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summary: melissa and reader are angry with each other over reader's dating life. who will break first? or will someone need to intervene to get them to pull their heads out their asses and make up? inspired by prompt 31 âLetâs just say that if I saw you bleeding out on my kitchen floor, Iâd act like I hadnât seen you.â
word count: 4.6k
warnings: arguments, swearing, hurt/comfort, insecure!melissa, age gap, reader is referenced as being under 30.
a/n: hello friends, this has been a long time coming. i've wanted to write for this queen for ages and when i finally sat down to do it the words didn't stop spilling out of me. i haven't been able to write like this in years, so i think i've found my passion again in melissa <3 it's good to be back. it's a long one and i hope i managed to capture her correctly. enjoy :)
For twenty years Barbara Howard has arrived at Abbott Elementary at 5.50am on the dot, just in time for her to park her car, take a stroll to the staffroom and make herself a coffee before Action News started at 6 sharp. Now, the walls of Abbott were never calm, but for 30 minutes every morning, while she sipped her coffee and listened to the soothing tones of Jim Gardner, everyone around her seemed to be able to keep themselves together. Even in her first year of teaching Janine had never tried to disturb her, maybe for once able to sense the importance of these moments for a successful teaching day.Â
Barbara can tell it will not be a normal day in Abbott the moment she pushes past the green doors into the building. The energy is high in the air and she fears if she touches anything an electric shock might meet her. Still, she sends a prayer to God and pushes her way through the building.
No one was stopping her from getting her 30 minutes of peace.Â
She finds the culprit for the upsetting energy the moment she crosses the threshold of the staff room and is not slightly surprised. Melissa sits in her usual chair, her face murderous, eyeâs dark and tongue in cheek as she stares pointedly at the wall with her arms crossed tightly against her chest. Jacob sits on the couch, eyes on his phone and leg bouncing anxiously, he shoots a look around the room and when his eyes land on Barbara his body sags in relief, thinking heâs found safety.Â
Whilst Barbaraâs got no idea what has happened, she also notes that the room is empty apart from the three of them and although Melissaâs anger making people scram is not an uncommon occurrence, it has never, in the last two years since you joined Abbott, made you flee a room. In fact, Barbara had watched you calm Melissa down with a simple touch to her arm, something she has never been able to do.Â
You did not fear Melissa, which means this anger was likely related to you. These moments were normally quick and fleeting and yet Melissa was so upset it was going to disrupt Action News. Definitely not a regular morning.Â
âWould you like a coffee, Melissa?â Barbara asks, starting simple as she enters the room and makes her way to the coffee machine, barely sparing Melissa a glance.
Melissa stands and takes the coffee mug from the table beside her and throws it on the floor, shattering it into tiny pieces, making Jacob yelp. She stalks from the room, muttering angrily under her breath something about âbetrayalâ.Â
Barbara sighs tiredly, pressing her fingers to her temples. Today was going to be a long day.Â
She considers going after the redhead but as a simple question had produced such a ferocious reaction, she decides it is best to let her cool off before work starts and sits down with Jacob to catch the reminder of Action News.Â
She was determined to not let today become a complete lost cause.Â
Later, on her way to her classroom to set up for the day, she finds Melissa with her head buried in grading, probably a good idea and a way to calm herself down after this morning's fiasco. However, youâre completely missing from your classroom, very unusual.Â
A complete disruption to your routine this morning it seems, Miss L/N.
