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”I saw that you were almost out of shampoo...” - Yahya x Black Reader - https://lemmewritesomeish.tumblr.com/post/660911920475406336/74-i-saw-that-you-were-almost-out-of-shampoo-so
Kofi Siriboe
K.T.S.E. Part 1 - Kofi Siriboe x Black Reader
K.T.S.E. Part 2 - Kofi Siriboe x Black Reader
Odell Beckham Jr.
Odell x Niara (Prompts)
“I loved you. i still do. i should have told you long ago, before i let you slip away.”
“I don’t want another love if he won’t love me the way you do, if he won’t make me feel the things you do. and he won’t.”
“My lipgloss is all over your lips.”
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Summary: Erik doesn’t do holidays. Not the lights, not the music, and definitely not the gatherings. But when an old friend invites him to spend the holidays with his family in Oakland, something makes him say yes.
Warnings: Slow-burn erotic tension/ Age-gap dynamics (consensual, emotionally complex)/Explicit sexual content/Oral sex (m+f)/Face-sitting/Bratty sub behavior/Dominance & praise kink (includes “good girl,” being told what to do)/Hair pulling, face holding, choking (consensual, requested)/Public teasing / risk play (in shared spaces)/Spit play/Mirror sex/Sensory play (blindfolds, textures)/Mutual masturbation / voyeuristic elements/Possessive energy/guided submission/Adult language & graphic detail
Part One
The day before Christmas Eve — Oakland, California
The air outside still held that sharp winter bite, but as soon as Erik stepped onto the porch, he could smell it.
Cinnamon. Fried something. Brown sugar. Black home.
The door was wrapped in thick garland and gold ribbon. White lights lined the windows. Somewhere inside, people were laughing warm and loose with the kind of joy he hadn’t been around in years. The one that reminded you of the holidays.
He lifted a fist and knocked twice. A second later, the door swung open.
“Ayeeee! Nigga, you made it!” Deuce grinned wide, his white tooth grin catching the light, “I was just tellin’ them you wasn’t gonna show.”
Erik smirked, dragging his duffle up the last step, “I said I would.”
Deuce clapped him in tight, a brother’s hug that ended with a half-slap to his back, “Still a ghost though. We gon’ work on that.”
Inside, the house was full of heat, voices, the clatter of pots in the kitchen, the smell of baked mac and yams. Somewhere, a Frankie Beverly vinyl was playing low under the noise. The walls were warm taupe, the lights soft and golden. Decorated to feel lived in, not staged. A wreath hung above the mantle. There was a Christmas tree in the far corner, real pine. Full. Not a single bare spot. Gift-wrapped boxes already stacked beneath.
It was too much. Too cozy. Erik’s shoulders rolled slightly under his Northface coat.
“C’mon, lemme show you the dungeon,” Deuce said with a grin.
He led him down a narrow staircase into a finished basement. It was clean, masculine, probably Marlon’s old man cave. There was a large sectional, a mounted TV, a bar cart in the corner, and a guest room with its own bathroom.
“Not the Ritz,” Deuce said, “but it’s got a shower, and it’s yours.”
Erik dropped his bag at the foot of the bed, “It’s solid.”
“You want a drink? Something to eat?”
“Nah. Lemme get settled first.”
Deuce gave a nod, already halfway back upstairs, “We upstairs if you need anything.”
And then he was alone.
Erik sat on the edge of the bed for a second, elbows on knees. The basement was quiet, dim, and cool, a nice change from the warmth upstairs pressing at him like a memory he didn’t ask for. A warmth that read: family, closeness, comfort, familiarity.
He took his time.
Stripped down. Stepped into the shower and let the heat pull tension from his muscles. Washed off the travel, the quiet of the flight, the months of grit behind his eyes. When he came out, he threw on a clean black tee and joggers. Rolled his neck once. Then made his way back upstairs.
That’s when he saw her.
She stood in the kitchen, angled sideways at the sink, pouring something into a glass Pyrex dish. The first thing Erik saw was curve—hips hugged in a soft plum-colored wrap dress. Bare shoulders. Gold hoop earrings swinging gently as she moved. Her curls were voluminous, thick, like a crown. And when she turned…
Hazel eyes.
Warm and unreadable, locked on him before she even said a word.
Deuce called from across the room, “Yo Ma, this my boy I was tellin’ you about. Erik.”
She didn’t smile. Not right away. She gave him a long look. Up. Down. Repeat. Took him in like he was something interesting she hadn’t expected. Like her curiosity peeked.
Then, “So you’re the one my son been braggin’ about.”
Her voice was low and smooth. Smoky. Sultry.
Erik nodded once, “Yes ma’am.”
That made her smirk. Just a little, “You don’t look like you do holidays.”
“I don’t.”
“Well,” she said, brushing her hands dry on a towel, “you in my house now. You gon’ eat, drink, and speak when spoken to. That clear?”
A pause.
Erik’s mouth twitched, “Yes ma’am.”
“Good.” She walked past him, close enough to brush his shoulder with hers, the scent of vanilla and wood clinging to the air behind her.
“Yo Zay!” Deuce shouted, “Come meet my boy!”
And then she appeared—Zaya, steps light, locs pulled half-up, half-down, with flyaways and a nose hoop that glittered when she smiled. She had on high-waisted sweats and a cropped tee that stopped just short of her waist beads. Her skin glowed.
She slid into the kitchen and leaned against the fridge, licking her lips, “Damn.” she said, looking Erik up and down, “You fine as hell.”
“Zaya—” Celeste warned from the other side of the room.
“What?” Zaya popped a spoon with leftover batter from her mouth, “I can look.”
Erik said nothing. Just looked at her, head slightly tilted, heat curling behind his eyes.
Deuce was already halfway into a story about their time overseas, oblivious.
And Erik…he just stood there in the middle of it all. This warm, chaotic, scented, glittering house feeling like he’d just walked into something he wasn’t gonna walk out of clean.
Deuce handed Erik a glass without asking. Neat. Dark. Strong. The type of drink that kicked the back of your throat before it kissed it. Erik sipped and let the burn bloom, grateful for the silence between the two of them. In the corner, the tree blinked gold and green. The scent of baked ham and sweet potatoes curled through the air vents like a living thing, softening everything it touched.
They were seated in the den now, just off the kitchen, where the lights were lower and the conversation didn’t have to compete with laughter. Deuce was reclined on the arm of a leather chair while Erik sat low and heavy on the sofa, legs stretched wide, glass balanced in one palm. He was beginning to settle, that thick restlessness in his chest quieting by inches. Deuce was catching him up on his cousin’s divorce drama when another man entered the room.
Stocky frame. Salt-and-pepper beard trimmed clean. Dark slacks, a collared shirt rolled to the elbows. His presence filled the doorway like he built the damn house. Marlon Hawkins.
“Y’all drinkin’ without me?” His voice was deeper than Deuce’s and rougher, like it had run through sandpaper.
Deuce stood and gave his stepfather a dap, “We ain’t startin’ nothin’ serious.”
Erik rose and nodded, “Erik.”
Marlon walked over and offered a hand. Firm grip. No nonsense, “Marlon. Appreciate you comin’ through, son. My boy don’t bring many people around. Especially not folks from the Teams.”
Erik gave a small smile, “He said y’all wouldn’t feed me if I didn’t show.”
Marlon laughed from the belly, “That sounds about right.”
The three of them talked for a while. Drinks in hand. The fire crackling low behind them. Marlon asked about the mission rotation, what it was like running ops in Bahrain, how the new administration was cutting defense contracts like butter. Deuce got a little looser with the bourbon, dropping wild stories from their second deployment. The kind that ended in bruises and stolen motorcycles.
Erik stayed quiet most of the time, not out of shyness but instinct. He preferred to listen. To absorb. But his eyes kept straying—again and again—toward the kitchen.
That’s where Celeste stood, hips leaned into the counter, one hand on a wine glass, the other gently stirring a sauce pot. Her back was to him, that plum dress still clinging to her like it had been sewn on wet. Her legs moved slow, casual, but he caught the moment her eyes flicked toward him in the reflection of the microwave door. She knew he was watching. She didn’t turn to acknowledge. But her movements slowed, like she was letting him look longer. Wanting him to sit in that ache.
Next to her, Zaya leaned over the counter with her bare arms folded under her chest, lip gloss catching the light. She was barefoot now, bangles jingling softly every time she moved, those high-waisted sweats riding higher on her hips and sinking between her cheeks. She licked chocolate icing from her thumb, smiling to herself like the joke was private and nasty.
Erik’s jaw flexed once. He brought his glass to his lips, slow.
“I’m glad you came, man,” Deuce said, still talking, “We really do it up around here. We start early. Christmas Eve gon’ be wild. Kwanzaa gon’ be real. And New Year’s…New Year’s gon’ be legendary.”
Marlon lifted his glass, “Ain’t no peace and quiet in this house, brother. Get ready.”
Erik nodded again. But he wasn’t really listening.
The kitchen light flickered slightly, just enough to make Celeste glance up. She stepped back from the stove and adjusted the strap of her dress with one finger, pulling it back into place along her shoulder. Her nails were a warm shade of burgundy, almond-shaped, glossy. When she reached for a dish towel, her dress slid slightly at the chest, revealing a hint of lace underneath. She didn’t bother to fix it. If anything, she paused for just a second longer than necessary.
Zaya said something. Celeste laughed. It was the kind of laugh that didn’t need to be loud to be heard. It hummed across the room like static on skin.
“Yo, Ma!” Deuce called out, “We gon’ play some cards after dinner?”
“Of course,” she called back, “As long as your boy knows how to lose with grace.”
Erik looked up, meeting her hazel gaze full on. Her smirk wasn’t sweet. It was slow. Knowing. She took a sip of her wine and didn’t break eye contact.
Behind her, Zaya bent forward, digging into a drawer too low for it to be accidental. The dip of her back, the way her ass rose perfectly with the stretch of her spine—it was deliberate. She glanced over her shoulder once, eyes sharp and shining, catching Erik looking just a second too long.
She grinned.
He froze. Like all his movements were restricted. His dick throbbed behind the crotch of his joggers, thick and hungry and missing something. He crossed one leg over the other just to keep it from showing, grinding his teeth gently before lifting his drink again.
Deuce kept talking. Marlon got up to grab more ice. Erik stayed seated, but his thoughts were already pulling him into dark places. The kitchen noise faded behind the thump of his pulse. He knew trouble when he saw it. He’d lived with trouble. Fucked trouble. Buried it in countries that didn’t exist on maps. But this? This was different. This trouble smiled back. Wore cinnamon and cocoa butter like perfume. Walked around barefoot through the house and whispered temptation in the flick of a wrist.
Celeste returned to her prep, back turned. But Erik could still feel her watching.
Zaya sat on the edge of the kitchen stool now, licking more icing from a spoon like it was an audition. She sucked it once, slow, then bit it with a soft pop, like she knew exactly what she was doing.
She didn’t look away.
And Erik didn’t either.
They both leaned into it.
The kitchen smelled like Christmas. The scent of caramelized onions met slow-roasted meat. Clove and honey slid through the air, tangled with the earthiness of collards, the sweet sting of yams glazed in brown sugar, the faint trace of nutmeg hiding in something Celeste hadn’t even pulled from the oven yet. The oven light clicked off and on. Something bubbled. The warmth coated the walls, thickening the space until it felt less like a house and more like a womb of tradition.
Erik stood near the kitchen entryway, watching the women work.
Celeste had her cell pressed to her ear with one hand, the other drizzling sauce over a roast in slow, looping strokes. Her nails tapped lightly against the edge of the pan between pauses in her conversation. Her voice was low, casual, almost intimate, like whoever was on the other end knew not to interrupt her flow. She didn’t smile much when she spoke, but her mouth stayed soft. Her lashes were long. She listened more than she talked.
Zaya moved around her like a shadow dipped in gold. She’d changed again—nothing too loud. Just a fitted long-sleeve top that clung to her waist and made her breasts look like a problem no one was trying to solve. Her skirt hugged her like it had been painted on, the soft, stretchy fabric molding to the curve of her hips and the swell of her ass with every step. It sat high on her waist, cinched just enough to draw the eye downward, but moved like second skin every time she leaned or turned. Her locs were pinned up now, a few falling forward just to tease her face. She hummed to herself as she set the table, hips swaying lightly with the background music.
Erik could feel the heat rolling off both of them. Not from the oven. Not from the food. Something else. Something tense.
Deuce walked up behind him and clapped his shoulder, “Come on, man. Time to eat. You sittin’ next to me. You gon’ need help defending your plate.”
They moved toward the dining room, where the lights had been dimmed just enough to make everything feel intimate. A garland centerpiece ran down the center of the table, dotted with candles and fake snow. The dishes were already set, heavy ceramic with gold trim. No paper plates here.
Zaya leaned over from behind him and placed the last fork, brushing his back lightly as she passed.
She caught his eye, lips parted just slightly, “Come sit,” she said, voice soft like a dare, “Before I change my mind and keep you all to myself.”
Deuce groaned, “Zaya. Chill.”
Celeste entered last, phone gone now, a pitcher of something ruby-red in her hand. Her dress clung tighter than before, like the steam from the oven had melted it further against her skin. She moved like a woman who didn’t rush for anyone. Her hazel eyes scanned the room once, then landed on Erik.
He didn’t flinch. Didn’t look away. But his jaw set tighter.
She poured the drink slowly, fruit and fresh herbs floating near the top.
“House hibiscus tea,” she said, “Infused with rum, orange peel, cinnamon stick, and a touch of lime. Made it this morning.”
Erik took the glass handed to him. It was cool in his palm, beaded with condensation. He sipped. Smooth. Sweet, with a sting just under the tongue.
“Yeah,” Deuce said with a grin, “Told you. Ma don’t play with the punch.”
Zaya slid into the seat beside Erik before he could move. Deuce dropped into the other side of him, already reaching for a roll. Marlon took the head of the table. Celeste sat at the foot, eyes flicking over the spread like a queen surveying her court.
They passed dishes in slow rotation. Platters of roasted chicken, glazed ham, baked macaroni thick with cheese and crisp on top. Bowls of greens, cornbread, stuffing that had to be made from scratch. Zaya leaned in close when she passed the bowl to Erik, brushing her hand against his, her thigh already warm against his under the table.
