Pairing: Arc Trooper Echo x f!Reader
Summary: Echo likes to take things slow and help really open you up.đ
Rating: EXPLICIT 18+
Warnings: Indulgent foreplay with dirty talk and praise and
encouragement and sweetness because oh he missed you sođ, fingering, relationship-y? I guess?, he's just so fucking sweet.
Word Count: 1k
notes: I saw a thing and could not get said thing out of my head and totally imagined echo doing this because he's indulgent and reverent and giving and sexy and we need to all be obsessed with him bc hes adorable. ok thanks :) also I am well aware the gif is TBB echo not arc trooper echo but this gif was too perfect for the scenario so I HAD to.
âCâmon, my sweet girl, open upâŠlet me see you.â Echo coaxed as his hands drew up the soft tops of your wide thighs. You kneeled before him on your bunk sheets, looking up at the unmistakable doting brown eyes of your beloved boyfriend.
His eyes were fixated elsewhere, nudging the hem of your pretty pink lace negligee up just enough to reveal your center. Gloved hands coursed over your dark bare skin, fingertips grazing down your lower belly and leaving goosebumps in their wake. Knowing him, heâd had only one thing on his mind since heâd landed back home for a few weeks, which meant heâd had a lot of time to think about exactly how he wanted you.
Parting your plush lips freshly bitten from passionate yet agonizingly slow kisses, you inhaled a soft gasp. His own drawing into a smug grin as he watched you react to his touch just as strongly as heâd imagined. You looked up at him through lust heavy lids and met his gaze, tracing down your own torso to outline the ghosts of his touches with your own.Â
âOhâŠEcho-â you practically squeaked, flipping up the dainty fabric to reveal what was between your spread legs. With two deft fingers you eased your outer folds apart and let your hips roll forward enticingly to meet his touch.
âThere she isâŠgood girl. Missing me, huh? Need me to take care of you?â Echo muttered, his darkened pupils locked with yours as he slipped off his gloves. One roughened palm massaged your inner thigh, carefully holding you open. He tipped forward to lock his lips with yours just enough to leave you breathless as he let his fingertips drag down your center.
You hummed your soft approval into his kiss, holding yourself open just as his middle finger dipped into your heat. He groaned lowly, breaking away from your mouth to silently curse whatever cruel circumstances or stars or gods would ever have him apart from you. The drenched slick between your thighs coated his single digit as he dragged it reverently along the length of you.
âOh yeah, you did. Such a good girl with this dripping little pussy. All just cause you missed me. Need me to come home and touch you like this always.â He whispered, slipping in a second finger and using both to glide around the fluttering hole desperate for his entry. You keened for more, letting your hips buck forward into him lazily.
You gripped his wrist with your other hand, urging him for more and riding his fingers needily. âOf course I.. m-missed you, baby. No one else gets to touch me like this. Only you. I need you. Need you m-more.â You whimpered, his gentle stroking along your slippery folds sending shivers down your spine.Â
âAwh, pretty baby, just a little more? Youâre so fucking sweet. So beautiful opening up and letting me get such a good look at you.â He leaned back, brown eyes devouring the sight of you splayed out so salaciously before him. His gentle caresses quickened, twisting his wrist to allow his fingers to curve in and enter you abruptly.
You cried out sharply as his broad fingers breached your entrance and spread you apart on top of them. It took everything in your power not to snap your hips and ride his perfectly thick fingers the way he knew you wanted to. He craved patience, he wanted to take his time properly fucking the girl he loved and the faster you sped through it the sooner heâd be to leaving again.Â
âThank youâŠbaby. Love it just like this. Take your time. I want you to feel how much I miss you. How wet I get waiting for you to come help me. My Echo.â you moaned softly, earning another weighted groan from him.Â
His fingers curled into your front wall, making you buck your hips forward into his palm and brushing your clit just briefly. He chuckled with amusement, letting go of your other thigh to twist the width of his thumb in circles across your clit. You moaned louder, the twisting of his fingers inside combining with his featherlight touches on your clit bringing you rapidly close to your first orgasm.Â
âNeedy little thing. Stars youâre so tight, so soaked for me. Body looks so fucking good in this too. I want to fuck you so bad, but iâm going to take my time. Going to make this last so you feel the ache of me for days. Would you like that? Want me to fuck you until youâre sore? Tell me, cyarâika. Let me hear your pretty voice again.â Echo rambled when he was turned on, his brain emptying weeks worth of lewd thoughts to the one person he could indulge in whenever he wanted.
âYes, Echo. Fuck me. Fuck me, please. I canât wait any longer for your cock. Now, baby. Please.â You begged, unhinging out of desperation as his endless looping circles had you balanced precariously on the edge. The familiar sizzling that had your body beginning to overheat spread through your limbs, numbing you of any other feeling but his fingers inside you.
âHmmm my impatient little cyarâika. I can feel how close you are. You need to let go. Soak my fingers so you can be nice and ready for my cock. I know you can do it. Cum for me, gorgeous. Just for me.â He encouraged, leaning his forehead on yours to watch your face contort in pleasure as the wave finally sucked you under.
With a high pitched whimper you came, fluttering around two of his fingers plunging in and out of your entrance and making a smug, satisfied chuckle rumble deep in his broad chest. A giddy smile drew across his dark features and heâd barely let you catch your breath before he was slicking his cock up with your leaking cum and notching himself at your entrance. âThatâs my pretty girl. You ready for more?â
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Summary:Â Benny likes you a lot, you like Benny a lot. Both of you are determined not to get that.
Pairing:Â Ben "Benny" Miller x Reader
Word Count:Â ~13.2k
Warnings: idiots in love, pining, canon level violence, PTSD, mental health issues, panic attacks, mild harassment and threats of violence
A/N: Thank you for reading! Again, I am so very aware Iâm writing in what is probably a dead fandom for a meh movie. That being said, please let me know what you think!
The afternoon is slow, hot.Â
Like most afternoons at the bar.Â
The Florida air is so heavy and thick with humidity, it feels like something you could swim through if you really tried. Thereâs a lethargic weight in the air, like youâre slowly sinking into the mire of your own life, the dreariness of the mundane and the everyday.
All the folding doors are open onto the deck that overlooks the lake, umbrellas open over the tables to keep the sun at bay. But the only patrons, a group of older men that come in at the same time everyday to drink together, currently sit inside beneath the lazily rotating ceiling fans.Â
The only balm against the pain of manning a tiny bar in a small town that hardly saw any customers during the endless afternoon shift, is that the owner doesnât mind you reading on the clock if there are no customers that need your attention.
John likes you well enough and knows youâre competent. He also knows how slow things can get, but refuses to close up shop during the afternoons. Heâs ran the bar the same way for forty years, and heâd be damned if he started doing things differently just because the townâs population and tourist traffic had shrunk a little.Â
So, once your regulars are taken care of, happy with beers and lowball glasses of whiskey straight, you take a seat on the barstool behind the counter and prop open your book against a bottle of tequila.Â
Sweat drips down your spine as a warm, heavy breeze drifts through the bar, bringing you the scent of lake water and sunshine. A local rock station plays lowly from the overhead speakers, and a peace settles between your bones. The low conversation and sudden loud chuckles from the regulars, along with the buzz of crickets and cicadas, the lap of water against the wooden poles of the deck, make for good background noise.Â
The front door opens and you glance up, trying not to look too excited, too giddy. But a smile pulls at your lips despite your best efforts.Â
And Benny Miller smiles openly at you, unabashedly happy to see you. He beelines toward you, waving at the regulars who all know him by name in this small town.Â
They know Ben Miller the MMA fighter, Ben Miller the soldier.
But they also know him as Benny Miller the troublemaker, as Will Millerâs little brother Benny.
âHey, Ben,â they call and he glances over his shoulder to flash that famous Benny grin, hyena wide and begging for trouble.Â
The breeze carries the scent of Bennyâs soap and cologne to you. Though heâs in jeans and a t-shirt, you can tell heâs just finished up at the gym, the edges of his hair still damp beneath his usual backwards ratty cap.Â
âHey babe,â he coos at you, dropping a battered copy of the last book youâd loaned him onto the counter before rounding the bar to envelope you in a hug that nearly knocks you out of your seat.Â
âEasy,â you remind him even as you fold one arm tightly around him, smoothing your fingers down his spine, that clean soap and earthy smell thatâs distinctly Benny wrapping around you. âHey, pretty boy.â
He clings onto you, his nose pressed against your temple, for just a tad too long. And you have to tap his back with a laugh when your lungs feel like they might collapse.Â
He skims his lips across your forehead before releasing you, grinning big and wide at you as you snap your own book closed to give him the attention you know he's about to demand. âMiss me?â he asks as he takes a seat on the opposite side of the counter.Â
âYou donât give me much of a chance to miss you, Miller,â you say, raising a brow at him. âWe see each other almost every day.â
âAnd ya miss me every single day,â he confirms to himself with a nod, nudging the book he deposited on the counter closer to you. âI liked this one.âÂ
âReally? Iâm a little bit surprised,â you pick the book up and flick through your worn copy of Stephen Kingâs Carrie. âWhyâd you like it?âÂ
âBig fan of goinâ out with a bang,â he grins, leaning over the counter to brace his forearms against the bar and drop his head. You can hear his leg shaking where he bounces it against the floor on the other side of the bar.Â
You shake your head and take the book to stack on top of your own. âYou want another one or are you good for now?âÂ
âSure, what dâya got for me?âÂ
âWhy donât you come over to my place and you can pick something yourself?â You offer. âAnd you know you donât have to get something else right away? You can take a break.âÂ
In the months youâd known Benny, heâd never struck you as a reader. But a couple of weeks ago heâd suddenly asked for a recommendation. Benny, youâre almost positive, has undiagnosed ADHD, so his sudden interest in something like reading had surprised you, though you'd been happy to recommend something to him. You were more than happy to have an excuse to invite him over to your place, if only to look through your book collection.
Benny preferred motion and action to something like sitting down with a book - MMA, fishing, running - literally anything but sitting down for hours on end. Stillness and silence did not suit Benny and you almost wonder how it was that he was getting through your books so quickly.Â
Whatever the reason for his foray into reading, you're glad for it, glad to have someone to talk with about books.
âNah, Iâm good,â he laughs. âI got you to keep up with now.â
You roll your eyes, âDo you have to be competitive about everything?â
âYeah.âÂ
âYou want anything today? Or are you just bored again?â Â
âNo,â his eyes flick over you, the corner of his mouth twitching up. âJust knew youâd be missinâ my company.âÂ
Benny never orders anything, not since the day you met him and not unless he hung around long enough for the dinner crew to start drifting in. He mostly just came in to keep you company - as he put it, or annoy you - as youâd put it.Â
âThat so?â You canât help but grin, shifting in your seat to cross your arms over your chest, âAnd who told you that, huh?âÂ
He smiles wider at you. âYou always gotta be so mean to me?â He jokes, lifting his gaze and peering at you from beneath his lashes, eyes wide and open and so pretty it makes your breath stall.
You glance away from him, skimming your thumb over the pages of your book instead, to avoid meeting his eyes, a gaze that hid absolutely nothing from you. âAny other thoughts about Carrie?âÂ
âNot about her, no.âÂ
âWhat about then?âÂ
âThinkinâ about how Iâm so smokinâ hot you canât even look at me.âÂ
You flash your eyes back up at him, âCareful, Ben, I might think youâre flirting with me.âÂ
âOh, honey, trust me, Iâm trying.âÂ
You reach out and touch a yellowing bruise at the edge of his temple. He winces against your touch. âMaybe. Good thing I think youâre pretty when youâre a little rough around the edges, huh?â You try not to think about how he leans into your hand, reaches up and holds your hand to his face, even when you press your thumb harder into the bruise.
