orca!ghost/seal!reader pt. 3 for @hypertail, @atlas3rr0r-1974, and @yeahitsboots
While Ghost was mourning your absence, you had begun exhibiting clear signs of stress. All seals mers were placed in a pool together, and they typically spent all day floating and playing with each other. But you had begun to grow stressed after constantly hearing Ghost calling out for you. You could hide and cower away from researchers, crying every time they tried to haul you out for research.
It was beginning to impact the other seals as well, as they all began to mimic your behavior. The aquarium was turning into chaos quick, so an emergency placement was made even though the paperwork wasn't done.
Ghost peered up at the looming shadow over his pod's tank, glaring at the researcher who got in the water. They were probably going to try and take more algae or bacteria samples for observation. However, that idea was dashed whenever they pulled in a familiar plump shape.
Ghost darted out of his spot and instantly darted to you, practically tackling you out of the researcher's hold. You perked up and beamed at him, pressing your cheek against his as you nuzzled against him. He pulled you down to his sleeping spot, not minding the curious looks from Gaz and Soap (Price was already notified that the transfer was happening).
"Watch it," Price warned Soap and Gaz, who were peering curiously down at you. "Ghost'll take your tails off."
"Cute thing," Gaz commented.
"Think we could get one of those therapy seals for ourselves?" Soap asked, grinning at the idea of having a seal mer to cuddle with all day or play games with.
"Well, officially, that mer's for us to share to 'expand our sociability'," Price said. "Unofficially, though she's here so the aquarium doesn't collapse."
Gaz and Soap shared a look. "so...she is to share," Gaz concluded with a grin, already planning an afternoon of sunbathing with the seal mer--his favorite pass time the rest of them were "too good" to enjoy with him.
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jason todd x fem!reader
summary: jason can't seem to understand why you keep talking about "your" wedding
contains: fluff, established relationship, pet names
word count: ~600
You and Jason laid in bed, morning light shuffling in through the blinds and illuminating the soft bedding. Jason had one arm around your waist as his head was tucked into the crook of your neck, eyes shut contentedly. Your eyes were open, staring blankly at the page of your book as you listened to Jasonâs soft breathing mix with the morning birdsongs that rolled in with the light.Â
âJay?â you whispered quietly, testing to see if he was awake.
âHm?â he grunted in reply, nose nestling further into your neck.
You kept quiet for a moment, hesitant to bring up such a topic before finally asking, âDo you ever think about what you want your wedding to be like?â
Jason was silent and you felt his arm subtly tense around you. You started to worry you had crossed some line you didnât know existed before he replied, âWhat do you mean?â
âI mean like how many people, what type of cake, the venueâŠthat stuff. How do you picture your future wedding?â
You felt Jasonâs brow furrow against your skin. âIâm still confused,â he mumbled, lips brushing ur neck and placing a soft kiss there.
You pursed your lips, puzzled at how he could be confused by such a question. âWhat are you confused about? When I picture my wedding I know I wantââ
Jason abruptly sat up straight, causing you to stop speaking and stare at him in confusion. He was really starting to freak you out.
âWhy do you keep saying it like that?â he asked, looking at you with a mix of annoyance, confusion, and a hint of hurt.Â
âSaying it like what?â
Jason looked away for a moment, letting the sunrays filtering in illuminate his features. His scars were highlighted and when his eyes met yours again, you could see them so clearly, their mix of green and blue capturing you before he spoke again.Â
âSaying âyour weddingâ or âmy weddingâ. Why do you keep doing that?â
âUmâŠâ you paused, laughing nervously. âWhat am I supposed to say, Jay?â
âDoll,â he brought his hand up to cradle your face. âThereâs not gonna be a âmy weddingâ or a âyour weddingâ...only âour weddingâ. Iâm not getting married unless itâs to you, princess.â
âOh.â Your face flushed and your eyes widened, a soft smile breaking out across your lips before you buried your face in Jasonâs chest in embarrassment.Â
Jason laughed, bringing his arms up to envelope you and leaning down to place a kiss upon your head. You were consumed by his intoxicating scent - the expensive cologne Dick had bought him for Christmas, gunpowder from last nightâs patrol, your favorite shampoo he swore he never used, and the fresh smell of clean linen sheets.Â
âYeah, âohâ.â He smiled as you brought your head back up to meet his. Jason kissed you softly and sweetly, still sluggish from sleep. âWhat, were you planninâ on marrying someone else?â
Your eyes widened as you pulled back. âNo! No, of course not! I justâŠdidnât know if you wanted that.â
He looked at you with a gentle, lovesick expression on his face. âI never thought I did either, doll.â He paused which made your heart pick up nervously again. But he just brought his hands to yours and raised one to kiss it tenderly. âUntil I met you.â
You flushed again, swatting him away playfully. âWho knew you were such a romantic, Todd?â
âAlways have been,â he pulled you back into his arms. âJust hadnât met the right girl until now.â
I recently adopted a kitten (she had fallen down a drain) and today I took her to the vet urgently because she was vomiting and oozing pus. I was told that she has an infection in her uterus (it's basically full of pus) and that she needs urgent surgery, plus she has tested positive for erlikia.
Even with all my savings, I can't cover all the expenses for surgeries, remedies and other aftercare.
Please, if you can donate, buy me a commission or at least reblog this post, I would be eternally grateful.
at least I need 350$
https://ko-fi.com/jejejijiju
https://www.paypal.me/Ypsilon16
unlimited commission slots. Oc, fanart, literally whatever you want
MmmmmmâŠ.. knight!Simon who fell in love with whore!reader and promised heâd return when he had earned enough to buy her freedom and take her as his wife. He disappears, and you hear rumors of his capture, that he has almost certainly died. You weep for himâ of course those romantic dreams were too good to be true.
Only for a knight in dark armor to approach your brothel on horseback, a skull plate welded to his helm, a sword with blood still flaking from its pommel at his hip. The madame has you all lined up, smacking those who dare to tremble in front of an honored guest with her riding crop. A bag of gold, far more than the price for a single night, gets tossed on the counter as a hand gauntleted in black steel points at you.
âSir, this is more thaââ
âNot âere to stay the night. Oiâm takinâ that one with me.â
pairing: John Price x gn!reader
cw: sleeptalking
wc: 903
an: price, the man you are. id forgotten my obsession with him until I found my Tumblr archives on my pc. this was SOOO fun to write, enjoy!
John Price had never been a heavy sleeper.Â
While it was a part of himself that had been apparent to him since before his time in the military, it would be foolish to say it didnât play an important role in it. He rarely got more than a couple of hours of sleep, which his body had adapted to over the yearsânot without putting up a fight, that is.Â
Heâd always struggled with the civvie life. Before you came into his lifeâa whirlwind of colour and a warmth he did not believe himself capable of deservingâheâd hated sleeping outside of the comfort of his quarters. His house was suffocating in its quiet loudness.Â
He had become acquaintances with the cat who rummaged through his trash at three in the morning, on the dot. He still woke up whenever the fridge clicked without explanation in the middle of the nightâthat sharp, sudden noise that had him shoving a hand under his pillow before he could even process the fact that he didnât need to aim his gun at an electrical appliance. The electrical line that had been busted for almost three months, constantly emitting a loud buzzing noise, had pushed him to the edge.Â
Then youâd come along. Quietly, sneakilyâlike mould. And, God help him, heâd never been more grateful for anything in his life. A toothbrush here, spare socks there, your things all over his house. What could only be described as a parasitic infestation had never felt better.Â
Along with your banter over lunch and your tea in his cupboard, came yourâŠpeculiar nightly habits.Â
Heâd heard of sleeptalkers, of course. He was guilty of his own nonsensical mumbling late at night after a string of stressful ops. But what you did wasnât mumble or whisper softlyâit was borderline paranormal.Â
The first night he got to witness it, you were jolted awake by the sudden weight laid over your neck. His forearm pressed against your neck, gone as fast as it had appeared. You blinked once in shock, unsure as to what the hell had happened and if you had imagined it in the first place. Itâd been John, the following morning, who recalled the events for you.
âThought someone had broken in,â he mumbled, and if you hadnât known any better you wouldâve sworn he was mad at you. âScared the shit outta me, love.â
He acclimatedâunwillingly. While his military instincts were hard to quiet down, he become almost fond of the late-night conversations and complete lunacy that came out of your mouth whenever midnight rolled around.Â
That night, he was woken up by the sound of you arguing with someone who had quickly become Priceâs number one nemesis.Â
âColonel Duck,â you whispered with a frown on your face. âThis was discussed in the briefing.â
John woke the way he usually did once his body had learned to recognize your nightly conversations as non-threateningâgroggily, slow, exhausted. He lay on his side, propping himself up on his elbow while his other hand rested above your stomach. Your shirt, caught in sheets and whatever else you had done to it through the night, lifted to reveal your cold skin. He flattened his palm over his stomach as he stiffened a yawn.Â
Outside, only the sound of a nearby creek and crickets were carried by the wind. Inside, Price watched as your nose scrunched at whatever this colonel had dared say to youâa civilian whose only contact with the army was through whatever the man shared with you.
He dragged his palm closer to your waist, twisting you effortlessly so that your chest would be pressed against his. He nuzzled your neck, his beard scratching the sensitive skin in a way that earned a quiet laugh from your otherwise serious façade.Â
âJohn, do something,â you whined against his ear. âHe wonât listen.â
Despite the exhaustion, he chuckled against your neck. He pressed a quick, albeit soft, kiss to your jaw before pulling away, feeling the tiredness that clung to his bones slowly bleed into his muscles.Â
âMâafraid I canât, love,â he whispered. âHeâs a colonel.â
Johnâs smile widened at the sight of your poutâso genuine and upset he almost asked Laswell to dig through whatever archives needed to be dug to find this Colonel Duck who had plagued your dreams for the past two months.Â
Your arm slid over his waist as you finally closed the distance between you. You muttered something he couldnât hear, even in the silent room, before burying your nose in the crook of his neck. He chuckledâlow and revibrating against your chest.Â
âHeâs drunk on power,â you mumbled with that voice heâd come to recognize as your finally going back to sleep voice.Â
John laughed, then sighed at the feeling of your body going limp beneath him. He felt your hair against his chin and your breath against his skin. His fingers dug into your hip as his lips found your forehead.Â
âWeâll report him,â he assured your sleeping form.Â
He let his lips linger on your forehead for a beat longer before he let his head fall against the pillow again, arms safely wrapped around you. Your breathing evened, and he listened to it like a lull to fall asleep to.Â
John Price had killed a general already. Heâd taken on a bloody colonel if needed.Â
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author's note: This has been in my drafts for one and a half years man. Never say never đ And thank you so much for 10k, lovelies! đ€ xx
The ad is three lines long.
You agonise over it for a weekâdrafting and redrafting on the back of a grocery receipt at the kitchen table while your husband is on deployment, crossing out words and rewriting them until the paper is soft and furred at the edges from erasing.
Three lines. That's all the local paper allows for the personals section, which is a relic from another era that you didn't even know still existed until you were flipping through the classifieds looking for a vintage bookshelf and your eyes snagged on the column header.
SEEKING CONNECTION
You'd laughed at first. Then you'd read a few. Then you'd read them all, sitting cross-legged on the sofa with your tea going cold in your hands, and something small and sharp turning over in your chest.
The ad you eventually submit reads:
Married woman, mid 30s, seeks interesting conversation and perhaps more with a like-minded gentleman. Discretion essential. If you enjoy good food, dry wit, and don't mind a woman who can out-drink you â I'd love to hear from you. Reply to Box 64.
You pay for four weeks in advance and feel sick the entire drive home.
Because here's the thing about being married to Captain John Price.
You love him desperately and completely, in a way that has settled into your bones over the better part of a decade and become indistinguishable from the architecture of who you are.
Adore the way he smellsâstale cigar smoke and sandalwood and old gun oil, a combination that should be repulsive and instead makes you want to bury your face in his neck and stay there. Love his hands, broad and scarred and capable of violence you'll never fully understand, and how gentle they are when they cup your jaw or fix the clasp of your necklace.
And you melt for the rumble of his voice on the phone at two in the morning when he calls from whatever godforsaken corner of the world he's operating in, tired and tight-lipped but always, always asking about you first.
You love him, and he loves you, and it hasn't been enough for a long time.
Not because the love ran out, because he did.
John Price gives everything to his work. Every deployment bleeds into the next. The gaps between homecomings stretch longerâthree weeks become five, five become eight, eight becomes âI don't know yet, love, I'll let you know when I knowâ.
And when he does come home, he's there but not there; hollow-eyed and distracted, reaching for his phone at dinner, falling asleep on the sofa before nine, making love to you the first night with a desperate urgency that fades by the third morning into perfunctory kisses on the forehead and an apologetic mumble about an early briefing.
Someday, you stopped asking when he'd be home six months ago; stopped leaving the porch light on four months ago, and you stopped wearing the nice knickers three months ago because what was the point again.
Two months ago, you realised you'd gone an entire week without hearing his voice and hadn't noticed until Thursday.
That's when the panic set in. Not the sharp, clean kind, but the slow, creeping kind. The one that makes you lie awake at three a.m. staring at the ceiling and wondering if this is it, if this is what the rest of your life looks like. A nice house in Hereford with a well-maintained garden and a husband who exists primarily as a name on a bank account and a voice on the other end of an increasingly rare phone call.
You don't want to leave him. The thought alone makes you nauseous.
You just want someone to see you again.
John finds the newspaper three days after he gets home from a six-week deployment in eastern Syria.
He's not snooping; he's looking for the TV remote, which has migrated into the crack between the sofa cushions again, and his hand closes around the folded section of newsprint wedged beside it. He pulls it out, intending to toss it on the coffee table, and his eyes catch the circle of biro ink around one of the small ads in the personals column.
John reads it, and then again.
Then he sits down very slowly, the remote forgotten, and stares at the far wall for a long time, connecting puzzle pieces like his life depends on it, which it very well does apparently.
Married woman, mid 30s. His wife is in her thirties.
Dry wit. His wife is the driest, sharpest-tongued woman he's ever met. It's one of the first things he fell in love withâthe way she could dismantle a man's ego with a single raised eyebrow and a well-timed "Bless your heart, love".
Can out-drink you. He's watched his wife put away Whisky Sours at the SAS Christmas do with a composure that made seasoned operators look like lightweights.
Discretion essential.
John sets the newspaper down on his knee. His jaw works and his eyes don't leave the wall.
And he doesn't confront you.
Not over dinner nor in bed that night when you roll towards him and press a kiss to his shoulderâa habit you've kept even through the worst of the distance, even when you're angry with him, even when he doesn't deserve it.
Instead, he waits, and he replies to Box 64.
The letter that arrives for you a week later is postmarked locally. Plain envelope, no return address. Inside, a single sheet of paper, handwritten in a bold, slanted script you don't recognise.
I enjoy good food, better whisky, and I've never met a woman who can out-drink me, but I'd enjoy watching you try. Friday, 8pm, OâMalleyâs on St. George's Lane. I'll be the one who looks like he doesn't belong in a place that posh. â J
Your hands are shaking when you finish reading it, and you have to sit down at the kitchen table and press your palms flat against the wood to steady yourself.
You could throw it away. No. You should throw it away. This was a mistakeâa stupid, reckless, selfish mistake born out of loneliness and too much wine and that ugly, gnawing ache in your chest that flares up every time John leaves.
But John has left again. Three days at home, then a call from Kate Laswell, then a bag packed and a kiss on your forehead and a quick âBe back soon, loveâ and the sound of the front door closing and the silence that rushes in to fill the space he used to occupy.
You read the letter once more.
I'll be the one who looks like he doesn't belong in a place that posh.
Something warm and reckless curls in your stomach, and you hate yourself for it, and you fold the letter into the pocket of your cardigan and carry it around for three days before you decide youâre going.
Friday night. OâMalleyâs.
You arrive twenty minutes early because you're a control freak in crisis, and you take the farthest booth in the corner because your back needs to be against a wall and your eyes need to be on the doorâa habit you picked up from your husband without realising it.
You order a gin and tonic to give your hands something to do, and you check your reflection in the blank screen of your phone for the third time. You look good, like you tried againânot the kind of effort you make for John when he comes home, all desperate and over-polished, but a quieter kind; wearing your favourite dress with subtle makeup and your hair done the way you like it, not the way you think someone else wants to see it.
You look like your old self, and that's terrifying, because the whole point of tonight was supposed to be about being someone else.
When your wedding ring catches the light as you reach for your drink, and you stare at it for a long moment, the slim gold band John slid onto your finger nine years ago with steady hands and unsteady eyes, and you don't take it off.
You should, but you canât, and you did say youâre married.
Eight o'clock comes and goes. Five past, then ten. You're about to convince yourself you've been stood up, which would be both a relief and a humiliation, when the pub door opens and a man walks in, and every nerve ending in your body fires at once.
Because the man standing in the doorway, scanning the room with those sharp, assessing eyes, is your husband.
John is wearing civvies. Dark jeans, a black henley pushed up to his elbows, boots that have seen better days.
He looks like he came straight from the base, which he probably did. His hair is freshly cut but his beard is full, and there is a tiredness around his eyes that you can read from across the room, the same bone-deep fatigue he carries home from every deployment and tries to hide and fails.
He spots you and your stomach plummets.
Meanwhile, his expression doesn't change; not a flicker. He holds your gaze across the crowded pub, and then he walks towards you with the kind of unhurried, deliberate stride that you've seen him use in exactly two contexts.
When he's approaching a superior officer, and when he's about to do something that no one in the room is going to enjoy.
Your heart is hammering so hard you can feel it in your teeth. Your hand tightens around your glass until your knuckles ache, and every instinct in your body is screaming at you to run to the bathroom, to the car park, to another country, but your legs won't cooperate, because Captain John Price is walking towards you and you have never in your life been able to move when he's looking at you like that.
He reaches the booth, stops, and looks down at you. And a beat of terrible, electric silence follows.
Then he smiles, though not the tight, exhausted smile he gives you at the front door when he's been gone for weeks, but something warmer, something almost boyish, and then he slides into the seat across from you, settling in with an ease that makes your blood run cold.
"You must be Box 64," he says casually, calm, like he's meeting a stranger for the first time, which is insane, because he is your husband and he is sitting across from you at a pub where you came to meet another man and he knows. He fucking knows.
"Johnâ"
"John," he repeats, tasting the name like he's hearing it for the first time. Then he extends his hand across the table. "That's right. Pleasure to meet you."
You stare at his outstretched hand, then at his face, and back at his hand.
"John, I can explainâ"
"Nothing to explain." He keeps his hand where it is, steady and patient. His eyes don't leave yours. "I'm J. You're Box 64. We're here to have a drink and see if we get on. That was the arrangement, wasn't it? What your ad said?"
Your mouth opens and something inside you dies a little, along with the words in your throat; anything but one.
"John."
"You gonna leave me hanging, love? Already?" He nods at his hand, one eyebrow raised, and there is something in his expressionâbeneath the calm and the performanceâthat you can't quite read.
It's not anger, not even hurt. Something closer to resolve, like he's made a decision about tonight and he intends to see it through, and nothing you say is going to alter the trajectory.
You take his hand, shake it weakly.
His fingers close around yours, warm and rough, and he gives one firm shake before releasing you. Then he flags down the barmaid, orders a whisky neat, and turns back to you with that same easy, unreadable smile.
"So. Tell me about yourself."
You stare at him owlishly.
"IâI don'tâ" You can feel heat crawling up your neck, your throat tightening with the precursor to tears. "John, please, can we justâ"
"Tell me," he says again, and his voice is gentle, but his eyes are steel. "What do you do? Where are you from? What made you put that ad in the paper?"
The last question lands like another slap, even though his tone doesn't change. You swallow hard, your fingers wrap around your glass for something to anchor to.
He waits for you to answer; patient as a sniper in a ghillie suit.
"I'mâ" You exhale shakily. "I'm from here. I live in Hereford. I'mâ" Your voice threatens to crack, and you bite the inside of your cheek until it steadies. "I'm a teacher."
"A teacher." John nods, like this is new information and not something he's known for the better part of a decade. "What age?"
"Year four."
"Year four. That'sâwhat, eight? Nine?" He takes a sip of his whisky. The barmaid left it quietly and shot you a look like she sensed the tension. "Brave woman. I've faced insurgents with less fight in them than a nine-year-old with a grudge."
The laugh that escapes you is wet and startled and completely involuntary, and John's eyes soften for a fraction of a second before the mask slides back into place.
"What about you?" you ask carefully, because two can play this game, and if he's going to make you sit through this surreal performance, you might as well commit. Your voice is still unsteady, but there's a spark of something underneath the fearâdefiance, maybe, or the stubbornness that made you put the ad in the paper in the first place. "What do you do?"
"Military," he answers briskly, which is what he always says at parties and barbecues when civilians ask, offering nothing further.
"What branch?"
"The kind that doesn't let me talk about it." He leans back in his seat, one arm resting along the back of the booth leisurely and looks at you with an expression that's half amusement, half something hungrier. "I travel a lot. Gone more than I'm home unfortunately."
"That must be hard," you reply, and you mean it in a raw way that has nothing to do with the roleplay and everything to do with the long years of lonely nights and unanswered phone calls sitting between you.
John hears it and you watch it land. A brief tightening around his eyes, a muscle jumping in his jaw before he takes another slow drink.
"It is," he says quietly. "Harder on the people who wait, I'd imagine."
Your breath catches. You look down at the table, at your ring, at the condensation pooling around the base of your glass.
"Yeah," you whisper. "It is."
The silence that follows is different from the others. Not tense or loaded. Just heavy, in the way that true things are heavy, settling between you like something solid.
