oh, silver fox...
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oh, silver fox...
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Jack had been trailing Arthur all morning, hanging back but never too far, his little boots crunching in the dirt whenever Arthur stopped to check a saddle or tie a knot. The boy had that look about him. Arthur noticed, of course, but didnât press. Jack had Hoseaâs way about him: better to let the words come when they were ready. They were by the hitching posts when it finally tumbled out.
âUncle Arthur⌠are you and Miss Bonnie in love?
Arthur froze midâbuckle on his saddlebag. His hands stilled on the leather, head tilting slightly before he looked down at the boy.
âWhat makes you say that? âI saw you kiss her yesterday âJack said, plain as day. No malice, no shame, just truth. His wide eyes searched Arthurâs face like he expected the answer to be written there.
Arthurâs mouth twitched, caught between a smile and a sigh. He rubbed the back of his neck.
âYouâre seeinâ a lot for a boy your age.
Jackâs shoulders slumped, like maybe he thought heâd overstepped.
âI didnât mean to spy⌠I just...
Arthur crouched until they were eye to eye, the leather of his holster creaking with the motion. He set one big, calloused hand on Jackâs shoulder, steady and warm.
âAinât nothinâ to apologize for, âHe said gentlyâ Sheâs⌠special to me. Real special.
The softness in his voice surprised even him. Jack studied him for a moment, as if weighing the honesty in those words, then smiled. It was that bright, unguarded grin kids had before the world taught them to hide it.
âGood. I like her too. She makes you laugh more.
Arthur huffed out a laugh through his nose, shaking his head.
âYeah⌠guess she does.
He reached over, ruffling Jackâs hair until it stuck up every which way, earning a giggle. From across the yard, Bonnie glanced up from where she was tending the horses. Sheâd caught enough to know. When Arthurâs eyes flicked her way, she ducked her head quickly, pretending to fuss with a stirrup, though the faint, knowing smile tugging at her lips betrayed her.
Jack found Dutch leaning against the camp rail near the fire, a tin cup of coffee in hand, surveying the bustle of camp like a king over his court. The boy sidled up beside him, small hands gripping the rough wood, eyes flicking up with a mix of shyness and determination.
âUh⌠Dutch?
Dutch lowered his gaze, one brow arched, a smile tugging the corner of his mouth.
âWhat is it, little man?
Jack hesitated, then blurted:
âAre you and Miss Bonnie in love?
Dutch nearly sputtered into his coffee, but he caught himself, lips curling wider as he chuckled.
âWell now, âHe said smoothlyâ thatâs a mighty big question for such a small fella. What makes you think a thing like that? âI saw you kiss her, âJack said matter-of-factlyâ By the wagon. You didnât see me.
Dutch laughed then, rich and low, shaking his head.
âAhh⌠youâve got an eye sharper than half the men in this camp. Hosea better watch out, youâll be catching him at his tricks next.
Jack shrugged, but his gaze stayed steady.
âWell⌠are you?
Dutch tipped his head, studying the boy like he was weighing how much truth to give. Then he leaned in, voice dropping into that conspiratorial drawl he used when he wanted to sound like a man letting you in on a secret.
âSheâs somethinâ else, that woman. A spirit like wildfire, clever as the devil, and kind enough to shame the rest of us. A manâd have to be blind not to love her.
Jack frowned, brow furrowed.
âSo⌠yes?
Dutch sighed through his nose, a smile tugging again at his lips despite himself.
âYes, son. I suppose I do.
That was enough for Jack, he grinned from ear to ear.
âGood. I like her too. She makes you laugh more.
Dutchâs eyes softened at that, the smile dimming into something quieter. He reached out, resting a big hand on Jackâs shoulder, gentle but firm.
âShe does more than that, boy. She makes a man remember what heâs fightinâ for. And that⌠thatâs no small thing.
From across the camp, Bonnie straightened from brushing down her horse. She caught Dutchâs gaze lingering on her and raised a questioning brow. He didnât say a word, didnât need to. The look he gave her was enough.
Hosea was whittling a strip of wood by the fire, curls piling at his boots, when Jack came trotting up, curiosity all over his face.
âMr. Hosea! âThe boy blurted, almost breathlessâ. Are you⌠are you and Miss Bonnie in love?
The old man paused midâcut, knife hovering. Slowly, he looked up, one brow raised, the faintest smirk tugging his mouth.
âWell now⌠thatâs a mighty big question for a lad who still canât tie his boots right âHe set the wood aside, easing back against the log behind him, one elbow proppedâ What makes you ask a thing like that? âI saw you kiss her yesterday, âJack said proudly, cheeks flushedâ By the creek. You didnât see me.
Hosea chuckled, the sound low and warm, shaking his head.
âSharp eyes, huh? Youâll be catchinâ outlaws in no time with that nose for trouble.
Jack puffed his chest, then leaned in, lowering his voice like it was a secret.
âSo⌠do you love her?
Hoseaâs expression softened. He glanced at the fire, at the way the coals pulsed like a heartbeat, then back at the boy.
âJack⌠loveâs a tricky thing to pin down. Slips through your fingers when you try too hard to name it âHe smiled, quiet and sureâ But yes. I love her. More than I thought an old coot like me had left in him.
Jack grinned wide, rocking on his heels.
âShe loves you too, doesnât she?
Hoseaâs smirk returned, the corner of his eyes creasing.
âShe does, son. And Iâll tell you somethinâ: she loves me best when Iâm makinâ a fool of myself. Keeps me humble, see?
Jack laughed at that, then took off across camp, no doubt to ask someone else a question thatâd make them squirm. Left alone, Hosea picked his knife back up but didnât cut into the wood. He watched Bonnie in the distance, her braid swinging as she carried water back from the river. A fond smile tugged at him, softer than heâd ever let the others see.
âAh, that girl, âHe murmured to the fireâ Keeps an old fox feelinâ young.
âââââă NAVI ă
main m.list â§ arthur m.list â§ dutch m.list â§ hosea m.list â§ bonnie m.list
ââââ Ý hosea matthews x bonnie ray (fem!oc)
a/n: Iâve been busier than usual lately and hardly have time to write anything new, so I decided to post something Iâd finished a while back and which had been gathering dust in my folder. Enjoy ŕ¨ŕ§.
wc: 5,3k âąâ summary: Hosea had the sweetest of dreams about his Clover; luckily, she's there when he wakes up. warnings/tags: 18+ smut & fluff ⢠soft angst ⢠established relationship ⢠morning sex ⢠dirty talk ⢠handjob ⢠fingering ⢠praise kink ⢠creampie ⢠aftercare ⢠mention of bessie
Hosea stirred before the camp fully woke. The air was still blue with nightâs edge, the fire embers low. His breath was shallow at first, tangled in some dream: her laugh, her green eyes, the warmth of her body curled against him. A dream so sharp and sweet it followed him even after his eyes cracked open. For a moment he lay still, chest rising and falling slow, watching the faint curls of her hair against the pillow. Bonnieâs braid had half-unraveled in her sleep, wisps spilling soft across her face. She murmured something, turned toward him, lips parting with a sigh that went straight to his chest and lower. The dream hadnât left him. Her mouth, wet and wanting. Her voice calling him âOld Fox,â sweet and filthy in the same breath. The ache that came with it had followed him into waking, pressing hard against the thin blanket over his hips.
Hosea closed his eyes, ran a hand down his face. Christ almighty, he was too old to be roused like a boy. And yet⌠Bonnie shifted again, thigh brushing his leg, warm through the thin fabric of her trousers, and he felt the dream claw right back up into him. He turned his head, watching her in the pale light. Freckles scattered across her cheeks, her lashes soft against her skin. She looked younger in sleep, untouched by the sharp world that had carved both of them into harder shapes. It struck him, that sudden tenderness, the love that hurt more than lust ever did. His hand moved almost without thought, brushing a stray lock from her face, his fingertips lingering at the corner of her jaw. She stirred at the touch, nose crinkling, lips curving the faintest smile before her eyes fluttered open.
âMmm âshe hummed, voice thick with sleepâ Youâre starinâ, Old Fox.
He chuckled, low in his chest.
âCaught me.
Her green eyes opened fully now, curious, mischievous, though still hazy from dreams.
âSomethinâ on your mind?
He swallowed, leaned close, pressed his lips to her temple. His voice was rough, quiet.
âDreamt of you âHis hand slid down, resting at her waist, fingers flexing lightlyâ And Iâll be damned if it didnât feel real enough to wake me hard as a horse.
Bonnieâs laugh was soft, wicked, brushing his skin. She shifted closer, her thigh pressing between his.
