Obsessed! Hitman! König(COD) x gender neutral mentally ill Reader
Summary:Listless, discharged from the army and working a dangerous job, König is ready to end his life in the forest before heaven drops you into his lap.
Trigger Warnings: VIOLENCE, SMUT, Fluff at the end, Male masturbation, dubious consent, blowjob, size kink, Depression, Anxiety, Social Anxiety, Neurodivergent Reader, Familial Trauma/ Death mention, minor character death, Implied Physical and Emotional Abuse, PTSD, Unhealthy relationships / DARK romance, angst (with a possible happy ending?) erotic, jealousy, possessiveness, obsession, stalker, explicit language, suggestive content, Violence, Blood, Slow Burn, Eventual Smut
a/n: warning for violence.
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He did not call. He didn't text.
Nothing. For weeks.
It was as if König had never existed. The only proof you weren't hallucinating the giant from the woods was his number saved in your phone and the strong, clean smell of your car — he must have used some heavy-duty stuff — but even then, after a few days, your nose adjusted.
Your phone stayed silent, except for debt collectors. For some reason, you couldn't pluck up the courage to reach out. You were a grown-up with thumbs and a mouth too. It would have been easy to text or call, but … the way he'd left you there in the diner stopped you. He seemed disturbed by whatever was on the other end of the phone, and it had to be important for him to leave so… abruptly.
That’s what you told yourself, at least.
He was a busy man, with his 'special consulting,' as he called it. Or maybe it was something else. He didn't tell you much about his life, after all. Besides, he'd let you know when he was free, right? Then again, you barely knew him. You argued with yourself in circles until you exhausted yourself.
It wouldn't have been so significant if he hadn't gotten so close to you so quickly, with such stunning ease. If he hadn't stirred you up with sweet words, his addictive attention, his unusual selfless behavior, and his generosity. You fixated on him and replayed his light touches, both distressing and alluring. Had you not been so lonely and touch-starved, none of this would have affected you so deeply. The brief moment you two shared struck with unexpected force, haunting the following days and echoing in every solitary moment.
The bathroom mirror offered no answers as to what König saw that made his eyes light up like that. You weren't sure. Pity, maybe—you were a dreadful sight.
Grief hadn't been kind to your skin, your neglected hair, or the wounded-looking flesh beneath your eyes.
Whenever you saw him again, it couldn't be like this.
In increments, you returned to the habit of washing your face in the morning and at night, as before your grandmother had gotten sick. Instead of just sitting in the shower dissociating, you picked up the washcloth and scrubbed your body, shampooed your hair, and worked through the painful snarls until you tamed it into something bordering decent.
It made you feel somewhat better, but it didn't cure everything. A constant weight still hung in your chest. Fantasies and daydreams of König couldn't keep reality from crushing in. You spent long hours paralyzed beneath the blankets—when you could bear to be in the creaky house at all. Outside, you kept searching the treeline for him.
Odd things started happening, especially when you left the house. The news reported a couple of recent break-ins in the area. The neighborhood, like so many others, was deteriorating as the military base continued to sponge up the community’s resources.
Just like in the parking lot, you got that same prickling on your neck. You'd glance up, childishly half-dreaming it was König staring with his baby blue eyes, leaning on his truck. It wasn't.
It was quiet on the street, but that feeling of being watched returned. You turned your head and glanced across the street, up to the corner. Nothing. Just cars and trash cans, or the occasional jogger or dog walker.
You attributed it to your foggy brain. What reason would anyone have to watch you, anyway?
One evening at the diner, you sat with your chin resting in your hand, tearing apart a napkin in the same booth. Your favorite booth. The one you shared with König. You remembered what he'd said clear as a bell.
Endure together.
Let someone in to be with you.
To be near you is—
The same waitress poured your coffee and left the sugar and cream in a bowl beside you.
I like you sweet.
You needed to do something. Something, anything. A distraction.
"Um, excuse me," you said to the waitress, who glanced at you. "I have, uh, maybe a silly question."
⋆˙⟡ ⋆.˚ ⊹₊⟡ ⋆
You left the diner just as the sky faded warm and peachy around a blazing sunset. Winter was approaching, freezing the air and prematurely dimming the light.
In your passenger seat sat a blank job application from the diner. You decided to expel the mysterious giant from your mind and focus on the job prospect. You remembered a dark sweater that would match the uniform perfectly, though you couldn't find it at first. You parked and unlatched your trunk. He'd put all the garments you'd thrown everywhere in the car there, folded neatly.
How sweet.
How embarrassing.
Strangely, though, the sweater you'd been thinking about was missing. Fingering through the cloth, you then lifted the bundle entirely — and paused.
Beneath the folded clothes was a dried splotch of … something. Dark brown. Not too big, but definitely there. Scrubbed to the barest visibility, but… had it always been there? Your car had been a disaster, sure. But you couldn't recall spilling anything in the trunk before.
Well, whatever. It wouldn't be unusual for you to do so, some leaking groceries or a forgotten coffee cup. Maybe it had been your grandmother. You pressed the bundle of clothes to you and the paper application between your fingers, and closed the trunk. When you looked up, you got that eerie prickling feeling.
You glanced around. A house up, a car idled at the curb. It was notably more expensive than anything else on the street, with dark windows that reflected the streetlights that flickered on. The engine purred, and the exhaust curled white clouds.
Weird.
Hesitating a moment longer, you headed up the walkway and made sure to lock the door behind you.
The evening went on, and you spent a little while doomscrolling, switching between apps. Back in bed, with nothing but the quiet house, König crept into your thoughts again. You switched over to his contact. You'd never messaged him before.
Fuck it.
Trying not to overthink, you swiped up your keyboard. In the corner, the battery indicated you were low. Less than five percent. Time for quick thinking, before the urge passed you.
Hi. <3 Been thinking about u since—
backspace.
Hi :) Thank you so much again for helping me out that time. I want to repay y—
backspace, backspace.
Hey, thanks again for helping me out that time. Hope ur doing okay, since I haven't heard from you. I'm hoping that we can see each other-
Damn it. backspace.
Hey, K, hope that you're well. You should let me know if you're free sometime. Want to pay you back for the breakfast.
You hit send and threw your phone across the room. It’s fine; let it die. You didn't want to know if he responded. No one else would be calling you, anyway. With dinner and a hot shower, you'd forget all about it. You scampered to your fridge and opened it.
A carton of cream for your tea and expired eggs stared back at you.
Okay. Maybe only a shower and some tea.
You'd go shopping tomorrow, you promised yourself.
You closed your eyes and let the water wash over you, daydreaming of taking orders at the diner, when you heard a noise above the hissing shower head.
Another one. A thump. Louder. So loud you jumped. You lunged to turn the water off and listened.
Thump. There it was again.
Footsteps.
The floor creaked beneath them, distinct. You'd know; you hadn't heard another pair of feet walking around the house in months.
Your stomach dropped to your ankles.
Moving as silently as possible, you pushed the shower curtain back. Fear tightened its grip, slowing each step to a crawl. Every noise made you freeze, waiting for a heartbeat before you moved again. Your heart stuttered in your chest. Of course, your phone was in your bedroom—and dead, besides. From the counter, you snatched your towel and pressed it to your body like a feeble shield.
Desperately, you whipped your eyes around the bathroom. Nothing, except your grandmother's ancient hair dryer. You reached for it, snatched it up, and held it in trembling hands. The steam and your rapid breath, which you struggled to control, made you lightheaded and dizzy, with an animal awareness of what lurked behind the door. The steps came closer, heavy on the complaining wood, dampening on the rugs.
You remembered too late that you had locked your front door. You lived alone and were used to coming and going about the house as you pleased.
So the bathroom door was unlocked.
Slowly, the metal knob turned. Clicked. Blood roared in your ears. The door opened.
You did not recognize the man before you. Cold black eyes. A red wound of a mouth on sickly yellowed skin. As foul as he looked, he also could have been someone you passed by on the street and never noticed. Maybe you did, right past his sleek car with tinted windows.
With a shriek, you threw the heavy hair dryer with all your might. This momentarily distracted the man enough for you to shove past him.
But he was quicker.
The intruder snatched you by your hair, pulled you, and threw you into the wall. Pictures fell, and glass shattered. Still wet from your shower, you slipped to the ground with the wind knocked out of you. Even worse, one of the largest glass shards had dragged along your skin as you stumbled, slicing deep into your forearm.
You howled in pain.
Red hot flames shot up your shoulder, down your fingers. The nerves screamed. Blood, dark and hot, streaked down your elbow to splattering droplets onto the floor. Adrenaline had reared fiercely, and you kept struggling to get away. He approached slowly, and you kicked yourself back feebly. Your towel fell around your waist, forgotten as you clutched your ravaged arm.
The intruder crouched before you. Cold, froggish eyes. "Bist du seine hure?" He sneered, his voice stringy like wire. When you didn't respond but with hiccuping sobs, he continued coldly, "Wann kommt er nach hause?"
Your lip trembled as you stared at him. Your vision was spinning. He slammed your head against the wall, and the breath rushed from you again. He repeated himself.
"I-I dunno—" you sniffled, stuttering and trembling. "I—I don't understand—"
Your throat tightened as he produced a mean-looking knife that clicked open from a blade. "Stupid bitch."
That you did understand.
You hoped he'd kill you quickly, or you bled out before he decided to do anything else to you. The blade neared your face, and you closed your eyes, resigning yourself to seeing your grandmother again soon.
Nothing came. You opened your eyes, and the intruder had perked up, his eyes turning to the side.
Too late.
All your attacker could do was let out a choked noise as two massive gloved hands snatched him into the dark. There was a bit of struggle, but the intruder's body slammed onto the floor. He heaved, stunned. The hands yanked him by the scruff of his neck and slammed him again, hard enough to knock his head on the floor.
The last moments before you passed out happened in snapshots. A great knee, donned in canvas, kneeling on the intruder's back so hard he cried out. Then a pillow - embroidered and from your grandmother's couch - smashed over his head.
Your attacker didn't struggle long before a pistol with a silencer was aimed and shot a hole right through the pillow.
The intruder went limp. All was still.
The towel around your waist was warmed with your own blood. Your arm dropped to your lap. Your head went slack against your shoulder.
Exhaustion crashed over you. The adrenaline that had run through you snuffed out, leaving you trembling and hazy. You struggled to keep your eyes open.
Heavy boots approached you. Frightened, you struggled feebly and whimpered. With the last of your strength, you turned and pressed yourself flat against the wall. Long legs in canvas pants knelt before you. Above your head, someone let out a string of curses.
Three thick fingers took hold of your face and gruffly turned your heavy head to face forward. You were met with wide blue eyes in blackout and a familiar mask. Cloth, red streaks.
You felt pressure on your numb arm. The towel was snatched from your body and wound around the stinging wounds. Rumbling in your ears. He was talking. His breath warmed your face. But you couldn’t hear what he was saying.
"K…K.." you choked.
A singular finger pressed to your lips and silenced you. Your consciousness was dwindling, but you saw blue begin to dapple the inside of the house through the blinds, sirens blaring, though they sounded far away, underwater.
The large man lifted himself, stiff with waiting. He — a great black smudge in your teary, half-conscious vision —stepped over you. You watched him peer through the blinds.
Beneath the pillow, blood was beginning to pool, slowly inching towards your cut-up feet. The sirens came and went. You were plunged in such dark that it did not make a difference when you closed your eyes.
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I am begging y'all, don't let this flop it took an ungodly amount of time and I am so proud of it. Full fic under the cut.
Also, leave feedback! I love reading what you guys thought of my writing!
Hamilton is hot.
There’s no other way to say it. He’s hot, miserably so. Even with the air conditioner full blast, and a fan directed straight into his face, he’s simply sweltering in the heat. His childish refusal to remove his shirt (even in the privacy of his own home) isn’t helping the sweat cease in their races down his back, and the base of his ponytail sticks to his neck. He grimaces every time he even tries to move, and thus he’s resided himself to the expanse of couch, positioned himself under an open window. But there’s no breeze, none reaching him anyway. If he lifts himself on his shaking arms, and peers out the window, he can see the trees aren’t swaying. The leaves bustle occasionally, but it’s far from the usual dance they perform. He can hear all too clearly conversations, chatter from those subjecting themselves to the summer heat. Perhaps Alexander is more a winter person, ever since he had moved to America he had been, after all, he saw snow, something he thought only existed in movies, and immediately fell in love with the season. Being able to choose if he was to be pleasantly warm, or surprisingly cold during winter was an experience. To have the option of curling up like a cat by the fire, or lying in snow, making snowmen and such. And Christmas dinners- Alexander could go on and on for hours about the wonders of the coldest time of year, alas Hercules would disagree, argue Summer was so much better. But Hercules is Irish, he has enough of the cold to last him a lifetime. Now Hamilton would bet the man wishes he had just held his tongue, because he must be suffering in the heat too.
Fuck heatwaves, and fuck New York.
He thinks to himself as he throws a cushion across the room in frustration. It hits his air conditioning unit, and before he knows it the apartment is plunged into a volcano. The unit malfunctions, turns off and doesn’t turn back on, even when Alexander shoots up from his languid position and desperately tries to fix it. He beats his fist off the top with pent up frustration, sincerely hoping that magically it would be fixed. Alas, it was not, it gave one last spluttering attempt to turn on before dying with a not so graceful clank. What sin has he committed to be tortured in such a way? It feels as though Satan himself is clawing his way up from the circles of Hell, and has declared Alexander’s apartment his spawn point, where the Heaven vs Hell war will begin. Whatever war is about to commence, Alex is on Satan’s team, as God must have something against him to send this wave of heat his way.
“Fuck!” He yelled, kicking the machine and cursing even louder at the shock of pain coursing through his toes. He clutches his foot, hopping around his apartment like some hurt rabbit and hisses through clenched teeth. He finally jumps his way ungracefully back to his couch, collapsing onto it in one foul swoop. His legs involuntarily give out under him, and he’s almost thankful for it as he half considers stripping out of his shirt, aching for some kind of relief. He starts tugging on the hem of his shirt, mulling over the idea before pushing his own hands away in disgust. A respectable man always remains fully dressed for any occasion. What if a visitor were to come by? He would likely demand their exit from his home, but he would at least like to do so in style.
The rooms are quick to grow stuffy, uncomfortable and as though the walls are too close and getting closer. Suddenly removing any clothing is a thought long forgotten, quickly replaced by the innate desperation to escape the closed doors of his apartment. He scrambles for purchase on the arm of his couch before forcing his muscles to revive and motor him towards the exit. He passes by his kitchen, opens the fridge for a moment just to feel the coolness on his body. He closes the door before all his food defrosts, albeit reluctantly. He would stand there all day if he could. Leaving the kitchen, he examines how his kettle has evaporated of all remaining water inside. There goes Plan B of making iced coffee, or worse, iced tea. Who could subject themselves to the bath water like clutches of cold tea? Disgusting.
He doesn’t stop to grab sunscreen, doesn’t consider sunburn a thing as he grabs his keys and shoves them in the pocket of his ratty cargo shorts. He pushes his feet into sandals, Birkenstocks, brown ones. He half contemplated putting socks on with his sandals, and automatically laughs at how much that would irritate Jefferson if he just so happened to run into him. The man is obsessed with his looks, conceited and vain in every way. Alexander wouldn’t be surprised if the man carries a pocket mirror on him, just to examine his appearance and remind himself of how goddamn gorgeous he is. Because he is gorgeous. Alexander is stubborn, not blind, and even he can admit the things he would give up for a fling with the man. His pride would never allow him to plead Jefferson for a one night stand however, and he knew Jefferson would never come to him, so that fantasy may as well remain just that. A fantasy.
So he leaves the socks behind, but not because he cares what others think. Of course he doesn’t… simply because socks would just be extra layers. He doesn’t care if people think his hair is a mess, which it is, so he drags his hand through it. The hand comes back damp, and he grimaces, wiping it on the tan material of his shorts. And he certainly doesn’t care that one of the buckles on his sandals is about to break. He glares at it, willing it to sew itself back together. It does not. Hamilton sighs and folds, giving up on attempting to appear presentable. It’s not like anyone else outside looks much better, save for the few teenagers posing on the streets in incredibly short shorts with a Starbucks they probably waited an hour for.
Alexander practically throws his door open and is met with a pleasurable breeze as it swings, which quickly dissipates into a blast of scorching air, as though opening an oven too quickly. You would think after being born in such a humid climate he would’ve grown used to the hot weather. Apparently, this was a false assumption. He fishes his keys back out of his shorts and locks the door, standing out in the lobby of his apartment complex.