Benny Miller had stormed into your life for the first time a few months ago. It had been raining, a temperamental, torrential rain that had the barâs parking lot flooded in minutes.Â
Heâd swung through the door mad as hell, his lip split, his cheek cut and bruised, soaked to the bone. His t-shirt had clung to him in all the right places, ridges of muscle and padding visible beneath. Cerulean blue eyes had been nearly eaten up by the black of his pupils.Â
A bandage had been wrapped around his upper arm, partially undone and spooling down his bicep, boots thumping against the worn floorboards as he closed in on you at the bar.Â
You had wondered for a half a second if you should be afraid of him, alone in the bar as you were, even the regulars kept away by the horrible weather.Â
But heâd only sat at the counter and brusquely ordered a beer. Those blown out pupils - so easily mistaken for fury, had held something deeper.Â
Fear.Â
He had been terrified of something, fingers drumming nervously on the bar, a shake in his hand.Â
âLittle early for that, isn't it?â Youâd asked, watching his brows tilt up as he ran a hand through locks dampened and darkened by the rain. âRough day?âÂ
âSweetheart,â heâd said, his voice low and graveled with just a hint of a twang. It was a voice that had made you melt, that softened everything inside you into mush. âYou have no fuckinâ idea.â He sounded exhausted, breathing hard and fast like heâd just got done running a race.Â
Youâd raised a brow at that and handed him the beer you poured from the tap. For a few long minutes, you only watched him sip his beer.
Veteran, youâd marked him out easy.Â
And he needed a distraction - so you chatted at him, telling him about how youâd rewatched Top Gun recently, mindlessly talking as the tension slowly rolled out of his shoulders and his grip on the glass loosened until his fingers werenât quite so white with pressure.Â
You still wouldn't be sure, even months later, if heâd heard a word you said that day. But your voice alone had seemed to be enough to ground him.
âI got a first aid kit here. Want me to take care of that for you?â You had eventually offered when his breathing stabilized, nodding at his busted cheek. âSo you donât go home with an infection. Gangrene or something.âÂ
Heâd barked out an unexpected laugh at that. âDonât think Iâm at risk for gangrene,â he snorted.Â
You shrugged. âWant me to or not?â His only answer had been a sheepish nod, an offering of his face to you with a jut of his chin.Â
He hadnât told you what happened and you hadnât asked. You had only moved around the counter, cleaned the cut and stuck a butterfly bandage over it, dabbed the blood from his split lip where he'd worried a wound open with his teeth. You had changed and rewrapped the bandage on his arm. The gauze was old and clearly hadnât been changed in awhile.Â
And while it looked like heâd been shot, you hadnât mentioned it.Â
âWhatâs your name, honey?â heâd asked you when you finished, his voice saccharine to your ears, slow and sweet and so low, like gravel wrapped in sunshine.Â
And, oh, youâd liked that. Liked how he sounded when he called you honey. Liked the slow, sweet drip of it.
You gave him your name, and heâd repeated it back to you, like it was something vital that needed to be committed to memory, your hand still on the curve of his bicep, your body still very close to his. âBen,â heâd informed you, even though you hadnât asked for his name in return. âBenny Miller. You knew around here?âÂ
âBeen in town just a couple months. But just started workinâ here.â
âAnd you always patch up customers like this?â Heâd asked, the last dregs of anger and fear lingering around him dissipating fast, a smile that you would come to know as his signature look spreading over his face.Â
âOnly the pretty ones, Miller.â Without realizing it, youâd gravitated so very close to him, his thighs bracketing your body but not touching you as you worked on his face. Something warm had bloomed between you then, that made you step back and look away, that made you take your hand off his arm where his skin was so warm it burned.Â
Something bloomed between you that would make Benny hang around for the rest of your shift, that made him walk you to your car, and come back the next day and the next day and the nextâŠ
You laughed, watched him beam with pride at the sound. âWith eyes like those? Ben, youâre pretty.â
And ever since that day, heâs made a point to stop in the bar during the afternoon. He claims he has time with the way his training schedule works out and you canât really complain. Benny makes good company. Heâs a good storyteller, loud and energetic and fun, and always interested in whatever you have to say even if he doesnât always remember what exactly you say.Â
Heâs become a constant presence in your life, a fast friend that stuck. And soon enough, it became hard to imagine your life without him, without his regular appearances at the bar.Â
More often than not he hangs around until your shift ends, walks you to your car, still talking, before asking you to take a drive with him.Â
And you always find yourself saying yes.Â
Benny can talk. He chats constantly about anything and everything - MMA, baseball, anecdotes from his time in the military, his little family of friends. Lately, he talks with you about the books he borrows, movies you watch and rewatch together.Â
The military thing comes up suddenly and without preamble, like it's something everyone already knew about him, ingrained into his identity. And although he openly tells you about his service, thereâs a pain that lies beneath, something that heâs not yet come to terms with, a crinkle in his brow that concerns you.Â
Some days, his hands shake a little.Â
Some days, his breathing isnât ever quite even.Â
Benny is going through something, and you think he hasnât told a soul about it.Â
You quickly felt at home in his passenger seat, going too fast down country roads, listening to him talk, radio all the way up, windows all the way down.Â
Sometimes you go to the lake, sometimes to an empty, open field that Benny seems to know well - sitting in the back of the jeep with the seats down until the stars come out.Â
Youâve spent almost all your free time with Benny over the last few months. You go to baseball games together on the Fridays he doesnât have an MMA match, and spend most Saturday mornings fishing together. His face is usually stained yellow and green from the previous night, broken blood vessels blooming purple and red, a cut to the cheek and above his brow. You always call him pretty and he always pretends to hate it.Â
Youâve gone to Topgolf together more than once and been kicked out each time for being too loud and rowdy and drunk. Heâs taken you to the shooting range and taught you how to handle a weapon though you insist it's not knowledge you want or need, while Benny insists that it is.Â
He somehow becomes your best friend, worms his way inside your heart, in such a short period of time that you canât imagine your life without him, especially not in this town.Â
Now, Ben leans back when you pull your hand away from his face, flexing not so subtly. You can tell by the way he sits, the bunched coil of muscle in his forearms twisting as he settles more fully in his chair, chest puffed out.
You roll your eyes at the display. Benâs flirting is about as subtle as a hammer to the head.Â
âWell, actually, babe, I have a bone to pick with you.âÂ
âOh?â
âYeah. Invited you to my fight and you didnât show. Youâre making a bad impression with my buddies. Theyâre starting to think I made you up.âÂ
He says it so casually, almost like itâs a joke, a megawatt smile still on his face, but you can tell Benny is hurt. Your heart gives a painful thump and you cast him a small smile in return. âI told you I wouldnât be able to make it, didnât I?âÂ
âSure ya did,â he whines, leaning forward again, âBut I thought you meant it in a faking me out kinda way so Iâd be surprised.â Before you can respond, he continues, fidgeting with a loose bit of wood on the counter. âWhat was so important anyways? You have a date or somethinâ?âÂ
You slap his hand away from the wood before he can damage the scarred bar more than it already is. Benny never stops moving, fidgeting, usually destroying napkins and paper drink coasters and straw papers in droves as he talks to you. âYeah, actually. And what happened to that fidget thing I got you? The pop-it?âÂ
And the stress ball, you think. To help with whatever he was bottling up inside, waiting for the emotions to shake up and erupt in a bout of anger instead of dealing with them beforehand.
Benny ignores your question and goes deadly still, the vibrations echoing through the floor from his bouncing leg ceasing. âYou serious?âÂ
You feign nonchalance, twisting the liquor bottles in front of you so their labels face out. âYep. So serious. We fucked in the parking lot and he bought me Taco Bell after,â you deadpan. Â
Ben laughs, the sound loud and unapologetic, so very Benny it makes something in you ache. But thereâs something else in that laugh too - relief. âReally, though.âÂ
âFor real,â you say.
You had gone on a date, but it had been a bad one. One in which you had been bored out of your mind. One in which your date talked at you and not with you. He had been so low energy - or maybe he hadnât been. Maybe youâd just been comparing him to Benny, who made everyone seem low energy.Â
Youâd had dinner and left. There hadnât been any random detours to the batting cages or a race against time down back roads, no here, honey, lemme show you this ice cream joint by the water-
It had been a date where you thought of a different guy the entire time, wondering if Benny was looking for you at his fight, wondering if he was getting his ass handed to him or making some money with a win.
The truth is - Benny terrifies you.Â
Youâre terrified of him, youâre terrified of the way he makes you feel, of the heart pounding, blood warming way he looks at you.Â
And you know that he wants something from you.Â
And it's something you arenât really willing to give.Â
Benny is a flirt, a curl of energy that bounced from thing to thing with surprising ease. The only constants in his life were his family and the military and fighting - and you do not fit into any of those spaces.Â
Benny loses interest in things at a rapid rate, and youâre sure youâre just another stepping stone, something that would only hold his attention briefly.Â
And you do not want to become just another thing that Benny Miller lost interest in.Â
You donât want a night with him, especially if it meant losing him after, of losing these conversations, these moments, all the things youâd done together and shared. You donât want to lose his friendship.Â
Friendship for Benny is made of much sturdier stuff, long lasting and fierce.Â
And if Benny wanted more than that, heâd just tell you. Heâs one to take the things he wants, or at least ask, instead of letting them fall into his lap.Â
So you keep him at arm's length, knocking him back a step or two each time he hints at something besides this thing you have with him now. And meeting his friends, going to one of his matches, feels too close for comfort, feels too personal and raw and vulnerable.Â
You would lose Benny and the things truly closest to his heart if you were to let that happen.Â
Besides, youâve been left alone before and you arenât keen on it happening again.
He rolls his eyes at you, âUh huh, sure.â Benny drums his fingers against the bar, though he doesnât sound particularly convinced. âListen, I get it's intimidating -,â he starts when you scoff at his assumption, âHold on! Let me finish! I know it's intimidating but Iâm always fine. And it would mean a lot to me. And the guys.âÂ
You soften. That he thinks you donât want to go because you donât want to see him hurt, makes your chest ache.Â
âOh believe me, Ben, Iâd love to watch you get your ass kicked.âÂ
He flashes a smile at you, yanking the ball cap off his head to toss onto the counter. You lift a brow at him as he laces his fingers together against the back of his head, arms wide. âOh yeah? Perfect opportunity right in front of you then,â he says with a shit-eating grin. âBut Iâm usually the ass-kicker.âÂ
Youâre always surprised at just how much room Benny takes up, the space he occupies without a care in the world, summer gold skin washed out in the low lighting of the bar. You also really donât mind the pull of the band of muscle in his arms, or the way his shirt rides up so you can see the flat of his belly, the dark trail of hair. âOf course you are,â you roll your eyes, forcing yourself to focus only on his face.Â
Bennyâs expression splinters, his smile fading for just a second, brows tilting down. âIs it something else? Why donât you -,âÂ
Heâs interrupted when the front door blows open and your name is called. You cringe, Johnâs horrible son Victor violently thrusting into you and Bennyâs safe little world. You'd hated Victor before you met Benny, for the way he looked at you, the slimy innuendos he made, but you hated him even more after.Â
He and Benny had gone to high school together, hated each other then too. And Victor never lets Benny forget that he thinks heâs trash.Â
âOh, and Miller is here too. How wonderful,â he snaps, the smile heâd been directing at you turning to a scowl when his gaze lands on Ben. Â
Benny bristles immediately, standing up and knocking his stool back but not over. âWhat the fuck is your problem?â He asks loudly. âYou always got some shit to say to me.âÂ
âJust wondering how you can get drunk in the middle of the day, everyday. Donât you have a job?â Victorâs eyes flit over Bennyâs broken face, the bruises that never quite faded. âOh. Right. You get the shit kicked out of you for a living.âÂ
âBetter watch your fuckinâ mouth,â he snarls, the converstaion of the regulars in the corner coming to an abrupt halt. Bennyâs never afraid to defend himself, and he certainly wasn't afraid to make a scene while doing so. âI donât lose much.âÂ
You hold out a hand when Benny starts around the counter. âBenny,â you say gently, âCâmon. Stop it.âÂ
Victor stops next to you, his hand going to your hip and you force yourself not to jerk away from his touch, as he intentionally tries riling Benny up. âYeah, Miller. Stand down. We all know how good you are at following orders and not using your brain.âÂ
Bennyâs chin tilts down, eyes on Victorâs possessive hand against your waist. Something goes dark in his gaze and this time he does come around the bar.Â
You move quickly, grabbing Bennyâs hat off the counter and both your books before shoving Victorâs stupid ass behind you as he laughs. âFuckinâ idiot, it's like you want to get the shit kicked out of you,â you mutter at him as as you step in front of Benny. He's fuming, leaning against you, pushing with a gentle strength, unwilling to hurt you to get to Victor.