Then John clears his throat. "Another round?"
You nod, not trusting your voice, and he waves the barmaid over again.
The second drink loosens something.
Maybe it's the gin, perhaps the sheer absurdity of the situation, but somewhere between your second and third drink, the fear recedes enough for you to actually talk.
And Johnâyour husband, who has spent the better part of a year giving you monosyllabic answers over dinner and falling asleep during filmsâis talking back.
He's always been charming. It's how he got you in the first place, at a mate's wedding eleven years ago, when he cornered you at the bar and spent forty-five minutes making you laugh so hard you snorted champagne up your nose. Though you'd forgotten what it looks like when he aims it at you with intent.
John asks about your students and listens to the answers. He asks about the book you're currently reading and offers an opinion on it that tells you he's been paying more attention to your nightstand than you thought. He tells you stories from deployment that are carefully scrubbed of classified details but still make you laugh; the kind of stories he used to tell you when you were dating. Absurd, self-deprecating, designed to make you think he's funnier than he is.
He is funny. You'd forgotten that, too.
"You've got a nice laugh," he says at one point, swirling his whisky, and the way he says it, like an observation, like he's hearing it for the first time, makes your stomach flip.
"Don't flatter me, J." The letter feels strange in your mouth, this thin fiction stretched over the truth of him. "I'll think you're after something."
"Maybe I am." He holds your gaze and doesn't smile. "That a problem, love?"
Your mouth goes dry.
Three drinks in, you're leaning across the table towards each other, and his hand is resting on the tabletop close enough to yours that your little fingers are almost touching, and you're telling him about the time one of your Year Fours brought a live frog to class in his lunchbox and it escaped during maths, and John is laughingâreally laughing, with his head tipped back and his eyes creasedâand for a vertiginous moment, you manage to forget.
You forget that this is a performance; that your husband is sitting across from you pretending to be a stranger because you put an ad in the newspaper looking for someone else. Everything except the sound of his laugh and the warmth in his eyes and the way he's looking at you like you're the most interesting person in the room, which is how he used to look at you all the time, before the deployments ate him alive and left you with the husk.
Then his eyes drop to your left hand, and the warmth doesn't leave his expression, but something sharper slides in alongside it, like the glint of a blade edge, and then he reaches across the table and takes your hand, turning it over in his.
His thumb presses against the band of your wedding ring, holding it there.
"You know," he says, and his voice is still easy, still conversational, but there's a new undercurrent to it that makes the hair on the back of your neck stand up, "if you were really going to go through with this little adventure of yoursâ"
He taps the ring once with his thumb, clicks his tongue.
"âyou probably should've taken this off first."
The blood drains from your face. The pleasant haze of gin and good conversation evaporates in an instant, replaced by a cold, lurching clarity.
"Johnâ"
"Bit of a deterrent, love. Even when you mentioned it in the ad." He's still holding your hand, still running his thumb over the ring, and his expression is unreadableânot angry, not hurt, just steady, the way he looks when he's holding a position and waiting for something to break. "Any bloke worth his salt would've clocked that you're not really in it five minutes in."
Your eyes are stinging. "I wasn't going toâI would never haveâ"
"I know." He replies simply and releases your hand. "I know you wouldn't."
The lump in your throat is enormous and razor-edged, and you have to look away at anything that isn't his face, because if you keep looking at him, you're going to cry in the middle of this pub and he will never, ever let you live it down.
"I'm sorry," you manage, barely a whisper. "John, I'm so sorry, I didn'tâI was justâ"
"Don't."
You look back at him. He's leaning forward now, strong forearms on the table, and the mask is gone. All of it, the J performance, the first-date charm, the controlled amusement. And underneath is just your husband. Looking at you with an expression that is not anger, that has never been anger, that is something far worse.
Guilt.
"I should've been home more," he murmurs; too honest for a pub on a Friday night. "I should'veâ" He stops, his jaw clenches before he tries again. "I should've given you a proper life. A family. A husband who's actually fucking present. And I didn't, and youâ"
He gestures vaguely at the booth, the pub, the entire premise of the evening.
"âyou shouldn't have had to do this to get my attention."
The first tear slips down your face before you can catch it. You swipe at it furiously with the back of your hand before the barmaid, who has become somewhat intrigued by whatever is happening at your table, can clock it.
"I wasn't trying to get your attention," you lie, and you both know it's a lie, and his mouth twitches; not quite a smile, something more tender and much more broken.
"Yeah, you were." He reaches across the table again and takes your hand, properly this time, threading his fingers through yours and squeezing. "And it worked."
You let out a breath that's half laugh, half sob, and squeeze back.
For a long moment, neither of you speaks. The pub buzzes around you. Glasses clinking, conversations flowing, some '80s song you can't name playing from the speakers. And you sit in the middle of it, holding hands across a sticky table, and the nine years of silence and distance and loving each other badly feel, for the first time, like something that could be survived.
"I need the loo," you announce eventually, because your mascara is probably wrecked and you need thirty seconds of privacy to pull yourself together before you dissolve entirely.
John releases your hand with a nod. "Take your time, love."
You slide out of the booth on legs that feel slightly unsteady with gin and adrenaline, and make your way to the back of the pub, past the bar and down the short corridor to the ladies'.
It's a single-stall bathroom. Small, clean enough, a lock on the door that you click shut behind you before bracing your hands on the edge of the sink and staring at your reflection in the mirror above it.
Your eyes are bright and glassy. Your mascara is, as predicted, smudged. You look wrecked and flushed and alive in a way you haven't in months, and you hate that it took thisâa dating ad and a Friday night charadeâto put that look on your face.
You run the tap and press your cool, damp fingers against your closed eyelids. Breathe. You can do this. You can go back out there, finish your drinks, go home with your husband, and figure out the rest in the morning like adults who have been married for nearly a decade and know how to have a difficult conversation.
You're drying your hands when the lock clicks.
You freeze. Your eyes snap to the door in the mirror's reflection as it opens, and John slips inside and closes it behind him with a soft, definitive click of the lock.
The bathroom shrinks to nothing.
He fills the space. Not just physically, though he does that too, broad shoulders and solid frame taking up far too much of the small room, but atmospherically. The air changes when he's this close, gets heavier and becomes charged, like the pressure drop before a storm front.
"John, what are youâ"
He moves. One step, then two, and then his big hand is flat against your lower back and he's pressing you forward, gently but firmly, until your hips meet the edge of the sink and your palms catch the porcelain on either side.
His body moulds against your back. Chest to spine, hips to arse. One hand sliding from your lower back to your waist, gripping and anchoring, while his other forearm braces against the wall beside the mirror.
You can see him in the reflection; towering behind you, head dipped, mouth hovering at the shell of your ear, and your breath stutters at the look on his face.
"Gonna make you remember why you married me, darling," he mutters into your ear, and his breath is hot and damp on the side of your neck, sending a shiver cascading down your spine. His hand tightens on your waist, pulling your arse back against the hard line of his cock already straining behind his zipper.
"Johnâ"
"Shh." His lips graze the spot beneath your ear. No kiss but a warning. "You wanted to be seen, love. I see you."
His hand slides from your waist to the hem of your dress and drags it up slowly, bunching the fabric around your hips until you're exposed from the waist down. The cool air of the bathroom hits your bare thighs and makes you gasp.
"John, we can'tâWe're in a pubâ!"
"Should've thought about that before you went looking for a date, shouldn't you?" His voice is rough and threaded with something dark and tender at the same time, and his fingers hook into the waistband of your knickers, tugging them down your thighs in one smooth motion. They pool around your ankles, and he doesn't bother removing them fullyâjust leaves them there, tangled between your heels.
"Anyone couldâ"
"Door's locked." His hand trails up the inside of your thigh, calloused fingers dragging against the soft skin, and you bite your lip to keep the sound that wants to escape inside. "And you're going to be quiet for me, aren't you, hm?"
You hear his belt buckle. The clink of metal, the drag of leather through belt loops, then the rasp of his zip, and your hands grip the sink so hard your arms tremble, because the sound alone is enough to make your pussy clench around nothing in anticipation.
"Nearly a decade of marriage," he murmurs against the back of your neck, and his free hand slides between your thighs from behind, two thick fingers dragging through your supple folds, finding you already embarrassingly wet. He lets out a low, dark sound of approval that vibrates against your skin. "And I let you forget."
His fingers circle your clit once and your hips buck back against him involuntarily.
"That's on me," he continues, his voice dropping to that gravelly register that makes your toes curl in your pumps. "My fault. My fucking failure. Not yours."
He presses one thick finger inside you, then two, stretching you open with a slow, curling thrust that makes your breath hitch and your walls clench around him. He groans quietly and his forehead drops against the back of your head.
"'M finally gonna put our baby in you," he declares, and the words are rough and raw and utterly certain, a promise sealed against your skin. "Should've done it years ago. Should've given you that. Should've given you everything."
He withdraws his fingers and you whimper at the loss with a needy, desperate sound that you'd be mortified by in any other context, and then you feel the blunt, plump head of his cock pressing against your entrance and every other thought in your head goes static.
"Johnâ" you mewl. John pushes in slowly.
He stretches you open around him with a fullness that borders on too much, and the sound that tears from your throat is muffled only because you clamp your hand over your own mouth.
More than a decade and his fat cock is still enough to make you go stupid.
"Fuck," John breathes, his hips flush against your arse, buried to the root, and his grip on your waist is bruising. He doesn't move yet just holds there, letting you feel every inch of him, letting your body adjust around the thick, throbbing weight of his cock.
Then he starts to move, and it's not the perfunctory, tired sex you've been having for the past year. The kind where he finishes quickly and rolls over and you stare at the ceiling and pretend you came.
This is John Price. The real one, the one you fell in love with. The one who backed you against the wall of your old flat on your third date and made you see God by eating you out through your knickers before he'd even taken anything else off.
He fucks you deep and deliberate, one hand gripping your hip while the other wraps around the front of your throat lightly; his fingers curled against your pulse point, feeling the frantic beat of your heart against his palm.
"Look at yourself," he orders, and your eyesâwhich had screwed shut at some pointâfly open to meet his in the mirror. Pupils blown.
The sight of it is obscene. Your dress bunched around your waist, his thick forearm braced beside the mirror, tendons flexing, his body curved over yours, and the slow, powerful roll of his hips driving into you from behind with a rhythm that's making the mirror rattle against the wall.
"That's my wife," he grunts, and his reflection's eyes are fierce and fixed on yours. "Mine. Not some fucking stranger's from a newspaper ad."
You can't speak, only feel his cock dragging against your walls, his hand on your throat, his chest solid and warm and present against your back for the first time in what feels like forever.
He picks up the pace; harder and deeper thrusts, the wet slap of skin on skin echoing in the small bathroom while his ragged breath puffs against your ear. And then his rough hand leaves your throat to reach between your legs, flicking your clit and rubbing tight, fast circles that make you bite down on your own fist to keep from screaming.
"Quiet," he reminds you, and the bastard sounds smug. "You want the whole pub to know what I'm doing to you in here? Huh? Want them to know âm fucking my wife?"
You shake your head frantically; cunt fluttering and squeezing his shaft, because dirty talk from John Price is its own kind of sweet torture.
"Then cum for me quietly, love. Right now."
A few more hard, precise thrusts with his cock dragging inside your quivering cunt, massaging that spot that keeps swelling inside you, and you shatter.
The orgasm rips through you so violently that your knees give out, and the only things keeping you upright are the sink under your hands and John's arm locked around your waist. You clamp your teeth into the heel of your palm and muffle the cry that wants to tear out of you, your walls clenching and fluttering around his cock in rhythmic, milking pulses.
"Christâfuckâ" John's hips stutter, his rhythm breaks, and he buries himself deepâso deepâand holds, his cock kicking and pulsing inside you as he cums with a low, guttural groan pressed into the curve of your neck.
He spills himself empty inside you, balls throbbing with each little jerk of his hips. Hot and thick, deliberate this time. No condom, no pulling out this time, and the significance of that isn't lost on either of you. His hips roll lazily through the aftershocks, working every precious drop into your messy cunt, and his hand slides from your waist to your lower belly, pressing flat.
"There," he murmurs, and his voice is wrecked and satisfied, unbearably tender. "That's where it belongs."
You're shaking. Your entire body is trembling, your legs are useless, and there are tears streaming silently down your face that have nothing to do with pain.
He stays inside you for a long moment; breathing, his lips pressed against the nape of your neck, beard scraping your skin, his hand warm on your lower stomach. Then he pulls out slowly, carefully, and you feel his cum start to leak from you immediately, warm and slick against your inner thighs.
He reaches down, picks your knickers up from around your ankles, and slides them back up your legs with an almost clinical efficiency. When they're settled back into place, he pats your arse once, light and proprietary, and tugs your dress back down.
"There we go," he says, like he's just helped you with your coat. "Good as new."
You let out a sound that's somewhere between a laugh and a sob, your forehead dropping against the mirror.
"How about a 'thank you,' love," he adds while he tugs his softening cock back into his jeans, and when you lift your head and catch his eyes in the reflection, the smug satisfaction on his face is so thoroughly, infuriatingly Price that you want to slap him and kiss him simultaneously, "for stuffing your pretty cunt full of my cum, hm?"
"John."
"Mm." He presses a kiss to your temple, achingly gentle after everything he just did to you, and reaches past you to turn on the tap. He wets his hand and wipes beneath your eyes with his thumb, cleaning up the mascara.
"Ready to leave, love?" he asks, straightening up and buckling his belt with the same unhurried ease he does everything. "Or would you like another drink before your husband takes you home?"
Your legs are still shaking, his cum is slowly but surely soaking into your knickers, and your heart is so full it might crack your ribs.
"N-No," you manage, small and hoarse. "I'd like to go home now, John."
He looks at you, really looks. And there is nothing left of the J performance, not the Captain Price mask, just John, your husband. The man who drove to a pub on a Friday night not to punish you but to remind you both of what you'd almost let slip away.
"That's my girl," he replies softly.
He unlocks the bathroom door, checks the corridor, and guides you out with his hand on the small of your back. You walk through the pub on shaking legs, past the booth where your half-finished drinks are still sitting, past the barmaid who gives you both a knowing look that you pretend not to see.
The night air hits you like cold water when you step outside, and you suck in a breath that fills your lungs properly for the first time in hours.
John pulls his car keys from his pocket, presses the fob, and opens the passenger door for you without a word. You climb in. He closes the door, rounds the bonnet, and slides into the driver's seat.
Neither of you speaks on the drive home. His hand rests on your thigh, squeezing gently every other minute, and your hand rests on top of his, your fingers tracing the ridges of his calloused knuckles and the band of his own wedding ring, which he has never, not once in nine years, taken off.
When he pulls into the driveway, the porch light is off. You haven't left it on in months.
John kills the engine. Sits for a moment, looking at the dark house.
Then he turns to you, and his voice is quieter now, stripped of the previous smugness, the heat, the performance. Just the raw thing underneath.
"I will do better."
No grand speech or a promise wrapped in flowers and apologies and all the things you've heard before and stopped believing. It's four words, plain and blunt and offered without decoration, and they land heavier than anything else he's said tonight.
You reach across the centre console and take his face in both hands, and you kiss him slowly, like you have time, because you're going to make time.
"I know," you whisper against his mouth.
And when you get inside, John turns the porch light on.
When Simon is too tired to fuck you or not in the mood to spend twenty-seven minutes getting your cunt loose and wet enough to take his monster cock but you're horny and practically humping his leg on the bed, he has you lay on your back and pull your legs up to present.
And then he kneels on the mattress, rubs your puffy slit and thumbs at your swollen clit until you're leaking slick down your ass crack.
"There we fuckin' go, bunny," he murmurs before spitting on your pussy to make a bigger mess; slick and saliva foaming on your skin.
Then he slowly plunges two long, thick fingers into your sopping hole, sometimes three if your pussy is greedy; feeling your inner muscles tighten around him.
And then he fingerfucks you properly until you're squeezing and squelching around his thrusting digits while your pretty whines and helpless moans make his own cock swell in his pants.
There's a rapidly forming damp patch on the front of his sweats; the smell of precum mixing with your musk. Because his cock didn't get the memo tonight, always aching for your pussy.
And when your back bows and you cry out his name, his free hand tightens on your knee to keep your legs apart, all while his tawny eyes stare at your greedy cunt as you come around his fingers, soaking his hand.
He groans shamelessly, easing his finger out before smacking your puffy, twitching cunt until you whine and shake.
"Si, s'too much," you mewl, pushing at his hand yet grinding your hips for more.
He chuckles, not cruel but arrogant, and leans down to place the sweetest kiss right on your clit.
summary: your boyfriend pours candle wax on you while having sex
masterlist!
âshhh, baby. yer alrighâ,â your boyfriend coos, landing a single smack across your beautiful ass perched in the air, âmâ gotcha.â
your boyfriend had you laid on your stomach, his pillow rested underneath your pelvis, your little arms tied above your head to the bed frameâs post.
the sound of your heavenly moans filled the air at simonâs big, girthy cock thrusting in and out of your tight cunt, forcing, âyes, s-si! oh!â out of you.
simon was relishing in the magnetizing site, the manâs massive hands gripping your waist, eyeing the ring of cream forming around the base of his cock at the entrance of your pretty pussy. the light shined on your glistening folds, messy squelching noises mixing with the echos of your boyfriendâs skin slapping against yours each time he thrusted.
âfuck yeah, luvieâ,â the beefy brit groaned out, leaning his muscular torso on top of your back to place a kiss on your cheek, âfeel so amazinâ for mâ.â he wrapped a tatted bicep around your neck, âlove ya so much.â
you smiled at simonâs words, biting on your lower lip when he hit just the right spot, âi-i- oh! i love you too, si!â
he sat himself up, eyes fixated on the candle you had lit on your night stand. his precious girlfriend always got candles to match the season, the man smirking at his great idea. simon went to grab your candle, blowing out the flame.
a strident screech departed you when you felt a hot liquid land along your spine, your boyfriendâs pounding only quickening at the beautiful noises of your pain.
he poured more candle wax down your back, eventually reaching the curve of your plump ass, watching the colorful liquid harden.
simon was loving the sight underneath him, how you were moaning and crying at the scorching sensation. you were just so perfect to the brute.
âthaâsâ righâ,â he fucks your cunt, tilting the candle to pour more, âjusâ bite down on yer pillow,â he grunts out next.
đà§ Simon won't admit it but he's an exhibitionist freak
cw. mature content
Simon doesn't necessarily care where he fucks you, he's quite lenient with it actually. like the time he had you took you across his captain's desk while everyone else was in the dinning hall. You just wanted to deliver your husband the lunch you had freshly prepared, all of his favourites, at his base yet the bastard couldn't help but feel like a horny teenager, pulling you in the first room he saw, that just so happened to be his captain's office.
Just seeing you in that pretty sundress had his dick hardening under his slacks, he just couldn't resist his pretty dovie and he couldn't care less about where he's pinning you. His gloved hand hurriedly pulling up his balaclava as he pressed his mouth to yours, his lips rough and chapped due to the lack of moisture on them. Simon's mouth moved hungrily against yours, his thick tongue pushing into your mouth as his hands already groped your ass.
He picked you up with his hands firmly under your ass while your arms wrapped tightly around his neck, you bit his lower lip, letting out a soft giggle as you licked his lips to moisturize them, "Your lips are so dry." "'cause I haven' kissed ya enough, c'mere lovie" he mumbled before chasing the feel of your lips as he puts you down on the cap's desk.
Simon immediately spread your legs before he pressed his hips right against your clothed cunt, his bulge prominent in his pants as he grinded without a care that he was practically humping his wife in his captain's office while people were present. His large hand cover the span of your waist as he pushed his thick tongue through your parted lips, "fuck luv, ya look bloody gorgeous!" He murmured before swallowing your tongue whole as he ate your mouth desperately.
The balaclava sat uncomfortably tight on his broken nose but he didn't mind, getting lost in the way your mouth felt against his. His large hand hurriedly pushed up the hem of your dress, bunching it at your waist as he dipped his hand underneath the tiny fabric you called underwear. The thrill of simon touching you in such a public place had your pussy gushing and soaking the lacy pair, a dark spot spreading as simon's eyes dipped and the side of his mouth turned into a cunning smirk, "look at ya, fuckin' soaked through the pair. Does this excite ya tha' much, huh?"
The way he condescendingly spoke had your thighs pushing together with his hand, "shut up, you're the one who's acting like a horny teenâ!" Your words get abruptly cut as simon glides his thick fingers, the middle and ring, through your dewy folds, stuffing them right into your pussy as you gasped. "F-fuck!" He smirked and without another thought he started to thrust his hand as humanely as it could go, the hand on your thighs travelled up and pulled your hips free of those panties, throwing them somewhere across the room.
Your mouth lets out a shriek at the sudden explosion of pleasure spreading through your cunt up to your stomach, you bit your lip, slapping a hand over your mouth as you let out a muffled scream, your eyes sharply stared at the locked door, just outside of it, soldiers walked cluelessly at the forbidden act happening behind the door. Simon's smirk just widened as his pace didn't waver despite your attempt to close your legs, his free hand gripping your thigh wide open as he fingered you, "Keep 'em open doll." The tips of his nails scratched and poked at the sweet spot inside of your gooey, clammy walls made your eyes roll back in your head.
You felt the coil in your stomach tighten as you bit your lip tightly, trying to not let any lewd sounds out in your husband's captain's office, your other hand gripped onto his shoulder, digging into the skin through the tshirt as your cunt clenched around his fingers, "There ya go luvie, cum on ma fingers." His fingers moved faster than ever as your toes curled in your shoes, your head thrown back as you came with a cry, "Simon!"
