āļøThe Joestars!!āļø
~Finished 11/07/2025~
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āļøThe Joestars!!āļø
~Finished 11/07/2025~

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.
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stop drawing jojolion challenge haha FAILED!!
Yasugap !! GO BEYOND š«§š
"what emotions i feel the most" [jjba spoilers]
i had almost zero ideas going into this, i just saw this trend and told myself "yes i'm drawing gappy in this" and so, six hours later, the final result is here!!!! and the opinions are um⦠well they're there this was definitely an experimental piece and uhh it does⦠look⦠experimental!
close ups;

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.
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can i request the joestar family discovering there s/o is pregnant (reverse for Joleen)
Telling the Joestars you're pregnant
Word count - 5.7k
Characters: Jonathan, Joseph (Young), Joseph (SDC), Jotaro, Josuke, Giorno, Jolyne, Johnny, Gappy/Josuke (Part 8)
Jonathan Joestar
Thereās golden light pouring in through the windows, warm against the old wood of the Joestar estate, and the whole world smells faintly like ink and tea. Heās in the study, fingers stained with ink, halfway through reading something ancient and dusty. He doesnāt look up right away when you enter, just smiles softly like he always does when he senses youāre near.
Then you speak.
āJonathan⦠I need to tell you something.ā
Something in your tone makes him freeze. Not visibly. But his shoulders go still, and his fingers tighten ever so slightly on the edge of the desk.
He turns to you.
Sees your face.
And he already knows.
He stands. Slowly. Reverently. Like youāve just handed him a living fragment of the divine.
āā¦Are you certain?ā he asks, voice low and steady, as if heās afraid to shatter the moment by speaking too loud.
You nod.
Thatās when it happens. The shift.
Jonathan Joestar - the gentleman, the fighter, the scholar, the man whoās stood against monsters without blinking - falls to his knees in front of you.
Not out of shock. Not out of fear. But with the grace of someone witnessing a miracle and choosing to honour it.
His large, callused hands reach for yours, then pause. Hovering. Always gentle. Always asking for permission.
When you lace your fingers with his, he lifts your joined hands and presses a kiss to your knuckles, then rests his forehead there for a long, still moment.
āI-ā His voice cracks. Just barely. āI donāt deserve this. But I will spend the rest of my life trying to be worthy.ā
You can feel his heartbeat thudding under his skin - fast and anxious and so full.
That night, he doesnāt sleep much.
Not out of fear. But because his mind isĀ racing. Heās thinking about everything - cribs and lullabies and how to make sure the Joestar legacy is something his child will want to inherit. He gets up at least three times to check on you. Not in an overbearing way, just⦠quietly. To make sure youāre warm. Comfortable. Safe.
āTheyāll need a protector,ā he murmurs, watching you sleep. āSomeone who knows what it means to stand for something. Iāll teach them that.ā
In the following weeks:
He readsĀ every bookĀ on pregnancy and parenting he can find: medical, spiritual, emotional, and even outdated alchemical nonsense just in case. You catch him taking notes at one point.
He starts writing letters. To the baby. For the future. In case heās ever gone. Because deep down, Jonathan Joestar has always known that fate doesnāt play fair.
He talks to your belly every night. His voice is soft, his stories endless. Sometimes about adventures, sometimes about his hopes. He sings, too (badly) but with so much heart you want to cry.
When youāre nauseous, heās beside you. Holding your hair, soothing your back. Whispering,Ā āYouāre the strongest person Iāve ever known.ā
When you cry over nothing (and you will), he doesnāt tell you to calm down. He holds you. Kisses your forehead. Letās you vent or sob or curse the world.
And when youāre asleep - curled into his chest, breath slow and even - he doesnāt move.
He just watches you.
One hand resting gently over your stomach, the other brushing your hair from your face like heās afraid to wake a dream.
Heās smiling. Not his usual polite smile, but something smaller. Softer. Like joy made quiet.
āI wonder if theyāll have your smile,ā he whispers. āI hope they do.ā
He leans in, voice barely audible, like heās telling a secret to the stars.
āYouāre already so loved. You donāt even know. But we love you. I love you. Every piece of you. Always will.ā
Then he presses the gentlest kiss to your forehead. And one more to where his child sleeps beneath your skin.