Now that he’s escaped the confinement of his home, Hamilton doesn’t know what to do. He could run down to Starbucks, take his mind off the heat with an ice cold Frappuccino. However, that would only distract him for a moment, perhaps an hour, until every drop of coffee has been drunk, and he’s left with an empty cup and a smoldering heat once more. And besides, if he's so desperate for an iced coffee then he could just make his own. That idea drains down the gutter, because he doesn't have any ice and there's no way water would freeze very fast in this temperament. He can briskly walk to work if he so pleases, despite being ordered to stay off, but that would require changing into a suit and now that he thinks about it… does his office even have air conditioning?
A long, broken sigh escapes his lips and he drags a hand through his hair, which has grown ever so slightly damp with sweat. Maybe a walk to clear his head, and if he strolls in the right direction, the wind will hit him perfectly and he should cool down.
He accepts this as the perfect idea and walks his way out onto the street, practically able to feel the burning tarmac through the soles of his sandals. He hopes there are no poor dogs or felines roaming the streets, or on daily walks on this day. The pavement would be far too much for their paws. Alexander feels which way the warm breeze is flowing and begins to trek directly into it, finding a sense of overwhelming relief at the sensation. (Even if it is relatively brief.)
Alexander’s feet carry him wherever they please, walking him down long streets, past empty stores. He stops to glance into a bustling Starbucks, hears through the glass a man screeching at a barista who is refusing to take his order because, “no shirt, no service.” He continues past, rather glad he had decided not to go inside, as it looks far too crowded, even for a small man such as himself.
His strides are short but swift, floating him along the streets with an air of confidence that he is known to possess. It is undeniably cooler outside, a welcome surprise as a gust of wind blows his hair from his face. He hears the simultaneous sighs of alleviation from the few on the streets, clearly walking around for the same reason as Hamilton.
Time ticks by and Alexander allows his mind to wander, as it all too often does when he gives it the chance. His thoughts speed past a mile a minute, tempting his brain to consider them longer, grabbing them like falling petals before letting them drift to the ground and blow away once more.
He passes through Time Square, finding it bustling, more so than he had imagined. However, it’s not ‘Christmas Crowded’, the eloquent name given to Time Square by Lafayette for when the area becomes full at the most amazing time of year. He makes his way past people, brushing shoulders and probably contracting some undiscovered disease off of some of them. It’s New York, he wouldn’t be surprised. He jumps out of his skin when some man behind him traces their fingers up his spine, but when he turns around the person is gone, laughing to their friends. He scowls, half considers shaking his fist and exclaiming about “kids these days!” But he doesn’t, he just shivers despite being roasted alive and continues on his way.
He spaces out again, wondering about work and then he doesn't know what he starts thinking about. But in his head he can picture a man. A man with a jawline that could cut glass, eyes blacker than the depths of the sea, yet shining as though filled with fire. He can see springy curls, imagines himself running his fingers through the mystery man's hair and cooing as he mumbles his disagreements. He sees a dark complexion, sharp cheekbones, with soft edges. The colour purple is prominent in his clothing, and it takes a moment further for Alexander to identify the male in his mind.
He zones back in as soon as he realises he's thinking about Jefferson. Again. He's thinking about Jefferson in a good way, thinking about doing couple things, about dates. And he grimaces. He convinces himself it's just a fluke, only because he sees Jefferson every day at work.
He starts checking the watch on his wrist, which is starting to heat up in the sunlight. It’s been almost an hour and forty five minutes since he began walking, and he checks the number on the street. It’s all okay. He can always catch a cab. He looks around and finds himself no longer in the bustling parts of New York, but instead part of a classy suburban area. Rows of white picket fencing and neat little gardens, full of wilting flowers meet his eyes. In the lawns of a few are men and women of all ages tending to the plants, feeding them with water to try and keep them going through the unbearable summer heat.
All the homes are different colours, some a perfectly average, cream white, others slightly more lavish baby blues. There’s one where the exterior walls are a glowing lemon colour, and it fills Alexander with an unexplained wave of joy. Then again, the colour yellow always has. It feels warm, welcoming, like a friendship long awaited. Something that has awakened the craving in him that demands the enveloping arms of a smothering hug.
A child - probably around eight - runs down the street, being chased by who looks like his friend. The girl racing after him knocks him to the side and he goes down on a patch of grass, flat on his back while his friend stands over him with a look of pure pride. Her curls bob as she jumps up and down beside him with glee, and Alexander observes as the boy stands. They lean against the tree beside them for a moment, before he mutters something and this time the girl takes off sprinting, the boy following five seconds later. He chuckles at the purity of the situation and takes it upon himself to continue his walk. It’s warmer than ever, but he doesn’t care as much anymore.
The kids race ahead, the girl much further ahead until she stops. Alexander observes from the sidelines as he walks, and the boy taps her on the shoulder. They stand there, childlike joy radiating from their area.
Alexander breezes past them, halfway down the stretch of street. The houses grow larger than the previous as he continues to walk, yet still feel as homely. An amazing feat really. He can hear the soft patting of his Birkenstocks as they tap off the pavement each time his feet hit the floor. A car trundles past, down the street, at what must be 10 miles an hour, giving kids on the road time to move out the way. He doesn't catch a glimpse of the driver, but he has respect for them nonetheless.
As he passes a large, pastel green house, a tall woman exits her garden. She’s old, that much is obvious, but she doesn’t live up to the ‘little old lady’ aesthetic. She’s tall, she’s not hunched and the only part that gives away her age is the wrinkles lining her face. She brushes a grey curl from her face, tying back her hair afterwards. She’s mumbling under her breath, something that sounds like, “it starts soon! The concert!” And for a moment he feels awfully bad for her, thinking she has Alzheimer’s or something similar.
She has a thick Southern accent, and reminds him of Jefferson in a way. Her curls are similar, perhaps not as bouncy or as soft looking (in fact the only similar thing is that they’re curls,) but it has the same obvious care put into maintaining their pristine appearance. Her skin tone isn’t at all similar to his however, she’s pale while Jefferson’s complexion is almost tawny in a way. He can’t see her eyes from where he stands, but if they’re anything like Jefferson’s, then they must be dark, and perhaps they sparkle like his does when he gets passionate about what he’s speaking of… And when did he start thinking about Jefferson so much? Why does he know Jefferson’s eyes glimmer in certain lighting, or burn with a fire when they argue? Why is he paying so much attention to the man's pupils, and how they fail to hide the emotions his stone-cold face manages to maintain? When did he begin to study his rival so closely that he noticed all these oddities? Little details; like the way his lips twitch into a soft smile when talking to Madison, or recalling fondly his time in Monticello. Or now his eyebrows quirk upwards whenever Alexander opens his mouth to speak during meetings, conveying his irritation, yet innate fascination with the words flooding the room. How does he know that Jefferson’s curls would be soft to touch, without ever being close enough to feel them between his fingertips. Why does he feel that the man could go pliant with a scratch to the right place of his scalp? Where did all this knowledge come from? The depths of his bustling mind-palace? Or is it some fountain of information that Alexander and few others have access to? Is there some key to access the quirks about Jefferson, a key that he has? Or does he simply have the mould, a fragmented ideology of a key? Has Jefferson personally handed him this key, trusted him with it? Or has Hamilton snatched it from his clutches like a criminal from an off-guard prison warden? To think of it, why does Jefferson - the ever flowing river of confidence - stash his emotions away, hiding them like a gold hoarding dragon in a cave. He sits on them as though a mother bird would protect her eggs. He keeps them unseen to the passing onlooker. Is he scared? The idea is ridiculous. Thomas Jefferson? Scared? Hell would freeze over before the moment Jefferson is frightened. Or is anxious a better word? Why does he covet to know what it’s like to wake up secured in those arms? (God those arms.) Why does his head claw for the intelligence to feel Jefferson? (Whether that be a warm hug or a simple swing of their hands, linked together?) Why is Alexander asking himself all these questions? Why is his brain grasping and reaching for the answers, as though the forbidden apple that he craves a bite of.
Why does he care?
It’s a recurring thought, one that his mind cannot seem to formulate a complete answer to. Perhaps because it’s the nice thing to do? But no, fantasizing about someone’s eyes like some schoolgirl is not a “nice thing to do.” It’s a crush, is what it is. Wanting to know more about Jefferson, seeking the answers to his many personal questions is not simply because it’s a nice thing to do. It’s because he needs the answers. His mind demands he become closer with the man, the vain, uncaring man. He sighs, pinching the bridge of his nose. Out of all the people his heart could sing a yearning song for, it chose Thomas fucking Jefferson.
Why has his attention been undeniably captured, held hostage, by the Southern fuck?
This one, he can justify. It’s a simple answer really, one that is half the solution to his hundreds of other questions, the ones that buzz in his ears like insistent flies. And it’s two words, one word if you so wish to keep it incredibly succinct.
His wit.
His brain, his intelligence only matched and rivalled by Hamilton’s own. The way his fingers tap out word after word on keyboards, or scratch out essays upon essays onto paper with pens, pencils, whatever he can get his hands on. His intense expanse of knowledge that spans from American finance, to Shakespearean literature. His ability to argue and debate and speak for hours and hours with Alexander without losing his pace. The way his mind formulates sentence after sentence where he debates and there’s a fiery, yet somehow icy cold, passion in his tone. The fact that Hamilton finally has an equal. Where it’s unlike arguing against Burr, a stone wall of indifference. Jefferson is a stone wall that Alexander knows exactly how to make crumble. And he does. Over and over, yet Jefferson keeps rebuilding, stronger than before. He makes Alexander fight for his right to get his ideas across and as much as if pisses him off… he can’t deny that he loves it. He adores having to work his way up, enjoys knocking away obstacles that continue to respawn. What’s life without a little competition after all? Alexander enjoys hiking, and Jefferson is the ultimate mountain to climb.
But he wants more. He needs to know more about this mysterious man. He wants to know what it’s like to share sweet moments with him, wishes to be granted passage to his heart. He wants the key to be given to him, not stolen away. He wants Jefferson to trust him. He wants to know his talents, his skills, his hopes, his dreams. He wants to know about his past, his present and his future. Wants to know his real personality, the one he has secured in a vault. Because Alexander is stubborn, this much as already been said, but he’s not stupid. He can see the twitch in his fingers, the brief panic that flashes through the man's dark eyes whenever he has to present in Congress. He can hear the way he stumbles and stammers his way through speeches, as though he’s ready off a particularly shitty script. It’s only when they debate, when they argue with that familiar intensity, that the inferno is let loose. And Alexander is happy to be consumed in its flames.
The thoughts are almost enough to frighten him. The way they consume his constantly changing mind until he can think of nothing else. The burning heat in the air has been forgotten, replaced with a searing, white-hot pain through his chest. A heart attack maybe? More likely a soul attack. Hamilton uses his clairvoyance, he isn’t stupid. He knows this crush has been around since the day they had met. Since the first inklings of their argumentative ways. The kindling that sparked a fiery rivalry. One sure to last a lifetime. Well, maybe on Jefferson’s end. Alexander has felt this way, this white hot pain for a while, but now his body registers it and it hits all at once. Like a slap to the face, a punch to the stomach and a kick in the balls. It’s never hurt this much. Not with Aaron, not with John, not even with Eliza. The three most important relationships of his life had never been this intense, and he and Jefferson aren’t even together. Perhaps that’s what caused the pain to harm him so much. The craving of a thing he can’t have.
He gets the same feeling, the same way he felt around his other relationships. With Aaron, it was calm, predictable. It was boring. He needed more, he needed a spark, something he could bounce off of and then melt together. Aaron was grey. Monotone, and straight lined. He was a man who needed something still. He required security and promises to stay the way they were. But Alexander was a storm, unpredictable and wild and fully intent on ravaging the waters, while what Burr really needed was a lighthouse. Someone who was a beacon of light to shine him to the right place. Hamilton could never provide that.
John had been close. He had been orange. Intense, swirling like a fire, like a burning heat. But not enough. He was too quick to back down, to agree and leave arguments unsettled. He didn’t put up enough of a fight, backed down from debates and left Alexander with many more points to push across. They had the same opinions, there was no need for a friendly debate. It just wasn’t enough for him. There was passion, but not in the way Alexander’s heart craved. John needed something grounding, someone to match his intensity with a cute yellow or a fellow orange. And he found that, he found that in Peggy and Alexander was happy to watch him go. He wanted his orange to be happy.
The third person had been blue. Eliza was the sea and the sky. She was beautiful and calm and swaying. She was helpful and loving, quick to input her opinion only to retract it later on. Alexander had thought she was perfect. She was, Eliza was perfect. But Alexander was not. Blue didn’t mix right with whatever colour Alexander was. Blue turned dark and foreboding, into something he didn’t want to experience. Their fire had been wrong, and if Eliza was the ocean, then Hamilton was the smoke on the water clouding her. She needed a similar colour, a green like the Earth whom she could surround and heal. Or another blue to swim with. It appeared Alexander was neither of those.
But Jefferson. Jefferson was different. He was intense and angry and punched out. He was red. A dark crimson that demanded attention at all times. A matching light to Alex’s own. They bounced off each other, before they crashed together in a mess of colours, an abstract painting of similarities. Jefferson was passionate, he had an intensity that matched Alexander’s previously unrivalled one, and he loved it. He loved red. Red was the colour he needed, the colour that felt best in his heart of hearts. And that’s when he knew that he was red too, that he was a candy red. He was bright and flashing and Jefferson was dark and mysterious and together they were perfect. Together they formed a shade of undiscovered colour.
That’s what Alexander needed. He needed his red. Everyone else had theirs! It was his turn! It was finally his shot to find love, and he had no intentions of throwing it away.
In his time thinking, he’s almost completely forgotten the putrid heat, and the fact that the woman from before is walking down the street just a foot or two away from him. She’s brisk, in a hurry clearly, occasionally checking the time on her surprisingly high class smart-phone. In fact, another person joins him on his venture down the street, the little girl from before, but without her friend. And if he thought the woman reminded him of Jefferson, then this girl is the spitting image of him. Same hair, but longer and tied into puffy pigtails, the same wide and toothy smile as she taps Alexander on the side.
“Hey there, Mr!” She waves, and the first thing he can think is Stranger Danger. Did this girl's parents never teach her the importance of not talking to random people on the streets? “I’ve never seen you round here before, are you lost?” He supposes that he sort of is. He doesn’t know his way home, but somehow he’s not concerned. He can call a cab, or an Uber or Lyft. There are plenty of ways for him to arrive back home. But the fact that she asks him this is evident that this is one of those neighbourhoods. One where “everyone knows everyone.” Which is sweet, but annoying, because now he stands out. He wants to blend in with the crowd for once, but as he looks around, that’s been impossible for a while. He notices everyone out in their gardens or on the streets are white, which is expected at this point. It’s a flaw in the American housing system, one that he should bring up in Congress. Perhaps he could get Jefferson to support him for once, team up even. That’s the dream.
He hasn’t said much for a few seconds, and the kid looks up at him with large, expectant eyes. “Oh, I’m not lost, no. Just going for a walk,” he nods gently and she seems to understand. He thinks she’s just going to run off after receiving an answer, but she seems insistent to interrogate Alexander a little more.
She hums to herself, “what’s your name?” She asks ever so superficially, like an employer ready to write someone up for bad behaviour or poor customer service. Alexander knows those write ups all too well, it’s the reason he’s been forced off work today, something he was happy to let happen as soon as the heatwave hit. Work doesn’t have good air conditioning, if it has air conditioning at all.
“Alexander,” he answers with a flick of his head, casting his glance to the sky. They’re still walking, nearing the end of the street. The old lady has stopped, and the little girl has too, which subsequently has Hamilton stopping. He looks down at her, chin tilted down as she glares up. She seems livid at his name, and he wonders what he’s done wrong until he realises she’s staring directly into the sun as she tries to suss him out. Her gaze is warm and welcoming however, childlike and pure and it’s a nice break from the cool stares he’s used to.
She nods happily, “my name's Patsy, I’m eight,” she grins and turns on her heel, casting one final look over her shoulder. “I’m going to play, if my Pops leaves the house tell him that’s what I’m doing!” She runs off, leaving Alexander wondering who her father is. The old lady is leaning on the fence of the house in front of him, glancing up to an open window. She looks like an NPC in a video game, purposefully placed in a specific spot just for unimportant exposition. Alexander is an expert in certain video games, and if her position isn’t just begging for him to go interact with her. She seems as though she may have some enchanted knowledge to pass down onto him, maybe even a cherry pie recipe if he’s lucky.
