Summary: After a week of silence, youâve been doing everything possible to avoid Wanda â until she shows up at your door when your momâs not home. What follows is a quiet, tense conversation where apologies mean more than they should, and unspoken feelings hang heavy in the air long after she leaves.
The days blurred together in a strange rhythm of avoidance. Mornings spent pretending to be productive, afternoons convincing yourself you were too busy to think about her. You kept your head down when you walked through town, changed your usual coffee shop route, even stopped going on evening walks because she sometimes drove past around that time. It was pathetic, you knew that, but it was the only way you could breathe without feeling like your heart was about to climb out of your chest.
Every now and then, though, youâd catch a glimpse of her â driving her red car through Main Street or chatting with the barista at the cafĂŠ where you used to see her all the time with your mom. And every time, she looked composed, radiant, untouched by the chaos sheâd left in you.
Youâd gone over that night a thousand times in your head â the rain, the warmth of her home, the way sheâd looked at you like you were something fragile and precious. The way her voice had softened when she said your name. And then, the kiss. Gentle. Slow. Careful. But nothing about it had felt accidental. It had been deliberate â and youâd let it happen.
Now, the guilt mixed with something even worse: wanting her to do it again.
Your mom had gone back to work full-time since youâd come home, which meant you had long, quiet days to fill with job applications, rejection emails, and too much thinking. That afternoon, you were sitting on the couch with your laptop open but not really reading the screen. The cursor blinked on an unfinished sentence: I am a dedicated and motivatedâ You sighed and shut the lid.
A car door closed outside.
You froze.
Your brain told you it was just a delivery driver or a neighbour, but your chest already knew better. You waited. A few seconds passed. Then came the soft, deliberate knock.
Three taps. Familiar.
You bit the inside of your cheek, hard. Maybe sheâd go away if you ignored her.
Then her voice came through the door â low, calm, and far too certain.
âBunny? I know youâre home.â
Your breath caught. Of course she knew. She always knew.
You pushed yourself up, every step toward the door feeling heavier. When you opened it, the world tilted for a second.
Wanda stood there, hair loose around her shoulders, a soft grey sweater hugging her frame. Her eyes met yours instantly â that same deep green that always made it hard to think straight. She smiled, a little cautious.
âHey.â
It was such a small word, and yet it carried a storm with it.
âHi,â you managed, your voice cracking slightly.
For a moment, you both just stood there, suspended in a silence that buzzed with unspoken words. Then she shifted the grocery bag in her hand.
âI brought those cookies you like. Your mom mentioned sheâd be working late, and I thought maybe youâd want some company.â
Of course she had. Sheâd planned this.
You hesitated, torn between telling her to leave and pulling her inside before anyone could see. âYou didnât have to.â
âI know.â She smiled faintly, stepping closer. âCan I come in?â
You didnât trust your voice, so you just stepped aside. She brushed past you, the faint scent of lavender and something floral trailing with her. You shut the door slowly, trying to calm your racing pulse.
Wanda set the cookies down on the coffee table, glanced around the room, then looked back at you. âItâs been quiet here,â she said softly.
âYeah. Iâve been busy.â
She raised an eyebrow, amusement tugging at the corner of her mouth. âBusy avoiding me?â
You froze. âThatâs notââ
Her head tilted slightly. âIsnât it?â
You exhaled through your nose, avoiding her gaze. âYou kissed me, Wanda. What was I supposed to do?â
Her expression softened instantly, and she took a cautious step closer. âYou were upset that night. It was raining, you were cold, and I⌠I shouldnât have blurred that line. That was unfair of me.â
You crossed your arms, staring at the floor. âSo it meant nothing?â
Her breath hitched just enough for you to notice. She was quiet for a long moment before saying, âThatâs not what I said.â
The air between you shifted â heavier, closer. You looked up, and the look in her eyes nearly undid you. She wasnât sorry. You could see it in the way her jaw tightened, in the tremor of restraint in her hands.
âThen what are you saying?â you asked, voice low.
Wandaâs lips parted, but she didnât answer right away. Instead, she sat down on the couch, resting her hands on her knees. âIâm saying I crossed a line, and I shouldnât have. But Iâm not going to pretend it didnât happen. I justââ She exhaled, looking down at her hands. âI donât want you to think I regret it.â
Your stomach twisted. âYou just said it was wrong.â
âIt was,â she said quietly. âBut that doesnât mean I regret it.â
Her honesty knocked the air out of you. For a moment, you didnât know what to do with your hands, your voice, your heart. You sat down too, leaving a small space between you, the kind that felt deliberate but useless.
