she's been snappy, trailing behind you, barely enthusiastic about all the merchandise you've been showing to her... So you come up with a lie -and besides, it's not that much of a lie- of having to pee, hoping to squeeze the truth out of her.
Ellie has you sandwiched between her and the cold bathroom wall - ass pressed to the wall, tits pressed up against her. The brunette can’t stand watching people check you out all day, eyeing what’s hers before she herself has it. Not fair.
“It’s just…” Ellie starts, brushing her hand through the hair you carefully styled, messing it up.
“I need a little of this,” she continues. Her sweaty fingertips trace the fabric of your outfit that leaves pretty much nothing to the imagination. Then, she slightly tugs at the little piece of material barely holding your tits up.
“Really,” you say. You find yourself getting lost in El’s needy gaze, so you wrap your arms around her shoulders and grab the back of her auburn hair.
Ellie has been holding back all day. She respects you too much to admit the perverted, voyeuristic thoughts that have been plagueing her all day. So instead, when you let go of her and suggest helping you fix up your costume and make up, she pulls you back, pushing her torso up against you.
“I’m not done,” she growls almost, and your eyes widen in surprise. Ellie is holding you down by your waist, but it’s not enough. Something sparked within her when she saw that look on your face – so she clumsily gropes your ass as she’s making her way up to undo your top.
“W-wait,” you stammer. Putting this on took forever! She can’t see the face you’re making, since her soft lips are busy nibbling your ear.
“It’s fine, I’ll do it later,” she whispers, leaving you to jolt at the vibration of Ellie’s sweet yet rough voice. You wince when your top comes undone, and a moan escapes you when she starts massaging and fondling your tits. So greedy, you think. She’s sporting a flushed face and a growing heat between her thighs, thinking about how you look so good today. Ellie doesn’t even know how to act, how to keep herself composed. She couldn’t care less about who is going to hear what’s, again, only Ellie’s, but she’s sure that the two of you are going to get thrown out of this con if she doesn’t keep you at bay.
So she pulls you towards her, kissing you sloppily, just to keep your moans down as Ellie reaches down to slide her fingers inside you. She pulls away and gasps for air.
“Fuck, so wet,” she whispers; you’ve got her going crazy. All this time, you’ve been that wet already? Her heart is pounding, and she can’t control the way her body is thrusting against your hips while doing her best to satisfy you.
“Just… for you,” you barely manage to say as the pleasure overloads your system, and it’s hard to speak anyway when your pussy is gaping and clenching around her fingers.
More, more, more, Ellie thinks, she needs you to grab her hair harder, needs you to suck more on her bottom lip, needs you so much, she remembers why she was holding back in the first place.
Ellie is all worked up, her hair is down, which is a rare sight, and your cum and her sweat are dripping down her forearm. As you notice her thrusts inside you going slower and softer, you bite your lower lip.
“Fuck, El,” you whine, pulling her arm away, and shove her down to her knees with shaky hands. Ellie is going to finish what she started, you think, as you pull up your skirt and buck your hips against her chin. Ellie is a real loser, a real sucker. It’s embarrassing; why would her arms give out so easily? But when you push your panties to the side and rub your slick all over the lower half of her face, Ellie feels pure bliss. This is where she belongs, down here between your thighs, doing what she does the best: being a sucker for you. She squeezes your thighs for support and in doing so, El can’t help but notice how soaked she herself is. And you grip harder onto her, thrust your hips faster against her mouth. You’re so close, you forgot why you’re here in the first place, or why you’ve felt anything other than this. You’re too far gone to notice Ellie’s frustrated, muffled noises, you’re moving too much, she thinks, and halts your wild – at this point – face-fucking.
Ellie sucks and tongues your clit, and she feels you pulsating, eager to have you release all over her face.
And you do, jerking at the sensation, however, earning yourself an unsatisfied look from Ellie. You hear her groan in between your heavy breaths, her eyebrows furrowed, as she comes up to kiss you. She won’t even let you catch a breath, what’s up with her?
“Was it good enough?” El asks. It takes you a few seconds to come back to the right here, the con, but you chuckle. I know exactly what this is.