Benny would never hurt you, but he looks like heâs considering shoving you out of the way. His eyes go cold as he watches Victor over your shoulder and you donât turn because you donât want to know what gesture heâs doing behind you. You press into Ben, leaning hard against his solid frame, laying one hand flat against his sternum. âHeâs not worth it. Let it go. For me, Benny?â You plead with a calm you donât feel, âCâmon, Iâll walk you out. Leave this asshole to man the bar.âÂ
He smirks at that, sliding an arm around your shoulders, holding you hot and tight and close against his chest. You swear you can feel his heartbeat. âAnything for you, sweetheart,â he says, the lilt of fury still lingering in his voice. You pull out of his arms and he follows you out of the bar easily when you tug him after you.Â
âYou always do everything youâre told, Miller?â Victor calls after your retreating backs.Â
âFuck you,â Benny snarls over his shoulder. âOnly when sheâs the one asking.â And he sounds almost proud.Â
Proud that you chose him, proud that you commanded him.
Something in you shakes, that this hot headed man listens to you.Â
You keep one hand behind you, tucked into Bennyâs elbow so that he doesnât get any ideas about bolting back to give Victor the beating he very much deserved.Â
âI hate that fucker,â he says when you finally pull him outside to cross the parking lot towards his jeep, his hand trailing down your arm to lace his fingers with yours. âAlways have. Made all the girls uncomfortable in school. And the way he fuckinâ talks about you-,âÂ
âI hate him too, Benny,â you interrupt. âBut heâs my bossâs son, what am I supposed to do?â You pause by the driverâs side door and reach up to tuck Bennyâs hat back onto his head, cradling your books against your chest as you stroke some stray hair back from his forehead. âGo easy, darlinâ. He shouldnât fuckinâ talk about you that way either. Fucking snob.âÂ
âIâm used to it,â he says, breaking your heart just a little bit. âBut you donât hear the shit he says when you arenât around. I should have knocked his teeth down his throat weeks ago.âÂ
You close your eyes briefly, hearing every horrible thing Victor has ever said to you about Benny. Namely that he was stupid and mean and not worth the time you spent on him. âYeah, well, ditto,â you say bitterly, blinking up at him, the last argument fresh in your mind.Â
âHeâs a loser and he always has been. Heâs lucky he has Will for a brother and feels like he needs to play catch up and get out of his shadow or he wouldnât have made it out of high school.â
Benny watches you, eyes darting between the barâs door and you, his expression souring by the second as he monitors you. âDonât,â you warn.Â
âNot gonna,â he says innocently.Â
âLiar.âÂ
âWhy donât ya wanna come to my matches?â He asks abruptly, remembering what youâd been talking about before you were interrupted.Â
You sigh, âIt's not that I donât want to. Iâm just-,â you fidget on the spot, trying to decide how to put it, wiggling your fingers at him. â-I just worry about you.âÂ
It isnât untrue, just not exactly the reason you didnât want to go.Â
âBullshit,â he says, calling you out.Â
âBenny,â you say gently, ducking your head to avoid his eyes. âI-,â
He shakes his head, âDonât worry about it. I got you.âÂ
âWhatâs that supposed to mean?âÂ
âJust what I said. I got it. You donât want to,â he yanks open the door and youâre forced to stumble back a few steps as he climbs in. The engine roars to life and Benny rolls the window down to look at you. âForgot. Got this for you. Meant to bring it in with me,â he says, handing out something rectangular, wrapped in pink paper.Â
You take it from him, peering up at him before you abruptly tear the paper and he groans, âDonât open it now.âÂ
But you just keep shredding the wrapping paper until a book is revealed to you, a limited edition of one of your favorites. âOh,â you say, running a finger down the cover. Youâd been looking for this particular edition for over a year. âOh, my God! Benny, howâd you find this?âÂ
He shakes his head, âDonât worry about it. You like it?âÂ
You clutch it to your chest. âFuck. Yes. Thank you.â You stare at Benny, and he stares back at you, the sweltering heat pinching at your skin. Since when did Benny go hunting for obscure books? Since when did he read in his limited free time?
âFuck, Benny. Listen, Iâm sorry, okay? I just donât know how to explain it right. Can I ride along? Lemme go tell Victor to fuck off and we can go to my place for your book. Dinner on me?â
You know John wonât mind, not if you leave a note that you needed to leave an hour early and that his useless son came in before he was supposed to.Â
The grin that cracks open Benâs face could end wars. âNever gonna say no to that.âÂ
~
Benny really isnât sure what it is about you that drew him in, like a moth to a flame, that first time he met you - dripping wet and mad as hell when he stormed into the first bar he came to.Â
Heâd just freaked out in a gas station convenience store - panicked and panicked and couldnât fucking breathe for a full minute before he was able to leave - all because someone was too close to him and he was trying not to put his hand through a freezer door or through the guyâs fucking head.Â
He hadnât.Â
He hadnât and had been proud of that fact until he was back in his jeep and that tightness in his chest still wouldnât go away, even though he was safe, even though heâd never not been.Â
Benny had had half a mind to call Will, to ask him to come pick him up because he didnât think he could drive, felt like maybe he was having a fucking heart attack.Â
But then the anger set in, the irritation that now, after everything - this was happening to him.Â
It was just another thing to add onto the shit that just kept stacking up. Heâd heard about guys going through this when they came home. Fuck, heâd seen Will go through it.Â
But why him?
Why now?Â
After all these years? After heâd been home for so long?
Just because of the Colombia trip? It wasnât even close to being the worst thing heâs been through.
Just because one of his closest friends, a man who was like his brother, had been killed in front of him?Â
Fuck off.Â
Itâs not the first time - it hadnât been that bad -Â
For a while he hadnât realized what was happening to him - why his chest would go tight and the air in the room felt like it had suddenly evaporated.Â
Fuck, he doesnât want to be having panic attacks, doesnât want to think about what he went through, doesnât want to think about why this was suddenly happening.Â
And if he doesn't look at it, it can't hurt him. If he doesn't look at it, it would go away.Â
So he ignored that it was happening at all. Even though it was happening more and more frequently.Â
Still, that day, his chest was tight, his heart pounding so hard he thought it might explode.Â
The anger suddenly burned up the tightness, made him so pissed off at himself for being so weak, that he knew heâd be no good in training, and decided to go for a drink instead.Â
No, he hadnât punched anyone that day.
And that was good, something to be proud of.Â
Everything else? Shit.Â
The cut on his cheek was from an unregulated fight in some fucking parking lot the day before, the bandage around his arm unchanged since he got home from Colombia two weeks before.Â
Nothing had felt right since they got home. It was worse than before, worse than when he was discharged from service.
Fighting in parking lots? He hadnât done that shit since high school. Everything felt like it was twisting down and away, the tentative grip he held on his life slipping away with every second.Â
His first instinct was to do something stupid, to go find a fight or break a speed limit.Â
But he couldnât. He shouldnât.
And so the bar it was.Â
And you had been there - an unsuspecting buoy in a restless storm, so calm and rock steady, his exact opposite in so many ways.Â
The immediate sharp burn of your presence, the steady way youâd looked at him, unfazed by the roll of anger that he tried to keep a lid on, how youâd not asked him a damn thing about what happened to him - why he was so torn up and spaced out and mad.Â
He probably wouldnât have been able to answer you anyways.
You talked to him as he nursed that beer, told him about a movie youâd rewatched recently - something old and he wishes he could remember now what it was - Top Gun? Back to the Future?Â
No idea.Â
Then youâd asked if you could help him out - one nonsensical, calm brow raised.
Heâd known in that moment, that heâd never be able to quit you, so suddenly and quick, like a flash of lightning - something inside him locked into place.
But Benny had always been that way with his loyalty, a gut instinct that he trusted implicitly.Â
He knew you were a person he should keep.
It was like when heâd known that his life would never be the same five seconds into his first day of basic training, like heâd known fighting was what he wanted to do the second he stepped into the ring that first time.Â
He knew.Â
Benny knew you were for keeps, that you were going to stick inside him like a burr, something that would be painful to rip out - just like fighting, just like the military, just like Delta.
Youâre something he canât quit. Â
Youâre something unchangeable and steady in his life. You become one of his constants only hours after meeting you.Â
And he doesn't want you to quit him. Benny wants you to want him too. He wants you to hold on tight, to claw your way into him and make a home there. Â
But fuck, do you make it difficult.
You are adverse to him making a move, knocking him back again and again. If you hinted that you wanted more heâd shoot his shot but you donât indicate that.Â
And thatâs fine, it really is.Â
Heâll be friends with you and nothing else if thatâs what you really want.Â
But that thing you lodged in his heart? It has sharp edges and its starting to fucking hurt, to ache, to bleed.
He spends all his time with you - youâre like a drug he doesnât want to quit.Â
And when heâs with you? Thatâs when he finally breathes normally again, when his blood settles down and he feels like Benny again - he can forget about what happened in Colombia, he doesnât have to think about the spray of Tomâs blood when he was shot.Â
He starts spending all his time with you, you become his best friend so suddenly it's almost shocking.
He stops fighting in back alleys and parking lots, and he can tell Will is relieved by the set of his shoulders when the bruising on his face actually gets a chance to fade. He can tell that you are relieved, because you note how his hands arenât as shaky, you note that the bruises fade and that he doesnât space out as much, breathing like heâs run a fucking race completely out of the blue.Â
That fucks him up so bad too, that youâve noticed the panic.Â
Still, you donât come to his matches, you donât meet Will or Santi or Frankie.Â
Maybe heâs just something temporary to you even though you have become a constant to him.Â
And thatâs never happened before, and it terrifies him.Â
Heâs always been the one to call the shots in his own life - heâs never had to wait for someone to decide on him. Benny has always been the temporary thing, jumping from relationship to relationship with ease.Â
And fuck if he isnât trying to tell you, to light the path so he can shoot his fucking shot. He started reading, and even though heâs coming to enjoy it a little - just because you light up like the goddamned sun when you get to talk about books - it's not easy for him. It takes concentration and frustrated brain power. He thinks for a while maybe you don't get it - but fuck if him taking up reading isn't a flashing neon sign of attraction, of trying to impress you and relate to you, he doesn't know what is.
He looked for a fucking book for you with an intensity he reserved for fighting, for missions, hunting and bidding and cajoling until he got it. Until he felt like he won a fight when he found it.Â
For you.Â
Now, he watches you unlock the front door of your apartment. He holds the screen door open for you as you fiddle with your keys, eyes locked on the curve of your jaw as you talk, intoxicated by the scent of you, the movement of your mouth, the flash of your teeth.
Heâs pressed close to you, the heat of your body radiating into his as he leans into you.Â
One thing he really appreciates about you? Youâre good with how he expresses himself - the too loud way in which he lives his life, the way he likes to touch.Â
Too many relationships had soured early - not that he was planning for the long haul but still - because he was too much.Â
Too loud, too brash, too quick to temper.Â
Youâve never told him heâs too much, never told him not to be the way he is. You say gentle things like easy to remind him not to squeeze you too tightly in a hug but thatâs it and sometimes he needs the reminder, forgets his own strength.Â
But you never tell him to stop, you never say that heâs too much.Â
âJesus, Benny,â you say now when the door finally swings open and you lurch inside. âYouâre heavy.âÂ
He grins and toes his shoes off by the door as you do the same. âSorry,â he says, not sorry at all, tucking himself behind you as he follows you to the kitchen.Â
He loves your little studio, loves that he can see everything about you in one room, your bookshelves and your pink sheets patterned with tiny little strawberries, your vintage coffee table saved from someoneâs trash and the stickers youâve pressed into your kitchen cabinets.Â
âIâm going to cook something.âÂ
âWe can definitely just get takeout though,â he says, throwing himself down onto your couch with a groan.Â
He doesnât need to look at you to know that youâre rolling your eyes. âBen, one day youâre going to be old and all that shit is going to catch up to you.â He hears you shuffle closer, and then you lean over the back of the couch, peering down at him, âAnd then youâre going to come to me and complain that I didnât warn you and feed you better.âÂ
âYou still gonna be hounding me when youâre old and gray?âÂ
For a second, your face cracks, an unreadable expression crossing your face before you smile again, some of the light gone from your eyes. âSure,â you say, voice careful, âSomeoneâs gonna haveta.âÂ
âWe can order pizza,â he says, trying to decide why the look on your face, that flash of uncertainty, made his chest tight, why panic is starting its slow unpredictable crawl up the back of his throat.