He walks over to her side, resting his forearms on the flat tops of the white fence. The house in front of him is painted a soft violet, it’s pretty. There’s neat rows of tulips and petunias in the lawn, which is freshly trimmed so it seems. There are bushes in the middle of the grass, cut into a point. Everything is seamless, blending together. It’s homely and calm, and Alexander smiles. The woman is smiling too. He glances at other things in the garden. Tucked away into the left corner by the porch is a barbecue, and not too far from that a wooden bench. There are thin cushions resting on it, but no one sits there. The lights in the house are off, the windows open along with the curtains. But when he looks in, he sees no one. Then again, he can only see directly into the window and up, so anything at the other end of the room is out of sight. Perhaps he should’ve worn his glasses today, unable to see very far in front of his face. In the driveway is a family car, a blue Chevrolet still spongy with a few soap studs. Newly washed, he notes.
“It starts soon,” the elder comments, gesturing vaguely to the home before them. So she’s not an NPC. Alexander can’t put his finger on if that’s annoying or perfect, because he doesn’t have to start the conversation.
Yet his interest has been piqued, he was always a curious soul. It gets him into fits of trouble occasionally, but for now it seems as though the only thing he can get out of it is an intriguing talk. “What’s starting?” He asks quietly, tone low. His lips are dry, and he smacks them together to coat them with saliva to hopefully stop them cracking.
“The concert,” she answers, as though it’s the most typical thing in the world. Alexander is about to open his mouth to argue against that fact, to insinuate that a concert happening in someone’s home is ridiculous - (Even if all the Disney Channel movies taught him otherwise.) - but the woman is talking again. “Tommy always plays at three in the afternoon on a Sunday.” She seems transfixed, and every time Alexander tries to speak she hushes him. She holds up her hand to silence him, and it gives him the same feeling George Washington gives him, authority radiates from her and Alex finds himself actually shutting up. It’s two fifty-nine now, and he’s waiting for the music to start from this mysterious “Tommy.”
He’s impatient, and authority only hushes him for so long. He fidgets, picks paint off the fence and then speaks. “When does it start?” He hisses, bored. Come on, it’s three! Almost at least.
“I told you, he plays at three.”
“It is three!” Alexander whines pathetically, crossing his arms over. He’s stood still in wait for long enough, and if music doesn’t start in the next thirty seconds he’s going to walk away and never look back. He’s all set to move when the lady grabs him by the shoulder.
She hisses, “it’s starting!”
And indeed it is. Through the open windows, pouring out the house are the sweet chords of an expert violinist. It’s a harmony, seems sad, longing almost. The melody starts slow, and carefully picks up pace as it goes. He can only imagine who the player is, male or female it doesn’t matter. His mind whirs with ideas, forming the musician in his mind.
Their hands would grip the bow with precision, glide across the strings with a focussed expression. He can see their- no, his, eyes turned down to the instrument, pupils darkening as they get lost in the notes. The violin is balanced on his shoulder, tucked under his chin and his hair falls into his view but he keeps playing. The straight, actually, it’s curly. The ringlets of curls are brushed away quickly, in one movement as he continues to play.
Alexander spaces out, losing himself to the music. It appears the lady beside him does the same, but he can’t be sure. He tries to put a colour on the tone of it, tries to decipher the meaning behind the song. The violin fades into an instrumental where it’s clear the player should be singing, but they don’t. He tries to picture a face, going as far as to close his eyes and block out everything but his own imagination and the melody flowing to him. It’s like a siren call, coaxing him towards sudden death. And Alexander is all too happy to submit to the urges.
He finds a face, dark eyes, curls, complexion. Once again he’s picturing Jefferson. Over and over the man comes to mind. He tries to push him away, attempts to imagine someone else standing in the home and playing just for him. But it’s futile. And the song does feel like it’s for him. It feels like it matches the music his heart sings, the yearning harmony that lathers his soul is rivalled by this player. By Jefferson. It’s not like he’s ever going to meet the violinist, so he’s free to picture whoever he pleases.
He’s sweating, it’s the heat, it must be. His palms that are clenched into fists by his sides are coated in a thin sheen of sweat, his forehead growing damp again. He makes no effort to wipe it away, he lets the heat sweep over him. He allows the flames to engulf him, the chords of the song floating to him still.
But as soon as it’s begun, it ends. The violin fades out, leaving the music buzzing pleasantly in his veins. The lady smiles, nods and starts to walk off, back to her house. The concert comes to a close, curtains shut and shun all backstage visitors away. But when has Alexander ever abided by the rules?
His feet march him into the garden, down the lawn and up to the porch. He steps up the stairs, both of them at once. He’s having trouble summoning courage, something that’s rare for him. Typically he isn’t walking up to a strangers home just to congratulate them on their musical talent… that he probably isn’t even supposed to hear.
It takes Alexander a long minute of just standing there before he swallows his pride and taps his knuckles off the door. There are footsteps, coming closer and as they do he rids himself of the urge to run away.
He’s almost expecting Jefferson, he’s built him up in his mind and placed him on a pedestal. Or maybe it’s better to say that he’s trying to force the man into a treasure box, as he does with all the things he loves. His mother’s memory goes in there, his pens and his laptop and the pendant necklace from his mother. He’s trying to push Jefferson into the box too, to keep him by his side but he won’t stay. Perhaps it’s impossible to keep a person preserved in a treasure chest, or maybe it’s just Jefferson. He needs room, he needs space to evolve and change and grow and Alexander’s treasure chest can’t provide that. Alexander can though. He just has to let Jefferson stay out of the box.
Like he said, he’s almost expecting Jefferson to be at the door. But he still gets shocked when it actually is. It actually is Thomas fucking Jefferson standing in the doorway and Jesus he’s wearing shorts and a t-shirt so tight it should be illegal. It’s difficult enough for Alexander to handle when he can practically see Jefferson’s chest through his sheen white dress shirt at work, but this is too much. This man is an Adonis. He’s the sun, Alexander is an icarus and he feels as though he simply has to fly closer.
“Hamilton!”
Shit, has he been speaking this whole time? Alexander flicks his gaze to Jefferson’s face, and fuck him he’s wearing glasses. Chunky black hipster frames that balance on the bridge of his nose. Christ, he’s in deep isn’t he?
Jefferson waves his hand in front of Alexander’s face, grabbing his attention. “Hu-uh?” Alexander stumbles out his words pathetically, lighting up red soon after. He goes the same crimson as Jefferson’s shirt, the colour he identifies the man with. He looks like he’s about to slap Alexander across the face if he doesn’t start properly talking soon.
“Are you even listening to me?” Jefferson hisses, venom laced in his tone. He’s like a snake, coiled up into a spring, ready to attack and bite at the next to approach. In his hands (lord, those hands!) he holds a clear water bottle, knuckles white with the ferocious way he grips it. He brings it up to his lips and takes a careful sip, eyes trained like a sniper on Alexander.
Hamilton collects himself, gathering his thoughts, which shouldn’t be as difficult to do as it is. He coughs into his fist, realising how dry his throat is. The aspect of water is welcoming, and he wants to reach out just to snatch the plastic (reusable, how environmental) bottle off of Jefferson to guzzle down the remaining liquid. Alas, he does not. Because that would be weird.
He still hasn’t answered, thus Jefferson continues with a hiss. “What are you doing here?!” He’s not angry, Alexander knows this. He has seen the man angry.
One time, he had seen the man in his furious element. The cabinet meeting had just ended, and Jefferson had stormed out after Washington had taken Alexander’s side once again. It wasn’t Hamilton’s fault he was better! Jefferson had stalked towards his office, and Hamilton had followed after him, the cheap fake leather of his shoes squeaking on the polished linoleum. Alexander had continued his argument, much to the dismay of the taller man. Jefferson had tried his very best to slam the door on Hamilton’s face, using all his force (which was a lot) to close it behind him, but Alex managed to stick his foot in the gap and wretch it open, still blabbering away. Jefferson had collapsed into his office chair, held his head in his hands and muttered to himself as Alexander got closer. His voice had stayed a constant, boisterous and accompanied with gesticulating gestures until he lost his cool and whipped Jefferson’s seat around himself.
“Answer me already! You spit and stumble your way through speeches, I bring out the real you! I bring out the fires! Show me him and argue back!” The animosity had been high in Alexander’s tone, he liked the unabashed Jefferson who fought with him. The man who poured wisdom from his tongue like his mother language. Why he held it back when talking to anyone else baffled him beyond belief. But this meeting he had barely spoken, just shared his points with a quiet voice and sat back down, not bothering to debate Alexander. He was furious, made sure to target Jefferson in some of his words just to try and get a rise, a reaction, anything! But it had not worked, so he resorted to his last lifeline, and followed the man to his office.
Jefferson snapped his gaze up, and there it was, the fire he so dearly wanted. The red-hot passion that licked at his pupils, threatened to burn Alexander. “You bring out the real me?! No, Hamilton,” he had spat his name like it was some dirt on the bottom of his polished shoes, “you bring out the worst in me! You bring out the angry, tired part of me that doesn’t want to deal with your bullshit!”
“My bullshit?” Alexander had smirked as though he had won, and in his sense he had. For a moment at least. Because he had gotten a reaction, the thing he craved as much as air. He had gotten his red to reply and that’s all he really needed. He was happy from here on out. But, he could always push it further. So he had. “Care to explain to me what my bullshit is? Is it my financial plan? Is that what it is, Jefferson?” He had remained sickeningly-sweet, words sugary like honey, dripping in the same way.
Jefferson had laughed, hysterical really. A break from his usual smug laughter. A break Alexander didn’t enjoy very much. He was never one to like breaks, preferred to continue in a way he always had. And he and Jefferson had a dance, a specific way they did things that they had yet to break. A routine that Jefferson was so arbitrarily destroying just with a fit of chuckles. “Your financial plan is a piece of insulting garbage, but that is not what I mean-“ he had scoffed, and rose from his seat, towering over Alexander with a menacing glint. “-You are a parasite to me, you trail around like some sad puppy, desperate for attention! But why me? I stammer through speeches, but alas it’s better than talking a million miles a minute where no one can understand you! You bring out the fire, the hellfire! You make me want to snap you into pieces and scatter you on my lawn like fertiliser. Do us all a favour and get out!”
A little shocked by the imaginative insult, Alexander resisted. “No.”
“No?”
“No.”
Jefferson had him by the collar next, shoving him up against a wall, face so close he could feel the hot breath of his rival on his face. “You talk a big game, Hamilton, yet you forget to follow through. The fire you bring out in me is the worst part about myself and I’d prefer to hide it away,” he had growled, low and rumbling in his chest, “you’re not good enough to lick the dirt off my shoes. You must think you’re so special, yet all you do is hump the President’s leg until you get what you desire. God knows why he takes your side on every political matter.” He had dropped Alexander after that, left him scrambling to his feet. “Get out of my office.”
Scared, but stubborn, Alexander had supplied a retort. “Or what, old man? Gonna make me?”
Jefferson had grit his teeth together, grinding them so hard Hamilton was surprised they hadn’t faded away. “Or else.”
“All bark and no bite.” Alexander scoffed in return, making his way slowly to the door. He cast a look over his shoulder in time to see Jefferson physically slump back into his chair, looking tense and stressed and he couldn’t help but feel bad. He had felt Jefferson’s eyes on his back the whole time he had left, felt them searing holes through his jacket and burning into his skin. Not that he was complaining though.
And once again, Alexander peers up at him with wide eyes. “Oh, well um-“ he directs his gaze over Jefferson’s shoulder, “it’s kind of a long story.” He’s hinting quite obviously at his pleas to come inside, and Jefferson must catch on because a hint of realisation casts over his dark eyes, the eyes Alexander spends so much of his time thinking about.
“I have time,” came Jefferson’s grimy reply. One long finger came up to push his glasses up by the rim, unlike anyone else who would push them up by the bridge. Alexander inadvertently stashed this information away in his treasure chest. He taps his foot in a way that almost feels surreptitious. Or perhaps that’s the incorrect word. Jefferson keeps looking over Alexander’s head, then glancing behind him, eyes darting in all directions.
Alexander has the sun beating down on his back, and he can see Jefferson squinting in the light. It’s hot again, too hot in all the wrong ways, and Alexander only feels hotter with Jefferson’s eyes on him. “Well- uh- it started because my AC unit broke and-“
“Hamilton, I didn’t ask for a life story,” Jefferson fiddles with the hem of his t-shirt, looking almost nervous. Which was ludicrous! Jefferson? Nervous? That… made a lot of sense actually. His stammering through meetings, his constantly tensed shoulders, the time he had overheard Madison and Adams talking about him a few years back, saying “He was born stressed out about something.” It makes the shuffling around start to add up, how he loses his cool around Alexander and loosens up because he stops thinking. He stops worrying and starts concentrating solely on deconstructing Hamilton’s argument. He feels a little rush of pride at that, that he can get Jefferson to let go. Yet at the same time, it feels like it’s perverse knowledge he isn’t supposed to have access too, which brings him right back around to the key metaphor. A metaphor he’s using so often it’s beginning to lose meaning, and he’s beginning to imagine an actual key, which confuses his head even more than it already is.
He’s broken from his thoughts by Jefferson speaking once more, “would you like to come inside?” He asks quietly, shifting foot to foot. Alexander steals his gaze downwards, unable to look Jefferson in the face as he processes that question. His rival (whom he’s established as the man he wants to date, and god it feels so much more real when he thinks of it like that), has just invited him into his home. His home that Alexander always imagined to be bigger, more spectacular and less… welcoming. “You could inform me of why you’re standing on my doorstep in broken sandals over a glass of Chardonnay?”
“How am I supposed to say no to that?” Alexander responds almost mockingly, stepping into the home as Jefferson moves aside. He shuffles and a hand goes up to card through his curls, and Alexander wonders if they’re as soft as they appear. He resists the urge to stride over and find out for himself as he steps inside. “I would take my shoes off, but I feel as though barefoot is even more disrespectful.” He hums absent-mindedly.
Jefferson seems to tune back in at that as he flicks his gaze to follow Alexander. “And since when have you cared about being respectful towards me?” His words are sharp, upset almost. It’s strange, but Alexander kind of likes the vulnerability, it feels special. As though Jefferson is trusting him with the real real him. “Just leave your shoes on,” he adds carefully onto the end with a flippant wave and a frown.
Alexander does just that, but wipes his feet on the welcoming mat Jefferson has placed in his hallway. “What’s your liquor of choice?” Jefferson asks, sauntering off towards his kitchen, voice growing quieter as he walks off. Alexander finds his eyes following his back, watching the way his red shirt clings to the muscles of his back, and he swallows slowly, with intent.
“I believe I was promised Chardonnay, Mr Jefferson!” Alexander calls after him, taking it upon himself to look around the hallway. It’s cooler inside, thank god, but it’s not chilly. Jefferson knows how to set his AC without breaking it, Hamilton could never relate. The walls are painted a warm brown, framed family photos lining the hall. There is one, where Alexander counts twelve people in the image. The camera quality isn’t great, but all the people in the photo are similar in appearance, the only two who stand out are the ones who look like parents, as their hair is turning grey and there are wrinkles along their foreheads. He spots Jefferson - well, Thomas because he’s managed to figure out everyone in the photo is a Jefferson - rather quickly, he’s the second tallest in the picture, just after the one who looks like his father, but he looks younger, smiling wide at the camera and holding a baby boy on his hip. He looks much too young to have a son, so he must be Jefferson’s brother.
There's another photo of him cradling a small child in his arms, a newborn, little girl based on the pink wool hat on her head. He looks older than the previous photo, so Alexander deciphers that this is his child. He looks around. There are no children about. He’s smiling wider than he’s ever seen before, down at the baby whose eyes are tightly shut. Alexander grins to himself and ghosts a finger over Jefferson’s face, or at least over the glass. There’s a corner of a woman’s face in the top left, she looks tired. Jefferson does too, bags under his eyes and smile creases by his lips. But he still looks… god, what word can he use?
The next photo makes his fond smile fall faster than a rock from the top of a cliff. A wedding photo, Jefferson in his mid-twenties, dressed in a suit (that hugs him in all the right places, damn) and kissing a short woman in a flowing white wedding dress. He looks so happy, beaming as his hands rest on her hips. A wave of jealousy crashes over him as he studies the image closer. It’s outdoors, must be in Virginia, and the two newlyweds are standing under an arch laced with pink roses and light pink tulips. He frowns, there goes his chance. But it won’t hit him yet, it only will at around midnight, when he’s emailing Washington where he will pause and scream for a minute as it sets in.
He’s so focused on the wedding pictures that he doesn’t even notice Jefferson coming up behind him. “That’s Martha,” the low voice by his ear makes Alexander jump out of his skin, clasping a hand over his mouth to stop himself from crying out. “Sorry, did I scare you?” He doesn’t wait for an answer and continues to talk, “I thought you would’ve been in the living room, but I suppose I never told you to make yourself at home.” Alexander turns around and chokes on a breath. Because fuck, Jefferson is right there, glasses slipping down his nose, cheeks dusted red and lips inches away from his own. He swallows again, takes a step backwards and hits the wall with his back.