“Be careful,” she whispered, lips near his ear, “That mac might make you fall in love.”
Erik didn’t answer. Just looked at her, slow and deliberate, until she smiled like she’d won something.
Celeste sipped her drink, watching the exchange without a word.
“So Erik,” Marlon said, wiping his mouth with a cloth napkin, “tell us somethin’ about you. Where’s home base these days?”
“Everywhere,” Erik said, “I move around a lot. Overseas. East Coast. Not much in one place.”
Celeste tilted her head, “No family nearby?”
He shook his head, “No one that’s still alive.”
Her gaze softened for a fraction of a second, “Well,” she said, “you got us now. For the holidays, anyway.”
Zaya leaned back in her chair, stretching slightly so her breast pressed into his arm before she adjusted again, “You can stay as long as you want,” she said sweetly, “Oakland’s better when it’s got something fine to look at.”
Deuce sighed, “This is why I don’t bring people home.”
Laughter rolled around the table, but Erik’s smile didn’t quite reach his eyes. He kept eating. The greens were sharp and seasoned perfectly. The cornbread melted on contact. The mac really might be dangerous. The flavors settled in his mouth like memory, grounding him in ways he hadn’t expected.
Zaya reached for the tea pitcher and poured him another glass before he could ask.
Celeste watched, her ringed fingers tapping slowly against her wine glass, “Zaya,” she said, voice calm but edged in steel, “don’t crowd the man.”
Zaya smirked, unbothered, “Just bein’ a good host.”
Celeste didn’t respond. Just sipped. Those hazel eyes never left Erik.
The music playing in the background shifted to Donny Hathaway’s “This Christmas.” One they’d played the hell out of since the holiday season kicked off. The sound filled the room like smoke—slow, soulful, familiar. The candles flickered.
Zaya moved closer, her knee now pressing into Erik’s leg. Her perfume was warm, sweet, with the faintest note of vanilla musk. Her foot slid lightly along the floor, just close enough that if she wanted to, she could let it touch his.
And Erik didn’t move.
Erik chewed slow, letting the layers of flavor melt across his tongue while his body tried to ignore the two women seated across from each other like two sides of a flame. Zaya on his left, Celeste down the table at his diagonal. Both beautiful. Both watching. But not in the same way.
Zaya was the storm. She flirted loud, teased with her eyes, bumped her knee against his under the table every few bites. She was playful with it. Shameless. Young enough to play games but grown enough to mean every one.
Celeste was something else entirely. She didn’t do much. Didn’t need to. She touched her glass a certain way. Tilted her head when she spoke. Her voice slipped under the conversation and stayed there, like the last note of a song you didn’t want to end. When Erik looked at her, she didn’t look away.
“Aight,” Deuce said between bites, nodding toward his mother, “Go on. Tell my boy something about you. So he don’t think I was raised by a robot.”
Celeste dabbed at the corner of her mouth with her napkin. Her smile was soft, but the gleam in her eyes said she wasn’t about to give anything she didn’t want to.
“Well,” she began, fingers resting delicately on her wine glass, “I’m from Los Angeles originally. Born in ’72. Moved up to the Bay in my early twenties. Used to dance professionally. Toured for a while. Did some choreography work, taught a little. Then had this one—” she motioned to Deuce—“and everything changed.”
Deuce chuckled, mouth full, “She means she tapped out of the spotlight and leveled up on the mom game.”
Celeste gave him a look that was half warning, half affection, “What I got was intentional.” Her gaze flicked back to Erik, “I run a wellness studio now. Yoga. Movement therapy. Feminine energy workshops. Candlework. All the things women don’t get enough of.”
Erik’s eyes moved slowly over her face as she spoke. That voice of hers pulled at the space between each word, dripped heat onto every syllable. She didn’t rush. She let him sit in it. Let him picture her on a hardwood floor, body curved and slow, breathing deep in a room full of incense and mirrors.
“I like anything that slows the body down,” she added, “Makes you feel where the tension lives.”
Zaya sucked her teeth softly and turned to Erik with a grin, “Don’t let her fool you. She be in there with her incense and her moans like she casting spells.”
Celeste didn’t react. Just sipped her wine and smiled, legs crossing slowly under the table.
“And what about you, Zaya?” Erik asked, voice low.
She perked up, “Oh, I’m the fun one.”
“That’s not a job,” Marlon said with a short laugh.
Zaya ignored him, “I do content and branding stuff. Photography. Style consulting. I help women feel good in their skin. Sexy. Present. Confident. I also host these private group sessions for Black women—kinda like…sensual development workshops. We talk body, energy, movement. Self-pleasure. How to ride better. How to talk dirty. You know, all the grown stuff schools should’ve taught us.”
Erik raised his brow slightly. Zaya winked. Deuce groaned and dropped his fork.
“Nah,” he muttered, “Why is this happening?”
“You asked,” Celeste said, lifting a shoulder, “We just answering.”
Deuce pushed back from the table slightly and stood, “I’m about to grab Tasha. She just pulled up out front.”
He disappeared toward the front door, the cold air drifting in from the hallway. Erik heard the jingle of keys, then the warm sound of Deuce’s voice outside as he greeted his girlfriend.
Zaya slid a little closer in his absence, “So,” she said, voice lower now. “You think you can handle this family?”
“I’ve been in warzones,” Erik replied calmly.
She laughed, that husky, spoiled little sound that settled right in his lap, “Mm. That’s real cute. But warzones don’t have women like me.”
Across the table, Celeste didn’t speak. But her gaze remained steady. She took another sip of wine and let her eyes linger on the way Erik leaned back in his chair, how his jaw clenched slightly as Zaya’s arm brushed his.
The front door shut. Footsteps padded down the hallway. Then a voice rang out, bright and honey-coated.
“I’m here!” Tasha called, sliding into view in a deep burgundy trench and matching lip gloss.
She was petite, stylish, with tight curls and a body that moved with casual elegance. She kissed Deuce on the cheek, then looked around the table with a polite smile.
“Hey y’all. I was over at my mama’s helping with her last-minute Christmas stuff. Had to sneak away before she started assigning wrapping paper by zodiac sign.”
Everyone laughed. Celeste motioned toward the sink.
“Go wash up, baby. Plate’s waiting.”
Tasha nodded and stepped into the kitchen, the sound of running water beginning behind her.
Zaya leaned in, whispering again, “Don’t worry. She’s sweet. Real locked in. But she not the one you gotta worry about.”
Erik glanced at her, “And who’s that?”
Zaya smiled wider, lifting her glass to sip, “That’s for you to figure out.”
The music shifted in the background, the bassline thickening, the croon of a soulful voice sliding over the clink of silverware and low talk. Erik reached for the pitcher and poured more of the red drink into his glass, slow and deliberate, letting the herbs and fruit swirl. The candle nearest to Zaya burned low, the flame flickering just enough to catch the shine along her collarbone.
Celeste watched it all. Said nothing. But the way her ring finger traced the rim of her glass told him everything he needed to know. She didn’t mind Zaya playing. Not at all. Because she already knew how this game ended.
The table had been cleared, plates stacked high by Zaya while Tasha wrapped the leftovers with foil and flicked away a few crumbs with a kitchen towel. The warmth of the meal still lingered in the walls. The air was thick with roasted spice and the last traces of melted butter, wine, and citrus peel. Erik leaned back in his chair for a moment before standing, the buzz from the rum-soaked hibiscus tea crawling through his blood like slow syrup.
In the next room, Marlon had kicked off his shoes and claimed the recliner, cigar tucked between his fingers, football humming low on the screen. The click of his lighter broke the quiet for a beat, followed by the faint crackle of tobacco. The scent drifted through the open floor plan, mixing with the fading remnants of dinner and setting the perfect mood for the lull that always came after a full table.
Deuce was leaning against the entryway near the tree, one arm draped around Tasha’s shoulders, the other gesturing lazily as he ran down some story about their second deployment. Tasha smiled with polite curiosity, but her eyes kept moving, sharp and watchful. She was the kind of woman who took notes with her expressions.
Eventually, she looked up at Erik.
“I’m Tasha, by the way,” she said, stepping away from Deuce’s grip and holding out her hand, “I don’t think we were officially introduced.”
Erik took it, grip firm but gentle, “Erik.”
She tilted her head slightly, “You the one been making my man look soft in the stories, huh?”
Deuce groaned, “Don’t gas him.”
Tasha smiled, wide and playful, “Too late.”
Before Erik could reply, Zaya appeared with a deck of cards in one hand and two shot glasses in the other.
“Spades time!” she said, sliding into the room like she’d been summoned by the music, “And y’all better come correct. I don’t carry no weak partners.”
She handed a shot to Tasha, who accepted it without hesitation. Deuce took the other from her hand and sipped. Zaya looked at Erik with expectant eyes, but he held up his tea glass instead, the fruit still bobbing near the bottom. He was warm already. No need to chase the buzz.
He stood, stretching slightly, then made his way into the kitchen. The lights in there had been dimmed just a touch, soft enough to relax the room without dulling it completely. The sink was empty now. The dishes washed and drying on a towel beside the sink. The oven door was cracked, cooling. And Celeste stood with her back to him, slowly wiping down a porcelain platter with a thick cloth.
Her dress had shifted slightly—one shoulder dropped lower than earlier, showing off the dip between her neck and collarbone. She was barefoot now, her silver anklet catching the light with every move she made. Her hips swayed gently with the rhythm of a Christmas song playing low from a speaker on the counter. Something soulful and old. The kind of song that touched your skin before it hit your ears.
He stepped into the room without saying a word.
Celeste didn’t turn around.
“You here to help?” she asked, without turning, “or to be nosy in my kitchen?”
Erik’s mouth curved slightly, “Could be both,” he said.
She chuckled under her breath. The sound was warm, like steam from a cup of strong tea, “Smart man,” she said, “You any good with fine china?”
“I can follow directions.”
She handed him a stack of plates—delicate, cream-colored, rimmed in gold, “Cabinet above the fridge,” she said, “Top shelf. Don’t chip nothing.”
He took the plates from her and moved slowly across the kitchen. Every movement was deliberate. He could feel her eyes on him now, though she hadn’t turned. As he reached up, he caught her reflection in the glass of the microwave door. She was wiping a second platter, slow, careful. Focused. Not flirty. Not obvious. But there was a calm in her posture that said she was very aware of every breath he took.
He slid the plates into place.
“You do this often?” he asked, returning to her side.
“Entertain? Around the holidays, yes.”
“No,” he said, reaching for the next platter she handed him, “Make men feel like they’re walking into a trap.”
She looked at him then. Just a glance. No smile. No twitch of her mouth.
“That’s not me,” she said, “Traps require effort. If you walk in, it’s because you want to.”
He nodded once, “Noted.”
She passed him another dish, this one smaller. A serving bowl. Her fingers brushed his—warm, dry, gentle.
“Truth is,” she said, “I like hosting. I like feeding people. It’s the only time I get to slow things down and watch people actually live in their bodies.”
“You teach that too?”
Celeste finally looked at him full on. Her hazel eyes held something steady, something that didn’t pull back or push forward. Just lingered.
“I don’t teach anything I don’t practice.”
He placed the last dish up in the cabinet and closed the door gently.
They stood there for a moment, the soft music curling through the kitchen like mist. Outside the room, Zaya laughed loud at something Deuce said. Marlon’s voice rumbled low from the recliner. The TV flickered with motion and color. The whole house vibrated with life.
But in that kitchen, it was just the two of them.
Celeste picked up her wine glass and took a slow sip, lips parting just enough to leave a faint smudge of gloss on the rim, “You good with cards?” she asked, her voice returning to something lighter.
“I don’t lose.”
She raised one brow, “That sounds like a challenge.”
He stepped back, not far, but enough to put space between them that still felt close, “I don’t challenge women I just met,” he said, “Not unless I know they’ll push back.”
Celeste smiled, finally, “You’ll learn quick,” she said, “There ain’t a woman in this house who won’t.”
Voices got louder. The music shifted to something with more bass—classics dipped in funk and soul. The heat kicked in again, hissing through the vents, and the living room swelled with warmth, laughter, and the smell of tobacco and citrus peel. Marlon sank deeper into the recliner with his cigar, his glass now filled with something darker than tea. The football game played quietly in the background, just enough to glance at during shuffle breaks. Deuce and Tasha sat side by side on the couch, her legs tucked under his thigh, sipping on a shared drink with a cherry at the bottom. Zaya, of course, was already at the card table, shuffling with one hand and licking a smudge of gloss off her thumb.
Erik stood with his arms crossed, observing. The haze of the hibiscus still clung to him—warm, slow, just enough to dull the sharpness in his mind. He didn’t mind it. For the first time in a long while, he wasn’t thinking about anything outside these walls.
“Aight!,” Zaya said, slapping the deck on the table, “Who ready to get they ass beat?”
“Oh, we talkin’ spicy already?” Marlon called from the recliner, “Say less. Lemme go on and show y’all why they call me Big Slick.”
Celeste stepped in from the hallway, glass in hand, her curls wild and full around her face. She looked relaxed now, wrapped in a loose knit sweater that hung off one shoulder, exposing her golden brown skin and a long, elegant collarbone that made Erik’s mouth feel too dry. She didn’t look at him as she walked past—but he felt her anyway.
Marlon took the seat across from Zaya, “I want her on my team,” he said, nodding toward Celeste, “She talk the most shit, but she got the best strategy.”
Zaya rolled her eyes, “Of course you want Mama on your team. Y’all always teamin’ up.”
“’Cause we win,” Celeste said, sipping slow, “Simple math.”
Deuce stood and looked around the table, “Alright, we runnin’ two on two. Me and Tasha.”
Tasha shook her head, “Uh uh. I came to watch and drink. I ain’t tryna get yelled at for reneging.”
Zaya turned in her chair to face Erik fully.
“Well then. That means you’re up, soldier.”
Erik smirked slightly and stepped forward, “I’ll play.”
“You any good?” Marlon asked, cutting the cards clean.
Erik pulled out the chair beside Zaya and sat down without hesitation, “I don’t talk unless I got the cards to back it.”
