Temperature Control
blurb: Jack Abbott was supposed to find a safer hobby. He wasn’t prepared to find you.
jack abbott x fem reader
content/tw: age gap implied, older man, afab reader, explicit smut, praise kink, soft dom jack, PIV unprotected (wrap it up folks), public(ish) sex, referenced gun violence, Jack Abbott is an amputee and this is briefly mentioned, flirting, forced proximity, humour and smut, porn with a plot
a/n: i wrote this in about 6 hours of shawn hatosy arm fuelled horniness so it’s barely edited, hope it’s at least readable and makes sense 🫣
length: 5.7k
MASTERLIST (still haven’t gotten around to making one for this blog yet so it’s on my main for now)
By the time you reached the Maison du Goût cooking school, the day had finally loosened its grip on you.
You’d spent what felt like a lifetime kneading and sifting and decorating. Followed by a second life time of mind numbing admin. Payroll, utility bills, bulk ingredient orders. After days like that not many people would want to step into a kitchen with cold lights, stainless steel counters, the scent of butter in the air. But it was your happy place. Something inside you would unclench and the tension in your shoulders would melt away.
Cooking was different from baking. Baking was your life’s passion. Cooking hadn’t come as easily but it was all the more rewarding for it.
Precision mattered, but not in the way it did elsewhere. You could fix mistakes. Start again. Add salt. Lower the heat. Let something rest and come back to it kinder than before.
Nothing screamed.
Nothing bled.
Nothing died.
That was why you had first started coming. Baking had always kept your mind busy, but never still. It was numbers and structure, precision. Weights, percentages, temperatures, chemistry.
A constant series of calculations. Cooking asked less of your head and more of your senses. Taste this. Smell that. Stir until it feels right. Add a little more. Let it simmer. In cooking, you could disappear for a while.
You tied your apron behind your back, tucking a loose strand of hair away as the first of the evening students drifted in. The chalkboard by the door read:
French Cooking for Beginners: Week Three Mother Sauces, Knife Skills, Tart Tatin
Your idea of heaven. Some cooking. Some baking. Best of both worlds.
You were setting your notebook down when the door opened again and someone entered the kitchen.
He did not look like a man arriving for recreational mother sauces.
His hair was all salt & pepper curls. Not overly tall but thick. Visibly strong in a way that gave him more height than he actually had. Broad-shouldered. Bow legged. White t-shirt tight around his chest and shoulders. The kind of posture that suggested he had spent years in rooms where standing wrong had consequences. His expression was calm, unreadable, bordering stern.
He was noticeably older than you. And devastatingly handsome. Your stomach flipped.
Now is not the time or the place to be thinking inappropriate thoughts about an inappropriately older man.
He carried a knife roll.
An expensive one, by the looks of it.
…To a beginners cooking class.
You bit back a smile.
He scanned the room once, taking in exits, counters, people. Then chose a station near the wall and set his things down with deliberate care.
Interesting.
He looked up.
Caught you watching.
You smiled politely.
He gave the smallest nod in return.
You nearly laughed. You had never seen someone so tense in a cooking class. Half of the students already had a glass of wine in their hands and yet he was surveying the rooms with the intensity of someone whose life was at risk.
“Welcome back, everyone!”
Chef Mireille swept in precisely on time, elegant as ever in her white jacket and red lipstick.
“Tonight we learn knife skills, mother sauces, and if you behave, dessert.”
A murmur of approval moved through the room.
“And because life is cruel,” she continued with a wink to the room, “we are rotating partners”
Groans. Laughter.
You straightened immediately.
Please let me get the stern one.
Something about him was drawing you in. You were known to talk too much, pry a little too far at the best of times. But his rough exterior did nothing to repel you. It only made you want to look more.
Mireille pointed around the room, assigning partners at random.
Then at you.
Then at him.
“You two.”
Perfect.
You crossed to his station, smiling warmly at him.
“Hi,” you said brightly. “This will be fun!”
He blinked once, a little taken aback by your optimism.
“I can’t promise anything will be edible when I’m done with it.” he responded, dryly though there was a glint of something in his eyes.
You laughed “That’s alright, I’m excellent in a crisis”
That got the faintest twitch at the corner of his mouth, like he was privy to a joke that you weren’t.
“I’m Jack,” he rasped, reaching a hand out to you.
