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Pairing: Johnny Storm x reader Word Count: 24k gold
Part Two
Description: After an attack on the Baxter Building threatens the family, every trace of evidence points to you being a traitor. Johnny is torn between believing you, the one heâs been in love with since day one, or his own blood. And while they question your loyalty, no one knows what youâre really hiding: a secret growing inside your belly, one that has Johnnyâs name written all over it.
Tags: fem!reader, angst, idiots in love, secret pregnancy, the F4 think you betrayed them, more angst, johnny cries a lot, regret, resentment, it gets better eventually, fluff, baby is described to look a lot like Johnny.
This was inspired on Taylorâs Swiftâs entire album Evermore, so you will find lyrics from it on every divider đ (with a dash of Folkore too) If you wish, please listen to the title song, thatâs the entire vibe for this fic.
Note: This is a Part One. I really didnât want to split this up but it ended up longer than expected and I went over tumblr's word limit đââď¸ This story has been the bane of my existence for the past 3 weeks (lovingly) so Iâm very happy to finally share it with you!! Get cozy, and pretend Iâm holding your hand while you read it bc this one is a rollercoaster of feelings đŤśđź Special thanks to the lovely @breadcheese444 for beta reading this đ youâre the best ily đŤśđź enjoy!
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Youâd lived in the Baxter Building long enough to feel like part of the family.Â
What once was a hard earned internship to work with the greatest minds of New York, turned inevitably into the Fantastic Four taking you in as one of their own.Â
From Reedâs speeches when you assisted him in the lab, to Sueâs gentle reminders to take care of yourself, and Benâs kindness that always managed to warm your chest, it was impossible not to let them enter your life as they let you enter theirs. Being around them felt comfortable, safe, everything you couldâve ever wished for.Â
And part of that was Johnny, who always managed a way to set your perfect little world on fire.Â
The main problem was, Johnny Storm was nothing and everything all at once. He was the spark that lit every room, the one who made you laugh when you didnât want to, the one who winked across the lab when Reed was being too serious, the one who leaned just a little too close when you were working on something.Â
But Johnny was just a friend, and that was it.
A friend who flirted too much, but never went past that, no matter how much you wished him to. It was the kind of will-they wonât-they thing that made Sue smile knowingly, Ben shake his head, and Reed mutter under his breath about unresolved tension in his lab.Â
And the kind of thing that made you want to jump from a high place just for him to come and catch you.Â
And then kiss you.Â
YesâŚyou were down bad.Â
And then came the gala. The kind of night where champagne tasted like water at some point and the city blurred behind the tall glass windows of the building. You shouldnât have let Johnny keep pouring into your glass, shouldnât have let yourself get swept into his orbit more than usual, but you did.Â
His warm hand fit perfectly against your waist when he pulled you into a spin on the empty dance floor, your laugh echoing on the walls as he twirled you around. You two looked like a mess. His shirt untucked, hair tousled, your shoes off, dress loosened up on the back where his hands inevitably began drifting lower and lower.Â
Everything felt so funny, yet so right. His laugh was loud and golden, his lips too close when he whispered a joke meant only for you, even when there was no one else around.Â
You told yourself it was just the alcohol, the dizzy haze of his scent and the music heâd played on the turntable. But his warm hands kept roaming freely, and you couldnât help yours from feeling every ridge of his muscles either. The night faded into sloppy kisses, his hips snapping against yours as you finally turned that âunresolved tensionâ into a melody of midnight gasps and your headboard banging the wall, knowing Sue would probably give you hell about it the next day.Â
But the night was just like him. Everything and nothing all at once.
Everything because all youâd ever wanted was his body on yours, his groans against your skin, his undivided attention on making sure you were having as good of a time as he was. But it was supposed to mean nothing because thatâs what you were. Even when he was buried deep inside you.Â
Next morning, you woke up to his warmth. Your legs tangled on your satin bedsheets, his arm slung heavy around your waist. We shouldnât have, was your first thought. But when you saw his face just inches away from yours, soft and peaceful in sleep, and his golden hair on your pillowâŚyou could picture yourself waking up to that everyday.Â
It wasnât just the alcohol. You knew it.Â
And he knew it, but âwe shouldnât haveâ was his first thought too, and unfortunately he let that be the only one he said out loud. Johnny cracked a joke, like he always did, and you forced a laugh, because for the first time you didnât find him funny.Â
The two of you ruled it out as a mistake. Too much champagne. Too little sense.Â
When it was too much stupidity, actually.Â
Because it didnât feel like a mistake, not to you. Never to you. Not when the warmth of his touch still lingered on your body, not when his cologne clung to your pillow even days later. And most certainly not to him, either. When he could still hear your moans, when he could still feel your nails on his back, when he could still remember every thrust he buried his love with.Â
But when people said âidiots in loveâ, you two surely loved to focus on the âidiotsâ part of it.Â
Because you let fear rule over your love, because you were nothing, just friends, and friends werenât supposed to wake up in each otherâs beds with their hearts racing. You couldnât afford to ruin a friendship over what you both thought was a one sided infatuation.Â
And the heart I know Iâm breaking itâs my ownÂ
To leave the warmest bed Iâve ever known
You thought staying friends was safeâŚuntil it wasnât.Â
A month and a half later, you were holding a test that changed everything. Staring in shock at a blue + sign that pulsed on the tiny screen. You felt lightheaded, your pulse skyrocketing as the world tilted under your feet. Terrified wasnât even enough to describe it.Â
Because you loved Johnny Storm, stupidly, deeply, recklessly. But to him, you werenât his. You were justâŚyou. A friend. How you came to despise that word.Â
Now every day felt like waiting for the inevitable, for the moment youâd have to tell him. For the moment your almost thing would turn into something you couldnât go back from.Â
You thought you could hide it. But then the mornings started hitting harder. The nausea, the way your head gaslighted you into thinking you suddenly hated the smell of coffee. You brushed it off as a stomach bug, as stress, as anything other than what you knew it was. It worked for a while; you became an expert at dodging the familyâs concern behind excuses of exhaustion.Â
But JohnnyâŚJohnny was trickier. He wasnât oblivious, not when it came to you. If anything, he watched too closely. He could see when your laugh didnât reach your eyes, when your smile was more of a mask. He thought it was because of that night. He thought heâd ruined something that didnât even exist in the first place. So he asked one night, casually, leaning against the doorframe of your room with a bowl of popcorn.Â
âAre you waking up earlier? I havenât seen you around breakfast lately.â He said, a cocky grin on his face to hide the true worry behind his words. âOne would think you got tired of my face.â He joked, like always.Â
âGot tired of the same cereal.â You joked back, and he feigned offense by putting a hand on his chest.Â
He didnât press further, because the truth was he didnât want to know if it really was that night, and it was easier to deflect reality with stupid jokes. So that night you ended up watching a movie. His shoulder grazing yours as you shared the popcorn, sat on the same bed heâd made love to you. Your head inevitably leaned on him. And he let you, of course he did.Â
You hated that you didnât mind it.Â
As months kept going, your clothes became tighter, so you stole Johnnyâs sweaters with the excuse of the weather getting colder, even when it was the middle of August and autumn was still yet to come. But he didnât mind, how could he when you looked so cute wearing his clothes?Â
How naive he was.Â
You told yourself you were buying time. That you needed to be sure before you said anything, that you had to pick the right moment. But really, you were scared of the look on his face, scared of turning something unspoken into something real.Â
For now, it was enough to live for the hope of it all.Â
August slipped away into a moment in time
âCause you were never mine
September.
On the day you turned three months pregnant, you left early in the morning for an ultrasound appointment. Your only company was the chilly September air. It was just supposed to be that, a normal day. But as you lay on a medical bed and saw the life growing inside you through a screen, something terrible was happening back in the tower.
A planned attack.Â
It wasnât dramatic in the sense of fire everywhere, or the use of brute force. No, the Fantastic Four were more than capable of dealing with that sort of stuff. In this case, information was more valuable, and unfortunately, more vulnerable.Â
The Baxter Building was supposed to be untouchable, layers of firewalls, Reedâs tech securing every inch of the place. But today, someone managed to hack every single file. And what better way to create a distraction than by targeting the innocent little droid first. All they had to do was program H.E.R.B.I.E into thinking his family was the enemy, starting with the two year old that was left in his care.Â
Franklin.Â
And for a few terrifying hours, the Fantastic Four had to fight an invisible enemy. Franklin had barely left unscathed, H.E.R.B.I.E was shut down until he could be repaired, but the damage was done. Their entire database got transferred to some location Reed kept desperately trying to track.Â
Some screens still flickered, the alarms were muted but still ringing in everyoneâs heads. Reedâs lab was suffocatingly tense, his quick typing and occasional scribble on the chalkboard were the only sounds.Â
Sue rocked Franklin on her hip, she had twice survived someone wanting to harm her child; her bloodshot eyes showing she wasnât sure she could ever take a third. Ben sat on the yellow couch, occasionally offering reassuring smiles to little Franklin.Â
Johnny had been trying to contact you as soon as the hellish situation was over. But tracking you was useless, because youâd left the watch heâd given you in your room that day, since you noticed it messed with the ultrasound machine every time.Â
But the worst part wasnât that he couldnât find you, no. The worst part was that every single trail of what happened that morning in the building was traced back to you. To that watch Johnny found on your nightstand, and which Reed now held next to his screen.Â
And you werenât even there to defend yourself.Â
âTell me this is a mistake.â Sueâs voice cut through the tension, still bouncing Franklin desperately. She walked toward Reed, leaning over his shoulder.Â
He didnât look at her, his eyes still darting over the evidence scrolling down his screen. âIâve checked it four times. The data breach is always traced back to an internal device.â His tone was even, but his hands hesitated when holding the watch. Your watch. âNot just internalâŚhers.â
Ben shifted uneasily on his seat. âCome on, Reed. Weâre talking about the kid hereâŚthereâs no way sheâd pull something like that.â
Reed went through the decryption for the fifth time, and all the incriminating details. Log-ins with your name, encrypted messages sharing information only you would know. It was too calculated, almost like the perfect crime, but they couldnât see past the fear that morning caused.Â
âThis is bullshit.â Johnny snapped, walking around the lab shaking his head. âShe wouldnâtâshe couldnât do this. Not her, and you all know it.âÂ
âJohnny, itâs all right here.â Reed looked at him. He didnât want to believe it either, but he was a man of facts, and they were right in front of him.Â
Johnny shook his head violently, pacing like he was going to burst into flames to burn the adrenaline off. âNo, I donât care what your computers say. Sheâs not like thatâ you know sheâs not.â He defended fiercely. âShe loves this family. She loves Franklin. She lovesââ He cut himself off, like he still couldnât say it out loud. âShe loves us, okayâSue? Help me a little bit here.â He looked at his sister, still clutching his nephew for dear life.Â
âJohnny, I really wanna believe you.â She said, soft and honest. âBut weâre talking about my sonâs safety. Your nephew. What ifâŚwhat if she isnât who we thought?â
Reed sighed, exhausted. He wasn't an emotional person, but he wasnât immune either. Pushing past all the logic, all the damning proof on his screens, his eyes reflected his heart trying to cloud his judgment.Â
Heâd grown fond of you too. You were brilliant, a true delight to work with. And you had always been so caring to the children of the place. Franklin and Johnny. Well, at least that's how it played in Reedâs eyes. The point was, he didnât see you as just an intern, but as family.Â
âI wish it wasnât this way, Johnny. But we canât ignore the facts, the evidenceâstrong evidence. Whoever did this had access to information only available to usâŚand the trail points to her being the leak.â
Johnny lifted his hands in the air, closing his fists like he wanted to choke the words that came out of Reedâs mouth. âIf you think for one second Iâm gonna stand here and believe she betrayed us, then you donât know her like I do.â He tried to sound firm, confident, but his voice cracked. âI just know sheâŚshe wouldnât do this to me.â
âJohnnyâŚâ Sue sighed. âThis is not just about youâŚthis is Franklin weâre talking about.âÂ
That set him off. The argument kept going in circles. Reed insisting on facts, Johnny yelling at him, Sue trying to reason with her brother, and Ben caught in the middle, taking Franklin from Sueâs arms to move him away from the confrontation.Â
But then Reedâs screen chimed, with the results of the last decryption of information he got from your watch. He froze, making Johnny stop bickering with Sue.
âWhat?â He asked, leaning over Reedâs shoulder.Â
Reedâs hands hovered over the keys as he took in the information. He saw dozens of image files, schematics, and hand drawn maps of the Baxter Building.Â
And not just that, but the personal notes youâd made on them.Â
At first he tried to find the logic, like he always did. And there was actually a reason behind it. It had been a project youâd worked along with Reed to set up a new security system when Franklin was born. He could see all the key points that he had explained to you alone. Okay, acceptable. But it had extra annotations around Franklinâs nursery, weak points, blind spots, stuff only you had observed and noted.Â
But he didnât know it had been from a place of good. The extra time you took to analyze everything to make sure the new systems would secure the childâs safety. And of course, they couldnât see past that, because the thing you had used to protect him, was the very same that was used against him.Â
And this time, in their eyes, there was no more room for the benefit of the doubt. Not when you werenât there to explain it to them. Not when Sue couldnât keep her eyes off Franklin in Benâs arms as if something would happen to him the second she blinked.Â
Johnny just stared in silence, he recognized the notes instantly. He remembered you perched at Reedâs side, stylus scribbling on your tablet as you tried to follow his explanations. He remembered laughing when you drew a tiny flame by his room. âSo you donât get lost, blondie.âÂ
It was yours, that was undeniable. And the decryption showed those notes had been shared outside the tower a few weeks ago. Far away from the family it belonged to.Â
âTell me someone forged this,â Ben said roughly, as the last thread of hope he had on you had snapped.Â
Reed shook his head. âItâs not forged. These are her annotations, this was information I confided in her withâŚher own observations on the Towerâs weak points.â
âThatâs yeahâŚthatâs hers.â Johnny breathed, shaking his head in disbelief. âThatâsâgod, thatâs her handwriting.â
Sue pressed a hand to her mouth, tears already spilling. She adored you like a sister, trusted you with Franklin more than anyone.Â
Johnny staggered back a step, like the air had been punched from his lungs. His eyes still locked on the little flame doodle. Was that why he couldnât reach you all morning? Had you ran away and left them to pick up the pieces of everything you broke?Â
For the first time, Johnny had no defense, no fiery protest. Just the crushing weight of evidence that seemed to confirm what he feared the most. The girl he loved had been betraying himânoâŚall of them all along.
And I fell from the pedestal, right down the rabbit hole
Long story short, it was a bad time
You carried the folded black and white print in your bag. Proof that everything inside you was still very real. But for the first time in weeks, you didn't feel afraid, instead you felt a strange kind of calm.Â
Thatâs when you decided youâd tell Johnny.Â
Whatever happened after, he deserved to know. He deserved to know you didn't really see him as nothing, that he was actually everything. And that everything, that love, was turning into something beautiful. Youâd seen it through a screen today, and you wanted nothing more but to share it with him. Maybe next appointment heâd be there to hold your hand through it too.Â
You just hoped heâd be able to forgive you from keeping it a secret for so long.Â
When you walked back into the Baxter Building, you couldnât find anyone. The place was quiet, as if the multiple floors of offices had been evacuated. Your heart raced as you went up the elevator, and walked around the empty halls of the familyâs floors with not even a sign of Herbert. You rushed to the lab, the last place you needed to check. The elevatorâs door opened, and you sighed in relief when you found your family inside.Â
They all turned to you at once, and you were shocked to be met with red, puffy eyes. Sue rushed to stand in front of Franklin and Ben. Reedâs eyes darted between you and the screen, and JohnnyâŚJohnny wouldnât meet your gaze.
The relief didnât last long.Â
âWhat is going on? What happened?â You walked instinctively toward Johnny, but halted when you noticed he took a step back before you reached. âThe whole building is empty, are you guys okayââÂ
âWe didnât think youâd actually show up here.â Sueâs harsh tone made your brows furrow. It didnât sound like her, not like the woman who would put a blanket over you and Johnny when you fell asleep watching a movie in the living room.Â
âWhat? Why wouldnât I?â You asked, completely taken aback with the way she looked at you. âJohnny?â You called to him, but for some reason he refused to lift his gaze from the labâs floor.Â
âThere was an attack today. On ourâŚinformation.â Ben explained, softly. âAnd on Fââ
âFranklin.â Sue finished for him, and your eyes went wide, but before you could ask, Reed rotated the sphere monitor so you could see what theyâd discoveredÂ
âThe breach came from your device. And theseâŚâ He pointed to the screen. âThese schematics were used to override our firewalls, and steal all of our information. Including all our safety protocols."
You walked a few steps closer, just enough to see your watch connected to the monitor, and all the information displayed on it. Your notes, your handwriting, your sketches, things youâd only ever shared with them.
âThatâsâno, thatâs impossible. I never shared that with anyoneâŚI donâtâReed, you know I neverââ You fumbled your words, nothing couldâve ever made you ready for this type of accusation. âMy watch has been glitching lately, Johnny I told you that.â Your eyes darted to him, hoping heâd say something, that heâd defend you. But that wasnât what came out of his lips.
âBut thatâs your handwriting.â He mumbled, arms crossed across his chest, but he still wouldnât look at you.Â
âOn the plans that put my son in danger today.âÂ
âYes, thatâs my handwriting, those are my notes. Butââ The words tore out of you, panicked. âI donât know how they got that. I swear to you, it wasnât me.â
Your eyes burned, your throat tight as you looked around the room at the family who once claimed you as their own, at Johnny, who didn't have it in him to meet your desperate gaze.Â
âJohnny, please.â
Finally, Johnnyâs head lifted. His eyes were glassy, rimmed red. It hurt you to see him like that, but it hurt you more that his mistrust of you was the reason behind those tears. Still, for one moment you let yourself believe he might leap to your defense like always. And as he looked right into your eyes, he wanted to. God, he really wanted to.Â
To this day he could still remember the taste of the champagne from that night, the way your laugh had muffled against his neck, the feel of your fingers brushing his. He could still remember the way he brushed it off as nothing. But it wasnât ânothingâ. You werenât ânothingâ.Â
You were supposed to be the one person who saw him, past all the cockiness, the one who always listened to him even when the family didnât. You werenât supposed to be the one who lied, who hurt him. He looked at Reed, hoping for a sign, hoping for that impossible âI was wrongâ, but Reed only shook his head, because as always, he wasnât.Â
âThe watch matches the breach exactly. Thereâs no evidence of tampering on it.â
âThen find it!â You snapped at Reed, making everyone flinch on their spots. âThis is my home, I would never hurt any of you, much less Franklin.â
You couldnât believe it. Had they really given up on you so easily?
