a summerās worth of sugar. (į°ā, COMPLETE) just a quiet collection of domestic moments shared in a remote forest cabin with a wanted man you happened to find bleeding in your kitchen. Somewhere between shared breakfasts, sketches in a worn journal, and the intimate hush of the woods, the dangerous stranger slowly begins to feel less like a guest and more like a husband you never planned on having. chapters: (1) | (2) | (3) | (4) | (5) | AO3
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Hey Iām new here just wanted to stop by and say how much I enjoyed your Arthur fic! You are an incredible writer, and it became an instant fave of mine. I appreciate it, and you š«¶
Hope you have a lovely day!
Omg thank you so much for taking time out of your day not only to read the fic but also to let me know how the story made you feel! šš„¹ I really appreciate it and Iām very happy to know it now has a special place in your bookmarks! I canāt wait to share more Arthur fics in the future! Have a lovely day too!ššø
Are you going to write more fics with Arthur? I reallu enjoyed the last one :)
Hello anon! absolutely!š I have at least 2 more Arthur fics in advanced stages of planning as we speak. Iām currently writing a John x reader thatās been in my to-write list since January haha the whole thingās going way more slowly than I originally intended but after Iām done with that one, I will begin working on a low-honor Arthur x reader fic that I am super excited to share with everyone! The reader is going to be a wealthy lady from the Garden District of Saint Denis that happens to meet Arthur during the events of chapter 4, at the Mayorās party. Sheās engaged to a rich man (this time the Saint-Denis boyfriend will be realš) and I donāt want to step into spoiler territory but itās going to get super smutty and probably angstier than originally intended toward the end, especially as we move into the events of chapter 5š I think it will be a nice change of scenery from my previous fics that mostly took place in rural areas. Iām looking forward to writing domestic, everyday moments from another perspective this time. Also, our reader character will be very proper and elegant which means it will be an absolute delight to witness outlaw Arthur slowly making a mess of her oh my God
Omg you canged your profile pic! Lol i almost couldn't find you š i hope youre doing well!
Hey bestie! Hahaha Shrek is so photogenic I have so many pics of him I canāt wait to use as my dpš kkk Iām good! And you?šø always lovely to open this app to be greeted by your Leon reblogs, appreciate them, especially when heās driving gigantic plastic lawn chairs on my dashboard. Thank you.
Iāve been working on my next fic (that John x reader I told you about then, the enemies to lovers, low-honor one) but itās going so slow at the momentš„² Writing Cigarettes and A summerās worth was so easy and everything went so smoothly, but lately Iāve been going through it nglš writing-wise haha I gave my brain a couple weeks to rest bc right now it canāt do anything but play dave the diver and watch rdr2 playthroughs haha
Iām hoping that this week with uni starting again I am able to fall into a writing rhythm. I tried again today and I was able to make quite a decent amount of progress so hereās hoping! lol I miss everyone, and interacting in the comments every week. I hope to be back soon!šš„¹ wishing you an amazing week!š«§šø
AAAAHHHHH I just finished reading your arthur fic "a summer worth's of sugar" and I don't know how to say something. I love it so much it made me explode into confetti of happiness!! Thinking about the story makes me cry happy haha
My favorite is arthur taking a bath in the lake and the reader getting feelings from the drawings and notes he made about her it really made me weak too
Thank you for letting me read it for free, it's so sweet and fluffy that I must got the dentist to check my teeth ( Ā“ ā `)ćļ½ ā”
(sorry if my english not good, i use translator)
Omg anon thank you soooo much for reading and for taking time out of your day to let me know how the story made you feelš Iām so glad you enjoyed it! āIt made me explode into confetti of happinessā is such a vivid description I love it so muchš„¹
Iām happy you liked the lake scene! I had a ton of fun writing that bit. I knew I wanted to include a moment where we could peek into Arthurās journal, and having him distracted and swimming shirtless in the lake was such a golden opportunityš
And youāre welcome, anon! Itās my pleasure! I love writing cozy, domestic stories and itās sooo nice to know they can connect with readers this wayš«§ thank you for making time to read themšø Sharing them with other fans and discussing them together is sooo much fun! I will continue to share many more in the future!
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I'm so mad! I typed out a whole dissertation in your ask and tumblr decided to delete it before I could hit send
Okay... lets see if I can recreate it lol
So, I let myself have a day after reading the Arthur fic, to let it marinade in my head! And I must admit, when you posed the first chapter of the fic, I didn't think you could pull it off again. I was just coming down from the high of the John fic and I was sure that there was no way you could write a fluffy fic that hit the same... oh how wrong I was, I sat there with a full heart and a fire in my chest regretting ever questioning your work!
Ah... chapter 5, my dear chapter 5! I have many thoughts! I will probably jump around a lot in this ask since i can't seem to sort them (and this being my second time writing it... I've forgotten a lot of the thing I wanted to write...ffs)
I remember somewhere in chap 3 thinking "Arthur should go to John and ask him to help him get rid of the pest in the forest"
And then you ACTUALLY DID write that!!!
Im telling you, I was so giddy when I read this! Also the fact that you managed to include the Marstons in such a good way! Chefs kiss!
I love to imagine Sadie and John teasing him while trying to purge all the skinners, they would deffinetly be on his back. Asking him what he has promised reader in order to stay with him lol but oh, how bitter-sweet it is!
Especially since we know something Arthur doesn't! He isn't supposed to be there... he is supposed to be long dead. His body under a cross, on a montain close to Armadillo. It broke my heart when the Marstons and Uncle talked about how they thought he was in Mexico, drinking himself dead. He doesn't know that in this iteration he got a second chance. That in another reality Reader was never able to catch him in her home, bleeding, with her cookies in his sachel... how beautiful it is that he finally got a chance to live out his life, to enjoy it even!
This! When I read "imaginary" I had the stupidest smile on my face! Finally he said ittt hehehe I know everyone already talked about this, but this was such a good plot point!
"Your new husband" Arthur Morgan, you've shoot me in the heart and cupped your hands together chatching evey single drop of my blood in your loving hands!
Love how they skipped every base lol yeah, she saved his life, they lived together for a few weeks... they married! An old married coupple through and through!
This scene was so stuck in my mind, I have dreamed it after reading! The beauty of being observed and seen... god I can imagine Arthur, butt ass naked, sitting at the table. His usual spot. His back warmed by the low fire, watching his butterfly sleeping peacefully.. his heart swelling every time he looked up to study the lines of her face while an uncaring storm breaks the sky outside. His whole world contained in that space... his world used to be so wast, cold and just as indifferent as the storm outside.. but how it is here! Warm, breathing and his entirely, just as he is hers.
Im a big fan of the fact that the Marstons keep visiting them! They are all a family now! Her and Abigail are now sisters in law, John her broter in law, Jack her nephew and Uncle her Uncle in law lol it feels so nice, finally she and Arthur are part of something stable and loving!
I absolutely enjoyed this fic! And never ever be sorry for writing over 10k words for a chapter! I would read an 100k word chapter of your work!
I hope you get to take a rest after this! I know you're writing an aot fic as well.. sadly I'm not into aot anymore, but I think I'll try to give it a read anyway!
I feel like I forgot to add a few things that I wrote the first time arround... but this mostly brings my view across!
Omgš First of all, I just wanna say thank you for taking the time out of your day TWICE to let me know what you thought about the chapter! I would be SOOO mad out of my mind if Tumblr did that to me. I was sooo excited when I got this notification so thank you for re-typing itš„¹
Thank you sooo much for reading and supporting both stories Iāve written so far!š and I am so glad you enjoyed the Arthur fic just as much as the John one. When writing a summerās worth I wasnāt too concerned about cigarettes & honey bc they are totally different settings/characters, even the reader-insert personality is different, so I felt like I was writing completely different stories for different audiences. BUT! I will admit I am a little nervous about the next John or Arthur fic Iāll write, I donāt want them to be super similar to previous ones but I do want to keep some elements I enjoy. Hopefully when the time comes they will be able to connect with readers in their very own special wayš«§
Asdfghjkl itās so funny how you were right about the plot many times before it even happenedš like the fact that Arthur did ask John for help in the end, and also I remember back in chapter 3 you said you hoped she met the Marstons and then it happened hahaha I really enjoyed writing the Beecherās Hope scene, so it makes me very happy to know you enjoyed it too! I absolutely love the idea of a cozy family dinner by the fire on a windy spring day for Arthurš he deserves all the moments of quiet joy and peace he can get and I will give him nothing but that in all my ficsš and yes! I also love to imagine everybody teasing him about his new husband phase kkkkk thatās why I LOVED writing every single Uncle lineš
āHe doesn't know that in this iteration he got a second chance. That in another reality Reader was never able to catch him in her home, bleeding, with her cookies in his sachel... how beautiful it is that he finally got a chance to live out his life, to enjoy it even!ā
This is so beautifulš„¹ it made me tear up a little bit. Ever since I finished the game I constantly find myself thinking about Arthur and how his life wouldāve looked like if he lived through it all and was present in the epilogue. And when doing that, I always imagine this type of life for him (not necessarily finding love like he did in the fic) but just enjoying his days in the peace and quiet of nature, no longer running away from the law and the violence from his past. To know this intention translated well into the story is so very satisfying. Thank you so much for wording this feeling so well!š«§
Hahaha I added the word āimaginaryā on my final editing, just as I was about to hit post, to make it super clear that Arthur knew there was no other man in her life but him kkk I know everybody knew it already but I didnāt want no misunderstandings in their happy ending kkkk Iām glad you enjoyed that line/plot!š
Love how they skipped every base lol yeah, she saved his life, they lived together for a few weeks... they married! An old married coupple through and through!
HAHAHAHAHA omg I laughed sm at the way you explained it idk whyš itās like she just chose him one day, married him in her head without him knowing sometime during those weeks they spent tgt, and uses the word husband based on vibes alone lmao
And I know I have quoted you a lot already but THIS RIGHT HERE
I can imagine Arthur, butt ass naked, sitting at the table. His usual spot. His back warmed by the low fire, watching his butterfly sleeping peacefully.. his heart swelling every time he looked up to study the lines of her face while an uncaring storm breaks the sky outside. His whole world contained in that space... his world used to be so wast, cold and just as indifferent as the storm outside..
ASHDSGFDSGHDFSG OMG I might actually cry, this is EXACTLY the kind of warm/cozy/comfy vibe I want to create with my writingš„¹ it makes me SOOO happy to know this scene translated into exactly that! I pictured the scene without the storm originally and then I was like āletās adjust the coziness slide bar to 100%ā with a little rain kkkkk Thank you for letting me know how this scene made you feelš so satisfying to imagine Arthur waking up to quiet moments like this, and then being able to go back to sleep peacefully, knowing tomorrow is just another day of routines and domestic life.
And omg that aot fic was the first one I ever wrote, back in 2023š My writing was sooo different back then, perhaps only the last chapters resemble my current style, which I was still trying to find at the time hehehe
Once again, thank you soooo much for reading, supporting my writing and indulging me with post-chapter discussionsš«§ It makes the experience or writing and sharing stories 10x more fun!š I look forward to sharing more fics with everyone!
hiii ! i dont normally comment on stuff but i wanted to drop by here and say how much i LOVED a summers worth of sugar and just how much of a talented writer u are! u write arthur so well and the line about how ābutterflies should always be around flowersā was literally the sweetest thing ever!! i was kicking my feet like š¤š¤ i cant wait to see the other stuff that u write in the future! i just know its gonna be a hit every time lol. have a great weekk!!
