» cw: smut! por favor só interaja se for +18! ; consumo de maconha + high sex; friends with benefits; nipple play; dirty talk; fingering + oral (fem rec); sextape; p in v; sexo desprotegido; menção a creampie
» wn: bom domingo entĂŁo neah đ minha querida amiga @lunitt pediu uma vez que eu canetasse uma do matias baseada nessa mĂșsica (muito boa inclusive) e saiu isso aqui! admito que isso aqui tava muitooo melhor na minha cabeça mas acho que ficou legalzinho na medida do possĂvel, espero muito que vocĂȘs gostem! đ fun fact eu pensei nisso aqui chapada! e vai se criando um clima incrĂvel para eu e matias recalt recriarmos isso đč
â Porque âcĂȘ tĂĄ muito bonitinho⊠â A frase saiu suave, num tom mais derretidinho do que vocĂȘ sĂłbria falaria com o seu rolinho bobo. Com Matias nĂŁo tinha tempo ruim, entĂŁo por isso que agora estava sentada no sofĂĄ do garoto que te chamou para fumar um e fuder, simples assim.
â Ah, bonitinho sĂł? â Indagou, metido. Deixou o lanchinho em cima do sofĂĄ e a bebida no chĂŁo, e, aproveitando-se que ao abaixar ficou pertinho do seu rosto, te deu um selinho demorado antes de endireitar novamente, fez o vĂdeo ficar preto por alguns segundos quando a blusa encostou na cĂąmera ao se abaixar.
Conseguia ouvir as palavras provocadoras enquanto os lĂĄbios se arrastavam pelo seu colo, logo seguido pelo som do celular escorregando pelo tecido da sua blusa e caindo no sofĂĄ. Agradeceu mentalmente a Matias por ter pegado o celular com a mĂŁo livre e o colocando na sua, implicitamente te instruindo a nĂŁo soltĂĄ-lo, te fazendo gravar a cena que, provavelmente, era a coisa mais excitante que vocĂȘ jĂĄ tinha visto.
Mesmo um pouco fora de foco, conseguia ver os dedos longos se enfiando debaixo do tecido, puxando ele para baixo e expondo seu mamilo para que Matias pudesse lambĂȘ-lo, com a lĂngua molinha e um sorriso de lado, safado, sem conseguir tirar os olhos do seu rostinho jĂĄ se contorcendo. âCĂȘ fica assim toda vezâŠâ, Matias comentou baixinho antes de abocanhar o biquinho babadinho, fechando os olhos ao sentir sua mĂŁo parando na cabeça e levemente puxando os fios marrons. Ele se afastou lentamente, te fazendo gemer baixinho ao soltar o biquinho e logo ir para o outro, o Ăąngulo na tela pegava o perfil dele, o qual ficava ainda mais bonito ao vĂȘ-lo mamando seu peito com tanta vontade, o nariz grande esbarrando na pele enquanto a outra mĂŁo apalpava o outro, negligenciado.
O jeitinho de Matias era justamente o que te deixava louca, as vezes no sentido bom, outras no ruim, e agora vocĂȘ nem sabia dizer qual: ele voltou o olhar para ti, que segurava o celular um pouco mais para o lado - ainda focado nele - para que ele nĂŁo atrapalhasse sua visĂŁo, e entrepartiu os lĂĄbios, como se fosse deixar uma lambida extensa entre suas dobrinhas. Mas nĂŁo, ele deixou apenas um beijinho no seu clitĂłris, te fazendo jogar a cabeça para trĂĄs e arfar em frustração antes de perguntar: âTĂŽ bonitinho ainda?â.
â Ă bom que vocĂȘ assiste de novo, e se vĂȘ ficando burrinha, burrinha⊠SĂł pra ganhar qualquer coisinha nessa bucetinha carente. â Antes que vocĂȘ pudesse responder a provocação, ele voltou a dar um beijo molhado, chupando e babando ainda mais seu clitĂłris enquanto fazia movimentos de âvem cĂĄâ com os dedos dentro de ti, encostando os dĂgitos no pontinho dentro de vocĂȘ.
O vĂdeo tinha terminado, sentia a respiração mais pesada e as bochechas mais quentes do que antes. Finalmente viu as outras mensagens que ele tinha mandado.
[28/7/24 22:42:09] Recalt đđ§: ainda tem certeza que vai sair com esse otaño aĂ?
[28/7/24 22:42:15] Recalt đđ§: dale guapa, vem aqui pra casaâŠ
[28/7/24 22:42:20] Recalt đđ§: extraño hacer eso con vos
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The string of days between Christmas and New Years always feels like purgatory. One holiday bleeds slowly into the next, and thereâs a general consensus no one knows what day it is or how long itâs been since they ate something moderately healthy. For most itâs time well spent with family and friends, but for Isobel itâs a sentence to near solitary confinement. She has no family remotely close, few friends, and is much too stubborn to take up her co-workersâ invitations to join them on holiday getaways to ski chalets or sandy beaches. Isobel refuses to be more of an inconvenience than she already feels like she is, but it isnât necessarily best for her mental health.
She spends as much time as possible at work, researching rising social media trends to present to the team and making sure all paperwork is up-to-date. The team will be able to start with their best foot forward in the new year, something Isobel is extremely proud of, and it keeps her going into the office even when sheâd much prefer to stay in bed and wallow in the intense loneliness she feels. There isnât a pressure to produce new deliverables, which is a slight stress relief. The analytics department isnât needed as much with the bye week and most of the incoming reports can be run by Isobel alone. A number of years ago the NHL implemented bye weeks in addition to the all-star break, which allows each team to not have scheduled games during the regular season. This year Ottawa got lucky, with their break over the Christmas holidays, and players and support staff alike took the opportunity to get the hell out of the snowy capital.
As far as Isobelâs aware, very few members of the Senators organization stayed in the area. From social media she could see co-workers posting from almost every continent, enjoying all the world has to offer. Many roster players were in tropical destinations, hungry to get away from the ice and snow that ruled much of their daily lives. Claude Giroux has taken his family to the Caribbean and posts a rare snapshot of his young boys enjoying the water. Brady, ever the gracious captain, has taken what seems like half the team home with him to St. Louis in order to cheer on his sisterâs university tournament being hosted in the same city. Only Jakobâs whereabouts are unknown, his absence from her life palpable, but Isobelâs sure he isnât in Ottawa. Why would he be? There are a thousand different people and places vying for his attention, and one of them was sure to be the lucky winner.Â
Itâs her most guarded secret, the fact that Isobel has an almost debilitating crush on who is technically a co-worker, but sheâs also sure everyone has figured it out, even Jakob himself. Working with professional athletes means thereâs a serious lack of personal boundaries, and oneâs private life isnât exactly private, no matter how well guarded they may be. The boys Isobel works with will stop at nothing short of blackmail to get information out of her, even if itâs only ever used for in-house teasing. No one has said anything yet, which sheâs incredibly grateful for, but Isobel canât help but think itâs the main topic of conversation when sheâs not around.Â
The suburbs of Ottawa are desolate as Isobel winds through the streets to the Canadian Tire Centre. No car is on the road except her own, and there is only one in the parking lot when she pulls in. Badge in hand, Isobel treks up the steps and pulls open the large door at the back of the arena, one that isnât used by anyone except members of the organization. Jamie, one of the buildingâs security guards, is face down in a book â it must have been his sedan parked beside her own sensible compact SUV.Â
âIsobel Walker,â he says, surprised to see another person. The offices were open upon a technicality in contracts that is now grandfathered in, but itâs likely Jamie hasnât seen anyone since he started his shift. âWhat are you doing here? Shouldnât you be getting ready with friends? The New Year's festivities start in a few hours.â
Isobel shakes her head. âJust wanted to square away a few things before the weekend. Besides, itâs not like I have anything better to do. Itâs just me this year.â
The attentive man doesnât miss the sad downturn in her voice, or the longing for companionship in Isobelâs eyes. âWho knows? Maybe youâll get invited somewhere.â Jamie sounds resolute in the statement, but she knows it must be easy for him to think when once his shift is over heâll return home to a wife and kids. When Isobel is done putting in work thereâll be no one waiting at home.Â
The elevator dings then, signalling its availability to deliver a human to the floor where the data and analytics department is located. Isobel waves goodbye in an almost timid fashion, insisting sheâll take good care of herself and promising to at least look into doing something. Nothing will come of it, this sheâs sure of, but a small white lie has never hurt anyone. In fact, Isobel deals almost exclusively in little white lies, whether it be to scouts who want to hear a specific player is doing bad so they feel less guilty about not advising the general manager to draft them or to teammates when they ask what sheâs doing on the weekends. Telling Jamie one more wonât cause the world to fall apart. Isobel is sure of it.
Her cubicle is tucked just inside the glass doors that shelter the front office from the rest of the floor, but Isobel doesn't head there. Instead, she tiptoes through the space until the corkboard of Senators and their individual season stats is right in front of her. The photo of Jakob immediately catches her attention â not an official headshot but instead a picture from the charity gala last season â and Isobel notices itâs a cropped version of one she has on her desk. In the photo heâs posing with the analytics staff, goofy smile plastered on his face as he stands three people from Isobel. She also remembers that in the photo sheâs not looking at the camera, but at him. Eventually she forces herself to stop looking at the gorgeous specimen that is Jakob Chychrun and accomplish what she intended to do. Taking one last look, Isobel places a distant memory that their eyes had locked seconds after the cameraâs shutter went off.Â
âââ
Itâs long past sunset when Isobel returns home, and thereâs no sense trying to scramble downtown to an overcrowded bar. She hadnât been planning on it anyways despite what she told the only person sheâs interacted with in a week. Things at the office didnât take long to complete, despite the frequent distraction of Jakobâs gorgeous portrait in the background, but Isobel couldnât bring herself to return to her empty home. Since the conversation with Jamie in the lobby sheâs been dreading the silence that would greet her when the door rocked on its hinges. Instead of immediately returning home, Isobel drives eastward towards more connected areas of the city and marvels at the tourists in town to ring in the new year surrounded by history. Each street sign passed amalgamated into a mushed series in her brain, and once she could no longer tell what was real or imaginary Isobel turned and headed for home.Â
As expected, the modest craftsman house Isobel occupies is dark and silent and lonely, as well as a million other words she canât think of to encapsulate how isolated she feels. If she had been thinking clearly Isobel would have picked up take out on the drive back, but she wasn't in a completely sound frame of mind, therefore being resigned to heating up three day old broccoli pasta and drinking room temperature beer. She canât even be bothered to change into comfortable clothing, instead throwing her blouse and slacks over the back of a dining room chair seconds before crashing onto the worn leather sofa inherited from a college roommate nearly a decade ago but that she canât seem to get rid of.Â
The television turns on at the press of a button, and Isobel briefly watches the sports highlights for updates on potential trade targets before deciding sheâs done more than enough work for the day and switching to a New Years special. This one seems to be taking place in New York, a place sheâs never been nor cared for, but at the moment Isobel would give anything to be there amongst the suffocating crowd. Maybe then she wouldnât feel so earth-shatteringly alone.Â
Hours pass by and more beers are consumed, but Isobel canât seem to reach the buzz sheâs so desperately chasing. The performances and countdowns meld together but if questioned there wouldnât be a detail missing from her recollection. No one could do that inebriated, further proving that getting drunk isnât in the cards for her tonight. A chill settles over the room and Isobel struggles to wrangle a throw blanket free from its perch on the back of the couch. Though comfortable, sitting in only undergarments doesnât provide much protection against the drafty windows she should call a repairman about. Some pop star, whom she doesn't particularly care about, is thanking fans for helping them reach a milestone this past calendar year and she zone out. Nothing and everything floats through Isobelâs brain all at once, swimming in circles and causing a beautiful confusion.Â
The dull thud of a fist against the front door shakes Isobel from her stupor and possible slumber. Panic encroaches and her sharp survival instincts set in â the baseball bat normally kept in the corner of the living room grabbed and work clothes are haphazardly tossed over frame. The person on the other side of the wood slab is the last person sheâs expecting to see, and the fact heâs standing there with a sheepish smile is astounding. Jakob Chychrun is on her doorstep, shifting his weight between the balls of his feet and carrying a large bottle of expensive champagne and a bag of garlic bread.Â
âHi.â
âCan I help you, Jakob?â she asks, but immediately backpedals when she realizes how ill-tempered the tone of the words made her seem. âI just wasnât expecting any visitors and am wholly unprepared.â
He smiles even more, as though Isobel can actually solve a problem heâs been faced with, and gestures to the objects in his hands like itâs obvious. âJamie mentioned you were spending the evening alone when I went into the rink this afternoon, and I had no plans, so I thought we could watch the dumb special programs and drown our sorrows in alcohol.â
The answer is so Jakob, so perfect and friendly and warm, Isobel canât help but return his grin. âI told him Iâd look into going out. What are you doing in the city?â
âI wanted a relaxing week.â
Isobel arches her eyebrow. âThe beach isnât relaxing?â
âNot as much as staying at home.â
âOh.â
Jakob doesnât skip a beat in bringing conversation back to his original proposition. âWell sweetheart, what do you say?â
All the air leaves her lungs at the pet name, but she manages to nod semi-enthusiastically and move to the side. Jakob slips off his shoes while Isobel closes the door and treads into the living space carefully, inspecting-without-inspecting the decor. She quickly plays the role of gracious hostess, getting her handsome guest a crystal flute and asking if heâd like anything to eat. Jakob declines, saying he had leftovers before coming over, and urges her to sit down and âstop fluttering around like a hummingbirdâ. She obliges, turning to face him and tucking her legs underneath her center of gravity.
