Masterlist
A list of my writing in no particular order :)

he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
art blog(derogatory)

if i look back, i am lost
KIROKAZE
đ©” avery cochrane đ©”
đ

pixel skylines
RMH
tumblr dot com
Not today Justin

shark vs the universe

titsay


Love Begins

Kaledo Art
Keni
I'd rather be in outer space đž

Product Placement
macklin celebrini has autism
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from South Africa
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Egypt
seen from United States
seen from Iraq

seen from Poland

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Poland

seen from TĂŒrkiye
seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from France

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Serbia

seen from United States

seen from Netherlands
@lauren7050
Masterlist
A list of my writing in no particular order :)

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genuinely just sugar spice and everything nice
manager!michael letting reader drag him to her nail appointment before her pop up concert? heâs sitting there, signing autographs from all the girls in the salon while his sweet baby is getting her nails done. love ur writing! so much love xoxo đ
( ˶°ă °) !! ââ0.7k, fluff ) manager!michael jackson x fem popstar!reader <3
i'm imagining this occurring after reader's first ever album... it's a huge hit, making you an overnight sensation. concerts are planned right away! "drag him to her nail appointment" oh baby, he's the one who suggested the nail appointment! while trying on your stage costumes, you happened to glance at your nails, thinking about painting them at home. still unused to the amenities sudden fame provides, you keep quiet, making a mental note to yourself to handle it later in the week. little did you know, your manager, michael, made a mental note, too. note to self, take her to get her nails done.
the look you give him when he reminds you that the label can pay for your nails to be done as part of costuming is priceless. it's this gorgeous mix of both embarrassed and excited, sheepish and eager. your smile, small and shy, grows exponentially when michael offers to set up an appointment for you. "i'll join you," he adds all-too-casually, brushing some hair from his face, "just to make sure everything's proper. you know, that the nails match the outfits, that the appointment doesn't run long, that you're safe..."
michael really shouldn't be entertaining his crush on you like this, but he can't seem to help it. the two of you walk in together, both sporting chunky shades, and are sat side by side. his eyes are focused on your hands as the young woman working begins to check them over. he almost misses the way several other women have gathered around to peer at him.
"just a manicure," you say to the lady in front of you, "umm... pink. can i see your shades of pink again?"
"yes, miss," the woman replies, nodding her head before leaving to find one of the store's color palette books.
"you could have had an industry professional, if you wanted," michael points out as the lady walks away, nodding towards your hand, "there's no price limit to costuming."
it's such a bold lie that even you catch it, giggling and shaking your head before replying, "i've always gone here. i usually go for one of the colors i've memorized, but i wanted to see if they had any better pinks. something light, like the pajamas i wore in that one promotional photoshoot, remember?"
the promotional photoshoot, michael thinks... the one where michael first realized he was crushing on you, enjoying your attention far more than a manager should. "yeah, i remember. it was a beautiful color on you... very good for the promotional material."
the woman eventually returns, offering the palette book to you and watching as you search through the pinks. once you found a shade you thought was suitable, you told her the color and let her start working. meanwhile, michael sits right beside you, keeping you entertained through conversation.
correction: for about five minutes, he's able to sit beside you and converse. it isn't long before an older woman comes over hesitantly, asking quietly for his autograph. of course, he says yes. he's never been one to deny a fan, really. after that initial woman comes another, and a line soon forms by you and michael. people with half-finished sets of nails, people with nail tools still in hand, and even some of the workers from the pizza place next door; everyone's eager for an autograph.
a brunette woman around your age approaches shyly, smiling. "can i have your autograph, too, when you're done? i loved your album."
"me?" you glance over to michael, cheeks warming.
"yes, you," michael laughs a little, "go on, answer."
"yeahâ yes, yes, i'd love to," you reply to the woman, nodding your head, "if you don't mind waiting, i'd love to. thank you."
"thank you, thank you," the fan squeals, beaming.
it's surprisingly calm, though that might be because security stands outside of the nail salon, now, making sure everyone behaves. michael called them in after a couple autographs, not for himself but for your sake. he hums, his right hand moving automatically to print his signature as he talks to you once more.
yes, he watched you get your nails done. yes, he still asks to see your fingers when you're done, gently taking hold of your hand and letting his thumb brush lightly along one of your knuckles as he admires the color paired with the tone of your skin. "looks good," he nods, releasing your hand, "let me pay, and then we can go." what? you really thought the label was paying? well, they probably could, but michael prefers to take care of you all by himself. always has, always will.
want more manager!michael?
ok this was very cute, very mindful. i don't have much to say, i just wanted to write something cute for reader & manager!michael so i went w first era/album bc yay and fun and fluff!!!! ugh this was rewarding for me, just a cutesy piece.
off topic, does anyone here do pilates or yoga? i do both, i try to balance my chronically online time with time for my body but oh my fucking god my pilates flow today killed me. genuinely like i can feel my butt and abs while im typing this <//3 im gonna have a snatched fall bc its TOO hot for me to be out this summer but good lord. yeah i'll be writing for reqs before work today bc my hands are prob the only part of me left that can still function right now. working out has to be a form of masochism or something im so serious someone research this.
Ę ËáČđŒâ michael jackson bad era moodboard âč àŁȘ Ë
ă ăïč â (âżËÍá”ËÍ) â ââ for public consumption (2).
â ïčâàšà§â âădangerous era .á
â ïčâàšà§â âăsummary .á what do you do when the man you built your entire life around disappears without so much as a goodbye for another woman? do you love him enough to stay? or do you respect yourself?
â ïčâàšà§â âăbefore you interact .á divorce, emotional infidelity, substance abuse, addiction, mental health struggles, medication, anxiety, panic attacks, grief, codependency, public scrutiny, paparazzi harassment, family conflict, legal disputes, custody proceedings, fainting, unhealthy coping mechanisms, weight loss, weight depiction, and complex relationship dynamics. age gap in relationship (reader is now 27, michael is 36). âim your freaky nikki :)â reference for the girls! â ïčâàšà§â âădisclaimer .á this work contains depictions of addiction, substance abuse, and deteriorating mental health. this piece is not an accurate depiction of any real life individuals. â 22k word count.