âJohnny, come on,â you whispered. âYou know me. Better than anyone.â
He didâŚor at least he thought he did. But the screen behind you glared back at him, your notes, your access codes, the coincidences. The smoking gun in your own handwriting.
âIf this is some kind of mistake,â Johnny said quietly, âthen give me something. Anything that makes this make sense.â
âI wasnât even here, Johnny. I wasââ you cut yourself short, not exactly knowing how to explain youâd been hiding a baby when everything you said already sounded like a lie to them. âCan you just give me a second? I just need toââ
âThereâs no time to spare, I need to track where this information has gone. You could at least tell us that.â Reed said, and you blinked in disbelief.Â
âI canât tell you something I donât know.â You shook your head. âThis is not about what you guys are seeing on that screen. This is about you trusting me for who you know me to be.â You fought one last time.Â
Reed just sighed, finally daring to say what theyâd all agreed on before you arrived.Â
âWe are shutting the building down. Everything will be changed to make sure the information that got leaked wonât be relevant. Iâll conduct a further investigation, butâŚI think itâs clear enough for now. You have broken our trust. And if youâre refusing to share information with us, that means we canâtâŚitâs not possible to have you here anymore.â
Johnnyâs head snapped up, but this time it was you who couldnât meet his eyes. All that was left was the quiet, the heartbreak, and the sound of your breath hitching as the family you loved looked at you like a stranger. You thought of the ultrasound picture in your bag, of the heartbeat no one here knew about. The one they were casting out alongside yours.Â
The weight of it crashed down. The lab blurred as tears filled your eyes in disbelief. At this point you didnât even care about their âfurther investigationsâ, because they had already decided it had been you. Their eyes didnât lie, they didnât believe you.Â
You lost them. And in that moment they lost you.
So you just nodded, and whispered, âI understand.â
But in your chest, your heart screamed I donât. Thatâs when you decided to turn to the last person who could give you saving grace. With what little steadiness you had left, you cleared your throat.
âJohnny,â you said softly, not daring to look at anyone else. âCan IâŚcan I at least talk to you? Just once. Please.â
Johnny didnât answer right away. His shoulders were stiff, his face turned away, but he exhaled, and nodded. âYeahâŚokay.â
Sue looked at him, but with the unbearing love she still had for you somewhere inside, she decided you two deserved that moment. So she took Franklin from Benâs arms and rushed out of the lab, Reed following her, Ben lingered just long enough to give you one last conflicted look before the elevator doors shut closed.Â
You were left in the silence of the lab, standing across from Johnny. This was either your last chance, orâŚyour last goodbye. The room felt too big now, like you didnât belong there anymore, but still you gathered the strength to fight one last time.Â
âI canât change what you saw, and I donât understand why you would believe that was me. You know how much your family means to me. How much you mean to me.â You started, your voice faltering with the tears you tried to keep from spilling. âJustâŚthink about everything weâve been through. Every night in this place. Every secret. Every laugh. Do you really think that wasnât real?â
That got him. His eyes snapped to you, glassy and burning, like your words meant the opposite you wanted them to.
âIt was real to me,â he said. âAnd maybe thatâs the problem. Because now all I can think is, what if it was all just part of this? What if you were playing me the whole time?â
âJohnnyâŚâ
He raked a hand through his hair, pacing again. âDo you know what it feels like? To look at you and not know if anything you ever said to me was true? To wonder if every smile, every moment, was just you getting closer to what you wanted?â His voice cracked. âWhat did you even want to get from this? I donât understand.â
The realization hit worse than ever. He wasnât questioning the stuff he saw, he was questioning you. He didnât understand why youâd done it, because heâd already decided in his head it had been you.Â
âIâthis is my family.â He continued. âWhy would you want to do this to my family?âÂ
The words carved into you. To believe you had come into the building ready to finally confess, to tell him about the baby, to give him the one piece of truth that could not be forged. But the way he looked at you now, made your stomach twist.
âI canât tell you something I donât know.â You repeated the same thing youâd said to Reed, blinking back the tears that blurred him out. âBut I donât think itâd matter anywaysâŚit sounds like youâve already made up your mind.â
This wasnât about proving yourself anymore. Not when heâd already decided you didnât even deserve the chance.Â
He didnât deny it, and that was the moment you knew. The same way Sue protected her child. You couldnât give yours to someone who didnât trust you, who doubted the very core of who you were for some made up evidence against you.Â
âI will do as your family said, I wonât be a problem to you anymore.â You said.Â
His lips parted one last time, like he wanted to speak, to backtrack, but nothing came, instead his eyes went back to the floor. That silence was enough to break the parts of you that once belonged to him.
It was clear to you, that no matter how much it broke your soul, you had lost everything. So it was time to go. You wiped your tears with your sleeves, and decided you wouldnât spill any more for him. Or at least, not in front of him. You took one last look at Johnny, the coward who couldn't even look at you as he exiled you from his life, his home, his family.Â
You didnât say goodbye, he didnât deserve it. So you just turned around, walked to the elevator, and didnât look back as the doors closed.Â
Thatâs when Johnny allowed himself to break. Breathless, broken sobs muffled by his hands soaking with the hot tears spilling. He didnât know what hurt more, that he never got to confess he loved you, or the fact that everything that made him love you wasnât even real. He was overwhelmed with emotions, the disbelief, the fear, the anger, that it was so hard to see clearly past all of that.Â
All he had left was the facts, the damning evidence on Reedâs screen. Because he didnât have you anymore.Â
Believing that was the biggest mistake of his life.Â
By the time the building settled into the darkness of the night, you were already gone. No goodbye note in your room, only your untouched belongings and your heart left behind. As the cab sped away, your mind was a whirl of grief and uncertainty. They had taken your home from you, but they could never take away the last part you had from Johnny.Â
The only thing you had left.Â
Johnny didnât sleep that night. He couldnât. He sat on the edge of his bed with his head in his hands and your watch on his nightstand. Every time he closed his eyes, he saw your face. He went to your room that night, trying to find something, a clue, anything that would help him see further the haze of pain that wouldnât leave him alone. The room was silent, cold, even when he was a walking furnace.Â
Youâd left the bed made, two drawers half open, but the rest was intact. Picture frames, gifts heâd given to you through the years, records heâd chosen himself still displayed on your shelves. Like you couldnât bear to bring a single piece of him with you. Only the faintest trace of your perfume lingered, clinging to the air like a ghost.Â
The room looked frozen in time, like you just stopped existing. Which, you kind of had.Â
Johnnyâs chest burned, but not with fire this time. With the void only loss could cause. He leaned on the doorframe, staring into the space that used to be yours, and in some unspoken way, his. He wanted to rage, to scream, to burn the whole damn world down if it meant changing what happened. But nothing would do.Â
You were gone.
Because theyâd asked you to. Because he didnât fight for you to stay. The smoking gun was not in your hands, but in his own.Â
That night he slept on your bed. Eyes crying acid rain on the pillow where you used to lay your head. He clung to your scent and the good old memories, grieving the fact that he would never get to make new ones. Not with you.
Haunted by the look in my eyesÂ
That wouldâve loved you for a lifetime
Leave it all behind
November.
The city you once loved became unbearable quickly. Every corner of Manhattan screamed their names. Fantastic Four billboards on Times Square, interviews replaying on cafĂŠ TVs, merch stands at every store. You couldnât buy milk without Johnnyâs smile flashing at you from a cereal box. It wasnât home anymore. It was a wound that wasnât allowed to close.
So you left New York for good, all to end up in a small southern town in Georgia.Â
No flashing billboards, no cameras, no whispers of superheroes. No Fantastic Four influence anymore.
Still, nights werenât easy.Â
You sat by the open window of your small rental, the autumn air freezing against your skin. You stared out at the trees of a world that felt foreign, while you replayed every step that had led you there.Â
Some nights you wrote letters. Folded scraps of paper with words you couldnât say to anyone. Questions, confessions, apologies. Letters to the fire, to him, to the life you used to have. To no one.
It was like standing at the edge of a cliff screaming âgive me a reasonâ.Â
There wasnât a clear path set for you anymore. The internship you earned through your hard work had once been an impossible dream, one you got to live.Â
You guessed this was the price you had to pay for those few years in heaven.Â
And there was one feeling that remained with you through the fall of the leaves. That peculiar ache, the sense that this wasnât just pain for now, this pain was for evermore.
Hey December
Guess Iâm feeling unmoored
Canât remember what I used to fight for
Tisâ the damn season.
The city became unbearable for Johnny in December. Three months after your departure.Â
The Fantastic Fourâs Christmas photos were everywhere. Sue smiling with Franklin on her hip, Reed stiff as always, Ben wearing a ridiculous Santa hat marketing forced him to wear but he secretly loved. And Johnny, always the center of attention, always grinning.Â
Because he was miserable but nobody had to know.Â
Because the world saw him as the spark of every season.Â
Because he was Johnny Storm, and he could do it all with a broken heart.Â
Even when he hated himself most of the time. For doubting you. For letting the proof shout louder than his heart. So he did what he was best at, and hid behind a smile and his muscles, carrying the weight of believing youâd betrayed themâŚand the heavier weight of still missing you anyway.
Winter was in all its glory.Â
Johnny wasnât very fond of the snow since he got his powers. It wasnât enough to affect him, since the cold never bothered him anyway, but it felt different when flying. Different than in any other season.Â
But now he liked to see it fall through the large windows of the tower. Because maybe, wherever you were, he hoped you were seeing snow too. He could at least share that with you.Â
So thatâs what he was doing tonight. Â
Johnny stood by the large windows of your room, a place where he found himself often, and thought about you. He always thought about you. Lost in his head, entranced by the way the snow fell, he didn't notice the tiny socks dragging against the blue carpet, until a little hand tugged the fabric of his pants.Â
âUncle Johnny?â
He looked down to find Franklin, clutching the stuffed dinosaur youâd given him on his last birthday. He smiled at his nephew, crouching to his height.Â
 âYeah, buddy?â
âWhere is she?â Franklin asked, tilting his head.
His question was innocent, it shouldnât have hurt as much as it did, but the words knocked the air out of Johnnyâs chest. He stared at his nephew, and the dinosaur tucked under his arm, the same one heâd helped you pick, and for a moment he couldnât breathe. Franklin tugged his arm this time, when Johnny didnât answer right away.
âShe was always with you,â Franklin said softly. He always liked to point stuff out. Facts. Just like his father. âBut now sheâs not here. Mommy said she had to leaveâŚâ His little brow furrowed, because he didnât understand. âDo you know why? Did she stop liking us?â
Johnny shook his head, forcing a crooked smile that didnât reach his eyes. âNo, buddy. She didnât stop liking you. SheâŚshe just had to go away for a while.â
âBut I miss her.â
That was it.
The final crack in Johnnyâs mask. He wrapped his arms around him and hoisted him up, wrapping him tight in his arms as he walked towards your bed and sat there. He buried his face in Franklinâs blonde hair so he couldn't see his eyes burning. âYeah, buddyâŚI miss her too.â
He didnât notice Sue standing on the doorway. She just watched as Johnny clung to her son, both of them breaking with the absence of the same person.
Back in your little southern town, you stared out the window too, but there wasnât snow there. You missed it. Missed teasing Johnny about it. Missed laughing until you cried when you tried to make snow angels and he melted the snow into water in a matter of seconds.Â
You couldnât share the snow anymore, but you were thinking about him too. All while in a city miles away, Johnny held a child who wasnât his, whispering that he missed you too.
Youâre not my homeland anymore
So what am I defending now?Â
January.
It was the first day of the new year.Â
Sue found him in your room again. It was late, hours after sheâd put Franklin to bed. Johnny sat in your bed in the dark, the glow of the moonlight painting his somber eyes. His hand was curled around your watch like he still couldnât let it go.
âJohnny.â Her voice was soft, but it carried the weight of someone whoâd been watching him break for months.
He didnât look at her right away. Just mumbled, âCanât sleep.â
Sue crossed the room, sitting down beside him. She let the silence sit for a moment before speaking. âI know it hurts. More than it hurts the rest of us.â She reached out, resting a gentle hand on his arm. âBut it's been months. And for your sake, JohnnyâŚyou canât keep living like this.â
Johnny remembered what Franklin told him that night, and he wanted to use the same argument. âBut I miss herâ. He was sure heâd sound the same as the child, considering how his voice wasnât as confident as it once was.Â
âI canât stop thinking about her. About that nightâŚabout everything I didnât say.â
Sueâs hand slid to hold his, comforting in a way only a sister could be. âI know, Johnny. But sometimes people make their choices, and all we can do is let them go. You canât burn yourself out trying to hold on to something that isnât here anymore.â
Her words cut deep, but he knew they were spoken with love. Johnny sat there for a long time, staring at the watch in his palm. âYouâre right.â
âI know it seems impossible now, but itâs time to bury it. Move forward, Johnny, for you.â
And he nodded, even though it seemed impossible. He decided then, to shove it down, to lock it up, to pretend the only fire burning him was the one from his own flames. He had to bury the pain, to bury you, somewhere he could never reach again.
The next day, as much as it hurt Sue, she moved every photo, every souvenir, every memory of you they had in the tower to that room, and put it under lock and key. Because she couldnât keep watching her brother talk to a ghost.Â
Johnny inevitably went back a couple of days after, only to find he could no longer get in. Heâd noticed photos of you had gone missing, as well as all of the stuff youâd once given to him, so he figured his sister locked them away in your room.Â
In that moment, Johnny wished heâd kept every receipt of the times heâd gone out with you. He would've, if heâd known one day every scrap of you would be taken away from him.
All that he had left was your memories. And he couldnât help but wonder, What is she doing now?
If I didn't know better, I'd think you were still around
I know better, but I still feel you all around
February.
Six years later.Â
The town had become your home in ways you never thought it would. Youâd grown to love the main street lined with diners, boutiques and an old movie theater. The way everyone waved and actually made eye contact when you walked by, the rhythm of a place that moved slower than the world youâd left behind. It was like living inside a Hallmark movie. ExceptâŚwithout the love interest part.
By day, you taught at the community college. Your mornings went by as a professor in the science wing, filling blackboards with equations and diagrams, trying to pass on your love for learning and the things Reed had once taught you. Your students adored you, not because you were easy, but because you made them feel like science was reachable, like anyone could do it if they put in the effort.Â
By night, your world was your son.Â
Leo Spencer.Â
He was everything all at once. The spark in your life, the reason behind your smile, and the vivid reminder of the one person you could never outrun.Â
Because Johnny Storm lived in your sonâs face.Â
The same golden hair, the same dashing smile that lit up every room, his charming confidence, his small quirks. The way he drummed his fingers against the table without realizing, the way he tilted his head when he was curious, the way he filled a room with energy without even trying. He was a copy of the man who broke you.Â
But not his eyes, no, those were yours. Johnny let you have one thing, at least.Â
The only thing missing was the fire. Thank God for that. He never needed flames to shine. At only five years old, his restless curiosity had already outgrown the classrooms around him. Teachers threw around words like gifted and advanced classes, ones that carried dollar signs heavy enough to scare you. You worked extra hours tutoring in the afternoon to afford his tuition in a private school, even picked up shifts at the local bar on weekends, while your lovely neighbor took care of him. Exhaustion became an everyday thing, but youâd do it a thousand times over if it meant Leo had what he deserved.
You werenât the same person who left New York. You changed your first name, and picked the same last name as your son for you, Spencer. It seemed stupid when you chose it, being Johnnyâs second surname and all, but you werenât really thinking clearly when you did. At least it had helped you tremendously to share it with Leo when it came to signing him up in the advanced programs. It kept people away from making questions since there wasnât a âfatherâ in the picture. They could only assume heâd divorced you or died.Â
It was a place where gossip ran like water, after all.Â
Your one story house wasnât that big, but it was yours. White paint on the porch railing, a garden you kept stubbornly alive, shelves lined with books you actually had time to read again. At night youâd sit on the steps with a mug of tea, watching your son chase fireflies across the yard, laugh bubbling while telling you facts about their wings.Â
Youâd built this life with your own two hands, out of nothing. You did it with a broken heart, with one truth you carried quietly, tucked deep inside your chest.Â
Iâm never going to love again.
People tried to show their interest in you; a colleague who lingered too long in conversation, a neighbor who offered to fix the leak on your sink when youâd mentioned it, or even the police captain offering you coffee when you passed by the station in the mornings, but you shut the door on all of it with a polite smile.Â
The world had taught you what it cost to put your faith in someone else, to hand over your heart and believe theyâd protect it. You couldnât afford to make that mistake again, not when there was a child depending on you. So you forgot about your big city dreams, at least until Leo was able to have his own. You kept your world small, safe, and put caution tape around your heart.Â
Miles away, Johnny wasnât much different.Â
Of course he didnât have to hide behind a fake name, he was still the golden boy of New York, still the Human Torch. Half naked in calendars, covers of magazines and billboards. Heâd leaned into the spotlight harder than ever, laughing loud, burning brighter than his flames.Â
But beneath it, the void never filled.
Six years, and he never let another woman close. Flirting, sure, he couldnât help it, but he never took anyone home. It felt like betraying you, even when you betrayed him first.Â
It was absurd, really, that he kept burning for a ghost.
He told himself he'd buried you, like Sue told him to. But the wound never closed. So he researched, quietly, secretly. When the others thought he was sleeping, Johnny sat in Reedâs lab going through old files, things that never quite added up. It had started as punishment, as a way to prove to himself that the evidence had been real, that he wasnât crazy for believing it. But the longer he stared, the more holes he found. Places where the trail was too clean, where it looked too deliberate.Â
He didnât find proof that youâd done it. He was finding proof that he had destroyed you for nothing.Â
Thatâs when he started looking for you. But your name didnât show up in any database after that September six years ago. You just vanished into smoke slipping from his hands.Â
He was supposed to be the fire, to absorb it before it burned everything down. But this time he had to be the one picking up the ashes left behind, one by one.Â
And every night he whispered the same prayer to the stars, let me find something. Let me find her.
And it's been so long, but if you ever think you got it wrong
I'm right where you left me
March.