Hello anon! Thank you sooo much for reading and taking time out of your day to let me know how the story made you feelš this is a HUGE compliment and I donāt take your support for grantedš„¹ and omg that line was a last minute addition, literally one of the last things I changed, and now knowing how much you liked it Iām SO glad I did! Originally, Arthur was supposed to say something else, I think he was basically repeating himself, something he said in a previous line, but I didnāt like how repetitive/generic it sounded, and then this line about the butterflies popped in my head kkk I canāt wait to share more stories with you! I have many more ideas in store, I canāt wait to start write again! Have a great week too!šøš
I just want to say I absolutely loved your Arthur fic ššš You write him so well and your writing style is genuinely so beautiful and eloquent!! Came for Arthur and stayed for the vibrant imagery š. And I just have to ask⦠will u ever bless us with a Javier fic or one shot?šš
What an absolute honor trulyš that you enjoyed the imagery and writing to the point of reading 40k+ words from meš It means a lot! Thank you soooo much for supporting this fic and taking time out of your day to send me such kind wordsššø And Javier! Omg is this my first fic request ever? Iām honored, anon!š„¹ Should I open my inbox for requests? Asdfsgafš At the moment, I am only writing for Arthur and John because those are the two men my brain canāt stop imagining in smutty scenarios all day long𤔠BUT! That doesnāt mean I am against the idea of writing for other beautiful men such as Javier and Charlesš„¹ I will just need a little help from you for the prompts when the time comes, you know just to get my gears turning haha so in conclusion, a Javier one shot can totally happenš
I literally have tears pouring out of my eyes as Iām writing this, oh my god that was so beautiful! I could feel the yearning and the uncertainty leaping off my screen and punching me in my chest. And the end!! It was so so perfect! I love that you included other characters, and you did it so seamlessly! And I love love love love love me some soft Arthur smut and yours was just *mwah* you have a gift and Iām so thankful you decided to share it with us! Please please keep writing!!!
No matter how many times I say this, itās never enough to express how grateful I truly am to everyone who gave this story a chance, and took time every week to read the updates. Thank you so much for reading and for letting me know how the story made you feelš it means a lot! It makes me so happy to know you connected with it in such a beautiful wayš„¹ and gosh I am SO GLAD you liked the ending omg and the smut! Haha I had spent more than 30k words building their relationship and the tension and I was so scared the love scene wouldnāt make the journey justice. But I was very satisfied with the way it turned out in the end and itās such a relief to know you liked it too! Sometimes when youāre writing something, itās hard to know if you like the scene bc itās actually good or just bc you have spent so much time with it that your brain develops some kind of bias. Anyway, soft Arthurš assdfaaffdadgf I feel thatās 100% how high-honor Arthur would be during the intimate moments with the woman he loves. Heās such a gentlemanš also, Iām very glad you enjoyed the āmeeting the Marstonsā bit! It was a last minute addition tbh, my original plan was to mention have the reader mention briefly that they met at some point (like the MC recall that meeting but in a very brief way, no more than a paragraph) but somehow I just kept writing, I couldnāt stop and next thing I know! I had a full draft of a scene at Beecherās Hope and I just had to polish it and include it. It was soooo fun to write. And it was such a cozy momentš I just imagined that family dinner and Arthur enjoying his loved onesā company and ahsdfsh, itās so perfect. He deserves cozy moments like that, and thatās all heās getting in my ficsš„¹ I have so many more ideas for wholesome moments like that I canāt wait to include them in other fics ahdshdf Iām so excited to share them with everyone! Again, thank you so much for reading, and I hope to see you in the next one!š
summary: Just a quiet collection of domestic moments shared in a remote forest cabin with a wanted man you happened to find bleeding in your kitchen. Somewhere between shared breakfasts, sketches in a worn journal, and the intimate hush of the woods, the dangerous stranger slowly begins to feel less like a guest and more like a husband you never planned on having.
genre: 50% fluff, 50% smut, 100% Arthur is hot.
warnings: none (just small mentions of blood and stuff)
notes: Fulfilling your Arthur Morgan husband fantasy. Slow burn (patience is the longest yet most scenic road to smut.) Includes Arthurās canonically perfect round ass naked in your kitchen. Includes Arthur enjoying a very ripe, very juicy, very pink peach in front of you. (Iām serious)
The morning melodies of the forest wrapped around you like the softest quilt, crisp highland air dancing through your hair, rustling the leaves over and over until you realized how quiet the trail truly was.
It wasnāt the absence of soundānever that, the woods north of the Upper Montana were just as alive as those in the southābut the kind of quiet that settled deep into your bones. It lived beneath the chorus of birds and everything else around you. The rhythmic creak of saddle leather. The steady puff of the horsesā breath. And the hush of wind moving through pine and aspen, threading itself through every thought until there was room for nothing else.
Last night still lingered in your body like warmth trapped beneath skin. Not just the memory of his lipsāthough that burned stillābut the devotion of his touch. The way heād pleased you like no man ever had, as if you were something precious, something to be worshipped rather than claimed. The way heād looked at you like he was afraid to break the spell by wanting too much.
And you understood the fear.
You, too, were now at risk of asking for far too much.
āYou knew the man who lived here?ā Arthur asked, riding just ahead of you, easy in the saddleāas if the land itself had shaped him to fit it.
To your left, Lenora View rested like a postcard of domestic peace. Old, weathered fabric swayed on the clothesline in the morning breeze, grayed by years of sun. Garden tools leaned where theyād been set down and never picked up again. Wrapped parcels and paper bundles waited patiently on the front step, untouched since ā99. The little blue cabin now belonged to the ivy spilling from its flower baskets, roots claiming timber and eaves with quiet, possessive insistenceātelling the ending to a mystery youād first heard about last century.
āSaw him around town a few times,ā you said, your eyes drifting back to Arthur, watching him without meaning toāmemorizing the lines of his back, the way his head lifted toward the peaks as if greeting old friends. If your hands held even a fraction of the talent his did, youād pull the reins right there and capture every sharp line, every soft shadow until he was yours to keep, long after the seasons changed and took him with them. āWent missinā around the time I left town, donāt know if they ever found him.ā You finished, forcing your attention back to the conversation.
āOh, they did,ā he replied, his shoulders moving with the horse, not against it. Free. Untethered. āPoor bastard drove himself off a cliff.ā He tipped his chin toward the bridge, where the land fell away into jagged, cruel stone. āWanna know whatās worse than dyinā like that?ā
Your face contorted with a wince. You couldnāt imagine much worse than meeting the rocks face-first. Even if fate gave you the mercy of a quick death on impact, the terror of the fall would be enough to shatter even the bravest soul.
āDyinā like that on the very road meant to take you to your bride,ā he explained quietly, his voice barely rising above the thud of the horse hooves. āMan never showed up at his in-lawsā porch.ā
A cold shudder rippled through you. It was a most horrible fate, indeed. Two, in fact. A lonely corpse forgotten under the shadow of a bridge. And a widow hauling her trunks back inside, step by confused step, as the realization set in that he wasnāt coming for her.
You wondered which was cruelerāif she ever learned the truth, if she knew her lover was now a broken heap at the bottom of a canyon, or if she spent her years believing herself simply forgotten. Left behind by a forever that had only just begun to bloom. Haunted by the promise of morningsāquiet and ordinaryāthat now felt borrowed from another life. Coffee shared in comfortable silence. A soft sleeve brushing hers as he reached for the tin. A faint smile she hadnāt realized she wore whenever he teased her about the years ahead. Small things. Domestic things. Fragile, beautiful things that had shattered before they could ever truly begin.
The kind that made oneās chest ache with both possibility and dread in equal measure.
You knew better than to let yourself imagine too far ahead.
A man like Arthur didnāt belong to a life measured in seasons and routines, in lavender gardens and evenings by the fire. He belonged to motion. To horizons. To roads that never truly ended. And yetātreacherous thingāyour mind still betrayed you with images of him splitting wood outside your cabin, of boots much bigger than yours resting by the door, of his laughter carried on crisp forest air as he leaned down to pick bay boletes beside you. Of shared meals eaten off mismatched plates. Of his coatāheavy and smelling of cigarettes and highland sunādraped carelessly over the back of a chair that had never expected to hold the weight of such a man.
He glanced back then, just briefly, as if heād felt the weight of your gaze. His eyes softened when they met yours, something unspoken passing between you in the space of a heartbeat. He didnāt pry. Instead, he tipped his head toward the sprawling Valley aheadāa silent come see thisāand you smiled despite yourself.
āHow ābout a little race, butterfly?ā he called, the breeze playing with those caramel locks you yearned to be the one whose scissors he asked for when they grew too long for his liking. āIf I win, you leave that husband of yours for good.ā
āAnd if I win?ā you shot back, almost certain that he knew there was no husband thinking about you in Saint Denisāthat the lie was nothing more than a thin, pointless game you both kept playing because it was just too fun to quit.
āDoubt thatāll happen,ā he said, a challenge sparking in his blue eyes as he spurred his Shire into a sudden, thundering gallop.
You swallowed your doubts and urged your horse onward, the ground beneath you beginning to blur.
āWell, look at you!ā you shouted after him. āAll healed and bouncinā on a horse like you werenāt bleeding to death last time I checked.ā Your lips curved and your eyes crinkled under the sun, a smile that carried the ache of all your thoughts gently, like something brittle yet still very much alive. āIf I had known that was all those wounds needed, I wouldāve let you ride much sooner!ā
His answer was laughter. Bright and unguarded. A sweet sound carried on the fresh breeze rolling into the open greens ahead of you.
The wind kissed your cheeks and tangled your hair, rushing cold and clean through your lungs as you rode fast along the creek. Morning had long since shaken off its sleep; the sun stood confident now, catching on river water and mossy stone, setting the world aglow as if it had something to prove. It was a freedom so real you could only feel it in the fleshāand never imagine.
Whatever tomorrow heldāwhatever ghosts waited for him, whatever roads might pull him toward an inevitable horizon where you didnāt existāthis was yours.
The day.
The sunlight.
The man riding ahead of you through a land far too beautiful to promise anything lasting.
So you let yourself have it.
Fully.
Without apology.
All of it:
The warmth of his familiar hands on your waist as he helped you down from your horse once you reached the sun-drenched fields heād promised. The air crisp and heady, a smirk gracing his lips after having won a race you would have forfeited anyway. The price of losingāthe promise to leave a ghost of a husband behindāwas a prize far greater than any victory.
You let yourself have the press of his honey lips against yours beneath the bright, unapologetic sunāa sweet, butterfly claim that took hold the moment your feet touched the emerald grass, dusted with clumps of rebellious purple that refused to listen to the seasons. A few sprigs bloomed around your boots just because they could. Just like his kissāborn of pure whim, done simply because he felt like it. Because he could.
You let yourself have the sight of him setting up the tents in the heart of that purple seaālavender still too young to pick, yet perfect to drink in with your eyesāhis broad shoulders working beneath a vast, cloudless sky. It was a fairytale scene you glanced back at now and then as you knelt in the cool grass a few feet away, picking wild mint for the lunch heād promised to huntāas if you feared that looking away for even a minute too long, meant the horizon would finally decide to take him back.
You let yourself have the comforting scratch of charcoal against paper beneath the mellow afternoon sun. He sat on a flat rock by the waterās edge, black hat resting atop his satchel, lost in the quiet sanctuary of his art and his thoughts. A few rocks away, your bare feet greeted the creek like an old friend, threading carefully over mossy stones, skirts gathered as cool highland water slipped past your ankles.