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My protector
Authors note- You guys know the video of Michael in the car yelling at the police (?)Â This was loosely based off of that. Something about angry Michael has my heart.Â
Summary- You and Michael were leaving a fundraising event when the paparazzi gets a little pushy. How will Michael react when they get a little rough with you?
You and Michael were attending a fundraising event for the local children's hospital. This event had a bit more meaning than the others because you had just announced your pregnancy. You had been told âCongratulationsâ more times than you could count. The two of you had big smiles on your faces the entire time. Michael was over the moon when you told him and keeping this a secret from the world was getting too hard to bear.Â
2000 watts gets me pregnant everytime i hear that mans voice. Ughh its so deep. like michael...MICHAEL PLS JUST ONE CHANCE!!
You can dance?!
Summary : Michael Jackson spends years believing his girlfriend canât dance because she secretly pretends to be terrible out of shyness. After Chris Tucker catches her dancing flawlessly at a club and gleefully tells Michael, Michael surprises her by bringing her onstage during his 30th Anniversary performance of The Way You Make Me Feel, where the two finally share the dance sheâd been too nervous to have with him.
A/n : SORRY IâVE BEEN SO UM UNACTIVE i js had a really big exam so yeah but I passed itđ€đ»
Gen : fluff, comedy
Requested by : @miss-kuki-nz
Michael Jackson always believed two things about you:
One, that you were the love of his life.
And two, that you couldnât dance to save your life.
The second one was entirely your fault.
âBaby, thatâs not dancing. Thatâs a medical emergency.â
You gasped dramatically, placing a hand over your chest as Michael doubled over laughing in the middle of his rehearsal studio.
âI am dancing!â
âNo, youâre fighting invisible bees.â
âIâm doing exactly what youâre doing!â
Michael looked at you, then at himself in the mirror.
ââŠNo.â
You spun in a clumsy circle, nearly tripping over your own feet.
Michael immediately rushed forward.
âSee! See what I mean?â he laughed, catching your arm before you fell. âYouâre gonna hurt yourself.â
You pouted.
For years, this had become your thing.
Whenever Michael danced around youâand Michael danced everywhereâyou suddenly became the most rhythmically challenged person on Earth.
Kitchen?
Bad dancing.
Living room?
Terrible dancing.
Backstage?
Absolutely tragic.
Michael genuinely believed you had no coordination whatsoever.
And every single time, you secretly wanted to crawl into a hole and die.
Because the truth?
You could dance.
Very well, actually.
You just couldnât dance in front of Michael Jackson.
That felt like trying to sing in front of Whitney Houston.
Or paint in front of Picasso.
The man literally changed music videos forever.
How were you supposed to casually bust out choreography in front of him?
No thank you.
You preferred embarrassment.
So you committed to the lie.
UnfortunatelyâŠ
The universe had other plans.
âž»
A few months before Michaelâs 30th Anniversary Celebration.
You were at a club with your sister.
No Michael.
No cameras.
No pressure.
Just music, flashing lights, and freedom.
âFinally,â your sister laughed. âYou can stop pretending youâre allergic to rhythm.â
You rolled your eyes.
âDonât start.â
The DJ switched songs.
A familiar beat filled the room.
Your eyes lit up.
âOh, this is my song.â
Your sister immediately grinned.
âOh no.â
âOh yes.â
The moment the music dropped, you were gone.
You melted into the crowd.
Moving effortlessly.
Spinning.
Laughing.
Actually dancing.
Not your usual fake-flailing nonsense.
And because you were finally relaxedâŠ
You forgot one very important detail.
You werenât alone.
Across the club, sitting in a VIP booth.
Watching with growing disbelief.
Was Chris Tucker.
Chris nearly spat out his drink.
ââŠWHAT.â
He stood up.
Looked again.
Then squinted.
âNo. No way.â
Because there you were.
Michaelâs supposedly dance-impaired girlfriend.
Moving like youâd been training with professionals.
Chris clutched his chest.
âIâve been lied to.â
âž»
The next day.
Michael was relaxing in his Neverland living room when Chris practically kicked the door open.
âMIKE!â
Michael jumped.
âJesus!â
âYOUR GIRLFRIEND.â
âWhat about her?â
Chris pointed dramatically.
âSHEâS A FRAUD.â
Michael blinked.
âWhat?â
âA LIAR.â
âWhat?â
âA DECEIVER.â
âChrisââ
âSHE CAN DANCE.â
Michael stared.
Then laughed.
âNo she canât.â
âYES SHE CAN.â
âNo.â
âYES.â
âChris.â
âIâm telling you!â
Michael shook his head.
âHave you seen her dance?â
âI HAVE NOW.â
âShe almost fell into a piano last week.â
âTHAT WAS AN ACT.â
Michael froze.
ââŠWhat?â
Chris leaned forward.
âI saw her at a club.â
Michael narrowed his eyes.
âWhat club?â
Chris ignored him.
âThat girl was dancing like her rent was due.â
Michael immediately started laughing.
âNo.â
âIâm serious!â
âNo.â
âMichael Joseph Jackson.â
Michaelâs smile slowly faded.
Because Chris looked genuinely offended.
Like a man who had witnessed a crime.
âYou saw her?â
âI SAW HER.â
âDancing?â
âDancing.â
âGood?â
Chris stared.
âMike.â
âWhat?â
âShe was better than half the people in the club.â
Michael sat up.
For the first time.
Concerned.
âž»
The interrogation began that evening.
You walked into Michaelâs room.
Immediately suspicious.
Because he was sitting on the couch.
Arms crossed.
Watching you.
âOh no.â
Michael pointed.
âSit.â
âWhat did I do?â
âSit.â
You sat.
Slowly.
âCan you dance?â
Your soul left your body.
Chris.
That snitch.
That traitor.
That rat.
You immediately knew.
âWho told you?â
Michael gasped.
âYOU CAN DANCE!â
âWHO TOLD YOU?â
âCHRIS WAS RIGHT?â
You buried your face in your hands.
Michael stood.
Laughing hysterically.
âOH MY GOD.â
âNo.â
âYOU LIED TO ME.â
âNo.â
âFOR YEARS.â
âIt wasnât a lie.â
âYOU PRETENDED YOU COULDNâT DANCE.â
âI exaggerated.â
Michael looked offended.
âExaggerated?â
âA little.â
âA LITTLE?â
You groaned.
Michael was practically crying from laughter.
âYou are unbelievable.â
You pointed accusingly.
âIâm never speaking to Chris again.â
âž»
Months later.
The 30th Anniversary Celebration arrived.
Madison Square Garden.
Packed audience.
Celebrities everywhere.
The atmosphere electric.
You sat backstage watching Michael perform.
Proud as always.
He looked incredible.
The crowd adored him.
Everything was perfect.
Until Chris Tucker appeared.
Smiling.
And whenever Chris Tucker smiled like thatâŠ
Something bad was about to happen.
âNo.â
Chris grabbed your wrist.
âCome on.â
âNo.â
âLetâs go.â
âNo.â
âMichael wants you.â
âHe can have me after the show man! Leave me alone!â
Chris started dragging you.
âCHRIS.â
âGet up.â
âCHRIS, IâLL WHOP YOUR ASS.â
âMove.â
âIâM NOT SUPPOSED TO GO ON STAGE.â
âToo bad.â
You dug your heels into the floor.
Chris pulled harder.
You hissed.
âYouâre literally the reason Iâm in this situation.â
âAnd Iâd do it again.â
âI hate you.â
âYou love me.â
âI donât.â
âYou do.â
âI donât.â
âYou do.â
âChris!â
The audience suddenly erupted.
Your stomach dropped.
Because you were getting closer to the stage.
Very close.
Far too close.
âOh my God.â
Chris was laughing so hard he could barely breathe.
âYou should see your face.â
âIâm going home.â
âNo youâre not.â
âIâm serious.â
âNope.â
âYou are the worst person Iâve ever met.â
Chris grinned.
âAnd yet here we are.â
âž»
On stage.
âThe Way You Make Me Feelâ was nearing its final section.
Michael glanced toward the wings.
Smiling.
The crowd had no idea what was coming.
Then suddenly.
Michael pointed.
âBring her out.â
The audience screamed.
You immediately tried backing away.
âNo.â
Chris shoved you forward.
âYES.â
âCHRIS.â
âGO.â
âCHRIS!â
The crowd got louder.
And before you could escape.
You found yourself standing under the spotlight.
In front of thousands of people.
And Michael.
Who looked entirely too pleased with himself.
The audience roared.
Michael approached.
Microphone in hand.
Tryingâand failingâto hide his smile.
âThere she is.â
You narrowed your eyes.
âOh, I hate all of you.â
The crowd laughed.
Michael chuckled.
âNo you donât.â
âChris forced me.â
Chris appeared from the side.
âYouâre welcome!â
âGET OFF THE STAGE.â
âNO.â
The audience loved every second.
Michael finally held out a hand.
âDance with me.â
Your brain short-circuited.
âWhat?â
âDance with me.â
âMichael.â
âDance.â
âIn front of everyone?â
âYes.â
âNo.â
The audience immediately booed playfully.
Michael smirked.
âCâmon.â
âNo.â
âCâmon.â
âNo.â
âI know you can dance.â
You glared toward Chris.
Who proudly pointed at himself.
âI TOLD HIM.â
âTRAITOR.â
âTHANK YOU.â
âNOT A COMPLIMENT.â
Michael laughed.
Then gently squeezed your hand.
His voice soft enough that only you heard.
âPlease?â
And suddenlyâŠ
The nerves disappeared.
Because it wasnât Michael Jackson.
The superstar.
The icon.
The legend.
It was just Michael.
Your Michael.
Looking at you like you were the only person in the building.
Waiting.
Trusting you.
Wanting to share this moment.
You exhaled.
Then smiled.
âOkay.â
The crowd exploded.
âž»
The music continued. âP.Y.T.â Playing now.
Michael stepped back.
Giving you space.
You could practically feel the audience expecting another awkward disaster.
The same girl Michael always teased for having two left feet.
Insteadâ
You moved.
Actually moved.
The reaction was immediate.
Thousands of gasps.
Cheers.
Screams.
Michaelâs jaw literally dropped.
Despite already knowing.
Because seeing it was different.
You spun effortlessly.
Matching the rhythm.
Matching him.
The smile on his face grew wider and wider.
Soon he joined you.
The two of you moving together.
Laughing.
Improvising.
Neither trying to outshine the other.
Just having fun.
For the first time ever.
You danced with him.
Not around him.
Not hiding.
Not pretending.
Just dancing.
And somehow.
It felt easier than breathing.
At one point Michael leaned closer.
Still dancing.
âI canât believe you hid this from me.â
You laughed.
âI was shy.â
âShy?â
âYouâre Michael Jackson.â
âSo?â
You stared.
âSo?!â
He laughed.
The audience laughed.
You shook your head.
âYou make people nervous.â
Michael pointed toward the crowd.
âIâm performing in front of twenty thousand people.â
âExactly.â
He laughed so hard he nearly missed a step.
âž»
As the song ended, the audience rose to their feet.
A standing ovation.
For Michael.
For the performance.
And for the moment nobody had expected.
Michael wrapped an arm around your shoulders.
Pulling you close.
Still smiling.
âYou know,â he said quietly.
âWhat?â
âNext time you pretend you canât do somethingâŠâ
âOh no.â
âIâm asking Chris.â
You groaned.
The audience laughed again.
Chris appeared from backstage.
Looking ridiculously proud of himself.
Michael pointed.
âHeâs my favorite person.â
âYou both are awful.â
Chris threw an arm around each of you.
âWeâre a team.â
âNo.â
âWe are.â
âNo.â
âWe are.â
The crowd cheered as the three of you continued arguing all the way offstage.
And for the rest of his life, Michael never let you forget that the greatest dance secret heâd ever discoveredâŠ
Was that his own girlfriend had been fooling him the entire time.
You came?
Summary- Even after a fight, youâll always come when he calls.Â
Bad!Michael x Fiance!reader
It had been a month since Michael left for the second leg of the tour and you hadn't heard from him once. You weren't totally surprised. You had gotten into a pretty big argument the day before he left. He wanted you to go on tour with him and you didnât want to be gone from home for months at a time.Â
The Lady in My Life
Context: Youâre singing your favorite Michaelâs song in the shower. He overhears you and joins the song and the shower.
Ë . Ęđđ. Ęâ Thriller era, Cute, FluffË . Ęđđ. Ęâ
Cuteeeeeeeđ€
The bathroom is completely filled with thick clouds of warm steam, smelling faintly of your favorite vanilla body wash.
You usually get embarrassed to sing anywhere near Michaelâpartly because his own voice is a literal global powerhouse, and partly because the sheer intensity of his focus when he actually listens to you makes your heart race too fast.
But right now, under the hot water, you feel completely invincible.
You take a deep breath and slide effortlessly into the smooth, romantic melody of your favorite song of his: The Lady in My Life.
âThere'll be no darkness tonight, lady our love will shine...â
Your voice carries beautifully through the steam, hitting the soft notes with a quiet confidence youâd never show him in the living room. You rinse the soap from your hair, completely lost in the rhythm, entirely unaware that the bathroom door has just clicked open a fraction of an inch.
Michael had been walking down the hallway when the sweet sound of his own song caught his ear. He knows exactly how shy you get about your voice around him, so instead of bursting in and interrupting, he plays it completely smart. He creeps inside the bathroom, closing the door behind him without making a single sound.
He drops onto the closed lid of the toilet seat just a few feet away from the shower, leaning his elbows on his knees. He pulls his dark curls back from his face, a slow smile pulling at his lips. Listening to you sing his words, completely uninhibited and happy, is the most beautiful thing heâs ever heard.
âSo listen to my heart... lay your body close to mine...â
Michael closes his eyes for a second, a soft chuckle vibrating in his chest. His gravelly voice stays completely trapped behind his teeth because he refuses to ruin this moment.
While youâre still humming the song, he stands up and drops his clothes in a silent heap.
You take a breath to start the next line:
âLay back in my tenderness, Let's make this a night we won't forgetâŠâ
Right as you were about to sing the next part, the frosted glass door slides open, letting a swirl of cool air cut through the steam. You gasp, your voice instantly catching in your throat.
But before you can even cover yourself, Michael steps into the heavy spray.
His bare frame instantly crowds the small space, hot water immediately slicking down his dark curls and running in streams over his shoulders.
Hands launching forward to grip your waist, pulling your back against his chest under the cascading water. He leans his head down, his lips brushing right against your wet ear, and takes over the melody in an effortlessly rich voice.
âReach out to a fantasy, Two hearts in a beat of ecstasyâŠ..Come to me, girlâŠâ
The sheer beauty of his voice so close makes your knees go weak. You lean back against his chest, your hands instinctively coming up to rest over his forearms at your waist. The embarrassment completely melts away under the heat of the water and the sheer romance of the moment.
He turns you around in his arms so you're facing him, the water running down on your back. He hooks a finger under your chin, tilting your face up, his eyes lock onto yours with total encouragement.
"Don't stop," Michael whispers, "Sing it with me."
You smile and close the space between you. Your softer tone wrapping around his strong but delicate voice.
âAnd I will keep you warm, Through the shadows of the nightâŠLet me touch you with my love, I can make you feel so rightâŠâ
Wrapping your arms around his neck, you both sway your bodies to the rhythm in smooth motion.
âCause you will always be the lady in my lifeâŠâ
Michaelâs face breaks into a proud, dazzlingly handsome smile. "Best duet ever."
He wraps his arms completely around you, lifting you slightly off your feet as he place a lingering kiss on your lips, tastes like pure warmth.
"You are." He whispered against your lips.
"Hm?" You hummed, raising your eyebrows.
"The one and only lady in my life."