āIāll be here,ā he promises, voice warm as candlelight. āEvery step. Every moment. Iāll be here.ā
And when he finally closes his eyes - arms wrapped around his whole world - Jonathan Joestar sleeps with a smile.
Joseph Joestar (Young)
Itās late when you tell him.
Not dramatic. Not romantic. Just you, in the kitchen, standing barefoot by the sink with a glass of water and a knot in your stomach. Heās rambling about something - some prank he pulled on Caesar, something involving a dress and two bottles of tequila - and heās so full of noise and motion it makes the silence between your words feel like a chasm.
āIām pregnant.ā
The world stops.
Literally. Itās like the air skips a beat. Joseph freezes mid-step, mid-story, hands halfway to gesturing some ridiculous reenactment.
āā¦ā¦YouāreĀ whatĀ now?ā
His voice cracks at the end. You can see his brain grinding like itās buffering at 2%. His eyes dart down to your stomach, back to your face, and then he does the worst thing imaginable.
He laughs.
Loud. Nervous. Completely out of pocket. Like heās waiting for you to break character and yell āJust kidding!ā like itās all part of a bit.
But your face doesnāt change.
The laughter dies.
āWait. Wait, wait, wait -Ā seriously?ā
You nod. Quiet. No tricks. No backup punchline. Just the truth.
Joseph Joestar has fought Nazis, Pillar Men, and literal abominations.
Nothing prepares him for this.
He sits down. Hard. Kitchen chair creaks under him. He runs both hands through his hair, muttering āOh my godā like a prayer or a death sentence. Then again, louder:
āOh my god, I did that?? IĀ did that?!ā
Youāre half a second away from leaving when he jolts upright.
āWait - no,Ā not like that! Not - shit! I didnāt mean it in a bad way, I just - holy shit, Iām gonna be a dad?!Ā ME?!ā
Heās spiralling. Hands flailing. Pacing now.
āOkay, okay, we can do this. I mean- I can⦠I canĀ barelyĀ keep a cactus alive, but this is fine. This is fine! Babies are just loud potatoes for the first couple months, right?ā
You stare at him.
He stops pacing.
āā¦Okay, Iāll read some books.ā
That night, heās lying flat on the bed, staring at the ceiling, arms flung wide like heās trying to take up all the space his thoughts are spilling into.
Youāre not sure if heās asleep until he says - quiet, raw:
āI donāt know if Iām ready.ā
Itās the first real thing heās said all night.
You shift, curling beside him. He flinches when you rest your hand over his chest - like heās worried youāre going to take it back, takeĀ everythingĀ back.
āIām scared,ā he says. āI joke when Iām scared. You know that.ā
You do. Of course you do.
He turns to you then.Ā ReallyĀ turns. No mask. No grin. Just those stormy, wild eyes full of fear and wonder and more love than he knows how to hold in one body.
āBut I want this. I wantĀ you. I wantā¦ā He swallows. āI wanna be there. For everything.ā
He reaches out. Presses a shaky hand to your side.
āā¦Iām not gonna run. I promise.ā
In the following weeks:
He tells everyone. Immediately. The mailman knows. Speedwagon knows. Caesar hears it through a window and nearly drops his espresso.
He becomesĀ insanelyĀ protective. You so much as sneeze and heās fussing over you.
Reads exactly half of a parenting book before getting distracted.
Invents āprenatal Hamon sessionsā that are 90% fake science and 10% sincere attempts to āboost the babyās Hamon potential.ā
Leaves you notes on the fridge like:Ā āGood morning, gorgeous + also the adorable parasitic lifeform inside you.ā
Says things like āItāll probably be huge like me. Sorry in advance.ā
Heās dramatic. Heās terrified. Heās not perfect.
But he loves youĀ so hardĀ it radiates off him in waves.
And every time he stares at you, like you hung the stars and then casually told him you built a second solar system, he means it when he says:
āIām gonna be the best dad this kid doesnāt know they need yet. Just wait.ā
Joseph Joestar (SDC)Ā
You donāt even get the whole sentence out before he chokes on his drink.