The sharp, clean scent of the creek mingled with the faint, ever-present aroma of his cigarettes, a perfume that had become your new definition of safety. And in the silenceābetween the birdsong and the rushing water, between the soft grazing of the horses in the field and the wind stirring drowsy leaves awakeāthere was a peace so profound it felt fragile, like a soap bubble that could burst at anytime if the breeze blew in the wrong direction. You watched the way his brow furrowed in concentration, the way his large, scarred hand moved with such surprising grace across the journal page. In the early afternoon light, he wasn't an outlaw or a face on a wanted poster. He was just Arthurāsimple and stillāsharing a piece of the world with you.
And for the rest of the afternoon, at least while sunlight seeped into skin and moss alike, the quiet was enough.
But as the first stars pricked through the purple silk of the sky, as the last brushstrokes of orange slipped behind snowy peaks, and the Valley finally surrendered to the evening chill, the fairytale day began to drift away on the night breezeāfeeling more like a memory than the present moment you were still allowed to experience. The quiet ache in your chest nudged you toward him, seeking the kind of bone-deep warmth you knew no campfire could provide.
āHere,ā you said softly, handing him a steaming cup of coffee. You lowered yourself beside him at the entrance of his tent, sitting as close as you dared. Your head found the reassurance of his shoulder, resting there as you bid the day a silent, reluctant goodbye.
He said nothing beyond a low thank youāthe words a husky, honeyed rasp carried off by the wind somewhere in the purple seaābefore finishing his coffee in just a couple sips.
His warm hand came to rest on your knee, a bittersweet reminder that today was still here. That he was still here. You took a sip from your own mug, the cool night breeze kissing your sunburnt cheeks as if to soothe the worries you wouldnāt voice to him.
Your free hand found his under the fire glowāsoap-worn fingers lacing through violence-worn knuckles. The gentle squeeze of his palm felt like it was pressing the ache right out of the tight muscle of your heart.
You stayed like that for a long while, listening to the chorus of cicadas humming somewhere in the brush and basking in the quiet comfort of his hand resting in yours. The Valley had gone blue with dusk, fireflies began to spark in the distance, and the firelight from camp flickered low and gold against the canvas of your tents.
Your thumb traced lazy circles along the base of his forefinger, feeling the rugged, uneven ridge of a scarāthickened like a ring of old damage that told a story of its own. You lingered thereācurious, thoughtful.
āHowād you get this one?ā you murmured, the question more tease than concern. Your gaze drifted briefly toward the darkening woods surrounding the campāsomewhere out there, a cellar hidden under the Valley, and an old woman who might still be haunting it. āWas it the old lady?ā
He let out a soft chuckle, the sound a low vibration in his chest.
āThis? No,ā he said, leaning back a little, eyes lifting toward the first stars blinking awake overhead. āBastard down in the Bayou.ā
You shifted slightly closer without meaning to, your knee brushing his thigh as the night cooled.
āWeād been trackinā him and his buddy for weeks,ā he went on, gaze unfocused as he was pulled back into the suffocating, muggy wetlands of Lemoyne. āGot āem cornered in some half-rotted shack. I got my man. My friend took the other. All clear, all goodā¦ā His jaw tightened just a touch. āUntil a gator crawled out from under the bed.ā
āOhāGod.ā
āI got distracted. As one does when a gator shows up.ā He huffed a dry laugh, eyes flicking back to you. āThe bastard I was tying up thought heād try his luck, broke free and caught my finger between his teeth. Wouldn't let go.ā
Your hand tightened around his instinctively, wincing as the image bloomed in your mind. The ring of scarred flesh felt even thicker now that you knew the story behind it. āChristāhow come you still got to keep the finger?ā
He shrugged, as if being bitten by human teeth was just another part of the job. āPunched his jaw until he couldnāt close it no more.ā
You winced again, a phantom pain throbbing in your own hand and jaw.
āDonāt worry,ā he added quickly, the corner of his mouth lifting as he caught your expression. āHeās fine. Happily livinā behind bars until they decide to hang him and his buddy. Reckon the law shouldnāt take its sweet time, though. Those two are known for their talent of squeezinā themselves out of tight holes.ā
You shook your head slowly, gaze dropping to the fire as it snapped and settled, still making sense of the story youād just heard.
āAre you a bounty hunter?ā you asked after a moment, your voice barely rising above the hush of the wind.
āSomethinā like that. More like an assistant, really.ā His thumb brushed once against your knuckles. āMy friend does the huntinā. I just help her out sometimes.ā
āJesus.ā The word slipped out before you could stop it, your thoughts drifting to this faceless womanāthis unnamed force of natureāwondering what kind of life sharpened a lady into a blade like that. āYour friendās tough.ā
āShe is,ā Arthur agreed, his voice growing heavy with a different kind of respect. āTougher than most men I know.ā
The fire cracked softly in front of you, embers glowing with a drowsy, orange heat, while above, the stars stitched a brilliant quilt across the open sky. You held his hand a little tighter, suddenly aware of the life etched into every ridge and scar along his skināknowing, with an aching certainty, that a life like his was not something a man simply stepped away from to pick mushrooms and chop wood in a forest cabin until the end of time.
And yetā¦
That same hand rested gently in yours tonight.
The same hand youād found clutching his side, shedding precious drops of life on your kitchen table one fateful winter day. The same hand youād cleaned and bandaged every morning as you nursed him back to health. The same hand you lifted to your lips now, pressing a soft kiss to the skin the doctor had stitched back together what felt like a lifetime ago. Your kiss was a silent plea wrapped in warmth.
To always remember you.
Wherever the wind took him next.
After all this.
After you.
Your gaze drifted up to his, content to simply look at him. Then, drawn into the blue depths of his eyes, you rose to press a wistful kiss over the scar on his chin, wonderingābriefly, uselesslyāwho had put it there, wishing heād linger around long enough to share that story with you some other night. Under these same stars.
You nudged him back gently, his back meeting the blankets inside the tent with a soft thud. And then you were straddling him, your weight settling comfortably over his, as you traced a line of slow, honeyed kisses along the caramel bristle of his jaw.
His hands came to rest at your hips, easy and familiar. His chest rose steady beneath you as your mouth drifted to his neck, your kisses sweet, caring and entirely his. That was how you wanted him to remember them: the āpretty lipsā heād written about in his journal. Just softness. Just sugar. Just his.
At the same time, your fingers worked at the buttons of his shirt. Slowly. Deliberately. Each eyelet freed with blind familiarity and careful precision. There was no rush in your movements. You had all night, after all; just the two of you and the scent of crushed lavender beneath the blanket.
You pushed the fabric off his shoulders far enough to reveal the rugged map of scars across his chest. His hands roamed the cloth over your thighs, a deep, satisfied rasp rumbling from within him as your lips met the iron-forged muscle of his torsoāscattering butterfly kisses over every patch of skin where violence had stolen the chance for sandy hair to grow.
His hand tightened on your thigh when your mouth brushed the scorched, distorted mark on his left shoulder. You wondered if it still hurtāif the pain still haunted him despite the scar looking old enough to belong to another lifetime.
āAnd this one?ā you murmured, kissing it again just to be safeāas if your warmth might help the skin finally heal, hoping the feeling of you might linger on him for days. āWho did this to you?ā
āSome Irish clown,ā he rasped, his voice low and molten, a pleasant whisper that melted like honey beneath your touch. āDistant time. Different life. Aināt āround here no more.ā
You glanced up just enough to see himāeyes closed, brow faintly furrowed, every last thread of tension dissolving beneath your care.
And for this moment, at least until the sun rose again and the horizon claimed him back, he was yours to soothe.
So you did.
You moved down from his shoulder slowly, reverently, kissing every patch of his history that didnāt include youāevery chapter of a life that had existed long before your paths crossed. Every shiny, gnarled line of scar tissue that broke the smooth rhythm of his skināeach one a quiet testament to the man he had been before and the man he had become after them. The outlaw whoād appeared bleeding in your kitchen one winter afternoon. The gentleman whoād placed your favorite flowers in a vase just so youād smile at the sight. The artist whoād sketched you like his muse instead of the simple country woman youād always been.
The man whose chest now rose and fell beneath your fingertips, his lungs whistling placidly as your lips traced a downward path, following the coarse line of hair that disappeared beneath the waistband of his jeans.
His nails bit into the soft skin of your arm when you drifted lower, abandoning all pretense of ladylike restraint, pressing your butterfly lips to the hard, swollen shape of himāheld captive beneath a suffocating layer of rough denim.
But not for long.
Your fingers worked the leather of his belt free, the quiet jingle of metal and the whisper of fabric setting your heart into a wild, impatient rhythmāone your hands did not mirror. Instead, they moved with agonizing control as you unbuttoned his jeans, savoring every second, every low grunt that left his chest despite the desperate anticipation running through your veins, despite the searing summer blooming between your thighs. Wet and unapologetic. Midday heat sizzling over sweat-pearled skin. A haze of a summer fantasy flickering through your mindāpeach lemonade on a sunlit counter, sweet beads of condensation rolling down cloudy glass, reality blurring at the edges.
Your eyes lifted to his as you tugged the fabric down, denim and cotton together. He met your gaze, his eyes fixed on you as if you were the first ray of light to reach him after an endless, biting night. Unable to resist any longer, you surrender to your desires, your attention drifting lower, savoring the iron planes of his chest, the dip of his stomach, until you reached the part of him every nerve in your body ached to feel.
A whimper escaped your lips at the sightāthe sound soft and honest, impatient yet reverent. Just like him: rising solid and proud between well-muscled thighs. The flushed tip already glistening with anticipation, sweet drops sliding down the swollen flesh, following the thick veins that disappeared into the coarse hair at the base.
Your eyes drank him in with gratitude. Unashamed.
He was the most beautiful sight the Valley had ever offered you.
His gaze was heavy, half-lidded, dark with a hunger that made your skin sizzle as he waitedāachedāfor your touch.
And who were you to make a gentleman wait?
You reached clumsily for the front of your shirt, your fingers betraying your eagerness. But you hadnāt even undone the first button when his hand closed gently around your wrist, stopping you cold.
Your mouth parted to protest, but he sat up and pressed his lips to yoursāsoft and deliberateāas if to quiet any complaint before it could form. His experienced, gunslinger fingers took over where yours had faltered.
Your mouth curved against his in a smirk you didnāt bother to hide. He had said this was the fun part, after all.
He bared you without inconvenience, sliding the cotton down over your shoulders, revealing skin his lips only seemed to know how to worship. Your head tipped back, suddenly too heavy to hold upright, your neck turning liquid beneath the warmth of his breath. A feeble sound escaped your mouthāhalf-need, half-delightāas his lips pressed soft and tender against your chest, painting a trail of wet heat as they traveled lower, to where plump flesh spilled from the tight lace cradling your breasts.
Your body shivered, a small, involuntary tremor, as the cool highland breeze brushed over skin still damp from his kiss. His rough fingers worked the lacing open with careful, deliberate tugs, each eyelet slipping free until nothing remained between his gaze and the sight of youābare, undone and aching for him.
Your nipples tightened in the night air, your chest rising and falling beneath his reverent stare, as if your body was thanking him for freeing your breasts from the constricting embrace of fabric.
You smiled at him, your eyelids heavy with want, and for a moment, you wondered if heād reach for the charcoal behind his ear and start drawing you right then and there.