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not enough
.ácontents: angst, suggestive content, michael makes it up to you, happy ending implied.
.ásummary: michael begins to question if heâs enough for you. when the discussion becomes an argument, he tries to make it up to you.
usually, when you and michael spent late nights together in the studio, it was never quiet for long. heâd ask for your opinion on a new melody, ramble about ideas he had for the future, or excitedly explain something he couldnât wait to bring to life.
tonight was different. the studio had been unusually quiet, the only sound being the faint hum equipment and the rustling of the newspaper in michaelâs hands. you watched from across the room as his expression slowly changed.
his eyes scanned over the headlines, with a look you werenât used to seeing. âdonât you read these headlines?â michael asked, his voice carrying a hint of frustration. you looked up from where you sat, your brows knitting together. ânot really.â
he let out a quiet sigh, dropping the magazine onto the table. âitâs always something,â he shook his head. âevery week thereâs another story. another rumor.â his eyes flickered back to the page. âi donât even know where they get this from.â
you frowned. âwhy do you even read them?â he looked up at you. âbecause theyâre everywhere.â he answered almost immediately. âi canât escape âem.â he picked the magazine back up, his thumb absentmindedly flipping pages before stopping on another article.
âlook at this one.â you moved closer, glancing down at the page. another bold headline stared back at you. âinsiders say sheâs growing tired of his schedule.â your eyebrows pinched together. âtheyâre ridiculous. you know that.â
âare they?â he asked quietly. you looked up. his eyes never left the page. âthey all say the same thing.â he laughed under his breath, though it lacked real humor. âthat youâre eventually gonna get tired of waiting on me.â
you folded your arms across your chest. âand you believe them?â he couldnât even look at you. âi donât know.â he admitted after a long pause. âsometimesâŠâ he closed the magazine, letting it fall onto the table with a dull thud. âsometimes i think theyâre right.â
you sighed, bringing a hand to your temple. âmichael, donât say that.â your voice strained slightly. âif iâm still here, why would i be tired?â he stayed quiet for too long, his eyes finding the magazine on the table again. âyou shouldnât have to wait around for me.â
you frowned. âwhat?â he finally looked at you. âi think you deserve better.â he said it so suddenly, so calmly, that for a second you werenât even sure if you heard him right. âbetter than what?â michael looked away. âbetter than someone whoâs always busy. someone who can give you what you need.â
you stared at him for a moment, almost waiting for him to take the words back. âmichaelâŠâ he looked away. âiâm serious.â the frustration you felt wasnât because he was upset. it was because the way he said it was like heâd already made that decision for you.
âyou donât get to decide what i need.â his eyes lifted back to yours. âiâm just trying to be realistic.â you shook your head letting out a quiet breath. âno, youâre trying to convince yourself that iâm going to leave.â the room fell silent. michael didnât try to argue, and that hurt more.
he looked down, his voice quieter when he finally spoke. âi just know what this life does to people.â he glanced around the studio, at the unfinished songs, and the scattered papers. âi know how much it takes from me.â his expression softened. âand i donât want to take something from you too.â
you stared at him, your chest tightening. you didnât even know what to say. not because you didnât have an answer, but because you couldnât believe he actually meant it. âi canât believe youâre listening to them.â
michaelâs expression shifted. âwhat?â you gestured between you. âthe headlines. the people who donât know anything about you.â your voice grew heavier with every word. âyouâre letting strangers convince you that they know whatâs best for us.â
he looked away. âthatâs not what iâm doing.â âisnât it?â the room went quiet. âyouâre sitting here telling me that i deserve better, like i havenât spent all this time choosing you.â he rubbed hand over his face, letting out a tired sigh. âiâm only trying to be realistic.â
ârealistic?â you scoffed, shaking your head. âno, michael. youâre letting a bunch of strangers tell you what our relationship is supposed to look like.â his jaw clenched. âyou think i want to believe them?â
his voice had raised the first time that night. âyou think i enjoy reading this stuff?â he picked the magazine back up, holding it out before letting it fall onto the table again. âitâs everywhere. every headline, every article. theyâre all saying the same thing.â
he looked back at you, his expression somewhere between frustration and defeat. âafter a while, you start wondering if maybe theyâre right.â the room suddenly started to feel cold, and neither of you spoke.
you let out a shaky breath, rubbing your forehead before reaching for your bag. âi think i should go.â michaelâs head snapped up. âwhat?â you didnât plan on stopping. âi justâŠâ you swallowed. âi canât do this right now.â
you slung your bag onto your shoulder, turning towards the studio door. âwait.â his voice wasnât loud. if anything, it was quieter than before. you stopped, your hand hovering over the doorknob. âplease.â
you closed your eyes for a brief moment before turning around. michael stood up. âi didnât mean it like that,â he said quietly. âi wasnât trying to end this.â his eyes searched yours. âi promise, thatâs not what i meant.â you didnât say anything. he took a hesitant step closer.
âi wasnât saying i donât want you.â he shook his head. âitâs exactly the opposite.â his voice caught in his throat. âi want you so much thatâŠâ he sighed, looking down for a moment. âiâm terrified iâm never going to be enough for you.â
he took another step. âand i know that doesnât make what i said okay.â his shoulders fell. âi just got in my own head.â âi let those headlines convince me that maybeâŠâ he paused, swallowing hard. ââŠmaybe youâd be better off without me, and iâm sorry.â
you went quiet, looking at him like you were trying to understand how he could ever believe that. âmichaelâŠâ your voice softened. âi wish you could see yourself the way i see you.â the tension between you lingered as michael stepped closer until his body was inches from yours.
his hands liften slowly, fingers brushing your wrist before guiding it gently above your head against the door. it wasnât forceful, just enough to hold you there. the way he paused, asking you a silent question, waiting for any sign to stop. âcan i kiss you?â he whispers, voice low and unsteady with everything he hadnât said.
his free hand resting at your waist, his thumb tracing a slow circle near the hem of your shirt. you nodded, and he leaned in. the kiss was soft at first, almost careful, hid lips moved against like he was cherishing the moment. then it deepened, his tongue brushed yours in a slow, intentional stroke.
heat built between you as his body pressed closer, you felt the hard line of him against your thigh. his fingers tightened just slightly on your wrist, not trapping you, while his other hand slid down to grip your him, pulling you against him. he broke the kiss to rest his forehead against yours.
his breath was ragged. âi want to make this right,â he murmured, lips gazing his jaw. âlet me show you.â after that night, michael never questioned your love for him again. because every time he looked at you, he was reminded that you werenât there because you had to be, you were there because you loved him.
tags: @uknownn111 @essenceofvxnilla
Snowy days
Summary- Just pure fluff. Michael finally taking a vacation after touring.Â
You woke up to the quiet sound of branches grazing the window. You looked towards the sound and smiled when you saw that it was snowing outside. You slowly slid out of bed, not wanting to wake Michael up in the process. You put on the fluffy robe hanging on the back of the door and walked towards the window. Snow was your favorite weather and sadly you didnât see enough of it in California.Â
 âąÂ âźÂ a different angle ăàŒ.
a thriller!michael x curvy!popstar!reader oneshot inspired by this req! i hope you enjoy it!
.đ„ Ę Ë synopsis: when a performance that should've been remembered for its music becomes a tabloid mockery instead, she's forced to confront years of insecurity she thought she'd left behind. while the world reduces her to headlines and photographs, michael sees only the artist he fell in love with, quietly settnig out to make sure everyone sees her that way too.
.đ„ Ę Ë wc: 6k
.đ„ Ę Ë cw: fluff and hints of angst (hurt/comfort), established relationship between reader and michael, reader is a pop star, reader is curvy, i had a black/mixed reader in mind but theres no specific appearance mentions other than body wise so take that as you will, body shaming from media, michael is protective and soft and cute i love him!!!
.đ„ Ę Ë a/n: i hope this fic isn't offensive at all... i tried to make it avoid the "reader is insecure" trope but i came up with this idea a few nights ago and rlly wanted to put it into words! also NOT proofread so sorry if theres any grammar mistakes or anything teehee
â reqs are open for full oneshots or mini drabbles! Ëđ·Ë dont be shy! â comment here if you'd like to be part of a future tag list ˶ᔠᔠá”˶
the headline had been in the morning paper for less than twelve hours before you stopped reading.
youâd learned that lesson the hard wayânot this time, but the time before, and the time before that. this was apparently how you learnt most things in this life youâd chosen: repeatedly, at a cost, until the lesson finally wore itself deep enough that your hand stopped reaching before your brain had finished forming the thought.
twelve hours this time. better than last time. progress, maybe. or maybe it was just exhaustion wearing a different face from all the other times.
at least the show had been good.
that part you were absolutely certain ofâthe feeling settling with ease, low in your sternum with the particular resonance that lived there when everything clicked into alignment at once. last night, the room had been with you from the very first song. three thousand bodies pressed together in the heat of a sold-out venue, swaying like a single organism breathing in the dark, your voice and the band merging into one sustained, electric vibration. youâd felt the beat thumping through your body like a second heartbeat; the specific hum that only happened when you felt like everything was going right for you.
youâd worn a gold dress on stage that night.
your stylist had pulled it from the rack backstage three days before the show, held it up in the fluorescent dressing room lights, and said this one with the certainty of someone who didnât need to explain her opinion whatsoever. the fabric was cool and heavy between your fingers when you took itâall those sequins catching the light like calm waves in the ocean. you excitedly slipped behind the fitting room curtain on your tiptoes, your pulse already going at the speed of lightning.
when you stepped in front of the mirror, the world dropped from your fingertips.
the dress fit like it had been made for you, like it had been waiting for you for decades. it was short and fitted, low-backed with thin straps that felt like nothing against your skin. the hem of it hit your mid-thigh, staying at that teasing height without apology. the gold caught every curve of youâthe roundness of your hips, the soft weight of your thighs where they were pressed together, the way your waist curved in before widening again, your breasts perfectly filling the bodice. it held all of it not like something to hide but instead as something to celebrate, like proof that the point of clothes was always to make you feel real, feel confident, in your own skin.
and you looked absolutely beautiful.
not beautiful in the way magazines dictated or in spite of anything. just beautiful, full stop, period. the dress moved against your skin when you shifted, catching the light and throwing it back in surges of warmth and gold. you turned slightly and watched the fabric shimmer against you, seeing how it hugged and applauded you in equal measure. the confidence that surged through you was immediateâsimilar to the particular electricity of the forty seconds you have before you walk on stage, when your hands finally stop shaking and your breath settles when you finally remember exactly who you were. you could see it clearly: yourself up there in the tiny dress, the lights hot above you, the microphone heavy and familiar in your hand as three thousand people press forward when you hit your first note; your body doing what it did best. making art.
it felt like power that belonged entirely to you.
then reality crashed back in like cold water, drowning you.
there would be cameras. lenses and angles, photographers who knew exactly how to find the least flattering moment and freeze it into a moment that lasts forever. critics with their columns and their loud opinions about a body that didnât belong to themâabout your own figure specifically. gossip columnists who would have a field day with you, radio hosts who would make jokes, reviews that would spend more words on what you wore than what you sang. the confidence drained out of you so fast it left you completely dizzy as you stood there still in front of the mirror.
you looked into your reflection and saw yourself now through their eyes. not the power otr the beauty your curves previously held inside the dressânow you saw too much thigh, too much hip, too much body. photographs taken from specific angles with specific intent, printed in the morning papers alongside captions that had nothing to do with the fact that youâd successfully sold out a three-thousand-person venue on your own merit.
the dress was still outstandingly beautiful. you were still breathtaking in it. but now that beauty felt like too much of a riskâan exposure you werenât ready to take by the handâlike you were willingly handing ammunition to people who were already looking for a reason to tear you down.
âwhatâs goinâ on?â michael asked, his voice breaking through your insecure spiral.
he had been sitting on the small couch in the corner of the large fitting room, his long legs stretched out, leafing through a book without much urgency. he had looked up from his page when you went awfully quiet and still, the silence stretching past comfortability into something else he took notice of.
ânothing.â you whispered meekly, patting the dress down against your body self-consciously.
he set the book down, closing it softly. âyouâve been standinâ like that for a while now.â