Maybe because it reminds him that youâre temporary. Maybe thatâs why it's hard to breathe, why Tomâs face and the flash of blood imprints into his mind, why Willâs face stark white while blood drips down his side darts behind his eyes.Â
Maybe you wouldn't be around to remind him, maybe you aren't planning to be.
Benny relies on very few permanent things, always moving, going, tracking forward and leaving most things behind.Â
But there are essentials - fighting, Delta, the military - and now, you.
He wants to ask why youâre looking at him like that but the tightness in his chest is rising and he canât speak.Â
You place a hand on his chest, and it's heavy and good and it steadies him. His breathing stabilizes. âNo pizza. Iâll make spaghetti.â You nod at your bookshelf, âAnything you want is yours, okay? When youâre ready.âÂ
And you walk away, back to the kitchen counter, searching through the fridge for ingredients.Â
Heâs glad you leave him, struggling to find the right rhythm in his breathing even though the breaths come easily.Â
Since when did people leaving scare him so fucking bad? Since when did anything scare him this fucking bad?Â
He wonders why you hold him at armâs length, keeping yourself away from the most important parts of his life, of himself.Â
Maybe you know youâre too good for him.Â
He hears what that fucker Victor says about him, that youâre too good to be keeping company like Benny, that heâs an idiot and always has been.Â
Benny isnât sure how much of it you believe.Â
When the pain eases, he stands and pulls himself to your bookshelf, scanning for the most battered copies.Â
You abuse your books, but only the ones you like, the ones you read again and again, filled with notes and tabs and folded pages, covers shredded to bits. Thatâs how he knows you love roughly and hard, and it makes picking something out so easy.Â
The cover of Carrie had been picked apart.Â
He thumbs out one of the more ruined books and glances at the title - Howlâs Moving Castle. Something clearly for kids. Even better - itâll be easy to get through.Â
When he shows you, you smile - âThereâs a movie too! We can watch it when youâre done.â You turn back to the stove, âYou always have a way of reading my favorites.âÂ
God, the things you donât realize.Â
~
Hours later, when youâve eaten and cleaned up the kitchen, settled onto the couch with a bowl of popcorn, he decides to try to ask you again about why you didnât want anything to do with the things that were really important to him.Â
âBe straight with me for a minute,â he says, turning onto his back so he can look up at you, his head pillowed on your thigh. âWhy donât you wanna come to my matches? Why arenât you keen on meeting the guys? You donât have to but I want a reason. Itâs important to me. Theyâre important to me. You're important to me.âÂ
You look startled at his admission but quickly recover, shaking your head as you press your fingers down the center of his chest, tracing slowly back up to his shoulder, across his collarbone. He bites down the urge to say something about just how much you liked to touch him. Â
âCan you try?â He pleads.Â
You pause, and Benny waits, even though heâs never really been a patient person. But for you, he'll try.
âIâve just never been good at being close to people, Ben. Itâs hard for me not to feel like the rug is going to be ripped out from under me,â you card your hands through his hair. âI moved here alone. Iâm always alone. Itâs easier not to be so attached.âÂ
âYou think Iâm gonna cut and run?âÂ
You donât answer for a moment and the only sound is that of the movie playing quietly on the TV that neither of you have paid attention to in a while. âNo,â you say eventually, carefully. âYou arenât one to abandon your friends.â
Benny, he tries to understand, what that meant you thought about him, that you don't want to come any closer than you already are.Â
Friends.Â
He would have to be okay with that.Â
But itâs late and heâs tired and your hands feel nice when they thread through his hair. âI kept the pop-it,â he says suddenly. âI know I ribbed you about it but I kept it and it helps. Itâs actually starting to fuckinâ fall apart because I use it all the time.âÂ
He uses it when he reads your books, so his hands are busy.Â
âIâll get you a new one,â you say, like the fact you would means nothing.Â
~
You barrel through the front door of the bar, the crash of music and laughter and pool balls clacking together assaulting your already delicate ears, a headache lingering from the day youâve had.Â
Benny hadnât come in during your afternoon shift and youâd been stuck alone with Victor for a majority of that time, your pleas for help via texts to Benny going unanswered.Â
âThanks for coming back in,â John says when you meet him at the bar. âSome fucking fight just let out and Salâs is closed tonight so we got their usual folks too. Promise this is a one time thing,â he adds. Â
âNo problem,â you say with a smile, swinging through the office door to drop your stuff and clock in. You catch sight of Victor as you pass back through the kitchen but avoid his gaze. âHey, where dâyou want me? Bar? Floor?â You ask John when you meet him back by the bar, tying your apron around your waist.Â
âI need you to take those tables over there,â he points to the far corner. âThey havenât been served yet.âÂ
You nod and cross the bar, trying not to think about Benny, about how goddamned much youâd missed him and how any effort youâd made not to let him worm too closely into your heart had been severely thwarted.Â
Your Benny hangover coupled with the amount of time youâd been forced to spend with Victor alone has you on edge, tired and unhappy.Â
You take care of the couple sitting quietly together and a group of chatty girls before you move on to your last table, a group of guys. One of them, a blond with close cropped hair and a beard, looks strangely familiar. He tilts his head at you, like he knows you too and canât place you.Â
Ignoring the feeling, you plaster a smile to your face, the pounding at the base of your skull increasing in intensity.Â
âHey, sorry for the wait,â you start, laying down some napkins. âWeâre a little bit understaffed tonight. What can I get for you?â
One of them, a man with fathomless, dark eyes and gray streaked brown curls, opens his mouth when a familiar voice says your name.Â
You start to turn just as Benny slams into you from behind, knocking the breath out of you. You jolt into the table as he wraps an arm across your chest, one of your hands coming up to hook at his elbow, to steady yourself. âBenny? What are you doing here?â You turn your head to find him grinning widely down at you, beaming at you like a ray of sunshine, happy to see you beyond what is reasonable.Â
âCould ask you the same thing, honey. Werenât you here all afternoon?âÂ
âI was but weâre understaffed so I got pulled back in. What are you doing here?â You ask again.Â
Bennyâs face is a masterpiece of pain. Heâs bruised up again, a scarlet cut above his cheek and near the line of his jaw, violent violet bruises starting to turn a painful shade of black and green. âCelebrating. I fuckinâ won tonight! Knockout within a minute,â he crows, looking proud. âAnd our usual place was closed.âÂ
And Johnâs words come back to you - some fucking fight just let out and Salâs is closed tonight so we got their usual folks too. âCongratulations,â you say softly, realizing who the people at the table must be, realizing why Benny had been absent that afternoon.
Normally he told you when you had a fight but you donât remember him saying anything about this one. He always made a point to invite you, even if he knew youâd say no.
Embarrassment pools in your belly, realizing how long youâve been letting him hold you, how youâve only looked into his eyes, his grip so comfortable to you that you hadnât noticed. Â
You frown as Benny finally releases you to sit down beside the man who looked familiar to you before. You suppose he looks familiar because he is. He can be no one else but Bennyâs brother, Will. âI take it youâre who Bennyâs been spending every minute with.â
âOh, I donât know about that,â you try to joke, trying not to bolt away from the lot of them, as the careful separation in your mind between your Benny and Bennyâs real life crashes down. âBenâs got so many friends.âÂ
âNot friends like you though,â says the man with those dark eyes, something unreadable brewing in his expression, his voice like ice. Benny shoots him a look that says fuck off.Â
Ben introduces you by name and then says, âMy brother, Will.â He slaps the blond man heâd slid into the booth next to on the back. âSantiago,â he points to the salt and pepper haired man and then the man with the baseball cap pulled low over his eyes, âand Frankie. Better known as Pope and Fish.âÂ
âNice to meet you,â you manage to say. âIâve heard a lot about you.âÂ
âSo have we,â Santiago says, his tone still crisp. âNice to know Ben hasnât been hallucinating you these past few months.âÂ
You suddenly feel like a mouse caught in a trap as you glance at each of them, the hardness in their gazes as they look back at you.Â
Of course they wouldnât be keen on you. Benny is like their little brother and youâve been avoiding what is essentially his family for months, for no good reason at all, at least not in a way that made sense to anyone but you, though Benny had tried to understand.Â
Your throat tightens and you open your mouth to respond when Benny cuts in, loud and gruff as he always is, âFuck off, Pope. Leave her alone. Tell her what you want so she can get back to it.âÂ
You glance at them apologetically, avoiding looking at Ben, ignoring his outburst. âBeers? First round is on me.âÂ
âYou donât haveta do that, sweetheart-,â Benny starts, his voice infinitely gentler when he addresses you.Â
âYeah, I do,â you interrupt him. âAnything else?âÂ
A chorus of noâs resound and you nod without looking at any of them before briskly walking away. Your hands are shaking as you pour the beers, deciding at the last second to put in for a plate of nachos too. Youâd hoped to avoid them, but you should have known better, that in a town so small youâd be bound to run into them at one point or another.Â
You just donât want it to hurt when Benny moves on, or for it to at least be as painless as possible.
But thatâs not what it looked like to them, not what it looked like to Benny.
Fuck, he must think you donât give a shit about him, not really.Â
It wasn't like it fucking mattered anyways, the hurt is coming for you whether you let the closest parts of his life sink into yours or not.Â
Benny has charmed his way inside you, his friendship like the serrated edge of a knife, cutting deeper and deeper until removing it would be to sentence you to death.Â
You swipe at your eyes though you aren't in danger of tears and shuffle the beers over on your tray for the nachos before starting back across the bar. Youâve halfway there, paused near one of the wooden support beams so a large group can pass you on the crowded floor when Victor stops by you, awkwardly leaning against the pole and blocking your way. When the group has passed, drunkenly shouting their way out of the bar you grit out, âWhat do you want?â You're irritated that youâve had to spend so much time with him today, and that heâs still bothering you.
âMillerâs here,â he says, an accusation in his voice, like you personally invited Benny just to piss him off. Jealousy drips off him. âAnd you got his table.â Like you'd plotted that too.
âYep. Won his match. Theyâre here to celebrate,â you start to move away when Victor leans into your free arm and forces your shoulder back against the beam.Â
Your breath flutters in your chest as you look up to meet his eyes. âWhatâs your problem, huh? Why do you hate me so much?âÂ
âYou know why. You talk shit about my best friend,â you snarl up at him, something feral rising up in you and chasing away the calm you were known for.
But Victor has pushed you to your limit over the last couple months and you can see the glee in his eyes at getting a rise out of you. You were rapidly approaching your breaking point with him.
He barks out a loud laugh, and it's not pleasant the way Bennyâs is. A couple of people turn to look at you but quickly go back to their own conversations. You squirm, trying to get your shoulder out from under his weight. An ache has started to creep up your arm.Â
âBest friend. Right. Like Miller wants anything but to fuck you. Youâre just a conquest, sweetheart.âÂ
âFuck you,â you say lowly, not willing to admit how that bites at you, how that is exactly what youâre afraid of.Â
Victor clocks it though, sees the break in your expression that confirms his accusation. âHavenât put out yet have you? Heâll get bored eventually,â he says, finally pulling his weight off of yours, an ache twisting down to your wrist. âHeâs always been that way. I know youâre new to this town but trust me, he tricks everyone with the golden retriever act. Hell, just fucking look at him. Military, Special Ops, canât stop fighting to save his life. Always in trouble and looks to his brother to tell him up from down.âÂ
You canât help it, you glance over at their table, Victorâs breath hot on your cheek when he leans in to whisper. âNot exactly stable. Never has been. How long til he does something like that to you?âÂ
Benny and his friends are staring at you across the dark bar. Will has a hand on Bennyâs arm, keeping him in place, his fingers white with the effort.
