san angelo | one shot
what happens when joel miller meets his star-crossed lover?
big love to @mrsmando and @5oh5 for cheering me on with this one, and @bageldaddy for being my eyes, my ears, and - only sometimes - my brain.
pairing: joel miller x fem!reader summary: it's the summer of two thousand eight. after two weeks following his little brother cross-country on the back of a harley, joel follows him through the doors of a dive bar - where fate delivers him to you. warnings: story is inserted into canon, so cordyceps outbreak happens, sarah dies (off-page), joel dissociates, doomed love, lots of mention of fate, alcohol consumption, reader is a smoker, cursing, drunken one-night stand, oral sex, unprotected piv, joel's cock is massive, a lot of angst, a lot of fluff, a lil smut to tie it all together. enjoy! word count: 9.8k
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Palm lines.
Itâs the first thing he thinks as soon as she stops moving in his arms. The second her little whimpers cease, the moment her chest stops heaving and her eyes glaze over. Suddenly, Joelâs little girl weighs more than he can bear.
Palm lines. And he has no fucking idea why.
He closes his eyes and there you are. The whir of the ceiling fan, the tinkling of bracelets loose on your wrist. You have sorta earth hands, you told him. Or, well â they could be water, if you look at âem this way. I donât really know. Iâm still learning.
You told him that air hands were long, spindly. And Sarah was always a lanky kid â tallest on the soccer team, head and shoulders above the other girls by the third grade. Her hands, he thinks, must be air. They must be.
Her fingers are still twisted around his right now. Lifeless, slippery with the blood still wet and quickly cooling.
Joel cradles her, squeezing so hard that he wonders whether he might be able to fuse their bodies together. Lock them in some white-knuckle grip so that he never has to let go of her â never has to leave this hill covered in dirt and blood.
His palms are ruined; a maroon river carving its way down his heart line, dirt deep in the groove of his life line. Why does he even fucking remember what theyâre called?
Why the fuck are you what heâs thinking about, right now?
âTommy,â he says, opening his eyes again. âWe gottaâŠwe gotta get toâŠâ
Sheâs limp, draped over his thighs as though sheâs nothing more than a stretch of crimson curtain. He looks down at her and begs her to come back, begs her to open her eyes and look up at him again.
But the night is passing and sheâs still not breathing. Dawn is breaking and Joelâs daughter is dead.
He sucks in a shattered breath. ââŠto San Angelo, Tommy.â
The younger Miller stuffs his gun into the back of his jeans and paces over, soles coated thick in shit and grass. âI hear you, Joel.â
âYou ainât listeninâ to me, I ââ
âIâm listeninâ fine, Joel.â Tommy hooks his hands under his nieceâs arms. âNow, help me lift her. We canâtâŠâ his voice strains, fighting the death grip his brother has on the girl, ââŠwe canât leave her here.â
Joelâs frozen to the spot; sinking further and further into the earth. Staring at his open hands, the stains like rust on his palms. He says to San Angelo again, and Tommy snaps.
âJesus, Joel, enough! Iâve heard enough goddamn it! I see your hands, now â we gotta fuckinâ bury Sarah.â
Your fate line,your nail tickled, and Joel held his hand steady, It can change, if something big is coming.
Somethinâ big? he asked. A little younger, a lot more naĂŻve. Still a healthy dose of belief in the world, an echo of the god-fearing faith that raised him.
His hand felt so light, cradled in two of yours. He half hoped heâd never have to let go â just lie there with you forever. Your legs tangled with his, the sheets disturbed; the room injected with amber from the streetlights outside.
You nodded. A big shift, or something.
And he scoffed. He actually scoffed, right there and then. Incredulous. The hell kinda big shift is cominâ our way? he asked, laughing.
You just smiled back, shrugging. You were so fucking casual, that whole night. It wouldâve unnerved him, if he hadnât been so swept off by the sparkle in your eye, the glowing cherry of your cigarette.
Guess we just gotta wait ân see.
Itâs August thirtieth, two thousand eight.
Almost five thousand miles on the back of a Harley, and Joel just wants to go home.
He arches his aching back, palms flat against the crests of his hips, and blinks in the light from the food mart in front of him. Twenty-six, he thinks to himself, only twenty-fuckinâ-six.
Itâs ninety degrees out. An uncomfortable heat, for a man who feels ten years older than he really is. For a man who hasnât had a decent shower in almost two weeks. For a man whoâs spent the last six hours tailing the brake lights of his little brotherâs bike.
The sweat gathers sticky between his shoulder blades, prickles along the nape of his neck. Thereâs dust spattered down his bare arms and buried in the grooves of his knuckles.
Heâs tired. Heâs tired, heâs dirty, and goddamn, he wishes he was back home.
He holds a hand up to shield his eyes from the sun, the yellow sky melting to a purple haze. Squinting, he follows the soar of two swallows overhead, looping through the sky, until heâs rubbing the image from his eyes with the back of his wrist.
Heâs gotta remember to call Sarah before she goes to bed.
The door opens with the tinkle of a brass bell older and rustier than Joel feels. A swaggering figure splits the glow from the store in two â a figure with a pack of Marlboros in one hand and an already half-empty bottle of water in the other.
Tommy holds them both out to Joel, who swipes the water with a scowl.
âAinât killed you yet, brother,â Tommy scoffs, stuffing the cigarettes into his back pocket. He swings a frayed-denim leg over the seat of his Harley.
Joel drains the bottle, panting as he crushes the plastic in one fist. âDamn near tryinâ,â he mutters, tossing it in the trash. He runs his tongue across his bottom lip.
âWhere are we?â Tommy asks. He glances over his shoulder, staring from the cracked roads to the telephone wires overhead. A Syclone pulls into the lot; a dehydrated squeal as it rolls to a halt.
âSan Angelo,â Joel says. âOnly a few more hours to go.â He settles on his own bike, pulling his leather jacket over his shoulders. âWe passed a Super 8 coming into town, if you feel like restinâ up. Or â we leave now, be home around midnight.â
Tommy chuckles. âWhatâs the rush? We ainât gotta be anywhere anytime soon.â
And Joel agrees â for the most part.
His mom is watching Sarah while theyâre gone, and he reckons sheâs hardly missing him. Too smart for her own good, Joelâs realizing: plotting and scheming her way into staying up past her bedtime, drinking Pepsi at dinner, watching Curtis and Viper â and swearing that her dad lets her do it all, too.