āYouāre too pretty for a bastard like me,ā he whispered, leaning down to press a butterfly kiss against the goosefleshed curve of your breast. āToo damn pretty.ā
Your spine arched at his touch, at his praise, the weight of your upper body resting solely on your hands, palms pressed flat into the blankets beside you.
āArthurāā you sighed his name into the star-freckled sky as his fingers guided your skirt up your hips and over your head, leaving only your lacy drawers between you. You lifted yourself slightlyāan awkward, desperate motionābut it was enough. He slipped them away without making you leave the heat of his lap.
āSweet butterfly,ā he rasped, his hand drifting down to the summer raging between your thighs, sinking into it softly, unafraid to be burned. His fingers coaxed a fragile whimper from your lips. āToo damn sweet to be touched by nothinā but the cleanest, softest hands.ā
And yet you wanted hisāblood-stained and bruised. Palms scarred. Fingertips calloused exactly where they curled around a trigger. You wanted those same hands that knew how to ease you open like this, gentle as a promise. Not teasing. Just preparing. Just reassuring. Only the sweetest pressure allowed in this fairytale.
Your hands found his face, cupping it, holding his gaze as the quiet, wet sounds of his touch filled the space between your bodies.
āClean hands aināt makinā me feel this way,ā you breathed, your mouth parting wide in a silent moan, gasping for the air you stole from his lungs. āA-Arthurā¦ā He touched you exactly where heād learned you liked it the night before, as though rewarding you for making his name sound so beautiful.
āYours is the only name these lips wonāt ever stop sayinā,ā you promised, arching against the arm he kept around your back, drawing you closer. His neglected lengthāwaiting with a painful, stoic patience between youābrushed against your belly as he shifted, a searing reminder of just how much he was holding back for your sake.
āGodāyesā¦Arthurāā
He pressed the tender bundle of nerves between your folds with his thumb, the movement as careful and artistic as when he held a piece of charcoal between his fingers.
āMen like me donāt get to have this,ā he murmured, his voice a bittersweet whisperādark coffee with barely a sprinkle of sugarāa reminder meant more for himself than for you.
You stilled, your hands resting against the steady, heavy beat of his heart. You gently nudged him back until his head met the blankets, even though it meant losing the delicious fullness of his fingers inside you. You leaned down, pressing a soft peck to his lips, your voice a hush against his skin.
āYouāre a gentleman, Arthur.ā Your fingers slipped into the honey locks of his hair, combing through them as you hovered above him, sinking into the honest, blue depths of his eyes. āThe sweetest man⦠and you donāt even know it.ā
āButterflyāā
āShhh.ā You pressed your lips against his again for good measureāhalf-kiss, half-smile.
Then, you left him there as you straightened back, your fingertips reaching carefully for his length. He jolted faintly at your touch, a small shudder running through his massive frame as your gentle hands wrapped around him, just enough to hold him steady. You shifted your hips closer, letting your aching, slick folds brush the prominent veins along his swollen cock.
A sound escaped you at the delicious contact. Though your legs felt liquid, you managed to press your knees into the blankets, rising just enough to glide your drenched slit along himāslowly, from tip to base and back again. Not taking him inside. Not yet. Just tracing the side of his length, letting your body become familiar with every ridge of him, coating him in your heat.
His nails pressed into your knee, his brow drawn tight as he looked up at you, then down to where your bodies met. Both of you were caught in the quiet spell of it, in the hush of that moon-drenched intimacyāin the slow, mesmerizing friction of flesh that had long ached for this. Velvet against silk.
āYouāre one handsome man, Arthur Morgan,ā you whispered, shifting your hips in gentle, swaying motions just to see his sharp features tighten in delight. āSo damn handsome. Donāt know if they ever told you.ā
He gave you a brittle, flickering smile through heavy lidsāa small gratitude for a truth you werenāt sure he believed about himself.
You glanced down just in time to see the glistening tip of him brush your swollen bud, a thin thread of sticky desire stretching between you.
And you could tellāby the way his muscles shuddered under your worship, by the way his fingers sank into your skin as your velvet folds soothed the painful hardness of himāthat he was not used to the softness. To the devotion. To the care.
To Arthur, all his bodyād probably ever been was a tool for survival, a shield for others, a target for his enemies. But to you, it was something precious whose warmth youād always crave, even after he was long gone from these lands.
āI want this, Arthur, ahāā your voice broke as the head nudged your clit again, a jolt of lightning sparking through your core. āIāI want us like this.ā
Every day, of every season, back in our little cabin.
In the summer, after a long day under the sun, sweat-damp bodies tangled in freshly washed sheets.
In the fall, behind the reliable trunk of an ancient pine, a basket of foraged berries forgotten in the carpet of needles beside you.
In the winter, quilts spread before the hearth, snow falling onto the frozen surface of the Basin, your shadows dancing in black and orange against the worn timber walls.
And every spring, in this purple sea, just like nowāthe Valley flowers and the star-pricked sky the only witnesses to your lovemaking.
āPleaseāā
ādonāt leave me.
You didnāt dare finish the thought aloud. It felt selfish to want more than what he was already giving youāgreedy to ask for his future when this moment alone already felt like every beautiful thing this life had to offer.
āArthurā¦ā With a soft sigh of his name, you finally nudged him inside you, using your hand to tuck the glistening tip into your welcoming warmthājust barely at first, just enough for your body to bloom around the stretch. He grunted as you lowered your hips slowly, the sound like gravel over silk. You let yourself sink down inch by patient inch, your hungry walls closing possessively around him.
The soothing brush of his hands on your thighs was a caress meant to encourage, to praise you for how well you were taking him in. Yet as you lowered further, the increasing heat in your sensitive flesh brought a flicker of sharp discomfort, and for a heartbeat you wondered if you would be able to fit him fully at all.
But patience was a virtue these lands had long since taught you.
You reached for his hand, threading your fingers through his as you sank lower, as deep as the pain would allow. Until it numbed. Until the fullness grew so exquisite you could feel nothing but the solid, pulsing weight of him inside you.
āYou okay, butterfly?ā he whispered, the words breathless. His voice was soft as the breeze stirring the leaves outside, sweet as the press of his lips against the back of your hand.
You nodded, barely hearing anything beyond the rasp of his breath. Barely seeing anything but the gorgeous, moonlit fantasy before you: his mouth parted in silent praise, his brow drawn tight with a vulnerability people never expected from a man like him. But then again, theyād never seen him like you did.
He was such a gentleman, just lying thereāhard and generousāletting you take your time, letting you move as you pleased, letting you use him as you pleasedāutterly content just to see you happy.
And you were.
Happy to be the one taking him in like a compliment.
Like a lock that had finally found its key.
Your palms pressed against his chest as you lifted your hips a few inches, then sank back down again, a little more confident this time, the feeling of him so deeply a part of you now. A low sound escaped his throatāhalf-breath, half-praiseāas his fingers tightened around the fat of your thigh.
You took it as encouragement.
So you did it again.
And again.
Soon, a comfortable rhythm formed between you, your bodies moving in harmony beneath the wide, starlit night. The clean mountain air brushed cool against your bare skin, raising gooseflesh whenever the wind hit your back, but the warmth between your joined hips burned bright enough to chase away any chill.
The world beyond the small tent of stitched blankets and dancing firelight seemed to fall away, leaving only the wet, rhythmic slap of flesh against flesh, and the steady cadence of your joined breaths.
āYou turn me stupid, woman,ā he rasped, his voice deep and rough, as if the words had to fight their way out of the breathless pit of his lungs. āDonāt know what you do to me.ā
His gaze remained fixed on you as though you were the only thing in the whole Valley worth seeing. His hands slid along your hips, steadying you, guiding your movements without ever trying to take control.
You smiled down at him, your pace growing a little quicker, a little less careful, as the pleasure built inside you like a gathering midsummer storm.
His name left your lips like a prayer, your voice trembling as the sensation tightened deep in your core, spreading through your limbs until they were too liquid and too useless to serve you in this dance no more.
He felt it before you could say more.
With a sudden, gentle strength, he shifted, rolling you beneath him just as your knees threatened to give out. Your back met the blanket, the grass bristling faintly beneath the thin fabric, still warm from his body. He hovered over you, careful not to press his full weight down. One arm braced beside your head, his fingers lacing tightly through yours, while the other slid beneath your thigh, lifting and angling you just the way he needed youājust the way he knew would make you feel everything he wanted to give you.
āAāArthurāā His name tore from your chest, loud and helpless, as though life wouldnāt give you another chance to say it after tonight, as though the Valley itself might carry the sound across the hills and keep it alive long after you were gone. The world blurred at the edges as the delightful fullness of him crested inside you, your body arching softly beneath his muscles, your fingers tightening around his knuckles until they went numb.
āYouāre alright, darlinā,ā he murmured, the low rumble of his voice more soothing than any touch. āIāve got you.ā
He kissed you through itāslow, deep, and steadyāhis tongue moving against yours with quiet devotion, as the combined depth of his thrusts became too much to bear. Your walls, swollen with sweet juice, finally surrenderedāa summer downpour spilling between your thighs, drowning him in your delight.
But being the gentleman he was, he didnāt pull away from the storm heād created. His lips stayed on yours insteadāselfless, patientāholding you close without asking anything of you as you came undone in his arms, as fire embers sparked all over your skin, melting the tension away from your muscles. As your body softened beneath him, he continued to move with a deeper, searching rhythm, chasing his own release.
He found it a few heartbeats later. Your walls fluttered around him as he slipped free at the last possible second, just enough to bury his face in the curve of your neck. A low, broken sound escaped himāa grunt of pure, shattered reliefāas his body tensed and shuddered. Sweet warmth painted beautiful shades of white across your belly before he finally stilled, his breath heavy and ragged against your skin.
For a long moment, neither of you moved.
Somewhere in the valley, a night bird called. Then another answered from farther off. The creek joined them, the cold water whispering over stone just a few feet away. Outside, the fire crackled softlyāperhaps too small for the mountain cold, but neither of you felt any urge to tend it.
He stayed there, catching his breath against your shoulder, his weight warm and grounding. It was as if he feared that moving even an inch might burst whatever short-lived, beautiful bubble you were trapped in. Not just tonight, but these last few weeks.
And you understood. You stayed still too, only daring to move the hand that now traced slow circles across his freckled back, your fingertips savoring the strength beneath his skin, memorizing the map of his muscles before the trail could claim them back.
āLetās go south through Black Bone Forest,ā he broke the silence first, the words tickling your skin on their way out. āSee that new ranch they built out there. Take it slow. Pick you some of those flowers you like. They grow āround there, too, those orchids.ā His fingertips drifted along your ribs, slow and absentminded, as though he were sketching the path youād follow come morning. āWe can camp near Owanjila if it gets late. Leave at first light the next day⦠then weāll make it south of the Montana before dark.ā
You stayed quiet, listening to the low hush of the creek, the brittle crackle of the fire outside, the soft rustle of blankets whenever either of you shifted. You let yourself sink into the simple comfort if itāthe grounding weight of his body, the lazy tickle of his fingertips at your side, and the wide, indifferent scatter of stars overhead.
You watched them as though they might hand down some ancient wisdomāsomething that would mercifully quiet the question your lips were aching to ask.
āAnd after thatā¦ā Your fingers moved slowly across his shoulders, counting freckles one by one, though your heart beat fast and uncertain beneath his body. And you wondered if he could hear it from where his ear rested against your chest. āAre you goinā to Mexico, then?ā
You felt the faint shake of his head.