You panted, gripping onto his shoulder while the other hand gripped the edge of the table as your pussy pulsed like a heartbeat, suddenly feeling empty as he removed his fingers. And without wasting another second, simon worked open his belt, his thick cock slapping his thigh because of how heavy it was even when hard. His tip was flushed red and already leaking precum as he gripped his base and slammed it deep in your cunt making you let out a shriek!
He let out a hiss at the tight warmth of your cunt, slapping a hand over your mouth, "Bloody hell baby, don' be so loud, can't have anybody knowing I'm fuckin' ya." Tears swelled in your eyes as he rammed his hips into your cushy cunt, your arousal leaked down your cunt to your table and down your ass. You tried, really did, biting your lip to quiet down your cunt along with his hand covering your mouth but you had just came, your body still thrumming from the pleasure as he fucked you hard.
Simon let out a short laugh, watching as you struggled to keep quiet, your thighs trying to close as you shook your head desperately, "Shh shh hun, ya can take it. Be good f'me." He grunted, slamming his hips into your cunt. You could feel every throbbing vein and every thick ridge of his cock shaping your walls, all due to the overstimulation and thrill. Simon's hand sneaked down and coaxed your swollen clit out of it's hood, letting out a smirk as you immediately clenched impossibly tight around him.
With his ministrations on your poor clit and your poor swollen pussy, it wasn't long when you reached your peak only this time it was something more as you squirted all over him, "There ya go doll, there ya go!" He let out a amused laugh, not stopping as you sprayed all over his stomach and jeans, dripping down to the table and floor as he chased his own orgasm before cumming deep in you, "Good girl baby."
It was late in the evening when Price finally entered his office, too busy in the meeting with laswell when he stopped at the door. He took one look around the office, it looked like how he had left it but he could feel something in the air, something sweet when his eyes spotted the pink lacy pair of spoilt panties neatly kept on the middle of his very sticky desk with a note "Apologies for using your office sir." He immediately recognised simon's neat yet gruff handwriting, crumbling the note as his calloused fingers brushed on the still wet spot on the pantiesâhis L.T's wife. John smirked, rubbing the fabric, "Dirty Bastard."
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when your stupid ex boyfriend kicks you out of the flat, he forgets to give you your cat back. you find the meanest looking guy in the bar to help you get her back.
type: one-shot (3.4k), ao3
cw: mature language and content, suggestive language and content, graphic depictions of violence, smut, unprotected piv, cumplay, oral, simon is not a good or nice person (except to reader), reader also maybe isn't a good person who knows, reader has hair long enough to hold, curvy/plus-sized!reader, size difference, size kink, military inaccuracies, 18+
There is a special place in hell for men like Michael.
You can see her through the window by the door. Her big eyes are looking at where you are, paws against the glass. Her mouth opens, and she scratches at the window, and your bottom lip trembles as you set your hand down where she touches.
You could care less about the things you left inside. Your clothes, your bags, your shoes, even your fucking computer can stay behind, but not her. Your tabby cat is inside, sitting by the window, and Michael changed the fucking locks.
You bang on the door for an hour. You leave, come back, keep banging, but no one ever answers. You've never felt this desperate or uneasy, but every time you come back and see her by the window, you nearly lose all of your composure. It isn't fair. She doesn't belong to him. He can take years from you, take your money, take your sanity, but he won't take her. You'll come back every single day. You'll become a nuisance. You'll never let him relax. Until he gives her back to you, he will never know peace.
A single day passes before you decide it's time to take drastic measures.
The nearest military base is situated a good distance away, but not so far that you won't drive to its neighboring city. There's a small main road with a few local shops, including a few restaurants, a bookstore, a coffee shop, and the crown jewelâa pub.
It's just after supper time when you ring the bell above the door walking inside. On a Friday evening, it's lively, packed close with warmth and tall pints and plastic baskets full of chips and greasy fingerfoods.
There's a lot of military around here. You can tell by their haircuts and the way they chug their glasses; but you aren't looking for baby-faced rookies with too much pent-up aggression. You're looking for the meanest guy in the room, and that means someone with scars and someone who goes cloudy behind the eyes when you ask him how he's gotten back from where he's been.
That man is sitting at the far booth with his back to the wall. A place where he can have an eye on the rest of the room at all times. Big, gloved hand wrapped around a sweating glass, gaze focused on the foam of his beer as he pretends to listen to whatever the red-cheeked man across from him is laughing about.
You ask the bartender what they're drinking and order another round, picking up each glass and making your way towards their table. You'd be nervous if you weren't so determined. You stand awkwardly beside the table before his friend notices you there.
"Tha' fer us, bonnie?"
He juts his chin out at the drinks you're holding, and you set them down with a nervous smile.
"Yeah," you look between them. You fixate on the big guy, who barely squints at you over his drink, and you bite your lip. "I was hoping you had room for one more."
His friend cackles, "aye. Always fer a pretty face."
"Cute," you swallow. "ButâŠI wasn't really talking to you."
The bigger one sits up at that. He leans back in the booth, rolling out his shoulders, and you hop up onto the seat next to him. His friend seems to get the message, picking up his new drink and tipping it towards you before taking a long drink of it and going to find a warm spot at the bar.
"Lookin' for advice or a fuck?"
"Neither," you say softly. "You're big, yeah? Are peopleâŠgenerally afraid of you?"
He laughs, and when he wipes at his masked face, you see a glimpse of a tattoo sleeve that adorns his massive left arm.
"Suppose."
"Great. How much for you to be my bodyguard for a few hours?"
He kisses his teeth under the mask, and then he turns his head to look down at you. His eyes are half-lidded, the skin looking a little greasy under the eye-black smudged there, but he's so calm and collected and amused. You've amused him; you're entertaining him. It's the most interesting thing that's happened to him all week, and you hope you're keeping his attention.
"Wot's tha' include?"
"It's gonna be illegal," you mumble, biting your bottom lip. "Just a little bit."
"Tha's my specialty, love."
"Not murder," you clarify, and he just shrugs. "JustâŠa little breaking and entering. Maybe some intimidation."
"'s Friday night, swee'eart, at least offer me somethin' fun."
"This isn't funny," you suck in a shaky breath. "It'sâŠ" You look down at the sticky pub table, swallowing again. You dig your nails into your own legs to keep your composure. "I need to get something back. Something that belongs to me. So it's not reallyâŠit's not really stealing."
A pregnant silence falls between you. You fail to keep the tears at your lash line back, and you quickly use the back of your hand to wipe your face gently. You think about your cat scratching for you on the other side of the window. You think about her sweet face; you think about Michael forgetting to feed her in the mornings as he usually did, and how he never changed the water filter in time even when you asked him to.
"'m Simon."
The low timbered voice breaks you out of your inner spiral. You look up at him again, and when you meet his eyes, you're finally able to let out a breath of relief. You don't know why, but there's something extremely soothing about sitting next to him. About being in his vicinity. He's so large and takes up so much space, but it's warm there, and he's not as mean as his outer layer might suggest. He's calm, and the way he presents himself tells you that it is not by luck that he's still sitting beside you.
You tell him your name, and his gloved hand touches under your chin.
"Olright, love. Lead the way."
Every time you have ever come back to this apartment, you have met the closed door with dread. A little fear. You feel none of that; not with the apparition at your back. You knock on the window beside the door, and like always, she appears. She meows on the other side, her eyes wet as she scratches and sniffs. You look over your shoulder at Simon who tilts his head to the side.
"This wot he stole?"
You look back at her on the other side of the window, shrugging.
"No," you say softly. "But it's all that matters."
The jiggling of metal brings your attention back to him. Simon is at the door, a multi-tool in one hand, and he's focused intently on working the doorknob until you hear the sound of a lock turn and then the door opens. The chain on the door jangles just as Simon opens it slightly, and you watch with rapt attention as he sticks his arm inside for just a few seconds, and then he swings the door open wide.
You push past him, reaching for the cat. She meows loudly, coming right to you, and you coo as you bend and pick her up from the floor. Loud purrs and sweet chirps follow as you hug her to your chest. You pet her little head, turning towards the living room. You used to keep her carrier behind the couch, and you find it as you go searching for it, exactly where you left it. You slip her inside and zip it up.
"What the fuck is this?"
You freeze, standing up straight and turning. You're caught, definitelyâyou knew he must have been home by the fact that the chain was latched, but you tried the nice way. You weren't going to get your cat back by being patient, not anymore.
"I'm just getting her, I'llâŠI was just leaving."
"Fuck no, you broke into my flat."
"Our flat," you snap back, putting the straps of the carrier over your shoulder. "And I'm leaving."
Michael looks like he's going to take a step towards you, but then he notices the dark shape in the corner of the room. He frowns a little, squinting.
"Who the bloody hell is that?"
You turn just in time to see Simon take a small step forward. The sudden movement seems to terrify Michael; he scrambles backwards into the kitchen counter, making the plates behind him fall off the counter and shatter onto the ground. He nearly trips over himself trying to get distance, and Simon seems to think it's very funny. He laughs, chest heaving, and he looks down at you as he gets closer.
"Flopping like a fuckin' fish, he is, in'he?"
Michael looks around frantically before he finds a pair of prongs. His hand shakes as he holds the pointy end towards Simon, spitting at him.
"Get the fuck out of my flat! T-The both of you!"
Simon's reaction tells you that maybe he has a few wires crossed in his head. He steps forward instead of away, laughing still, and you watch warily as he tilts his head to the side and nods his head towards Michael.
"Go on, then, mate," Simon taunts. "Try it."
Like a fool, Michael obliges. You flinch when Michael swings, but Simon tilts his body at just the right moment to dodge. He smacks Michael's arm, but he tries againâand like playing footie with a child, the weapon is now in Simon's hand, and then ohâ
Michael's screaming as it pierces through his open palm.
He bleeds a lot less than you thought he might. Sadly, also, his blood is as red as yours. You thought he might be a little less pathetic at a moment like this. It is a gift, however, to see him bursting into tears as Simon grips the collar of his shirt and leans over him.
"Lot like you like to take things that aren't yers, tha' right?" Simon spits. "Like to punish and intimidate and fuckin' take, even if ya aren't owed."
"Pleaseâplease just get out, take her, fuckin' please!"
"Oi, wot's all this?" Simon snorts. "Now yer pissin' where you stand cause it got too real, eh? Got wot was comin' ta you? Reckon it's not like you thought. Reckon you thought she'd come hat in hand, beggin' for wot she deserves, but you wouldn't know good cunt even if it sat on yer face, yeah?"
"PleaseâŠ"
"Simonâ" You try, but he tsks, shaking his head.
"Nah, love, he's gonna learn," Simon murmurs. "Have you learned?"
"Yes," Michael squeaks, and you're not longer staring at the blood dripping on the hardwood, you're oogling at the giant man standing in what once was your kitchen that's starting to look more delicious by the second.
"Good," Simon breathes. "I know where ya lay yer head, mate. Know where ta come back if things aren't quiet on her end. You'd do well to remember tha'."
He releases Michael with a shove; Michael sinks to the floor, hands trembling, and Simon makes his way towards you to put a hand to your back and turn you around towards the front door.
"Need anythin' else?" Simon asks. You're too speechless to say anything, so all you do is shake your head. You clutch the carrier closer; she meows from inside the bag, and Simon nods his head towards outside so that you start moving. The door shuts behind you both, and then you're being led to his truck, ushered into the passenger seat, precious cargo on your lap as you breathe a huge sigh of relief.
The drive is quiet, but a comfortable quiet. You don't realize until a few streets over that you're smiling; a big, sparkling grin that's taking over your face, and when Simon rolls his truck to a stop at a red light, you lean over the center console and give his masked cheek a big, wet kiss of gratitude.
"Got a death wish or somethin'?" Simon turns to look at you, glaring from under the mask. It's so hard to be scared of him. He just put the fear of God into your terrible ex-boyfriend so you could get your precious cat back; he scared him shitlessâliterallyâand he did it looking this good.
"Is that what a kiss gets me?" You ask. You slide your hand down his bicep, swallowing the drool when you feel just how solid and beefy he is under that hoodie. He fills it out too well. He must be so fucking handsome under that mask; there's no way he wears it for anonymity, he must be so hot, he wears it so he doesn't have to swat away all the boys and girls when they usually buzz around him like moths to lightâ
Maybe death is really this sweet. This good. Your cat is snoozing, safe and sound, in your bedroom with a full belly. The lights are on low; soft orange glows from well-placed lamps, giving the entire living room a warm feeling. There's a man on your couch with his belt unbuckled, mask halfway up his face as he pants because his cock is in your mouth, and he tastes like sweet, sweet victory.
"Ahhâfuck."
You nuzzle your nose up the length. He's so hard; you don't think a man has ever been this hard for you. He's leaking so pretty, dribbles down the length that you catch with the tip of your tongue, forcing him to hiss and spit and bite his knuckles. He keeps his hips still, but his hand around your hip squeezes the flesh there nice and tight, borderline bruising when you suck his tip a little too softly. You lick a stripe around the head before leaning back up towards him, and his hand around your hip curls against the back of your neck as you share a messy, wet kiss.
You twist your wrist, pumping his cock with a gentle glide of your palm, and he grits his teeth between kisses, touching his forehead to yours.
"Oll tha' for a cat, yeah?"
It is true. You did do it for her. But you did it for you, too.
"Not just the cat," you whisper, smoothing your thumb along the tip. He kisses you again, slower this time, and you groan into his mouth as you squeeze your thighs together. "Look at youâŠ"
"Fuckâ" Simon grunts, and his other hand finds the base of his cock, squeezing hard, and you giggle as he scrunches his nose. "Don't say shit like tha'."
You can't with his mouth on your cunt. He's laying flat on his back on the couch, legs too long to fit. Boots against your blanket, you'll whine to him about it later, but now both thighs are on either side of his head, and he's slurping with a hot tongue. You cup both sides of his head, dragging your hips, and while normally you'd think twice about dropping your weight on someone like this, the ease at which he hoisted you up his chest tells you Simon's a big, big boyâand he can handle whatever you give him.
"Gonna let me handle things from now on," Simon murmurs. He kisses the inside of your thigh, and you yelp when he smacks one side of your ass. He's waiting for an answer, and you took too long to give one.
"Y-Yeah," you breathe, leaning your head back. You feel yourself dripping between the legs, flooding his mouth, but he curls his tongue all the same. Uses two thumbs now as he hooks his arms around your thighs to pull the wet, sensitive skin back so he can drink what he's owed. He said he takes payment like this, getting his fill; he says he's never really satisfied until there's cum in his mouth and some in your cunt, and he's not gonna leave your flat before becoming familiar with those two, mutually non-exclusive events.
"Yeah, y'r pretty, olright," Simon laughs, but there's no more humor when he bounces you on his cock. Oh, he hurts a little. He told you he might, but then you're really there, knees on either side of him as you clutch onto the meat of his shoulders and hope to God he doesn't let you go. "Told you tha' you'd feel it, didn't I?"
"Yeah," you whisper, cupping that face of his, half-revealed to you, and you rub your thumbs down his scarred cheeks. Gorgeous, even with eyes that dead inside. "'s big."
"Don'tâ" He snarls, holding down your hips, shaking his head. "Wot did I say about sayin' shit like tha', eh?"
Life has spoiled you. Life is too good. Life is your pet curled up between your pillows and warm beneath the blankets, and life is fucking the sanity out of big, pudgy military men with blood under their fingernails and their breath stuck in their throat. You've rendered Simon to nothing but grunts and sputters. He's focused on keep the rhythm, arms clasped around your middle as he fucks up into you and pants into your neck. You reach for the back of the couch, digging your nails in, and all you can do is cry and take it as he keeps bringing you back down again and again and again.
The kiss you share is starved. You're so hungry, your hand slipping under the mask to cup the back of his head, and he draws your hips down and holds you there as he licks into your mouth and relishes in the pulsing of your cunt. This is what he fights for, maybe.
Not the glory. Not for the good of others. Not for Price and his self-guided moral compass, not for Laswell and her targets, not for revenge, not for blood, not to save the world. It's so he can come back here onto home soil and fuck a gorgeous girl without ever being interrupted by the sound of anything but her.
Her. You. Whatever she is, what you are, what you will eventually beâit manifests itself in the very room he's in, and he's got it between his teeth, and he won't be letting go for anything.
Nothing at all.
He's smoking a cigarette by the open window as she makes tea. He smiles, just barely, with teeth a little yellow when he sees you burn your hand a little as you pour the water into a misshapen mug.
"Olright?" He asks. The mugs shake a little as you bring them back into the room, precarious as you overfilled the mugs. He takes one from you and takes a long sip, flicking the cigarette out as he watches you get settled. You set your mug down on the coffee table, leaning forward to give him that same sweet, wet kiss on his cheek.
"Never better."
Belly full. Eyes bright. You are nothing like the woman that propositioned him just a few hours ago. A monotone, piss-drink evening, and then a scared, desperate girl asking him if he was willing to do something a little off the books.
Fucking finally. The world was just starting to get a little too dull.
It's the middle of the night when he hears the creak of a door. The sound of a little bell. You're laid out on your side, having just fallen asleep. The movie on the telly still plays, but Simon has turned the volume down. The light flickering from the screen is enough that he sees the cat trot into the room, eyes searching for you and seeing the two of you settled there.
She comes over slowly, sniffing the toes of Simon's boots, and then she closes her eyes as she rubs her face against his leg. Low purring, headbutts, and then she's putting a paw to his boot and looking up at him with the same big, wet eyes her mother has. Simon reaches down, scratching under her chin, and then she's curling up on his lap, little head next to yours as he leans back and takes it in. The sight for sore eyes. The thing that makes his medals and his stripes and all the money in the world look worthlessâcheap.
"Yeah," Simon takes another sip of his tea. "This'll do."
Synopsis: porn w/o plot. Jason being attentive and showering you with attention and devotion.
Warnings: slight teasing (r receiving), sex, soft dom jason, body worship, nipple play (r receiving), making out, cunnilingus (r receiving), fingering (r receiving). Let me know if I missed anything!
Jasonâs lips traveled from your cheek, to the spot under your ear, lingering a bit to take in your perfume and the way you shivered ever so subtly. His hands were warm as the spanned around your waist, thumbs caressing your ribs before tugging off your shirt to reveal your perky breasts held up by a lacy bralette that offered a tantalizing view with the lace and intricate bows.
âTell me you didnât stand in front of the mirror wondering what Iâd say when I saw you in this.â Jason smirked softly, unable to help himself from being smug and fluster you a bit.
âSo what if I didâŠâ You huff halfheartedly at him for his teasing to which he chuckles and lightly pinches your chin to make you face him. Lips brushing against each other, the tips of your noses nudge against the other lightly. âSo pretty. My gorgeous girl.â With that, he slowly slips his tongue inside your mouth, kissing you languidly and passionately.
The making out makes you dizzy, unable to do anything but reciprocate and tug him closer by the front of his shirt. It never failed to make him smirk into the kiss.
His fingers expertly pinch the clasp of your bralatte, causing the soft cotton to release your tits from their prison and the next thing you know is youâre gasping as he trails his fingers along your sides and carefully cradle your tits in his palms.
âYouâre the prettiest thing Iâve ever touched.â He mutters softly and reverently, you think he didnât mean to say it out loud with how heâs gently kneading each breast and tracing the rosy nipples with his thumbs. You moan softly, immediately heâs obsessed with getting to hear it again. So he lowers his head, pressing a slow and open-mouthed kiss on the valley of your breasts to create anticipation. His mouth is warm on your left breast, he canât hide the way his stomach flutters when you involuntarily arch your back just enough to push your tits out, how your fingers already threaded into his hair as if preparing for the pleasure you know heâll bestow upon you.
âHngh, ah, JayâŠâ the moan you let out embarrassingly eager, head tipped back as your fingers twisted in his hairâ not pulling hard just yet.
He hums softly, closing his mouth on your nipple and allowing his tongue to lap repeatedly around it, against it, back and forth and top to bottom. It wasnât fast and hard, it was too thorough and deliberate. Almost as if he wanted you soaking wet before he was done with you.
You whimper breathlessly, gasp and twitch, squirm and pull at his hair once he finally lets go of your tit, lavishing the other with the same amount of attention.
Your panties slick and sticking against your cunt by now.
You nearly slump back against the headboard once heâs done and satisfied with the way your nipples were rosy and swollen prettily.
You whine so sweetly against his mouth once he kisses you, unable to resist your needy expression. âLook at you, princess.â He breathed, kissing the corner of your mouth now and speaking against your skin. His hands pushing back your hair to fully admire you beneath him, gaze tracing every inch of skin uncovered until he sees the damp spot on your panties. His cock twitches, his mouth waters, and his eyes darken with desire as he situates you on your back, the silky sheets of his bed comforting against your skin. You looked so angelic in his eyes, sprawled out comfortably on his bed, chest rising and falling with heavy breathes of anticipation, cutely gripping the sheets loosely to brace yourself for his touch.
âRelax for me, legs apart. Good girl.â
You get even more wet. If thatâs possible.
âI can smell how much you need me.â He hums, getting comfortable by leaning down, shoulders flat against the sheets and face buried against your sopping wet cunt.
In classic Jason fashion, he places a sloppy open mouthed kiss on the center of the pantiesâ right above the damp spot. He moans at the taste of you, eyes half lidded as he rasped âFuckin' perfect," before dragging one slow, torturous lick from bottom to top, tongue flat and warm against your slit before sealing his lips around your clit with a muffled groan of satisfaction.
He doesnât tease for too long; for one, youâre wound up with frustration and two, his impatience is getting to him. He is incapable of resisting tasting you, after all.
