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first ll prev ll next in july! COMICFURY MIRROR Want to read a mediaval plant au? Because I made one. This is the link.
It's still a week for midsummer, let's celebrate early. I've been going insane overr this. I've written a love confession chapter like 5 times over the years and all of them have been vastly different... Scary to nail down one iteration and decide that'll do.
second chances
mob boss! lando norris x reader
part forty-two: hello? are you there?
word count: 5.7k
warnings: this chapter contains descriptions of violence and gore. reader discretion is advised.
forty-one | forty-two | forty-three
It slipped out somewhere between Oscar raiding the fridge for orange juice and Logan bitching about how Max Fewtrell kept leaving his boots in the entryway like it didnât pose a hazard, considering they all had an inexplicable tendency to walk around armed more often than not.
âIf someone breaks in, Max, what? You gonna throw your fucking loafers at them?â
âTheyâre not loafers. Theyâre tactical boots.â
âTheyâre muddy gym shoes, bro. Move âem, man!â
Lando didnât even look up from the glass he wasnât drinking out of. He just leaned against the counter and posed a question aloud. âHow do you tell someone youâre sorry?â
The conversation stumbled mid-step.
Max F. blinked. âBy saying it?â
âNo shit, Sherlock.âLando scrubbed a hand through his hair, frustrated. âI mean, like⌠how do you make themâyâknowâŚâ
âNot mad at you?â Oscar offered.
âYeah. That.â
âYouâre asking how to make someone forgive you,â Max Fewtrell clarified from the doorway, his voice knowingly even. âWhich is a very different question.â
For a beat, there was silence. Lando glared at his coffee like it had personally betrayed him.
Then, it was Oscar who spoke up first.
âTime machine,â the Aussie offered with a wry smile, clearly proud of his little joke.
It took everything left of Landoâs willpower not to dramatically roll his eyes.Â
âNot helpful.â
âChocolate,â Max Verstappen offered next. âExpensive chocolate. Or wine. Works on everyone.â
âShe doesnât drink,â Lando muttered, clearly exasperated by now.
âThen just send her the chocolate of course,â Max replied, completely unfazed.
âOr,â Oscar said, holding up a spoon like it was a pointer, âyou could write her a letter. A real one. Handwritten. Not just a text. Itâs very⌠Jane Austen. Trust me, girls eat that shit up.â
âI tried that,â Lando said. âI donât think she even looked at it.â
Logan bit into an apple and spoke around it, his mouth very much still full. âYou could try showing up at her work with, like, a sad sign. Yâknow, something pathetic. Women love pathetic.â
âSheâs not the kind of person whoâd be impressed by public humiliation,â Lando replied dryly. âEspecially when Iâm the one sheâd want to humiliate.â
Carlos, who had been silent until now, set his coffee down slowly.
âYou want her back, si?,â he asked simply, getting straight to the point.
Lando didnât answer, looking away. Carlos, of course, took that as a yes. It was no secret that Lando Norris was not a man who was used to asking for help, much less for advice. This certainly could not be easy for a man of his⌠personality.
âFlowers,â The Spaniard announced. âThis is what always works for me.â
Oscar snorted, the sound echoing into his mug as he lifted it to his mouth for a sip. âOf course they did,â he muttered under his breath.
âNo, listen,â Carlos waved off the young man and his usual remarks, turning instead to Lando. âYou cannot get the cheap ones. You have to get the real ones, hermano. Be, uh, thoughtful, eh? Get her favorite ones. Not these âI want you backâ flowers. It must be âI am sorry I ruined everythingâ flowers.â
Lando blinked, too deep into his new action plan to really be offended by Carlosâs bluntness. Heâd have to let it go this time â the idiot was actually making sense for once, it seemed.
âPeonies,â he mumbled aloud.
Carlos nodded, giving the British man a concerned once-over. âThen send peonies. And do not write a note. Let the flowers do the talking.â
Lando blinked. âThatâs⌠oddly specific.â
Carlos shrugged, unapologetic. âI once ghosted a girl for three weeks and she forgave me after one bouquet. Iâm just saying.â
Logan narrowed his eyes. ââŚyouâre the reason girls donât trust men.â
But Lando had already tuned them out.