āI gotta go to Beecherās Hope,ā he said quietly. āAsk John a favor.ā
Your heart twisted. Mexico or Blackwaterāit didnāt matter. Neither of those plans included you. Still, you liked the way he said that nameāJohnāwith a natural, lived-in warmth, as if you were supposed to know who he was. It made you feel, just for a moment, as though you belonged to some small corner of his world. You pictured the drawing youād once glimpsed in a stolen morningāthose men with their quiet smiles. One of them, perhaps. A brother.
āWill you come visit me, Arthur?ā you asked, voice faltering just a little, the question barely rising above the hush of the wind. Your eyes stayed fixed on the patch of sky framed by the tent opening. āSometimes. When youāre in the area.ā
āButterflyā¦ā He drew in a slow, steady breath and lifted himself from the cradle of your arms, propping up on one elbow so he could look at you. The firelight from outside flickered softly across his godlike features, softening the hard lines of him. āYou know I donāt much like the idea of you beinā there alone.ā
āThen donāt leave.ā
The words slipped out before you could stop them. The years youād imagined togetherāthe four seasons in the cabināunfolded inside your head like a map you weren't allowed to keep. But what ifā¦
You pushed yourself upright and cupped his face in both hands, as though you could anchor him to your life by sheer will alone. In that moment, you forgot every promise youād made to respect the man he wasāhis drifting nature, his wild heart. Because the thought of a life where you didnāt fall asleep against his chest every night felt like the cruelest torture imaginable.
āYou can still travel,ā you whispered, your voice thick with a desperate, brittle hope. āStill see the world. Camp under the stars. Ride wherever the wind calls you. Justā¦ā Your thumb brushed a slow, loving circle along the bristled warmth of his cheekālonging, wishful. āJust come back to me in between, Arthur. Come back to me every time, before you leave again.ā
Please.
He looked at you for a long moment, the starlight caught deep in his eyes, the same pale glow it cast across the Basin on a clear summer night.
āWhether itās a trip to Saint Denis for cookies,ā he said quietly, his hand sliding to the small of your back, drawing you closer, āor just down to Manzanita for groceriesā¦if I leave you alone for a second while āem pelt clowns still roam those woods⦠how am I any different from that imaginary piece of shit you call your husband?ā
A smile broke across your face, his features blurring through the warmth gathering in your eyes.
He leaned in first, slow and careful, as if he were giving you time to change your mind. His lips brushed yours in a soft, lingering kissāsweet and reassuring. An owl hooted in the distance, and somewhere beyond the tent one of the horses shifted, a sleepy huff drifting through the night air along with the faint, comforting scent of woodsmoke and pine.
āEx-husband,ā you smiled against his lips, your hand sliding to the back of his neck, your thumb stroking gently just below his ear.
He huffed a quiet laugh, the sound warm and breathy between kisses. āSo youāre single now, maāam? Finally?ā He pressed another kiss to the corner of your mouth, then to your cheek, as if he couldnāt quite bring himself to stop.
āNo.ā
He pulled back just enough to frown, confusion flickering across his faceāthen understanding dawned, playful and sure.
āYou donāt mind your new husbandās a wanted man in a few counties?ā he asked, the weight of his past haunting his voice beneath his playful demeanor.
āAnd whoās gonna come find him in the middle of the woods?ā you teased, though you could still feel the tension behind his question. āYou and the pelt clowns are the only men Iāve seen in all the years Iāve lived out there. If the law ever comes, I could always hide you in my cellar.ā
You stole another peck from his velvet lips, as if you could kiss his worries quiet.
āAnd if they see my boots āround the house?ā he wondered aloud, his voice deepening as he let himself drift into the shape of the life you were offeringāthe shape of the husband who shared a little cabin in the woods with his butterfly wife. āIf they find my shirts in you closet, my guns in a chest under the bedā¦ā
āIāll just tell āem they belong to my husband.ā You brushed your nose gently against his, smiling, perfectly content to spend the whole night spinning little stories if it meant one of them would convince him to stay. āMy sweet husband who sells exotic flowers in Saint Denis.ā
He huffed, amused. āYouāre one clever lady, aināt ya?ā
You laughed softly as he pressed his lips against yours one more time before drawing you closer, turning you around so your back rested against his chest. His arms circled you in a warm, protective hold. The heat of him seeped into your skin, still slightly damp from your lovemaking, his breath slow and even against the crown of your head.
You stayed like that for a while, your fingers drifting absentmindedly over the soft hair on his forearms, tracing the faint ridges of old scars. Above you, the sky stretched wide and endless, stars scattered like spilled sugar. His chest rose and fell gently against your spine, the rhythm slow enough to lull your thoughts quiet.
āI mean it, butterfly,ā he said after a moment, his voice low and thoughtful. āWhat Iāve done⦠it aināt pretty.ā The words slipped into the night, carried away by the soft murmur of the creek. āOut there⦠lawās still lookinā for folk like me. Last thing I want is that kind of life to find yāā
āWhere?ā you cut in softly. āWhere are they lookinā for you? We could just avoid those places forever.ā
He paused, then sighed, as if remembering that the woman in his arms was as stubborn as mountain stone.
āLetās seeā¦ā he murmured. āAnnesburg. The whole stretch of Scarlett Meadows. Blackwater still, though Iāve been there a few times lately.ā He fell quiet again, listening to the creek as though it might whisper the rest back to him. āReckon Saint Denis too. Though Iāve passed through without much trouble. Cityās too big for the law to care who comes and goes.ā
āSāokay,ā you said softly, pressing your hands over his where they rested just beneath your breasts. āNever even thought of goinā to Rhodes or Annesburg anyway. Heard thereās nothinā to see there but dust and coal. And who even needs Blackwater?ā
He chuckled faintly at your optimismāa low, melodic vibration that traveled from his chest straight into your spine.
āWhat about Ambarino?ā you asked. It was the only place you didnāt want to leave this world without seeing at least onceābut youād gladly give up every mountain peak in the country if it meant he stayed by your side.
āDonāt recall ever doinā anything nasty up there,ā he murmured against yours ear.
āThen, Iād like to see the Grizzlies with you. That round house you drew. The Springsā¦ā you let the fantasy take root as you spoke. āI read in the Ledger that the water thereās bluer than the sky. So bright it almost hurts to look at. They say it changes colors, like it canāt make up its mind. Little ponds of boilinā water.ā You smiled faintly at the memory of the tattered article. āEver been there, Arthur?ā
He only nodded against your head, quiet and content to simply hear you speak.
āAn old traveler once stopped through Strawberry,ā you went on, your fingers tracing the thick, prominent vein along his forearm. āSat at Mr. Cooperās counter all evening, talkinā about the places heād seen. Said there was a poppy field real high up north. Bright orange ones. Claimed the land for themselves, he saidāwild little things.ā
Arthur stayed still, save for the hand that drifted along your side, his fingers warm and reassuring against your skin, sketching the blooming shape of a future you both knew was a gamble.
āHe told Mr. Cooper you could see the whole country from up there. The Heartlands, Cumberland Forest, OāCreaghās Runā¦even Flat Iron Lake if the skyās clear. Like the land just opens itself up to you. And up thereā¦ā you smiled faintly, picturing the two of you as tiny specks in that orange sea. āHe said the wind never stops. Just rolls through the flowers and makes the whole hill shimmer orange.ā
Above you, the patch of sky framed by the tent flap seemed to fill with that imagined colorāthe orange sea the traveler had described, the wide world unfolding beneath it. You could almost see it: a quiet picnic in the sun, his head resting in your lap while the wind stirred the poppies and lulled you both into a lazy afternoon nap. Your horses grazing nearby, tails flicking at flies in the tall grass.
And you wondered if, in his silence, he was painting the same picture in his mind.
āHe said thereās a lookout tower near the ridge. And a little cabin folk call the Witchās Hut,ā you added after a moment. āNobody seems to know who lives there. Or if anyone does at all.ā You let out a quiet, wistful breath. āSaid that field was the prettiest patch of land heād ever seen, Arthur.ā
āI can take you there,ā he promised quietly, his voice brushing your ear like a secret. āLate spring, when them flowers are in full bloom. Camp under the stars, just like right now.ā
You turned slightly in his arms, searching his face, trying to memorize every detail in the firelightāthe tired kindness in his eyes, the way the shadows clung to the stubble along his jaw. The world felt small and gentle around you, no bigger than the blankets beneath your bodies and the slow rustle of the leaves dancing in the night breeze.
āThat sounds real nice, Arthur,ā you whispered, your lips curving into a smile the moment they shaped his name.
āButterflies should always be āround flowers.ā He leaned in and pressed a gentle kiss to your cheek. Not hurried, not hungryāit was just warm and it was his. The kind of kiss meant for quiet goodnights, and not for farewells.
He shifted, the blankets rustling softly as he drew you down with him. One arm slipped around your waist as your back met the warm fabric beneath. You turned toward him without thinking, fitting against his chest like that was always where you were meant to rest. His hand settled at the small of your back, careful, protectiveālike you were something too precious he didnāt want the night to steal while he slept.
You listened to the steady rhythm of his breathing, to the faint thump of his heart beating life into his body beneath your ear. He caught your fingers in his and brought them to his lips, pressing a soft kiss to your knuckles that felt like a seal on a contract.
āIāll take you everywhere you want,ā he murmured again, as if he wanted the stars to be the guardians of this life you were planning to start together. āThe Springs, the house on the hill, the poppy field.ā
You smiled at the thought, watching the faint, pulsing glow of embers through the tent opening, basking in the fresh scent of the wildflowers crushed beneath your tangled bodies.
āThereās a place up north near the Reservation,ā he went on, his voice drifting. āWhere the Dakotaās born. Waterās emerald like this valley grass, but deep blue as the midday sky too⦠if that makes sense.ā
You nodded against his chest, not quite able to picture a color so vibrant, but content to know that his plansāhis futureāincluded you now.
āYouāll love it up there, butterfly.ā
Your fingers curled gently into his as a reply, wishing you could bottle this starlit night forever. Wishing you could fold it up like a letter and tuck it somewhere safe in the event that, despite your best efforts to build a fairytale together, the years eventually decided to take him away some day.
His arm tightened around you just a little more, soft and quiet as the valley itself. It was a wordless reminder that, though the future curled in uncertain, shifting ways beyond the canvas of the tent, the present moment was all you truly had.
And it was enough.
-
Rain hammered the roof in a steady, heavy rhythm, like a thousand angry fingers drumming on the planks overhead. It was the kind of summer storm that came down all at once, wild and unruly, carrying thunder and lightning in its wake. The scent of damp earth and crushed pine needles slipped through every crack in the timber, the forest air feeling softer for itāricher somehowāthe oppressive heat of the day washed away and replaced by the cool, clean breath of the storm.
You stirred beneath the blankets, drifting in the hazy space between dreams and reality. Across the room, the fire in the hearth burned low, reduced to a blurry nest of glowing embers beyond your heavy eyelids, casting wavering shadows along the walls. The cabin was steeped in the soft scent of warmed sap and old smoke that had burned all night, while the world outside was reduced to flashes of pale light and the endless, roaring curtain of rain.
For a moment, you didnāt know if it was still night or if morning had come and simply forgotten to bring the sun with it. The sky beyond the small window by your bed was black as pitch, and the downpour made time feel slow and thick, as if the hours had melted into one another and settled quietly in the dark corners of the room.
You shifted, your body instinctively seeking a warmth that was no longer there.