Jakob rakes his eyes over Isobel, once, then a second time, before coughing rather aggressively. It rings through the quiet like a gunshot and nearly makes her jump. Unsure of what could have caused such a reaction, she looks down to find the previously hastily buttoned shirt has shifted, revealing a rather large patch of red lace that hints at whatâs underneath. Surely that canât be the reason the normally suave man across from her is a blushing mess?
He respectfully looks away while she adjusts, and Isobel finishes quickly before placing a tentative hand on her shoulder to let her know everything is back to normal. Sheâs desperate to dissuade any awkwardness. âSorry about that.â
âItâs okay,â Jakob laughs, but it comes out a little strangled. âHappens to the best of us. Well not me, in that exact way, but Iâve been caught in my fair share of wardrobe malfunctions.â
Isobel focuses extremely hard on not thinking about what that means, and unsure of where to go from the moment that was somehow vulnerable and impersonal at the same time, she reaches across Jakon to grab the bottle of champagne and doesn't even bother getting a glass. The cool liquid does wonders to soothe the fire in her insides, exacerbated by the fact that Jakob came to her, wanted to spend time with her. Some alcohol misses Isobelâs mouth, dribbles down her chin, but before she can even lift the bottle from her lips itâs being wiped away.Â
Itâs Jakob, she realizes, stroking his thumb across her skin tenderly and making sure there isnât an opportunity for the champagne to stain the silk button up that she can never remember to take to the dry cleaners. Clouds immediately form in her mind and Isobel closes her eyes â this has to be a dream. An incredibly elaborate fantasy. Under no circumstance is Jakob Chychrun sitting on her couch staring at her with longing and centimetres away from her lips. She must have fallen asleep, and her dreams are vivid due to the beer.Â
âIso, sweetheart, hey,â Jakob says barely above a whisper, eyebrow furrowed with concern and the slightest bit of amusement. âYou alright?â
Her eyelids flutter open, a bit heavy from all the alcohol sheâs consumed, but her gaze is met with his blue eyes so close to her own and his fingers fiddling with the hem of her pants. Apparently this is in fact real life, and while Isobel had been trying to convince herself otherwise sheâd missed Jakob inching closer and resting his forehead against her own.Â
âYeah,â she sputters, nearly choking on air for the second time that evening. âI drank a bit before you got here and I think itâs all catching up to me.â
Jakob smiles softly, like he already confirmed this, and itâs then she clues in to the fact there are four empty beer bottles on the coffee table. âAre you drunk?â
Laughter trickles from her lips. âI wish,â Isobel confesses, âIt would make the loneliness a lot easier to ignore.â
Again, Jakob smiles like he understands. Itâs a bit surreal, the way the two of them are so similar, but Isobel canât help but enjoy learning about him through these small glances. If she could keep her cool around the man for longer periods than the handful of minutes long interaction theyâd shared, Isobel is almost sure theyâd be friends, but the universe is cruel and unyielding. Sheâs destined to never know Jakob all that well, watching from the sidelines as he jokes with Brady and Tim, marvelling at his beauty and resigning herself to the fact heâll never be yours.Â
âCan I kiss you?â
The question steals every ounce of air from Isobelâs lungs. Jakob is looking at her intently, studying her features for clues or transgressions he unknowingly committed. Sheâs never been good at keeping her emotions steeled away, and Isobel knows everything is splayed on her face for him to decipher if he wants to. The most prominent one is shock. Isobel is beyond surprised heâs asking the one thing thatâs been on the tip of her tongue and whispering in her mind for years.Â
âAre ââ she struggles to find the words she wants to say. âAre you sure you want to do that?â
Itâs Jakobâs turn to laugh. Itâs a beautiful sound, his deep rumbles as he nods his head, and Isobel does her best to imprint it to memory. If this is the last time sheâll ever hear it she wants to give herself the best shot at remembering.Â
âPretty damn sure, sweetheart. Iâve wanted to do it since I joined the team.â
Isobel is now beyond shocked. âYouâve wanted to kiss me for three years?â
Jakob smiles in a way that allows it to reach his eyes. Beautiful, Isobel thinks, but doesnât allow herself much time to focus on it, too eager to catch his next words. âFour if you count the time I got lost when Arizona was the visiting team and you held the door for me to get back to the locker rooms. You were wearing a black turtleneck that made your eyes look even more angelic than normal. I didnât know that at the time, of course, but I did know I wanted to kiss you senseless.â
âFuck me, you never thought to say anything when I was so clearly pining after you?â she whispers, emboldened and growing more confident under the confession and moving even closer until her lips are so close to Jakobâs she can feel the breath he inhales.Â
It takes a moment, but Isobel gains the courage to tilt her head slightly upwards and slot her lips against Jakobâs. Time stops with the flourish of a cheesy romance novel, though she canât find it in her to groan internally even if she would under normal circumstances. Nothing about whatâs happening is normal, however. Kissing Jakob is perfect in ways Isobel could never accurately describe â all plump lips and gentle touches and whispered sweet nothings. She never wants it to end, but eventually he pulls back.Â
He doesnât stray far, just tucks her into his side with a hint of possession if Isobel squints , and cards his fingers through the matted ends of her hair. Jakob seems to have quite an affinity for the strands, allowing them to keep his attention while Isobel processes the fact that the man sheâs been secretly in love with for years has also been in love with her for just as long.
âYou know,â she says breathlessly, still in a surreal state from the kiss, âMaybe ringing in the new year wonât be so lonely after all.âÂ
Jakob giggles in the same warm and gleeful way that made Isobel fall in love with him all those years ago. âI hope not.â
The pair of them spend the remaining hours of the night eating, drinking, and talking about what the future holds. When the television program begins the countdown Jakob looks at Isobel with a gleam in his eyes, and waits until the ball drops to kiss her into the next year.
warnings: explicit!fem reader, cursing, little bit of asshole joel, alcohol consumption, slight innuendo, moderate depiction of injury, needles
recommended listening: under the spell | springtime carnivore
a/n: i know figure skater/hockey player romances are terribly cliche but i couldnât help myself. as an ex-skater hopefully i can make it a little less cringe. thereâs probably an obscene amount of technical jargon in here and i sincerely apologize. the injury mentioned actually happened to me and let me tell you, it was not fun lmao. enjoy!
Joel swears heâs going to kill whoeverâs in charge of renting out the practice facility.
Realistically, he knows itâs impossible. The rink can be rented by anyone when the Flyers arenât using it and he typically thinks itâs a great way to promote ice sports in the community. Joel just wishes the facilities manager didnât rent it out to figure skaters. They kick the shit out of the ice with their toe picks and leave the ice in terrible quality. It frustrates Joel because while community engagement is important, his career and the team take precedence.Â
No one else seems to be bothered by the recent decline in ice conditions. Most of his teammates are used to poor ice, growing up playing pond hockey and at rinks that also housed figure skating clubs. While Joel had those experiences as well, he clearly never developed the same nonchalance as everyone else. He complains in the dressing room after every practice until Kevin finally says something.Â
âChrist Beezer, relax. Itâs only for another month or so until renovations at the other rink finish.â
Others chime in, telling him to not take it so seriously, with a couple of them defending the right of the other athletes to use the ice as they so please. The grief Joel catches is enough to shut him up, but he still stews privately over the fact figure skaters are destroying his happy place.Â
âŒâŒâŒâŒ
You want nothing more than to return to your home rink. The Flyers Skate Zone has been nice, the staff are incredibly accommodating, but something feels off. Youâre having a harder time landing jumps and skating clean programs. The change in routine is enough to knock you off your game, which is something you absolutely canât have. Youâre coming off a breakthrough season, finishing on the podium at nationals and landing a spot on your first world championships roster. People are expecting you to replicate your success and you want to do that and more.Â
US Figure Skating had taken a chance placing you on the national team for the current season. Though it was expected, they could have easily chosen the fourth place skater instead. Sheâs much younger than you, barely fifteen, and is yet to have a serious injury. At twenty youâre barely an adult, but this could be the last time you get an opportunity like this. The sport keeps getting younger and youâre going to get left behind if you donât prove yourself. The grand prix circuit has been kind to you, allowing you to earn medals at some of the smaller competitions and hold your own against the big dogs in the majors like NHK Trophy.Â
âŒâŒâŒâŒ
âTry the triple flip again,â Brenda, your coach, instructs. âYou could be more solid on the landing.â
âItâs this fucking ice! I can do one at home that would get me a high GOE,â you complain.Â
She rolls her eyes and thinks about telling you off, but decides against it. No matter how many times she tells you itâs a mental block you need to get over, you find a way to blame the training facility. âJust give me five solid ones and weâll call it quits.â
Itâs your turn to roll your eyes, but you peel away from the boards anyways. Some juniors are mingling in a corner and you warn them to watch out as you skate by gaining speed. The first attempt feels natural, and though you could have been a little stronger on the exit itâs a significant improvement from what you were doing earlier in the session. Jumps two and three also go well, but things go wrong on the fourth try. You catch a bad edge just before takeoff and arenât able to correct your center of gravity while in the air. Two and a half rotations happen before you slam into the ground. The entire right side of your body feels like itâs been run over by a bus.Â
âFuck!â you scream in frustration as you pick yourself up off the ice. Circling back to examine just how bad the edge was you notice your pick created much too large a hole, something youâd get points deducted for in competition. Brenda signals you over to her, and you hang your head as you skate over.Â
âYouâre done,â she sighs. You can tell it pains her to see your progress plateau, but youâre doing everything you can to get out of this rut. Before you can protest, try to convince her to let you stay on, sheâs speaking again. âOur ice time is up anyways. Go cool down and meet me in the conference room when youâre done.â
Thereâs nothing for you to do but sulk off the ice. The other skaters clear out of your way, not wanting to be on the receiving end of your anger. You direct it at the dressing room door, kicking it open so harshly it flies back on the hinges. It makes you feel a bit better but youâre still in a sour mood as you untie your skates. Itâs frustrating not being able to perform at the level you know you can, even in practice. If you could just get out of this rink and back into the one youâre most comfortable at.Â
After a much longer stretching routine than normal, you pack up your bag and head upstairs for what will no doubt be one of those meetings where you sit silently and take the heat. You realize that your behaviour today was childish, but you couldnât help but let your emotions overcome you. The next group is well into their ice time when you pass by, and you realize itâs the Flyers. Most of them donât acknowledge you and keep running drills, but one who looks about your age is sending you daggers. You have no idea why.Â
The meeting goes much better than you thought it would. Brenda takes your anger in stride and lets you apologize for your outburst before shifting the conversation to altering your training plan. She suggests you take a few days off from the rink, working strictly off-ice, and you begrudgingly agree. There isnât anything you can do or say to change her mind so you take the updated workout plans with a fake smile. She also tells you that your appointment with your sports psychologist has been moved up a couple of days, which youâre grateful for. Things then move to talking strategy and watching tape of competitors to see what to expect at this yearâs nationals. The event is just over a month out, and you have the goal of landing on the podium once again, hopefully with the gold medal dangling around your neck.Â
A couple of hours pass with you holed up in the conference room, and itâs dark when you gather your stuff and head for home. The complex is deserted and you assume no one but the staff are still here. It turns out someone else was there, and they follow you out, their own gear bag slung over their shoulder. You donât really pay them any mind, holding the door open out of habit, and fail to recognize the person as the boy who glared while you walked by hours prior. He notices you, however, and makes a point to voice his distaste.Â
âHey!â he calls out, âNext time you eat shit donât put such a big hole in the ice. Other people need it too.â
âGet fucked,â you yell back. You really donât have the time or energy to be accosted by a hockey player. He continues to talk, but you donât hear it because you slam your car door shut and drive off into the darkness.Â
âŒâŒâŒâŒ
Joel doesnât feel like he was in the wrong until Claude suggests he apologize a few days later. In his mind, he has every right to be upset about you damaging the ice because it directly affected him. The hole you caused couldnât be fully repaired, and he tripped at a really key moment during the scrimmage. His bad day was your fault.Â
âYou canât blame a tough practice on her man,â Claude says as the two of them skate a few warm-up laps. âShe didnât mean to fall. Hell, she didnât want to do it.â
âI get it, or whatever, but itâs still her fault. Weâre professional athletes G, we need to be at the top of our games.â
Claude swats Joel upside the head. âSo is she! Did you know that sheâs favoured to win both the national and world championships? And that things look good for her to be on the Olympic team next year?â
Joel didnât know, and guilt twinges his stomach. The next time he runs into you at the rink heâs going to apologize.Â
âŒâŒâŒâŒ
You spend your time away from the rink conditioning and regaining focus. The first couple of days are tough, but then you settle into a routine you believe will ultimately make you a better athlete and competitor. Your cardio and weights are upped, and youâre anxious to see how the increase improves your performance. At the suggestion of your psychologist you take a few more days off than originally planned, but itâs the best thing you could have done. You return to the rink ready to nail the final few weeks of training before nationals.Â
Any other coach would have detested you for taking a week off this close to a major competition, but not Brenda. She understands that you needed time to refocus and that youâll work harder than anyone else in the time until you leave for Salt Lake City. Your first practice is fantastic â every element is clean when isolated and within your programs. The timing is off a bit during your free skate on the first run-through but your jitters settle quickly and the next one is spot on. It feels good to be back in control of things.Â
âI think youâre over that mental block kid,â Brenda laughs when you stop along the boards to get some water. âYouâre skating better here than at home.â
You canât help but agree. âYou know, I donât hate it here as much as I used to. Think we should move here permanently?â The comment earns you a slightly aggressive hair ruffling, but itâs worth it. You spend the last hour of ice time alone, running through both of your programs in a mock competition setting.Â
Itâs nearly silent in the complex when Joel sneaks through the doors. The only thing he can hear is the faint sounds of your music from inside the pad. He had been worried that you were never going to reappear at the rink but learned you were just taking a break when he cornered your coach in the parking lot. The middle-aged lady had told him when youâd be returning and Joel immediately put it in his calendar so he wouldnât forget. Now, as he stands against the glass watching you, heâs nervous. What if you donât accept his apology?