Always a man of action, Lando was knee-deep in floral websites within minutes. More than happy to let the rest of his men continue whatever it was they occupied their time with, he sauntered off with his phone in his hand, preoccupied with this new opportunity for redemption.
There was a fresh arrangement of flowers on her doorstep by the next morning.
Meticulously planned, Lando made sure that he gave nothing but his best. His best apparently included not just flowers, but arrangements â ridiculous, overdone, hand-delivered bouquets in tissue-wrapped boxes with quiet little cards that never said his name.
The first bouquet arrived with full, perfect peonies in pale pink and cream, wrapped in brown paper and tied with a soft ribbon that matched the color of her favorite sweater.
Of course, there was no note â he didnât want to write the wrong thing. So he chose to write nothing at all.
He sent one a week later, and then again the next week. Each time, heâd send them in different colors this time in different colors. Some of them had sprigs of lavender tucked inside, others with a bit of eucalyptus. They were always delivered on Mondays.
Sheâd always said she hated Mondays.
He sent them once a week â always peonies, always without a message. Just to let her know he hadnât stopped thinking about her. Just to make sure something soft was showing up in her life, even if it couldnât be him.
He knew it wouldnât fix anything, but truthfully, he didnât know what else to do.
The first time, she stared at them for a long time before placing them gently behind the counter at the cafĂŠ. Not quite throwing them out. Not quite acknowledging them either.
The second time, she didnât even look at the delivery guy. Just nodded, took the box, and walked to the back without a word.
They always arrived just often enough to remind her that she was still on his mind. That she hadnât disappeared from his world, even if heâd vanished from hers.
For a while, she accepted them.
Once, Logan even told him while they were out on a job â that she had smiled when she saw this week's delivery â a stunning bouquet of stark white peonies in the softest lilac wrapping. As they loaded their weapons back in the trunk, Logan turned to him and put his hand on Lando's shoulder, daring to look him in the air in a rare moment of familiarity.
âHey, she smiled. Even if itâs just a bit, thatâs gotta be worth something, right?â
Lando hated how that simple thought was enough to rekindle the tiniest spark of hope in his chest.
Between the bullshit with having to manually throw out Binotto and the faulty shipment Stella delivered, the Reaperâs Circle was already having a pretty shit week.
Binotto wasnât the only one of their clients who had started to play fast and loose with the rules. Verstappen had to knock sense into at least three different people who had decided to try their luck with asking for âan extensionâ on their payments, or just for âa little more time.â
What did they look like, a fucking charity?Â
So it was Lando who had to take Binotto and make an example of him, had to rough him up a little. It took a few hours of strategically placed cuts and meticulously calculated fractures to ensure that when he walked out of Jimmyâz, he served as an example for anyone else who felt brave enough to be as stupid as him.
Logan stood in Landoâs office just as this did any other day, more of Sargeantâs weekly updates scattered about the large desk in the form of meticulous photographs. The two of them were going over the surveillance details of the Monte Carlo police, as well as the officers whoâs been trying to demand a greater cut over in the Moneghetti district.
âThose bastards arenât worth half the money we pay them,â Lando snarled. âI mean, what the hell do they even do?â
âUh, I believe they do⌠police things, Boss.â
The American winced as he said it, already anticipating the bout of rage heâd just signed himself on to be the target of.
Lando simply glared at him, too preoccupied with angrily pacing the length of the room.
â24 thousand euros, and what do we even pay them for?â
âI can dig up dirt on them, if that helps,â Logan offered eagerly. âThereâs actually this new technique with my clip point blade Iâve been meaning toââ
The assassin cut himself off when he noticed he apparently no longer held Landoâs attention. Instead, the leader seemed preoccupied by a slip of paper he was reading, a worn sticky note with distinct scrawl.
Ah, he realized. The pains of young love.
