Summary: A period from hell, shameless flirting and Soldier Boy being the absolute worst person to take care of you. Until he accidentally gets a little softer than either of you expected.
Pairing: Soldier Boy x Reader
Warnings: 18+ only! Smut, Language, blood
Word Count: 3750
DISCLAIMER: Everything is purely fiction. I do not intend to attack or hurt anyone. The story is, of course, entirely made up and meant for entertainment purposes.
You woke up to the faint smell of weed and whiskey and that damn cologne of his that clung to the sheets like a bad habit. The sheets, of course, were his, scratchy, shouldâve been burned sometime after 1984, but you werenât exactly in the position to complain. Especially not when Soldier Boy was draped across you like a smug, snoring furnace.
You shifted, groaning softly. Cramps twisted in your stomach like a knife, and the ache in your lower back reminded you of what the day was about to be: hell. Bloody, hormonal hell.
And of course, as if summoned by the suffering itself, Ben cracked an eye open.
âShitâ, he muttered, voice still thick from sleep. âYou makinâ that noise all night, sweetheart, or just savinâ it for when Iâm tryinâ to sleep?â.
You rolled your eyes, nudging him off your hip. âSorry Iâm not silent and dead like your exesâ.
He grinned a wicked, shit-eating grin that always spelled trouble.
âOh, so you do admit it⌠Youâre bleedinâ, huh?â, he asked, sitting up and raking a hand through his mess of hair. âCould smell it last night. Thought maybe youâd just killed someone in my bed. Wouldâve been hotâ.
You grabbed a pillow and lobbed it at him.
âAssholeâ.
âGuiltyâ, he said proudly, catching it mid-air and tossing it aside. âYou know, back in the â80s, girls didnât get all weepy on their periods. They just popped a Quaalude and fucking danced it offâ.
âYeah, and back in the â80s you still thought Russia was winning the warâ, you muttered, curling into a ball. That got a bark of laughter from him.
âAh fuck, I love it when youâre a little shitâ, he said, reaching over and yanking the blanket off you. âLook at you. All curled up, cranky, hormonal. Like a puppy someone kickedâ.
You glared at him. âKeep talking and Iâll kick youâ.
âOoh. Fiery. You sure you donât wanna cry about it first?â, he teased, leaning in just close enough that his breath warmed your cheek. âCome on, doll. Whereâs the part where you get all misty-eyed and ask me to rub your back while you sob over some video on your phone?â.
You shoved him again, and he caught your wrist mid-push, his grip firm but warm. Something in his expression softened for a second, just a flicker.
âYou hurting?â, he asked, quieter this time.
You hesitated.
ââŚYeah. A littleâ.
He let your hand go and flopped back onto the bed, throwing an arm behind his head.
âWell, shit. Guess I gotta be nice nowâ, he muttered. âGo ahead. Snuggle up, break my ribs with your heat pad, cry about cats or whateverâ.
You stared at him.
âYou done mocking me?â.
âSweetheartâ, he smirked, âmocking you is my cardio. Youâre like a little walking PSA for why women shouldnât be in combat. All moody, bleeding, curled up like a busted-up MRE. Cute, but uselessâ.
You shot him a look sharp enough to cut glass. âWow. Misogyny before breakfast. How very on brandâ.
âPleaseâ, he scoffed. âItâs not misogyny if itâs true. Hell, if you were in Payback back in the day, Iâd have had to carry you around like a baby in one of those pussy-like kangaroo pouchesâ.
You opened your mouth to snap back, but before you could, he reached over and hooked a hand under your thigh, yanking you toward him so you were practically sprawled across his lap.
âHey!â, you protested.
âWhat? Iâm beinâ sweetâ, he said, feigning innocence while his thumb rubbed slow, lazy circles just above your knee. âFigure Iâll keep you close before you waddle off and start nesting or whatever the hell it is you ladies do on your time of the monthâ.
You tried to wriggle out of his grip, but his hand was firm on your thigh, rough palm sliding higher with lazy confidence.
âDonât startâ, you warned, glaring at him. âNot while Iâm like thisâ.
âLike what?â, he asked as his fingers ghosted just below the hem of your sleep shorts. âWarm? Whiny? Bleedinâ like you got knifed in a bar fight?â.
You shot him a warning look. âBenâŚâ.
That grin. That filthy, knowing grin that had no business looking good at 7 a.m.
âWhat? Iâm just sayinâ, sweetheart â Iâve seen worse. Hell, Iâve been worseâ. He leaned in, his voice dropping low against your ear. "Honey, Iâve had brains and guts on me. Little uterus juice ainât exactly my breaking point".
You groaned, pressing a hand to your face. âThatâs disgustingâ.
He laughed. âIâve had my dick shot half to hell and still fucked after. Little period goreâs not exactly a mood killer".
âBen, noâ.
âBen, yesâ, he smirked, dragging your leg higher over his thigh until your core was pressed to the thick line of muscle. âCome on. Youâre soft, warm, cranky â itâs kinda hotâ.
You stared at him like heâd lost his damn mind. âItâs not hot. Itâs gross. Iâm literally bleeding. Itâs not sexy, Benâ.
He tilted his head, genuinely confused. âWhy? You think I havenât been with a girl on her period before? Shit, back in the seventies, girls didnât even tell you, you just figured it out halfway throughâ.
âThatâs vileâ.
âThatâs history, dollâ, he said proudly, brushing his nose along your jaw. âAnd I got no issue gettinâ a little red on my dick. Call it patriotismâ.
You snorted. âOh my godâ.
He grinned, the bastard. âLook, Iâm not sayinâ we go full Slip ân Slide, but donât act like you donât want it. You get all moody and touchy when youâre like this. Sensitive⌠Hotâ.
âIâm bloated and irritated and my uterus is actively trying to kill meâ.
Benâs hand moved up, brushing gently under your tank top, warm and surprisingly tender against your skin. âYeah, and youâre still the prettiest fuckinâ thing Iâve laid eyes on since disco diedâ.
Your breath hitched. Damn him. Damn his hands, his mouth, and that voice.
âYouâre seriously trying to get in my pants right now?â, you asked, voice half incredulous, half breathless.
He looked down at you, so damnn calm. âIâm tryinâ to make my girl feel better. Problem?â.
You hesitated.
He smirked like he already had you beat. âThatâs what I thought. Let me take care of you, baby. Ainât scared of a little messâ.
You swallowed hard, cursing the way your body responded despite your brain screaming this was ridiculous.
âFineâ, you muttered. âBut no jokes. No war metaphors. No calling it âshark weekââ.
He leaned in, lips brushing your ear with a low growl of a promise.
âNo jokesâ, he murmured, his voice hot and honey-thick. âJust you, me, and a bed thatâs gonna need burninâ afterâ.
Before you could fire off another protest, Benâs hand pressed flat to your shoulder, pushing you gently but firmly onto your back.
âBenââ.
âShhâ, he drawled, settling between your legs, sitting back on his heels like he had all the time in the world. His hands gripped your thighs through the thin fabric of your shorts, thumbs stroking lazily against your skin. âShit, I missed this view. Pretty little thing laid out just for meâ.
You narrowed your eyes. âIâm not âlaid outâââ.
âYeah, you areâ, he smirked, leaning in just enough for his breath to tickle your skin before he sat back again. âAnd youâre lucky Iâm in a generous moodâ.
With a slow, deliberate tug, he hooked his fingers in the waistband of your shorts and underwear, dragging them down over your hips. The movement was unhurried, almost reverent, until the fabric slid past the tops of your thighs and your bare skin met the cooler air.
His eyes flicked down, and that wolfish grin of his spread wide.
âWellâ, he said, tilting his head like he was admiring a battlefield. âThereâs my girl. Bleedinâ for meâ.
You groaned, covering your face with your hands. âYouâre disgustingâ.
âYeahâ, he agreed shamelessly, tossing your clothes aside. âAnd youâre warm. Fuck, I love that about you humans. All that heat on the inside. Supes donât got it the same â cold, sterile, like screwinâ a fucking refrigerator. But youâŚâ. He ran one big, calloused hand up your thigh, slow as a match burn. âYouâre all soft and alive and hot in here. Can feel it in my bones when Iâm inside youâ.
Your cheeks burned, and you hated that his words made something low in your stomach tighten despite the cramps. âMaybe we shoul-â.
âWhat?â. His thumb brushed over the tender inside of your thigh, and his gaze was fixed between your legs. âC'mon now. Itâs just you. My girl. My messâ.
He leaned forward, palms braced on either side of your hips, lowering himself enough that the heat of him pressed against you. âAnd Iâm gonna enjoy every damn second of itâ.
You could feel him, hard, thick, pressing against your inner thigh like heâd been waiting days for this.
Ben reached down, wrapped a firm hand around himself, and pressed the head of his cock down with his thumb, guiding it with that casual, practiced control that made your breath hitch.
âLook at thatâ, he murmured, eyes dragging down between your thighs like he was admiring a loaded weapon. âStandinâ at attention so goddamn perfect".
You clenched around nothing, cursing him in your head and yourself for the way your body responded to his voice alone.
âGonna slide in nice and slowâ, he muttered, almost to himself, his hips shifting forward, the thick head of him nudging where you needed him most. âFeel every inch of you stretch around meâ.
Your breath caught as he pushed in just a little, not enough to satisfy, just enough to tease. His jaw flexed.
âFuck, youâre hotâ, he groaned, eyes half-lidded. âLike a goddamn furnace in there. I swear, itâs not even fair".
You turned your face away, too flustered to meet his gaze, but he caught your chin in his hand and turned you back to face him.
âUh-uh. Eyes on me, sugarplumâ, he said, voice low. âI want you to feel every fuckinâ inch. Want you to remember who does this to you, who makes you forget the pain and all that shit. Itâs me⌠Say itâ.
Your lips parted, the words stuck in your throat, half from shame, half from how deep the need clawed inside you.
He pushed in another inch, slowly, relentlessly, and you gasped.
âWho is it, baby?â, he whispered against your ear, voice suddenly softer. âWho makes you feel like this?â.
ââŚYouâ, you breathed, almost involuntarily.
âDamn rightâ, he growled, and with one hard roll of his hips, he sank in deeper, not all the way, just enough to make your back arch and your fingers curl into the sheets. âNow relax. Iâm not stoppinâ âtil you forget what you were even cryinâ aboutâ.
Ben eased back, and you caught the way his eyes flicked down between you, that smug grin stretching slow across his face.
âNow ainât that some wholesome American shitâ, he drawled, his voice thick with amusement. âWhite sheets, blue fuckinâ veins, and red all over the place. Damn near deserves a national anthem, sweetheartâ.
You groaned, covering your face with your hands. âBenâŚâ.
âWhat? Youâre makinâ me festiveâ, he smirked. âFeels like I should be salutinâ right nowâ.
Before you could come up with a proper insult, Benâs smirk deepened and his hands locked hard on your hips.
âCâmere, dollâ.
You barely had time to gasp before he drove back in with one rough, uncalculated thrust, too deep, too fast. The breath ripped out of you, your hands flying to his chest in reflex.
âBen!â. The sound came out sharper than you meant, pain flaring low in your stomach.
He froze, eyes narrowing instantly. âShitâ. His grip loosened, but he didnât pull out, his expression shifting from cocky to something dangerously close to sheepish. âToo much?â.
You glared at him through the sting. âYou think?â.
He blew out a breath, muttering under it, âDamn it⌠". He eased his weight off you, hands gentler now as they rubbed over your hips in slow circles. âGot carried awayâ.
You gave him a look that said You always get carried away.
âHeyâ, he said, softer now, searching your face. âTalk to me. You good, or you want me to stop?â.
The cocky mask hadnât dropped entirely, this was still Soldier Boy, after all, but there was a tightness in his jaw, like he was forcing himself to hold back.
âHurtsâ, you admitted, your voice smaller than you meant it to be.
âAlrightâ, he murmured, brushing his thumb over your hip bone. âWe go slow. My badâ. Then, a smirk tugged at the corner of his mouth again. âStill, you took damn near all of me in one go. Not bad for someone whoâs supposedly delicateâ.
You swatted weakly at his shoulder. âBenjaminââ.
âYeah, yeahâ, he said, bending to press his mouth against your temple. âEasy now. Iâll make it worth itâ.
His hands adjusted their grip on your hips, not to pull or control this time, but to keep you steady. He moved slowly, painfully slowly for him, watching your face for the smallest flinch.
It was almost⌠adorable. And painfully Ben. Always overcompensating.
âYouâre gonna burn a hole in me if you keep staring like thatâ, you said softly, trying to take the edge off.
âNot takinâ chancesâ, he muttered without looking away.
You reached up and brushed your fingers over the rough stubble on his jaw. âIâm okay, Ben. Just a bit sensitive right now. Youâre goodâ.
His eyes flicked up to yours briefly, searching, like he didnât entirely believe you. âYeah?â.
âYeahâ, you assured, a small smile tugging at your lips. âYouâre being⌠weirdly careful. Kinda sweet, actually. Donât tell anyone, though. Wouldnât want to ruin your reputationâ.
That earned the faintest twitch at the corner of his mouth, but he didnât drop the focus. âJust⌠tell me if itâs too muchâ.
âI willâ, you promised, letting your hand trail to the back of his neck, feeling the tension there.
He gave a slow nod, then eased forward again, still watching you like a hawk, less the cocky supe now, more the man who, despite himself, didnât want to break what was his.
It struck you then⌠the last time heâd been this careful was months ago, the night he took your virginity. Back then, his hands had been steady but unsure, his mouth still mouthing off between moments of surprising gentleness. Youâd almost thought you imagined it afterward, that tenderness, because it hadnât shown up again.
Until now.
Seeing it again, feeling it, did something to you.
Ben wasnât the kind of man to hold back for anyone. He was all sharp edges, bad habits and a mouth that got him into more trouble than even he could shoot his way out of. But right now, those edges were softened, his hands warm and grounding instead of demanding, his eyes scanning your face like he was taking inventory of every breath, every twitch, every flicker of discomfort.
It made your chest ache in a way you hadnât been prepared for.
Youâd fallen for him before, in pieces. In the smirk that made you want to punch him, in the way he carried himself like the world still owed him a parade, in the heat of his presence when he wanted something. But this? This was different. This was rare. And it was yours.
Your throat tightened, and you reached up, curling your fingers into the hair at the back of his head. He glanced down at you, that mission-focus still in his eyes.
âWhat?â, he asked.
âNothingâ, you said, shaking your head with a small smile. âJust⌠donât stopâ.
Something flickered in his expression, not quite a smile, but close, before he leaned in, brushing his mouth over your temple, and kept moving slow. Every shift of his body was deliberate and measured, like he was proving he could be careful when it mattered.
And you realized, right there, that this man â this brash, infuriating, larger-than-life man â had just made you fall for him all over again.
Every slow movement, every careful shift of his weight, every look he gave you like you were something worth guarding, it built higher and hotter than you expected. It wasnât just your body reacting; it was everything else, too. The months of brashness, the constant teasing, all balanced now by this one rare, steady tenderness.
It was too much.
Your breath caught, your fingers tightening in his hair. âBenââ.
He looked down at you, still moving with that same deliberate control, but his eyes sharpened at your tone. âYou there, doll?â.
You nodded, not trusting your voice, the heat cresting all at once, sudden and overwhelming. It rolled through you in seconds, your whole body tensing and shuddering beneath him.
The sound that tore out of you was almost a sob, sharp, unsteady, too honest to hold back. You felt yourself shaking, every nerve lit up at once, and when you opened your eyes again, his were already locked on yours.
They widened, just a fraction, like youâd done something he hadnât prepared for. That unguarded flicker, surprise, maybe even a little awe, was enough to knock the air out of both of you.
His breath hitched, the careful rhythm faltering as his grip on your hips tightened. âAh, shitâŚâ, he muttered, voice rough, like heâd just realized too late that you were pulling him over the edge with you. His whole body tensed above you, his weight sinking into you as he let go. The sharp inhale he took was ragged, almost matching your own.
He stayed there, braced but close, his forehead dipping to rest against yours. His breathing was uneven and his chest was rising and falling against you.
ââŚDidnât see that cominââ, he admitted after a beat, his voice low and unsteady in a way youâd never heard before.
You smiled faintly, still catching your breath. âMe neitherâ.
He didnât move right away. Usually, Ben was quick to roll off, crack a joke, or wander off like nothing happened, but not this time. His weight stayed over you, his forehead still pressed to yours like he was catching his breath and⌠maybe not ready to let go yet.
You felt the slow thud of his heartbeat against your chest, the warmth of him sinking into you. His hand slid from your hip to your side, resting there like it belonged.
âYouâre heavyâ, you murmured, though you made no move to push him off.
âDeal with itâ, he muttered, the words automatic, but the edge was gone from his voice.
You smiled, your fingers drifting up into his hair, brushing it back from his face.
âYouâre⌠differentâ, you murmured, your fingertips tracing through his hair.
His eyes stayed half-lidded, watching you. âDonât get used to itâ, he said, but there was no bite in the words.
You shifted under him slightly, realizing something. âHuhâ.
âWhat?â, he asked.
âNo cramps anymoreâ, you whispered, almost surprised.
That cocky grin started to tug at his mouth again. âSo what youâre sayinâ is⌠Iâm better than painkillersâ.
You rolled your eyes but leaned up anyway, brushing your lips against his in a soft kiss. It lingered, slow and unhurried, before you pulled back just enough to see the faint smirk still playing on his face.
âGuess youâve got your usesâ, you teased.
âGuess?â, he echoed, feigning offense. âBaby, I just cured your uterus. Thatâs Nobel Prize materialâ.
You laughed, shoving at his shoulder lightly. âYeah, Iâll put in the nomination tomorrowâ.
He finally rolled to the side, pulling you with him so you ended up tucked against his chest. His arm stayed draped around you.
âGoodâ, he murmured into your hair. âMeans I donât have to go far for my next miracleâ.
-
Later that day, Hughie was halfway through a sandwich, when Ben strolled in, looking smug in that I-just-got-away-with-something kind of way.
Butcher was at the table cleaning a gun, already narrowing his eyes. âWhatâs with the shit-eating grin, grandpa?â.
Ben dropped into the chair across from them, leaning back with his arms spread. âJust came from my girl. Sheâs on the ragââ
âFor fuck´s sakeâ, Butcher muttered. âHere we fuckinâ goâ.
Hughie froze mid-bite. âUh⌠do we really need to hearââ.
"Yes, you doâ, Ben shot back, pointing at him like a drill sergeant. âThis is educational. Girlâs laid up in bed, cramps kickinâ her ass, barely able to move. So I step in, handle business like a gentleman, and suddenly?â. He snapped his fingers. âFuckin´ miracle recoveryâ.
Hughie blinked. âIâm scared to ask what âhandle businessâ meansâ.
Ben grinned. âKid, you ever been inside a woman when sheâs runninâ that hot? Feels like your dick just got draftedâ.
âAlright, thatâs enoughâ, Butcher snapped, jamming the cleaning rag through the barrel of his gun hard enough to nearly bend the rod.
âNo, no, hear me outâ, Ben went on, waving a hand. âHumans already run warm, right? But when theyâre on their period?â. He pointed like he was explaining combat strategy. âWhole different operation. Like somebody lit a goddamn furnace in thereâ.
Hughie dropped his sandwich onto the table, looking like he was rethinking all his life choices. âI am begging you to stop talkingâ.
Butcher shot Ben a look full of exhaustion. âYou done traumatizing the children?â.
Ben leaned back in his chair, smug as hell. âJust wanted you assholes to know youâre in the presence of a fucking healerâ.
Butcher rolled his eyes. âMore like a filthy old pervâ.
Ben just grinned wider. âCall it what you want, pal. I call it service to my countryâ.
âââââââââââ
A/N: Please let me know what you think. Itâs one of my all-time favoritesđĽ°)
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Summary: Eighty-five years after Soldier Boy left you behind, he finds you frozen, kept as leverage, and drags you back into a world you never got to live. Far from Voughtâs spotlight, you and Ben try to stitch a marriage back together from ash.
(sequel to "the softest thing")
Pairing: Soldier Boy x Reader
Warnings: Language, angst
Word Count: 10178
DISCLAIMER: Everything is purely fiction. I do not intend to attack or hurt anyone. The story is, of course, entirely made up and meant for entertainment purposes.
The file hit his lap. Ben looked down with the kind of flat, exhausted annoyance he had been wearing since he woke up in that obscene room high over the city. Homelanderâs room. Homelander stood across from him bright-eyed.
âThink about it againâ, he had said. Then the file.
Ben almost told him to go fuck himself twice. His fingers were already closing around the folder to throw it. Then he saw the label. A name. Not yours when you were his wife. Not Mrs. anything. Not the name on the marriage license, or the bills, or the little card at the dry cleaner back when there had still been ordinary days. Your name. The one from before him.
Ben went still. The suite got very quiet.
Ben looked down at the folder again. SUBJECT STATUS: CRYOGENIC CONTAINMENT STABLE
For one second his brain refused to understand the words in the right order. Then it did.
His thumb slipped under the edge and opened the file.
The first page was a photograph. Black-and-white. Studio-lit. Clinical in a way that made his stomach turn. You were in your twenties in it.
He knew that before the file told him, because he knew your face. Not the lined, careful face you might have worn if life had kept happening to you. Not the older version time should have made. This was you as you had been when he left you. Soft mouth, watchful eyes, hair set neatly back from your face, trying so hard in the picture to look composed that it hurt to see.
Twenty-seven. Frozen there. Eighty-five years gone and not a day on your face.
Ben stopped breathing. Below the photograph, line after line of text blurred and sharpened and blurred again.
Initial retrieval.
Unauthorized domestic association with asset.
Emotional leverage viability high.
Compound V survivability unexpectedly successful.
Long-term storage authorized.
Pressure contingency.
Pressure contingency.
Pressure contingency.
His hand tightened on the page hard enough to crease it.
Across the room, Homelander lifted his glass and watched him with open interest. âShe´s aliveâ.
Ben did not look up. The suite had narrowed to the file in his hands and the sound of blood rushing hot and violent in his ears.
There were more pages. Medical charts. Temperature logs. Monitoring summaries. A diagram of some buried facility with sectors blacked out in thick ink. One page clipped in later than the rest with a new date stamped at the top and a note:
Subject remains non-public. Retention advised. Utility value may increase if Soldier Boy becomes noncompliant.
Ben stared at that line until the letters stopped being letters and became something else. Something with teeth.
He had thought leaving you had been the worst thing he ever did to you.
Not because he had not done worse things to other people. He had. Plenty. Enough to wake sweating with names he never let himself say out loud.
But leaving you, walking out of that little kitchen for good, letting Vought sand down whatever was left of Ben until Soldier Boy fit cleanly over the top, had always sat in him like rust. Hidden. Eating through from the inside.
And all that time⌠All that goddamn timeâŚ
They had had you.
Kept.
Stored.
âI figured that might get your attentionâ.
Ben lifted his head then. Slowly. He had looked dangerous before. Hungover, heavy-eyed, broad across the shoulders even in borrowed clothes. Now he looked like something much older and uglier than danger.
Homelanderâs expression flickered, just a little, delighted and cautious at once.
âShe was always thereâ, he said lightly, as if discussing an old account finally brought current. âCute trick, really. Vought keeps all sorts of contingencies. You of all people should appreciate preparednessâ.
Ben rose from the couch.
âSoâ, Homelander said. âNow that you understand the leverage, are you ready to be useful?â.
âYou knewâ.
Homelander tilted his head. âI know lots of thingsâ.
âYou knewâ, Ben said again.
The file hung at his side, crushed under his fingers now, your photograph bent where his grip had warped the paper.
Homelander gave a small shrug. âI knew enoughâ.
That was all it took. Ben crossed the room. He caught Homelander by the throat and hit him through the edge of the bar. Marble split. Bottles exploded and glass sprayed the room.
Homelander laughed. Even half-crushed under Soldier Boyâs hand, he laughed.
âAhâ, he choked out, eyes bright and mad, âthere he isâ.
Ben hit him again. This time the sound was wetter. Angrier. A lamp went over. A slab of black stone cracked down the middle.
Homelanderâs smile came back bloodied.
âSheâs aliveâ, he rasped. âThatâs the important partâ.
Benâs fingers tightened at his throat. For one terrible second, he really might have killed him. Then Homelander, even pinned and bruised and half-grinning through blood, said the one thing that cut clean through the red:
âYou kill me, you lose herâ.
Ben froze. Homelander smiled wider despite the hand at his neck.
Ben looked at him and saw, all at once, every Vought man he had ever hated. The executives with polished shoes. The handlers. The doctors. The ones who turned human beings into concepts and concepts into assets and assets into pressure. Homelander was just the latest model, shinier, but made from the same rotten blueprint.
Very slowly, Ben let him go.
Homelander staggered back, still smiling because he could not help himself. Because getting under skin was the only intimacy he understood.
Ben wiped his bleeding palm on his shirt and looked down at the file again. Your picture stared back up at him. Twenty-seven.
A whole life stolen and held in a drawer.
His chest went tight in a way no fight had ever managed. Not even Russia. Not the furnace. Not the years in a tube under a foreign sky while his own name turned into a mascot and then a joke and then a warning.
You.
He thought of the side yard between your houses. Your mittened fingers tucked into his elbow. Your voice, soft and bossy at sixteen: Hold still. The little kitchen table where you had cleaned blood off his face while his fatherâs voice still rang in his ears, calling him a fucking disappointment. The way you had looked at him when nobody else looked at him like there was anything worth saving.
He had left you.
That was his sin.
But this⌠This was something else.
They had taken what he left behind and turned it into inventory.
Homelander straightened. âGet Butcher for meâ, he said, as if the room were not half-destroyed around them. âAnd I show you where she itsâ.
-
The air bit cold enough to sting the back of your throat just breathing it. Frost filmed the pipes overhead. Ben stood in the middle of the bunker, bloody from wrist to collar. Some of it was his. Most of it wasnât. Bodies lay where they had fallen. One by the far control panel, neck bent wrong over a spill of shattered glass. Two by the blast door, rifles kicked out of reach. One half-slumped against the wall. Another near the alarm box, hand frozen inches from the switch he never got to hit in time.
Ben had not made much noise doing it. That was what frightened him now, standing there with the little remote in his hand and your tank in front of him.
Not the killing itself. He had done too much of that for it to feel new.
Not even the speed of it.
It was how easy it had been. How clean. How Soldier Boy it had felt.
The remote was small in his palm. One red button under a flip-cover guard. Ridiculous, really, that after eighty-five years, after Russia and fire and Butcher and Homelander and all the rot in between, the distance between him and you had come down to one ugly little button.
He stared at it. Did not move. In front of him, behind a curved wall of glass gone pearly with cold, you stood upright in the tank. Frozen. Perfectly still. Twenty-seven.
That was the first thing that had wrecked him when Homelander shoved the file at him in the tower. Not the reports. Not the coordinates. Not even the word cryogenic typed in neat black letters above your name.
Your age. Twenty-seven.
He had been old enough to rot and be reborn and rot again. The world had gone through wars and presidents and hairstyles and goddamn moons and computers in peopleâs pockets.
He had been buried under Russian steel while his own legend got sold by men who had never once had to dirty their own hands.
And you were still twenty-seven.
Still wearing the same face he remembered from the last years before he left.
Softer in rest than in life, maybe, because whatever fear or sorrow Vought had dragged through you hadnât made it through the ice.