âDream or not⌠we can fix that, canât we?
Hoseaâs breath left him slow, the weight of age meeting the sharp pull of desire. He cupped her cheek and kissed her, gentle at first, then hungrier when she melted against him. Bonnieâs lips curved against his, soft but sly, then she tilted her head and bit at his jaw, that clean, sharp line she loved tracing with her mouth. A nip, playful and hungry, and she felt his breath catch, a low sound rumbling out of him. Her fingers, restless, slid down from his face to his chest, finding warm skin where his shirt had come undone in the night. She spread her hand wide, stroking over the wiry hair, feeling the steady thump of his heart beneath. She loved that chest âbroad still, though time had thinned him someâ loved that she could press her palm there and know she was his first thought upon waking. She dragged her nails lightly down, feather-soft, until they grazed the edge of his trousers. Hoseaâs hand caught at her wrist for a heartbeat, as if he might stop her, but the way his thumb traced her pulse gave him away. His eyes were half-lidded, breath uneven.
âYou Little Fox âhe murmured, voice hoarse with sleep and desireâ Youâll be the end of me, teasing an old man this way.
Bonnie only smiled, kittenish, and slipped her hand lower, over the flat of his belly, easing beneath the waist of his trousers with exquisite slowness. The heat of him pressed against her palm, hard and urgent, proof that his dream had been no fleeting fancy. She kissed along his throat as her fingers curled around him, savoring the way his hips shifted toward her touch.
âNot the end âshe whispered against his skinâ The best beginning you ever had.
Hosea groaned low, head tipping back, his grip tightening on her hip as if to anchor himself.
âGod help me, girl âhe raspedâ I dreamed of this⌠and youâre sweeter than any dream.
Bonnieâs hand worked him slow, lazy at first, like she wanted to draw out every ragged breath he gave her. Hoseaâs eyes slipped shut, his chest heaving under her palm, but then he opened them again, that sharp, keen look she knew too well cutting right through the haze.
âMmm. No, darling âhe rasped, voice low, teeth flashing in a crooked grinâ Not just me.
His hand slid down from her hip, over the curve of her thigh, slipping between her legs through the loose fall of her trousers. He found her already warm, slick, the kind of wet that told him sheâd been dreaming too. His fingers traced her through the fabric first, teasing circles that made her buck against his hand, a breathless whimper escaping before she could catch it.
âGoddamn irresistible âhe muttered, almost to himself, like he was marveling at her all over againâ This body of yours⌠youâve ruined me, Little Fox. Canât close my eyes without seeing you.
Bonnieâs head tipped back against the pillow, a soft moan breaking loose, her own strokes on him faltering as his touch unraveled her. She clung tighter to him, gasping.
âHosea⌠oh, you drive me madâŚ
He chuckled low, kissing her neck, biting just enough to make her squirm.
âFunny thing, Clover. Thought Iâd had my share of wild years. Thought I knew every kind of hunger âHis fingers slipped past the cloth now, bare against her heat, sliding into her slick folds with aching slowness. Her cry in his ear made him groan, feral and gutturalâ But you⌠Christ. Youâve got me worse than a boy.
Bonnieâs green eyes glittered with mischief as she wrapped her left hand tighter around him, dragging her palm up slow, twisting just enough on the way down to make him grunt. Hosea bit back the sound, jaw clenching, his lips pressing shut like he could force the noise to stay inside. She saw it, and loved it: the way his breath hissed sharp through his teeth, the twitch at the corner of his mouth as he tried not to give her the satisfaction.
âYouâre trembling âshe whispered against his ear, her lips brushing the shell, the kittenish purr in her voice cutting him to pieces.
His body gave a sharp shiver under her hand, thighs taut, belly clenching with every slow stroke. Hosea Matthews, silver-tongued and always in control, undone by the way her hand curled around his cock, by the heat of her palm, by the slick sheen gathering at her fingers as she worked him.
âDamn girl âhe rasped, his voice cracking low, trying to keep it quiet, his head tipping forward against her shoulderâ You know just how to ruin meâŚ
Bonnie smiled, wicked and soft all at once. She kissed the edge of his jaw, the jaw she adored, nipping lightly as she pumped him faster, then slowed again, savoring the way his body bucked into her touch. She lifted her head enough to watch his face in the gray morning light: the furrowed brow, the twitch of his closed eyes, the way his lips parted with a groan he swallowed too late. She could feel the damp spreading over her fingers now, the head of him slick, leaking for her. She rubbed her thumb over it deliberately, smearing the wetness down his shaft, and his whole body shuddered hard.
âGoddamn it âHosea growled. He pressed his face into the crook of her neck, breathing hardâ Youâll⌠youâll finish me too soon, little fox.
But she only purred, squeezing him tighter, her strokes steady and loving, kittenish but filthy in the way she dragged every tremor out of him.
âMmm, I love you like this âshe murmuredâ All soft in my hand. My favorite sweet.
That last word nearly undid him, his hips jerked, a raw groan finally tearing free from his chest despite his attempt to stay quiet. Her thumb swept over him again, slick and perfect, and that was it, Hoseaâs hand clamped around her wrist, rough but not cruel, pulling her left hand away from his cock with a sharp growl.
âEnough âhe rasped, breath hot against her neck, eyes glittering with feral heat when she looked up at himâ Youâll ruin me before I can have my fill of you.
Bonnie gasped as he pressed her hand flat to his chest, holding it there so she could feel how fast his heart was racing. His other hand was already sliding down, slipping beneath the band of her trousers, practiced and sure.
The first touch of his fingers against her bare folds made her moan, loud and unguarded. He shushed her gently, almost teasing, but his smile was wolfish as his fingertips circled, testing her wetness.
âChrist almighty âhe muttered, voice low, his thumb finding her clit, stroking slow, preciseâ Soaked for me. My clever girl⌠all sharp tongue and fast hands, but down here? âHe slid two fingers into her in one smooth motion, groaning when she clenched around himâ Soft and desperate. Just like I dreamt.
Bonnieâs back arched, her braid dragging across the pillow, her breath stuttering into his shoulder. Her thighs parted instinctively, hips rolling against his hand, chasing the rhythm he set. Hoseaâs face was close, his jaw brushing hers.
âYou think youâre in control, lass, but Iâve been at this a long time. I know every little thing that makes you melt.
His thumb pressed firmer, circling just right, his fingers curling inside her until she whimpered brokenly. He drank in every twitch, every moan, every tremble of her body as he worked her with careful precision, not fast, not rough, just maddeningly exact, each stroke placed like a man whoâd studied her, dreamed of her, and now had her in his hand at last. Her nails dug into his chest, her lips biting at his shoulder to muffle the cries she couldnât hold back. She shook her head, gasping,
âHosea⌠Old Fox⌠youâre⌠oh God⌠youâre gonna finish meâŚ
He chuckled, low and sinful, fingers never faltering.
âGood girl. Thatâs the point.
Bonnieâs cries were getting too loud for campâs thin dawn silence. Hoseaâs hand clamped gently but firmly over her mouth, muffling the next whimper that tore up her throat. His breath brushed hot against her ear as he rolled them both, guiding her with that sure strength until she was curled on her side, back snug against his chest.
âShh now, little fox âhe murmured, voice a gravelly purrâ Canât have the whole camp hearinâ how Iâve got you cominâ undone.
Her braid spilled across the pillow, her body already trembling from what heâd done with just his fingers. She tried to twist, to beg, but his arm pinned her against him, holding her exactly where he wanted her. His free hand slid down over her belly, fingers resuming their work between her thighs. Only now, from this angle, he had her completely open to him. He spread her slick folds with practiced precision, his thumb circling her clit while two fingers pumped slow, deep, curling just right. Bonnie moaned into his palm, the sound desperate and muffled, her body jerking in helpless rhythm against his hand.
âGood girl âhe whispered against her temple, voice full of smug heatâ Thatâs it. Let it take you. Just like in my dream.
Her thighs clamped and shook, but he hooked his leg over hers, keeping her spread, utterly under his control. Every time she tried to wriggle away, his fingers sank deeper, pressing her softest places until she was a gasping, sobbing mess in his hold. Her eyes squeezed shut, tears threatening as her body fought to handle the sharp pleasure. She bit against his hand but he only chuckled low, pressing it tighter to keep her cries swallowed.
âGoddamn irresistible âHosea groaned, grinding himself against her hip, his cock throbbing, needy but patientâ Feel you flutterinâ already, Bonnie. My sweet Little Fox, youâre about to lose it for me.