You spent your afternoons tutoring, guiding your students the way youâd wished someone did for you when you were younger. Every bright mind that walked through your door had the potential, you just showed them what they could do with it.Â
But some shone brighter than others, like this girl Kate. The darkest long hair, a sharp gaze and even a sharper mind. The kind of mind you recognized instantly. Restless, unable to settle for easy answers. She deserved more than the small town college could give her, and more than you could give her, if you were honest.Â
Now, one of the many things The Fantastic Four contributed to the world were their academic programs. Opportunities, grants, financial aid, internships were all part of the things someone could earn through them. Of course, you had to be brave enough to even apply in the first place, and compete with millions of âexceptionalâ applicants across the globe.Â
You had once been brave enough to, and felt like you won the lottery when it landed you an internship withâŚthem.
We all know how that story went. In the end, you lost the game of chances. But maybe Kate would play her cards better. So one day, pushing past your fears and your own trauma, you talked to her about the program that changed your life many moons ago.Â
âHave you ever thought about applying to the Fantastic Four First Steps Program?â
Her head snapped up from her notebook, eyes wide. âMe? No way. I meanâŚthatâs for geniuses, right? Not many people get in, only the people from the big cities.â
You smiled softly, even though your chest ached at the name. Fantastic Four. You hadnât said it out loud in years; it was exiled from your vocabulary the way theyâd exiled you. You never thought youâd send another person into that world ever again, but your experiences shouldnât tarnish the ones others could have. So, even if the words tasted bitter in your mouth, you forced yourself to go on.Â
âKate, that program was built for minds like yours, no matter where you apply from. I seriously think you could get in, I wouldnât tell you if I didnât.â
She hesitated; she had heard of other people from the college applying, but she thought they were crazy for even considering it, since no one from there ever got accepted. âWell, butâŚeven if I could, which would be crazyâŚwould I even belong in places like that?â
God, how many times had you asked yourself the same thing?
âListen to me. You belong anywhere your brain can take you. And if youâre worried about the application, Iâll help you, I know what it takes to get in. You donât have to do it alone.â You reassured, and after some consideration, she finally nodded.
You let out the part âbecause once, I was inâ. Because once, those halls were your home. Because once, your whole life had unraveled on the top floor of that tower. But that was a long time ago, and you were starting to live for the hope of it all once again.Â
Maybe life would be kinder to her the way it couldnât be with you.Â
So you both worked on her application right away. Crafted it perfectly. It wasnât a hard task, since she was brilliant and her scores backed her up. You just helped her polish everything, keeping your name out of it, and soon her file was mailed to New York.Â
It's been a long time
And seeing the shape of your name
Still spells out pain
October.
Johnny had been sent to represent the family at the Fantastic Four First Steps Program Showcase. Where dozens of students made a presentation on the projects theyâd been working on since they got into the program.Â
He arrived just in time, wearing a leather jacket over a fancy button down, and the most inappropriate pair of tight pants he found that day.Â
âFamily representation, Johnny." Sue had said that morning, shoving the itinerary into his hands. âBehave, pay attention, and ask questions.âÂ
And he tried, he really didâŚat first.Â
But by hour two, saying he was bored wasnât even enough. He still clapped when everyone else clapped, smiled when a camera panned at him, even threw a wink or two when someone in the audience managed to get his attention.Â
He just had to hold on for another half an hour. Then he could sneak out, text Sue âgreat event!â and pretend heâd been deeply moved by the future of scientific innovation.
He wasnât even looking at the stage when the next student walked up. Kate Bishop, the host announced. Another young person with a bright future and a nervous smile. Johnny didnât even notice the accent in her voice or the way her hands trembled holding the slide pointer to the huge screen behind her. His gaze was fixed on the watch on his wrist, until her presentation came to an end.Â
ââŚand I wouldnât even be here today if it werenât for my mentor, my professor back home,â Kate was saying. âShe pushed me to apply, even when I didnât think I could make it.â
Johnny looked up absentmindedly, he was ready to clap and give a thumbs up as if he heard the whole thing, but his hands stopped midair when he saw the slide change.Â
There you were. On the screen.
Standing in a college lab, radiant as ever, the sunlight from the big windows pouring over your shoulder. The girl on stage was smiling next to you, her head tilted slightly in your direction. Your hand rested on her project model. You looked proud, happy, alive.
You. It was you.
Johnny couldn't clap, smile, or even breathe. He forgot where he was, forgot the rows of interns, the attention from the audience, the cameras pointed at him. The entire world narrowed to that glowing projection of you.
He hadnât seen you in six years. Not in memories that didnât hurt. Not even in photographs because Sue had locked them away in your room. His heart started to race, too fast, too painful. He felt it everywhere, in the edge of his ribs, in his throat, his ears.
All he could see was your smile frozen on that screen. The same smile that used to undo him every single day.
âThe project began with her, back home in Georgia. She taught me that even if people donât believe in you, you have to believe in the impact youâll leave behind.â
Johnny squinted, trying to read the caption under the picture.
Professor Spencer and student Kate Bishop. Thomasville, Georgia.Â
Spencer. Jonathan Lowell Spencer Storm.
You took his name. His second surname.
Youâd vanished, built a life, a reputation. And you chose somewhere quieter, smaller, far from him, far from the city that ruined you. You built yourself back up, became a new person, and still took his name.
But Johnny didnât have time to spiral, because for the first time in six years, he didnât just have a ghost, he had a trail. He had a location now.Â
Thomasville, Georgia.
He had to find you.
Johnny left the conference building in a blaze of golden fire, without even saying goodbye to anyone, and went back to the Tower.
He stumbled into his room, slamming the door behind him, the rush of adrenaline burning through his shaking hands. He went straight to his nightstand, pulling out the last piece of you he kept, the only one Sue couldn't take away from him because heâd hid it.
Your watch.
He paced the length of his room, the watch clutched tight in his hand, muttering under his breath like that would help calm the storm inside him.
âSix years,â he whispered. âSix years and I finally found you.â
He pressed his palms against his face, but in the middle of his frenzy, the watch slipped from his grasp. It clattered to the floor with a sharp crack, metal case popping open, tiny pieces scattering over his carpet.Â
âFuckâŚâ
He dropped to his knees, scooping the pieces up, but stopped over something that didnât look like it belonged there. He picked it up carefully, staring at a tiny silver chip, glinting under the light coming from the large windows. It didnât have the blue number four Reed stamped everything with.Â
What the hellâŚ
He scooped the rest of the pieces from your watch, and set them on his bed. Then, without even giving it a second thought, he took off his own watch and closed his eyes as he slammed it against the floor. The casing burst open just like yours, gears and metal scattering on the floor. But all he saw were pieces that were meant to be there, stamped with the tiniest four emblem. No weird chip.Â
âNo, no, noâŚâ He shook his head, looking all around the carpet to see if he missed it coming out of his watch. But he found nothing.Â
He needed answers now.
Johnny didnât remember running through the halls. His chest burned, and his vision blurred. By the time he burst into Reedâs lab, he was gasping, eyes wet, the small chip clutched safely in his hand.Â
âReedâReed, I need you to look at this!âÂ
Sue jumped in her spot, and sat up straighter from where she was leaning over some papers. Reed looked up from his work, brows furrowing at Johnny sprinting toward him.Â
âWerenât you at the education summit?â Reed asked, just as Johnny set the chip in front of him.
âI left early.â Johnny shook his head quickly, catching his breath. âThis is more important. You need to analyze this. Now.âÂ
Reed glared at him for a few seconds, but when he noticed the desperation behind Johnnyâs pleading eyes, he reached for the chip with a tweezer. Johnny began pacing, raking his hands through his hair, breathing uneven as Reed studied the component carefully.Â
âAre you okay?â Sue finally dared to ask, but Johnny didnât answer.
He turned to Reed. âWell?â He demanded. âItâs not from here, is it?â
Reed ignored him, and set the chip under his scanner. A pulse of blue light ran over it, as Reed pressed keys, analyzing its composition, code structures, searching for anything familiar. When the machine was finally done with the results, Reed leaned back.
âThis isnât ours.â He announced, and Johnny froze in his pacing. âThis is advanced nano technology. âÂ
âJohnny, where did you even find that?â Sue asked, but was ignored once again by her brother.Â
âAre you completely sure it isn't ours?â He pressed.Â
âIt is not. I am years away from implementing it on our equipment. Iâm afraid I donât have the capability of building something like this hereâŚyet.â
Johnny just stood in silence, his eyes fixed on the chip glowing faintly under the lab lights.Â
âThe chipâŚit was in her watch. The one we got the information from when we threw her out.â He explained, quiet anger threaded in every word. âThe one she begged us to believe was glitching.â
Sue and Reed exchanged a wide eyed look, they knew exactly who he was talking about. Sue got up to put a hand on Johnnyâs shoulder, but he turned away.Â
âJohnnyâŚâ
He slammed his hands against the counter, as tears burned the back of his eyes. âShe told us. She told us something was wrong, and we didnât listen. We justâwe believed the files instead of her.â
Reedâs expression hardened as he looked back at the chip. His mind piecing everything together. âNano technology is extremely dangerous. Someone must have embedded it on her device when she was out in the city, stole her information and then transferred the breach into it to cover their tracks. To make it look like the leak came from her.â
âOh my god,â Sue gasped, covering her mouth with her hand.
âThisâŚthis could have been planted on any of our watches. But whoever did this chose hers.â Reed added.Â
âBecause she wasnât blood.â Sue shook her head.Â
âBecause she wasnât officially one of us, which would make it more believable to us.âÂ
Johnny turned furious toward Reed when he heard that. âShe was part of the family! At least back then she was. Donât you dare imply she wasnât.â
âJohnny, Iâm not implying anything. Iâm just trying to reason on how this happenedââÂ
âWe let her take the fall, thatâs what happened! You let me believe it was her, when she was innocent!â Johnny snapped, pointing accusingly at him. Reed opened his mouth to argue, but Johnny didnât even let him speak. âHow did that chip get past you? You got all the information of the breach from her watch. How come you didnât see that?â
Thatâs when Sue decided to step in. âJohnny, we had no idea. None of us did. There was so much evidence, you saw it.â She reached out, her hand hovering near his arm. âWe can only hope to forgive ourselves for believingââ
âForgive ourselves?â Before she could reach him he recoiled, staggering back offended. âHow can I forgive myself? Tell me that, Sue. How can I fucking forgive myself?â His voice cracked.Â
That was the moment Johnny couldnât hold it in anymore. He leaned over the counter, palms supporting him as his eyes drowned in tears with the heartbreaking realization that it wasnât you. It had never been you.
And he found that out six years late.
Six years of feeling guilty for not hating you. Six years of burying you. Of forcing himself to believe that you were the one who had cut them open, who had put Franklin at risk, who had taken everything they built and sold it out. All those years, all that evidence, the betrayal theyâd carved into your name, was a lie. Someone had planted it. Someone had turned the watch he gave you into a weapon against you.Â
And he believed it.Â
He thought he knew pain before, the loss of his mother, the terrifying day that changed his life on that space mission. But this was a different kind of pain. Because those other things he could have never foreseen, or prevented. But this? He didnât keep you safe, didnât protect you, just let you take the blame.
And he could never undo what heâd done to you. This was a fire he ignited himself, a fire heâd let consume you.Â
Sue walked over to him, her face pale at the sight of endless tears streaking down her brotherâs cheeks. She placed a hand on his shoulder hesitantly, expecting to be rejected once again, but instead stumbled backwards when Johnny turned around and wrapped his arms around her, sobbing into her shoulder. Sueâs eyes swelled with tears too as her brother cried uncontrollably, clinging to her for dear life.
She let him get it all out, one arm hugging him tightly and the other lifted to stroke his hair, just like when he was a kid. Reed just watched in silence, guilt sinking deep into his bones with every sob that echoed in the lab. Johnny was right. He shouldâve seen it, he shouldâve given you the benefit of the doubt instead of making them think you would do something like that. He hadn't just failed you, heâd failed his entire family.
Johnnyâs tears finally came to a stop after what felt like forever, his chest heaved with leftover hiccups. He pulled back from Sue, running his hands violently through his soaked face. He sniffed a few times, gaze lowering on the floor, hands on his hips.
âI let her walk out with nothing. I watched her beg me to believe her and Iââ His voice cracked again, but he pressed his palms to his eyes. âI didnât, Sue. I didn't. For six fucking years I let her believe we hated her.â
âJohnny, we canât change the past.â Her voice softened, she wiped her own tears with a napkin Reed pulled out from his shirt. âAll we have is the nowââ
âNow? Now sheâs in some small town, working in a community college when she shouldâve had the world with us. We stole her future from her.â
That made Reedâs head snap up. âWaitâyou know where she is?âÂ
âJohnny, you found her?â Sue asked, just as surprised.Â
Johnny nodded, sighing. âI saw herânot in person. This girl from the program, Kate, showed a picture of her in her presentation today. Said she was her professor at the community college back home.â He sniffed as he forced himself to go on. âIn Thomasville. A town in Georgia, sheâs there.â
Sue stepped closer, her arms crossed in her chest. âThen we have to fix it.â
She got startled by Johnnyâs bitter laughter. âFix it? How the hell do you fix six years? How do you fix letting someone you love think you hated them?â He shook his head. âI love her, I never stopped. And now I donât even know if sheâd even look at me, let alone forgive me.â
Reed sighed, walking over to Johnny. He placed a firm hand on his shoulder, and spoke to him the way he did when Johnny was younger. âMaybe itâs not about forgiveness, Johnny. Maybe itâs about the truth. About giving her back what was stolen.â He looked over to the chip, regret flickering through his calm voice.Â
âSo now we try. It doesn't matter if itâs too late.â Sue added. âAnd it has to be you. It doesn't matter if she slams the door in your face. You try, Johnny, you have to.â
Reed nodded. âWe canât undo what we did. But we can stop letting her carry it alone.â
Johnny stood there, comforted by his sister whoâd always been his mother figure, and Reed who, no matter how much they bickered everyday, had also always been there for him in ways only a father could.Â
He didnât know if it was possible, he didnât know what came next. But he knew he had to try.Â
He was coming to get you.Â
Guilty, guilty, reaching out across the sea
That you put between you and me
Thomasville, Georgia, was quiet that sunny Sunday morning.
Church bells rang in the distance, families walked out of diners with paper bags of pancakes, the people on the streets moving at that slow pace that belonged to small towns.
Johnny Storm had never felt more out of place.
He couldâve flown there. Part of him wanted to, he loved traveling in that fast, fiery streak across the sky. But he couldnât risk it. If the news caught him flying in some random town instead of New York and you saw it, you might vanish before he ever got close, and he couldnât lose you again. So he flew into the nearest big city instead, rented a shiny black pickup truck that in his head looked appropriate for his trip, and drove for hours to your town across red, yellow and orange trees with the windows down, letting the autumn air cool down the heat gnawing inside him.Â
He hadn't been able to find your address on public records, so he chose to start by the community college first. The campus was almost empty that Sunday, only a few students lingered by the library steps. He stepped down his huge pickup with sunglasses on, the less flashy pair he owned, and a cap to cover his distinct blond hair. Johnny kept his head down, hands stuffed in his jacket pockets, slipping past unnoticed.Â
The directory board near the main entrance gave him what he needed. Your office number. He dodged a custodian pushing a cart, and ducked past a pair of students glued to their books. His heart pounded louder with every turn until finally, he found it.
The office.
The door was unlocked, strangely enough since there was no one inside. But when he stepped in, he understood why. The space wasâŚbare. If your name wasnât on the door, he would've thought no one worked there. He saw a desk, a neat stack of papers on it, and a clean chalkboard. No photos. No plants. No little trinkets to claim the space as yours.
Johnny closed the door softly behind him, his chest aching as his eyes traced the emptiness. There was no warmth, no spark of you. It was efficient, practical, almostâŚdetached. Like you could walk away without leaving a trace. And Johnny realized, with a sick twist of his stomach, that your trauma had a shape. Four walls, stripped bare, a life lived like you might vanish again tomorrow.
âYou never let yourself settle,â Johnny whispered to the empty room.
Because six years ago, they had made you leave your home with nothing. Because you had learned the hard way that belonging could be ripped away overnight. The guilt pressed down harder on his chest, almost suffocating. Johnny shoved those feelings away, he was on a mission to try to fix all of that.Â
He rounded your desk, and checked the papers on it first. Faculty memos, notes, nothing relevant. His hands went through the drawers, he found more notes, a few bags of snacks, and finally, a folded bill, with your address printed clear at the top.
âBingo,â he grinned.Â
He shoved it in his pocket, then tugged at the next drawer but nothing happened, it was locked. He grinned wider, because if there was anything Johnny Storm liked, was sticking up his nose where he shouldn't. And heâd known you long enough to remember you used to hide things in plain sight. All he had to do was scan the desk until he found a small key tucked inside a pencil holder.Â
Typical.
At first, it was nothing remarkable. Just research notes, class grades, tests drafts. But then his hand found envelopes tucked deeper. He pulled them out, and found letters with your handwriting, but no stamps, no addresses. Letters that were never meant to be sent. But his brow furrowed when he noticed his name on the first one.
My Johnny.
He flipped to the next.Â
Dear Johnny.
Then the next.
Johnny.
And then the last one.Â
For him.
You wrote to him, even when there was no hope, even when he was never going to read them. He clutched the envelopes, his heart fracturing when he realized he went from being called yours to someone you couldn't name anymore, not even on paper.Â
He took a deep breath, ready to read what the first one said, but before he could take out the folded letter out of the envelope, the doorknob rattled.
He didnât even have time to panic. He shut the drawer in a rush, and dropped down to his knees with the stack of the envelopes clutched tightly against his chest, crawling under the desk just as the door creaked open. The sound of heavy footsteps filled the room. Someone was walking up to the desk. Was it you?Â
Oh my God, oh my God, oh my Godâ
âYeah, Iâm in your office now,â a manâs voice snapped him out of his thoughts. âWhereâs that document you said you needed?â
Johnnyâs eyes went wide. That man seemed to be on the phone. With you. He couldnât make out clearly what you were saying, not from where he crouched, but the knowledge that you were there, so close, closer than youâd been in six years, nearly made him throw up.Â
That, and also the fact that someone was on the other side of the desk and if they decided to round it, they would find the Human Torch hiding like a fucking thief.