Your back arches, one hand grips the pillow above your head while the other tugs at his hair, rewarding you with a groan vibrating against your pussy.
He slides off your ruined panties and throws them behind his shoulder, eagerly returning to his meal like he was starved for months.
His mouth seals over your clit, tongue brushing and slowly flicking the spot under while sucking and releasing the aching bud over and over as though he had all the time in the world. To make matters worse, he was grunting and groaning as if *he* was the one getting his brain melted.
âH-ahhh, fuck⊠f-feels sâgood.â You whimper helplessly, thighs involuntarily cushioning his head when he rubs your clit with his thumb and his tongue devours your folds. He licks up your slit, gathering your wetness before sliding it inside.
Your eyes roll back, pleasure shooting up your spine as he works you over with earnest, deliberate strokes. You feel his digits easily entering you, ribbing your lips at first before they push inside you gently. His lips reunite with your clit, not allowing a moment of rest for the puffy bud.
âThis pretty little pussy just never seems to get enough of my mouth, does it?â He asks rhetorically, not expecting an answer and not giving you a chance to answer anyway.
He sets a rhythm; thrust hard and slow, lick up your clit, rub the tips of his fingers against your inner walls, suck your clit into the warmth of his mouth with a bit more force.
Delivering blow after blow, it becomes impossible to form a thought as you push your hips against his face and your walls flutter and you keenâ signaling he found your g-spot.
He massages, rubs, caresses the spot with relentless determination while his tongue works your pussy tirelessly.
âAhngh! C-cumminggg!â You babble and squirt into his mouth with an incoherent cry of his name.
âYeah? Look at you,â he murmured against your pussy with awe. âtaking my fingers *so well*.â
With a firm suck and well timed curl of his digits inside you, he gets you to cum hard enough that you squirt. âYou look so pretty when you cum.â
Eagerly, he slurps up every last drop. Licking gently and ensuring he doesnât waste any of your precious cum. He kisses your inner thighs, tracing the valley of your breasts with his lips, he meets your lips in a tender kiss.
âMm, you okay?â His hands guide your limp legs off his shoulders and back to the mattress, wrapping one arm around your waist while he cradled the side of your face with the other. He caressed your cheekbone, entirely gone for you. Which was evident in his dilated gaze, the way he softened with you around.
âMâfine, Jay.â You breathlessly answer, turning to nuzzle into his palm, effectively giving Jason a heart attack.
âLove you,â he murmured quietly, leaning in to steal a kiss from your kiss swollen lips. âSo fucking much.â
It wasnât often he got so open that it made your heart ache with tenderness. But when it did happen, youâd cup his face like he was precious and kiss him with twice as much love.
âLove you more.â
âą
âą
âą
A/N: I stayed up until 6 am to write this. Thatâs how much I love my readers!! (Ps. I have finals coming up soon and Iâll try to write as much as I can. Pls donât hesitate to send requests đŐ Üž.ËŹ.ÜžŐđŠŻ)
jason todd x fem!reader
summary: you finally decide to approach the cute guy you've been eyeing in the bookstore
contains: fluff, meet cute, pre-relationship, nerding out over authors
word count: 1k
a/n: first dc fic kinda nervous
You had seen him around your local bookstore before, always in the classics section. The white streak in his hair is what caught your attention initially, that and his massive build. He must have been at least 6'2 and was always wearing a leather jacket, most of the time it was beat up and brown. Youâd always wanted to talk to him, maybe ask for his number if you were brave enough, but you kept chickening out. Today was the day however. The classics section was empty except for the two of you, and you slowly shuffled over to be browsing the same shelf as him.Â
Clearing your throat quietly, you asked âBig Austen fan?â while maintaining eye contact with the book you were reading.Â
âUh, Iâm just getting into it, tryna find my first one,â he replied. His voice was deep and rough, and he sounded like a smoker. Not too scratchy to scare you off, but just enough to add a bit of an edge to his voice.Â
âYou should read Emma,â you suggested after a beat. You were facing each other now, you leaning against the shelf and him upright with a copy of Pride & Prejudice in his hands.
âNot Pride & Prejudice? Thatâs what I hear about the most.â
You considered this for a moment before saying, âItâs the most popular, and a good book, but I donât think itâs the best for getting into classics. Emma is more humorous and approachable I think.âÂ
âOh, this isnât my first classic,â he said, a flush coming to cover his cheeks. You berated yourself silently in your head, you knew that he loved classics. You had literally only seen him in this section. In your defense though, he really didnât look like the type of guy to be into classic literature.
Hoping you hadnât offended him, you asked âWho do you read then?âÂ
âHemmingway, the BrontĂ«sâŠI liked Alcott,â he listed.Â
âOh I love Little Women,â you smiled at the mention of the novelâs author. His face softened slightly at this. âHave you seen the 2019 movie? By Greta Girwig?â
âUh, no, no I havenât. Iâm not a huge movie guy.â He frowned, a part of him hoping that wouldnât turn you off of him, but you still seemed intrigued. Jason Todd had seen you around before as well and always found you cute, but he wasnât the type of guy to just approach girls. He wasnât as easily confident and charismatic as his brother Dick Grayson, and he harbored a lot of guilt from his time after the Lazarus Pit.Â
âThatâs a shame,â you said. âI love movies, itâs definitely worth watching.â
âWell Iâll have to check it out,â he added.
âYeah,â you panicked slightly. The conversation was lulling but you werenât sure if you were going to get another chance with him. Scrambling, you asked, âSo why Austen? Your girlfriend managed to persuade you or something?âÂ
It was a shot in the dark but you also didnât want to try and keep him here if he was already taken.Â
He laughed lightly. âNo, no girlfriend.â He looked conflicted for a moment before adding, âYou?â
âOh me? No, I donât have a girlfriend either,â you smiled coyly.
âBoyfriend then?â he shot back.
âNope,â your smirk was evident now and you felt more confident.
âInteresting.âÂ
God, did this guy not know how to hold a conversation with a woman? you thought to yourself. He wasnât boring or uninterested by any means, but he wasnât giving you much to work with either. Again, you found yourself blindly speaking in hopes of extending the conversation.Â
âVeryâŠâ you started, adjusting your position on the bookshelf to lean a bit closer to him. âHey, maybe you need a Jane Austen expert to talk about that book with then. You know, sheâs hard to get into.â You were lying through your teeth and he knew it, Jane Austen was not a difficult author to understand by any means. All you could hope was that he took it as flirting and not you being illiterate.Â
âOh really? I wasnât aware she was so complex,â the man smirked, thankfully catching onto your sarcasm.
âYep, Dostoevsky really pales in comparison.â This earned you a laugh from him and you couldnât help but smile yourself. âNo, honestly, sheâs a worthwhile author to get into. Sheâs really unique and hides a lot of her philosophy and intelligence behind romances.âÂ
Jason smiled again, glad to be speaking to someone who actually cares to delve into the deeper meaning behind the ink. âSounds like youâre the expert I need then.â
âSounds like it,â you grinned widely.Â
âAny chance I could get your number then?â he asked, his voice wavering a bit with nerves. But upon seeing your face light up, he added with confidence, âFor research purposes of course.â
âOf course,â you smiled and grabbed the phone from his hand.Â
It was a small, outdated device that came from Wayne Industries. The screen was cracked in one corner and the case was a simple dark red. Smirking to yourself, you typed âcute girl from bookstoreâ as the name in the contact before adding your number. You returned the phone to him with a grin.
âEnjoy the bookâŠâ
âJason.â
âJason,â you repeated, the name rolling off your tongue with ease. You held out your hand and offered him your own name. His hands were warm and calloused, and much larger than your own.Â
âNot âcute girl from bookstoreâ?â he teased, glancing down at the name in the contact.
âOh well I wasnât going to be so forward but if thatâs what you think of me, then by all means,â you replied.Â
Jason laughed and the sound seemed to calm your nerves. He promised to text you later as you bid goodbye, explaining that your lunch break was coming to an end. As you walked away from the book store you felt your phone buzz in your pocket.
xxx-xxx-xxxx
hey itâs jason
what time do you get off work?
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simon 'ghost' riley x f!reader | soulmate!au | 18.8k (oops)
Ghost didnât want a soulmate, and he was sure, if they existed, that they didnât want him either.
cw; soulmate!au in which soulmates share scars, references to self-harm, lots of talk about scars, angst, fluff, references to domestic abuse and past violence, references to simon's past, descriptions of pain, military inaccuracies, miscommunication, touch aversion, reallllly slow slowburn, ghost being sort of really bad and weird at affection
Simon didnât remember how he got every scar on his body.Â
The big ones, the important ones, sure. He remembered them all too well, even through the haze of pain and fatigue that often hung thickly around their reception.Â
But there were too many to account for. To remember the particulars of each slash and burn and gunshot wound was a losing battle. Heâd long since given up on keeping track of them. Little lines on the sides of his fingers, stretchmarks on the backs of his biceps, winged fans of a burn on the side of his thigh, a pale line along the point of his elbow that he might as well have been born with.
There were ones from further back, too. Scars that time and pain had eroded the precision of the memory, but not the feeling. Cigarette burns on his forearms, a necklace of animal teeth on his side, a craggy line across his hip, accompanied by the shadowy memory of hand reaching for him, and not being quick enough to duck out of the way.Â
They all meshed together into the hard patchwork of scar and muscle his body had wrought itself into.
Almost none of them could be helped, out of his control, out of his hands.
They were a catalogue of his life, a story traced on his skin.
Stamped, more like. Branded.Â
Survived.Â
And soulmates shared scars.Â
Their hurt was his; his hurt was theirs. Literally or metaphorically, he wasnât quite sure. Simon had so many, spent so much time in pain, it was impossible to know if any of them didnât belong to him originally. Â
He didnât like the thought of someone sharing his scars, having felt what he did. Possessive of them and the pain in a strange way.Â
Itâs ironic, then, that he should be able to find his soulmate more easily than the average unmarred person, and wanted to do nothing of the sort. Simon dismissed the whole thing as drivel a long time ago, anyway. If they did exist, if they werenât just incredibly rare instances of luck, Simon was sure that he hadnât been afforded one.Â
There was guilt, too, settled somewhere deep inside him, that someone had to endure it alongside him. It was easier to believe heâd been left out of the whole thing.Â
Better he was alone.Â
The likelihood of finding that person was slim. It almost never happened. Eight or so billion people swanning around the planet would do that. A one in eight billion chance.Â
A grand, cosmic joke. The unfairness of it drove some people crazy, drove them to do insane things to increase a probability that couldnât be alteredâto know that person probably existed somewhere and yet know that they would probably never run across them.
A trend of self harm cropped up online every few years, healed over self inflected wounds posted in forums of people seeking their other, fated, half. The presumption being that they were being desperately searched for in turn. Â
Idiotic. Determined. Fallibly human.
And taboo. Most saw it as circumventing fate.Â
Violently frantic for the thing Ghost had been unwillingly given. A way to find them, or, at least, easily identify them. And he never would.Â
But, sometimes, he wondered.Â
He tried to picture the imprint of a person somewhere out in the world wearing his wounds, suffering his losses. The thought would circle his brainstem in an unrelenting loop, a bright fish whispering around the perimeter of its bowl before it dissipated in lieu of something more pressing.Â
It was always there, though, waiting to be grappled with again.Â
He always came up blank. Nothing but a shadow in his mind where a person should be. Fitting, typical. Â
It was a cruelty he couldnât imagine, somehow. Someone being fatefully, inescapably afflicted with him.Â
Simon didnât want a soulmate anyway, and he was sure, if they existed, that they didnât want him either.Â
If there was someone out there, someone wandering around with his scars on their skin, he was certain they hated him already.Â
He didnât particularly believe in fate; life had taught him not to. He believed in himself, his capabilities, planning and contingencies. And Simon didnât relish the thought of something he couldnât control, someone holding the other end of his corded, deformed soul, like a leash they could tighten and use to yank him to his knees. Compromised, vulnerable.Â
It wouldnât happen; the margin for discovery was so small it was practically nonexistent.Â
He blamed Soap, then, for tempting fate.
Ghost listened to Johnny yammer on, the sound of his voice louder than usual in the rattling dark belly of the transport plane home. The glow of green light, the roar of engines, the jangle of gear.Â
It was an irritating, and sometimes endearing, quirk of Johnnyâs that he couldnât stop talking in the post-op cortisol and adrenaline drop, his words a smeared haze of jumbled thoughts spoken aloud for hours afterward.
The notion of a soulmate was at the front of Soapâs mind, not for the first time. Heâd always seemed to enjoy the idea of it, and find some comfort in it, particularly after a close call. There was someone waiting for him, somewhere, after all, it couldnât all come to nothing yet.  Â
Simon glanced out the window, watched the sea below morph into land.Â
A yellow network of light winked below, a sea of reverse stars swimming in the black.
âLucky that way, Lt,â Johnny declared with finality, finally winding down, sounding exhausted. âFindinâ âem will be easier.âÂ
Ghost glanced over, the first time in nearly an hour that heâd acknowledged the conversation beyond a hum and a nod. âWhat do you mean?âÂ
Soap gestured to his scarred chin, then his temple. âKnow âem straight away, wouldnât I?â Â
Simonâs own thoughts spoken out loud; his hopes to never see his own scars reflected back at him turned on its head.Â
Johnny made it sound like a good thing, instead of the nightmare it was.Â
No, he thought for the nth time in his life, not that, not for him.Â
But heâd always had an extraordinary knack for beating the odds.Â
.
.
.
The base was a constant flurry of activity, a relentlessly buzzing hive of people. There were very few places that skirted away from the general chaos of life on a military base, but Simon had catalogued them allâthe field behind the barracks when drills were not being run, the concrete service walkways beneath the base, crowded with spiderwebs and dust, the cool, sterile medical wing, and, the orderly administration offices.Â
Each place had caveats.Â
The service walkways were the most reliably quiet, but Simon hated being underground, hated the claustrophobia of it, like some part of him would always be clawing at black earth, and so usually avoided it.Â
Soap had found him smoking behind the barracks once and now regularly joined Simon there.Â
The medical wing could be crowded and frenzied, depending on the day.Â
The administration offices were practically serene in comparison. Neat file folders, tidy desks, windows that let in the watery, gray English sun. Square offices with their doors propped open, conference rooms bathed in the light of glowing intel reports, data convergences, and map overlays, uniform gray walls and floors.Â
The admin wing only occasionally spasmed into restless activity if an emergency op was underway or about to be, and if that happened, Ghost was usually already swept up in it himself, probably already long gone.Â
A spare office stuffed away at the end of the hall with the name plate removed technically belonged to him. A mostly unused space he sometimes finished reports in but, more often than not, sat empty.Â
He preferred to haunt the corridors, observe the more peaceful, inner workings of the military, breathing in the quiet air for five minutes at a time. It gave his perpetually over taxed nervous system, his forever-in-fight-or-flight-mode body, to relax, if even it was only an increment or two. The lightning was softer, the constant bark of orders and drills, the snap of gunfire, the general loudness of the rest of the place, was muted and far away.
Simon knew of all of the staff and their precuilaritiesânames, ages, birthdates, minor feuds among each other, immediate family members, previous posts, favorite foods, habits, complaints about the buildingâs irregular temperatures and the pervasive scent of diesel. It wasnât information he necessarily collected on purpose. Gleaned over years of half heard conversations, glimpses of photos on desks. They, like the medical staff, didnât often change, not like the revolving door of soldiers and operators.Â
It was a regular, routine, quiet place.Â
So it would be difficult for even the most oblivious person not to notice when the familiar order of the place was interrupted.Â
Soft, dandelion light flooded the hall from a doorway that had always before been shut tight.
The scent of an unfamiliar perfume lingered in the hall in a feathery streak, oakmoss and lavender. It settled hard in his lungs, made his footsteps slow slightly, caution prickling at the back of his neck.Â
The click of ceramic being sat on wood, the soft shuffle of files, tapping of computer keys emanated from within the now open office. The faintest notes of bubblegum pop floated by, at odds with the chill, still air.Â
Inside, you were hidden behind two massive computer monitors, the very top of a pair of lilac headphones just visible over the rim. Plants in colorful painted terracotta pots lined the window to your left absorbing what they could of pale winter light, a thick blanket was thrown over the back of a chair in the corner, a jumble of bright, hand crocheted squares. A brass floor lamp with a circular shade sat behind your desk and drooped forward like the antenna of a giant radio, or a bug, casting a delicate halo of light around you like a protective ward.Â
There was something. . .lambent that emanated around the room, that had nothing to do with the ridiculous lamp.Â
Simon hovered in the doorway, in the shadow of the dim hall, just to get a glimpse of your face. Start a mental file on you, begin his careful catalog. Something to match the color and light to.Â
It was a surprise to you both, then, when you glanced up and caught him at it.Â
You stood hastily, headphones sliding down your neck when the cord jerked taut, the tinny sound of pop echoing loudly from them until you slammed your fingers down onto the keyboard and silence descended abruptly. âSorry, sir. I didnât see you there. Can I help you with something?âÂ
Simon could only stare at you, a curl of dread snaking its way between his ribs.Â
Johnny was right, then, he would know his own scars anywhere.Â
He would know his own face anywhere.Â
He would, apparently, know you anywhere.Â
Your face was a faded mapping of his own, the same scarring traced with a lighter hand. The same crack over your lips, a line drawn across your cheek, a faded check through your brow, the bridge of your nose bisected, the outline of webbed burn scars crosshatched at the edge of your jaw and shoulder. A jagged, thick line crossed your throat.Â
Despite his legacy marring your face, you were pretty. Beautiful, even, with curious, cautious eyes, one side of your mouth pulled up into a half grin that tugged at the line across your cheek and somehow didnât ruin the brightness of it.Â
You were watching him watch you with a tentative gaze, brows drawing slowly together the longer he stood there staring at you, breathing around the newly minted cavern under his lungs.Â
His eyes met yours again, and as soon as the realization settled in, something clicked violently into place inside his chest, like a missing rib bone had suddenly slotted into the cage around his heart.Â
Pain bloomed hot and tight across his chest, so acute he covered his side, expecting to find a knife inexplicably lodged there. He grunted mutely. The discomfort receded as quickly as it had come, leaving behind a vast hollow just beneath his breast bone. Cavernous, lurching, undone.Â
The hollow hardened into a solid brick of pain.Â
Nausea swept into the back of his throat.Â
âAre you okay?âÂ
He was frozen in the direct line of fire. Your eyes swept over him, fingers curling around a folder on the edge of your desk which you thumbed nervously. You began to lift your other hand, an aborted half movement toward your face that you dropped at the last second. But you didnât avert your gaze. You looked past the mask, past him, and into his eyes.Â
You saw him.Â
Simon was not to be seen.
Ghost didnât get caught, didnât freeze.Â
Didnât feel like an animal trapped in a cage, pinned and weak and panicked.Â
Not anymore.Â
He was a ghost, a shadow, a silentâ
The silence unspooled, thin and fragile as unraveling lace.Â
Your smile widened, a slow, confident thing that stretched across your face crookedly, pulled at your scarred skin as you tilted your head. It was, maybe, the most beautiful thing heâd ever seen.Â
âSir?â
Amusement threaded your voice; a laugh curled like a sleeping animal in your throat.Â
Instead of answering, he faded back into the hall.
As he retreated an uncertain realization prodded at the back of his mind. One wonderful contingency.Â
You had not felt the shift, the world turning horribly on its axis, the pain that radiated hot as a wildfire.Â
You hadnât recognized what he was.Â
And he was going to keep it that way.Â
.
.
.
It felt like there was a hook in his chest, slipped right between his ribs, a constant painful tearing that landed him again and again outside your office door. Like he was a fish on a line, and you held the reel in your fist, totally oblivious to it.Â
He didnât love you, thatâs not how the soulmate bond worked. You were tied together, for some reason, though that reason remained to be seen. Resentment was all he felt, a burning desire to chew his leg out of this trap, to grip the line that bound you and run a knife through it.Â
Better yet, through you.Â
Sever the tie as cleanly as a blade through an artery.Â
One sure way to free himself was your death.Â
It was unusual, but it happenedâheadlines of a soulmate killing their pair because they couldnât tolerate the connection. It was taboo, considering how rare the bond was. The link suffocated them, instead of comforting them.Â
Simon understood the urge.
He thought of your office, the way your back was angled half toward the door, how easily he could slip in and slice your throat open. He had seen and done worse, but the thought of you lying in a pool of blood, let alone at his hands, was so abhorrent and wrong that he doubled over as an acute, sharp pain pinched between his ribs, like someone wriggling their fingers between the bars to claw at his insides.Â
Which irritated him. Things like that didnât bother him, not anymore. At the very least, he was better at handling discomfort than this.Â
It did start him thinking about someone else doing it, though. Slipping quietly into your office and nudging a knife between your ribs, pressing a silenced pistol against your temple, Ghost left to find your cold corpse.Â
It was wrong.Â
He could feel your life wrapped around his fingers, tangled in little ribbons around his wrists. A pulsing, glowing, bright thing. Â
The resentment doubled because he should not care. He didnât know you, trust you; your death should mean nothing. You should mean nothing. Â
Still, he found himself walking the administration wing again the following day, even though the sun was out and itâd be nice to sit behind the barracks and smoke and listen to Johnny rattle on about something or the other when he inevitably showed up.Â
Your door was open again, gold light spilling into the corridor, the low flutter of too loud music in your headphones accompanying it.Â
Simon would never admit it to himself, but he also needed to know that he could remain hidden from you. The shock of your eyes finding his still hadnât left him. It had never happened beforeânot on an op, not about the base, not out among civilians. He blended in, he remained invisible, but you saw him, sensed him, and he needed to know if that was something he had to adjust to. Planning was survival, and you were an unknown factor he needed a method for handling. Â
Simon stepped close to your door, out of the beam of light.Â
Your office was bathed in soft, cream light but not from your antenna bug lamp.Â
Your back was fully turned toward the door, face tilted into the scarce winter sun streaming in the window as you leaned back in your chair. Your eyes were closed, headphones over your ears as he suspected they were.Â
Fuuucking hell.Â
Couldnât see, couldnât hear, back toward the entry point of the room.Â
Your life hung there, trusting, fragile as spun crystal.Â
He waited, but you didnât turn, didnât seem to know he was there. Something in his shoulders uncoiled, tension slowly replaced with an odd sense of calm. The pain in his chest eased for the first time in twenty-four hours, fading to a tender ache.Â
Your lunch, half eaten, laid abandoned on your desk. The blanket that had been on the chair in the corner was swaddled around your shoulders.Â
You yawned, eyes still closed.Â
He waited for you to sense him, glance up, but you seemed unaware of him. He wouldnât admit it then, but he half hoped you would.Â
Ghost backed away, left you to your peace.Â
The weight in his chest intensified again.