Her hips bucked, her breath sobbing against his palm, and still he didnât let up, his experienced fingers were merciless, knowing exactly how to push her to the brink and hold her there, his own body trembling with the effort not to spill first. Her left hand still glistened with him, slick from where sheâd been stroking and worshiping, when she twisted her head, lips trembling against his jaw.
âHosea âshe whispered, breathless, wreckedâ Please. I need you inside me. Donât make me beg twice.
He let out a strangled groan, deep in his chest, like every shred of his control cracked at once.
âGoddamn⌠girl âhe hissed, his voice breakingâ I canât⌠Christ, I canât wait.
In a rush, his hand left hers, went to her trousers, tugging them down rough and urgent, just enough to bare her ass and thighs. She whimpered, arching back into him, her body already trembling with need. He didnât bother stripping further. He just shoved his trousers lower on his hips, down to his knees, enough to line himself up against her soaked folds. Bonnie gasped when the head of him dragged through her wetness, coating him, teasing her entrance.
âPlease, Old Fox âshe moaned, so soft it was a prayerâIâm ready. I need you.
That was all it took. With a guttural growl, Hosea thrust forward, sinking into her in one desperate, driving motion. Her walls clamped around him, hot and greedy, and his forehead dropped against her shoulder with a groan he couldnât bite back.
âSweet merciful Christ âhe rasped, his hips snapping again, quick and sharp, already too far goneâ So damn tight for me in the morninâ⌠like you were made to wake me this way.
Bonnie clutched at his arm, nails digging into his skin, muffling her cries against her own wrist as he fucked into her side-lying body. Every thrust drove deeper, messier, fueled by the need that had been burning in his dream and now roared into waking. Hoseaâs hand gripped her hip hard, anchoring her against him, while his teeth grazed her ear.
âYouâll be the death of me, Little Fox âhe groaned, breath raggedâ But hell if I care⌠I need you too much.
Bonnie wriggled, panting, and pushed her trousers all the way down with shaking hands. She kicked them off her ankles, baring herself completely for him, then hooked one leg high over his hip. The movement opened her wide, needy, giving herself to him without shame. Her voice was a desperate whisper against his ear.
âThere. Take me proper, Old Fox. You know how I love it like this.
Hosea groaned, muffled, the sound caught low in his throat so it wouldnât carry. His hands seized her thigh, spreading her, guiding her leg higher as he shifted closer. The new angle let him sink into her deeper, fuller, until Bonnie gasped sharp and clutched at the blanket to keep from crying out.
âGoddamn, Bonnie âhe whispered harsh, his lips brushing the shell of her earâ Soaked and open for me⌠every time I think I know your body, you give me somethinâ new to dream on.
She trembled in his arms, her back flush against his chest, muffling her moans into her wrist. He set a rhythm, sharp thrusts that rocked her forward with each snap of his hips, his trousers tangled low around his knees. The sound of their bodies was filthy in the hush of dawn âwet, hungry, skin against skinâ but the camp was quiet, and only their harsh, whispered gasps filled the air.
âDonât stop âshe begged in a hiss, her nails raking his armâ Oh God, Hosea, just like thatâŚ
His hand clamped over her mouth again, cutting off the rising cry.
âQuiet, sweetheart âhe whispered hot, his voice ragged in her earâ Donât you wake the whole damn gang. Let it out against my palm. Thatâs it.
Bonnie whimpered into his hand, her eyes rolling back as he drove into her deeper, her leg tightening around his hip, holding him inside. She rocked back against him, her body squeezing, desperate, chasing the peak. Hoseaâs jaw clenched as he buried his face against her neck, trying to swallow the groans that wanted to tear out.
âMy sweet Little Fox âhe rasped, whisper shakingâ Youâre gonna finish me fast if you keep clenching like that⌠Christ.
Bonnie writhed against him, her leg hooked over his hip, body taking every hard thrust he gave her. Her muffled cries buzzed against his palm, each sound vibrating straight into his chest. Hosea thought he could keep her quiet, keep them hidden in the early dawn, but then he risked a glance at her face: her cheeks were flushed pink, freckles shining with sweat, lashes fluttering. Her mouth was wet under his hand, lips parted around his skin, tongue slipping out as though she was begging to taste him, to speak his name. Hoseaâs breath hitched, his cock pulsing inside her.
âSweet Jesus âhe groaned against her ear, the whisper ragged. Slowly, deliberately, he pulled his hand away, wanting, needing, to see her mouth free.
Bonnieâs head fell back onto his shoulder, her lips open, slick with spit, her tongue slipping out in a silent plea. Green eyes heavy-lidded, drunk on pleasure, she looked up at him with a filthy, ruined expression that no dream could have matched.
âLittle⌠Fox⌠âhe breathed, almost broken. âPlease âshe whispered, voice hoarse, the tiniest sound as her tongue darted out again. â Kiss me, Hosea⌠I need your mouth.
His chest rumbled with a groan, feral, as he crashed his lips onto hers, swallowing the whimpers sheâd been holding back. Her tongue met his, hot and slick, and she moaned into the kiss as he thrust into her harder, the wet slap of their bodies masked now by their mouths locked together. He kissed her like a starving man, desperate and claiming, the taste of her making his hips lose all rhythm, rutting messily into her heat. Between kisses, he whispered filth against her lips, words almost trembling.
âMy sweet⌠my filthy little fox⌠look at you, begginâ for me with that mouthâŚ
Bonnie only moaned louder, her leg tightening around him, pulling him deeper. Her tongue tangled with his, shameless, as though sheâd die if she couldnât have more of him. Bonnieâs leg squeezed around him, nails digging into his forearm as she kissed him back with abandon. Her moans spilled into his mouth, hot and desperate, her tongue stroking his as if she wanted to devour him whole. Hoseaâs thrusts grew ragged, hips slamming harder, the rhythm breaking as the fire surged up his spine. Her body clutched him greedily, fluttering and wet, pulling him deeper every time he tried to slow.
âFuck, Bonnie âhe whispered against her lips, voice hoarse, every syllable a shiverâ Youâre squeezinâ me⌠Christ, youâre gonna milk me dry.
Her reply was nothing but a filthy whimper into his mouth, her eyes half-lidded, her sweet flushed face begging him without words. And then she broke. Her body tensed all at once, back arching, a muffled scream swallowed by his kiss as her climax tore through her. Her walls clamped and pulsed around him, soaking him, dragging him right with her. Hosea groaned into her mouth, deep and guttural, his own release hitting like a flood. His cock jerked inside her, spilling hot, pulse after pulse as he ground himself deep, holding her tight so not a drop could slip free. His kiss grew sloppy, open-mouthed and breathless, both of them trembling as they clung to each other. When it finally ebbed, he pressed his forehead to hers, panting, his hand smoothing her hair back
âSweet Jesus, Clover⌠youâll kill me yet. And Iâll thank you for it every damn time.
Bonnieâs lips curled into a languid, kittenish smile, her tongue still grazing his as she kissed him soft, drunk on the afterglow.
âGood âshe whispered back, voice wrecked but teasingâ Youâre my favorite sweet⌠and Iâll never get enough.
Hosea chuckled low, kissing her again, slower now, more tender. His hand rubbed her hip, the two of them still joined, messy and sated, the camp still sleeping around them.
Hosea held her close for a long moment, his cock still buried in her, both of them trembling in the aftermath. Her breathing slowed, sweet little sighs warm against his throat, her leg still hooked over him possessively. He pressed a kiss to her temple before finally easing back, reluctant but needing to tend to her. When he pulled out, the wet heat clung to him, and a rush of cum spilled from her swollen folds onto the sheets. More than he expected. Hosea froze, staring down with wide eyes, his chest heaving.
âWell, Iâll be damned âhe muttered, half to himself. His hand brushed his brow, disbelief flashing across his faceâ Sweet girl⌠only you could draw that outta me.
Bonnie shifted, still flushed and smiling lazily, a kittenish glint in her green eyes as she noticed his astonishment. She dragged a finger through the mess at her thigh, lifted it to her lips, and licked it clean with a soft moan. Hoseaâs breath caught hard.
âChrist âhe groaned, voice breakingâ You wicked, Little Fox.
He forced himself to move, fumbling for the clean cloth he kept folded nearby. His hands trembled faintly as he pressed the soft linen to her, wiping her down with careful strokes. The sight of her âall flushed and wrecked, freckles shining with sweat, thighs sticky with proof of what she did to himâ hit him deeper than any dream.