But, still. He misses his kid.
Itâs the most theyâve ever been apart â time or distance. The longest he hasnât had her climbing up his back or hanging off his arm. The least heâs been called Dad since he was eighteen years old.
He justâŠmisses his kid.
He sighs, drumming his fingers on the body of the bike. âTommy, I gotta get back home to Sarah.â
âLook,â Tommy says, and Joel knows that the argument is lost already, âBy the time we got back, sheâd be asleep anyways. Letâs leave in the morning â first thing, I swear â and weâll be home in time for breakfast. Deal?â
They stare at one another, a stand-off in the parking lot. Both waiting for the other to break. The swallows gather on the roof of the store, basking in the weak wash of flickering fluorescents.
âCome on, brother,â Tommy pleads, âItâs one more night.â He lifts his helmet, punching it over his mop of shaggy hair, and kicks the bike to life.
Joel growls to himself, watching it drift over to the side of the road.
He considers heading to the Super 8 alone, grabbing a room only to shower and get some food, then hitting the road and leaving his little brother in the dust. Waiting for him to stumble through the door tomorrow morning â tired, groggy, probably hungover â while Joel, fresh as a daisy, drizzles syrup over Sarahâs pancakes and pours her orange juice.
Heâs a pragmatic man. Heâs a grown-up. Scares away the ghosts and ghouls and monsters of his daughterâs nightmares. Shushes her back to sleep in the crook of his arm, tiptoes as lightly as he can out of her room so as not to wake her.
Things like God, like the universe, things like horoscopes and laws of attractionâŠfor the most part, Joel can do without them. Has done his whole life.
But then â the glow of indigo overhead, and the mysterious shadows lurking behind the buildings. The birdsong tittering in his ears, the twinkle of the sun in Tommyâs helmet â something distant in the dusty sphere.
Something, someone, winking at him from far away.
Something a little heavier than the breeze nudges at his spine, and Joelâs arms lift â fitting his own helmet over his head. He swings the heel of his boot into his kickstand and revs the bike, Harley roaring as it joins Tommyâs out on the boulevard.
Murphyâs is a small, green bar on the corner of an intersection. All peeled paint lettering and buzzing fluorescents â the y burnt out and pulsing.
Joel doesnât think Tommy picked it for any reason other than the huge Lone Star mural on the side of the goddamn building, the way he tosses his thumb to it as they park up. A squint smirk on his face, muttering something like âs good to be home, big brother, as they hook helmets over handlebars.
Tommy leads Joel inside, their boots tacky on the wooden floor. Walls paneled by aged frames and sun-bleached photographs; air hanging thick with a smell like vinegar. The babble of slurred conversation is pierced by the sharp crack of pool balls breaking.
Metal-plate belt buckles snaked through strained jeans; low eyes which shift to size-up the two strangers. They all turn back to their fingerprinted glasses when Joel and Tommy settle into an empty booth.
It feels hotter in here than it is outside, stuffier. A thick humidity which clings to Joelâs bones, humming like the string lights draped from beams above his head.
Tommy reclines between the creaking leather cushion and the wall. He pokes at a yellowing poster of some Western, hums to himself, and then looks across the table.
Joelâs eyes loop once around the room before they meet his brotherâs. âWhat?â he asks.
âFirst round is yours, old man.â
âOh, is it, now?â He cocks an eyebrow. âThought this was your idea?â
A weedy grin stretches across Tommyâs lips. He needs to fucking shave, Joel thinks. Whiskers poking from around his small mouth like pine needles. ââs my birthday trip,â he reasons.
And can Joel argue with that? Does he have the fucking energy? Will it get him out of here and back to Austin any quicker?
âGoddamn it,â he grumbles. He pushes himself to his feet, heels of his palms against the tacky wood.
He wanders over to the bar, tugging on the front of his tee to unstick it from his damp chest. Slots in beside an ivory cowboy hat with a pair of jeaned legs. The man fixes his bolo tie and watches Joelâs hand as he flags the bartender down.
And then he feels it.
You.
Then he feels you.
First, the weight of you â crashing some into his back. He shunts forward from the suddenness of it, knocking his ribs against the bar, and lifts a hand to brace himself on the ledge.
And then â heat, like an iron. Like every hair and freckle on your skin is branded into his the second you come into contact with him. A feeling like the roll of a wave against his spine, a hand hooked around his forearm when he begins to turn.
âShit,â you hiss, steadying yourself on the curve of his shoulder. You glance down at your feet, clicking between your black boots. âIâm sorry, that wasâŠthat was my bad.â
ââs alright,â Joel says instantly. He holds his arm still until you let go and he sidesteps â though only a little. He watches, dumbstruck, as you rest your elbows on the bar and lean forward. His eyes linger on your back, trailing the crisscross straps wrapped tight over your spine.
You squint up at the menu pinned above shelves of crystal bottles. Your eyes move back and forth across the chalkboard, slowly descending until theyâre meeting his in the speckled mirror opposite â a sweet smile growing on your lips.
It runs like whiskey through Joelâs veins: warm and dangerous.
And the way his head spins, the way the world blurs for a moment into one swipe of color around you; the way your cooing laugh echoes between his ears long after heâs heard it â
Joelâs already intoxicated.
Heâs still staring when you pull back and motion to the bar. âYou can go first, by the way,â you say, waving a hand. âI wasnât cuttinâ in line. Just trying to read the drinks.â
âIâll wait,â he replies, remembering how to be polite, how to be charming. Old cogs long out of use jerking to life inside him again. âCanât read any of âem, either, anyways.â
It draws from you that same little laugh, a puff of air from your nostrils. You nod, biting your bottom lip.
Heâs quickly forgetting why heâs stood in this room, why heâs in this city. Heâd probably forget his own fucking name if you asked him right now what it was.
âânother drink, darlinâ?â a low voice interrupts, and youâre turning away.
Joelâs eyes follow you â a moth chasing something golden and radiant â as you face the wiggle of a snow-white mustache poking from beneath the brim of that ivory cowboy hat.
You shake your head, lifting two fingers with a bill slipped between them. âIâm good, thanks, George. Maybe next round.â You wave to the kid behind the bar â some name that Joelâs too fucking mindless to hear. Too distracted by the glint in your eye, the sparkle of your crescent moon earrings in the light.