you turned back to the mirror. the longer you stared, you noticed how the dress was beautifully gold like where sand and ocean metâcatchnig the dressing room light and throwing it back onto both of your faces. but the problem was that you couldnât look at it separate from your body now. the dress was on your body and your body was the thing people had opinions about; loud and entitled that were shared in print and on the radio and in conversations youâd never be invited to.
âhey,âÂ
he was behind you before youâd registered him getting up, which was something about michael that still caught you off guard even now, months into this thing between youâhow quietly he moved for someone so present, someone who took up so much space in a room just by silently being in it. his hands settled at your waist from behind, warm through the thin fabric, and the heat of his large palms sank into you immediately, grounding you from your crashing insecurities. he looked at you in the mirror with patience, reminding you that he was someone who had nowhere else to be except happily wrapped around you.
âtalk tâme,â he urged softly.
âitâs a lot of dress,â you answered. it wasnât quite what you meant, not necessarily the right words, but it was the closest approximation of how you felt.
âitâs not a lot of dress,â he said, his voice laced with something amusing and gentle. âitâs a little dress.â
âyou know what i mean.â
and he did, that much was clear from the way his expression shifted, settling into a sense of seriousness without losing its warmth. it was the particular attention he gave you when he noticed you working through something in your head. his hands then moved slightly at your waistâit wasnât necessarily rubbing, but it made you aware of his presencing. it was anchoring.
âi know what yâmean,â he said quietly. âand i think you should wear it anyway.â
âeasy for you to say.â you scoff with disbelief at his words.
âmhm,â he hummed simply in agreement. âit is. âcause iâm lookinâ at you right now and iâm gonna tell you what i see, which isâŠâ
he paused and let go of your waist, stepping back slightly to take you in properly. as his eyes slid across your body, he was choosing his words carefully in his mind the way he always did when accuracy mattered more than speed.
â...someone who looks absolutely extraordinary. in that specific dress, in this lighting, standinâ exactly like that.â
you looked at his reflection rather than your own. his eyes were steady and clear in the mirror, with no trace of performance lingering in them. what was found in the glint of his eyes were truthâplain, and unadorned.
âpeople are gonna have opinions,â you retorted.
âpeople have opinions about everything,â he noted. âwe both know that. thatâs not new information.â
his hands find their way back to the curve of your waist again, his chin coming to rest on your shoulder. âwhat theyâre not gonna be able tâdo is argue with what happens on that stage a couple days from now. and you know that.â
you were quiet as his words sunk into your skin. the dressing room hummed around you, the fluorescent lights and the distant sound of the crew working around the venue filling up beyond the door, your own heartbeat filling in your eardrums.
âyou know that,â he said again, softer this time, and it was a statement that travelled through you and settled into the balls of your feet.
you did know it. beneath the old argument that you have every time you look in the mirror, beneath the familiar doubt that visited you like an unwelcome relative who showed up uninvited and overstayed you knew the show was going to be amazing. you could feel it in the readiness of your hands, the way the setlist sat in your body like a gun loaded and waiting to be fired.
âokay,â you exhaled.
âyeah?â
âyeah.â
he pressed a quick peck to your cheek, then patted your shoulders gently, urging you to push them upright. you watched yourself straighten in the mirror, the dress catching the light once again.
his arms came around you properly thenâa real, unhurried and complete hold, his chest resting against your back and his chin finding the curve of your shoulder like it was meant for him. you stood there together in front of the dressing room mirror for a moment that stretched out into something you didnât want to end.
âââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââ
days passed and your first show came to an end, and it was genuinely, entirely good. maybe your best performance yet.
the satisfaction followed you home and sat warm in your chest while you washed your face, peeling off the gold, tight dress under your coverup from after the show, letting it pool onto the bathroom floor all the while getting into bed with your skin still humming from the vibrations of the bass speakers and the heat of all those bodies pressed together in the dark.
michael had said your performance was outstanding in approximately seven different ways by the time you finally emerged from the bathroom since thatâs just how he wasâspecific and sincere about the things he loved, which included you. he never just said you did good, but instead praised you by telling you which moment, which line, which note had him seeing stars in his eyes.
he was already in bed when you came out, propped up against the headboard with his legs stretched out beneath the covers, watching you pad across the room in one of his t-shirts. you climbed in beside him and he immediately pulled you close, your head finding his chest and his hand settling warm at the curve of your waist.Â
âthe bridge in heartâs a mess,â he continued his ramble into your hair, âwhen you dropped down to that low note ân held itâthe whole room went still. and i mean still, girl. like everyone forgot tâbreathe,â
youâd closed your eyes and giggled against his chest, the ecstasy flowing back through you as you felt the echo of the stage come back to you with his wordsâthe note resonating in the floorboards, in the air itself, in the three thousand held breaths.
âand that moment in inner glow where yâstopped singin' and just let the crowd carry it,â he continued, his thumb moving absently against your leg, tracing small circles through the fabric of your comfy shorts. âi watched you just stand there and listen to them singinâ your words back at you, ân your faceââ
heâd stopped then for a moment, his hand slightly tightening, lovingly, on your thigh.
âwhat about my face?â youâd asked, opening your eyes and tilting your head to meet with his.
âyou looked like you couldnât believe it was real,â he said quietly. âlike you were hearinâ it for the first time. three thousand people singinâ your song ân you lookedââ
he took another pause, his jaw working slightly as he thought about what word would fit best with your expression in that moment he was admiring your talent.
ââgrateful,â he finished. âyou looked so grateful.â
you smiled at him, settling back into his chest. his hand found yours beneath the covers and he turned his palm up and laced his fingers through yours. the room fell quiet and dark and warm in that moment, and that was enough for both of you to drift off to sleep. âââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââ
and now youâre brought to the presentâthe morning.
the sun came up with its particular shine, the cold, early brightness felt like an unwanted exposure; like being seen before you were ready to be; and the newspapers came with itâdelivered to the doorstep with a thump that woke you before the alarm, three different papers because your publicist insisted you needed to see everything. the reviews were obviously meticulously placed between the headlines, as well as the gossip columns, and the photographs taken from specific angles with specific intentâangles that emphasized, exaggerated, turned your body into something to be dissected and discussed in the fine print.
youâd sat at the kitchen table in one of michaelâs t-shirts and shorts, spreading the papers in front of you like evidence at a crime scene.
the times critic had been relatively kind about your music but obviously couldnât resist stating: â...though one wonders if the costume choices were entirely necessary for a venue of this caliber.â
the tabloid gossip columnist had been less subtle: âsheâs got the voice for sure, but someone should tell her that sequins and curves like that are better left to the disco floor. this is supposed to be art, not a strip-tease.â
the weekly entertainment magazine had run a full-page photographâyou mid-spin, the dress slightly riding up causing your thighs to become more prominent than intended, your body caught in the least flattering possible moment. the caption underlined the photo made your stomach turn: âToo Much of a Good Thing?â
your eyes scanned the words over again and again, finding new ways to hurt yourself with the same words, the same language youâd been hearing in one form or another your whole life. eventually you pushed the papers away and got up to make coffee, your hands unsteady as you measured the grounds. you stood at the counter and watched the coffee drip into the pot and forced yourself to not look at the scattered papers left on the table.
the coffee was too hot when you finally took a sip from it. it burned your tongue but you continued to drink it anyway to distract yourself from glancing at the elephant in the room. you stood at the counter, staring at the morning light creeping across the kitchen floor instead.
michael found you there twenty minutes later, still standing as still as possible at the countertop, holding a mug of coffee that had gone completely cold. he didnât ask if you were okay. he just looked at you for a moment, trying to decide how to help, and then he got to moving.
he gathered the sprawled out newspapers firstâfolding them closed without a word slipping from his mouth, moving them to the far end of the counter, completely out of your line of sight. then, he put the kettle on and found your favourite mug, making you tea the way you liked it. when it was ready he carried it to the couch and settled in, looking over at you quietly, patiently.
you followed him, as quiet as a mouse. you curled up into his side and he tucked you in close, one long arm wrapping around your shoulder as his thumb moved in a slow absent rhythm along your elbow. the television murmured some nonsense softly in the bathroom, completely inconsequential to the moment. the warm tea replaced the cold chill of your untouched coffee.
he didnât say anything, and neither did you. but it was somehow the kindest thing he couldâve done in that moment.
âââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââ
the interview had been in the calendar for weeks, long before any of this nonsensical statements about your body started.
it was for one of the serious publicationsâa magazine with a long history of treating artists as worth the effort of a real conversation. theyâd wanted you both, which had been their suggestion, and youâd hesitated. youâd done enough press to know how shared interviews tended to go, how the woman in the room became context for the manâs story regardless of anyoneâs intentions. but the journalist was someone whose work you admired. the timing aligned with your newly released album, and michael had said he wanted to do it with a quietness in his voice that told you there was something underneath it he purposely wasnât telling you yet.
in the car on the way, you watched the city slide past the windowâbuildings and pedestrians turning into blurs with the sharp-sot quality of the afternoon lightâand you promptly said: âyou donât have to bring it up. if it comes up, you know.â
âi know i donât have to,â he quickly answers.
âiâm serious though, michael. i can handle it.â
âi know yâcan handle it.â a pause settled between the two of you, his hands staying steady on the wheel. âthatâs not why iâd say something.â
you looked at him. he was watching the road, his jaw set in a particular way that kept you a bit on edge. he turned and looked at you with a steady expressionâone that didnât ask anything of you or perform anything, just to be yourself.
you turned back to the window.
he hadnât addressed the reviews directly in previous interviews and wasnât going to unless you brought it up, which was something youâd learned about him in the months youâve been dating himâhe never pushed at closed doors, nor did he demand access to the parts of you that werenât ready. but what he did do was notice everything and remembered everything, acting on it in his own time, in his own way. like tea in the morning without being asked, or folding those newspapers out of your sight. placing his hand on your knee with the television on low without any words about whether you were okay, because he already knew and understood that being asked it repeatedly never changed the answer.
you understood the reason for the interview now as you watched the city continue to move past you both.
he was going to say something, no doubt about it.
not because you needed him toâyouâd been handling this alone for years before he arrivedâbut because he needed it to exist somewhere outside of just the two of you. he needed it to be in print, permanent and undeniable for the public to see.
âââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââ
the interview room was a hotel sitting roomâtwo sofas upholstered in something soft and expensive with a low table between them. the afternoon light was pouring through tall windows that overlooked the city, and the journalist was already there when you arrived, notebook in hand, cassette recorder placed on the table between you. she had the particular alert quality of someone who listened for a living and was good at it, who heard not just the words but also noted the spaces between them, which frankly had you a bit nervous.
you settled onto the sofa that was soft beneath you, the fabric smooth against the backs of your thighs. michael sat beside you, close enough that his knee was pressed warm against yours, which he did without any remark.
the first portion moved wellâthe album, the writing process, the tour, the experience of being a new artist playing rooms you'd spent years imagining from the outside. you talked about what it felt like to write a song that was entirely yours and then watch it become something shared with millions of other peopleâhow strange and necessary that transfer was, how you had to let it go a little to let it work, had to release your grip on it and trust that it would find the people who needed it just as much as you needed it to be out there.
then the journalist set her pen flat against her notepadâa deliberate gesture, a shift in the energy of the roomâand said: "i'd like to ask about this week, if you're open to it."
"go ahead," you said with expectancy hinted in your tone.
"the response to the show has been⊠loud," she said carefully, choosing her words with visible precision. "the reviews, the gossip columns, the photographs. how are you doing with it?"