Zaya grinned slow, eyes gleaming, “Mmm. That’s what I like to hear.”
Celeste moved to the kitchen island, standing just close enough to watch but far enough to stay out of the fray. She leaned her hip against the counter, sipping her drink, eyes half-lidded with something unreadable.
Marlon and Celeste on one side. Zaya and Erik on the other.
The cards hit the table with practiced ease. The first hand was all warm-up—Zaya grinning, Erik watching, letting his partner lead while he read the room. But by the second hand, the gloves were off.
“Don’t underbid, old man,” Zaya teased, “You know you too damn competitive!”
“Don’t overbid, little girl,” Marlon shot back, “You ain’t played me yet!”
Erik sat silent, steady, his eyes sweeping over his hand, then flicking briefly to Celeste. She was still standing at the edge of the room, sipping, saying nothing. Just watching. And every time he caught her gaze, she didn’t look away.
“You got that?” Zaya asked him softly.
He nodded once, “Run it.”
She threw a card down with a clap, “Cut that shit.”
Marlon groaned, “Aw, hell.”
The game rolled on. Cards flew. Shots were poured. Tasha laughed so hard at one point she dropped her drink, and Deuce rushed to grab a towel while teasing her. Celeste finally moved closer to refill drinks, her fingers grazing Erik’s shoulder as she leaned over to grab his glass. She didn’t say anything. Didn’t linger. But her scent—vanilla, spice, and something darker—coated the air like smoke.
Erik didn’t flinch. But he noticed.
Zaya leaned in and whispered, “You good, handsome?”
“I’m straight.”
“’Cause you keep starin’ like you about to fold.”
He glanced at her, “I don’t fold.”
“Mm,” she hummed, “We gon’ see.”
The final hand was loud—everybody on edge, drinks half-gone, cheeks flushed, cards slapping with more force. Marlon talked trash through a cloud of cigar smoke. Zaya stood halfway out of her chair at one point, chest bouncing under her shirt, laughing like a woman who knew she just pulled the right card at the right time.
When the game ended, Celeste raised her hand slightly. “Game.”
Marlon stood with his arms wide, “Told y’all. Big Slick don’t lose.”
Zaya groaned, tossing her cards across the table, “I hate y’all. Y’all be cheatin’ with eye contact.”
Celeste only smiled and gathered the cards.
Erik leaned back in his chair, eyes half-lidded, that smooth buzz still thrumming through his chest. He hadn’t won—but he’d learned everything he needed to.
About the way Zaya moved when she was excited. About how Marlon got louder the closer he was to losing. About how Celeste didn’t gloat, didn’t boast—she just played and let the win speak for itself.
He could feel her near again, hear the quiet scuff of her heel against the carpet as she passed behind his chair. She didn’t say anything. Just brushed close enough for her sweater to graze his arm, her body heat lingering in the air after she walked away.
Erik felt it. The hunger. The challenge. The quiet push-and-pull that had already begun. And he wasn’t backing down from any of it.
The house had dimmed to a hush. The laughter faded into low murmurs from upstairs, the TV turned off with a quiet click, and the scent of roasted meat and cinnamon had settled into the bones of the walls like memory. Even the music had cut out. Only the soft creaks of an old house settling remained, paired with the hum of the heating vent.
Erik made his way down the basement steps, feet heavy with the kind of tired that came after good food, strong drink, and too much attention. The guest room was cool but clean. A folded blanket lay at the foot of the bed. His duffle sat in the corner with a quiet yet heavy presence. He unzipped it, pulled out some of his things, and unpacked slowly. Not because he needed to but because it gave him something to do. A way to ease the weight in his chest that had crept in the moment the last card hit the table and Celeste caught his eye across the room without smiling.
He peeled off his shirt and dropped it to the side.
His body was a map of a life few could imagine.
Hard, wide chest cut deep with muscle. Shoulders that flexed even when he wasn’t trying. The thick curve of his biceps told a story of war, discipline, and punishment that hadn’t yet caught up to him. His abdomen—carved. The kind of cut that couldn’t be faked or Photoshopped. A soft groove ran from the center of his chest down to his navel, where a trail of faint hair disappeared into the waistband of his sweats.
Scars ran across him like quiet history. One stretched just below his ribs. Another curled near his right shoulder. A thinner one marked the inside of his forearm, clean and purposeful like it came from a blade. Each one lived there without shame, just part of the frame.
And then there were his locs.
They were tight, deliberate locs, cut with precision, tapered clean along the sides where the fade sharpened the angles of his face. The top held just enough length to fall forward when he leaned or lowered his head, a few locs slipping loose across his forehead like punctuation marks, never messy, never accidental. They didn’t swing or sway freely, they shifted with him, responding to movement the way muscle did beneath skin. Each loc was thick at the root, coiled with purpose, some pressed close together, others separating slightly from heat and wear, creating texture instead of softness. When he exhaled, they barely moved. When he thought too long, his head would tilt, and they would follow, framing his eyes and emphasizing the sharp line of his cheekbones. It was a style that looked restrained until you paid attention, then you realized it was holding something back.
His skin—deep bronze, kissed by the kind of sunlight that left richness behind. Smooth across his chest, glowing faintly with the warm gleam of leftover lotion and clean heat from the upstairs air. It made the ink on his shoulder stand out sharper. Made his gold canines flash brighter when he breathed out a slow laugh to himself.
That’s when the knock came.
Soft.
He moved toward the door, dragging a hand over his face. His body was wide enough to fill the whole frame when he opened it.
And there she stood.
Celeste.
No sweater now. A deep wine-colored robe, silk or satin, cinched loose at the waist. The collar dipped low, framing the smooth glow of her chest. Her curls had been pulled into a loose, low bun, a few strands brushing her cheek and the curve of her throat. In her hands: a folded set of soft, pale gray blankets.
“Sorry,” she said, her voice quiet, “Didn’t mean to bother you. Just thought you might want extra covers. It gets colder down here at night.”
Erik said nothing at first.
Just looked at her.
Her eyes moved briefly over his chest—once, quick, before they lifted back to his face like it didn’t rattle her at all. But he saw the shift. The pause in her breath. The way her knuckles tensed just slightly around the edge of the blankets. He took them from her slowly, his fingers grazing hers, warm against warm.
“Thank you,” he said, his voice rough from quiet.
She nodded once. A little too fast.
He watched her start to turn, her shoulder beginning to pivot away.
But something in him wouldn’t let her leave just yet.
“Wait,” he said, hand still gripping the blankets.
She paused. Looked back over her shoulder.
“I appreciate you,” he said, “For real. For the meal. For letting me in your house. For making it feel like a house.”
Celeste looked at him. Not the way the others had looked. Not with hunger. Not with flirtation.
But with something deeper.
“You’re welcome,” she said, and her voice had lost its playfulness now. It was lower. Slower. She shifted her weight to one hip, hand still resting lightly on the doorframe, “Tomorrow’s a long day,” she added, “Shopping. Prep. Little traditions we don’t miss. Don’t be surprised if Zaya wakes you up with glitter and bullshit.”
Erik cracked a soft grin, “I’ll be ready.”
Celeste gave a small smile, the kind that didn’t stretch across her face but still hit like a warm wave. She stepped back, feet silent against the floor.
“Sleep well, Erik.”
And then she turned.
The robe swayed around her thighs as she turned, catching just enough of the soft hallway light to reveal the slow, hypnotic roll of her ass beneath the satin. Her walk wasn’t exaggerated—just natural. Feminine. Smooth. Every step deliberate and unhurried, like she had nothing to prove and already knew what she carried. She didn’t look back.
But he did.
He leaned against the doorframe, watching her disappear down the hall like she wasn’t leaving pieces of him behind.
He dragged a hand over his mouth.
Let out a breath through his nose.
Then shook his head once.
“…Gahdamn.”
The basement was still dark when the door creaked open.
Soft. No rush. No knocking.
The quiet drag of fuzzy socks whispered across the floor as Zaya crept down the steps, a slight sway in her hips and a phone in her hand glowing with the low light of her Christmas playlist. The bassline thumped gently at her side, barely loud enough to register.
Just enough to soundtrack her little mission.
But the second she reached the doorway, her thumb tapped the screen. The music stopped. Silence slipped in behind her like a partner in crime.
Then she stepped inside.
She eased in slow, hips swaying in a bodycon ribbed mini short that clung like second skin. Her tank top was snug, braless beneath it, the hem just barely brushing the top of her waistband. She smelled like fresh lotion, vanilla shea butter, and that perfume she only wore on days she wanted to be noticed. Something sweet with a twist—like sugarcane kissed with amber.
In her hand was a coffee mug—red, with big block letters that read:
Silent Night My Ass.
She set it down on the end table with care, then turned her attention to the lump in the bed.
Erik.
He was still asleep. One arm thrown over his face, chest bare, the blanket draped low enough to reveal the deep curve of his waist and that shadowed ridge of V-line muscle that made women second-guess their morals. The room was cool, but his skin glowed warm in the dim light from the hallway—brown, smooth, the tone of wet sand right before it bakes dry. His chest rose slow, steady. Broad. Every inch of him hard-earned and war-built.
And those locs—short, thick, tightly tapered on the sides, the top styled with control. A few of them had shifted in sleep, dangling forward across his brow, one brushing the edge of his cheek. They didn’t flop or hang. They framed. They commanded.
Zaya bit her lip. Just a little.
She whispered to herself, “Damn, you pretty.”
Then her eyes flicked to his bag.
The large black duffel sat by the foot of the bed. Wide open. Unzipped halfway like it had been tossed down and forgotten. She crept closer, curiosity overriding common sense, and pulled the flap back a few inches more. Inside, folded clothes. A pack of rolled socks. A pair of gloves. Cologne. A sleek black towel. But beneath all that—
A chrome pistol.
Sitting right there like it had a name.
Her heart skipped. She didn’t touch it. But the glint alone made her still.
And that’s when it happened.
His hand wrapped around her wrist.
Fast.
She gasped—a sharp little inhale that never left her mouth—because the next second he was up. Standing. Tall. Wide. Unbothered. Bare-chested. One arm flexed around her waist now, dragging her upright like she weighed nothing.
“Don’t know how to knock?” His voice was low. Not yelling. But sharp enough to bite.
Zaya froze, her back pressed against his bare chest now, his arm across her middle, firm and unshaking.
“I—” She tried, turning her head slightly.
He leaned in, face close, voice a little lower now. Eyes half-lidded. Lips parted. Gold catching the light in his canines, “And you goin’ through my shit?”
She swallowed. “I wasn’t—I just saw it open and—”
“You just what?” His voice didn’t change. Just coasted low, like heat behind a closed door.
Zaya stayed still, her breath shallow, her heart knocking hard against her ribs.
Erik glanced at the open door, then let her go. Quick. Controlled.
Zaya stumbled one step forward, brushing her top down as she turned to face him.
He was still shirtless. Sweatpants hanging low. Abs carved like marble. One hand dragging down his jawline as he stared at her like she’d set something off he hadn’t planned on dealing with this early.
“I came to wake you up,” she said finally, cheeks hot but her tone unbothered, “It’s Christmas Eve. We got shit to do. Everybody else is up.”
“You break into everybody’s room when they sleep?”
She smiled, “Just yours.”
He stared.
Her smile grew, “You’re not a morning person, huh?”
“I’m not a people-in-my-room person,” he replied, voice dry.
Zaya shrugged and backed toward the door, her fuzzy socks sliding a little as she moved.
“Well, you’re up now,” she said, eyes dragging over him one more time before she turned, “Coffee’s hot. Don’t waste it.”
And with that, she slipped up the steps.
Erik ran a hand down his face, dragging a sigh from the back of his throat. He looked down at the coffee mug still sitting on the table. The words stared back at him in bold red font.
Silent Night My Ass.
Erik dragged a hand down his face again, exhaling through his nose. Shook his head once, like that might be enough to clear her scent, her voice, her shape, out of his head.
It wasn’t.
He looked down and there it was.
Hard. Thick. Pressed against the inside of his sweats.
He was still standing there with morning wood, half-lidded and wide as hell, his dick heavy from sleep and the kind of contact he hadn’t planned for. That girl had crept into his space, poked through his shit, and he’d yoked her up while fully bricked.
And she felt that. No question. The way he pulled her in? That wasn’t a brush. That was full contact. Waist to chest. His hand around her middle, her ass flush against him, soft and warm and right there. He could still feel the curve of her pressed into his palm. Could still smell the way her skin melted with her lotion—sweet, buttery, soft with some kind of warm perfume tucked beneath it. Not fruity. Not floral. Deep and feminine. It clung to his bare chest like she’d marked him with it.
But it was her smile. Her eyes.
That look she gave him when she turned to face him—eyes bright, skin glowing warm from the rush, lips parted like she was holding in more than she said.
Like she didn’t scare easy.
Like she liked it.
Like she came looking for danger.
Erik took a long pull from the mug she’d left on the table. The red ceramic was still warm, the scent rising in thick, sweet steam that cut through the sleep hanging off him. Coffee strong, laced with something nutty. Maybe hazelnut. Maybe vanilla. He didn’t care. He drank it, slow at first, then deeper, letting the heat do its job.
He moved around the room in that quiet way he always had, never in a rush, always measuring time like he owned it. The house creaked softly above him. Voices in the distance. Nothing urgent. Nothing he had to respond to.
After finishing the coffee, he rinsed out the mug, set it back on the nightstand, and reached for his things, making his way back to the bathroom. He washed his face, letting the cold water snap the rest of the sleep from his eyes, then brushed his teeth, slow and methodical, the same way he did everything else. No rush. No wasted motion. Once he’d dried off, he stepped back into the room and reached for his things.
From the duffel, he pulled out a red hoodie—clean, rich in color, worn just enough to feel lived-in. It slid over his shoulders easy, the fabric clinging for a second before falling into place. He paired it with grey joggers, soft cotton with a heavy hang, cuffed at the ankle to sit right above his sneakers. He laced up a fresh pair of Jordan 1s, red and black with a white toe box, the kind of detail that mattered to a man who didn’t do flashy, but still showed up with intent.