âNever thought Iâd see the day âhe murmured, his voice softer now, reverentâ A man my age, spillinâ like a boy just from the way his girl begs âHe kissed her hip tenderly, shaking his head with a crooked smileâ Youâve ruined me, Clover. Completely.
Bonnie purred, stretching against the blankets, glowing in her pride.
âGood â she whispered, smug and sweetâ Thatâs what I wanted.
Hosea finished wiping her clean, the cloth damp and warm in his hand, before tossing it aside and easing her onto her back. He slipped in close, one arm under her shoulders, the other hand smoothing sweat-mussed strands of hair from her freckled face. His lips brushed her brow, his breath still a little uneven.
âThere now âhe murmured, voice soft, husky in a way that came from more than just ageâ Sweet girl, all tucked back together.
Bonnie curled into him, cheek pressed against his chest, listening to the steady thump of his heart. Her leg draped lazily over his, still bare, still claiming him. The air smelled of sex and dawn and leather, but for the first time in hours, she felt calm, tethered to him. Her fingers traced idle patterns against his skin, and then her voice, small and raw, slipped out:
âI love you so much, Old Fox.
The words cut through him sharper than any pleasure. His arms tightened around her instinctively, as if he could hold them between his ribs and keep them safe. He tilted her chin up, forcing her green eyes to meet his.
âMy Clover âhe said low, a smile ghosting across his lipsâ You donât know what that does to me, hearinâ it from you.
She bit her lip, her expression shifting, softer, but also troubled.
âSometimes⌠sometimes I get jealous âshe admitted, voice nearly a whisperâ Of all the women you mustâve had before me. The stories you could tell, the sweethearts and saloon girls. I hate that it knots in my chest, but it does. âCause I wish Iâd been the only one to make you tremble like that.
Hoseaâs brows lifted, and then a laugh, low and warm, rumbled out of him. Not mocking, tender, almost incredulous. He kissed her nose, then her cheek, then lingered at her lips, whispering against them.
âBonnie, darlinâ⌠I lived a long time before you. I had lovers, sure. Nights and mornings, laughter and regrets. But none of âem stayed. None of âem burned me the way you do âHe stroked her hair back, his thumb tracing her templeâ Youâre the only one who makes me feel alive at this age. The only one who makes me spill like a fool. The only one Iâve ever let see me weak.
Her throat tightened, tears stinging her eyes, but her smile bloomed wide.
âYou mean it? âWith my whole damn heart âHosea swore softly, kissing her hard then, sealing itâ Youâre my Clover, my good luck, my one real chance at somethinâ soft in this cruel world. The rest? Dust in the wind. Youâre the only one, apart from Bessie, that Iâll remember at the end.
Bonnieâs lashes were heavy, her body limp against his chest, the rise and fall of her breath slowing. Hosea thought sheâd slipped into sleep already, until her voice came, drowsy and quiet, words tumbling without her usual cheek.
âYou loved Bessie âshe murmured, not a question but a truth. Her fingers idly traced circles against his chest, slow and aimlessâ I can feel it when you say her name.
Hosea went still, the name like a ghost settling in the blankets between them. His hand kept stroking her hair, steady, though his heart clenched.
âAye âhe said finally, his voice rough, lowâ I did. Loved her more than most men get to love in a lifetime.
Bonnie nuzzled closer, eyes slipping shut again.
âShe was lucky, you know. To have you âHer lips brushed against his skin as she whispered itâ Iâm happy she made you happy. That she was good to you. âCause⌠if she hadnât been⌠âShe trailed off, a flicker of pain crossing her features even in half-sleepâ If sheâd hurt you, the way he hurt me, I think it would break me.
Her throat bobbed as she swallowed, words catching.
âIt near kills me sometimes, knowinâ how much you loved her. But Iâd rather that, than think of you goinâ through what I went through. She gave you joy. I⌠Iâm glad for that.
Hoseaâs chest ached at the rawness of it. He tightened his arms around her, pressing a kiss into her hair. His eyes burned, though he let no tears fall.
âBonnie âhe whispered, fierce and soft at onceâ Youâre somethinâ else, you know that? Only you would lay in my arms and call yourself glad for another womanâs place in my heart.
Her lips curved in a tired, crooked smile, but her eyes stayed closed.
ââCause you deserve good. You always did. Bessie gave it to you once. Now itâs my turn.
Hosea shut his eyes, resting his cheek against her hair, letting her warmth sink into him. For the first time in years, he felt like a man allowed to carry both loves without shame: one a memory, one alive and breathing against his chest.
âRest now, Little Fox âhe murmured, voice husky with emotionâ Youâve given me more than I ever thought Iâd have again.
Her body softened, her breathing deepening into sleep, but the faintest smile lingered on her lips, even as dreams took her. Hosea lay still, careful not to wake her. Bonnieâs breath warmed his chest, slow and even now, lashes casting shadows across freckled cheeks, lips parted in the soft slackness of sleep. He brushed a fingertip over one of those freckles, reverent, almost like a man afraid sheâd vanish if he touched her too hard. Bessie. The name curled through his mind like smoke. He could see her still, the way she used to laugh at him when he was too serious, the way her hand would cup his cheek when he got ahead of himself. Heâd loved her with a manâs whole heart, and losing her had been like having the sun go out. For years, he hadnât thought heâd ever feel warmth again. And yet⌠here she was. This wild, stubborn slip of a girl, half his age and twice his spirit. She laughed too loud, teased too sharp, got herself into trouble more often than sense should allow. And still she looked at him like he was worth a damn. Still she pressed her soft hand against his chest and whispered she was glad for Bessie, glad heâd known happiness once, glad enough to take whatever pieces of him were left and call them hers. Hosea swallowed hard, throat thick. Christ almighty, what did I ever do to deserve her?
He thought of all the women heâd known in passing: saloon girls, lovers, the kind of company a con man kept when nights got lonely. They blurred together, nothing but shadows and names half-forgotten. And here was Bonnie, bright and sharp, burning herself into him so deep that he couldnât close his eyes without dreaming of her. She shifted in her sleep, murmuring his name, her brow furrowed for a second before smoothing again. He pressed his lips to her hair, breathing her in, that faint scent of smoke and lavender she carried.
âMy Clover âhe whispered into the quiet, words only for the darkâ My second chance. My salvation.
Bonnieâs breath was soft against his chest, her small hand curled near his heart. Hosea kept stroking her hair, long after her breathing steadied, unable to close his eyes. His gaze stayed fixed on her freckled face, the curve of her lips, the faint little frown that haunted her even in dreams. How can she be this precious? he thought, almost angrily, because it made no sense to him. A girl whoâd been beaten down by a husband who swore to love her, a girl whoâd watched her blood kin slaughtered before her eyes, how in Godâs name could she still laugh so bright? How could she still curl into him, pure and wild, and whisper love into his ear like it wasnât the hardest thing in the world to believe? It terrified him. Terrified him worse than any bullet ever had. Losing her. The thought of it was like ice in his veins, choking him. Heâd lived long enough to bury too many. If death came for him, he could meet it with a grin. But if it came for her? Heâd never forgive himself, never forgive the world. His arms tightened around her instinctively, almost too tight, his breath shuddering as he pressed his lips to her crown. Hold on, Little Fox. Stay. Let me keep you safe.
His thoughts drifted further, softer. Not of robberies, not of Dutchâs speeches or the next con. No. He pictured something else. Something impossible. Him, Bonnie, Arthur, Dutch, the four of them far from the guns and the wanted posters. A cabin by a stream, maybe, fields wide enough for Dutch to preach without fear, a porch where Arthur could sketch while Bonnie teased him, where Hosea could sit and smoke and watch them with a smile that reached his bones. No gangs, no lies. Just family. Just peace. He let himself imagine it, even though he knew better. The dream curled warm in his chest anyway, stubborn as Bonnie herself.
âGod help me âhe whispered into the hush, voice breakingâ but Iâd trade every damn scheme I ever spun for that.
He brushed a thumb across her cheek one last time, memorizing the way she looked in his arms. And then, with her warmth seared into him and that impossible dream tucked close, Hosea Matthews closed his eyes again, because the morning could wait a little longer
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ââââ Ý hosea matthews x bonnie ray (fem!oc)
wc: 1,9k âąâ summary: During a supply run, Hosea gently turns down a store clerkâs flirtation, his mind already pulled homeward to the young woman whoâs stolen his heart: Bonnie Ray. When he returns to camp, he finds Bonnie teaching Jack to read with a patience and warmth that stop him in his tracks. warnings/tags: domestic fluff ⢠established relationship ⢠domestic moments ⢠found family
The bell above the general store door rang as Hosea stepped inside. He gave the place a quick sweep with those sharp eyes of his: shelves stacked high, a thin layer of dust, the smell of leather and dried beans. He moved to the counter, already knowing what he needed: coffee, tobacco, maybe a bit of candy for Jack if they had it.