You were aiming for casual, maybe āHey, Iāve got some newsā or āSo, funny thing about my doctorās appointmentā¦ā
Instead, what comes out is a very dry, āJoseph⦠Iām pregnant.ā
And then itās like you detonated a bomb made entirely of āWHAT?!ā
He coughs. Flails. Nearly knocks over the table. Thereās peach iced tea on the floor and lemon slices stuck to his shirt and heās already halfway to standing like heās about to physically square up with the concept of your pregnancy.
āYOUāRE WHAT?!?ā
You blink. āPregnant.ā
āI-ā He gestures at you, then himself, then vaguely at the air like heās trying to solve an invisible equation. āYou ā me ā how-?!ā
You fold your arms. āYou know how.ā
He opens his mouth. Closes it. Points a finger. Drops it. Then finally sits down like his legs gave out.
āā¦Youāre serious?ā
You nod.
He leans back, hand over his heart like heās just been hit by a Hamon beam.
āOh my God. I still got it.ā
You stare. āThatās what youāre leading with?ā
He grins, roguish and infuriating. āCāmon, sweetheart. Sixty-two and still got it? Youāve gotta admit thatās kind of hot.ā
You reach for a pillow to throw at him. He narrowly dodges it, laughing until it dissolves into something quieter and a little softer.
He looks at you again. Really looks.
āYouāre sure?ā he asks. Not doubting - just⦠hoping itās real.
You nod. āIām sure.ā
And Joseph Joestar - smartass, war vet, drama king - sits very still for a second too long.
Then says, too fast:
āOkay. Okay, okay, we can make this work. I mean, we have experience⦠even if it was years ago. Holy turned out fine, right?ā
Heās up again, already pacing.
āDo we need to move? We should move. Tokyoās stressful. Do babies get stressed? DoĀ IĀ get stressed?!ā
You say his name once, twice.
Then, finally, he stops in front of you. A little winded. A little wide-eyed.
A lot in love.
āIām scared,ā he admits.
Your breath catches.
āIām scared Iāll screw it up again. That Iāll miss things. That Iāll be too old, or too busy, or too Joestar to get it right.ā
You reach out.
He takes your hand like itās the only thing tethering him to the moment.
āā¦But I want this,ā he says, quieter. āGod, do I want this.ā
And then, classic Joseph, he ruins the emotional tension by immediately announcing:
āWeāre gonna need to hide this from Jotaro. I can already feel the judgment.ā
In the following weeks:
Absolutely uses the pregnancy as an excuse for more affection. āYouāre carrying the next Joestar! You get foot rubs. Thatās in the rules.ā
Comes up with terrible baby names every day.Ā
Canāt decide between things so just buys everything.
Tries to convince you the baby might inherit a StandĀ in uteroĀ and brings out tarot cards to test your belly.
Jotaro finds him talking to your stomach and immediately walks out without comment.
Buys a ridiculous number of books, reads zero. Claims heās going to āwing it with style.ā
Has one night of complete meltdown where he panics about being older, about making mistakes and you hold him while he spirals, until he falls asleep muttering, āIāll be there. I swear it.ā
Heās dramatic. Heās inappropriate. But he shows up. He loves fiercely, makes mistakes loudly, and keeps coming back. He may not always get it right but heās never going to stop trying.
And when he holds your hand, when he presses his palm to your stomach like heās making a pact with the future, he whispers-
āIām gonna love the hell out of this kid. You better believe it.ā
Jotaro KujoĀ
You tell him the way you have to.
Not dramatic. Not poetic. Just⦠plain truth.
You donāt plan it. Thereās no romantic setup. No flowers. No āWorldās Best Dadā mug waiting on the kitchen table.
Itās late, the lights are low, and Jotaroās halfway through reviewing marine data, glasses perched low on his nose, a pencil tucked behind his ear. The room smells like coffee and salt air. Heās quiet. Focused. Calm.
And then you say it.
āJotaro⦠Iām pregnant.ā
His hand stills over the paper.
A long, thick silence settles between you. Not awkward. Not cold. Just heavy. Full of something that doesnāt have a name yet.
He doesnāt look up. Doesnāt move. You wonder if he heard you.
Then-
āā¦Are you sure?ā
His voice is low. Level. But not unfeeling.
You nod. āYeah. Iāve taken three tests.ā
He finally looks at you.
And youāve never seen that look before.