Your hand brushed over the blanket beside you, searching for solid muscle, but found only the faint dip in the mattress where heād been. The spot still held a trace of his heatāa ghost of warmth beneath your palmāand the sheets still carried the lingering smell of his skin. But the steady rise and fall of the chest youād fallen asleep against was gone.
You blinked your eyes open, lashes heavy with sleep, and turned your head toward the corner where he liked to drink his morning coffee.
He stood near the kitchen window, his back to you, outlined by the dim, dying glow of the fire. The soft light traced the broad expanse of his shoulders and the strong line of his spine. It caught the firm, familiar curve of his ass before it artistically melted into the muscle of his thighs. There was something about the way he stood, the easy, unguarded posture of a man who hadnāt bothered with clothes after the night youād shared.
He didnāt seem to notice you stirring. Just stood there, one arm bent at the elbow, a cigarette resting between his fingersāthe ember at its tip pulsing faintly, a tiny orange star in the darkness.
He looked out at the black window where rain streamed down in silver lines, the storm turning the glass into a shifting, watery mirror that reflected nothing but the quiet life he had spent years searching for.
For a long moment, you simply watched him, listening to the distant thunder and the protest of the trees as they bent under the tempest. Every now and then, lightning flashed, outlining his powerful silhouette against the glass before plunging the room back into firelit shadows. The blankets were soft around you legs, silk against your skin, and in the cradle of their warmth you found yourself wishingājust a littleāthat this god of the wilderness you just so happened to call your husband would come back and lie down beside you again.
You rose from the bed, your bare feet meeting the cool floorboards with a quiet thud. You were only wearing the shirt youād fallen asleep ināthe same cotton shirt youād brought him from Manzanita one distant spring afternoon. The fabric was faded now, worn thin by years of honest use and the countless mornings it had spent swaying on the clothesline beneath the bright sun.
āYou have a beautiful ass, Arthur Morgan,ā you smiled, giving the firm, plump muscle a playful squeeze before wrapping your arms around his waist. Your pressed your cheek snugly against the freckles on his back, skin warm and slightly damp from the heat of the room.
He huffed a laughāeasy, unguarded and entirely his. āWell, good morninā to you, too.ā His voice came out a deep rasp, husky like the first words of the day always wereāa quiet contrast to the storm raging outside. āSleep well?ā
You hummed your answer against his skin, breathing him ināsalt, moist pine, premium tobacco, and the faint, lingering trace of lavender from last nightās bath.
āMorninā?ā You glanced toward the dark window where the Basin caught the lightning like a turbulent mirror, doubtful the clock ticked anywhere past three or four. āWe can still sleep a little more. Come back to bed.ā
āWas about to.ā His hand came to rest atop yours, warm and heavy. āThunder mustāve scared the horses, woke me up, too.ā His fingertips brushed your forearm in an absent, affectionate strokeāthe touch of a man who no longer had to keep his hands near a holster. A man who only cleaned his guns out of habit and fondness for the steel, and not necessity. āAnd then I felt like drawinā somethinā.ā
Your gaze drifted toward the scarred wooden table, where his journal lay open. A stick of charcoal rested across the center crease like a worker sleeping after a long day, proud of the finished lines it left behind on the page.
The firelight turned the paper a soft amber, making the woman in the drawing look even warmer, even more peaceful. She slept curled in thick, soft blankets, the folds of fabric shaded so carefully you could almost feel their weight. Behind her, a small window shimmered with rain, the glass streaked in thin, slanted lines as though the storm lived inside the page itself. You could almost hear the thunder roar, feel the hush of the dark room, the softness beneath her cheek, the deep, earned rest in her sleep.
And perched lightly in her hair was a butterfly, its delicate wings folded like a quiet ornament among the wild tangle of bed-mussed strands. Heād somehow made that unruly morning mess look soft, almost flatteringāas if it belonged in a storybook instead of a real, ordinary routine.
And even after all these years, after all the lazy afternoons heād spent trying to teach you the way of the charcoal in numerous, failed attempts, you still didnāt know how he did itāhow he could turn something so simple into a fairytale.
āOh, Arthurāā your brows drew together in fondness, a tender little frown and an even bigger smile taking over your face, letting him know how much you liked it. āItās beautiful.ā
āGood, ācause...ā He reached for the journal, carefully tearing the page free so it wouldnāt crease. āIt was for you anyway.ā
You took the paper in your hands. Up close, the details felt even more alive. You couldnāt understand how he managed to capture something so vivid in the dim, smoky light of the hearth.
āI love it.ā You rose onto your toes to plant a kiss against his caramel stubble, where a few lines of silver had begun to show, glowing faintly in the firelight.
He caught your chin softly, tilting your face up so he could kiss you a little longer, his lips still as sweet after all these years.
Just like that first time in your cellar, all those summers ago, with the Skinnersā threat hanging over your head and everything still waiting to begin.
The room beneath your feet was still your cellarāthe cedar box still held quilts that smelled faintly of soap and dust, and the walls were still lined with jars of preserved plums and candied tomatoes. But now, an entire shelf was devoted to the journals heād finished through the years. They sat tucked against the far wall, next to the corny romance novels you usually read for him under the mellow afternoon sunāafter the chores were done, resting on a patch of grass by the shore, with his head in your lap and your fingers threading through his caramel strandsā¦
No, the cellar was no longer a place meant for hiding. There were no more nights spent listening for footsteps above the floorboards, no more strangers with cruel intentions wandering through these woods.
Arthur had made sure of that.
On the distant sunset when youād come back from Big Valley, he hadnāt taken you home to the Basin like youād expected. Instead, youād found yourself hitching your horse to the front porch of a sturdy farmhouse, the railings smooth and well-cared for, the timber still smelling faintly new beneath the crisp evening air. The sun sank low on the horizon, painting the tall yellow grass of the Great Plains a honeyed gold, just like the fur of the friendly Labrador licking your hands.
Heād bounded up to you the moment you stepped down from your horse, his tail wagging so hard his whole body wiggled. Youād laughed as the fur tickled your skin, kneeling to scratch behind his ears while his tongue slobbered happily over your fingers, the scent of hay and sun-baked earth rising from the yard.
The woman from Arthurās drawingāAbigail, youād learnedācame through the front door at the sound of the dogās excited barking. Her hair was gathered neatly into a bun, and the soft sway of her skirts made her look as though sheād simply stepped straight out of the journal page.
āJohn! Come here! Arthurās back!ā she called into the cooling air, hurrying down the steps to throw her arms around him. āDidnāt expect to see you again so soon. Thought you were halfway to Mexico by now.ā
āOh, Iād probably be happily drowning my regrets in tequila at some bar in Chuparosa if it wasnāt for āem damn Skinners.ā He joked, his arm light and familiar around her shoulder. āTwo arrows and several knife cuts later, turns out Iām still standing.ā He signaled briefly to his side and his thigh, his tone light despite the gravity of the scars you both remembered too well. āLong story. The important thing is I wouldnāt be here today if it werenāt for the gentle hands and the incessant scolding of this sweet lady. Butterfly, this is Abigail.ā
āPleasure to meet you, maāam,ā you said, smiling back at her.
āOh, just call me Abigail,ā she insisted, moving without hesitation to pull you into a hug, her shirt warm against the evening breeze. āThank you for savinā this man. Heās one big stubborn fool.ā She glanced at him, her brow furrowed in disappointment. āI donāt even want to know what he got himself into this time, but Iām glad you were there.ā She turned back to Arthur, though her hand still rested kindly on your elbow. āHow many times will I have to tell you? Someday youāre gonna get yourself killed, Arthur Morgāā
āWhat happened, brother?ā
A man emerged from a nearby barn, short black hair under a sun-worn hat and long, deep scars carved into his right cheek. The marks were harshāa jagged reminder of the same violent past Arthur had crawled out fromābut his expression was anything but. His rough features were softened by the playful grin he wore as he approached.
āFinally decided to move in and help me run this mess?ā he half-shouted, boots thudding tiredly across the yard. His voice sounded worn by years of trail dust and campfire smoke.
āJohn here was never much of a farmer, butterfly,ā Arthur murmured to you, leaning close enough that you felt the brush of his breath at your ear. āPlays tough, but as you can see, heāll always need me to save his ass. Aināt that right, Johnny?ā
āFrom where I stand, that could very well be yourself youāre talkinā about,ā John shot back, his lips curving in a grin. His gaze flicked toward you, tipping his hat in greeting. āMiss.ā
āGood eveninā, misterāā
āWhat would any decent lady be doinā anywhere within ten feet of a bastard like Arthur goddamn Morgan?ā Laughter burst from the house, a voice too loud, too cheerful to belong to the body that followed it out the door. It was none other than the old man from Arthurās drawingālong, untamed white beard and hair to match, face weathered like sun-bleached wood. He looked like he ought to be carrying a banjo, just to match the picture in the journal. āHave some self-respect, sweetheart,ā he chuckled, giving your shoulder a friendly, yet heavy, pat that stung even through your shirt.
āJesus, you still alive, old man?ā Arthur greeted him, already stepping toward the doorway as Abigail ushered everyone inside. āWas hopinā to come back to better news.ā
āAināt that a fine way to greet your elders?ā the old man scoffed, shuffling after Abigail. āDonāt go actinā all tough just to impress a lady. I pictured you rottinā in some ditch down in Casa Madrugada by now.ā
āJust pretend he aināt here,ā Arthur murmured to you as you crossed the threshold. āHeās so ancient he might as well be a ghost and we donāt know it.ā
You let out a small huff of amusement at Arthurās comment, then quickly pressed your lips together, worried the old man might take offense. But he didnāt seem bothered in the slightest. He wore a smile that looked permanently carved into his cheeks as he settled himself at the table, an empty bowl waiting in front of him.
Once inside, the comforting scent of simmering stew, fresh bread, and clean wood wrapped around you like a blanket. The floors were smooth, well-swept planks that glowed honey-gold in the firelight. A braided rug lay beneath the table, its faded reds and blues soft under your boots. Decorative plates hung neatly along one wall, catching the flicker of the hearth in the salon. There, a piano stood silent but ready, and a large portrait of the master and lady of the house stood proudly above the mantel.
Just beneath it, sat a small statue of a squirrel wearing a hat and carrying a tiny gun. It immediately reminded you of Mrs. Hobbsā work back in Strawberryāshe used to make odd, charming things just like it. There was a word for that, sheād told you once, you just didnāt remember. You wondered briefly if she was still around.
Everything in the room felt cared for. Not fancy, not richābut warm, lived-in, and honest. It was the kind of place where mornings began with coffee on the stove and evenings ended with tired laughter around the table.
āHeās been old his entire life,ā John explained, dropping into the chair across from the old man. āYou remember him young, Arthur?ā
Arthur shook his head, placing his hat on a nearby peg. āHe refuses to tell his age. Reckon heās forgotten it.ā
āThatās ācause nobody ever asks nicely,ā the old man said, folding his hands over his belly as if waiting for a miracle. Or, more likely, the stew.
āHow old are you, good sir?ā you asked with a polite smile as you took the seat beside him.
āYou can just call me Uncle, miss,ā he said, leaning closer and whispering the answer like a state secret.
āOh my, really? You donāt look a day over sixty!ā you said, perfectly mirroring the mischievous smile he was giving you.