Barbara lays eyes on you for the first time that day when sheâs walking her class to their music lesson. You offer a smile and âGood Morning, Miss Howard,â but the bags are obvious under your eyes. You did not sleep well last night.Â
âGood Morning. Your class is in an excellent mood this morning. Gym class?â She asks, looking behind you to the excited third-graders who stand in lines of two, well-behaved but talking in a low excited chatter.Â
You chuckle, âIâve never known a class to love it more.â
Barbara hums, waving goodbye as you turn off down the corridor towards the gym. She drops her class off with the music teacher, making sure to remind them to be well behaved before she heads back down the corridor, stopping at your classroom.Â
You look up from your desk, surprised. âCan I help you, Barbara?âÂ
Sheâs never seen the point beating around the bush, and she was not about to start now. âI ran into a very angry Melissa this morning. Do you know something about that?âÂ
Your entire body tenses, your smile going rigid and tight on your face. Barbara can see the anger simmering behind the surface. Unusual. You were always more calm, more open to reason. âIâd be more surprised if youâd said she was in a good mood. Now Iâve actually got work to be doing, if you donât mind.âÂ
âY/N,â Barbara sighs, giving you the pointed look that always works on students and teachers alike.Â
You shake your head, âI really respect you a lot Barb, but youâre not gonna be able to fix this one. Please just leave it alone.âÂ
Barbara stands there for a long moment, staring at you, before she releases a sigh. âFine. But one of you needs to fix this because Abbott barely has enough mugs as it is.â
She gives you one last pointed look before leaving the room. You sink into your desk, hands capturing your head to stop your head from slamming against the desk and adding to your already growing headache.Â
Fuck Melissa Schemmenti.Â
Fuck everything about her.Â
She had no right to be angry. Youâd done nothing wrong. You felt bad for blowing off Barbara, you knew she was just trying to help. And usually a pointed look from her had you confessing your darkest sins, but not this time you couldnât. She couldnât fix it. Melissa was the one in the wrong and you were gonna keep a wide berth until she bloody well realised that.Â
Although knowing Melissa, youâll be on your deathbed before that happens and maybe even then sheâll find something scalding to say. Itâs what you get for trying to have an honest conversation with a red-headed cancer.Â
She was more ill behaved than your worst students.Â
 ââ
You dismiss your students for lunch minutes before the bell rings, hoping youâll be able to run to the staff room and grab your lunch and run back without facing the redhead. Itâs not that youâre scared of her, you simply donât have the energy to deal with her attitude so eating in your classroom was the best option.Â
However, your plans are foiled when Ava stops your pathway talking about a new tiktok challenge that she wants you involved in. âYouâre the only teacher that wonât embarrass me and show off that this place has at least some fit, young teachers.âÂ
âSure, whatever. I need to go.â You say, not really listening as you put an end to the conversation and move past her.Â
âRude!â She yells back at you, âBut do your thing, girl!âÂ
By the time you make it to the staff room everyone is already there. Jacob is telling an over the top story about something uninteresting to Janine and Gregory. And Barbara and Melissa are talking quietly at their usual table, where you usually join them. Melissa looks calmer than when youâd spoken to her this morning, she even smiles at Barbara, however the moment you step into the room it all fades away. Her eyes land on you and her eyes harden and her shoulder tense. She jabs the salad in her tupperware harshly.Â
You canât contain your eye roll and donât bother to say hello to anyone as you make your way through the room to the fridge.Â
Janine picks up on the tension in the room, drawing her away from Jacobâs rambling that appears to have gotten more anxious. âWoah, whatâs going on guys?âÂ
âNothing.â You say.
âY/Nâs a snake.â Melissa gruffs at the same time.Â
You slam the door to the fridge before you can grab your lunch, swinging around to glare at her as Barbara releases a horrified, âMelissa!â
âYouâre a child. Just grow up!â You growl.Â
âRich cominâ from the girl that isnât even thirty yet.âÂ
âWell that wasnât a problem for your sister when I went on a date with her last night!âÂ
The gasps in the room are instant. Even Gregory breaks out into a coughing fit as he struggles for breath. And okay, yeah. So you went on a date with Melissaâs sister, but in your defence you hadnât known she was her sister until half way through the date and then youâd fucking ended it because you knew Melissa would get her panties in a twist.Â
And you thought you were being a good friend coming clean, that it would be a funny story. But no, classic Melissa flipped her shit talking about betrayal and schemes.Â
âKristen Marie?â You hear Jacob mutter horrified under his breath. You donât bother to correct him but no, her you knew. It had been Toni, Melissaâs youngest sister. Youâd matched on Tinder and apart from both having green eyes there was nothing on her profile that gave away they were siblings. Toni was tall with short brown hair. You hadnât even known she was from Philly until you showed up.