Joel knew you were a good skater. Well, he was pretty sure you were. He spent the short three-day road trip to Florida watching as many videos of you competing on YouTube as he could find. Though heâs murky on the specifics of what makes a good figure skater, Joel knows you put heart and soul into every performance and that your elements are strong technically. Your scores reflect that. Regardless, Joel is blown away at how talented you are when he watches you skate in person.Â
Youâre looser than in the videos heâs seen, probably because there isnât any pressure, but you donât give it any less than your all. The music drives you forward in a way Joelâs never seen before â youâre an extension of it, and it of you. As you round a corner to pick up speed he holds his breath. From watching footage of this program from earlier in the season, he knows youâre about to attempt your hardest element. The quadruple salchow is one of the hardest jumps female skaters are attempting at the moment, according to his research, and itâs been your most inconsistent element this season. Youâre completing the jump before Joel realizes youâve taken off the ground, but you donât fall. He exhales and watches the rest of the program in awe.Â
When the music stops and you take in your surroundings, you notice the applause. Thinking itâs just from Brenda, you shrug it off, but when you turn around she isnât clapping. Itâs coming from someone else â the boy who was a douchebag the last day before your break. The chances are heâs here to make another stupid comment, but Brenda insists you should talk to him. You wave him over to a section near the benches that dosenât have glass so you can hear him better.Â
âWhat do you want?â you ask bluntly, taking a sip of water.Â
Joelâs taken aback by your abrasiveness but recovers quickly. He deserves it. âI, uh, wanted to apologize for what I said last week. That wasnât cool. I was having a bad day and took out on you, Iâm sorry,â he rambles. âAnd youâre like really good.â
âIt wasnât fucking cool,â you agree, âBut weâre fine. I had just been kicked off the ice when you caught me, so Iâm sorry too. For snapping.â Thereâs nothing more for either of you to say, and Brenda is calling your name, so you skate away from him. Over your shoulder you call out, âThanks for the compliment unnamed Flyers player!â
âItâs Joel!â he responds. âJoel Farabee.â
âŒâŒâŒâŒ
A sort of truce befalls you and Joel. More of your ice time overlaps, but neither you acknowledge each other more than the occasional nod in each otherâs direction. It doesnât bother you in the slightest. Preparing for nationals is the only that matters currently, and trying to navigate a possible friendship would be too much of a distraction. Joel is a little put off you donât try to extend pleasantries, but when itâs explained to him that youâre entering a period that is similar to the lead-up to playoffs he understands.Â
However, he finds himself making up excuses to stay at the rink to watch you practice. He blows off dinner with Kevin and drinks with Morgan when you have the slot after practice, and when you skate before him heâs at the rink hours early. His schoolboy crush becomes the topic of locker room gossip. Though Joel swears up and down that he just likes to watch you skate, none of the guys believe him. They donât go as far as to embarrass him in your presence, but Travis certainly tries. What Joel doesnât know is that youâre developing the same sort of fascination with him. You find yourself turning on every Flyers game you can fit into your schedule, watching him intently, and keeping an eye on his stats.Â
âThat boy sure has a lot of interest in you,â Brenda muses one day while youâre talking strategy on how to increase the points total on your short program.Â
âI donât know why,â you sigh. âSo I was thinking, if I raise my arms during the triple lutz it should give me at least three more points.â
She looks at you like youâve gained two extra heads. âAre you insane? Youâve never raised your arms during a triple.â
Your smile turns into a wicked smirk. âIt canât be that hard.â
Itâs a lot harder than you thought it would be. Though youâve added the extra step to jumps in the past, itâs been on single and doubles to rack up points and GOE scores. Jumping has never been your strong suit, and trying to navigate the change in your centre of gravity is difficult. You spend the rest of your ice time popping, under-rotating, or slamming into the ground. A couple of juniors snicker at your failed attempts, but when you remind them theyâre stuck on a double loop they stop laughing. It was a little mean, and you remember how hard it was to prove yourself as a junior, but you canât find it in you to care. Thereâs no need to laugh at someone trying to improve their skating.Â
Bruises start to form on your sides from falling the exact same way so many times, and you trace them lightly through the thin material of your compression top. Theyâre going to look nasty in a few hours if you donât ice them soon. A knock on the door stops your actions, and you invite the person on the other side in. To your surprise itâs Joel, and heâs holding an ice pack.Â
âI thought you might need one of these,â he says, extending it to you.Â
You thank him and hiss slightly when the cold hits your skin. Thereâs a beat of awkward silence before Joel speaks again. âCan I ask why youâre trying to change that jump?â
âYou noticed that?â you know it isnât a response to his question, but youâre shocked.Â
Joel smiles and nods. You explain how changing the position of your arms increases the difficulty of the jump and therefore raises the amount of points it can receive. âSo youâre doing it to get more points?â
âPretty much. Itâs a gamble this close to competition, but Iâm confident itâll work out.â
âYouâre afraid your program wonât gain enough points to put you in a good position for the free skate,â he notes, âOr you wouldnât be doing this.â
Once again, youâre floored by Joelâs understanding of your sport. âMaybe I am, maybe Iâm not,â you say as confidently as you can. âBut maybe I just want the challenge.â If Joel notices the shake in your voice and the worried look in your eye he doesnât say anything.Â
You go through your cool-down routine but are surprised Joel doesnât leave. In fact, he stays at the rink until youâre finished and follows you to the parking lot. His car is parked a few spots over from you, so you have to raise your voice a little to get him to hear you. âHey Joel,â you call, âDo you not have practice?â
âDay off,â he yells back. Heâs grinning like an idiot, which prompts you to ask him why. âThatâs the first time youâve said my name.â The smile on his face doesnât go away, and you try to settle the butterflies in your stomach as you drive home.Â
âŒâŒâŒâŒ
Something shifts between you and Joel after that day. Itâs subtle, but youâre well on your way to becoming friends. Phone numbers are exchanged, with him insisting his contact name be âKing Beezerâ, and the two of you chat regularly outside of the rink. He still watches as many training sessions as he can, and you start making appearances at his practices. Itâs far more awkward for you but you push through it if for no other reason than wanting to be a good sport. Once Joelâs teammates catch wind of your budding friendship, theyâre pestering you to go to a game. You politely decline each time, explaining that your training schedule is rather rigid and you canât change it so close to nationals. The competition is just over a week out, and youâre catching a flight to Utah in three days.Â
Joel doesnât let you know heâs a little upset you wonât shift your schedule for him. Instead, he brings you lunch on days where youâre at the rink for eight hours and does his individual workouts alongside you. The two of you fall into the easy routine of enjoying each otherâs company and everyone else is beginning to take notice.Â
âSo,â you say with a mouth full of the pita Joel brought you, âWhat are your plans for the All-Star break?â
Joel has been toying with an idea for a few weeks now, but heâs keeping it a secret. âIâm just gonna spend it at home with my family,â he shrugs.Â
âYouâre fucking joking. Joel, you could be someplace warm enjoying the beach!â
âI donât want to go to the beach,â Joel retorts.Â
You open your mouth to argue with him, because youâre of the opinion that everyone should love the beach, but youâre cut off by Brenda calling you to return to the ice. âThis conversation isnât over Beezer,â you say sternly, poking him in the chest to prove your point. He rolls his eyes.Â
âIâve gotta be at Wells Fargo in an hour for a team meeting, so I canât watch this session,â he tells you. Youâre a little deflated but understand he canât play hookie from his job to watch you do yours. Brenda is banging a skate guard on the boards to get your attention, so you wave goodbye and jog over to her. âY/N,â Joel yells loud enough that youâll hear him over the chatter on the ice, âKeep your core tight!â
Your coaching team is perplexed at the comment because itâs second nature to you at this point, but you think itâs sweet. Some of the other girls poke fun at your âboyfriendâ and it makes you irritable. Brenda tells them off and suggests they get back to work which makes you feel better. You keep Joelâs advice in the back of your mind for the rest of your practice, and land every jump almost flawlessly.Â
The day before you board your flight you have a terrible practice. Brenda chalks it up to nerves, but you thatâs not it. You feel good about the competition and are confident it will go well. Something is off â you just canât put a finger on it. Frustration eventually boils over and practice is called early. Everyone stays out of your way, letting you cool off, and you huff out a goodbye after promising to meet Brenda at the airport in the morning. Before youâre even out the door youâve got your phone pressed to your ear, waiting for Joel to pick up. The Flyers got to start their break a day early due to a scheduling conflict and you hope he doesnât fly home tonight.Â
âWhatâs up?â Joel says casually. Judging by the background noise heâs playing video games, no doubt some dumb first-person shooter game he seems to play constantly. The sound of his voice is enough to send you into tears and you canât get out a reply. His tone changes instantly and the noise stops â the game paused and forgotten about. âHey,â he soothes, âWhatâs wrong?â
âPractice was bad,â you choke out, âLike really bad. Joel, I donât think I can do this.â Now across the parking lot and at your car, you throw your bag in the trunk and crumble into the driverâs seat.Â
âOf course you can. Want me to bring dinner over and we can do whatever?â You agree, not wanting to be alone, and hang up only after insisting youâre okay to drive the twenty minutes to your apartment.Â
Joel must have drove well above the speed limit because he pulls into the parking lot at the same time as you. His engine is turned off jarringly fast, and heâs popping your trunk to grab your bag before your gears have settled in park. Though you put up some rather weak protests about carrying your own stuff, Joel ignores them. When you insist on holding something he tosses you the bag of food he brought with him. Opening it up, you realize Joel had stopped at your favourite sushi restaurant even though he doesnât like the food. A smile creeps onto your face, possibly the first one all day, and you lean into Joel slightly when he wraps an arm around your shoulder.Â
The two of you eat in silence, but itâs far from awkward. Joelâs waiting for you to open up, knows you will eventually, and youâre trying to find the words. However, theyâre yet to appear, so you let Joel lead you to the couch and put on an episode of some crime show heâs currently watching.Â
âThanks for coming over,â you say as the credits roll on the second episode.Â
Joel sends a smile your way, which you do your best to reciprocate. âDonât worry about it. This is what friends do.âÂ
Slowly, you open up about practice, venting about how you skated sloppily and couldnât nail any element no matter how simple it was. You tell him about how tense your muscles are and how scared you are that your fifteen minutes of fame are over, that youâll never get another chance to represent America on the world stage. Joel listens attentively, letting you speak for as long as you need. At some point you start crying again and he tucks you into his side. Your tears soak through his sweatshirt but he could care less. When youâve laid all your emotions out on the table he speaks gently, dispelling your doubts and letting you know that you can do it and he believes in you. Joelâs words make it easier to believe in yourself.Â
The two of you spend the night on the couch, and youâre disheartened when your alarm goes off. You canât stay in the little bubble Joel created for the two of you â the world and its responsibilities taking precedence over your fantasy. He drives you to the airport, rationalizing it by telling you itâll be safer to keep your car at home. Realistically there isnât a difference, but you thank him anyways. Parking is just one last thing you have to worry about. When you reach the airport entrance, Joel pulls into the idling lane and steps out of the car. You follow him, dragging your feet a bit because though youâre excited for nationals you donât want to leave Joel. This will be the longest time the two of you have been apart since becoming friends.