He hated you for it.Â
He went back the next day.Â
And the day after that.
.
.
.
Anchor might be a better descriptor.Â
Hook was too violent.
Simon knew what it felt like to have a hook between his ribs, and this feeling was not that.Â
He was satisfied, after weeks of observation as late winter turned to a wet spring, that you did not have a preternatural sense of his presence. In the process, he learned other things.Â
You hated the cold, and your office always seemed to be chillier than you would prefer, blanket perpetually tucked around your shoulders. He watched you fiddle with the radiator one morning, bottom lip caught between your teeth, sigh, and resign yourself to it. He waited for you to complain to your coworkers like everyone else did, to call maintenance to fix it, but you didnât.Â
You liked to sit in the sun, however you could, squinting against the glare of it against your computer screens just to have it on your skin.Â
You hunched over your desk, and clearly had pain in your neck and back because of it.Â
You often stayed later on base than many of the staff and walked out of the building alone late at night.Â
You didnât drink tea, but politely accepted the tea several different coworkers made for you with the very good intention of showing you a proper cup. You drank every drop as you chatted with them, even though you clearly detested it. It didnât show, but Simon could tell. He didnât like that he could, that it was instinctual and nothing else.Â
They were also plying you with shit tea, of course you werenât going to like it. He watched as one bloke let it steep for a full fifteen minutes and then presented you with what must have been the bitterest lukewarm tea to ever pass through the base. An older secretary took the opposite approach and handed you a cup of barely brewed tea with approximately four tablespoons of sugar in.Â
Absolutely bloody foul.Â
Horrific crimes committed in your name, and you swallowed them with a smile.Â
And you smiled a lot. From the tiniest twitch of your lips when you were alone, to a grin so big he could see all your teeth, that your eyes squinched closed.Â
You nearly always had headphones onâwired earbuds dangling from the collar of your shirt as you walked down the hall, or over ear headphones looped around your neck at your desk, usually pop, occasionally 70s rock or alternative spitting from the speakers.Â
You talked a lot, and your voice carried. One of those truisms about Americans, you could be heard long before you were seen even if you werenât being particularly loud. He didnât need to be close to hear you, and he found himself thinking one afternoon good. It would be easier to keep track of you.Â
He liked your voice, anyway, liked your laugh, liked to hear you say English phrases in that accent of yours that made them sound ridiculous.Â
You could likely give Soap a run for a world record of useless chatter. Anyone who walked into your office was subject to your stream of consciousness if they lingered long enough.Â
Lonely, he might have called it. But you were new, to the base, and to the country. Your only connections were those you were attempting to craft with stuffy intelligence officers who sometimes seemed to regard you as below them.Â
He found his thoughts drifting to the sound of your voice once heâd left you for the day, replaying things heâd heard you say in the period of observation he allowed himself, like the tune of a lullaby. It calmed him.Â
The resentment in his chest festered like a badly healed wound. You were nothing but a distraction, a thorn stabbed into his side, stealing his focus from nearly everything that was more important.Â
That used to be more important.Â
Now his every thought was asterisked by you.Â
Distracted.Â
He didnât do well with it.Â
He didnât like that he could feel the newly rended hole in his chest corroding and throbbing when he wasnât near you, suffocating him. Heâd felt worse in his life, so he could mostly ignore it.Â
Simon decided that the nature of the bond was at least neutral. You were not a threat. Â
He was tired, anyway, of constantly thinking about your back to the door, your headphones playing too loudly.Â
After you left one evening in mid spring, he moved your desk.Â
Simon sat in your dark office for longer than he should have, letting the pain ease out of his chest.Â
It was enough to be where you had once been.Â
That was as close as he cared to be.Â
He fixed the radiator before he closed the door again.Â
.
.
.Â
He went by Ghost, you learned eventually.Â
His was a redacted, blacked out name in the files on your computer, so Ghost seemed less a name than a description. You briefly scanned the ops he had been on. It was a horrifyingly long list, most of them totally classified or excised beyond comprehensibility. And those were only the missions you could see, likely his involvement in many ops had been scrubbed entirely.Â
It was clear that he was good at his job, though it left you to wonder what he had been doing in the administration wing of the base, let alone peering into your office like a silent wraith.Â
It should have been terrifying to find him looming in your doorway. His massive frame had blotted out the corridor behind him. Mostly in black, a skull mask covering his face. You hadnât been able to see his eyes in the low lighting. But you had only felt curiosity, apprehension, a delicate wrenching in your gut.Â
Something that a different person might liken to butterflies. Absolutely absurd, but nonetheless true.Â
Fear, afterward, of course, that youâd missed some kind of order or request.Â
It had also been a while since someone stared so openly at you, since youâd felt the urge to duck your head, obscure the scars littered across your skin. You never had before, and you wouldnât have started then. You wore them proudly. Most bore their soulmateâs scars better than their own, and you were no exception.Â
It had become a rarity, really, in recent years that anyone spared you more than a glance. Being surrounded by military personnel who had seen worse, might have had worse on their own skin, meant you didnât stand out.
When you mentioned the incident to Laswell, worried that some kind of disciplinary report, during your first month at this post no less, was headed your way, she had only shook her head. âThatâs just Ghost. He probably didnât say anything. You get used to it.âÂ
The base, especially among the operators, was filled with odd personalities with even odder quirks, so you decided not to question it. You had only nodded, and said, âOkay.âÂ
Laswell had smiled. âYouâll do well here.âÂ
You suspected you were being watched in the weeks following the incident, though you couldnât say why at first. The suspicion was confirmed when you arrived one blissfully sunny spring morning to find your office warm and your desk moved. Your other furniture was rearranged neatly around it. You rounded it, dropping your bag as you went, half expecting to find a note.Â
There was nothing, and you started to rotate it back, a bit irritated, when you paused and sat. The new angle gave you a clear view of the door and window. The sun hit your face without causing a glare on your screens. The monitors had been lowered ever so slightly so you could easily see over them.
You left your desk in its new position. It was better that way.Â
Ghost appeared in your office that afternoon as suddenly as he had left it.Â
You sensed that heâd been there for a long time when you finally noticed him in the doorway, that you were only seeing him because he wanted you to.
You smiled and turned away from a report. A welcome reprieve for your strained eyes and hunched back.Â
âHi. Something I can help you with, Lieutenant?âÂ
This time, he stepped into your office, grasped your offer with both hands.Â
The room seemed to shrink and adjust to his size. He was more massive than you remembered, in height and breadth. His eyes didnât leave yours, a deep blackened honey brown half hidden by skull. Neither of you looked away.
âHave I passed?âÂ
His head tilted ever so slightly. When he spoke his voice was like an iron rod shoved down your spine. Deep and jagged and rough, it settled between your ribs, in the pit of your stomach. âPassed?âÂ
âYour test?âÂ
âThink Iâm testinâ you?âÂ
âYou moved my desk.âÂ
He didnât answer for a long moment, still not dropping your gaze. The silence lasted so long you began to think he wouldnât answer at all. âPractically had your back to the door,â he said eventually, as though that explained it.Â
It conjured the image of Ghost creeping around the base in the dead of night to adjust offices into more tactical configurations and you had to bite the inside of your cheek to keep the giggle in your throat from bubbling out.  Â
You nodded and then shrugged instead. âI guess I donât think about things like that.âÂ
âShould.â
âMaybe.âÂ
âEspecially in the field.âÂ
âI donât do field work.âÂ
He nodded slowly and finally took his eyes off yours, glancing around the room again. When his lashes caught the light, you saw that they were a light blond.Â
âWelcome to sit,â you offered, taking up a pen and a pad of yellow paper. âGhost.â Â
He didnât sit, but he didn't leave either. When he remained mute and motionless, you looked back at your report and continued working, resigned to the new addition to your office.Â
Minutes passed in silence, with only the scratch of your pencil over paper, the tapping of computer keys, for company.Â
All at once, the room sighed, and when you looked up, he was gone.Â
Ghost was strange, slightly off putting.Â
You liked him.
Maybe, you thought, heâd come back.Â
.
.
.
Ghost visited regularly after that.Â
Sometimes he simply stood at the door and watched you work.Â
His boots were so silent that you often didnât know he was there until he was leaving again. It felt as though he often melted into nothing but shadow, but it wasnât an uncomfortable feeling.Â
You didnât feel watched, so much as observed, minded.
But the lengthy silences began to wear thin, so you started talking to him. Â
Talked at him, more like, about anything that came to mind.Â
The shit weather and how cold you always were. Recounted phone calls with your sister and noted things youâd seen on your commute. You told him of your slightly creepy neighbor who would follow you occasionally down high street when you did your weekly shopping trip, but that was probably harmless.
You were sure he wasnât actually listening, his eyes focused somewhere in the middle distance as he stood statuesque in the middle of your office. Â
The visits were occasionally broken up by operations that could last days or weeks, once up to a month. Time passed either way, but you found it passed more easily when you could reliably count on a visit from Ghost. Hearing his voice in staticky communications wasnât the same. A blinking green dot on a map that you tracked just a little more closely than the others.Â
Ghost sat down for the first time toward the middle of a particularly miserable and cold spring afternoon. He sighed as he did, the only sign of any feeling. Almost a resignation in the soft cut of it.Â
You didnât comment on it, just chatted as you usually did, buoyed in a way that you could not explain.Â
He started to bring you coffee, done up to your preference, always when you were hitting the midday lag.Â
In exchange, you left offerings at the edge of your desk. Baked goods, protein bars, chips, sweetsâ which disappeared when you looked away from him. You noted what went first so you could invest in it. Chocolate went more frequently.Â
But Ghost, whether he was listening or not, made you feel less alone. The ache of loneliness in your heart eased, and maybe that said more about you than him.Â
If he was around, he usually slipped in while you ate lunch. He didnât eat with you, the mask never moved, but you began cooking extra in the evenings, leaving tupperware containers at the edge of your desk in addition to brownies wrapped in waxpaper, chocolate chip cookies sprinkled with sea salt. âDonât have to,â he always said.Â
âWant to,â you answered, and then received the empty, clean container from the day before as though it were an offering.
Your office always smelled like tobacco and tea for hours after he left, a comforting combination that you began to wish you could bottle.Â
He didnât appear one day at his usual allotted, precise time. You figured something came up or he finally got tired of you, but he turned up instead late in the afternoon. Â
âSorry,â he said as he sat, without explanation, a paper cup of coffee steaming at the edge of your desk like it appeared there by his will alone. Â
âOh,â you answered. âYou didnât have toââ
âDid,â he said simply. ââave you eaten?â
âYep. Got something for you, too.âÂ
He settled back. âNeighbor still botherinâ you?âÂ
You blinked in surprise, the slightly creepy neighbor had not spoken to you in a few days. âOh. . .IâYou were listening.â
He tilted his head. ââCourse I was, bird.â He leveled you with a look. âSo?â
âNot recently. Not in a couple days.â
âGood. Let us know if he does, yeah?â
Then he sat back and waited, shoulders relaxed as though attending a sermon, but content with silence anyway.Â
When you glanced up from a report a while later, for clarification on a mission detail that he happened to be on, his eyes were closed.Â
It felt akin to having a wolf willingly curl up in your lap, blood wet maw dripping peacefully onto the floor.
.
.
.
When you turned from watering your plants one innocuous spring day, you found Ghost entering your office with a different mask on. A soft black balaclava. You could see his eyes and brows, the bridge of his nose and the thin, bruised skin beneath his eyes.
You froze and then smiled at him, tried hard not to stare. His eyes were always pretty but now you felt you could actually see him. Blond brows and lashes, his irises were lighter, amber honey in the yellow light of your bug lamp, as Ghost had called it one afternoon without a shred of humor.Â
It was raining, and the dim light made the small space cozier than usual. The patchwork blanket was around your shoulders, a ward against the chill bleeding beneath the window.Â
In his usual chair, youâd laid a gift.Â
He pointed to the blanket you had carefully folded there earlier.Â
âItâs for you. I knitted it.âÂ
He froze, hand half extended toward it. You swept past him around your desk again, inundated with the scent of black tea and cigarettes as you went. His was alternating black and dark blue squares to your brightly colored purple and teal. âJust in case you were cold. Youâre always so buttoned up after all,â you joked. âAnd you fixed my radiator this winter. So itâs a thank you, too.â
Ghost only moved it to the back of the chair. You hadnât expected him to take it, really, but his gloved fingers lingered on it for a moment, rubbing the fabric gently. âHow dâyou know it was me that fixed it?âÂ
âWho else would have?âÂ
He grunted. âYou knit?âÂ
âWhen I canât sleep,â you answered. âKeeps my hands and brain busy.â
His brows furrowed, and seeing even that small movement felt like seeing him naked, like seeing something he didnât want you to. You averted your eyes, heat crawling up your neck.Â
âCanât sleep?â His fingers slid off the blanket and he sat.
You shrugged. âMust seem silly to you. You see it with your own eyes. But some of the reports. . . stick with me.âÂ
Ghost considered this for a long moment. âItâs not.âÂ
âWhat?âÂ
âSilly.âÂ
The way he grunted the word made you laugh.Â
âCould I ask you something, Ghost?â
âReckon you just did.âÂ
You rolled your eyes. âAm I allotted only one question?âÂ
âJust two.âÂ
It was. . . funny. You giggled and shrugged. âGuess Iâm shit out of luck.âÂ
âAnd out of questions.â
You laughed again.Â
He surprised you by laughing too. If a low, graveled grunt counted as a laugh. You certainly counted it, a cache of swollen pride bubbling in your stomach. âGo on, then.âÂ
âWhere are you from?âÂ
The levity vanished. His brows lowered. âWhy?âÂ
You shrugged. âJust curious. Iâm not good with all the accents yet. Just canât place you.âÂ
He relaxed back into the chair again, but didn't answer.Â
The pinch of his brows, the tense line of his jaw, remained, his expression considering as he tilted his head back.Â
âWhy do you come here?â You asked instead.Â
This question he answered readily. âItâs quiet.âÂ
âThatâs one way to tell me to shut up.âÂ
He blinked and lowered his chin to meet your eyes. âNot the kind of noise I mean.âÂ
You decided not to take offense at being called noise.Â
You snorted and reached beneath your desk, taking some pride in the fact that Ghost did not tense anymore than usual when you did, withdrawing your lunch.Â
âHungry?â You asked. Â
âTryinâ to see my face?âÂ
You smiled. âNever,â you answered, âNot sure I want to see what youâre hiding under there.âÂ
The rain tapped against the window as you popped the thermal lid off. Â
âWhy are you here?â He asked as you folded your legs beneath you on the chair and tucked the blanket around them. Ghost rose without asking and twisted the knob of the radiator beneath the window a bit higher.
You waved your fork, indicating the office. âFairly positive I work here. But perhaps base security is more lax than I thought.âÂ
He sighed, a long suffering sound. âEngland, smartarse.âÂ
You smile and dig your fork into last nightâs spaghetti bolognese. The steam caressed your face in a warm puff as you lifted a bite. âIâm on loan to Laswell.âÂ
âOn loan?â He asked as he settled back into the chair, broad shoulders pressed to the wall behind him, against the blanket. It slid over his elbow a little, curled over his forearm. He didnât move it.Â
When you lifted your gaze to his, his stare was piercing, brows lowered, furrowed. You imagined he must be frowning. Â
âTemporary replacement for whoever used to be in this office,â you explained. âShe needed someone quickly, who she could trust.âÂ
Ghost folded his arms across his chest, something more tense than usual in the movement. âHow long are you on loan for, then?âÂ
You shrugged, twisted your fork into the noodles. âItâs unclear. So, for now, indefinitely.â You smiled, âHopefully not through another winter, though, I donât think Iâm cut out for the rain and cold.â
His shoulders eased, but only marginally. If it werenât for all the hours heâd passed in your office, you werenât sure you would have caught it at all.Â
âFrom somewhere warm?â
âWarmer than here. Especially in the winter.âÂ
âMust be nice, that.âÂ
âHas its perks. But the summer is its own kind of hell.âÂ
âOne you enjoy.âÂ
âBut of course. I like feeling like Iâm baking alive.âÂ
He snorted again.
You ate in silence for a bit. The quiet had become comfortable between you somewhere along the way, silken and gentle.Â
When you were scraping the last bit of sauce from the bottom of the container, Ghost said, âManchester.âÂ
âHm?â
âWhere Iâm from.â
His voice was low; he wasnât looking at you, eyes trained on the door instead.Â
âManchester,â you repeated, trying to place it on the map of the UK in your mind. âAnd do you all sound sort of likeââ
You were about to say like you have gravel in your mouth but he makes an affected noise, that stiff grunt again. âAre you laughing at me?â
âItâs your fucking accent.â
âMy accent?â You asked incredulously. âHave you heard yourself?âÂ
âGot a thick one, bird.â He imitated your voice. âManchester.â The sharp rhotic r sound was like a gunshot in his mouth, each letter enunciated to the point of being butchered.Â
You scoffed, not bothering to fight your smile. âTakes one to know one, I guess.âÂ
âSuppose it does.âÂ
âFucking Brits,â you said, without any venom. âI canât do anything right according to you all.âÂ
He tilted his head, something predatory in it. It made your heart flutter a little. âWhoâs tellinâ you you canât do something?âÂ
You sighed, long suffering. âMy coworkers. Canât make tea, apparently. I donât care for it and everyone keeps insisting I just make it wrong.â
âThey make it wrong too.âÂ
You groaned. âNot you too.âÂ
Ghost rose to take his leave as you snapped the lid back onto the now empty container.Â
âIâll show you how to make a proper cup sometime.âÂ
You paused, a warm surprise sweeping into your chest, and decided not to linger on this solitary acknowledgement that Ghost would return to your office. âBig fan?âÂ
âI love tea.âÂ
It made you laugh. âOf course, English afterall.âÂ
He nodded, just once, and started toward the door. âGhost?â You called.Â
Ghost turned and you slid another tupperware container across your desk. âFor you.âÂ
He stared at it, for a moment too long, as he always did, like he was telling himself to leave it. âDidnât have to.âÂ
âI know.â You nodded at it again and then then ducked behind your computer screens. âI always want to.âÂ
Ghost moved so silently that you didnât hear or see him take it, but when you looked up again he and the container at the edge of your desk were gone.Â
.
.
.
It should be a good thing.Â
You would be gone soon enough, none the wiser of who Ghost was. Of what you were to each other.Â
But it didnât sit well. It was a new thing to nag at the back of his mind, finding your office empty, you becoming a ghost in your own right. He hated the ache in his chest, the thought of you so far away. He could only assume youâd be stationed back in the US.
The thought festered, burrowed.Â
âLaswell.â
She jumped, hand going beneath her desk before she spotted Ghost in the corner of her office. She sighed and closed her eyes, fingertips rubbing her eyes instead.Â
âGhost,â she sighed, âDonât do that.âÂ
Simon said your name, and Laswell lowered her hands to look at him. âHow long has she got?âÂ
âWhat do you mean?â
âSaid sheâs on loan. I want to know how long.â
Laswell considered him; Ghost waited. He wouldnât explain himself, and Laswell knew that.Â
âMaybe as long as a year.â She tilted back in her chair and asked anyway. âWhy?âÂ
Ghost didnât answer, slipping back out of her office and down the hall.Â
You were still in your office, hunched over the desk, lavender headphones pulled down around your neck. He watched you for a long moment, eyes tracing over scars that belonged to him. It was jarring each time to see pain he experienced threaded over your skin. It made him feel exposed by proxy.
As he watched, you lifted a hand and rubbed your neck with a wince, fingers lingering on the long scar slashed at the base of your throat. The grimace faded from your face and your expression receded into the impassive, blank, focused slate it always settled into as you continued working.Â
When he sat down in your office, you just shot him a tired smile and continued working.Â
He walked you to your car around midnight.Â
âTell us if youâre here this late again,â he said, not looking at you.Â
âGhost,â you said. âItâs almost enough to make me think you like me.âÂ
âDonât get ahead of yourself,â he answered.Â
You just laughed.Â
.
.
.
âTea?âÂ
You jumped, just as Laswell had, only your hand didnât go beneath the desk. Nothing there to reach for, he knew, your vulnerability like a beacon, or a stain.Â
It would need remedied.Â
But first, this.Â
It was the sixth time in two weeks that you were at your desk well past when everyone else had gone home. Â
âJesus Christ.âÂ
âUnfortunately not.âÂ
You laughed; his shoulders eased. âGhost,â you said. âTo what do I owe the pleasure?â You tilted your head. âIâm starting to think youâre spying on me.âÂ
âWhatâre you still doing âere?âÂ
âWhat are you doing wandering around our wing after hours?âÂ
Not a line of questioning he was keen on following. That just being near a place you had been earlier in the day was enough to loosen that fucking tether in his chest. That he was worried incessantly about you being alone at night.