Not fear. Not joy. Not even shock. Just⦠stillness. Like heās caught between the version of his life heād planned - and the one you just gave him.
His jaw tightens. His eyes search yours. And then, softly:
āā¦Okay.ā
Itās not dismissive.
Itās not distant.
Itās a promise.
He stands up. Walks over to you.
His hands hover for a second, then settle on your shoulders - warm and steady. The space between you closes.
You expect more questions. More reaction.
What you get is his forehead against yours. Steady.
Just that. No words.
Just breath. Contact. Connection.
Later that night, you find him on the balcony, lit by starlight, staring up at the sky like itās suddenly got answers. His coat is draped over your shouldersāleft there without a word.
You sit beside him. Donāt press.
Eventually, he says:
āI donāt know what kind of father Iāll be.ā
You rest your head on his shoulder.
āI think youāll be better than you think.ā
And the silence that follows feels like belief settling in.
He doesnāt look at you but he squeezes your hand. Hard.
In the following weeks:
He doesnāt talk about it much. Doesnāt announce it. But you catch him pausing longer in the baby aisle at stores quietly reading labels.
Buys parenting books. Science-based ones. Annotates them like marine biology research and cross-references sources.Ā
Rewrites his entire schedule. Late nights out? Gone. Conference travel? Postponed. Patrol shifts? Shortened. He doesnāt say why. No one dares ask.
Every time you so much as wince, heās there. Doesnāt say āAre you okay?ā - just is there.Ā A hand on your back. A glass of water. A calm, firm āsit down.ā
Keeps a medical file for you thicker than his thesis. Tracks vitamins. Memorises everything. Subtly corrects the doctor once.
Starts researching the safest bassinets and strollers like itās his final Stand battle. Refuses to settle for anything with fewer than five-star reviews.
You wake up from a nap once to find his hand resting over your belly. Not moving. Not even fully touching. Just there.
You pretend to be asleep. Because if heās letting himself have this moment, you wonāt take it from him.
One night, he hears you talking to the baby - and later, when he thinks youāre not listening, you hear him murmur: āYouāre safe. I promise.ā
He never screams. Never breaks.
But you feel it. Every day.
The way he walks a little slower now when youāre by his side.
The way his gloved hand hovers before finding yours.
The way he says, in the dark, half-asleep:
āIf anything ever tries to hurt them⦠Iāll stop the world.ā
And you know he means it.
Heās not loud.
Heās not flashy.
But heās already a father in every way that counts.
Josuke HigashikataĀ
You donāt mean for it to come out the way it does.
Youāre not sure how you meant to say it, honestly. Maybe with a little more prep. A lead-in. Some grounding. Not while heās halfway through trying to microwave his supper, still in his uniform undershirt, badge clipped to the counter, and humming along to the Morioh radio jingle like the most chaotic domestic golden retriever known to man.
But youāre watching him - hair a little tousled, sleeves rolled up, gold chain catching the light - and your brain just⦠says it.
āIām pregnant.ā
He doesnāt even turn around at first.
Just kind of nods like you said something casual. Nice weather today or the mail came.
Then he freezes.
Real slow.
Turns.
Stares.
āā¦Youāre what now.ā
You swallow. āPregnant.ā
His face goes through all five stages of grief in under two seconds. Denial. Confusion. Visibly questioning his own fertility.
āLike - baby pregnant?!ā
āYes, Josuke. Thatās⦠how pregnancy works.ā
He opens his mouth. Closes it. Points at your stomach. Points at himself. Points back at your stomach. And then:
āOh my god.ā
He takes a step back like the concept physically hit him. His brain is racing - you can see it. There are so many thoughts colliding in his skull that nothing is coming out of his mouth except-
āDo you need water?! A chair?! A chair and water?! What if you pass out?! What if I pass out?! Okuyasuās gonna pass out when he hears!!ā
You sit him down. Heās flailing. Verbally. Emotionally.Ā
āI - shit, okay, no - this is good! Iām not saying itās not good! Itās just like⦠wow! Thatās a person. Inside you. That we made. Thatās not important. I just - whoa.ā
He rubs his face with both hands. Still wearing his patrol belt like thatās going to help.
You wait.
Then, quietly:
āā¦Youāre sure?ā
You nod.
And the second he sees that, the panic fizzles.