âMake sure you donât forget about me when you win and get all famous,â Joel jokes, handing you your suitcase.Â
You swat his shoulder playfully. âLike youâd let that happen.â
âOf course I wouldnât. Come here.â
He takes you in his arms. Youâve hugged Joel a couple of times before, but they didnât feel as serious as this. This time heâs holding you for a purpose and youâre gripping the back of his jacket tightly because you want him to let go. Itâs longer than people who are just friends are meant to hug for, so you begrudgingly pull away. Besides, Brenda and some of your teammates are waiting.Â
âHave a good time at home,â you mumble.Â
Joel wraps a single arm around you for one more squeeze. âYou have a good time,â he says seriously. âRemember to enjoy the moment. Iâll be watching on T.V.âÂ
With your goodbyes said you wander into the airport. Joel says parked in his spot until he sees you embrace Brenda before driving off. The boarding process is painless, and once on the plane you take your seat beside a junior and put your headphones on. Downloaded to your Spotify is one of Joelâs hip-hop playlists, and though itâs the farthest thing from the music you enjoy you listen to it the whole flight.
âŒâŒâŒâŒ
Utahâs nice, but you canât help feeling like somethingâs missing â Joelâs missing. Youâve become so accustomed to him watching you train, clapping like an idiot every time you land a jump, that the silence is unnerving. Everyone notices the shift in your performance, and eventually Brenda crumbles and uses your phone to facetime him while you practice. Itâs a decent enough substitute â Joel watches your pixelated figure zip around the ice and though he doesnât always make comments, just know heâs with you in some capacity is enough to let your mind focus on the task at hand. You do the best you can at pushing away the butterflies that appear every time you think about how heâs giving up his freedom to make sure you succeed.Â
When you arenât training or doing press youâre talking to Joel. You call him constantly, narrating what you see on walks around town to settle your nerves and eating at the same time to make it feel like youâre together. The only person to support you in Salt Lake City is Brenda, so talking to Joel frequently makes you feel far less alone. You wish he could be here with you, but understand he needs time to recharge and canât just follow you around the country no matter how much youâd like him to.Â
âWhat time do you skate tomorrow?â Joel asks, mouth full of the pizza heâs enjoying. The features behind are different, so you assume heâs settled into his childhood home.Â
âUm, I think 11:35? Iâm not entirely sure,â you respond. Due to the way the event is seeded youâre skating second last, which both settles your nerves and makes you more anxious. There isnât the pressure of closing out the event, but thereâs hope that youâll score high enough to win the short program and skate last in the free skate.Â
Joel hums pensively. âIâll check the website.â Conversation shifts away from skating, which youâre grateful for. Itâs the last thing you currently want to think about. You listen with interest as Joel recounts stories of the pond hockey matches heâs played since getting home. The two of you are on the phone until nearly ten, when you have to say goodnight and head to bed. Tomorrow marks the start of the biggest week of your year.Â
You follow your pre-competition routine to the letter. At other events this season youâve been more relaxed, but your professional skating career depends on your performance at nationals so you arenât taking chances. Five-thirty comes faster than you thought it would, but youâre out of bed and eating your first breakfast quickly. A quick two mile run follows, and then youâre having a shower and grabbing a second breakfast to eat at the rink. You meet Brenda in the hotel lobby before ubering to the rink. A solid practice follows, and you manage to keep your imposter syndrome on a leash in the presence of the other skaters.Â
âItâs Joel,â Brenda says as she tosses you your phone.Â
âHey,â you say, squeezing the device between your ear and shoulder. âI donât have much time to talk. My warm up call is soon.â
Joel laughs and you find yourself cracking a smile at the sound. âI know. Just wanted to check in and see how youâre feeling.â
âHonestly? I canât remember the last time I was this nervous for a competition.â
His response is cut off by a loud noise. âWhere are you?â you ask.Â
âJust at home,â he says quickly. âMy sister has some friends over and theyâre being loud.â
The line is compelling enough that you donât question how hastily it was delivered. Joel stays on the phone until you have to go, keeping your mind off the jittery feeling in your stomach. The TV cameras catch you talking but you give them a cheery wave and continue telling Joel about how good the soap at your hotel smells. You hang up when they call your flight to take to the ice for warmup and give your phone back to Brenda for safe keeping.Â
âŒâŒâŒâŒ
Joel tries hard not to feel too out of place while he takes his seat. For someone who practically lives in arenas he feels like itâs his first time within fifty yards of one. Everyone around him is dressed nicely, and heâs acutely aware of the fact there is a neon orange pom-pom attached to the top of his hat.Â
As much as he feels like a baby deer trying to stand, Joelâs beyond excited to be here. Itâs been a while since heâs gone somewhere that wasnât hockey related and getting to support you while he does it is the best scenario ever. There are some potential looks of recognition from those around him, but thankfully no one approaches.Â
Skaters begin to take the ice and he scans vigilantly for you. Youâre doing the best you can to stay warm, jacket zipped all the way up and gloves on your hands. Joel notices you seem to be the loosest of the girls below him but isnât sure if thatâs a good thing. You skate a few quick laps before warming up some jumps. Everything goes well, though he can tell you under-rotated a few of them and didnât attempt the one quad in your program. The warm up is over as quickly as it began and youâre herded off the ice. Joel sinks a little further in his seat as gets ready to watch your competitors.Â
âŒâŒâŒâŒ
Thereâs just over five minutes until you take to the ice. You keep your body moving, walking up and down the corridor, and blast your pre-competition playlist so loud youâll probably have hearing damage when youâre older. Only one other girl in the hall with you but it feels too small. Brenda comes to grab you and the pair of you walk to the side of the boards. You donât watch whoâs currently skating, choosing instead to focus on adjusting your feet slightly in your skates.Â
âGo out there and put on a show,â Brenda says. âFuck the judges.â
You laugh at her remark. âOkay Bren, when I lose points for flipping them off Iâm blaming you.â
âFine by me. I have a bone to pick with Mark Johnson anyways.â
The scores for the previous girl are being announced, so you peel your jacket from your frame and do a couple more laps. Right before your name is announced you press your forehead to Brendaâs. Itâs a ritual you started back when you were barely as tall as the boards and youâve done it every single competition since. You feel grounded looking in her eyes, and you break with a fist bump. Itâs go time.Â
Every inch of your skin feels like itâs on fire. You didnât come to play, and leave everything on the ice. The skate isnât completely clean, you stumbled on the landing of a triple axel, but youâre happy with it. Despite your fears, both the triple lutz and quad salchow go smoothly. Audience engagement was at an all time high and you finished to deafening applause. Brenda wraps you in a tight hug when you step off the ice before leading you over to the kiss and cry. You chat idly with her and your choreographer, trying to catch your breath, while you wait for your score.Â
The announcerâs booming voice crackles over the PA as he reads the judgesâ decision. âThe scores for Y/N Y/L/N please.â You donât pay attention to the individual numbers, just the final total. âFor a total score of 74.83.â
Itâs lower than you had hoped for. Not by much, just two or three points, but it could mean all the difference in tomorrowâs skate. Brenda pats your leg sympathetically and whispers in your, âItâs alright. You skated well.â
You head back to the dressing room to watch the final skater on the small T.V in the corner while you get undressed. Sheâs phenomenal, and you end the day falling to third place. Joelâs hip-hop playlist blasts through your headphones as you do your cool down routine. The average tempo is upbeat and helps to take your mind off the fact youâre not where you want to be. Just as youâre about to exit the room and find Brenda to talk strategy thereâs a knock on the door.Â
âYeah?â you say dejectedly, the word coming out as more of a sigh than you had intended.Â
The door is cracked open, and the head of your best friend peaks out from around it. âHey there rockstar,â Joel says softly, stepping further into the room. Once you comprehend that heâs really here youâre sprinting in his direction, jumping into his embrace. Joelâs laugh reverberates in his chest, and you feel it as you settle further into him.Â
âWhy are you here?â you whisper. Though youâre elated Joel is here, youâre confused as to why he would want to spend his break in Utah.Â
He lets you down gently and shrugs. âI had to see if youâd land the quad.â Joelâs smile matches yours as you shake your head.Â
âYouâre fucking insane,â you quip, but thereâs no malice in your voice.
Before you can pester Joel into answering all your questions youâre whisked away to a press conference. Talking to the media is something you donât particularly enjoy, and itâs even more difficult to stay present when you know you could be spending time with your best friend. Most of the questions are directed towards the girls who placed higher than you which youâre thankful for. Itâs easier for you to zone out, and you root through your mind of places around the city to take Joel.Â
âY/N, how tough will it be for you to better your scores in tomorrowâs free skate?â
The question is one that you expected, luckily, and youâre able to recite the response you worked out with Brenda without really engaging with the reporter. âI mean I obviously didnât aim to be in third place heading into tomorrow,â you joke, âBut Iâm fairly happy with where I ended up. The other girls had fantastic skates and deserve to be above me. My plan for tomorrow is to leave everything on the ice, skate cleanly, and be proud of myself regardless of what happens.â
Pens scribble furiously by those that donât have recording devices to get your words down on paper. Thereâs some chatter, questions for the other girls, before a young reporter fresh out of journalism school is allowed to speak. He identifies himself as Theo Rateliff before jumping in. âY/N,â he says, âHow excited are you to get back to training on home ice when you get back to Jersey?â
âUm, I didnât know the renovations were finished,â you stammer. âAs far as I know, Iâll be at Flyers SkateZone until the end of the season.â
Theo shakes his head. âMy partner was informed this morning that the rink will be good to go by the time you get back.â
You turn to the side to look at Brenda, who just shrugs. âWell, to be quite honest Iâll miss being in Voorhees. I had fun skating there and feel like the rink prepared me well for this competition.â
âObviously not well enough,â Theo retorts, not missing a beat. âYour odds of winning dropped by seventy-seven percent.â
âThank you for the reminder Theo,â you snap. âAre we done here?â
The press-coordinator shakes their head in confirmation, and you rip the microphone off your jacket before stomping off. People clear a path for you, not wanting to get caught in your storm. You run right to Joel who lets you direct him out of the arena and into the uber he called while you were wrapping up.Â
Itâs a silent ride, Joel knowing you arenât in the mood for light conversation. He lets you take a ridiculously long shower and orders take out that arrives just as you step out of the bathroom.Â
âWhere are you staying?â you ask as you detangle your hair.Â
âNowhere yet,â Joel says, âI got in early this morning and went straight to the rink.â
You think carefully about your next words before you speak. Your competition routines can be excessive and annoying, and you donât want to inconvenience him. âYou could just stay here. The room is massive and thereâs more than enough space for both of us in the bed.â
âYeah?â
âYeah,â you say, voice taking a soft lilt. âIâd really like it if you stayed.â
Joel smiles wider than youâve ever seen him do before. The two of you sit comfortably in bed, eating the burritos Joel got and going down a conspiracy theory youtube wormhole. He asks how you feel about him coming to watch your evening training session you have to leave for in twenty minutes. You tell him youâd be angry if he didnât stand beside your coach and clap every time you landed a jump.Â
Itâs chilly but the sun is shining bright so you decide to bundle up and walk to the rink. Joel pokes fun at you beanie and you swat him in the chest, shutting him up for the time being after his giggles subside. The view is gorgeous, mountains framing the setting sun. You squeeze Joelâs bicep to get his attention and relish the feeling of his muscle in your grip.Â
âLook! An owl!â
Sure enough, a barn owl is flying over top of you, in the middle of downtown Salt Lake City. âThatâs my good luck charm. Means Iâll skate well tomorrow.â
Joel pokes your cheek lightly. âI thought I was your good luck charm,â he gasps.Â
You roll your eyes. âI guess you can be my secondary one.â Joel doesnât seem to mind the fact your arms are still wrapped around his, so you stay that way until for the rest of the journey.Â
âŒâŒâŒâŒ
The night goes according to plan. You skate well in practice and feel comfortable for tomorrowâs event. Joel executes his role perfectly, cheering when you do things well and squirting water at you to make you squeal in laughter when things get a little too serious. Once back at the hotel you collapse into bed almost immediately. Youâre so exhausted you canât even be bothered to climb under the covers, and wait until Joel pulls them back for himself to crawl in. Thereâs no awkwardness at sharing a bed with Joel, and you sigh contently as he pulls you into his side. Sleep comes easily then for the both of you.Â
You wake before both your alarm and Joel. It takes you a second to get your bearing and realize youâre pinned against his body, though you donât mind. Thereâs worse places to be stuck. You lay curled into Joel for as long as you can, but eventually you have to shake him awake.Â
âBeezer,â you whisper, ruffling his hair, âYouâve gotta let me out.â
He groans something unintelligible but instead of heeding your words pulls you closer. âJoel come on,â you try again, âIâve really gotta get up. Need to shower before I get to the rink.â
Joel listens this time, but only lets you go after squeezing you tight for a second. You go about your routine with him still passed out in bed and giggle at the way his hair curls around his ears when you pass by. As youâre leaving to get to your practice ice slot Joel wakes up, lumbering into the bathroom. He reappears a minute or two later to say goodbye.Â
âWill I see you after practice?â he asks, voice still gruff with sleep.Â
âProbably not,â you reply, leaning down to tie your shoes. âI wonât be coming back here until after everything is done.â
Joel nods and wraps you in a warm hug. âYouâre going to do great,â he says as he pulls away. âIâll be there, cheering so fucking loud.â
âI expect you to throw a teddy bear on the ice after I finish.â
The walk to the arena is lonely without Joel, but you push the thought out of your mind. You need to stay focused on putting on the skate of your life in a few hours and not on how lately youâve been having more-than-friendly thoughts about your best friend. Brenda is there when you arrive, making conversation about what you did last night with Joel before explaining how youâre going to run your practice.