 âShe just seems⌠quieter,â Logan shrugged, clearly hesitant to tell Lando this truth. He offered it in hopes that an update would cheer him up, make him less of⌠whatever it was heâd been lately. âLike, sure, sheâs not really smiling like she used toâŚâÂ
âBut that doesnât mean itâs not working!â Logan corrected, quickly realized his mistake. It was honestly a miracle how long heâd survived in this profession. âMaybe sheâs playing hard to get? You know, I was tailing this girl one timeâŚâ
Loganâs story faded into the background as Lando absentmindedly brushed the pad of his thumb along the familiar grooves of the ink.
âWas she⌠Was she angry?â Lando interrupted, his voice uncharacteristically soft.
Logan almost felt bad for the guy.
âNo,â he responded just as quietly, his expression sincerely sympathetic. Even he had noticed just how much this girl â this apparent stranger â had worked wonders and brought magic into his bossâs life. Hell, he had front row tickets to the whole damn thing.
âShe wasnât angry,â he told Lando honestly, hoping it would make him feel a bit better. âJust⌠less happy, is all.â
Instead of breathing easier at this information, Landoâs expression only became more forlorn.
Something behind his ribs shifted. It was worse, somehow. Anger meant she still felt something for him. Sadness just meant the part of her that used to feel safe with him was perhaps⌠gone.
Lando turned away. There was a strange tugging sensation in his chest, he found, in response to Loganâs words. He shouldnât have been surprised really â Lando hadnât really left Y/N with all that much to smile about when heâd wormed his way into her life and earned her trust, all while lying right to her face.
But the problem was that Lando knew that smile. The smile that crinkled her nose and ruined his entire week. He was intimately familiar with the radiance of the smile she used when she was pretending not to be proud of herself. His memories held perfect recreations of the exact curvature of the smile she used when she was happy and didnât know how to contain it.
Lando could never forget the smile Y/N used around him.
Or at least, used to.
He gave it one final attempt.
Some stupid, human part of him that sheâd managed to dig up and make living once again pleaded with him to try one more time, to reach out for her once again despite it all. That part of his heart believed that if all the time theyâd shared â from haphazard dinners made in her kitchen and movie night where she always fell asleep first to staying at her universityâs library at unholy hours of the night â had been worth anything, that then there was still something worth fighting for.
So he arranged for one more set of flowers to be delivered to her place. These peonies were cream and soft pink â the exact shade of the kind she always watered a little extra at the shop, the ones she showed that little bit more love. They used to make her light up in this stupid way, like the whole world had softened just for her.
These ones heâd hand selected from his own garden, carefully the buds that were still barely in bloom â the kind that unfurled slowly over a few days, like they were shy about being beautiful.
He didnât know all that much about flowers. For all long as heâd lived in this residence, heâd had a gardener who dutifully took care of all his plants, no matter how boring at times it seemed to Lando. Christian likely knew a lot more about flowers than Lando did, but had gone ahead and tried anyway.
He just chose the ones that reminded him of her.
The delivery man came back to the residence with a familiar bouquet and a less-familiar look of pity on his face.
âDidnât take âem,â the man informed Lando with a shrug. âDidnât even open the door, really. Said she doesnât want âem anymore.â
Lando stood in the middle of the foyer, staring down at the rejected bouquet in silence. The petals were still fresh, still beautiful, and yet somehow already wilting.Â
That hurt more than she probably meant it to, not because of the money or the gesture, but because it confirmed what he already knew.
Y/N didnât want his apologies. She didnât want him. The truth was that no matter how many flowers he sent, Lando couldnât fix what he broke â not with peonies, not with silence, not with love.
Not anymore.
She had always loved peonies, and now she couldnât even look at them without thinking of him. Now she didnât even want them in the same room. Lando finally understood: there were some things he couldnât buy, or fix, or drown in beauty.
Some damage was just done, and all the peonies in the world couldnât bring her back.
He didnât try again after that.
Because if even peonies hurt now, what chance did he have?