you thought for a moment. not because you didn't have an answer but because you wanted to give the right oneânot the one your publicist would have prepared for you.
"i wore a dress i loved on stage in a room full of people who showed up to listen to me sing my heart out," you said lightly, a grateful chuckle leaving your lips. "and i did my jobâand the show was incredible. i know it was because i was there and i felt it. i felt it in my chest, in the veins of my hands, in the way the room moved with meâŠâ you paused, thinking about your next words, glancing at the slow rotation of the wheels in the cassette recorder. "what happened afterâthe reviews, the columnsâi understand what that was about. it wasn't about the dress. it was about the fact that my body doesn't match a particular expectation and i was visible in a way that made it impossible to ignore or overlook."
you looked at the journalist steadily, held her gaze once you finished your sentence.
"that's an old conversation. and iâm honestly not particularly interested in having it again."
"fair enough," the journalist said, and there was something in her expression that suggested she meant it, that she understood exactly what you were saying and why.
she was about to continue until michael spoke.
he hadn't shifted his positionâknee still against yours, hands loose in his lap, his body still relaxed against the sofaâbut something in him had gathered, like the way air gathers before a stormâyou felt it in the space between you, that particular quality of attention that meant he'd arrived at a thing he intended to say.
"can i add something?" he said.
the journalist looked at him in a short surprise, but then gestured for him to continue. "please."
"i was there," he said. his voice was quiet but clear, no hesitation threaded in it. "i was standin' in the wings for most of the show, which is where i usually end up when she performs, becauseâ"
a small pause with something almost private in it, something just for you even though he was speaking to the room.
"âbecause i find i can't be somewhere else when she's performing. i've tried. it doesn't work. i end up there anyway, like there's a string tied between us 'n it just pulls me there."
the journalist's pen was moving as she noted his words.
"what i saw," michael continued, and his voice had settled into something that felt less like a statement for the record and more like testimony, like bearing witness, "was someone doinâ somethinâ that most people never figure out how to do, which is stand in front of a room full of strangers and make them feel somethinâ they didn't feel before they walked into the room. make them feel something they didn't know they could feel."
he was looking at the journalist but you could feel the weight of what he was saying as though it were directed at you, into you, like he was speaking the words directly into your chest, landing heavily like stones dropping into still water.
"and she did that lookingâ"
a deliberate pause, the kind that meant the word coming was one he'd chosen specifically for this moment, the same word he had silently turning in his mind during the drive on the way here.
"âextraordinary. because she was. because she is."
he announced it without decoration or the performance that crept into a voice when a person was saying something for an audience rather than because it was simply the truth, plain and unadorned. he said it the way he'd said it in the dressing room, like it was just information to himâtrue and plain and not requiring any compliment in return.
"the people who were actually in that room aren't confused about what they saw," he said. "the confusion comes from people who looked at a photograph taken with a specific intent, from a specific angle, by someone who wasn't there, who didn't feel what the audience feltâwhat i felt. it was printed in a paper the next morning by someone with an agenda, which is a completely different thing from actually looking and seeing her in her element."
his knee pressed slightly harder against yours in reassurance. you pressed back.
"i've been seeing how people respond to her since we've been together," he said, "'n what i know is that anyone who was standing where i was standing that nightâin the wings, in the dark, watchingâwasn't thinkinâ about anything except what was happening on that stage. because that's what sheâs capable of doinâ. she makes everything else irrelevant, and she has the rare talent of makinâ the whole world go quiet except for her voice. that's what the press should be talkinâ about."
the room was very quiet now. the afternoon light had shifted slightly, coming through the windows at a different angle, painting everything the same gold as your dress that night. the cassette recorder kept turning.
"she's goinâ to be one of the most important artists of our generation," he said, and his voice had settled into something that felt less like a statement for the record and more like something he simply needed to say while he had the opportunity, while someone was listening and writing it down and recording it for posterity. "i don't think that's a controversial opinion. people will figure it out eventually. 'n she isâ"
a brief pause, his jaw working slightly.
"âgenuinely, remarkably beautiful. 'n i'm aware those two things are separate facts. but for me they're not really separate, because they're both just who she is. they're both just⊠her. the whole thing. 'n anyone who looked at those photographs in the papers and saw something to mock was lookinâ at them wrong. was lookinâ at her wrong. they were missing the entire point, and they fell for the pathetic propaganda of something completely useless."
a beat. the journalist's pen had stopped moving. she was just listening now, the cassette recorder the only witness still working.
"that's all i wanted to add," he said quietly.
the journalist looked at him for a long moment. then at you.
you were studying the table in front of you with considerable focus, your vision slightly blurred. not because you were upsetâthe opposite, which was the problem. you were trying very hard not to cry in front of a journalist with a tape recorder running, which felt like it should be easy but was turning out to be remarkably difficult.
"that's quite a statement," the journalist said.
"it's just what's true," michael said simply. "she doesn't need me to say it. she already said it better than i did, said exactly what needed saying. i justâ"
a pause. his hand found yours on the sofa between you, his fingers lacing through yours with the easy certainty of someone who'd done it a thousand times before.
"i wanted it on record. i wanted there to be a version of it that existed outside of just us saying it to each other at home. wanted it in print where it counts in a way that's bigger than just private."
you looked up at him then. he felt you look and turned, and for a moment it was just the two of you in the roomâthe journalist and the recorder and the afternoon light all going slightly out of focus, the edges of the world softening until there was just his face, his eyes looking at you in the specific way that made you feel seen in a way that didn't hurt like the tabloids did.
"sorry," you said quietly, to him.
which had the second meaning of: thank you, and: i don't know what to do with you yet, but i love you deeply.
"don't be," he said, just as quietly.
the journalist made a sound that might have been the beginning of a question and then appeared to think better of interrupting, which was exactly the right call, which showed the kind of emotional intelligence that made her good at her job.
âââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââ
the car ride home was the full kind of quiet.
not an empty or uncomfortable quiet, but the kind that was actually full of thingsâfull of the interview still sitting in your chest, full of michael's affectionate words still ringing in your ears, full of the particular quality of late afternoon light as it shifted toward evening.
the city moved past in the last of the golden hour and you sat beside each other without filling the silence, which was something you'd noticed about being with michaelâthe silences were never awkward, never empty, they were just another way of being in the same place, another way of communicating without words.
his hand found yours on the seat between you, unhurried and certain, and you turned your palm up and laced your fingers through his and felt the warmth of his skin against yours, the particular weight of his hand that you'd come to recognize in the complete darkness.
"you said you wanted it on record," you said eventually, watching the city slide past the window.
"uh huh." he was smiling.
"why? really."
he looked at the window for a moment, his profile sharp against the evening light. "because things said in private are true," he said slowly, like he was working it out as he spoke, "but they exist only between the people in the room. 'n i wanted there to be a version of it that was somewhere else. somewhere public. somewhere it couldn't be ignored or dismissed orâ"
he stopped. his hand tightened slightly around yours.
"in print," he finished. "it's permanent and it counts in a way that's bigger than just me saying it to you in our kitchen at four in the morning when we both canât sleep; when no one else but the crickets outside are listening." he slipped some humour in his words, but they didnât distract from the tug at your heartstrings from his words.
you held his gaze. the car moved through the city, through the evening light, through the particular quality of air that came just before sunset.
"it already counted," you said.
"i know."
something in his expression shifted, something small and warm, like a light turning on in a distant window.
"i wanted it to count more."
you looked back out the window and watched the buildings slide past, the people on the sidewalks, the whole city moving through its evening. his hand stayed intertwined with yours, warm and solid and real, and you held on, feeling something in your chest ease, some tension you hadn't known you were carrying finally releasing its grip.
âââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââ
the magazine featuring your interview came out four weeks later.
you were at the newsstand on the corner with a lousy disguise during the early morning, the city still waking up around you. youâd walked there alone, wanting this moment to yourself before you shared it with anyone else; scared of whatâs to come.
the paper was right there on the rack, shining with a gloss that indicated how new it was. you pulled it down and paid for it, then walked to the small park right across the street. you sat down on a bench in the morning light and skimmed the pages as you searched for your article.
the journalist had quoted him directly and in full. what you hadnât expected was the photograph beside his lovely words.
it was you, again, mid-performance. the gold dress was shining on your body like mercury, your figure caught perfectly in motionâone of your arms were raised while your head was tilted back, your eyes closed and your mouth open in a smiling vocalâyour body was clearly given over to the sound of your music completely.
it was a very different photograph than the ones that had been in the newspapers weeks prior.
it was the same night, same dress, and the same body. but there was an entirely different intention behind these lens.
in this photograph, you looked like the you you imagine yourself to be. like the version of yourself that only shined to its fullest on stage; the bigger, brighter, more true version than the photos youâve seen of yourself before. the person youâve taken so much time to grow comfortable in. you looked absolutely beautiful, full of power, and you looked exactly like what michael had said you were: extraordinary.
you sat there on that bench for a long time, the magazine open in your lap, the morning light getting stronger around you. people moved pst youâcommuters, joggers, some individuals walking their dogâthe city waking up and advancing forward in its day as you sat there reading michaelâs word in print, official and undeniable.
âsheâs going to be one of the most important artists of our generation,â the magazine noted. âgenuinely, remarkably beautiful.â
you folded the paper with reverence and held it against your chest in a cliche gesture you couldnât bring yourself to be embarrassed about. the smile stretching across your face follows you home, burning bright enough to rival the golden wash of the sun beaming on your face.
michael was in the kitchen when you got back, pouring himself a cup of coffee. he was still in his pajama pants and old t-shirt; merch from his jacksonâs days; and his curls were sticking up in every direction from sleep. at the sound of the front door, he glanced up and his eyes immediately find the magazine in your hands. the moment he realizes what it is, something in his expression melts and the corners of his mouth curl into a gentle, knowing smile.
âyeah?â he asked, quietly.
you meet his eyes finally, unable to stop the grin on your face.
âyeah.â
you handed him the magazine and watched his face contort as he looked at the photograph and read the quotesâhis own words reflecting back at him in the print. his eyes softened even more when he observed the photograph of youâthe particular softness that was preserved only for looking at you.
âthatâs what i saw,â he murmured, pointing at the photograph of your figure in movement.
he dropped the magazine onto the counter beside his coffee and his hand came up to your face, his soft thumb brushing across your cheekbone. you leaned into his touch without thinking.
âcâmere,â he said, pulling you into the warmth of his strong but lean arms, reveling in the particular safety of early morning when the world was still recovering from the day before.
âi love you,â you said into his chest, listening to the soothing beat of his heart.
his hand tightened in your hair. âi know,â he breathed. âi love you too, mama.â
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first off i love love love your stories but, what if you do a story where reader and michael are dating or married or whatever and michael is teaching her some of his dance moves and stuff. it could be like fluff/angst because he gets really touchy âguidingâ her on what to do
Tender Moments
Michael Jackson x Black! Fem Reader
Word Count: 561
Summary: Michael tries to teach you some of his dance moves on a late night
Tags: Fluff, fluff and more fluff, you and Michael being the happy couple you are, Michael cracking quick jokes
a/n: I got more thing I want to release today than I'm locking in and completing my ongoing series
A nice âyou cameâ âyou calledâ idea is sitting heavy on my chest right now. Definitely gonna start writing it asap đ«¶đ»