He stood in front of the mirror, eyes low, jaw tight from sleep, then reached for the small spray bottle tucked in the side pocket of his bag. Lifted it to his scalp, parted his locs gently, and gave them a quick mist. The leave-in moisturizer coated each strand, rich with a subtle sheen. He shaped them with his hands, coaxing the thick tapered coils back into structure. Some laid forward. Some curved toward the crown. They didn’t need to be perfect—just precise. His look was always that: measured, clean, effortless only on the surface.
He took a final look around the room. Bag half-zipped. Blanket still half-folded. The air still smelled faintly of her perfume.
Then he headed upstairs, mug in hand. The second he stepped onto the main floor, the heat hit him first. Then the noise. The kitchen was alive and bright with overhead light, thick with the smell of butter, eggs, pepper, and grease. Celeste was already at the stove, robe tied tight, hair wrapped in a patterned scarf. Her back was to the room, one hand on a skillet of grits, the other reaching for a plate of crisp bacon on the counter behind her. She moved with purpose, like her body already knew where everything was without needing to look.
Tasha stood at the other end of the kitchen cracking eggs into a glass bowl, her curls tied up in a pineapple puff. She wore a silky pajama short set, pale gold with black piping, the top unbuttoned just enough to show a peek of cleavage when she leaned forward. The fabric clung softly to her hips as she danced in place, humming along to the music playing low from the speaker on the window sill—something jazzy, warm, and old-school. You could almost smell the vinyl through it.
In the living room, Marlon was kicked back in his recliner, coffee mug in one hand, remote in the other, watching a recent college football bowl game like it was a championship replay. He wasn’t saying much, just tracking plays and shaking his head every time the defense missed a tackle. His hoodie was zipped halfway, pajama pants tucked into low-top sneakers like he might step out later—but probably wouldn’t. Every now and then, he tipped his mug just a little longer than necessary. The faint scent of cognac floated up from the cup like steam, subtle enough to pass if you weren’t paying attention.
“Zaya gave me the wrong playlist,” Deuce mumbled as he shuffled through the hallway in pajama pants and a hoodie with no strings. His eyes were barely open, “who the hell blasts Sexxy Red at 8:30 in the morning?”
No one answered him.
Erik stepped fully into the kitchen now. No fanfare. No announcement. Just the quiet clink of his mug setting down on the counter and the soft press of his sneakers on the tile.
Celeste turned, just slightly, and handed him a plate.
No words. No extra look.
Just eggs, bacon, grits, and a biscuit, already arranged.
He took it without question.
There was a clink of mugs at the table as someone toasted something half-understood. The scent of maple syrup filled the room next, floating in from a tray someone had just pulled from the oven. The buzz of the morning settled into Erik’s chest like a hum. Nobody was still. Everyone moved. Voices overlapped. Bacon popped in the pan.
It felt like something old. Something solid.
Family.
And for now, at least, he was in it.
Late morning had drifted into early afternoon. The smell of breakfast still lingered in the air, mixing with candle wax and the faint tang of Pine-Sol. The dishwasher hummed. Someone’s playlist looped softly from a speaker in the corner, switching between Donny Hathaway AGAIN and H.E.R. Upstairs, wrapping paper crinkled. Tape snapped. Voices moved in and out of rooms with no real urgency, just the rhythm of family during the holidays.
In the kitchen, Celeste stood near the counter with a notepad in one hand and a pen tapping lightly against her chin.
“Damn it,” she muttered under her breath, “Forgot foil. We need more cream. Batteries. Pie crusts too.”
Deuce was on the floor near the back door, fiddling with a box of tangled string lights.
“Ma, you want me to run out?”
Before she could answer, Marlon looked up from where he was sipping coffee with his feet kicked up.
“Nah, I need you to help me get that patio set up for the fry later. Got some shit in the garage I can’t lift by myself.”
Celeste looked at Deuce, then turned to glance across the room.
Her eyes landed on Erik, who stood near the kitchen island refilling his water.
She didn’t ask him. Not directly.
Just, “You mind riding with me?”
Erik wiped his hand on a towel and nodded once, “Yeah. I got you.”
The ride started quiet.
Celeste drove a black SUV, clean, simple, and surprisingly fast. She didn’t ride slow. Didn’t hesitate at lights or drift between lanes. She drove like she did everything else—with confidence and calm control. One hand rested casually on the wheel, the other adjusting the air. Her hair was still wrapped from earlier, but she’d changed into black leggings, a soft tunic sweater, and slides. No makeup. Just skin, smooth and golden in the light filtering through the windshield.
Erik sat passenger, hoodie up, one hand on his thigh, watching the city move around them.
Oakland was alive. Sidewalks packed. Horns blaring. Aunties in fur-lined coats moving fast with bags in hand. Kids in matching pajamas trailing behind cousins. Parking lots overflowing. Street vendors hollering about handmade wreaths and spiced nuts.
The chaos hit full force when they pulled up to the local grocery store. Cars double parked. Lines curled past the door. Somebody was already arguing near the carts.
Celeste sighed through her nose, “Let’s make this quick.”
Inside, it was packed. Carts bumping into each other. Shelves half-empty. People talking loud, moving faster. Celeste moved through it like she’d done it a hundred times—which she had. Every few steps, someone greeted her.
“Hey Celeste, baby! Y’all frying fish again this year?”
“Mmhmm. Gotta keep tradition alive,” she replied without stopping.
“Your son still in the service?”
“Back home this week.”
“You look good, girl.”
“Always do.”
She didn’t raise her voice. Didn’t perform. But people parted when she walked. Moved aside. Smiled wider.
Erik trailed behind her with the cart, bent forward, arms crossed over the handle, observing everything. He didn’t speak much. Just kept pace beside her.
When she reached for a can on the top shelf, he was already there, grabbing it with an easy stretch and handing it off without a word. When her hands were full, he pushed the cart. When her brow furrowed at a crowded endcap, he cleared the way with the calm presence of a man who didn’t need to raise his voice to make space.
He watched her move—not like a spectacle, but like a rhythm. Efficient. Fluid. She reached for what she needed without overthinking. Checked dates on labels with a quiet diligence. Wrote mental lists on the fly and didn’t miss a beat.
People nodded to her in passing—cashiers, elders, a young girl with a baby in the cart—none of them made a scene. They just acknowledged her like she mattered, like she’d always mattered. She didn’t command attention. She just carried it. With that same quiet authority Erik recognized in himself. No flash. Just weight.
He loaded the car while she double-checked the receipt. Didn’t wait to be asked. Just opened the trunk, packed the bags in a way that kept the eggs from cracking and the greens from getting crushed. It wasn’t for show. It was muscle memory. Consideration without performance.
She caught him watching her as she buckled her seatbelt, and for a second, her expression softened—just enough to say she noticed, too. She adjusted the music to a quiet instrumental station. Something with keys and low bass. He sat back, one hand now resting along the inside of the passenger door, the other rubbing a thumb along his knee.
“You must be Superwoman,” Erik said, “In and out that market like you said. Barely broke a sweat.”
Celeste smirked, eyes on the road as she drove, “You keep that up, I might start bringing you every year.”
“Long as I don’t have to cook,” he said—then paused, smirk tugging at the corner of his mouth, “Actually…I do like to cook. When I get the time.”
Celeste glanced at him, intrigued, “Yeah?”
“Yeah. It’s one of the few things that slows me down. Feels good to feed people.”
She nodded, a knowing smile forming as she turned back to the road, “Careful. Say something like that around here, you might end up in somebody’s kitchen with an apron on.”
Erik smirked, settling deeper into the passenger seat, “Ain’t a threat if I know what I’m doing.” Then, after a beat—eyes on the windshield, voice low but edged with dry humor, “Besides…long as the food’s good and the company don’t talk too much, I don’t mind pulling up my sleeves.”
Celeste let out a real laugh this time. Low and rich. The kind that warmed the air between them.
The vibe in the car shifted—lighter, looser, a quiet relief from the rush of holiday prep and to-do lists. Something easy passed between them in that silence that followed, wrapped in sunlight, R&B on low, and the scent of cinnamon gum she’d just popped in her mouth.
“My family talk a lot, Erik,” she warned, still smiling, “Wait until the others show up tonight.”
He gave her a look, “I’ll manage.”
“You say that now…”
Another laugh. This time they both did.
And for a few seconds, the world outside the car felt far away.
They made two more stops on the way back.
First: a Black-owned bakery tucked on the corner of a street with cracked pavement and painted bricks. Celeste went in while Erik waited outside with the bags, nodding to a few men on the corner who were talking over a box of warm patties and the latest neighborhood gossip.
When she came back out, her arms were full—sweet potato pie, a caramel cake, and a box of lemon bars stacked neatly in her grasp. The scent hit before she even reached the car, sugar and spice clinging to the bakery box lids.
Erik was already stepping out.
Didn’t hesitate. Just met her halfway on the sidewalk like a gentleman, hands out.
“Lemme get that,” he said, voice low as he took the pies from her—careful, steady, like he knew how to handle fragile things.
Celeste smiled, letting him, “You really trying to make me brag about you when we get back, huh?”
He only smirked, then opened her car door for her without saying a word.
She slid into the seat, and for a second, paused—watching him as he closed the door gently, walked around to his side, and loaded the desserts into the back like they were gold.
Not just helpful.
Attentive.
The kind that paid attention without making it a performance.
And when he got back in beside her, the car filled again with that light hush—R&B still playing, bakery boxes rustling softly in the backseat, and that feeling like the day had just turned a corner.
Then the liquor store.
It was tighter inside. Warm. Smelled like Black & Milds, pine cleaner, and old bills.
Celeste moved through with purpose, grabbing dark rum, whiskey, multiple bottles of wine, and a bottle of gin she didn’t bother to explain.
At the register, she reached into her purse.
Erik stopped her.
“I got it.”
She looked at him, one brow raised, “This is half the bar.”
“It’s the least I can do,” he said, “Y’all let me in your house. Fed me. I ain’t showed up empty-handed in years.”
She studied him for a beat, then nodded once and stepped back.
He paid in cash. Crisp bills. Quick count. No hesitation.
They left the store and headed back to the SUV. Bags in hand. The sun was already beginning to drift a little lower in the sky, casting long gold streaks across the pavement. The air smelled like barbecue smoke and pine trees. Somewhere nearby, kids were yelling over a basketball game and Mariah Carey’s voice drifted from someone’s Bluetooth speaker.
Inside the SUV, Celeste buckled her seatbelt and started the engine.
“Appreciate you riding,” she said quietly.
“No problem.”
And that was it.
Back at the house, the living room had been taken over. Wrapping paper was everywhere—candy cane stripes, glittery snowflakes, rich velvet green. Zaya sat cross-legged on the floor like a woman on a mission, scissors between her teeth, tape nowhere to be found, humming along to a sexy R&B Christmas playlist bumping softly through the speakers.
“Who got tape?!” she hollered for the third time.
Tasha was curled on the nearby loveseat, helping with bows and handwritten tags, pausing every so often to sip from her cocoa and roll her eyes.
“You mean the same roll of tape you just had in your lap?” Tasha replied, tossing it at her.
Zaya caught it midair, grinning, “Y’all gon’ miss me when I’m gone!”
Footsteps sounded near the entryway—Erik walking in, grocery bags in both hands, the cold still clinging to his hoodie.
Zaya looked up and lit up like a tree, “Finally! Santa’s back!”
She scrambled up to peek inside one of the bags, “Ooooh y’all got the caramel cake! Bless you.”
Tasha laughed, “Girl, let him breathe.”
Before Erik could fully respond, a voice called from the back of the house.
“Yo E!” Deuce.
He appeared in the hallway, already holding a bag of charcoal and gesturing with his chin. “Come help me set up the patio. We gotta rinse out the cooler, set up the burners, and get the fish fry table ready before Uncle Nate show up with his loud ass.”
Erik sighed with mock dread, but handed off the liquor bag to Zaya and followed without a word.
As he passed through the living room, Zaya yelled, “Don’t forget! no apron, no plate!”
Tasha snorted, “That sound made-up as hell.”
The back patio had been winter-proofed weeks ago. It wasn’t fancy but it was done right.
Deuce had built the structure himself: clear vinyl tarp walls, strung with soft white lights and red-green bulb strands. Heat lamps stood in the corners, humming low like warm sentinels. Folding tables had been set up in a half-U-shape, covered in plaid runners and paper plates already stacked high. A Bluetooth speaker perched on a high shelf, cycling through a mix of Frankie Beverly, Guy, and Anthony Hamilton. The space could easily hold 15 to 20 people, intimate but spacious enough to move around.
Near the back fence, two large coolers sat ready to be filled. A deep fryer and two grills were stationed on the far end under a makeshift awning, along with Deuce’s black apron that read: “You Smell What I’m Cookin’?”
Erik pulled his hoodie tighter around him—it was only 50 degrees, but crisp enough to bite if you stood still too long. He adjusted one of the heat lamps and glanced around. The setup was solid. Felt like it had seen many Christmases before this one.
“Hand me that wrench,” Deuce muttered, crouched by the fryer.
Erik passed it over, no small talk needed between them. They worked easily, fluidly, the silence only broken by the sizzle of preheating oil and distant laughter from inside the house.
Then the front gate creaked open.
Deuce didn’t even look up, “Damn.”
A voice rang out before the man even turned the corner, “Y’all better have cleared me a chair ‘fore I get back there!”
Uncle Nate.
He stomped into the patio like he owned it, wearing a long trench coat that didn’t match his basketball sneakers, scarf crooked like it put up a fight. His booming voice filled the space, dragging behind him a crew: his wife and grown son trailing behind with a tray of deviled eggs.
Deuce stood up slow, already annoyed, “Look who the wind blew in.”
“Better than what you usually blow,” Nate shot back, laughing loud at his own joke.
His eyes landed on Erik immediately.
“Well damn,” he said, eyebrows raised, “Who’s this? Secret Service?”
Erik stepped forward calmly, wiping his hands on a towel, “Erik. Friend of the family.”
Uncle Nate didn’t extend his hand at first—just gave him a look, trying to size him up. The air tensed.
Then Nate reached out with a smirk, “You look like you could throw somebody.”
Erik shook his hand firm, respectful but steady, “Only if I have to.”
Nate let out a deep chuckle, “That grip strong. You a trainer or somethin’? Gym boy?”