You gave yours and grasped his hand with your own. It was calloused and so large it engulfed your own. You briefly wondered what they’d feel like on other parts of your body. But shut the thought down as fast as it came around.
“So,” you said cheerfully, “what made you sign up for this?” Your head tilted and you handed him his apron.
“It was… an aggressive recommendation.” he put, watching you as he put the apron on. Your mouth went dry seeing the veins in his arms, visible as he forcefully tied the knot.
“That sounds suspiciously vague.”
His lips pushed to the side like he was trying to hold back a smile.
“From who?”
“Friends. Colleagues. Therapist.”
Your eyes widened a little and you grinned. “An intervention?”
“Something like that.”
“That’s sweet.”
“Trust me, it wasn’t but they all think I need better hobbies and it was either this or pottery. Maybe that would’ve been the safer option” you saw him eyeing the fancy knife set he had brought with him.
You laughed softly.
He shook his head once, but there was the beginning of amusement there now.
“And you?” he asked.
“What made me sign up?”
He nodded.
“I’m work at a bakery” you said. “Thought it was time I learned to make things that don’t rely on sugar. Though Tart Tatin is safely in my comfort zone.”
“You bake professionally?”
“I do.”
“What kind?”
“Pastries, cakes, breads, anything involving butter and unnecessary effort.”
That earned the smallest real smile.
It was entirely worth the wait.
Chef Mireille clapped once for attention, waiting until the room quieted.
“Before we begin ruining perfectly good butter,” she said, “we talk about mother sauces.”
She lifted a wooden spoon like a pointer.
“In classical French cooking, the mother sauces are the foundations. The starting points. Learn them properly, and you can build a hundred other sauces from them. Learn them badly, and everything that follows tastes of regret.”
That got a laugh.
“There are five traditionally recognised mother sauces: béchamel, velouté, espagnole, tomato, and hollandaise.”
She moved down the line of ingredients as she spoke.
“Béchamel is milk thickened with roux. Simple, elegant. Velouté begins with stock and becomes lighter, silkier things. Espagnole is rich and brown and rewards patience. Tomato sauce, in the French sense, is deeper and more structured than many of you expect.”
Then she held up a bowl of cubed butter.
“And hollandaise,” she said, smiling faintly, “is where overconfident people go to be humbled.”
The room laughed again.
“And naturally, that is where we will begin. If you can master this sauce you can master them all. It is an emulsion. Fat and liquid persuaded to cooperate through technique, temperature, and attention. Too cold, it tightens. Too hot, it splits. Too rough, it breaks. Too timid, it never comes together.”
Her gaze swept the room.
“So, like many relationships.”
Even louder laughter this time.
Mireille set the bowl down.
“Tonight, we are learning what they teach: control of heat, patience, texture, and trust. If you can make a good sauce, you can cook. If you can rescue a broken sauce, you can really cook.”
She
“Now. Aprons on. Whisks ready. And if anyone curdles my hollandaise, at least do me the courtesy of telling me before I taste, hm?”
You divided the ingredients between you with the efficiency of someone who had done this enough times to know chaos always began with poor prep.
Jack read the recipe card once, then set it down like he intended to win on instinct alone.
He took the butter and put it on the stove, whilst you got to work whisking the eggs with white wine, a splash of cold water and a pinch of salt.
“So, Jack, what do you do when you’re not being mysteriously assigned hobbies?”
A brief pause as he stared down intently at the melting butter. As if, if he looked away for a second, it would all go wrong.
“Emergency medicine.”
“Oh. Really?”
“Really.”
“That must be intense.”
“Sometimes.”
You laughed.
“Sometimes?”
He glanced at you, then back at the butter.
“A lot of the time.” he admitted.
“II hope you don’t mind my questions. I’m just…. interested.” you said honestly. Because it was the truth. And you wanted to know more.
“In emergency medicine?”
“In you.”
That made him pause, spoon stalling in the pan.
You pretended not to notice.
Then he resumed stirring.
“ER now,” he said.
“Now?”
“I used to be a combat medic.”
Your whisk stopped.
“Well.”
He looked over.
“Well what?”
“That is significantly more interesting than baker.” You held out the eggs for him.
He huffed a laugh and poured the butter into the eggs, placing the bowl over a pan of simmering water.
“I mean… don’t get me wrong. I’m sure you’ve never had pastry collapse at six in the morning.”