âI didnât mean to make things awkward,â she continued. âI just thought I should check on you. Make sure youâre alright.â
You gave a half laugh. âYou thought showing up unannounced would make me feel better?â
Her lips curved slightly. âMaybe not. But I figured you wouldnât answer if I called.â
You didnât deny it.
The silence that followed wasnât comfortable, but it wasnât unbearable either. Just⌠tense. Fragile.
âIâve missed you,â Wanda said finally, almost to herself.
You turned your head. âYou shouldnât say things like that.â
Her gaze met yours â unwavering, unreadable. âWhy not?â
âBecause it makes this harder,â you whispered.
Wanda studied you for a long moment before replying. âYou think I donât know that?â
Something in her tone cracked then â the perfect composure, the control. Her voice wavered just slightly, and her eyes softened in a way that made you want to forget every reason youâd convinced yourself to stay away.
âIâm sorry if I made you uncomfortable,â she said after a moment. âThat wasnât my intention.â
âYes, it was,â you said quietly. You didnât mean for it to sound accusing, but it came out that way anyway.
Her breath caught, but she didnât deny it. Not outright.
âI just wanted to help,â she said, softer now. âYouâve always been so independent, even when you were little. I wanted to be there for you.â
You huffed a shaky laugh. âHelping someone and kissing them are two different things.â
That earned the faintest smirk from her. âYouâre right.â
She leaned back slightly, exhaling through her nose, and for a second, the tension eased. Then her hand brushed yours â accidentally, maybe, maybe not â and your whole body went still.
Neither of you moved.
Then, finally, Wanda stood. âI should go.â
You nodded, not trusting yourself to speak.
She walked to the door, then paused with her hand on the handle. âBunny?â
You glanced up.
âDonât avoid me anymore,â she said softly. âPlease.â
You wanted to ask why. You wanted to ask what any of this meant. But the words wouldnât come.
So you just nodded.
Wanda lingered for a heartbeat longer, then opened the door. The sunlight caught her hair as she stepped out, and for one dizzy moment, she turned back â eyes soft, smile faint, full of something she didnât say aloud.
âTake care of yourself, sweetheart.â
And then she was gone.
The door clicked shut, and the house fell quiet again. You stood there in the silence, heart pounding, wishing youâd said something â anything â to make her stay.
Because now, even though she was gone, it felt like sheâd never really left.
A/N: Thank you all so much for reading this and I hope you enjoyed it! And Iâm sorry for not uploading sooner - work has been so hectic lately and Iâve not had that much time to write xx
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
â Live Streamingâ Interactive Chatâ Private Showsâ HD Qualityâ Free Actions
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
âIâve stopped looking when I found you,â Harry murmured into Louisâ mouth. âI found you, baby.â
Louis didnât open his eyes, just rested his head against Harryâs shoulder, swaying with him. The night was cold, and Harry was only wearing a t-shirt. There were stars out, but they got drowned out by the lights of the city around them.
It didnât matter to Louis. They couldâve been in the middle of Oxford Street and heâd still feel like they were the only people in the world right now.
âIâd find you again.â The words were quiet; only for Louis to hear. Harry kissed his temple and put his hands on Louisâ waist. âWeâre meant to find each other.â
They were. Louis lifted his gaze to Harryâs and nodded. They stared at each other for a moment, and there were a lot of unspoken promises between them. They didnât have to be said out loud.
It was crystal to Louis.
As they kept walking, Harry took his hand, and they laced their fingers. Whatever was coming their way, and whichever obstacles theyâd have to overcome, theyâd get through it together.
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
â Live Streamingâ Interactive Chatâ Private Showsâ HD Qualityâ Free Actions
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Summary: Wanda canât stop thinking about how wrong it is to want you, not when she practically raised you, but guilt doesnât stop the memories or the way her chest tightens when she sees you half-wasted on your Instagram story. One late-night drunken call later and sheâs dragging herself out of bed to collect you, clean you up, get you home. She tells herself itâs just caretakingâjust worryâbut then you tug her into bed with you and she doesnât even try to leave.
Men and Minors DNI
â§ââââ§âżâżâżâ§ââââ§
Wanda sat on the edge of her couch with the sort of heaviness you get only when the house has been quiet for a long time. The TV was paused on some random cooking show she wasnât really watching, the light from the screen washing pale over the living room. Outside, wind pushed the trees against her windows, that low rustling making the whole evening feel colder than it probably was. It was the kind of night where most people would curl up and unwind.