Your hair was pinned back from your face by frost and suspension gel and machinery he did not understand. Your lashes lay dark against your skin. Your mouth looked pale and closed and familiar enough to stop his heart. You looked exactly like all those years ago.
And the second he saw you, all the time between then and now collapsed so violently it left him dizzy.
The little house. The kitchen table. Rain on the windows. Your pink satin nightgown. Your face wet with tears while he stood in the doorway and let Soldier Boy win.
He had imagined finding you a hundred different ways on the drive out here. Older. Dead. Bones in a box. A grave with some false name.
He had not imagined this.
You looked like you could open your eyes any second and ask why he was home so late.
Benâs fingers tightened around the remote until the casing creaked.
He was afraid. Afraid of pressing a button. B
ecause once he did, it became real. Once he did, there would be no more distance between the idea of you and your body in front of him.
You might wake and not know him. You might wake and know him too well. You might look at him and see only the man who left. Worseâyou might not wake right.
Vought had held you for eighty-five years like inventory. Shot you full of V and put you under glass. Used your name as leverage in files. He had no reason to trust anything about what came next.
âJesus Christâ. He stepped closer to the tank.
Up close, he could see where frost feathered over the seams of the metal braces holding the glass in place.
Tubes snaked from the back of the chamber into your arms, your spine, the base of your skull. Machines had been kissing you longer than he had.
The thought made something black roll over in him.
He lifted his free hand and pressed his palm to the glass. The cold bit instantly through blood and skin.
Behind the fogged surface, your face stayed calm. Untouched by any of it. Soft in that old familiar way that used to wreck him even when he was a boy with split knuckles and too much pride.
You had always looked gentler than the world deserved.
He bowed his head once, just enough that his forehead nearly hit the glass. Blood from his hand smeared across the frost in a rust-dark streak. For a second, all he could see was another kind of red. Lipstick on a collar. Then your tears. Your wedding band glinting while you tried not to cry in front of him.
All the little moments he had buried under war and whiskey and Vought work and rage because digging them up would mean admitting what he had done with his own hands.
His thumb found the edge of the safety cover on the remote and flipped it open. Benâs heartbeat kicked hard. Then something inside him, something older than Soldier Boy and uglier than pride and maybe closer to Ben than he had been in years, made the decision for him. He pressed the button.
For one horrible second, nothing happened. Then the chamber gave a low hydraulic thud. Lights changed from green to amber. Somewhere under the floor, machinery woke in layersâpumps, vents, hissing valves releasing pressure in precise bursts.
Frost shivered loose from the tank seams and fell in powdery sheets. The hum deepened into a mechanical roar.
Ben took one step back, then stopped himself and stood his ground.
Amber turned to white. Warm fluid began draining in spirals around your body, slipping down the inside of the glass in pale pink streaks where blood had mixed into the solution somewhere in the tubing.
Numbers on the monitor started changing faster now. You did not move.
Benâs throat tightened until breathing hurt. âCome onâ, he muttered.
The glass clouded, then cleared in patches. Your skin changed color by degrees, from the waxy stillness of preserved flesh to something nearer living. Frost melted from your lashes. One lock of hair slipped loose against your temple. The line of your mouth softened as the cold released it. Still nothing.
Ben stepped closer again without realizing he had. The chamber hissed. A latch somewhere deep in the mechanism disengaged with a heavy clunk. Then your fingers twitched. So small he might have imagined it in another life. Not now. Ben stopped breathing altogether.
A second later your hand jerked again, this time harder, tendons pulling under your skin. Your chest gave a shallow, ragged hitch as if your body had forgotten the shape of breath and was trying to relearn it by force.
The front seal cracked with a metallic snap. Ben was moving before the door had fully opened. It swung out in a gust of freezing vapor, and you pitched forward with the dead weight of someone waking into gravity after a century.
Tubes tore free. Glassy fluid spilled over the lip of the tank onto the floor. Your knees buckled instantly.
Ben caught you.
Your body convulsed against him. Then you coughed. Ben looked down and saw the tube shifting at the back of your throat. âShitâ.
He dropped to one knee in the spill of coolant and freezing fluid, one arm locked behind your shoulders to keep you upright. The other hand hovered for a second over the tubing, his fingers slick with blood and condensation.
You gagged again, harder this time. âEasyâ, he said, though his own voice was shot through with something dangerously close to panic. âEasy, sweetheart, I got itâ.
He had no idea if he did.
He slid two fingers carefully to the base of the tube, trying to ignore how unnatural it looked disappearing past your lips, trying to ignore the old terror that came whenever your body was involved and his hands had to do something delicate.
His touch, for once, was painstakingly light. Your throat worked around the plastic. Another cough tore through you. Ben pulled. The moment it cleared your mouth you folded forward with a choking gasp. Your forehead knocked weakly against his collarbone. Cold fluid soaked through the front of his shirt where you leaned against him. You kept coughing. Your whole body shook with it.
âBreatheâ, he said, low and rough. âCome on. There you goâ.
There were wires everywhere. Thin sensor leads plastered to your skin. Adhesive pads at your icollarbone, your ribs, your temples. A cluster of ports and lines trailed from your back and arms and disappeared into the ruined chamber behind you.
The monitor to the side was beeping too fast now, numbers climbing. Ben glanced at it once. He didnât know what most of it meant. But he knew the sound of a heart trying to decide whether it belonged in a living body again. Fast. Wrong. Then skipping. Then racing.
His jaw tightened. âCâmonâ, he muttered, more fiercely now. âDonât do thisâ.
He reached for the first wire at your chest and peeled it back with maddening care. Then another. Then another. The adhesive came loose with soft wet sounds against your skin. His fingers shook once when one of the leads snagged in your hair and you flinched faintly even half-conscious.
âSorryâ, he said instantly. The word left his mouth before he could stop it.
He stared at your face after saying it, as if even now some part of him expected you to open your eyes just to tell him it was too late for apologies. But your eyes stayed shut. Your mouth was parted, drawing in broken little breaths that. Every now and then another cough shuddered through you, weaker than the one before.
Ben stripped the last wire from your throat and shoulder, then found more at your wrists. At the inside of your elbows. At the base of your neck. Whoever had put you in there had instrumented every inch of you like they were trying to measure a miracle and own it.
He tore the leads free one by one. The monitor screamed once before the rhythm smoothed. Still too quick and shallow. But steadier.
Ben went still long enough to listen. And there was your heartbeat. Fast. Frightened⌠Human.
He frowned and looked toward the monitor again. That made no sense. They had pumped you full of V. He knew that from the file, from the notes. He had come down here half-prepared to find something else in the tank. Some glowing-eyed Vought experiment wearing your face. Some twisted answer to a question nobody should have asked.
But your heart didnât sound like his. Didnât sound like Homelanderâs, his own or any of the monsters and mascots he had spent too much of his life around. It sounded breakable. Human.
Your breathing hitched again and your eyelids fluttered.
Benâs pulse hammered. He had faced gunfire with less dread. He could fight. Kill. Blow through steel doors. March into a bunker alone and paint the walls with guards and not blink. But waiting for your eyes to open⌠that nearly undid him.
Because now there was nothing between you. Now it was just you waking up. And him. The man who left. The husband who broke your heart before strangers finished the job. The one who had not come back in time. Not in 1970. Not in 1980. Not in any of the years after that.
The one who had let himself become Soldier Boy so completely that the company had thought the only way to control him was to freeze the last soft part of his old life and keep it in storage.
Ben sat back on his heels in the freezing slush and watched your face with the kind of terrible focus that made everything else disappear. A dozen possibilities chased each other through his head, none of them good.
You might wake confused. You might wake screaming. You might wake and remember only the worst of him. You might wake and hate him on sight.
You had every right.
That last thought lodged in him hardest.
Did you still hate him? Worseâhad the hatred had eighty-five years to sharpen somewhere inside whatever dreaming half-life Vought had trapped you in?
Or had the ice kept you right at the moment of your ruin, your grief as fresh as blood under skin?
Ben rubbed a hand once over his mouth and came away with red still drying there from someone else. He looked down at it with sudden disgust and wiped it on the concrete.
Your heartbeat jumped again. His attention snapped back to you instantly.
âHeyâ, he said. âStay with meâ.
Your fingers closed weakly around two of his without any strength in them at all. The contact hit him so hard it almost made him bow forward.
There you were. Cold. Half-conscious. Newly dragged from eighty-five years of dark. And still, by some reflex too old for either of you to kill, your hand had reached.
Ben swallowed hard enough it hurt. âI knowâ, he said softly, though you had not spoken. âI knowâ.
He didnât know what he meant by it. That he knew you were frightened? That he knew he shouldnât be the one you woke up to? That he knew exactly what kind of man he had been the last time you saw him properly and how impossible it was to ask for anything gentler from this moment?
Maybe all of it.
Your breathing steadied a little more. Still shaky. Still too quick. But less torn-up on the way in. Less like drowning.
The lights buzzed overhead. Down the corridor, a distant alarm warbled and cut out, maybe killed by the same broken circuits that had left this section half running on backup. Cold fog curled low around the empty chamber. Corpses stared at the ceiling in silence. And in the middle of all of it, Soldier Boy knelt on a concrete floor holding your hand like it was the only thing in the world he couldnât afford to break.
Your lashes trembled again. This time your eyes opened halfway. Blurred. Unfocused. They moved over the room in fragmentsâwhite light, concrete, the silver of the blankets around you, the dark shape of him kneeling in front of you.
Your brow drew faintly, confusion coming first. Then discomfort. Then the weak animal fear of waking somewhere wrong.
Ben saw the exact second your gaze snagged on his face and tried to make sense of it.
He was older. The face was still Benâs. The damage wasnât.
Recognition came slowly and painfully in pieces. Your lips parted. No sound at first.
Benâs chest went tight. âDonât push itâ, he said, instinctively rough, then caught himself and lowered his voice. âYou donât gottaââ.
Your mouth worked again. This time a thread of breath shaped itself into a word so faint he almost thought he imagined it. âBenâŚ?â.
There was no hate in your voice. Not yet. Not understanding either. Just stunned, impossible recognition.
His eyes closed for one beat. When he opened them again, something naked had slipped through the cracks in his face before he could stop it. âYeahâ, he said. âItâs meâ.
Your gaze held on him, still struggling to focus, still dragged under by cold and waking and the sheer wrongness of the room. He could see your mind trying to fit him somewhere it understood and failing.
The last Ben you knew should have been twenty-something and standing in a little house with his shadow too long on the wall. Not this.
Your fingers tightened weakly around his. Then your gaze dropped to the blood on him. To the bodies beyond. Back to the tank. Confusion turned to fear in a quick, bright flare.
Ben felt it like a knife. âNoâ, he said at once, too fast. âNo, easy. Youâre okayâ.
That was a lie, and both of them knew it.
But he could not bear the look in your eyes when it landed on the room.
He shifted closer, slowly enough to give you time to recoil if you wanted to. You tensed anyway. Only a little. Only instinct. Still enough. Ben stopped right there. His throat worked once. âI knowâ. The words were almost to himself.
He loosened his hand under yours, giving you the room to let go if that was what you wanted. His other hand stayed braced on the concrete beside your hip.
âYou were in thereâ, he said quietly, glancing toward the tank. âThey had you under. Long timeâ. His mouth tightened. âI got you outâ.
Your eyes flicked to the tank again, then back to him. Your voice, when it came, was no more than a scrape. âHowâŚ?â.
Ben let out a breath through his nose.
How did one answer that? How did one bridge war and Vought and Homelander and files and eighty-five years buried under concrete and ice?
He chose the only part that mattered first. âI found youâ.
Your lashes fluttered. Confusion still clouded everything. âYou leftâ, you whispered. The words were so weak they should not have had any force at all. They hit him like a bullet.
Ben went motionless.
Of course. Of course that was the first clear thing. Not the bunker. Not the blood. Not the impossible machinery.
Him leaving. The door. The kitchen table. The keys.
Your mind had come back through ice and nightmare and whatever half-life Vought had forced on you, and the first solid fact it reached for was the one that hurt most.
He looked at you and did not even try to defend himself. âYeahâ, he said.
Your face changed, not into anger exactly, because you were too weak yet for anything so hot. More like the old wound had opened before the rest of you had even finished waking.
Ben felt panic rise in him then. Helplessness. The kind he had always hated most.
Just then, your world tipped sideways.
One second you were looking at him and the next, everything in you simply gave out.
Your fingers slipped from his. Your eyes rolled shut.
Ben caught you before your head hit the concrete. âHeyâ.
The word cracked out of him, sharp with fear.
He felt for your pulse before he even realized he was doing it, two fingers at the side of your throat, then lower when his hand shook too much to trust the first reading.
Your heartbeat was still there. Fast, too thin, but there. Your breathing came shallow and uneven against the front of his shirt. You were alive. Just unconscious.
Ben closed his eyes for half a second and let the relief hit him hard enough to make his teeth grit.
Then he wrapped the blankets tighter around you, slid one arm behind your back and the other beneath your knees, and lifted you with a care that would have looked unnatural on anybody who knew what his hands could do.
Your head fell against his chest. Damp hair brushed his throat.
He got out of the bunker before the next wave came.
More alarms. More men. Maybe Vought cleanup. Maybe Homelander changing his mind.
He didnât stay to find out.
The car crooked in the gravel behind the bunker entrance, engine still idling.
He laid you in the back seat of the car heâd taken from the last guard first, then stopped, swore under his breath, and moved you again.
âNoâ, he mumbled.
Not back there. Not where he couldnât hear every breath right beside him.
So he settled you in the front instead, reclined the seat as far as it would go, belted you in with maddening care, then pulled both emergency blankets up to your chin before slamming the door and getting behind the wheel.
He took back roads first, then frontage roads, then some dark stretch of highway lined with shut gas stations and chain restaurants glowing in the distance. He didnât know where he was going until he saw a motel sign.
The place sat off a quiet road outside town, the sort of motel people used when they didnât want questions or company.
Ben carried you in through the side entrance of room twelve with the key still warm from the clerkâs hand.
Inside, the room was dim and ugly and blessedly quiet.
He set you down on the bed and for a second he just stood over you.
Your face was pale against the motel pillow. Your lips still had that bluish cast around the edges that scared the hell out of him. Coolant and thawed frost and fluid had soaked through everything. Blood, other peopleâs, maybe some yours, marked the silver blanket and his ruined jacket wrapped around your shoulders.
You looked small.
Not fragile exactly. You had always hated that word. But small in a way the world had no business making you.
Ben turned on the bathroom light. Found washcloths, thin towels, a sealed little bar of soap. Ran the sink until water came hot enough to steam.
He went back out with a wet towel and sat on the edge of the bed.
Then he hesitated.
Not because he hadnât seen your body. Christ, he had. A thousand times, in better years and worse. In satin and cotton and nothing at all. In the narrow bed of your first house with summer heat making the sheets stick, in dark mornings before he left for work, in the rare soft pauses where he had once believed wanting and keeping were the same thing.
That was exactly why it hit him so hard now.
Because all those memories came from a life before he broke the right to any of this.
Still, you were half-frozen and unconscious and shaking every now and then in little leftover aftershocks. He could not leave you soaked in chemicals and blood.
So he did what needed doing. Carefully.
He cleaned you with warm water and the washcloth, rinsing fluid and blood from your arms, your shoulders, your legs, your throat. Wiped the residue of adhesive from your skin where the sensors had been. Smoothed damp hair away from your face with fingers that dwarfed your temple and yet somehow barely touched.
Every now and then he stopped just to listen.
Heartbeat. Breathing. Human. Still there.
When you shivered hard enough to make your teeth knock together in your sleep, he stripped off the ruined top half of his suit without a second thought. Underneath, he had the long-sleeve undershirt Vought had built under the costume warm from his own skin. He pulled it over his head and for a second stood there in only his suit pants.
Then he dressed you in it.
That took longer than it should have. One limp arm at a time. Your head supported in the crook of his elbow while he eased the shirt down over you. The fabric swallowed you whole, hem falling to your thighs, sleeves past your wrists. His shirt on your body looked indecently intimate in a way that had nothing to do with sex and everything to do with history.
He hated how much that undid him.
By the time he got you under the blankets, you were warmer than before. Not warm enough. But no longer ice. Ben sat beside you and stayed there.
-
At 2:07, you woke with a gasp that hurt all the way down.
The room lurched into view in broken pieces.
A yellow lamp with a stained shade. Floral curtains pulled almost shut. A ceiling painted the color of old nicotine. The stale smell of motel soap, dust and somebody elseâs cigarettes soaked into the carpet long before you ever got here.
Your body felt wrong in every possible direction and for one wild second, you did not know where you were.
Then you tried to move and everything came back badly.
The tank. The bunker. The blood.
Ben.
You pushed yourself up on instinct. Pain and dizziness hit at once. Your head swam. Your stomach turned over hard enough to make you press one hand against it. The blankets slid down your lap. Something warm and steady moved in the chair beside the bed.
âDonât do thatâ.
His voice came low and immediate. Awake already. Waiting.
You turned your head.
Ben sat in the chair by the bed with his elbows on his knees. He had no shirt on. Only those green superhero suit pants still clung to him.
He looked tired enough to split. His hair was damp, pushed back from his face by impatient fingers. There was gray at his temples now, not the gray of age so much as damage that had decided to show itself there first. Faint scars cut across his chest and shoulder, old and pale. His eyes stayed fixed on you with the kind of concentration men used on bombs.
You realized then that what you were wearing was not yours.
A dark long-sleeve shirt swallowed your body whole. It smelled like soap and something underneath it that was unmistakably him. Not cologne. Not city. Not the chemical glitter that had clung to him in the last years before he leftâŚ. Just Ben.
Your throat went tight.
He saw your gaze drop to the shirt.
âYou were freezingâ, he said. The explanation came out rough, almost defensive, like he was bracing for accusation. âYou had all that fluid shit on youâ.
You tried to speak too quickly. Your voice came out scraped raw.
âWhatââ. You stopped to swallow.
Ben was already reaching for the bottle on the nightstand. You took a sip and looked around the room again, slower this time. Cheap dresser. One door with a heavy chain lock. A purse-sized Gideon Bible on the nightstand.
âThisâŚâ. Your voice failed. You tried again. âWhere are we?â.
âMotelâ, he said. His eyes did not leave your face. âOutside the cityâ.
That answered almost nothing.
You licked dry lips and looked at him more carefully. Really looked.
The last time you had seen him properly, he had still been young in a way that made sense. Dangerous maybe, yes. Mean, yes. Already turning into something⌠cruel. But still recognizably anchored to the world you knew.
This Ben was not that.
The face was the same underneath. The mouth. The brow. The shape of his jaw when he clenched it. But timeâhowever it had touched himâhad done it from the inside out. He looked like a man who had been lived through by too much. A man who had survived things badly.
Your eyes dropped to the green pants again. To the ridiculous costume piece in a room that might have existed nowhere in the world you remembered.
Cold crept into you from somewhere deeper than your skin.
âWhat year is it?â.
Ben went still. You saw the way his shoulders locked and the way his eyes changed. As if this had been the question he had been dreading most.
When he answered, he did not soften it.
â2026â.
You stared at him.
The number meant nothing for a beat. Then too much.
Your hand loosened around the bottle. âNoâ, you said.
Benâs jaw tightened. âYeahâ.
âNoâ.
You shook your head once, then regretted it instantly when the room tipped again. The clock on the nightstand glowed red. 2:08. That horrible little digital brightness alone looked wrong enough to make your chest pull tight.
âThatâs notâŚâ. You swallowed. âThatâs not funnyâ.
His face changed at that. Something like pain crossed it fast and was gone.
âIâm not jokingâ.
You looked at the lamp. The clock. The cut of the curtains. The shape of the phone on the nightstand, plastic and smooth and alien compared to what memory expected. The air itself felt different. Colder in some mechanical way, flatter, less alive than the rooms you remembered.
You pressed your hand harder to your stomach.
Eighty-five years.
The number opened under your feet like a trapdoor.
Your mind reached for smaller things instead. Safer things. The last details it could still trust.
Rain on the kitchen windows.
The tick of the clock above the stove.
His keys on the table.
The newspaper on the floor.
Your breath started coming too fast.
Ben heard it immediately. He pushed out of the chair before you could register the motion, then stopped himself halfway to the bed, hands open at his sides, as if remembering all at once that moving fast toward you was no longer neutral.
âHeyâ, he said, lower now. âBreatheâ.
You looked at him and wanted to ask ten things at once.
Where had he been.
What had they done to you.
Why were you still twenty-seven.
Why did he look the same and not the same.
Who had dressed you.
Why did the room smell like bleach and old heat.
Why, why, why.
Instead what came out was, âI was deadâ.
âNoâ.
The answer was immediate. Too sharp. Almost angry.
Ben dragged a hand over his mouth and forced his voice back down. âNo. They had you under. Frozenâ. His mouth twisted around the word, hating it. âLong timeâ.
Your eyes burned. âWho?â.
âVoughtâ.
The name sat between you like acid.
You looked away. Of course. Of course it was them. Who else took people and turned them into property with a clean desk and a typed memo?
Your fingers curled into the blanket. âWhy?â.
He laughed once through his nose. No humor in it. âFor meâ.
You turned back to him. He did not look away.
âThey kept you as leverageâ, he said. âPressure. In case I ever stepped out of lineâ.
You looked down at your own hands. Pale against dark fabric. A strangerâs motel light on skin that had not aged. The shirt sleeve hanging over your knuckles, his shirt, because there had been no time or right or choice left in anything.
âFor youâ, you repeated.
Benâs throat worked once. âYeahâ.
A hundred feelings moved through you at once, too tangled to separateâshock, fear, grief, humiliation so old it woke up instantly, and somewhere under all of it a raw little thread of anger that had somehow survived even the ice.
You laughed once, softly and without any joy in it. âThat sounds about rightâ.
He flinched.
You had not meant to make him do that. Or maybe you had. You didnât know. Your whole body felt like it belonged to someone else.
Silence settled.
Ben stayed standing where he was, not near enough to crowd you, not far enough to pretend he wasnât waiting for every breath.
You looked at the motel door with the chain lock, then the window, then back at him. The movement was instinctive. Measuring exits. Safety. The habit felt new and old at the same time.
Ben noticed. âThis place is cleanâ, he said. âI checkedâ.
You almost smiled at the phrasing. Almost. It died before it got there.
âDid you kill them?â.
Ben went very still.
You already knew the answer. You had seen the blood on him in the bunker. The bodies. The way he carried violence now like a second skin. Still, some part of you needed to hear whether he would lie.
He didnât.
âYesâ.
You closed your eyes.
When you opened them, he was still watching you with that unbearable focus.
âThey were keeping you in a tankâ, he said, voice roughening. âI wasnât gonna ask nicelyâ.
No. He wouldnât have.
That answer should have frightened you more than it did.
Maybe because there was no room left for new kinds of fear yet. Only the old one, sitting between your ribs with his name on it.
You shifted under the blankets and the motion pulled a small, involuntary wince out of you. Ben caught it instantly.
âWhat hurts?â.
You blinked at him. The question came so fast it sounded as though he had been waiting to ask it for hours.
âNothingâ, you said automatically.
His expression said he didnât believe you for a second.
âEverything?â, he tried instead, and there was something almost grimly dry in the adjustment, something old-Ben enough to catch you off guard.
A tired, disbelieving breath escaped you.
âPretty muchâ.
That did something to his face. Softened wasnât the word. Wounded maybe. Or maybe just made him look like a man listening to damage he could neither fix nor fight.
He sat back down in the chair slowly. He leaned forward, forearms on his thighs, giving you less height to have to look up at. That seemed deliberate too. You watched him for a while.
âYou were waiting for me to wake upâ.
Ben looked at the floor for a second before answering. âYeahâ.
âHow long?â.
He flicked a glance at the clock. âCouple hoursâ.
The absurdity of that hit you strangely. The world had moved nearly a century. Vought had stolen your life. You had woken in a motel wearing your estranged husbandâs undershirt while he sat shirtless in superhero pants beside the bed like a sentry.
And still some small, intimate truth survived in the middle of all that ruin: he had waited.
You didnât know what to do with that. Neither did he, by the look of him.
He was quiet for a long moment. Then he said, lower than before, âYou can go back to sleepâ.
You almost laughed.
âBenâ, you whispered. âI woke up in 2026â.
His mouth flattened. âYeahâ.
âI donât think Iâm sleepingâ.
No answer at first.
Then, almost under his breath, âFair enoughâ.
Around three, Ben started talking, because the silence had become its own kind of cruelty.
He gave you the shortest version he knew how to give, which still wasnât short, because his life after you had been one long chain of violence, bad choices, and men using one another like weapons.
He told you about Countess first. Not gently. Ben had never known how to make ugly truths pretty.
He sat there half-turned in that ugly motel chair, forearms on his knees, looking at the carpet instead of you when he said, âYeah. I loved her. In my wayâ.
The words hit low and hard. You kept your face still, but your fingers curled tighter in the blanket.
He must have heard the change in your breathing, because his jaw tightened. For a second you thought he might take it back, soften it, say something to save you from the shape of it.
He didnât.
âShe wasnât youâ, he said after a beat, rougher now. âNever wasâ.
That should not have helped.
It did and didnât, both at once.
Then came the rest. His team. The betrayal. Countess turning on him with the others. The Russians taking him. Decades in a lab, drugged and buried and cut open and studied. He told it flatly, like if he stripped the feeling out of it first, maybe neither of you would have to touch it.
You listened with your arms around yourself. Every now and then you asked a question, and every answer only seemed to make the world wider and colder.
Then Butcher. His guys. Homelander. Vought changing shape over the years without changing its soul. Companies swallowing countries. Supes becoming celebrities and products and idols and nightmares all at once. The world getting louder, faster, filthier, greedier. Men in suits still running everything, just with better technology and whiter teeth.
You sat there trying to imagine all of it and couldnât.
Television everywhere.
Phones without cords.
Cars that barely made noise.
People living half their lives inside screens.
And then, for some ungodly reason, Ben spent far too long explaining porn.
At first you thought you had misheard him.
Then you realized, with growing horror, that no, he was seriously trying to explain the scale of modern depravity through the existence of instant filth on demand, as if that were somehow one of the key pillars of civilization you needed updated on.
âBenâ, you said at last, appalled, while he sat there shirtless in his green suit pants talking in the calmest voice imaginable about how âthereâs whole websites for every weird thing a person can think ofâ.
âWhat?â, he said, actually looking offended. âItâs relevantâ.
âIt is not relevantâ.
âIt tells you a lot about the cultureâ.
âIt tells me people need churchâ.
That shut him up for half a second.
Then one corner of his mouth twitched.
You saw it and hated that part of you still recognized that almost-smile.
âThis is funny to you?â, you asked.
âA littleâ.
âBenjaminâ.
That made the smile vanish properly, because you only used his full name when you were genuinely scandalized, and apparently even after eighty-five years that still worked on him.
You straightened under the blankets as much as your weak body would allow and gave him, in your raw half-frozen voice in a cheap motel room in 2026, a tired, sincere lesson about morality, modesty, Christian decency and the collapse of civilization.
Ben sat there and took it.
Mostly because he looked too tired to fight.
Partly, maybe, because hearing you sound like yourself again, even lecturing him, did something to his face he could not hide fast enough.
When you were done, he rubbed a hand over his mouth and muttered, âYou wake up after eighty-five years and your first real opinion is that everybody needs Jesusâ.
âYesâ, you said. âObviouslyâ.