âOfferinâ to make you a tea,â he answered. âObviously.â Â
âObviously,â you echoed. âOf course.âÂ
âYouâre supposed to tell me when youâre stayinâ late.âÂ
âGhost,â you said seriously, lifting your brows, âIâm here late again today.âÂ
âHilarious, you are.âÂ
You giggled again. âAre you really offering to make me tea?âÂ
He nodded. âCâmon then.â
You smiled and shrugged the blanket off your shoulders. He waited while you locked your computer and stood.
Simon allowed you to lead toward the breakroom where heâd observed the many cups of tea youâd politely swallowed from well meaning coworkers, who left it to steep for too long or too short, added too much sugar and milk, or left it totally plain.Â
The overhead lights were too bright, a blue-white glare that made you frown and squint. Your nose scrunched up in distaste. There were circles beneath your eyes, exhausted loops that matched his own. Â
âSo,â you prompted, leaning against the counter, âHow does one make a proper cuppa?â
âNot bad,â he said of your accent, lifting the electric kettle from the hook to fill with water. âLittle posh.âÂ
âIâve been practicing.â
He grunted, and put the kettle on, before rooting through the cabinet above the sink for tea bags. A grim selection awaited him, but heâd make due with what was available.
âAh, so you boil the water. I was under the impression you could just stick it all in the microwave.âÂ
He involuntarily made a pained sound. âFucking hell,â he muttered, âThat your usual method?âÂ
You bit the inside of your cheek, poorly concealing a laugh. âI scandalized a data analyst with that joke.â You cup your chin in your hand, peer up at him from beneath a thick fringe of lashes. âI do know how to boil water, Iâll have you know.â
âGot a head start then.âÂ
You laughed again, shoulders shaking. Simon watched the corner of your mouth curl, and it eased something in his chest. You were painfully close, the woodsy, floral scent of your perfume curled in the air. Your elbow brushed his. He didnât know how you could be unaware of the bond at that moment, when being that close to you felt like being lit on fire. He wanted to reach for you so badly that he had to clench his fist closed to avoid it.Â
If someone were to ask him to move away from you right then, it would end badly. Bloody.Â
The thin, needle sharp connection ached, begged.Â
Simon ignored it. Â
When you glanced up, he looked away. He could feel your eyes on his face, and didnât mind the scrutiny in it. He didnât mind you watching him, and wondered what you saw.Â
âI like being able to see your eyes,â you said, just as the kettle clicked off.Â
He met your gaze, disarmed by the declaration. Your features had softened, melted into a dangerous fondness. âWhy?âÂ
âYou have pretty eyes,â you shrugged. âAnd itâs hard to see you with the other mask.â You shifted, watching him lift the kettle, pour the hot water into a mug and over the teabag heâd dropped into it.Â
âYou can tell me to fuck off, if you want,â you began carefully, fingertips drumming nervously against the counter. âWhy do you wear it?âÂ
Simon watched the teabag bob on the surface of the water, thin amber trails unfurling, coloring the water slowly brown. âFive minutes,â he nodded at the tea. âDonât touch it. None of that dunking shite.âÂ
âYes, sir,â you agreed. âFive minutes, no touching.âÂ
He huffed, and your smile widened. You bumped your shoulder against his. The contact only lasted a second or two, but the relief it provided was so intense that he nearly choked on it.Â
The pain, softened by your proximity, returned immediately, crept down into the soft ligaments between his bones. He felt the loss in the roots of his teeth, the middle of his chest; it was like losing his breath in a different way, being suckerpunched in the solar plexus, knocked on his ass.
âTo hide my face.âÂ
âYour identity, you mean.âÂ
âMy identity,â he agreed.
âWhy?âÂ
He released a long, slow breath, and thought about telling you to piss off, maybe even just to see how youâd take it. Were you as good as your word? Would you let the subject drop?Â
Instead, he said, âThere are a lot of bad people in the world, bird.âÂ
You pursed your lips, fingers toying with the teabag string, flicking the tab at the end with your nail. There was another question swimming in your eyes, but you let it go unasked, dropping your eyes from his instead.Â
âYouâve seen more of them than most,â you said. âI would guess.âÂ
âPart of the job.âÂ
Your mouth curled a little, lashes fluttering against your cheek. âHm. But yâknow something? I think Iâd know you anywhere,â you said, without a hint of shame or irony. âItâs all in your eyes.âÂ
Before Simon could respond, you hid a yawn in your sleeve and rubbed your hand over your face, exhaustion layered in thick rings beneath your eyes. âEven if this is gross,â you indicate the tea, âAt least it will keep me awake.âÂ
âI take offense to that.âÂ
You laughed again. âHm. Sorry, Lieutenant.â You leaned in, âIt smells so nice, so why does it taste like shit?âÂ
He rolled his eyes. âIâll make you a coffee if itâs shit.âÂ
âYouâre kind.â This time when you leaned your shoulder against his, you left it there. The empty soreness like a bruise inside his ribs loosened again. For the first time in a while, he was left with the absence of pain. Â
When the tea was done steeping, he did yours with a bit of honey. There was no way youâd take it plain and like it, but he drew the line at milk. Especially the blasphemy that was the military issued powdered milk in a canister that sat on the counter. Abso-fucking-lutely not.Â
âThere you are,â he said, âCup of tea.âÂ
âA proper cuppa,â you tried again. It was a little less posh this time.Â
He huffed. âBetter all the time.âÂ
âAnd I have you to thank.âÂ
Your face creased as you took the cup between your palms, an unreadable expression flitting across your features. Then your mouth twisted to the side, a sure sign you were attempting to keep some emotion or thought in check.Â
Your shoulder was still pressed heavily against his.Â
âThanks, Ghost.âÂ
ââS just tea.âÂ
You shook your head and lifted the cup, blowing gently on the surface before you took a tiny sip. He watched your face, watched your throat move as you swallowed, the flickering web of your lashes. A step up, at least, from all the shit tea from your coworkers that make your brows tense in an effort to conceal a grimace. âOne good thing has come of this,â you said after a moment of contemplation.Â
âWhatâs thaâ?âÂ
âI know how to make tea for you now.âÂ
âLike it?âÂ
âI love it.âÂ
You briefly tilted your head onto his shoulder, then pulled away entirely. The flood of discomfort was worse than before. His muscles spasmed around it in a violent convulsion. âI mean that really.âÂ
He breathed out, through it. âI donât take honey.âÂ
You studied the contents of the cup, tilting it one way and then the other, like something important laid at the bottom of the porcelain well.Â
âNoted.âÂ
Sure enough, the next day, a hot cup was waiting for him, which he drank as you chatted from behind your computer, decidedly, pointedly, giving him the privacy to do so.Â
.
.
.
Things settled into a pleasant rhythm.Â
A regimented, regular existence that you had long ago learned to embrace. The base became home more than the tiny apartment you rented and spent only enough time to sleep, bathe, and cook in.Â
You timed your days to the ebb and flow of the base, to visits to your office, debriefings and conference rooms, the restless energy of so many people in one place moving. You breathed around absences, the pockets of emptiness that sometimes cropped up. The loneliness that felt like an unfillable pit in your stomach.Â
People often saw your scars and thought not to bother. Why would fate have marked you so heavily if you werenât meant to find your pair? The scars meant nothing, really. They were no more significant than anyone elseâs. Your chances of running into your soulmate was no higher than someone who had accrued no scars from their bond.Â
You were a stopping off point, a bit of fun, but not someone to invest time and effort into, not when the reminder that someone else might come along and render it all moot was so visible, so literally in their face. To look at you was to be reminded of that bond waiting in the wings, for them and for you, and that you could only ever be temporary.Â
It made friendships hard too. Some were jealous, others thought there couldnât be room for anyone else in your life. You were important to no one.
It had been proven to you time and again, and you werenât sure what kept you hopeful that someone would one day see past it. So when Sergeant Davies stuck his head in your office one Friday afternoon long after Ghost had departed your office for the day, and asked you out, you found yourself saying yes.Â
âWould you like to go out sometime?â He asked, hand rubbing the back of his neck. âJust round the pub for drinks?âÂ
âOh,â you said. âIââÂ
It had been a long time since anyone took interest in you. Youâd only talked to him a few times before, but Davies was handsome in a boyish way and sweet and you liked him well enough, you found yourself hesitating for half a second. To your horror, your mind flashed to Ghost, stomach lurching painfully, a knot of tension fisting itself in your chest.Â
You looked at his usual chair, empty now, seeing his large frame sprawled there anyway, thighs spread wide, arms crossed over his chest, eyes steady and focused, locked onto you with an intensity and constancy you still werenât used to.
Heat bloomed in your lungs, crept up your neck. You glanced away, back at Davies waiting at the door.Â
âYeah,â you answered firmly. âSure.âÂ
âBrilliant,â he grinned. âHow about tonight?âÂ
Your belly gave another sour squirm that you ignored; it had just been a long time, that was all. âIâm free.âÂ
âBrilliant,â he said again. âIâll text you.âÂ
âOkay.âÂ
His grin was crooked and self satisfied as he exited your office.Â
So you found yourself walking off the base with Davies later that evening. You found yourself laughing and hopeful in a local pub that you hadnât gotten the chance to explore yet, busy as you were, the base a tide that tugged you back again and again. Like a magnet, you wanted to be there.Â
And all of it came to nothing, the moment Davies saw the extent of the scarring when you took him home. It wasnât just your face, it was your hands and arms and chest and belly. Your whole body was marked, dogeared for someone else. He looked down at you in your bed, his head framed by your ceiling fan and you saw the moment it clicked. The moment it wouldnât work.Â
âSomeone out there is really looking for you,â he said. âYouâre lucky.âÂ
âNo more than anyone else,â you countered. âYou know thatâs not how it works.âÂ
âI know,â he said, pulling on his shirt. âIâm sorry.âÂ
âItâs okay,â you said before he kissed your cheek and retreated.Â
Still, you didnât sleep, just laid on your side, half undressed, staring out at a sky that slowly lightened, stars fading, wondering if perhaps your truest fate was to be lonely for your whole life.Â
You didnât hate your scars, or your soulmate. But sometimes you thought it would be easier if you didnât have one at all.Â
.
.
.
Monday.Â
There was a knife in Simonâs pocket.Â
Not unusual in and of itself, he carried several at all times, slipped into his sleeves and belt and boot.Â
The one in his pocket, though, was for you.
A gift, a contingency, and an offer all wrapped in one.Â
The knowledge that it was yours was an uncomfortable weight in his chest. It meant admitting he cared enough to procure it, test it, hand it over.Â
It wasnât quite your typical lunch hour, but Ghost was headed to your office anyway. It was sunny, for once, and he expected to find you taking an early break anyway, leaning back in your chair with your headphones on, absorbing the rare rays.Â
And, he wanted to be done with it, to stop tapping his pocket repeatedly, checking the blade was still there, like it might have run away.Â
Soap had noticed his fidgeting as they all sat through a briefing on intelligence reports with Laswell that morning. Ghost had forced his hand still, exuded a forced calm, but Johnnyâs eyes hadnât turned away.Â
When he arrived at your office, deliberately rustling against the doorjamb so as not to startle you, you glanced up and smiled tightly and his plan vanished.Â
Something was wrong. The blinds were closed, your office an unusual sea of gray air. Your shoulders were caved inward protectively, your expression wan and closed. Your smile didnât reach your eyes, your voice was rough when you said, âHey, Ghost.â Â
Simon took his usual seat, watching you type something, decidedly not looking at him. He watched you, the set of your mouth and eyes. He waited for your chatter to begin but it didn't.Â
âAll right?âÂ
âHm?â
âYouâre quiet.âÂ
âOh, only one of us is allowed to be quiet?â You joked, but it came out a bit brittle, and worn.
There were, he noticed as he looked at you, circles beneath your eyes. âWhat âappened?âÂ
You looked up again, and shook your head. âIâm just tired.âÂ
âTry again.âÂ
Frustration crept into your features. âWho said I want to tell you?â With that, you ducked behind your monitors.
Simon waited, but you did not reemerge.Â
He stood, and rounded your desk. You glanced up then, leaning back when you found him so close. âJesus, GhostââÂ
âNice weather.âÂ
âI can see that.âÂ
âAnd you arenât out there sunninâ yourself? Something horrible must have happened.âÂ
Your mouth twisted to the side and you glanced away. âI. . .Iâm just being dramatic.â
âCâmon, then.âÂ
You blinked up at him. âWhere are we going?âÂ
He didnât answer, but you rose anyway when he tilted his head toward the door. Simon snagged the blanket youâd knitted for him months ago from its place along the back of his chair, finally with a proper purpose, and carried it over his arm.Â
âLunch.âÂ
You grabbed it and followed him down the hall. Simon shouldered open an external door and held it open for you, the scent of your skin, the warm brush of your body so close to his as you ducked under his arm like a beacon, a light he wanted to follow.Â
Carefully, you nudged your shoulder against his as you walked. The familiar sharp, sweet pang whenever you brushed too close together settled in his chest. He wondered if you felt it too, if you felt that sickly flutter in your chest, or if his suspicion that he was holding one end of an untethered bond in his hand was right.Â
Just his luck.Â
Didnât matter though.Â
He ticked his elbow out a little, and after a moment, you pushed your hand against the inside of his arm. His shoulders loosened; his jaw unclenched. The pain in his chest settled.Â
The absence of the ache was intense; he was so used to being in near constant pain.Â
âSo, what are we doing?âÂ
âWalking.âÂ
âI can see that.âÂ
âWhyâre you askinâ, then, bird?âÂ
You huffed but didnât ask anymore questions as he led you down one concrete pathway.Â
The sky was a flawless robinâs egg blue, only a wispy, thin line of cloud on the very distant horizon. The distant shouts of drill instructors snapped in the warm summer air. Your shoulders drooped as you walked, eyes fluttering closed for a few seconds at a time as you tilted your face to the sun, inhaling deeply.Â
He led you around the last building in a long line of barracks and brought you to a halt. The only thing beyond was a chainlink fence that marked the edge of the base. A faint breeze coated him in the smell of your skin, settled deep in the well of his lungs. He took a breath, watched your lashes flutter.Â
Your thumb stroked a pattern against the inside of his arm, lazy and slow. âYouâve got a soft spot for me, Ghost.âÂ
He didnât deny it.Â
âWhat are we doing back here?âÂ
Ghost pulled away from you with some effort and spread the blanket over the grass. He sat on the concrete steps that led to the back door of the unused barracks.
You sat on the blanket, started to open your lunch and then flopped back in the sun instead. âA usual haunt?âÂ
âSometimes.âÂ
âSecretâs safe with me.âÂ
âMind if I smoke?âÂ
âNo.â Then, âI wonât look.â Â
He grunted in acknowledgement, rolled the bottom of his mask up, carton of cigarettes and lighter pulled from the depths of a trouser pocket. Simon watched the rise and fall of your chest, tracing the latticework of scars over your face. They looked better on you, he decided. Not as noticeable as his own, faded and light, pencil through wax paper instead of the thick groves of his own.Â
They glinted a little in the sun, like the scales of an iridescent fish.Â
Your eyes remained peacefully closed, soaking up the sun like a long deprived plant. Sweat beaded along your forehead, and when you pushed up your sleeves, Ghost was reminded that all of you matched all of him.
He recognized a burn mark on your forearm that belonged to him, a cut that wrapped halfway around your wrist. He was pretty sure the burn mark was from a mishandled flare, the wrist scar from a rope that had gotten tangled and burned him.Â
Simon wanted to reach down and cup the side of your throat, feel the soft, sun warmed skin beneath his fingers. He wondered if your scars felt the same as his own, rough and grooved.Â
Probably not, they were imitations, ungenerous sketchings of his own.Â
Heâd like to map them all against his own, find out if he bore any of yours. He wouldnât have noticed something small that you might have collected yourself. A childhood fall, a careless burn while cooking.Â
He watched the delicate flex of muscle in your forearms. Your shirt was a little askew, more faded marks left like a tracery of veins on your chest and collarbone and shoulder. It was fucking awful, a wrenching feeling in his chest, to know all that had been inflicted on him, had fallen on you too.Â
He wondered about the pain again, imagined you writhing with terror and agony and confusion, every gunshot wound and burn and slash he received an echo inside you. Cigarette burns dotting your arms and wrists when you were just a child, months of pain without end when he was captured and tortured and his life was irrevocably changed.Â
Simon wanted to ask, needed to know just how much damage heâd inflicted. But the words stuck in his throat. A fear of knowing, if he asked about the pain, maybe heâd hear other things too, how much you must hate him and didnât know it was the man in front of you your hate should be directed at.
When he stubbed out his cigarette on the heel of his boot and rolled his mask back down, you blinked into the sun and exhaled, long and slow, and then sat up, leaning back on your palms.Â
âWhat âappened?â He asked.
Your mouth twitched into your usual, if a bit more sheepish, smile. âYouâre like a dog with a bone, you know that?âÂ
âAffirmative,â he said.Â
You rolled your eyes and set up straight, brushing your palms together before reaching for your lunch. âI brought something for you.âÂ
âStalling.âÂ
âPushy,â you countered, giggling, rummaging around in your bag. Your smile faded as you pulled free one of the usual containers, what looked like lasagne within. He watched the edge of your mouth curl, the scar slitted along one side pulling at your expression. âI went on a date this weekend.âÂ
Ice slid down his spine, curled in a viscous circle in his gut. âBad date?âÂ
âNo,â you said, shaking your head adamantly, staring down at the container in your lap. âNo, it went really well.â You glanced up at him and then dug in your bag again, passing another one to him along with a fork. âUntil he saw myââ You fidgeted with your sleeve and then yanked it down. The other followed suit. âMy marks. My scars.âÂ
âHeâs a prick.âÂ
âNo, he wasnât,â you shook your head. âItâs happened before. They see the extent of it, and itâs like something biological clicks. Iâm off limits.â You sat your food to the side and wrapped your arms around your knees. âEven though Iâm no more likely to find mine than anyone else.âÂ
You looked very small, and alone at that moment.Â
âI know itâs not my soulmateâs fault,â you said quietly. âI know that. I know that. And I donât blame them for it. But sometimes I get so lonely I justâI wishâI wish I didnât have one. Sometimes I wish I could hate them.â
The chill spreads outward. Â
It was confirmation enough. If you knew, you would hate him. All that repressed, sentimentalized resentment would come bubbling up the moment you were actually faced with the person who so fundamentally changed the course of your life.Â
He looked at his scars winking in the sun on your skin and felt a self hatred so intense it nearly made him flinch. He wished he could crawl out of that grave and kill them all over again, slower, just for this.Â
You glanced up and smiled tightly. âBut Iâm a hopeless romantic, and dramatic. It was just disappointing. I always have hope someone will see past it.â You ran your hand over the blanket and unfolded yourself to finally begin eating. âThis helped, though,â you said. âThank you, Ghost.â You nodded at the food in his hands, averted your gaze again.Â
And even though you could easily glance at him, Simon pushed up his mask and popped open the lid of the lasagne still warm between his hands.Â
You ate together for the first time, in silence in the sun. You closed your eyes, kept your face pointed up and away, a cool breeze ruffling your shirt sleeves.Â
âHave you found yours?âÂ
Simon looked at you, the edge of your jaw, the soft shadows your lashes cast over your ruined cheek. âDonât think someone like me is meant for one.âÂ
You nodded. âMe either.â
.
.
.
He walked you back to your office.Â
You felt better, settled, but he sort of just had that affect on you, you were coming to find.Â
Ghost smelled like sun and freshly mowed grass and cigarette smoke. His shoulder kept touching yours, something in your chest lurching each time, like a rib bone had come loose and was knocking against your heart and lungs.Â
Ghost carried the blanket back, folded it and set it carefully along the back of what had become his chair.Â
You sat and turned, expecting to find him already silently gone as was his way.Â
Instead, he was very close and depositing something on your desk.Â
Matte black, compact, deadly, cold to the touch.Â
A folded pocket knife sat at the edge of your desk. Ghost loomed over you, his shadow curling around your edges.Â
He slid it toward you, watched you fold your fingers around it. For a long moment, each of you was holding it. âWhatâs this?â You asked when he released it, gloved fingers sliding across your desk, back to his side. Â
âA knife.âÂ
âOh, really? I've never seen one before.âÂ
He rolled his eyes. âItâs for you. Iâll teach you how to use it.âÂ
âWhy?âÂ
âIn case you need to.â
âIs this about me staying late?âÂ
âNo.â He did not elaborate.Â
âYou know I received firearm training. I can shoot a gun. Isnât a knife a littleââÂ
âBut you donât carry a gun.âÂ
âNo,â you agreed. âI donât.â Â
He nodded as though that explained it. âRight.âÂ
You considered it, flipped it open. Deadly, shiny blade newly sharpened and oiled and well cared for. It was odd to be given a weapon, and yet unsurprising where Ghost was concerned. You glanced up, watched his dark, intense eyes flick over your face. You werenât sure what he was looking for, but his brows knitted the longer you stared at each other. Concern, weariness.
âOkay.â
His shoulders loosened. âTomorrow.âÂ
âTomorrow,â you agreed.Â
.
.
.