He exhales hard. Eyes wide. Heart full.
āā¦Iām gonna be a dad.ā
He says it like heās trying the word on. It fits. Too big right now. A little terrifying. But⦠right.
He grins. Big, shaky, earnest.
Then completely breaks down into happy tears two minutes later while hugging you. Still smells faintly like coffee and traffic stops.
āIām sorry,ā he chokes, wiping his face on the back of his wrist. āI donāt even know why Iām crying. Iām just - shit, youāre so cool. Youāre so cool and youāre pregnant and you still wanna be with me?! Like, this is my kid too? Really?!ā
You kiss his forehead. āIām very sure.ā
In the following weeks:
Buys so many toys for the baby.
Googles āhow to be a good dadā while Okuyasu hovers behind him eating chips and yelling, āDUDE! DUDE! You gotta teach it how to fight!ā
Starts keeping a second notepad in his patrol car - one for ticket logs, one for baby name ideas and āthings I wanna teach them someday.ā
Tells every coworker in the precinct that heās going to be a dad. Every single one. Including his supervisor. Multiple times.
Panics over every little sound you make. Slight groan? Crazy diamond is ready.
Spends literal hours talking to your stomach. Tells them about the arcade. How to dodge punches. Who to trust. Which diners in Morioh are the best (Tonioās).
Is lowkey insecure. He tries to hide it, but one night you catch him sitting at the foot of the bed, whispering, āIām not my dad. I swear Iāll try harder than he did.ā
Rohan finds out and starts sketching a crazy one-shot called āThe Hair Heirā. Josuke prepares to torch his house.Ā
His mom is THRILLED. Starts crocheting blankets within minutes.
Josuke insists on building the crib himself. Itās crooked. He cries. āI canāt even fix it with Crazy Diamond.ā
Heās not ready. God, heās not ready.
But he shows up. Every day.
Pompadour perfectly styled. Badge on his belt. Lunch packed with too many snacks. Ready to protect Morioh with one hand⦠and hold your hand with the other.
And when he looks at you?
Itās not just love. Itās awe. Itās joy. Itās youāre my whole world now and Iām gonna be the best dad in this town.
āā¦You know,ā he says one night, curled around you in bed, voice soft and full of wonder, āif theyāre anything like you⦠theyāre gonna be amazing.ā
You smile into his chest. āTheyāre gonna be half you, too.ā
And he just pulls you tighter.
āI hope they get your laugh,ā he mumbles.
You tell him they probably will.
And if they get his heart?
Theyāll be just fine.
Giorno GiovannaĀ
You donāt say it like itās a confession. You say it like youāre handing him a mission briefing.Ā
Something final. Important. Irrevocable.
āGiorno⦠Iām pregnant.ā
The words hang in the air between you, quiet and clean.
He doesnāt speak at first.
He just stops what heās doing, his pen frozen mid-signature over a document marked for Passione territory logistics, and lifts his eyes to meet yours.
Still, calculating, but never cold.Ā
āā¦How long have you known?ā
You answer. Calmly. He listens. Silently. Then finally, he sets the pen down. He crosses the room in three slow, even steps.
You brace for anything.
Heās the boss of Passione.
Youāve seen how he handles problems.
People kneel before him.
But you think of Trish.
The way she was stolen, pursued, nearly carved up just for being her fatherās daughter.
And the man who let it happen wore the same crown Giorno wears now.
But this time?
He doesnāt turn away.
He doesnāt calculate risk.
He reaches for your hand like it means something, likeĀ youĀ mean something.
His fingers wrap around yours.
Steady, warm and real.
And when he speaks, itās not just certainty. Itās something softer.
āā¦I see.ā
A beat. Then gentler:
āThank you for telling me.ā
And it makes your chest ache.
That night, he doesnāt sleep.
You wake once to find him on the balcony, overlooking the city, suit jacket off, shirt sleeves rolled. The moon turns his hair to molten white, his eyes sharp in the dark.
He doesnāt hear you at first.
Then says, āThe world isnāt kind. Iāve worked every day to change that.ā
He turns to you.
āBut I have a new reason to succeed and I wonāt stop until this city is safe for our child.ā
In the following weeks:
A quiet shift rolls through Passione. Nobody speaks of it, but things change. Layers of extra security around you. Routes rerouted. Meetings relocated.