That got a breath of laughter out of him. Quiet. Brief. Gone almost immediately.
From here, Ben should have let it go there.
He should have taken the small, strange mercy of that moment. Your outrage, his almost-laugh, the fact that for half a second the room had felt less like a grave dug up and more like two people who once knew how to talk.
But Ben was still Ben.
Which meant the second the air got almost manageable, he ruined it.
He leaned back in the chair, scrubbed a hand over his jaw, and said, with the kind of false casualness that was never a good sign, âYou should probably hear about Herogasm from me tooâ.
You blinked. âWhatâ.
His eyes flicked to you, then away. âItâs⌠a thingâ.
âA thingâ, you repeated.
âYeahâ.
The way he said it made your stomach drop before you even understood why.
You stared at him. âBenjaminâ.
That full name again. Sharper this time.
He shifted in the chair, suddenly looking like he knew heâd stepped wrong and had decided, in typical fashion, to keep walking anyway. âLook, Iâm telling you now because if you find out some other way later, itâll be worseâ.
You sat up straighter despite the ache in your body. âFind out whatâ.
Ben exhaled through his nose.
âItâs this yearlyââ. He made a vague motion with one hand. âSupes-only event. Vought pretends it doesnât know about it. Everybody knows about itâ.
You kept staring.
His mouth flattened. âBasically a giant degenerate free-for-allâ.
Your mouth fell open.
For one full second, you could not even form words.
âA what?â.
That won you the smallest twitch at the corner of his mouth, which only made your horror worse.
âA giant degenerate free-for-allâ, he repeated, less flippant this time, as if he knew very well how it sounded and had accepted that there was no better version.
You looked around wildly as though the motel room itself might confirm you had finally lost your mind. Then your eyes snapped back to him.
âAnd youâ, you said, each word distinct with disbelief, âwere involvedâ.
Ben had the nerve to look almost rueful.
âI kind of started itâ.
You made a sound so scandalized it barely qualified as language.
Then you grabbed the nearest pillow and threw it at him.
Not hard. You were too weak for hard. But with all the outrage and heartbreak your body could muster at four in the morning in a motel in 2026.
The pillow hit him square in the face.
Ben caught it a beat too late and let it fall into his lap.
For one stunned second, he looked at you over the top of it like he couldnât quite believe youâd done that.
Then, because he was exhausted and half-broken and still somehow capable of being amused at exactly the wrong moment, he let out a quiet huff of laughter.
You pointed at him from under the blankets, appalled. âDo not laughâ.
âIâm not laughingâ.
âYou areâ.
âA littleâ.
âBenâ.
That cut it off again. He dropped the pillow to the floor and held up both hands in surrender, though there was still a trace of something almost warm in his face. âAll right. All rightâ.
You stared at him in open horror.
âA yearlyââ, you broke off, unable to even repeat it properly. âWith other peopleâ.
He rubbed the back of his neck. âYeahâ.
Your cheeks felt hot now, which was ridiculous after everything. After tanks and bunkers and eighty-five years and blood and Vought and the end of the world as you knew it. And yet thisâthis obscene, careless, public filth attached to the man you had married in a church while wearing white gloves and trembling because you loved him so muchâthis was somehow what undid the last of your composure.
âYou are disgustingâ, you whispered.
Ben took that one. Didnât argue. Didnât posture.
Just sat there in the chair, shirtless, looking more tired than offended.
âIt was a long time agoâ, he said after a beat.
âThat is not helpingâ.
âI knowâ.
âAnd you thought I needed to know this now?â.
âYesâ.
âWhy?â.
He looked at you then and whatever joking edge had been there faded.
âBecause if you hear it from someone else, itâll sound worseâ.
You gave him a stricken, incredulous look. âHow could it possibly sound worse.â
His mouth opened. Closed. To his credit, he did not try to answer that.
The silence that followed trembled with the remains of your outrage. Your heart was beating too fast again, but for a different reason nowâless fear than a kind of mortified heartbreak, the shame of imagining too much and wishing you could imagine none of it.
Because beneath the scandal, beneath the appalled moral horror, there was something much simpler and more painful.
He was your husband.
He had been your only man. The only body you had ever made room for in your life. The only one you had ever known like that.
And now here he was, matter-of-factly admitting to entire arenas of dirt and excess and other people and acts so vulgar your mind kept swerving away from them before they fully formed.
Your eyes stung.
You looked down at the blanket before he could see it, but too late. One tear slipped free and landed dark on the fabric pooled over your knees.
Ben went still. All the humor dropped out of him at once.
âAh, hellâ, he said quietly.
You wiped at your face angrily.
âI didnât meanââ.
âYou never meanâ, you said and your voice broke halfway through.
That shut him up.
You pressed the heel of your hand to your mouth, furious with yourself now. Furious that after everything he had already told you, this was what pushed tears out. Furious that your body still kept finding new ways to humiliate you in front of him.
But it wasnât just Herogasm. It was Countess. It was the years. It was his body becoming public in every possible way while yours had been locked underground and forgotten. It was the obscene scale of all the lives he had lived without you. The filth of it only made the distance easier to picture.
Ben leaned forward in the chair, elbows on his knees again, hands hanging between them. He looked stricken in that angry, helpless way of his, like if there had been someone else in the room to hit, heâd have preferred that to watching you cry.
âI was trying to tell you straightâ, he said.
You laughed once through the tears, a soft miserable sound. âAnd that worked out beautifullyâ.
His eyes shut for half a second.
âNoâ, he muttered. âGuess notâ.
You kept your face turned down, breathing carefully, trying to stop the tears before they became more than a few. The blanket bunched under your fists.
After a moment, Ben said, lower now, âIt didnât mean anythingâ.
There were so many things wrong with that sentence you almost laughed again.
Instead you looked up at him with wet eyes and said, âThat might be the saddest partâ.
You sat there for a long time without speaking.
The tears had mostly stopped, but your face still felt tight with them. Your throat ached. The room had gone dimmer in a way that only happened toward morning, when the lamp seemed too yellow and the window too pale and everything looked exhausted with you.
Ben watched you from the chair.
He was bad at silence on a good day. Silence left too much room for things he didnât want to sit with. Guilt. Shame. Memory. The sight of you in his shirt with your eyes red from crying because of him.
So, after a few minutes of the kind of quiet that made the whole room feel held underwater, he tried again.
Not with anything important. That was how you knew he was trying.
He started telling you stupid little things about the new world. Not the big terrible ones this time. The ridiculous ones. The things that seemed to offend him personally on principle.
He told you about self-checkout machines that made customers do the cashierâs job for free.
About electric scooters left all over sidewalks âlike some kind of plagueâ.
About men in suits paying nine dollars for coffee and thanking the barista like theyâd just been handed medicine.
About something called âinfluencersâ and the look on your face at that word alone was so baffled that one corner of his mouth twitched before he could stop it.
âThey just⌠influence what?â, you asked weakly.
âEverything, apparentlyâ.
âThat is not a jobâ.
âNoâ, he said. âIt is notâ.
Then he told you about juice cleanses and gender reveal explosions and people filming themselves crying on the internet for strangers, and for the first time all night a sound escaped you that wasnât pain.
A small, startled chuckle. It slipped out while your cheeks were still damp.
The noise seemed to hit him almost as hard as your tears had. His face changed around it. Not into a smile exactly. Something quieter. More careful. As if hearing you sound like yourself, even in that tiny way, made him afraid to move too fast and lose it.
âThere she isâ, he murmured.
You wiped under one eye with the heel of your hand and gave him a tired look. âThis world sounds ridiculousâ.
âIt isâ.
âAnd immoralâ.
âThat tooâ.
âAnd badly dressedâ.
That got a real laugh out of him. Low and brief and gone quickly, but real.
âYeahâ, he said. âYouâre gonna hate half of it on sightâ.
âOnly half?â.
âMaybe seventy percentâ.
You gave a weak, watery breath that was almost another laugh.
The room loosened by one thread.
Not fixed, but loosened.
Ben shifted forward a little in the chair, elbows on his knees. The lamplight caught the line of one scar down his shoulder. He looked, suddenly, less like a myth and more like a very tired man trying and failing not to scare the one person he most wanted near him.
His hand lifted. Slowly.
You saw what he meant to do before he did it. Just brush your arm, maybe, or smooth the blanket where it had bunched near your elbow. Your body flinched back anyway. Small. Quick. Pure reflex.
Ben froze and his hand stopped in midair. Then dropped.
The look that crossed his face was so nakedly guilty it made something twist in your chest.
He looked down at his own hand like it belonged to someone else.
Then, very quietly, âIâm in control nowâ.
You didnât answer right away.
His voice roughened. âI amâ.
Ben swallowed once and kept his eyes on the floor.
âI know that doesnât mean much coming from meâ, he said. âBut itâs trueâ. A beat passed. âI spent years in Russia with every goddamn thing in me chained down and measured. Then more years after trying not to level a room every time I got pissedâ. His mouth tightened. âI know my own strength nowâ.
You watched him.
He finally looked up.
âI would never hurt you by accident againâ.
The sentence sat between you, heavy and imperfect. Not because you didnât believe he meant it. Because âby accidentâ still left too many other kinds of hurt in the room.
Maybe he knew that. Maybe that was why he looked away first.
Your voice came soft. âThat wasnât the only problem, Benâ.
His jaw flexed. âI knowâ.
And there was too much history in those two words to press any farther right then.
So you didnât. Instead you asked other things. Smaller things.
What music sounded like now. Why everyoneâs clothes looked so cheap in the brochures he found in the motel drawer. Why women wore running shoes with dresses. What a microwave was. Why cars all looked rounded.
Ben answered as best he could.
Sometimes badly.
Sometimes with surprising patience.
Sometimes with that old dry streak of humor that had once caught you off guard in kitchens and backyards and school corridors before life had filed all its edges into weapons.
By the time the clock dragged toward six, your body had started losing the fight.
The adrenaline had burned off. The shock had settled deeper. Every muscle in you felt borrowed and sore. Your eyelids turned heavy between one blink and the next. The room kept going a little soft at the edges no matter how hard you tried to keep your thoughts lined up.
Ben saw it before you said anything.
âYouâre doneâ, he said.
You frowned faintly. âIâm awakeâ.
âBarelyâ.
âI amâ.
He gave you a look. Not mean. Not even amused, exactly. Just familiar in a way that hurt.
âYou look like youâre about to fall over sitting stillâ.
You wanted to argue. Instead you yawned.
That made one side of his mouth twitch despite everything.
âYeahâ, he muttered. âThought soâ.
He stood then, slowly enough not to startle you, and crossed to the lamp.
âDonâtâ, you said, more quickly than you meant to.
His hand paused over the switch.
You looked toward the window, where the first weak gray of dawn was beginning to thin the dark. âNot all the wayâ.
Ben glanced back at you and seemed to understand.
The lamp stayed on, just dimmed lower.
Then came the awkward part. The room had one bed.
You looked at the chair. At him. At the bed. Your tired brain could not quite make those pieces into a shape that felt sensible.
Ben solved it the way he solved most things: by making a decision and standing still inside it.
âIâm not sleeping in that chairâ, he said.
The bluntness of it would have annoyed you in any other life.
Now you only looked at him through the fog of exhaustion.
âI wasnât asking you toâ.
He studied your face for a second, like he was checking whether that was true or just politeness shaped like surrender. Maybe it was both. You were too tired to sort it out.
He came to the bed carefully, pulling the blanket aside on the far edge and lying down over the comforter first, not under it, as if to prove he wasnât assuming anything. The mattress dipped with his weight. Your body noticed immediately. Tensed a little. Then, because you had nothing left in you for another flinch, slowly let go.
He kept his distance. An honest distance. A strip of mattress between you. One arm folded under his head, the other lying still on top of the blanket where you could see it.
You didnât complain.
Part of that was exhaustion. Part of it was that your thoughts had gone too loose and strange to fight anything except sleep by now.
And part of itâthough you hated admitting it, even to yourselfâwas older than all of this. Older than Vought and tanks and neon motel signs and digital clocks. Old training in your bones. A wife did not make a scene over a bed. A wife did not tell her husband no just because the world had ended and remade itself around them. Not when she was raised in the years you were. Not when love and obedience and habit had been braided together so early you could no longer always tell where one stopped and the next began.
Ben must have sensed some of that in the silence, because after a long beat he said into the dim room, âIf you want me out of the bed, say itâ.
You turned your head on the pillow and looked at him.
The offer sounded almost painful coming from him. Like it had cost him.
You were too tired to unpack that too.
âI donâtâ, you murmured.
It wasnât the whole truth. It wasnât a lie either.
He nodded once, eyes on the ceiling.
âAll rightâ.
âââââââââââ
A/N: Didnât plan on posting it this soon, but⌠well, here we go because Lou canât wait. Like always. The next one will probably be up in a week.
Also, just so you know, I had this one finished before season 5 aired đ I wrote it after that teaser of Ben in Homelanderâs suite came out. Kinda funny considering all the church and Jesus stuff⌠well, youâll see in the following chapters đ
Summary: You are Soldier Boyâs wife. Gentle where he is hard and steady where his world keeps pulling him away. But as Voughtâs spotlight grows brighter, home starts to feel lonelier and youâre left wondering what love looks like when itâs tested by power.
Pairing: Soldier Boy x Reader
Warnings: Language, angst
Word Count: 5442
DISCLAIMER: Everything is purely fiction. I do not intend to attack or hurt anyone. The story is, of course, entirely made up and meant for entertainment purposes.
Even before the Compound V, even before the Vought men with their polished shoes and lacquered smiles, the house had always been too small for his footsteps. He had filled every room like a storm front. Broad shoulders in narrow doorways, heavy hands on the kitchen table. His voice carrying down the short hallway whether he meant it to or not.
But back then, the house had still felt lived in. Tight, a little shabby, but warm. His boots by the front door. His jacket slung over the back of a chair. The smell of coffee in the mornings, cigarette smoke curling out the kitchen window, his laughârare, but realâwhen you said something dry enough to catch him off guard.
Now it felt like a place arranged around an absence.
You sat on the sofa with your legs tucked under you, a mending basket open at your feet and his shirt spread across your lap. One of the seams at the cuff had split. It was the beige one he barely wore anymore, too plain now, too ordinary for the image Vought had started to build around him. If he wasn´t in his supe suit, they liked him in red, white and blue.
Outside, the street was quiet. You lived outside the city, where people still left porch lights on for one another.
Eleven forty-three.
You threaded the needle through the cuff and pulled it taut.
You used to wait up without realizing you were waiting. Two plates on the table, one growing cold. Coffee kept warm on the stove too long. It had changed slowly, then all at once. The first week after the injections, heâd still come home every night, wired and bright-eyed, walking too fast, talking too loud, unable to sit still. His skin had run hot under your hands. Heâd paced the kitchen in a white undershirt, flexing his fingers like he could feel power underneath them, as if his own body had turned strange on him.
âDâyou know what it felt like?â, heâd asked you then, grinning in that boyish way that made him look younger and meaner all at once. âLike lightning. Like somebody cracked me open and poured in pure energyâ.
You had been standing barefoot at the stove, stirring tomato sauce that was already done. âBenâ, youâd said quietly, because your voice always got quieter when his got louder, âsit down before you wear a hole in the floorâ.
He had laughed and crossed the room. He caught you around the waist and lifted you clean off the ground with one hand like you weighed nothing at all.
You had gasped, sauce spoon clattering against the pot, both hands flying to his wrist.
âBenjaminâput me downâ.
He had. Right away. Too fast, almost, as if heâd forgotten for a second what ordinary strength felt like. His grin had faded when he saw your face.
âHeyâ. Heâd touched your cheek with the backs of his fingers, unexpectedly gentle. âDidnât hurt youâ.
âI knowâ.
âYou looked scaredâ.
You had managed a small smile then, one that meant to smooth a moment over before it turned ugly. âYou picked me up one-handed in the kitchenâ.
âThatâs the point, sweetheartâ.
Months later, the point seemed to belong to everyone except you.
A pair of headlights swept across the living room wall.
You looked up fast, needle pausing midair.
The front gate clicked. Then his tread hit the porch, still unmistakable, still his, though heavier now somehow.
Your fingers curled around the shirt.
He stepped inside. For a second, he stood under the entry light, framed by it. Broad chest under a dark peacoat. Hair combed back too neatly, probably for some event, though loose strands had fallen over his forehead by now. There was lipstick on the corner of his collarânot yours, not your shade. The sight of it passed through you so quietly it barely made a ripple on the surface, but your hand tightened around the cloth in your lap until the needle pricked your thumb.
He closed the door with more force than necessary. The glass in the little front window rattled.
âYouâre upâ.
His voice was rough with fatigue and something harder underneath it.
You set the shirt aside before you stained it with blood. âItâs lateâ.
He glanced at the room, taking it in like a man visiting a place he used to know. His gaze landed on the mending basket. On the lamp youâd left on beside the sofa. On you.
He looked tired in ways the newspapers never caught. It couldnât show the strain gathered around his eyes now, or the restless twitch in his jaw when he was trying to keep hold of his temper.
âYeahâ, he said. âI noticedâ.
You rose from the sofa, smoothing your skirt automatically. âDo you want something to eat? I kept the roast warm as long as I could, but I canââ.
âNoâ.
You nodded. âAll rightâ.
He tossed his gloves on the side table and missed. They slid to the floor and he didnât pick them up.
For a few seconds, neither of you spoke.
Then he gave a short, humorless laugh and dragged a hand over his face. âYou gonna ask?â.
Your throat felt dry. âAsk what?â.
âHow the gala went. Whether the mayor kissed my ass. Whether the Vought pricks rolled out another flag and called me the future of the nationâ. He stepped farther into the room, shrugging out of his coat. âThatâs what a wife asks, isnât it?â.
You bent to pick up his gloves because leaving them there felt worse. âI didnât want to start with work the second you walked inâ.
âWorkâ, he repeated, like the word offended him. âThat what you think this is?â.
You straightened carefully. âI think it keeps you away from homeâ.
His eyes snapped to yours.
There was that little movement, sudden and electric, the one heâd had since the V, like something inside him hated being contradicted. He crossed the room before youâd fully braced for it, looming close enough that you had to tip your face up to keep looking at him.
âHomeâ, he said, lower now. âThis place? This little box on a dead street where the neighbors peek through their curtains every time a car pulls up?â.
âIt was home before they put you on billboardsâ.
His mouth tightened.
For one awful second, you thought he might smash something just to have somewhere to put the anger. The lamp or maybe the side table. His hand flexed at his side. Tendons stood out in his wrist.
Then, instead, he laughed again. Meaner this time. At himself or at you, you couldnât tell.
âYou think I asked for half of this?â, he said. âYou think I like being pulled in ten directions by men who smile with all their teeth and talk to me like Iâm a racehorse?â.
âNoâ, you said softly. âI think you like the parts that shineâ.
His stare sharpened.
You almost wished you hadnât said it. Not because it wasnât true. Because it was. Because you knew him well enough to put a finger right on the bruise.
His jaw worked. He looked past you toward the kitchen, toward the sink full of washed dishes drying in the rack, the hand towel folded over the oven door, the ordinary life waiting there with its small routines and quiet expectations. When he spoke again, his voice had gone flatter.
âYou donât know what itâs like nowâ.
The room felt very still.
âNoâ, you said after a moment. âYou donât let meâ.
Something in his face shifted, unsettled, as if for a moment he had been forced to look directly at the distance he kept pretending was made by everyone else. He looked at you. At your cardigan buttoned wrong because youâd done it absentmindedly. At the tiny dot of blood on your thumb from the needle. At the shirt on the sofa, half-mended, waiting for hands that hardly came home to wear it.
His eyes dropped to your thumb. âYou hurt yourself?â.
You tucked your hand behind your back automatically. âItâs nothingâ.
He reached for your wrist.
You flinched.
Not dramatically. Barely anything, just the slightest pull backward, quick as breath.
But he saw it and his hand stopped in the air between you.
His expression changed in increments so small they were almost impossible to read. First disbelief. Then anger. Then something darker and more private, like humiliation curdling into resentment before it had the chance to become regret.
âJesus Christâ, he said, very quietly.
You hated that your pulse had jumped. Hated that heâd noticed. Hated even more that part of you had started measuring the room the way you did lately without meaning to, the distance to the kitchen, the solidity of the table, whether the front door was unobstructed.
He let his hand drop.
âYou think Iâm gonna hit you now?â, he asked.
You swallowed. âI didnât say thatâ.
âYou movedâ.
You looked at his face and chose your words with care. âYou came at me fastâ.
âI came at you fastâ, he echoed, a bite under the words. âThat what weâre calling it?â.
The first drops had started, tapping softly against the front window.
You could smell rain coming in through the cracks in the old frame.
âIâm tired, Benâ.
âSo am Iâ.
The answer came back immediate, almost childish in its force. He turned away, raking both hands through his hair, pacing once to the fireplace and back like the room could not contain him. âEverybody wants a pieceâ, he muttered. âThe company, the press, the goddamn country. And I come home and you look at me likeââ. He stopped.
âLike what?â, you asked.
He faced you again. His eyes were bright, too bright.
âLike Iâm already somebody you have to surviveâ.
You couldnât answer right away. Not with the truth sitting between your teeth.
He looked as though he regretted saying it the moment it left him, but the regret didnât make him gentler. It just made him harder, the way shame always did with him.
Finally, you said, âI still wait up for youâ.
His face closed off. That had been the wrong thing too, or maybe there wasnât a right one anymore.
âDonâtâ.
Your fingers curled at your sides. âDonât what?â.
âSit here like some widow every damn nightâ. He went to the hallway, then paused without turning around. âGo to bedâ.
The bedroom door shut a minute later, hard enough to shake the framed wedding photo on the mantle.
You stood where heâd left you, listening to the rain and the old house settling around it. You looked down at the shirt still draped across the sofa, the neat line of stitches youâd managed before he came home, and then at the hallway where the light under the bedroom door burned a thin gold line across the floorboards.
After a long while, you sat back down and picked up the needle again, though the thread shook a little in your hands.
-
Half an hour later, the light under the bedroom door had still been on when you reached the hallway. You stood outside it for a second with your hand on the knob, listening. No pacing now. No drawers opening and shutting. Just the low scrape of bedsprings when he shifted his weight, and the faint hiss of rain against the window over the radiator.
Then you opened the door and stepped inside.
The bedroom was small, same as the rest of the house. Too much furniture for the space. A narrow bed pushed against the wall. One dresser with a warped bottom drawer. Your vanity by the window, its mirror clouded at the edges. The yellow lamplight made everything look softer than it was. It took the sharpness out of the room, but not out of him.
Ben was already in bed, propped against the headboard in nothing but his underwear, one arm hooked behind his head. The sheets were dragged low on his waist. He looked up as soon as you came in.
He didnât say anything.
You shut the door quietly behind you.
Your nightgown was folded at the end of the bed where you had left it that morning, a spill of pale pink satin catching the light. Soft pink, almost too delicate a color to belong anywhere near him. All your nightgowns had come from him, bought on one of his early Vought trips into the city when the money had started coming easier and faster. He had arrived home with glossy department store boxes tucked under one arm and the self-satisfied look of a man pleased with his own generosity.
âTry âem onâ, heâd said, dropping them on the bed.
You had touched the tissue paper, then looked up at him. âBen, we didnât needââ.
âI wanted toâ.
That had been the end of that.
He liked choosing things for you. Dresses. Perfume. Stockings. Little ribbons for your hair back when you still wore it that way around the house. He liked to look at you and see his own taste staring back.
You crossed to the dresser and opened the top drawer for your hairbrush, though you didnât need it yet. Mostly you needed something to do with your hands.
Behind you, the mattress creaked once.
âThought I told you to go to bedâ, he said.
You kept your eyes on the drawer. âThatâs what Iâm doingâ.
His voice came back after a beat, flatter. âYou know what I meantâ.
You set the brush down again. âNo. You meant stop waiting up. I did thatâ.
The room went still. In the mirror, you could see him watching you. Not lazily or idly. Fully. His gaze had weight to it. It moved over your shoulders, your hands, the line of your back beneath your cardigan, and stayed there. He always looked like a man who expected the world to hold still when he fixed his attention on it. Lately, the world usually did.
You unbuttoned your cardigan slowly. Not for him but because your fingers felt clumsy, and you refused to let them show it.
He made a small sound in his throat. Not quite a laugh.
âYouâre sore at meâ.
You set the cardigan over the chair by the vanity. âYou noticedâ.
âDonât do thatâ.
You turned partway toward him. âDo what?â.
âThat quiet little voice like youâre better than everybody in the roomâ.
For a second you just looked at him. Then you reached for the zipper at the back of your skirt. âIâm not better than you, Benâ.
âNo?â. He shifted higher against the headboard. âYouâve been looking at me all night like I crawled out of the gutterâ.
The zipper rasped down. âYou came home looking for a fightâ.
âAnd you made sure I found oneâ.
His tone sharpened on the last word.
You stepped out of your skirt and folded it over the chair. The blouse came next. You laid that down too, careful with the sleeves. The air in the room felt cool against your skin. Your slip brushed your knees as you moved.
In the mirror his eyes had not left you.
There was nothing tender in the watching, not at first. It was the old familiar thing: appraisal, possession, habit. The look of a man checking whether what was his was still where he had left it.
You reached for the pink gown. The satin slid through your fingers with a whisper. It was soft enough to make your skin look softer, the color flattering in the way he liked. The neckline was modest, but the fabric clung a little before falling loose. He had chosen it because it made you look gentle. It made you look like his wife should.
You slipped it on over your head.
The gown settled against you cool and smooth, then warmed by degrees where it touched your shoulders and ribs. You adjusted the straps, eyes lowered. The motion was ordinary, practiced. But under his stare, even ordinary things started to feel staged.
Ben watched every second of it.
When you reached for a fresh pair of panties, he spoke again.
âLeave emâ.
You stilled. Then you set the panties down exactly where they were and turned to face him.
He had one knee bent under the sheet now, one arm draped over it. His hair was mussed from his hand going through it. Without the uniform and the shield and the Vought smile, there were flashes of the old him if you knew where to look. The crooked scar by his shoulder from some dumb bar fight before any of this. The nick on his jaw from the time he tried to fix the gutter himself and slipped. The shape of the mouth you had once thought looked stubborn in a way you could laugh at.
Now it mostly just looked dangerous.
His eyes moved over the nightgown and back to your face.
âThat one looks nice on youâ.
You almost said thank you by reflex. The habit rose quick as breath, then died before it reached your mouth. âYou picked itâ, you said instead.
He held your gaze. âYeahâ.
The word sat between you for a moment. Then he pushed the sheet aside and swung his legs over the edge of the bed. You didnât move. Neither did he, at first. He just sat there with his forearms braced on his thighs, looking up at you from under his lashes.
âCome hereâ, he said. His voice wasnât soft. It rarely was. But it had dropped out of that earlier sharpness into something lower, rougher, more intimate in a way that still made your stomach tighten.
You went. You always had, with him. Not because he raised his voice. Not because he stood bigger than everyone else, bigger now than he had any right to be. Because this part had once felt simple. Him reaching. You yielding. His hand at the small of your back guiding you where he wanted you, and your body answering before your mind caught up.
There had always been something in you that liked being gathered up by his certainty. Liked not having to be hard in a world built for hard edges. Liked belonging, in the ways that were tender and chosen and warm.
It was only lately that warmth had started to come with a flinch.
You stopped between his knees.