If only he knew this feeling. If only he could put a name to it. As familiar as the sun and yet, brand new like dawn. His stomach swirls in a fleet of butterflies â as though heâs fifteen again, bumping elbows with his high school crush.
You nudge him, thumb pointing in the direction of the bartender.
Joel shakes his head. âLadies first,â he says, heart skipping when you hold his stare.
âNuh-uh,â you shake your head, âTold you I ainât jumping in.â
He asks the guy for two beers, barely taking his eyes off you. âAlright,â he leans in, lowering his voice, âThen let me buy you a drink. Make up for gettinâ in your way just then.â
You prop your chin on your knuckles, grinning as you push your twenty around the wooden bar top, dodging pooled rings of alcohol like itâs an arcade game. âI donât do that,â you say, eyes tracing the slick trail left by the bill.
âDo what?â
âAccept drinks from strange men in bars.â
His tongue presses against the back of his teeth, the taste of humor honey-sweet. âYeah? ân how long have you knownâŠâ he nods to the â what is he, sixty? Sixty-five? â year-old on your right, ââŠGeorge?â
Your gaze lifts, eyes wide. Apparently as impressed by Joelâs confidence as he is himself. âWeâre actually in a very serious relationship. Marriage proposal imminent.â
âDamn,â he mutters as the bartender reappears with two Coors, âAnd here I thought I had half a chance.â
You hum to yourself, studying him. Looking from his jaw across the span of his shoulders, his wide-knuckled hands and then back to his lips. Curious and wary, judging the strange animal stood before you.
And he knows heâs weathered from the weeks on the road, and all the years before that. Dirt under his nails and the light sheen of sun on his forehead. The flecks of gray through his thick, brown beard.
You take a deep breath, eyes twinkling, and tell him, âIâm here with my friend.â
âAinât that lucky?â Joel glances at Tommy. âIâm here with my brother.â
You look across to the dirty blond, sat tilting a glass candle in his hand. âHe single?â
Joel nods. âIs she?â
You nod.
âAlright. You wanna come sit with us?â
Your smirk answers his question. You take the beers, rings clinking off the glass. âRum,â you call over your shoulder, wandering off, âI drink rum.â
Joelâs gaze lowers to the sway of your hips. âRum it is,â he says, turning back to the bar.
âSoâŠa cross-country bike trip, and you wound up in San Angelo?â
Youâre on your fourth drink, the first one Joel hasnât paid for â and he only allowed it because itâs a Diet Coke (and maybe you got to the bar first, held his wrists with one hand so he couldnât stop you from slapping your own money down).
âYep,â Joel replies, pinching the lime from his drink and dropping it onto a napkin. âJust passinâ through. Shower, sleep, then head on home.â
âWhereâs that, then? Home?â
âAustin.â
âAustin,â you pout, âNice.â
Joel smirks, licking citrus from his fingertips. âIs it?â
âIâve never been to Austin,â Brooke chirps, fiddling with the umbrella in her piña colada. She twirls the paper canopy and glances up to Tommy.
He snaps out of his slack-jawed gaze when he realizes what sheâs implying. âOh â yeah, wellâŠâ his head wobbles as he stutters, ââŠyou two ever come down that way, weâd be happy to, uhâŠshow ya âround, huh, Joel?â
Joel doesnât reply, staring back at his brother with the same amused expression you are.
Youâve been an inch apart all evening â doused in the dive bar darkness, the shrouded conversations and muffled TV static. The tip of your nose and curve of your shoulders lit only by the luminous signs dotting the walls.
Tommy and Brooke are already deep in conversation again about the best car Tommy ever owned. Joel watches as your eyes flit between the pair, entertained by the way they trip over each otherâs sentences. Your cheeks lift when Brooke lays a hand over Tommyâs, and he squeezes her fingers back.
Where did you come from? Joelâs thinking. He takes a swig of his whiskey, feeling your eyes on him. As he lowers his glass, you lift yours. When he turns in his seat towards you, youâre already facing him, back against the wainscotting. He smiles, and so do you.
Every movement feels choreographed, some merry dance only you two know. Youâre in your own little world.
Where did you come from, again, and where have you been my entire fucking life?
âSo, what about you?â Joel asks instead, swallowing â all warm-bellied and brave. âYou grow up here?â
You shake your head, taking another sip. âNope. Just liked it enough to hang up my coat for a few months. I grew up in Phoenix.â
âYou travel a lot?â
âIâve been around. This is the longest Iâve stayed in one place since I was a kid.â
He thinks of home: of Austin and its silver-snake river, burnt-orange jerseys and the pleated bunting lining Sixth Street. He thinks of late nights on lawn chairs, nursing a beer and shooting the shit with his brother. Keeping their voices lower than the buzz of the cicadas, looking more at the dusky sky than at each other.
âYou donât ever get tired of it?â Joel asks. âOf moving around so much?â
You scoff, breath clouding the inside of your glass. âThree weeks on a motorcycle starting to get to you, huh?â
He breathes a laugh, loose again. The cicadas fade from his ears.
Your head tilts in a shrug. âI donât know. I guess the universe keeps on surprising me.â
Joel doesnât do this. At least, he hasnât done this since he was a teenager â crate of beer under his arm and a chest full of courage. Heâs long forgotten the feeling of heat blooming in his cheeks, the twitch of his heart anytime you look at him.
But fuck, if there isnât something about you. Something in the way you move, the way you look at him. Something in the way you play with your straw, knocking ice cubes around and chewing on the plastic once youâve drained the glass.
Something â though itâs a little too early and Joelâs a little too tipsy to tell just what. He tries to remember that heâs pragmatic. A grown-up. He chases away the monsters in his daughterâs â
âOh, shit,â Joel says suddenly, scrambling to pull his cell from his pocket. Itâs nine thirty. He was supposed to â âI forgotâŠâ
A miserable tone from his Motorola cuts him short. The screen flashes an empty battery before fading to black. He jams a thumb into the keypad a couple more times, cursing at the winking symbol.
âSomeone you gotta call?â you ask.
He meets your eye and winces. âYeah, IâmâŠI said Iâd call an hour ago.â
âYou wanna use mine?â You twist around, fishing in your purse for your own. âWe can go outside.â
âNo, no, itâsâŠitâs alright, Iâm sure she wonât mind, she ââ
You shake your head. âShut up. Come on, letâs go. I could use some fresh air, anyways. Be back in a minute,â you tell Brooke â who nods and turns straight back to Tommy.