“Used to do security,” Erik replied, voice easy.
“Ahhh, used to. That’s code for ‘I done whooped some ass in my time,’ huh?”
Before Erik could answer, the wife swooped in like perfume and smoke.
“Mm! Y’all got it warm back here,” she said, adjusting her ill-fitting wig. It tilted slightly to the left, and the curls were fighting for their lives. Her eyebrows were penciled two inches too high, and a faint mustache glittered on her top lip under the lights like a misguided halo.
She smiled big, “Hey sugar, I’m Naretha. Nate’s better half.”
“I’m Erik. Nice to meet you, ma’am,” he replied smoothly.
“Mmm. Got some manners. And them shoulders too. I like that.”
Nate rolled his eyes, “Naretha, don’t start.”
Behind them stood their son, awkward and thin with thick glasses and a navy coat zipped all the way to his chin. He didn’t speak—just nodded at everyone and stayed glued to his Nintendo Switch, thumbs flying.
“What up, Junior,” Deuce said, half-hearted.
“Hey,” the kid replied, eyes still on screen.
Naretha popped her gum. “He playin’ that Pokéman or whatever. Whole ride over, I said, ‘Boy, speak to people!’ He ain’t heard a word.”
Uncle Nate snorted, “Long as he don’t burn down the damn patio tryna catch Pikachu, we good.”
Erik stepped aside to help unload their food onto the table, ignoring Nate’s constant commentary. But he caught Celeste’s voice calling from inside.
“Erik! You still on patio duty or can I borrow you for something?”
He nodded at Deuce, who just smirked and said, “Go on. Before Uncle Nate asks you to arm wrestle.”
As Erik walked off, he caught the older man still watching him, but this time with a little less bark behind the eyes. Maybe even a flicker of…approval.
The house was in full prep mode now—one big Black holiday scramble.
Celeste had a checklist in her head and eyes everywhere.
“Bathrooms wiped, fresh towels out, and y’all better plug in them damn lights by five o’clock or I swear—”
She didn’t finish the threat. She didn’t need to. Everybody moved.
The air in the house started to shift. The chill faded, replaced with comforting layers of scent—warm cashmere vanilla, sharp cinnamon sticks, and fresh pine spray from the tree in the corner. Scented plug-ins clicked on in every hallway socket. A potpourri pot bubbled quietly on the stove behind the sweet potato pie.
Marlon was vacuuming in zigzags across the carpet, muttering to himself the whole time.
“Why we gotta do all this just for people to mess it up again…”
Still, he did it.
Zaya’s Jodeci Christmas album was way too loud in the background—distorted harmonies and sexy ad-libs bouncing off the walls as she danced around the living room, tossing ribbon and tape near Junior, who was still planted on the couch with his Nintendo Switch, unbothered, unmoved, and unblinking.
“WHO GOT THE TAPE?!” Zaya hollered for the third time.
Celeste shot her a look, “Turn that down before my ears start bleeding!”
Meanwhile, Erik had been roped into holiday grunt work.
He shifted a heavy box of light-up reindeer into the corner, then stood on a stepladder to swap out a dead bulb in the hallway fixture. His hoodie sleeves were pushed up, arms flexing as he worked—quiet, efficient, blending in but always watching.
“Boy, you real handy,” Naretha called from the kitchen, sipping on something warm, “You build decks too?”
Erik gave a polite smile but didn’t engage. He was used to auntie flirt.
Tasha and Deuce had slipped away somewhere between the tree adjustments and gift-wrapping chaos. No one noticed. Or maybe no one cared.
Until Marlon yelled from the back porch, “Aye! Deuce! I need your ass for the fryer again!”
Celeste looked up from fluffing pillows, “Where is he?!”
“Gone ghost like always,” Zaya replied, adjusting the volume again, “Check the garage.”
Marlon rolled his eyes, “Man, Erik! Can you go find his big head? Upstairs prolly.”
Erik didn’t argue. He wiped his hands and headed for the stairs, taking them two at a time, his body still slightly warm from lifting boxes.
Upstairs, the music was louder. Not Jodeci anymore—this sounded like UGK or some old Memphis bassline.
He walked down the hall, stopping at a cracked door.
Deuce’s room.
Erik knocked once, no answer.
The door creaked open half an inch.
What he saw first was the mirror.
Positioned on the closet door, it reflected everything—the tangled sheets, the dim light…and the sight of Tasha on her knees.
She wasn’t just giving head—she was eating it. No hands. Just throat. Her cheeks hollowed out, lips stretched wide, and she was working it like she had something to prove. Her shirt was pushed up, exposing heavy, spit-slicked breasts, areolas glistening under the soft light.
Deuce’s head was tilted back. Silent. Still.
Erik froze.
He didn’t mean to look—but the mirror wouldn’t let him look away.
Then Tasha’s eyes lifted—locked with his in the glass.
Pop!
She snapped her lips off Deuce’s dick, flustered as hell.
“Deuce, why you ain’t shut the damn door?!”
The door slammed instantly.
BAM!
Erik blinked.
Still paused.
Downstairs, Zaya’s voice floated up through the floorboards.
“TAPE! WHO GOT THE DAMN TAPE?!”
Erik finally turned away, descended the stairs without a word, hands in his pockets.
Nobody asked what took so long.
And he sure as hell didn’t tell them.
The evening crept in slow, but the house moved like it knew what time it was.
Christmas Eve meant one thing: fish fry and cookout.
No fancy tablecloths. No white people food. Just heat, grease, and home.
Tasha and Deuce showed back up downstairs like they hadn’t just been caught doing something filthy.
Tasha’s cheeks were still warm, but not from the cold. She avoided Erik’s eyes when she brushed past him to grab paper towels. Kept her head down. Kept busy.
Deuce was none the wiser. He gave Erik a head nod and a dap, completely unaware of what his boy had seen in the mirror, “What’s good, man. You drinkin’ dark or light?”
Erik didn’t flinch. Just said, “Either,” and kept it moving.
The kitchen became a quiet symphony.
Celeste stood at the center—Queen of the operation. She didn’t shout, didn’t raise a hand, but somehow everybody fell in line like clockwork.
Deuce and Uncle Nate were on frying duty, posted outside on the patio by the portable fish fryer. They wore aprons and attitude, oil already popping. Nate swore by catfish nuggets, Deuce argued for whiting.
“You burn my hushpuppies and I’mma throw this whole fryer in the damn pool,” Nate barked.
“You throw it, I’m throwing you in after it,” Deuce shot back, laughing.
Zaya had taken over the long counter with the sides—pans of baked mac covered in foil, a massive bowl of potato salad chilling, and grilled corn on standby. She had a bottle of wine open, one AirPod in, and was mouthing lyrics between stirring things.
Celeste didn’t need to ask what anyone was doing. She knew. She had her own rhythm, working that oven, checking on her cakes, rotating trays of honey cornbread, whispering to her greens like they had ears.
She didn’t have to look up to say:
“Zaya, don’t forget the paprika. Deuce, tell your uncle to back up off the fryer with that flask. Tasha, wipe that counter again. And Erik, put that wine in the big bucket with ice and make sure we got cups.”
They all moved.
No questions. Just flow.
Erik was on drink patrol, cooler filled with ice and brown bottles of ginger ale, wine chilling in a metal tub, and a massive glass punch bowl in the center of the island. He stirred the punch slow with a long wooden spoon—red, sweet, and fizzy. Cut oranges floated on top. He slid the ladle into place, stepped back, and kept glancing toward the kitchen sink where Tasha was washing out a mixing bowl. She still wouldn’t look at him. Still didn’t say a word. Erik didn’t either.
The music had softened—classic Christmas music giving way to some Jazmine Sullivan Christmas cover. The kitchen smelled like garlic butter, fried fish, smoked paprika, greens, and sweet glaze.
They moved around each other like they’d done this every year.
Shoulders brushed. Hands passed pans. Laughter sparked off old memories. Little Junior was back on the couch with his Switch and a plate of fries. Nate’s wife was dancing by herself in the corner to “Silent Night” like it was a full concert, dragging the fake fur collar of her coat back up every five minutes.
Marlon hollered from the back room, “Who hid the hot sauce?!”
Celeste didn’t even blink, “Check the third drawer, next to the mustard you never put back!”
This was how tradition moved—loud, warm, slightly messy, but full of love.
The house filled up fast.
By 6:00 PM, it was packed. Full.
Uncles, aunties, play cousins, folks from church, the family friend who always brought one of her loud-ass kids and a to-go plate already in her purse.
Coats piled on the guest bed. Shoes lined up by the door. Voices everywhere.
Somebody’s baby was crying. Somebody else was hollering over spades in the dining room. The playlist had switched from soul Christmas to full-on ‘90s Black family reunion—Frankie Beverly, Bobby Brown, back to Luther.
The heat from the oven and the bodies had the walls sweating.
Not real air. Just space.
He eased out of the kitchen, ducked past Marlon who was arguing about the game, and slipped down the narrow stairwell toward the basement. The cool air hit his skin like a relief.
That’s when he heard steps behind him. Light ones.
“Erik—wait.”
Tasha.
He paused. Turned around halfway down the stairs.
Tasha stood at the top of the steps, biting her lip and hugging her arms across her chest. Still wearing that soft cotton tee, still looking like something Erik hadn’t meant to witness—but couldn’t unsee now that he had.
Her voice was low. Embarrassed. She kept her eyes on the floor.
“I just…wanted to say I’m sorry. About earlier. I didn’t know. I thought the door was shut.”
Erik didn’t blink. Didn’t smirk. Didn’t tease. Just nodded.
“It’s all good.” His voice was calm. Quiet. Like he meant it.
She stepped down one step. Hands twisting in front of her, “Still, I feel stupid. That was—hella awkward.”
Erik exhaled slowly through his nose, “You good. Just…keep y’all doors closed, aight?” A pause. Then a dry add-on, “Y’all being risky as hell.”
That made her laugh. A quick one. Soft. She covered her face, still mortified, “I know. You right. I told him to lock it.”
“But he didn’t,” Erik replied, voice even.
Tasha winced, “Damn–I know–yeah…”
Another pause.
She glanced up at him, finally.
Eyes full of apology but also curiosity. Just checking to see if he was really cool. If he was gonna hold this over her. If he was gonna tell. Erik held her gaze a second longer than needed.
But then he turned, “We straight,” he said over his shoulder, continuing down the steps.
Tasha nodded, “Alright. Thanks.”
And then she left.
Down in the basement, Erik turned on the tap, splashed cool water on his face.
But no matter how cold it was…
The image wouldn’t leave his mind.
Those wet, swinging breasts.
Her mouth stretched wide.
That glint of eye contact when she realized he saw.
Erik came up in a fitted cream sweater that hugged his broad chest and rolled slightly at the collar. Clean-lined trousers. Watch glinting beneath his sleeve. Celeste clocked it immediately and gave a little approving glance without saying much, though her own look was just as sharp: burgundy velvet that caught the light with every step, gold hoops, and heels that clicked when she moved through her house like she still owned the night.
Zaya had dressed up too—a curve-hugging sweater dress in a warm shade of rust, soft and ribbed with a mock neck. Her long locs were swept into a low bun at the nape of her neck, neat with a few curls left out at the edges. Gold hoops, glossed lips. had changed into a ruched black dress with gold jewelry and matching confidence. Deuce had on a clean polo and new jeans, haircut fresh, trying not to make a big deal out of how good he looked. Even Marlon came correct—pressed slacks, navy sweater vest, loafers. But he looked stiff. Jaw tight. And Celeste, for all her shine, was already on her second glass of wine before dinner started.
Erik noticed. The way her lipstick stayed perfect, but her hand kept drifting to the glass before her plate was even set. Something had gone down earlier. He didn’t ask but he clocked it.
The dining table overflowed. Paper plates stacked high. Serving pans spread out buffet style. Fried catfish and whiting, crispy and golden. Mac and cheese bubbling at the corners. Corn on the cob wrapped in foil, spiced with Cajun butter. Potato salad, deviled eggs, rolls, and Tasha’s lemon bars shining like treasure on the side
People were everywhere—older folks out back in jackets and shawls, crowded near the space heaters and portable speaker Deuce set up on the patio. Laughter carried through the screen door. Line dancing broke out between bites and refills, someone yelling “Ayyyyye!” every time the music dropped.
Kids zipped around the yard in coats and mittens, plastic swords and baby dolls in hand, dragging each other into hiding spots. The younger crowd stayed inside—posted near the kitchen, curled up in corners, leaning on door frames, phones in one hand, red cups in the other, talking over whatever music was playing from Zaya’s speaker dock.
Later in the night, another wave of people came.
A cousin of Deuce’s walked in. One of those smile-too-wide, dap-too-hard types. Handsome, tall, beard lined up, chain out. And right behind him: his girlfriend. Beautiful. Light beat on her face. Slick ponytail and an outfit meant to show skin, even in this cold. She knew she looked good. And she knew everyone else knew it too.
Deuce gave the cousin that tight-lipped nod. Respect, but distance. They didn’t mess with each other like that. Too much ego. Too much competition. The cousin glanced around, then landed on Erik.
Chin lifted, “Who this?”
“Friend of the fam,” Deuce muttered without looking up.
Erik didn’t bristle. Just turned, offered his hand.
“Erik.”
The cousin shook it. Tried to squeeze too hard.
Erik squeezed back harder—without breaking stride. No expression changed. No words needed. When the cousin pulled away, he shook his fingers out like a joke and said, “Alright now—grip like you lay bricks for a living.”
Zaya giggled. Tasha smiled behind her glass. Deuce just looked the other way. After dinner, someone dimmed the lights and turned down the music. The tree glowed like a centerpiece. Warm light, flickering tinsel, and shadows dancing on the ceiling.
Marlon gathered everyone with a raised glass—low, gravelly voice calling over the room, “Let’s get quiet for a minute.”
The chatter slowed.
Celeste stood beside him, lips already shining with a new pour of wine. She didn’t speak right away. Just looked around the room—at the family pressed in close, kids curled up on the floor with cookies, her nieces and nephews clinking glasses, her sisters laughing near the hall.