Benâs hands found your hips almost at once. They settled there like he was reminding himself of your shape. Through the satin, you could feel every spread finger, every ounce of pressure.
He tipped his head back to look at you properly. Up close, his face was all the things the billboards flattened out. The shadow of stubble darkening his jaw. The faint crease between his brows that deepened when he was trying not to snap. The tiredness under the bravado. The temper under the tiredness.
His thumbs moved once against the fabric at your waist. âYou were mouthing offâ, he said.
The corner of your mouth twitched before you could help it. âThat wasnât mouthing offâ.
âWas for youâ.
You looked down at him. âMaybeâ.
One of his hands slid around to your back, pressing you a little closer. Not enough to hurt. Not yet. The satin shifted under his palm with a soft whisper.
âThat little attitudeâ, he muttered. âYou save it up for when I get home?â.
âSomebody has to say things to youâ.
âI got plenty of people saying things to meâ.
âThat isnât the sameâ.
His gaze sharpened on your face. For a second you thought he might bite back immediately, something mean and fast and cutting, the way he had lately when a nerve got touched. Instead he just looked at you, jaw moving once.
Then his eyes dropped. His hand had moved from your back to your side without you noticing. His fingers spread there, almost spanning half your waist. The pressure changed, minutely, as he touched the place above your hip.
The bruise there had already started turning the ugly yellow-brown of healing. Last week. The last time heâd been home long enough to touch you like he meant it. You had worn a higher-waisted skirt for two days after and pretended not to notice it in the mirror. His thumb pressed beside it, not on it.
âThat still there?â, he asked.
You swallowed. The question should have sounded like concern. On someone else, maybe it would have. On him it came out hard, almost annoyed, like he resented the evidence of himself. âItâs fadingâ.
His fingers stayed where they were. You could still remember the exact moment it happened. His hand clamping down when you twisted under him, not from pain, just from the force of him, and his body not remembering yet that it wasnât ordinary anymore. The breath leaving you in a short sound you hadnât meant to make. His mouth going still against your throat when he realized.
Then that strange, ugly sequence that had become familiar these last weeks: guilt for one beat, anger the next, as if being sorry made him feel weak and weakness had become intolerable.
He looked at the bruise through the satin as though he could see it. âYou shouldâve told meâ.
You let out a small breath through your nose. âYou were already madâ.
His head jerked up. âAt what?â.
âAt yourselfâ. Your voice stayed quiet and careful. âWhich usually turns into me if Iâm standing thereâ.
Something flashed across his face. Not denial, worse. Recognition.
His hand tightened before he caught it. You felt the start of it in your skin, that instinctive clench of too much strength, and then the deliberate release that followed. He noticed too
You put your hands lightly on his shoulders, more to steady the moment than yourself. His skin was warm, warmer than it used to be, the heat of him seeming to sit closer to the surface now. Under your palms he was all hard muscle and contained motion, even sitting still. âI know you donât mean toâ, you said.
His mouth flattened. âDonât make excuses for meâ.
âIâm notâ.
âYou always doâ.
âThatâs not trueâ.
He gave a short, humorless laugh. âSweetheart, thatâs damn near all you doâ.
The endearment should have softened it. It didnât. You looked at the set of his mouth, at the arrogance worn so close to the skin now, at the strain pulling under it. Then you reached up and touched the line between his brows with two fingers. He went still.
âYou didnât used to look at me like you were waiting for me to disappoint youâ, he said.
The words came out quieter than the rest. So quiet you almost missed them.
Your hand lingered against his forehead, then slid into his hair.
âYou didnât used to make me work this hard to remember youâ, you said.
His eyes lifted to yours and held, while his hands shifted from your hips to the backs of your thighs, just under the hem of the gown. The satin bunched under his fingers. The touch sent a familiar shiver through you despite everything.
He knew it. You knew he knew it.
That had always been the trouble with him. He could make your body answer even when your mind was tired, hurt, wary.
Even now, with all the sharpness in him. Maybe especially now. There was a part of you built to soften under a hand at your waist, under a low command, under that look that said come here, stay still, let me. It wasnât shameful to you. It was simply true.
What you had never wanted was this other thing that had come in on the heels of power. This impatience. This carelessness. This streak of meanness that seemed to flare up before he even knew heâd lit it.
His thumbs stroked once, absent and possessive, against the bare skin above your knees. âYou like itâ, he said.
You knew what he meant. The way he handled you. The way he directed. The way you came to him instead of making him drag you. His voice had gone rougher again, but less defensive now, more certain. More Ben.
You didnât look away. âThat doesnât mean I like all of itâ.
His hands stilled. âAll of what?â.
You hesitated just long enough for him to notice.
âThe way you get nowâ, you said. âHow fast it turnsâ.
His jaw tightened.
âThat Vâ, you went on, because if you stopped now youâd lose the nerve entirely, âitâs not just making you stronger, Benjamin. Itâs making everything in you come up sharper⌠Meanerâ.
âMeanerâ, he repeated, like trying the word for weakness.
âYesâ.
He stared at you. The muscle in his cheek flexed. For one long second you thought he would erupt. You could see the instinct for it, the pride wounded and immediately baring its teeth. His fingers flexed once against your thighs. Then, unexpectedly, he looked away first. His gaze went to the vanity, to the warped drawer, to your brush lying across a folded handkerchief. Anywhere but you.
When he spoke again, his voice had gone flatter, stripped down.
âYou think I donât know somethingâs off?â.
You blinked.
He huffed a breath, not quite a laugh. âJesusâ. He scrubbed a hand over his face, then put it back on your leg as though he couldnât bear to have both hands off you at once. âI can hear too much now. Smell too much. Half the time Iâm trying not to put my fist through a wall because the goddamn fridge is humming from three rooms awayâ.
You stayed still, listening.
âThe suits want me smiling. Reporters want me charming. Every asshole in the country wants a pieceâ. His mouth twisted. âAnd then I get home and I touch you too hardâ.
Something inside you softened at the edges, not because the problem vanished, but because there he was for a moment. Not the mascot, not the looming figure on the stage, not the man puffing up his chest against every bruise to his ego. Just Ben, sitting on the edge of a cheap bed in his underwear, looking furious at the world because he could not control his own hands.
You brushed your thumb once along his temple. âI knowâ.
His eyes cut back to yours. âNoâ, he said. âYou donâtâ.
You let your hand slide down to his jaw. The stubble there rasped against your palm. âThen tell meâ, you said.
He searched your face like he expected mockery and found none. Only you. Only your too-soft voice and your pink gown and your hand on him like he was still worth touching.
Something in him gave way a little at the center. His shoulders dropped, not much, but enough. He leaned into your hand. Only for a second. So slight you might have thought you imagined it if you hadnât known him as well as you did.
Then he caught your wrist and kissed the inside of it.
The gesture should have been sweet. The grip almost ruined it. Not because it was cruel, but because even now he forgot.
Your breath snagged before you could hide it. He froze. His mouth stayed against your pulse for one beat too long. Then he pulled back and looked at the place where his fingers circled your wrist. His expression changed when he saw the faint blanch of your skin there.
Very carefully, he loosened his hand. The gentleness of that was worse than if heâd ignored it.
âYou see?â, you whispered. His eyes lifted. âI do like when you tell me where to beâ, you said.
The admission came easier than you expected, because it was true, and truth had a way of making the air cleaner even when it hurt.
âI like when you put your hands on me. I like being yoursâ. Your throat tightened around the next part, but you made yourself say it anyway. âI donât like feeling like youâll forget I can breakâ.
He stood up too fast. You took half a step back before you could stop yourself. His eyes caught the movement immediately. That same wounded, furious look flickered over his face again, but now something else sat under it too. Shame. Raw and hot.
âChristâ, he muttered, and turned away from you.
He went two steps toward the window, then braced one hand on the sill hard enough to make the old frame creak. Rain striped the glass beyond him. The muscles in his back were rigid under his skin.
You stayed where you were, fingers curled into the satin at your side. After a moment he said, without turning, âCome hereâ. This time it wasnât an order. It sounded almost like defeat.
You crossed the room slowly. When you stopped behind him, he didnât turn around right away, he reached back for you. You put your hand in his. He drew you around to stand in front of him, between him and the rain-dark window.
His fingers slid under your chin, lifting your face. âIâm not gonna let anybody else touch youâ, he said.
You held his gaze. âThat was never the part I was afraid ofâ.
He looked at you for a long moment. Then, with visible effort, he moved his hand from your chin to your cheek instead. Gentler. Deliberate. The pad of his thumb brushed under your eye, then along your jaw.
You laid your hands flat against his bare ribs. You could feel the expansion of his breathing under your palms, still a little too fast. Feel the contained strength in him, the dangerous ease of it.
It scared you sometimes now. It also didnât stop you from wanting him. Both truths lived together, neither canceling the other out.
âI miss youâ, you said.
His eyes flickered. âIâm right hereâ.
âNoâ, you said softly. âNot like beforeâ.
He closed his eyes. Just for a second. When he opened them again, some of the fight had gone out of him. Not all. Never all. There would always be something in Ben that came out with his fists half-raised against the world. That was true before the V. The V had just poured gasoline over it and called it heroism.
He bent his head and rested his forehead against yours. The contact was careful. That, more than anything, almost undid you. His hand slid from your cheek to the back of your neck, holding you there with a pressure you liked, a pressure that steadied rather than threatened.
You let your eyes close. His breath moved against your mouth. âTell me if I do itâ, he said.
You blinked your eyes open. âDo what?â.
âTurn on youâ. His mouth tightened around the words. âBefore I know itâ.
You searched his face. Ben didnât ask for help. Not from anyone. The request sat between you like a lit match cupped in both hands, fragile only because he would hate that word. You touched his cheek. âI always doâ, you said.
A sad smile tugged at one corner of his mouth. Barely there. Gone almost before it formed. âYeahâ, he said quietly. âYou doâ.
He kissed you then. Not rough. Not the punishing kind of kiss he sometimes reached for now, like he was trying to silence himself with your mouth. This one was slower. Intentional. His lips warm, the hand at your neck steady, the other settling at your waist with obvious care.
You felt the effort in him, the restraint, and that made the tenderness feel more precious, not less. You kissed him back.
When he pulled away, he didnât go far. His nose brushed yours. His thumb moved once against your side. âGet in bedâ, he said. The old command was back in the words, but gentled. Familiar in the way that made your body loosen instead of brace. You obeyed.
Summary: You and Dean have been dancing around the tension for years. Stuck in a snowstorm mid-hunt, with a virgin-hunting witch on the loose and your secret suddenly not so secret, things finally boil over in the backseat of the Impala.
-requested-
Pairing: Dean x Reader
Warnings: 18+ Only! Smut, Language
Word Count: 7322
DISCLAIMER: Everything is purely fiction. I do not intend to attack or hurt anyone. The story is, of course, entirely made up and meant for entertainment purposes.
Right now, Sam was buried somewhere in a town library, trying to charm some overworked clerk into handing over files that probably hadnât been digitized since the '80s. You and Dean? You were holed up in a bar that smelled like stale beer and desperation, pretending you were working, even though you both knew this was just the part where you'd argue over who was reading the reports wrong.
You sat across from him in the booth, bundled up in layers that still werenât enough for this freezing Rocky Mountain hellhole, flipping through a local police blotter with half-frozen fingers.
âLookâ, you said, jabbing at the paper, âthree hikers go missing in less than a month, all around the same ridge, no signs of animal attack, no blood. Thatâs not nothingâ.
Dean took a long sip of his beer and leaned back, smirking like he had all the time in the world. âOr itâs a bear that doesnât like leaving evidence. You ever think of that, Sherlock?â.
You narrowed your eyes at him. âYeah, Dean. A bear that drags people off into the woods and vanishes into thin air. Totally logicalâ.
He grinned, satisfied he was getting under your skin. âWell, stranger things have happened. Remember that haunted raccoon last year?â. You rolled your eyes so hard it hurt. âThat was your theory. And it was a cursed ring in a taxidermy shop, not a ghost possum or whatever you called itâ.
He snorted. âStill say that raccoon had it out for meâ. You shook your head and muttered, âMaybe it had bad tasteâ.
Dean just raised his brows and looked at you over the rim of his glass, that stupid smirk still playing on his lips, the one that said he enjoyed this, the banter, the push and pull.
It had been worse lately. Since that night.
The one where he'd stumbled back into the motel drunk off his ass, rain-slicked and whiskey-soaked, with that half-lidded look that used to mean trouble. You'd just gotten out of the shower, towel in your hair, arguing with Sam over the phone about some case detail. And then Dean, without warning, had closed the space between you in three uneven steps and backed you up against the wall like it was a hunt.
âYou ever think about it?â, heâd asked, voice low and wrecked from liquor and years of things unsaid.
You hadnât answered. Just stared up at him, stunned, heartbeat in your throat. Because yeah, you had thought about it. More than once.
But that night, youâd shoved him off gently, told him he was drunk, and left it there. He hadnât brought it up since. Not in words, anyway.
Now, as he shifted in the booth and nudged your boot under the table with his, you felt that tension coil again.
âWhy are we even here?â, you muttered. âThe coldâs gonna kill us before anything supernatural doesâ.
Dean leaned in slightly, tone lazy but eyes too sharp. âYou sure itâs the cold thatâs getting under your skin?â.
You kicked him lightly under the table. Not hard enough to hurt, just enough to shut him up. He laughed, but it didnât quite reach his eyes.
Outside, the wind howled against the windows like it was trying to warn you. Something was out there. Something old, hungry and buried under too much snow. And inside, something else was clawing at the walls between you and Dean.
-
It was nearing midnight when you and Dean finally found something that matched. Youâd commandeered the back corner of the bar and were nursing your third cup of bitter, over-brewed coffee when you spotted a local blog post buried in an online forum. A hikerâs brother had posted about dreams, visions even, his missing sibling supposedly had before vanishing. Weird symbols carved into the trees, animals acting wrong, time slipping.
Dean leaned over your shoulder, his warmth too close, and read it silently. His shoulder brushed yours, but you didnât move.
âSymbol matches that weird-ass sigil we saw near the trailheadâ, you said, pointing at the photo embedded in the post. Dean let out a low whistle. âYeah⌠that ainât bear country. Thatâs witch territoryâ.
Just as the thought settled, Deanâs phone rang. âSammyâ, he muttered, already standing and pulling it from his pocket.
You sat back, watching him pace near the bar as he answered. His face went serious, brow pinched in that way it did when something clicked, that hunter instinct, sharp as ever. âWait, say that again?â. Pause. âShe only targets what?â.
You straightened, tension prickling at the back of your neck.
Dean turned slightly away from you, like maybe he didnât want you to hear. His voice dropped low. âNo, no, that makes sense. That explains why the victims didnât have anything in common age-wise. Yeah, thanks, man. Weâll head back to the motel and regroupâ.
He hung up and didnât look at you right away. You raised an eyebrow. âWell?â.
Dean ran a hand over his face and sighed. âItâs a witch. Real old-school. The kind that feeds on purity rituals or some twisted version of 'em. Sam says the lore matches. Appalachian, pre-colonial, likes to hunt in remote woods and lure⌠virginsâ.
Your coffee cup paused mid-air. âCome again?â.
âYeahâ, Dean muttered, clearly uncomfortable, like the word itself was gonna bite him. âSam confirmed it. All the vics had one weird thing in common⌠turns out they were all virgins. Didnât show up in the initial reports, but medical files, some background stuff⌠it tracksâ.
You tried to school your face into something neutral, heart suddenly hammering against your ribs. Dean didnât know. No one knew. Youâd never told anyone. Not because you were ashamed, but because in your world, secrets were safer than honesty. And hell, who had the time for love or awkward fumbling in between salt lines and monster guts?
Dean rubbed the back of his neck. âWe should be fine, though. I mean, obviously weâre all⌠uh. You know. Not the targetâ. You forced a smile. âRight. Obviouslyâ.
He didnât catch the hesitation. Or maybe he did, but didnât want to. Either way, he nodded and tossed back the last of his drink, then gestured toward the door. âCâmon. Letâs get back before Sam freezes to death with his head in an archiveâ.
You stood, grabbing your coat and trying not to let the panic bleed through your carefully trained calm. Because if this witch really did go after virgins⌠You werenât just part of the hunt anymore. You were the bait.
-
The road back to the motel was a stretch of black ice and blowing snow, flanked by trees that looked like skeletons clawing at the sky. Deanâs knuckles were tight around the wheel, his eyes narrowed in that way that meant he was half focused on driving, half focused on something in his head.
You sat in silence, watching the headlights cut through the darkness. The heater wheezed as it struggled to keep the Impala warm and the familiar rumble of Babyâs engine was oddly comforting⌠until it wasnât.
âIâm coldâ, you whined, dragging the word out dramatically as you hugged your arms across your chest and sank lower into your seat. âIâm freezing, Dean. My bones are turning to ice. I think Iâm dyingâ.
Dean snorted without looking at you. âYouâre wearing two coatsâ.
âNot enoughâ, you shot back. âIâm gonna get frostbite and lose a toe. Or several. Then youâll feel badâ.
âIâll feel bad for Samâ, he muttered, adjusting the heat dial like it might magically work better. âHeâs gonna have to listen to you whine the whole way back to Kansasâ.
You gasped, mock-offended. âI donât whine. I contribute atmosphereâ.
âOh yeah?â. He glanced over at you with a crooked grin. âIs that what youâre doing right now? Freezing to death with flair?â.
âExactly. And for the record, your heater sucksâ.
Dean gave the dashboard an affectionate pat. âSheâs doing her bestâ.
âYouâve said that about your liver tooâ.
âAlso doing its bestâ.
You chuckled, watching him shake his head, lips twitching in amusement. There was always this. This stupid back-and-forth that felt more like home than anything else you knew. Even when the world was frozen and broken and full of monsters, Dean could still make you forget for a second that it wasnât normal.
But the second shattered.
A loud POP jolted you in your seat, followed by a gut-deep crunch and the awful, unmistakable sound of rubber tearing itself to pieces. âSon of aââ, Dean yanked the wheel, fighting to keep the Impala from fishtailing across the ice. You grabbed the door to brace yourself as the car skidded, then gradually slowed to a halt on the side of the desolate road.
Dean exhaled hard and dropped his forehead against the steering wheel. âThat didnât sound like frostbiteâ. You were already unbuckling, peering out your fogged-up window into the dark. âYou hit something?â.
âWasnât a potholeâ, he muttered, reaching for the flashlight in the glovebox.
You climbed out into the icy wind, boots crunching on snow. Dean circled to the back of the car, crouched low and aimed the light at the tire. âShitâ, he said. âGlass. Thick pieces of it â looked like a bottle, maybe. Someone busted it across the roadâ.
You leaned down beside him, shivering now not just from the cold but from the way the air felt. Still. Too still. âYou think it was random?â. Dean didnât answer right away. âNopeâ, he said finally. âIt wasnâtâ. He stood slowly, sweeping the flashlight along the roadâs edge, toward the woods, where the trees leaned in too close. You followed his gaze. The shadows there didnât sit right. Like they were waiting.
Dean turned to you, eyes narrowing. âGet your knife. Weâre walkingâ.
You didnât argue. Because deep down, you knew: the witch wasnât just picking off victims from behind some veil. No, she was watching now. Sheâd already made her choice. And she was coming for you.
-
The trees swallowed you up within minutes. Dean led the way, flashlight cutting narrow slices through the dark while your boots crunched softly behind him. The snow came down in lazy spirals now, the storm easing just enough to let the cold sink deeper into your bones.
âThis is a stupid ideaâ, you muttered, hugging your arms tighter as a branch smacked you in the face for the third time. âWe shouldâve stayed in the car, called Sam, waited it outâ.
Dean snorted. âSure, letâs just hang out in the middle of the road like sitting ducks while some virgin-hunting witch takes her sweet time carving runes into our gutsâ.
You made a face. âWay to paint a pictureâ.
âYouâre the one who wanted to be an artistâ, he said over his shoulder, smirking.
You squinted at him through the falling snow. âI was four and I wanted to draw unicornsâ.
âAnd now look at youâ, Dean said, âslinging silver blades and complaining about your toes in the middle of a haunted forest. Youâve really peakedâ.
You shoved a branch aside, nearly slipping on a patch of ice beneath the snow. âYeah, well, when we both die of hypothermia, I hope you know Iâm blaming you. Loudly. From beyond the graveâ.
Dean stopped suddenly, turning to you with that shit-eating grin that meant trouble. âOh, I know youâll be loudâ, he said. âYou always areâ.
Your breath caught for a second, just half a beat, before you rolled your eyes. âReal mature, Winchesterâ.
âYou love itâ, he said, a little too easily.
And the worst part was, you did. You tried not to smile as you passed him, pushing ahead through a tight patch of trees, the wind picking up again. You could feel his eyes on you, even in the dark. Not in the way a partner watches your six, but something heavier. The forest was closing in around you, but that heat between you? That was growing by the second.
âYou keep staring at my assâ, you said, not even bothering to look over your shoulder, âweâre gonna miss the witch creeping up behind usâ.
Dean chuckled low behind you, unbothered. âIf sheâs smart, sheâll wait her turnâ.
You snorted. âGrossâ.
âAccurateâ, he shot back. âCanât help it. That viewâs been distracting me for yearsâ.
You turned, walking backward now just to give him a look: unimpressed, flat, but not entirely serious. âYeah? That why you thought trying to climb on top of me soaking wet and half-drunk was a solid plan?â.
Dean didnât flinch. If anything, his smirk deepened. âWorked out fine for me. I remember you not exactly shoving me off right awayâ.
You held up a gloved hand. âI was stunned. You were babbling about whiskey and destiny and how my âsmart mouth was a goddamn turn-onââ. He grinned wider. âStill isâ.
You huffed, but the truth was, that night had never left your mind. You could still feel the weight of him, the press of his hands against your hips, his breath hot and heavy against your neck when he leaned in and whispered your name like it meant something. Youâd told him to back off, to sleep it off. But it had been close. Too close. And if you hadnâtâ
Another snap in the woods. Closer this time. You both stilled instantly, your instincts taking over. Dean held up a hand, listening. The teasing disappeared from his face like someone had flipped a switch.
You whispered, âLeftâ. He nodded, swinging the flashlight around. Snowflakes caught in the beam, swirling like ash. Nothing but trees. Again. And then⌠A whisper. Barely there. Just your name. But not in your voice.
Dean stepped closer to you, body tense and protective. His hand brushed your lower back. It lingered half a second longer than it needed to. âThis bitch is screwing with usâ, he muttered, eyes scanning the shadows. âTrying to separate us. Get in your headâ. You nodded, grip tightening around your blade. âI hate witchesâ, you muttered.
Dean leaned in, lips near your ear now. âIf she tries anything, sheâs gonna learn real quickâshe picked the wrong girl. She´s not that good at her game if she canât tell purity from practiceâ. You stiffened. Your heart flat-out stopped.
Dean was already pulling back when he froze, realizing what heâd just said. You saw it happen in real time, the split second his smirk faltered, brow furrowed, and his brain put the pieces together. He looked at you. You looked away.
âWaitâ, he said, voice lower now. âYou'reâ? You meanâ?â.
You took a sharp breath, heart hammering in your chest. âDean, not nowâ.
His voice was softer. âYou never told meâ.
âItâs not exactly something I put on my hunter rĂŠsumĂŠâ, you muttered, glaring out into the woods like that would somehow erase the embarrassment knotting in your gut.
Dean moved in front of you, flashlight lowered, eyes on your face. âHey. Heyâ, he said gently. âI didnât meanâit's not a bad thing, okay? Itâs justâhell, I shouldâve known. Youâve got standardsâ.
You scoffed. âThatâs your takeaway?â.
He grinned. âWell, that and⌠explains why you didnât jump me that nightâ.
You narrowed your eyes. âDonât flatter yourselfâ.
He leaned closer, gaze dropping briefly to your mouth, voice thick with something darker now. âNot flattering. Just⌠makes me wish Iâd tried harderâ.
The trees creaked. The cold deepened. And somewhere beyond the reach of the flashlight, something moved. Dean exhaled hard, his eyes flicking toward the shadows again.
"Shit", he muttered under his breath, running a hand down his face. "Now weâve got a real problem". You looked at him sharply. âWhat?â.
He gave you a look. One that said, you know what. âThat witchâ, he said, voice low and rough. âSheâs definitely out for youâ.
You rolled your eyes, but the sarcasm couldnât quite cover the chill that ran down your spine. âGreatâ.
Dean shifted his weight, glancing back toward the trees like he half expected something to come crawling out of them any second. âYou shouldâve told meâ, he muttered, quieter now.
You frowned. âDeanââ.
âNot nowâ, he cut you off, holding up a hand, eyes still scanning the dark. âNot yet. Weâve gotta stay focusedâ.
You bit the inside of your cheek. âWell, forgive me for not blurting out my sexual history while weâre dodging shapeshifters and bar fightsâ.
He turned to you then, eyes locking with yours, intense and unreadable. âI just meanâŚâ. He paused, shaking his head like he couldnât believe he was saying it. âBack then. In Oklahoma. That night. When I tried to get into your very virgin pantsâŚâ.
You couldnât help it, your lips twitched, even as your cheeks burned. âWowâ, you said. âThatâs what weâre calling it now?â.
Dean gave a dry half-laugh. âI didnât know, okay? I wouldnât haveâif Iâd known, I wouldnât have gone at it like a wrecking ballâ.
You arched a brow. âSo if I hadnât been a virgin, then wrecking ball was the plan?â.
He smirked. âYouâre dodgingâ.
âAnd youâre deflectingâ, you shot back.
You both stood there a second too long, close enough that you could feel the warmth radiating from him, even in the bitter air. There was something in the space between you, fragile and heavy all at once. Words that hadnât been said. A decision neither of you had made. Dean opened his mouth to say something more, but then the trees screamed. Not wind. Not snow. A shriek echoing through the forest like nails down your spine.
Dean's face snapped toward the sound. âWeâve gotta move. Nowâ.
And just like that, the conversation dropped dead. You tightened your grip on your blade, heart pounding. Later. Youâd finish this later. Assuming the witch didnât get to you first.
-
The witch didnât go easy. She bled black smoke and bones, hid her sigils in frostbitten bark, whispered in voices that didnât belong to anyone you loved and for a few terrifying minutes, she had you separated from Dean, breathless and staggering through the trees, trying not to let fear take the wheel. But you made it. You always made it.
When you finally sank your blade into her chest, she shrieked like the forest itself was dying and then her body crumbled, nothing more than ash and old teeth.
Dean found you moments later, blood on his jaw, eyes sharp and wide with relief. âDamnâ, he muttered, pulling you in just long enough to check you over with a rough hand on your arm and a look that said more than it shouldâve.
You both limped back to the road, bruised and exhausted, only to find Baby exactly where you left her, looking just as broken as before.
Dean crouched to check the damage, cursing under his breath when he saw the spare tire was shredded too. Like something had bitten into the rubber. Perfect.
-
Now you were back inside the car, huddled under the one ratty emergency blanket you kept in the trunk, shoulders trembling despite the few layers you still had on. Your phone was still dead. Deanâs was too. The signal was useless this deep in the woods.
You sighed dramatically, your breath fogging the air. âIâm coldâ.
Dean glanced over from the driverâs seat, where he was slumped with his boots up on the dash and his coat pulled tight. âYouâve said thatâ.
âIâm still coldâ, you grumbled, burrowing deeper into the blanket like a human burrito. âI think Iâm dying. Againâ.