Joel extends his hand to help you out of the booth, then follows you to the door. The cool air tugs every nerve in his body to attention, pin-sharp when he steps out of that lazy heat. Under the emerald glow of the Murphyâs sign, he settles his glass on a window ledge. âNext roundâs on me, alright?â
You roll your eyes, pushing the phone against his chest. âJust call, Joel.â
One last apologetic glance, and then heâs dialing. He makes to wander along the curb, the tone already pulsing in his ear, when he notices â
âYou ainât brought a jacket?â
Youâre sitting on the ledge, clutching your elbows. Swatting midges from the light youâre bathed in, charms on your bracelets jingling. âHm?â
He tuts. âA jacket. Here.â He shrugs his own off, sitting it around your frame. Itâs warm from the bar and from Joelâs body heat, and you sink into it â letting the dark leather drown you as you rummage through your purse again.
âNice,â Joelâs eyes narrow, âFresh air.â
You hum into your hands, flicking your lighter. The cigarette trembles when you murmur, âWe all got our skeletons, I guess.â
He turns on his heel when a familiar voice picks up.
âHey, hey, MâYeah, sorry itâs lateâŠYeah, we got held up. My phone died, so Iâm usingâŠIs she stillâ? Can Iâ? Oh, Sarah. Hi, baby.â
His little girl begins chattering down the line immediately, telling Joel everything sheâs been up to since they last spoke this morning.
ââŠand then, Emily thought I was one of the Armadillos â I donât even know how, âcause they play in red, remember Dad? â but she did, and she slide tackled me so bad that Coach Thomson had to sub in Akari for me so I could ice my ankle. Grandma was kinda mad about it, but she took me to Burger King after to cheer me up, andâŠâ
Joel wanders back and forth, smiling to himself and scuffing the heel of his boot along the concrete â barely able to squeeze more than two words between her chirping. Itâs all, Yeah, baby? and Wow, sweetheart; all uhuhs and mhms until she finally quietens, excitement plateauing again.
âAlright, well. You know what time it is, right?â
âYeah,â Sarah groans. She knows it all too well.
Bedtime.
ââŠBut you didnât call when you said you would, Daddy, and itâs Saturday, itâs ââ
âI know, baby, I know. Iâm sorry. JustâŠsomethinâ came up. But Iâll see you tomorrow, right? Weâll be back before you know it.â
âWhereâs Uncle Tommy? Can I talk to him?â
Joel turns to face the bar. âHe, uhâŠIâm not with him right now, sweetheart. Iâll tell him you asked after him, though.â
Sarah concedes, and then begins asking questions Joel knows sheâs only asking to stay on the line a little longer â to stay awake a little later. But still, he answers each one â humoring her and, at the same time, letting himself listen to her voice just a little more before he has to let her go.
He thinks of scooping her up in the morning; thinks of being slumped on the couch after dinner with her head on his stomach â fast asleep with whatever movie she chose droning on in the background.
Despite the thousands of miles and close to two weeks between them â she makes him feel closer to home. She always does.
When Sarah asks where he is, he glances your way. Clocks your flat expression, the half-burnt cigarette hanging from your fingers.
You flick ash to the ground. Eyes unreadable beneath low brows, a tiny crease between them that Joelâs only just seeing for the first time.
âUhâŠâ he clears his throat, ââŠjust a little â a little north of you, baby. Home first thing, I promise.â
He tells her he loves her and she says it back, and he tells her to sleep well and she says that back, too. And then heâs hanging up â Alright, see you soon, bye, Sarah, bye-bye, byebyebye â and pressing his thumb into the red button.
He wanders back over to you â ears flat like a guilty dog, though he isnât quite sure why. He mumbles a quiet thanks as he passes the phone back, then stuffs his hands in his pockets.
You lean back, ankles crossed, studying him. Swirling whatâs left of the cigarette in your fingers â the smoke lifting like a winding snake to the dark sky. âSo,â you pout, âWhat are you doing flirting with me, if you got a wife and kid back home?â
His jaw ticks, a hand coming up to scratch his beard. âI donât have a wife,â he says.
You stare blankly, filter back against your lips. âOkay, then â a girlfriend. Does she know youâre out tonight with us?â
He shakes his head. âNo wife, no girlfriend. I donât have an anything.â
âBut you have a kid.â
Joel nods once, tongue in his cheek. âUhuh.â
And then the penny seems to drop. A small oh; your jaw slack and eyes wide. The cigarette smolders between your fingers. âFuck,â you whisper, âIâm sorry. I didnât mean toâŠâ
âNo, hey,â Joel steps closer, âYou didnât know. Itâs alright.â
He straightens the jacket on your shoulders. When you finally look at each other again, you snort.
âSorry,â you repeat, shaking your head. âIs she okay? Your daughter â is sheâŠ?â
âSarah,â Joel says. âSheâsâŠsheâs fine. Thanks.â
You look down, stubbing your cigarette against the brick. Voice quiet, you ask, âHer momâs not around anymore?â
Relief settles in his chest: youâre softening to him again.
Joel slots onto the ledge at your side. Shoulder to shoulder. He reaches behind and lifts his drink. âNot since she was a year old.â
Your mouth pulls in a wince. âJesus. Thatâs rough.â
He doesnât reply. He doesnât have to â youâre not asking him to explain â and he doesnât want to, either.
Youâre not stupid â youâve seen enough of the world to hear what heâs really saying. The darkest, dustiest corners of it â all the places no one ever wants to look.
You donât seem disturbed, barely even moved by the reality thatâŠwell, shit happens. People leave, families break; a two-car driveway is suddenly taken up by just a pick-up truck and a little pink bike with tassels.
He figures you get it. You donât need to know how can that be? â you justâŠknow that it can.
âSo, uhâŠâ you look up at him again, ââŠmy apartment is, like, five minutes away if you wannaâŠyou know. You can charge your phone, can shower â if itâs bugging you that much.â
Joelâs eyebrows lift. âOh, really?â
You simper, eyes thin. âReally.â
âCharge my phone ân shower?â He stands, palm flat against the wall above your head, and leans in. His face is inches from yours.
You look up, mirroring his expression. âYes,â your voice curls in a half-truth, âWhatâs the big deal?â
âWhat a goddamn line,â Joel says, smirking. âHow long you been sittinâ on that one for?â
His blood thrums faster, harder, louder in his veins when you stand up, hands on your hips.