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escapism
synopsis: two years after he broke your heart and married someone else, you finally break your silence. you shatter his world on live television. now, in a private vip booth you make him crawl and beg for an encore.
themes: HIStory era! michael x famous singer! reader, ex boyfriend, angsty michael, he hides his feelings for someone else, breaks your heart, 1995 vmaâs, make your come back, michael begs.
note: this is inspired by escapism by raye!! listen along as you read!!
The cameras adored you before you even admitted you were together. To the media, you werenât just a couple; you were a cultural phenomenon. Every magazine printed the exact same bold headline across glossy covers: The King and Queen of Pop. The impossible couple. The unstoppable couple. The forever couple.
That reality felt largest on the nights you shared the stage. Stepping off the platform after a grueling two-hour set, sweat still glistening under the stadium lights, your chest heaving after another flawless performance. Before your manager could even hand you a towel, Michael materialized from the shadows backstage.
âYou were incredible,â he whispered, his voice a breathless rush as he wrapped his arms around your waist, pulling your back flush against his chest.
âYou say that every night,â you teased, leaning back into his warmth.
ââCause itâs true every night, spread the word.â He kissed your temple, his eyelashes brushing your skin as the blinding pop of paparazzi flashes caught the silhouette of the embrace through the heavy velvet curtains. The next morning, the world woke up to the same image plastered across every major newspaper: KING AND QUEEN OF POP RULE THE WORLD.
Those public triumphs were born in the quiet spaces no one else saw. A year prior, Michael had been sitting cross-legged on the hardwood floor of the Neverland library, helping you scratch out lyrics on a crumpled legal pad while Bubbles wandered through the room, occasionally swipe-grabbing pens off the coffee table.
âNo,â Michael had laughed, a high, musical sound that filled the room. âNo, no, hold on. That line needs to hit harder. Donât cheat yourself. Itâs too soft for what youâre trying to say.â
âYou think everything needs to hit harder,â you grumbled, chewing on the cap of your pen. âSometimes a whisper works, Michael.â
âBecause youâre capable of a roar!â he said, his playful demeanor instantly shifting into something intensely serious. He leaned forward, his dark eyes locking onto yours with absolute sincerity. âI mean it. I believe youâre the greatest artist of our generation. You have to show them that.â
Your cheeks flushed, a warm heat spreading down your neck. He smiled, that soft, dimpled expression that belonged only to you, far away from the stage lights. âAnd one day,â he murmured, reaching out to tuck a stray lock of hair behind your ear, âtheyâll realize I wasnât exaggerating. Just wait.â
The world seemed to agree, turning every public appearance into an interrogation about your future. By the time the 1992 MTV Awards rolled around, the red carpet was a chaotic sea of screaming fans and blinding white flashes. Hand in hand, you and Michael moved through the press line like royalty until a bold interviewer thrust a microphone toward him.
âMichael, the rumors are flying! Do you think wedding bells are next for the King and Queen?â
Michael laughed shyly, burying his face slightly in your shoulder to hide his burning cheeks. âOh, gosh⊠I donât really discuss my private life, you know that..â
The interviewer pushed, sensing a headline. âBut sheâs the one? Come on, Michael, give us something.â
Michael stopped walking. He looked over at you, the chaotic roar of the red carpet seemingly fading into background noise. His eyes softened into something so deeply tender it made the breath catch in your throat. âI think sheâs⊠very special. More than special.â
The world exploded, and with that explosion came the vicious teeth of the industry. Yet, he defended you constantly. He was your fiercest protector, a barrier between you and the gossip. When executives questioned your risky artistic choices, Michael would slam his hand on the boardroom table and tell them, âThey donât understand her. Let her create. She knows exactly what sheâs doing.â When gossip columns claimed your sudden success had made you difficult on set, he snapped at reporters, âTheyâve never met her. She is the kindest soul in this business.â And when a prominent reporter sleazily suggested that your chart-topping success was merely a byproduct of dating the most famous man on earth, Michaelâs polite smile vanished. The air in the room turned to ice.
âNo,â Michael said, his voice dropping to a terrifyingly cold, razor-sharp register, staring the reporter down until the man visibly fidgeted. âSheâs successful because sheâs extraordinary. Donât ever confuse her brilliance with my presence. She commands the stage all on her own.â
You loved him for that. You worshipped him for it. He always stood between you and the world, until the day the storm inside Neverland grew louder than the noise outside.
It started on a night when the rain was battering violently against the panoramic windows of the sunroom. âYou cancelled another dinner,â you said, your voice trembling with a toxic mix of exhaustion and hurt. âThatâs the third time this week, Michael. We live in the same house and I have to schedule a meeting to see you.â
Michael was pacing, his boots clicking sharply against the floor. He looked frayed, his curls damp with sweat, his leather jacket thrown carelessly over a chair. âI was recording! I told you, the tracks aren't blending well, the mixing is all wrong. Iâm running out of time, I have people breathing down my neck!â
âI was recording too! We share a studio calendar, Michael, I know when you left the booth. You were gone by four.â
âYou donât understand the pressure Iâm under!â he suddenly shouted, his voice cracking, pitching high into that raw, strained register he only used when he was completely unraveling. He spun around to face you, eyes wide and frantic. âThe labels, the press, the tour prep, everyone wants a piece of me! Everyone is draining me! I donât need this from you too!â
You laughed, a bitter, hollow sound that cut through the room. âOh, don't give me that. Don't play the martyr with me. Don't make me out to be the villain just because I want my boyfriend back.â
Michael stopped pacing. He took a deep breath, rubbing his temples aggressively, his fingers burying into his hair. âIâm exhausted,â he pleaded, his voice dropping to a broken whisper. âI am so, so exhausted. Please, just let it rest tonight.â
âSo am I,â you whispered, the anger giving way to a devastating grief. âIt means youâre disappearing. Youâre right here, and youâre entirely gone.â
The silence that followed was suffocating. Michael looked down at his hands, his voice barely audible. âIâm trying. I swear Iâm trying.â
âNo,â you snapped, the truth ripping out of you. âNo, youâre pretending.â
The distance only grew, mutating into a toxic paranoia over the weeks that followed. The breaking point arrived in the main house when a phone began ringing on the antique side table. Michael, who had been sitting on the sofa, practically leaped across the room to grab it. The moment he saw the caller ID, his body went completely rigid. He didn't answer it there; he turned on his heel toward the hallway.
âWho keeps calling?â you demanded, standing up.
Michael froze at the threshold of the room. He didn't turn around. âWhat? Itâs nobody. Just the office.â
âEvery time that phone rings, you leave the room. You look like youâve seen a ghost, and then you vanish into the office for an hour. Who is it? Is it a woman?â
His jaw tightened so hard you could see the muscle flexing in his cheek as he finally turned to face you. His eyes were dark, guarded, reflecting a side of him he usually kept reserved for his enemies. âItâs business. Don't do this. I said itâs business, leave it alone.â
âBullshit, Michael! Don't lie to me!â You folded your arms, your heart hammering against your ribs. The suspicion that had been rotting in your gut for weeks finally formed into a name you had seen pop up in the logs. âIs it Lisa? Is she the one calling you at midnight?â
Michaelâs face changed. It was subtle slight widening of his eyes, a momentary parting of his lips, a sudden drainage of color from his face. But then he recovered, his expression hardening into defensive anger. âNo! No, itâs not! Why are you doing this? Youâre making up stories in your head!â
âYou donât trust me,â Michael groaned later that same night, throwing his hands in the air as he paced the length of the bedroom.
He was sweating now, the nerves rolling off him in waves. He looked cornered, defensive, like a man desperately trying to protect a secret that was already bleeding through his fingers. âYouâve become so suspicious of everything I do! I canât even have a private conversation without you treating me like a criminal!â
âShould I trust you?â you yelled back, tears finally stinging your eyes. âYouâve become a stranger to me, Michael! You look at me like Iâm an obligation, like you're just waiting for me to leave the room!â
âYou make everything into a crisis!â he yelled, his voice cracking violently. He gripped the edge of a dresser, his knuckles turning white. âYouâre projecting your own insecurities onto me! I canât even breathe in my own house without you analysing it! There is nothing going on! I told you, sheâs just a friend, we are talking about a project!â
âBecause there IS something!â you screamed, your voice breaking.
âThere isnât! I swear to you, there isn't!â Michael roared back, his chest heaving, his face contorted in a mask of defensive fury.
âThen look me in the eyes,â you challenged, stepping directly into his space, forcing him to face you. Your voice dropped to a deadly, trembling whisper. âLook me in the eyes right now and tell me thereâs absolutely nothing between you and Lisa Marie Presley. Tell me you don't feel anything for her.â
Michael opened his mouth to speak. To repeat the denial. To yell at you again.
But he couldnât.
He looked at you, and the lie died in his throat. He choked on it. His gaze broke, his eyes darting frantically to the floor, his breathing shallow and ragged. That hesitation, that agonizing, five-second silence, shattered something inside you that could never be pieced back together.
The quiet that followed that fight was the prelude to the end. One evening, you drove back through the heavy wrought-iron gates of Neverland after a grueling fourteen-hour session at the recording studio. You walked into the main lounge and stopped. Michael was sitting entirely alone on the edge of the large sofa. The television wasnât on. There was no music playing. He looked smaller than usual, his head bowed, his hands clasped so tightly between his knees.