But she couldnât. Her head wouldnât shut up long enough.
She rubbed her hands over her face and let out a quiet exhale. Work had drained her today â long hours, endless customers, constant noise â but the second she got home, it wasnât relief that settled in her bones. It was that low hum in her chest she tried not to name. The one sheâd been ignoring for years.
It was always you.
Not even in a dramatic, romantic way â at least thatâs what she told herself. It was just⌠sheâd known you practically your whole life. That sort of connection gets tangled. It gets complicated. And she hated that she felt things she wasnât supposed to, things she never asked for. Especially with the memories that kept sneaking into her head, reminding her of a time when youâd been so small, so trusting, so painfully innocent.
That was the part that made her feel guilty. Sheâd watched you grow up. Sheâd looked after you more times than she could count. She saw you become your own person, and instead of stepping back like she should have, she found herself watching you more closely. Noticing you in ways she wasnât sure were fair.
She leaned back into the sofa cushions and stared up at the ceiling, letting one of the oldest memories pull itself forward.
You were five â maybe six â the day youâd shown up on her doorstep crying because youâd fallen off your bike. Not badly, just a scraped knee and wounded pride. Wanda had still been living in her old house at the time, the carpet awful and the hallway narrow and echoey. She remembered opening the door and finding you sniffly and red-cheeked, clutching your helmet like the world had ended.
âIt hurts,â youâd said in that tiny voice, trying so hard not to cry again.
Wanda had scooped you inside without thinking, sat you on the counter, cleaned up your knee, and plastered a sticker-covered plaster on it because you insisted the dinosaur ones âmade it heal faster.â Youâd believed her when she said youâd be okay. You always believed her. And that sort of trust â God, that stuck with her in a way she didnât realise until it was too late.
Another memory followed right behind it, sharper than she wanted. You at ten years old, stomping into her living room during a thunderstorm because you didnât like being alone when thunder hit. You hadnât even knocked â you just let yourself in with the spare key sheâd given you in case of emergencies. Wanda had laughed softly at the time, pretending not to see how tightly you were gripping your sleeves. Sheâd made hot chocolate, handed you a blanket, and pretended the storm didnât bother you.
Youâd fallen asleep on her sofa halfway through the film you insisted you âtotally wouldnât fall asleep to.â Sheâd carried you to the sofaâs corner and tucked the blanket around you, standing there a little too long afterwards without knowing why.
Now those memories werenât cute. They were heavy. They made her feel like sheâd crossed some unspoken line simply by caring too much.
She pressed the heel of her palm to her chest, trying to ease the ache that always came with thinking too hard about you. It didnât help, but she kept doing it out of habit.
The room felt too still. Too quiet. The kind of quiet where you could hear your heartbeat and every thought that came with it. She needed something to distract her before her mind spiralled somewhere she didnât want it to go.
Her eyes drifted to her phone on the coffee table.
Instagram.
Youâd been the one to make her download it years ago â literally sat next to her, grabbed her phone, and installed it yourself because you were tired of sending her memes she ârefused to open.â At first sheâd used it normally. Followed some friends, a few accounts she liked. But somewhere along the line, sheâd started opening it just to check yours.
You posted more as you got older. Outfits, friends, little bits of your life she never got to hear about anymore unless she asked â which she tried not to do too often or too eagerly. She didnât want to hover. Didnât want to seem like she was keeping tabs. Even though she sort of was.
Wanda reached forward, picked up her phone, and unlocked it. The familiar glow lit the room more warmly than the TV ever did. Your profile icon sat right at the top of her feed, bright and new.
Youâd posted a story.
Her stomach tightened before she even tapped it. She told herself not to read into it. She always told herself that.
The story loaded slowly, agonisingly slow, and then your face filled the screen. You were at some party, music blaring in the background, lights shifting behind you. You had a drink in your hand and a flushed, happy smile on your face. Someone beside you leaned into the camera, shouting something she couldnât make out, and you laughed â carefree, loud, a sound she hadnât heard from you in ages.
You looked older. Independent. Out there living your life without her.
Wanda lowered the phone slightly, her eyes still on the screen.