Then she said, “It’s been a year. Good, bad, everything in between. But we made it. And I’m glad we’re here together.” Her voice wasn’t loud, but it carried, “I love y’all. Even when y’all get on my nerves,” she added with a half-smile, “Even when I got to clean behind everybody. Even when folks drink up all the wine. I wouldn’t trade it.”
A soft round of “awws” and laughter circled the room. Erik, standing near the back, felt Zaya press lightly into his arm, her head tilting just enough to brush his shoulder. He didn’t move. Just stood still. Listening.
There was something tired in Celeste’s voice, beneath the velvet of it. Something that said I’m worn, but I’m still going. Erik recognized it. The quiet way women carry everything on holidays like this and still make it feel like magic.
Everyone raised a glass.
“To family,” Marlon said.
“To peace,” Celeste added.
“To this food,” Deuce shouted, and laughter broke the quiet.
Later, when folks were drifting, and music had crept back up, someone shouted from the stairs.
“AYO—JUNIOR!”
His daddy’s voice. Loud.
Murmurs followed. Then heavy footsteps.
“What the hell—boy, is that TITTIES on the screen?!”
People started howling. Marlon yelled, “Lord have mercy! Boy!” while Celeste groaned and covered her face. Junior tried to bolt up the stairs with his Nintendo Switch clutched to his chest, hoodie yanked up to hide. His ears were burning, whole neck and jaw glowing dark with shame. Laughter chased him like a mob.
“Not anime titties!”
“Boy was watching cartoons with nipples!”
“He down there tongue out and everything!”
Even Erik laughed, sipping his drink with a shake of his head.
“Leave that boy alone, Nate,” Celeste said, sipping her wine, “If he wanna watch his little anime titties, let him. He grown.”
They were posted around the dining table, cups sweating, Jenga tower stacked halfway to heaven. The room was loud—liquor talking, bodies leaned back in their chairs, laughter spilling between clinks and bass-heavy music coming from the other room.
Erik nursed his drink, buzz settling behind his eyes. Zaya was tucked close beside him, pretty in that sweater dress, hand sneaking under the table like it belonged there. Fingers slow on his thigh. Stroking light. Casual, like nobody’d notice. Like her touch wasn’t pulling heat low in his stomach.
Tasha caught it. She was across the table, nursing her own drink, eyes glittering with amusement. Gave Zaya a look. Laughed to herself. She didn’t say a word though. Just sipped slow, those glossy lips parting soft. Erik met her eyes for a half second before she looked away—too fast. Too aware.
Deuce was nowhere to be found. Neither was his cousin’s loudmouth girl.
Erik’s gaze moved, sweeping. That subtle recon habit. The kind he never turned off. And when he looked back, Tasha was peeking again. This time longer. Her lips parted like she might say something—but she didn’t. She just wet them. Looked down at her plate like it was the most interesting thing in the world.
Zaya’s hand was still moving.
“Go help your mama,” Erik said low, tapping the rim of his glass.
She sucked her teeth but stood up anyway, slow and sulky. Erik didn’t miss the way her ass moved walking away. That tight sway. But his eyes shifted just as quick—Tasha. Those tits sitting up high and soft in whatever stretchy fabric she had on. She wasn’t even doing anything and it still felt intentional.
He focused on his drink. Let the burn clear his head.
Deuce came back first, smirking like he had a secret. A few minutes later, so did the girl. She slid over to her man and leaned in, whispering something that made him stand up fast.
“I’m ready to go,” she said with a coy smile.
And just like that, they were gone.
Tasha stood with a sigh, gathering a few empty glasses as she made her way toward the kitchen to help Celeste. Erik watched her go, hips swaying, waist snug in that dress. Then his gaze shifted.
Deuce was slumped back in his chair, head tilted like the room might be spinning just a little too fast.
“You look fucked up,” Erik muttered with a crooked grin, taking another sip.
Deuce didn’t argue just chuckled, eyes half-lidded, swaying a little.
That’s when Uncle Nate stumbled in.
Drunker than everybody. Loud. Slurring. Face shiny with sweat and too much Hennessy. His button-up half-untucked, shoes scuffed from dancing outside in the yard.
He clocked Erik and grinned big, “Ay, boy!” he bellowed, pointing, “You look like you think you tough. Come on, then!”
He threw his fists up in slow motion—clumsy, wobbling jabs at the air.
Erik smirked, shook his head, “Come on, Unc. Not tonight,” he said, waving him off.
But Nate was already in his face.
Deuce pushed back from the table to intervene. “Unc, chill—”
Too late.
Nate shoved Deuce—hard. The whole table rocked, cups rattling, Jenga collapsing in a clatter of wood and curses.
Deuce’s expression snapped clean. He stood like he meant it—shoulders squared, jaw set, ready to throw hands.
Erik was up first.
One hand firm to Nate’s chest, stopping him mid-sway. “Aight, Unc,” he said, voice low but cutting through the noise, “You need a cut off.”
Nate blinked like he didn’t hear. Tried to push forward again, but Erik didn’t budge. His palm stayed planted. Calm. Controlled.
“You been on ten all night,” Erik added, “Go sit down before somebody get embarrassed.”
The room held its breath. The laughter died out, all eyes slowly turning toward the scene.
Then Celeste called out from the kitchen, voice sharp as a blade, “Nate, if you don’t get yo’ ass somewhere and sit down—!”
That did it.
Nate groaned, muttered something under his breath, then stumbled back toward the hallway, still cussing but retreating.
Deuce let out a long breath, “Drunk ass.”
Erik sat back down, jaw tight, but calm, “Family fun,” he muttered into his drink.
Tasha moved back toward Deuce, eyes scanning him carefully.
“You good?” she asked, voice lower now—soft, concerned. Girlfriend mode activated. She reached out, lightly touched his arm.
Deuce leaned away slightly, pulling his drink in tighter. “I’m straight,” he said. Quick. Flat. Didn’t even look at her.
Tasha’s brows knit, just for a second. Something flickered in her face—hurt, confusion, maybe both. But she swallowed it down. Didn’t push. Just nodded once, lips pressed into a tight line.
“Okay.”
She turned and walked off, heels clicking as she disappeared back toward the kitchen where Celeste was still fussing over dishes.
Meanwhile, Erik stepped away from the dining table, drifting into the living room where Junior was curled up in a corner of the couch, eyes locked on the TV screen, thumbs moving fast over his Switch controller.
“What you on?” Erik asked, settling beside him with a fresh drink in hand.
Junior didn’t look up, “Smash Bros.”
Erik nodded like that meant something, “I’ll whoop you in that.”
Junior paused, finally glancing over, “You play?”
“Used to.”
Junior smirked, “Pick up a controller then. Let’s see.”
They got into it. Competitive. Loud. Talking shit back and forth, the sounds of button mashing filling the air as the party energy carried on around them.
After a few matches, Junior chuckled and said, “Damn, you better than I thought.”
Erik grinned, sipping slow, “Told you.”
A beat passed—comfortable, easy. Then Erik said, casually, without even looking up from the screen:
“Aye…I watch Hentai too.”
Junior blinked, then broke into a wide, scandalized laugh, “Yo, chill!”
Erik cracked a smile, leaned back. “What? I ain’t judging. I seen some wild shit. Octopus arms and everything.”
Junior damn near dropped his controller, shaking his head, “You sick.”
“Nah, you the one got caught,” Erik said with a side-eye.
They both laughed harder. The tension from earlier had faded. The room felt lighter. Safer. A little bond formed in the middle of animated chaos, laughter, and digital ass-kickings.
From the kitchen, Celeste glanced over and saw them—Junior finally smiling again, Erik leaned back like a big cousin, fitting in easy.
She smiled to herself, just a little.
It was a little past one in the morning.
The house had finally gone quiet, save for the occasional creak from upstairs—footsteps, maybe the sound of someone closing a bedroom door, settling in.
But Erik couldn’t sleep.
He rolled over again in the guest bed, eyes wide open, then sighed and sat up. Slipped on a pair of Nike slides. Moved through the hallway, quiet and smooth, avoiding the floorboards he remembered squeaked earlier. The air still smelled like baked sugar and spice—leftover cake, pies cooling on the counter.
When he got to the kitchen, the light was already on.
Celeste was there in a soft cream robe, hair wrapped, pulling a tea bag from its pouch. She moved slow, deliberate, a woman at the edge of winding down. A black trash bag was by the back door, along with a bin full of recycling.
“I got it,” Erik said, nodding toward it as he stepped in.
Celeste glanced over her shoulder, startled just a little, then gave him a half-smile.
“You sure?”
He was already lifting the bag, “Yeah.”
She held the back door open for him.
When he returned a minute later, he washed his hands at the sink. The sound of the water was loud in the quiet.
He didn’t leave right away. Just leaned on the kitchen island, arms folded loosely, watching the steam rise from her tea mug.
Celeste stirred in honey. Didn’t speak at first.
Then finally—without turning to face him—she started talking.
“I ain’t really in the spirit this year either,” she said, “Used to love the holidays, but lately it just feel like work.”
Erik didn’t interrupt.
She kept going, “Everybody always talking ‘bout how good everything tastes, how nice the place look…but nobody offers to do shit. They just show up, eat, make a mess, then leave. I cook, I clean, I decorate. I do the most, and for what?”
Her voice wasn’t angry. Just tired. A little frayed around the edges.
“I’m sorry,” she added quickly, finally turning around with her mug in hand, “You ain’t gotta listen to all that.”
Erik shook his head, voice even, “It’s cool. I’m listening.”
She stared at him. Took a sip. Then gave a faint smile, something unreadable behind it.
“You got a real heavy presence, Erik,” she said quietly, “Been that way since you walked in my door.”
He didn’t respond right away. Just watched her over the island, his eyes darker than usual in the dim kitchen light.
Celeste blinked. Looked away. Tried to busy her hands again, putting the spoon in the sink, turning on the water. Reaching for the sponge.
But Erik stepped forward.
He didn’t say anything. Just reached and gently took the sponge from her hand, slow. Set it down beside the sink. Celeste’s hand stayed frozen midair for a second. Then she looked up at him. Erik was closer now. Not too close, but enough that she could feel the heat rolling off his body. The quiet steadiness in him.
“You don’t gotta apologize for venting,” he said, voice low and calm, “You do a lot, Celeste. Like…a lot.”
She opened her mouth, like she might deflect, but he kept going.
“I know the holidays ain’t been feeling the same. They don’t for me neither. Not in a long time. I been goin’ through the motions for years now—showin’ up places, eating, leaving. Never really felt like anything.” He paused. His eyes held hers, “But tonight? All this? It felt different. Real shit.”
Celeste blinked. Her throat bobbed slightly.
Erik gave a soft shake of his head, a half-smirk forming, “Even with Uncle Nate’s drunk ass tryna box me in the kitchen.”
Celeste burst out laughing, loud and sudden. A hand over her chest, her whole body tipping forward as she laughed harder than she had all night.
“Boy, please! You handled him better than I did, shoot. Damn fool almost knocked the mac and cheese off the table!”
Erik chuckled too, the corners of his mouth pulling wider now, “Deuce looked like he was ready to tackle him.”
“He was!” Celeste wiped her eye, “You just kept it so cool. That’s why I said you got that heavy presence. You ain’t even gotta raise your voice.”
Erik watched her settle. Her laughter faded into a quiet smile.
“And you,” he said, a little more serious now, “you make this house feel full. Might not seem like folks say it, but it’s felt. You the reason they keep showin’ up. Food, warmth, all that—it’s you.”
Celeste stared at him.
Her eyes welled just slightly. Nothing dramatic. Just a flash of something deep behind them. That ache only women like her knew—being the backbone, but feeling like the afterthought.
She tried to turn back to the sink. Tried to grab the sponge again.
But Erik was already there.
He caught her wrist gently. Took the sponge from her hand, slow. Set it aside.
The silence turned thick.
Her fingers curled around nothing.
She looked up at him again, slower this time. Less guarded.
He was just watching her.
Breathing even.
Then he leaned in.
And kissed her—once. Deep. Slow. His lips warm, deliberate. Like he meant it.
Celeste let him.
Then, almost as quickly, she stepped back.
Her gaze broke first.
She touched her lips, gave a small shake of her head, then turned, walking out of the kitchen without a word.
Robe swaying.
Mug still in hand.
He just stood there, jaw tight, pulse steady but loud in his ears. Staring down at the dish sponge like it had all the answers.
He stood there for a while. Still. Shoulders square, jaw flexing. That kiss—brief as it was—sat on his mouth like weight. Like memory. Not just of how she tasted, but how she trembled just slightly when his lips met hers. How her breath hitched. How she didn’t stop him.
Didn’t pull him closer either.
The low kitchen light cast a soft amber hue across the tile floor, the counters, the back of her robe as she disappeared up the stairs. But Erik didn’t move. Shoulders squared, arms at his sides, jaw tightening like it was holding the weight of what just happened.
That kiss.
It sat on his mouth like heat that hadn’t cooled. Not just the press of her lips, not just the taste of cinnamon and clove that still lingered faintly, but the way her breath had hitched when he leaned in. The way her mouth parted on instinct. The slight, near-imperceptible tremble that rolled through her—not fear, not shock, something else.
She didn’t stop him.
She didn’t pull him closer, either.
And that said more than anything else.
Eventually, Erik reached for the switch and let the light fade to dark. He made his way back down the hallway, footsteps soft, shoulders still tight with that restless energy. Something in his chest wouldn’t sit right. It didn’t matter how many deep breaths he tried to take. That kiss had cracked something open.
He laid down again, pulled the blanket up out of habit, but the bed felt too cold now. Too wide.
He stared at the ceiling.
The dark pressed in from all sides. No windows. Just the faint hum of the old HVAC system kicking on somewhere in the walls. The silence wasn’t peaceful—it crawled. Got under his skin. It filled the room too thick, like it was pressing against his chest.
He closed his eyes.
But all he could see was the shape of her.
The way her robe had opened just slightly at the collarbone. The delicate chain around her neck. The way her fingers twitched near her side, like maybe—just maybe—she almost reached for him. Her voice rang back through his mind, soft but heavy, like it was still stitched into the air.
“You got a real heavy presence, Erik.”
Damn right he did.
But she’d let him in. Even for just a second. That second was enough to pull him under, twist him up, drag something out of him that had been quiet for too long.