Your hour of semi-private ice passes in the blink of an eye. The other girls in your flight are just as tense as you, popping jumps and doing a lot of stroking to loosen up. A lot is riding on todayâs event and youâd be lying if you werenât feeling the pressure. When you get back to the dressing room and check your phone, you notice thereâs a text from Joel.Â
Donât want to disrupt your pre-comp routine, but I thought Iâd share a playlist. Itâs songs that remind me of you.Â
Included is a link to a spotify playlist entitled âmy golden girlâ. You open it with a smile, noticing that it starts with some of your favourite songs even though they arenât the kind of thing Joel regularly listens to before turning into things youâve never heard before.Â
Thanks <3, you respond, going to listen to it during my off-ice.Â
Thatâs exactly what you do. It filters through your headphones for hours as you stretch, do a quick interview for those watching on television, and get dressed. Though itâs a break from your typical routine, itâs welcome. Knowing Joel thought about you enough to make you a playlist and send it to you helps calm your nerves.Â
âHey kiddo,â Brenda says as she walks to where youâve taken up root on the floor. Your left hamstring is tight, and youâre trying desperately to fix it before you have to go on the ice. âGo out there and absolutely kill it. This is your best program, and I havenât seen anyone skate better than what you can do today.â
âGee thanks for the confidence booster Bren,â you chuckle before hoisting yourself onto the bench to tie your skates.Â
She doesnât laugh. âI mean it Y/N. You can still win this thing.â
Youâre left alone to finish getting ready and then join the other girls in the tunnel. No one talks, which youâre grateful for. When you were younger and coming up through the ranks the other competitors liked to gossip while they waited and it was your least favourite part of an entire competition. A camera man waits at the end of the walkway, filming your arrival to the ice pad, and you wave cheerily as you pass by. It can never hurt to endear yourself to those watching at home â maybe theyâll be nicer to you on the internet.Â
Joel is standing at the edge of the boards during your warmup, watching and cheering intently. In a moment of insane confidence you blow him a kiss as you skate past, and giggle hysterically when he catches it and holds it close to his chest. Youâre called off the ice then and spend the time really getting into the zone.Â
Itâs considered bad luck to watch the performances before your own, so you face the wall as you do jog lightly to keep your body temperature up and the adrenaline flowing. Much sooner than youâd like itâs your turn to take your guards and jacket off. Brenda holds your skating hands as she whispers last minute words of encouragement, and you stumble through the traditional handshake before presenting yourself to the crowd.Â
Once the music starts your brain checks out and instinct takes over. You learned when you were younger that your best skates happened when you just allowed yourself to feel, and you desperately need the skate of a lifetime. Going into the first jumping pass you can feel yourself tense up so you think about Joelâs smile while you guys sat by the lake last night. It works to loosen you up, and you spend the rest of the program thinking of your favourite moments with Joel. As you strike your final pose the music fades out and the roars of applause cascade in. You know you had a flawless performance, beaming as you fist pump the air in the same manner you chirp Joel for doing while he celebrates goals.Â
You bow to the crowd in all directions, waving and laughing as flowers and teddy bears fall onto the ice in front of you. An orange blob of fur catches your eye, and you skate to pick it up before one of the volunteers could put it in the bag that will join your garment bag in the dressing room. You know Joel is the one who threw the Gritty toy â no one else really knows of your affiliations with the team. As you sit in the kiss and cry awaiting your results, you examine the stuffed animal. Instead of the regular Gritty jersey Joel replaced it with his own, the number flashing vividly at you and pulling a smile from your nervous features.Â
Brenda keeps her hand clasped tightly in yours as the PA system crackles to life. âAnd the scores for Y/N Y/L/N are,â the announcer begins, and your knee begins bouncing rapidly. âThe free skate score is 155.79, for a total score of 230.62.â
You jump up in amazement. Despite your slow start to the competition you managed to get a seasonâs best. Youâre also five points ahead of the second place skater, guaranteeing you a place on the podium and depending on the final results, a spot at worlds. A volunteer ushers you out of the kiss and cry and you skip all the way down the tunnel. To get out some of the adrenaline you jog the corridor a few times before returning to Brenda.Â
âCome on,â she laughs, âJoelâs waiting at the edge of the public area. We can watch the final skate together.â
At the mention of Joel youâre jogging again, wanting to see him as fast as possible. âBeezer!â you shriek as you approach, launching into the elaborate handshake the two of you have perfected at this point.Â
âHey golden girl,â he chuckles, returning your actions with just as much enthusiasm. âYou looked fucking great out there. I see you got my gift.â
The Gritty doll is still in your hands but thereâs no shame. Instead, you tuck it under your arm and rest your head against Joelâs shoulder to watch the final skater. The girl after you had fallen a number of times, dropping her total significantly and landing her in fifth place. Victory is so close you can almost taste it.
 Itâs the longest six minutes of your life. Watching her skate increases your anxiety â sheâs good, has almost as great a skate as you, but she under-rotated a jump and rushed through her program so there was extra music at the end. The clock above your head rings throughout the silent corridor as everyone awaits the scores with baited breath. In under a minute youâll know whether youâre returning to New Jersey with a gold or silver medal in your suitcase.Â
You donât hear anything as they announce her score â just see the numbers flash of the small T.V screen and calculate that itâs not enough for her to beat you. After years of blood, sweat, and an immeasurable amount of tears youâve crossed another goal off your list. Those around you are jumping and screaming, Brenda letting a few tears escape. All you can think about is Joel, whoâs celebrating like he just scored the game winning goal in the Stanley Cup finals, and how much you love him.Â
Without thinking, you smash your lips against Joelâs. Itâs adrenaline filled and mostly teeth until he wraps one hand around your waist and the places the other along your jaw. Then it becomes purposeful, both of you moving in tandem and never wanting it to stop. When Joel pulls away and rests his forehead against yours you canât stop smiling. The kiss might have happened in the heat of the moment, but you know itâs the culmination of feelings building inside of you for months.Â
âYouâre a national champion,â Joel says, pulling you flush against his chest in the biggest hug youâve ever received.Â
âIâm your national champion,â you whisper.Â
He pulls back and grins, kissing you again. âYouâre my national champion. My golden girl.â
The rest of your stay in Salt Lake City is a blur. Youâre swept up in the numerous press events, galas, and enjoying your blossoming relationship with Joel. When you finally got back to the hotel after what seemed like hours of people complimenting your comeback, the two of you sat down and talked about the kiss and what you wanted to happen next. It was scary, being so vulnerable, but it needed to happen â youâre both adults and communication is important. So, youâre returning home with a gold medal and boyfriend, two things youâre ecstatic about.Â
âŒâŒâŒâŒ
âJ, itâs not straight,â you giggle. Joelâs trying, and failing miserably, to hang the shadow box with your nationals medal in it above your couch. Itâs been almost a month since you returned home but youâve been so busy that decorating the apartment you barely spend time in has been at the bottom of your to-do list.Â
He grunts out a response. âFuck. Do I have to go left or right?â
âLeft.â The picture shifts in the opposite direction. âThe other left Joel!â
A few minutes later the decoration is sitting perfectly in place. Your child of a boyfriend insists on getting rewarded for his achievement, so the two of you bundle up and get dinner. Itâs nothing fancy â just sandwiches from the deli down the street from your apartment, but spending time with him is nice. Joelâs been on a string of short road trips and youâve been training anxiously, waiting for the organization to announce who theyâre sending to the world championship.Â
âHowâs practice been lately?â Joel asks, mouth full with a bite of his BLT. âI miss being able to watch you skate whenever I want.â
After returning from Utah you were shuttled immediately into the freshly renovated rink of your skating club. Itâs a little farther into Jersey and certainly not as convenient for him to get to, especially now that the NHL season is picking up and the Flyers are clinging desperately to the final playoff spot. âItâs been interesting,â you shrug, âIâm skating well, and physically I feel great. Thereâs a mental block or something though because everything feels a little bit off.â
The smile that graces Joelâs face can only be described as shit-eating. âDuh, Iâm not there.â
âFuck off.â Though you try to make the words come out in a serious tone, thereâs no malice in them.Â
Conversation flips to some ridiculous story Travis told at practice that morning, and you giggle as Joel recounts it with failing arms. You tell a few stories of your own, that leave him in stitches, and as you walk home hand in hand he asks you again to come to a game. With your schedule a little more flexible as you wait for a decision about the upcoming competition stint it will be much easier to see Joel play. You say yes with a shy smile and donât miss the way the boy beside you blushes under the streetlights.Â
Joel stays over, and the next two nights after that. Itâs nice, falling into a relationship with your best friend, because thereâs no awkwardness. You know what kind of cereal to keep in your pantry and he knows you donât eat meat on Mondays. Everything is easy. There are a fews in the road, as can be expected with any budding relationship, but for the most part your lives fit seamlessly together. Â
After some meticulous planning, you found a home game on the Flyers schedule that will coincide with yours. Itâs a Friday night near the end of February, and itâs actually the last day US Figure Skating can announce their assignments for worlds. You figure watching your boyfriend is the perfect way to distract yourself from the decision, whether or not you make the team. Joelâs ecstatic about your attendance, wanting you to be immersed in as many aspects of his life as possible. The entire day heâs bouncing around your apartment, beyond ready for puck drop.Â
âItâs literally three in the afternoon,â you grumble as Joel corrals you into the hall to put your shoes on. âYou never leave this early! Why do we have to do it today?â In an attempt to save gas and lower your carbon footprint youâre carpooling with Joel.
âBecause being in this house is making you more anxious,â he points out. âIâve caught you staring into the distance one too many times today. Besides, this way you can meet up with some of the other girls and relax before the game.âÂ
Joelâs right, as he so often is. Your agent hasnât called to let you know if you made the team or not, nor has US Figure Skating made an announcement on social media. So youâve spent the entire day pacing back and forth around your living room and fretting that perhaps the best performance of your season wasnât good enough. He twirls his car keys around his index finger in an attempt to speed you along and you roll your eyes at his impatience.Â
After ensuring your home is safely secured you hit the road. The drive into Philadelphia is easy, with little traffic, and you spend it laughing at Joelâs ridiculous freestyle raps. It doesnât surprise you that the staff lot at the Wells Fargo Centre is sparsely populated â most of the guys donât show up until around five, Joel included. However, a group of women are standing near the entrance. While this isnât the first time youâve met significant others of your boyfriendâs teammates, itâs the first time Joel wonât be around.Â
âItâll be alright,â he whispers as the car settles into park. You offer a small smile that mustn't have been convincing because Joel lifts the hand thatâs intertwined with his to his lips, pressing a delicate kiss to the knuckles. The smile becomes genuine and you tease him the entire walk to the door.Â
Joel greets the other girls before setting his bag down on the concrete and wrapping you in a hug. âHave fun,â you say softly against his lips, landing a short kiss. He winks and opens the door, disappearing inside and leaving you in a fit of giggles.Â
There was no reason for you to be nervous â everyone is incredibly kind. You seem to be the youngest in the group, but the other girls pay no mind and treat you as one of their own. Thereâs a small amount of confusion when your phone chimes with a notification, a few glances of possible distaste, but as soon you explain youâre waiting on a very important call they understand. Dinner is wonderful, filled with sincere questions about your skating career and how you got together with Joel. By the time you get back to the arena for the game it feels as though youâve been a part of the group for years.Â
You spend the game in the family and friends box, sipping a glass of wine and following Joel around the ice. Practice is early in the morning and you want to be productive, so youâre relaxed in your alcohol consumption compared to some of the others. One of the older girls, though you canât remember what player is her significant other, recently got engaged and is celebrating with as many drinks as those around her will allow. Itâs fun to experience a hockey game in this way, but youâre a little on edge. You havenât anything about worlds assignments all day and the organization doesnât typically leave the announcement to this late in the evening. Thereâs seven minutes left in the game when your phone rings. You quickly excuse yourself from the group and step into the hall.Â
âHello?â
âY/N,â the chipper voice of your agent Megan says, âHow are you?â
A nervous laughter tumbles from your lips. âI think that depends on what youâre about to tell me.â
âI imagined youâd say something along those lines,â she responds. âYouâve always been quite witty.â Before you ask her to just get to the point of the phone call, Megan speaks. âI have some good news and some bad news for you. Youâre going to the World Championships, but you arenât leading the team like we hoped.â
Itâs not as bad as she made it sound. A breath you didnât know you were holding escapes, and you try your best to remain professional in the hallway of the arena. âHonestly,â you sigh, âI think thatâs better. Thereâs going to be a lot less pressure for me to bring home three Olympic spots. Thanks for letting me know Meg.â She hangs up then, no doubt having to tell another girl she didnât make the cut.Â
When you slip back through the door, you find all eyes on you. âWhat was that about?âÂ
âI made the roster for worlds.â
Earth-shattering applause erupts from everyone in the room, and no one pays attention to what happens on the ice for the remainder of the game. The congratulations continue until youâre waiting outside the dressing room for Joel to exit. He had a good game, featuring two assists and a blocked shot, and smiles lazily when he sees you leaning against the brick wall.Â
âThis is something I could get used to,â he chuckles, pulling you into him by the belt loops of your jeans. The two of you kiss for a moment, letting it stay chaste in fear of getting chirped by teammates.