âItâs not a line, Iâm serious ââ
âI didnât take you as the type, baby, I really didnât â but if thatâs how you wanna play this, then ââ
He feels you before he sees you moving, like heâs stood at that bar all over again. Your hands on his jaw, your chest pressed to his. Your lips â soft as satin, with a tinge of sweet rum and smoke â against his.
Joel barely misses a beat. He closes his eyes and lifts a hand to the back of your head, kissing you back. Itâs dizzying, the taste and feel of you so close; the wet of your tongue on his. The little scratches of your nails in his beard, the moans caught in your throat.
Dizzying â and fucking perfect.
You break apart and lean in to each other, catching your breath. Joelâs hands slip beneath the heavy leather of his jacket onto your waist.
âUnlessâŠâ you whisper, pulling away from him, ââŠyou donât want to. In which case, Iâll justâŠâ You twirl back towards the door, batting your eyelashes.
Joel smiles. He catches your wrist and reels you back into his body. âI want to,â he breathes, kissing you again. âI want to.â
âLetâs go.â
You make it to your apartment door, fumbling with your keys â and Joelâs hands are glued to your waist.
You miss the lock over and over as he kisses your neck, grazing the skin with his teeth. Anything to satiate the hunger quickly taking over, the tightening in his jeans.
He pulls you against his hips â rough denim grinding into the curve of your ass. He can smell your flowery perfume, a strange melding of peony and menthol sharp in his nostrils.
Itâs the hungriest heâs ever felt, he thinks â a starved animal pinning his prey to her flecked apartment door. He pauses, bottom lip damp against your neck; breathing a liquor-laced laugh over your skin.
You jam the key into the lock. The door finally shunts open and you spill inside, dragging Joel with you.
Your place is dark. Angled strips of streetlight thrown high up the bare walls and across the ceiling, splintered by tilted shades. The spill of a blanket draped over an empty couch; a pair of sneakers left on the rug. Joelâs knees brush by a houseplant guarding the door â heavy leaves which pfft when they sway out of his way.
Itâs half-decorated. Temporary. Caught somewhere between home and away. Little fragments pieced together into something the shape of home: a mosaic vase that scatters light across the surface of the coffee table; a beaded curtain pinned around the closet doorway.
Like youâre a little magpie, collecting trinkets of silver and gold until your nest feels like yours. Bags dropped long enough to keep a Monstera plant alive, not to put nails in the wall for the frames propped against the skirting board.
You shrug Joelâs jacket off, dropping it over the back of the couch. When you spin back around to him, he lifts your chin with two fingers and presses his lips to yours. You lead him down the hallway, tumbling into your room.
He follows you over to your bed, collapsing onto a tousled mess of sheets with his hips between yours. The hem of your dress rides up your thighs, bunching around your hips and revealing a flash of pink lace underneath.
The world around him seems to sober up for a second, sharpens into focus. It begins to seep in: the realization that he has you â some girl he met no more than two hours ago in a bar â pinned to your mattress. A slick gathering in your underwear and a weight building in his.
Right now, he should be sinking into squealing bedsprings in a Super 8. Bathing in the flicker of a television set twenty years too old. He should be showered and rested â ready to head home at sunrise, if not sooner.
But then something led him to you, and â well.
Thereâs no fucking helping him now, is there?
Joelâs fingers hook around your panties. He pulls down, leaving a trail of kisses along your bare leg, until that same pink lace is dripping from your ankle.
His eyes flash up to yours, love-drunk and sparkling. He pushes your knees apart, watching your velvet folds open for him, and â oh, he thinks, staring at the glistening arousal smeared around your cunt. Such a slick little mess for him already.
âGoddamn, darlinâ,â he licks his lips, âSheâs so pretty.â
You hum, hands lowering. Your fingers separate, spreading your pussy for him. Your middle finger swirls around your clit, dips along your seam. And the n, silky and shining, you lift your hand again and slip your fingers into your mouth.
âTastes even better than she looks,â you murmur, dappling your fingertip along your bottom lip.
Joel growls. He pushes down on your thighs, ignoring your little yelp, and drags the tip of his tongue through your slit.
âOh, shit,â you gasp, back arching. Your fingers knot in his hair, twisting and tightening. âShitshitshit.â
âMhm,â he hums against you, tongue pushing inside.
Fuck, youâre just so perfect: so soft and warm and fucking dripping for him. He laps at your sweet center, wet already spreading all over his mouth and beard.
A dampness blooms in his boxers. Heâs throbbing, fucking aching the longer he goes untouched. He grinds against the mattress, denim rough against his solid erection.
He lifts his chin, panting â satisfied by the way you squirm under the weight of him. âYou like that, huh?â he asks, a sodden kiss to your mound. âFuckinâ love it.â
He spits a thick bead of saliva, watching it dribble down your folds to your ass. His tongue swipes it back up, circling your clit, all slippery and swollen.
âFuck, Joel,â you moan, tugging on his hair. Your legs spasm, hips lifting.
He loves the sound of his name when you say it. Broken in two, a lilt to it as it rolls from your tongue and down his spine. Like itâs yours as much as it is his, now.
He sucks hard on your clit, his tongue flicking. And he can tell youâre close; can feel your hips starting to lose rhythm, see your back desperately arching higher and higher.
Joel groans, pushing up to hover over you. He cups between your legs, dabbing two thick fingers at your entrance, and pushes in.
Your pussy draws him in knuckle-deep. Your chest lifts, the loose neckline of your dress exposing more and more. You grab your breast, pinching your nipple â a roll of pebbled flesh between your fingertips.
He lowers his lips to your ear â watching as you toy with yourself. âCome on, baby,â he grits his teeth, âGive me one. Let me feel this pretty cunt.â
Your head rolls back into the pillow; a high sob as your orgasm crests. Clamping tight around him; a warm flood down his fingers.
Joel kisses you as you come. You look so pretty, he thinks, with ecstasy behind your eyes and his fingers between your legs.
Christ, he wants to be inside you so badly. Wants to feel your cunt do all this around his cock instead.
The blood rushes between his hips.
His fingers slip in and out, bringing you back around. Joelâs lips are on your neck, murmuring, âGood girl, thatâs my girl,â as you resurface.
Your eyes open again â glossy, glazed with the aftershock of your high. âFuck,â you breathe, playing with the hem of his shirt.