He didn’t sleep. Not really. Drifted in and out. Kept seeing her in flashes behind his eyes. Woke again before sunrise, jaw tight, arms folded behind his head. Restless. Still caught in the space between want and restraint.
Christmas Morning 7:00 AM
The scent got him first.
Warm, rich, and layered. Coffee and cinnamon. Sharp and sweet at once, hanging in the air like it’d been brewed just for him. Erik rubbed a hand down his face, sat up slow. Chest bare. A pair of dark sweats slung low on his hips. He skipped the tank top this time. Didn’t rush. Moved quiet through his routine—brushed his teeth, washed his face, splashed cold water across his skin. The chill sobered him a little, but that tension still clung to his body like static.
When he climbed the stairs from the basement guest room, he moved quiet, the way he always did. The house was still peaceful. No chatter. No footsteps above yet. Just that smell—coffee and cinnamon. Something sweet still cooling on the counter, maybe. Banana bread or some kind of coffee cake. He followed it, like scent could guide him through the weight of that memory.
Celeste was already in the kitchen.
Same soft robe. Same calm posture. But her hair was pinned back now, tight and neat, and there was a new stillness to her movements. She wiped the counter slow with a clean rag, eyes focused on the space in front of her like she hadn’t already felt him enter the room.
But she had. He knew it.
She just didn’t turn.
“Morning,” she said.
Her voice was smooth. Velvet and unreadable.
“Morning.”
His reply matched hers—calm, level. No heat. No pressure.
Silence stretched between them.
The hum of the fridge. The tick of the clock.
Something low warming in the oven—maybe cinnamon, maybe nothing.
Erik leaned against the doorframe, watching her move. She didn’t look at him. Not at first.
Then—slowly—Celeste glanced over her shoulder. Not smiling. Not scowling. Just present. Just measured. That same quiet control that made men question themselves.
“I let you kiss me,” she said.
No guilt. No regret. Just the facts.
He felt that—how clean the words landed. No softness to hold on to.
“I know,” he said. “You wanted to.”
Celeste turned now. Fully. One hand braced against the counter, her robe tied clean, her posture composed like she’d never been touched. Like that kiss hadn’t shook anything at all.
“That was a moment,” she said, “And it’s over.”
Erik stepped in. Not too close. Just enough, “But it happened.”
She didn’t answer.
He studied her—how her eyes flicked, not in avoidance, but in calculation. How her body stayed still, not defensive but guarded.
“You kissed me back,” he said quietly.
“I did.”
That fast. No hesitation. She owned it. But her tone didn’t invite more.
“And now?”
Celeste let the silence hold. She looked at him. Really looked. Then, with that same cool finality she used on men who got out of pocket:
“Now I make my coffee. You gonna stand there or pour a cup?”
Erik gave a slow nod. Stepped aside. Reached for a mug.
He poured it black. No sugar. No cream.
That silence? It wasn’t peace anymore.
It buzzed under the surface—thick, warm, laced with restraint and want. The kind of silence that didn’t end things.
The kind that marked the beginning.
The house is quiet. Dim light filters in through the dining room curtains, soft and gold, pooling at the edges of the hardwood floor. The scent of cinnamon still lingers in the air—warm, baked into the walls like memory.
Erik leans against the counter, bare chest rising slow with every breath. A clean mug rests in his hand, half-full with black coffee. The heat presses into his palm, grounding him. Across the room, the silence between him and Celeste hasn’t moved. It’s thick, like breath caught in the throat. Like everything they didn’t say still hanging between them.
He takes another sip. Lets it burn down the middle of his chest. A slow sting. Something to hold onto.
Then, he hears it.
Footsteps. Light and careless. A laugh.
The distant thump of a playful knock against a hallway wall. Then that voice:
“Merry Christmas, Daddy! You still sleep? Thought so.”
Zaya.
His shoulders react before his mind does. Not a full flinch—just a pull, a slow roll of tension through his back. He doesn’t turn right away. Doesn’t speak. Just listens to her steps glide across the floor behind him, low and smooth like a body that knows it’s being watched.
When he does turn, she’s already in motion.
Tight black leggings sculpted to every curve. A cropped gray hoodie rides just above her waist, the drawstring swinging with every step. Her locs are piled into a loose bun on top of her head, a few strands slipping free to frame her cheekbones. Bare feet. Lips glossed just enough to catch the light when she lifts her water bottle to take a sip.
She drinks slow. Casual.
Doesn’t glance his way at first. Just moves through the kitchen like she belongs to it. Like she’s always belonged to it. Her body cuts through the quiet like heat through fog.
“Merry Christmas,” she says.
But not to the room.
Just to him.
He watches her close the fridge. Watches her lean against the counter like she’s done it before. Her eyes find him now—bold, unbothered, curious. She lets them linger on his chest. His arms. The line of muscle at his stomach.
Then her mouth curves.
“You my Christmas present?” she asks, “Can I unwrap you?”
His grip tightens on the coffee mug. He doesn’t answer. Doesn’t blink. Zaya steps closer. Only a few inches separate them now. She reaches for his mug, takes it from his hand without asking. Sips.
Immediately winces, “Yuck. Black coffee? You really drink it like this?”
Erik arches a brow but stays silent.
She grins.
“You need some sugar in this,” she says, voice light and teasing, “Some cream too. You don’t like sugar and cream?”
The way she says it—sweet, high, like it’s innocent—makes his jaw lock tight.
Still, he doesn’t fold.
From the front room, the soft rustle of wrapping paper carries in. Celeste’s voice—low, occupied. She’s sorting gifts under the tree, setting up for the morning before everyone else wakes.
In the kitchen, it’s just them.
Zaya’s hand lifts—fingers brushing the waistband of his black joggers. She tugs. Not hard. Just enough to shift the fabric. Just enough to make him react.
And he does.
Fast.
He grabs her by the wrist and pulls her in hard, chest to chest. Looks down at her, jaw clenched, breath slow and sharp through his nose.
“Why the fuck you keep testing me?”
Zaya stares up at him, lips parted, not an ounce of fear in her face. Her eyes hold his with that same boldness, that same challenge.
“Why you keep acting like you don’t want me to?” she says, “You ain’t got much longer here. Let’s make it count.”
And just like that, she slips free. Smooth. Smiling.
Grabs her yoga mat from the corner near the staircase, tucks it under one arm, and heads for the basement door. The air behind her is still warm with the shape of her. Erik doesn’t move. Just watches the door swing shut. Watches it settle. His coffee’s cold now. His body isn’t. And his jaw’s still tight.
Christmas Morning 9:00 AM
The scent of cinnamon rolls and brewing coffee hung thick in the air, curling through the warm house like a memory you wanted to stay inside forever. Outside the windows, light filtered in soft and hazy, brushing over frost-glazed panes and the trimmed porch wreath like a hush. The fireplace crackled low in the living room. White lights blinked along the branches of the tall fir tree dressed in gold and burgundy ornaments, and a vintage record played faintly in the background.
Old-school soul music floated through the house, warm as the morning light. The unmistakable crackle of vinyl underpinned every note, filling the room with rhythm and memory. The Temptations’ “Silent Night” rolled in first, deep. Then came Otis Redding’s “Merry Christmas Baby,” smooth and gritty with feeling. Later, Donny Hathaway’s “This Christmas”….again…slipped in like a familiar promise, the kind of song that made the tree lights seem brighter and the hot cocoa taste richer.
It was a playlist stitched together from decades of Black holiday joy, voices that sounded like grandmothers humming over the stove, like uncles dancing with aunties after a little too much rum. It wrapped around them all, humming through the house like love lived in the walls.
Zaya claimed her spot first, dropping down onto the carpet directly in front of the tree with a red plaid blanket tossed across her legs. She wore her Christmas pajamas, red with white snowflakes, cropped just enough to show a teasing sliver of stomach and snug across the curve of her hips. Her locs were piled into a messy bun, edges laid clean. She looked bright and alive, joy humming through her like music. A cinnamon roll sat half-eaten in one hand while the other reached eagerly toward the pile of gifts.
Celeste moved between the kitchen and living room with quiet intention, long silk robe tied neatly at her waist, steam rising from her mug. Her presence anchored the space. Calm. Elegant. Watchful. She carried herself like a woman who knew how to hold a room together without raising her voice.
Marlon emerged from the hallway still yawning, slippers dragging beneath him. He kissed Celeste’s cheek, murmured something low that earned him a small smirk, then settled into his chair with his coffee, eyes already warming at the sight of the tree.
The front door opened and in came Deuce and Tasha in matching green pajama sets with white piping, clearly chosen by Tasha. She bounced in first, curls pulled into two playful puffs, candy cane earrings swinging as she passed out hugs.
“Merry Christmas, y’all,” she said brightly, hugging Zaya, then Celeste, then Marlon.
Deuce followed, scooping Zaya up off the floor in a tight hug before dropping down beside her. They fit together easy, laughter spilling between them like rhythm and bass.
Erik stayed slightly apart at first, leaning against the archway with a mug of coffee in hand, black thermal clinging to his broad shoulders. Quiet. Observant. His eyes moved from face to face, but he didn’t say much. Just watched.
Celeste clapped her hands once, gentle but decisive.
“Alright,” she said, “Let’s do this together.”
Everyone settled in. Wrapping paper crinkled. Tags were read out loud. Laughter rose and fell as boxes were passed around the circle.
Zaya tore into her gifts with delight, squealing over cozy socks and a silk bonnet from Tasha, throwing her arms around her in appreciation. Deuce opened his gifts next, his expression shifting when Celeste handed him a long rectangular box.
Inside sat a gold watch, heavy and elegant.
“Damn,” Deuce breathed, “You went crazy.”
“It’s time you wore something with some weight,” Celeste said simply.
Marlon laughed, nodding in approval.
Tasha unwrapped a perfume bottle shaped like a dark rose and immediately sprayed her wrist, holding it out for Deuce to smell. He leaned in, smiling wide.
Zaya handed her father a folded jersey, crisp and stitched with his favorite team and his old high school number.
“You wild!” Marlon said, holding it up, “Where you even find this?”
Zaya just grinned.
Then Celeste stepped forward with a neatly wrapped box —cream paper, gold ribbon, corners sharp like she’d ironed them into place. She held it out to him, steady.
“For you,” she said.
Erik blinked, genuinely caught off guard, “You ain’t have to do all that, Miss Celeste.”
She tilted her head slightly, a softness settling in her eyes, “I know,” she said, “But I wanted to.”
He accepted the gift slowly, unwrapping it with quiet fingers. Inside was a denim jacket—heavy-duty, sherpa-lined, dark indigo with clean lines. No logos. Just quality. Timeless. Exactly the kind of piece he would buy for himself. The fact that Celeste had chosen it without asking, without missing a beat, landed heavier than the gift itself. It meant she’d been paying attention. Clocked his taste. Knew what warmth looked like on him. And in only two days.
Marlon glanced over, grinning, “Damn, son,” he said with a chuckle, “Wifey hooked you up! Bet you glad you came anyway, right?”
The room broke into easy laughter. Erik cracked a quiet smile and nodded once, “Yeah…looks like I am.”
He tried the jacket on then and there—shrugged it over his broad shoulders, adjusted the collar.
Laughter rippled through the room.
Erik smiled, just slightly.
Then Zaya scooted forward on the carpet and held out a small black velvet pouch, “For you too,” she said, her tone casual but her eyes sharp.
Erik caught it easily, loosening the drawstring. Inside sat a pair of mirrored aviator shades, sleek and silver-rimmed. Tactical. Sexy. Exactly his style.
She tilted her head, “Put ’em on.”
Deuce chimed in immediately, “Yeah, yeah, let’s see ‘em, bro.”
Erik hesitated, then slid them on. When he lifted his chin, the lenses caught the glow of the tree lights, sharpening his jawline and deepening the quiet authority he carried.
“Okay, fineness,” Zaya said openly, biting her lip. “Looking swagged out.”
Tasha laughed, “They look good on you,” she said, sincere, though her eyes lingered a moment longer than necessary.
Deuce shook his head, grinning, “Careful, man. You keep this up, Zaya gon’ pull you under the mistletoe.”
More laughter followed.
“…Appreciate that,” Erik said, fingers brushing the frame of the glasses.
But it landed deeper than gratitude. He had not expected to feel seen.
Deuce slid a wooden box across the floor toward him next.
“For you,” he said, “Remember that trip to Haiti? You wouldn’t shut up about this rum. Took me a minute, but I tracked it down.”
Erik opened it and let out a low breath.
“Damn,” he said, “You really did that?”
Deuce leaned back, “Figured you could use a reason to relax.”
Erik nodded, touched.
Then he reached for a smaller velvet-lined box and handed it to Deuce.
“Open that.”
Deuce did, and his breath caught.
Inside lay a gold pendant, vintage and rare, a perfect match to the one his grandmother had given him as a kid and lost years ago.
“Where the hell did you find this?” Deuce asked quietly.
“New York,” Erik said, “Took some digging. Didn’t care about the price.”
Deuce stood and hugged him hard, clapping his back.
“Man. Thank you.”
Zaya watched the exchange closely, her gaze lingering on Erik now with something softer behind it.
“Photo time!” she announced suddenly, grabbing her phone.
She propped it on the mantel and set the timer.
Everyone shuffled into place. Deuce sat on the floor with Tasha curled against him, laughing. Zaya dropped down beside them, blanket pooled around her legs. Marlon stood behind them, one arm around Celeste’s waist. She rested a hand lightly on her husband’s back.
Erik stood at the edge, aviators still on, jacket folded over his arm, gift bag in hand. Zaya glanced back at him just as the shutter clicked, the smallest smile tugging at the edge of her mouth. No one said anything about the tension but it was there.
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It's Wunmi's , the perfect cast" I don't want to work with no one else" for me Shunika, head of hair and Zinzi like, girl, we know. Everyone knows and them laughing. They know the 🍵 🤣
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: ̗̀➛ 𝐏𝐀𝐈𝐑𝐈𝐍𝐆: cameron cade x best friend black!reader
: ̗̀➛ 𝐑𝐀𝐓𝐈𝐍𝐆: M 18+, NSFW
: ̗̀➛ 𝐖.𝐂: 2.03K
: ̗̀➛ 𝐒𝐘𝐍𝐎𝐏𝐒𝐈𝐒: best friends who finally do the do.