Dean gave you a long, amused look. âYou know, if we were in a real survival situationâŚâ.
You peeked out from under the blanket suspiciously. âDonâtâ.
He grinned. âIâm just saying â itâs basic science. Body heat. Skin-to-skin contact. Totally practicalâ.
You snorted. âDeanâ.
âTotally unsexual. Very noble. You take your clothes off, I take mine off, and boom, no hypothermiaâ.
âWow, you really are a giverâ.
He smirked, leaning his head back on the seat. âDonât act like youâre not curious. Iâve got excellent circulationâ.
You narrowed your eyes, hiding the smile tugging at your lips. âYouâre impossibleâ.
âAnd warmâ, he added smugly. âSeriously, we could die out here. Youâd be doing it for scienceâ. You laughed, despite yourself, a breathy, tired thing that fogged up the cold windshield. Deanâs smirk softened just a little. âYou okay?â.
You nodded slowly, still bundled up. âYeah. Just⌠tired. And cold. And glad weâre not deadâ. His voice dropped, just a bit. âSameâ.
Silence settled for a few beats.
âSamâll find usâ, Dean said after a minute. âGive it another hour, heâll have a whole search party out hereâ. You hummed, eyes closing.
-
An hour passed. Or maybe two. It was hard to tell with your phone dead and the Impalaâs clock blinking wrong. The cold had settled deep into your bones, not sharp anymore, just heavy. Your fingers were numb, your lips tinged with purple despite the blanket cocoon youâd made for yourself.
Dean glanced over at you for what had to be the fiftieth time. His smirk was gone now, replaced with a furrowed brow and a jaw so tight it looked painful. âYouâre shiveringâ, he said, voice low, but lined with concern.
You opened your mouth to argue, purely out of principle, but your teeth chattered when you tried to speak.
Dean exhaled sharply through his nose. âThatâs it. Scootâ.
âWhat?â, you blinked.
âWeâre doing itâ, he said, already unzipping his jacket. âFull Winchester body heat protocol. Come on, get the blanket openâ.
You frowned, too cold to tease. âDeanââ.
âIâm not trying to get in your pants, alright?â. He shot you a crooked half-smile. âI mean, I am, eventually. But right now Iâm just trying to make sure you donât turn into a popsicle before Sam gets hereâ.
You huffed out a weak laugh. âSo romanticâ.
âShut up and take your clothes offâ.
You paused, raising a brow. âWowâ, you deadpanned. âReally nailed the mood with that oneâ.
Dean smirked, shrugging off his flannel and then his t-shirt, muscles twitching against the cold air. âHey, if Iâm getting frostbite on my ass for this, youâre committing tooâ.
You hesitated only a second before peeling off your coat and sweater, biting your lip when the air hit your skin. You slipped out of your undershirt next, cheeks flushing more from nerves than the temperature.
Dean looked at you, but there was no smugness in his eyes this time. Just something soft and warm and a little bit in awe. âYou okay?â, he asked, voice quieter now.
You nodded. âYeah. Just⌠donât let me die half-naked in a car, okay?â.
Dean chuckled. âDeal. Now get over here before I start charging rent for personal spaceâ.
You slid over, blanket pulled around both of you as Dean pulled you into his chest, bare skin against bare skin. The shock of warmth surprised you. He was solid and steady, his arms curling around you like theyâd always been meant to.
âWell shitâ, you whispered, pressing your freezing nose to his collarbone. âYouâre actually hotâ.
He snorted. âTold you. Excellent circulation. Itâs basically my only superpowerâ.
You nestled closer, feeling the tremble in your muscles start to ease. âThis is weirdâ.
âNot weirdâ, he murmured against your temple. âSurvivalâ.
The silence wrapped around you both, softer than the snow falling outside. Deanâs heartbeat was steady beneath your cheek, his hand slow against your back, drawing absent circles like he didnât even realize he was doing it.
Warmth was finally returning to your limbs, and with it, awareness. Of everything. His breath against your hair. The steady rise and fall of his chest. The fact that you were pressed flush against him, skin to skin, with nothing but the thin blanket and years of complicated tension stretched around you like a net.
And then⌠you felt it. A shift beneath you, unmistakable. His body tensed. His jaw twitched. His hand froze mid-motion on your back.
You bit your lip, hiding your smirk as the realization hit. Slowly, carefully, you shifted just slightly, enough to feel it again, the very clear, very human response he was failing miserably to hide.
âNow thatâ, you murmured, voice low against his throat, âis what makes it weirdâ.
Dean let out a low, frustrated sound, something between a groan and a laugh. âGod, donât do thatâ.
âDo what?â, you asked innocently, though your grin said otherwise.
âMove. Speak. Breatheâ. His voice was tight, low in a way that made your skin heat all over again. âIâm barely holding on over hereâ.
You looked up at him, chin on his chest. âYou said this was about survivalâ.
âYeahâ, he muttered, eyes flicking down to your mouth. âI didnât realize Iâd actually have to fight you for my lifeâ.
You laughed quietly, the sound muffled by the blanket. âYouâre such a guyâ.
Dean rolled his eyes, but there was no heat in it. âIn my defense, youâre nakedâ.
You grinned against his chest, lips brushing the warm skin there as you mumbled, âTechnically⌠only half nakedâ.
Dean huffed a laugh, shaky and low, but before he could say something smart, you moved, just a little, careful not to shift too much under the blanket, your fingers sliding behind your back with a practiced ease. The faintest click of a clasp coming undone broke the quiet between you. Dean froze.
You didnât move away. Didnât make a show of it. Just let the tension hang there, your body pressed against his a little more freely now. He exhaled slowly, like he was trying to physically keep himself from reacting. âYouâre not playing fairâ.
âNot playing anythingâ, you murmured, eyes still closed, cheek resting on his chest. âJust warming upâ.
His hand tightened at your waist, just briefly, before he seemed to remember his own rules and loosened his grip. âYouâre killing meâ, he said, and you could hear the smile in it, even under the strain. âYou know that, right?â. You tilted your head just enough to glance up at him. âFigured Iâd return the favorâ.
Deanâs eyes met yours, green and unreadable in the dimness. His thumb brushed over your hip beneath the blanket. âThis isnât how I imagined this goingâ, he said, voice barely above a whisper.
You gave a soft chuckle. âLet me guess â fewer frostbite warnings, more candles?â.
âKindaâ, he said, shaking his head slightly.
You grinned, your fingers idly toying with the worn leather of his belt under the blanket. Just the faintest tug, no pressure. And no rush. âI think itâs pretty romantic here, actuallyâ, you murmured against his chest. Dean let out a shaky breath, his hand still at your hip, unmoving, like he didnât trust himself to move yet. âSnowâ, you continued softly, lips brushing his skin, âa fire hazard of a blanket⌠and youâre not drunk this timeâ.
His head tipped down just slightly, his voice rough at the edges. âIs that the only reason why you said no?â.
You nodded, your nose grazing along his sternum. âIt wasnât that I didnât want to. Itâs just⌠that night, it felt like you werenât really there. Like it was about something else. Numbing somethingâ. Deanâs silence was enough of a confession. âI wanted youâ, you said honestly, still fingering the edge of his belt. âBut I wanted this more. You. Sober. Realâ.
He let his forehead rest against the top of your head, voice barely audible. âYou deserve that. All of itâ.
âI knowâ, you said, your grin returning, playful but grounded. âThatâs why Iâm here. Half naked. In your lap. In a snowstormâ.
Dean huffed out a laugh, the kind that came more from relief than amusement. You leaned back just enough to look up at him, your hand still gently resting at his belt, unmoving now, waiting. âNo whiskeyâ, you whispered.
He nodded. âNo motel room with flickering lights and my boots still onâ.
You smiled. âJust you and me. Finally on the same pageâ.
Dean leaned in slowly, eyes on yours the whole time. No rush. No game. Just a kiss. So soft. Barely there at first, like he was still giving you a chance to pull away, but you didnât. You leaned into it, let yourself fall into that warmth, into him. His lips deepened it gradually, hand rising to cradle your face beneath the blanket, thumb brushing your jaw as your fingers finally undid the buckle of his belt with one slow, deliberate motion.
Deanâs lips curved into a smile against yours, his breath warm and unsteady. âYou better get real quick in that backseatâ, he murmured, the words pressed to your mouth like a secret, half a tease, half a promise.
You laughed softly, pulse thudding in your ears, the sound swallowed by the snowy silence outside. With careful, quiet movements, you shifted across the seat, dragging the blanket with you, trailing heat and nerves in your wake. Dean followed without hesitation, all warmth and muscle and that infuriating, irresistible smirk.
In the tight space of the backseat, everything felt closer. Realer. You lay back against the seat, the leather cold against your skin, until he was above you.
The blanket slipped slightly as Dean settled over you, careful and steady, his hands braced beside your head. Only his hips were still covered, but the rest of him was bare. Skin dusted with freckles, chest rising and falling like he was trying to keep his balance. You shivered, partly from the chill, mostly from him.
Dean leaned in again, nose brushing yours, his voice low and tender. âStill okay?â. You nodded, breath catching. âYeah. More than okayâ.
His eyes searched yours, checking, double-checking, because thatâs who he was. Even now. Especially now.
Then, slowly, gently, his hands slid down your sides, fingers grazing goosebumps as he nudged your thighs apart with his own. No rush. No pressure. Just the steady warmth of him filling the space between you.
âYouâre shakingâ, he murmured, thumb brushing the edge of your hip. âLet me warm you upâ.
You grinned, eyes soft, teasing. âIs that your way of saying âtrust me, Iâm a professionalâ?â.
Dean chuckled, forehead falling to yours. âBaby, Iâm the only professionalâ.
And then he kissed you again. Deeper this time, like he was finally letting himself. Not just lips, but a quiet kind of truth. His hands were careful as he eased the rest of your clothes away, then his, like he was taking his time with something he didnât want to ruin.
When he shifted, the blanket rustled, warm against the cold air pressing at the fogged-up windows. He paused, his body hovering over yours, one hand still steady on your hip, the other brushing hair from your face like you were something fragile, precious, even.
Then he dipped lower, positioning himself with a breath that was half nerves, half reverence. âMight hurt a littleâ, he murmured against your jaw, lips grazing the skin there. âJust⌠gonna take it slowâ.
You smirked. âYou giving me the talk, Winchester?â.
He let out a breathless laugh. âHey, someoneâs gotta be the responsible adult hereâ.
âYou?â, you teased. âThe guy currently naked in the backseat of his car?â.
Dean grinned, eyes bright even in the low light. âWe got a blanket. Thatâs practically domesticâ.
You laughed softly, the sound easing the tension in both of you. Your hand found his cheek, thumb brushing his stubble. âI trust youâ, you said again, and meant it in every way.
Deanâs smile softened, and his next words came quieter, but with that unmistakable edge of mischief. âNot gonna lieâ, he muttered as he kissed the corner of your mouth, âthe whole virgin thing? Kinda hotâ.
You rolled your eyes, biting your lip to hide your smile. âYouâre unbelievableâ.
âUnfairly attractive and modest, tooâ, he added, pressing his forehead to yours.
âJust donât be smug afterâ, you whispered.
Dean grinned, brushing his nose lightly against yours. âYou nervous?â. You smiled, eyes soft but mischievous. âA littleâ.
âDonât beâ, he murmured, kissing the corner of your mouth. âI got youâ.
You rolled your eyes lightly, still smiling. âYou always say thatâ.
âYeah, well, I mean itâ.
Your fingers played lazily at the back of his neck, teasing. âI dunno⌠you might be overhyping yourself. What if youâre not all youâre cracked up to be?â.
Dean pulled back just an inch, pretending to look offended. âYou saying Iâve got a big ego?â.
âIâm sayingâ, you said with a grin, âmaybe you think youâre bigger than you areâ.
Dean let out a short, disbelieving laugh. âOh, you did not just say thatâ.
You nodded, deadpan. âI didâ.
Dean blinked at you, stunned, and then let out a laugh that rumbled low in his chest. âYou really wanna die in this car, huh?â.
You shrugged, trying not to grin. âIâm just saying⌠thereâs a decent chance youâre, you know⌠average. Statistically speakingâ.
Deanâs eyes flashed with amusement and something deeper, something more heated, as he leaned in, cutting your teasing short by capturing your lips in another kiss. Gentle at first, but quickly deepening into something fuller, more demanding.
âYou knowâ, you started, breathless and smiling against his mouth, âIâm just saying that statistically speaking, youâre probably justââ.
Dean didnât let you finish the sentence. With slow, deliberate care, he pressed forward, gently but steadily pushing past the resistance until he felt it give way beneath him.
âThere we goâ, he murmured softly, smirking slightly against your cheek, his voice full of quiet triumph and tenderness all at once.
You sucked in a sharp breath, your eyes widening just a fraction at the sudden sting, your nails instinctively digging into his shoulders. It hurt, but only for a heartbeat, quickly fading beneath the warmth and closeness of him.
âDickâ, you muttered quietly, but there was no real venom behind it.
He chuckled softly, pressing his forehead gently against yours again, the teasing still bright in his voice. âAverage dick, apparentlyâ. You laughed, breathless and genuine, shaking your head as the brief tension faded into comfort again, replaced by something warmer and deeper, blooming softly between you.
âYou okay?â, he whispered after a pause, his voice turning serious, searching your eyes carefully. You nodded, breath still uneven but softening, your gaze finding his, sincere and vulnerable. âYeah. Iâm goodâ. You let out a slow breath, your body adjusting to him little by little, and all at once the cold that had burrowed into your bones earlier felt like a distant memory. Your voice was quiet, more to yourself than him. âYouâre⌠really warmâ.
Dean chuckled softly, brushing a kiss across your cheek. âThatâs what they all sayâ.
You rolled your eyes, still catching your breath. âI wasnât talking about you. I meant⌠you know. Youâ.
Dean froze for a split second, then grinned, that grin. âOhhhâ, he said, smug now. âYou mean my averageââ.
âDonâtâ, you warned, swatting his shoulder, though you were laughing through it. âDo not make this a thingâ.
âI mean, Iâm just sayingâ, he murmured as he shifted slightly, his hips rolling gently with almost excruciating patience. âSomeone was out here questioning my stats not two minutes agoâ.
You sucked in a breath, nails tightening at his shoulders. âOkay, okay. Maybe youâre slightly above averageâ.
Dean gave you a look. âSlightly?â.
You met it head-on. âDonât push it, Winchesterâ.
Dean leaned down, lips brushing your ear as he whispered, âStill warm?â.
âJust moveâ, you whispered, voice low and breathy.
Dean let out a soft laugh against your neck, warm and teasing. âCanât, sweetheartâ.
You blinked up at him, confused, until he leaned in a little more, his nose brushing your temple.
âIf youâd relaxâ, he murmured playfully, âIâd actually have room to move. But right now? Youâre gripping me like you donât want me going anywhereâ.
Your face flushed, the heat blooming from your chest to your cheeks in an instant. âDeanâ, you hissed, half-scandalized, half laughing.
He just grinned, clearly pleased with himself. âHey, Iâm not complaining. Youâre⌠clingy in all the right waysâ.
You swatted his shoulder again, but your hand stayed there this time, fingers curling against his warm skin as you buried your face into the crook of his neck. âShut up and tryâ, you muttered against him.
He kissed your jaw, slow and sweet. âAs you wishâ.
Then, slowly, deliberately, he rolled his hips. Just enough to pull a quiet breath from your lips and make your fingers tighten where they rested on his back.
He stilled for a moment, like he was testing the reaction, and when he looked down at you, there was something in his eyes that almost made you forget how to breathe.
He knew exactly what he was doing.
âYeahâ, he murmured, voice low and smooth, âthatâs more like itâ.
You opened your mouth, ready with some clever, cutting tease, something about how he was finally living up to the hype, but the words never made it out.
Because in the next breath, Dean shifted his angle, just slightly, and pressed his hips flush against yours in one smooth, deliberate motion.
The sound that left your mouth wasnât planned. It wasnât pretty, either, not the usual quiet laugh or sarcastic jab. It was raw. Instinctual. A moan so loud and unfiltered, it startled even you.
Dean stilled, just for a second, blinking down at you like he hadnât expected that reaction and then his lips pulled into that slow, wicked smirk. âWellâ, he breathed, his voice thick with heat and affection, âwas that approval?â.
You could barely think, let alone answer. One hand gripped his shoulder while the other curled into the blanket beside you like it might keep you grounded. Your heart was racing, your breath uneven, and your whole body felt like it had been rewired with him at the center of it.
But eventually you managed to blink up at him, barely finding your voice. âShut upâ.
He grinned, leaning in to kiss you slowly, lazily. âNot a chanceâ.
And then he did it again. Same angle, same perfect pressure and whatever clever comeback youâd been planning scattered into dust. This time, you didnât even try to speak.
Dean kept moving, slow at first, finding that angle again like heâd learned your body in a heartbeat. Each time, the heat built higher, your nerves sparking bright and electric with every steady roll of his hips.
He watched you, eyes hungry, but also soft and a little amazed, as if seeing you come undone was the greatest victory heâd ever won. Every time your breath hitched, every quiet gasp or desperate whimper, he pressed a kiss to your cheek, your temple, your lips.
You could barely hold onto the teasing now. Every word faded under the growing wave inside you. Too much and not enough, his hands strong and grounding where they held you close. âDeanâ, you gasped, the sound tangled between a plea and a promise.
âYeahâ, he whispered, just for you, âI got you. Just let go. I got youâ.
And you did. It hit you hard. Waves shivering up your spine, curling your toes, making you moan his name louder than youâd meant to, like there was nothing else in the world. Just him, and the feeling, and the way he held you together while you came apart in his arms.
Dean followed, groaning your name as he pressed even closer, shuddering with you. You felt him tense, then relax, every muscle in his body softening as he buried his face in your neck, breath hot against your skin.
For a while, neither of you moved. The only sound was the harsh rhythm of your breathing and the quiet hush of snow against the Impalaâs windows.
When Dean finally pulled back enough to look at you, his face was flushed, eyes shining with something warm and almost vulnerable. âStill cold?â, he asked, his smile a little crooked, a little dazed.
You shook your head, smiling up at him with nothing left to hide. âNot even a littleâ.
He laughed, rolling onto his side and pulling you close, blanket tangled around you both as you melted into his warmth, your heart still pounding.
You lay there for a long moment, tucked into Deanâs side, his hand lazily tracing circles along your back under the blanket. His breathing was steady now, a quiet rhythm beneath your cheek, and for once, everything was still. No monsters. No running. Just heat, closeness, and the hum of something that felt suspiciously like peace. You closed your eyes, your body starting to relax fully for the first time in days. Maybe longer.
Just then, there were three sharp taps against the fogged-up window beside Deanâs shoulder. You jolted, sitting upright slightly, yanking the blanket higher over your bare chest as your heart jumped straight back into your throat.
Dean sighed dramatically, scrubbing a hand down his face. âOh, youâve gotta be kidding meâ.
Outside the window, barely visible through the snow and condensation, was a very tall, very bundled-up figure with one gloved hand pressed flat over his eyes.
âUhâ, came Samâs voice, muffled through the glass, âI really didnât need to see thatâ.
You groaned, dropping your forehead to Deanâs shoulder. âTell me he didnâtâ.
âOh, he didâ, Dean muttered, half-laughing, half-mortified as he reached out to crack the window just enough to talk. âDude, could you not knock like the FBI during the one moment of peace weâve had all year?â.
Sam sighed, clearly exasperated. âYou two were missing for hours. I followed your GPS and then found the car with tire tracks and⌠well, thatâ. He gestured vaguely toward the fogged windows with an air of resignation. âNext time, maybe text before you get snowed in and start playing house in the backseatâ.
You winced. âYouâre gonna bring this up forever, arenât you?â.
âOh, absolutelyâ, Sam deadpanned. âI already regret saving youâ.
You couldnât stop the whine that escaped, muffled into Deanâs chest as you tried to disappear into the blanket entirely. Dean kissed your temple, clearly amused now. âAlright, alrightâ, he called through the crack in the window, âgive us ten minutesâ.
Sam stepped back, muttering something that sounded suspiciously like âgrossâ as he walked away toward the front of the Impala.
Dean leaned back against the seat, looking at you with a crooked grin. âWellâ, he said, tugging the blanket tighter around you both. âGuess the honeymoonâs over⌠for nowâ.
Summary: Eighty-five years after Soldier Boy left you behind, he finds you frozen, kept as leverage, and drags you back into a world you never got to live. Far from Voughtâs spotlight, you and Ben try to stitch a marriage back together from ash.
(sequel to "the softest thing")
Pairing: Soldier Boy x Reader
Warnings: Language, angst
Word Count: 5709
DISCLAIMER: Everything is purely fiction. I do not intend to attack or hurt anyone. The story is, of course, entirely made up and meant for entertainment purposes.
The next few days were awkward as hell. There was no graceful way around it.
You were weak, disoriented and eighty-five years out of place in a motel off some road you did not know. Ben, for his part, had apparently decided that if he let you out of his sight for longer than half an hour, the earth itself might split open and swallow you. So he hovered. Not obviouslyâhe would have died before calling it thatâbut practically, relentlessly, he did.
The first morning he left for exactly twenty-three minutes.
You knew because you watched the red numbers on the motel clock the whole time, sitting up in bed with your knees drawn under the blankets and your heart doing little nervous jumps every time headlights swept past the curtains.
When he came back, he had a paper bag in one hand, coffee in the other and an expression that already suggested he expected trouble.
âGot you clothesâ, he said, setting the bag on the bed like he had accomplished something noble.
You looked inside. Then you looked at him. Then back at the bag.
It contained a tiny skirt, a top that appeared to have surrendered in the battle against fabric, and something he was apparently trying to pass off as a jacket though it looked more like decorative sleeves.
You pulled the top up between two fingers.
âWhereâ, you asked very slowly, âis the rest of it?â.
Ben leaned one shoulder against the wall, coffee in hand, and had the nerve to look confused. âThat is itâ.
You stared at him.
He glanced at the clothes, then back at you, and, Ben was Ben, he added, âI thought it looked hotâ.
Your mouth fell open.
âHotâ, you repeated.
âYeahâ.
You held up the skirt. âThis is not a skirt. This is an apology for a skirtâ.
One corner of his mouth twitched.
You pointed at the bag like it had personally offended the Lord. âI am not putting on something that makes me look like Iâm selling my body for moneyâ.
That wiped the twitch right off his face. âJesusâ, he muttered.
âYesâ, you said. âExactly. Go againâ.
He did.
Grumbling.
The second outfit was only slightly better. This one featured jeans already torn at both knees, which you regarded with visible distrust, and a sweater so wide at the neck it kept sliding off your shoulder like it had no morals. Still, it covered actual skin, and the coat was real, and the boots looked sturdy enough not to break an ankle in, so you accepted defeat with whatever dignity remained to a woman dragged into 2026.
He had also brought food.
At first you thought it was wrapped engine parts. Grease had soaked through the paper bag in wide translucent circles. The smell of salt, meat, frying oil and something sharp and pickled and chemical and aggressively modern hit you instantly.
You looked inside and found a burger the size of your head and fries glossy with oil.
Your expression must have said enough.
âWhat?â, Ben asked.
You looked at the food. Then at him. âDo people still have stomachs in this century?â.
He barked a short laugh and sat on the edge of the dresser. âTry itâ.
You did.
It was vulgar. It was delicious. It upset you on principle.
You ate half of it anyway.
Ben noticed and looked unbearably smug about it.
âDonâtâ, you warned.
âI didnât say anythingâ.
âYouâre thinking very loudlyâ.
That got a low chuckle out of him, and for a second the room almost felt less impossible.
The next few days passed in uneven pieces like that.
You learned about smartphones and hated them immediately.
You learned people now ordered groceries through apps and said, flatly, âThat sounds lazyâ.
You learned televisions could stream anything at any time and said the whole country was doomed.
You learned cars beeped at people now for drifting in lanes and muttered that perhaps the cars were the only responsible ones left.
Ben kept explaining the world in the bluntest ways possible, usually from the motel chair, sometimes leaning in the doorway with his arms crossed, sometimes sitting at the edge of the bed if you were too exhausted to sit up on your own. He was bad at patience, but weirdly decent at repetition. If something overwhelmed you the first time, he circled back later in smaller pieces.
You tried your hardest not to lose your mind.
Some moments almost did it anyway.
The first time he showed you a phone screen and casually pinched two fingers together to make a photograph zoom, you recoiled hard enough that he snorted.
âThatâs unnaturalâ, you said.
âItâs a touchscreenâ.
âItâs witchcraftâ.
âNoâ, he said. âThat was the fortiesâ.
You threw a motel hand towel at him for that one.
By the fourth day, you were strong enough to walk to the bathroom without your knees shaking.
By the fifth, you stood at the window for a full ten minutes just staring at the parking lot and all the wrong-shaped cars in it.
By the sixth, the walls of the motel room started to feel less like shelter and more like a padded box.
That morning, while Ben was standing by the little coffee machine trying to bully it into producing something drinkable, you said, âI want to go homeâ.
He looked over his shoulder at you. Very still.
Your fingers tightened in the sleeves of his shirt (you were still wearing it to sleep, though now you had actual clothes of your own folded on the dresser) and you said again, quieter this time, âI want to see the houseâ.
Ben turned fully then, coffee forgotten.
For a second he said nothing. Then he rubbed a hand over the back of his neck and looked away.
âI donât even know if itâs still thereâ.
âItâs thereâ.
âYou canât know thatâ.
You lifted your chin a little. âNeither can youâ.
His jaw moved once. That meant youâd hit something.
Finally he muttered, âEven if itâs standing, it wonât beâŚâ. He stopped.
He didnât finish because there was no way to finish.
Wonât be home.
Wonât be what it was.
Wonât be untouched by everything the world had done since you last stood in it.
You looked at him for a long moment. âI still want to goâ.
He nodded once. âAll rightâ.
The drive took hours.
The farther you got from the city, the stranger the world became in a different way. Less glass. More sky. Old roads folded under new ones. Towns stretched wider than they used to, signs brighter, gas stations uglier. Ben drove with one hand on the wheel and the other loose on his thigh, sunglasses on, jaw set, saying little unless you asked something.
When the turnoff finally came, your heart started beating too hard.
You recognized the road before you recognized anything on it.
Trees were bigger now, thick and old where they had once been saplings. The ditch line had shifted. A mailbox was gone. Another stood rusted and leaning. The street itself looked narrower somehow, as if time had let the grass creep closer from both sides.
Then you saw the house.
You stopped breathing.
It was still there.
Built solid, just as people used to build things when they expected weather and years and bad luck and war. Paint had long since peeled to gray, then weathered past gray into something almost silver. One shutter hung crooked. The garden beds were wild with weeds and volunteer growth. One front window was clouded at the corners, another cracked clean through. Ivy had climbed halfway up one side and died there in brown tangles.
Eighty-five years had done a number on it.
But it stood.
Ben killed the engine. For a moment neither of you moved. You just sat there looking at the house with both hands folded too tightly in your lap, as if letting them go loose might make the whole thing disappear.
âItâs really hereâ, you whispered.
Beside you, Ben looked at it too, his face unreadable behind the dark lenses.
âYeahâ.
You got out of the car slowly. The gravel crunched under your boots. The air smelled like dirt and old leaves and sun-warmed wood. Ben came around the hood and stopped next to you. You stood shoulder to shoulder in front of the place where your whole life had once fit inside four small rooms.