He pulls his fingers out and sucks them clean. Whips the tee over his head in one motion; another kiss tucked under your chin as you peel your dress from your body. He tosses it to the floor.
Still dazed, your body still trembling, you ask, âDo you have a condom?â All dreamy and distant, your hands trailing along his belt.
Joel pauses. Tilts his head, frowning. âIâm on a road trip with my brother, baby â the hell would I bring condoms for?â
You roll your eyes, sighing. Itâs the cutest thing Joel thinks heâs ever seen. You thread the belt through the loops of his jeans. âIn case you meet a really cool girl at a bar and wanna take her home, maybe?â
He lifts his eyebrows, impressed. He slips his salty tongue over yours again.
You moan at the taste. âItâs just IâmâŠIâm all out.â
His belt drops to the floor; buckle clinking against hardwood.
âWell, shit,â Joel whispers.
Itâs not exactly a scenario he predicted, setting off from Austin. Meeting you wasnât on the bucket list for the trip. Itâs another three, four, probably five things to add to the list of shit he doesnât do, shouldnât do, wouldnât fucking do if it hadnât been for you.
No, Joel thinks, groaning as you palm the solid shape of him â he didnât bring a goddamn condom. Jesus, the most he has in his pockets right now is fifteen bucks and a stick of gum.
You unzip his pants, shrugging the denim loose. âWe can just do itâŠwithout,â you offer.
Joel stares down at you. âYou sure?â
You nod, biting your lip. âJust pull out, right?â
âJust pull outâŠâ he echoes. Your hands are cold on his heated skin, but heâs not about to fucking stop you.
You tug his underwear down with his jeans, following the darkening hair from his navel down. Another quiet pull out passes your lips â your voice dissolving when you spot the thick base of his dick.
Joelâs shaft springs free, heavy against the inside of his thigh.
âHoly shit.â You push yourself up on your elbows, eyes flooding black.
His tongue runs along the bottom of his teeth. He thrusts forward into your hand, a glassy drop of precome dribbling from his slit.
Your thumb swipes across his flushed tip, fingers wrapping around his width. You roll his balls in your other palm, massaging and squeezing just the right amount.
âEasy, easy,â Joel whispers. Too much, too soon. He canât come yet, not until he feels your fluttering cunt around his cock.
Instead, you reach up â snaking an arm around his neck. You pull him back down, his naked body flush against yours, and hike a knee over his hip.
He grinds into you, his cock nudging between your legs. They fall apart for him â pliant and keen, like petals unfolding. He covers himself in your slick, his tip catching below your clit.
âPl-ease,â you whine, scratching at his shoulders.
Joel nips at your damp neck. âPlease, what?â he taunts.
Your breath is hot against his cheek â a stifling request which curls up in the shell of his ear. âF-fuck me.â
And his hips roll into yours.
âJesus fâŠâ your face buries into his chest, ââŠyouâreâŠyouâre so fucking big, Joel, I canât ââ
He nudges between your walls, groaning into your skin. Youâre even tighter around his cock, even cozier. âI know,â he pants, âI know. Take it, baby, know you can take it.â
You stretch around him, opening up the deeper he pushes. âFuckfuckfuck,â you pant, the thick hair at his base finally brushing against your clit. âFuck, Joel.â
âLook at me,â he taps your jaw, âHey. Look at me. Breathe.â
You exhale, hot and shaky across his lips.
âGood, thatâs good.â Joel nods. He holds you by the waist, lets you adjust to his size.
He pulls back, your cunt clamping around him. Halfway out, and then in again. Feeling you open up, inch by inch, until he builds a steady rhythm.
âJesus, baby, sheâs soâŠâ he moans, ââŠsheâs so goddamn tight.â
You drape an arm over his shoulders, a hissing pain where your nails dig into his skin. Yelping each time he bottoms out, your leaking cunt wrapped snug around him. âSo â goddamn â big,â you whine, a ruined smile on your lips.
He slams his body into yours again, watching the way your tits bounce. Nipples hard, skin tacky and shining with sweat. Your pussy pinches, and he starts to unravel.
Fuck the road trip, Joel thinks, fuck all of it. This is where he should be: in the middle of your bed, burrowed deep between your legs. This is the only place he wants to fucking be, right now.
So he fucks you harder; the headboard hammering against the wall. A fistful of the pillow, his knuckles whitening. He guides his cock when he slips out â a filthy sound as your clutch sucks him back in.
âFuck,â he growls, gripping your hips so hard he worries he might bruise you. His thrusts become sloppy â quick and desperate.
âSo close,â you gasp. Youâre squeezing him so tight that he sees stars. âIâm gonna â IâmâŠâ
Perfect, Joel thinks, watching you bloom. Youâre so fucking perfect.
He coaxes you through it. Slows enough to feel you come around his cock, your warmth as it gushes all over him. âThatâs it, baby, I got you. Shit, youâre gonna make me come.â
He pulls out just in time to coat your stomach; a throaty groan as he comes. He pumps his shaft, covering from your sternum to the plush of your tummy. It dribbles down your waist, spurts between your breasts.
He collapses over you, pressing his forehead to yours. His dick, soaked and softening, smears the ejaculate across your skin.
You giggle, leaving sticky kisses along his beard.
âYou okay?â he asks, breathless.
You nod, and his tongue dabs at the inside of your lips. You taste like sex and sweat â sweet and salt.
Joel shifts to the edge of the bed. He feels you follow, your lips featherlight on the curve of his shoulder.
You make to stand â going to clean yourself up, he reckons, your tummy dripping with his semen â and he locks a hand around your bare thigh.
âStay,â he says, voice low and rough â sex still smoldering. âLet me get you a towel.â
You smile, resting your chin on his shoulder. Your fingers link around the other side of his waist. âIâll get it. Just relax.â
And for a minute or two, you stay like that. Hooked onto one another, tired eyes closing over, breathing in rhythm. Your cheek on his shoulder, your knee brushing against his tummy.
Itâs simple; quiet and still. Joel feels like half a person â the other half tracing her chipped nails along his bare thigh. Eyelashes fluttering, teeth holding back a grin that she thinks might give her away.
Eventually, you move. Shimmy yourself down the mattress, swipe a crinkled tee from the ottoman â and slink off to the bathroom.
Joel lies back against the headboard, body sticky hot. He watches the shadow of your figure stretch across the open door. His eyes drift upwards to the looping ceiling fan â only half as dizzying as the sound of your humming in the next room.
