civil. (j.m.)
masterlist
desc: you canât stand joel miller, and he canât stand you.
pairing: enemies to lovers! joel miller x gn! reader
a/n: this is my gift for the pedrostories secret santa 2024 event!!! i had so much fun writing this for my giftee, @adora-but-ginger. thanks so much for introducing me to the absolute bop which is never let me down by depeche mode which inspired this lil fic. i really hope you enjoy it babes <3 happy holidays!
âYouâre an idiot. A big, hulking idiot.âÂ
âYou think Iâm big and hulking?â
You could hear the smirk in Joelâs voice, which made equal parts of anger and embarrassment flare up inside of you. You could admit he wasâĻ well-built. Sickeningly, disgustingly so. And right now, you wanted to snap his well-built body in two.Â
âIâm going to kill you.â Â
âIâd like to see you try, but weâre a little tied up at the moment,â his tone was sardonic, his meaning literal - the two of you were in the bed of some raidersâ truck, tied up and blindfolded, being driven to who-knows-where. It was probably for the best, as the restraints around your wrists were the only things stopping you two from choking each other out.Â
âAnd whose fault is that?â you hissed.Â
âIâm glad you asked. Yours.âÂ
âMine?!â you exclaimed, the anger pulsing through you growing stronger by the minute. âI told you we should avoid the cabin and you still dragged us right into this mess.âÂ
Joel had insisted the abandoned cabin would be a safe place to rest. The raiders had the same idea, and were quick to pounce on the both of you after coming across your horses outside. They had ambushed the two of you, deciding to bring you back to their camp to figure out what to do with you later - probably nothing too pleasant. They had left your horses behind, and you had overheard them saying theyâd come back for them later.Â
âMaybe if you didnât fall asleep when you were supposed to be on lookout, we wouldnât be here right now,â Joel muttered.Â
You sighed, a dull knot of ache forming behind your eyes. It was true. You had fucked up. But he had fucked up too. If it were anybody else with you, the two of you may have been able to admit that, kiss and make up. But you and Joel never got along. You bickered and fought on every patrol you were forced on together, and this was your last straw. You were livid, and he was too.Â
âWe wouldnât have been there in the first place if you didnât-âÂ
âEnough with the goddamn loverâs quarrel!â one of the raiders yelled out from the cab.Â
That shut you and Joel up sufficiently, but that word tinged the silence with a shy awkwardness.Â
âLoverâs quarrel,â Joel scoffed.Â
âYeah. âLoversâ,â you mimic his veneer of nonchalance, poorly veiling the flustered tone in both your voices, âin your dreams.âÂ
âIn yours,â he shot back, immediately rolling his eyes at himself.Â
He was too old for this shit. Everytime he was around you, he acted like a petty teenager. You just ignited a flame within him, one that he mistook for the bitter burn of loathing, not knowing it was something else entirely.Â
âSo, how are we getting out of this one?â you whispered.Â
âWhy are you asking me? I thought I was an idiot?â
âI wish you could see the look Iâm giving you right now, Miller.âÂ
He lowered his voice to a whisper, unheard by the raiders up front over the rumble of the engine.Â
âAdmit Iâm not an idiot, and Iâll get us out of here.âÂ
âOh, come on-â you started, gritting your teeth with exasperation.
âOr, you can always spend the rest of the day with our new friends here.â
â...Youâre not an idiot.âÂ
âAnd, whoâs in charge?âÂ
âOh, fuck y-âÂ
âI can always let you hitch a ride with these guys and see how you fare on your own,â his voice took on an annoyingly laissez-faire quality. You hated him.
âYouâre in charge,â you assented.
âCorrect. I hid my knife in my pocket. They missed it when they took away our weapons.âÂ
Maybe you didnât hate him.
âMaybe youâre not as big of an idiot as I thought,â you smiled.
âFlattery will get you nowhere. Get it out of my pocket, then cut my ropes. Then Iâll cut yours.âÂ
You shimmied close to him, trying to ignore how the proximity made the heat rise in your collar. You tried to convince yourself itâs a physical reaction to your hatred for him. Like an allergy.Â
You managed to slide the knife out, only almost stabbing him in the ass once on a bumpy stretch of road.Â
âHands!â He had grit through his teeth.