Days blurred. Weeks passed.Â
The world went on like it always does when people fall out of love â or maybe, in his case, when someone lets the person who loved them see them for who they really are.Â
Lando didnât keep track in any meaningful way. Life had its own rhythm again: operations resumed, meetings were scheduled, threats were dealt with. No one dared mention her name around him anymore. It had faded from conversation the way most dangerous things do.
But even as the months stretched out like fading shadows, Lando still found her in places he didnât expect.
He had been searching for one of his IDs when A sticky note, curled and fading, pressed between his phone and the case, tucked behind one of his IDs. Her handwriting spelled out some mundane comment, something stupidly her: drink water, donât die :)Â
Another day, it was the origami stars. The ones she used to make when her fingers were too restless to be still, usually while he was telling some story she pretended not to care about. He had reached into the pocket of his winter coat and felt a small, crinkled shape â the tiny origami sheâd taught him how to make, gentler hands placed right over his as he did his best to mimic each of the folds heâd watched her do dozens of times.
Another time he found two of them, pale blue and slightly squished, tucked in the front pocket of a he hadnât worn since winter. He had never noticed how many sheâd left behind. Some days, it made him feel like sheâd never left at all.
That was the worst part of grief, he found â the way it hid, the way it waited.
He would find them by accident now, like landmines. Every time he thought he was fine, something else would come along and remind him of her, making it impossible to breathe.
He hated it.
He didnât mean to think about her.
But that night, when the house was all quiet and there was nothing more to do, he couldnât help but think of her. Even Lando Norris, the Reaper of Monaco, couldnât stop the reel of old footage his brain kept playing back. On nights when sleep felt more like punishment than rest â she came back in whole memories.
It was worse on the nights he drank.
Not the reckless kind â not anymore. But the kind that made his head buzz just enough to knock the edges off, to make the memories less sharp and the guilt a little warmer.
He was already a few drinks in â not drunk, just loose around the edges â when it happened. Sinking into the large wingback chair, he let the darkness drape itself around him as he reached under the table to grab a different bottle, seeking something stronger.
If he focused just enough, he could spot her silhouette in the mirage of spotted lights reflected across his glass wall, the distant flecks of color blending together to remind him of the evening at the little Chinese place before Brazil.
Under the hanging lights, her eyes shimmered.
The lighting then had been dim but golden, all soft bulbs and reflections in window glass. He remembered watching her chew the end of her straw like she always did when she was pretending not to smile. Remembered the way she looked across the table at him â chin in her hand, laughter still blooming in her throat â and how the world had felt still for a moment, like it paused just to give him that memory in perfect detail.
Sheâd been radiant.
He remembered the warmth of it, the way the lights caught in her hair, the soft flush on her cheeks when she laughed at something dumb heâd said. Sheâd worn that dark green sweater he liked â the one that made her eyes look almost unreal under the amber glow.
God, sheâd looked unreal under those lights â hair a little windblown, cheeks warm from the cold, eyes lit up with some joke he didnât even catch all the way. Later that night, sheâd reached across the space between them and took his hand gently, so gently, and asked him to stay still.
âGive me your hand,â sheâd asked softly.
Heâd frowned but obeyed, watching as she pulled a thin, threaded bracelet from her bag. It wasnât fancy â nowhere near the caliber of the multimillion euro watches he always wore. It didnât seem to matter to her â sheâd still tied it around his wrist like it meant something sacred.
Now, when he thought about it, he couldnât remember ever having taken it off. He still wore it, tucked beneath sleeves and suits and the rest of the life he kept moving forward in. He still wore it, even after everything.
He tried then, inspired by the flash of anger that seared through him, to tug the stupid thing off. It was only a couple of stupid threads woven together, after all â how hard could it be?
Hooking his fingers under the braided string, Lando tugged with a mighty grunt. The skin of his face burned hot with shame, with frustration, with something when no matter how hard he tried the damn thing didnât come off. He tugged and twisted and yanked on it until his fingertips were red and raw from all his failed efforts.
Stupid thing.
He told himself heâd cut it off the second he could get his hands on something sharp enough, but after too many drinks and not enough distance from his own thoughts â he found himself holding that thread between his fingers like it might answer something.