âAfternoon, stranger âCame a voice.
Hosea looked up. A woman behind the counter had turned from her work, brushing a loose strand of hair from her face. She smiled at him: warm, lingering, just a touch too curious.
âWell now âShe went on, leaning her elbows against the counterâ Donât believe Iâve seen you âround here before.
Hosea tipped his hat politely.
âLikely because I ainât from here. Just passinâ through. âShame âShe said, eyes sliding over him in a way he was all too familiar withâ Man like you oughta stay a while.
For a beat, Hosea chuckled. Once upon a time, he mightâve played along, just for the sport of it. But now? His thoughts drifted to camp. To a freckled face, wild brown hair falling loose from a braid, suspenders shrugged from her shoulders as she laughed with Jack. A young woman with eyes so bright and green they could stop him mid-sentence.
âNo disrespect, maâam âHosea said kindlyâ But I reckon Iâd be the worldâs silliest man alive if I let my eyes wander when Iâve already got the finest sight waitinâ on me.
The woman blinked, clearly surprised.
âOh? She must be somethinâ then.
Hosea smiled, slow and certain.
âShe is. Green eyes, wild spirit, sharper than any blade I ever carried. Chose an old man like me âHe shook his head, as if still half in disbeliefâ So you see, Iâve no interest in flirtinâ. Iâd only end up comparinâ, and that wouldnât be fair to you.
The ladyâs smile faltered, but she gave a small, good-natured laugh, turning back to her work. Hosea tipped his hat again, picked up his coffee and tobacco, and walked out. Outside, he paused a moment in the sunlight, lips twitching into that private smile he only wore when thinking of her. Hosea left the general store with his parcel tucked under his arm, the sun catching in his silver hair as he stepped into the street. The flirtation was already forgotten, not even a temptation, not even a spark. Because the truth was simple: heâd be the most foolish man alive to even think of another when he had Bonnie Ray waiting on him.
And wait she did.
When he rode back into camp, the first sound he heard was laughter â Jackâs small, boyish giggle mingling with Bonnieâs warm, lilting voice. He dismounted slow, lingering just to watch the scene: Bonnie sat cross-legged in the dirt beside Jack, her shirt loose, suspenders dangling at her sides, a smudge of mud on her freckled cheek. Her dark brown hair had fallen free from its braid, tumbling wild around her shoulders as she bent over a battered book.
âSound it out, sweetheart âShe was urging Jack, her finger tracing the wordsâ Donât rush it, youâre doinâ just fine.
Jack stammered through the line, and when he got it right, Bonnie whooped and clapped, pulling him into her side. Jack giggled harder, proud as could be. Bonnie leaned in close to Jack, her hair brushing his temple as he struggled through the sentence. Her freckles were dusted darker with the dayâs sun, her shirt half untucked from chasing the boy around earlier. Jack was pouting, tongue sticking out just a little as he squinted at the page.
âCâmon now âBonnie coaxed, voice warm and teasingâ You get through this page and Iâll make us a treat tonight. Cookies. With sugar, if Pearson hasnât eaten it all already.
Jackâs head shot up, brown eyes going wide.
âCookies!?
Bonnie grinned, green eyes sparkling.
âMmhm. But only if you finish âShe tapped the line with her fingerâ Deal?
Jack groaned dramatically, but bent back over the page.
âDeeeal.
Bonnie laughed, a bright, free sound that carried across camp. She tugged him closer with one arm, holding the book steady with the other.
âThatâs my boy. Steady now, no rush. Youâll get it.
The words drifted across the camp, and Hosea stopped dead in his tracks. His chest tightened, those were his words. The very ones heâd whispered months ago to a trembling, freckled girl who could barely hold a pistol steady. He remembered her eyes then: green and frightened, trying so hard to prove she could belong. Now here she was, saying those same words to Jack. Gentle, patient, sure of herself. Passing them down like a quiet inheritance. For a moment, his old heart ached in the best way. She wasnât just surviving anymore. She was teaching. Living. Giving back all the tenderness the world once stole from her.
He stood there longer than he meant to, watching the sunlight catch in her hair, the way she ruffled Jackâs curls after he hit close to the target. A lump formed in his throat before he even realized it. He hadnât the heart to interrupt, not when he could watch her like this, wild hair tumbling down her back, bare toes curling in the dirt, freckles glowing, coaxing Jack along with patience and joy. And she hadnât the faintest idea he was there, watching her give away pieces of her heart like it was the simplest thing in the world. Bonnie Ray âa girl whoâd walked through hell itself, carrying scars no one could seeâ here she was, barefoot and grinning, promising cookies to a boy who needed love as much as she once did. He smiled to himself, a rare, quiet smile, and thought: Lord help me⌠Iâll never let her doubt sheâs all Iâll ever need.
Jack was hunched over the page, lips moving as he whispered the words under his breath. Bonnie leaned in close, encouraging him softly, her smile patient and bright.
âSound it out⌠there you go, youâve near got it âShe murmured.
A crunch of boots on dry grass made her glance up, and the instant her eyes found Hosea, they lit up like a lantern catching flame. The surprise gave way to that playful warmth that was hers alone, and for a heartbeat, it was just the two of them.
âUncle Hosea! âJack cried suddenly, spotting him. The boy scrambled to his feet, the book tumbling into the dirtâ Did you bring candy?
Hosea chuckled, shifting the parcel under his arm.
âWell now, straight to the important questions, eh? âHis eyes crinkled as he crouched just enough to meet Jackâs eager gazeâ As a matter of fact, I did.
He drew out a small twist of paper from the parcel, a few hard sweets heâd picked up, just in case. Jack snatched them with a whoop, darting off toward his motherâs tent to show Abigail. Bonnie shook her head, laughing softly.
âYou spoil that boy rotten. âSomeone ought to âHosea said, his voice quieter now, his gaze returning to her.
She was still sitting in the dirt, trousers rolled, bare toes dusted, a smudge of ink on her hand from guiding Jackâs finger across the page. Wild dark brown hair framed her face, and those green eyes âLord, those eyesâ looked at him like she hadnât been waiting for anyone else. Hosea felt something ease in him, the years and aches falling away under her smile. He didnât say a word about the woman at the store. Didnât need to. He just walked the few steps closer, set the parcel down, and offered her his hand to help her up. Bonnie slid her fingers into his without hesitation, the corner of her mouth tilting into that mischievous grin he loved so well.
âTook your time, Old Fox.
Hoseaâs lips twitched, his chest still aching from the sight of her moments before: barefoot in the dirt, promising cookies, lighting up Jackâs whole world with nothing more than patience and laughter. And before he knew it, before his reason could step in, he crossed the last space between them and cupped her face in his hands, pressing his mouth to hers. It wasnât slow or calculated, not the way Hosea Matthews usually was. It was instinct, sudden and sure, like a dam breaking. Bonnie gasped softly against him, surprise flashing in her eyes, but then she melted into it, her hands finding his chest, clutching his vest like sheâd been waiting for him to lose that careful control. When he finally drew back, just enough to breathe, his forehead rested against hers. He was smiling, not his conmanâs smile, not his practiced charm, but something unguarded, something younger.
âI know what you were doinâ, âHe murmuredâ And I reckon there ainât a finer sight in this world than you and that boy bent over a book together.
Bonnie bumped her forehead lightly against his, breath still a little shaky from that sudden kiss.
âWell, âShe murmured, voice low and teasingâ if this is how you greet me when you get back from town, I might have to send you out for errands more often.
Hosea huffed a soft laugh.
âDarlinâ, if I go any more often, Pearsonâll accuse me of runninâ off with the sugar supply. âMm. Maybe you are âShe said, tapping his chest with one fingerâ Sweet talker.
He opened his mouth to volley back, but a small voice shrieked across camp:
âBONNIE! UNCLE HOSEA STOLE A KISS FROM YOU!
Jack came barreling toward them, crumbs of the hard candy still stuck to his cheek, waving his arms like heâd discovered a crime. Bonnieâs eyes went wide. Hosea groaned. Right behind Jack, Abigail stuck her head out of her tent, eyebrows raised.
âStole it, huh?
Jack nodded furiously.
âHe just grabbed her face and smushed!
Bonnie burst into laughter so sudden she nearly doubled over, clutching Hoseaâs sleeve to stay upright.