“So good, El,” you circle your fingers on her back while planting a soft kiss on her lips. You watch her shiny face light up, she’s so easy...
“I’ll reward you when we get back to the hotel,” you say. For the rest of the day, Ellie’s eyes are sparkling and she returns to her usual, dorky self.
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cw: reader is straight and has never dated a woman before vi , vi is her gay awakening , roommate au , sa rescue , sweet girlfriend!vi , gentle smut , fingering , kissing , vi is a loser with zero strap game so she fingers , vi is shy , praise kink ? , confessing feelings . 2.5k words
The house you and Vi shared together wasn’t anything big. It was cramped but it was cozy. You both drew strict boundaries usually. You knew from the moment you met her that she was gay, however… one thing that didn’t seem to rub Vi right was the fact, you were straight and you had guys over every other day.
It wasn’t even as if you had a committed relationship and you only slept with a singular guy. It was like every other night you got back home with another guy, and although Vi wanted to say something against it— she stopped herself remembering that you also did pay the bills besides her.
So the house was yours just as much as it was hers.
The problem wasn’t that you dated around a lot and all the men suspiciously smelled like they’d taken a shower— the problem was the sounds.
Headboard banging against the wall, and the muffled sounds of your moans that came through the thin walls Vi cursed at instead of you, her roommate who was making the sounds in the first place… because God did you sound so good when you moaned.
At first, the sound made her unintentionally rub herself through her clothes, other hand scrolling on her phone although she didn’t really care whatever she was scrolling by. The only thing she could focus on was the heavenly sounds you were making.
But that’s when her brain had to remind her, “she’s not yours, dude. It’s somebody else making her moan like that.”
And the thought alone made Vi want to slam her face into the wall.
She sighed deeply, turning her phone off and tossing it to the side.
For some reason, it really pissed her off knowing it wasn’t her treating you right, making sure you had whatever you needed and wanted. Making sure you came nicely on her fingers and strap that she kept tucked away in her drawer, not having used it once since she got it.
Well, let’s be honest.
Vi was pretty much a loser.
She didn’t have much game in getting women.
But that wasn’t because she wasn’t pretty or good looking.
It was because she just sucked at asking women out. How the hell was she supposed to do that without stammering and making a fool out of herself? She groaned and pulled the blanket over her head.
It didn’t help.
Your loud “oh fuck!” made her want to kick your door down and demand the man left without his clothes. But she wouldn’t, obviously.
She was a loser, but she wasn’t an asshole.
You were always exceptionally pretty in Vi’s eyes and she’d hoped you were into girls until she met your boyfriend at that time. After you both had broken up, Vi had very enthusiastically suggested that you try your hand at dating women, but you turned her down rather politely.
Somehow, that night you’d ended up falling asleep with your head on Vi’s lap, bingeing movies with her.
The memory of it made Vi blush the same color as her hair.
She hated how easy she was for you.
“Fuck, Tyler, oh! I’m close, I’m close—”
Vi grabbed her pillow and pressed it to both sides of her head, trying to drown out the sounds. The sound of creaking furniture intensified and then finally came to a halt.
Vi slowly lowered the pillow, jaw clenched so tight that her face hurt.
“Why am I so affected?” She thought. “I shouldn’t be… but she’s so… I need her to be mine in a way that it hurts seeing everyone else get to put a smile on her face when I’m just her… roommate.”
That night, Vi barely slept.
The next morning when she had walked out of the room she saw you leaning against the counter as you buttered a piece of toast carefully. You saw Vi by the corner of your eyes and offered a sweet smile.
Vi’s heart skipped a beat.
“Hey, I’m sorry if we kept you up yesterday, Tyler’s just so good.” You put the buttering knife down, “can you believe it? My dating life is finally getting back on its feet.”
Vi smiled dryly, trying to appear as supportive as she could, “yeah ’course. Happy for you.”
Your eye smile flickered a little. “Oh, I’m sorry, did we keep you up too late?”
“No, not at all,” Vi lied quickly, “m’just… a little stressed with college, that’s all.”
“Oh, alright. Let me know if I can help you in any way.”
Fuck, why the hell were you so sweet to her when all she did was lounge around as your roommate and occasionally become your tissue box when you cried on her shoulder and soaked her sweatshirts.