The front door looked swollen in its frame, paint cracked and flaked around the handle.
âItâll be lockedâ, you said.
Ben glanced at it. Then, with the smallest sigh of annoyance, he put one hand on the knob and gave it the tiniest bit of supe force. The lock snapped with a soft metallic pop. The door swung inward. Dust and old wood and eighty-five years of closed-up silence breathed out to meet you.
âYou never came back?â. You looked up at him.
He looked at you for one long second.
Then he said, âNoâ.
Nothing dressed up around it. No excuses first. No quick lie. No reaching for war or Vought or the Russians before the truth had a chance to stand there naked. Just no.
The word moved through you quietly and did its damage all the same.
Because from the fifties to the day the Russians took him, there had been thirty years.
Thirty years in which he could have come back once. Knocked on a door. Asked a neighbor. Stood in this street and looked for you. Thirty years in which one apology, one moment of courage, one act of love not poisoned by pride might have changed something.
He had not.
Your throat tightened, but no tears came. Not yet. You had cried too much lately. Now the hurt mostly sat deeper than your eyes.
âIf you hadâ, you said softly, âyou wouldâve knownâ.
Benâs jaw flexed. âYeahâ, he said. That one came rougher.
You nodded once, as if he had confirmed something practical instead of tearing another strip out of your heart. Then you turned and walked to the stairs.
The steps creaked under your weight exactly the way they used to. Third one from the bottom, then the fifth near the banister. The sound hit you so hard you had to stop for half a second with your hand on the rail, breathing through the sudden rush of memory. Bare feet at night. Ben taking the stairs two at a time. Your hand gliding over this same wood twenty lives ago with a laundry basket tucked to your hip.
Behind you, he did not follow right away. He gave you the room to climb alone. That, more than anything, told you he knew what this was.
Upstairs, the hallway was smaller than you remembered. Dust lay silver over everything. The wallpaper had peeled. Your bedroom door stood half-open, just as if someone had left it that way for air and meant to come back before supper. You pushed it open with careful fingers.
The room held. Not untouched, no. Time had gotten in around the edges. The curtains had yellowed. A crack ran down one corner of the wall by the window. The quilt on the bed had gone stale with dust. But the shape of it was still there. The vanity. The narrow bed. The little night desk by your side, tucked under the lamp with the chipped cream base.
You crossed to it in silence. Your hand shook when you touched the drawer pull. You didnât open the drawer first. You looked at the top. Your wedding ring still sat there.
Small. Gold. Dull with age, but unmistakable. Exactly where you had left it.
For a second you just stared.
Then you picked it up.
The metal felt cold in your palm, lighter than something that had once meant forever had any right to be. You remembered taking it off. Remembered your fingers swollen from crying and the motion feeling unreal, like a bad scene in a play you were too tired to perform properly. You had set it here because you could not bear to look at it and could not bear to throw it away.
You opened the drawer with your free hand. His ring was inside. It lay in the back right corner, just as heavy and plain as it had been the day you slid it onto his finger in church. For one wild second it looked less like a ring and more like proof that a whole other world had once existed and expected to continue.
You heard him come to the doorway behind you. Slowly. No heavy Soldier Boy tread meant to fill a room. Just Ben, or as close to him as the years had left. He stopped there and did not come farther in.
You stood with your back to him, your ring in one hand, his in the other.
When you finally spoke, your voice was so quiet it almost disappeared into the dust.
âI waitedâ.
Nothing from behind you.
So you went on.
âFor months at first. Then years in stupid little waysâ. Your thumb rubbed over the inside of the band without meaning to. âI kept thinking maybe youâd come in through the front door and say you were sorry. Or angry. Or drunk. I didnât even care which, not really. I just thought one day youâd be thereâ.
Ben made a sound in his throat. Not a word. Something lower. Wounded. You turned then.
He was leaning one shoulder against the doorframe, eyes fixed on the rings in your hands.
âI shouldâveâ, he said. The answer came immediately. Like he had been carrying it in his mouth for years.
âYesâ, you said.
He shut his eyes for one brief second. When he opened them again, he looked older than ever in the helplessness of a man who could punch through steel and still not lay hands on the one thing heâd broken most cleanly.
âI thoughtâŚâ. He stopped and gave a short, bitter laugh. âNo. Thatâs bullshit. I didnât think enough, that was the problemâ.
You watched him.
He pushed off the frame and took one step into the room, then stopped himself there. âAt first I was madâ, he said. âAt you, at me, at the whole goddamn thing. Then I was busy. Then I was famous. Then I was drunkâ. His mouth twisted. âThen enough time had passed that coming back meant having to look at what Iâd doneâ.
The honesty of it hurt, but it also fit him too perfectly to deny.
âSo you didnâtâ.
âNoâ. He looked at you directly. âI kept telling myself you were better offâ.
You laughed once, softly and without humor.
âThatâs what cowards say when they want to feel nobleâ.
That landed.
âYeahâ, he said after a moment. âProbablyâ.
The room went still again. Your fingers closed around both rings until the edges pressed into your palm. It grounded you, that small pain.
âIf youâd come backâ, you said, âyou wouldâve found an empty houseâ.
His eyes sharpened.
You looked down at the gold in your hands.
âYou wouldâve known something happened to meâ, you whispered. âYou wouldâve known I didnât just leaveâ.
Ben went completely motionless. All the blood left his face. And there it was. Fresh guilt, new and horrible, layering itself over the old kind. Not just that heâd abandoned you. That his abandonment had helped bury the evidence of what Vought had done. That if he had loved you bravely instead of selfishly, even once, the trail might not have gone cold.
He looked at the floorboards for a long time before he said, very quietly, âI knowâ.
You turned back to the desk because looking at him was too much. On the far wall, your old mirror gave back a strange picture: a woman in modern clothes standing in a bedroom from another century, and behind her a man who had once been her whole life and now looked like a wound that had learned to walk.
Then you crossed the room to the closet. The door stuck at first. Time had swollen the wood just enough that it resisted, then gave with a dry little groan. Dust drifted down from the top frame in the late light. The smell inside, cedar gone faint with age and old fabric hit you immediately. Lavender sachets long since surrendered into powder.
You stood there for a second with your hand on the knob, breathing it in.
Behind you, Ben said nothing. He only watched.
You reached in slowly, fingertips skimming over hangers and cloth covers and dresses that no longer belonged to any world you understood. Cotton. Wool. One good church dress in blue. A coat with foxed buttons. A cardigan with one cuff still turned up the way you used to wear it while doing dishes. Every piece felt impossibly patient, as if it had been waiting without complaint all this time.
Then your hand found satin. Soft pink. You stilled.
Very carefully, you drew the nightgown out from between two dresses. The fabric slid over your fingers with that same quiet whisper it always had. Time had yellowed one strap slightly and the satin no longer gleamed the way it used to, but it was still there. You held it up in both hands and looked at it.
For one second, the room doubled over itself. The motel. The bunker. The digital clocks and neon signs and all the ugly bright machinery of 2026 fell away. You could almost feel the old floor under your bare feet, hear the rattle of rain at the bedroom window, smell your face cream and his cigarettes.
Behind you, Ben had gone so still he barely seemed to breathe. He watched the way you moved with the gown in your hands. Careful not to tug a seam, careful not to catch the strap, careful even with a thing that had no nerves left in it. There was nothing rushed in you. Nothing hard. No modern bluntness. No jaded carelessness. You moved the way you always had: quietly, gently, as though the world might bruise if handled too fast.
When you finally turned, the nightgown folded over your arms, Ben looked like someone had struck him somewhere internal and left the bruise blooming in real time. His face had gone strange. Open in places he usually kept bolted shut. His eyes stayed fixed on you. Not on the satin, but on your hands, your carefulness, the old softness in you that no tank and no century and no company full of monsters had managed to grind entirely out of existence.
Something deep in his chest had finally caught up with him.
Love.
Real love. Old love. The kind he had felt before he learned how to bury every vulnerable thing under pride and violence and noise. Before Vought. Before Countess. Before the stage lights and the blood and the lies he told himself about what kind of man he had become.
And then came the shame.
It moved over his face so sharply it almost looked like nausea. His mouth tightened. One hand came up and scrubbed hard over it, as if he could physically wipe the feeling away before it settled too deep. He looked down, then back up at you, and his expression only got worse.
Because loving you, truly, in that old helpless way, meant feeling all at once what he had done to something he knew had been good.
Not perfect. Not naive. Good.
You had been the softest thing in his life. The cleanest part of it. And he had put his hands on that softness with all the wrong kinds of strength.
His throat worked once.
âYou kept itâ, he said. It came out lower than usual. Not quite steady.
You looked down at the satin in your hands. âIt was in the closetâ.
âThatâs not what I meantâ.
You looked back at him then. He had not moved from where he stood near the bed, but he looked as though the floor under him had shifted anyway. Shoulders tense. Hands open and useless at his sides. A man who could split steel and still had no defense against a pink nightgown in a dusty bedroom.
Your voice stayed quiet. âNoâ. You folded the nightgown once, carefully, over your forearms. âI didnât keep it because of youâ.
He nodded immediately, too quickly. âI knowâ.
But he didnât, not fully. Or maybe he did, and that was part of what made his face look so wrecked.
Because whether the gown had stayed because you loved it, because it was expensive, because you forgot it, because throwing it away had once felt like sawing off your own wristânone of those answers saved him. None of them made this easier.
You watched him for a long moment.
Then you said, âWhy are you looking at me like that?â.
He gave a short, rough laugh that held no humor. âBecause Iâm an fucking idiotâ.
It was so plain it almost startled you.
The silence after it stretched.
Then, more quietly, with his eyes dropping from your face to the satin and back again, âI forgotâ.
You frowned faintly. âForgot what?â.
His jaw tightened.
âWhat you wereâ, he said.
The words landed wrong at first, and he must have seen it in your face because he shook his head once, hard.
âNo. Not like thatâ. He dragged a hand through his hair and started again. âI forgot what it felt like to be around somethingâŚâ. He stopped. Swallowed. âSomething goodâ.
That made your chest ache in a new place.
He looked almost sick now. Pale under the roughness. A man trying not to throw up on his own shame.
âI treated you likeââ. He cut himself off, eyes dropping to the floorboards. âChristâ.
You waited.
He didnât finish the sentence because maybe there wasnât a version of it he could bear to hear out loud. Like property. Like punishment. Like convenience. Like something he was entitled to keep no matter what he did to it. You knew all the endings. He probably did too.
For a moment the room was so quiet you could hear the old house settling around you.
Then Ben said, very low, âI loved youâ.
The tense of it sat between you.
You looked at him steadily. âLovedâ.
His eyes closed for half a second. When they opened again, there was no attitude left in him at all. âNoâ, he said. âThatâs not what I meantâ.
He looked at the nightgown in your hands again, then at your face. And you understood.
Not because he said the words. Ben had never been a man who could hold something that tender out cleanly in front of him. But because you saw it all over him anyway. In the ugly guilt, in the racing pulse at his neck, in the way his eyes kept catching on your hands like he still could not believe they were real.
He loved you.
Still.
Maybe had never really stopped, not in the place that mattered. Only buried it so deep under Soldier Boy that by the time it clawed its way back up, it found blood on its hands.
You did not stay in that room much longer after that. Not because there was nothing left in it. Quite the opposite. There was too much.
Too much dust holding the shape of old days. Too much light falling across the bed where you had once lain awake listening for his key in the lock. Too much of yourself tucked into drawers and folded into fabric and preserved in corners that had not asked to survive you. The whole house felt like a held breath that had lasted eighty-five years and now did not know how to exhale.
So you packed. Not everything. You couldnât. Even if you had wanted to, there was no carrying a whole life out in two arms and one afternoon. You chose the way people do when they know every object is about to become a decision.
A few dresses. Practical ones first, then one nicer one because some old reflex in you still believed a woman ought to keep at least one proper thing ready. A cardigan. The pink satin nightgown, folded so carefully your hands hardly seemed to touch it. Two picture books from the shelf in the hallway cupboard downstairsâone of family photographs, one of pressed cards and notes and yellowed clippings tucked between the pages. The small jewelry box from your vanity. Your brush. A Bible with your maiden name written in slanted ink on the inside cover. The old fountain pen that no longer worked but had once been your fatherâs. A little hand mirror with a crack at one edge.
Ben helped quietly. That, more than anything, kept striking you. The quietness of him. No commentary. No impatience. No trying to take over the whole task just because he could carry more. He only stepped in when something was too high or too heavy or too awkward to reach, and even then he moved like a man afraid of making too much sound in a church. He held open boxes while you chose what went in them. Wrapped picture frames in old pillowcases. Took the suitcases down from the top closet shelf and set them on the bed without jarring the mattress.
Once, your fingers both reached for the same stack of photographs. His hand pulled back immediately. âSorryâ, he said.
The word came so automatically that you looked at him before you could help yourself.
Ben had his eyes on the floorboards. One of the photographs had slipped sideways in the album, and he straightened it with the side of one finger. There was something almost unbearable in the concentration of it, in the restraint. This giant, brutal man who had once moved through rooms like he owned the air itself was now helping you pack your old life in near silence and apologizing for brushing your knuckles. You looked away first.
By the time the car was loaded, the light had gone thinner and cooler. Evening settling in. The boxes sat in the back seat and trunk in careful stacks, absurdly small compared to the weight of what they stood for. Ben shut the trunk with one hand and glanced toward the house. You followed his gaze.
The porch leaned. The windows reflected sky. The broken front lock hung useless inside the doorframe where he had popped it loose. The place looked tired. Wounded. Still upright.
He knew you werenât going to stay there. You knew he knew.
Not after what the house held. Not after what it didnât. Not after the years inside it had split cleanly into before and after, and before was dead enough already without forcing yourself to sleep in its rooms.
Neither of you said it. You just got into the car. Ben behind the wheel. You in the passenger seat, coat over your lap, one hand still tucked in the pocket where his ring had been resting against yours ever since youâd taken it from the drawer.
For a minute he didnât start the engine. The old house stood in the side mirror, half-obscured by overgrown shrubs and years. Ben had one hand on the wheel and the other resting loose over the gearshift. His face was turned toward the window, jaw set, not tense exactly, thinking. Or maybe bracing. With him, the difference had always been hard to tell.
Then he said, still looking out at the yard, âWhat now?â.
Not where do we drive, not which motel, not what state line to cross before morning.
What now.
What were two people supposed to do with this? With eighty-five stolen years, with betrayal and grief and survival and love that had somehow stayed alive badly enough to wound on contact.
You looked at him for a long moment. Then you slipped your hand into your coat pocket and drew both rings out into your palm. Your wedding ring. His. Gold worn dull with time, lying side by side on your skin like two tiny pieces of a language you had both once spoken fluently and then spent a lifetime forgetting on purpose.
You held your hand out between you. Palm up. Not offering them exactly. Not demanding.
Asking.
It was the gentlest question you knew how to ask, and the most dangerous one.
Not "do you still love me".
You already knew the answer to that, in his way.
Not "can I forgive you".
You didnât know that yet. Maybe wouldnât for a long time.
Something more fragile and more frightening.
Do you want to try.
Do you want to be my husband again.
Not Soldier Boy. Not the man Vought made. Not the one who let the world sand him down into something harder and meaner and easier to market.
The old Ben.
Loving, when he knew how.
Protective, when it came from tenderness instead of possession.
Supportive, when his pride wasnât choking it at the root.
Good, in the ways that had once mattered most.
Ben looked down at your palm and stopped moving altogether. The whole car seemed to go still with him. Even his breathing changed.
His eyes went from your ring to his and back again, and you saw the exact second he understood what you were asking. Not a romantic gesture. Not nostalgia. Not some soft, easy wiping away of everything ugly that had happened between then and now.
A choice. A real one. And with it, responsibility.
He looked at your face then, as if checking whether you truly meant it. Whether this was pity. Shock. Some post-cryo confusion that would evaporate in better light.
You didnât look away. Benâs throat worked. Slowlyâso slowly that in another moment it might have looked like fearâhe reached toward your hand. His fingers hovered over the rings before they touched. Then he picked up yours.
He held it for a second between thumb and forefinger, staring at the band like it might burn him. When he finally took your left hand, he did it with a care that nearly undid you. Turning your wrist gently. Supporting your fingers from beneath as though even this, this small familiar motion, had to be relearned from scratch.
He slid the ring onto your finger. So gently.
No rush. No claim in it. No arrogance. Just a man putting back something he knew he had no right to touch roughly again. The band settled at your knuckle and your breath caught.
Benâs hand stayed around yours a second longer than necessary. Then he let go.
You picked up his ring. His hand, when he offered it, was broader than you remembered and more marked. Old scars, roughened knuckles, one faded burn near the base of the thumb, veins standing heavier beneath the skin. But it was still his hand. The one you had held walking to school. The one you had once guided to your waist in a little kitchen and church halls and moonlit sidewalks because you were young and in love and trusted what he touched.
You took it carefully. He watched your face the whole time.
You slid his ring back on, over the knuckle, into place.
For one second neither of you breathed.
Ben turned your hand over in his and looked at the ring like it was the strangest thing he had seen in a century. Then he lifted his eyes to yours. There was no No joke. No Soldier Boy. Only a man who looked wrecked by hope.
âYou sure?â, he asked.
It would have been easy to say yes.
It would have been easy to say no.
The truth was harder and smaller and more human than either.
âNoâ, you whispered. âBut I want to tryâ.
His face changed at that. He lifted his free hand and touched your cheek. Just the backs of his fingers at first. Waiting. You didnât pull away.
His hand settled there fully then, warm and careful, thumb resting near the corner of your mouth. His expression had gone almost unbearably bare.
âYou donât know what that does to meâ, he said.
Maybe you did. Maybe that was why your own eyes stung.
He leaned in slowly enough to stop a dozen times if you wanted.
The first kiss in over eighty-five years should have been dramatic. It wasnât. It was quiet. Tentative. His mouth brushed yours once, barely there, like he was asking a question and still didnât trust himself to hear the answer right.
When you didnât move away, he kissed you again, a little more fully this time, still impossibly gentle. No heat. No taking. No demand. Only the old softness, shaken and ashamed and careful.
His hand stayed at your cheek. Yours was still around his.
The kiss tasted like old grief. It hurt. It healed nothing. It made no promises the world could be trusted to keep.
But when he drew back and his forehead rested against yours, you felt something shift.
When he finally opened his eyes, they looked brighter than before, rough with feeling he would hate named too plainly.
âIâll do betterâ, he said.
You looked at him for a long moment. Then, because you knew him, because you knew what grand vows became in the mouths of men like Ben, you answered the only way that mattered. âYou will have toâ.
That got the faintest broken huff of laughter from him.
âYeahâ, he murmured. âI figuredâ.
Then he started the car, and with both rings back where they belonged, you left the old house behind together.
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Summary: You are Soldier Boyâs wife. Gentle where he is hard and steady where his world keeps pulling him away. But as Voughtâs spotlight grows brighter, home starts to feel lonelier and youâre left wondering what love looks like when itâs tested by power.
Pairing: Soldier Boy x Reader
Warnings: Language, angst
Word Count: 7507
DISCLAIMER: Everything is purely fiction. I do not intend to attack or hurt anyone. The story is, of course, entirely made up and meant for entertainment purposes.
For a little while after that night, you let yourself believe it.
Not in some foolish, storybook way. You knew Ben too well for that. You knew the temper had always lived in him, the pride, the ugly stubborn streak that made him bite down hardest when he was scared.
You knew one soft night in a dark room did not undo Compound V, or Vought, or the reporters, or the blood already on his hands.
But still.
He came home three nights in a row after that. He kissed the side of your head while you stood at the stove. Sat at the kitchen table with his sleeves rolled up and a drink in his hand and actually answered when you asked how his day went. Slept with one arm flung over your waist like his body remembered the shape of you better than his mind did.
Once, half-asleep, he tucked his face into your hair and grumbled because your curlers were poking his cheek, and the irritation in it had felt so ordinary you had nearly laughed from relief.
You lived off crumbs then.
A hand at your back as he passed behind your chair. A gruff, âLock the door after meâ, on his way out. The sight of his boots by the front step in the morning.
Those small pieces of him became enough to build hope out of if you were careful and lonely and wanted it badly enough.
Then work got bigger.
Or maybe he did.
Half a year later, you barely recognized him.
It happened the way rot happened in wood. Quietly at first, hidden under paint, until one day your hand went through the surface and found there was nothing solid left underneath.
He stopped coming home most nights.
At first it was excuses. Late meetings. Press dinners. Vought keeping him in the city because âthe public wants to see their heroâ.
Then it became something nobody even bothered to dress up. Whole weeks where you only knew he was still alive because his face smiled at you from newspapers by the register at the grocerâs, talked about peacekeeping, patriotism, and American strength.
They never mentioned the bodies. Not really.
Not the men in back alleys with their ribs crushed inward like cans under a boot. Not the protester knocked so hard into a barricade his neck snapped. Not the warehouse fire where three gunrunners and two girls in the wrong place at the wrong time burned up together while Vought called it a necessary show of force. They used words like intervention. Operation. Stability⌠Peace.
As if saying it often enough made it true.
Ben came home smelling like all of it.
Whiskey first, usually. Then cigarette smoke. Then the chemical stink under both, sharp and wrong and too sweet at the edges. Pills, powder, whatever rich men and Vought handlers put in front of him because nobody in that world ever handed a weapon less ammunition.
Sometimes you heard the car in the drive after midnight and your whole body went cold before you even opened your eyes.
Other times you did not hear anything at all until the front door slammed so hard the hallway picture frames knocked crooked.
You learned quickly that it was safer to be asleep when he got there.
Or pretending to be.
You started going to bed early, before the street outside went properly dark. You would wash the dinner plates, turn off the kitchen light, smooth your hand over the table like it might matter whether the placemats were straight, and then slip into bed with a book open in your lap you never really read.
By ten, the lamp would be off. By eleven, you would be lying still in the dark with your heart beating too fast at every distant engine, rehearsing silence.
If he found you awake, sometimes he wanted an audience. That was worse.
He would pace the bedroom half-drunk, shrugging out of that green costume piece by piece and throwing it wherever it landed. Gloves against the wall. Belt across the chair. Boots kicked so hard one split the skirting board by the dresser and left a dent you covered later with a laundry basket.
He talked at the room more than to you, jaw tight and eyes too bright, railing about idiots and traitors and weak men in suits and weak men in uniforms and weak men in general, as if the whole country had become a personal insult.
And if you answered wrongâ
If your voice was too soft, he said you were pitying him.
If it was too careful, he said you were scared of him.
If you said nothing, he laughed that mean, ugly laugh he had developed lately and asked whether the cat had got your tongue.
So you learned.
You learned that the best nights were the ones where he did not need you to witness whatever he had become outside those walls. The best nights were when you could stay very still and breathe slow and let him think you were already asleep by the time he staggered in.
Then he would stand in the doorway for a minute, swaying slightly, filling the room with city stink and liquor fumes and something burned beneath it all.
Sometimes he would look at you for so long you could feel it with your eyes shut. Sometimes he would mutter, âJesusâ, under his breath like you were either a comfort or an accusation, maybe both.
Sometimes he crawled into bed and turned his back immediately, taking up too much space and radiating angry heat.
Sometimes he did not come to bed at all.
On those nights you found him in the morning asleep on the sofa, one arm flung over his face, empty glasses on the floor and ash in a saucer because he had smashed the proper ashtray three weeks ago when you asked if he wanted coffee.
He broke things more often now.
Not always at you. Sometimes at the house itself, as if the walls had failed him by being there when he was furious. A cabinet door ripped clean off its hinge because the liquor you kept in the kitchen was not the bottle he wanted.
The bathroom towel rack torn loose because his cuff snagged on it and he was too drunk and coked up and god knew what else to stop and simply unhook it.
A plate shattered in the sink because you had overcooked the roast and he stared at it for a second with that cold, flat look in his face before letting the whole thing slip from his hand.
Then there were the nights when he went looking.
For a flaw. A provocation. A reason.
Why was the living room dark?
Why was the porch light on?
Why did the house smell like bleach?
Why had you moved his razor?
Why had you not moved his razor?
How long had you been asleep?
Who had called earlier?
Why were you dressed like that in your own damn house?
Why werenât you?
The questions came strange, hooked together by a logic only he could see.
Sometimes he was so wired he laughed in the middle of them, eyes empty, as if the whole performance of domestic life had become absurd to him.
Other times he went frighteningly quiet instead, standing in the kitchen with one hand on the counter while you answered in as few words as possible and watched the pulse jump in his throat.
Mean did not always look like shouting.
Sometimes it looked like him glancing at the dinner you had made and saying, âYou seriously thought this was good?â, before walking away.
Sometimes it looked like, âWhat do you do all day in this house besides make things worse?â.
Sometimes it looked like him coming up behind you while you were folding towels and moving your hair off your neck with two fingers, almost tenderly, only to murmur, âYou got so damn quietâ, in a voice that made it sound like an accusation.
And the awful thing was, he was right. You had gone quieter.
At first on purpose. A tactic. Silence kept the peace better than tears, better than questions, better than anything that made him feel cornered by your softness.
Then gradually it stopped being a tactic and became the shape of your life.
You had no job. Never had. Ben had always said there was no need, not when he could provide, and in the beginning it had sounded almost gallant. Protective. A husbandâs pride. He brought home the money. You made the home. That was how it was supposed to work.
Only now the money arrived whether he came home or not, and the house did not feel like a home so much as a waiting room with your name on the lease.
You had no friends either. Not because anyone announced you werenât allowed. It had just happened slowly.
A call not returned because Ben wanted dinner hot when he got back.
A church social skipped because he said the women there were nosy.
A neighborâs invitation turned down because he made a face and asked why youâd want to waste an evening listening to small-town idiots talk about casserole recipes.
Over time the invitations stopped. Then the habit of expecting them did too.
Ben had always been your life. You had married him young, loved him young, built yourself around the shape of him while he was still just a broad-shouldered boy with a temper and big dreams and the kind of grin that made you feel chosen. By the time the world got its hooks into him, there was no part of your day that did not still, in some way, orbit him.
So when he stopped being home, you did not suddenly become free. You became alone.
Every so often, usually in the gray hour before dawn when the chemicals had burned out of him and he was too exhausted to pretend at being made of steel, some piece of your old Ben surfaced.
He would find you in the kitchen making coffee with your robe tied tight and your hair still mussed from sleep and stand there in silence, looking wrecked and handsome and far too young to carry what he carried.
Once, he touched your shoulder as he passed and said, very low, âYou should go back to bedâ. As if he still knew how to care. As if the meanness were a fever that might break.
It never lasted.
Morning turned to noon. Noon to press calls, handlers, cars, guns, praise.
By night he was somebody else again.
And you moved through the little house like a ghost who still straightened the cushions.
By winter, you had learned the sound of each version of his return.
The slow, uneven tread that meant whiskey.
The too-fast, restless pace that meant something powdery and vicious was still racing through his blood.
The dead-silent entrance that was worst of all, because it meant he was sober enough to be deliberate and angry enough not to want witnesses.
One Thursday in December, the first hard cold of the season pushed frost into the corners of the bedroom window. You were already in bed before nine, lying on your side in flannel now instead of satin because pink softness had started to feel like a costume from a different life.
When the front door slammed just after midnight, you closed your eyes at once.
His footsteps paused in the hall outside the bedroom. Then the knob turned.