And just when he starts to think he might be fucking missing you, you reappear in the doorway. Leant against the frame, some worn band tee hanging from your shoulders. Arms crossed; smiling back at him.
A rush of words floods to the tip of his tongue. You look beautiful. Your makeupâs smudged, chains of your necklace twisted; your shirt is frayed and splotched with faded stains â and youâre the most beautiful thing heâs ever laid eyes on.
He holds his arms out and you prance over.
You crawl over his figure, kissing your way up to his lips, and then turn in his lap. Cradled against his broad chest, your head nuzzling into the dark threads of hair between his pecs. You clasp one of his hands in two of yours.
âOfferâs still there for a shower, if you want it,â you whisper, kissing the pads of his fingers.
Joel tilts his head, mumbling against your temple, âWill you be in there with me?â
You answer something shaped like a tease, just as sharp with wit â but heâs too busy watching your nails trace his open palm. Too distracted by the sweet scent of your skin: a fresh burst of fruit, singed with the edge of tobacco.
âWhat do you do for work?â you ask.
He makes some sort of sleepy sound â a grunt, a hm? into your skull. âOh, uh â Iâm a contractor,â he says.
Your chin lifts. âThat why your palms are allâŠ?â Your thumb strokes light as lace against his worn skin.
âProbably,â Joel admits. He draws shapes on your thigh with his free hand.
âDo you sand the wood with your bare hands, or somethinâ?â
Joel scoffs. âAlright, alright. You liked my hands plenty, twenty minutes ago.â
Your cheeks lift, a low hum caught in your throat. You angle your head to let his lips trail along your shoulder, pressing into the hinge of your jaw. A dark nail following the landscape of Joelâs skin â each score and divot, the callused pads at the bottom of each finger.
âYou have sortaâŠearth hands, I think.â
It sits in the air for a few seconds before Joel turns to you. âWhat?â
âEarth hands. Or, well â I guess they could be water, if you look at âem this way.â You open up his hand, fingers stretched. âI donât really know. Iâm still learning.â
He looks down at you. Feels the now-steady pulse of your heart on his sternum. âLearninââŠhands?â
You snort. âPalm reading, Joel.â
His brows draw tight. He licks the inside of his whiskey-stained cheek. âYouâre into all that hippie shâŠstuff?â
You knock your knuckles against his chest, still staring at his hands. The hills and their valleys, the ravine-like lines; the worn skin and hatch marks.
âLetâs seeâŠYour heart line,â you whisper â more to yourself than Joel, but heâs listening all the same. âItâs pretty deep, which means the relationships youâve had have beenâŠimportant. But itâs kindaâŠit tails off right here, see? Itâs broken. SoâŠI guess they didnât end too good.â
Joel raises an eyebrow â playful, encouraging your timid smile. Keep figuring me out, he thinks, stoking the curious flame behind your eyes. âAlright,â he says, âNow tell me something you didnât already know about me.â
You gawk, holding his wrist up. âYou donât see that? The way it breaks up? Iâm not bullshitting you, Joel, itâs ââ
âNaw, I see it,â he nods, squinting a little at his palm, âJust â tell me more. Whatâs all these other lines mean?â
âWell,â you adjust between his hips, âyou got your life line right here. Short, which means ââ
âDonât tell me that part.â
âNo,â you roll your eyes, âIt just means youâre independent. You never needed much from anyone. And it runs past this mount â these are called mounts â right here. Venus: all to do with love and sexuality.â
Joel holds your open palm next to his, comparing them. He takes less than a secondâs look, lines his lips to your ear and says, âSeem like a pretty good match to me.â
You wriggle when he tickles your ribcage, trying to twist out of his grasp. Youâre laughing again â the same laugh heâs been hearing all damn night. The same giggle thatâs had his stomach somersaulting since he first heard it.
The room seems to light with it, this glow he feels from you â as if youâre the sun. Spent and still half-drunk; lazing with a stranger in the middle of her bed. Tracing the lines and scars on his palm, telling him how logical and grounded heâs supposed to be.
As if the world orbits around you â everything you touch turning to molten gold. And for what feels like the hundredth time tonight, Joel looks at you and wonders: Where the hell did you come from?
You hold your hand against his, folding your fingers perfectly together. The evidence of your night flaking from Joelâs knuckles; sweat still simmering on the nape of his neck.
He hasnât done this for years. Hasnât felt this gentle aftermath. Itâs usually a rush, a hastened zip and clink of his pants. An awkward dance, plucking clothes from the bedroom floor and pacing back to his truck.
Itâs never like this. Talking and laughing, holding and kissing. Questions about his parents and yours; his biggest dream as a kid, or the time you broke your arm falling out of a tree.
He tells you stories about growing up with Tommy; tells you Sarahâs favorite flavor of cake. He tells you about the time they tried to make it for a school bake sale, forgot to turn the oven off, and almost burned the damn kitchen down.
You snicker and tell him that never wouldâve happened if you were there.
Yeah, well, Joel smiles, I wish you were.
He notices youâre drifting off, despite your slurred protests and your weak grip on his wrist. He pulls you under the covers, curving his body around yours, praying that the quickening drum of his heartbeat wonât wake you.
His nose nuzzles into the curve of your skull, his hands link in front of your tummy. And he wonders whether his body was made with yours in mind.
He glances out at the sky â light starting to bleed from the horizon â and wills the turn of the sun to slow. Only a little; just let him stay here a little while longer.
Just a little while.
Dawn forces her way in eventually â more unwelcome than ever before.
Thereâs a throb between his temples which swells to life when the light floods past his pupils. âJesus Christ,â he grumbles, face turning back into the pillow. He gives you a gentle squeeze and then pushes up from the mattress.
You roll to the middle of the bed, still sound asleep. The sun spills golden all over the valleys and crests of your body. The bedsheets carve pathways up to your hips, dipping at your waist.
Last night, there was something so mystical about you â so otherworldly. Joel felt himself drawn towards you like a compass needle shooting north, the second he felt your weight crash against his spine.
A figure behind a cloud of smoke, like the mountaintops disappearing into a thick mist. And now, blood drained of alcohol, youâre just you.
Your shirt is twisted around your shoulders. Your lips puffy, mumbling to yourself in your doze. Makeup smudged like chalk under your eyes, and still â just as beautiful. Just as radiant as you were ten hours ago.