âPlease, thereâs nothing back there to cut. Youâre as flat as a board,â you had whispered, immediately blushing and following your words up with a quick: âNot that Iâve been looking or anything.â (You had looked. A couple times. But youâd die before telling him that.)Â
Unable to see, you fumbled around a little, careful not to cut him as you sliced through the ropes binding his wrists together. Once free, he lifted his blindfold with careful, quick movements, sure to not let the men in the cab see him, before cutting off the remaining ropes keeping his legs tied together then doing the same for you.Â
With the ropes loosened in heaps around your wrists and ankles, you whispered: âWhat now?âÂ
His voice was determined, but grim. âWe pray.âÂ
âI gotta take a leak.â One of the raiders mumbled a mere 5 minutes later, after you both had replaced your blindfolds and were acting like two good kidnapees in the back of the truck, in hopes that the men wouldnât look too closely at the both of you and discover you had freed yourselves.Â
âLetâs hope our prayers have been answered. Do you trust me?â Joel asked.
âNo.âÂ
âYouâre gonna have to. 3âĻ2âĻ1.âÂ
The two of you ripped off your blindfolds.Â
The scuffle was over in a few minutes. Joelâs chest heaved from the exertion of the fight as he cleaned the bloody knife off on his shirt. He had subdued one of the men pretty quickly, which gave you enough time to grab your gun from the cab and deal with the other.Â
He had done a pretty good job, you had to admit, with hiding his knife and handling the raiders. Without him, you would have been royally fucked. You felt a twinge of gratefulness, and a pang of something else as you watched him, the slope of his nose and hardness of his jaw as he wicked the sweat off his forehead with the back of his hand. He had saved you.Â
Then, you looked down at the two dead raiders, and what glimmer of heroism that you saw in Joelâs figure distorted into frustration.Â
You aimed your gun at Joel.Â
âJesus Christ! What is wrong with you?!â he yelled, the bullet whizzing past his head.Â
âCool it, Texas,â you huffed, âNow, hold still this time.â You aimed again.Â
âI just saved your ass, and you try to shoot me because of it?!âÂ
âI told you we shouldnât have gone to the cabin-âÂ
âLook whoâs talking, sleepyhead!âÂ
You started to walk.Â
âWhere dâyou think youâre going?â he called after you, his voice already receding into the distance.Â
âJackson. Back to the village of which you are the idiot of!â you screamed over your shoulder.Â
âA bit of a convoluted way to put it, darlinâ.âÂ
You refused to dignify that with an answer.Â
You had only made it a few metres down the road when you heard the roar of the raidersâ truck, and the heat of the thrumming engine as it pulled up beside you.Â
You stared straight ahead, feeling Joelâs gaze rove over you from the driverâs window as he cruised alongside you.Â
âGet in,â Joel called out to you. Â
âNo.âÂ
âDâyou know where youâre going? âCause I sure as hell donât.âÂ
âI do. I think. I tried to memorise the turns they took while we were tied up.âÂ
âWell, you arenât getting back to Jackson anytime soon on foot.âÂ
You ignored him, marching forward. The next few moments were clouded in silence as you stormed down the road, Joel driving slowly beside you all this while.Â
âCâmon, get in. Please?â Joelâs voice was startlingly soft, a flash of vulnerability that you hadnât expected that stopped you in your tracks. He said his words slowly, like it was difficult for him to articulate. It definitely wasnât easy for someone as stubborn as him to seek help from you. âI canât leave you out here alone, and I need your help to navigate.â
You turned to look at him, not expecting to find the sincerity scrawled over his face. It softened you. But you liked to make him suffer.Â
âWhoâs in charge?â you said.Â
âOh, câmonâĻâÂ
âMiller. Answer me. Who is in charge?âÂ
âYou are. Now get in.âÂ
You smiled in satisfaction, clambering into the passenger seat.Â
âYouâre in charge of navigation, Iâm in charge of driving,â he mumbled beneath his breath.Â
You chuckled at his comment. Suddenly his snarkiness, though annoying, seemed like a harmless dig after the events of the day. That laugh was utter release, a reprieve from the loathing for him that had been boiling your blood all day.Â
Peeking over at you, you watched his confused face turn into one that mirrored yours. One of cathartic happiness. He let out a laugh, unable to help it. You had never noticed his laugh, his smile. Like a silver lining. You liked it.Â
The rest of the drive passed in relative silence, save for your directions, though the air between you was different. Still electric in its energy, but not because of anger, or frustration. It was strangely warm.