“Hey, Vi, can I ask you something?”
Vi nodded, getting herself a bottle of water.
“What’s up?”
“Uh, so Tyler is coming over this weekend and we decided that instead of eating out, I would cook and have a little date night at home…” you paused, then took a deep breath and asked, “is there any way you could— y’know— give us some privacy?”
Vi nodded again, “yeah, sure. Let me know the timing, and I’ll be outta your way.”
Considering how cool her voice was when she replied, her heart was beating so fast that she barely even breathed as she made herself some eggs. She couldn’t believe you’d planned a date night with some guy who looked like he had bargained his way into planet earth.
Either way, Vi told herself to be happy for you.
But it didn’t last.
Not when Vi finally got back home that night and she heard the sounds. Not pleasured moans. Muffled voices.
“Let go—”
“Hold still!”
The sound of clothes rustling. Then the sound of something falling and breaking— maybe a lamp, maybe your bedside table clock.
Vi’s brows furrowed and she closed the door behind herself silently, walking down the hall as quietly as possible. She inched closer to the door.
“I came all the way here, not to just have you fucking giggle around and cuddle—”
“Tyler— what’s gotten into you?! I told you, I don’t want to—”
SMACK!
The sound of hand against skin was so sharp it made Vi’s stomach twist uncomfortably. Before she could contemplate any further, she kicked the door open.
You were pinned to the bed, legs dangling off the edge of the bed with Tyler’s hands pinning them above your head. Your eyes widened at the sight of her standing at the door.
“Vi! Violet! Help— please!”
“Quiet!” Tyler yelled.
“Back the fuck off!” Vi yelled back, advancing towards him.
The sight of her bulging muscles was enough to scare Tyler’s boner back down. He glanced at you, then back at Vi and quickly grabbed his jacket off the back of your study desk chair.
“Get the fuck lost.” Vi called after him as he ran out the door like a scared little rat. She didn’t care to chase him, didn’t care to fight. She didn’t care about him actually, yeah every cell in her body itched for a fight but she knew that right now her first priority should be you.
“Oh fuck,” she knelt by your side, “are you okay? Hey, hey—”
You didn’t even know what to say, your eyes filled with tears and before you knew it you threw your arms around the other woman and sobbed against her shoulder.
“I got so scared, Vi… so fucking scared… I thought— I thought he was going to—” you couldn’t even bring yourself to say it aloud, you just cried harder.
“Hey, shhh…” Vi rubbed your back, trying to be as comforting and someone could be. “Let’s get you some water and dress you up first okay? It’s chilly.”
That night Vi didn’t leave your side. She stayed in your room because you asked her to and held you, mumbling to you about how everything was okay and Tyler was not coming back. Eventually, you finally let go of her shirt and let her get up for a minute.
“I’m gonna get myself some water, do you want anything?” She asked.
You looked up, eyes unsure, “I just wanna cuddle…”
Vi’s facial expression softened at that and she nodded, “yeah, of course, we can cuddle.”
Vi made you feel safe like no one else had before. You both spent the night talking endlessly about nothing specifically, and before you knew it you fell asleep with your head against Vi.
At first, Vi wrapped her arm around you naturally. Like she wasn’t side-hugging her crush. But then reality consumed her thoughts and she felt her face heat up.
“Shit, she’s really— fuuuuck. I can’t fuck this up. She needs a friend more than anything right now. Feelings can wait.” Vi thought, and she never pressurised you that night.
Instead, she simply held you.
Day by day, you and Vi got closer. You didn’t even realise when you’d been hanging out more with her than any guy. At first you told yourself that maybe that’s because of the way Tyler had treated you but slowly you realised you’d healed from that already. And the memory didn’t haunt you every night like it did initially.
The thought of Vi made you blush.
Your messy roommate who left a scent of cologne in your sheets whenever you both cuddled. Fuck, you were in love with her.
But would she ever see you as something more than a roommate? At best, you’d been friends but you knew that Vi was… shy. So she’d never come right out and say it if she did like you like that and if someone were to make that approach, it’d have to be you.
You didn’t mind.