⸝
The music thumped hard enough to rattle the floorboards, the kind of bass you could feel in your teeth. Someone had turned the living room lights down so low everything looked dipped in warm gold and strange shadows, and the air smelled like cheap vodka, perfume, and something definitely not legal. Youâd stopped trying to figure out who brought what; every time you turned around someone was offering you a new cup, a new bottle, a drag of a vape, a joint that you knew you should smoke outside but nobody else was and youâd hate to ruin the mood.
Honestly? You werenât even sure when youâd gotten this gone. You only knew that your head felt light, your chest felt warm, and the whole world had a soft blur around the edges, like someone had smeared the night with their thumb.
A girl from somewhere â a friend of a friend, maybe â dragged you closer to the kitchen where the music was loudest, shoving a drink in your hand without asking. You took it because refusing felt like effort, and effort was something you left back home on your bed. The drink tasted like rubbing alcohol and fruit juice. You winced but kept sipping anyway.
People were dancing. Laughing. Someone was yelling the lyrics to a song nobody knew the words to. You joined in anyway, half shouting nonsense into the air because why not. Everything felt easier like this. Softer. Less sharp. You didnât have to think about Wanda, or the kiss, or the way your stomach twisted whenever her name hit your brain.
Except it still did. Over and over. Like the thought refused to piss off for even one measly night.
You leaned against the counter, breathing a little too heavily, letting your gaze drift across the room. You were good at pretending you were just having fun â you even fooled yourself for a bit. But every time your head cleared for even a moment, she came back.
Wandaâs stupid pretty face.
Wandaâs soft voice in the rain.
Wandaâs hands helping you out of your wet clothes like it was nothing.
And that kiss, gentle and slow and careful in a way that almost made you want to scream.
And then she apologised.
The thought hit you again, harder than the drink did. Why did she apologise? Why did that hurt so damn much? Why did it feel like she wanted it and regretted it all at once? Why did you care?
You lifted the cup to your lips without realising it was already empty. Someone bumped your arm, startled you, and suddenly you were laughing â big, stupid laughter you didnât even understand. The girl next to you handed you something to smoke. You didnât even ask what it was. You took it, breathed in, and the world softened even more.
Your phone vibrated in your pocket.
You fumbled it out, blinking at the screen like it was written in another language. Your story had uploaded. A couple people had replied. Nothing that mattered.
But Wandaâs name hovered in your mind, not on the screen.
You stared at your phone a little longer, thumb drifting over the edge like you werenât controlling it.
You did not plan to call her.
You didnât even think about calling her.
Your thumb just⌠moved. Like some part of you bypassed your brain and hit the one person you shouldnât be contacting while half drunk and floating, but the only person you wanted.
The ringing sounded impossibly loud over the music. Your heart kicked hard, not in a panicked way â more in that reckless, buzzing way that made everything feel more alive.
She answered on the third ring.
âHello?â Her voice was soft, cautious, familiar in a way that made your chest go hot.
You smiled without meaning to. âWanda,â you said, her name rolling off your tongue like honey, looser and warmer than youâd ever dare say it sober.
There was a pause. âAre you⌠alright?â
You laughed â a breathless, tipsy sound that wasnât quite steady. âYeah. Iâmâ Iâm good. Iâm at a party. Can you hear the music?â You held the phone slightly away from your ear before remembering that was stupid and pulling it back.
âI can hear⌠something,â she said, a tiny wry smile hidden under her tone. âSounds loud.â
âItâs loud. Everythingâs loud. Except you.â You leaned heavier onto the counter. âYouâre always⌠quieter. In my head, I mean. Even when youâre not there.â
Another pause. A heartbeat. You didnât notice the tension in it.
âHave you been drinking?â she asked gently.
âMaybe.â You grinned at the floor, feeling stupidly warm. âMaybe a lot. Maybe Iâm⌠I donât know. Floaty.â
She exhaled, a soft breath that floated through the speaker like a hand brushing your cheek. âSweetheartâŚâ
Something in your stomach flipped.
âYou didnât mean that kiss, did you?â you blurted â not sad, not hurt, just honest in a way only intoxication could pull out of you. âOr you did, and then you freaked out. I canât tell. And itâs annoying.â
Silence again. The kind you didnât register as heavy â just there.
âI shouldnât have called you,â you giggled, running a hand through your hair. âBut I wanted to. You feel good to talk to. Always have.â
âWhere are you?â she asked â steady, careful, far too grounded compared to you.