Joel rubs his eyes, sitting on the edge of the bed. He blinks down at his bare feet, the morning sharpening into focus. As he lifts his phone from the nightstand, the cable drops â hitting the wooden floor with a snap.
He pauses, shoulders hunched. Hears you stir over his shoulder, and turns around.
The earth of your body shifts beneath cotton hills, clouds of sleep clearing from behind your eyes. âHey,â you whisper, voice pretty and broken.
A little bird in the palm of his hand â that magpie curled up in her nest of gems and trinkets.
âHey.â He leans down and kisses your cheek. âSorry, darlinâ, I didnât mean to wake you.â
You wrap your arms around his wrist, tugging. âAreâŠare youâŠleaving?â
Joel feels a pang in his chest, and he doesnât know why. He takes a deep breath. Your scent fills his lungs and steadies his heart. âIâŠâ he sniffs, ââŠI gotta go home, baby.â
You give a slow and heavy nod. âS-SarahâŠâ
He strokes your head with his thumb. âYeah. Shh, go back to sleep. Itâs still early.â
He glances at his phone â itâs just after six. He knows Tommy will be waiting for him, parked outside the Super 8 and wondering where the hell Joel is. He knows Sarah will be, too â sat by the living room window, listening for the rumble of their bikes.
And still, he thinks â How do I fucking leave you? Leave this?
He shouldnât even be entertaining the thought. He has a kid waiting for him back home; soccer practice, packed lunches, homework and bedtime stories. He has work to do, bills to pay, a roof to keep over their heads. Itâs all waiting in Austin, two hundred miles away.
As though you can see the question flipping in his mind, you pull him closer. A weak finger in the palm of his hand, drawing circles. Your bleary gaze meets his, and you whisper, âIn the next life.â
Joel smiles. Twelve hours ago, heâd have laughed at the idea of it. Now, heâs not so sure. He kisses your knuckles, muttering, âPromise.â
Another wave of sleep washes over you, and youâre gone again.
Joel pushes himself from the bed, reaching for his clothes. His back twinges as he stretches, pulling his T-shirt over his shoulders. He steps into his jeans; pinches his belt between two fingers and lifts it from the floor.
He leans over and tilts your shades the opposite way, dulling your bedroom. He unplugs the charger, neatly winds the cord, and sits it on your nightstand. He fixes his side of the sheets: folds them over the mattress, tucks them in at your back.
With a deep breath, he makes for the door.
His jaw turns, eyes still low. Your dress is in a heap at the foot of the bed; a tube of lip gloss lying next to it. He looks up, following the landscape of sheets â the slope from your ankle to your hip. Your hunched shoulders, your cheek smushed into the pillow.
If he looks too long, heâll never leave.
The image burns golden into his eyes. He hopes for half a heartbeat that youâll wake again and pull him back into bed. Kiss him all over, whisper something sharp and sweet in his ear. Touch him and graze him and wrap yourself around him â anchoring him right here and now.
But you donât.
And Joel slips out of the room.
Jackson stirs to life over his shoulder.
A white lump in the snow-covered valley, the settlement seems so far away now. Tommy sets off up ahead, leading the way to the outpost. The blizzard is picking up â it almost swallows the silhouette of him whole.
Joel had tried to warn him: the weather would be too bad to see five feet in front of them, never mind any infected. But Tommy argued with the same determination that dragged the pair of them into that dive bar thirty years ago, and Joel didnât have half the energy nor the will to argue back.
Heâs thinking about you. He always is.
Your searing gaze over the rim of your glass; the weight of you against his chest. The tickling of your nail on his palm, severing each line and changing him forever. You and your palm lines.
You were just learning to read them. Joel didnât know a thing about any of it, and he told you so. You took his hand in yours and said, Here. Let me see.
He runs a thumb down his fate line, swaying in time with his horse. And he shakes his head with a little smile â he still remembers which one is fate and which is heart.
He still remembers all of it. He has earth hands. All salt and soil and solid as stone. His earth hands have gotten him this far, right? Twenty-five years and heâs still here. Gray and grown; stiff joints and sewn-up scars.
His head line has channeled more strangersâ blood than Joel can count. Mounts thatâve stopped breath in the throat of any man who crossed him. He doesnât think youâd recognize his hands anymore, if your fingertips traced over them again. Broken and bruised and bloody.
And he doesnât think heâd want you to â doesnât want you to meet the shadow of the man you knew back then. Heâd prefer you remember that same brown-eyed, soft-touched stranger with enough charm and naivety to survive anything. No need for bone-breaking fists or bloodstained hands.
Where are you, he wonders?
The answer knots deep in his stomach: the same old rope twisting into the same old shape. A fist of anger, of guilt. Some terrible cocktail of both, spilling poison through his veins.
Heâs terrified to wonder what mightâve happened if he had ever made it back there. What he mightâve found in your apartment â what he might not.
Where would you have gone, that day? Would you have fled, or would you have stayed?
You were smart, he knows that much. He saw the cogs of your mind turning right in front of him, standing opposite each other in that bar. Barely thirty seconds in and he couldâve sworn you had him all figured out.
But â oh, Jesus, you were kind. Open and willing to help a stranger with a dead phone and a tired smile. Would that kindness still glow as bright against the flicker of a world on fire?
A lone hawk swoops down before him, shooting straight between the pines. Joel slips his glove back over his freezing hand.
He thinks about you every day. Every fucking day, and it never eases. Never loosens. It keeps him up some nights â the truth heâs too afraid to look square in the face.
You live now in the back of his mind like a little ghost. His little ghost â still floating around that dusty city; the warm light of life and innocence still bright in your eyes.
Tommy glances over his shoulder. He gestures ahead as if to say, Would you take a look at this goddamn storm?
And Yeah, Joel thinks, Iâm lookinâ, brother.
All he wants is to go home. Jackson, Austin, the bedroom of your apartment in San Angelo. Just let me go back.
He blinks, and the snow melts to cracked asphalt under a lilac sunset. Tommyâs holding handlebars instead of reins. The horsesâ hot puffs of breath darken to clouds of smoke, choking from the exhaust pipes of the Harleys.
Youâre somewhere on the other side of town, waiting for him in the faint glow of a jukebox. Sipping whatâs left of your rum and Coke, fishing a twenty from your purse for the next round.
Just let me go back home.
He tugs on his horseâs reins and pulls off after his brother.
People on tumblr be ripping my heart out





