He looked up when the door clicked shut. âOh⊠hi. Youâre back.â
ââŠHi?â The air in the room was thick with impending doom.
He stood up slowly, his movements stiff, almost robotic. âCan⊠can we sit down for a minute? Please?â
You frowned, dropping your keys onto the side table. âWhat the heck is going on, Michael? Just tell me.â
He gestured to the sofa, his eyes swimming with a desperate, agonising anxiety. He looked physically ill. You sat down, the silence stretching for a minute. Two minutes.
ââŠMichael?â you whispered, a cold dread pooling in your chest.
He stared intently at the pattern of the carpet. âIâve been thinking a lot⊠about us. About everything.â Your stomach dropped into a bottomless pit. âIâŠâ Another agonizing pause. Michael swallowed hard, his throat bobbing. ââŠyou know youâre my best friend. Youâre the closest person to me.â
âNo.â
He blinked, finally cutting his eyes to you. âWhat?â
âDonât start with that,â you said, your voice deadpan, completely hollow. âDonât do the 'best friend' speech. If you're going to break my heart, just do it.â
Silence. Michaelâs lower lip began to tremble, a deep, painful angst taking over his features. He looked like he was suffocating under the weight of his own words. âIâll always care about you. No matter what happens, I will.â
Your breathing quickened, panicking. âNo. Stop it.â
âI justâŠâ
âNo!â
âI donât know how to say this,â he choked out, a single tear finally escaping and tracking down his pale cheek.
âThen donât say it.â
He closed his eyes, took a ragged breath, and finally spoke the words very quietly. Very clearly. âI donât love you anymore.â
Everything stopped. The wind outside. The ticking of the grandfather clock. The very beating of your heart.
ââŠWhat?â you whispered.
He kept his eyes glued to the floor, his voice shaking but resolute. âI donât love you anymore. Iâm sorry.â
âWhat the fuck?â
Michaelâs shoulders flinched violently at the profanity, a soft gasp escaping him as he curled further into himself.
âNo,â you laughed, a broken, hysterical, confused sound that ripped from your throat. âNo⊠no⊠why? Michael, look at me! Why?â
Nothing. He just sat there, taking the blows of your words, his head bowed in absolute shame.
âMichael!â you screamed.
Nothing.
âWHY?â
He couldn't answer. Not a single word. He couldn't give you a reason because the reason was a betrayal he didn't have the courage to voice. You stood up so quickly your knees slammed into the coffee table, rattling the crystal coasters. âOh my God⊠Oh my God.â
He finally looked up at you. His face was entirely streaked with tears, his eyes red-rimmed and brimming with a profound, heavy misery. He looked broken, but he wasn't changing his mind.
You pointed a shaking finger at him. âItâs her. You lied to me. Itâs her, isnât it?â
Silence.
âItâs her, damn it!â
His lips trembled violently. He looked like he wanted to scream, wanted to beg for forgiveness, but he remained completely paralyzed. âLisa.â
He looked back down at the carpet. He didnât deny it this time. He didnât defend himself. He didnât even say your name to comfort you.
You let out a ragged laugh that dissolved into a heavy, devastating sob. âI knew it. I knew it all along.â
âIâm sorry,â he whispered, his voice cracking completely, a pathetic, broken sound. âI didnât mean for it to happen, I swear I didnâtâŠâ
âYou let me think I was crazy!â you shrieked, the betrayal burning through your veins. âYou made me feel like I was insane! You stood in this room and lied straight to my face!â
âI never wanted to hurt youââ Michael cried out, standing up, reaching a frantic hand out toward you. âPlease, you have to understand, I was so confusedââ
âYou LOVED HER!â
âIâŠâ
âYou loved her while you were sleeping in my bed! You loved her while you were looking me in the face!â
He couldnât answer. He just stood there, tears pouring down his face, his chest heaving under the weight of his own guilt. That silence was your final answer. You grabbed your handbag from the chair. Michael took a frantic step forward. âPlease⊠don't leave like this.â
âNo.â
âCan we justâcan we please talk tomorrow? When we're both calm?â
âNo!â Tears finally spilled freely down your cheeks, hot and blinding. You looked at the man you had built your life around, the man you thought was your forever. âI chose you,â your voice cracked, breaking into pieces. âEvery⊠single⊠time. No matter what they said about you, I chose you.â
Michael was crying openly now, big, heavy sobs shaking his entire frame. He covered his face with his hands, the picture of absolute, unadulterated angst. âI know,â he wept into his palms. âI know you did.â
âAnd you couldnât even look me in the eyes.â
You turned and walked straight to the grand front doors. He didnât stop you. He didnât chase you down the driveway. He didnât fight for you. He just stayed in the center of that massive, empty room, weeping into the silence. The heavy oak door clicked shut behind you. You never returned to Neverland.
The split absolutely broke Hollywood. Every entertainment news show ran 24-hour coverage, and fans chose sides across global forums. The King and Queen of Pop were dead. And then, you simply vanished. No press releases. No promotional singles. You pulled the plug on your public life entirely. For two long years, the music industry was a ghost town, wondering where its Queen had gone, even as Michael moved on publicly, marrying Lisa Marie Presley under a storm of relentless headlines questioning if their fairytale was already over.
The answer came at the Video Music Awards in 1995. Michael sat in the front row of the packed arena, Lisa sitting stiffly beside him. Their smiles for the flashing cameras looked entirely rehearsed, brittle and hollow. Michael looked exhausted, the spark missing from his eyes, his mind clearly a million miles away from the awards ceremony until the presenter walked up to the podium with a knowing smile.
âAnd now, ladies and gentlemen⊠a surprise performance.â
The arena lights died instantly. Complete, pitch-black darkness enveloped the venue. Confused murmurs broke out across the thousands of celebrities and fans. Then, a massive, heavy bass beat boomed through the stadium speakers. A slow, deliberate inhale echoed through the microphone, sending a collective chill down the audience's spine. From somewhere hidden deep in the dark stage, a voice purredâŠ
âSleazinâ and teasinâ, Iâm sittinâ on himâŠâ
Gasps erupted like wildfire across the arena. Michaelâs head snapped toward the stage so fast he nearly strained his neck. His entire body went completely, terrifyingly rigid. His breath caught in his throat. No⊠it couldnât be.
The voice continued, oozing with an effortless, dangerous confidence.
âAll of my diamonds are drippinâ on himâŠâ
Michael stopped breathing entirely. He knew that voice. He had spent years helping train that voice. He had fallen asleep to that voice. He would know it in the middle of a warzone.
âI met him at the bar, it was twelve or somethinââŠâ
Lisa looked over at him, her brow furrowing as she noticed his sudden, deathly pallor. ââŠMichael?â she whispered, reaching for his hand. He didnât answer. He couldnât. His hand was trembling.
âI ordered two more wines âcause tonight I want himâŠâ
The audience was screaming now, a deafening, hysterical roar as the realization swept through the crowd. A single, blinding white spotlight burst to life on the center stage.
You stepped forward, flanking a line of synchronized dancers. You looked breathtaking. A skin-tight, floor-length black dress that fit like a second skin, towering heels, your hair cascading over one shoulder in perfect waves. The diamonds dripping from your neck and wrists caught every single flash of the media pit. The arena exploded.
Michael couldnât move. He sat frozen in his seat, a man watching his past life return to haunt him in full high-definition glory. His dark eyes found yours instantly across the sea of thousands of screaming faces. And across the distance, you found him too. Neither of you looked away. The music suddenly softened, dropping to a sultry, rhythmic pulse. You lifted the microphone to your lips, a faint, dangerous smile touching your face. You stared directly into Michaelâs soul, and you sang to him.
âA little context if you care to listenâŠâ
Michael swallowed hard, his throat dry, a look of sheer, agonizing vulnerability passing over his features.
âI find myself in a shit positionâŠâ
His jaw tightened, a muscle leaping in his cheek as the lyrics began to register. Next to him, Lisa went entirely stiff.
âThe man that I love sat me down last night⊠and told me that itâs over.â
The crowd collectively gasped, a massive wave of realization washing over the stadium. This wasnât just a comeback performance. This was a public execution. Your eyes never left his as you delivered the final, devastating blow of the verse, your voice ringing out crystal clear and mocking over the microphone.
âDumb decision.â
The shift into the chorus was a physical explosion, a seismic shockwave that rattled the steel beams of the arena. The heavy, syncopated bass line dropped like a hammer, the speakers vibrating so violently that the floorboards beneath the front row trembled. You tore your gaze away from Michael, severing the heavy thread of tension between you, and did exactly what you were born to do take absolute, unapologetic ownership of the room.
You strutted down the long catwalk, every step calculated, dangerous, and dripping with an untouchable, lethal confidence. The two years of agonising silence, of hiding away and nursing a shattered spirit, evaporated under the heat of ten thousand stage lights. You were fully, blindingly alive, soaking in the electric thrill of the crowd, riding the high of a woman who had survived the worst of the wreckage and lived to flaunt it.
Your voice cut through the stadium, raw and laced with a venomous, triumphant joy as you belted the melody.
âJust a heartbroke bitch, high heels, six inch, in the back of the night club sippinâ champagne!â
The arena went completely feral. The sound of thousands of people screaming the lyrics back at you was deafening, a wall of noise that fueled the fire in your chest. You danced down the stage, hips swaying with a hypnotic, predatory grace, your movements fluid yet violently sharp as the dancers flanked you in flawless, tight synchronisation. You spun on a dime, catching the main cameraâs lens with a wicked, teasing glint in your eyes before delivering the next emotional shrapnel.
âDrunk calls, drunk texts, drunk tears, drunk sex, I was lookinâ for a man who was on the same page!â
Down in the front row, the air left Michaelâs lungs. It felt like a physical blow to the sternum. His eyes widened, his chest locking up as the words hit him like a bucket of ice water. He knew exactly what that line was about.