“Comparable trauma?” he smirked, not turning to face you but you could see his eyes flicking towards you.
“Devastating.”
He laughed then.
Short. Real.
It changed his whole face.
You liked the sound of it immediately.
But the smell… wait? The smell?
Oh no.
Chef Mireille appeared at your shoulder with the uncanny timing of someone who could sense culinary incompetence from across the room.
She looked first at the pan.
Then at Jack.
Then back at the pan.
You craned your neck and got your first look as well. The hollandaise sat in the bowl in glossy yellow patches, butter pooling at the edges, curdled through the middle.
Mireille placed one hand on her hip.
“Well,” she said. “This poor sauce has suffered, it seems. The heat is far too high”
Jack’s brows raised in surprise and then dropped into a frown. You bit the inside of your cheek to stop yourself laughing.
Jack glanced down at the bowl. “In my defence,”
“Ah Ah. The heat,” Mireille cut in smoothly, “did not turn up by itself.”
A few people nearby laughed.
Then her eyes moved to you.
“And you,” she said, lifting one elegant brow.
Uh-oh. You swallowed the laughter you had been holding in.
“Were you paying attention?”
You straightened automatically.
“I was just,”
“She was helping,” Jack cut in.
Mireille ignored him with professional ease.
“You are usually one of my star pupils,” she told you, tone playfully stern. “Reliable. Focused. A woman I trust around butter.”
You pressed a hand to your chest. “Chef,”
“And yet tonight,” she continued, gesturing toward the bowl, “you have allowed this man to commit acts of impatience in my kitchen.”
Mireille pointed her spoon between the two of you.
“Start again. Lower heat. Slower hands. Less eye contact.”
Heat climbed your neck.
Now it was Jack who was holding back a laugh.
“We’re just cooking.”
“Mm,” Mireille said. “And I am twenty-five.”
She swept away before either of you could answer.
There was a beat of silence.
Then you turned and nudged Jack lightly in the ribs with your elbow.
“You’re dragging my reputation down.”
He looked at you, deadpan.
“Your reputation must be pretty fragile.”
You gasped softly.
“It was immaculate before you arrived.”
His mouth twitched and he absently rubbed the spot on his torso where your elbow had been.
“Then I’m glad I came.”
One more attempt, this time successful, at mastering the hollandaise, and it was time for the knife demonstration.
Your second batch had come together beautifully. Pale gold and glossy, thick enough to ribbon from the spoon. Chef Mireille had swept past, dipped a fingertip into it, and given a rare nod of approval before gliding on to terrorise another station.
You had tried not to look smug.
Jack had noticed anyway and shot you a subtle wink that made your heart skip.
Now the room gathered around the long central counter while Mireille demonstrated how to peel, core, and slice apples evenly for the Tart Tatin.
“Uniformity,” she said, lifting a wedge between two fingers, “is not about pleasing me, though naturally it does. It is about making sure everything cooks at the same rate. If one piece is too thick and one too thin, one burns while the other stews.”
She set the knife down.
“And grip matters. If you are fighting the knife, you have already lost”
She demonstrated once, swift and elegant, then sent everyone back to their stations with bowls of apples and the promise of shame for anyone who hacked them into rustic chunks and called it charm.
You returned to your counter with Jack beside you.
He picked up the knife immediately.
And held it completely wrong.
Not beginner wrong. Not nervous wrong.
Wrong in a way that suggested years of muscle memory.
His index finger ran high along the spine of the blade, thumb angled close, grip narrow and exact, as if he were about to make an incision rather than cut fruit.
You stared.
“That,” you said, pointing, “is not a kitchen grip.”
He glanced down at his hand.
“It cuts.”
“You’re holding it like a scalpel Doc.”
His mouth twitched.
“I’m sure it’ll be fine, they’re just apples”
Your face dropped into a deadpan stare and you teased, “You’re not dragging my reputation through the mud anymore”
You stepped nearer before you could think better of it.
Up close, he was even more solid than he looked. Heat rolled off him in a quiet wave. He smelled so good. Clean soap, cotton, and something warmer beneath it. Cedar, maybe, or just him. The kind of smell that made you instinctively lean in before sense caught up.
You reached for his wrist.
His forearm tensed the second your fingers closed around it.
Strong. Dense. Warm.
The muscles shifted beneath your touch like restrained machinery.