âSmushed? âHosea repeated, deadpanâ Iâll have you know I kiss with the utmost sophistication.
Jack frowned, confused.
âWhatâs sofiss... sofist...? âMeans heâs old, sugar âBonnie supplied.
Hosea shot her a look of betrayed amusement.
âDarlin'âŚ
She only grinned wider. Jack squinted up at Hosea, then at Bonnie, then scowled.
âWell⌠he still smushed you.
Bonnie bent down, gently booping Jackâs nose.
âAnd what if I liked being smushed?
Jack gasped like sheâd just admitted to robbing a train. Abigail groaned.
âLord save me. Iâm not explaininâ this to him.
Hosea finally wrapped an arm around Bonnieâs waist, tugging her close with that mock-stern glint in his eyes.
âYâknow âHe murmured to herâ there was a time when my reputation struck fear into men.
Bonnie leaned into him, playful and smug and glowing.
âAnd now youâre beinâ tattled on by a sticky six-year-old.
Jack proudly raised his candy-wrapped hand like evidence. Hosea sighed dramatically.
âHow the mighty have fallen.
Bonnie pressed a kiss to his cheek, quick and warm.
âDonât worry, Old Fox. Iâll protect your honor. âSweetheart, âHosea murmured, smiling despite himselfâ youâre the one destroyinâ it.
Bonnie winked.
âAnd you keep cominâ back for more.
Hosea couldnât even pretend otherwise, not with her wild hair brushing his shoulder, Jack circling them like an excited puppy, and the whole camp pretending not to stare.
Yeah. He absolutely came back for more.
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ââââ Ý hosea matthews x bonnie ray (fem!oc)
a/n: I've been working on this for a while and finally decided to upload it. It's their first time having sex, so obviously there will be adult content at some point. Hosea deserves more love, and I'm here to fix that ŕ¨ŕ§.
wc: 19.1k âąâ summary: Hosea takes Bonnie on a little trip from which they will not return the same. warnings/tags: 18+ smut & fluff ⢠slow burn ⢠pre-relationship dynamics ⢠dirty talk ⢠oral sex (m) ⢠nipple sucking ⢠previous marks of abuse ⢠praise kink ⢠tears during/after sex ⢠aftercare
The mountains stretched long and green around them, spring mist still clinging to the hollows, sunlight glinting on damp rocks where the streams cut through. Birds sang sharp and bright overhead, and every once in a while, Bonnie joined them, voice soft but steady, carrying an old tune her mama mustâve taught her. A lullaby, maybe. Something simple, sweet, that made the ride feel less like an outlawâs march and more like something near holy. Hosea kept his eyes forward, one hand on the reins, the other resting loose against his thigh. He shouldâve been listening to the land: the wind, the hooves, the crack of a twig that might mean company. Instead he was listening to her.
That voice. Lord. How many nights had he sat awake by the fire, her hum lilting through the camp while she patched coats or soothed Jack to sleep, pretending it didnât settle into his chest like a brand? Too many. Far too many. He told himself it wasnât lust. Couldnât be. He wasnât like Dutch, prowling after every pretty girl who crossed their path. No, what gnawed at him was softer, crueler. It was love. Real, aching love. And love, at his age, with a girl like her, was its own kind of sin. She belonged with Arthur. That thought bit him the hardest. Arthur was steady, young, could give her years. Not half-broken lungs and bones gone brittle. Not some old thief who coughed blood when the nights got cold. She deserved strong arms and a future, not an old manâs fading heart.
But when he glanced over, Bonnie was turned just enough in her saddle that sunlight caught her braid, set the little flyaway strands alight like a halo. Her freckles were brighter for it, her mouth curved in a smile only the song couldâve put there. She was joy incarnate, his Little Fox, riding beside him like sheâd never known another place to be. And Hoseaâs heart hurt with it. Hurt and swelled and shook all at once. He wanted to reach out, to brush his fingers over hers where her reins lay slack. He wanted to stop the horses, pull her down into the grass, and confess everything that burned in him. But he didnât. He only tightened his grip on the reins, eyes hard on the trail, while inside his chest that coil of tension wound tighter and tighter, fed by every note of her song. The mountain air was cool, but Hosea was burning. Bonnieâs mare picked her way easy, ears twitching as birds burst from the underbrush. She sat loose in the saddle, braid swinging over her shoulder, voice humming soft at first, then fading into a smile.
âWhereâre you takinâ me, Old Fox? âShe asked, nudging her horse closer to his.
Her tone was light, but the words carried more than curiosity. If heâd told her he was bound for the end of the world, she wouldâve gone without another question. Hosea adjusted his hat, keeping his gaze forward.
âYouâll see soon enough, Clover. Donât you trust me?
Her green eyes sparkled as she leaned his way, just enough to tease.
âCourse I do, Professor. Just donât like beinâ kept in the dark.
He chuckled, low and warm, though her voice âProfessorâ made something hot shift in his chest.
âTrouble, thatâs all you are. Pure trouble.
She grinned, pleased, then sang out sweet as sugar.
âMr. Matthews, you wound me. âMr. Matthews, âHe repeated, rolling it with that silver tongue of his, sharp and fond at onceâ Careful, young lady, or youâll find yourself walkinâ back to camp.
Bonnie laughed, head tipped back, freckles catching the light.
âYou wouldnât leave me behind, darlinâ.
He swallowed hard at that âdarlinââ and forced a smirk.
âWouldnât tempt me if I were you, lass.
Her cheeks flushed, but she only leaned back in the saddle, humming again like nothing had happened. Still, Hoseaâs pulse hadnât steadied. The words âyoung lady, lass, troubleâ heâd only meant them as playful, but the way her lips curved at them, the way her eyes lingered just a little too long, told him she liked them. Maybe more than she should. He cleared his throat, focusing on the trail.
âNot much farther now. Thought you might like a quieter place to practice.
Bonnieâs voice softened, affectionate now, her teasing tucked away.
âSilver Fox, Iâd like any place so long as youâre the one takinâ me there.
Hosea didnât answer, couldnât. His chest ached with it, words piling up unspoken. She deserved youth, strength, a man with years to give. Not him. And yet she rode beside him, calling him Silver Fox, darlinâ... naming him like he belonged to her. And God help him, he wanted to.
Theyâd stopped in a dusty little town for supplies. Nothing grand, just a trading post and a watering trough, a saloon humming lazy in the mid-afternoon. Bonnie had slipped off her mare, leading it toward the hitching post, braid falling forward as she tightened the reins. Hosea swung down slower, joints creaking, eyes scanning out of old habit. Thatâs when the voice slurred from the saloon porch:
âWell ainât she a pretty thing.
Hoseaâs back went rigid before he even turned. A broad-shouldered man, drunk by the look of him, leaning against the post with a grin too wide. His eyes dragged over Bonnieâs frame in her shirt and suspenders, her trousers cut to fit her better than any manâs.
âShe yours, old man? âThe stranger barked, smirk wideningâ Hell, donât tell me thatâs your daughter. Shame to waste a gal like that.
Bonnieâs cheeks flushed crimson, not with modesty, but fury. Her mouth opened sharp, ready to bite back, but Hoseaâs hand lifted in the smallest gesture. Not now, Little Fox. He stepped forward, calm, steady, voice smooth as a blade sliding from its sheath.
âSon, you best sober your tongue before it cuts your throat.
The man snorted, swaggering a step closer.
âWhat, you gonna teach me a lesson, old man?
Bonnieâs green eyes narrowed, fire dancing in them as she edged nearer Hosea, but he didnât so much as blink. He stood tall, shoulders square despite the years, silver hair catching the sun.
âYouâve no idea who youâre talkinâ to.
The stranger faltered, eyes flicking from Hoseaâs calm gaze to Bonnieâs wicked little grin, then back. For a moment, he seemed to sober, realizing maybe this wasnât the harmless old man he thought. He spat, muttered something under his breath, and stumbled back toward the saloon, the fight bleeding out of him. Bonnie tilted her head, lips curling.
âSilver Fox, I think you just scared him clean sober.
Hosea finally let out a breath, turning to check herâhands steady on her arms, eyes sharper than theyâd been in years.
âYou all right, Clover?
She smiled up at him, fierce and tender at once.
âBetterân all right. Never seen anyone put a man in his place so fast. âShe paused, teasing softâ Not bad for my old man.
His jaw clenched, the words landing deep, heavy. Not bad for her old man. Sheâd meant it as a joke, he knew, but oh, it burned. Burned and warmed and scared him all at once.