You stayed very still, listening to him breathe in the dark. You tried to keep your own breathing slow. Even and deep. The kind that belonged to sleep.
But Ben was a superhero. He could hear your heartbeat from the hallway. Could hear the little hitch every time the floorboards shifted under his weight. Could hear the way fear changed the rhythm of you even when you stayed perfectly still under the covers with your face turned toward the wall.
The bedroom door stayed open behind him. Cold air from the hall spilled across the floorboards and crept up under the bedframe.
You kept your eyes shut anyway, one hand tucked under the pillow so he would not see it trembling.
For a few seconds he said nothing. Then, very quietly, âDonâtâ. Just that one word.
Your throat tightened. You could smell him even from here. Whiskey, yes. Cigarettes, yes. But under that, sharp and unmistakable, perfume that was not yours. Sweeter than anything you wore. Heavier. Something expensive and clinging and⌠public. Your stomach turned.
âI know youâre awakeâ, he said.
You opened your eyes to the dark. The room was mostly shadow, lit only by the weak wash of streetlamp through the curtains. His shape stood in the doorway, broad shoulders filling it, coat still on, one hand braced against the frame.
For once he had not come in throwing things. Had not barked your name or switched on the light or started hunting for some small mistake to pin the whole night on.
He only stood there looking at you.
You pushed yourself up slowly against the headboard, the blanket gathered to your chest.
Ben came farther in. âYou gonna ask?â, he said.
You kept your eyes on the quilt in your lap. âWould it matter if I did?â.
He let out a short breath through his nose. Not quite a laugh. âJesusâ.
The mattress dipped at last when he sat on the edge of the bed.
You stayed very still. Ben tipped his head slightly, listening to you with that new, awful attentiveness the V had given him. Listening to the fear you were trying so hard not to show. His mouth tightened. âYouâre scared of meâ.
It wasnât a question.
You swallowed. âYouâre drunkâ.
âThatâs not what I saidâ.
Ben leaned forward, forearms planted on his knees, staring at the floor.
âBeen weeksâ.
You didnât answer.
He laughed once through his nose. No humor in it. âJesus. You know exactly what I meanâ.
Your fingers tightened around the blanket. Of course you knew. You bit your lip. It was a small thing, barely a movement. But Ben saw everything now. Heard everything. The slight change in your breathing. The way your heartbeat jumped, then turned fast and shallow. The fear blooming under your ribs before you even looked up at him.
His eyes cut to your face. And just like that, the memory rose up between you. The last time. Not bruises. Not the usual aching fingerprints on your hips or thighs you could hide under clothes and pretend were nothing. Not something you could press your hand over in the bathroom and tell yourself he hadnât meant it, that heâd just forgotten his strength again, that the V had made him careless but not cruel.
The last time had sent white pain through your whole body so hard youâd gone sick with it.
You could still remember the exact sound that had come out of you. Short, broken and shocked more than loud. The way everything had stopped all at once.
The way Ben had gone rigid over you, his face changing in a single second from heat to confusion to horror.
The way you had curled in on yourself after, hands shaking, unable to get your leg to move right.
The doctor Vought sent had called it a dislocation in a voice so bland it made you want to scream. He hadnât looked you in the eye once.
You hadnât slept properly beside Ben since.
Now, in the dark, your mouth stayed pressed shut around the inside of your lip, and Ben watched you doing it. His expression changed. Not softened. That was too easy a word. But the edge of something hard in him faltered when he understood exactly where your mind had gone.
âThat badâ, he said quietly.
You made yourself speak, though your voice came out thin. âYou know it wasâ.
Ben looked away. The muscle in his jaw flexed once. His hands hung between his knees, big and slack for the moment, but you knew too well what those hands could do by accident now. That was the worst part. Not malice every time. Not intent. Just carelessness wrapped around too much power, with you left to bear the consequences.
âI didnât mean thatâ, he muttered.
You almost laughed. It was so tired. So useless.
âI knowâ, you said.
He glanced back at you sharply, maybe hearing something in your voice he didnât like.
âYou say that like it fixes somethingâ.
âIt doesnâtâ.
The silence after that felt heavy. Ben leaned back a little, bracing one hand behind him on the mattress. You flinched before you could stop yourself when the bed shifted under his weight.
His whole body went still. There it was againâthat awful little betrayal. Your body reacting before your mind could smooth it over. Ben heard it in your heartbeat. Saw it in the way your shoulders locked. Felt it in the inch of distance you tried to put between yourself and him without actually moving.
For a second, something hot and defensive flashed across his face. The old instinct. Hurt pride turning dangerous. Then it died. Or at least got buried. He dragged a hand down his face and said, lower now, âYou think I donât know youâre scared every time I get near you?".
You looked at him in the dark. âWhat do you want me to say to that?â.
His mouth twisted. âI donât knowâ.
That, at least, was honest.
You pulled the blanket higher against your chest, more for something to hold than for warmth. âYou keep acting like I decided this for funâ.
Benâs head snapped toward you. âI didnât say thatâ.
âNoâ, you said softly. âYou just come in here half-drunk and talk about how itâs been weeks like Iâm punishing youâ.
He stared at you. The words had landed harder than you expected. You could see it in the way his breathing changed, in the quick pulse that jumped in his throat. It would have been easier, maybe, if he had shouted.
Easier if he had turned mean right away and given you something familiar to defend yourself against.
Instead he just sat there looking at you like he had walked into his own reflection and hated what it showed him.
âYou wonât even sleep easy next to meâ, he said.
Your throat tightened. The truth underneath the complaint. Not just sex. Not just denial. Something more humiliating to a man like Ben: the fact that even in your own bed, with the lights off and the house quiet, he had become someone your body braced against.
You looked down at the quilt. âI tryâ.
âYeahâ, he said, and this time the laugh came out bitter. âI hear that tooâ.
You let out a breath and finally said the thing you had been swallowing for weeks.
âI donât know when youâre going to forgetâ.
Benâs face went blank.
âI donât know when youâre going to grab too hard, or shove too fast, or get angry because I say the wrong thing and thenââ. Your voice thinned. âAnd then Iâm the one who pays for itâ.
He stood up too quickly. You recoiled on instinct, flattening back into the headboard before you could stop yourself. The movement cut through the room like glass. Ben saw it. Heard it. Felt it. And for one terrible second he looked like he might smash something. Instead he turned away and paced one step, two, then stopped with both hands braced on his hips. Shoulders broad. Back rigid. A man too full of strength and temper and shame to fit inside his own skin.
âI never meant to hurt youâ, he said.
You looked at his back. At the line of it under the coat. At the city still clinging to him. At the man who had once been all of your life and had now become the thing you measured rooms against.
âI knowâ, you whispered again.
He rounded on you. âStop saying thatâ.
The words cracked through the room, louder this time. You went still. His chest was rising hard now. Eyes bright. Jaw clenched so tight it looked painful. For a second the old fear came up so fast it turned your hands cold. Then he heard your heart racing and shut his mouth.
A long beat passed.
When he spoke again, his voice had dropped back down, scraped raw.
âDonât make it easier for meâ.
That surprised you enough to lift your eyes. He stood there in the middle of the room, huge and tired and frightening and, for one unguarded moment, wrecked.
âDonât say you know like that makes me less of a bastardâ, he said.
Your lip trembled. You pressed your teeth into it until the feeling passed.
Ben dragged both hands through his hair. âI come in here and I thinkââ. He stopped, swallowed hard, started again. âI think maybe tonight I can just lie down beside you, maybe touch you without you tensing up like Iâm about to put you through the wall. And then I see your faceâ.
You stared at him.
He laughed once, low and awful. âAnd I get whyâ.
You looked at the shape of him in the half-dark and saw, with painful clarity, all the contradictions at once.
The man who had once bought you pink satin nightgowns because he liked softness.
The supe Vought had sharpened into a weapon.
The husband who still came home to your bed.
The stranger who made you afraid to sleep.
Very carefully, you shifted your sore hip under the blankets. The motion was small, but not small enough. Benâs eyes dropped to it at once. His face changed when he realized what you were doingâprotecting it still, even now. Guarding the place where his strength had done more than bruise. Something in him seemed to cave inward.
âIs it still hurting?â, he asked. The question came out so quiet you almost missed it.
You hesitated. Then, because lying felt pointless in a room with a man who could hear every stutter of your pulse, you said, âSometimesâ.
He shut his eyes. For a moment he looked like he wanted to hit something again. Himself, maybe. The wall. The whole house. Anything but the truth sitting between you. When he opened them, he didnât come closer. That, more than anything, told you how bad it was.
Ben always reached first when he wanted control back. Tonight he stood where he was and kept his hands to himself like they belonged to someone dangerous.
For a long moment he said nothing.
When he finally spoke, his voice was low and scraped thin. âThey turned herâ.
You stared at him. âWhat?â.
He looked away, jaw flexing once. âA few days agoâ. A humorless breath left him. âNew name and everything. Crimson Countessâ. The words felt absurd in the room.
You said nothing.
Ben rubbed a hand over the back of his neck. âRobert was practically crowing about itâ.
Your fingers tightened in the blanket. âWhy are you telling me that?â.
His eyes flicked to yours, then away again. Because he was a lot of things. Cruel sometimes, arrogant often, broken now in ways he kept making everyone else pay for. But he was not a liar when it mattered most. Not when the truth had already risen high enough between you to choke on.
His mouth flattened. âBecause I slept with herâ.
The room went soundless. You looked at him and did not recognize the face you were wearing. Or maybe you recognized it too well. It was the one that came when pain was so sharp it emptied you out instead of making you cry.
Ben saw it happen. He shifted his weight once and stopped.
âI wasnât gonna stand here and lie to youâ.
Your voice barely came out. âNoâ.
He took that for agreement or accusation, maybe both.
âIt happened after they turned herâ, he said. Each word sounded forced through clenched teeth. âRobert kept pushing it. Public image. Pairing us at events. Getting us in the papers togetherâ. His lip curled. âThe whole thingâ.
You swallowed hard enough it hurt. âAnd you said noâ, you whispered.
The old statement. The one from months ago in bed, when he had held you close and said there was no power couple. That there was him and you and everyone else could go to hell.
Ben heard it in your voice at once. His face changed. âYeahâ, he said. âAt firstâ.
You looked down at your hands because looking at him was suddenly unbearable. Your knuckles were white where they gripped the blanket. Your wedding band caught a strip of weak streetlight.
He kept talking because stopping now would mean letting the silence say it for him.
âWith her, I didnâtâŚâ. He stopped, jaw tightening. Tried again, rougher. âI didnât have to hold backâ.
That was his way of saying it. Not pretty. Not clean. Not cruel for the sake of cruelty. Just blunt enough to make it impossible to misunderstand.
You went perfectly still. He heard your heartbeat change. For the first time since he had walked in, Ben looked uncertain. Genuinely unsure of where to put himself in the face of what he had just done to you.
âShe wouldnât get hurtâ, he said, quieter now, like he hated the truth but not enough to soften it. âNo matter how hardââ.
âStopâ. The word broke out of you before you knew you were saying it.
Ben shut his mouth.
Your eyes burned. You stared at the quilt in your lap until the pattern blurred.
Of course. Of course that would matter to him now.
Of course the thing that had frightened him and shamed him and made your body go tight whenever he came near you would become, somewhere in the back of his mind, a relief with someone else. A convenience. A place where he did not have to remember himself every second.
The heartbreak of it was so complete it almost felt calm.
He had always been your husband. The only one. The only man you had ever let close enough to learn the sound of your breathing in sleep. The only one who had ever mattered enough to break you with something as small as a sentence.
And before all thisâbefore Vought, before the serum, before the flag pinned to his chest and the blood on his handsâhe had been Ben. The boy next door. The one with split knuckles and a crooked grin and a father mean enough to turn a house into something children crossed the street to avoid.
You remembered him at sixteen, still human, showing up in the narrow strip of dark between your two houses with one eye swollen nearly shut and blood dried at the corner of his mouth. Trying to act like it was nothing. Saying heâd slipped in the garage.
You had looked at him for one long second and said, âThatâs not true, Benjaminâ and he had laughed once, bitter and embarrassed and already too proud.
You had brought him inside through your parentsâ back door because your mother was asleep and your father would have called his father and made it worse. Sat him at the kitchen table with a bag of frozen peas wrapped in a dishtowel and your hands shaking while you cleaned the cut on his cheek. He had hissed when the antiseptic touched it.
A week later he was back at your side fence with one shoulder propped against the post, asking if you wanted to walk to school together.
That was how your whole life had started.
School hallways smelling like chalk dust and wet wool coats.
Him stealing your pencil in english just to watch you frown.
The two of you cutting across the football field at dusk because it shaved three minutes off the walk home.
Your mittened hand tucked in the crook of his elbow the first winter he was brave enough to act like it belonged there.
You had loved him before he knew what to do with love. Maybe before you did.
Loved him when he was only a boy trying to survive his fatherâs fists and his own temper.
Loved him when he was eighteen and talking big about getting out, getting rich, becoming somebody no one could ever call a disappointment again.
Loved him when he married you too young and too fast because he wanted one thing in his life that was his by promise instead of fear.
And now here he was. A superhero. A weapon. A husband who had come home smelling like another woman and admitted, in that flat ruined way of his, that part of the reason was because she could take what you couldnât.
Your heart broke very quietly. No great collapse. It just broke.
Ben saw it. He took one step toward the bed, then stopped when your shoulders pulled tight. His face hardened at the sight, not at you. At himself. âIt wasnât about wanting herâ, he said.
You let out a laugh that sounded nothing like laughter. âDonâtâ.
âIt wasnâtâ.
âThat doesnât helpâ.
âI knowâ. His voice roughened. âI know it doesnâtâ.
You pressed the heel of your hand to your sternum like it might keep the pain from spreading. Tears slid down your cheeks before you could stop them.
Benâs whole face changed when he saw them. It stripped everything down too far. Took all the excuses and temper and left him standing in front of what he had done with nowhere to put his hands. For one second he looked almost panicked.
Then, because he was Ben, because panic in him always curdled into something meaner before it had the chance to become gentleness, his mouth hardened. âJesus Christâ.
You wiped at your face with the heel of your hand, but that only smeared the tears and made more come. Your throat felt closed up. There were a thousand things in youâhurt, humiliation, memory, love warped into something rawâbut none of them would turn into words.
Ben took another step toward the bed. You shrank back before you meant to.
He stopped. The silence that followed was awful.
You looked down at the blanket in your lap because looking at him felt worse than anything. Your shoulders were shaking now, small and uncontrollable, and you hated that he could see it. Hated even more that he could hear it: the way your breathing broke, the way your heart stumbled, the way your whole body gave you away.
âYouâre gonna sit there and cry nowâ, he said almost flatly. His laugh was short and bitter. âFantasticâ.
You pressed your lips together so hard they hurt. The humiliation of it went through you clean. Not just that he had cheated. Not just that he had said it in that brutal way of his, like your body breaking had become one more logistical problem he needed solved somewhere else. But this too. Him looking at your pain and treating it like a mess you were making in front of him.
You felt stupid. So stupid your skin burned with it.
Because some part of you had still hoped absurdly, humiliatingly, that if he told the truth, if he looked wrecked enough while saying it, maybe there was something in that to hold onto. Some proof that the boy you had loved was still buried under all the serum and blood and whiskey and Vought polish.
Instead there you were, crying in your own bed while your husband stood over you acting like your heartbreak was yet another thing he had to manage.
Ben dragged a hand over his face. âYou think I wanted to stand here and tell you this?â.
You still couldnât speak.
âNo, of course notâ, he went on when you said nothing. âBecause thatâd require you to think about something besides how bad this looksâ.
Your head jerked up then, shocked enough to cut through the crying for a second.
His eyes met yours and he knew immediately he had gone too far. You saw that too. The instant recognition. The flash of regret. But regret had never been the thing Ben was best at acting on. He doubled down instead.
âIâm the one who came in here and told you the truthâ, he said, voice roughening. âI couldâve said nothing. I couldâve let you keep playing houseâ.
You stared at him, tears still slipping down your face.
Playing house. Pretending.
As if your whole life had not been built around holding together the wreckage he kept dragging home.
A broken sound left you before you could swallow it.
Ben shut his eyes for half a second like even that hurt him to hear. But when he opened them again, he was still angry. At you. At himself. At the room. At the whole unbearable shape of things.
âYou always do thisâ, he muttered.
That made you blink. A laugh almost escaped you, but it would have sounded insane. âDo what?â. Your voice came out shredded.
He gestured vaguely, helplessly. âGo all quiet. Look at me like I kicked a dogâ.
You stared at him. Then, because you were too hurt to soften it and too tired to pretend, you whispered, âYou did worseâ.
You wished, instantly, you could take the words back. Not because they werenât true, but because you were not brave. Not with him. Never with him. Not really. Not like that. Every piece of courage you had ever had seemed to fail somewhere in the space between your chest and your mouth whenever Ben was the one you had to use it on.
He knew that. That was part of what made this so awful.
He knew exactly how soft you were with him. How your love had always bent before it broke. How even now, with your face wet and your chest caving in, some part of you was still waiting for him to say the one right thing that might let you keep loving him without feeling ridiculous.
âYou donât know what worse isâ, he said.
You turned your face away from him.
âLook at meâ, he said.
You couldnât. Not because you were trying to punish him. Because if you looked at him right then, you knew whatever was left of your composure would break wide open.
âLook at meâ, he repeated. Still not shouting.
You shook your head once.
That did it.
He moved suddenly, not toward you, but away, pacing hard steps toward the window, then turning back, then stopping in the middle of the room like a man trapped in a cage too small for his own body. The floorboards creaked under him. His hands opened and closed at his sides.
âThisâ, he said, voice low and dangerous with frustration, âthis is exactly why I didnât want to say a damn thingâ.
You laughed once then, and it came out wet and broken. âBenjaminâ.
Just his name. But there was enough in it. Enough disbelief. Enough hurt. Enough exhaustion. He heard it all.
And finally, finally, some of the fight went out of him.
âI donât know how to make this not destroy everythingâ.
You wiped your face again. Useless. Fresh tears came anyway.
âIt already didâ, you whispered.
You drew the blanket tighter around yourself, covering your mouth, your chest, your shaking hands. The gesture was instinctive. Childish almost. Something small and protective. And seeing it seemed to do something final to his face.
Because there you were.
His good, sweet wife. The quiet girl from next door. The one who had patched up his split lip at sixteen and married him before either of you had learned how ugly love could get when power got into the room. The one he had always counted on to stay soft when the rest of his life went hard and mean and bright.
And he had made you sit in bed and cry like you were afraid to take up space in your own house.
When he spoke again, the anger was gone. Only the damage remained.
âYou should hate meâ.
Your breath hitched.
Maybe you should have.
Maybe that would have been easier. Cleaner. More dignified.
But you loved him. God help you, you still loved him.
Loved the boy he had been and the man he sometimes still almost looked like in the space between one cruel sentence and the next.
Loved him enough that hating him never arrived cleanly; it always got tangled up with grief first.
You looked at him through wet lashes and said the most humiliating truth of all.
âIâm tryingâ.
He stared at you for one long second, then looked away like he could not bear what he had found there.
This time when he moved, it was toward the door. At the threshold he stopped, hand braced against the frame, shoulders rigid under his coat. He did not turn around.
You thought that was it. Thought he would leave you there with the cold and the crying and the wreckage of his confession.
Then he said, so quietly you almost didnât hear it, âYou were the only good thing I ever hadâ.
Your eyes closed.
The words were not enough. They were nowhere near enough. They did not fix the cheating, or the fear, or the way your own body had become cautious around the man who was supposed to be your safest place.
But they were true.
And that was what made them so cruel.
He left after that, his footsteps fading down the hall, and you sat in the dark with the blanket clutched to your chest, crying so quietly the whole house seemed to lean in and listen.
-
The next morning, his keys were on the kitchen table.
For a long time, you only stood there looking at them.
The kitchen was gray with early light. Rainwater still clung to the outside of the window over the sink. The clock ticked above the stove. The house smelled faintly of cold toast and old cigarette smoke and him, still him, though he was already gone.
After that night, he never came home again.
No note.
No call.
No half-drunk apology muttered in the dark.
No slam of the front door after midnight.
No heavy footsteps in the hall.
No broad shape filling the bedroom doorway.
Just absence, all at once and for good.
At first, you waited because you did not know how not to.
You kept listening for his car.
Kept glancing at the clock in the evenings.
Kept making too much food without meaning to, then wrapping the extra in wax paper and putting it in the icebox like he might come in hungry at one in the morning and ask, rough and thoughtless, whether there was anything left.
He never did.
A week passed.
Then two.
The headlines started not long after.
At first it was only photos. Soldier Boy at galas. Soldier Boy on stages. Soldier Boy shaking hands with senators, factory foremen, Army brass.
Soldier Boy with a woman at his side, her hair pinned in glossy waves and her smile bright as a knife.
Crimson Countess, the papers called her.
Americaâs newest sweetheart.
A blazing beauty beside the nationâs blazing hero.
You stopped buying newspapers after the third morning you found her face beside his at the grocerâs, but in a town like yours, you did not have to buy them to know. People left them folded on counters. Neighbors talked on porches. Radios carried names through open windows in the summer heat.
Once, at the butcherâs, you heard two women behind you discussing the âpower coupleâ Vought was building and had to leave before your legs gave out under you.
Still, it was the kiss that finished it.
Not because it surprised you. Nothing about it surprised you anymore.
Because it was so public.
Someone had caught it under flashbulbs: his hand on her waist, her mouth tipped up to his, his face turned to meet her like the whole thing had been designed and lit and blessed. By the time it reached you, it had already been packaged as romance. Destiny. Americaâs golden pair.
You saw it in an evening extra a boy was hawking on the corner outside the pharmacy.
You hadnât meant to stop. Had only turned at the sound of âSoldier Boyâs leading lady!â shouted bright into the street.
Then there it was.
The picture.
The headline.
His mouth on hers.
Your hands had gone so numb you nearly dropped the parcel you were carrying.
The world did not end with noise. It narrowed. The street, the shouting boy, the cars rattling past, the low hum of conversation outside the drugstore⌠all of it pulled away until there was only the image and the terrible, stupid knowledge that whatever had been left of Ben after that last night had now been buried under Soldier Boy for good.
You made it home somehow. You did not remember the walk.
Only the kitchen chair scraping hard over the floor when you sat too fast.
Only the newspaper slipping from your hands onto the floor.
Only the pain that came later. Deep and wrong and sudden enough to fold you over yourself.
You had not known for certain yet.
Had only suspected. The lateness. The tiredness. The strange tenderness low in your body. A fragile, private hope you had held without speaking because there had been no one left to say it to.
By midnight, there was blood.
By dawn, there was no baby.
The doctor called it stress. Called it unfortunate. Called it one of those things. He would not meet your eyes.
The night Soldier Boy was born for real, was the night he lost you.
Not with the serum.
Not with the first poster.
Not with the first mission with reporters trailing behind like dogs.
That night.
The night Ben left his keys on your kitchen table and never looked back.
The night he chose the version of himself Vought could use best. The bright, brutal, untouchable one. The one who smiled for cameras, drank whatever was poured, killed whoever they pointed at, and let the company write the rest.
After that, he gave them what they wanted.
He stood where they placed him. Kissed who they paired him with. Sold war bonds and victory and American virtue with that square jaw and that terrible easy charisma. They dressed him up as destiny in boots and stars and let the public love what they had made.
And you⌠disappeared.
Quietly.
Vought had not built itself by letting useful things vanish.
They found you years later.
You had just turned out the lamp when there came a knock at the door so polite it froze your blood before you even moved.
Three men. Two in dark coats. One in a doctorâs collarless shirt under his overcoat, carrying a black case.
You tried to shut the door. The taller one caught it with one hand.
âMrs. ââ, he began, using the name you had been born with, not the one you had worn after marriage. That frightened you more than anything else.
You ran. Not far. Just to the window. To the hall. To some instinctive place in yourself that still believed there had to be a way out if you moved fast enough. But there wasnât.
The needle burned cold going in. After that, everything blurred at the edges. White lights. Metal rails under your hands. Voices speaking over you as if you were not there.
âViable candidateâ.
âDeep emotional anchorâ.
âIf he destabilizesââ.
âInsuranceâ.
Someone pried your jaw open when you tried to bite them. Someone held your arm still while another syringe emptied into your vein, and this one did not burn cold. It burned hot. Hot enough to make the world flash white behind your eyes. You screamed and no one stopped.
No one knew.
Not the public.
Not the papers.
Not even him⌠Especially not him.
Somewhere above ground, Soldier Boy went on becoming the man Vought needed him to be. Louder. Harder. More useful each year. Until he wasn´t.
Summary: Four years after Dean disappeared, he comes back to find the life he left behind⌠waiting for him in the shape of a little girl with his eyes. Now itâs ghosts in the walls, love that never died and a second chance that might heal everythingâor break it for good.
-requested-
Pairing: Dean x Reader
Warnings: Language, angst
Word Count: 2541
DISCLAIMER: Everything is purely fiction. I do not intend to attack or hurt anyone. The story is, of course, entirely made up and meant for entertainment purposes.
You were late. Again. Half your brain was on the grocery list and the other half on the neighborâs house two doors down from yours, the one with the lights that flickered at three a.m. and the dog that wouldnât cross the gate anymore. You told yourself it was wiring maybe old pipes. Even if you knew better.
Tomorrow was Halloween. The hallway smelled like tempera paint and orange slices. Little ghosts cut from coffee filters dangled from the ceiling on clear thread.
You rubbed at the tired spot between your eyebrows and reached for the clipboard, already forming the apology youâd give for being late, again. A man leaned over the desk, saying something low to Ms. Rivera that made her laugh in a way she didnât for anyone else at pickup.
ââŚcould leave my numberâ, he was saying, tapping the pen against the margin instead of writing. âYou know, in case any of the kids mentioned noises across the street. Strange hours. Flickering lightsâ.
Ms. Rivera tucked a curl behind her ear. âRight. The neighborsâ. Her voice brightened, like youâd just walked into a commercial for toothpaste. âIâm sure itâs nothing, butâsure, why notâ.
You signed your name where it always went, thinking about canned pumpkin and whether you had enough sugar, about salt and doorways and windows that didnât latch right. You were in your list, your little ordinary raft, when the man at the desk gave a soft laugh, and something in your chest stuttered.
It took a second. Of course it did. Youâd trained yourself not to hear that sound. Still you glanced up. On reflex.
Deanâs gaze stayed on Ms. Rivera, the smile turned down just enough to look sincere. Your heart stopped anyway. That laugh, stupid, impossible, stitched into you like a scar you had learned to dress around. You told yourself it was coincidence. You told yourself a hundred men in a hundred bars had laughed like that. You told yourself anything that wasnât his name.
âMommy!â.
DelilahâLilahâcame at you like a small hurricane in light-up sneakers (the sweetest, clumsiest whirlwind there ever was), paper-plate craft flapping in one fist, a smudge of orange paint on her cheek. You bent without thinking, arms opening in the exact shape of her. The world righted itself around the weight of her. Play dates, park snack bags, cartoon theme songs at 6 a.m., all of it, your anchor.
âLook what I made!â, she declared, thrusting a construction-paper bat into your face. The googly eyes were crooked and perfect.
âItâs amazingâ, you said, and your voice steadied on the easy truth. âMuseum qualityâ.
Ms. Rivera cooed appropriately. âOh, that is museum quality, Lilah. I love her little fangsâ.