The man hummed at whatever your response was, rifling through the stack of papers on top of the desk until he found it. âAh, here. You owe me, Professor.â He chuckled.Â
And then, faint but unmistakable, Johnny heard your laugh carrying from the other side of the line. God, heâd forgotten what it sounded like. Six years apart, and the first time he heard your laugh again, it wasnât for him.
âLucky for you, I was passing by campus today.â He said. Then his voice shifted, to a more playful tone Johnny knew too well. âBy the wayâŚhave you thought about that coffee yet?â
Johnny stiffened under the desk. The man had an ease to him, the kind of thing that wasnât forced. He wasnât pushing, justâŚtrying. He leaned closer so he could hear what you said to that. And thatâs when he heard it again, your laugh. Like he was the funniest man alive, and it twisted Johnnyâs insides.Â
âJohn, Iâm always flattered with the offer.â
John? Another John?
Jealousy wasn't something Johnny had felt in a long time. But at that moment, a million questions popped in his head in a matter of seconds.Â
Who was he? How did you know him? Why did you ask for his help? Why were you laughing so much? Was he blond too? What car did he driveâ
âBut you know Iâm busy, so Iâm going toââ
â...Reject me, I know, I know.â John finished your sentence, and laughed under his breath, almost like he was expecting it. Johnny had to cover his mouth before he sighed in relief. âIâm used to it. But it's always worth a try, though.â
Always??
Before Johnny could lose it under that desk, it seemed like this âJohnâ was finally about to leave, but stopped midway. âThis may sound weird, but your office feels tooâŚwarm. I know itâs autumn, but how much do you crank up the heating?â He snorted, looking around the room.
Johnny cursed in his head. He hadn't even realized his temperature had risen significantly with all the jealousy. Not that he would ever admit it out loud, though.
âHuh, yeah, thatâs weird. I always turn it off when Iâm not there. Must be your imagination.â You joked.
âOr your voice,â John flirted. If you could even call that flirting, in Johnnyâs very humble opinion. He grimaced, and thankfully, you protested too. âAlright, alright sorry. Let me get this to you and Iâll be out of your way.â He joked.Â
âOkayâŚthank you, Captain Walker.âÂ
Captain Walker? Why did that sound flirty? Why did âJohnâ laugh at that? Was it an inner joke? Was he an actual captain?
Johnny had to see this man right now.
But before he could spiral any further and create scenarios in his head, the line clicked off. He held his breath, waiting for the man to leave. Finally, the footsteps shifted toward the door, and Johnny couldnât stop himself. He tucked the four envelopes on the inside of his jacket, and then he lifted himself up just enough to peek over the desk.Â
He couldnât see his face as he walked away, but with the way he carried himself, he was probably handsome. His hair was darker than Johnnyâs but still blond, most likely with the same blue eyes to match. Taller, broader, the kind of frame that filled a doorway without trying. He wore a dark red flannel shirt rolled at the sleeves, worn jeans, and brown cowboy boots. The outfit screamed southern man on a Sunday.
Finally, the guy left the office, leaving him alone again.
Johnny shouldâve been glad youâd turned him down, at least for a moment he was. The thought that youâd smiled politely, laughed softly, and still said no soothed the part of him that was still in love with you.
The guy seemed kind, and didn't really come off as a creep. He was a captain, apparently. He sucked at flirting, according to Johnny, but you seemed to laugh genuinely at his attemptsâŚyou seemed comfortable. Now Johnny only knew him from that short interaction, but he felt like the type of guy who looked steady, rootedâŚsafe. The type of man who looked like he belonged there.Â
The type of man you would've said yes to.
But something gnawed at the back of his head. The delusional part of himself thought that maybe youâd rejected that guy because you still remembered him. But then, the darker part of him whispered in his ear that it was actually because of what he did to you, and you couldn't risk another heartbreak.
The same way you didnât seem to get attached to spaces, like your office, maybe you didnât let yourself get attached to people either.
Johnnyâs heart pounded in his chest as he drove to your home. He didnât really have a planâŚor words. What could he say after six years? What could possibly fit into a sentence when what he did to you should be a lifetime of apologies?
All he knew was that he had to see you.Â
When he finally turned down your street, the world seemed to slow. It was a beautiful place, for sure. Orange leaves fell from the trees lining up the street, landing in the gardens of the houses. It was quiet around, yet it looked so lived in. Johnny parked a few houses down, and he sat there for a long moment, just staring at his shaking hands. He finally gathered the courage to get out of the car, and looked for the house with the same number he found in the bill he got from your office. He finally found it, and he stood right in front of it.Â
Your home.
A single story painted in soft baby blue with a beautiful porch. A little rocking white bench sat out front, and plants that looked cared for lined the steps in mismatched pots.Â
You built this, he thought. Without us. Without me.
Each step to the porch felt heavier, like he was walking straight into a storm. He ran his hand over the wooden railing, steadying himself, letting the softness of the blue paint calm him down. He paused at the door, looking down at the doormat that said Welcome!Â
He chuckled nervously under his breath, but something in the corner of his eye caught his attention. Right by the door, there were two pairs of rainboots. One black, the other shiny red. It would've been a normal thing, if it wasn't for the fact that the red ones looked too small to belong to you. Johnny tilted his head, but the nerves running through his body didnât really let him think clearly. So he just shrugged it off. Maybe some kid from the neighbors had left them there. It seemed like the type of neighborhood where everyone knew everyone and everyone shared everything.Â
He took one last deep breath, and finally knocked on your door.Â
The time is near
What would he do if he found us out?
He's gonna burn this house to the ground
The knock that would change your life echoed through the quiet of the house. You finished slipping your sports shoes on, frowning at the sound. Sunday afternoons were calm, Leo was already at the neighborâs so you didn't get interrupted as you got ready for your shift at the bar. You werenât expecting anyone.
And when you opened the creaky wood door, you certainly werenât expecting Johnny Storm to be standing right outside the mesh screen.
It felt like a bucket of ice water just got dumped on you.Â
The last rays of golden sunlight hit him perfectly, catching on that familiar blonde hair you saw everyday on a smaller version of him. Your eyes went over the sharp lines of his face, ones you had spent years trying to erase from your memory. It was him, without a doubt. A few years older. Real. But somehow missing that boyish spark you were so used to seeing on him.
For a moment you didnât move, you didnât breathe, you couldnât even if you tried. It felt like the air had been stolen right out of your lungs.
And Johnny? He was no different. Because even though he knew he was seeing you that day, he wasnât prepared for this version of you. The one whose eyes told him you were still haunted by everything he had taken away from you. And you were so real, not a memory, not a brief visit in his dreams, not a picture on a presentation yet he looked at you like heâd seen a ghost.
Because thatâs what you were, his ghost, his lost six years.
The mesh door separated you like a thin wall, but the weight of lost time pressed through it. Your face was stunned, eyes wide like you were seeing death itself. Because thatâs what he was to you.
But this time what died didnât stay dead, and it was standing on your porch, right in front of you.Â
The pain of it all hit you immediately, like it never left. You remembered the way heâd said everything all those years ago, his voice harsh and determined. Words that had followed you through every lonely night, every rock of your babyâs cradle, every time you told yourself youâd never trust again.
And now he dared to show up at the house you built with the bricks they threw at you.
Your heart rushed, panic replacing your anger. The only thought racing in your head was Leo. He came for Leo. He found you somehow, and now he was going to take your son away.
âJâŚâ Your voice broke trying to say his name; it had been buried in your throat for years. But saying it felt wrong, unnatural, like dragging open an old wound.Â
His own breath hitched, his eyes getting glassy before he could stop them. âGodâŚâ He whispered. âItâs you. Itâs really you.â
For a moment, neither of you moved. Neither of you spoke. You stared at him as if he might vanish like he always did in your dreams. He would be doing you a favor anyways, youâd much rather be safe and stranded, than giving someone the chance to hurt you again.Â
Your fingers gripped the edge of the doorframe to ground you, and the words tumbled out before you could stop them, sharp and defensive.Â
âWhat are you doing here?â
Johnny flinched, just slightly, like the sound of your voice had cut him. He swallowed hard, trying to steady his breathing.Â
âIâve been looking for you,â he said softly. âFor a long time.â
Your stomach twisted. Panic and fury knotted together in your chest, and you shook your head. âYou shouldnât have.â
He took a small step closer, seeing the fire in your eyes, yet still he dared to ask. âCan IâŚcome in? Please. We need to talk.â
âI donât think you should.â The answer came firm, unhesitant.Â
The firmness in your voice startled even you. His face fell, taken aback, like he hadnât expected you to stand so solid, to draw a line in the sand. Six years ago, youâd begged. Six years ago, youâd folded under the weight of their disbelief.
But not anymore.
Johnny cleared his throat, his voice breaking as he tried again. âJustâjust a conversation. I swear. We really need to talk.â
For a moment, you wanted to shut the door. To bolt it and keep the small, safe world youâd built intact. But his eyesâŚalways those eyes. Wide, glassy, unguarded. And against every instinct, against every scar, you found yourself unlatching the mesh door. It creaked open, and you stepped aside.
Johnny crossed the threshold like he was walking into another world.
The door clicked shut behind you, leaving him standing awkwardly in the small living room. Johnnyâs eyes darted everywhere at once, taking it all in. The scent of lemon freshness, the warmth of afternoon light across your light cream walls, the faint clutter of everyday life, papers stacked on the table, faint scuff marks on the wooden floor, a blanket folded neatly on the couch. It wasnât the Baxter Building. It wasnât glass and striking colors and grandeur. It was a home. Your home.
And Johnny Storm stood in the middle of it, stunned, feeling like he had no right to breathe the same air.
âYou can uhâŚsit,â you said quietly, gesturing to the couch near the door, trying to keep him from looking closer and finding something that could hint at a child living in the house.Â
He obeyed without question, lowering himself onto the cushions. They sank beneath his weight, too soft, too comfortable. Nothing like the Baxter couches, firm, pristine. This one probably carried the wear and tear of movie nights and lazy weekends. He wasnât sure the last time he had something like that. Still, no matter how comfy, Johnny sat stiffly, hands clasped trying not to fidget.
You hovered nearby, nervous, shifting your weight from one foot to the other. âDo youâŚwant something to drink?â
For a second, he softened. The offer was familiar, like the ghost of old times when youâd fuss over whether he wanted a soda or coffee before turning into your assistant for long nights in the lab. His lips twitched, almost a smile, but the nerves won out.
âNo. Iâm fine.â He said, voice awkward.
You crossed your arms, finally steadying yourself enough to meet his gaze. âThen say what you came to say. I donât really have much time.â
He frowned. âWhat do you mean?â
âI have to go to work.â
He blinked, caught off guard. âWork? On a Sunday night? Classes arenâtââ
âItâs not college. I have something else on the weekends.â You didnât elaborate further, you didnât need to.
Something in his chest sank, knowing you had another job, a side job. You, who once had the whole future wide open in the palm of your hand, who got everything promised when you were selected to work on Reedâs lab, becoming one of them, now pulling late shifts somewhere just to make ends meet.
Johnny swallowed the lump in his throat, understanding without you spelling it out. You needed the income. The silence stretched until it strangled him, until he couldnât keep those words inside anymore.Â
âIâm sorry,â he blurted, then leaned forward, voice already breaking. âIâm so goddamn sorry for everything. For not believing you. For letting you walk out of that tower like you were nothing when you wereâwhen you were everything. I know it wasnât you. I know now.â
WordsâŚhow little they mean, when theyâre a little too late.Â
Johnny dragged a shaking hand down his face when you just blinked at him. âI found the root of the leakâŚsome nano chip that was hidden inside your watch. I know you told usâyou said it was glitching, that it wasnât you. Someone planted it there, got your information and used you to cover their tracks. And weââ He stopped for a moment to breathe, to steady his voice. âWe let them. We handed you over without a fight. IâI did.â
Hearing Johnny say those words shouldâve made you jump into his arms and kiss the tears away. Shouldâve shattered you into granting him the sweet light of your forgiveness. Six years ago, you would have. Six years ago, you would have fallen to your knees just to hear them, wouldâve clung to the smallest scrap of his belief.
It was the apology you had begged for in the dark, the one you had prayed might come. For years, you had whispered those words into your pillow, written them down in letters addressed to the fire, waited for the day he would arrive and tell you what you already knew.
But that day never came.
Not until the years had worn the edge off the pain. Not until youâd forced yourself to move forward. For your sakeâŚfor Leoâs. Still, that didnât make it any easier for you.Â
You could see it in himâŚthe wreckage. His eyes wet, voice cracked with regret, chest rising and falling too fast. He was crushed under the same weight youâd carried alone for so long. As his chest ached with the same heartbreak yours once did, you stood still, lips sealed tight, arms crossed to protect yourself.Â
That silence killed Johnny. And he had no one else to blame but himself.Â
âI shouldâve believed you.â His last choked apology came in a whisper, barely audible.Â
Johnny stood up from the couch, but didnât get closer. His fire buzzed under his skin, begging to flare to burn the ache down, but he forced it off. The last thing he wanted was to scorch this place, your place, the home you had built from the ashes heâd left you in.
You swallowed hard when he did, but you said nothing. You didnât uncross your arms. Didnât breakâŚnot yet.Â
âPlease,â he begged. âDonât just look at me like that.â
When you said nothing, again, he staggered back a step, his hands dropping to his sides like he was keeping himself from reaching for you.Â
âGod, I deserve this,â he mumbled, more to himself. His eyes glistened, fixated on some mark on the floor. âSix years. Iââ His throat closed, he had to force his voice out. âSix fucking years, and you wonât even say my name.â
No. You couldnât.Â
âI wouldâve died to hear those words back then.â
His head snapped up. The sound of your voice, steady but laced with ache, tore through him like fire.
You shook your head, a bitter laugh made its way out. âI waitedâŚGod, I waited. For you to reach out, for any of you to show up at my door and say you didnât believe it, that you hadnât given up on me. But nothing came.â
Johnnyâs lips parted, eyes wide, but this time it was him reeling in silence.
âI wrote letters,â you whispered, arms still crossed. âLetters addressed to no one. Words I knew youâd never readâŚjust so I could breathe. Just so I could put the pain somewhere.â
Tears clouded Johnnyâs eyes, he could almost feel the papers in your hands, the ghost of your handwriting spelling his name. My Johnny. Dear Johnny. For him.Â
The last one when you couldnât even withstand the thought of his name anymore.Â
âAnd stillâŚI couldnât make it go away by making you the villain. I triedâbelieve me I did, because out of all of them I expected you to be the one to stand by me. But you justââ Your voice faltered when tears finally found their way out of your eyes. âYou didnât believe me.â
The little sobs you tried to muffle with your hand were unbearable for him. For a moment, he looked like he might collapse under the weight of your words, but he pushed through. He had to make you understand his side of the story.Â
âI didnât give up on you, not at first.â He said, words coming out desperate. âI studied itâŚin secret. Every night, I went over the reports, the logs, everything I could get my hands on. I couldnâtâGod, I wouldnât believe it. Not you. Not the girl who lived in the tower with us, who was family, who wasâŚwho was everything to me.â He scrubbed a hand over his face, pacing once before turning back toward you. âBut the evidence was there, every file, every trace led back to things only you would know, and I was too blind to see past that. But all this timeââ He reached into his jacket, fingers brushing the broken edges of your old watch. âIt was sitting on my nightstandâŚthe proofâthat fucking chip inside your watch. It was right there all alongâŚand I didnât see it until six years too late.â
The revelation that he kept your watch on his nightstand shouldnât have hurt as much as it did. Heâd kept a piece of you close to himâŚnext to him. Yet still, he decided you werenât worth the benefit of the doubt.Â
âThe problem,â you said dryly, âis that you needed the evidence at all. If youâd just listened to meââ Your voice cracked, but you forced yourself to hold his gaze. âIf youâd just trusted me back then, everything would be different today.â
âI wanted to,â he rasped, too unsteady, too quickly. âGod, I wanted to believe you more than anything. But I didnât know how. I didnât know how to choose my heart over proof and I hate myself for thatâŚIâm sorry, Iâm so fucking sorry.â
You stared at him for a moment, then shook your head. âYouâre asking for something I canât give you now,â you whispered. âI donât know if I ever can.â
âIâll take it.â He whispered back, wiping the tears away with the back of his sleeve. âWhatever youâll give me, Iâll take it. I just needed you to know I was sorry. That I was wrong.â
Silence stretched, until you finally forced yourself to ask what youâve been dying to know since you saw him at your doorstep, your arms tightening across your chest.Â
âHow didâŚhow did you even find me?â
Your stomach twisted, braced for the answer you feared most. That he wasnât here for you at all. That the apology was just some excuse. That he was here to rip Leo from your arms, to take the only piece of safety you had left.
âThrough one of your studentsâŚKate. She showed a photo at a presentation. You were thereâŚnext to her.â He explained. âI thought Iâd gone insane. I thought I was seeing ghosts. But it was you.â
Kate.
Shit.
You swallowed hard. It had been you whoâd told her to apply, whoâd guided her steps closer to the program you shouldâve kept far away from. You had been so careful with her application, keeping your name out of it, yet it was a variable you couldn't control that made your face find its way back to him.Â
It still felt like your fault.Â
The walls of the house suddenly felt smaller, the air heavier, warmer but not in a good way. Suffocating. For six years youâd kept yourself invisible, careful to erase every trace, and now youâd been foundâŚbecause of your own slip.
Johnny saw the realization hit your features. Your frantic eyes told him how much you didnât want to be found, how he was considered a danger to the little world you lived in now, and it ripped his heart more. He took a shaky step back, his hands half raised like he needed to show he wasnât a threat.Â
âGod, I knew it. After everything I did, after what we put you through, of course you donât want me hereâŚand you donât owe me anything, but Iâll take whatever scraps youâll give me. Justââ He ran his hands through his already messy hair. ââŚJust donât be afraid of me.â
You just stood there, letting your gaze drift over him. His posture a little heavier, his face more lined, but still so unmistakably Johnny Storm. Still handsome in that way that made your stomach twistâŚlike seeing an ex.Â
And the resemblanceâŚGod. It was astounding.
Your throat tightened as your eyes flicked from his face to the memory of your sonâs. The same blond hair, the same damn smile when he was feeling mischievous. Leo was a mirror of him, down to quirks he didnât even know he shared.