Jefferson hands him a champagne flute with a bubbling glass of white wine, and Alexander nods in return. "Thank you," he studies Jefferson carefully as he flicks his chin up quickly and takes a step away, giving Alexander room to finally breathe. He quickly glances back at the few photos on the wall, catching a glimpse from his peripheral vision as Jefferson sips from his glass. "Martha was…?" He waits for the other to finish his sentence impatiently.
"My wife," Jefferson answers with ease, gulping back a small drink. "A million years ago at least." He chuckles. And Alexander doesn't quite understand. Typically, divorcees don't keep photos of their marriage hanging in the entrance way to their home. Apparently the confusion is evident in his expression, because his host keeps talking. "She passed away eight years ago, just after giving birth."
Alexander bites down on his bottom lip, regretful. He was just thinking about how jealous he was, thinking about going home, calling Laurens or Lafayette and talking shit about Jefferson and his supposed wife. Well he certainly wouldn’t be doing that anymore. “Oh,” he says, rather ineloquently, “I’m sorry.”
Jefferson shrugs, takes another long drink from his glass, like the conversation pains him. It probably does, Alexander realises. “It’s alright, it was a long time ago,” he drawls, making sure to not finish his glass. It’s half full now, and Alexander sips the sparkling liquid. Jefferson clears his throat, looking much like he does during meetings. Uncomfortable, small almost. “Well, can I tempt you to sit in the parlour with me?” He raises an eyebrow, leads them through to a room with windows that are almost floor to ceiling, spar for the comfy looking window seat (covered in a knitted quilt and tartan pillows) that Alexander plops himself down on. The other man seats himself by a small round table, mahogany for the looks of it.
Alexander wants to speak, as always. His tongue flicks in his mouth, forming words but Jefferson cuts him off. “So, Alexander, tell me, what brought you to my doorstep on this… boiling afternoon?” It doesn’t slip past him that Jefferson uses his first name. The way it rolls with his accent, drawling slow as always until Alexander is hanging onto every syllable.
His brain catches up with the question after being so hung up on the way his given name sounds on Jefferson’s lips, and the fact that he would love to hear it in other contexts- God, he needs to stop. But the man is right there and- No. “I broke my air conditioning unit, and needed to get out.” He shrugs and takes a slurping drink of Chardonnay, perhaps if he irritates Jefferson enough, he’ll see the fire he wants.
“That doesn’t explain why you knocked on my door,” Jefferson flicks his wrist and places his glass down. Alexander can practically hear the cogs in his brain (that wonderful mind) whirring as he thinks. He can see the intelligent man putting the puzzles pieces together, in order to view the whole picture. He stops to admire his fellow Secretary’s brilliance far too often, and he always has. It’s a constant, a comma in his life where he pauses and admits to himself that Jefferson is smart. And sometimes he hates it. He hates that Jefferson is so so bright, but is full of only stupid things to say. Like he doesn’t learn both sides of the argument before presenting. Or perhaps that’s just how humans work, they’re always going to be biased.
Alexander coughs into his fist again, seeing Jefferson grit his teeth that he had the audacity to slurp his expensive (probably French, pretentious bastard) wine. “I decided to go for a walk,” he began to explain, as confident as always. “And then I ended up here,” he chewed on the inside of his cheek, “because I heard you playing violin and wanted to come speak to whoever the player was. Didn’t know it was going to be you.”
Jefferson appears uncomfortable. He finishes his glass in one large gulp and places his now empty glass on the table. He pushes his glasses up his nose by the rim once more, sighing softly. “You say that like it was bad playing.” He said quietly, rubbing the back of his neck. He glances at his empty glass, refilling it with only his eyes and exhaling as it refuses to fill. How disappointing.
“No, no!” Alexander waves his hands in a flurry, almost spilling his Chardonnay on the laminate flooring. Jefferson’s eyes catch the droplet that flies from the glass and lands on one of his quilted cushions. Hamilton is too busy explaining himself to realise. Why is he being so considerate of Jefferson’s feelings? (He has a crush on him, he knows this. He knows it’s because the man looks so much more vulnerable in his own home, in shorts and t-shirt and glasses. And oh fuck he’s staring again.) “I wanted to come tell the violinist how incredible their playing was!” He watches the man who is supposed to be his rival smile, genuine and pure, and his heart soars. Butterflies swarm in his stomach, flapping their wings at a hundred miles an hour. It’s like he can take flight, all because of Jefferson’s shy little grin, watching the way his lips twitch upwards. It’s so different from his other sly, wicked smirks, all teeth and hatred. Is it hatred really though? Alexander doesn’t have the time to ask himself all of these questions again, he’s never going to find an answer.
"I've played ever since I was a child," Jefferson replies, tapping his fingers off his thighs. As Alexander has established, everything about this man seems to be carved by the gods out of stone and his legs are no exception.
"Impressive." He isn't lying. Alexander finds it wildly impressive, violin is a difficult instrument to master. He believes Jefferson mutters something along the lines of 'thank you', but he isn't particularly paying attention. He needs more to drink. He doesn't want to have to think anymore, so he doesn't. Instead, he downs his glass.
“Want a refill?” Jefferson drawls, rising to his feet and taking both empty glasses. All Alexander can do is nod and watch as the man walks off, eyes concentrated on his back and definitely not other places because that would be crude.
Alexander crosses his legs (sits criss-cross applesauce) on the windowsill seat, fluffing a pillow behind his back and cautiously leaning back to rest against the window panes. He’s almost scared of breaking them, or of the glass popping out. So instead he turns and tucks his knees in slightly, sitting along it sideways to lean on the wall that slightly juts out. He must appear comfortable, because when Jefferson comes back in he laughs carefully. “Made yourself at home I see?” He hands Alexander the glass of Chardonnay, and he notes that in his other hand is the bottle.
“Yeah, got a problem with that?” Alexander responds sarcastically. Jefferson plops himself down - surprisingly - beside Alexander, in the small space between his feet and the other wall. He hadn’t expected the sudden closeness, and all cognitive thought grinds to a stop when he realises he can smell Jefferson’s overpriced cologne. It’s probably perfume, when he thinks about it. Flowery and reeking of money. But Alexander thinks (after smelling it before, and now smelling it here) that he’ll kill Jefferson if he ever wears anything else.
Jefferson sips from his glass. “Not at all.” Alexander wants to stretch his legs out, but felt as though he couldn’t do that. Jefferson was right there! What can he do? Put his feet on the man’s lap? … he could do that. He could actually do that. “Whatcha thinkin’ about, Hammy?” He purrs teasingly, raising a curious eyebrow and chuckling to himself. Alexander can’t help but notice the slight flush of his cheeks, the dusty pink across his skin. He eyes him suspiciously, before he finally realises that the man must be a lightweight. Now there’s something he didn’t expect.
“Hammy?” Alexander quirks an eyebrow, suspect. It’s amusing how Jefferson seems to relax that slight bit as he sips his Chardonnay. The slightly older man just nods in return, bringing his glass to his lips and taking another drink. Alexander does the same, swirling the wine in his champagne flute with a chuckle. “Just that I wanna stretch out.” He shrugs and continues to drink, observing as Jefferson’s face scrunches up unattractively. Somehow, Hamilton still finds it adorable. Who would’ve thought he would find Jefferson cute? How strange.
“Then just do it,” Jefferson suggests with a smile, shrugs his shoulders and sips his drink. Alexander is surprised, never would’ve thought Jefferson would allow him to kick his feet up. It feels intimate, like a cute-couple thing to do. He hesitantly stretches his legs out, untucking his knees and placing his feet up on Jefferson’s lap, who hums his approval.
Alexander sips his Chardonnay, starting to speak. And Jefferson? Jefferson starts to listen.
Half an hour, and the rest of the bottle of Chardonnay later, the two are on the right side of tipsy. They’re just drunk enough to feel comfortable enough to sit shoulder to shoulder, resting against each other without looking like they’re being forced into the close proximity. Except they are no longer shoulder to shoulder, in fact, they’re closer than that. Alexander has his head on Jefferson’s lap, his glass long forgotten on the table, along with Jefferson’s champagne flute too and the empty wine bottle. Alexander is continuously muttering about the current political climate, ranting quietly while Jefferson listens, occasionally inputting his opinion.
“Are you not gonna argue with me?” Alexander raises an eyebrow. He’s trying to irritate Jefferson, and pokes his cheek to try and agitate him more. But Jefferson doesn’t react, other than blushing an even darker crimson. The colour he is. He’s crimson, but now he’s dull and Alexander misses his booming red.
Jefferson hums to himself, eyes fluttering shut. Alexander reaches up and pushes the other man’s glasses up his nose by the bridge. Jefferson flicks his eyes open suddenly and stares down at him, catching his wrist in his hand. Alexander feels paralysed, feeling his large palms around his own bony wrist and holding it in a loose grip. He doesn’t answer the question, “it’s so nice outside. Why are we still sitting here?”
“Why indeed?” There’s a ever so slight slur to his words, drawn out a little more than usual. Alexander kicks his feet to the ground, standing so casually it’s like he stays and hangs with Jefferson all the time and not never at all. He turns to face Jefferson, overlooking his features. He’s never had a chance to look at him so relaxed, and he notices how tense Jefferson typically is compared to now. At work, his shoulders are straight, hunched up to his ears and his posture is a horizontal line. Whereas now, he’s a little more slumped, tension gone from his body. It’s a breath of fresh air, one he never thought he would experience and accept so easily.
Jefferson rises to his feet, and typically he would be towering over Hamilton yet now, he doesn’t feel as dominating. Instead, he’s softer, edges aren’t as sharp or predatory. The mirthful glint in his pupils has faded, but the fire still licks at his eyes. It’s a welcoming heat, like the fireplace on a freezing day. And despite the current heatwave, Alexander finds himself wishing to curl up by the fire like a purring cat. “Come on, let’s go sit in my backyard.”
Alexander expects to trail after him, certainly not for the man to offer his hand to Hamilton. But he takes it, ignoring the way his heart pounds in his chest and the way his head is screaming at him. “You’re holding his hand! You’re holding Thomas Jefferson’s hand! He offered it to you! You didn’t even have to ask!” His pulse races in his ears, as he leads the two of them into his back garden. It’s beautiful, a large monkey puzzle tree in the far right corner, casting a lovely shadow over a section of the yard. Jefferson guides Alexander over to the tree and sits down under it, gesturing next to him. “C’mon, Hammy, I don’t have all day.” Alexander feels his heart flutter again, starting to race at the ridiculous nickname. If anyone else used it, he would be quickly driven mad. It’s all because of this damn Secretary.
Alexander takes a seat by him, leaning against the bark of the tree and exhaling. It’s warm, but at least vaguely cooler under the tree. Jefferson certainly seems to appreciate it, as the slightly intoxicated man removes his glasses and places them on the trimmed glass next to him, tips his head back until it hits the tree truck and breathes out happily. Alexander eyes the expanse of skin by his neck, and starts to feel like a particularly famished vampire, gazing at the muscles of someone’s neck of all places. But there’s a familiar itch in his fingertips, the urge to have his face tucked into the crook of his neck and just breathe. The thought would be scarier if it wasn’t for the alcohol in his blood. He feels confident, confident enough to lean against Jefferson and carefully hide his face in his shoulder. Not his neck, sure, but it’s close.
Alexander can feel his counterparts breathing stutter and he gently nuzzles against him, appreciating the muscle under him. “Hamilton, are you alright?” He’s sobered up, the shock of Alexander curling around him like ivy clings to a house seemingly having knocked the wine out of his system. He allows Alexander to wind himself tighter around his body, like it's cold out and he’s the only viable source of heat. It’s not. It’s still absolutely sweltering, evident in the way sweat beads at Jefferson’s brow and Alexander longs to reach over and smooth out the developing stress lines.
“Mhm…” Alexander hums his answer and buries his head into Jefferson’s neck, finally finally being close enough to him. Yet… somehow he’s dying to be closer. “I’m great, perfect! Even,” he giggles, the alcohol definitely making him a fun drunk. He’s a lightweight, that’s for sure, but when it hits him, it hits all at once. He’s got a rush of flirtatious courage surging through his veins, hot in his blood.
Jefferson moves his hand across and gently caresses Alexander’s pink cheeks, observing how he keens into it like a cat. That’s exactly what Alexander reminds him of, a cat. Hissing and violent in his worst moments, yet clingy and desperate for attention in his best. It’s a good thing Jefferson likes cats then. He drags an arm around Alexander’s shoulder, taking in his appearance. Small and (gross, his back is damp) hunched over, tucking into him and smiling, pink lips twitching into a happy grin. He’s so soft like this, vulnerable in a way Jefferson’s never seen him before. He’s intensity is being channeled into a new emotion, and Jefferson knows he’s still red. Still a fiery red, but it’s dragged in a different direction. It’s pulling him into love, and it makes his stomach do flips. Because if he has to be honest to himself, he’s had a crush on this ridiculous gremlin (excuse of a man) politician since the day of their first Cabinet meeting. Alexander could keep up with his thunderous talking pace, and he loves it. He loves it so much. “You’re sure?”
“Well,” Alexander decides it’s now or never, “I suppose there’s a way it could get…” he darts his tongue out and licks his lips, “even better.” He moves an inch away from Jefferson, eyes flickering between his eyes (no longer covered by lenses) and his lips, which look all too kissable. Jefferson doesn’t seem to catch on, just catches Alexander’s gaze with his own intense one.
“How so?” He raises an eyebrow, arched brow almost judging him.
“Kiss me,” Alexander breathes, tilting his chin upwards and leaning forward, hoping Jefferson will close the gap. And he does. God he does. He leans down and in, dipping his head and pressing his lips softly to Alexander’s own. They’re soft and insistent and gentle against his own chapped ones. And Alexander finds himself sober, before getting drunk on the feeling of Jefferson kissing him and ha! He’ll be able to rub this in Lafayette’s face later! Suck it, Frenchie!
Alexander cards his hand into Jefferson’s curls, because he’s scared he’ll never get the chance to feel them again. They’re as soft as they look, springy between his fingers and wonderful to the touch. It’s such a wonderful kiss, their first kiss, and Alexander wants to keep on kissing him forever. Jefferson makes a quiet whimpering noise and Alexander forces himself to pull away before he melts and never does. “Jefferson,” he breathes across his lips.
“Thomas,” the other corrects delicately, a meer whisper before he’s tangling his hand in Alexander’s hair and tugging Alexander back to meet his lips. It’s feverish this time, desperate and needy. The roasting heat must be getting to them, because they’re rivals, are they not? Well, not anymore. Because he’s pretty sure enemies don’t kiss in summer heatwaves, under monkey puzzle trees in their rivals back garden. But they do now, because Alexander isn’t giving this up for the world. Not now. He has his red.
“Thomas,” Alexander repeats Jeffer- Thomas’s words as they break away again. The name feels heavy on his tongue with the taste of its owner on his lips. Like it should be a sin, a sin to have enjoyed that so much. But he will gladly go to hell if it means getting to experience that intimacy again. The base of his ponytail has started to be tugged out, knotting where his fingers have tangled in the locks. He lays his head on the man’s shoulder, starting to slide half in and half out of his lap. It’s insane, the burning feeling in his chest as he locks this memory away in his treasure box, saving it for a rainy day, just in case this was a one time thing.
Thomas cradles Alexander’s chin in one hand, thumb hooking under his jaw and tilting his head up so that he can look into his eyes. Hamilton could get lost in those eyes, as he has many times. So many times during cabinet meetings he has stared at Jefferson, at those dark eyes and simply dove in, gleeful at the aspect of drowning in them. Only for the man to spout some ridiculous shit and drag Alexander out of the waters, slap him around and take him to his senses. “Yes, dear?”
That voice was going to be the death of him.
“I-“ He lost all forms of cognitive thought, the train must’ve derailed when Thomas pressed their lips together. Because fuck, he can even feel the violin chords buzzing in his veins again and it’s all so much and he loves it. Alexander flicks his gaze around Thomas's face, (he really has to get used to calling him that) kiss-swollen lips, the deep blush across his cheeks. He must look like an awestruck child from Thomas's perspective, because the man chuckles and takes his free hand through Alex's hair, taking it out of the pony tail in one movement. "Red." Alex mutters finally.
"Red?" Thomas repeats with a cocked eyebrow, hands Alexander his hair tie and brings both hands back to his lap. He really isn't sure what Hamilton means. What does red have to do with anything? If he had to put a colour to this moment, he would call it tickled pink. Intense and warm, but full to the brim of love and devotion. Pink.