âAt a house,â you said unhelpfully. âWith people. With too much everything.â You looked at the spinning lights. âYou ever think too much when youâre trying not to think? âCause Iâm doing that.â
She breathed again â slow, measured. âYeah,â she said softly. âI do.â
You licked your lips, leaning your head against the cabinet. âWanda?â
âYes?â
âYou make my head complicated.â
That was the last thing you said before someone shouted your name from across the room, pulling your attention away for just a second â long enough for the call to wobble between you and the noise of the party, hanging open in the air.
⸝
Wanda stared at her phone long after the line went dead, the flat beep-beep-beep of the disconnected call sinking into the quiet of her living room. She didnât move at first. She didnât breathe properly, either. Her thumb hovered over the screen like the warmth of your voice was still pressed into it.
Drunk.
Not tipsy.
Not a little loose.
Drunk.
The kind of drunk where your words fell out without barriers, where you didnât know you were being vulnerable until it was too late. The kind of drunk that made you say things youâd never dare say while sober â like you were floating, like she made your head complicated, like her kiss lived rent-free inside you.
She swallowed hard, pulse thudding against the base of her throat. It was ridiculous how fast her mind was moving â worry, guilt, fondness, something heavier that she didnât want to name.
And then there was the other thing.
The selfish thing.
The part of her that replayed every slurred sentence.
Youâre always quieter in my head.
You wanted the kiss but you freaked out.
You feel good to talk to.
You make my head complicated.
God. She shouldnât have liked hearing those as much as she did.
Wanda pressed the heel of her hand to her forehead and paced once across her bedroom rug. âSheâs drunk,â she muttered under her breath, though the words didnât make her annoyance at herself loosen at all. You were drunk, and she was sitting here glowing because you said her name like it tasted sweet.
That was wrong.
That was exactly the problem.
That was why sheâd apologised in the first place.
She wiped her palms over her thighs, trying to settle the restless ache low in her stomach. She didnât know where you were â youâd given her absolutely nothing useful. âA house with people.â You could be anywhere within miles. Loud music didnât narrow anything down. You didnât even realise what you were doing, didnât hear the way your voice wavered, didnât understand how unsteady you sounded.
And all Wanda could think was: You shouldnât be alone like that.
You shouldnât be stumbling around a house full of strangers.
You shouldnât be out there without someone who actually cared enough to look after you.
You shouldnât be this soft and honest for anyone but her.
The last thought hit her hard enough that she sat on the edge of her bed, elbows on her knees. Where the hell had that come from? She rubbed her forehead again, frustration curling through her chest.
You werenât hers.
You couldnât be hers.
Youâd grown up with her in your house, her best friendâs daughter, a kid she used to tuck into blankets when you fell asleep on the sofa during movie nights. She used to press kisses to your forehead when you were small enough to fit under her chin â now you were grown and beautiful and looking at her like you didnât know what to do with the way your stomach flipped.
And she didnât know what to do with it either.
Not morally.
Not safely.
Not cleanly.
But the protective instinct won every time. It came from somewhere low, somewhere deep, somewhere sheâd rather not examine too closely.
She stood abruptly â like stillness was making everything worse â and walked across the room, grabbing her keys off the dresser. She stared at them in her hand for a long moment. This was a line. Another one she probably shouldnât cross.
If your mom ever found outâŚ
Wanda shut her eyes briefly. Your mom trusted her. That fact alone twisted something sharp in her. Your family believed she was safe, dependable, harmless. And once upon a time, she was. She remembered braiding your hair on the porch, teaching you how to bake cookies, carrying your half-asleep body to the car when you were too small to keep your eyes open.
Those memories softened her â and made everything about tonight feel wrong.
She put her keys back on the dresser.
Then picked them up again.
Another breath. A deeper one. She wasnât going to forgive herself if she stayed here and something happened to you. Not when you had called her â not a friend, not someone your own age â her.
That meant something. Even if you wouldnât remember why tomorrow.
Her phone buzzed suddenly, vibrating against her palm with a new Instagram notification from your account. Another blurry picture from the same party, lights streaking, someoneâs drink spilling in the corner.
Wandaâs jaw tightened.
That was enough.
She slipped her shoes on, threw a jacket over her shoulders, and headed for the door with a determined exhale. She didnât know exactly where you were, but she knew the kind of places people your age went. Sheâd find you. She always did.
When she stepped outside, the night greeted her with cold air and the faint smell of damp pavement. Her fingers closed tighter around her keys.
She wasnât doing this because she wanted another kiss.
She wasnât doing this because your voice had made her heart lurch.
She was doing this because you were drunk and alone and she couldnât sit still knowing that.