Melissa pushes herself up from her chair, her eyes dark and murderous as she stalks over to you. âI want nothinâ to do with ya.âÂ
The hurt youâre feeling is shoved down. Thereâs no place for it when sheâs angry. âFine by me. If youâre this upset over one date I left early then maybe itâs a good call to bring this friendship to an end.âÂ
âGuys-â Janine tries to interrupt.
âNo,â You state hardly, eyes never straying from Melissaâs cold ones, âSchemmenti finally knows what she wants.âÂ
âYeah I do, and itâs you far away from me. In fact, so itâs clear for everyone just how I feel about this traitor, letâs say that if I saw you bleedinâ out on my kitchen floor, Iâd act like I hadnât seen ya.âÂ
More horrified gasps. The words hit you in the chest but you barrel forward, your words scalding as you see red. âWow, Schemmenti. Itâs real no wonder youâre alone, is it? Determined to run anyone out your life that shows you any kindness. Iâm surprised Joe lasted so long.âÂ
Barbara shoots up, lips pursed and hands signalling a sharp line. âEnough! That is enough!âÂ
Your shoulders slump, tired and drained. Everyone looks on edge, Janine close to tears although the words hadnât been directed anywhere near her. Barbara was right.Â
You sigh, turn around and grab your lunch from the fridge while Melissa storms back to her chair.Â
âIâm sorry for the disruption. Enjoy your lunch.â You say to the group as you head for the door.Â
âYeah, and donât come back.â Melissa grunts.Â
âOh, fuck off.â You snip, sending her one last glare before you storm back to your classroom where you close the door with perhaps too much force behind you. Which works in your favour because itâs a great deterrent in case anyone gets any unwise decisions to follow you, luckily they donât.Â
Over the course of the next week you try every mindfulness trick in the book but still end up going home most evenings and screaming into a pillow. Everyone for the obvious reason that they werenât shit scared of you had started coming to you begging you to fix the relationship between you and Melissa, like she wasnât the one to burn it down in flames in the first place!
You donât care how many times Janine comes to you crying about Abbott peace needing to be restored, or Jacob complains that heâs running out of crockery because Melissa keeps smashing it, or even Barbaraâs pointed looks (which you know Melissa will be receiving as well) you refuse to give in. Not this time.
Avaâs pointed, âFix this because Iâm not starting doomsday with a fighting crew so I will have to pick, and itâs not looking good for you.â definitely hurts a little because you thought you were friends.Â
âThis is the end of the world, Y/N. Friends get you killed! I need a crew with skills to make sure I survive.â
You walk away from that conversation and miss Melissa not for the first time that week. Sheâd say something kind to cheer you up like, âDoomsday ainât happening, but if it does Iâm not anyoneâs patsy. Me, you, Barb and her family are all headinâ up to my timeshare and Iâm keeping youse safe.â
As you walk the hallways of Abbott you hear her voice through the open door of her classroom. You pause, leaning against the wall where she canât see you, and listen to her teach. You havenât heard her voice void of hate all week and it was draining you. For a woman set on wanting nothing to do with you, she seemed to be around every corner shooting you a glare or scorching remark.Â
You melt into the wall, and listen to her lead her class through a grammar lesson, her voice gentle as she praises and encourages students. You miss the days you could drop in to her class on your free periods and bring her a cup of coffee just to see her eyes light up and receive a warm smile before leaving her to teach. You miss sharing food over lunch, you hate not having anyone to try your new recipeâs on. You miss every little soft touch sheâd give you throughout the day, a hand on your arm, on your upper back, on your shoulder. You didnât realise how much you relied on those moments to keep you steady until they were pulled away and suddenly you didnât feel safe in your own body anymore. Ridiculous. You lived many years before Melissa Schemmenti your body and brain just needed to get the memo that it was happening again.Â
You needed to get over yourself because your friendship with Melissa Schemmenti was dead. Those kind comments werenât coming and you needed to stop yearning for them if you wanted to survive at Abbott. First things first, maybe stop wistfully waiting outside her classroom.Â
Youâre back in your classroom at the end of the day, packing up after dismissing your kids, when Avaâs voice rings through the intercom, âMiss Schemmenti and Miss L/N report to Miss Howardâs classroom immediately.â
What the hell?