: ̗̀➛ 𝐖𝐀𝐑𝐍𝐈𝐍𝐆: ROUGHLY EDITED, explicit sexual content, porn with no/minor plot, unprotected sex, rough sex: manhandling, overstimulation, multiple orgasms, dirty talk, slight breeding kink [he has you in a mating press], slight toxic!cameron, slight aftercare, abrupt ending [i didn’t know how to end it gang 😭]
: ̗̀➛ 𝐀𝐔𝐓𝐇𝐎𝐑’𝐒 𝐍𝐎𝐓𝐄: my official first tyriq[and characters project] I do have many more coming! I am trying to raise £200 to help with a short fall. I’ve had some shifts cancelled on me so I’m behind on bills! If any of you can donate I would appreciate it PayPal. 💕
Regardless, please reblog, comment and like 💕
“Damn baby, why didn’t you tell me you had all this good pussy?”
Cameron mumbled against your bare leg that were currently hiked over his broad shoulder, his voice dripping with admiration a lot sweeter than the way he was fucking you.
The question was rhetorical but emphasised just how much he was enjoying being inside of you.
Goosebumps broke all over the surface of your flushed and damp skin, choking on a whiny moan as your cunt tightly squeezed and pulsated around him. The throbbing sent a shiver down the length of his spine and settled in his bones. A flurry of chopped sobs poured from your mouth as your climax began to climb. You were so close. And he could feel it all.
You would have tried to answer his question but in truth - you didn’t know how to.
The two of you met during freshman in college - sharing the same physiotherapy classes and the two of you instantly clicked. When he first approached you - you couldn’t believe that he’d even talk to you. When you first arrived on campus, his name was uttered in every corner. He was the person to know because of his projected career. You had wanted to keep away from him - you didn’t like attention being drawn to you at all but Cameron just had to be enrolled on your course.
Even worse, he came to sit next to you.
You stilled at just making eye contact with him. Low sitting blue eyes, dimples deep as he smiled, rosy lips begging for attention and from his seated position alone you could tell that he was tall. He made sure that you couldn’t ignore him and you hated that fell for his charm, hook, line and sinker.
The attraction was shared and the chemistry intensified with each interaction but nothing ever came off it.
Football. Girlfriends. Endorsements. A great rookie career - all of it got in the way.
So friendship is what you settled for and you were grateful just to be a part of his journey.
Unfortunately for you, he was relentless. The friendship status did not matter to him at all and Cameron steadily flirted with you like the devil of temptation resided in his flesh. Always hanging around, giving you his undivided attention when you were close. Treating you just on the edges of a girlfriend, yet always teasing the word ‘friend’ in front of you. You always let it wash over you because being close to him in any capacity was worth it.
That attraction however, could not be denied and could not be hidden. And he’d picked up on it and he played with it - he played with you. He enjoyed teasing you. Kissing you on the neck, hands on your lower waist as he moved past you, hugs that lingered. Girlfriends be damned - you were the apple of his eye even if you denied what you were to him.
So that was how you found yourself in his penthouse - on a supposed regular night in with your best friend on his days off. So how you ended up in your current predicament was unbeknownst to you.
A movie, typical gossip, a game of tease.
From there all it took was a kiss.
A soft brush of your lips when he leaned down above you, whispering teasingly against your lips, fingers underneath your chin before gripping your jaw so that you couldn’t shift your eye contact away from him. So that he could see all of that want dripping out of your eyes.
“Do it.” You dared him.
And it was no surprise that he listened.
You had been so determined not to fall into his orbit and now you were on your back, sweating out your hairstyle, tank top ripped and panties pulled to the side as he manhandled you in every way. Your pussy stretched out and creaming around the thickest dick you’ve ever had in your life as you moaned in bliss. Fuck, you loved every second of it.
Cameron’s thrusts were deliciously brutal, his hips snapped into yours as your legs hang over his shoulders. He fucked you like you were a bitch in heat and you sounded just like one. Your mouth dropped open as your cries and whines could not be contained, sounding real pretty for him.
He breathed heavily through his nose at the sight your cream coating the length of his dick. Cam wedged his hands underneath the arch at the base of your back and gripped tight. He used your body as leverage to fuck into you even deeper.
The heat of the bedroom was making you delirious as much as the way his fat mushroom tip was pushing against your softest spots. You were so loud and Cameron drank all of your sounds by shushing you with rough kisses.
The wet clapping emitting from where your bodies connected was getting so loud, Cameron had to look down. His loud moan barely registered through the fog clouding your senses.
“You’re sooo fucking wet baby. Gushing all that good shit all over me, fuuuccckkk.”
You were looking up at him, doe eyed, a soft crease pinching in-between your eyebrows with your teeth biting onto your bottom lip as you tried to control it. He was hitting all of your good spots and it was so intense, it sat like a weight on your chest.
Then, Cameron pushed your legs back so that your knees were touching your ears and he moved to hover directly above you. He used his upper body to contort you into the perfect position for him - ready for his taking and you were in awe with how it left you feeling. The weight of pleasure sinking into your bones, deeper and deeper.
“O-oooh!” You gasped as you pulled on the sheets underneath your fingertips.
His beautiful, blue eyes never left your face as he watched your pretty face surrender into the pleasure he was delivering. Your eyebrows drew together tighter, as if you were about to cry, your lips forming into an ‘o’ form as he slowed down his strokes, letting you enjoy the feel of him. Inch by inch.
Soft curves and hard muscles colliding into each other. Naked,skin on skin - still, felt like there was a barrier between the two of you. The thought slamming into you, nothing will ever be enough, you will always want more. Cameron groaned as he felt the pain of your nails breaking into the skin of his back as you unintentionally brought him closer.
You were begging for him without words and that caused him to smirk in satisfaction. Cameron couldn’t believe you had been keeping this type of connection away from him. The type of connection that quenched your thirst but left you famished for more.
He was brought out of his thoughts by the feel of your trembling fingers tracing his bottom lip, tugging it free from his teeth. He placed a tender kiss on the inside pad of your thumb before his eyes drew back to where your bodies connected. The sight of it caused all of his blood to soar down to his aching dick.
Slathered all over his base was milky white. It built up generously and it accumulated so much the flapping wetness caused his eyes to roll to the back of his head. He couldn’t believe you’d ever get this wet.
“Yeahhh mamas, I can’t believe she’s this wet for me …”
Cameron doesn’t take his eyes off your cunt as he slammed back in, the wetness drawing a delicious drag with drag. He threw his head back as a deep groan left him. The sound was so primal it sent nasty shivers down your spine and settled in your pelvis.
But you didn’t move your hand away from his pelvis as he was folding you even deeper. In fact, Cameron, lowered his upper body until he was completely folded over yours. His pelvis ground against your clit, his trimmed hair brushing your clit - hard.
Cameron was wild in his lust.
He sucked bruising kisses into your neck, his tongue trailed hotly up to your mouth to claim it in a deep kiss. It was all consuming, overwhelming. His long tongue flattened against yours in maddening swipes, sucking the muscle sloppily into his own mouth which made you lightheaded.
Blood rushed to your ears as he ground his hips up again, hammering away at that spot inside you but not enough to make you cross eyed and your hand pressed on his abdomen.
Cameron kept his eyes on as you gasped desperately. Your eyes closed as he nipped at your bottom lip which caused you to sigh softly. His tongue darted out and soothed the sting of your bite before whispering inside your mouth- eyes glazed, “Move that hand, baby.”
You didn’t move your hand but he did it for you. He grabbed your wrist and trapped it above your head as he drilled into you. Your mind was mush the more he thrusted into you so you didn’t even try to think straight. Cameron was so caught up in the moment - not just from the heat of your pussy but how tight and how creamy you were.
Letting out a string of swears, Cameron captured them by bringing your mouth into another overwhelming kiss. His cock aching whilst he swallowed your wails as you twitched and ached around him.
Until you couldn’t take it anymore. Cam gave another harsh yet hard roll of his hips into your swollen opening while he was battering at that tender spot inside of you and then … you were coming.
And fuck! You were coming, hard. Your nails clawed at Cam’s rigged muscles as a swarm of stars completely eclipsed your vision whilst your body went into shock with wave after wave of vicious pleasure.
Your wails were so loud, you struggled to recognise your voice. But Cameron had a clear view to the ecstasy flooding your face he pumped his hips forward, pushing himself deeper into your body. Filthy words of praise and encouragement directly in your ear, prolonging your orgasm.
“That’s it, babygirl … I love the way you’re cumming all over me…”
Tears spilled from your eyes and you were close to passing out when Cam dropped his head into your chest and took one of your swollen nipples into his mouth, his thrusts slowing down in tempo as he shot his cum deep inside of your heat with a muffled groan.
He filled you up to the brim and then popped out your nipple out of his mouth with a satisfied sigh.
The both of you were riddled with tiredness, thighs were killing you, and your body was trembling like a leaf but a grin had etched onto your lips regardless as Cameron placed calming kisses everywhere his lips could touch.
He slowly pulled out, warm yet concerned eyes checking over you for any sign of discomfort as you basked in the glow of the aftermath. Your eyes closed as you sank into the softness of the blankets beneath you. You left his kisses on your cheeks in the tender way that you’d grown accustomed to.
“You okay sweet girl? I didn’t hurt you did I?”
“No, baby. I’m good.” You shook your head as you hummed in satisfaction. You felt him shift away from the bed, leaving you in your peaceful lonesome until you felt him wipe you down gently with a wet towel. You heard a thud as he tossed to rag onto on the floor when he was done.
You felt the bed dip beside you before Cameron slipped up behind you. Your hands reached behind you and brought him closer with a soft hum. You had crossed that line in your friendship and you couldn’t process what it meant for the future for the both of you. But you’d bask in whatever this moment meant for you.
Cameron nuzzled his face into the crook of your neck. “We’ll never just be friends after this.” He mumbled.
He was right about that. Nothing would ever be the same.
Dry humping. Titty fucking. Thigh gap fucking, thigh riding. Mutual Masturbation. Solo Masturbation. Just making out without an escalation to sex. I will be bringing it.
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SUMMARY: see image below + in which Tyriq doesn’t know the definition of ‘personal space’ and stays glued to your hip. 🩷
“Tyriq, mooooove,” you groaned as you tried to push him off of you with one hand and kept your grip on your edge brush with the other, “you see me over here strugglin’ to do my edges and you playin’.”
he had been bothering you for the past few minutes by doing little things like kissing your shoulders, neck, and cheeks, but then it gradually progressed into him practically holding you hostage against his body while he made random noises every now and then to get on your nerves.
you couldn’t stay annoyed with him for long, but you at least wanted him to leave you alone until you finished doing your edges, especially since your baby hairs weren’t acting right and wouldn’t lay down for shit.
“gimme’ a kiss, bae,” Tyriq pouted, dramatically sticking out of his bottom lip, as he leaned his head down and tried to kiss your cheek, but you dodged his kiss and kept your eyes glued to your uncooperative baby hairs, “wow, so you just hate me and want me to die?”
“Ty, i’m gon’ pop your yellow ass if you don’t move for a second.” you murmured, successfully swooping some of your baby hairs, as you let out a soft huff in relief and started to swoop the next section, your eyebrows furrowing a little in concentration.
“you didn’t deny it,” Tyriq’s face contorted into a deep frown and he dramatically groaned as loud as he could as he let go of you and threw himself back against the bathroom door, his body hitting the door with a loud thud while his head fell back and rested against it, “ohhhh, my Godddd, my girlfriend hates meeee!”
you paused mid-swoop and you looked back at him through the mirror in bewilderment mixed with amusement with your eyebrows furrowed as you cracked a wide smile and let out a laugh, unable to hide how hilarious you thought his antics were.
“Tyriq,” you laughed, lowering your edge brush, as you turned your head and looked back at your boyfriend, who now had his face covered with his hands and was fake-crying into them, “oh, my goodness— come here, boy, damn.”
Tyriq’s hands swiftly left his face and his expression now held a wide smile with lit-up eyes as he looked at you, making you chuckle and shake your head.
“you childish as fuck, you know that?” you chuckled, raising an eyebrow, as Tyriq’s arms wrapped around your waist and pulled you into him.
“yeah, yeah, give yo’ childish man a kiss before i tell everybody you hate me.” Tyriq grinned, puckering his lips, as you smiled at him and let out a hearty laugh before standing into your tiptoes and giving him a loving kiss on the lips.
Tyriq eagerly returned the kiss, his lips moving in tandem with yours while his hands moved down to your ass and gave it a squeeze. the kiss was slow, sensual, and filled with all of the love the two of you harbored for each other as one of your hands cradled the side of his neck and the other held onto your edge brush, your body pressed against his and trapped beneath his long and muscular arms.
gently pulling away from the kiss, the two of you locked eyes almost instantly and Tyriq smiled widely at you, his dimples poking through his cheeks while he gazed at you like you were his most prized possession. smiling back, you let out a soft content hum and pecked his lips twice before lowering yourself back into the pads of your feet.
“anything else you want from me before i finish doin’ my edges?” you asked as you raised your eyebrows and held up your edge brush, waving it a little in your hand.
“can i keep holdin’ you while you do ‘em?” Tyriq asked, slightly tightening his arms around you, as you smiled and let out a soft chuckle.
“Ty, if you start annoying me again, i’m kicking you outta’ here,” you warned, pointing your index finger at him, as Tyriq smiled and quickly nodded his head, making you crack a grin before letting out a soft laugh, “i swear, you lucky you so damn cute.”
you moved towards the sink and Tyriq instantly followed, his arms remaining around your waist while his head rested on your shoulder. your eyes flickered towards your baby hairs and you adjusted your grip on your edge brush as you dipped the bristles in your edge control and applied it to your baby hairs, starting to swoop the section you were working on before Tyriq threw a tantrum about you not giving him a kiss.
“i love you, fat butt.” Tyriq grinned, using his personal nickname for you, as your hand momentarily paused and your eyes briefly moved towards him in the mirror before you let out a laugh and your lips curled up into a grin, shaking your head and resuming your swooping motions on your baby hairs.
“i love you too, diva.”
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