At least, that was what she told herself as she locked her front door behind her and started walking, the sound of distant music somewhere in the neighbourhood guiding her on.
Wanda found the house by following the noise.
The music thumped through the pavement long before she reached it, the kind of bass that rattled windows and grated into her teeth. A porch light buzzed overhead, casting everything in a sickly yellow glow. People spilled in and out of the door, laughing too loudly, drinks sloshing over their hands.
She hated it instantly.
She hated it more knowing you were somewhere inside.
The moment she stepped through the doorway, the smell of cheap alcohol and vape clouds hit her like a wall. Bodies pressed shoulder to shoulder, music vibrating through sticky floors, coloured lights flickering in erratic pulses. She scanned the room, heart thudding harder than the beat.
Nothing.
Not you. Not even a flash of your hair.
She moved deeper, ignoring the looks she got. Someone tried to hand her a drink â she shot them a look sharp enough to make their hand freeze mid-air. She pushed past groups, stepped over an abandoned jacket, ignored the girl crying on the stairs.
Then, in the dim light of the hallway, she found you.
You were leaning against the wall near the kitchen doorway, eyes half-focused, lips parted slightly as you tried to steady yourself with one hand. Your phone screen lit up your face faintly â one missed call, two missed calls, three â all from Wanda.
A rush of something fierce and hot shot through her chest.
She said your name softly.
Your head snapped up, breath catching. âWanda?â Your voice came out too loud, too relieved, like youâd been waiting for her and didnât realise it until now.
She reached you in three quick steps.
You smelled like something sugary and alcoholic, with a faint edge of smoke. Her palm went immediately to your cheek, turning your face gently toward hers to check your pupils, your expression, anything that might tell her how far gone you were.
âOh sweetheartâŚâ she whispered, thumb brushing your cheek without thinking. âYouâre a mess.â
You laughed a little, leaning into her touch like it was the only solid thing in the room. âYou came.â
The two words nearly undid her.
âYes,â she said quietly. âOf course I came.â
Someone bumped into you, forcing your body against hers. Wanda stiffened, arm circling your waist instantly to steady you. The way your dress rode up when you shifted made her chest go tight â it was far too short, barely covering the top of your thighs. She didnât let herself look again.
âCome on,â she murmured, voice firm. âWeâre going home.â
You didnât argue. You just nodded, eyes soft and hazy, trusting her more than you should.
She guided you through the crowd, keeping her arm firmly around your waist, not caring what it looked like. She got a few curious glances on the way out, but no one dared say anything. By the time she stepped back into the cold night air with you pressed close to her side, she finally felt like she could breathe again.
The walk back to her house was slow.
You stumbled twice.
Both times she caught you.
At one point, you whispered, âYou smell nice,â and Wanda had to close her eyes for a moment just to keep walking in a straight line.
When she finally got you through her front door, you sagged against the wall like gravity had been waiting for permission.
Wanda locked the door, turned to face you, and exhaled. âSit,â she said gently, nodding toward the sofa.
You dropped onto it with a worn-out sigh.
She brought water first, she thought about juice but decided against it. Then crackers, animal crackers to be specific, the type sheâd always bring to picnics she attended with your mother and you. Then a cool washcloth for your face, nothing fancy, just something to maybe help.
You took a sip of water, made a face, and muttered, âIt tastes boring.â
Wanda huffed a quiet laugh. âThatâs the point.â
You blinked up at her â big, trusting, drunkenly earnest. âYouâre taking care of me.â
The softness in your tone made her chest ache. âSomeone has to.â
She moved to kneel in front of you, hands on your knees, grounding herself before speaking. âSweetheart⌠your dressâ itâs soaked and itâs freezing outside. Letâs get you into something dry, alright?â
You nodded, and she helped you stand, steadying you when you swayed. She guided you to the bathroom and grabbed an old t-shirt and pair of soft shorts from her drawer.
âLift your arms,â she murmured, voice low.
You obeyed without thinking.
She pulled your dress up carefully, averting her eyes with more discipline than she knew she had. She managed it quickly, professionally, like she was trying to erase every implication from the moment.
When she eased the shirt over your head, you whispered, âYou always used to help me get changed after pool days when I was little.â
Wanda paused, hands resting lightly on your shoulders.
âYeah,â she said softly. âI remember.â
Once you were dressed, she guided you to her bed â not the couch, not the guest room. She wasnât letting you sleep somewhere she couldnât keep an eye on you.