The horsesâ hooves drummed soft against the dirt road as they left the town behind, the clap of saloon doors and drunken laughter fading into the trees. Bonnie shifted in her saddle, patting the small parcel tied to her bag: a little tin soldier for Jack, painted red and blue. She looked pleased with herself, that bright fox-grin lighting her whole face. But Hosea? Hosea was quiet. Too quiet. His jaw was set, eyes forward, hands tight on the reins. Bonnie chewed her lip, then leaned toward him just enough that her braid brushed his shoulder.
âYou ainât sulkinâ, are you?
He flicked his gaze at her, sharp, then back to the trail.
âNot sulkinâ, Clover. âMm-hm... âShe smiled sly, green eyes glintingâ You didnât like that fella thinkinâ I was your daughter, huh? Thought you might shoot him right there.
Hoseaâs mouth tightened.
âMan was a fool. âThat ainât an answer, âShe sing-songed, tilting her headâ Wouldnât be the worst thing, yâknow. Beinâ mistaken for my old man.
She dragged the words out, sweet as honey, waiting for the spark. And oh, she got it. His jaw flexed, a muscle twitching in his cheek, knuckles whitening on the reins. He didnât look at her, couldnât, not with her laughing like that: low, playful... kittenish.
âLass, âHe said at last, his voice dipped low, velvet edged with steelâ You keep on like that, youâll find yourself in more trouble than you can handle.
Bonnie shivered at the way he said it, thighs tightening around her saddle. God, that voice. She smirked, leaning closer.
âTrouble? I thought I was your Clover. âYouâre both, âHe muttered, breath catchingâ God help me, youâre both.
For a moment the trail went quiet but for the creak of saddles, the jingle of tack. Bonnie hummed, soft, pleased, fingers toying with the ribbon on Jackâs parcel. Sheâd gotten under his skin, and she knew it. And Hosea⌠Hosea felt it like a brand. That bastard in town hadnât known who he was, but Bonnie did. She knew exactly where to sink her teeth. And God, he was letting her.
By the time the sun had slipped high overhead, the trail widened into a clearing Hosea had tucked away in his mind years ago. A stream cut through the middle, water clear and quick over smooth stones, wildflowers crowding the banks in soft purples and yellows. The grass was long, soft-looking, dappled by light that fell through the branches. It was the kind of place that made a man want to sit a while and forget he was hunted.
âHere we are âHosea said, sliding stiffly from his saddle. He tied his gelding to a low branch.
Bonnie swung down with her usual grace, boots sinking into the grass. She looked around, eyes wide, smile spreading slow and sweet.
âWell, now⌠you do know how to treat a girl.
He snorted, busying himself with unpacking his kit.
âDonât get too romantic, Clover. Weâre here to hunt, remember?
But her laugh âthe light, lilting one that always slipped between her wordsâ chipped straight through him. She stepped close, brushing his shoulder as she bent to untie her bag.
âHunt, sure. But donât mean I canât enjoy myself.
He dared a glance at her. Sunlight caught in her braid, freckles bright, eyes alive as she crouched and pulled out the small block of wood sheâd brought. She held it up with a grin, green eyes dancing.
âYou promised me a lesson, Professor âShe said, the word dripping from her tongue in that playful way that already had his throat tightâ. Donât tell me you forgot.
Hosea froze, then laughed low, shaky. Lord, she knew exactly what she was doing.
âDidnât forget, Little Fox. Just hopinâ you might. âNever âShe plopped onto the log near the stream, patting the spot beside her with mock impatienceâ Now, you teach me how to make a horse... or Iâll tell Jack youâre a liar.
He shook his head, muttering something about her being trouble, but he sat. Too close, of course, close enough to smell her, to feel the warmth rolling off her. He put the knife in her hand, steadying it with his own, guiding the blade into the wood. And just like that, the tension surged. Her fingers trembled under his, not from fear but from awareness. His palms were broad, steady, calloused, swallowing hers whole as he angled the knife, shaving curls of wood. She leaned into him without hesitation, her braid brushing his cheek, her breath grazing his ear.
âLike this? âShe whispered, turning her head so her lips nearly brushed his jaw.
Hosea swallowed hard.
âThatâs right, Clover. Let the blade do the work. Easy.
But it wasnât easy. Not with her so close, with her voice low and soft, with every deliberate use of Professor wrapping tight around him. His pulse drummed in his temples, and the last thing he looked at was the block of wood. He was looking at her, only her, and she was looking right back, eyes bright, mouth curved, as if she knew exactly how far gone he was.
Bonnie
His hands swallowed hers: steady, calloused, warm. She wasnât even looking at the knife anymore. She was looking at the way his fingers curved around her own, guiding, teaching, as if the world wasnât on fire and she wasnât aching to kiss him.
God, his hands.
Sheâd thought about them more times than sheâd admit: how they smoothed Jackâs hair, mended a coat, carved out a horse from nothing. Hands that had lived more life than most men sheâd ever met. Hands she wanted on her, in her, holding her like she was something precious. She called him Professor because she loved how it made him twitch, how his voice roughened just a little, how the corners of his mouth tightened. She called him Silver Fox because thatâs what he was: wise, sharp, handsome in a way no one could touch. And Old Man? That one was hers too, playful, teasing, but behind it was the truth that he wasnât old to her. Not at all.
Her heart hammered as she tilted her head, catching his profile in the light. He looked carved from the mountain itself, strong even under the lines that age and sickness had left. He thought she didnât see. How he rubbed his chest when the cough threatened, how his eyes sometimes lingered on Arthur like he was giving her away without her knowing. But she saw. She saw everything. And she loved him anyway. If she kissed him now... if she just tipped her chin up, pressed her mouth to his... heâd taste like smoke and mint and years of stolen wisdom. And she wanted it so badly her chest hurt.
Hosea
She was too close. Much too close. Her braid brushed his cheek, her breath warmed his ear, her laughter still rang in his bones. God above, what was he doing, sitting here letting her lean into him, letting her hands rest in his like they belonged there? She deserved more. Younger. Stronger. Arthur. That thought gnawed him raw. Arthur would give her years, a family, a life not haunted by the cough that stole Hoseaâs nights. He should set her free, should steer her toward something better, brighter.
But she called him Fox, Clover, darlinâ. Her voice softened just for him, teased just for him. And when she looked at him âreally lookedâ he felt younger than he had in decades. He felt like a man again, not a relic waiting for his lungs to give out. And Lord forgive him, he wanted her. Wanted her laughter spilling against his mouth, wanted her hips rolling under his hands, wanted to bury his face in her neck and breathe her in until there was nothing left of him but her.
But he couldnât.
He wouldnât.
If he touched her now, if he took what he wanted, he might ruin her. And she was the one thing he couldnât ruin.
His grip tightened over hers, not from the knife, but from the fight raging in him. To do right by her, or to give in to the hunger clawing at his chest. She shifted slightly, just enough that her temple brushed his jaw. And Hosea Matthews had never been closer to breaking.
Bonnieâs tongue peeked out at the corner of her mouth as she dragged the blade carefully down the grain. Hoseaâs hand stayed steady over hers, correcting the angle, guiding the pressure. Little curls of pale wood scattered onto her trousers, clinging to her knee.
âThere, âHe murmured, low, gravel-smoothâ Thatâs the way. Youâll have a horse in no time.
She smiled, triumphant, lifting the block to inspect the beginnings of a muzzle.
âNot half bad for a student, hm, Professor?
The way she said it, it wasnât teasing now, not really. It was soft, warm, her green eyes bright with pride as she tipped her chin up to look at him. Too close. So close. Hoseaâs breath caught. Her freckles, her mouth, the faint rise of color in her cheeks... he could have leaned down, kissed her, tasted her laugh. God, he wanted to. But he was a fool, and fools ruined things. He pulled back just slightly, clearing his throat, hand withdrawing from hers before he forgot himself.
âThatâs enough lesson for today, Little Fox. Donât want you cuttinâ your thumb off tryinâ to impress me.
Her smile lingered, though her eyes searched his, curious at the sudden space heâd put between them. For a heartbeat she thought he might⌠but no. He was Hosea Matthews, wise old fox, and heâd never let himself slip so easily. Bonnie tucked a strand of hair back, lips curling again, though this time with a touch of mischief.
âIâd never let you down, Silver Fox. You ought to know that by now.
He almost said it back "you never could, Clover", but instead he pushed up to his feet, dusting his palms.
âYou hungry? We ought to eat somethinâ before we think on go hunting.
She grinned, springing up with that wild-cat ease.
âAlways. But only if youâre the one cookinâ. You know I like your stew better than anyoneâs.