âSee, even now heâs itching for blood.âÂ
You wrinkle your nose and turn your face into his, refusing to look away from Victorâs beady eyes. Youâre so close your noses almost touch, but you refuse to back down. You bare your teeth at him and grit out, âAnother word. One more word against him, and Ben will be the least of your problems. You think Bennyâs temper is bad? Youâve been fuckin' trying me all day and I got nothinâ to lose.â
You step closer and grip your tray in both hands to shove into his stomach hard. The glasses rattle but donât fall. He makes a soft oof sound but doesn't look away, doesnât back down. Â
It takes a minute but his eyes drop and he steps back. âYouâll find out the hard way what kind of fucking people they are. All of them.âÂ
The fucker canât even look you in the eyes as he says it.Â
You roll your eyes and move away. âFuck you, coward.âÂ
Your hands are shaking again, but for a completely different reason as you approach the table.Â
Victorâs starting to get bold, and it's starting to worry you. How long until his obsession with you and your relationship to Benny becomes unhinged? It already kind of is, the way he follows you and watches you, the way heâs been trying to turn you against Ben for months now, the touches and the passing remarks - it's all headed to something unsafe.Â
For all Victorâs talk, Benny has never made your shoulder ache, has never crowded you or tried to intimidate you or made you uncomfortable.Â
No, it's not Benny you have to worry about.Â
You pass the beers out, the plate of nachos, when you stop at the boyâs table. âAll on me,â you say more cheerfully than you feel, unconsciously stepping closer to Benny where he sits at the end of the booth, pressing the back of your hand into his bicep, reassuring yourself that heâs there and real. âYell if you need something else, okay?âÂ
âHey,â It's Willâs voice that stops you from pulling away. âYou okay?âÂ
You glance around as Benny covers your hand with one of his and squeezes your fingers reassuringly, gaze turned toward the bar, eyes tracking something.
âYeah,â you confirm. âWhat, Victor? Heâs a piece of shit but heâs harmless,â you say with more conviction than you feel.Â
âHell of a stare you got,â Santiago says, sounding impressed.
Frankie chuckles and meets your eyes, âYeah, wouldnât want you lookinâ at me like that.â
And fuck, you wonder if they heard. If Victorâs voice could have traveled that far. You pull away from Bennyâs hand when he tries to tangle your fingers together and say, âWell, I just get protective sometimes.âÂ
You tuck your tray under your arm and turn to walk away when Benny tugs you back, âSure youâre okay?âÂ
âGolden,â you answer with a smile but he doesnât look convinced.
And when you glance at the others, you know they overheard you and Victor, because all hostility is gone. They watched you go toe to toe with an asshole for Benny, and now they know theyâre missing some vital piece of the picture as to why you hadn't been around, the thing that really kept you away from them and Bennyâs matches.Â
And theyâre too skilled, too observant, not to pinpoint exactly what it is.Â
Benny might not know youâre in love with him, but his buddies suddenly do.Â
~
Victor continues to bother you throughout the night but you try not to let it affect you, you try to stay calm despite your earlier threat, if only so there wonât be a scene and Benny can enjoy his win.Â
The boys, when you stop by their table, have warmed to you entirely. They joke with you, rib you just like Benny does, and the fold youâve been trying to avoid being dragged into has engulfed you in seconds.Â
So when the bar finally clears out and their table is the only one left, Frankie gestures you in. âSit down here for a minute, youâve been workin' your ass off.âÂ
âWasnât too bad,â you say, slipping into the booth next to Benny and Will. âBut it's definitely the busiest this place has ever been.âÂ
âSo how come you donât come to the fights?â Santiago asks. Â
âPope-,âÂ
âMaybe you guys intimidate me,â you say with a shrug of your shoulder. âI know how important you are to Benny.â You nudge an elbow into Benâs ribs, âIâm just some waitress.âÂ
They laugh and you feel better, like maybe they might even like you. Benny scoffs loudly at your declaration, and you kick yourself for never meeting them before. Even if you lost Benny, you donât want to hurt him now. âJust some waitress?â Benny rolls his eyes. âHoney, fuck off,â he says fondly.Â
âSo tell us how you ended up in this shithole town,â Will says. âAnd how you got this one so whipped,â he locks an arm around Bennyâs shoulders.Â
Benny doesnât try to deny it, looks a little bit smug, almost happy at the accusation.
âIâm from a small town, different one, did the big city thing, fucking hated it. Ended up here.â You ignore the other question, not really sure how to answer it anyways, but you donât comment when Ben drapes his arm across the top of the booth behind you. Â
âNot back home?â Frankie asks you.Â
âNo one at home to go back to,â you say, revealing more than maybe you should. âFound I liked the company here anyways.âÂ
The conversation rolls along easily from there. Theyâre funny and loud and affectionate with each other in a way that makes your heart hurt. Thereâs a closeness there that makes you happy, and jealous that you're witnessing so rare a love and bond. Â
And it makes you feel stupid, because theyâre so welcoming to you, they tug you into the center of them and it feels like youâve always belonged.
Eventually, John calls you away from the boys, wiping his hands on a dish towel - the exact opposite of his son, cordial and funny and kind.Â
You arenât sure what happened to Victor to make him so bitter, if he really just has a problem with you and Benny in particular.
âWe should be heading out anyways,â Frankie says, laboring to his feet after Santi stands.Â
You get hugs from all of them, a kiss to your brow from Benny. âWe still on for tomorrow?âÂ
Saturday morning fishing, you would never miss it. ââCourse, always.âÂ
âAnd we arenât invited?âÂ
âHow about beers at Salâs tomorrow instead?â you offer, not willing to give away your morning alone with Benny.
Santi and Will share a look that Ben doesnât see, too busy examining the ridge of your shoulder where a bruise is forming from being locked against the beam.
âSure, we can get you back for the beers tonight,â Will says, one big hand pressing between your shoulder blades briefly.Â
âNo-,âÂ
âYeah, we are,â Santi says. âWeâll see you tomorrow.âÂ
You watch them file out, Benny turning to hug you hard, breath pressed out of your lungs at the intensity. âFuck. Thank you,â he says. âFor putting up with them.âÂ
âTheyâre nice.âÂ
âGlad you met âem? Theyâre meatheads but they mean well.âÂ
âThey do and I am.â
~
Benny is almost to his jeep when he decides to wait for you. He wants to be with you, to ride along to your place and sleep on your couch like he has so many times before - so he can see you grouchy and soft in the morning sunshine before you get ready, drink coffee with you at your kitchen table.Â
God, heâs going fucking soft.Â
Domestic.Â
It feels weird but right.
He waits along the side of the building where the back deck of the bar wraps around to the front stairs, the lights that normally line the walkway already out.Â
He watches John leave, entrusting closing to you and Victor.Â
Quiet descends, the chirp of the crickets loud and sweet, the sounds of safety and home, when he hears a crash.Â
Then -
â-fucking stupid. What do you see in him?âÂ
âWhy the fuck do you care, Vic? Itâs not like I would want you, if I didnât want Ben.âÂ
His brain statics, not sure he heard right. You want him? Is that what you implied?
âAnd whatâs so fucking wrong with me, huh?âÂ
You snarl back, âFuck. Really? Youâre an asshole and judgemental.âÂ
âItâs not judgement if it's right. Call it like I see it. Ben Miller is -,â Â
He doesnât get to hear what he is. âYouâre crazy,â he hears you shriek. âFucking crazy! Even if he was everything you claim, I still wouldnât want you!â Â
A rage builds in Benny, and heâs about to move, to come to your aid, when Victor starts muttering lowly again - the conversation seems to peter out into something civil.Â
Then - the sound of something slamming, a rattling of drink glasses, and low talking. âFuck off,â you growl suddenly. âYou know how fucking brilliant you have to be to make it to where he did? Where all of them did?âÂ
âLuck. And brawn and brother that would do anything for him.âÂ
You let out a disbelieving laugh, âI quit. You can finish closing alone. If your dad asks why I fucking quit, you can explain it to him.âÂ
The front door flies open, smacking back into the wood paneled wall as you go trudging down the steps and across the gravel of the lot.Â
Victor follows you, catches up to you and jerks you to a halt. âJust give me a chance,â he pleads with you. âOne chance. I can make you forget about him. Youâll see what youâre missing.âÂ
âNo,â you say. âYou couldnât. No one can.âÂ
Bennyâs vision goes red as the hand around your arm tightens, but he freezes when Victor continues, speaking something that Benny is afraid is almost uncomfortably close to the truth of his life.Â
âHeâs a fuck up and a loser and would have been in jail for something stupid years ago if he didnât have his brother trailing him around and forcing him to make something of himself. Itâs a good thing that kid got shoved into the military because he never would have made it otherwise. Youâre just going to let him drag you down too.âÂ
âShut up.âÂ
âIâm serious, youâre pining away after someone thatâs never gonna measure up to you. Youâre brilliant. He could barely fucking read in high school.âÂ
You jerk out of Victorâs grip, shaking your head and stalking across the parking lot, but he follows you.
Under normal circumstances, Benny would have been across the lot and in that motherfuckerâs face in 5 seconds flat, but he canât move, heâs frozen, watching the tension in your shoulders knot up.Â
God, heâs waiting for you to agree, to turn and say that heâs right.
But you donât, you keep moving. And when Victor touches you again, snags at your elbow, every bit of restraint he has dries up.Â
He lurches away from the wall and stalks after the pair of you. He saw the bruise on your shoulder, he knows that Victor is the worst kind of dangerous to you - that and youâre his fucking girl.Â
No one is gonna do fuckinâ shit to you without reprecussions.Â
Heâs nearly reached you when -
You turn and land an elbow into Victorâs stomach, he crumbles, curves at the waist and you bring a knee up to crack into his face. He goes sprawling backwards onto his ass as you tower over him with your shoulders thrown back.Â
God, that was fucking hot.
Heâs so proud of you, impressed with the absolute fury contorting your features.Â
His girl, a fighter.Â
Of course you fucking are. Youâre his.Â
And he likes this mean streak in you, likes the feral protectiveness that bubbled up.Â
âFuck you,â you say and heâs never heard such venom in your voice, such protective laced violence. You glance at him suddenly, looking startled to find him standing there before you lean over Victorâs crumpled, prone form. âI warned you Benâs temper wasnât the one you had to worry about, didnât I? You donât know a goddamn thing about him. Or me. And if you ever say another word against him in my presence, youâll get much worse than a bloody nose. Understand?âÂ
âWhatâs your fuckinâ problem, bitch?â Victorâs back is still to Benny, has no idea that heâs there.Â
Benny reaches down and hauls him up by the back of his shirt, gets the satisfaction of seeing him go white with fear, of hearing a squeak pass his lips in surprise. âJust makinâ sure youâre listening to the lady,â he says, jerking him roughly into place before smoothing Victorâs shirt out carefully. He gestures to you and crosses his arms, âGo on, sweetheart. Tell him.â
You grit your teeth at him, and Benny decides yeah, he really likes you mean. âI'm a bitch, huh? Because I wonât fuck you? Fuck off. I asked you a question - do you fuckinâ understand or donât you?âÂ
âYeah, shit, I got it. You want to be Millerâs special girl so bad it makes you look stupid. Heâs not the settling type, babe.â He snaps at you, refusing to acknowledge Benny.Â
âDamn, so much fucking confidence for someone whoâs about to have his ass handed to him,â Benny growls.Â
âFuck you, Miller, like you even need the excuse. You arenât gonna do shit. Neutered after all these years, huh? Contained to a cage.âÂ
Victor yanks out of his grasp and spits at your feet before turning to walk away. But he couldnât have really expected to do something like that and get away with it.
Running on autopilot and adrenaline and rage - Benny yanks him back by the collar of his shirt and breaks his knuckles against his teeth, breaks the nose that you weakened with your knee. Victor falls again and Benny picks him up by the front of his shirt, slams him into the nearest car.
He brings his mouth to Victorâs ear, feels the tremble and shake of fear. âEver touch her again, speak to her again - hell, even look at her - Iâll fucking kill you. Got it?â And then lowly, barely a whisper, "She's mine." Â
He drops Vic to the ground, watches him stumble back and skitter away.Â
As soon as heâs rounded the corner to the back deck of the bar, Benny turns and wraps his arms around you in a crushing hug, and doesnât let go even when you tap your fingers against his spine.Â
âBenny, easy,â you breathe out but you cling onto him harder, and Benny realizes how shaken you are, how scary it must have been to have a man follow you across a dark parking lot. âWhat are you still doing here?âÂ
âWaitinâ on you, honey. Good thing too, though I think you had it handled. Hell of a swing you got.âÂ
He finally lets you go, your eyes going to his bloody hand and you sigh. âGod, weâre both gonna have assault charges," you murmur, tracing your thumb over the broken skin.
âHe ainât gonna say shit. Heâs gonna tell everybody he fucked you and went toe to toe with me over it. Heâs a liar and little bitch,â Benny says, curling his arm around your waist, his blood settling when you lean into him, hand against his chest. âHeâs not going to fuck with you anymore.âÂ
You peer up at him, your gaze still holding a lingering fear, âThanks for having my back. You coming home with me?â
He nods and you gesture him around the side of your SUV.