You knew if Johnny looked too long into your eyes, he might see the fear was not for you, but for Leo. So you forced yourself to blink, to pull the thought back into the cage where it belonged. Johnny didnât know. Couldnât know.Â
âIâm not afraid of you,â you said at last, steadying your voice. âItâs justâŚshocking. Seeing you after all these years.âÂ
âYeahâŚfeels the same way for me.â
For a moment, Johnny let himself breathe, let himself believe just being there with you was enough, that heâd gotten farther than he thought he would. He sat back down on the couch, trying to steady himself from the weight of it all, but the silence stretched, and something gnawed at him. A pang in his chest, a whisper at the back of his mind.
Something was missing.
He tore his gaze from you, eyes drifting quickly across the place like answers might be hiding in the corners. It wasnât like the tower, not polished, not curated. This house showed it was lived in. The open small kitchen was the room that first caught his eye. On the breakfast counter that faced the living room, three different kinds of cereal sat half open. A small wooden stool sat beneath the sink on the counter by the window, and in the drying rack, a mug and an orange plastic cup with a built-in straw sat side by side. A metal lunchbox was nearby, plain, blue, nothing flashy, but it didnât quite fit as yours alone.
Thatâs when he remembered the tiny boots at the entrance. Everything lined up too perfectly, too unmistakable. Johnny came to the conclusion that someone else shared this space with you. Someone with smaller steps, different routines than a normal personâŚit was a familyâs home, without a doubt. Johnnyâs chest tightened, and his eyes darted again, searching for just one more clueâŚ
And then he saw it.
By the small tv center, half hidden in the corner, a toy box. Brightly painted, clearly well loved by the scratches on it. From the top poked the unmistakable shape of a toy car, the front wheels worn from too many races across the floor. His eyes widened, locked on the toy poking out, his entire body going still.
You followed his line of sight, dread flooding through your body. Heâd seen it.
The toy. The truth. And you knew in that second there was no taking it back.
Johnnyâs gaze stayed fixed on the little car. He didnât say it right awayâŚhe couldnât. The truth pressed the back of his throat, suffocating, but if he spoke it aloud, it would be real. So instead, he gaslighted himself for a little longer, forcing his voice to come out.
âDidnât know you had a nephew,â he said, nodding faintly toward the corner. âGuess I missed a lot.â
It was subtle, almost casual, not accusatory. But you could hear the crack beneath the words, the real intention under his tone. He was pretending not to know. Pretending, maybe for both your sakes.
You hesitated, lips parting before closing again, thinking you could lie. You could nod and let him believe it, let the moment slip away. But his eyesâŚGod, his eyes were already on you, glistening, waiting for you to tell the truth he couldn't.Â
âItâs not a nephew.â Was all you said.Â
No lie. Not the full truth either.
And what once was a forgotten night of too many drinks between two idiots in love, turned into two strangers, standing inches apart, knowing damn well what that child was.
Johnny pushed up from the couch, his legs unsteady but determined. He couldnât sit any longer, he needed to be closer. To force that truth face to face. But when he stepped closer to you, his eyes caught on something on the corner of his eye.
A wall that led to a hallway, covered in frames. He drifted toward it instinctively, drawn like a moth to flame.
You moved quickly, your hand half reaching for his arm to stop him, his name tumbling out of your lips in desperation. âJohnnyââ
But he pushed past you, and soon was standing there. Right in front of the wall of photographs. Dozens of them. A curated display of moments of a little kid.Â
A newborn in a hospital blanket, tiny fists curled tight. A toddler, grinning wide as frosting smeared his cheeks at a birthday table, a number two on the cake. A four year old, probably, holding up a plant with proud little hands. And the one where he looked the oldest, standing proudly next to an experiment with a âwinnerâ badge at a science fair. It couldâve been that same week for all he knew. And multiple more, across all stages of his little life.
The kidâs face looked back at him like a mirror from the past. His past. Just younger, innocent. Same hair, same smile, same spark. He reached out, fingertips shaking as they hovered over the glass.
All the paths led there. To that house. To that wall. To that smile.
To you.
Johnnyâs mind went to that gala night. That one damn night. Too much champagne, too much fire, laughter and kisses that blurred into a night he could never forget. But it had been just one. One night you'd both decided it was a mistake, an impulse, a result of recklessness.Â
And yet here, before his eyes, was proof of everything that night had left behind.
âGodâŚâ he whispered, barely audible.
An entire childhood he had missed.
Your son.
Hisâ?
Johnnyâs hand lingered on the frame. His own reflection in the glass, overlapping with the kidâs smile, and it felt like a cruel trick. His chest heaved, his head spinning.
âNo,â he said under his breath, shaking his head. âNo, it wasâŚit was just one night.â His voice cracked in denial. âThat gala, that was all it was. Just one night.â
His eyes darted across the wall again. Newborn, toddler, child, and every photo twisted the knife deeper. He staggered back a step, and finally, he forced himself to turn to you, his gaze pinning you to the spot.
âTell me heâs not who I think he is.â He begged. âPlease. Tell me I didnât miss itâtell me I didnât miss the most important part of your lifeââ His voice cracked, devastated, ââof mine.â
The plea rattled the air between you, thick with panic, with grief, with the sharp edge of a truth he couldnât bear to face. His eyes glassy and desperate, burning with fire he couldnât control, the heat searing just beneath his skin. And you couldn't, for the life of you, say anything.Â
âGod, please,â he whispered, his throat closing around the words. âDonât let it be true. Donât tell me Iâve lost all those years I'll never get back. Donât tell me heâsââ
He cut himself off, choking on the last word.
And you knew. You knew the cat was out of the bag. No turning back, no denying it, no hiding Leo in the corners of your little world anymore. His father stood right here, breaking, begging you to undo what couldnât be undone.
Johnny stared at you. Heâd begged, heâd pleaded, heâd prayed youâd deny it. That youâd laugh, shake your head, shove him out the door and tell him he was insane. That you went out and had a child with someone who looked exactly like him as revenge.Â
But you didnât.Â
âIâm sorry, Johnny.â Was all you could say.Â
He blinked the tears away, and with a shaky exhale he finally claimed what was undoubtedly his. âHeâs mine.â
You couldnât even speak. Couldnât force the words out. All you could do was nod, slow, aching, like it was tearing you apart to admit it.
âHeâs my son,â he said, voice breaking again.
His eyes darted back to the wall of photos, all the years heâd missed staring back at him. Six years of a life he shouldâve known. Six years of first steps, first words, laughter, birthdays. Johnny looked like the ground had opened beneath him. Face pale, stunned, his lips parted but no sound came out. Your instincts told you to grab Leo, to run, to keep him safe. But Johnnyâs faceâŚit was wrecked. It wasnât fair for him.
So instead, you grabbed his arm lightly, steadying him, and guided him back toward the couch. He sank into the cushions without resistance, his hands shaking on his knees.
âIâll get you some water,â you whispered.
You set the glass down in front of him, but he didnât touch it, just stared through it like it wasnât there. The shock ran like a chill through his body.Â
Johnny was part of a family that had been torn apart when his mother passed. Every time he thought about having his own, he prayed for something complete. Not broken, not tarnished, notâŚthis. Not a son who didnât know he existed.Â
âWhatâs his name?â
âLeo.â Your voice cracked, so you cleared your throat. ââŚSpencer.â
There it was. Spencer.Â
âWhen was he born?â
âFebruary 18th," you said quietly.
Johnnyâs head snapped up. His head doing the math quicker than he ever thought he could. You must've been around three months when everything went down.Â
âYou knew,â he said, voice accusing now. âYou already knew. Beforeâbefore weâŚâ He trailed off, gathering the strength to continue. âWhy?â He blurted. âWhy didnât you tell us? Tell me?â He shook his head. âIt couldâve changed everything. God, you shouldâve told me.â
You couldn't even look at him, because you had asked yourself that same question a thousand times in the dark. Your hands twisted together, nails biting into your palms as you forced yourself to meet his eyes.Â
âI didnât tell you becauseâŚbecause before that night, we were nothing,â you said. âJust two idiots who got too drunk and crossed a line. You said it yourself, it was just one night. You joked about it.â
The words tasted like lies, because you knew damn well you were in love with him. Still were, no matter how hard you tried to burn it out of yourself. But it was easier to paint it as nothing than to admit how much of you had always been his.
âAnd after what happened? After Reed found that so called evidence, after he told me I had to be gone, after youââ Your voice broke, eyes burning. âAfter you didn't fight for me? I wasnât going to raise my child in a house that didnât hesitate to throw me out like I was nothing. I wasnât going to let my baby live in a place where family turned on me without blinking.â
Johnny just listened, because he didnât have an argument for that.Â
âI wanted him safe,â you mumbled. âSafe in a way I wasnât. And I triedâI swear to God, Johnny, I tried to tell you when I asked to speak to you. But you wrecked me before I ever got the chance. You wouldnât even look at me without that lookâŚlike Iâd betrayed you.â
Your throat closed, but you forced the last words out.
âSo I didnât say anything. Because you didnât deserve it.â
He realized just how much heâd really lost. Not just six years, not just the kid on the wall, but the pieces of you that he never had the courage to claim as his, long before that night. For a heartbeat he sat frozen, but when his hands went to cover his face, he broke.
The sound just ripped out of him, raw, sobbing. His shoulders hunched forward, his body folding in on itself as if he could hide from the truth but he couldnât. Not from this. Not from you.
âGod, Iâm sorry,â he choked. âIâm so fucking sorry. I shouldâveââ He cut himself off, a sob tearing free. âYou were right there, and IâI didnât listen. I didnât believeâI shouldâve fought for you.â Tears streamed hot down his face, his chest heaving. âYou tried. And Iââ His hands dropped uselessly to his lap.âI destroyed you. I destroyed everything.â
Before he could stop himself, his hand reached out to your figure in front of him. His hand hovered in the air, hesitant, fingers almost brushing yours, asking for something he knew he had no right to.
Still, he asked. âPlease. Just let me hold your hand. Justâjust for a second. I donât care if itâs the last time.â
The man who always stood cocky and unshakable in front of the world was reduced to this. Broken, sobbing, begging at your feet for the smallest piece of forgiveness. And in his blue eyes, through the tears, you could see the guy you had loved with all your soul. The guy who had been yoursâŚkind of.
So you let him hold you, just for a moment. Johnnyâs warm hand shook against yours, his fingers curling carefully, like he was afraid youâd pull it back if he held too tight. His breathing evened out, his sobs softening until the room fell heavy again with silence. But then his lashes lifted, his eyes still wet as they flicked toward the hallway.Â
ââŚIs he here? In his room?â
Your whole body stiffened, and he felt it with the way your hand tensed against him.Â
Johnny took a deep breath, thumb brushing your knuckles as though he didnât even realize he was doing it. âI justâŚI need to see him. Please.â
That was when you yanked your hand back, shaking your head profusely. âThatâs not happening.â
Johnny froze, eyebrows furrowing in confusion.Â
âYou canât see him,â you said firmly. âYou canât take him away. Heâs all I have, Johnny. The only thing I have.â
And Johnny sat there stunned, gutted that youâd think that, realizing he wasnât just fighting for your forgiveness anymore, but fighting for the right to see a son he hadnât even touched.
âNo. Godâno. I would never take him from you.â He shook his head, pleading for you to believe him. âI swear on everything I am, I would never do that.â He reassured, pressing a hand to his chest. âBut I need to see him, please. I have to. Heâs mine. Heâs my son.â
âBut heâs my whole world, Johnny. And I canât let anyone risk that.â You shook your head, stepping farther away from him.
Johnny couldnât exactly blame you. He understood where the fear came from, but heâd be damned if he managed to find you and his son only to be told to go back to his life.Â
This was his life now.
âI have a right to see him. To know him. To look at his face and not just through pictures on a wall.â He pressed, his eyes searched yours as you forced distance between you. âIâm his father.â
You had spent years building a wall around you and Leo, years convincing yourself you could keep him safe by keeping the world out, by moving to a small town where the Fantastic Four were nothing but big city superheroes. But now Johnny was sitting here, away from his big city, claiming that word like it was the only thing keeping him alive.
Father.
Johnnyâs lips parted, trying one more time. âIâŚI donât want to take him from you. I just want to see him. Please, Iâm begging you.â
You wiped at your cheeks quickly, forcing yourself to stand taller even as the word father rang in your ears. You drew in a shaky breath, keeping your tone as steady as you could.
âHeâs not here,â you confessed. âMy neighbor takes care of him when Iâm working late shifts at the bar.â
Johnny blinked. The bar. The image of you, the woman who once lived and laughed in the tower, now pouring beer for drunk men on a Sunday, broke him.Â
You glanced at the clock on the wall, your face scowling. âShit.â You reached to grab your jacket from a chair. âIâm so late. Youâll have to wait until tomorrow if you want to see him.â
You stepped past him, toward the door, until his hand closed around your wrist. The warmth of his touch froze you in place.
âI canât wait anymore.â His grip on your wrist was not tight, not forceful, just begging. âIâve already lost so much. Please donât make me lose another day.â
âJohnnyââ
âDonât go.â His voice cracked as his eyes searched yours. âPlease. Donât go.â
âI canât just ditch work,â you snapped, panic rising in your throat. âI need it.â
âIâll figure something out,â he said quickly, desperate. âWhatever it takes, Iâll fix itâIâll cover it. But please. Not tonight. Not when I just found you again.â
The plea broke something in you. His hand on your wrist, his voice hesitant, the way his eyes begged. Your pride told you to yank your wrist back like youâd done before and tell him no, but the whole encounter had taken a toll on you, and you werenât sure you could withstand a shift like that. So you exhaled, then finally gave the smallest nod. You pulled your wrist gently from his hand, not harsh, just needing space to breathe.Â
âI uhâI need to make a call first,â you announced, and he nodded, stepping back so you could walk to the telephone on the wall.
Johnny watched as you gave him your back, and dialed the number with shaky fingers, the line ringing a few times before someone picked up. By the looks of it, it was your boss most likely, from the way you stumbled over a lie about Leo being sick. Johnny flinched when he heard the scolding from the other side of the line as you mumbled apologies for the short time notice.Â
God, he needed to fix all this mess.Â
You set the phone back with a sigh, and turned to him. âIâll bring him home,â you said, then walked closer to him to plead just like heâd done before. âBut you have to promise me you wonât take him away, JohnnyâŚplease. Donât make me regret this.â
He stepped closer, hands raised in surrender. âYou wonât,â he assured. âIâm sorry for leaving you alone to do this by yourself. Iâll never stop being sorry. But I can promise you this, I wonât take him away. Not from his mom. Not from you.â
You nodded, choosing to believe, slipping your jacket on to walk into the cold of the night. âWait here,â you said. âIâll go pick him up from my neighborâs.â
Johnny only nodded, shoulders hunched, his hands lowered and clasped together like he was trying to keep himself from reaching for you again. His eyes followed you to the door, until you slipped away.Â
Youâd forgotten how warm a room became when Johnny was in it. The night air hit you as you stepped outside, crisp and cool, making you shiver. The street was dim, only the soft glow of porch lights guiding your path as you walked to the house across from yours. Your eyes went to the huge fancy pickup truck parked just a few houses down, which had to be Johnnyâs, for sure. You rolled your eyes, of course. Rubbing your arms as you walked, legs moving on autopilot, every voice in your head screaming to scoop Leo up and vanish before it was too late. But it was already too late. Johnny was inside your house. His ridiculous truck outside. Johnny had seen the photos. Johnny knew.
Back at your place, behind the curtains, Johnny couldnât sit still. Heâd told himself he wouldnât move, wouldnât intrude, but his chest was on fire with longing. So he drifted closer to the window, pushing the curtains just enough to peek past the glass.
There you were, on your neighborâs porch, exchanging a few words with a lovely old lady who looked at you worriedly. Johnnyâs breath fogged the glass as he watched you. His heart ached at the sight. You looked so small, so breakable, carrying all of this alone.
You went inside only for a moment, and then you stepped out, cradling a bundle against your chest. The porchlight painted your silhouette in gold, and just beneath it, faint but unmistakable, was the glow of that blonde hair.
Johnny stopped breathing.Â
My God.
He scrambled back from the window, clutching the pearls he didnât have, and set the curtains back in place hoping you hadn't noticed him. By the time you reached your porch, he had forced himself back onto the couch, his hands braced on his knees, trying to look like he hadnât just witnessed his entire world change in an instant.
The door opened with a quiet creak, and there you were. Your arms wrapped protectively around your sonâhis son, head resting on your shoulder, lips parted in soft sleep. Johnny shot to his feet immediately. His eyes, glassy and wide, locked on the child in your arms. You nudged Leoâs body only slightly, to see if he realized he was home, but Johnnyâs hand twitched forward before he pulled it back, hesitant.Â
âDonât wake him,â he whispered quickly, his voice breaking. âPleaseâdonât. He looksâŚpeaceful.â
You nodded, shifting only to hold Leo tighter. Johnny stepped closer, just enough to see. His eyes fell on the little face pressed into your shoulder, cheek squished, small eyebrows relaxed. Johnnyâs hands stuck at his sides, aching to reach out, but terrified to cross that line.
âHeâs⌠perfect,â he breathed. His knees nearly gave out, but he clung to the sight, drinking it in as if he could catch up on six years in a single heartbeat.
Your sonâhis son.
Perfect.
âCâcan IâŚ?â He mumbled, the words barely making it past his lips, more a plea than a question. His hand lifted a little, hovering helplessly over Leoâs little back, asking for permission to touch the sun.
He wasnât Johnny Storm, the cocky Human Torch, not here, not now. He was just a man staring at his son for the first time.Â
âCareful. Heâs a heavy sleeper, butâŚâ
Johnny nodded frantically, like heâd do anything, anything, not to ruin this chance. His hands shook as you carefully, reluctantly shifted Leo into his arms. The kidâs head fell against Johnnyâs shoulder, his little hand curling unconsciously into the fabric of Johnnyâs shirt.
And Johnnyâs whole world stopped.
His arms tightened instinctively, protectively, as his body nearly buckled beneath the weightâ not because six year old Leo was heavy, but because he was real, warm, breathing.
Johnnyâs lips quivered as he pressed his cheek lightly against the crown of his sonâs head, his tears falling into soft blonde hair. âHi, buddy,â he whispered, his voice cracking. âGod, youâre perfect.â
He rocked a little without realizing, clutching him as if heâd disappear. Six years of missed moments collided in his chest all at once. And for the first time since that night at the gala, Johnny felt whole and broken in the same breath. Johnny swayed gently, cradling Leo like heâd done with Franklin a thousand times before. His lips brushed Leoâs hair, a soft kiss he couldnât stop himself from giving. His chest ached with every quiet breath the child took against him.