You collapsed onto the mattress, exhaling in a relieved sort of way.
Wanda pulled the blanket up over you, tucking the edges with a tenderness she didnât often let herself show. Her hand brushed your hair back from your face.
âTry to sleep,â she murmured.
You grabbed her wrist before she could pull away.
âDonât go.â
âSweetheartâŚâ She tried to keep her voice steady. âIâm right here.â
âNo.â Your fingers tightened around her wrist, eyes glossy with exhaustion. âPlease donât leave. I wonât sleep if you leave.â
Her heart twisted painfully.
She shouldnât.
She absolutely shouldnât.
But you werenât flirting.
You werenât trying anything.
You were scared and drunk and overwhelmed, clinging to the one person you trusted most.
And Wanda had always been weak when it came to you.
She exhaled, slow and quiet, then slipped off her shoes and climbed into bed beside you â not touching, just close enough for you to feel her presence.
Your breathing eased almost instantly.
Wanda lay there staring at the ceiling, battling guilt, longing, fear, affection, and a thousand things she couldnât untangle tonight.
You shifted once, head drifting closer to her shoulder.
Wanda closed her eyes.
Sheâd worry about what this meant tomorrow.
For now, you were safe.
And she wasnât going anywhere.
â§ââââ§âżâżâżâ§ââââ§
A/N: I know itâs been almost a month since my last update to this series, and I appreciate all the love iâm getting on my last few chapters, it really does mean a lot to me, and as always I hope you enjoyed this chapter
Summary: You wake up in Wandaâs bed with a pounding head, her shirt on, and just enough memory to know something happened â but not enough to feel safe about it. The panic isnât dramatic; itâs quiet and internal. You remember calling her. You remember her voice. You remember the way she stayed.
âŻÂ¸.â˘Â´*¨`*â˘âż âżâ˘*`¨*`â˘.¸âŻ
You wake slowly, like your body doesnât quite belong to you yet.
At first, itâs just the dull throb behind your eyes that pulls you out of sleep, a steady ache that pulses in time with your heartbeat. Your mouth feels dry, your limbs heavy, and thereâs a faint, lingering warmth wrapped around you that doesnât immediately make sense. You stay still, eyes closed, trying to piece together where you are without moving too much, because even the thought of opening your eyes feels like too much effort.
Then you notice the bed.
Not yours.
The sheets are softer, the mattress slightly firmer, the air around you carrying a scent thatâs familiar in a way that makes your chest tighten before your brain catches up. Lavender. Something warm underneath it. Something distinctly her.
Your eyes open.
The ceiling is wrong. The light filtering through the curtains is softer than the one in your room at home, casting a pale glow across unfamiliar walls. For a moment, you just stare, your mind blank, like itâs buffering, trying to load something it isnât ready to process yet.
Then it hits you.
Wandaâs house.
Your stomach drops slightly, not in fear, but in something far more complicated.
You donât move right away. Instead, you let your gaze drift slowly to the side, careful, cautious, like youâre scared of what you might find if you look too quickly.
And there she is.
Wanda is lying beside you, still asleep, her body angled slightly toward yours without quite touching. One of her arms is bent near her head, the other resting loosely on the bed between you, close enough that if you shifted even an inch, your fingers would brush against hers. Her hair is slightly mussed, falling across her cheek, and thereâs something softer about her like this â less controlled, less guarded.
Youâve never seen her like this before.
Your breath catches quietly in your throat.
For a long moment, you just look at her. Not in a rushed, curious way, but in that slow, lingering way that feels almost intrusive, like youâre seeing something you werenât meant to. The kind of quiet vulnerability she never shows when sheâs awake, when sheâs composed, when sheâs being Wanda.
And then, all at once, pieces of the night start to come back.
Not all of it. Not clearly. But enough.
The party.
The music.
The drinks.
Calling her.
Your stomach tightens.
Fragments flicker through your mind â her voice through the phone, low and steady, saying your name. The way you leaned against the wall, trying to focus on something that wouldnât spin. The warmth of her hand on your face when she found you. The way youâd said, âYou came.â
God.
Your eyes squeeze shut for a second, like you can physically push the memory away. But it doesnât go anywhere. It lingers, pressing at the edges of your thoughts.
You remember the walk, vaguely â the cold air, her arm around you, keeping you upright. You remember her voice telling you to drink water. You remember sitting on her couch, complaining about the taste. You remember her helping youâ
Your eyes snap open again.