You frown and place the books in your hands down before you head towards the kindergarten's teacherâs room, curiosity getting the better of you.
Melissa runs into you in the corridor, her brows drawn together in confusion. âYou know what this is about?â She asks gruffly. Â
âNot a clue.â You sigh.Â
You let her lead the way into the classroom. Her walk signalling her preparation for battle. The protective streak in her simmering under the surface, youâd be dumb to think it had anything to do with you.Â
The kindergarten classroom is empty and in perfect order. Barbara Howard stands poised perfectly beside her desk, her head held high. âIâd like both of you to sit down please.â She says in her sickly sweet voice. The one you know means danger if you donât comply so you perch on a desk near the front of her class.Â
StIll, Melissa doesnât follow orders. Instead, hovering by the door. âBarb, whatâs going on?âÂ
Barbara holds her gaze, eyes flashing, even as her voice drips with honey, âMelisssa, dear. Sit down.âÂ
She grumbles but this time complies, choosing the desk on the other side of the aisle to you. âHappy?âÂ
âWonderful.â Barbara clasps her hands together and starts making her way to the door. âNow, you two are going to fix whatâs happened between you-â
âIâm not talking to that-â
âBarbara-â
âI do not want to hear it!â She cuts you both off. âIâve had enough of the temper tantrums and sulking. Youâre worse than the teenagers. So pull it together and admit you miss each other so people can stop walking on eggshells and poor Janineâs hair stops falling out.âÂ
Thoroughly told, you slump further in on yourself as Barbara strides out of the room. The door shutting behind her and the unmistakable sound of a lock clicking into place.
You chance a glimpse of Melissa from the corner of your eye. Surprised she wasnât up, ready to kick the door down to escape you. Itâs then you notice just how tired she looks. Her makeup has begun to fade, revealing the dark circles under her eyes, her face was drawn and pale, her eyes lacking their usual sparkle. She looks exhausted. Â
âMelissa, whatâs it going to take for you to forgive me?â You ask plainly.Â
She shoots you a glare, eyes full of fire again. The tiredness hidden and slammed up behind shields. âYou know this ainât a forgive and forget sorta situation.â
You push yourself off the desk and walk closer to the woman of your torment, âWhat so we donât listen to Barbara and Abbott continues to be an awful place to work because everyone is uncomfortable whenever weâre in the same room.â
She shrugs, âIâve worked with enemies before.âÂ
âIâm an enemy now? Come on! It was one lousy date! You wanna throw away years of good friendship for that? Iâve apologised multiple times and Iâll do it again. Iâm sorry Melissa. I wouldnât have gone on the date if Iâd known. You must know that.â You say incredulously, watching the hard-headed woman in front of you. âWhy would I wanna jeopardise my closest relationship here? You really think you mean that little to me?âÂ
She wavers, the words touching her, but she doesnât soften. Instead, she pushes herself off the desk, making herself taller.Â
âYou talk the talk. But if thatâs all true,â she jabs a finger in your direction, âwhyâd you send goddamnâ nudes to my sister, Y/N!âÂ
Your eyes widen, jaw dropping in shock. âWhat the hell are you talking about? We went on half a date. Why would I have sent her nudes? Do you really think Iâm that sort of person?âÂ
She crosses her arms against her chest, âI saw her last Sunday, before your date. She told me about this âyoung thingâ she was messaginâ and receivinâ risky photos from. You tellinâ me that werenât you?â
âFirstly, âyoung thingâ is disgusting.â You protest, and Melissa winces in agreement. âBut more to the point, no it was not me. Not that it would be any of your business if I did decide to send those types of photos to someone because Iâm an adult and itâs my choice, Melissa. I get sheâs your sister but I told you I left the date when I found out and that I had no interest in seeing her again. So I just donât understand what the problem is.â
She sighs, and takes a step back. âYou really tellinâ the truth?âÂ
âYes!âÂ
âFuckinâ hell,â She grumbles.