Your doctor receives an anonymous āgiftā of new equipment, better staff, and the silent understanding that any failure will be unacceptable.
Giorno never says the word āPapaā out loud, not at first. But he makes space for the role in his world: time in his schedule, protection in his plans, softness in the places no one sees.
Gold Experience becomes hyper-responsive to your state. Once, when you stumbled, it moved faster than either of you - Giorno caught you, and Gold Experience stabilised the ground beneath your feet with vines.
He builds a nursery hidden within his villa, soundproofed, sunlight filtered. Quiet. Secure. Untouchable.
At night, he begins speaking to the child - not with soft lullabies, but with truth. āThe world will challenge you,ā he says to your stomach. āBut you will not face it alone.ā
Giorno doesnāt fall apart.
He doesnāt shout. Or cry. Or spiral.
He recalculates.
He reorganizes.
He adapts.
Because to Giorno Giovanna, being a father is not just a title.
Itās a new kind of mission.
And just like he swore to defeat Diavolo and end suffering from the inside-
He swears now, in quiet moments between breath and heartbeat:
āNo harm will come to you. Not while Iām still breathing.ā
And you believe him.
Because this is Giorno Giovanna.
And when he decides to protect something?
The world shifts to let him do it.
Jolyne Cujoh
She tells you while walking.
Just blurts it out while crossing the living room, pulling on a hoodie, tying her hair back with fast, restless fingers like sheās trying to keep her hands busy so they donāt do something else, something stupid, like shake.
āIām pregnant.ā
No buildup.
No soft lighting or pastel sweaters.
Just:Ā āIām pregnant.āĀ Said like a dare.
You blink. āWhat?ā
She stops. Doesnāt turn around. Just lets the silence hang there for a few seconds too long.
āā¦I said Iām pregnant.ā
When you donāt respond right away, she does turn - arms folded, jaw tight. Thereās a flicker of something in her eyes: not anger, not quite. Bracing. For judgment. For abandonment. ForĀ anything but support.
You step closer, slow. āAre you okay?ā
That catches her off guard.
āWhat? Yeah. Iām fine.ā āWell -Ā no, Iām throwing up like every morning and Iām pretty sure my boobs are trying to murder me, but other than that - yeah. Totally peachy.ā
You almost smile. She notices and scowls.
āDonātĀ lookĀ at me like that.ā
āLike what?ā
āLike Iām gonna cry. Iām not.ā
āā¦Okay.ā She pauses. Then: āā¦I might.ā
You sit down. She doesnāt follow.
āI didnāt plan this,ā she says. āAnd Iām not gonna pretend Iām one of those people who always wanted to be a mom or whatever. I didnāt.ā
You nod. You wait.
āBut itās here now. And Iāve been thinking about it. A lot. Andā¦ā
She stops.
She breathes.
āā¦I wanna try. I wanna do better than what I got.ā
You stand. Take her hand. Her grip is tight - like sheās afraid if she lets go, the ground will open up and swallow her whole.
You donāt say much.
You donāt have to.
And when you finally pull her into a hug, she sinks into it like her bodyās been waiting for permission.
In the following weeks:
Jolyne insists on doing everything herself. Carrying groceries? Climbing ladders? Lifting furniture? You have to beg her to sit down.
Refuses to read parenting blogs. āThey all sound like they were written by rich suburban yoga weirdos. Thatās not my style.ā
Starts researching genetic Stand inheritance like a college thesis. āIf this kid ends up with a string-based power, I need to prepare for that. I didnāt inherit my dadās but itās possibleā
Keeps pretending sheās fine, then collapses onto the couch with a heating pad and a bowl of mac and cheese. āDonāt say anything. Just let me die for twenty minutes.ā
When the nausea gets bad, she talks to the baby like itās an annoying roommate.Ā āYou better come out cool, or I swear Iāll put you back.ā
You catch her late at night, hand over her stomach, eyes unfocused. Sheās whispering something soft. You donāt interrupt.
Tells her dad eventually. Pretends not to care what he thinks. But she doesnāt stop pacing until he says:
āYouāll be a great mother. Just like your mom was.ā
Keeps your sonogram photo tucked in the back of her phone case. Pretends itās no big deal.