“Relax,” you murmured.
“I am relaxed.”
“You’re so tense, didn’t you hear what Chef said about fighting the knife?”
That earned a low sound that might have been a laugh.
“Not like that,” You slid your hand down, nudging his thumb and forefinger into place at the base of the blade, “Like this”
“Pinch grip,” you said. “Here. Control comes from the blade, not strangling the handle.”
Your other hand covered the back of his briefly, guiding the angle lower.
He went very still.
So did you.
You became acutely aware of the breadth of his chest just behind your shoulder, the steady rise and fall of his breathing, the fact that if you leaned back half an inch you would feel all of him.
Your pulse gave an unhelpful kick.
“Then your guiding hand,” you said, voice thankfully steady, “makes a claw.”
You took his free hand and curled his fingertips inward around the apple.
“Protect the tips of your fingers, bend them in a little.”
“Bossy,” he murmured near your ear.
“People generally appreciate instruction involving sharp objects.”
“I don’t usually need any instruction around sharp objects.”
“Debatable.” You smiled, though with you in front of him like this you know he couldn’t see.
You released him and stepped back.
“There. Now slice.”
He brought the knife down through the apple in smooth, clean strokes. Even wedges. Neat spacing.
Quick learner.
Annoyingly attractive.
“Well?” he asked without looking up.
“Well what?”
“Tell me I’m talented.”
You laughed.
“I’ll tell you you’re teachable. Let’s not get ahead of ourselves.”
That time he smiled properly.
It hit you with the force of a minor collision.
Warmth transformed him. Softened the stern lines of his face. Made him look less like a man carrying something heavy and more like one who had briefly remembered how to set it down.
You forgot what you were saying for a full second.
He noticed that too.
“Tart Tatin,” he said coyly. “Try to focus.”
You stared at him.
“Are you flirting with me over apples?”
“I don’t know,” he said, slicing another perfect wedge. “Is it working?”
You rolled your eyes, another smile forcing its way onto your face before you could stop it. You didn’t bother humouring him with a response, your expression told him enough already.
From there, working together became strangely symbiotic.
You caramelised the apples on the stove, he stabilised the pan handle without being asked.
He fetched ingredients before you reached for them.
You corrected seasoning. He corrected heat. And then overcorrected it.
Still learning. You bit back a laugh
“The heat was fine, just watch the timer” you said.
“They burn if ignored.”
“Where was that attitude when you killed our hollandaise?”
He glanced over.
“I was distracted then:
Your heart beat heavy against your chest.
“You’re not now?” you asked, eyes flicking up to his. He was watching you with a flirtatious intensity you hadn’t experience from anyone before. Maybe you’d just been flirting with the wrong people this whole time.
“I am” he said, voice rough and low, “I’m just motivated not to disappoint you twice in one night”
“Hmm, maybe too late for that Doc. Your tart crust is looking pretty thick.”
He looked down at it.
“It is not.”
“It’s wearing armour.”
“It needs structure.”
“It needs tenderness.” you arched a brow, daring him to argue further.
That look again.
Unadulterated attraction.
“You talk like that about all pastry?”
“Only the difficult ones.”
The timer for the apples went off then.
You both reached to take the pan off of the heat at the same time.
Your fingers brushed.
Neither of you moved for a beat too long.
Then he moved away, allowing you to take it.
“Slow reflexes, old man”
“I was letting you have it, kid”
“How noble.” you retorted, trying to ignore the flush of heat between your legs at the nickname he had given you.
As the tarts came out of the ovens, the room softened into that pleasant end-of-class warmth.
More wine appeared at nearby stations. Mireille floated by critiquing apple placements and praising crusts.
Jack stood beside you, leaning on the counter. You were starting to think he noticed how much you’d been looking at his arms and had decided to show them off for you.
Extremely annoyingly attractive.
“What kind of bakery?” he asked.
You glanced over, surprised.
“Umm it’s called Willow & Rye. Mostly pastries, custom cakes, bread. If I’m feeling particularly masochistic I’ll make macarons on weekends.”
He hummed, eyes never leaving yours.
“You own it?”
“I do, took over from my mom or took over from her mom. I basically grew up in that place.”
“You like it?”
No hesitation.
“I love it.”
He nodded once.
As though filing that away.
“And cooking?” he asked.
“What about it?”
“Why take a cooking class after baking all day?”