It had happened precisely five weeks after you packed your bags and walked out of the Neverland gates. The initial wall of his defensive anger had finally crumbled, leaving behind a hollow, terrifying reality. Alone in the sprawling master bedroom, suffocated by the quiet and fueled by a rare, desperate fog, Michael had unraveled completely. He had spent that entire night hunched over his phone in the dark, his hands shaking as he sent you a relentless barrage of frantic, pleading texts. Messages typed through a blur of tears, full of embarrassing typos and raw, naked desperation, begging you to just answer him, to come back, to tell him what he needed to do to fix it. You had never replied. You had left him floating in that silence. And now, he was forced to sit in a room full of the most powerful people in his industry, under the glaring scrutiny of rolling television cameras, while you broadcasted his private breakdown to the entire world. His hand gripped the armrest of his chair so tightly the leather groaned.
You didn't give him an ounce of pity. You were already moving, launching into the next complex choreography block, completely mesmerising the venue. You dropped low to the stage floor, the skin-tight black dress catching the moody purple and crimson hues of the stage lights, before rising up with an effortless, gravity-defying power to deliver the melodic, sweeping pre-chorus. You locked eyes with him once again, your voice soaring, thick with a beautiful, devastating irony.
âCause I donât wanna feel how I did last night, I donât wanna feel how I did last nightâŠâ
Michaelâs chest heaved, his breathing shallow and ragged. He looked utterly paralysed, his gaze pinned to yours like a man facing a firing squad. Every single muscle in his jaw was flexing, a visible pulse jumping in his cheek as he fought with everything in him to keep his face a mask of stoic composure for the broadcast. But the sheer, unadulterated angst in his eyes was blinding. He could feel the heavy, suffocating weight of the room shifting; he could hear the subtle whispers as the people around him began looking between him, Lisa, and the stage, effortlessly putting the pieces of the puzzle together.
Next to him, Lisa pulled her hand away from his entirely, her posture turning to solid stone as she stared straight ahead, refusing to look at him.
You transitioned seamlessly into the next verse, your tone dropping into a conversational, biting rhythm as you moved right to the absolute edge of the stage, towering directly above where his seat was positioned.
âLast night really was the cherry on the cake, been some dark days lately and Iâm finding it cripplinââŠâ
Michaelâs breath hitched, a faint, fractured gasp escaping his lips. He leaned forward just a fraction of an inch, his eyes burning with a volatile mixture of heartbreak, guilt, and an intense, suffocating longing. Hearing you publicly acknowledge the dark days was tearing him apart in real time. He looked like he wanted to jump out of his seat, like he wanted to scream, his eyes begging you for a shred of mercy you had no intention of giving.
You gave him a look that was pure, unfiltered heat and malice, leaning over the stage monitor as you delivered the final lines of the verse straight into his face.
âExcuse my state, Iâm as high as your hopes that youâll make it to my bed, get me hot and sizzling!â
The beat exploded again, throwing you right into a massive, high-energy dance break. The choreography was relentless, sharp, and undeniably powerful declaration that you were back, completely unbroken, and dominant in your element. The arena erupted into a roaring sea of cheers, the applause rising like a physical wall of sound as you hit every single beat with flawless, devastating precision.
As the music began to decelerate, winding down into a sparse, echoing rhythm, the dancers melted away into the shadows behind you. A single, dramatic spotlight trapped you in its beam, painting you in stark, sharp contrast against the darkness. The track slowed to a crawl, leaving your voice bare, vulnerable, and completely commanding.
âLipstick smudged like modern art, I donât know where the fuck I am or whoâs drivinâ in the fuckinâ carâŠâ
Michael watched you through a thick, agonizing blur of unshed tears, completely captivated, utterly unable to look away even if the world depended on it. He looked like a man drowning in plain sight, his throat bobbing heavily as he swallowed down the massive lump forming there. The absolute, raw honesty of the lyrics was stripping away every single ounce of his carefully built public armor.
You took a slow, deliberate step forward, your towering heels clicking sharply against the stage right at the absolute edge of the catwalk, looking straight down into his ruined expression as the song drew to its absolute close.
âSpilling secrets to the stranger in my bed, I remember nothing, so thereâs nothing to regretâŠâ
You paused, letting the heavy, breathless silence hang in the air for a fraction of a second, before delivering the final, echoing line:
ââŠother than this four-four kick drum poundinâ in my head.â
The final electronic beat thudded through the massive speakers and cut out entirely, leaving a vacuum of pure tension. You stood perfectly still, bathed in the blinding white light, your chest rising and falling heavily from the exertion. Down in the front row, Michael was completely breathless, his eyes locked onto yours, his heart hammering against his ribs in a painful, chaotic rhythm. He looked entirely wrecked, utterly exposed, his lips parted slightly as he stared up at you in a state of tragic, hopeless defeat.
You caught his shattered gaze, held it for one final, devastating second, and let a slow, triumphant smirk spread across your lips.
The stage lights slammed into pitch black, and the entire arena went completely, utterly wild.
The suffocating heat of the stadium lights gave way later that night to the exclusive, low-lit velvet luxury of the official VMA after-party. You didnât run backstage, and you didn't hide. Instead, you glided into the venue like a conquering monarch, peacefully letting the compliments slide off your shoulders as you retreated to your private, heavily guarded VIP booth. The bass from the club speakers thudded softly through the thick curtains, a dull reminder of the storm you had just unleashed on live television.
You stood near the back of the dimly lit booth, looking out through the smoked glass at the crowded dance floor. You swirled a glass of champagne in your hand, watching the bubbles rise, entirely at peace with the chaos you'd left in your wake.
Then, the heavy velvet curtain behind you rustled. The security guard outside didn't make a sound because there was only one person in the world who could bypass your detail with a single look.
The air in the small booth shifted instantly. A familiar, clean scent of expensive cologne and ozone cut through the musk of the club, making the hairs on the back of your neck stand up. You didn't turn around. You kept your back to the room, your fingers tightening just a fraction around the stem of your champagne flute.
Silence stretched.
The intruder didn't storm in. There was no shouting, no dramatic scene. This was someone who fiercely guarded their privacy, who loathed airing dirty laundry in public spaces, keeping their composure tightly coiled.
âThat was quite a performance,â a voice murmured from the shadows behind you.
It was low, velvety, and laced with a dangerous, quiet gravity. It was a voice used behind closed doors when wanting absolute control.
A slow, deliberate smirk spread across your lips. You kept your back to him, facing the glass, letting him look at the sharp silhouette of your shoulders. âI learned from the best.â
A heavy pause. You could hear the faint rustle of a jacket as he moved a step closer, though he kept a respectful, agonizing distance. âThe lyrics,â the voice said softly, dropping an octave, carrying a raw, jagged edge of hidden angst that couldn't quite be masked. âThe text messages. You told the whole world.â
âI told the truth,â you replied smoothly, taking a slow sip of your champagne. âI thought you loved a good story.â
âNot when it's mine,â he countered. He took another step, his shadow falling over yours against the glass. You could feel the heat radiating off his body, thick with two years of buried longing and unspoken regrets. âAnd certainly not when it's incomplete.â
Your smirk widened slightly, though your heart hammered against your ribs. âOh? Did I miss a verse?â
âYou forgot the part where I never stopped looking for you,â Michael whispered, his voice finally thick, cracking just enough to let the agony bleed through the armor. âYou forgot the part where I still wake up in the middle of the night reaching for someone who isn't there.â
The words hung in the dim air of the booth, heavy and toxic with unresolved history. You finally turned around, slowly, deliberately, bringing yourself face-to-face with him.
Michael stood under the dim amber light of the booth his shadowing eyes that were dark, intense, and absolutely swimming with unadulterated heartbreak.
He looked proper, perfectly put together on the outside, but his bottom lip trembled slightly. The sheer, desperate love he had tried to bury under a massive public marriage was burning right on the surface, practically begging you to touch it.
You looked him up and down, your face a mask of beautiful, cruel indifference. You stepped closer, tilting your head up until you were inches from his face, your eyes locking onto his.
âThe song is already a hit, Michael,â you whispered, your voice a teasing, lethal purr. You reached out, your manicured finger tracing a slow, agonising line down the silver trim of his jacket, right over his racing heart, before gently tapping the rim of your champagne glass against his button. You leaned in closer, your lips almost brushing his ear as you exhaled, âBut don't worry. If you play your cards right tonight... I might let you help me write the encore.â
Before he could capture your hand, before his fingers could close around your waist to keep you from slipping away, you glided past him. Your dress fluttered against his leg like a whisper as you vanished through the velvet curtains and into the flashing lights of the club.
Michael stayed frozen in the dark booth, staring at the empty space youâd left behind, his chest heaving as your perfume lingered in the air, mocking him. The Queen was back. And you were going to make him crawl for it.
yup, highest grossing biopic of all time.
17 years later heâs still making history.
after everythingâthe racism, prejudices, tabloids, endless attempts to tear him downâa black man who endured more scrutiny and cruelty than anyone ever should has a legacy that continues to speak for itself.
you made it to july, my love âïž