On a random Saturday, you scooted closer to her. A movie played on the TV but even though Vi’s focus was there, yours was on her.
You looked over— she looked so hot, brows a little bit furrowed in concentration, maybe she was also biting the inside of her cheek, oh that perfect arc of her nose.
Vi was perfect. And you… suddenly, you felt self conscious. You were just her roommate dressed in galaxy printed pajamas and hair up in a messy bun… not exactly the kind of vibe you wanted when you were confessing your feelings to her.
“Violet,” you hated how hoarse your voice sounded.
“Mhm?” She looked at you.
“I have something to tell you.”
“Go ahead.”
“I like you.” You paused. Vi didn’t say anything. But you could see that she was blushing so you went on, “I have liked you for a while now and at first I thought that’s because you saved me that day when I almost got… touched.” You swallowed thickly, “but then I realised, I don’t like you for that, I have liked you for a while but… I guess I’ve never really wanted to admit it to myself.”
Vi’s lips parted, blue eyes twinkling with emotions, “o-oh.”
For a second, you thought she would reject you but she just smiled and leaned her back against the couch.
“Y’know, that’s a little funny, I’ve— I’ve always liked you too.”
“Wait, really?”
“Yeah, you’re, like, I’ve always found you super cute and I’ve hated the jerks you’ve been with.”
That made both of you laugh.
“So,” you nervously met her eyes again, “I guess we kiss now?”
Vi just smiled.
It was as if you were seeing her for the first time, suddenly all the scars on her face started becoming more and more prominent, but not in the way where you saw them and you thought they were ugly. You saw them and you realized there was just so much you didn’t know about her, and you wanted to spend the rest of your life knowing more about her.
She kissed you, she initiated it first. Her lips brushing against you, soft like cotton, months of longing crashing down all at once.
You moved. Your hand landed on her jaw, holding her there in place as you kissed her back. Vi climbed on top of you slightly, pinning you to the arm of the couch as she used her body weight as leverage to keep you in place.
But she wasn’t forcing you; you wanted this as well. Your arms wrapped around her, you brought her closer.
For a second, you both parted, breathing heavily, staring into each other’s eyes as if it was the first time you were seeing each other. Vi was the first one to break the silence. She said, “fuck, I’ve wanted this for so long.”
You smiled, breaking into a little giggle. “Yeah, I have too, and I hate that we’ve stayed together, under the same roof, resisting each other, when we could have been doing this all along.”
Vi leaned closer, her voice a whisper now. “I don’t care how long I’ve had to wait now that you’re mine.”
Your eyes fluttered shut, letting her kiss you again. She pushed your loose shorts and panties to the side so she could run her fingers against your damp folds. You were soaked. A wet mess, all for Vi.
It made her smile into the kiss, pads of her fingers teasing your entrance before she slowly pushed them.
You moaned into the kiss, already clenching around her fingers before she even fucked you properly. Vi pulled away, nose still close enough to brush yours.
“Oh, Vi…”
Your moans were adorable to her. Your eyes squeezed close as her fingers moved in your cunt, curling and twisting in all the ways she knew would have you cumming before you knew it.
“I fuck you better than them, don’t I?” she asked, a jealous undertone in her soft loving voice.
“You do, you’re always— you’re good, you’re the best!”
“That’s what I thought.”
Vi curled her fingers, searching for your textured sweet spot, letting her tongue in your mouth again. You let her kiss you, drool slipping down the side of your face as well as hers as you trembled and held onto her clothes.
Vi’s other hand wrapped around your waist and pulled you closer, feeling the way your smaller body tucked against hers, pleasured by her fingers.
“Come on, baby, show me how pretty you can look when cumming.”
“I— Vi, oh!”
“Yes, that’s it.”
She kissed you again, swallowing all those filthy moans. You came on her fingers soon after, walls spasming around her intruding digits as slick ran down her palm.
Your eyes rolled back, tired and worn already. That made Vi chuckle, “exhausted? Already?”
You playfully pushed at her chest, “I’m not used to… all this. I’m— men I’ve been with didn’t really care that—”
“Shh,” Vi pushed one of her soaked fingers against your lips, hushing you, “don’t speak a word, baby, I’ll take care of everything from now on. Okay?”