You stood frozen, watching them. The sight was enough to undo you. There he was, Johnny Storm, holding his son on a random Tuesday, right in that small town you called home. And the sight unlocked a longing on you that had been buried a long time ago. So you spoke, softly, because the silence was too heavy.
âHe wonders about you, you know.â
Johnnyâs head jerked up, his glassy eyes wide. âWhat?â His voice caught between awe and disbelief.
âLeoâŚheâs brilliant, I think the word smart is too small for him. Heâs a little wonder,â you said proudly, trying to smile. âAnd he asks a lot of questions, about everything, about his dadâŚabout you.â
Johnnyâs eyes went wide. âWhat kinds of questions?â He asked, shifting Leo in his arms just slightly, like he was grounding himself his warmth. âPlease, tell me what he wanted to know about me.â
âEverything.â You exhaled, shrugging, eyes dropping to the floor. âIf you had the same hair as him. If you liked the same foods. If you could build things the way he does. If you wereâŚfunny.â A chuckle slipped out of you. âHe even asked once if you were a superhero, Iâm not sure why. I told him no, of course, because, wellâŚobvious reasons. Guess I just wanted him to know youâre human. Just human.â
Johnnyâs chest caved in, he pressed his lips against Leoâs hair, whispering. âOh, buddyâŚâ
Your eyes went to the floor, clearing your throat before confessing the last part. âAnd then heâŚhe asked why you werenât here. And IâI didnât know what to sayâŚso I just told him you live far away, and had a very demanding job. That your life is there. And his is hereâŚwith me.â
The hesitation in your voice made Johnnyâs arms tighten around Leo instinctively. You still looked away, biting down on your lip, but you kept talking, because it was the truth.Â
âI couldnât lie to him. But I couldnât tell him, either. So I justâŚI kept you as a distance. An idea. Someone too far away to reach, because thatâs what you were to me.â
Johnny, on the other hand, couldnât stop staring at you. But once again, he didnât have an argument against that. He shifted, his eyes roaming over Leoâs little face like he was trying to memorize every curve, every eyelash. And then he finally whispered the question that had been clawing at him.
âDoes heâŚ?â His throat bobbed, his voice hesitant, almost afraid. âDoes he have it? Myâmy powers?â
You shook your head quickly. âGod, no.â Your hand pressed protectively to your chest. âNo fire, nothing like that. I watched him like a hawk for years.â You let out a small, nervous laugh, one that carried your relief. âHis only superpower is being too smart for his own good.â
Johnny smiled at that, oh he knew.Â
âHeâs a genius, Johnny. Top of his class. Public school said he needed advanced courses. So IâI work myself to the bone to pay for that private school because he deserves it. Every single opportunity I can give him, Iâll give him.â
Johnnyâs arms curled tighter around Leo. âI could've given him so many more opportunities. I could've helped you, heâd have the best teachers in the world right in his own house. But you decided to keep him from me.â
You flinched, clutching your arms tighter around yourself.
âI get itâyou didnât trust my family. Fine. You didn't have to. But me?â His voice cracked, his chest heaving. âYou didnât even give me a chance. You didnât let me know I had a son. You didnât let me decide if I could protect him. You justââ He looked down at Leo in his arms, ââyou just shut me out.â
âWell, you shut me out first, Johnny!â You whisper shouted, doing your best to not let your anger disturb Leoâs sleep.
âI know,â he whispered, broken. âGod, I know I did. But six yearsââ He shook his head. âSix years I couldâve been here. Six years I couldâve loved himâŚand you didnât let me.â
For the first time, it wasnât just guilt suffocating Johnny. It was grief for the life heâd been denied, the life he might never get back. Your hands balled into fists at your sides, the words came tumbling out, because you couldnât hold them anymore.
âYou really want to know why I didnât tell you about him?â
Johnnyâs lips parted, but no sound came.
âBecause I was terrified,â you admitted. âTerrified that if you knew, youâd take him away the second you held him. Because you didnât trust me. Because you already proved I was disposable.â
âYou werenâtâGod you werenâtâŚâ He shook his head. âAnd I wouldâve never taken himâ but you thought I would. And thatâs on me.â
Leo stirred in Johnnyâs arms, a soft little whine slipping from his lips as he shifted against his chest. You straightened immediately, your arms twitching as if to take him back.
âHe needs to go to bed,â you whispered.
Johnnyâs eyes shot to yours, desperate but gentle. âLet me. Please.â
For a long, taut moment you hesitated, torn between instinct and the look on his face. You had already allowed him so much today. But you had also denied him so much already during those years, so you could let him have this at least.Â
Together, the three of you walked down the hallway, guiding Johnny, who moved slowly like he was carrying glass. You pushed the door open, and Johnny froze on the threshold.
You turned on a little lamp, the room glowing soft in the warm light, painted in baby blue, with tiny white stars scattered across the ceiling like a sky waiting for wishes. A low bookcase ran along one wall, stacked neatly but already overflowing. It reminded Johnny of Franklinâs back home, except his nephewâs was bigger, neater. This one was fit to Leoâs size.Â
He saw multiple posters on the walls. Beautifully illustrated and educational, with names of insects, dinosaurs and galaxies. A half solved massive puzzle was scattered across the carpet, the edge pieces already put together, and in the middle a scattered constellation of tiny hopeful starts. He could tell it was a rocketship mid launch. Next to it was a tower of lego blocks mid construction, like Leo couldn't decide which one would be more fulfilling to finish. In a corner of the room, boxes stored little cars, stuffed animals, and more books.Â
His son's little kingdom.
Johnny stepped inside, dodging the puzzle on the floor. He bent carefully, guiding Leo down onto the small bed with its soft, solar system patterned covers. He eased Leo onto his back, smoothing his hair gently, brushing a stray lock off his forehead. The child sighed in sleep, lips parting, lashes fluttering against his cheeks.
Johnnyâs chest crumbled.
He leaned down and pressed a small kiss to his sonâs forehead, lingering there, his lips hot with tears he couldnât stop. When he pulled back, his eyes drank in the little face now tilted upwards in the glow of the night light.
So small. So peaceful. So perfect. So his.
And he couldnât look away. Not from the child heâd just tucked into bed for the very first time, six years too late. You stayed in the doorway at first, leaning against the frame, your arms wrapped around yourself as you watched Johnny kneel by the bed. He was so careful, so gentle, nothing like the energetic golden retriever you once knew.Â
As Leo shifted in his sleep, a soft sigh slipping from his lips, you finally stepped into the room. Without a word, you reached past Johnny to pull the little blanket up over your son, tucking it around his shoulders the way you always did. Your fingers brushed Johnnyâs hand for the briefest moment.
And for just that moment, just a delusional, fragile secondâŚJohnny let himself picture it.
You, beside him at bedtime. This little room, these blue walls, these stars on the ceiling. A ritual of small hands reaching for him, bedtime stories, goodnight kisses. Not a stolen moment after six years, but your life. The life he shouldâve been here for. The life you shouldâve had together.
In another universe, it was probably like that. In another universe, he didn't doubt you. In another universe, you didn't have to run. Johnnyâs throat ached, trying to keep the dream from spilling out. For one heartbeat, he let himself believe it.Â
You adjusted the blanket one last time, smoothing it over Leoâs chest until he let out a tiny snore, and you almost smiled. Johnnyâs hand still hovered near the edge of the bed, his eyes glued to the childâs face like he couldnât believe he was real.
âIâll never get tired of saying itâŚIâm sorry,â he whispered, so low it almost vanished in the air. His eyes flicked to you. âIâm sorry I wasnât here for him. I shouldâve been here. For the first step, the first word⌠all of it. I missed everything, and he doesnât even know I exist.â
âIâm sorry you missed that too,â you whispered back.Â
His gaze lifted to you, and he decided not to speak as the man who betrayed you, but as a father. âI promise youâŚIâll never let him feel like how I let you feelâŚalone. I swear it.â
You gave him a nod. That promise wasn't just to you, but to his son.
You flicked off the little lamp by Leoâs bed and the two of you stepped out, leaving the door cracked just a bit. When you reached the living room again, Johnny stopped in his tracks. The room wasnât just yours anymore. Now that he knew the truth, every detail shifted, every corner sang a different story.
The boxes of cereal on the counter? Leoâs. Not the quick snack of a busy professor, but his kidâs favorite breakfast. The fridge, though he hadnât really looked at it before, had drawings pinned there with mismatched magnets. Crayon rockets, wobbly stick figure heroes, a very accurate representation of a T-rex. His sonâs talent staring him in the face.
The blanket on the couch, the one heâd first seen, wasnât just yours. It was small, soft, patterned with stars and comets, clearly a childâs. He pictured Leo curled up there, dozing while you graded papers late into the night. Even the stack of books by the TV wasnât just random clutter. Johnny crouched a little, his breath hitching at the sight of colorful hardcovers. Stories picked by little hands, read again and again. And a huge detail he'd missed, an unmistakable pair of tiny sneakers under the coffee table.  Â
This was his sonâs world. A kingdom built out of your sacrifices, your sleepless nights, your stubborn refusal to let him grow up with less than he deserved.
As Johnny explored, you lingered by the edge of the living room, your arms crossed, eyes flicking uneasily toward the door like you expected it to burst open at any second. What now? The question pressed heavy in your chest. You could almost see it, the rest of the family arriving in the morning, wanting answers, deciding Leoâs fate. The thought made your stomach knot.
You rubbed your temple, fighting to stay upright, but the weight of the day dragged at you. The adrenaline was wearing off, leaving only bone deep fatigue. You yawned before you could stop yourself, covering it quickly with the back of your hand.
Johnny caught it. His brows furrowed, his eyes softening in that way you hated because it made you feel seen. His gaze lingered on your tired shoulders, on the dark circles youâd tried to hide, on the way you still stood like youâd go work another eight hours if you had to.
âYou were really gonna work like this?â He asked softly, borderline accusatory. âDead on your feet. With class tomorrow, too?â
You shrugged, too tired to build your walls back up. âI donât have a choice.â
Johnnyâs stomach twisted. He wanted to scoop you up, tell you youâd never have to push yourself like this again, and tuck you under the covers of your bed. But he knew he didnât have the rightâŚnot yet. So instead, he swallowed the words down, forcing the fire back down.Â
âI better get going.â
You blinked at him, surprised.
âYeah, you uhmââ Johnny started quietly, glancing at the hallway that led to Leoâs room. His voice softened even more. âYou need to sleep. AndâŚweâve got a conversation pending. A big oneâŚbut not tonight.â
You were too tired to argue, so you nodded.
âThank you, for letting meâŚfor letting me see him.â He forced a smile, not cocky, just soft. âItâs more than I thought I could.â He chuckled nervously. âIâll be back tomorrow.â
âNot in the morning,â you blurted, before you could stop yourself. âItâs always chaos,â you explained quickly. âGetting Leo ready for school. Breakfast, answering his questions, all of it. Justâdonât. Please.â
His eyes softened, his shoulders easing a fraction.
You exhaled and added, âIf you want⌠you can come by the college, after classesâŚthereâs this coffee shop right outside campus.â
Johnny nodded slowly, like heâd been given more than he expected âCollegeâŚcoffee,â he repeated, committing it to memory. âAlright.â
For a moment he just stood by the door, drinking in the sight of you in this beautiful, lived in space that was never meant to carry all this history.Â
âTomorrow after classes,â he whispered again, like a vow, before finally stepping out into the night. The door closed softly behind him, leaving you in silence.
You didnât know if you were more terrified or relieved that Johnny Storm had found his way back to you.
Did I close my fist around something delicate?
Did I shatter you?
Johnny drove to the hotel on autopilot, barely remembering the turns he took, barely noticing the glow of passing streetlights. His mind was still spinning like the world had been knocked off its axis.
Because it had.
Leoâs weight had been in his arms. He looked at peace sleeping on Johnnyâs shoulder, as if it had been the most natural thing in the world. Now, in the dim silence of his hotel room, Johnny sat on the edge of the bed, his elbows braced to his knees, his face buried in his hands, caught somewhere between joy and grief.Â
He pressed his hand hard to his eyes, but the images came anywayâŚLeo, smaller, toddling through the tower halls, Sue fussing over him, Ben sneaking him cookies, Franklin pulling him into games, Reed insisting on checkups. His family.
It shouldâve been like that.
Instead, Leoâs bookcase was small because Johnny hadnât been there to build it bigger. His shoes by the door were scuffed because Johnny hadnât been there to buy him new ones. His mom worked extra shifts on a damn Sunday because Johnny hadnât been there to shoulder half the weight.
His son. His brilliant, perfect, wonder of a kid. The one he shouldâve known since the very beginning.
He thought about calling Sue. His fingers even hovered over his repaired watch, her name right there. Sheâd been waiting for him to call and tell her everything. And he knew sheâd tear it out of him the second she heard his voice.
But the thought alone made his heart sink.
Telling Sue meant telling everyone. Meant deciding what came next. Meant pulling you into a storm you clearly werenât ready for. And after tonight, after the way you begged him not to take Leo away, after you let him tuck his son into bedâŚhe couldnât betray that fragile thread of trust. Not yet. Not when you hadnât even talked about Leoâs future. Not when you still looked at him like you were half a breath away from running all over again.
So he swallowed the urge, locked it down, and typed out a simple message instead.
Didnât find her today. Iâll try again tomorrow.
A lie. But one he could live with.
He leaned back against the headboard, and stared at the ceiling for a while, until he decided it was better to rest if he wanted to be ready to face whatever came the next day. He got up to shrug out of his jacket, tossing it carelessly onto the hotel chair, but it landed heavier than it should have.
The letters.
He turned back, snatching the jacket up, shaking the inner pocket until the stolen envelopes spilled onto the bedspread. He sank down beside them, remembering he hadnât had the chance to read them in your office before âCaptain Walkerâ barged in.
He reached for the first envelope, the oldest. The one dated just weeks after youâd been cast out. He unfolded the page with care, your handwriting staring back at him.
My Johnny
I donât know why Iâm writing this, maybe to remind myself Iâm not crazy, maybe to hold onto some piece of what I thought we had. I really want to hate you. God, I know I should. But all I can think about is the way you looked at me before it all went wrong. The way you smiled at me that night at the gala. The way you made me feel like maybe, just maybe, I wasnât alone in that big building.
But now I am. Completely alone.
I wanted to tell you about our little miracle, but you hurt me Johnny, before I even had the chance to say it out loud. You couldnât even look at me without that fire in your eyes, and not the kind that used to warm me, the kind that burned.
That was the moment I chose to leave, instead of fighting for something that you had already decided I didn't deserve. I canât pretend I understand how everything ended, but it did, and now your life is there, and mine is wherever you arenât.
Those words felt like a punch to the gut. You did try. You reached for him, but he had turned away.
âYou hurt me, Johnny.â
âFuck,â he cursed, shaking his head violently. âFucking hell.â
Johnnyâs hands shook as he set the first letter down, his breath ragged. His chest hurt, but still he reached for the next.
He unfolded it with trembling fingers, the paper softer, the ink smudged like it had been folded and unfolded a hundred times before.Â
 Dear Johnny.
Today he turned four. He asked me if his dad would come to his birthday, and I told him no, because you live far away. He didnât cry, but he looked at the door all afternoon like he was hoping youâd walk in, even if he doesnât know what you look like. I donât know how to explain to him that you donât know what he looks like either. But he is so much like you.
When he smiles, when he makes his silly faces, when he figures something out quicker than anyone else. Itâs you. Every day I see you in him, and every day I tell myself Iâm doing the right thing keeping him away, that Iâm protecting him, but it feels like a lie, because sometimes I think Iâm just protecting myself. Protecting myself from you breaking me again.Â
The worst part is you were never really mine, and it embarrasses me that sometimes I canât get out of bed because I miss something I never had. Â
I guess that hurts more on days like these.Â
For what felt like the millionth time that day, Johnny found himself crying. Leoâs fourth birthday. The one he shouldâve been front and center at, not a ghost in the background of his motherâs fears.
Not even a curse left his lips this time, just his ragged breathing. But his eyes flicked to the pile again, as his trembling fingers reached for the last envelope. The one dated five years after youâd been cast out. A year before tonight.Â
For him.
Iâve realized something I should have long ago, youâre not coming. I convinced myself I hated you, yet I still waited every day, hoping youâd find something. Itâs eaten me alive, night after night, I feel like I fight with you even in my dreams.Â
And I keep asking myself, if clarity is in death, then why wonât this die? Why canât I let it go? Why do you still haunt me even after all these years?
I wish you would give me back my peace. It was mine first.
I miss who once was my best friend, but more than anything, I miss who I used to be. So I canât be like this anymore, I canât keep writing letters to a ghost. Five years Johnny, five years of wondering if you ever saw me in a different light, if you ever saw beyond the lies. But I have to stop for my sake, for his sake.
This is the last time Iâll write to you, this is my goodbye. There was happiness in my life because of you, and I can only hope thereâll be happiness after you. Wherever you are, whatever youâre doing, I hope youâre happy too, and I hope youâve forgotten me, because I need to forget you. I need to let you go before I lose myself completely, I need to live without waiting for a door that will never open.
So Iâm closing it myself.
Yours once, never again.
Fuck.
Of course he hadnât forgotten. He had never stopped thinking about you. He had tried to find proof, investigated, and spiraled in dark nights in his room with papers stuck to his windows. And all the while, you had written this, your goodbye, your surrender, your heart breaking onto the page while he was too blind.
You had given up on him. And now, a year later, he was here, only to realize heâd arrived far too late to be the man youâd once waited for.
Johnny barely slept. Every time he shut his eyes, the words of those letters screamed at him. The thought of you sitting alone, hiding from Leo to write that with shaking hands, giving up on him. It hollowed him out until there was nothing left but determination to make things right.
To give you back your peace.
So before dawn even touched the sky, he was already moving. He slipped into the college campus while the halls were still dim and quiet. Not that easy now, since it was Monday. Students, staff, early professors buzzing everywhere, far different than the hushed emptiness of the day before. It was a risk, and his chest pounded with every step, but he had to do it.
He couldnât have you finding out the letters in your desk had gone missing the same weekend he showed up at your doorstep.Â
Your office door creaked faintly under his hand. He moved quickly, carefully, as he slid the papers back into the drawer, tucking them in place exactly where heâd found them and locking it again.Â
By the time he slipped out into the hallway, the building was alive with movement. He kept his head down, his hands stuffed into his jacket pockets, wearing that same sunglasses and baseball cap combo to make himself look like just another visitor until he made it outside.