Her gaze drops from yours as she kicks her shoe into the ground, a frustrated grunt leaving her lips. When she looks at you again, her gaze softens, the anger melting away leaving her vulnerability exposed. âLook, I hated the thought of her seeing youse like that, alright? I love my sister but sheâs not got the best track record of treatinâ women the way they ought to be treated and I didnât want you messed up in that. If you were sharinâ those photos it should be with someone that respected âem, respected you. Not someone that treated you like her latest play thing.â
âSo you took it out on me.â
âWell you still went on a date with my sister,â She says with an eye roll, âbut I guess I got a second wind of anger when I connected the dots and It was easier to blame you. Iâm sorry.â She shrugs.
You smile tenderly. The calm good, hope settling in your stomach that everything might actually be okay. She cared about you being treated right, that was something, at least.
âIâm sorry too. For everything I said in the staff room. I didnât mean it.â You respond genuinely. Youâd regretted the words as soon as your anger had faded.Â
âAllâs good.â She shrugs again, with a smile. And you know youâre forgiven, even if you donât feel like you quite deserve it.Â
She tilts her head, fingers tugging on the belt straps of her jeans - which doesnât make your heart skip a beat at all. âLet me ask one thing ând then we can move on for good.âÂ
You clear your throat, âS-Sure.âÂ
âWhy her?â
âMel-â You shake your head.
âCome on, thereâs gotta be loads of women on those apps, but ya choose to meet with Toni, why?â She asks, watching you closely, eyes guarded, like sheâs scared of your answer.
You sigh and contemplate lying or refusing to answer, especially with how new the calm is and how quick she can be set off again. But you also donât want to refuse her and you can see the vulnerability sheâs desperately trying to hide.
âHonestly?â You shrug, unable to hold her gaze, âI liked her eyes.âÂ
âSeriously?â She chokes, eyes widening in surprise. She ducks her head and shifts on her feet, âPeople have always said we got the same eyes.âÂ
âSimilar. Yours are lighter, bigger, prettier.â The words are out your mouth before you can stop them and you kind of want the ground to swallow you up whole.Â
Melissa smiles, her cheeks dusting pink, as she laughs and rolls her eyes. âYeah, okay, hon.âÂ
The compliment hadnât been intended and leaves you feeling exposed, but still you hate her immediate refusal. A trend since you started at Abbott. Apart from compliments on her teaching, which she accepts, sheâs always quick to dismiss the kind words that come from your mouth. Any compliments on her hair, her outfits, her personality are all quickly laughed off. You hate it, and whatâs worse, you really donât understand it. She accepts everyone elseâs nice words, you know sheâs so confident in herself, so it doesnât make any sense.Â
âWhy do you do that?â You ask, sighing.Â
She furrows her brows, âDo what?âÂ
âAlways reject the compliments I give you.âÂ
She huffs, eyes averting yours. âI donât.âÂ
âOh, come on,â You chuckle, âYouâre gonna have to do better than that.âÂ
She crosses her arms against her chest, shrugging, âYouâre a kid, whats it matter if I accept your compliments or not?â She challenges
âIâve told you not to call me that.â You say firmly, eyes narrowing.Â
You had this conversation a few months after you started working together and she promised sheâd stop calling you that. You were aware of the age gap, but that doesnât mean you need to be patronisingly called âkidâ, especially by Melissa. She knew better.Â
Her eyes narrow as her hand comes out to wave at you, âBut you are, alright? Ainât even thirty. Why are we kiddinâ ourselves with nice conversations and stupid compliments that mean nothinâ.â
âYou donât honestly believe that,â You breathe, voice calm even as your heart beats rapidly.Â
âYou should be hanginâ out with kids your own age, not me.âÂ
âI do, you know this. I have out of school friends and Iâve got Ava and I join the after school crew sometimes.â