Sometimes love didnât end in shouting or closure. Sometimes it just lingered like a thread around your wrist â fraying, but still tied.
A few more drinks later he found himself in his personal bedroom, pulling open one of the locked drawers in the back of the too-large walk-in closet.Â
He breathed a sigh of relief. The ring was still right where heâd hidden it, wrapped in a receipt and tucked beneath a box of spare cufflinks. Reaching for it, he stumbled to the ground more than he sat down with any amount of grace, the black velvet box smooth under his fingertips. Â
He hadnât bought it for a reason. He hadnât planned a proposal or imagined some cinematic moment with rose petals and violins. Heâd just seen it in a market somewhere in Italy, or maybe Portugal, he canât even remember. It reminded him of her, simple and delicate. A pale, iridescent stone â quiet and beautiful, just like her. He remembered seeing it and thinking thatâs hers â not would be, or should be â just hers.
So he bought it, tucked it away and never told her.
Heâd never gotten the chance.
He hadnât planned on proposing. If he was being honest, he hadnât even known what the future looked like. But heâd bought it anyway, because heâd wanted to â because he loved her.
He missed her.
Not just the version of her that had loved him â but her. All of her. Her stubbornness, her sarcasm, the way she threw napkins at him when he made a dumb joke. The way she used to hum when she studied. The way sheâd fall asleep with her cheek pressed to his shoulder like she didnât even realize she was safe there.
He missed the life they never got to have.
He turned it over in his fingers now, the weight of it a little heavier than he remembered. It was almost the only proof she was ever real, that he hadnât dreamt her up. That he was real when he was with her.Â
Maybe sheâd been a fever dream in the middle of the violence, a soft thing his brain made up to protect him from the rest.
This ring was nearly the only proof he had ever cared about her enough to dare to think that she could someday be his.
He held it between his fingers for a long time and let the metal sit against his palm as he tried to imagine how her hand wouldâve looked wearing it. He also tried not to imagine what her hand might be holding now â if it wasnât his.
Maybe Iâll finally stop thinking of her, he told himself, if I can just see her once.
What Lando wanted to know, deep down, was that she still smiled sometimes. He wanted to be certain that despite his Midas touch, he hadnât ruined Y/N entirely. He wanted to see with his own eyes that she was okay, that she was safe. He needed her to still be able to smile, to still be building the life he watched her dream about. He didnât need to talk to her or even approach her â just needed to finally confirm that Y/N had moved on.
Just to see. Just to know. Just to remember what it looked like to love something without touching it.
Perhaps then he would finally be able to let go of this godforsaken guilt festering in his chest.
So on that late Thursday night, Lando propped himself up until he was steady on his two feet, grabbed his coat, and headed out into the night.
The streets were quieter at this hour, the city breathing in its own way â hushed murmurs of distant cars, the occasional flicker of neon signs reflected on the rain-slick pavement. The neighborhood was mostly empty by the time he made it to the block where Brews & Books sat, still gleaming faintly under the warm light of its storefront. The leftover light spilled through the windows, cutting faint patterns into the pavement.
The cafĂŠ was tucked into the corner of the street like always, windows glowing soft and golden against the dark. Brews & Books â the lettering still intact, still the same warm serif she had chosen for the sign herself.Â
It looked exactly how he remembered it.
Outside, it wasnât freezing â just cold enough to cut through his jacket in that way that made everything feel sharper, more real. He welcomed it, letting the wind bite at his hands and cheeks like it was a punishment. Or maybe a penance.
He kept his head down as he walked.
For once, Lando Norris wasnât dressed nicely. Instead, he wore jeans and a hoodie and that same worn coat with the thread bracelet still tucked under the sleeve. If she saw him, he didnât want her to think he was trying anything. He just⌠wanted to see her.
That was all.
Heâd timed it carefully â picked a night he was fairly sure sheâd be working, when the cafĂŠ usually stayed open late for evening study hours. Heâd walked by enough times before to know the rhythm of her schedule. The soft hum of her days.