If you thought you would receive one lesson in knifework and be done with it, you didnât know Ghost very well.Â
You only ran drills first, as though Ghost were making sure the physical fitness exam you had to pass once a year was up to scratch. You proved again and again that you could run without getting too winded, disassemble, load, and fire a service weapon. When he was satisfied with that, the real training began.Â
You practiced with a rubber blade that bruised when stuck into your ribs. He did not go easy on you. You left the gym battered and bruised, sweaty and just a little bit resentful. But you could break a wrist lock hold, grapple and use your body and size to your advantage. The goal he repeatedly told you, was not to turn you into a fighter or a soldier, but give you an opportunity to get away, to run away. Â
What kind of danger he imagined you getting into between the base and your apartment you couldnât begin to imagine. But you enjoyed spending time with him, enjoyed being in the gym. You found yourself laughing when you were repeatedly slammed into the mat, knife wrested from your fingers. It was fun. And, it was good for you, you decided, even if you thought his intense insistence was a tad dramatic.Â
Ghost was a bit dramatic about certain things, you were coming to learn.
This was one of them. You were, you thought with warmth, one of the things he was a bit dramatic about. For whatever reason, youâve been tucked under his wing, into his shadow.Â
On the third week of relentlessly brutal training, you arrived at the base gym, empty as it always was, to find him holding a length of rope.Â
You eyed it warily and shifted from foot to foot, amused despite the discomfort. âWhat do you imagine is going to happen to me?âÂ
Ghost didnât answer as you set your bag down and pulled off your sweatshirt. The room was warm, close and humid, the scent of left over dregs of soldiers clogging the room for most of the day. The scent of plastic, lemon disinfectant, and sweat is thick on the air, but when you stepped toward Ghost, his familiar comforting smell of tea and cigarettes washed over you in a vacuous, orbital cloud.Â
You looked up just as his eyes slid away from you, blond lashes catching the light, skin pink around his eyes. Youâd swear it was a blush if you didnât know better. âGhost?âÂ
âBetter to be prepared, yeah?âÂ
âFor what?â All the same, you turned with a sigh.Â
After a painfully long moment he stepped close and pressed the dark material around your wrists. His body was warm behind yours for that brief moment even without touching you, like the glow of a heat lamp that made the rest of the room feel cold by comparison.Â
His gloved fingers were carefully delicate against your skin. It sent sparks skittering up your arms. What would his bare skin feel like against yours?Â
Rough, warm. Safe. Â
Itâs a thought that had curled its roots into your mind the first time you fell to the mat together and you felt his weight against yours, brief and heavy, but comforting somehow. It wasnât supposed to be, he was playing predator, it should have been panic inducing.Â
Stupid, silly.Â
If your most recently failed date had shown you anything, it was that feeling anything for anyone that had seen your scars was a failing venture. And Ghost had seen more of them now, than most. Maybe you should start wearing a mask.Â
âWhatâs the goal today?â You asked, feeling a little like you couldnât breathe. His warmth and scent and the weight of his presence was overwhelming in a way that made you want to curl into him, gladly suffocate.Â
âSame as always,â he answered drolly. âTo get away.â
âHm. I keep thinking youâll challenge me,â you teased. Â
âNot a game, bird.âÂ
âBut what am I meant to do? I canât fight.âÂ
âGet out of the bindings. Get to the door.âÂ
âIs that it?âÂ
You would swear heâs smirking. âSimple enough, aye.âÂ
It wasnât easy.Â
For the third time in a row, you landed hard on your back.Â
Ghostâs weight was heavy against you, before it lifted away. Your sweaty skin stuck to his hoodie.
Your breath comes in hard, deep pants. Your wrists ached and panic had begun to set in.Â
âOn your feet.âÂ
Clumsy as a newborn deer, you stumble to your feet. You had to be faster than him, incapacitate him. âYou wonât be getting away from me,â heâd said once, âso youâd have a chance.â It was a compliment; one that said you were doing good.Â
It didnât feel like you were doing good now.Â
By the sixth time, you felt raw and helpless, wrists caught at an odd angle beneath you. It wasnât fun; it wasnât sparring. You couldnât manage to wriggle out of the bindings and you were useless at anything heâd taught you without your hands.Â
âYouâre hurting me,â you gasped.Â
He released you immediately and the pressure in your wrists eased. It hadnât been pain, not really, just panic, just exhaustion.Â
But you knew instantly that youâd made a mistake, that he would not take it that way.Â
âShit.âÂ
.
.
.
The window was open and you were not in your office.Â
Simon paused in the doorway, noted your bag on the chair in the corner, the patchwork quilt trailing over the arm of your desk chair and spilling onto the floor. His was gone from the chair. Youâd been wandering off without him recently.Â
He turned and marched back down the hall. An administrative assistant pointed toward the external door. âGetting sun, she said,â he said. âSir.âÂ
Ghost nodded and shouldered the door open. He found you behind the barracks, lying on his blanket, staring up at a patchy sky, slices of blue peaking from between low hanging gray clouds.Â
When his shadow fell over you, you opened your eyes and squinted up at him. âGhost, youâre blocking my sun.âÂ
âNot much sun to speak of.â You grimace and frown at the sky. âYou werenât in your office.âÂ
âSorry, should have left a note.â You patted the blanket next to you. âSit.âÂ
Simon sat on the concrete steps. âWhereâs your lunch?â
âForgot it.âÂ
Worry sprouted, blossomed along his veins, ubiquitous as the pain that accompanies it.Â
âCanteen,â he said. âLetâs go.âÂ
âItâs okayââ
âWasnât a suggestion.âÂ
âYouâre bossy,â you said but didnât move, chin tilted up, eyes flitting shut again. âIâll have a big dinner.âÂ
He sighed and pulled a pack of cigarettes from his pocket, content enough to wait you out and smoke. The clouds continued to gather, putting your beloved sun to rest for the moment. The air grew steadily thicker with humidity.Â
âGonna rain,â he commented.Â
You ignored him, eyes squinching closed harder, like you could will the sun to return. He watched you, made himself look at the bruises on your wrists and forearms, he knew there were matching ones on your ribs. They were harmless, just the usual consequence of sparring, but the ones around your wristsâthatâs a mistake he wonât soon forget.Â
When a fat raindrop landed on your arm, you sat up with a grumble. âReady now?â He asked, pulling down his mask again.Â
âI can see you wonât leave it alone.âÂ
âAffirmative,â he said.Â
You rolled your eyes and started to get to your feet, pausing when he held out a hand to you. You stared for a beat too long before gripping his hand in yours.Â
Even through his gloves, it was like being electrocuted.Â
You released his hand as soon as you could, eyes skirting his. âYour lead,â you said. âI havenât had the privilege.âÂ
He grunted, followed you closely back inside.Â
As Simonâs misfortune would have it, Johnny was still in the canteen.Â
He lasered in on the pair of you immediately, a grin growing across his face as he approached. âAch so this is where youâve been off to LT.â
Ghost herded you into line, a raucous group of new recruits halting their conversation to ogle you before their eyes flicked to his and away, conversation continued at a more subdued level. He shifted closer, between you and them, though you didnât seem to notice.
âHavenât been off anywhere,â he grumbled.Â
âWhoâs this then?âÂ
You smiled and offered your hand and name. âItâs nice to see that Ghost has bad manners with everyone.âÂ
âJohn MacTavish,â Soap said, all charm as he practically bowed. âCall me Soap.â
âSoap,â you giggled. âIâve seen you in my reports.âÂ
Soapâs gaze flicked over your face, sharp eyes making the quick calculations that had made Simon hope he wouldnât be in the canteen. âAre they yours?âÂ
âSergeantâ,â Ghost said sharply, a warning in his voice.Â
But you only laughed and touched your cheek with obvious pride as the line moved up. âNo. None of them belong to me. Theyâre nice though, right?âÂ
Simon went very still, swore his heart rate slowed. You held out your arm, showed off a sliver flash.
âVery becoming, lass.âÂ
You smiled again and gestured to your own chin, the side of your head. âYours?âÂ
âAye, all mine.â
âAh, luck.âÂ
âLucky indeed.â
Johnnyâs eyes shifted to Simonâs, brows raised, with a look that said he knew. Simon glanced away, gritting his jaw so hard it ached.
 âAm I going to get food poisoning from this?â You asked as a tray was handed over, eying warily what was ostensibly mash, peas and carrots, mystery meat.Â
âProbably not,â Johnny answered cheerfully. âBeen mostly fine.âÂ
âYes, but I think you military people might have tolerance to low levels of poison.âÂ
âThatâs for sure, bonnie.âÂ
âBonnie,â you said, giggling. âAre you calling me pretty?âÂ
Soap covered his heart, balancing his tray with one hand. âYou wound me. Simon only keeps us good looking bastards around.â
âSimon,â you said softly, glancing up at him. âI didnât think anyone knew your name.âÂ
Ghost didnât answer for a moment, glaring daggers into the side of Johnnyâs head, ignoring the way his heart was clenched so tight it felt like it was in a vise. Simon, his name on your tongueâ Â
âItâs need to know,â he snapped.Â
Your expression folded and you glanced away. âRight, of course. Sorry.â
Simon clenched his jaw so hard it clicked as Johnny shot him a look. âThis way, lass,â he said, leading you toward a spot in the corner of the mess.Â
âOh,â you said weakly, âThatâs all right. You donât have toââ
Ghost couldnât help but notice the anxious look you threw him, the thin line your voice had transformed into.Â
Soap wasnât listening, already talking your ear off, pulling out a chair for you. You smiled and sat and Simon was left to silently watch it unfold.Â
.
.
.
âFuckinâ hell,â Soap muttered when theyâd safely returned you to your office where a contingent of lesser analysts awaited you. The corridor leading away from the now closed door seemed impossibly long. âDâya know how many people would kill to meet their soulmate? Youâve got yours right under your fuckinâ nose and havenât even told her yer name!âÂ
âShe doesnât need to know.âÂ
âYer name?âÂ
Ghost leveled Soap with a stare.Â
Soap gaped at him. âSteaminâ Jesus. You arenât planninâ to tell the lass at all?âÂ
âStay out of it, MacTavish.âÂ
Johnny followed him down the hall, outside into a bleak, gray drizzle. âYou know it can kill you?â Simon kept walking. âSimon.âÂ
He stopped, glanced at Soap with a warning in his eyes. âDo ya?â
âIt wonât.â
Johnny continues anyway, urgently. âThereâs a pain, they say, under the ribs whenââ
âStay out of it, Sergeant,â Ghost growled, that very pain growing as it always did as he moved further and further away from you. âItâs nothing.âÂ
âItâll corrode,â Johnny said to his retreating back. âSheâll feel it eventually.â
Simon ignored him.Â
But he wondered as he walked away, if he died, if youâd feel the corded snap of his life floating away from yours. Â
Somehow, being that sort of ghost, didnât sit well with him.Â
.
.
.
Johnny, predictably, did not stay out of it.Â
He regularly and reliably began to show up in your office. More than once, he looped Garrick into accompanying him. Ghost had watched as the same realization Soap had snapped into place on Gazâs face, and knew it was only a matter of time before Price knew too.Â
Luckily, they were the only three on the entire base that could make the connection, that had seen his face, so at least it was done with. None of them said anything to him about it, but there were a lot of worried glances being exchanged.Â
Ghost felt the edge of his sanity begin to wear thin the longer it went on, not that there was much left of it in the first place.
The disruption, the infiltration, the distraction grated until his insides felt raw with irritation. He hadnât wanted anyone else to know, not because he was ashamed, but because you were his, and you didnât deserve to be burdened by that. He would shoulder that horrible belonging for both of you.Â
But the way youâd tenderly touched your cheek remains burned into his memory. The soft look in your eye. The gentle way you and Soap always spoke of soulmates whenever they came up, reverent and tender.Â
You enjoyed their company, Johnny and Kyle, and seemed all the better for it. It was clear immediately how much you liked both of them. How much you desperately needed friends.Â
Ghost was loath to admit there was a seed of jealousy wriggling in his belly. The easy way you got on with them proof enough that a wire had gotten crossed somewhere, that you were more cursed by him than anchored by.
Then, the gifts left at the edge of your desk began to extend to the lads and not just himself, and it felt vaguely as though he were losing a vital piece of himself to it.Â
Then, you stopped coming to the gym. You were gone, office dark, before he could walk you to your car. You went on another date.Â
He didnât know what to do with any of it.
One Tuesday at the end of July you were in your office, but Soap was there before him, tearing into a packet of crisps, lounging in Simonâs chair, patchwork quilt flattened beneath him in a heap. It was hot, and humid, a fan in the corner working overtime, window propped open.
You were happily listening to Johnny explain the ins and outs of football. A match was playing on your computer screen which youâd turned back so both of you could see.Â
Your eyes found Simonâs when he paused in the doorway, and you waved him inside, an unsure smile twitching at the corners of your mouth. âHi, Ghost. Do you keep up with soccer, too?âÂ
A groan from Soap. âBloody Americans.âÂ
âSorry, sorry. You keep up with footie too, mate?âÂ
âHorrendous,â Ghost said flatly.
Your smile faltered then brightened again. It didnât quite reach your eyes. âYou should hear my Scottish accent. Soap said I offended every one of his ancestors.âÂ
âAye and you did lass,â he said solemnly. âYehââÂ
âSergeant,â Ghost interrupted loudly. âArenât you due for PT?â Â
âAch, right,â he muttered, getting to his feet, âThanks for the reminder, LT.âÂ
âOh, Soap,â you said, âHold on.â You rummaged beneath your desk for a long moment, then passed him a brown paper bag full of cookies. âYour favorite, as requested.âÂ
âYou sweet on me or something, bon?â
You rolled your eyes and said, âOut of my office.âÂ
âYes, maâam.âÂ
Ghost took Soapâs vacated seat, watched you avoid looking at him as you moved things needlessly around your desk, twisted your monitor back around and muted the match.Â
The silence was suffocating.Â
âAll right?âÂ
You froze, then shuffled the papers together and slid them to a corner of your desk. âI wanted to apologize.â Your voice hitched a little.Â
He blinked, taken aback. He didnât like that you could surprise him. âFor what?âÂ
You bit your lip, fidgeted again. âYour name, I guess. You didnât want me to know.â Your mouth twisted to the side. âAnd your team bothering you hereââÂ
âYouâre apologizing for Soap?âÂ
Your brow furrowed. âWell I encourage itââ
âNo.âÂ
âNo?â You shook your head, âand that day in the gymââ You opened and closed your hands anxiously. âI think I upset you.âÂ
He stared across the room, toward your big, sunny window, all those little potted plants that have flourished through the summer months. Your bug lamp seemed to droop in the heat, sad and watchful. Heâd hurt you, and youâd taken the blame. Something horrible lurched in his belly, heavy and unforgiving. âDidnât. I should have been more careful.âÂ
âRight,â you said carefully. âSo if itâs not that, why are youââÂ
He shrugged, watched one of the emerald leaves sway in the warm breeze. âI like you to myself,â he admitted. âNot the best at sharing.â Â
âOh,â you said, voice tender. âOh.âÂ
âMm.âÂ
âIâll make space.âÂ
He didnât quite understand what you meant by that, but he liked the way it sounded. Space for him.Â
âYouâll come to the gym later, yeah?âÂ
âYes.âÂ
âGood.â He stood, deposited your knife, which heâd snagged early in the morning to clean and sharpen, back onto your desk, along with the new box of tea because he noticed you were out the night before. âAnd donât tell bloody Soap.âÂ
âAye, LT.âÂ
He chuckled. âTake care of that.âÂ
âTeach me how?âÂ
He nodded.Â
âThanks for the tea. I used the last bag yesterday afternoon.âÂ
âI know.âÂ
Your smile was soft, your fingers touched his. He breathed a little easier.Â
ââCourse you do.âÂ
.
.
.
Simon couldnât stop thinking about pain.Â
His body functioned at a constant low level of pain, had for years. Maybe it had his whole life, so he tended not to notice it. But the ache you caused had only seemed to grow over time, tendrils spreading to the furthest reaches of his body, the tips of his fingers, the backs of his knees, places he didnât think could hold pain.Â
The intensity increased too, until he could no longer ignore it. It was like a whine, like a child begging to be seen to.Â
He kept thinking of your voice, too, dreaming of it. Youâre hurting me. Panic ridden, laced with fear.
You said he didnât, after, but he didnât relish the thought of the possibility. Accidentally hurting you, hurting you on purpose. He thought of his mother, doing her best with a brutal man. He was afraid of unknowingly stepping into a cycle, to find himself standing above you one day, drunk, mean, angry.Â
Youâre hurting me. Â
It echoed like a heartbeat. Inevitable.Â
You might collect his scars, but he would not add to them with his own hands. Heâd rather die; heâd rather be burned alive; heâd rather crawl out of a grave a hundred times over.Â
He was afraid of it. Afraid that every terrible aspect of this bond between you could only bring you pain.Â
His father loomed in the recesses of his mind, all the violent men heâd ever known, every bloody fist. Simonâs scalp ached, the memories swam behind his eyes. Long nights, wild animals, dead girls.Â
There was one person who had a preoccupation with soulmates who was likely to know, who badgered him regularly about eroding the bond, about bond tears and pain. Simon could know, once and for all, if he was the cause of the indirect pain, at least. His own imposed on you, pushed into your skin like a punishment. He could cross that off his long list of sins.Â
Johnny, when Simon finally tracked him down, was sat in the armory cleaning a rifle. He watched over his Sergeant's shoulder for a long moment. The methodical movement soothed him, brought his heartrate down a little.Â
âJohnny.âÂ
Soap jumped and glanced around. âSpooky fucker. Should put a bell on yeââÂ
âDoes she feel it?â
âWhatââ
He exhaled long and slow. âMy pain. If Iâm shot tomorrow, would she feel it?â
âNo, the lass doesnât feel it.â Soap turned his wrist, pointed to a scar that was lighter than some of the others, a pale tracery that slipped from the inside of his elbow to mid forearm. âNot mine. Watched it fade in one morninâ. Didnât feel a thing.âÂ
Ghost looks at the scar, and Soap lets him. âThaâ why you havenâtââ
âNo.âÂ
âWhy?âÂ
âDeserves better.âÂ
Johnny nodded, continued cleaning the rifle. âThing is, LT. She doesnât. Thatâs the point.âÂ
Well, at least he only had to worry about becoming his father.Â
Fucking perfect.Â
.
.
.
Two months deployment. Â
The pain in Simonâs chest was agonizing, a constant fire. He couldnât sleep, pain meds did nothing for it.Â
He could only wait it out, wait until he was back on base and hope you were in your office, that the solace of your presence in that warm yellow light would be waiting for him. The pain would recede. He needed a plan, though. Clearly it wasnât fucking viable to just let it go on. It was too distracting and only getting worse. It was no longer something he could ignore.Â
Maybe, he didnât really want to.
Maybe, Johnny was right.Â
He half convinced himself that the lancing ache was so bad because youâd been posted somewhere else the last two months and you were further away than ever. Your office would be empty. This was just an agony he would have to learn to live with.Â
Finally, though, they were going home. Intel secure. One last building to sweep. Empty. A loaded silence that made the back of his neck prickle.Â
Not as empty as they thought.Â
Soap steps quickly into the last room ahead of him, gaze sweeping from one side to another before he lowered his weapon and stepped forward.Â
Ghost followed quickly, lowered his gun when he saw what Johnny had. Civilians. One curled around the other, sobbing so hard she made no noise.Â
When she lifted her face, Simon sucked in a startled breath. She looked like you, only without his scars. There was a mark slowly bleeding into place on her temple, one that matched the gunshot wound of the woman beneath her.Â
The wail that suddenly pierced the air was distraught, horrible, a lurch and a bang.Â
Soap was there, kneeling, looking for wounds that Ghost knew didnât exist. Horror froze him for the second time in his life, your face swimming behind his eyes.Â
âI thought you said they couldnât feel it,â he barked.Â
âWhat?âÂ
âSoulmates.âÂ
Soap looked at the pair with fresh eyes.Â
âThey canât, LT,â Soap said without glancing at him. âItâs noâ that. Itâs justââÂ
Grief. The unbearable snapping of a fated cord. The tether in his own chest pulsed, ached. He thought of it breaking cleanly in two, as though it never existed, your light snuffed out, leaving him in total darkness again.Â
It wasnât pain she was feeling, it was the absence.Â
âGhost,â Johnny said sharply and Simon finally snapped out of it, went to his side.Â
It wasn't worth it, he thought. None of this could be fucking worth it. He was left with the sinking sense that all he could ever do was hurt you.Â
All the same, he felt an urgency to go home. To return to your side. To feel your pulse under his fingers.Â
Just to be sure.Â
It took them a long time to get her to leave the body.Â
.
.
.