Jolyne doesnāt change overnight.
Sheās still fiery. Still loud. Still the girl whoād punch someone for looking at you wrong and then complain about how sore her knuckles are.
But thereās something gentler in the way she carries herself now.
Not softer.
Just⦠stronger. In a different way.
And when she curls up next to you at night, one hand resting on her stomach, she murmurs into your shoulder:
āI donāt know what Iām doing.ā
You press a kiss to her temple. āNeither do I.ā
She breathes.
āā¦Weāll figure it out, though.ā
And you believe her.
Because if thereās one thing Jolyne Cujoh knows how to do - itās fight for what matters.
Johnny Joestar
You donāt plan how to tell him.
Because how do you prepare someone whoās survived what Johnny has?
You canāt soften this kind of truth.
So you just⦠say it.
Heās out on the porch when you find him. Hat tilted low, boots kicked up on the rail, something unreadable in his face as he watches the sky go gold over the horizon. Thereās a calm to him lately - not peace, but the kind of stillness you get after years of running.
You sit beside him.
He doesnāt look at you, just shifts slightly to make room.
āJohnny,ā you say, carefully. āIām pregnant.ā
He doesnāt react.
Not visibly.
Just lowers his boots to the porch floor with a quietĀ thunk.
His eyes are still on the sky.
āā¦Say that again?ā
āIām pregnant.ā
Silence. Long and full of gravity.
His hand curls against his knee, knuckles pale. Then-
āā¦Huh.ā
You wait.
He finally turns his head, slowly. Thereās no panic in his expression, but itās not blank either. Itās focused. Serious. Like heās just been handed a question he doesnāt know the answer to yet.
āYouāre sure?ā
You nod.
He breathes out through his nose, slow and controlled.
And then he says, very quietly:
āOkay.ā
Youāre not sure what you expected. He doesnāt touch you. Doesnāt flinch. Just sits with it. Like heās testing the weight of this new future in his hands and deciding whether or not itāll crush him.
He leans back against the wall. His gaze drops to the floorboards.
āI thought I wasnāt the kind of person who get this,ā he says after a minute. āFamily. Future. Normal stuff.ā
You donāt interrupt.
āIāve spent so much of my life trying to outrun who I was. And then trying to prove Iād changed. And now thisā¦ā
He finally looks at you.
Thereās no fear in his eyes.
Just something raw.
āā¦I want to get it right.ā
In the weeks that follow:
Johnny doesnāt tell anyone right away. Not because heās hiding itābut because heās keeping it close. Letting it be real before letting it be public.
He starts making lists. Quietly. Supplies. Books. Things to fix around the ranch.
You catch him once, in the barn, practicing how to hold a newborn with an empty feed sack.Ā
He builds the crib himself. Doesnāt ask for help. Itās a little crooked, but steady.
When you feel sick, he doesnāt panic. He just gets up, makes tea, rubs your back, and mutters, āAlright, kid. Go easy on āem.ā
Once tells a horse, very seriously, āYouāre not the baby anymore,ā before giving it a carrot anyway.
Starts whittling random shapes out of spare wood and leaving them on the windowsill āfor luck.ā One ends up looking vaguely like a baby with a cowboy hat. He pretends it doesnāt.
You catch him dancing in the kitchen with his shirt halfway unbuttoned, holding the laundry basket like itās a toddler. He doesnāt stop when you walk in, just gives you a lopsided grin and keeps going.
Itās not easy for Johnny to be hopeful.
It never has been.
But he shows up. Every day. Even the hard ones.
And one night, as youāre getting ready for bed, he slips a hand to your stomach and just⦠stays there. Not saying anything. Just holding on.
Eventually, he murmurs:
āI think I can do this.ā
And you believe him.
Because underneath everything - the anger, the hurt, the things heās done and the things heās lost - Johnny Joestar is someone who fights to move forward.
And now, he has someone new to carry with him.
Josuke Higashikata (Part 8)Ā
You donāt think itāll be a big moment. You donāt plan to say it while heās rinsing off a bunch of fancy grapes in the kitchen sink, humming that off-key little tune he picked up from TV commercials, sleeves rolled up and face slightly flushed from the sun.
But you do. You say it.