âWell,â you sigh dramatically, drawing out the suspense of what youâre about to say, âYouâre going to have to wait a bit longer for it to become a regular occurrence. My training schedule just increased exponentially.â
Joel sits on your words for a moment before it registers. âNo fucking way!â he shouts, picking you up by the waist as the two you are a pairs team. âYou got the spot?âÂ
Having Joel be so excited about the accomplishment makes it seem that much more real. Tears well in your eyes and you shake your head up and down to signal heâs correct. Joel presses his lips to yours once again, this time not caring about any insults his friends could throw at him. The kiss makes you feel loved, fully and completely, and you hope youâre conveying the same amount of emotion he is.Â
âThatâs my girl.â
âŒâŒâŒâŒ
âOh my fucking god,â you grumble, picking yourself off the ice for what feels like the hundredth time in the past five minutes. Thereâs two weeks until you leave for Milan and it looks like youâve never skated before. Jumps are being under-rotated, spins arenât being entered properly, and your footwork sequence is abysmal. Nothing about the way youâre performing would let a newcomer know youâre a world class athlete.Â
Brenda gives you a sympathetic smile. âJust try again kiddo.â
You do try again â fifteen more times to be exact. Each attempt at a triple axel getting farther and farther from what it should be. Before you get even more frustrated you abandon the element altogether, hoping to avoid a complete meltdown. No one questions it when you shift disciplines completely and move about the ice completing a simple foxtrot pattern. Ice dance has always been a great de-stresser for you, and after a few passes you feel your heart rate return to normal. At some point during your break Joel had entered the rink and is now standing beside your coach, making pleasant conversation. You smile as you skate towards them, ecstatic that the two most important parts of your life blend seamlessly.Â
âFarabee!â you shout when you get close enough for him to hear you. At the sound of your voice Joel smiles, turning to pick up your water bottle and toss it in your direction.Â
âIâm wounded babe,â he feigns pain as you take a drink, âI really thought that we were on at least a first name basis.â
You roll your eyes at his dramatics and playfully squirt water at him. âIâll call you whatever I want. What brings you this far into Jersey?â
âThought Iâd see if you wanted to grab lunch after you were done. Weâve got a late practice today,â he explains. âWhatever you want, eh? Does that mean I say whatever I want? Because I think youâre looking particularly good in those leggings.tumâ You donât miss the suggestive tone to his voice, but choose to ignore it.
Joel watches the rest of your practice from his spot at the boards and lays himself across the dressing room bench as you complete a quick cool down routine. You have a meeting with your massage therapist in the afternoon, so you follow Joel to the restaurant he chose. Itâs a small vegan place that you sometimes stop at on your way home from the rink. They have the best burrito bowls youâve ever tasted and since youâve gotten together Joel has become rather fond of them as well.Â
The two of you sit outside on the curb. New Jersey is uncharacteristically warm for March and you want to enjoy the sunshine as much as possible. The rest of the day will be spent in dark rooms receiving physical therapy and trying to ease your tired muscles. There isnât much conversation, but youâre more than content just to be with Joel. Life moves incredibly fast and your schedules donât always line up nicely. Itâs difficult to spend time with him, especially when youâre weeks out from a major competition, but small moments like this keep you from missing your boyfriend too much.Â
âHave I asked you to take me to the airport yet? I canât remember,â you admit as you finish the last bite of your meal.Â
Joel laughs at your lapse in memory, knowing he gets the same way when high stakes games roll around. âNo, but you would like me to?â
âDo you mind?â you ask, âThat way I donât have to leave my car at the airport for a week and a half. But if you can't, don't worry about it, Iâll grab an uber.â
âBabe, the uber will be like fifty bucks. Iâll take you. What time do you have to be there?â
You give him a much too detailed itinerary of your departure plans and listen to him talk about the drills theyâre going to run at practice. Time passes much quicker than you would have liked, and soon youâre kissing him goodbye and watching him wave from your rearview mirror.Â
Itâs almost a week later when you see Joel again, showing up at a Flyers practice for the first time since training moved back to your home rink. Youâve been instructed to have a rest day, the team wanting to push you too hard before taking off. The arena attendants know you well at this point, and chat with you as you sit on a bench away from the media. You know better than you alert them of your presence â some of them no doubt wanting a comment from you about worlds. Joel has no idea youâre even there until long after practice, when he sees you leaning casually against the driverâs side door of your car, conveniently parked next to his.
âHey all-star,â you say as casually as possible, twirling your keys around your index finger.Â
He leans down to kiss you sweetly, and though you probably shouldnât in a parking lot, you push your body closer to his in an attempt to deepen the kiss. Joel obliges you, tongue gently slipping into your mouth, staying there until you both hear the shouts of his teammates.Â
âFuck off,â he yells at Kevin, whoâs hollering so loud people can probably hear him all the way back in Philadelphia. âWhat are you doing here?â
âI have a day off,â you smile, and I thought Iâd come see if I could hitch a ride to your place.â You had originally planned to attend the game in person, but a rough day of training yesterday had you too sore to do much other than lie on the couch.Â
âThe chariot awaits mâlady,â he says in a terrible British accent, bowing for good measure as he opens the door. Your car will be fine in the parking lot overnight, so you slip in and enjoy the journey into the city.Â
Joelâs pre-game routine changes only slightly with you in his apartment â instead of napping alone, you curl into his chest and snore softly, lulling him into one of the most peaceful sleeps heâs ever had. You tie his tie for him and riffle his hair before kissing him good luck. Being alone in Joelâs apartment isnât as strange as you thought it would be, and you familiarize yourself with his kitchen while you make dinner. The pre-game show plays quietly in the background, and when they mention how well Joel is playing you canât help but smile.Â
Itâs much more comfortable to watch the game in your boyfriendâs hoodie and pyjama pants on the couch than it would be to sit in the stiff arena seats. Time passes at a pretty leisurely pace, with nothing too exciting going on within the game, and sometime in the third period you fall asleep. The rest of the game and all the media appearances pass you by. Joel figures you must be sleeping when he doesnât get a congratulatory text when Claude pulls off a buzzer beater to win. His suspensions are confirmed when he slips through his front door to see you drooling slightly on the throw pillow his mom bought him as a housewarming gift.Â
You donât remember climbing into bed, but you wake up with Joelâs socked feet pressed against your calves. He stirs behind you and mummers something unintelligible.Â
âWhat was that sleepyhead?â you giggle, turning around to run a hand through his hair. Itâs rather unruly at the moment and you find it adorable.Â
âGood morning,â he repeats.Â
âThatâs what that was?â
âLeave me alone.â
The two of you lay in bed for a few more minutes before starting the day. You navigate around Joel flawlessly â like youâre there every morning. Breakfast is quick and youâre out the door before you have a chance to cherish the domesticity of it all. You have a pretty intense day of training and Joel has to be at the airport in two hours for a trip to Toronto. He drops you off in Voorhees, kissing you gently before making his way back into the city. You hate to see him go, wishing you could spend more time together before you head to worlds, but you know youâre both adults with real-world responsibilities.Â
For the first time in the final push you have a practice that is up to standard. Things click into place and you feel good. Really good. Each time you skate a program itâs clean, and the elements donât feel weak when completed individually. Maybe youâll actually be able to pull this off.Â
âŒâŒâŒâŒ
Italy is beautiful, but you donât get much time to enjoy it. A scheduling mishap has team USA leaving two days later than you were supposed to and now youâre all scrambling to find a groove. Every moment is being spent preparing for the competition â off ice training, multiple practices a day, press conferences. When you get a moment to spare you call Joel, but oftentimes heâs at practice or fulfilling other obligations. The time difference is brutal and souring your mood. You feel alone, and just wish Joel could be by your side like he was at nationals.Â
As soon as you step on the ice something feels wrong. You run through a mental checklist and assure that nothing is â your skates feel they way they should and you didnât forget any gear. It must be nerves. The competition officially starts tomorrow and youâre eager to cheer on the pairs teams America has brought. You do your best to skate it out, and by the time youâre allowed to have the ice to yourself you can almost convince yourself everything will be fine.Â
The music starts and you snap into character. Your short program music is punchy and so are you â all sass and sharp angles as you navigate the opening step sequence. A lump forms in your throat as you set up the first first jumping pass, but you push it down. Youâve done a thousand triple lutz-triple toe-loop combinations and could execute it flawlessly in your sleep.Â
Everything happens so fast. One second youâre rotating through the air and the next youâre sprawled across the ice. Nothing feels off until you try to pick yourself up. When you canât move your left leg you look to see what the issue is and find your kneecap where it most certainly should not be. Itâs rotated nearly one hundred and eighty degrees, now residing in the back instead of the front.Â
âHelp me!â you scream, mostly out of shock. Thereâs no pain which surprises you, but you know it definitely should hurt. Everyone around the ice surface is frozen in place, not knowing what happened or what to do, and you continue to sob helplessly.Â
Someone sprints to get the onsite emergency responders and Brenda runs to you as fast as her dress shoes will allow. âDonât look at it honey,â she soothes. âItâs just going to make things worse.â
âIt should hurt,â you croak out through the tears, âWhy doesnât it hurt?â
âYouâve got so much adrenaline pumping through your veins you canât feel anything,â the EMT explains in flawless English. âCan we take your skates off?â
You nod, and the right skate comes off breezily. Brenda unlaces your left skate and the medical team works to pry the boot from your foot. A sharp pain shoots up your leg and you wail in agony. âShh, itâs okay,â your coach coos, âThe skate is going to stay on until we get to the hospital.â
The ride to the hospital feels like time is moving through sludge. The paramedics keep an eye on your blood pressure and do their best to keep you calm. Brenda is typing furiously on her phone, and you ask what sheâs doing as the vehicle pulls into the ambulance bay.Â
âThe ISU rep told me to keep him updated,â she explains. âAnd Iâm trying to vote on which alternate is going to take your place.â
You knew that was going to happen, you couldnât possibly skate, but it makes you unbelievably sad. All your hard work is going to amount to nothing. No one cares about national champions who donât place at worlds, and the injury is going to sideline you in next yearâs olympic race. The emergency room has a bed ready for you, and the doctor arrives as youâre being transferred into it.Â
âMiss Y/L/N, Iâm Dr. Morelli. Weâre going to put your patella back into place. Itâs going to be incredibly painful, so weâre to sedate you. Is that okay?â
âYes,â you say as strongly as you can, though it comes out feeble and hoarse.Â
A nurse inserts an IV into your arm and smiles at you. They have you count backwards from ten, and by the time you get to eight youâre asleep. Thereâs a brief moment of panic when you wake up as you forgot where you are. âYouâre awake,â Brenda speaks softly from the bedside. âHow are you feeling?â
âLike shit,â you admit. âIt hurts so fucking bad.âÂ
She gives you a sympathetic smile. âI know. Theyâre going to come get you for x-rays in a few minutes and then weâll go back to the hotel.â
âOh my god,â you gasp. âIâve gotta call Joel. Bren, give me your phone.â
Laughter comes from the deviceâs speakers, and you realize sheâs one step ahead of you.Â
âThereâs my girl,â Joel whispers, eyes landing on yours as the phone lands in your hands. âAre you okay?â
The question makes you laugh. âYouâre quite the comedian Mr. Farabee. Of course Iâm not okay. My leg is currently being held together by a brace and my dreams are ruined.â You soften when you realize how upset Joel looks. âIâll be fine J, I promise.â
âIâm so sorry I wasnât there.â
âThereâs nothing you could have done. It was a freak accident. You can pick me up from the airport.â
He agrees in a heartbeat and tells you about his day to distract you from the pain. Youâll have to ask the nurses for some pain meds before you leave. A nurse comes to take you to the radiology department, and you hang up after reassuring him for the hundredth time that he doesnât need to fly to Italy to bring you home himself.Â
Brenda holds you as the adrenaline wears off and your legs twitches rapidly as a trauma response. She helps you navigate around the small room and makes sure youâre able to use the bathroom. Luckily none of her other skaters are competing, and sheâs able to travel back to Philadelphia with you once the doctor clears you. Itâs a rough flight â thereâs a fair amount of turbulence and each bump makes your leg throb. You donât get a wink of sleep and are grumpy by the time you touch down in Philly. Joelâs waiting at arrivals with a giant sign and a sweet smile. You wheel yourself over to him as quickly as possible, wanting nothing more than to collapse into his arms.Â
âWelcome home baby,â he whispers, leaning down to catch your lips in an airport appropriate kiss. The reason youâre home so early isnât brought up which you're incredibly grateful for. Your untimely withdrawal is still a very sore spot.Â
âI wasnât gone long,â you laugh, trying to poke fun at the situation before reality gets you too down.Â
âLong enough for me to miss you a tremendous amount.â
The three of you exit the airport, and Joel drops Brenda off at her house before taking you back to his place. Chuck and the rest of the management team were allowing him to miss a few games until you become more mobile and canât exist on your own for a few hours. Joelâs bed is calling out to you, but he insists youâll feel better after a shower and you know heâs right. Showering isnât something you can do yourself, so Joel keeps your leg straight and elevated as you sit on the stool he bought while waiting for you to return. The grime of travelling is washed away and you feel lighter when you swing into bed, stubbornly refusing Joelâs help.Â
You convince him to let you watch the broadcast of the event you were supposed to be skating in. Itâs probably not the best thing for your mental health, but you want to see how everyone does. Joel sits besides you, arm wrapped around your shoulder, and listens to you explain the rationale behind every elementâs score. When your replacement takes the ice you go silent. Itâs too much to see her skating in your place so you bury your face into Joelâs neck. Thereâs no jealousy like you thought there would be, just an infinite amount of sadness that youâre not able to be there.Â
âYouâll be able to get back there,â Joel reassures you when he feels a tear soak through his sweater.Â
âThatâs not guaranteed,â you sniffle. âI might not ever skate again, let alone compete at any level.â
He shakes his head in disagreement, leading you to quirk a brow. âI know you. Youâre going to do it. It wonât be easy, but youâre the most determined person Iâve ever met. People bounce back after major injuries all the time. Iâll be by your side the entire time, helping you through.â
âI love you,â you blurt out. The gravity of your words sinks in and you gasp. You havenât said those words to each other yet, but they feel right.