You laughed lightly, understanding the absurdity, “Well… it’s very different to baking. And I like learning things I’m not good at.”
“Why.”
“Because being bad at something humbles you.”
“You’re not bad at this.”
You laughed, “Thanks. But thats now. I was never a natural with cooking like I was with baking. It took time.”
His mouth twitched.
You added more quietly,
“And I find it peaceful. Even when the kitchen is chaotic I can still find the peace I need there.”
Something in his expression shifted then.
Small enough most people wouldn’t notice.
You did.
“Peaceful,” he repeated.
“Yeah.”
He pushed down off of the countertop and wrung his hands together, looking down at them.
“Maybe that’s why I’m here too.”
Warmth moved low in your stomach.
So naturally, you ruined the moment.
“I still wouldn’t trust you to do any of this alone”
He stared.
Then smiled slowly.
“I learn fast.”
“Do you?”
His eyes dropped briefly to your mouth.
“I do.”
By the time the tart came out of the oven, golden and fragrant, the room had dissolved into happy chaos.
People packed leftovers. Chef Mireille kissed cheeks and assigned homework.
You stayed behind to wipe down your station, as always.
Jack stayed too.
Not helping, exactly.
Lingering.
“You can go, you don’t have to wait for me” you said.
“I know.”
He didn’t move.
You dried a pan, trying to reign in the heat you could feel spreading up your neck to your face.
He watched you with the same focus he gave everything else.
“You hungry?”
You glanced over at the half-eaten tart between you, raising a brow at him.
“Is that a joke?”
“Or thirsty, then.”
Not smooth.
Not practiced.
Just direct.
You liked that far more than smooth.
“I could use a drink,” you replied, a smile playing at the corner of your mouth.
The wine bar next door was narrow, warm, and softly lit.
You took a booth.
You ordered wine.
He ordered water, mentioning briefly that he was driving home when he saw the surprise on your face.
“Ah, here I was expecting whiskey” you said.
“Why is that?”
“It’s very on brand for gruff older man in need of hobbies.”
“You think I’m gruff.”
You bit your bottom lip, smiling and nodding before saying “Can I ask you a question?”
He gestured for you to go ahead.
“Now, don’t take this the wrong way because I think you look incredible in the apron but. Why do your friends feel the need to strong arm you into taking up a cooking class?”
He shook his head, amused before leaning forward, resting on his elbows.
“They think I have a habit of mistaking danger for recreation.”
You smiled faintly. “Do you?”
“Sometimes.”
He glanced down at the water glass, turning it once against the table.
“Before this, I was doing volunteer medic work with a SWAT unit.”
You blinked. “Wow,” nodding “That’s really brave”
His mouth twitched but he didn’t argue.
“Anyway, couple months back I caught a graze.”
Your smile faded.
“A bullet?”
“Technically.”
“Jack.”
“It barely touched me.”
You stared at him.
Mouth downturned, he drew a sharp breath through his nose, shrugging like it was no big deal.
“Apparently getting shot, however inefficiently, gave everyone around me opinions.”
You were quiet for a moment.
“And what do you think?”
That made him pause for a second.
“They’re probably just tired of waiting for the phone to ring. So. Cooking class”
He summed it up like it was nothing. Like he had just finished telling you about traffic.
Conversation unspooled easier after that.
He told you about his job, long shifts working nights. You laughed when he taught you the Nightcrawler chant that he does with his staff at the start of a shift to hype themselves up.
He told you about his friends who worried.
And he told you about his time in the service, a life built around reacting quickly. Losing his leg.
He didn’t overshare, but what he gave you was enough that you were able to build a picture of who he was, the life he lead. And you wanted more.
You told him about four a.m. starts at the bakery, kneading dough before sunrise, the violence of holiday cake orders.
You told him about pressures of keeping the third generation family business going.
And you told him about baking. Growing up. With your mom and grandmother. Food as a conduit for community. A way to gather close with everyone you love and share in something.
“You talk about food like religion,” he said.
“Oh please, in my family it was the next best thing.”
Eventually the wine bar closed down. Jack offered you a ride.
You wouldn’t have ever said yes to a ride from someone you had only known for a few short hours but… you didn’t want to say goodbye yet.
The walk to the car park was damp with recent rain.
Streetlights turned the pavement gold.
You stopped beside his car.