āI know, sweetheart. My second wife always used to describe me as ageless,ā he murmured, looking immensely pleased with himself. āSee? That was easy.ā He glanced at the younger men around the table. āLike I said, kindness costs you nothinā.ā
āYeah, yeahālike I said,ā Arthur muttered, rolling his eyes as he pulled out the chair next to you. āWhereās Jack?ā
āJack! Come out! Your Uncle Arthur is here!ā Abigail called, setting a heavy iron pot onto a thick wool pad at the center of the table. Steam curled from beneath the lid, carrying the rich scent of beef, onions, and herbs that made your stomach tighten with a sudden hunger you hadnāt realized youād been carrying.
āWhereād he abduct you from, sweetheart?ā Uncle asked, already dipping a ladle into the pot. āBlink twice if you need help.ā
You laughed, the sound slipping out before you could stop it, and Uncle joined in with a wheezy chuckle of his own. He poured a generous helping into his bowl, thick, velvet drops of gravy sliding back into the pot. The sight made your mouth water, reminding you just how ravenous a long day of picking flowers in Black Bone Forest could leave a body.
āI wasnāt abducted,ā you said, amusement still dancing behind your words. āQuite the opposite. Iād have lost my home and my horse, perhaps more, if it werenāt for Arthur.ā
āAww, well look at you, Mister Morgan,ā Uncle teased. āFinally doinā somethinā gentlemanly for a lady.ā
āReckon Hosea would be proud,ā John added with a playful grin.
āOh, you two be quiet,ā Abigail scolded, placing clean bowls in front of you and Arthur. The pottery was simple but sturdy, still warm from the wash water. āArthurās always been a gentleman. You two were just too busy with a bottle of bourbon or a damn Cattleman to even notice.ā She turned to you, her expression softening. āAināt he a good man, miss?ā
You nodded, smiling at her before turning your gaze to Arthur. He looked faintly uncomfortable with the sudden praise, shifting slightly in his chair as if he werenāt quite sure where to put himself when the spotlight wasnāt a threat.
āFinest gentleman Iāve ever met,ā you said softly, your hand finding his knee beneath the table. āThe sweetest, too.ā
āYeah, a regular dandy and a charmer,ā he muttered, self-deprecating as everyone at the dinner table knew him. But despite the gruff words, his hand slid warm over yours beneath the wood, his thumb brushing your knuckles while the fire crackled in the little salon and the stew steamed between you all.
āThen you aināt been around much, sweetheart!ā Uncle burst out, a wheezy laughter that rattled in his chest, the sound so natural on him it felt as if heād been born chuckling at the worldās expense. Abigail only shook her head, disappointed but used to it, as she took the seat beside her husband.
āUncle Arthur.ā
The young boy whoād always let you pick out the biggest eggs on a the busy mornings you visited Beecherās Hope, stepped out of a room behind you. The lamplight caught in his light hair as he paused next to Arthur. He stood at once to greet his nephew, his rough hands turning remarkably gentle as he pulled the boy into a quick hugāthe quiet, careful affection a sharp contrast to Uncleās rowdy teasing.
You lifted your palm in greeting when he noticed you, a shy smile curving his lips as if he were surprised to find an unexpected face around the dinner table.
āHello again, miss,ā the boy said. His eyes were soft and thoughtfulāthe kind that made a person feel welcome without a single extra word.
āMy lady here tells me you are one generous salesman, Jack.ā Arthur said as the boy took the seat across from him.
āIs that so?ā Abigail asked, smiling fondly at her son while she reached for the bread loaf and began slicing it, the crust crackling satisfyingly under the knife.
āThe lady is one of our best customers,ā Jack explained quietly, focusing on his bowl as he dipped his ladle into the pot. āShe always buys more than anybody else.ā
It was true. You always stocked up on eggs whenever you rode back from Blackwater. Trips into town were rare, and you liked having plenty set aside for the long weeks of mountain solitude ahead.
āAnd Rufus likes her,ā Jack added, glancing toward his mother. āBecause sheās kind. Doesnāt shoo him off like most customers.ā
āWell, guess sheās a dog whisperer, ācause Arthur here clearly likes her too,ā Uncle chimed in, craning his neck like a nosy crow to see if his jab had elicited the reaction he wanted from Arthur. āAll that starinā and holdinā her hand under the table like a goddamn schoolboyās got you lookinā like a bigger fool than usual.ā
John huffed a laugh, almost spitting out his stew, and even Jack let out a quiet snicker. You noticed John stealing a quick, contemplative glance between you and Arthur, as if trying to piece together a story no one had spoken aloud yet.
āJust let him be,ā Abigail said, her tone a blend of warmth and authority. She set a slice of bread beside your bowl, her smile gentle, and knowing. āHeās happy.ā
Arthur didnāt answer.
But his hand returned to yours beneath the table, despite Uncleās teasing. His thumb resumed its slow, quiet circles against your skinātelling you, without a single word, that Abigail was right.
Later, as laughter rolled easy around the tableāas John recalled the time he and Arthur had nearly blown themselves to pieces by lighting a cigarette beside a wagon full of dynamite, as Jack eagerly explained to Arthur a new kind of arrow his Uncle Charles had shown him how to make in his most recent visitāyou found yourself sitting back, quietly taking it all in.
It was nice.
Nights like this.
For so long, your evenings had been made of quiet routines and dinners for one, the only sounds the crackle of the hearth and the wind brushing the eaves of your cabin. Youād forgotten how warm a house could feel when it held more than one heartbeat. How a fire seemed to burn brighter when it lit several faces at once. How a meal could stretch well into the night simply because there was always another story to tell, another memory to laugh over.
Yes, it was really nice.
To hold his hand beneath the table, hidden from the lamplight and teasing eyes.
To fall sleep to the distant grunt of bison somewhere out on the Plains, curled warm next to him in a clean, moonlit room. It was the same room he always stayed in when he visited, Abigail told you the next morning while you and Jack helped her wash the dishes from last night. The warm water had turned your fingers pink, the smell of soap and stew lingering in the air while plates clinked softly in the basin.
Jack was a good kidāquiet, politeābut there was something pensive about his eyes, something deep and restless beneath the calm surface. His mother mentioned he had a head full of ideas, maybe too many for someone so young. When she teased him about being so well-spoken he might grow up to be a writer, heād flushed red as a beet, ducking his head as though the compliment blinded his eyes like the bright morning sun.
Watching him then, you understood why Arthur spoke of the boy with such quiet pride. Why his parents did.
And in the days that followed, you began to understand even more.
Because your stay at Beecherās Hope lasted longer than youād first expected.
As it turned out, Arthur hadnāt brought you there just for the pleasure of the visit. Heād wanted you as far as possible from Tall Trees while he, John, and their friend Sadieāwhom youād learned was the fearless bounty hunter heād told you aboutārode out to purge the woods of the rot and filth of the Skinners. They were gone several days. Long enough for you to notice how Abigailās jaw tightened whenever the wind carried hoofbeats from the distance, only to relax in disappointment when it turned out to be nothing.
She hadnāt been happy about the plan. That much was clear. But she never took it out on you.
Instead, she let you help her around the farmāshelling peas on the porch while Jack played with Rufus in the front yard, washing shirts together by the river in the blue light of early morning, stirring pots over the stove while the kettle hissed softly beside you. And as you worked, she told stories.
Stories of 1899 and the years before that could have very easily filled a dozen novels. She spoke of muddy camps and long rides against snowstorms; of laughter around fires and silly arguments that lasted well into the night; of a man of the clergy who drank more than he ever prayed; of how Sadie had lost everything to the OāDriscolls before finding the steel she yielded now. She spoke of Hoseaāan honest conman with a rattling cough and the kindest eyesāwho was responsible for teaching both Arthur and Jack how to read, and a whole lot about life in the process. She told you how sheād almost lost John twice, first to wolves and then to lawmen. Of how he was mostly a family man now, but still remained wild and untamed, for the moments his friends needed him to ride with them.
She spoke of loyalty, heartbreak, and the strange, tangled family theyād all once been. Of how both Arthur and John still carried the invisible wounds of being left to rot by a man theyād once considered a father.
And by the end of your stay, between Abigailās honest recollections and Uncleās⦠more imaginative onesāas Arthur later called themāyou felt like you understood better. The cold steel. The gunpowder. The endless, winding roads that seemingly always led to danger.
And it was because of those yearsābecause of Arthur and the people whoād shaped himāthat you now got to live this quiet, gentle fairytale in a remoteābut never lonelyācabin in the forest. You had been his butterfly for years now. Perching on the edges of his journal pages while he drew, fluttering around him with little stories of things youād seen while foraging in the woods, sharing memories from your youth in Strawberry that surfaced without warningāthough there werenāt many left he hadnāt heard by now.
You pinned the drawing heād just given you to the board in the kitchen. It hung across from the table, positioned perfectly to catch your gaze whenever it driftedāwhen you drank your morning coffee, when you scrubbed the lunch dishes in the sink, when you sat knitting across from him in the fading afternoon light.
The board had grown crowded over the years. Paper edges overlapped, older memories hiding behind newer ones, some curling faintly with age, others still crisp. Each one held a small, quiet piece of the life youād built together.
There you were, sitting in the middle of an endless sea of poppies, your dress swallowed by the swaying petals, and though the charcoal was monochrome, your mind insisted on seeing the vibrant, fire-bright orange that had burned across the field that day.
There, bent over a patch of violet snowdrops near the so-called Witchās Hut, a place youād visited almost every summer now and which, as it turned out, held no trace of magic other than the quiet peace of the mountain.
Next to it hung a sketch of you perched on a sun-warmed rock at the edge of Cattail Pondāa fishing trip born on a crisp autumn whim, the water drawn so clear it looked ready to ripple at the slightest touch.
Another caught your horses grazing beside the round house near Bacchus Station, their manes lifted by the late spring breeze, your reliable horse looking delicate and small next to the midnight mountain of his Raven Shire. You could still feel the warmth of the sun as it washed the mossy roof in a liquid gold that afternoon.
And then there was your favorite, a masterpiece of perspective heād simply titled: Sunset at The Loft.
It showed the world breaking open beneath that high Ambarino ridge. You could see it allāthe rolling Heartlands, OāCreaghās Run reduced to a shimmering pond in the distance, the deep shadows of Cumberland Forest, and the sliver of Flat Iron Lake on the horizon.
It had taken him three full days, perched at the high balcony of the tower, studying the light until his fingers were more charcoal than skin. You remembered those days with a longing, sweet fondness: the rhythmic scratch of his charcoal blending with the cries of birds flying level with the lookout; the focused lines of his face glowing pink under the cherry-colored skies, the way your legs had ached for a week from climbing that dizzying ladder just to keep him company. And when the daylight finally died and he latched his journal shut for the night, that same endless world would shrink down to just the two of you, the crisp highland air, and the low murmur of your voices as you traded stories beneath the cold, bright diamonds of the Ambarino sky.
Quiet moments.
Little fragments of peace.
Sometimes you thought the cabin was growing too small to hold all the bliss that had grown inside it over the years, ever since that day youād met him in your kitchen with his mangled leg and your peaches in his satchel.
āCāmere,ā he called softly from the bed.
He was already lying beneath the covers, one arm crooked behind his head, the other lifting the blanket in a silent, familiar invitation. You crossed the room and slipped in beside him, the sheets already cool from the brief absence of your bodies. He pulled the blanket over and wrapped his arms around you the way he had every night since that starlit evening in Big Valley, all those laps around the sun ago.
Outside, the rain kept pouringāhard and steady against the roof. Inside, you were warm and safe, tucked against his chest, his heartbeat slow and steady beneath your ear.