Youâre not wearing your clothes.
Your heart skips, not in panic, but in something sharp and disorienting. The shirt you have on is too big, the fabric soft against your skin, smelling faintly like her detergent, like her house. Your cheeks warm instantly, your thoughts tangling.
She helped you change.
The memory is fuzzy, but the fact of it isnât.
You swallow hard, suddenly very aware of how close she is. Of the fact that youâre in her bed. Of the fact that she stayed.
Your gaze flicks back to her, searching her face like it might give you answers you donât know how to ask for.
Why did she stay?
The question sits heavy in your chest, louder than the pounding in your head.
You shift slightly, just enough to test the space between you, and the movement feels too loud in the quiet room. Wanda stirs almost immediately, her brows knitting faintly as she inhales, her body adjusting without fully waking.
You freeze.
For a second, you consider closing your eyes and pretending youâre still asleep, like you can avoid whatever conversation is waiting for you on the other side of this moment. But itâs too late.
Her eyes open.
They find you almost instantly.
Thereâs a flicker of something there â surprise, maybe, or just the brief disorientation of waking up â before it settles into something softer, something more controlled.
âHey,â she murmurs, her voice rough with sleep.
Your throat feels tight. âHey.â
The word hangs awkwardly between you, too small for everything sitting underneath it.
For a moment, neither of you moves. Neither of you says anything else. The silence stretches, not uncomfortable exactly, but heavy. Full.
Wanda pushes herself up slightly, leaning back against the headboard, one hand coming up to rub at her face. You notice the way she avoids looking at you directly for a second, like sheâs gathering herself, pulling those familiar walls back into place.
âHow are you feeling?â she asks finally, glancing over at you.
âLike I got hit by a bus,â you admit, your voice quieter than usual.
That earns a small, almost amused huff from her. âThat sounds about right.â
Another pause.
You sit up slowly, the blanket slipping slightly as you do, and you tug it back up without thinking, suddenly hyper-aware of everything â the space, the clothes, her presence.
âDid IâŚ?â You hesitate, unsure how to even phrase it. âDid I do anything⌠stupid?â
Wandaâs gaze lingers on you for just a second too long before she looks away, her expression smoothing out. âYou were drunk,â she says simply. âThatâs about it.â
Thatâs not an answer.
You can tell itâs not an answer.
But you donât push.
âDid I call you?â you ask instead, even though you already know the answer.
âYes.â
You nod slowly, pressing your lips together. âRight.â
Silence settles again, thicker this time.
You want to ask about the kiss.
You want to ask why she stayed.
You want to ask why your chest feels like this â tight and warm and completely out of your control.
But the words donât come.
Wanda shifts beside you, her hand brushing briefly against yours as she reaches for the glass of water on the bedside table. The contact is accidental, fleeting, but it sends a small, sharp jolt through you anyway.
âDrink,â she says, holding the glass out.
You take it, your fingers brushing hers for just a second longer than necessary. Neither of you comments on it.
You sip slowly, the water grounding you a little, giving you something to focus on that isnât her.
âI should probably go home,â you say after a moment, even though the idea of leaving feels heavier than it should.
Wanda doesnât respond immediately. When you glance at her, sheâs watching you â really watching you â like sheâs trying to figure something out.
âYeah,â she says eventually, her voice even. âProbably.â
But she doesnât move to get up. Doesnât rush you. Doesnât push.
You set the glass down, your fingers lingering on it, unsure of what to do next. Everything feels⌠unfinished. Like thereâs something sitting right there between you, waiting to be acknowledged, but neither of you are brave enough to touch it.
âThank you,â you murmur, because itâs the only safe thing you can say.
âFor what?â
âFor⌠coming to get me. Last night.â You glance down at your hands. âYou didnât have to.â
Wandaâs expression softens, just slightly. âYeah,â she says quietly. âI did.â
Thatâs the problem.
She always does.
And you donât know what that means anymore.
The silence that follows isnât empty. Itâs full of everything youâre both not saying, everything thatâs changed without either of you admitting it out loud.
You shift on the bed, your shoulder brushing hers for just a second before you pull back, like even that small contact feels too loaded now.
Nothing about this feels simple anymore.
And neither of you knows how to make it be.
âŻÂ¸.â˘Â´*¨`*â˘âż âżâ˘*`¨*`â˘.¸âŻ
A/N: itâs been almost 5 months since my last upload to this đŤŁ, kind of lost inspiration but started to write this again like last night.