And thenâŚhe waited.Â
Will you forgive my soul
When you're too wise to trust me and too old to care?
The hours until your little meeting felt like years. He wandered the campus for a while before he realized some people were looking too suspiciously at him. He then drove around the college block more times than he could count, and since he was inside a window tinted black Ford truck, he was sure some student mustâve thought some mafia members had come to kidnap them.Â
Now, heâd been waiting outside the cafe for exactly fifty four minutes. He tried to stay inside the truck to avoid getting seen, but his nerves and inner spiral didn't let him sit still. So he stood by the truck, cap still on and head ducked low, his eyes glued down the street so he wouldn't miss the moment you showed up.Â
As your unmistakable figure appeared around the corner of the cafe, Johnnyâs breath hitched at the sight of you finally emerging, walking slowly with a folder hugged against your chest.Â
The autumn air was crisp, brushing against your skin, but the moment your eyes found him leaning by that ridiculous, shiny rental truck, you suddenly felt like sweating.
Johnny straightened the second he saw you, his whole face lighting up like heâd been waiting for this all dayâŚwhich he had. But the closer you got, the more his confidence faltered. He shoved his hands deep into his jeanâs pockets, suddenly awkward.
âHiâŚJohnny.â You said, standing a few feet away from him, chin lifted, your voice steady. âLeoâs not out of school for another hour.â
Johnny nodded, quick, like heâd been expecting the wall. â...Hi.â He greeted, and you gave him the slightest curve of a smile.
âI know you want to see him again,â you went on, the folder pressed tighter against your chest, âbut we need to talk first.â
He nodded again, softer this time. âYeah. Yeah, of course. Youâre right.â
There was an uneasy pause, until Johnny cleared his throat, rubbing the back of his neck. âCan IâuhâŚcan I get you a coffee?â
This type of nervous awkward interaction was so strange to Johnny. He was so used to smooth words just flowing out of his mouth, making a joke out of everything. But his life had changed so drastically in just a matter of days, that he wasn't sure he could go back to his default âChill Johnnyâ setting.Â
You studied him a moment, then gave a small nod. âOkay.â
His shoulders loosened instantly, and he finally allowed himself to smile, then gestured toward the little cafĂŠâs glass door with a red frame. He held the door open for you, and you muttered a thank you as warm light and the hiss of an espresso machine welcomed you. The bell above the door jingled when you stepped in, Johnny following carefully behind.
You chose a booth by the window, close enough to the door if you needed an exit, far enough from others to keep voices low. Johnny slid into the seat across from you, the baseball cap finally coming off. His knees bounced under the table, his hands fidgeting with the paper menu though he didnât read a word.
For a moment, it was just silence. Awkward, heavy. You stared down at your folder on the table, and he stared at you, neither of you knowing where to start. A waitress came by, and Johnny ordered two coffees, remembering your exact order from all those years ago.Â
That made your heart skip a bit.Â
The silence stretched again until Johnny cleared his throat, his voice softer than you remembered. âSoâŚLeo.â
Your eyes flicked to his, nodding slightly. âLeo.â
The clatter of cups and the murmur of conversation around the cafe made the tension between you feel sharper. The drinks arrived but Johnnyâs coffee sat untouched, steam curling up between you as his eyes finally lifted to yours.
âWhatâs his favorite cereal?â
You blinked, caught off guard. Of all the questions he could have askedâŚâWhy this, why that?â that was not the one you expected.
âCereal?âÂ
âYeahâŚyouâve got, like, three boxes on the counter. He has to have a favorite.â Johnny shrugged.Â
Your chest ached at the innocence of it, the way his voice cracked with soft curiosity.Â
âLucky charms,â you said.Â
Johnnyâs eyes softened instantly. He nodded, filing it away like it was the most important piece of information in the world. Then, an idea lit up his face.
âDid he get the human torch figurâ?â
âThey donât have the one with your face on it here,â you cut him off, almost apologetic.
The truth is, one of the many reasons youâd picked that town was the lack of the Fantastic Fourâs influence. Johnny understood that.
âRight.â He nodded, not exactly sure how to feel about it. âAnd his favorite color?â he asked quickly, before you could redirect.
âBlueâŚâ you answered, âlike your eyesâ your mind whispered. âLike the summer sky,â you said instead.
Johnny smiled. He wanted to ask a thousand things at once. About his laugh, his quirks, the bedtime stories he loved, the little words he mispronounced when he was smaller. But each answer cut and healed him in equal measure, so he asked them slowly.
âWhat makes him laugh the most?â
âWhoâs his best friend?â
âWhat does he want to be when he grows up?â
You sipped your drink, watching Johnny soak in every answer like heâd been starving for it. He wanted to know everything, like each detail was a thread stitching him closer to the the kid heâd missed for so long. And for a moment, you let him have it. For a moment, it almost felt right.
âI could talk about Leoâs favorite things all day,â you admitted softly, tracing the rim of your mug with your fingertip.
Johnny smiled faintly, but when he looked up, your eyes had shifted.
âBut thereâs something else,â you said, daring to look up. âA question thatâs been eating me alive. One I canât keep inside anymore.â
His brow furrowed, the smile gone instantly.
âWhat exactly do you plan for him now, Johnny?â You sighed. âNow that you know he existsâwhat happens to Leo? Because last nightâŚlast night I slept with him safe beside me. I couldnât close my eyes without imagining someone walking through that door to take him away.â
Johnny froze, the color draining from his face. You didn't think he was safe. He reached for the mug he hadnât touched, gripping it just to anchor his hands, but he didnât drink.
âI need to know,â you pushed on, your stare burning into him. âWhat do you plan to do with myâwith our son?â
For a long moment, he didnât answer. His mouth opened, then closed, like the words werenât ready, like nothing he could say would be enough.Â
âI donât know,â he said, honest.âI donât know what the right move is,â he went on, his eyes flicking up to yours. âI donât know what the hell Iâm supposed to do, or how to fix six years Iâll never get back. ButâŚthe only thing I do know is that I want to be part of his life. However youâll let me. I canâtâŚI canât pretend I donât know him now.â
The conviction in his words fought with hesitation. He wasnât demanding, wasnât trying to take. He was still begging for a chance, clumsy and terrified, but utterly certain of one thing.
âI want to know him,â Johnny added, more firmly now. âAnd I want him to know me.â
You leaned back against the booth, your chest tight, but his words lingered. I want to be part of his life. The way he said itâŚshaking, terrified, but sure, chipped at the walls youâd built so carefully.
âDo you think heâdâŚwant me in his life? I mean, if we told him who I am. Would he hate me for not being there?â He asked, hesitant, tracing the rim of his mug.
The question knocked the air out of you more than you expected. Not because you hadnât thought about it, God knows youâd lost sleep over it, but because of how honest he sounded asking it.
âHeâs a smart kid. He sees things. Asks questions I canât always answerâŚI donât think heâd hate you, butâŚheâd have more questions. And Iâd like to give him answers that donât hurt.â
Johnny nodded slowly. âI justâŚI want to do right by him. Even if itâs late.â
You looked at him in silence for a few seconds, before humming. âYou can start,â you said softly, âby meeting himâŚlike really meeting himâ
Johnny blinked, startled. âLikeânow?â
The look on his face of wide eyed disbelief, made you huff out a laugh you didnât expect.Â
âYes, Johnny. Now.â You tilted your head to check the time on the clock by the barista. âItâs just in time to pick him up from school.â
For a second he just sat there, frozen, like he hadnât prepared himself for the possibility that youâd actually let him do that today. His hands gripped the edge of the table like he needed to hold on to something solid before the floor crumbled under his feet.
âGod,â he whispered. âI donât even know if I can breathe right now.â
You chuckled and shook your head, standing up from the booth. âYouâll manage, come on. I promised him yogurt ice cream after school. He aced a test on Friday.â
âDoesnât he, you knowâŚalways ace them?â Johnny asked, the doubt in his voice almost made you laugh again.
âHe does. But I donât want him to think itâs his duty to excel every single time. I want him to know that little victories matter too even if I didn't take him much effort. He deserves to feel celebrated, not pressured because he thinks he has to fulfill other peopleâs expectations."
Johnny stared at you, floored. He thought of his own childhood, of expectations that had weighed on him since the day Sue took over his raising, when his mother passed away. It wasnât because his sister pressured him directly, but because he always felt like he owed her excellency. Things that took all his effort, sweat and tears. But to this day, Johnny felt like he'd failed her on that, because the bar had always been set too high for his little hands to reach. So in his head, that kid inside him didn't deserve yogurt ice cream, because little victories had never mattered in his big world.Â
But his sonâs did. Because you made sure of that.Â
So he just glanced toward the window to blink away the tears threatening to come out of his eyes. All he could think was his son had the best mom he could've had.Â
Once you walked outside, the late afternoon sun shone across the street. Johnny headed toward that absurdly shiny rental truck, but when he glanced back, you were unlocking your modest sedan.
âIâll pick him up from school. You can meet us at the yogurt place.â
Johnny nodded, though something in him ached at the distance between your cars, your lives. But he didnât fight it, just asked for some directions on how to find said yogurt place.Â
âAlright,â he said softly, eyes lingering on you as you slid into the driverâs seat. âIâll be there.â
-
The yogurt shop was painted in cheerful colors, with a bell jingling as Johnny stepped in. He scanned the room, with only a couple of tables occupied by groups of high school students. His chest rose and fell too fast, his palms getting ridiculously damp. Since when did he sweat?
Calm down, Storm, it's just ice creamâŚoh right, and you are also meeting the most important person in your life.Â
âWelcome in!â The teenage girl behind the counter gave him a friendly wave.Â
Johnny nodded too quickly. âYeah, hi, thanks, justâuh, table for three? Iâm waiting for someone.â He said, then immediately panicked.Â
Did he really just ask for a table for three? In front of a bunch of teenagers that were totally giving him a side eye? He couldn't exactly blame them, what was this, some fancy dinner restaurant from New York? Was he really so out of touch that he didnât even know how to be a normal person anymore?
Before he could keep overthinking over that single interaction, he cleared his throat, then pointed around the place. âIâll just find one myselfâŚyeah.â He smiled nervously, darting toward the empty tables, away from the groups.Â
It didnât matter though, because they were still watching him over their shoulders, because Johnny tested each empty table like a maniac. Too wobbly. Too close to the trash can. Too far from the door. Until he finally landed on one by the window where the afternoon sun spilled in. Steady, perfect lighting, perfect line of sight to the door.
âOkay,â he whispered to himself, yanking the chairs out and back in again to make sure they werenât squeaky. âAaaand we got a winner! This is the table.â
Then, he went toward the counter where he could see the list of flavors on the wall, because he couldnât look like a fool not knowing what to order in front of his family. He scanned the labels, as the girl behind the counter stared at him curiously.Â
âWhatâs the most popular?â He asked, placing a finger on his chin as he tilted his head. âNo, waitâwhatâs the healthiest? Do you guys do likeâŚsugar free? No, kids donât care about that. UhâŚâ
âSirâŚwould you like a sample?â The girl offered, lifting tiny spoons in the air.Â
Johnny nodded so quickly, that the girl let out a chuckle, before turning to the yogurt machines to get a sample of the most popular flavors for this weird guy to try. He was handsome though, she was totally telling her friends about him.Â
By the time the judgy teenagers had left the establishment, Johnny Storm, Human Torch, beloved public figure that no one seemed to recognize in this small town, was sitting on the table heâd meticulously picked with five pink sample spoons sticking out of his jacket pocket.Â
Okay, so if he likes chocolate, Iâm set. But if heâs a fruit kid? Iâm screwed.
The bell above the yogurt shop door jingled, snapping him out of his thoughts, and thatâs when the golden light of late afternoon poured in behind you. Johnny looked up, and the world stopped.
There he was.
His son. Your son.
Leo stood beside you, his small hand clasped in yours, his little uniform neat. A navy pullover stretched just slightly at the sleeves, crisp white polo peeking out at the collar, khaki shorts, and the cutest polished shoes that Johnny knew youâd spent extra to make sure he looked perfect in.
He looked like a polite kid, yes, but his energy buzzed right through the surface, his body practically bouncing at your side like he couldnât decide whether to walk or skip into the shop. His hair glowed blonde in the light, catching that same golden halo Johnny had seen in the mirror his whole life. The shape of his smile,as he was tugging at your hand, was his. Unmistakable. The resemblance knocked the air straight from Johnnyâs chest.
It was a mini him, except better, softerâŚpure.
By the door, you crouched slightly, tucking a strand of hair behind your ear as you spoke gently to Leo. Your voice was steady, but Johnny could see the way your hands twitched with nerves.
âLeo,â you said softly, brushing a hand over his sleeve, âI want to introduce you to someone.â
Johnnyâs heart hammered so loud he thought the whole shop could hear it. He didnât move, didnât breathe. And Leo, with wide curious eyes, looked up at you, then followed your gaze toward the man waiting by the window.
âBaby,â you squeezed his hand, getting his attention back. âI want you to meet aâŚfriend.âÂ
His eyes flicked from you to Johnny again, studying him with all the seriousness a curious five year old could muster. Leo tilted his head, eyebrows knitting.
âA friend?â he said, and Johnny almost fainted from how cute his little voice was. âFrom where?â
âFrom a long time ago,â you replied.
Leo squinted at Johnny, the way only a child could, unfiltered, curious to the bone. Then, with a sudden burst of energy, he let go of your hand and marched right toward the table. You followed anxiously.Â
And Johnny? Johnny was toast. He forgot how to move. His heart jackhammered as the kidâhis kidâstopped in front of him and just stared, unblinking, like he was scanning him for answers.
âYou look like me, mommyâs friend.â Leo said matter of factly. âWe have the same hair.â
Johnny panicked, and for a terrifying second he thought his legs were going to give out when he stood up from the table. He managed a shaky disbelieving laugh, crouching to meet him at eye level.
âYeah, buddy,â he exhaled. âI guess we do.â
Leo grinned, quick and bright, satisfied with his own observation. âCool.â Then, as if that settled everything, he spun around and tugged at your sleeve. âCan we get ice cream now, Mom?â
âYes, baby. Letâs do that.â You nodded quickly, letting yourself be guided by his little hand to the counter.Â
But Johnny was frozen in his crouching position for a few seconds, blinking fast, the word Mom echoing in his head as he stared at Leo, who was already more like him than heâd ever dared to imagine.
He took a deep breath.
There was no way back from this. Only forward, into the storm.
PART TWO
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waited all night for you, i'll wait forever. ( johnny storm )
after an long coming arguement with your boyfriend at dinner, you leave, desperate for space. forty thousand missed calls and texts later, you come back in the morning when you've cooled off only to find johnny storm slumped against your front door where he's waited all night for and will wait forever too.
human torch! johnny storm x fem! reader
themes: fluff, mainly angst, reconciliation, johnny being an absent partner.
masterlist.
if you ask johnny, he thinks it starts during dinner.
he turned up fifteen minutes late, saw your back turned to him at a table positioned in the corner- away from all the main attention and pressed a soft kiss to your hair before he slumped in the seat opposite you.
he murmured a sorry, delved into some story about reed holding him back after the attack and before he knew it his apology had turned into a whole recount of his really exciting, really scary day.
you nodded, let out a few "wows" that landed offhandedly and he tried not to let the fact that you were slowly pulling away from him ruin the ambience. you two didn't get to go out too much, with johnny being recognised almost everywhere he went- he wanted some normalcy, some privacy and to shelter you from the nasty opinions of losers in the world.
he wanted things to be just his- you, to be just his. and you smiled, laughed when he left a gap for a reaction but something was still playing on his mind, taunting him as you stared. it wasn't your usual look of adoration, a glance so soft it liquidifies his whole body till he's left in a puddle of love. this look feels detached, like you're there but you're not here until he catches it- and freezes.
"fuck me," he whispers and you murmur in agreement.
"took you long enough to notice," you sigh, the bite doesn't land the way you hoped it to- leaving the taste of fatigue and pasta die on your tongue. his gaze is still stuck on his supersuit he wasn't bothered to change out of- the white and blues roaring under his red jacket he threw on in a hurry to come and meet you.
"baby, i'm so fucking sorry, shit i didn't mean-" he starts but you just raise your hand gently, a subtle peace offering and bow your head.
"johnny, let's not do this now," you meet his gaze and he dies at the fading light. he's really fucked this up, he opens his mouth to plead, to prove you wrong to apologise- because if there's one thing about johnny storm it is that he doesn't back down- not without a fight. however, the earth comes to a standstill, stepping on the cracks of his heart till he's left holding his last breath at the sound of a faint, "please," you add to the silence.
so he lets it go.
he eats painfully slow, hoping to drag out this moment of half-hearted peace, savour the calm before the storm but the tide is creeping in and coming for him. you eat in silence, combatting his attempt to lighten the mood with updates about sue's pregnancy and his excitement to be an uncle but the smile doesn't quite reach your eyes. it doesn't burn like sunshine and bleed into his rising sky. its hollow and johnny hates himself for it.
you don't bother with dessert, you didn't reach for a drink you settled with water and when the bill comes, johnny slams his card down onto the table and rushes to bring the car out front. its a cowardly escape he knows, but some part of him just wants to get home and settle this before he loses you to something bigger.
you don't even have the care to shrug your jacket on, letting the cold evening air bite at your bare shoulders. it was your first date out in weeks and you wore the little black dress you knew johnny loved on you almost as much as he loves taking it off of you. he hadn't even given you so much as a glance before delving into his day.
so where johnny thinks this has happened mid-dinner, you know the truth. this has started in the weeks before- the busier days, the less truthful nights where he doesn't completely open up, the missed dinner dates albeit he is late to a few and more than anything, it feels like he's so content on hiding you that it upsets you more than anything. you've loved him your whole life- before he became the human torch, before he started joining his brother in law in saving the world, before he became someone elses, he was yours.
and its hard to feel like you're on the same page when he's starting an entirely new different chapter.
he pulls up outside the restaurant and though you stand there now you can't help but feel like you've lost a piece of yourself in there.
the you that found this place hidden a few blocks out years back, the you that would reenact the lady and the tramp scene with johnny over spaghetti, even though it embarrassed you you knew he loved it, the you who would sit by his side in closeness and never opposite. the you who didn't have to hide in the corner and pretend like your love was diluted into the walls.
he gets out of the car, opens your passenger door and you gingerly get in. he curses as a recognition of camera flashes and a few women scream "johnny!" and shoots you a look of pure desperation and regret.
the only thing you grace him with is a small thank you and a sigh as you nestle into the seat, the feeling of familiar wrapping around you like an old friend. you think his car is obnoxious, but slowly it grew on you and its seen too many of your best memories to hate it.
johnny reaches across and he's suddenly so in your space. he's inches from your lips, his skin dangerously close to yours and your heart, despite the earlier tense confrontation (if you can even call it that), skips a few beats, stuttering in a childhood blush. it kind of reminds you when you first started seeing each other, how he would always have his hands on you, never let you go, how he could spend forever in your orbit but still look at you like you took his breath away for the very first time.
you think he actually might kiss you- it's been weeks and you hate yourself for actually getting excited, for leaning in a little bit closer on the edge of pure want and need when you feel a strap pull. he stretched the seat belt across your body and it clicks with a faint tick into the holder before he pulls back a few milimetres.