âI love you too,â Joel smiles, kissing the tip of your nose. âNow pay attention to the TV, that girl you beat at Skate Canada is up next.â
âŒâŒâŒâŒ
Recovery hasnât been easy. There have been so many days where all you want to do is throw in the towel and cry, but Joel keeps you going. He insists you to your physical therapy exercises with him so you arenât alone, and he comes to as many doctorâs appointments as he possibly can. After the Flyers get eliminated from the playoffs he doesnât return home for the summer, choosing to stay in the Philly area with you. Having him there is a massive help, and you power through the pain.Â
The Flyers are hosting a family skate before training camp, and it will be your first time on skates in nearly six months. Your doctors have cleared it as long as you take it slow and basically let Joel pull you around the rink but you donât care. It gives you hope that one day youâll be back to full strength.Â
âReady to do this thing?â Joel asks, grabbing your hand and intertwining your fingers.Â
You nod enthusiastically and let him pull you from the bench to the tunnel and down to the boards. Joel steps on the ice first, keeping his hands up in case you need them for support. A few of the significant others notice whatâs happening and they erupt in applause once both your feet are planted on the surface. Joel joins them, his eyes watering when he sees how happy you are to be skating again.Â
âI do believe you promised me a few laps lover boy,â you wink.Â
âYes maâam,â Joel giggles as he mock salutes. He places his hands in yours and guides you gently, careful not to go too fast or get too close to other groups. The two of you giggle and stop to kiss frequently but no one says anything. Youâve worked incredibly hard to get here and theyâre perfectly content letting you have your moment. Standing at centre ice you feel complete, and you know itâs all thanks to Joel.Â
âŒâŒâŒâŒ
taglist: @samsteelâ @kiedharaâ @tortitoâ @boqvistsbabeâ @iwantahockeyhimbo @himbos-on-iceâ if you want to be added just shoot me an ask :)
âïž forgive me father. fem!reader x enzo vogrincic
đȘ minha masterlist
» cw: smut! por favor só interaja se for +18! ; enzo!padre; infidelidade; angst + catholic gilt; fingering; masturb masculina + fem; sexo desprotegido; p in v; creampie; sexo num altar e na igreja (ops); nuances de strenght kink; enzo e leitora virgens então perda de virgindade.
enzo!padre que se esforçou para prosseguir com a confissĂŁo da mesma forma que sempre fazia, disfarçando o quando sua voz o afetou. procurou focar no que vocĂȘ dizia, prestando atenção em cada detalhe da histĂłria que vocĂȘ contava: que tinha se mudado recentemente para a cidadezinha da sua avĂł porque o filho de um homem importante tinha se interessado em ti, fazendo com que - de acordo com a sua famĂlia - a opção de negar o casamento nem existisse, e que talvez estivesse se precipitando pois tinha conhecido o garoto hĂĄ apenas um mĂȘs, mas mesmo assim nĂŁo enxergava se apaixonar por ele como algo possĂvel.
enzo!padre que, no dia seguinte, quase engasgou com a prĂłpria saliva quando novamente ouviu sua voz do outro lado da parede do confessionĂĄrio. ainda com a cabeça ruim devido Ă noite mal dormida, passou as mĂŁos nos olhos, mentalmente dizendo a Deus que jĂĄ tinha entendido o recado, suplicando para Ele nĂŁo punĂ-lo dessa forma.
enzo!padre que te impediu de falar informaçÔes que entregariam a ele sua identidade, dizendo que as confissĂ”es sempre deveriam permanecer anĂŽnimas. apesar de ser verdade, o real motivo era que enzo jĂĄ se sentia enlouquecido apenas com a imagem das suas mĂŁos e o som da sua voz, tinha medo do que poderia acontecer com sua saĂșde mental se descobrisse seu nome, seu rosto, seu corpo.
enzo!padre que nĂŁo teve nem coragem de enfiar a mĂŁo por baixo do tecido, se ele nĂŁo tocasse de fato no pau que com apenas com alguns minutos de estĂmulos liberou o lĂquido espesso e branquinho, talvez tudo isso seria menos pior, uma tentativa de burlar o pecado. depois de ter se esvaziado e ter feito uma bagunça na sua calça de pijama favorita, permaneceu de olhos fechados enquanto o peito subia e descia rapidamente.
enzo!padre que sentia como se estivesse no inferno durante essa semana, todas as noites acordando de madrugada depois de sonhar contigo: imaginando sua voz gemendo o nome dele, enquanto visualizava perfeitamente suas mĂŁos ao redor do membro grosso.
enzo!padre que se sentou ao seu lado, por mais que vocĂȘ fosse a Ășnica coisa que o desviasse do caminho sagrado, nĂŁo conseguia te ver nesse estado e nĂŁo fazer nada. âdesculpa, padre⊠eu achei que vocĂȘ nĂŁo estaria acordado essas horas e⊠imaginei que vir aqui e rezar um pouco me faria bemâŠâ, vocĂȘ disse entre soluços, o que fez enzo responder, âtĂĄ tudo bem⊠tem alguma coisa que eu possa fazer para te ajudar?â. vocĂȘ balançou um ânĂŁoâ com a cabeça em resposta, ainda fungando o nariz e com os olhos molhados de lĂĄgrimas enquanto encarava o prĂłprio colo. enzo se aproveitou da ausĂȘncia da parede entre vocĂȘs para te observar atentamente: seu cenho franzido, como o peito subia e descia mais rĂĄpido que o normal, como vocĂȘ puxava as pelinhas no canto da unha, e mais rĂĄpido do que ele pudesse reagir, como tomou as mĂŁos dele nas suas e pediu âora comigo, padre? por favorâŠâ
enzo!padre que rezou um ave maria contigo, e - por mais que estivesse atento demais na forma que o seu toque praticamente queimava a pele dele - quando vocĂȘ começou a chorar novamente antes mesmo da prece terminar, envolveu o braço ao redor do seu torso e sentiu o coração bater mais rĂĄpido quando vocĂȘ encostou seu rosto na curva do ombro dele. âshh⊠tĂĄ tudo bemâŠâ, ele te confortava enquanto a mĂŁo grande fazia um carinho gentil no seu braço. âpadre⊠eu preciso confessarâŠâ, vocĂȘ sussurrou, tĂŁo baixinho que ele quase nĂŁo escutou.
enzo!padre que tomou a liberdade de fazer cĂrculos com os quatro dedos que estavam dentro da calcinha - apenas o polegar estava para fora do tecido - e passavam pelo seu clitĂłris e perto da sua entradinha que jĂĄ pulsava. âera assim⊠issoâŠâ, vocĂȘ afirmava, o dizendo que o que ele fazia era exatamente o que vocĂȘ tinha feito. âenzoâŠâ, ao gemer o nome dele, enzo voltou a realidade: percebeu que o que estava fazendo era completamente errado, mas, porra⊠o jeito que vocĂȘ gemia o nome dele, o jeito que seus olhos estavam cheinhos de lĂĄgrimas e desejo, o jeito que seus lĂĄbios estavam entrepartidos e mesmo assim segurava os gemidos, soltando um ar pesado pela boca. ele nĂŁo conseguia parar, muito menos resistir, selou os lĂĄbios no seu. as lĂnguas se esbarravam lentamente, sem nenhuma sincronização pois ambos jĂĄ estavam perdidos demais no prazer, principalmente quando suas mĂŁos pararam na coxa dele em um impulso, sentia que estavam perto demais de um orgasmo, âenzo⊠euâŠâ. âem quem⊠vocĂȘ pensou?â, ele te interrompeu, ofegante, fazendo vocĂȘ jogar a cabeça para trĂĄs ao ouvir a pergunta e apertar a coxa dele, perigosamente perto da virilha.
enzo!padre que percebeu que, agora, a sua Ășnica devoção era vocĂȘ, que o Ășnico altar que ele queria louvar todos os dias era seu corpo. entĂŁo, antes mesmo de sair de dentro de ti, disse ofegante âfoge comigoâ. seu rosto expressava hesitação, mas a forma que seu coração bateu mais forte ao pensar como seria viver com enzo te confirmou que era isso que vocĂȘ queria. âmas⊠como a gente vai fazer isso?â. âeu nĂŁo sei⊠eu sĂł sei que eu quero ficar com vocĂȘ pra sempreâ.
» wn: sim mais um esteban dilf. e sim ele sex deprived de novo. o motivo? tesĂŁo. minha buceta? explodida. hotel? trivago. enfim minhas gatinhas cheirosas eu me diverti e me empolguei muito atendendo a esse pedido (lĂȘ-se passei mal de tesĂŁo) entĂŁo acabou ficando meio grandinho, mas espero que vocĂȘs gostem!!! đđđ a mĂșsica que eu ouvi escrevendo foi pink matter do frank ocean, recomendo que ouçam đđ·
Para sua felicidade, o telefone tocou, ficou aliviada em ter uma desculpa para cortar seu acompanhante, mas logo se transformou em preocupação quando leu âEsteban Kukuriczkaâ na tela do celular.
â Sr. Kukuriczka? TĂĄ tudo bem? â VocĂȘ perguntou preocupada, o homem nĂŁo era de entrar em contato a noite, muito menos num final de semana.
â Oi querida, tĂĄ tudo bem sim⊠Desculpa te ligar assim do nada, mas a Sofia tĂĄ com febre e ela tĂĄ pedindo pra te ver, vocĂȘ estĂĄ ocupada?
â NĂŁo, nĂŁo⊠Eu vou pra aĂ agora.
â TĂĄ bem, me passa seu endereço que eu mando um uber para te buscar.
VocĂȘ nĂŁo conseguia responder, atordoada da sensação tĂŁo gostosa dele te chupando logo depois de te fuder como nunca tinha sido antes. Mas honestamente, nem precisava, ambos sabiam que vocĂȘ queria que essas palavras bonitas se concretizassem tanto quanto ele e que, depois dessa noite, isso com certeza aconteceria.