The sun had begun to dip beneath the horizon, and with a satisfying click, he flicked on the headlights, making a turn. The lights illuminated the cabin and your horses. Your heart soared.Â
âWell, shit. You did it,â he whispered.Â
You couldnât help but let out a laugh, and more laughter bubbled from his lips. Laughing with Joel seemed so foreign after spending every patrol together arguing or in heated silence. It was pleasant.
From here, the two of you would be able to find your way back to Jackson, no question. The two of you mounted your horses and started your way back. He turned to watch you, the delicate turn of your head as you gazed up at the vast sky, drinking it all in. He felt that same pang he always felt around you, what he always thought was annoyance. It hit him with that same ferocity, but it was charged with a different energy. It felt kind of nice.Â
You turned to lock eyes with him.Â
âIâm sorry,â the both of you said in unison.Â
You both dissolved into laughter.Â
âWell, Iâll go first,â Joel chuckled, âIâm sorry. I really am. I should have listened to you-â
âNo, Iâm sorry!â you said. âIf it wasnât for me falling asleepâĻ and I guess trying to shoot you wasnât very nice.âÂ
âWasnât polite, was it?â he snorted, his smile reflecting your sheepish one. âStill, I fucked up. And the way you helped us find our way backâĻ you saved our asses.âÂ
âI fucked up too. And if anyone saved us it was you. There was no way we would have gotten out of there without you thinking ahead and hiding the knife.âÂ
âI guess we make a pretty alright team, huh?â he said, the smile he shot you so hopeful and sweet you felt that hot, molten feeling in your gut again, though it definitely was not hate.Â
âYeah, we do,â you sighed. âI guess if your brotherâs gonna keep insisting on putting us on patrol together, we could at least be civil to each other. I think we work together better that way. Deal?âÂ
âDeal,â he said. âYou still drive me a little crazy though.âÂ
âDitto,â you smiled at him, and the smile he flashed back made you feel strange and floaty, a similar sort of light-headedness from when you used to get so mad at him on patrols you wanted to scream. You were starting to realise that feeling may have been motivated by a different emotion entirely. He was definitely driving you a little crazy.Â
âWhere the hell were you guys? You missed the bonfire,â Tommy called out to Joel as the both of you arrived at the centre of Jackson, a dying bonfire crackling behind him.Â
âThatâs the least of our problems,â Joel huffed, dismounting from his horse as you followed suit, thrusting the reins into his brotherâs hands. âYou deal with that.âÂ
Tommy shrugged, leading the horses back to the stable.Â
The two of you stood side by side, staring into what little was left of the bonfire, now a flame that licked up to around Joelâs knee-height. The crowd that was surrounding it earlier that night had fully dispersed, leaving just you and Joel alone before the fire. He turned to look at you, the fire glazing your eyes with orange and red hues, setting your gaze alight.
âI have an idea,â you said. Your smile meant trouble. âLetâs jump over it.âÂ
âWhat?â Joel asked, eyebrows shooting up incredulously.Â
âI read it somewhere. Itâs an old tradition, supposed to bring about good luck and new beginnings,â you smile at him, a smile that instantly wins him over. âWe need all the luck we can get. Câmon Miller, indulge me. Be civil.âÂ
His laugh was hesitant, but when you reached for his hand he knew he could do it.Â
âDo you trust me?â you grinned.Â
âYes.â
âWell, youâre gonna have to. 3âĻ2âĻ1!âÂ
There was a moment there, with his hand in yours, at the very top of where the flames swirled, where it felt like the two of you were flying, suspended against the dark sky.Â
Then, you hit the ground.Â
You were lying beside each other in the dirt, panting in between gasps of laughter, the cuffs of your pants and the soles of your shoes singed. That electric warmth fired through the air, boiling your blood - definitely not anger. Something else. Passion and anger possess that same fiery quality.Â
It burned so brightly within the both of you that he couldnât help it. He leaned over to kiss you. The fire was warm by your side, the sky dark and electric above you as a storm gathered. The two of you were definitely going to be more than civil.