âHer name is Midnightâ, Lilah announced, still brandishing the bat like a parade flag.
A shift in the air told you heâd finally turned. You didnât look right away. You fixed the corner of the bat, smoothed your daughterâs hair, checked the time on the wall clock as if any of that mattered. Then you lifted your head.
He looked exactly like your memory and not at all like it. Older around the eyes, the jacket broken in deeper, the mouth still fighting not to soften. The sight of him didnât knock you back so much as tilt the floor, just enough that you had to plant your feet.
Deanâs gaze finally met yours. It held. He looked at you like he was trying to line up two transparencies, who youâd been and who you were now, and the longer he stared, the more the room thinned to the quiet between two heartbeats.
It went on long enough that you felt Lilahâs weight lean into your leg, her patience in short supply. âDo you like her?â, she piped up, tilting the paper plate so the batâs crooked smile faced him. âMy bat. Her name is Midnightâ.
The sound broke the spell. Deanâs eyes cut to her, then back to you, then to her again, like a pendulum that couldnât decide where true was. The movement was small, precise, the way heâd always measured rooms for exits. Only now the exit seemed to be you, and the door he couldnât quite bring himself to touch was a four-year-old with glue on her knuckles.
âSheâs⌠awesomeâ, he managed, voice softened down to something careful. âMidnightâs a tough name to live up toâ.
Lilahâs whole face lit. âShe can fly. But not inside. Mommy says nothing´s around to fly insideâ.
âMommyâs smartâ, he said, and on that word his gaze snapped back to you, pinned there a breath too long before it slid to Lilah again. The green of her eyes caught the struggling light and threw it back at him. That was when he faltered. Not much. A stutter in breath, a shift in his jaw, a tighten-and-release of his fingers at his sides, but you felt it like a temperature drop. His eyes stayed on your daughter, then flicked to you, then back as if testing the same answer three times.
âHow old are you, kiddo?â, he asked, too quickly to be casual, the question pushed out on instinct, suspicion, hope - whatever ugly, holy mix lived in the space behind his ribs.
âFour", Lilah announced, very proud, holding up too many fingers and then fixing it with serious concentration. âFourâ.
The number seemed to echo. You heard it bounce off the cinderblock walls, off the paper ghosts and the cup of dull pencils; you felt it land in him like a stone dropped in deep water. He looked at you, sharp, then back to her, and you could see the math drawing itself across the back of his eyes. Counting backward. Counting forward. Counting all the places where he hadnât been.
âCâmon, baby, we need to goâ, you said, scooping Lilah onto your hip. It was to her, but it was for him. An end to a conversation he hadnât started yet and you werenât going to have in a hallway full of paper ghosts.
Ms. Riveraâs smile faltered as her gaze bounced from Deanâs eyes to Lilahâs and back again. You watched the recognition click into place behind her professional cheer. She pressed a folder toward you like a shield. âIâllâumâfinish the attendanceâ, she murmured, already retreating. âSee you both tomorrowâ. And then she disappeared, shoes squeaking a polite escape.
âWaitâ. Deanâs hand lifted, palm out, stopping short of your sleeve like heâd hit an invisible fence. âCan weââ.
âNot hereâ, you said, low. Lilahâs arm looped around your neck, her bat bumping your shoulder with each breath. âNot nowâ.
His jaw worked. Four years collapsed into the space between heartbeat and regret. âI didnâtââ. He shut his mouth, swallowed the excuse. âYouâre rightâ. A beat. âBut⌠can you give me a minute?â.
You angled past him toward the door. âYou had a yearâ, you said, even, for the sake of the kid whose ear was pressed to your collarbone. âThen you had fourâ.
He took it, the hit and the history. âYouâre angryâ.
âYou think?â. The edges of your voice were sanded for little ears, but the shape of the word was still sharp. âWeâre doneâ.
Lilah patted your cheek, oblivious diplomat. âMommy, can Midnight have sprinkles, too?â.
âMidnight can bathe in sprinklesâ, you said, and kissed her temple because it helped.
Dean shifted, blocking the door just enough that you had to look at him. He didnât touch you, or crowd. He just stood there with his questions bleeding through the seams.
He was always so much taller than you. The hallway lights caught on the slope of his shoulders, and you hated that your body remembered what it felt like to stand under his shadow.
âDeanâ. You made your voice calm and flat. âGet out of my wayâ.
His jaw clenched, green eyes flicking down at you like he was trying to peel back every layer youâd built since he left. âJust⌠a minute. Thatâs all Iâm askingâ.
âYou already long enoughâ, you snapped, low enough that Lilah wouldnât hear it as more than a hum in your chest.
He flinched but didnât move. âI justâlook, we could grab a coffee. Sit down. Talk like adultsâ. His voice dropped, softer, trying for gentler. âCatch upâ.
You laughed once, sharp and bitter. âCatch up? Like we lost touch after high school? You ghosted me, Dean. Vanished. And now you want coffee?â.
He swallowed, Adamâs apple bobbing like the words cost him. âI had reasonsâ.
âYeah? So did Iâ. You shifted Lilah higher on your hip. âMine wore diapersâ.
His eyes dropped, just for a second, to the girl nestled against you. Then they snapped back to your face, as if he wasnât allowed to stare too long, as if staring too long would break something he didnât know how to fix. Still, you the loop his gaze kept making: Lilahâs lashes, your mouth, Lilahâs hands, your eyes. Back and forth, like a man trying to solve a puzzle without touching the pieces.
âSheâs beautifulâ, he said, quiet, reverent. âSheâs⌠sheâs got your smileâ.
The lie hung there, soft and heavy. You didnât correct him. You didnât need to. His gaze gave him away, lingering on the green in her eyes, the stubborn lift of her chin, the way her curls bounced when she fidgeted. He didnât say the words, but the question was in every breath he took.
âShe likes loud carsâ, you said flatly, because if he wanted clues, youâd toss them like knives.
He blinked, the corner of his mouth twitching in something that wasnât quite a smile. âFiguresâ. He exhaled, almost shaky. âSo sheâsââ.
âDonât finish that sentenceâ.
His hands flexed at his sides, the fight in him trying to crawl out, but he held it down. âI just⌠I need to know ifââ. He caught himself, scrubbed a hand over his jaw. âIf youâre okay. If you both areâ.
You met his eyes, steady. âWe are. Without youâ.
The words landed, and he didnât even try to dodge them. He nodded once, slow, like he deserved every bit of it. Still, he didnât move.
âCoffeeâ, he said again, quieter, like maybe if he whispered it youâd hear something else in it. âJust half an hour. No excuses or vanishing. Just⌠me and you. Pleaseâ.
You stood there in the too-bright hallway with paper pumpkins rustling and Lilah humming against your shoulder, and you hated that a part of you wanted to believe him.
âGet out of my way, Deanâ, you said again, softer this time, but no less certain.
His throat worked. For a moment, you thought he might argue. Then, finally, he shifted sideways, giving you space. But his eyes followed you, asking all the things he couldnât say out loud, burning with a truth he was too much of a coward, or too much of a Winchester, to name.
And you walked past, Lilah in your arms, every step steady even though your chest was on fire.
Later, in the bathroom that smelled like bubble soap and wet towels, with steam fogging the mirror, you rolled your sleeves up, kneeling on the bathmat with one hand steady on Lilahâs back as she splashed and hummed, glue peeling off her little fingers in gummy strings.
âDonât eat itâ, you warned, pulling the sticky wad away before she could test her luck.
âI wasnât!â, she giggled, then immediately changed the subject, because thatâs what four-year-olds did. âMommy, did you see the black car? The loud one?â.
Your chest tightened. You reached for the shampoo bottle, forcing your voice into its calm, bedtime cadence. âYeah, I saw itâ.
âIt was shinyâ, she said dreamily, tilting her head back so you could lather her curls. âAnd so big. Not like ours. Ours is⌠ours is squeakyâ.
âOur car gets us where we need to goâ, you said, rinsing her hair with the plastic cup, watching the suds slide down her shoulders.
âBut the black one was likeâvroom!â. She made the noise with her whole body, water sloshing over the side of the tub. âCan we get one like that?â.
You swallowed hard, focusing on rinsing the last of the shampoo from her curls as she splashed and squealed about engines and vrooms.
âCan we get one?â, she asked again, stubborn in the way only Dean Winchesterâs child could be.
You wrapped the towel around her small, slippery body and lifted her out, settling her onto the bathmat. She giggled as you rubbed her hair dry, soap bubbles popping under your palms.
And all you could think about was the Impala. That night.
Rain pelting down hard enough to blur the motel sign across the lot. Cold air spilling in every time the passenger door opened and slammed shut. Samâs tall shadow moving inside, muttering something about giving you two five minutes, which had stretched into thirty.
You remembered the creak of leather under you, the way Dean had dragged you into his lap, his hands gripping your thighs like he couldnât believe you were real and alive after what youâd just faced. You remembered how the windows fogged faster than you could wipe them clear, how his mouth moved against your jaw, your neck, your chest like he was starving.
And the way the world had gone quiet in that front seat, with the hunt behind you, the storm outside and his body warm and solid beneath yours. That night had left more than memory. It had left your little girl.
You cleared your throat, willing the memory back into its box, sealing it tight before it could leak out where she might see it on your face.
âSomeday, maybeâ, you murmured, kissing the top of her damp curls. It was easier than saying never, easier than explaining that the car she was dreaming about had already given her all it was ever going to give.
She giggled when you spread the towel wide, then squealed as you wrapped her up tight, tucking every corner in until she was nothing but a squirming little burrito with green eyes peeking out from the folds.
âMommy! Iâm stuck!â.
âThatâs the pointâ, you teased, securing the last corner. âNo escape for the burritoâ.
She wriggled delighted. âBurrito with sprinkles!â.
You laughed, the sound breaking something loose in your chest, and lifted her against your hip, towel trailing like a cape. She pressed her wet cheek against your neck, and for a moment, just a moment, the memories dulled, the Impala faded, the storm quieted.
This was what you had now: sprinkles, towels, bedtime stories. Not the growl of an engine in the night. Not the man who drove it.
Summary: You woke up at Benâs place with your stomach already in knots and your brain running wild. When Ben noticed, he didnât let you ride it out alone. He took care of you in the only way he knew.
-requested-
Pairing: Soldier Boy x Reader
Warnings: 18+ only! Smut, Language, angst, anxiety, mental health issues
Word Count: 3436
DISCLAIMER: Everything is purely fiction. I do not intend to attack or hurt anyone. The story is, of course, entirely made up and meant for entertainment purposes.
You knew the day was going to be bad the moment you woke up and your brain started sprinting before your eyes were even open.
Did you lock the door?
Did you turn off the stove?
Did you answer that text wrong last night?
Did you piss Ben off somehow?
You lay there staring at the ceiling of his place, heart already ticking faster than it should and your fingers were twitching with the familiar urge to check something, fix something or just⌠do something.
You had been at his apartment for three nights straight now. That was new. Usually it was one night, maybe two, and then you were back in your own bed, with your own routines and your own rituals. Out of sync, your thoughts felt louder and heavier. You kept replaying yesterdayâs conversation, picking apart a throwaway comment youâd made like it was a confession to treason.
What if he took it the wrong way?
You shifted on the mattress and listened. The TV murmured faintly from the living room. He was still here. It was still the middle of the night.
You checked your phone. No new messages. No emergencies. Nothing wrong.
But your chest didnât care, it tightened anyway.
You dragged yourself up, pulling on his shirt, the shirt heâd tossed at you last night with a casual, âYou cold or just lookinâ for excuses to wear my shit?â. You had rolled your eyes, but youâd kept it. It smelled like his cologne⌠and something metallic that never really came out.
You hesitated at the bedroom door with your hand hovering over the knob. You wanted to go out there, but you also wanted to stay here forever so you didnât have to talk, or think, or say something that would sound stupid in your head for the next week or two.
You counted to four, then another four, then another, breath catching and restarting in little stutters. Itâs fine. Youâre fine. Donât be weird.
And then you opened the door.
Ben was sprawled on the couch, one arm thrown over the back, legs spread and his attention on the screen. A half-empty bottle sat on the coffee table next to a bowl of something heâd decided was breakfast around midnight.
His eyes cut to you instantly. For a man who spent half his life hungover, he noticed everything. âMorning, sunshineâ, he said, his voice low and scratched, like always. âYou look like shitâ.
âGood morning to you tooâ, you muttered, closing the door behind you.
For a moment, you hovered by the arm of the couch, fingers worrying the hem of his shirt. You could feel his gaze drag over you, lazy and assessing, lingering on your face a fraction too long. âWhat?â, you asked, already hearing it in your head: youâre being weird, stop fidgeting and stop fucking overthinking.
He tilted his head. âYou do somethinâ to your face?â.
You frowned. âWhat?â.
âYeah, thereâ. He gestured vaguely at your eyes. âAllââ. He squinted. âBugged out. Like you´re on cokeâ.
Your lips twitched despite yourself. âThatâs⌠a very specific comparisonâ.
âCanât help. I know my way around the fun stuff", he said dryly, then shifted, patting the cushion beside him. âCâmereâ.
You sat down, careful not to crowd him, but your knee brushed his thigh anyway. His body heat rolled off him like a space heater. On the TV, someone screamed and you flinched. He noticed that too.
âWhatâs up with you?â, he asked, not soft at all. Curious, maybe. But more mildly annoyed that something was off in his immediate orbit.
âNothingâ, you said automatically. âJustâdidnât sleep greatâ.
He huffed. âYeah, no shit. You woke me up twice. Tossinâ, turninâ, breathing like a goddamn asthmatic pugâ.
Your face heated. You hadnât realized it had been that bad. âSorryâ, you said quietly.
He turned his head toward you, his eyebrows pulling together like youâd just spoken a foreign language. âWhat the hell are you sorry for? Didnât punch me in the crotch in your sleep. Thatâs my lineâ.
You swallowed, eyes flicking to the TV. It was easier to watch strangers die than meet his gaze right now, while your thoughts started up again, relentless. You replayed the night: lying there, staring at the shadows, heart hammering, brain chanting stupid things about whether youâd said âyeahâ in a tone that could be misinterpreted five hours earlier. Youâd wanted to get up and check the door. Then check it again. Then again. You hadnât, because he was here, and he would see, and you didnât want to be that person around him. You rubbed your thumb against your middle finger, counting each pass. One. Two. Three. Four.
âAlrightâ. His voice cut through your thoughts. âSpit it outâ.
You blinked. âWhat?â.
âWhateverâs doing laps in that head of yoursâ. He made a circling motion with one finger at your temple. âI can hear the fucking whining from hereâ.
âIâm not whiningâ.
âInside. The secret bitchingâ. His mouth quirked. âCâmon. Out with itâ.
You hated that he was right. You hated that a small part of you was relieved heâd noticed.
âItâs just⌠my anxiety stuffâ, you said, hoping the vague label would be enough.
He snorted. âOh, that. The crazy brainâ.
There it was. Classic Ben. You tensed, shoulders creeping up. He caught that too and rolled his eyes. âRelaxâ, he said. âYou know what I mean. The⌠what dâyou call it. Worrying about shit that doesnât matterâ.
âIt matters to meâ, you said before you could swallow the words.
For a second, something unreadable flickered across his face.
âYeah, I knowâ, he said finally. âThatâs the problemâ.
You stared at your hands, nails digging little crescents into your palms.
âDoor locked?â, he asked suddenly.
You nodded. âI checked it last nightâ.
âYour mom still alive?â.
âYesâ.
âStove off? Oven off? Fire alarms, whatever the hell youâre thinkinâ about?â.
âYesâ, you said, a little sharper. âI checked. Twiceâ.
âThen congratulations, sweetheartâ. He turned back to the TV, leaning back into the couch. âYouâre being stupidâ.
The words hit, familiar and still somehow fresh. You felt your throat tighten. You knew he didnât do gentle. You knew what you were getting into. Youâd told yourself before you ever kissed him that Soldier Boy was not a safe space, he was a bad idea wearing a tight suit and a dirty smirk. You liked him anyway. You liked that he didnât treat you like you were fragile.
But today everything felt thinner, like your skin had been scraped back a little too far. You blinked fast, hoping the burn in your eyes would go away. It didnât.
âHeyâ. His hand landed heavy on your knee. You stayed very still, staring at the TV. âYou cryinâ?â, he asked bluntly.
âNoâ, you said, voice wobbling, which absolutely did not help your case.
âFor fuckâs sakeâ, he muttered under his breath, more to himself than to you.
You waited for the next joke, the next dismissive comment, already shrinking into yourself in preparation. Instead, he sighed, long and put-upon, like someone had just handed him a baby heâd never asked to hold.
âLook at meâ, he said.
You hesitated, then turned your head. His eyes were clearer than you expected this early, searching your face like he was trying to figure out where exactly the damage was.
âYou know I donât mean it like⌠thatâ, he said, words awkward, like theyâd been dragged out of him. âI just donât get itâ.
âThatâs kind of the pointâ, you said with a small voice. âI donât get it either. It just⌠happensâ.
âYeah, well, lots of shit just happensâ. He shrugged. âDoesnât mean you gotta let it ride youâ.
You huffed a tiny laugh, wet and shaky. âThatâs not really how it worksâ.
âSure it isâ, he said, with the bulletproof confidence of a man who had never lost a fight he remembered. âYou bite down. You get through it. Thatâs what people doâ.
âNot everyone is you, Benâ.
âThank God for thatâ, he muttered.
Your chest pulled tight again, breath snagging on the way in. You tried to slow it, to count, but the edges of the room started to fuzz a little, sounds turning distant and echoey, like you were underwater. âHeyâ, he said, sharper now.
You swallowed. âItâsâ Iâm fineâ.
âBullshitâ. His grip tightened just enough to ground you. âYouâre doinâ that⌠fish thing again. Breathing like youâre about to pass outâ.
You dragged in another breath, shoulders hitching. Your fingers twitched with the urge to get up. You stayed seated, because moving felt impossible and you didnât trust your legs.
âOkay, this is annoyingâ, he said, but he shifted closer, thigh pressed hard against yours now. âCâmereâ.
You blinked. âI already am hereâ.
âCloser, smartassâ. He slid his arm around your shoulders and tugged you sideways, half onto his chest. You stumbled with it, hand planting itself against the firm line of his ribs. You froze there, muscles locked and lungs still stuttering.
âJesusâ, he muttered, looking down at you. âYouâre wound tighter than my old rifleâ.
You tried to laugh and it came out as more of a shiver.
His hand started moving in slow, aimless circles on your upper arm. It wasnât exactly gentle, but it was steady. âAlrightâ, he said. âWe tried breathing, we tried talkinâ, both sucked. What else do people do for this shit? Yoga? You want me to get you a dumb little mat and some crystals?â.
You sniffed. âYou doing yoga would probably make the world endâ.
âYeah, Iâm not bendy enough for that fucking cultâ, he said. âMeditation, then. Close your eyes. Think of a happy place. Puppies and rainbows and my dickâ.
You closed your eyes because it was easier than arguing. Your head didnât get quieter. The room still felt like it was tilting in slow degrees, the urge to get up and check everything scraping at your skin.
He watched you for a second, jaw working. âThis isnât doing shitâ, he announced.
âThanksâ, you muttered.
He shifted beneath you, restless, like the problem offended him personally.
âOkay, new planâ, he said. âDistraction. Oldest trick in the book. Worked on soldiers, works on kidsâ.
âHow?â, you asked with your eyes still shut.
âDunno. Tellinâ jokes? Hey, did I ever tell you about the time Iââ.
âYesâ, you said automatically. âAll of them. Multiple timesâ.
He snorted. âYou love my storiesâ.
âIâve heard the Panama one four times, Benâ.
âYeah, well, it gets better every time I remember more of itâ.
He paused. âFine. No storytime. Cards? You want me to dig out a deck and lose on purpose so you feel strong and capable?â.
âThat would never happenâ, you said while your lips were twitching.
âThere we goâ, he murmured. âThereâs the mouth I knowâ.
The faint smile slipped almost immediately as your chest squeezed again. You curled your fingers in his shirt, trying to anchor yourself. He looked down at your hand, then at your face, like he was cataloguing every little tremor.
Ben hated feeling useless. You could see it in the way his shoulders had gone tight, like he was in a fight he couldnât punch his way out of.
âNone of this is workingâ, you said, miserable.
âYeah, no shitâ. He tipped his head back against the couch and stared at the ceiling for a second, thinking in the blunt, straight-line way that he did. Then you felt his gaze drop back to you, heavier now. Assessing. âYâknowâ, he said slowly, âthere is one thing that shuts you up every timeâ.
You blinked up at him. âWhat?â.
His mouth curved lazy and sharp. âYou really need me to spell it out, doll?â.
Heat rushed to your face, anxiety colliding with embarrassment so hard your brain shorted a little. âBen, Iâm notâ I donât think I canââ.
âRelaxâ, he said, and for once the word didnât feel like a dismissal. It felt like an order he actually expected you to follow. âIâm not saying we put on a show for the neighbors. Iâm just sayinââŚâ. His thumb brushed along your jaw, tilting your face up. âPretty good track record of you forgettinâ your own name when I get my hands on youâ.
Well, he wasnât wrong with that one.
Without waiting for anything, he manhandled you onto your back on the couch, his hands gripping your hips with that effortless strength that always made you feel like a ragdoll in the best way.
He spread your legs roughly, shoving them apart with his knees until you were perfectly laid out for him. You still wore nothing but his shirt, the fabric soft while he started bunching it up around your waist with one impatient fist, leaving you bare from the waist down.
âBenââ, you started, but the word dissolved into a gasp as he dropped down, shoulders forcing your thighs wider, his face burying between them like a man on a mission. No preamble, no teasing kisses or gentle buildup. That wasnât his style.
Ben ate you out like he did everything else. Fucking messy and insistent, all hunger and zero fucks given about finesse.
His mouth was on you in an instant, hot and demanding, tongue diving in without mercy.
He licked a broad, flat stripe up your center, groaning low in his throat like heâd just found his favorite meal after a long day. âFuck, thatâs betterâ, he muttered against your skin, the vibration sending sparks up your spine.
His hands clamped down on your thighs, fingers digging in hard enough to bruise, keeping you pinned and open, with no chance of squirming away even if you wanted to.
And fuck, you didnât.
The anxiety that had been clawing at your chest started to fracture under the onslaught, your brain too overwhelmed by sensation to hold onto the panic.
He sucked at your clit with a wet pull, then plunged his tongue inside you, thrusting it in deep and curling just right, like he was trying to devour you from the inside out.
Messy didnât even cover it. His chin was already slick, beard scraping against your sensitive inner thighs while the sounds of it were echoing in the quiet room.
You arched off the couch, one hand flying to his hair, fingers tangling in the short strands as you pulle. âBen, oh fucââ.
He chuckled, the sound muffled and smug, but he didnât stop. If anything, he doubled down. One hand sliding up to press flat against your stomach, holding you steady while the other hooked under your thigh, yanking it higher over his shoulder. His tongue worked you relentlessly, circling and flicking, alternating with hard sucks that made your vision blur.
âSee?â, he growled between licks. âTold you. Shuts you right the fuck upâ. He nipped at your clit lightly, just enough to make you yelp, then soothed it with a slow swirl of his tongue.
Your legs trembled, muscles locking as heat coiled tight in your core, the roomâs tilt forgotten, the scraping urge buried under waves of building pleasure.
He kept going, messy and thorough, until your breaths came in short, desperate pants, your hips bucking against his face despite his iron grip. âCome on, sweetheartâ, he urged, words vibrating right where you needed them. âLet go. I got youâ.
And with one more insistent thrust of his tongue, paired with the rough drag of his thumb over your clit, you shattered⌠back arching, a broken cry escaping as the release crashed over you, washing away everything else in a white-hot rush.
Eventually, your heartbeat finally started to come back down, the edges of the world knitting themselves together as the aftershocks faded. Your legs felt boneless, your breathing uneven but no longer frantic in that awful way.
Ben pushed himself up with a grunt, wiping the back of his hand over his mouth like heâd just finished a good meal. The look on his face was pure smug satisfaction. âYeahâ, he panted, dropping back onto the couch beside you and hauling you into his chest. âThatâs more like itâ.
You let him move you, body too loose to protest, your cheek ending up pressed against the familiar span of his ribs. His shirt was still bunched around your waist, but he tugged it down roughly, covering you with a sort of careless protectiveness.
âCrazy brain check", he said after a moment, voice rumbling under your ear. âYou still thinkinâ about the door?â.
You blinked, brain lagging behind. ââŚNoâ.
âThe sound of your voice?â.
âNoâ.
âMission accomplished thenâ.
âThatâs not real therapy, you knowâ, you mumbled into his chest.
âYeah, well, Iâm not a real therapistâ, he said. âExcept you´re into role playâ.
You snorted, small and soft, while the tightness that had been wrapped around your lungs earlier was mostly gone now, replaced by a heavy, warm tiredness. Your thoughts still tried to kick up now and then, but they couldnât get much traction with him holding you like this, with his heartbeat slow and steady under your ear. His hand slid up and down your back in lazy passes, not even like he was trying to be comforting, more like his body just needed something to do, and you were there.
âHeyâ, he said after a while, quieter. âYou get like that again⌠you tell meâ.
You tilted your head up a little. âSo you can complain about it?â.
âSo I can fix itâ, he shot back immediately, like it was obvious. Then, a beat later, softer, âOr⌠try. Whateverâ.
Your chest squeezed in a way that had nothing to do with panic. âYou donât have toâ, you said.
âYeah, I doâ, he said while looking down at you like you were being ridiculous. âIâm the boyfriend. Thatâs in the job description somewhere. âLook good, kill shit, keep girl from spiralinâ into the sunââ.
âThatâs not how being a boyfriend work eitherâ.
âDonât careâ. He nudged your forehead lightly with his knuckles. âI signed up anyway, remember?â.
You stared at him, at the faint lines at the corners of his eyes, the scar by his chin and the way he was trying very hard not to look like he cared as much as he clearly did.
âBen?â, you said.
âWhatâ.
âThank youâ.
He rolled his eyes so hard you could practically hear it. âYeah, yeah. Donât get fucking sappy on me. Youâre just not useful when youâre losing your mindâ.
âHow am I useful?â, you challenged, too comfortable to be really offended.
He smirked, leaning his head back against the couch. âYou laugh at my jokes. You look good in my shirts. You make this place less depressingâ. His hand gave your waist a brief squeeze. âAnd, yâknow⌠youâre mineâ.
The last two words came out almost casual, but you felt the weight behind them. Your throat went tight. âYeahâ, you whispered. âIâm yoursâ.
âDamn rightâ, he said satisfied. âSo when your brain starts doing that thing again, remember that part first. Everything else is noiseâ.
You let your eyes drift closed, melting further into him. For once, your thoughts didnât immediately start their usual loop. They just⌠hovered, quiet, held in place by his arm around you and the rough press of his chin resting on top of your head.
It wasnât a cure and it wasnât perfect. But it was you, and it was him, and it was enough.
âBen?â, you mumbled, half asleep already.
âWhat nowâ, he grumbled.
âIf I wake you up tonight breathing like an asthmatic pug againâŚâ.
âIâll shove you closer and tell you to knock it the fuck offâ, he said. Then, after a beat, âAnd Iâll be right there. So quit worryinââ.
You smiled against his chest, finally letting yourself drift.
For the rest of the day, the door stayed locked, the stove stayed off, the texts stayed exactly the same and you didnât think about any of it. You just thought about him.