Alexander nods, presses a finger to Thomas's chest, and another to his own. "Red," he nods, taking his fingers away, instead splaying his palm across Jefferson's chest absent-mindedly. "That's our colours. We're red."
Thomas never imagined he would be agreeing with Alexander so easily. With Martha, their relationship had been a soft pink. The fire was there, buried beneath the surface of dedication and loyalty. It was comfortable, it was perfect. He never needed anything else, because everything he needed was in Martha. But was he pink? Certainly not. She was his high-school sweetheart, the only real relationship he had ever had. He didn't count the many women (and men) in France, they never lasted longer than a night of sub-par activities and a morning of awkward goodbyes.
"We are, aren't we?" Thomas hummed, eventually pulling himself from his thoughts before he sunk too far. Thinking was a dangerous activity, one he didn't take time to do in fear of never emerging again.
"But," Alexander continues, and Jefferson's heart sinks. There's always a catch, isn't there? "We're the opposite reds. You're the darker red, most definitely. You're secrets and feelings are locked away, while I display mine like the lights on Broadway."
Thomas gulps. Never before has he been called out so boldly, or in such a forward manner. Yet Alexander has hit the nail on the head, first try and won the prize so it seems. He softens a little further, slumping against the tree. A low hanging stick swats at his head, and he bats it away with one hand.
"You keep everything behind lock and key… no one else has the key, I don't think," Alexander draws little swirls and patterns with his fingertip on Thomas's chest, the art fading as fast as it appears. He feels the man quiver, trying to hold himself together, and he knows that stone wall he hides behind is breaking.
He shakes his head in a curt motion. "Ja- Madison has a key," he corrects, inadvertently agreeing with Alexander, "Martha… Martha had a key." He finishes there, hands folding into each other, fingers fidgeting with discomfort. His face contorts as he screws it up, not allowing his mind to drift, forcing himself to stay in the moment. Stay in the tickled pink time. But how do you make pink from two reds?
"I'd like a key," Alexander adds, "if you'd be willing to lend me a spare." He glances up at Jefferson through his eyelashes, shall he offer something in return? The key to his treasure chest perhaps? The place he stores his most prized memories?
Jefferson chews on his lip. "I think you already have one. Whether we realised it or not… you've always had one." The metaphor is starting to confuse him, muddling with his mind. So many keys, and so many possible doors they could unlock and it's all a bit much. What door should he go through first? None of them have labels, none of them have a clear cut future secured behind them. How does he choose? Maybe he should let Alexander choose for him, go along for the ride.
Alexander smiles. He drapes himself further across Jefferson, kicking one of his legs over both of the man's and leaning into his shoulder, tucking himself there. The hot air, accompanied by the events that just occurred have sobered him almost entirely, but it feels so much better to experience this without the alcohol tainting his memory. "Thank you."
"For what?" Thomas raises an eyebrow, because as far as he's certain, he should be thanking Hamilton. Or cursing him. Cursing him and whatever magical force drew them together. This may just make him believe in fate, in destiny. He wasn’t a Christian, not anymore anyway, but this had him thanking god. Thanking every god for bringing them together. This was good, he could sit under this monkey puzzle tree, feeling the way he is now for the rest of eternity. Not good, no, that didn’t do this justice. Amazing? Fabulous? Stupendous?
"It's a preemptive thank you, since you'll be paying for tonight's date. Say seven o'clock." Alexander smirks up at Thomas, watches as the man chuckles. That laugh, there's a sound he could get used to. And to know he caused it? Fills him with joy. The laugh is like yellow. He doesn't know why, it just is. Colours fit everything, his mother was a deep navy blue, his father a cold icy white. Lafayette is purple, a mix of strength and flowing like the sea, but passionate like red. Hercules is green like juniper, he’s a grounding presence, one that Alexander can rely on to stay strong for them all. Angelica is pink, full of passion, but for some reason she just doesn’t hit that red mark. Washington stands bold in yellow, along with Peggy, but much like Thomas and Alexander, opposite ends of the spectrum. He can’t say why these colours fit, where he got them from or why they are this way, but it just does. It all slots together, everyone in his life has an assigned colour. And he thinks they always will.
Thomas raises an eyebrow. "Alright, I'm sure the neighbour will be fine taking care of Patsy for a bit," he hums. It's nerve wracking, because Jefferson doesn't have a clue if Alexander is alright with kids or not. His brain is screaming at him that Alexander is going to see sense and run, hear the talk of kids and sprint. After all, they're both in their mid thirties, so it's normal for someone their age to have a child. What if Alexander doesn't like kids? God, was this a mistake?
“Patsy? The little girl playing out in the street?” Alexander asks, laying himself across Thomas. He feels comfortable, like himself already, and he feels like this could go places. Because reds match, and opposites attract. They’re just lucky they’re opposite reds.
“Yeah, yeah, she’s playing with John,” Thomas sighs out his nose, grabbing his glasses and pushing them up his nose. He smiles at Alexander and giggles, actually giggles, a sound that makes Alexander’s heart fly like doves around his chest. “Dress comfy, I hope you like picnics.”
“Picnics?” Alexander raises an eyebrow. “I love picnics.” It’s true. Hell, if they picnic in the back of Thomas’s garden, criss-cross on a blanket under this tree, that could be one of the best dates of his life.
“I’m glad, it’s my dream date,” Thomas admitted, rubbing the back of his neck, “look at us, getting to know each other already!” He chuckles again, noticing the flush it causes to Alex’s cheeks. Gorgeous. He cups his jaw, watches as the smaller man leans into the touch with a soft purr.
“You know what’ll make it even better?”
“What, if I bring more Chardonnay?”
“No!” Alexander bats at his arm playfully.
“Then what?” Thomas asks through laughs.
“If you kiss me again.”
And he does. God, he does.
-
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please this is 13,045 words I spent to much time on this I'm begging yall, if you liked it please reblog it, I dont want this to go unnoticed.
Trigger Warnings: VIOLENCE, SMUT, Fluff at the end, Male masturbation, dubious consent, blowjob, size kink, Depression, Anxiety, Social Anxiety, Neurodivergent Reader, Familial Trauma/ Death mention, minor character death, Implied Physical and Emotional Abuse, PTSD, Unhealthy relationships / DARK romance, angst (with a possible happy ending?) erotic, jealousy, possessiveness, obsession, stalker, explicit language, suggestive content, Violence, Blood, Slow Burn, Eventual Smut
** additional trigger warnings for chapter - drug use/ drugging.
a/n: thank you to everyone who has enjoyed the series so far! If you enjoy, please be sure to like / reblog, and send me a lil sum in my inbox if you feel like it! :) Y'all keep me motivated <3
this chapter is part of a series. Please see the chapter index to read from the start!
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Your consciousness came together piece by piece. When you fully woke, it was in total darkness.
Belatedly, you comprehended that your eyes were sealed shut; the eyelashes clumped together, sticky. It was too much effort to flex your face to pull them apart, so you didn't. Another immediate sensation was cold condensation on a solid rim, pressed to your cracked lips. Your tongue was swollen, and your throat was a desert, so your chapped lips parted easily.
Water. Cold all the way down your esophagus and pooling in your stomach. You leaned in and took as big a gulp as you could muster. When it pulled away, you coughed, and water dribbled down your chin.
As you shifted your body to adjust yourself, your nerves in turn shot back pinpricks of pain that stabbed you to the hilt. Stinging zings all about your legs and especially your arms, one of which was bound tightly. You groaned, keened with clenched teeth.
In your state, you couldn't do much. Strength was not there, and you went limp in seconds. So you listened, allowed your senses to take control while your body stilled. A clock tick, tick, ticking. Whirring overhead fan. The smell, distinct in your memory, of your grandmother's house. Ah, that's it. You must have had a nightmare. Or you'd been biking and hurt yourself again. Your arm, from what it felt like. Likely, it was as you pedaled from school on the rough terrain of back alleys as a shortcut — your grandmother warned you countless times about that. You'd fallen and cut your arm, knocked your head against something. You dreamed of giants in the woods with red eyes and scary monsters shattering glass in the house.
But of course, that was all the dream. Grandma would take care of you. Being with your grandmother again allowed some vulnerability you were only granted with her; the vulnerable, childlike, trusting kind. Your body instinctively began to loosen, emotions flowing, causing rivers to run down your crumbling defenses. Heat made your face pinch in crying; you were in pain. You needed attention. You wanted her to croon over you like she always did. Her warmth, the feeling of someone looking after you, to fall apart into it felt good. You wanted it, you needed it.
Oh, you missed her.
The weight of the world had crashed down and crushed your wings. You couldn't take it anymore.
You cried harder. Big fat tears slide down your cheeks, salty on your trembling lips and dripping off your nose.
"Shh," Someone hushed you. A hand delicately brushed the tears from your cheeks with a warm cloth and moistened your lips with it, providing more relief from the dryness. They, whoever they were, were close; they smelled of hard soap emanating from sweating skin. Your sobs quieted, but your tears still fell silently through your closed eyes. You felt the fabric of your duvet pull over your chest.
"Sleep," They whispered. Not your grandmother. It was accented, husky, and masculine.
You sniveled for a little while, but soon exhaustion came to collect once again.
You slept.
When you had reawakened, again it was to the cold press of water to your lips. You drunk deeply, consciousness strengthening enough to lift you from the fog of sleep. You lifted one arm - the one that you could - and rubbed at your eyes with the back of your hand.
Bleary-eyed, you blinked a couple of times. The walls of your childhood room materialized. The entirety of it was drenched in the blue of early morning or late evening. In front of you, both your arms were splayed - white square bandages spotted all over one, but the other was wrapped tightly in layers of gauze from the elbow to your wrist.
Everything came rushing back. The break-in. The glass shattered as pictures fell behind you. That sickly smile and those coal black eyes, smothered beneath a pillow and shot with a pistol. A huge dark smudge overwhelmed your vision.
And him.
You gasped and lurched forward. Your body answered with shooting pain that shocked you into crying out. Something heavy shifted near you, and you felt pressure on your shoulder, pushing you back to the pillows.
You screamed.
A bear paw clamped over the entire lower half of your face, and you thrashed feebly. You used your good hand to claw at it wildly. It didn't flinch—you were doing nothing to it with your fingernails even when you dug crescent moons into the flesh. Pain roared from your arms and legs. Your screaming and moans were muffled by—by—
Your heart raced, but it felt like it stopped as it registered who this was.
"Shh," unblinking blue eyes, glowing behind black cloth, lowered to your vision. "Easy,"
König held your face fast. With your mouth mashed shut, you blinked wildly, begging dozens of questions with your eyes.
König granted answers to only a few. "You are hurt, but you are fortunate. No arteries hit. You must be still, or the wounds will reopen. That will be bad, hm?" As he spoke, his eyes flared, glinting ice chips that gripped your gaze forcefully. König's tone was unlike any way he'd spoken to you before; it was quiet, but hard as slate. He was trying to be gentle, but he wasn't asking. "You will not scream. If you scream and someone hears you, we will have a bad problem. Do you understand?"
You whimpered into his palm.
His grip eased up just slightly, his expression gentled, no— something else. Something hungrier than that. His eyes flickered down. You realized in a panic that you were naked beneath the blanket; your chest caved in in a feeble attempt to hide your breasts, failing of course. His eyes then bore deep into your very being. "Will you be good for me?" König murmured.
Your breath hitched in your throat. Slowly, you gave a single nod.
König lifted his palm experimentally. When you didn't make any noise, he removed his hand from your jaw entirely. He used the pad of his thumb to brusquely wipe the falling tears on either side of your cheeks. You pressed your lips together. His hand trailed down your shoulder to your injured arm. "It must hurt, I know. But you are such a lucky one, Engelchen. You had supplies on hand. I discovered a little hospice in your cabinet."
Your grandmother's nurse had kept shelves of various medical supplies on hand before she was too far gone. She needed a lot of painkillers in the end. Gauze, too, her skin papery and fragile enough to break on a whim. That warmth, her presence you felt, it was a lie.
It was just König.
Disappointment curled in your chest. You swallowed hard and looked away. You retreated from his touch and pulled the blanket over your exposed chest, and leaned back into your pillows.
König blinked and seemed to realize a little too late. He turned his masked head and withdrew his hands from your body. He sat on the edge of your bed. The springs protested loudly beneath him as he shifted. His eyes turned down, the lashes long and caked with blackout, just like his visible cheeks in the eye holes. "This should not have happened." He said finally.
You wet your lips with your tongue. König kept speaking.
"He was… a bad man." König's voice was clipped. He bent until his elbows rested on his knees, and his head hung in front of him. König searched the floor with his eyes; he was choosing his words carefully. "He saw I was with you, perhaps that day." König turned his head fully away from you, the fabric of his mask shifting with him. "He wanted to hurt me. But he found you."
"Why…" Your voice cracked, hoarse with sleep and dehydration. "Why was a—a bad man—" You swallowed thickly. "—trying to hurt you?"
It replayed in your mind over and over—König's hands throwing down the pillow over his head and aiming the pistol. Pulling the trigger without a breath of hesitation. Nausea turned your stomach and thickened the saliva in your mouth. Was the corpse—it had to be a corpse, all that blood pooling sickeningly from behind the pillow—still out there in the hallway? You couldn't see with the door closed.
Rather than answer you, König stared at the floor in silence.
"W-we should call the police," You rasped. "And explain everything—"
König whipped his head back around. His eyes were icy daggers, wide and pinning you to the bed. "No," The ice in his voice matched his eyes and chilled to the bone.
"W-why not?" You cried.
König stood. His fist - spotted with red half moons you had dug into it in your struggle - clenched and loosened. Then he turned his back, pacing to the end of the bed. As if to wave a gnat off of him, he shook his head rapidly. In the back of his pants, the pistol was snug in the waistband beneath his rumpled shirt. "It will be nothing but trouble." He half grumbled to himself, half spoke aloud to you.
"What are you talking about? He broke in. H-he attacked me. If you tell them he'd been following you, then—"
"No police." König snapped. "Do not mention police again. You do not know what you're talking about."
"But, König—!" You were shrilled, hysterical, and overwhelmed with panic.
"Be quiet," he hissed. The threatening tone hit so harshly that you clamped your jaw shut. "Naïve little child. Do you want to die?" König spoke scathingly. He did not yell, he did not scream. He spoke levelly, but the threat oozed poisonous—it was unclear if he meant death by his hands or not.
Who was this man, who had replaced the sweet, gentle giant? Was that even real? The smiling, cut-up face that called you sweet, played with your fingers, and squeezed your shoulder. Where was he? Surely not hidden behind this monstrous mask?
You flinched at the force of his words. Your lip trembled, and tears stung your eyes. Hatefully, you envisioned how you must look; sniveling and weeping, proving him right. You didn't understand. Not anything. Who was that awful man, and why all this violence? Especially, you didn't know what this had to do with König, and now you. All you knew how to do was cry. Like a naïve little idiot.
König;s gaze seared you for a few more seconds before he took a deliberate moment to breathe in and regather his patience. When he looked at you again, his eyes were half lidded. He looked… tired. König's shoulders sagged. He retreated to the chair at your bedside — pulled from the dining room. Atop the side table sat several pill bottles — your grandmothers', that you'd been keeping in the pantry — and a glass of water. König fingered through them, inspecting the labels. He decided on one and set it to pop one bottle open and spilled out two pills onto his hand.
Leaning a bit, you tried to see exactly the medication he was giving you, but he put the bottle back down among the many. His big frame knelt before you, so you were once again at eye level. Baby blues behind thick lids, nurturing, tolerant. Like you were having an unreasonable tantrum, he had to wait out. "Little angel," he sighed, long and resigned. "You will rest now. Too much excitement is not good for recovery."
You opened your mouth to protest, and König plugged your mouth closed with two fingers, pushing the tablets hard onto your tongue. In one swoop, he'd pushed the cup to your lips as well, and you tilted your head back with the force. Liquid spilled on the corners of your mouth and splattered onto your chest. The surprise and the rush of water into your mouth forced you to drink. He needed only his thumb pressed down to keep your lips sealed long enough to swallow the pills hard. You spluttered and coughed, and Konig tutted, shushed you, and pushed you further down into the pillows, pulling the blanket over you, up to your chin.
"But that is why I am here." König tucked the excess blanket around you, cocooning — or maybe trapping — you inside the duvet. His hands lingered, pushing the fabric deep around your legs and your hips, and trailed over, down your thighs. "I will take care of everything."
Your eyelids sagged; the medication was strong, tugging you into sleep. "K…" you whispered, emotions and pain dampening, muffled by the drugs coursing through your veins. Still, you fought just a little, a little glimmer, a voice screaming and echoing, fading into a plunging tunnel. "König…how did you know…he was here…?"