So when he got there â the familiar corner glowing faintly in the dark, window fogged from the warmth inside â he let himself hope, just a little.
With his gaze locked on the glass storefront, he waited for a glimpse of anything â a silhouette in motion, a flash of her in a messy bun, the curve of her smile as she handed someone a drink. All his attention focuses itself, seeking out the sound of her voice rising faintly through the door. Her laugh â god, her laugh.
He wouldâve taken anything, even just her reflection in the glass. So he waited.
One minute. Then two. Then five.
He shifted from foot to foot, tucking his hands deeper into his coat. Then, he kept glancing back at the window like sheâd appear any second, but she didnât.
He didnât go in, didnât even get close enough for the security camera to pick up more than his silhouette. He just stood across the street with his hands in his pockets, the ring burning a hole in his coat.
Watching. Waiting.
His hands were stuffed in his pockets, his fingers brushing the frayed bracelet on his wrist. He just stood there â across the street, in the dark, watching the life that mightâve been his⌠if he hadnât ruined it.
Ten minutes passed. Then fifteen. And, finally, the truth started to set in.
She wasnât there. She wasnât coming.
And the thought hit him harder than he expected: she used to love this place.
She used to light up in here. He remembered that night he showed up soaked from the rain, and sheâd dragged him behind the counter just to dry him off with the sleeve of her cardigan. She used to hum while she organized the books. She used to sneak extra whipped cream into his drink and then pretend she hadnât. She used to live here, in that warm way that he had never really seen her take up space anywhere else.
Now? Even this felt empty.
Did I ruin it for her?
Had he taken the one place that was hers and turned it into something she couldnât stomach?
His jaw clenched as he looked away from the cafĂŠ window and swallowed hard.
âFuck,â he muttered to himself, under his breath.Â
He shouldnât have come out here like an idiot thinking sheâd still be where he left her. He shouldâve asked Logan before coming here. He shouldâve checked if her schedule had changed, shouldâve done anything other than walk out here like a complete idiot expecting some kind of⌠moment.
Because now he just felt stupid.
He stayed a little longer anyway â because some part of him still hadnât caught up with reality. Some insane, idiotic part of him was still half-convinced sheâd come around the corner any second and look at him like she used to. Certainly there had to be a reality where he got to see her one more time, got to witness one more time the way she used to light up when she would realize that it was him who had walked through the door.
But that didnât happen
Frozen in place by some unknown power, Lando felt the rest of the world go quiet as he let himself miss her, just for a moment. For a moment, he let himself love her, quietly and from a distance. For a moment, he told himself that maybe, from now on, that this was what love had to look like.
So Lando stood alone in the cold a while longer, with a bracelet on his wrist and a ring he couldnât give to anyone.
It took him longer than it should to realize somethingâs off.
The lights were on. The sign beside the door was still lit â OPEN in neon, flickering letters. The usual warm glow still poured from the cafĂŠ windows. He hadnât noticed it at first, too busy watching for her, but now that he was really looking, the whole place was⌠awake, still thrumming with the faint hum of electricity.
That was the first thing.
The second thing was the music. Something played low, an acoustic track with a familiar rhythm that was barely audible from the street.
Yet no one was inside.
There were no customers, no baristas. In fact, there was no movement at all.
Instead, each booth and table and chair lay empty, devoid of even a single soul. From here, he could still spot a mop bucket abandoned near the center of the floor space. One of the chairs was left pushed back like someone had stood up quickly and never sat back down.
Lando squinted through the window. There was no sign of her â or of anyone else, for that matter.
There was a pressure in the air, a certain amount of wrongness that his body recognized before his brain caught up. His stomach tensed, the muscles tightening subconsciously to the unease he now felt creeping through his whole body. The sensation was faint at first, like static on the back of the neck. He hadnât survived this long by ignoring a gut instinct like that.
That was the third thing â the bad feeling.Â
His hand drifted automatically to the inside of his coat. The leather of the concealed holster there was familiar, the weight of it comforting.Â
Just in case.