Task Force 141 was deployed for nearly two months.Â
September and October passed slowly, in starts and fits that seemed to drag.Â
You developed a pain in your side, a stitch from taking it too hard in the gym you assumed. But nothing seemed to help it. The pang became a prick became a small misery that the base medical staff couldnât pinpoint the origins of.Â
You missed Ghost, and Kyle and Johnny, tolerated the terrible tea your coworkers made for you, went on another series of failed dates, and finally became friends with your cross-hall apartment neighbor. Months of baked goods and hellos finally coming to fruition. Pieces of a life were falling together.Â
Finally, they were coming home. You left your offer that night with the assurance that they were uninjured, that Ghost, and likely Soap, would be in your office by noon the next day.Â
But Simon still managed to reappear as he always did, silently and without warning. A shadow crossed your back as you were locking your office near midnight, a hand grazed your back. You followed the series of steps youâd been taught months ago. Foot back, elbow out, knife in hand, open, turnâ
Your wrist was caught by the flat of his palm, fingers of the opposite hand yanking it from your grip. Â
You blinked and breathed out heavily, relieved. The tight tenderness in your side leveled off for the first time in a month. âGhost,â you murmured, lowering your now empty hand, âYou arenât supposed to be back until tomorrow morning.âÂ
âThat disappointed to see me?âÂ
No. Never. But he was still in full tactical gear. The skin around his eyes was still layered with eyeblack, exhaustion and an acid tension rolling off him in a thick wave. His gaze was heavy, but steady, assessing you in turn. He smelled like diesel and cigarettes and gun powder. You lifted your chin. âSurprised to see you. Glad to see you.âÂ
He only flipped the knife around and held it out to you. âNice work.âÂ
You smiled as you took the blade and stored it again. âYouâre making me paranoid, I think.âÂ
âGood. Paranoid keeps you alive.âÂ
His eyes flicked over you, looking long and hard, though for what you couldnât be sure. He stepped closer, until you were forced back against the door. He towered over you, corralled you back against the cool wood. Soft, dark eyes like wells of ink in the shadow of the hood pulled over his head, searched long enough that you began to worry something was wrong.Â
You reached out and rested your hand on his forearm. His body was so taut you could feel the tremble of exhausted, overwrought muscle. âGhost,â you said gently, carefully. âAre you okay?âÂ
He inhaled deeply, so hard and fast it sounded pained.Â
He looked at you again, eyes sliding over you slowly, like he was orienting himself, finding steady ground on which to stand.Â
âWhy donât you cover âem?â
Your belly clenched. âCover what?â you queried, silently begging him not to ask that question.Â
âScars.âÂ
You went still, looking down at your skin. You had rolled up your sleeves earlier in the evening when furious typing had required it. They glinted silver in the low light of the hall. Pretty and delicate as dragon scales.Â
It wasnât anything he hadnât seen before.Â
Still, you fought the urge to cross your arms. You hated when he stared at them.Â
âWhy would I?â You rubbed your wrist. âI donât want to. They belong to my soulmate.â
He glanced away from you, his jaw tight beneath the mask. âYou actually believe in that shite?â His voice was harsh, aggressive in a way he had never spoken to you before. âItâs a bloody childrenâs tale.â Â
You bristled, felt something hard and mean well behind your breastbone in a tight knot. The pain that had been kicking you in the ribs lately reared again, made you wince and cover your side. âWell,â you snapped, gesturing to yourself with your free hand, âthese arenât mine, so I guess I have to.â Â
He scoffed and you felt your heart lurch, hurt settling in your gut, twisting an invisible knife that much deeper. You tried to side step him but he didnât move, a terrible, solid wall of muscle andâanger? Irritation? You couldnât tell. âWhat the fuck do you care? Maybe youâre ashamed of yours,â you said roughly, âBut not all of us are.âÂ
His brows furrowed and he shook his head again. âOh, come off it.âÂ
âWhat?âÂ
âYouâre tellinâ me that if you came face to face with the bastard that did this to you, you wouldnât hate him?âÂ
Indignation burned a righteous path up your throat. âYou donât get to do that,â you said lowly.Â
âYou didnât deny it,â he said. âYou would.âÂ
âNo,â you interrupted vehemently, swallowing around the word like gravel in your throat. âNo, of course I wouldnât. It wasnât done to me, itââÂ
But Simon was determined, his mind set.Â
âHe hurt you, changed the course of your bloody life, whether you want to admit it or not. Youâll hate him for it, love.âÂ
âFor something he went through?â You asked incredulously, defensively. âDo you know how scared I was?âÂ
Ghostâs eyes went blank, his stare suddenly flat and far away. His gaze drifted from yours, the weight of flinty amber lifted. âOf him,â he said viciously, like something terrible heâd always known had been confirmed.Â
âNo,â you snarled again, not sure why Ghost was fighting you, not sure why he cared about your scars suddenly. âYou arenât listening. For him.â Your ribs ached, your breath came in short bursts. He was too close, the clashing sensations of safety and agitation calcifying the tension between you into a solid, immutable wall.Â
You inhaled shakily through the sudden distress. Your lungs hitched and spasmed before you could suck in a proper breath, feeling faint, glad for the wall behind you.Â
He blinked, looked down at you again. âHeyââÂ
âI was so scared I would lose him before I ever got to meet him. Ever since I was a kid Iâve had scars. Cigarette burns and scratches, bite marks. I used to hope he was older than me, so it wouldnât have meant that heâso that he wouldnât have beenââ Agitation rises like a tide, all the nights youâd sat awake watching scars bleed into your skin. Your parents had been unable to look at you in the morning, wondering what the future held for you. What kind of person that child would grow up to be.Â
The same fear Simon seemed to be holding onto so tightly.Â
You stumbled over his concern, something prickling at the base of your neck.Â
âOnce,â you continued shakily, âthey just kept showing up, day after day, for months. I didnât know what was happening and there was nothing I could do. I thought he was going to die and I couldnât help him. I was so worried and all I could do was watch.âÂ
You met his eyes, saw something so raw and wretched there that you flinched back, closed your eyes, breath caught.Â
You arenât sure when you transitioned to using he instead of they.Â
It suddenly didnât feel like you were talking about someone you hadnât met yet.Â
You thought of how strangely intense he was about you. How you had felt so strongly about him immediately. How the only bit of his skin youâve ever seen has been around his eyes; the delicate veins at his wrists.
You thought of him making you tea and teaching you to defend yourself. You thought of him walking you to your car and pulling you into sunny days. You thought of all the cups of coffee and boxes of tea, the gentle way he handled the blanket you made him from cheap cotton like it was spun gold.Â
You thought of Johnny asking after your scars the first time you met him. How not long after youâd been personally introduced to the rest of the 141 for no discernable reason. How they checked on you. How they were probably the only people that knew what Ghostâs face looked like.Â
âNo,â you whispered, pieces of a terrible puzzle sliding together in your mind.Â
You opened your eyes. Â
âGhost?â you asked softly, tentatively lifting your hand.Â
He jerked back. âDonât do that,â he warned. Â
You stepped closer, knowing you were playing with fire, that he might burn you, lash out like a dog with its leg in a trap.Â
But if he was yoursâ
If he was yours, you would not be the one to inflict more hurt on him.Â
He did not want this, he did not want you, that much was clear.Â
You closed your hand and let it fall, pushed your fist against your heart instead. âI see you,â you said gently. âThatâs all Iâve ever wanted.âÂ
âYou donât understand,â he rasped. Â
âYou survived.â You backed away. âThatâs enough. To know youâre okay.âÂ
The empty spot in your chest ached, seemed to grow tendrils that wrapped around your heart. A bond so close and not latched. Because you havenât seen him. He has to let you in.
âWhen youâre ready. If youâre ever ready. I'm here.â
He finally returned his gaze to yours.Â
âDid it hurt?âÂ
âDid what hurt?â You tilted your head but he didnât answer, just stared at you with big, moon dark eyes, brows pinched inward, eyeblack creating a tiny white line there. âOh, you wouldnât know, I guess.â You shook your head, âNo I was just scared. Just worried. It didnât hurt. Youâve never hurt me.âÂ
He moved so quickly and silently that you jumped when his hand curled around your wrist. Light enough that you could pull away if you wanted. Â
âYou donât have to. You never have to. I donât want to take anything else from you.âÂ
Ghost hesitated, his chest rising and falling quickly. âDo I have any of yours?â The question was quiet, almost reverent. Â
You nodded, ââCourse you do. I fell out of a tree when I was a kid. Gave me a nasty scar on the back of my elbow. I landed on a rock.âÂ
His eyes flicked away, like he was trying to imagine it. You twisted your arm, showed him the thick line of scar there, totally different than the lighter version of his on your skin. âSee? Youâll have that one in the same spot but lighter. Maybe not even visible, since youâre so pale.âÂ
Your breath caught when he stepped closer, the pain in your chest was so intense it made breathing difficult.
âItâs not fair to you.âÂ
âWhat isnât?âÂ
âTo bloody leave it. Hurts, yeah?âÂ
You didnât admit to the spasming in your chest; it wouldnât help anything. âWhen have you ever cared about fair?âÂ
He made a pained sound. âDonât.âÂ
âIâm okay. I donât need anything from you. I donât want anything from you.â
âYouâre supposed to need things from me.â Â
He peeled his gloves off, tucked them into his back pocket. The hall was still and silent aside from your combined ragged breathing. It sounded like youâd been running a marathon. âGhostââÂ
âSimon,â he said. âPlease, call me Simon.âÂ
You closed your eyes, felt his hands graze your collarbone, your throat, before anchoring on your jaw, tilting your face up. âLook at me, sweetâeart.âÂ
âI canât.â Your voice trembled, tears clogging your throat.Â
âCan.âÂ
Very gently, he leaned down and pushed his forehead against yours.Â
You shuddered and swallowed and stepped closer. Simon curled his arms around you, pulled you into his chest. He was so broad and tall, you felt swaddled against him, warm and secure. His scent wrapped around you like ribbons holding you together. âNo point dragging it on, yeah? No point you being in pain.âÂ
âHow long?âÂ
âThe whole time,â he admitted after a moment. His voice rumbled against your cheek. It felt like home. âFirst time I saw you.âÂ
âYou have had this pain for almost a whole yearââÂ
âNot your fault,â he interrupted, one massive hand sliding down your spine. âNot your fault.âÂ
You huffed, hooked your fingers beneath his tac vest. âIâm sorry anyway.â You pulled back, felt his arms tighten around you for a moment. He didnât want to let you go. âIs there anything you need to take care of? Reports or debriefing or something?âÂ
âNo.âÂ
âWould. . . would you want to come to mineââÂ
He reached under your arm and plucked your keys out of the lock before you could finish, guiding you down the hall, his hand never leaving your skin.Â
You had never seen Simon outside the base, you realized suddenly, and everything felt vastly more fragile. It also felt as though that hollow pulse in your chest would tear if you were asked to walk away at that moment, something real and physical would tear and drop out of you, an irreparable part of your soul.Â
You werenât sure how you drove home, Ghost huge in your passenger seat, your hands shaking each time he shifted his grip on you.Â
In your apartment, you hesitated, not sure where you belonged in your own space anymore. Simon looked strange in your tiny living room, among soft blankets and years of collected books and knicknacks. An all consuming shadow. You wondered if this would end like all those dates, just another failure, another loss.Â
When you started to step toward the lamp, Simonâs fingers curled around your wrist to keep you by his side. âNo.âÂ
âJust turning on the lamp.âÂ
He released you.
As you stepped away, a hollow pulse in your chest retched with pain that made you gasp and clutch the edge of the sofa. It felt real, like something was breaking, jagged edges clawing at the inside of your skin. You wondered what Ghostâs self imposed distance might have done to the bond. There were stories, albeit few, of corrosion. The bond literally rusting out, slowly poisoning the soulmate and their pair.Â
âCome âere,â he muttered. âSit down.â
When his palm cupped your elbow, the world became softer. Like purr instead of a shriek. He guided you onto the sofa.Â
Your hands shook when he released you, making quick work of the lamp. The room flooded with soft yellow light. He glanced around. Art on the walls, forest green rug over hardwood floor, molding you had painted a delicate gold. You felt embarrassed of it all suddenly.Â
âGod,â you muttered. He didnât seem to feel the pain at all, which made your chest ache in a different way and guilt pool heavily between your bones for it. You didnât want him to be in pain, but you felt as though you were breathing water, choking on your own lungs. âHow have you dealt with this?âÂ
âWorse now,â he said, though you felt it was his version of a kind untruth.Â
He sat next to you, reached for you, then faltered, unsure. You closed the space, folded your fingers between his. The scars made a fucked up little mirror when you looked down at your hands. They matched exactly. âIâm sorry.âÂ
Simon didnât answer, but stayed close to you, letting you hold his hand. Even the smallest amount of space between you seemed to burn, a brazier that flared hot and demanded attention. But it was better; just having his bare hand in yours helped.Â
âNothinâ tâbe sorry for.â He said after a few minutes of uneven breathing, eyes trained on your hands, thumb running over the back of your fingers.Â
âYou donât want me.âÂ
It wasnât a question.Â
He glanced up, something razor sharp in his eyes. You flinched a little, but his hand tightened on yours.Â
âYou donât have toâWe donât have to bond,â you tripped over the last word. âItâs okay.âÂ
âObviously itâs not, bird.âÂ
Your heart sunk and you glanced away. A one in eight billion chance was sitting under your nose for months, and he wanted nothing to do with you. He was being forced into it.
âIâm sorry,â you murmured again. âGhost, Iâmââ
âSimon,â he corrected. Â
âSimon,â you echoed.Â
He curled his hands around your wrists, lifted your palms to the bottom of his mask. He let your hands settle at the base of his throat, eyes never leaving yours. âI didnât want you,â he said plainly. âI never wanted you to know.âÂ
You swallowed and nodded. âIâm sââÂ
âNo.â
You closed your mouth with a click of your jaw. You donât expect a speech and he doesnât give you one. âYou deserve better,â he said. âBut Iâm all you get.âÂ
His knee touched yours. Your faces were tilted together, so close that the only thing you could see were the soft depths of his eyes reflecting the gold light.
It didnât feel close enough.Â
You wished it were all different.Â
That he didnât feel forced, that you were what he wanted.Â
âI deserve you. Isnât that the point?âÂ
He watched you for a long moment, an unreadable expression on his face, then nodded.Â
âGo on, then.âÂ
Your throat felt tight as you tugged the mask upwards, heart lurching when you recognized the same scar on your throat on his. You pushed the fabric over his chin and mouth, up until you could pull it over his head.Â
You looked at him, the same scar over his mouth, along his cheek, the bridge of his nose was nicked, the outline of burn scarring crossed the edge of his jaw and neck. When you looked past that, you saw him. Crooked nose, thick, furrowed brows, dark eyes youâd loved for a long time cast darker by the black around them, light eyelashes and hair, longer on top and curling.Â
Something seemed to. . .snap then. A warmth broke between you, filled that awful, dark, pained well in your chest. It hurt, but the pain was brief, like stitches done by a seasoned medic.Â
Breathing was easier. You could feel the pulse of him without the threat of imminent pain. It was a warm, comforting, safe thing in your lungs. You inhaled, attempted to stand, to give him a bit of space. âShould be able to separate now. Shall we test itââÂ
You didnât get a chance to move away, tugged suddenly from your seat and into his lap. You fell heavily against his chest, wrapped tightly in his arms, foreheads slanted together.Â
âNo,â he said, sounding, for the first time since youâve known him, breathless. âNo.âÂ
âI donât want to.âÂ
âGood.âÂ
âCan I touch you?âÂ
âCan do anything you like to me, bird.âÂ
You stroked the side of his throat, felt him shiver. âWell, I wonât. Not anything.âÂ
He made a content noise of agreement.Â
You touched his jaw, his cheek, the tail of his brow, the faded check through it that youâd never noticed matched your own. His arms tightened around you in increments until the pressure forced you to take shallow breaths. âYouâre beautiful.âÂ
âLookinâ in a mirror, are you?âÂ
âSort of,â you answered. âA little.âÂ
His hands shifted, anchored on your hips, and pushed you back a little.Â
Disappointment that it was over so soon pinched at your throat but you backed off, attempting to slide from his lap. His hand caught at your hip. âStop trying to bloody move.âÂ
âWhatââÂ
He was only taking off the vest, which probably should have been left at the base. It dropped heavily to the floor as he pulled you against his chest. It was warmer, softer like that, thick muscle coiled beneath your cheek when you rested it against his shoulder, heartbeat hard against yours. Â
âNo more pain?âÂ
âNone.âÂ
âGood.âÂ
You pushed your face against his throat, felt him tense and then uncoil. One large hand cupped the back of your neck, holding you there. You brushed your lips against his pulse point, felt a scarred flutter against your mouth, a muted grunt.
âYouâre all I want,â you admitted quietly. âI think I knew. I think everyone knew. Iâm sorry,â you finally said, âthat Iâm not who you need.â Â
His hand squeezes your neck and then heâs pushing you down against the cushions, pressing one massive thigh between your legs, hauling you closer like it could never be close enough. The space between your bodies would always be too large, because you couldnât climb into his chest, nest among his veins.Â
It would have to do then, his hand tilting your jaw up, his eyes searching yours as you part your lips.Â
âYou are, sweetâeart,â he said simply, mouth brushing yours before he kissed you properly.Â
He tasted of black tea; his eyeblack rubs off on your temples.Â
Already, he was leaving pieces of himself behind with you to mark safe.
âSimon,â you murmured against his mouth. Just to say it, just to be rewarded with a shudder.
The kiss slipped into something more desperate, your hands felt the skin of his back, your own scar on his elbow, and you thought, maybe, you could become what he needed. Â
if you made it this far thank you for reading! I'd love to know what you thought!
jason was completely drained from patrol as usual, so what does he do ?
take it out on you of course, let you fuck the energy back into him while you ride the thick of his cock nice and hard, taking it all the way down to the hilt.
he couldn't be bothered to change let alone take off his mask, pants tugged down to his knees as he laid back on your shared bed.
you couldn't exactly complain about it either, whenever jason wore the mask it did something to you, made you a little rabid for him and him the same for you. he found himself always being a little rougher whenever he wore it, his touch too hard and his words too mean.
no, you weren't fucking jason, you were fucking red hood.
you sat on top of him with his thick cock stuffed all the way inside your pulsing cunt. you were so wet he practically slid in, all perfect and drooly for him, your slick dripping down to his balls. he let his head fall back watching all your pretty bare skin as you began to fuck yourself on him, completely naked while he was still dressed. you began bouncing as hard as you could, he watched his cock disappear and reappear with each movement and lewd squelch.
you took it so well, taking his hard length inside you inch by inch. a sharp hiss escapes his lips and you imagine his eyes closing for a moment, head tilting back against the bed headboard. his hands find your hips quickly and his fingers dug hard into your flesh with the familiar grounding friction of his calloused touch. jason grabs at you hard and forces a faster pace, making you gasp out and grab at the solid of his muscle for balance.
"easy babyâ", his words are low and muffled through his mask.
but you don't want easy. you want it raw, rough and real, feeling the satiating throb deep inside you as you squeeze your sopping cunt around him. jason grunts, a hand reaching for your face roughly, making you stare down at his mask all wide eyed and frozen.
"behave."
you almost cum right there, but you swallow and nod, listening to his word like it's law, then you feel him begin to move. even with his face covered you could feel his gaze intense, tracking your every movement. he takes his time with each filling, hard thrust of his cock his hands flexing on your hips, forcing you steady.
his hand on your jaw stays there, keeping your gaze on his mask, if you look carefully, manage to focus your eyes you can see your reflection, faint and blurred and dyed red.
you see what he sees, your own reflection.
your own face staring back at you, lips parted and mouth held agape with his big hand.
his hips speed up with each upward thrust to meet yours, chasing the friction.
hes forcing you to ride him harder, faster, chasing the building pressure low in your belly. his thumb traces a hot path along your hipbone, his grip tightening possessively. the rhythm between you is relentlessly now, pushing up into you with powerful thrusts that steal your breath and make you cry out softly. you feel the tension coiling tight within him, mirroring the near unbearable tightness building inside you.
even when you feel yourself so close to release your eyes stay focused on the little smudge of your red reflection on his mask, you rode him faster, leaning back as your tits bounced with you.
you hear him groan at the sight.
he's as desperate for release as you now, bobbing you up and down as if you were no heavier than a flesh light, letting out little huffs and grunts. his other hand slides from your jaw down between you two to seek out your pretty clit, resting his thick fingers on your thigh while his thumb comes to stroke at the twitchy nub in tight hot circles making you jump and squeeze around him at the simple action.
âthatâs what you were missingâ"
"pussy's so fuckin' tight around meâ so wetââ
you feel your orgasm getting closer, eyes rolling back as he slots in and out of your lulling body. the sheer size of him causes an ache inside your core that arches your back, clutching and clawing at the skin of his muscled abdomen, he feels you gush around him, all soaked and perfect and moaning and crying for him, melting with every of pull of his cock only to fuck it back in.
you can faintly see your fucked out face in the reflection of his mask and that's what does it. it has you fall forward onto him, laying across his hard body limp, face flushed into the crook of his neck but he persisted through your muffled cries and glossed over eyes.
your glistening wetness dripped down his cock every time he lifted your hips, and the way your mouth hung open, releasing moan after moan, it was driving him wild. fuck he was close, he could feel his balls tighten from the feel of your fucked out cunt as he kept thrusting up into you, balls deep. he felt your pussy twitch and squeeze, poor thing all tired out practically sopping around him with your wet heat.
he managed to ram into you once more, the ridges and veins of his cock rubbing harshly against your velvety walls as your pussy sucked at him greedily. you both held quiet listening to the wet squelches in harmony with the fleshy smacking of his balls relentless against your cunt.
"dirty girlâ"
"letting me fuck you like this with my mask onâ"
"bet you get off on itâ" ,he lets out a lazy half groaned laugh before rearing back his hips for another brutal thrust, this time, he hit you deep, pressing into the cervix, causing your vision to blur momentarily. you were a pathetic mess, eyes watering, spit dribbling from your lips and soaking through his dark shirt while as you whined loudly.
when jason cums you swear you see stars, you feel him paint your walls with thick, creamy release, his cock humping into you weakly with a few more stuttered thrusts.
"my pretty girl", he lets out a lazy huff of laughter as he strokes your face and hair roughly, petting you all sweet like, cooing and coaxing to help you calm down,
"fuckin' patheticâ"
he laughs lazily at your fucked out state, pure bliss behind your eyes and lets his hands squeeze and flex around your ass, feeling how you were still shaky and twitchy from the high, trying to get comfortable over him.