She stares at you, her eyes hard even as her hands shake. You reach out and place a gentle hand over hers and watch as her whole body relaxes.Â
Her eyes squeeze shut and she drops her head, a deep sigh escaping her lips.Â
âMel, this is me.â You whisper. âMy favourite part of the day is sneaking into your classroom and giving you a coffee because it makes you smile. You have no idea how much Iâve missed it this last week. It just so happens that out of everyone you're still my favourite person to be with. Whatâs so wrong about that?â
Shining green eyes meet yours, âI ainât good for ya.âÂ
Your brows draw together, heart aching as you step closer to her. âThatâs not true.âÂ
Sheâs so close you can see the brown specks in her green eyes. You want to reach out and cup her cheek, hold her close and help somehow.Â
âIsnât my opinion what matters?â You prompt.Â
Her eyes gaze back into yours, pained and tormented.Â
âYouâre a terrible idea.â She breathes, voice so quiet you barely hear it over the sound of your thumping heart.Â
âMel,â Your heart thuds, your voice shaking as you're guided closer by an invisible force. Your hand rests on her upper arm, hers perching on your waist and all your thoughts disappear in an instant as your eyes squeeze shut and you try to remember how to breathe.Â
Her eyes track your face, memorising every detail now she has you so close. The slight furrow of your brow, your delicate eyelashes, your open mouth.
âFuck it,â She sighs, her hand coming up to cup your cheek, fingers cool against your overheated skin. Your eyes open and Melissaâs darkened ones stare back at you. Your teeth dig into your lip and her eyes follow the movement.Â
You canât find your breath as Melissa guides you towards her, her mouth slowly moving closer to yours. Your fingers grip into the cotton of her t-shirt the moment her lips tenderly brush against yours. You melt into the kiss, a mew escaping your mouth as you kiss her back. All thoughts gone as you give into the sensation of her lips against yours.
It doesnât last long but you still canât find your breath when Melissa pulls back, a nervous smile on her lips.Â
âWow,â You breathe.
She chuckles affectionately, her eyes warm as she watches you. âThatâs all youâve gotta say?âÂ
âUhâŚKiss me again, please?â You offer
She chuckles again, her smirk victorious as she rolls her eyes. âCome on, tell me what youâre feelinââÂ
âOh, isnât that obvious?â You squint, âIâm obsessed with you. I have been for ages. Youâre the one that was keeping it all close to the chest, Schemmenti.âÂ
She shrugs, âDunno. I mightâve suspected you had a thing. Wasnât sure though, and with those dates youâve been going on. I was gettinâ mixed signals.â She rolls her eyes.Â
Sheâs been going on dates as well but it seems pointless to point that out. âMelissa, Iâm crazy about you.âÂ
She grins, âI kinda have a thing for ya too.â
Your heart thumps at her words, like the kiss wasnât enough confirmation. Her smile and warm eyes, matching your own goofy smile. âThatâs good to know. How about you let me take you out for dinner?â
She rolls her eyes, âWhat the same place you took my sister? No hun, Iâm takinâ you out.â
Your teeth dig into your lips as you try and fail to suppress your smirk, âOh, was that the real issue? Jealous that your sister got to go out with me first?â
âDonât know what youâre talkinâ about.â She grumbles.
âOh yeah, is that so?â You tease, leaning in close.Â
Melissaâs eyes darken, âIâd watch it if I were you.âÂ
âWhyâs that?â You ask, excitement rippling down your spine.
ââCause youâve got no idea what Iâm capable of.â
âIs that a threat?â
âA promise.âÂ
Your body heats up. All the air leaving your lungs as Melissa laughs.Â
âThis is gonna be fun.â She grins.Â
She pats your hip, âCome on, hon, let's find a way out of this room and then Iâll take you on a proper date.â
You nod, unable to form words as you follow her blindly.
But with Melissa Schemmenti, you know youâll always be okay, even if she does have a dangerous impact on your ability to regulate your breath.
You think itâs worth it.Â
For a woman that beautiful, just about anything is.Â