Worst case scenario, he told himself, thisâs nothinâ more than a simple misunderstanding. It was more than likely that some barista had stepped out for a smoke break or someone with the closing shift merely forgot the lights on.Â
But Y/N wouldnât do that.
The thought nagged at him.
Immediately, he stepped forward and crossed the street, barely looking on either side of the pathway before making his way over to the familiar entrance. When his hand went to press against the glass door, it gave way immediately. The door wasnât locked.
That was the fourth thing.
He pushed it open slowly, the bell above it jangling with the same cheer it always had. The sound made his chest ache with something akin to grief for this place heâd somehow developed fondness for.Â
He stepped inside, and Landoâs eyes narrowed. His palm instinctively brushed the inside of his jacket, where the holster sat snug against his ribs. his long fingers still curled near the handle of the gun, but with the index finger still pressed up against the safety lock on the side of the barrel. There was no need to draw it yet.
Huh.
Landoâs eyes narrowed. His fingers instinctively brushed the inside of his jacket, where the holster sat snug against his ribs. He didnât draw it â not yet â but the tension settled across his shoulders like a warning. Years of training and muscle memory kicking in without being asked.
He rounded the side of the first booth, his eyes flicking over everything now. The register appeared to be closed somewhat haphazardly, its security latch visibly loose. On the countertop sat a single transparent cup, likely intended for some drink, only to be abandoned with the now-melting ice cubes as its sole content. He also noted a blueberry muffin on a plate, untouched. From where he stood, Lando could also spot the familiar sight of a note stuck to the side of the shelf, clearly in Y/Nâs handwriting: restock oat milk!!
He was just in the middle of attempting to identify what it was about this scene that was so disconcerting whenâ
The loud, shrill ringing of a phone interrupted his train of thought, nearly startling him in the process. The stillness of the place had lulled him into a sense of ease, one that was disrupted the longer the ringing went on.
Isnât anyone going to get that?
It rang again and again, going unanswered. Despite the fact that the sound seemed to emanate from behind the swinging door that led to the backroom, Lando could hear it clear as day, even out here.Â
Why wonât anyone answer it?
He moved slowly now, eyes scanning, every step heavier than the last. Each step followed the same heel-to-toe rhythm his body had long since memorized, his body working on autopilot as he continued to scan the room in an attempt to figure out what was going on.Â
"Hello? Are you there?"
Not paying enough attention to where he placed his steps, Landoâs shoe squealed against the tile. The floor behind the bar must have been slick with something, the rubber of his boot catching on it slightly.
He looked down to see what it was.
A spray of fresh, red blood.
Instantly, his gun was out, his finger hovering over the trigger now. He moved faster now, stepping past the edge of the bar counter and through the swinging door into the workspace. His body moved before his brain could even finish catching up.
And thatâs when he looked down. His breath caught, and time slowed.
Crumbled on the tile like the air had been knocked out of her, one of her arms was outstretched, the soft skin of her palm open towards the door. The deep burgundy of blood rapidly stained her abdomen, with even more dribbling out of the side of her mouth. There was enough of the thick liquid for it to just begin pooling beside her, the floor beneath her soaking fast. Her body twitched weakly, like she was still trying to move.
Her eyes met his for the briefest, most agonizing second.
She tried to speak. All that came out was a wet, choking sound â like the air was catching on itself, like her lungs were filled with something thicker than breath.
Blood.
âY/N!â
a/n: so...

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I so desperately want a sokeefe imagine/one shot where they're at school or smth hanging out with the whole group or whatever.
but Sophie didn't want to tell everyone immediately so nobody knows except like edaline and grady
and obviously ro
ANYWAYS
so they're like at lunch or smth and everyone's talking and Keefe gets up to throw away his food or something random it doesn't matter
BUT AS HE GETS UP HE KISSES SOPHIE'S HEAD AND EVERYONE JUST STARES
but like neither of them notice
Nothing is better than reading a manhwa with the context of the novel. Moondae your besties literally learned your micro expressions. What do you mean you're only thinking about the schedule after being hospitalized.