If he heard you, he did the same thing he always did when he didn't want to answer. He simply ignored it and continued patting the blankets down. He placed his great hand on your thigh, sliding it up and down; his other hand rested on your skull, the thumb brushing along your hairline, tucking strays behind your ears.
"Feels better, doesn't it?" König purred, voice syrupy, echoing as your consciousness faded.
You wanted to fight. You wanted to run away and scream and yell into the sky at how wrong it all was.
But it felt so fucking good to be touched. To be cared for.
"Do you see how good you feel when you listen to me?"
Yes.
You slipped again, down, down, down, into the murky depths of drugged slumber.
Trigger Warnings: VIOLENCE, SMUT, Fluff at the end, Male masturbation, dubious consent, blowjob, size kink, Depression, Anxiety, Social Anxiety, Neurodivergent Reader, Familial Trauma/ Death mention, minor character death, Implied Physical and Emotional Abuse, PTSD, Unhealthy relationships / DARK romance, angst (with a possible happy ending?) erotic, jealousy, possessiveness, obsession, stalker, explicit language, suggestive content, Violence, Blood, Slow Burn, Eventual Smut
a/n: its getting a little domestic in here. This one is dedicated to everyone who has left a kind comment or ask in my inbox! I hope that the way this work goes lives up to your expectations and excitement :'o
this chapter is part of a series. Please see the chapter index to read from the start!
Prev | Next | Chapter Index
Dynamic scents filled your nose as you breathed into consciousness. Floral, soft, and honeyed, they mingled with rich, warm wafts of something sweet and roasted, all undercut by the citrus, hard-edged tang of cleaning products.
You opened your eyes to bursting color at your bedside. When you sat up slowly and rubbed sleep from your eyes, the vision cleared. Among the orange medicine bottles sat a mason jar, poorly scraped clean of its label — one of the old pasta sauce jars you used as a coffee cup — filled with bundles of little flowers, their petals snug around yellow-specked centers, ranging from pure white to shades of purple. You'd never seen such a flower before. It gave off a honey-sweet scent, softening the edges of your frizzed nerves.
It was all foggy, but you remembered the gist of what had happened before you fell asleep and before you passed out before that, with gut-wrenching clarity. Your body ached as an additional reminder. Looking around, your room had brightened; sunbeams formed rectangles on the wall where your blinds were parted.
You were also alone.
Upon inspecting your arm and bandages, you found the sting had eased somewhat, but the gauze was still tight around your other arm, clean and bleached white. You pulled the duvet off, exposing your shivering naked body to the air. Bandages were patched along your legs, up and around your thighs.
Heat surged in your chest at the realization he'd done this, and had therefore seen your naked body multiple times. He'd been the one to carry you to your bed and patch you up. Again, you felt a familiar emotion toward the giant: a conflict between gratitude and abject horror.
A sound disrupted the air, and you flinched; a faucet hissed briefly, then stopped. Your door was just slightly ajar, so you could hear quiet sounds of activity just beyond, in the hall, in the kitchen.
When you slid out of bed, you looked around for your clothes. But your floor was clean of its usual shirts, underwear, and socks thrown about; it was just your rug and the wood flooring. Your piles of dirty, not-quite-dirty, and somewhat clean clothes were gone from the floor and the various surfaces of your room, like the chairs and dressers.
What the fuck?
You had to pull open a few drawers to finally find clean underwear (that, unfortunately, wasn't unusual. Lately, you had very often procrastinated laundry until your very last pair, staring into space or depressed beneath your blankets). The only thing comfortable enough for your stinging, injured body was a button-down pajama set your grandmother had gotten you years ago when you were in college. It was faded blue with little dotted stars, left deliberately in an empty top drawer.
What the fuck.
You had no other choice. That or walk around naked, which-absolutely fucking not.
You pulled it on. You were a grown adult now, so you filled out the pants fully, snug as briefs at the widest part of your thighs, but not too tight. You buttoned yourself into the top, too embarrassed to look in the mirror at how your chest, soft sides, and front looked in the fabric you were hatefully very comfortable in.
You hesitated at the doorknob. Your memory flashed: the attacker with the pillow over his blown head, a pool of blood, right down the hallway, visible from your room. Right on the other side of the door.
But that sweet, dark smell had sharpened. You recognized it as coffee, brewing strong and making your mouth water.
So you took a deep breath and opened the door.
There was nothing.
No, there was really nothing; all those boxes, crates of clothes, and piles of your half-moved-in things and your grandmother's half-moved-out things were gone. There was no bloodied body at the end of the hallway. You inched closer. The glass had been swept away, and the intact frames were righted. Even the floor was immaculate, not even a stain or drop of blood—neither yours nor your attacker's. That tangy smell of the cleaning product wafted more prominently into your nose as you crept through the scrubbed down house.
You saw now that your mountains of clothes were in bins or tumbling in the washer and dryer—the clean clothes and sweaters you'd normally just toss in the dryer to let fray and shrink out of laziness hung up on your grandmother's wire clothes rack to air dry. Like she taught you to, and you never did.
You knew König was a bit of a neat freak, from his treatment of your car. But this was ridiculous.
Noises were coming from the kitchen. You tiptoed past the living room—tidy, but with one pillow on the couch glaringly missing—down the hall. You recognized the crackling, warbling sound of your grandmother's old radio. Your heart wrenched in your chest. It was even on the same station, her favorite, playing classical music.
How many mornings had you padded down this hall, yawning with sleep still in your eyes, following the wafting smells of breakfast waiting for you before you went to school? The house was as clean as when your grandmother had been well enough to keep it that way. You remember when you'd had the energy and will to help her with chores. Both of you would open the windows, vacuum, and wash the dishes, talking or sitting in comfortable silence, fixing up where you lived, making it just a bit more bearable to exist because your home was so immaculate. How you'd both sit on the couch after, with her knitting and your books, fingers dry and stripped from cleaning products, but nonetheless satisfied.
Everything like that had gone away when she passed; she took it with her. But now... it was coming back.
You stopped at the threshold, your eyes glassy with moisture, your lip crumpled.
König's shadow passed over you. He poured a dark stream of coffee from the percolator into a ceramic mug on the clothed table. The bills and junk you'd piled there were cleared away. Your molding, rotting dishes were presumably scraped clean and running in the thrumming dishwasher.
He lifted his head, masked still. But his clothes had been changed, and he was washed, smelling of the same hard soap and detergent. No cologne, always simple. Had he showered here or gone home? How long had you been sleeping?
He looked at you, and the questions quieted. Morning light trickled in, dust motes dancing off his broad shoulders. As always, his eyes roamed freely over you, long and unembarrassed, mentally stripping your clothes from you and putting them back on as he looked up and down. You folded your arms tightly to your chest, wanting to fold in and disappear in your little pajama set. His eyes crinkled at the corners warmly. "Good morning," König greeted you, his voice tender. "Sleep well?"
You did not return his warm stare so happily.
He seemed unperturbed, pulling out one of the two chairs—irritatingly, the one you always sat at, your grandmother always on the other side with her cushion. Of course, the bastard somehow knew—and invited you with a tilt of his head, his hands on the sides, prepared to push you in.
Like a suspicious little cat, you lingered at the threshold, your arm tucked to your chest, shoulder brushing the corner. You slunk forward and made a show of avoiding contact with him as you walked past, pulled out your grandmother's chair, and plopped into it, pulling yourself to the table.
Better you sit here in her spot than him.
Without missing a beat, he pushed the coffee mug to the side of the table where you sat. He turned around.
There the pistol was again, tucked into his waistband. You bit the inside of your cheek.
He had to crouch down to reach into the refrigerator—astonishingly full of food, cartons of eggs and milk, vegetables and fruit of all sorts—and pulled out the cream, the same one you always bought. From the counter, he plucked your grandmother's sugar bowl and spoon. He removed the lid to reveal it was freshly topped off with sparkling little white grains. On his hand, the little claw marks you'd made had faded to bruises.
"You're looking much better. I'm glad." He hummed. "Are you hungry?"
"No." Yes. You were starving. But you hated him a little bit for how wonderful this all was. It was over the top. It was obnoxious. You were thrilled. So you pouted, glaring down at your coffee.
He chuckled softly. Instead of sitting, however, he leaned his big body against the pristine sink, folding his arms across his chest. In short sleeves, his muscles rippled, stretching the fabric taut. The scratches and scars crossed across his skin, discolored roadmaps up and down each arm. He tapped his fingers in a staccato along his bicep. "What can I fix for you to eat? I am not much of a cook. But I will try for you."
You ignored him and the warmth on your cheeks as you eyed his body. He seemed aware of it as well, tilting his head. You looked away, turning your nose up and folding your arms on the table's edge.
"Coffee is no good cold," he said softly.
"Why? Did you drug it or something?" You grumbled. Grouchily, nonetheless, you poured in the sugar and cream to your liking and stirred. You held it up to your nose to sniff experimentally, as a show of suspicion. "Or put a body part in it?"
König huffed out a low laugh and rolled his eyes. Amused. Of all things. "Not this time." He replied lightly.
When you shot him a slack-jawed look, the washer beeped in the laundry room, and lifted himself and strolled down the hallway.
You hesitated a little longer. Finally, you sipped the coffee and cursed. It was fucking delicious. You took another sip. When he returned, he tossed something onto the other chair. He went back to leaning on the sink and watched you for a bit before taking a hanging washcloth and turning his back to you to wipe the counter absently. "You and your Oma," König offered as conversation. "Have a lovely home."
You set down your mug; your eye sockets stung. He didn't deserve to talk about her. At the same time, you wanted someone to acknowledge she existed. But when anyone did, the ache sprang anew, bleeding in your chest. "Why did you do all this?" You whispered.
He was quiet for a moment, his arm moving as he wiped circles into the counter, making it gleam. "A gift," he replied simply.
"You shouldn't have done it. You shouldn't have touched anything." You snapped, emotions running high, erratic. "I don't want any gifts from you."
"An apology, then." He answered.
"It's a little late for one of those." You shot back. "Someone's already…already d…" You couldn't finish it. The words snagged in your throat. Your tongue tasted of ash, and you swallowed hard. "Don't think I forgot."
"Forgot what?"
"My question. How did you know he was here?" You urged, testily glaring at him.
König turned around to face you again, holding the cloth tight, the fabric shrunken in his huge fist. "You texted me."
"H-huh?"
"You texted me. I called you back once, twice. You didn't reply. I got…a feeling. I drove over." König said this easily, evenly. "Your front door was open. I come in and…" He shrugged.
Your eyebrows furrowed. It made no sense, but it …kind of did?
Where was your phone, anyway?
König disrupted with an overly loud sigh, cutting into your confused spirals of thought. "Engel, you do not have to be nice to me. I do not deserve it." This admission gave you pause. "But, this I want you to know." His words grew somber, as did the expression you could read behind the mask. "I cannot explain everything right now. More harm will come than good. But I will, in time. All I ask is you listen, do what I say, and be patient."
König shifted the weight of his body onto his legs again. "Now, please, will you let me look at your hurt?"
You know he meant your wounds, but his little misspeaking of English turned a key inside you. You didn't want him to look at your hurt. It had been all around you, in the messes you'd allowed to pile up in the house, in the ignoring you did to your skin and hair and clothes. You were deeply ashamed of the neglect you'd given the house, given yourself. How quickly he'd brought it back to where your Grandmother would've wanted it. He saw your hurt and, instead of running away, he helped. He was fixing it. He was taking care of things you were too wrung out to find possible, even if he had added a plethora of problems.
And at least … this time … he was asking.
"Please?" He added softly.
At first, you didn't move. Then you shifted sideways in the chair, facing him. You put your arms out limply onto your lap, palms up. Making a pleased noise, König quickly retrieved the items sitting atop what he'd placed on the other chair — a bundle of first aid. He knelt before you. He was so tall that he met you easily at eye level as he knelt. This stirred the memory of him kneeling before you as you sat in your car and wept. It reignited something, one of the many funny little feelings König's attention had made you feel. He rolled up each pant pajama leg with care, all the way up to a little past your thigh. With deft fingers, he inspected each patch on your legs. Some lesser cuts had scabbed over and needed only to be wiped. Others were more tender, but the bandages could be smaller.
König's touch trailed all over your skin. His fingers dragged along your calf, massaging the muscle, careful not to disturb the bandages. You saw now that he had brought socks from the dryer, still warm. He lifted your ankles one at a time, the bone encircled over by his fist with ease, tugging them onto your bare feet with reverence that made your heart — and other places, lower than your belly — twinge. He traced his fingertips up your knees, goosebumps raising at his delicate touch.
He reached up to your less-afflicted arm, meticulously working through the same routine he used on your legs. You winced as he took your other arm and inspected the gauze. Nothing had bled through; it looked like he had just put the fresh bandages on, so he just assured it was secure with a tug. You yelped in pain, and he paused, then kept going, murmuring gentle encouragement as you bore through the stinging.
König looked… genuinely upset by your wounds.
König whispered, so quiet you almost didn't hear it. "Poor little thing.” He looked up, his gaze delicate as hydrangea petals. "Ich werde dafür sorgen, dass du nicht mehr traurig bist."
You didn't understand what he said. But the tenderness was convincing enough. You couldn't help it; you relaxed beneath his touch.
So your reaction was a little delayed as he began to unbutton your pajama shirt.
"Wh.." You flushed, wriggling. But not exactly… pulling away. "W-what are you doing?"
König hummed, going on until all the buttons were undone, the opening revealing your soft belly, your rapidly rising and falling chest. But he merely buttoned them again, from bottom to top. "You missed one," He replied quietly. König's expression was unreadable he locked eyes with you.
The dryer buzzed. The spell was broken. He stood up and walked away, leaving you with your heart thudding in your chest.
Trigger Warnings: VIOLENCE, SMUT, Fluff at the end, Male masturbation, dubious consent, blowjob, size kink, Depression, Anxiety, Social Anxiety, Neurodivergent Reader, Familial Trauma/ Death mention, minor character death, Implied Physical and Emotional Abuse, PTSD, Unhealthy relationships / DARK romance, angst (with a possible happy ending?) erotic, jealousy, possessiveness, obsession, stalker, explicit language, suggestive content, Violence, Blood, Slow Burn, Eventual Smut
a/n: oooo shit now its popping off
this chapter is part of a series. Please see the chapter index to read from the start!
Prev | Next | Chapter Index
König eventually coaxed you into eating breakfast. He set your favorite cereal in front of you. How did he know? Simple, he answered: several empty boxes around the house and next to your bed. The embarrassment petrified you, but you were too starved to hover for too long. It felt like you hadn't eaten for days, which was perhaps true, so you got seconds and thirds.
"Not healthy," König grunted. "But at least you're eating."
König did not sit with you; he gave you your space, floating elsewhere in the house. When you were finished, you put your dishes in the pristine sink. You found him as you tiptoed through the hallway on newly socked feet. He stood with his back to you, pulling one of your sweaters from the dryer. You watched him smooth it with his hand, fold it tenderly, and place it on the washer beside him.
You saw several bulging black trash bags right behind him, slumped in the corner near the back door. Anxiousness pooled in the back of your mind and down your neck, freezing you in place. Was that… just trash? Your imagination raced; hunks of your attacker's flesh chopped up in each one, among your trash and rotting food, dispersed so they would never be found and put together again.
König was cleaning up the crime scene.
The thought alone made you nervously edge away a bit from the doorway, but König had already seen you. He raised his eyebrows and reached for the sweater he’d just folded. He approached you and offered it. Warily, you took it. It was still warm. It folded around you as you pulled in on like a cozy hug.
"Why are you washing all my things, anyway?" You grumbled.
"So you have more options," König replied. He absently reached out and tugged your crooked pajama collar from the sweater's neck hole.
You tried not to overly think about the contact as if his fingertips had burned you, and didn't quite let what he said sink in. "What do you mean?"
"For when we leave."
That grabbed your attention fully. "Leave?" You repeated back loudly in genuine confusion.
König narrowed his eyes and looked away, pulling more of your clothes from the dryer. He had that same calculating look as when he'd been carefully choosing what to say to you while you were bedridden. "That man. The bad one," he clarified, as if you wouldn't know what he was talking about. "There are more of him. His… 'friends'."
Despite the sweater's warmth, your whole body chilled.
König rolled his neck to face you, his eyelids lowered, resigned. He let you read the rest on his masked face, in his eyes.
"Wait, so, you're saying— you're saying we're going to have to leave? Leave the house?" You spluttered. You were utterly flattened by the revelation, the laundry room spinning. "And go where?"
Now, König faced you with his body. He tilted his head, his shoulders jumping, so casually you were horrified. "Anywhere you want."
You choked. "But, but—"
"Engel," He raised his hand to you. "We will not leave tonight if you do not wish. They may not come tonight. Or tomorrow. Maybe not for a week or a month." His eyes darkened, and so did his voice. "But they will come."