He opened the passenger door.
As you neared him, you hesitated.
“You’re not getting in?” his voice was low. You looked up at him, his eyes darting between yours and your lips. He swallowed and his adam’s apple bobbed.
You were suddenly very thirsty again.
“Not yet”
Streetlight caught in the silver at his temples. The night air was cool, but standing this close to him made it hard to notice.
He stepped closer and the air changed with him, into something electric.
“You got quiet,” he said.
“Just thinking.”
“Dangerous habit.”
A smile pulled at your mouth.
“I want you, Jack.”
He went still.
Not startled. Not offended.
Just still in that way controlled men did when faced with something uncontrollable.
His eyes searched your face like he was checking for hesitation, for uncertainty, for the chance that you didn’t mean it.
“You don’t know how difficult you’re making it for me” he said quietly.
Your brow furrowed, confused. Your hand reached out for his, trailing up his arms lightly.
“What’s difficult about this?”
His jaw tightened visibly.
“I’m older than you.”
You laughed a little.
“Yeah, Jack, I noticed.”
“That doesn’t concern you?.”
“It looks like it concerns you enough for both of us, apparently.”
That almost pulled a smile from him, but it faded before it fully formed.
You dropped your hand. “Look, if this isn’t-. If you don’t want this. I’m sorry if I got the wrong impression”
His hand came to your jaw then, rough palm warm against your skin, thumb resting lightly beneath your chin.
“No. I want you too, you don’t know how much. All night I’ve been thinking about it” he said, the words sounding dragged from somewhere deep. “That’s the problem.”
You leaned into his touch.
“Doesn’t sound like one to me.”
“No,” he said, one corner of his mouth tugging up, eyes dropping briefly to your mouth. “It sounds like the start of several.”
You smiled up at him innocently. Far from innocent.
He groaned, almost too quiet to hear but you did.
That did it.
You reached up, hands reaching for his curls and bringing his head towards your own.
He kissed you like he’d been restraining the urge for hours and resented the delay.
One hand came to your waist.
The other braced on the car above your shoulder.
Controlled. Strong. Deliberate.
You kissed him back harder.
He made a low sound in his throat.
You tugged him closer by the front of his shirt.
“Still think pottery was the better choice?” you murmured.
“No.”
“Good.”
He kissed you again.
Longer this time. His tongue pushing in against your own, teeth biting gently at your lip.
When you broke apart, breathless, you took him by the hand.
Closing the passenger door and opening the back door.
You looked at him, brow raised in a challenge.
He laughed and slid into the back, pulling you with him.
The windows fogged quickly.
Heat trapped in too small a space. City lights reduced to blur.
You learned several things, as you were straddled on Jacks lap with your dress hiked up above your hips.
Jack liked control until he trusted someone enough not to need it.
He was attentive in every sense of the word.
And all that contained stillness hid a startling amount of hunger.
You kissed until your lips were swollen. Chin rubbed raw against his silver stubble.
Hands explored through clothing first, hesitant nowhere but careful everywhere that mattered.
There was laughter between sharper moments.
Your forehead bumping the roof of the car.
His muttered complaint about leg room, wishing he’d had the fore thought to push the front seats forward.
You teasing him that tactical planning should’ve accounted for that.
But when the laughter subsided, all that was left in its place was the heat.
You lifted up on his lap and he reached down to align his cock to your soaking entrance. You hadn’t had a chance to see it but fuck did you feel it. You had a moment of panic, he was thicker than anyone you had been with before. And lets be honest… it had been a while.
He looked up at you, eyes darker than before.
“You still with me?”
“Yeah.”
“Tell me if anything feels wrong.”
Something in your chest tightened at the care in it.
You nodded.
“Good girl, so wet for me” he said softly, voice roughened by want, feeling exactly how much you wanted him as the tip of his cock entered you.
The words went through you like a spark.
He held you closer to his chest, patient where another man might have rushed, giving you time to adjust, time to breathe, time to feel every inch of anticipation.
Your fingers tangled in his curls.
Your eyes squeezed shut.
“Take your time baby,” he murmured against your throat.
Your thighs were shaking with the strain of holding yourself up but Jack noticed. And before you knew it strong rough hands were holding you up, hovering you just on the tip while you got used to the stretch. The veins in his arms were more prominent than you had seen all night. Jack moaned as your pussy clenched around him from the sight.