āYou think theyāll make it?ā you whispered into the night, watching a flash of lightning leak through the thin curtains, illuminating the room for a heartbeat before fading back to ember-glow.
āButterfly,ā he murmured against the crown of your head, his breath stirring your hair, āin the years Iāve known John, bullets aināt stopped him, snow aināt stopped him, the law hasnāt stopped himā¦hell, not even a pack of wolves could.ā His chest rumbled rhythmically under your cheek as he spoke. āWhatās a little mid-summer shower gonna do but get his hat wet? If the man wants to fish, heāll be here.ā
You chuckled softly against the heat of his skin. John, Abigail, and Jack were meant to come fish in the Basin today. Some fisherman from the east near Rhodes had spun John a tall tale about a rare bass that supposedly inhabited these high-altitude watersāa "king of the mountain" that had eluded every hook.
But despite all the long, stubborn afternoons he and Arthur had spent trying to lure the beast out of the depths of the Basin, youād never seen them pull up anything but good āol tiny Rock Bass. You and Abigail didnāt share their competitive disappointment, though. You were more than content with the "failure," enjoying countless afternoons picnicking along the shore, watching the water shimmer like shattered glass while Jack skipped stones and Arthur triedāwith a persistence that bordered on crueltyāto convince John it was finally time to learn how to swim.
You loved every second of it. The laughter, the bickering, the simple peace of a family that had finally stopped running. You silently hoped the clouds would break by dawn, if only to see the look on John's face when he inevitably caught another finger-sized fish.
But for now, youād rest. Cradled in the arm he tightened around you, his hand resting warm at your waist. For now, the world was just the size of your room. You let the song of the rain lull you back to sleep, drifting off in the absolute certainty that come morningārain or no raināthe day would begin with the scent of strong coffee and the sweet, familiar brush of his lips.
ā
It seems like weāve made it to the end of this journeyš When I started writing this fic last December, I never expected readers to connect with the story in all the ways you guys did. What an amazing time Iāve had with you in the comments every week! I hope the ending did the journey justice! Dying to know what you think about it! Also, you guys are amazing for putting up with my insane word counts, especially the last chapters which were absolutely deranged (what was even that?! lol) As always, thank you so much for your support.š¦š
Iāll go ahead and link my Kofi here in case youād like to support my work this way tooāļøš ko-fi.com/missbubblesoda
Lastly, it goes without saying that Iāll be back with more stories soon! Iām currently working in two low-honor fics (for John and Arthur). If youād like to be notified when I post the first chapters, donāt hesitate to reach out and let me know which one youād like to be tagged inšø Until the next one!š«§š
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I hope that š¦ gets railed by Arthur in the next chap- OMG WHO SAID THAT!? WHO SAID THAT!?
HAHAHAHAHAHAššš lmaooo not to spoil anything about tomorrowās chapter, but bestie I would never, NEVER, dare to tag a fic ā50% smutā and not give you at least one detailed, sensory enriched railing scene to justify it. Rest assured, the question now is how, where, who starts it and who will be on top when it happens𤔠just as much as the next person, Iām feral for dom arthur and the idea of his muscular, sweat-pearled body hovering over us but idk, I just feel like he would like to be riddenā¦
i don't know how you do it but you write Arthur so perfectly??? i could read your fics for a job
Ashfdhgafd omg this is a HUGE complimentš I am sooo happy to know youāre enjoying the story and that Arthur feels in characterš„¹ thank you soooo much for reading and supporting the fic. Iām very glad you feel you could do this for a job bc bestie tomorrowās chapter is hitting 13.7 words as we speak. I apologize in advance for such insanity. I take full responsibility, donāt know how that happened. All I can do for now is give you a heads up so you get the comfy chair and the mug ready. Iām gonna steal a few minutes of your time tmrš literally canāt wait to hear what you think about the ending and fic as a whole.
Reader is so much stronger then me... i would have been so mad at him if he said this to me.. i dont know why lol id be mad out of frustration i suppose.
The Saint denis husband adds so so much friction and pent up energy tho, i feel like ive said this like 5 times already, but i really do like that plot point. I wonder how she will talk her way out of this one, becouse i am starting to feel like Arthur might actually be believing the husband story, if only slightly.. and if so, that means he is serious about Reader and might wanna commit to her... i dont think he is the type of guy to hit and run and leave a family broken... he cares too much to do that... i know that she expressed the concern that he might want to leave a few times already.. but i just dont see it. Ofc i know Arthur differently from her.. in my mind he is a man chasing stability, the gang was his family and his stability. Even tho it might look like he cant be tied down, but by god, Dutch and Hosea had him tied down real good. And i feel like he wished for stability more then Dutch ever could.
The chemistry between the two is so well done! I can really feel it! I really felt it with John in the other story, and i had my doubts about this one, since i feel like John and Arthur are very different personalities but by god, you pulled it off! You really managed to write the two of them so distinctly! I feel like John would have been faster in his persuit, and probably more cynical about the whole husband thing. Hed probably call reader out on inconsistencies.. where Arthur just watches and absorbs, plays along... these are 100% my favorite portraits of the two of them!
In other news...
DUDE STOP TALKING ABOUT MY HUSBAND GAAHHH
ASDGFHGFDG omg I know writing these take precious time out of your day, but please never stop sending them kkkkk I just LOVE reading your post-chapter thoughts and opinionsš they give me life. Itās the next best thing to being a fly on the wall as youāre reading them! Kkkk
The husband plotline! I know! I feel she should just scream āfine you win Iām single just rail meā next time he brings the hubby up. But at this point, they prolly just like playing the game. As a reader so accurately described ātheyāre just roleplaying having an affairā lmao which I think is hilarious kkk their kink i guess𤔠And youāre absolutely right, Arthur would never break a family. High-honor at least. (Low-honor thoughā¦you just gave me an idea for a future ficš¤”) but Iām not sure he buys her little lie tbh. Girl didnāt even try, where are the men boots around the house, his shirts, his thingies? Arthur probably knew a woman lived there as soon as he walked in and sized the place up, her age and interests and all that. Heās probably just felt like playing along, and like you said omg John wouldāve totally called her out on her bsš i also tend to imagine 1899 John a little less in touch with his feelings than epilogue John or Arthur? Like, heād probably just take a long time to realize the MC is down bad for him. Heād probably think heās falling in love alone, which would be so cuteš
And about the ending and Arthur leaving or staying, omg itās hard to give my opinion without spoiling anything about tomorrowās chapter. But I agree with everything you said. Despite his drifting nature, the gang was a constant in his life for over 20 years, the only reason he drifted was because the gang did. Itās an interesting way to look at it, like he wasnāt against the idea of settling down with the gang say pre-canon when Dutch was about to buy land for them to settle down but then decided against it or smth like that. Or the Tahiti idea. It looks as if he just wants to be where the people he cares about are. Plus when him and š¦ talk in Strawberry, he does mention heās just looking for a little quiet. With that said though, Arthur, as we know, is a very selfless man. And I can see him leaving too. Perhaps not because he canāt be tied down like the MC thinks, but because he also told her in that same conversation that noise seemed to follow him wherever he went, and I know he wouldnāt want that noise finding her too.
Finally, I just want to add Iām soooo glad the chemistry between them workš I was scared too! Since John and Arthur are very different, and the fics are very different too in setting and conflict. Iām glad to know you enjoyed both storiesš
HAHAHAHAHA Heās obsessed with the cookie man I fearš Iām so sorry but there are a few honorable mentions weaved in chapter 5 too. Youāre gonna be so mad when he brings him up again and I apologize in advance.
I need you to tag me in EVERYTHING you write, and i mean EVERYTHING
I love u
Ashgdagdfsgadf OH MY GODš a permanent taglist? this is the BIGGEST compliment ever! š„¹š Thank you sooo much for reading and supporting my writing! It truly makes my day to know you enjoy the stories just as much as I do writing themš«§ I will of course tag you in every new fic I share from now on heheš just message me if you wish to unsubscribe kkkkk just kiddingš Love you back!š
in loooveeeee with your arthur fic, may i please be tagged for next chapter plsplspls š„¹
Of course! I will post chapter 5 around this time tomorrow and tag youš omg canāt wait to share it with everyone! Thank you sooooo much for reading!š It makes me very happy to know youāre enjoying the story!š„¹
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oh em gee, im losing my mind over the new chapter. All i can say is right now, incredible.
wait, what do you mean āpossibly last chapterā??!! i need at least 50 of them, im begging on my knees for a long fic, you write him so beautifully.
Omg anon Iām SOOOO sorryš I wish I could give you a telenovela-long fic of Arthur and Miss Butterfly because I enjoy writing them sooo much too, but I feel their story wraps up nicely in 5 chaptersš Maybe if I had planned ahead for a longer fic I could have written in so much more blissful domestic moments or steamy interactions between them, but since I didnāt, I fear adding them now would feel forcedš„² With that said, I am truly honored youāre enjoying the story to the point of requesting 45 more chapters. I have no wordsš„¹ the good news is chapter 5ās wc is INSANE. Like REALLY INSANELY LONG, to the point Iām wondering if tumblr will let me post it all in one go. Guess Iāll find out what the character limit per post is tomorrow night, wish me luck bc I really want chapter 5 to be all together in one post, it reads more nicely that way. All this to say, donāt worry anon, you will still have A LOT more to read about Arthur and Missš¦tomorrow! (Honestly my favorite chapter out of the 5. I canāt wait to share it with you guys) Plus! I promise to keep the factory open for Arthur fics for a long time! Kkk I still have so many more ideas for fics I absolutely HAVE to write haha so hopefully youāll get so much more Arthur from me even after a summerās worth is finished!š
SCREAMING CRYING THROWING UP!!! part 4 was soooo good! I love how you arenāt rushing things and the way you build tension, I donāt think Iāve been this invested in a fic in years! I love how soft you make Arthur too, as far as Iām concerned heās my babygirl and a big teddy bear lol, I am counting down the hours until part 5! I love love love you and your writing so much!!!
Asdfghjkl omg thank you sooooo much anon. Iām not even exaggerating when I say messages like yours absolutely make my day. Truly! It makes me so happy to know my writing is contributing in its own little smutty or fluffy way to making readersā days more exciting! Iām glad you appreciate the slow-burn element cause I DO TO! Asdsgdfsš„¹ I absolutely LIVE for fics or stories where I get to see the romance between two characters blossom slowly, step by step, analyzing how their feelings change overtime, being able to pinpoint the exact moment where they realize they are down bad for each other lmao, you get it. Point is, the slow-build element is a HUGE priority for me when I write (thatās prolly the reason why even though I start with the intention of writing a fun one shot, somehow always end up doing multi-chaps insteadš¤”). Iām glad youāre enjoying it too! With that said, brace for part 5 because these fingers did not hold back when writing it kkkk there is no shortage of small details and fleshing out their feelings in tomorrowās chapter. My keyboard has worked so hard itās sweating as we speak𤔠Iām SO excited to share it and see what everyone thinks about the ending (low key scared too thoughš) and Arthur, omg what can I say that you havenāt already saidš„¹ Heās just a big teddy bear. This was my first time writing him and through this process I just confirmed high-honor Arthur is simply a tooth-rotting cupcake. Iām working on a low-honor fic too and Iām just so curious to see what he ends up sounding like? Iām still finding his voice, but I get a feeling heāll just end up being a teddy bear too. Probably just a rude teddy bear at the beginning before he falls in love, ooh and also probably way filthier when it comes to the smutty scenesš kkk