When youâre both settled, you turn your keys in the ignition and the engine rumbles to life, but you donât pull out. You turn and stare at him through the dark, the AC wafting his hair gently. âWhat?â
âDid you mean that?âÂ
âWhat?âÂ
âYou said - you said sheâs mine. Was that just some macho bullshit or did you mean it?â
Fuck.
He licks his lips, thinks about lying, when he shakes his head, looks down, and sniffs. Heâs tired of pretending. âYeah. I meant it.âÂ
It immediately feels like a mistake to say it, and the now familiar icy clutch of panic closes a fist over his lungs, like he canât breathe, like you are going to tell him to fuck right off.Â
Like youâre going to yank the rug right out from under him.Â
Heâs done losing constants. Heâs done losing the world around him for nothing.Â
His lungs seize and he feels that familiar stupidity, what a stupid fucking thing to panic over - not killing, not gun shots, not fighting - but losing people.Â
âHey,â you say, pressing a steadying hand to his arm. âItâs okay. Whatâs got you bothered?âÂ
He reminds himself that you already know about the panic even if itâs never been directly addressed, and it hasnât been too much for you yet.Â
âYouâve -,â it comes out in a gasp and so he stops, takes a minute to breathe, to ground himself against your fingers when they tangle with his. âYou keep batting me back, honey. Itâs okay. Just donât leave. I meant it but it doesn't have to mean anything to you.âÂ
âYou think Iâm gonna leave?â You ask quietly, âWhy? Iâm always thinkinâ the same thing about you, Benny.â
His head thumps back against the headrest. âSomethingâs wrong with me,â he says. âDonât know what.â One hand rubbing at his chest like it might help the ache ease.Â
~
You give Benny a moment to collect himself, for his breathing to even out, for the shake in his hands that he normally tries not to let you see to stop.Â
âWhen did it start?âÂ
âWe - fucked up mission in - we lost someone. Ever since it's like - I start thinkinâ Iâm gonna lose everyone, everything. Got better since I met you.â He glances at you, shakes his head. âComes and goes, I guess. But anytime it feels like somethingâs changing or someone is pulling back itâs like - fuck - itâs like I canât stop seeing blood.âÂ
âYou think youâre gonna lose me?âÂ
Benny laughs, his hyena-like wild laugh that youâve come to love more than anything, âYeah. Yeah, all the time,â he says. âYou have a way of just - you keep knocking me back. You donât want anything to do with whatâs important to me - like you donât really want anything to do with me and -,âÂ
âBenny you arenât exactlyâŠyou arenât someone who stays. But you stay with your friends.â You squeeze his fingers, âI would rather be your friend - so I can keep you.âÂ
He stares at you, wide blue eyes tracking your every minute move, adding up what you just said in his mind. You look away from his eyes. âYou have a couple things you keep close - I donât fit into that. And Iâve lost people before. Iâm alone and I donât want to keep being that way. I would rather keep you like this.â
âYeah, sweetheart,â he says. âAnd what if thatâs bullshit? You fit in just fine. Too well maybe. You never said shit because you thought what? Iâm feeling casual about you?â He huffs out a sigh. âI spend every goddamn free second I have with you, or thinking about you. Not just anyone Iâd start reading for. You know what it took for me to find that fucking book for you? God it was worse than chasing down fugitives.âÂ
You scoff dismissively, not willing to believe yourself special. Youâve heard that one before. âYeah, I know how guys like you are, hon. I know.â
âThe fuckâs that mean?â He says, not really a question, turning fully to you, pushing you back into your seat, hands lifting to frame your face, large and hot and calloused against your skin. âLemme tell you something, honey, it only took me a couple hours to know you werenât something Iâd be able to forget.â His eyes flick over your face, âNah. Never. You are one of my constants.âÂ
âOh yeah? And what makes me so special?â You say with a roll of your eyes.Â
âWell for one you just punched the shit out of someone for me,â he says. âAnd just about everything else. Everything we get up to. We compliment each other. You understand me. We have fun together and you never tell me to be quiet even when I probably fuckinâ should be. Youâre my best friend too.âÂ
You reach up and hook one hand against his wrist, trace your thumb over the veins there, softening a bit. âSerious?â
âYeah. Fuck, yes.âÂ
You nod and move your other hand to his chest. âYou punched the shit out of someone for me too.âÂ
âShoulda happened a long time ago.âÂ
You smile at that and then frown. âYou should talk to Will. About the panic attacks. Itâs okay that youâre going through something. Weâre here for you. But no oneâs going anywhere. Not me, not anyone.âÂ
âIâm not either,â he says, ignoring your suggestion for the moment, clearly not wanting to think about the panic attacks or his brother. âIâm not going anywhere either. Trust that.âÂ
And you do.Â
Bennyâs never lied to you and he certainly isnât cruel. You tug him closer, press your forehead to his and breathe him in until he seems like heâs back to himself.Â
The closeness is familiar. It doesnât feel strange to be wrapped up in him like this, you and Benny are this close all the time and itâs always felt right, natural.Â
âYou want me, babe,â he says suddenly, only ruining the moment slightly, and you hear the grin in his voice.
âFuck off.â
âI heard you. I know you do. Sâokay, I want you too.â
When his breath ghosts over your lips and your breathing hitches hard, he surges forward to kiss you roughly.Â
Its a desperate kiss, one that sears into you, that lights your veins on fire. You push your hands into silky wheat hair, tugging at the strands until Benny shoves back the center console and drags you into his lap, presses you close and tight, his heartbeat matching yours. Itâs a little awkward, your jaw smacking into his nose, Benny grunting before you find a good position, giggling the whole time before heâs kissing you again, the heat of him so good around you.Â
Broad hands splay over your back, trace the line of your spine as you push your hand inside the collar of his worn shirt.Â
But just as quickly it softens and Benny Miller is smiling into you so hard he canât really kiss you properly.Â
âBeen waitinâ for this so long,â he says, his mouth brushing yours with every word. You jerk him forward by the back of his neck, pressing him as close as you can, laughing into him.Â
âHave ya?â
âFuck yeah,â he murmurs, hissing when you press your thumb into one of his bruises, a bad habit you don't want to quit. âYeah, shit, I have been. Stupid gorgeous and puts up with my shit.â Â
You grin, âSure do, pretty boy.âÂ
He doesnât correct you, just fastens those cornflower blue eyes on you and asks, âSo youâll be at my next match?â
ââCourse. Canât wait to see you get your ass handed to you.â You pull back to stroke his cheek, trace a thumb over his bottom lip.Â
He kisses you again and this time itâs deep and controlled and so good, familiar and unexpected rolled into one.Â
Feels like home, like thereâs solid ground beneath you for once.Â
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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They collaborate on a jumper for Omega that is 75% immaculate stitchwork and 25% Wrecker getting his ass kicked by gauge, and of course Omega adores it and wears it everywhere
âšPatreonâš| Stickers et al | Commissions | Instagram
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Someone may have already posted about this, but the amazing @uzuriart on Instagram posted these based on the face of Temuera Morrison and I just canât with how beautiful they all aređ
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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I hope the top picture comes to pass, I saw the new episode where GROGU got his roundal chest piece and I hope GROGU gets more armor.....and a growth spurt XD
Summary: Joel has a problem. Having settled into some semblance of a 'normal' life in Jackson that no longer involves running for his life and living off scraps, his clothes are getting a little⊠tight. Self-conscious, he deals with it the way he does most things - he ignores it.
That is until one day, the zipper on his jeans finally gives up after one too many desperate tugs, leaving him stuck. With neither Tommy nor Ellie anywhere to be found to get him out of the tight spot, Joel begrudgingly heads to the clothing store heâs seen in town for help - and a new pair of jeans.
There, he meets you.
Warnings: Spicy thoughts, sexual tension, sexual innuendos, body insecurity, some language, Joel being unkind to himself, shy!reader, reader has a nickname related to her job, soft!Joel, no use of Y/N
Word count: 6k
Notes: I haven't written anything this fast for a hot minute. It's both exciting and terrifying, especially as Joel is so new to the fandom. So this is a one-shot as it stands, but I'll be lying if I say I haven't thought about where this story can go. Please be gentle with me, Joel is easily the most intimidating Pedro boy I've written for so far. I hope this doesn't disappoint đ„ș
âTommmMMMMMYYYY!â
His voice echoes in the empty street, gruff with irritation. He can feel eyes on him - he always does, wherever he goes in this damn place - covert stares from behind curtains, peeking out of windows from the neighbouring houses.
The polished wood thumps hollowly under his fist. Head bowed in surrender, his forehead makes contact with the surface of the door with a dull thud.
âFuck,â he mutters under his breath.
Trudging back to the house thatâs been allocated to him - he still struggles to think of it as his - he slams the door shut behind him so hard that the sound rings in his ears. Well, more in his left than his right.
Tossing the keys onto a chest of drawers in the hallway, he yells in a last-ditch attempt, âEllieeee!â
The house is silent.
The one time he needs either of them, neither can be found anywhere. Even Maria has made herself scarce - not that heâd ask her for help for this.
This being these stupid fucking jeans.Â
His trusty jeans that heâs worn for years, other than on laundry days, which were few and far in between. Theyâve literally seen him through thick and thin - the knees are so worn he can almost see the web of white thread beneath the denim.
Tess had gotten him these jeans. Stole them, if he remembers correctly. Once upon a time, he needed a belt to hold them up, or theyâd hang down to his ass crack. By the time Ellie came into the picture, they fit well enough to render the belt redundant. He could still easily fit things into his pockets though, like a map or a switchblade.
But now -Â
Now heâs stuck, and he canât get them off.
If heâs being honest with himself, the jeans havenât fit for months. The jobs in Jackson donât come anywhere close to the backbreaking work in the QZ or being on the road with Ellie. The food is plentiful even during the harsh winter, and as much as he looks down his ideological nose at it, Maria deserves credit for the thriving commune.
He had a late start this morning. Ellie had already vacated the house by the time he came to. He was on autopilot, distracted by his thoughts about the porch steps that have rotted and need to be replaced.Â
He was making plans in his head to nip down to the workshop to get the wooden planks when he started getting dressed. Stepping into the legs of the jeans, he pulled them up, hopping to stretch them over his thighs. Out of habit, he sucked in his belly to button them up, the waistband seemingly even tighter than usual.Â
He relegated that to the back of his mind, the same way heâs ignored the fact that the jeans have been uncomfortably tight for months - to the point of hindering his movement when he lays bricks, or cuts off his breathing when he sits down. But heâs gotten used to it, like he does everything else. Heâs Joel Miller with the stiff upper lip, after all.
The zipper was next. As usual, he met resistance about halfway up. Baring his teeth, he gripped the tongue of the zipper and yanked upwards.Â
Except this time, it didnât budge. Grumbling, he pulled harder, feeling the burn in his biceps -
It happened so quickly that he wasnât even aware until he was wheeling backwards from the force, his arm flying up in an arc - and a metallic clink behind him registered faintly in his good ear.Â
Disoriented, he glanced down at the zipper. The slider had come clean off.
âFuck,â he swore and turned to the full-length mirror on the wall to inspect the damage. Running an experimental finger along the seam, it was clear that the zipper had somehow snagged on the denim. It was stuck. Dead stuck.
Turning the house inside out, he couldnât find a single pair of scissors, and there isnât enough space to fit a knife in without slicing himself open, at which point he left on his ultimately fruitless search for reinforcement.
Joel scrubs a tired hand down his face. Heâs never been a vain guy - Tommy is that sibling. But heâs never needed to stress about his looks either, with contracting keeping him in shape before the outbreak, and the fight for survival after - until now.
Grabbing his jacket, he shrugs it on, hyper-conscious of whether itâs a tighter squeeze than usual (fortunately not) - and heads into town.
Main Street Outfitters, the only clothing store in Jackson, sits in the middle of the high street, sandwiched between the pub on one side and the welderâs on the other. For the most part, residents come in to trade in old clothes for new ones, but thereâs also a nicer selection for the occasional party that one can barter for.