“Good girl” he said, drawn out “We’re gonna go nice and slow yeah?” he lowered you ever so gradually lower and lower as his cock went deeper and deeper inside of you. You had never been so fucking full. It was overwhelming. So full you could cry.
When you finally settled, his cock fully seated inside of you, Jacks head fell back onto the head rest. Eyes closed and mouth slightly open in absolute bliss.
You kissed up his jaw, hands moving from his hair to his shoulders. Clutching desperately as you began to move.
That spurred Jack back into action, his hands moving to cup your ass, finding the rhythm you wanted to set and lifting you in time.
“Ohh good girl. You’re so wet for me aren’t you” he cooed, drawing out a wanton moan from you that had you realising you’d been holding yourself breath. He had made you forget how to fucking breathe.
Bracing his hands against the seat, he used the leverage to buck his hips up to meet you and you folded, head resting against his shoulder.
“Jack, feels so good” you whined pathetically.
“Yeah baby, let me take care of you” he murmured in your ear, words enunciated by grunts as he rutted his hips, “Do you feel how hard you made me? I’ve been thinking about this all night. Wanted you as soon as I fuckin’ saw you baby”
Your insides quivered around him and he knew you were close, you wanted to straighten back up and move on him again but you were so fucked out on his cock you felt like you couldn’t move. He didn’t seem to mind.
“Good girl, you’re getting close aren’t you?,” he moaned, a ragged breath leaving his chest, “You’re gonna make me cum too, your tight pussy is squeezing me so well baby”
Fuck. That did it.
Your legs started to tremble and his hands were already there, on your hips, grinding you down onto his length where you had lost the strength to do it yourself.
“There she is. I’ve got you, cum all over my cock baby”
He held you steady, worked you through it with the same patient certainty he seemed to bring to everything, like there had never been any question he would carry you when your body gave out.
“That’s it,” he murmured, voice rough and low. “Let go for me.”
And with his hands anchoring you, you did.
Your body hummed with pleasure and the sob that you had been holding in let out as your orgasm rode through you.
You mumbled something indecipherable, unable to get the words out.
“Talk to me” Jack said, voice raspy and breathing fast, “What do you want baby?”
“Please Jack” you sobbed “I need you- inside me. Please”
His eyes closed again and his fingers dug into your flesh at your words.
“You want me to finish inside you?”
You nodded, head still resting on his shoulder, body complete mush.
“Say it.” he bit out. Demanding and assertive.
“I want you” you whimpered.
“Not what I meant,” His hips bucked up hard and you gasped for air, “Say. It”
“Cum inside me Jack. I need it. Please” you repeated that last word, over and over, blabbering and completely cock drunk.
Jack groaned and you could feel his cock twitching inside of you, filling you with his seed, overflowing and seeping back out.
What a fucking mess.
You leaned against his shoulder, you couldn’t say for how long, catching your breath.
Jack held you, long after his cock had gone soft, still buried deep in the warmth of you. His hands stroked your hair, down your back. Repetitively over and over. He pressed kisses into your temple and whispered how good you were.
You had never felt safer.
After a long time, you got up. Jack helped you dress which you were glad for. He had fucked any strength you had left out of you.
He drove you home, hand holding yours the whole time, rubbing soothing circles into your palm.
When he pulled up outside your building, neither of you moved immediately.
Then, direct as ever,
“I’ll make you dinner sometime.”
You laughed sleepily before you could stop yourself.
His brow lifted.
“I’ve seen your skills, Jack.”
“They improved significantly tonight.”
“Still.”
He leaned towards you, hand coming up to grasp your chin gently.
“You saying no?”
“I’m saying if we eat anything edible, I’m probably the one cooking.”
He smiled, nodding.
“You can cook. I’ll sous chef”
You grinned up at him, knowing you probably looked completely love sick.
“Deal” you said.
He walked you to your door, making sure you had stepped over the threshold before asking,
“Next Thursday?” he asked.
“The class?”
“The dinner.”
You pretended to consider.
“Depends.”
“On?”
“Whether you practice your knife grip”
He laughed.
Warm and rough. Pulling you back towards him slowly.
“I will practice.”
He stroked your hair and tilted your head back towards him, kissing you deeply.
“Then yes. Next Thursday, it is.” you agreed, mumbling against his lips.