āJosuke⦠Iām pregnant.ā
He looks up, blink-blink, fingers still tangled in the grape stems. His shoulders go rigid, like someone just hit a switch in his spine. He blinks again. His lips part - like heās going to say something. And then?
āā¦Hold on.ā
He very calmly puts the grapes back into the bowl.
Wipes his hands on the dish towel.
And turns to face you, dead serious.
āYouāre being serious?ā
You nod. āCompletely.ā
āā¦Youāre sure?ā
āYeah.ā
He stares at you for a second longer, then turns around and walks directly into the edge of the kitchen counter.
āOkay ā ow - okay,ā he mutters, putting a hand on his hip like thatāll help. āOkay.ā
He doesnāt freak out. Not exactly. But you can see it in his eyes: the math scrambling to finish itself, the swirl ofĀ how?Ā andĀ what now?Ā andĀ am I ready for this?
And then:
āā¦I thought you were gonna tell me you smashed a plate or something.ā
You snort. āNope.ā
āI mean. This is⦠kind of better.ā
āKind of?ā
He rubs the back of his neck, flustered but smiling. That weird, soft, sheepish smile he gives you when heās trying really hard to look cool and emotionally balanced.
Then he says it - quietly:
āIāve never really thought about stuff like this before. I was so occupied with my past I never really looked forward.ā
You donāt say anything. You just take his hand, and he squeezes it like heās trying to ground himself in you.
In the following weeks:
Starts carrying a little notepad with reminders like āprenatal vitamins,ā ādonāt let them carry heavy stuff,ā and āask what a onesie is.ā
You catch him reading a baby book with a totally blank expression. āWhat the hell is a swaddle? Is that a Stand?ā
Asks you at least five times, dead serious, āDo you think itāll have four balls, too?ā
Asks Yasuho for help picking out baby-safe shampoo. She immediately starts crying. He panics.
Draws a ābaby Standā design and shows it to you like itās a science fair project. Itās weirdly cool.Ā
Touches your stomach like itās the most delicate thing heās ever seen. Doesnāt always say anything. Just⦠rests his palm there.
Mutters, āIām gonna protect you,ā half to you, half to the baby. Says it again when he thinks youāre asleep.
Gappy is still a bit fuzzy about who he used to be.
But he knows who he wants to be now.
He wants to be steady. Safe. Someone who shows up. Someone who figures it out, even if he stumbles.
And when he looks at you now - your fingers linked, your breath slow, the weight of a new life between you - he says softly:
āā¦This is real, right?ā
You nod.
He exhales.
āThen Iām not going anywhere.ā
giggles while tucking my hair behind my ear
gappy brainrot
+18 | gappy higashikata is a real boob guy !
You were sprawled across the couch, and what started with him resting his head on your chest, calling you a pillow, quickly turned into a slick, heated mess against your skin.
Gappyās index finger danced over your nipples, teasing and rolling them relentlessly, while the other fingers kneaded and pressed your soft flesh. His mouth was glued to your chest, sucking, nibbling, and leaving sharp, wet hickeys across your collarbone and between your breasts. You stroked his hair, pushing his head as his mouth and hands drove you wild, every touch making you shiver.
"You're seriously expecting me to stop? Not happening" he murmured, voice low and teasing.
His teeth grazed lightly as he returned to your skin, the index finger drawing slow, deliberate circles while his other fingers kneaded and pinched, making you arch and gasp. He bit down gently on a nipple, humming against you, laughing when your hips jerked involuntarily.
"I could do this forever, honey⦠so soft, so warmā¦" he whispered, squeezing and rolling you again, claiming every inch of your chest like it was his.
A harder, wet kiss left a burning hickey across your skin, his eyes half-lidded and hungry as he stared up at you.
"You're stuck here with me, hmnn⦠exactly like this. No escaping for you" he growled, teeth grazing your shoulder as his hands continued their relentless worship.
Every brush of his lips, every circle of his fingers, every teasing bite pulled a low, breathy moan from you. And he just smiled against your skin, utterly possessive, utterly addicted to you.
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ABOUT ME
hi guys, I'm Bechamel and originally i don't speak english (but im learning) so if there is any word that doesn't make sense, you can let me know (ā ļ½”ā dā Ļā dā ļ½”ā )ā ļ¾ā ā”
I hope you enjoyed it ā
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