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» cw: smut! por favor só interaja se for +18! ; consumo de ålcool e cigarro; leitora!virgem e inexperiente; blas!guitarrista; corruption kink; fingering; chupão; um pouco de size kink e dirty talk.
Sentada na ĂĄrea externa da sua casa com seus pais e os convidados, ouvia mas nĂŁo prestava atenção na conversa do momento, se te perguntassem vocĂȘ nĂŁo saberia nem falar qual era o tĂłpico da vez. Durante a noite toda, os casais amigos dos seus pais foram muito simpĂĄticos, mas a Ășnica pessoa daquele jantar que realmente chamava sua atenção era Blas, filho de um deles. JĂĄ conhecia ele hĂĄ tempos, apesar de nunca terem se tornado amigos que nem seus pais, um friozinho na barriga ao vĂȘ-lo sempre existiu, mas hoje, especialmente, depois de duas taça de vinho, nĂŁo conseguia deixar de reparar o quĂŁo atraente ele era: muito mais alto que vocĂȘ, os cachinhos marrons escuro chamavam muito sua atenção, e, apesar dele passar a impressĂŁo de ser misterioso e descolado demais em comparação a vocĂȘ, era incrivelmente simpĂĄtico, com um sorriso que nĂŁo saia do rosto enquanto vocĂȘs conversavam.
Tragou o cigarro mais uma vez, e ao soltar a fumaça perguntou: âVocĂȘ toca violĂŁo?â. A pergunta sem conexĂŁo com o assunto anterior te deixou visivelmente confusa, parece que tinha esquecido completamente da decoração do seu quarto, fazendo com que ele sorrisse de lado ao ter que falar a informação Ăłbvia, âĂ que tem um ali na sua paredeâ.
â Ah! NĂŁo⊠à sĂł decoração mesmoâŠ
â Como vocĂȘ tem um violĂŁo no quarto e nĂŁo saber tocar? â Perguntou rindo, num tom que dava a entender que nĂŁo estava nem um pouco te caçoando, sĂł genuinamente surpreso com a revelação, e encantadinho com o jeito que vocĂȘ mexia as mĂŁos, novamente provando o efeito que ele tinha sobre vocĂȘ.
â Ah⊠Fica bonito⊠â Disse com um sorriso envergonhado no rosto, que aumentou quando viu a expressĂŁo alegre no rosto dele.
â PeraĂ â Ele disse e apagou o cigarro, indo em direção a parede do seu quarto que o violĂŁo estava preso, tirou ele de lĂĄ e trouxe para a varanda, se sentando no sofĂĄzinho ao seu lado. â Ă inadmissĂvel vocĂȘ nĂŁo saber, deixa eu te ensinar â Mexia nas cordas, vendo se o instrumento estava afinado.
âïž bad habit. enzo vogrincic x fem!reader x esteban kukuriczka
đȘ minha masterlist
» cw: smut! por favor sĂł interaja se for +18! ; infidelidade e leitora meio gaslight gatekeep girlboss (i support womens rights but mostly womens wrongs!!); band!au; leitora!guitarrista; enzo!vocalista; kuku!baterista (eâđ»com buzzcut); threesome; fingering; oral masc e fem; face fucking; squirting; dirty talk; praise kink + degradação; p in v; sexo desprotegido; menção a creampie; sexo anal; nipple play; choking; uns tapinhas; rough sex; um pouquinho de size kink e messy sex; kuku e enzo sacanas se alfinetando de vez em quando; double penetration; chupĂ”es; masturbação masc; finger sucking; voyeurismo e cuckholding if you squint; kuku meio ciumentinho *its the silly in me âđ»đđ€đ»*
â Caralho, por que vocĂȘ nĂŁo me ouve? Ă nĂtido o jeito que eles sĂŁo doidos por vocĂȘ, vocĂȘ sĂł tem que parar de dar moral pra eles. â Seu namorado dizia, bravo.
â Tchau. â Com isso, vocĂȘ saiu do carro, andando depressa em direção ao estĂșdio, carregando a bolsa pesada com a guitarra dentro e ajeitando seu vestido soltinho um pouco amassado.
â TĂĄ atrasada. â O loiro finalmente disse, ainda sentado, enquanto via vocĂȘ colocar os cabos na guitarra, descendo com os olhos lentamente para a sua bunda, coberta pelo vestido florido.
â TĂĄ falando de mim mas a Vic nem chegou ainda. â VocĂȘ disse enquanto terminava de preparar sua guitarra.
â A Vic nĂŁo vem, Agustin passou mal e ela teve que levar ele pro hospital. â O moreno informou, deitado numa pilha de travesseiros que sempre estavam no chĂŁo, era o lugarzinho que vocĂȘs tinham para descansar.
â Calma, bebita⊠DĂĄ pra gente ensaiar ainda. â Esteban finalmente se levantou, chegou perto de vocĂȘ e te deu um abraço de lado, enquanto acariciava seu braço rapidamente, um sinal de ârelaxaâ.
â Sai, Esteban. Como que fica calma, cara? A gente tem um show amanhĂŁ e ainda temos que repassar duas mĂșsicas. â VocĂȘ disse e se afastou dele, andando em direção a caixa de som que jĂĄ estava perfeitamente configurada, entĂŁo deu meia volta e sentou perto do moreno que estava deitado, o qual apenas observava seu comportamento com um dos braços atrĂĄs da cabeça. VocĂȘ colocou o rosto nas mĂŁos e bufou, era sĂł o que faltava mesmo, depois de uma briga com o chato do seu namorado, vocĂȘs ainda marcaram um ensaio atoa. VocĂȘ nĂŁo viu, mas o silĂȘncio momentĂąneo era porque os meninos se entreolharam e telepaticamente concordaram que sabiam o jeito de resolver seu problema.
â Eu tĂŽ estressada com o show. Nervosa. â VocĂȘ disse, ainda de olhos fechados enquanto se deitava, ficando entre os dois homens, apoiando a cabeça em um dos travesseiros macios.
â Claro que nĂŁo, vocĂȘ acha que ele dĂĄ conta de uma putinha dessa? â O moreno disse antes de dar um beijo molhado no seu pescoço. VocĂȘ bufou, frustrada com o tanto que precisava deles de novo, nĂŁo queria trair seu namorado, mas era muito difĂcil tomar alguma decisĂŁo sĂŁ com as mĂŁos grandes de Kukuriczka subindo cada vez mais pela sua coxa e Enzo beijando seu pescoço.
âïž a noite toda. fem!reader x esteban kukuriczka
đȘ minha masterlist
» cw: smut! por favor só interaja se for +18! ; kuku!dilf pai de menina; leitora!milf; oral male e fem recieving; face fucking; sexo desprotegido; p in v; shower sex; dirty talk/praise; nipple play; face sitting; hair pulling; multiple orgasms; kuku!sex deprived [gemidos].
kuku!dilf que vocĂȘ viu pela primeira vez na praia, no dia que tinha decidido levar sua filha de manhĂŁ para que ela pudesse brincar na areia e no mar enquanto o sol nĂŁo estivesse tĂŁo forte. sua menina tomava uma ĂĄgua de coco sentadinha na canga na sua frente, ela percebeu a lĂngua familiar que a menininha na barraca perto falava com o pai. âmamĂŁe, eles estĂŁo falando espanholâ, a observação dela te fez olhar para ele pela primeira vez, apesar de ser muito bonito, nĂŁo era isso que estava focada agora. âpor que vocĂȘ nĂŁo chama ela pra brincar entĂŁo, chiquita?â.
kuku!dilf que observava sua filha chamar a dele para montar castelinhos de areia juntos, jĂĄ que elas falavam a lĂngua em comum. o pai da sua filha era colombiano, e, apesar de nĂŁo manterem uma relação tĂŁo boa, vocĂȘ fez questĂŁo de ensinar a lĂngua para a garotinha.
kuku!dilf que se aproximou de vocĂȘ com um sorriso educado no rosto, estendeu a mĂŁo para se apresentar, e te contou como ficou feliz da sua filhinha ter convidado a dele para brincar, jĂĄ que ele era tĂmida que nem ele quando criança. depois, te falou que eram argentinos e tinham chegado hĂĄ alguns dias no Brasil, e que ele jĂĄ estava encantado pelo paĂs.
kuku!dilf que quando estavam sentados no sofĂĄ bebendo, fazia carinho na sua coxa, com o rosto deitadinho no sofĂĄ enquanto te admira. e, por mais que queria muito te beijar ali mesmo, quem tomou a iniciativa foi vocĂȘ: chegou mais pertinho dele e falou que a boca tava sujinha de vinho, passando o polegar nos lĂĄbios roxinhos entreabertos e manteve a mĂŁo ali no rosto, sĂł aproximando sua boca da dele, finalmente selando um beijo depois de querer fazer isso o dia inteiro.
kuku!dilf que nĂŁo perde tempo em te colocar no colo dele, segurando seu rosto enquanto te beija e bagunçando seu cabelo de levinho, as mĂŁos grandes descendo lentamente para sua cintura e te apertando ali quando vocĂȘ move o quadril pra frente, gemendo baixinho dentro da sua boca.
kuku!dilf que diz ânĂŁo faço isso hĂĄ muito tempoâ, e sorri quando vocĂȘ responde que ele tem a noite inteira pra matar a vontade, enquanto fica de joelhos na frente dele. quando sente sua mĂŁo o masturbar por cima da calça, joga a cabeça para trĂĄs e xinga baixinho, levanta os quadris para te ajudar a retirar a calça e a cueca e nĂŁo consegue tirar os olhos de vocĂȘ desde o momento que vocĂȘ lambeu toda a extensĂŁo dele antes de enfiar ele todo na boca.
kuku!dilf que, a princĂpio, segura teu cabelo em forma de um rabo de cavalo para que seus fios nĂŁo te atrapalhem, mas com o jeito que vocĂȘ chupa ele tĂŁo bem e ainda usa as mĂŁos para envolver a parte do membro que nĂŁo cabe na sua boca, segura seus cabelos com mais força e começa a fuder sua boca. e ele nĂŁo se entrega aos prĂłprios olhos quase se fechando de tanto prazer, fixado na sua boca e seus olhinhos lacrimejados, te observando com o olhar caĂdo enquanto morde a gola da camisa, a fim de abafar os gemidos e xingamentos que saem da boca dele.
kuku!dilf que fala que vai gozar e puxa seu cabelo te afastando, se masturbando enquanto esfrega a cabecinha na sua lĂngua de fora, para que possa ver ela ficar toda sujinha de porra.
kuku!dilf que enfiou a cabecinha enquanto analisava sua expressĂŁo, mas, covardemente, se retirou de dentro de vocĂȘ. rĂĄpido, te virou de bruços com muita facilidade e puxou seu quadril para cima, te deixando de quatro. âcalma, bebita⊠a gente tem a noite todaâŠâ disse, e logo se enfiou todo dentro de ti.
kuku!dilf que colou suas costas no peitoral dele enquanto te fodia, envolvendo a mĂŁo no seu pescoço para que seu ouvido ficasse perto da boca dele, permitindo com que ele gemesse no seu ouvido e falasse âdesde que eu te vi de biquĂni mais cedo, tava sonhando em te comer desse jeito⊠sĂł nĂŁo imaginava que sua bucetinha seria tĂŁo gostosa assimâŠâ enquanto move a mĂŁo que estava apertando sua bunda para o seu clitĂłris, fazendo cĂrculos para te fazer gozar juntinho com ele.
kuku!dilf que pediu para que vocĂȘ se virasse para que ele pudesse lavar suas costas, esfregando a esponja de banho e o sabonete cheiroso nos seus braços, ombros e lombar. depois apertava seu ombro tensionado com o polegar, fazendo massagem. descendo o carinho para sua lombar, passando as mĂŁos na sua cintura, percebendo que vocĂȘ gemia baixinho ao sentir as mĂŁos grandes no seu corpo. abaixou o corpo para que pudesse apertar suas coxas, subindo cada vez mais perto da sua buceta, ainda sensĂvel mas que ficou molhada com o toque, e ele fez questĂŁo de pontuar isso. âjĂĄ tĂĄ molhadinha de novo, bebita? que lindaâŠâ enquanto te dedava lentinho.
kuku!dilf que pediu para vocĂȘ sentar na cara dele enquanto desfazia o nĂłzinho da sua toalha, e fez uma cara de cachorrinho abandonado depois que vocĂȘ disse que estava muito sensĂvel dos Ășltimos dois orgasmos. âpor favor, nena⊠nĂŁo vou conseguir dormir direito se nĂŁo chupar sua bucetinha⊠deixa, vai⊠prometo que vou chupar gostosinho, devagarinhoâŠâ enquanto beijava sua barriga e apertava suas coxas.