"König," your exasperated tone faltered. "I don't understand."
Why, why did this have to happen? Why did it have to be you involved in all of this? They wanted Konig, and now you? "W-why do I have to leave?" you probed, shaking your head like a petulant child. "I have nothing to do with this. So why? Why me?"
König's eyes closed. For a heartbeat, then two, he was quiet. "Because you saved me." He said softly.
It hung in the air, but you didn't understand. You couldn't. "What?"
"Because you... Are connected to me. I will leave, but they will still kill you. They will kill you very slowly, to try to find me." When his eyes reopened, they were narrow slits. "Your life—it is too precious. Your soul is... clean. It is worth so much more than a sacrifice for mine. I will not allow it."
Your heart plunged, your lip quivered. Warmth spread across your cheeks, and your mouth dried. Genuinely, you were at a loss for words, the emotions in you whirling like scattered leaves.
What was more, you didn't believe him. You weren't worth more than anyone.
"You don't know anything about my fucking soul." You spat.
Without allowing another word from König, you retreated on fast feet back to your room. There, an open suitcase had been placed on your bed.
You grabbed it with both hands and threw it into the hallway, hearing the crash before you slammed your door. You tried to muffle your cries by jumping into bed and burying your face in a pillow. Your eyes stung from crying. You have been crying so much lately. You were afraid you might dissolve into tears.
You don't remember nodding off, but you did.
When you awoke, your pajamas had rolled up to your shins, and the sun outside had hazed the room in afternoon light. But you refused to leave your room, even with König's knocking and the delicious smells of dinner drawing you into the kitchen. You did what you did best—you froze. You burrowed beneath your blankets, willing the scents to become nauseating, trying to resist the reality of this nightmare.
You heard heavy steps approaching your room as the sun set. When a soft knock — three, as always — reverberated on the door, you said nothing. When the handle jostled, you pretended to be asleep, turning your head into the pillow. The shuffle of pills in bottles reached your ears as König placed a tray of dinner on your table. You felt his eyes on you and turned farther away. If he knew you were faking, he didn't say so; he simply retreated back out of your room, shutting the door quietly behind him.
Only when you heard him retreating did you sneak a glance. He had set out what looked to be some kind of casserole; you blinked hard, memory flashing like a beacon.
In the kitchen, your Grandmother had kept a stack of index cards in the cupboard, full of recipes for desserts, soups, everything she ever cooked. You recognized this one by the texture, the vegetables—all the ones you loved—and the way it crisped at the top. It was your Grandmother's recipe, followed to a T.
I cannot cook. But I will try for you.
As you ate in bed, you sniffed so as not to salt your meal with tears. You took slow bites, savoring the taste and memory. It was as if she'd cooked it herself.
You finished and, hesitatingly, brought your tray back to the kitchen. König sat with his back to you, his long legs spread, the chair pushed out to accommodate his huge frame. His hands were working on something, his shoulder and arm jumping.
Suspicion flaring, you inched a little closer.
He was cleaning his pistol. The magazine was on the table, as were other parts, while he wiped down the barrel, pieces spread out on a rag so they wouldn't stain the tablecloth.
"Thank you for dinner." You announced curtly. He did not stop what he was doing for even a beat.
"You're welcome." He replied simply. He didn't look your way. You watched his fingers maneuver the weapon dexterously, almost lovingly, his wrist turning it this way and that.
It made you itch.
You wanted to say something. You didn't want to apologize. You refused. But you needed to say something. You lingered awkwardly in your own kitchen on unsteady feet. This is when all those years of neglecting to interface with others bit you in the ass the most. Someone clever, someone good with talking and people, would know what to say. They would be able to sort the feelings storming and clashing like thunder in your body into a few lines, say what they are with confidence in a way that you never, ever did right. You wondered about the proper tone, how to use it; the complexity stretched before you like an impossible math problem with infinite variables.
"I'm sore." You decided flatly, with all the charm of a deflated balloon.
König placed the disassembled pistol down carefully. "Do you need my help taking your medicine again?"
His fingers in your mouth. Your tongue remembered the texture well. His thumb swiped across your lip as you choked down the pills.
Inexplicable heat streaked across your face. "No," you replied. "Tell me what you made me take, and I'll go to bed."
König stood and headed for your bedroom. You teetered behind. "I can do it myself," you insisted to his broad back doggedly. He ignored you, so you repeated yourself. Nothing.
Nonetheless, you seated yourself on the bed, waiting for him with your hands between your thighs. Your eyes wandered to the fragrant bouquet among the vials on the table, the little petals shrunken even more by his great form.
"What are the flowers called?" You asked.
He produced two bottles in his hand. You read the labels, and he let you; then he popped them open. "Sweet alyssum," he replied. "I saw them during a deployment overseas once. Killed only by great frost." König didn't look at you directly. His accent was thicker as he reminisced. The mask cast shadows over his face, but his eyes still glowed.
You fidgeted with the glass in your hand. "Do they have a meaning?"
"The sweetness of the soul," König replied gently.
Your soul is…clean.
I like you, sweet.
You don't know anything about my fucking soul.
You winced.
König took the water from your hands. "I will refill this and return. Then you will sleep." He walked out of your room, and you followed him with your eyes until he disappeared down the dark hallway.
The hallway, long and gloomy, stirred something in you. It unnerved you. You imagined those coal-black eyes again, shining in the dark as they watched you, the cut wound of a mouth flitting in the darkness. You jumped out of your skin when you saw something move — but it was just Konig returning with your water.
"Goodnight," König murmured and turned to leave.
"W-wait!" You called.
He looked back at you, and you opened your mouth, but no sound came out. You clamped your jaw closed, and you hesitated. You had to say it. You had to.
"Will you, um, stay with me?" You stumbled, then looked up to him, sincerely fearful. "In— In case they come." The vulnerability seared your stomach, so you quickly followed up with, "Until I go to sleep, then you can go."
König's eyes crinkled at the corners. He nodded. "If that is what you want."
You burrowed into your blankets, and König settled in the chair at your bedside, his arms folded over his chest. He kept his eyes on you for so long that you had to look away out of embarrassment. You lie on your side, one eye closed against the pillow. König had turned the light off, but you could still see the dark outline. It was… really, really comforting. Your mind was easing into sleep already, the medicine kicking in and coursing through you.
“Goodnight, Engelchen.”
The next morning, König was gone from the room, coffee smells again wafting in the air.
In his place on the chair was the suitcase. You stared at it for a while before slowly pulling off your sweater and placing it inside.
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Trigger Warnings: VIOLENCE, SMUT, dubious consent, blowjob, size kink, Depression, Anxiety, Social Anxiety, Neurodivergent Reader, Familial Trauma/ Death mention, minor character death, Implied Physical and Emotional Abuse, PTSD, Unhealthy relationships / DARK romance, angst (with a possible happy ending?) erotic, jealousy, possessiveness, obsession, explicit language, suggestive content, Violence, Blood, Slow Burn, Eventual Smut
a/n: a long one, a sad one. literally word vomited this and I could not wait. lock the fuck in, my beloved readers-- it only gets more buckwild from here.
this chapter is part of a series. Please see the chapter index to read from the start!
Prev | Next | Chapter Index
Like off-white-to-dishwater curtains stirring in a breeze through the cracked window, the days blended into one another, and you lost count of how much time had passed. König folded all of your clothes neatly into your shelves and hung the rest in your closet. He'd wiped everything down twice, so the interior looked more like a model home than a place anybody lived in, much less the depressing rat's nest you had made it over the previous handful of months.
Also, you had found your phone — abandoned under your bed, dead since the night you'd been attacked. You'd charged it and turned it on, to no messages or calls, of course. You weren't surprised, but you were still somehow disappointed. Minutes later, König swiped it from your hands and shut it off. He explained that your location could be pinged that way, and you subsequently cursed him out, which he ignored, only infuriating you further. Helpless, you spent the evening giving him the evil eye and ignoring his bids for conversation.
He kept his mask on all the time now, until you went to bed, which you presumed was when he showered and ate; at least you thought so. Each morning, he was freshly bathed and changed. With the painkillers, you couldn't stay awake to sneak and see, so you were left to wonder.
At first, you would sulk in bed to avoid him and whatever he was doing — König was always busy: doing the dishes, changing your bandages, cleaning his rifle and pistol, taking inventory of ammo, making coffee, breakfast, dinner. It was definitely some habit picked up in the military; constantly keeping himself occupied, maybe so he wouldn't lose whatever was left of his mind.
You monitored König distrustfully from a distance, hovering in doorways or around corners or in the shadowed wall of the hallway, making sure he didn't destroy any of your grandmother's things with his awful big hands or knock something over with his tree-like limbs. He never did, acutely aware of his height after a lifetime of living in a world that was built too small for him, and you told yourself you hated him all the more.
Most of the time, he trustingly kept the broad expanse of his back to you, busying himself with whatever. He didn't mind being watched, unlike you. When you thought he was moving his head to glance over, you'd vanish behind the corner, an anxious little mouse keeping track of the terrifying bear roving in the kitchen and living room.
Until finally one evening, after a shower, you peeked from the kitchen doorway as König stirred dinner in its pot. He announced without looking over, "Will the little angel watching over my shoulder hand me salt?"
You pushed the shaker toward him with your hand and scampered away. You didn't follow him around as much after that. You tried not to. You kept your distance as much as you could, really. König didn't seem to mind the long stretches of silence, and, admittedly, neither did you: There was no pressure to make conversation on either end, which generated comfortable silence.
But it wasn’t always peaceful.
Other than the little inch you gave him by tucking your sweater into the suitcase, you refused to pack. You followed none of the instructions he gave you for preparation, blowing him off and making excuses. You convinced yourself didn't want to leave, and you didn't want to believe anything he'd told you might be real. To convince yourself, you resisted packing and tossed the bag into your room or onto the floor. The suitcase vacantly stared open-mouthed at you each morning, perched expectantly at the foot of your bed or on the chair. No matter where you tossed it, it returned in the morning.
It was clear his patience was wearing thin, but you needed this small thing to hold against him, spare ground you could stand stubbornly on. He had steamrolled over almost everything else.
Whenever he brought it up, your interactions would get a little tense.
Then you had an especially significant fight when you found the diner application crumpled up in the trash. It was insignificant, a faraway dream now, but still, you felt furious, despairing at your helplessness, and at König’s audacity to come into your life and wreck it so completely.
You were restless; As much as you wanted to stay, you wanted to leave the house, go to the park, and drive through the town's potholed roads. The memories in the walls and the resulting distress were driving you crazy, but König's tight control was unrelenting. He disapproved of you even being too close to the windows. It was usually you who would snap at him. His way of losing his temper with you was being cold and clipped, freezing the blood in your veins with his looming body, the coolness of a steely, controlled temper in his voice, or his icy eyes. You'd yell some hurtful curse, and retreat to your room and slam your door like an enraged adolescent.
One morning, while he was distracted, you'd tried the windows to your bedroom. Only to discover, chillingly, they'd been nailed shut.
However vicious the day's fight was, you two had developed an unbroken routine at night. After dinner, you would go to your room, and he'd follow. He'd redress your wounds. You were hyper aware of his hands, but he didn't try anything like the first time (you felt mixed emotions about that). You'd take your painkillers — you needed a little less every day — and he'd sit on the chair, leaning back and as unobtrusive as he could possibly be with his great form, and kept watch until you fell asleep.
Confusingly, as guns unnerved you so, and you truly despised even the implication of violence, it made you all the more relaxed when you saw he'd kept his pistol on his knee, his hand wrapped around it as he watched over you.
You were aware of how well he used it. So you slept a little better.
But it would always return to the cycle of strife and unease in the morning.
A nondescript afternoon, one just like the last few. You had showered, and your hair was wet down your back, water droplets blooming on your oversized shirt. You mostly wore pajamas these days, since you were always inside. You spooned cereal into your mouth as the static visage of a woman filled the large-backed television. The volume was kept low, so you could monitor where König might be in the house; maybe make a quick getaway if you heard his heavy-booted steps approaching. With a manicured hand, the anchorwoman pointed to the green screen behind her, on which bloomed a large, coagulating purple-then-blue-then-aqua shape sprawled over a lined map of the state hour by hour. The text scrolling beneath the weather lady's shiny white smile and hay-colored waves included snow totals, which had been mounting with every commercial break since you'd turned the T.V. on.
In fresh bandages, you were tucked into the corner of your couch, sinking into the plush armrest where the pillow was missing. The lights were off — König had insisted that you stop using lamps and overhead lighting, especially at night, so no one could see from the street that anyone was home. But that day the sun shone through hard, goose feather gray morning clouds, bleaching it and casting cold illumination among the shadows of the spotless house.
You were looking for the remote to switch channels when the news cut to the male anchor. His mouth moved rapidly; next to his head floated two portraits, side by side, of rough-looking men who scowled at you. You flinched hard when your eyes met the second one, like you'd seen a ghost.
Because you did.
Black coal eyes. A slit of a mouth. Clearly a mug shot, making the skin all the more sallow and sickly.
NOTORIOUS INTERNATIONAL GANG MEMBER BODY FOUND BENEATH MILITARY FORT DOCK; SECOND IN TWO MONTHS.
You searched more urgently for the remote; you couldn't hear much. Your eyes stayed glued to the screen as your breath quickened. "K-König?" you shouted over your shoulder. "König!"
DETAILS STILL UNCLEAR; SUSPECTS REPORTED TO BE AT LARGE. AUTHORITIES INVESTIGATING—
Grainy security cam footage: a gray hatchback crawling along the road, eerily similar to the one parked outside in front of your house.
The one König had cleaned so well, except for that dark stain in the trunk.
You dropped your bowl, and the spoon clattered with it.
Blackness swallowed the picture. In the screen, you saw your reflection: you perched on the couch, with a great figure behind you.
You whirled around. König placed the remote down carefully on the arm of the couch. His eyes were hard. There was no arguing. The force of his expression, combined with the fear that now constricted your throat, left no room for it. You had no room to process the fury of what you’d seen on the television, what he’d done with your car.
"Ten minutes." That is all König said.
You leaped from the couch and sprinted to your room.
You yanked open drawers, pulled out pants and underwear, and grabbed the first few shirts from the top of the second drawer. Your favorite book of all time, your worn journal. Quickly thinking, you pushed the drugs in there too; for some reason, you also put in the dried sweet alyssum, wilted but still beautiful in the jar, petals falling onto your clothes as you placed them on top and closed the lid securely.
You pulled the sweater you’d put in the case on, then the same oversized work jacket you always wore, and your boots over your lounge leggings; there was no time to change. The last thing you took was a photo of your grandmother and you from where you'd stuck it in the mirror, and shoved it into the inner pocket of your coat.
Breathless, you met König in the hallway. He was in a dark, heavy jacket, his sharp jaw outlined by the fabric of his mask, which he had tucked into the collar. He took your bag, and you followed him out into the stinging cold air; you shivered hard, but the outdoors were refreshing after being cooped up for the last couple of days.
König had pulled his ginormous truck around back to hide it from the street. His work over the last few days was more apparent now; several cases of what you could only think were supplies, snug beneath a black tarp in the bed of his pickup. He put your suitcase in the roomy backseat, then opened the passenger door and extended his arm to help you inside.
You hesitated, your grandmother's house looming, a presence heavy behind you. "W-wait," you stammered, taking a step back. "I—I forgot something."
König's eyes were blue flames, both annoyed and almost furious. "Tell me what it is, I'll go back and—what are you doing?!" He barked sharply, but you had already turned to go back inside. You rushed through the garage, down the hall, into the kitchen, and opened the cabinet above the sink.
Your grandmother's recipes, all snug in a bundle of yellowed index cards. You pulled them down and held them to your chest. König had even made sure they were in the same order that your Grandmother had left them, after he referenced them for your dinners.
König caught up to you. His eyes betrayed his irritation, but it relented just a little when he saw what was in your hands.
"Okay," you breathed out, resigned. "I'm ready."
He nodded, but then his head whipped around, past you. His blue eyes widened. He'd heard it before you had; Knocking hard against the door. Crashing. The hinges are busting in from the force of a heavy kick. Then another.
König reacted faster than you did. He pulled out his pistol and put a finger to his mouth. He took you by your arm and yanked you to the side, further from the front door, into the first inlet — the bathroom. He pushed you into the tub, a heavy hand on your shoulder, until you crouched in the ceramic.
"Lay down. Stay quiet."
"K-K—"
"Don't move."
"P-Please, don't leave me—" you pleaded.
"Quiet!" He hissed, and pulled the shower curtain over the lip of the bath. You heard the door snap shut, swallowing up all the sound behind it.