Youâre in the workshop at the back, the afternoon sun filling the room through the skylight.Â
With your skill in thread and needle, you were the obvious candidate for the job when you arrived in Jackson. Over the years, it has become your sanctuary. The walls are lined with wooden shelves, where neat - though mismatched - boxes of buttons, trimmings, thread and trinkets slot perfectly into place.
You spend the days checking over incoming clothes after they come back from the laundry, making sure they are in reasonable condition and mending those that are not. The shop also charges for adjustments and repairs, and the tasks easily fill your working hours.
Itâs a Tuesday, and itâs usually quiet this time of the afternoon. If youâre lucky, you can be undisturbed until you clock off at five - which is why youâre surprised when you hear the tinkle of the doorbell.
The footfall is heavy, it sounds like a strong work boot. You hold your breath and your fingers hover mid-air as the door shuts with a slam. You hear the customer clear his throat - definitely a man - as you wait in vain for the front of house to greet him.
But of course Lucy has sneaked out again. Sheâs a sweet girl, but manning the counter has always been too dull for her.
âHello?â
The voice is deep and gravelly, and despite your reluctance, it doesnât sit well with your work ethic to keep a customer waiting. Sticking the needle into a pin cushion, you noiselessly rise from your seat and make your way to the front of the shop.
Your first glimpse of him is his back. Standing in front of a rack of jeans, the grays in his hair catch the light streaming through the shop front windows. You study him for a minute, curious eyes running over the width of broad shoulders under a beat-up, khaki jacket. Lower, his jeans are⊠well-worn, to put it kindly. And from sight, a sitting a bit tight on his hips -
You must have shifted your feet without you noticing. At the minutest creak of wood, the man whips around, one hand reaching behind him in search of the butt of a loaded gun or the hilt of a knife. Itâs your good fortune that you see neither on him. The intensity of his gaze is just as effective as a blade on your neck to pin you to your spot.
Thereâs no question that heâs a newcomer. Youâve seen the same kind of intensity in everyone whoâs braved whatâs out there to get here.
But even if that didnât give him away, you already know who he is. Heâs Tommyâs brother. Joel, if you remember correctly. Maria approached you for some clothes a few months back when he arrived with his kid for the second time. Theyâve been the talk of town since - not that you listen. In fact, you try not to, but you canât help it if someone talks loudly enough at the next table in the canteen to interrupt your lunchtime reading.
âSorry,â he mumbles as the tension in his body recedes. âYouâre very quiet.â
You duck your head. âSorry.â
âYou work here?â
Wringing your fingers nervously, you nod and take two timid steps towards him, hoping he doesnât hear the tremour in your voice. âHow can I help?â
Youâve heard things about Joel Miller. The words most frequently whispered as he ambles by in town include ruthless, cold-blooded and steer clear.
You canât exactly reconcile the man in front of you with those particular words right now.
Thereâs nothing that speaks to ruthlessness in the way he averts his eyes and shuffles his feet, the blunt tip of his shoes catching the wooden floor. You also find it hard to believe that a truly cold-blooded person would willingly cross the country and all its horrors in search of his brother, or take a teenager under his wing.
You might not think much of yourself, but you know that your judgement of character has kept you alive so far. And your instinct isnât telling you to steer clear of this man - quite the opposite, in fact.
But thatâs neither here nor there.
He rubs the back of his neck, uncomfortable with your scrutiny. âJust lookinâ for some new jeans.â
âAlright,â you reply, taking the remaining five steps to the other end of the jeans rack, a safe distance away from him. âWhatâs your size?â
To your surprise, he huffs a sardonic laugh. âAt least one up from whatever I have on right now.â
Sucking in a breath, you gesture vaguely at him. âUm, do you mind if I take a look at uh - you? So I can guess what size will fit you?â
Youâre used to being the most awkward person in the room wherever you go, but this man is giving you a pretty good run for your money right now. While you divert your gaze as he unbuttons the front of his jacket, he fixes his somewhere over your shoulder to the right, grinding his teeth, as if he wishes he was anywhere but here.
Dragging your eyes back to him, you take stock of your customer as he sweeps the lapels of the jacket to the side. Underneath, the green flannel cuts off at the top of the jeans, and you see the soft pouch of his abdomen beneath the fabric. While the shirt is well-fitted, the jeans are obviously too small. The waistband bites into his sides, you can see the subtle overhang of his love handles. Even by the way heâs standing you can tell heâs uncomfortable, packed in way too tight in the denim.
And then⊠you really shouldnât, but stare at the front of the jeans. Now, you know for a fact that the fit will be just as snug there even if he goes a size upâŠ
âSorry, not much to look at,â he grunts, breaking the silence.
Taken aback by the self-derision in his voice, the words leave your mouth before they register, sharper than you mean them to be. âDonât say that.â
He blinks at you. âWhat?â
You gape at him. Does he really not see? His tall, solid frame? The strong columns of his thighs? Is this man blind on top of being frustratingly attractive -?
But of course you can never say that. Instead, you pull out three different pairs of jeans in quick succession and all but throw them at him, heat prickling the tips of your ears as the disbelief that you spoke to a customer like that sinks in.
âThe dressing room is there,â you squeak, pointing at the far corner. âIâll be at the back if you need any help -â
You turn on your heels, in a hurry to get back to your workshop, but you only get halfway through the spin. It takes you three seconds to realise why - his calloused palm is on your wrist, holding you in place.
âActually, I do need help - I broke the zipper, and Iâm stuck in these damn jeans.â
You ignore the clench of your stomach at the way he spits out the word damn. Youâre not big on swearing, but the cuss word sounds good rolling off his tongue in his Southern twang.
To your horror, a giggle bubbles up your throat before you can slap a palm over your mouth.
âIâm so, so sorry,â you apologise profusely, heat flooding your cheeks.Â
You stare in consternation when those broad shoulders of his quake, a half-smile on his lips as they part in a scratchy chuckle. âTrust me, Iâm glad I found you first. My brother or my kid would have given me a much harder time. Probably wouldâve pissed their pants laughinâ.â
Despite yourself, you smile back with a weak attempt at a joke. âI mean, Iâll try not to -â
He smirks, the corners of his eyes crinkling. âThatâs all I can ask for.â
You lead the way to the back of the shop and Joel follows three polite steps behind, pausing by the doorway. Running practised eyes over the space, the contractor in him appreciates the well-built skylight and the sturdy furniture in the room, pieces that were clearly built to last. He places the jeans you picked out for him on the big work table, made of strong timber and aged with time.Â
He picked up a change in your demeanour the moment you crossed the threshold into the workshop. Thereâs a quiet confidence in your measured steps, the way you move speaking volumes - this is clearly your place, and youâre so much more comfortable in your skin here.
You point at the spot marked by a round, cosy rug directly beneath the skylight. âCould you stand there for me?â
Doing as heâs told, he startles when you march straight up to him, sliding your palms under the shoulders of his jacket to push it off. Your front brushes his chest briefly when you reach around to catch it, but not brief enough for him to ignore the soft swell of your breasts pressed up against him.
Joel is all too aware of his pulse going from zero to a hundred at the fleeting touch, the collar of his shirt suddenly a bit too tight. For fuckâs sake, Miller. Itâs been an embarrassingly long time since his head has gone anywhere near there, but of course it has to happen at the most inconvenient moment.
At least you donât seem to notice, draping his jacket over the back of a chair before retrieving a pair of tailorâs scissors from one meticulously organised drawer.
Just when he thinks heâs gotten a handle on himself, you hit him with a non-sequitur. âAre you wearing underwear?â
Only when Joel splutters wordlessly does the full weight of the question seem to hit you. You stutter, âOh god, I didnât - I mean - I only asked because if push comes to shove, and I have to cut through the jeans, I donât want to ruin any underwear youâre wearing -â
You trail off, and itâs his turn to stammer, scratching an invisible itch on his elbow as he struggles to remember what he usually does with his hands.
âNo, no, I get it. Iâm ahem -,â he pauses with a cough. âIâm not actually wearinâ any underwear right now. Not out of habit, itâs just that Iâve been barely squeezinâ into the stupid jeans even without it.â
His honest answer seems to put you at ease, and you purse your lips. âSounds uncomfortable.â
He shrugs. âHave been for months.â
âIâm sorry.â
He arches an eyebrow. âWhat for?â
âThat youâve been uncomfortable. Thatâs one thing clothes shouldnât be.â
Not quite knowing how to answer you, he watches you grab a velvet cushioned footstool from under the work table and place it squarely at his feet. Then, without further preamble, you sink onto your knees in front of him, knocking the air clean out of his lungs.
As he stares down at the crown of your head, your nose at the level of his waistband, he muses that he hasnât seen this view for a long time, a very long time. His fingers twitch at his sides, and he closes his eyes, fighting the base instinct to cup the back of your head in his palm and to pull you close -
He breathes out hard through his nostrils and clenches his jaw, casting his gaze heavenwards through the skylight as he actually prays for the first time in years.
Donât you fucking dare get hard, Miller.
You chew on the inside of your mouth as you consider whatâs before you. Itâs tricky. The jeans are unbuttoned and zipped up most of the way, but the denim has been caught tight in the metallic teeth, and the handle of the zipper yanked clean off.
Cocking your head to one side, you think out loud. âI think we should at least try and unsnag the zipper before cutting. But weâre going to need some lubrication, and weâll need to give it a really good, firm tug -â
The man chokes on nothing above you, and you frown up at him in a question.
Clearing his throat loudly, he asks through gritted teeth, âDo we have to?â
âI mean, I can just cut open the jeans, but then youâll definitely have to trade in something extra to cover the costs of the repairs -â
He interrupts, âThat. Letâs do that.â
âAlright, your call,â you say with a nod. âCan you hold up your shirt?â
You try not to gawk when he draws up the tails of his flannel, revealing his soft stomach underneath. The mid-rise jeans cut off beneath his belly button, and you eye the trail that sneaks full and dark under the waistband. Heâs obviously sucking his tummy in, and you catch yourself wishing he doesnât feel like he has to.
You bite your bottom lip. âDo you think you can fit a couple of fingers into the waistband so I can slide the scissors in? Theyâre sharp, I donât want to cut you.â
You watch as he tries, first his index finger, then his middle, but he can barely squeeze in beyond the nail, which turns completely colourless from the pressure. He sighs in surrender. âMfraid youâll have to, sweetheart.â
You have to close your eyes for a moment, your head swimming. Youâre not sure whether itâs from the sweetheart, or the fact that he wants you to stick your hand down the front of his pants.Â
Well, not exactly that he wants you to. And not your hand. But still.
You squeak. âDo I have to?â
He pins you a sarcastic arch of his eyebrows. âWell, if youâre sure that you wonât cut my dick off -â
You flush at his blunt words, falling back onto your haunches. âGreat, now youâve got me worried -â
Palms in apology, he shrugs. âSorry -â
âNo, no, youâre right. I donât want to accidentally castrate you,â you sigh. âAre you - um - well adjusted in there?â
âIâd go down the right side of the zipper,â he answers diplomatically.
Taking a deep breath, you ask, âReady?â
âWhenever you are, sweetheart.â
The first contact is the brush of your knuckles against his stomach, the skin warm and soft on the back of your fingers. You donât dare look up, but you can feel his eyes on you as you burrow your index finger under the waistband. Itâs a squeeze, but you manage to wriggle in nail side down, creating a small gap, but not enough to get the scissors in without nicking him.
Talking more to yourself, you mumble, âBetter safe than sorry. Let me just get one more finger in -â
Joel chokes so hard that you almost jump back in fright, frowning at him as he catches his breath. âAre you okay? Do you need some water?â
His voice tight, he shakes his head. âNo, Iâm fine.â
You wait a beat to make sure he doesnât go into another coughing fit. When the coast is clear, you gesture at his jeans. âCan I just -âÂ
âGet one more finger in?â he finishes your sentence in his raspy baritone.Â
You finally hear it when he says it like that. And oh god, your ears burn as you stare up at him, lips parted, torn between outrage and a very disorienting arousal. âYou - you -â
A wicked smirk tugs unexpectedly at the corner of his mouth. âI already tried, sweetheart. My fingers are too big to fit inside.â
The touch of playful condescension in his tone has your jaw going slack, and your brain practically short-circuits at the thoughts of where else they are too big to fit inside of -
So as it turns out, youâre brave, or just downright stupid, when youâre turned on. Next thing you know, you hear yourself telling him off. âI could just leave you in those jeans you know.â
Joel smiles wider, and retorts, âI donât think you would.â
âJust because Iâm shy doesnât mean I donât have a mean streak,â you shoot back.