"fuck," it's your turn to repeat the earlier sentiment this time as you wipe away the tears that gather at your waterline. the sniffle tears his heart in two and he looks over in concern.
"baby- look, i'm sorry, i didn't mean to upset you tonight- i know this was important and i just forgot- i didn't-" he gets out and when you don't rush to forgive him he just stares.
"i don't think you know what you mean, johnny," you look over, your brows raising and falling as the sentence leaves your lips. "it's not about you being late, or not bothering to even just change- i mean who gives a shit about clothes? i dressed all pretty for you and did that get me anywhere?" you scoff lightly, pausing to press your fingertips into your eyes and blot the tears brewing.
"honey, i-" and you hold up your hand again, asking for a moment to just get out what you have to say whilst the courage still flows through your veins.
"i know you're busy now johnny, you're busy saving the world and i get that. i love that you have this purpose and you're doing so much good but," you breathe, "we haven't been ourselves in a long time. i'm second in whatever game this is and i just can't do it." you look at him, reach over to place your hand on top of his on the gear stick and press your eyes closed for a second.
"you didn't even ask me about my day; you didn't notice the dress i wore for you or that i cut my hair a few days ago- i waited for you, the same way i wait every single night for you to come to bed and hold me like you still love me," you cry, it's no use holding them back.
"i do love you!" he counteracts back immediately, desperately.
"not in the way i need now," you sniffle, "and what hurts is i have to tell you that- you didn't just see that yourself."
"honey, i,"
"please stop the car," you whimper and he looks over in concern.
"baby, i can't let you just leave- not when you're like this, it's late!" he pleads, a wild look settling into his eyes and reaching the pits of his stomach. he interlocks your hands from where you previously placed it on his and kisses your knuckles. you relish lightly in the touch but pull back.
"stop the car," you drop the formalities and establish firmly, your hands interlocking your own in your lap, almost holding you together steadily. and he does with great reluctance and worry, he pulls up on the side, watches you get out of the car- what's worse is you don't even slam the door behind.
you just shake your head with a heart-wrenching exhaustion at johnny and disappear. his eyes widen when he sees you've left your jacket behind and he gets out the car at lightning speed, taking off in your direction.
"don't follow me, johnny, i really can't do this right now," you plead, the tears just falling and falling.
"honey, it's cold and you're gonna get sick, please just at least take your jacket," you pause, pressing your lips together to stifle a sob and nod, letting him help you back into the soft knit of your cardigan that doesn't actually do too much to keep you warm- it just looked pretty with your outfit. what a waste, you want to just laugh at yourself.
"baby, i know you don't want to see me right now but please, come back to the car, please let me talk this out i can fix this," he tries to place a hand on your shoulder but you shrug it off, not wanting to make any eye contact with him either.
"i don't think you can- not tonight at least," you press.
"then i'll take you home and i will leave- but please i need to know you're safe," he begs, "please."
"no," you whisper lethally soft. "i need to not be anywhere that reminds me of you right now so please just- i have my phone on me, i will find a place to stay but i'm not going anywhere with you tonight."
and the fierce determination in eyes lets johnny know you mean it, you've meant everything you've said tonight. so he lets you go, he gets back in the car and waits for you to start walking again. he follows you gingerly and you pretend like you can't recognise the faint purring of the engine that follows you around each street. it stops in the corner of your vision when you disappear through the doors of a hotel but johnny doesn't leave until he gets a notification from his phone; a transaction from your shared account by the hotel to confirm you have a place to stay tonight.
he doesn't want to go home- he has half a mind to drink his problems away or turn to sue- his sister would know what to do but it feels like a betrayal. he hasn't showed up for you in a long time and he can start by making things right tonight. he pulls up to your shared apartment and lets the way his heart burns and pounds in his chest at the feeling of you missing- because he deserves to feel a fraction of the hurt he's caused you, it's the bare minimum.
he has to be home, in case you decide you want to come back- in case you need him to come get you, in case you need him- he is here. where he is always meant to be. the door unlocks with its usual ratty metal squeak and johnny doesn't fancy himself a crier- he's fun johnny, light-hearted, doesn't take himself too seriously johnny, but tonight he lets the persona fall as he slides down the wall.
your home feels like a house without you and he doesn't deserve to sleep in your bed where the smell of you surrounds him a gentle lull goodnight, he doesn't even deserve the couch, he decides. he braces his back against your shoe rack that's missing your favourite pair of heels and his blood roars in agony. the first tears of many falls and he tries to catch them in his hands but they overflow and he takes over in a straight bawl. he hasn't cried in years but the loneliness that suffocates him now, to know that you've felt this way for weeks and he had been too wrapped up in himself to realise, he cries and cries till the tears dry and he slips in and out of sleep. he doesn't know at which point his eyes finally close as his head hangs between his knees but sleep comes for him.
and even in his dreams, he still tries to reach for you.
. . .
"babydoll, fuck i'm so sorry, i shouldn't have been so careless with you. you must've felt so damn lonely and i have been the worst- the worst, and i wish you could come back and we could talk this out- you don't have to talk, you can listen but i've got things i need to get off my chest-"
"fuck, it cut off. but what i'm trying to say is i've been so wrapped up in myself i forgot that there's two of us in this team. it's not an excuse how things have started picking up so quickly, this is all my fucking fault and i'm sorry-"
"what you said back in the car- i know what i mean now, i know that i mean that i'm sorry, for all the times i took advantage and didn't put you first. you deserve so much better than me- than how i've treated you. and i love you, fuck, i'll love you so much better if you could just honour me another chance-"
"fuck- stop cutting me off! (growl) gorgeous i can't breathe- this feels wrong not having you here, i don't deserve you- i don't. if you don't want to forgive me- that's fine. if you dont want to give me a chance- fuck, i understand- fuck, ah, oh my god, that'll be fine, i will make it fine-"
"but please, don't give up on us. don't give up on me- you don't owe me a single thing but i love you and i'll work through this, i'll earn back your trust, i'll be here every single second of the day and i'll remind you why we work so well together- i'll be so good to you baby-"
"baby please-"
"please come home and be angry at me, please just come home, please-"
"(ten seconds of crying)"
"hey gorgeous, haven't heard from johnny this morning he was supposed to swing by, he's not answering his messages, could you get him to call back? thanks honey, love you, come by soon, reed and i miss you!"
"hey honey, it's ben. johnny rang, cried for a second didn't say anything then hung up. i mean, i'll give him shit on it later but it sounded serious. is everything okay?"
. . .
you open the door with a faint nudge, and when it traps halfway you furrow your brows in annoyance, pushing it with all your might. it sends you flying a few steps and straight into a warm body that's scrambling from the ground.
"johnny?" you pull back in confusion, he has his hands planted at your waist, holding you upright from your ambush and lets go suddenly. you miss the warm sensation immediately as he takes a step back, giving you some space.
the distance makes your heart ache but it's what you've asked for and what he tries to honour. he scratches the back of his neck awkwardly and waits for you to address him.
"did you sleep on the floor?" the little gasp that escapes you does not go unnoticed by him and he blinks slowly, sleep still creeping on his features as he flushes a faint shade of pink.
"it didn't feel right to be in our bed without you and i uh, i wanted to be ready in case you called and needed me to come to you," his admission softens something in your heart.
"you've been there all night?"
"all night and i'll wait forever for you if i have to," he nods with quiet determination and at the intensity you pause, last night's memories fresh at the surface.
"i listened to your voicemails, all 82 of them," you confess and you cross the distance, placing a hand on his heart. he leans into your air, the air that wavers and circulates around you- his entire world orbits around you.
"and?" he asks hopeful, his voice the smallest you've ever heard him and it does hurt something raw in you. johnny storm- the embodiment of confidence? shrinking as you speak? impossible- "i really want to fix things, i can't take back what i've done, but- i want to be with you, if you'll still have me."
"oh johnny," you sigh and extend your arms, he steps in them a little unsure, waiting extra confirmation for you which you reassure with a nod, "we start slow," you whisper into his neck as he holds you close. he murmurs into agreement, "anything you need."
and when you break apart and meet his gaze of pure hope and adoration, you press your forehead to his, "i mean it baby," you press, "you can't make me feel like a background character in my own life," and he hangs his head low in a nod.
"i'll prove it to you- i'll never- i'll burn myself whole to keep you warm doll, i'm sorry," his voice cracks and you squeeze him tightly.
"hey now, we do this one step at a time," you pat his back, soothing him gently. "i'm not forgiving you completely but i'm not saying no, either," and he presses his lips together, biting the lower in anxious thought.
"thank you," he breathes.
"by the way, sue's asking for you," and the scoff that leaves his lips surprise you for a moment.
"they can all wait, there's a lot i gotta make up for first and you're my priority," he sways you in his hold, hesitating before pressing a soft kiss to your temple as you lean into him.
it's a start for sure, but the end is not coming because johnny storm is never going to let you go again.
riya saying hi: hellooooo!! another johnny fic woop woop!!! hope you like, hope you love- let me know what you think, thank you so much for even reading <33 i have one more in the drafts, might get it out in the next few days and its a scientist x flirty johnny fic, strangers to lovers and alllll the vibes ugh anyways have a great one!
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synopsis: after a girlsâ night out, johnny picks up a very drunk you who canât stop calling him her âshiny husband.â
word count: 1.5k
Johnny never really slept when you were out on girlsâ nights. Heâd tell you he wouldââGo, have fun, Iâll see you in the morningââbut the truth was, he couldnât relax until you were home. Not because he didnât trust youâhe trusted you more than anyoneâbut because he didnât like the space in the bed when you werenât in it. So heâd pace around, scroll through his phone, half-watch something on TV, until the hours crept later and later.
So when his phone buzzed that night and it wasnât you but one of your friends asking if he could come get you, Johnny was already shrugging into his jacket before she finished explaining.
The bar was crowded, neon lights buzzing, music thumping. But he spotted you instantlyâyou were slouched in a booth, cheeks flushed, your laugh a little too loud. The second you caught sight of him, you lit up, scrambling to your feet with all the grace of a baby deer.
âJohnny!â you squealed, stumbling into him. He caught you easily, strong arms steadying your weight as you immediately started peppering his face with kissesâsloppy little smacks to his jaw, his nose, his cheeks. He couldnât stop the laugh that bubbled out of him.
âYou came,â you said, kissing the corner of his mouth before grabbing his face in both hands. âYouâre the best boyfriend ever. My husband. My shiny husband.â
And JohnnyâJohnny Storm, cocky, arrogant, smug Johnny Stormâgiggled. A giddy, boyish sound that he tried to hide by tucking his face into your neck, grinning like a fool. God, he loved when you said that. He couldnât wait for the day itâd be true.
âAlright, baby,â he murmured, kissing your temple. âLetâs get you home.â
You clung to him as he scooped you up bridal-style, ignoring your squeal of protest that you could totally walk. Your friends cheered you on as Johnny carried you straight out of the bar, shaking his head but smiling like you hung the stars.
What none of you realized was that paparazzi had been lurking outside, waiting for the perfect shot. And wellâJohnny Storm carrying his very drunk, very giggly girlfriend in his arms? Yeah, they got plenty.
The car ride home was a blur of your rambling.
âJohnny, I love your nose.â
âMy nose?â he asked, amused.
âMmhm. And your eyeballs. Theyâre like a swimming pool. Can I swim in them? Youâd get me floaties, right?â
He bit back laughter, squeezing your hand. âOf course, babe. Iâll get you the best floaties.â
You sighed dramatically, turning toward him with glassy eyes. âYouâre sweeter than pancakes. And puppies. And fries. And you know how much I love fries.â
Johnnyâs heart squeezed. He lifted your hand and kissed your knuckles, smiling softly. âThatâs serious love.â
Back at the apartment, he eased you out of your shoes, coaxed a glass of water and Advil into your hands, and tucked you into bed. You tugged at his shirt until he slid in beside you, and then you were right back to peppering his face with kisses, giggling as you went.
âI love you the most,â you whispered, your words heavier now, sleep tugging at them. âYouâre gonna be the best husband.â
Johnny laughed again, helpless and lovesick, pressing a kiss to your hair. âYouâre gonna kill me, you know that?â
You were already asleep before he got the answer. And he lay awake a while longer, smiling like an idiot, your words replaying in his head.
The next morning, you woke with a pounding head and the sun stabbing through the curtains. Johnny was already up, leaned against the headboard with his phone in hand, a glass of water and Advil waiting on the nightstand.
âMorning, Mrs. Storm,â he teased, setting his phone aside.
You groaned, flopping onto your back. ââŚDid I say that?â
âOh, yeah. About twenty times. Called me your shiny husband.â
You buried your face in your hands. âKill me.â
He chuckled, prying your hands away to kiss your knuckles. âDonât worry, I liked it. Loved it, actually.â
You peeked up at him through your fingers. ââŚReally?â
âReally,â he said softly, brushing hair from your face. âYou have no idea how much I loved it.â
You tried to smile, but he was already grinning, mischief sparking in his eyes. âOh, and by the way? You told me you wanted to swim in my eyeballs.â
You smacked his chest. âNo, I did not.â
âExact words,â he said smugly. âAsked me if Iâd get you floaties.â
You groaned, hiding in his chest. âI hate myself.â
He laughed, kissing your hair. âDonât. It was adorable. Alsoâyou told me I was sweeter than pancakes and puppies. And that you love me more than fries.â
You gasped softly. âOkay, wow. Thatâs⌠thatâs big.â
âBiggest compliment of my life,â Johnny said, smirking. âI might frame it.â
You swatted him again, but your lips were tugging into a smile. âThanks for taking care of me.â
âAlways,â he murmured, tilting your chin to kiss you gently.
Later that afternoon, when you finally braved your phone, you realized why Johnny had been smirking at it all morning. Paparazzi shots of him carrying you out of the bar had exploded onlineâhim holding you bridal-style, your arms looped around his neck, your face buried against his chest.
The internet had thoughts.
âfind you someone who looks at you the way johnny storm looks at y/n đâ
âheâs literally HUSBAND material???â
"heLLLOOOO???"
âthe way he carried her out like she was made of glass STOPPâ
ây/n calling him her husband drunk and then THIS happening⌠universe is trying to tell us something đâ
âJOHNNY STORM GIGGLING WHILE SHE KISSED HIS FACE this is why i believe in loveâ
#JohnnyStormHusbandMaterial trended within hours. Fans made edits of the paparazzi photos set to sappy songs, spliced with interview clips of Johnny talking about you. Someone even made a meme comparing him carrying you to a Disney prince, complete with sparkles.
You groaned, tossing your phone onto the couch. âWeâre a meme.â
Johnny slid an arm around you, pulling you close with a smug grin. âCorrection: weâre relationship goals.â
âYou love this, donât you?â
âBaby,â he said, kissing your temple. âI havenât stopped giggling about it since last night.â
By the evening, it wasnât just fans blowing up your phone. It was family.
Sue had texted first: âJohnny, explain why my morning coffee is being interrupted by you trending worldwide with the hashtag #HusbandMaterial.â
Then Reed, ever the scientist, had followed up with a dry: âStatistically, it appears you and Y/N are the internetâs favorite couple. Congratulations.â
But the real trouble came when Ben barged into the living room at the Baxter Building later that day, holding his tablet like it was evidence in court.
âWell, well, Mr. Husband Material,â Ben said, his gravelly voice booming with laughter. âCare to explain why I just saw you carrying Y/N outta a bar like you were straight outta The Notebook?â
Johnny groaned, dragging a hand over his face. âBenââ
âOh no, donât you âBenâ me,â the Thing barked, practically wheezing with amusement. âLook at this one! Look at your face, youâre smilinâ like a lovesick teenager. And her callinâ you husband? Ohhh, Iâm never lettinâ this one go.â
Sue leaned against the doorframe, smirking. âTo be fair, you do look very prince charming in those pictures.â
âShut up, Sue,â Johnny muttered, cheeks burning.
Reed peeked up from his work, ever the calm observer. âI believe the term is âwhipped,â Johnny.â
That earned a round of laughter from the entire room, and you, sitting on the couch, only made it worse by chiming in sweetly, âHe is whipped. My shiny husband.â
Johnnyâs head snapped toward you, eyes wide. âBabeâ!â
But it was too lateâBen nearly doubled over with laughter, pounding the wall with his massive hand. âShiny husband! Ohhh, this is rich. Kid, Iâm gonna be callinâ you that for years.â
Johnny groaned again, hiding his face in his hands while you leaned against him, grinning like the devil.
Later that night, after the teasing had died down and the Baxter Building had gone quiet, you and Johnny curled up together in your shared room. He was unusually quiet, running his fingers up and down your arm as you lay against his chest.
âYou knowâŚâ he murmured finally, voice soft, âI really wouldnât mind if you kept calling me that.â
You tilted your head up at him. âWhat, shiny husband?â
He chuckled, that boyish giggle slipping out again. âYeah. Just⌠husband.â His eyes flicked down to yours, suddenly earnest. âBecause one day, I really want to be.â
Your heart squeezed, and you pressed your lips to his jaw, smiling against his skin. âGood. Because one day, I really want you to be.â
He exhaled, a little laugh of relief in his chest, before kissing you slow and sweet, like he was sealing a promise neither of you had to say out loud anymore.
And somewhere, still trending online, was #JohnnyStormHusbandMaterialâproof that maybe the world already knew what you both did.