Utterly alone, lying in your tub. Your nerves felt as if they poked three feet out of your skin. You listened, terror running you cold as the ceramic your body pressed against, your pulse in your ears.
.𖥔 ݁ ˖ ✦ ‧₊˚ ⋅
When you were a child, it was an overcast day like this one. A group of children huddled in the park, and you watched, a lonely little planet orbiting a cluster of bright, lively stars.
Back then, you still believed in the illusion. You wanted to be included, to try and be normal. You thought you could be. The children were a giggle fest, planning and shouting over each other excitedly about a game of hide-and-seek, deciding who would be it. The count would be to ten.
Can I play?
You thought you said it loud enough. You were sure. You repeated yourself, but no one looked your way. In your mind, this was acceptance; it had to be. No one was yelling at you to go away, which sometimes happened and was clear to understand. You understood repulsion and hard shoves. Ignoring was still a nuance you hadn’t figured out yet.
Someone began to count, and the children dispersed, darting in all directions.
Elated, thrilled, you ran too, speeding on your little legs into the treeline.
You found a good enough spot as the person covering their eyes shouted their count. It wasn’t perfect, but it was good — a tall tree, the roots bulging out, forming a perfect chair for you to tuck your body into. So you did, and you waited.
And waited.
You heard the shouts and giggles of children around you getting caught, and you pushed yourself further into the spot, elated, waiting for someone to pop out and shout your name.
Found you!
When you're caught, you’d be brave enough to volunteer to be it, to find everyone else. You promised yourself that.
You waited longer. The sun cast long shadows against the trees, blazing the sky with tangerines, purples, and pinks, and finally the blue of dusk.
You stopped keeping track of time.
No one came.
There you are!
In the dark, something shone on your face; a bright light that made you blink away at the glare. You heard your Grandmother’s voice, exasperated and relieved. She’d found you. You jumped up into her arms, and she put her laughing mouth to your hair as you embraced, her sweet powdery scent filling your senses, softening the cruel blow to your heart.
.𖥔 ݁ ˖ ✦ ‧₊˚ ⋅
It felt like hours. It could have been minutes. You had pushed all your senses outward, trying to hear what could possibly be going on through your shuddering breath. The sky darkened out the tiny window, and you were washed in dusky gloom. You dozed, faded. The bathroom was dyed blue in evening illumination. Your vision blurred out and refocused with an intermittent blink.
You recoiled as you heard the crash of the front door slamming ajar, shaking the foundations even from the bathroom; Footsteps. Heavy, but lighter than Konig's assured foot. You recognized his steps well at this point. Low murmurings. Men talking, another language. Two, you think, based on the pause between words being said.
They got closer, louder.
"This is the police," You heard someone call into the hall. "We know you're here. We aren't after you. We're after him."
You froze and listened.
"Come out quietly with your hands up from where you are. Your cooperation will be rewarded."
For a moment, you considered it. Maybe König had been lying; the police could be trying to help you after all. You could call out and go with your hands up, and you'd be safe from the terror of the huge man stalking through your house, who had killed someone in it. You could be done with this altogether.
But you didn't move.
Maybe it had been all this time you had spent with König, listening so carefully to the sparse words of conversation he sprinkled into each day. But barely, just barely, you recognized the slightest lilt in the muffled voice. It was trying to hide itself with a thick American pronunciation, but it was too theatrical, too warbled; just enough for you to catch it, on certain words.
An accent. Like König's. But not his voice.
You remained still. You waited for the sound of the doorknob turning, still as you possibly could keep yourself. They were right outside, talking urgently to one another.
Then it quieted.
You imagined them right outside the door of the bathroom; perhaps they'd heard you, your thoughtless mistake of making a noise like a cornered prey animal. waited for them to open the door, to yank open the curtain, and drag you by your hair to your execution.
You heard a pop, then another in swift succession, loud enough to make you jump and your boot to squeak against the tub.
Gunshots? Is that what those were? If so, where? Exchanged with whom? Konig? Was he still out there?
What if he got hurt?
The plunging feeling in your chest stabbed right into your stomach at the thought.
It was quiet for a long, long time, allowing your mind to run in circles with panicked questions. The blue had darkened to indigo, and soon enough you were shivering in the dark of your own thoughts.
König had left you behind.
He had wiped down the place to ensure his fingerprints were nowhere to be found, but yours were still there. It had only been you, perfect bait to dump into the circling throng of sharks.
No one was coming. Not your grandmother, not König.
No one.
Then the bathroom door creaked open.
Your blood froze, your heard pooling to your feet. So you prepared again, for the second time in a few days, for death.
König pulled back the curtain, breathing hard, his huge chest rising and falling as he huffed and puffed. He knelt on the bathroom tile, looking searchingly at your face, your body.
“There you are.” He rasped.
There you are!
The emotion that had pooled in you flooded, and ran over. You cried out in relief, throwing yourself forward, your arms around his neck. Tears jumped into the corners of your eyes. You buried your face into the cloth draped over his neck and squeezed.
König stiffened in surprise beneath your embrace, his back straightening up. You had thrown all your weight forward, but he caught you without moving so much as an inch. Gradually, he put his arm around you, the hand clutching your shoulder as you sobbed with relief into the crook of his neck.
“Are you hurt?” You heard him ask.
“Nuh uh.” You shook your head that you’d buried into his neck. "Are y-you hurt?" It smelled stronger of the scent you knew as his detergent and — now that you were close enough to smell him — grass, undercut with a lemony citrus.
"Nein, Süßer Engel. Du bist jetzt in Sicherheit." He breathed out a sigh. His voice was shaky, which filled you with a surge of emotion that made you pull yourself tighter to him, unthinking, just needing. König's hand slid down to your waist. With ease, he pulled you up, up, over the lip of the bathtub, and set you on the floor. "We must go now." He whispered, the cloth warm against the shell of your ear; he was stooped down as you still clung around his neck.
You nodded, unlatching yourself. He released you, too, his fingers dragging up your back. You clung to his arm as you walked down the hall, through the kitchen. There was no one there, at least it seemed so; the house was eerily quiet. König stopped so suddenly you nearly crashed into him. He turned to you, and you could see that as he looked at you, he was turning something over in his head.
"Do you have it?" He asked quietly.
At first you didn't remember, but then you did; you fished in your pocket, and pulled out your grandmother's recipe cards. Despite everything, you smiled up at him.
For a moment, his expression warmed, but sobered just as quickly. "You must stay close to me. Close your eyes. Do not open them until I tell you. Do you understand?"
"W-why?"
"Do you understand?" He repeated, harsher.
Instinct told you that wanted to argue back with him as you had been for the last few days. But second thoughts came; he'd come back for you. He was trying to protect you; that he had made clear enough, over and over.
So you nodded.
In a double measure anyway, König clamped his big hand over your eyes, guiding you through the yard beneath the crook of his arm. Immediately, the air outside that hit your nose carried an ozonic, metallic smell; razor sharp and warm against the cold, making it all the more distinct.
Blood?
"Don't look," König repeated gruffly under his breath, pulling you along. Remembering now, with clarity, the shots you heard. You clenched your teeth; you weren't sure you'd want to see what horrors could possibly be behind his hand at that point. So you obeyed.
You heard the car door open and felt him take you by your waist again. Only then did he remove his hand from your eyes, and he lifted you into the passenger seat of the truck.
"Don't look!" He ordered fiercely, and you screwed your eyes shut. He slammed the door, and you heard him come around into the driver's seat. "Keep your head down," He ordered. You didn't need him to command you to do that; you clamped your hands over your ears and tucked your head into your knees, trying not to hyperventilate.
The engine of the truck roared to life. König yanked you both out of the driveway, and you only got a slim, rushed glance back at your grandmother's house before it disappeared forever behind you. Tears fell hot down your cheeks. Outside the car, as you both plunged into the night, soft white flakes had begun a descending dance in the winter air, dusting the road and covering the tracks.
I'm having a pretty hard time rn (my grandpa passed away two days ago and my best friend and me had a major fall out the day before) so.. could you maybe give me some fluff? I don't care who about, I just need something nice and sweet -
First of all, anon, I'm so sorry about your grandpa! I hope you're okay, if not feel free to message me!
Take this short, fluffy Jamilton which had been sitting in my drafts for months. Thanks for making me finish this!
a copier room for two
Jamilton, 973 words
Reblogs > Likes
tw for anxiety
Full fic under the cut!
Jefferson grabs Alexander by the arm and tugs him down the hall. The office is long empty, the employees filed home hours previous. A rumble of thunder breaks the unpleasant silence, and Hamilton lets out a pathetic whimper, suppressing the overwhelming urge to curl up into a ball.
Jefferson is still pulling, less harsh and more caring with a focused expression plastered over his features. If he weren't so utterly caught in the net of fear, Alexander would've taken a moment to admire him.
They turn a corner, a left he notes and then a door is thrown open with urgency. Another loud clap of thunder and a strike of lightning has involuntary tears tracking down Hamilton's cheeks. A choked sob comes from one of them, and it takes Alexander a second to realise it was him. He's guided by a strong hand into the room, a printer room, how classy he thinks.
The door shuts and a light flickers on, suddenly the storm is nonexistent. Standing before him is a tired looking Thomas Jefferson. His usual arrogant smirk is replaced with a sad looking frown, his forehead wrinkles with the expression. He looks old. Well, not old. But older than he is. As far as Alexander knows, Jefferson is thirty-five, a full four years older than Hamilton, but he could easily pass for his mid-forties.
Jefferson opens his mouth to speak, and that familiar sultry drawl does not escape. The accent itself is the same, but his tone has changed dramatically. His voice is quieter, lighter. He sounds more friendly, approachable and in a way… shy? It's an emotion he wasn't aware the ignorant jerk possessed, but it was a breath of fresh air.
"This is the only soundproof room on this floor," Jefferson breathes, stepping away from the door, releasing the handle.
Alexander sighs. That's how he can no longer hear the crash of thunder. There aren't any windows either, so he's safe from seeing any of the storm too. Then he raises a questioning eyebrow. "How do you know that?"
He examines with intent as Jefferson's face lights up red, all the way up to his ears. The blush isn't as noticeable as it would be, and he susses the man must be grateful for his darker skin hiding his fluster. "Unimportant," he mutters and turns back to the door. "Would you like me to leave?"
Alexander blinks a few times. Despite being unable to see or hear the storm, he knows it's out there. And he really doesn't want to be alone. "Stay? Just until it's gone?" He musters the willpower to ask for help, and it doesn't feel good. Not until Jefferson lets go of the handle again and nods, his hands dropping to his sides like he doesn't know what to do with them.
With a moment of silence washing over them, Alexander sinks to the floor, tugging his knees up to his chest. The tears haven't ceased in their tirade of running down his face, and he sniffs as he realises this fact. His - admittedly hot - political rival has seen him at his lowest point. Great.
He doesn't notice Jefferson sitting down next to him until a thumb graces just below his eye and wipes a bitter tear away. He flinches and the hand is gone. He looks over, Jefferson automatically glances away. This is a side he's never seen of the man. This shy, bashful, quiet man is such a difference to the cocky piece of shit Alexander knows.
They sit in silence for a minute longer, enjoying the feeling of not arguing. Alexander has calmed down significantly when Jefferson speaks.
"When I have panic attacks I come in here." He says with a simple shrug, but his eyes shine with fear and regret as soon as the words pass his lips.
"What?" Alexander asks, exasperated. He takes big gasping breaths.
"You asked me how I know this room is soundproof," Thomas (when did Jefferson become Thomas?) reminds him. "Well, I come in here when I'm having a panic attack, or I need to cry or whatever." The man looks away, averting his eyes from a confused Alexander.
"What? When you need to…?" Alexander's voice wavers with the effort to hold himself together, for his and Thomas' sake.
Thomas catches his bottom lip between his teeth, rolls it back and forth as he considers his words. "Cry, or I'm panicking. Usually twice a week at least."
"When was the last time-?" Alexander asks, throat thick. It feels as though he's the cause of this.
"Yesterday-" Thomas announces, "you called me a pathetic disgrace to the earth," he adds, glancing off. The storm may have stopped by now, and yet neither dare move.
Alexander caught his bottom lip between his teeth, rolled it back and forth nervously before letting it go. "I'm- sorry about that. You're… you're not that bad actually."
Thomas scoffs. "No, Hamilton. I am that bad."
Shaking his head, Alexander cuts in. "You're not. You wouldn't have helped me if you were."
Thomas snorts out a soft laugh and drops his head to Alex's shoulder absent-mindedly, not thinking about his actions. "You're not so bad yourself, Hamilton."
"Alexander," he corrects, threading his fingers through Thomas' curls. They spring - much to Alex's delight - to the touch. Not only that, but Thomas makes no objections, merely leans closer to Alexander.
"You're not so bad, Alexander," he repeats, name changed to fit better. It brings a gentle smile to Alex's face, and in this moment he's completely forgotten where they are. In his mind, they're no longer huddled in a cramped printer room, there is no storm outside and Thomas hasn't just opened up about his anxiety to him. No, it's just him and Thomas in their own little world together.
Just some self indulgent Jamilton fluff I wrote a while back when I had a really bad migraine.
782 words
Reblogs > Likes
Full fic under the cut!
Jefferson buries himself further under the covers, pulling them up to his ears so only a small poof of his curls poke out the top of the duvet. He's swaddled himself, a cocoon of warmth around his tired form. His head pounds, a dull aching on his left temple, and try as he might, it refuses to resist.
He groans to himself, tugging the blankets tighter and pushing his head into a mound of pillows. His mattress is soft under him, a comforting presence but not what he needs. He knows what he wants, but Alexander is not here, and thus there is no one for him to curl against. There is no one beside him to run their fingers through his hair, whisper soothing words to assure him it would all be okay.
Alas, Alex is not at his side. In fact, he's not even in their shared apartment. No, his beloved boyfriend of two years is still at work on a late shift, miles away from Thomas. He groans again as his head aches once more, and he reaches up to rub desperately at his temples. He's already taken two paracetamol tablets, and yet it has done nothing to cease the sore feeling through his head.
Thomas has suffered migraines all his life, always experienced the awful pain in his head. It occurred most often after a long day at work, or if he was just feeling particularly shitty. And unfortunately, today was both reasons.
He doesn't hear the front door open through his focus being sorely on his headache and trying to bully it away. He doesn't notice the footsteps down the hall, or the soft call of, "babe? I'm home!" He only realises someone has joined him when the bed sags next to him, and a warm hand lands on the top of his head that pokes out the blankets.
Thomas scrambles to peek out the comforter, blinking in the light. He was sure he had turned them off. The blinds and curtains were still firmly shut, and when he managed to see he glanced up at Alexander. He whimpered slightly, head retaliating against him for looking into a bright room.
"Hey, Tommy," Alexander says to him softly, stroking his hair carefully, just the way he likes. He keens into it, closing his eyes to avoid the light. "Migraine?" he asks, despite knowing the answer. Alex is good like that, he always asks, never assumes. Not anymore. When they had first met, Alexander had assumed everything about him. He had assumed he was some spoiled, trust-fund kid who came into the world with a silver spoon in his mouth, never had to worry about anything and most likely bought his friends. And well, for a lot of that he wasn't wrong. Thomas had a trust-fund, but he had still worked damn hard to get to where he was in the world. As they had gotten closer, Alexander had come to realise the confident mask was a guise for how insecure and anxious Thomas really was. And now all he wanted to do was wrap him up in a sweater and feed him fucking soup.
All Thomas could do was nod, cuddling closer to Alexander with another groan.
"Have you taken tablets?" A nod. "Not working?" Nod nod. "Do you want me to turn off the lights and cuddle?" Another nod. Alexander smiles and kisses Thomas' forehead, watches the man preen as he slips off the bed. He shucks off his suit jacket, undoes the top two buttons of his shirt and tugs his tie off, letting it all fall to the floor. He flicks the lights off and hears Jefferson sigh softly in relief.
Alexander carefully slides back into bed with Thomas, who begrudgingly gives up his blanket cave in favour of clinging to Alex's side in the same way ivy does to a house. He grumbles something along the lines of, "thank you for putting up with me." To which Hamilton simply hushes him and runs a hand through his hair, patting his chest with his other hand, as though calming a spooked horse.
He sits up against the headboard, two pillows propped up behind him as Thomas lays his head in his lap with a content exhale. He continues to pet him, twisting hair around his finger before letting the curl bob as he lets it go. "There there, sweetheart. Just try and rest…" he comments absent-mindedly, noticing the way Thomas' breathing has steadied and evened out, evident in the way he's slowly drifting off to sleep. The migraine must be bad.
Alexander smiles, kisses his forehead in a show of gentle affection. "Sleep tight, love."