He seems pleased to have lured you out of your shell, grinning down at you. âBelieve me, Iâm shakinâ in my boots, sweetheart.â
Itâs really unfair that he looks this good from where you are on your knees. His eyes are hooded, curls flecked with grays sweeping his forehead. Even though the apocalypse has left its marks on him in wrinkles, frown lines, and smudged bags under his eyes, it has clearly not taken away from that proud nose or plush lips -
Steadying yourself with a deep inhale, you shake yourself out of it. With an in, itâs slightly easier to push in your middle finger into the waistband to widen the gap. Happy with the quarter inch of space, you hold up the scissors. âIâm ready to cut if you are.â
He nods his acquiesce. âDo your worst.â
Opening up the scissors and carefully fitting the blade beneath the denim, you carefully begin snipping away. They are sharp, but the fabric is tough and youâre conscious of the very tight fit, so you take it slow.
You pause when youâre a couple of inches in, when Joel lets out a groan of relief. Absent-mindedly, you run a soothing thumb over the angry, red indents the waistband dug into the soft pouch of his tummy, sending a shudder through him.Â
âSorry,â you squeak, snatching back your hand as if he burns you.Â
Too preoccupied with the relief of being able to breathe, Joel shakes his head. âDonât be. Just keep going. Please.âÂ
Why is that one word - six letters - making your breath hitch?
Gripping the top of the now open fly and pinning it against his body so you donât accidentally see anything youâre not meant to see - whether you want to deliberately is a completely different matter - you hunker down and keep cutting along the zipper.Â
Each snip gets easier as the jeans release their death grip on him. The right side of the fly falls away as you cut, the denim peeling back slowly to expose the skin underneath. Your eyes drift to the curve of the pubic bone thatâs now completely in view, and itâs taking everything you have to not lean over and run the broad of your tongue along it -
How long has it been since youâve been with a man? When was the last time you had someone stand before you, pants unzipped and hanging open -
With tremendous fortitude, you tear your eyes away to check on him, âAll good?â
The grunt of respite that he lets out is almost guttural, going straight between your legs. âFeels so fuckinâ good to breathe.â
âBefore I keep going, do you want to - uh - rearrange yourself?â
You expect him to turn around, or at least give you a second to turn around to give him some privacy, but heâs obviously been too deprived of oxygen to think straight. One big palm snakes down his front, right in your face, and he cups himself through the denim.
You stop breathing, eyes wide as he adjusts himself.Â
Holy fuck.
When heâs done, he gives you a thumbs up. âAll good.â
This is it. Youâre not making it out of this alive.
You can barely get the words out, your throat suddenly drier than sandpaper. âCan you, um, hold up the other side of the fly?â
When he does, you stare at his hand next to yours. How is it so big? The veins are prominent on the back, leading down to thick fingers, the nails neatly trimmed and clean - but you bet thereâs residue gunpowder underneath.
Thereâs still a slither of skin peeking through the V of the fly as the scissors slice through the denim, following his happy trail. The lower you go, the thicker and darker the curls, and goddamnit - what is wrong with you - all you can think about is burying your nose right in there, nudging through the hair, lower and lower and lower still -
A sharp pain on your left finger makes you yelp, the scissors falling from your other hand to the floor with a loud clang. A small bead of blood wells up on the tip where the sharp blade nicked it, and in a panic, you let go of his jeans.
âShit,â Joel curses and covers himself up quickly, his brow furrowed in concern. âYou okay?â
You flush, nodding in embarrassment while you get on your feet. âI - my hand just slipped. Itâs nothing, the smallest cut, Iâm fine -â
Well, to be fair, you were fine - until he grabs your left wrist, brings your hand up to his face and sucks your bleeding fingertip into his mouth.Â
As if itâs the logical thing to do.
Your knees buckle, and you collapse into his front, but he doesnât even budge, as if you weigh nothing. Taking a deep breath - wood smoke, simple soap and man fill your lungs. Peering up at him through your lashes, you spot the silver flanking the hinge of his jaw, leading down to a peculiar bare patch on the left side of his beard.
He watches you back as he releases your finger with a wet pop. Tracing his bottom lip with his tongue, he pronounces, âJust a small cut. Youâll live.â
Will you though? Because it feels like youâre on the verge of expiring from breathlessness.Â
He glances down at his front, which heâs still holding up. âI guess I can get out of these now.â
It takes you three seconds to catch up before you stumble backwards. âYes, of course. Sorry.â
âThank you for freeing me,â he says with a lopsided smile.
You duck your head, unable to meet his gaze all of a sudden - hypocrite, you had no problem perving on him a minute ago - and nod at the jeans on the table. âWhy donât you try those on?â
He clears his throat. âI, uh, should probably put on some underwear first.â
You barely manage to hold back from smacking yourself on the forehead. âOf course. We do have some in stock. Boxers or briefs?â
He looks amused. âWhat do you think, sweetheart?â
You hesitate, but you force yourself to be brave and venture a guess. âBoxers.â
He winks, and you grin back.
Joel hovers uncertainly in front of the mirror in the fitting room, having exhausted all the angles he can see twice, and wonders if heâs been dithering for too long. Heâs not even sure what heâs looking at anymore, so he bites the bullet and draws back the curtain.
âHow do they feel?â you ask.
He was counting on some hint from you, but you give nothing away. So he shrugs, hands on hips. âI honestly canât tell you.â
âMay I?â
At his nod, you step into his space, and he watches as you hook your fingers into the belt loops on either side of the jeans and pull them up, as if gauging the size. He holds his breath as your hair grazes the front of his chest.
âTheyâre a bit loose, to be honest,â you tell him.
He scoffs self-decrepatingly. âProbably not for long at the rate Iâm going.â
You take a step back and level him with a glare. âStop it.â
He frowns, hackles rising. âWhat?â
âStop putting yourself down.â
That he didnât expect. He protests, âIâm not putting myself down -â
âYes, yes, you are,â you interrupt him with a boldness that has his eyebrows reaching for his hairline. With fire in your eyes, you go toe to toe with him, poking him in the chest with a firm finger. âYouâre alive, youâre safe here, and youâre fit as hell. If youâre going to make fun of yourself for putting on a bit of healthy weight, you can go ahead and get out of my shop.â
Warmth blooms in his chest as Joel stares down at you, breathing heavily after your little speech but showing no intention of backing down. You donât know him, but for some reason, youâre fighting his corner.
That shouldnât feel as good as it does.
Pursing his lips, he towers over you as he teases, âYou think Iâm fit as hell, sweetheart?â
With a roll of your eyes, you walk backwards to the shelves, rummaging through the sizes before returning with a pair of dark wash jeans. You quip, âDonât fish for compliments, itâs unbecoming.â
You snap the curtain shut in his face with a flick of your wrist before he can answer, and he chuckles to himself as pulls on the jeans you picked out for him.
When he pushes open the curtain again, Joel doesnât miss the way you pause as you stare.
The waistband sits on his hips without cutting into his stomach, and heâs pleased that he can comfortably slide his hands into the pockets. The denim wraps firmly, but not tightly, against his backside, holding his thighs comfortably and falling straight down to the ankles. The wash is dark and flattering, smarter than his old ones.
When the silence has stretched on long enough, Joel shifts on his feet and asks, âWell?â
You turn the question back at him. âWhat do you think?â
He shrugs. âTheyâre alright, I guess.â
With a tilt of your head, you prompt, âYou can say it, you know.â
âSay what?â
âYou can say that you look good.â
Joel huffs, shaking his head and catching his reflection in the mirror as he does. At your look of insistence, he reluctantly parrots back, âAlright. I look good. Happy, sweetheart?â
Then you smile, really smile, and he feels himself soften - his eyes, his face, his mouth, his fucking old, rickety knees -
Suddenly, the bell over the door rings and a woman bustles in. âIâm so sorry, Pin! I know Iâve been gone a long time, but I got your favourite tea to make it up to you -â
She stops abruptly when she spots him. âHey! Youâre Joel Miller, arenât you?â
Before he can answer, she crosses the shop in a bundle of energy, sticking her hand out. âIâm Lucy, Iâm a friend of Tommy and Mariaâs. Itâs so nice to finally meet you.â
He lets her shake his hand, then she continues without skipping a beat. âHow are you settling in? You got that house in the street near the stables right? Itâs great, itâs quiet but not too far from everything -â
Since she doesnât seem interested in his participation in this conversation, he doesnât. But he notices, with regret, the way you start to retreat, the shyness making a return in the shadow of her clearly more outgoing friend - like a bad habit.
Heâs suddenly aware of a lull, and that Lucy is looking at him expectantly, like sheâs just asked a question that he didnât hear.
âYeah sure,â he replies dismissively, stopping you with a hand on your wrist just as you try to slink away unnoticed. âHey, wait a second -â
To Lucyâs credit, she picks up on the snub and the energy between the two of you at the same time. Instead of taking offence, she gives you a knowing look and points towards the back diplomatically. âYou know what Pin, I just bumped into Maria and she asked me something about our fabric inventory, so I better go check it out. Iâll see you around, Joel.â
With a wink in your direction, Lucy makes herself scarce, leaving the tea on the counter for you.
Joelâs quiet for a beat when youâre left alone again. âSorry, I didnât mean to run off your friend, but I just wanted to uh - thank you. For all this.â He pauses, then adds, âLike she said, Iâm Joel. Probably shouldâve introduced myself before I asked you to cut me out of my jeans.â
You quip, âThereâs always next time.â
He chuckles, and asks, âDid your friend just call you - Pin?â
âItâs just a silly nickname,â you explain. âAs in pins and needles, for obvious reasons.â
Then you give him your real name and your hand, his palm warm and calloused against yours as he shakes it firmly. When he lets you go, you notice the watch on his wrist, the veins of broken glass on the face catching the light.Â
Nodding at it, you ask, âDo you need that fixed? Thereâs a repair guy down the road who can fix anything.â
Confused for a moment about what youâre referring to, Joel pauses before realisation dawns on him. His answer is suddenly polite, a stark contrast to the light-hearted conversation just now. âNo, I - I like it this way. But thanks.â
You donât miss the emotional weight behind his words, and the air thickens with unspoken meaning, but you know better than to ask.Â
âI understand,â you say simply.
Everyone has something like the watch is to him. God knows you do. A moment of quiet understanding passes between you, one that needs no words.
Breaking the silence, he says, âSo, you mentioned Iâll need to trade in something else for these jeans -â
You dismiss that notion with a wave of your hand. âOh no, itâs ok. I got it.â
âYou donât have to -â
You shut him down. âItâs not a big deal, it will take me two minutes to replace the zipper.â
He hesitates. âAnd the boxers -â
Passing him his jacket, you insist, âSeriously, Joel, donât worry about it.â
His fingers brush yours when he takes it from you and shrugs it on. You try not to look too conspicuously when the bottom of his shirt draws up, flashing a bit of tummy, but itâs gone too quickly. With a nod, he concedes reluctantly, âYou really shouldnât, but thank you. I owe you one.â
You roll your eyes with no real exasperation as you walk him towards the exit. âI know you havenât been here for long - thatâs just how things work around these parts. We do things for each other, you donât owe me anything.â Pulling the door open, you give him one last grin. âWelcome to Jackson, Joel.â
âThanks, Pin,â he says as he crosses the threshold. He pauses on the porch and looks around the high street slowly, as if heâs taking it in for the first time. He then turns to you with a parting wink that is charged with easy confidence. âI think Iâll like it here.â
You linger by the door, leaning against the frame as he jogs down the front steps with a swagger, watching in appreciation at the way his new jeans frame his backside. You smile when he slides his hands into his pockets as he walks away, the afternoon breeze ruffling his curls and the sun warming his broad shoulders.
You think youâll like him here as well.
Notes: As I was writing this, I couldn't help thinking that it reminded me of Grays đ What can I say? I want to give middle-aged men in need of self-love all the reassurance that they need. I hope you enjoyed Pin and Joel's meet-cute, I'm honestly so nervous about this fic I had to stop myself from compulsively over-editing.
Thank you so much for reading! Comments and reblogs are appreciated as always đ„°
P.S. Apparently, there is a Main Street Outfitter in the game, so I ran with it.
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