Hosea shook his head, chuckling low, grateful for the excuse to turn to the fire instead of the way her eyes still lingered on him. He could feel them âsoft, steady, knowingâ and Bonnie, gathering kindling with a bounce in her step, thought only one thing: he could delay, deflect, deny all he wanted. But sheâd seen the way he looked at her just now, that heartbeat of temptation he couldnât quite hide. It was only a matter of time.
Bonnie crouched by her saddlebag, tugging out a small wrapped bundle.
âLucky for you, I came prepared âShe unwrapped the cloth, showing a neat hunk of salted venison, packed tight with a sprig of dried thyme tucked insideâ Borrowed it off Pearson when he wasnât lookinâ. Told him I needed it for âpractice.â
Hosea barked a laugh, shaking his head as he knelt by the fire.
âPractice, huh? You mean eatinâ well without the rest of camp sniffinâ after us like hounds.
She grinned, handing it over.
âExactly.
He set about slicing it, mixing it into the small pot he carried with a handful of beans and root vegetables heâd bartered for in town that morning. A simple stew, nothing fancy, but in Hoseaâs hands, it always came out rich, filling, comforting. Bonnie settled cross-legged nearby, chin in her hands, watching him work with a softness she didnât bother hiding.
âYou always think ahead âShe said, voice lilting with that admiration that cut right through himâ Never hungry with you around.
His chest tightened, though he kept stirring slow, eyes on the pot.
âSomebody has to keep you troublemakers alive.
She smirked, tilting her head.
âOld man like you should let the rest of us do the work. âOld man, âHe repeated, glancing at her sidelong. The corner of his mouth curved as he leaned in just enough to let his voice drop into that honey-smooth drawlâ Careful, young lady. Might make me prove Iâve still got teeth.
Bonnieâs breath hitched, pulse skipping. God, when he said young lady like that⌠She looked down quick, biting her lip, but the grin still slipped free.
âYouâre a wicked one, Old Fox.
Hosea chuckled, settling back as the stew began to bubble, though inside he wasnât laughing at all. Because every word, every look, every stolen grin from her made him ache, and it was getting harder and harder to pretend he didnât want her.
The stew smelled rich by the time Hosea ladled it into two tin bowls, steam curling in the cool mountain air. He handed one to Bonnie, who beamed like heâd just given her treasure.
âYou spoil me âShe said, already digging in.
Hosea settled across from her, his own bowl balanced on his knee.
âDonât flatter me, darlinâ. Just stew.
But Lord above, watching her eat... it undid him. She didnât pick at it like some lady in a parlor, all dainty manners and rehearsed grace. No, Bonnie scooped up big mouthfuls, lips closing around the spoon with a soft hum of pleasure that shot right through his chest.
âMmm âShe sighed after the first bite, eyes closing brieflyâ Thatâs delicious.
Hosea nearly dropped his spoon. She licked a drop from her lower lip, utterly unconscious of the way his pulse kicked. Then her fingers âLord, her fingersâ pinched a bit of potato that had slipped, popping it into her mouth before licking the broth off her thumb. Hosea gripped his knee, shifting on the blanket. Jesus, she was just eating. Just eating. And still, his body betrayed him, heat pooling low, his cock swelling against the confines of his trousers. Bonnie looked up mid-bite, green eyes bright, a little broth glistening at the corner of her mouth.
âYouâre not eatinâ.
He cleared his throat, forcing his spoon into the stew.
âStarinâ at you, Iâll never get a bite down.
Her grin spread slow, teasing, but not cruel. She slurped another mouthful, licking the spoon clean with a satisfied little hum.
âThen donât stare âShe said, and winked.
He coughed, spoon rattling against his bowl, trying to think of anything but the wet sound of her mouth, the pink of her tongue. Guilt coiled sharp in his gut. She was just Bonnie âhungry, happy, carefreeâ and he was a damned fool, sitting here with half a mind to spill himself like a boy at his first brothel. But when she sucked a spot of broth from her knuckle with a soft, pleased noise, Hosea bit the inside of his cheek so hard it stung. Because what he imagined wasnât her knuckle at all.
Bonnie ate like someone whoâd grown up hungry and learned not to waste a bite. Not messy ânever thatâ but eager, unashamed, with a kind of confidence that was all her own. A fox at the table, quick, clever, savoring every scrap. Hosea tried to focus on his own bowl, but every sound she made tugged at him: the little hums of satisfaction, the scrape of her spoon against the tin, the soft sigh as she swallowed. It wasnât deliberate, wasnât coy. That was what killed him. She was just eating, and yet his cock pressed painfully against his fly, stiff and throbbing like a man decades younger.
She licked her lips clean after a long spoonful, catching a drop with the tip of her tongue. His throat went dry. He thought of her at Jackâs age, probably shoving down food at a rough wooden table, brothers laughing, no one teaching her to eat like a lady because there was no room for that kind of foolishness. That was her: raised tough, raised honest. She tipped the bowl back to sip the last of the broth, a soft satisfied âMmm,â escaping as she lowered it. Then, grinning, she ran her tongue along each finger, sucking the taste clean with a little pop of her lips. Hoseaâs stomach clenched. God, help him. He gripped the edge of his bowl until his knuckles whitened, staring hard into what stew remained. When she finally set her empty tin aside, she flopped back onto the blanket with a sigh, hands on her stomach.
âThat was perfect âShe said, tilting her head toward him with a smile that could have lit the whole mountainâ. Best stew I ever had. You always take care of me, Silver Fox.
His heart twisted. She said it so easy, so grateful, not knowing what it did to him. He forced a chuckle, even as guilt burned hot in his chest.
âYou flatter me, Clover. Nothinâ but meat and beans.
But when her laugh rang out, bright and careless, Hosea knew the truth: he was already in too deep. Too far gone. And the way she licked her lips just now, oblivious to the fire it sparked in him, would haunt him for the rest of the day.
The fire burned low, crackling lazily in the midday quiet. Birds chattered somewhere in the trees, the mountain breeze soft and warm. Bonnie stretched out on her side, hand tucked beneath her cheek, green eyes fluttering heavy after the meal.
âMm, âShe sighed, half to herselfâ. That stewâs gone and done me in.
Hosea leaned back on his elbows, watching her shift to get comfortable on the blanket. Her braid slid forward across her shoulder, freckles kissed golden by the light. She yawned, quick and kitten-like, then settled with a content smile.
âYou close your eyes a spell, âHe said, voice lowâ Weâll hunt after. No rush.
She hummed, not even bothering to argue, and within minutes her breathing had evened out, lashes fanned against her cheeks. Bonnie Ray Fischer, outlaw, survivor, wild little fox, sleeping easy in front of him like sheâd never known a reason to be afraid. Hoseaâs chest ached. He turned his gaze toward the stream, forcing himself to breathe deep. But it was no use. His eyes found her again and again: the curve of her hip under those damn trousers, the looseness of her suspenders slipping down one arm, the way her lips parted softly in sleep. He swallowed hard, shifting against the pressure still lingering in his trousers. What kind of man let himself think of her like this? His Little Fox. Too young for him, too good. She deserved Arthur... hell, anyone else. Not some broken-down old conman with lungs that rattled on cold mornings and hands that shook more than they used to.
He rubbed at his face, leaning forward, elbows on his knees. Guilt burned hot in his chest, but beneath it, something deeper pressed in: love. The kind heâd thought was done with him after Bessie. The kind that terrified him because it wasnât just desire, wasnât just her body he wanted, it was her. Bonnie murmured in her sleep then, lips curling faintly, a tiny sound that couldâve been laughter if it had been louder. Hosea smiled despite himself, heart twisting, and whispered under his breath:
âYouâll be the death of me, Clover.
She didnât stir. The mountain held its peace. And Hosea sat there, torn clean through between the part of him that wanted to wake her with a kiss and the part that swore heâd never forgive himself if he did.
It was past midday. Bonnie stirred with a soft groan, stretching her arms above her head like a cat, her shirt pulling just a little tight across her chest.
âMm⌠Lord, Silver Fox, I didnât mean to sleep half the day away.
Hosea chuckled, though his throat was dry.
âWasnât half the day. Just a nap. Needed it, by the look of you.
She rolled onto her back, blinking up at the sky before turning her face toward him. That smile spread slow across her lips, the one that always hit him square in the chest. She pushed up on her elbows, braid sliding over her shoulder, and leaned close enough for him to smell the warmth of sleep on her skin. Then, quick as a dart, she pressed a kiss against his cheek.
âThere âShe said softly, eyes dancingâ For takinâ such good care of me.
Hosea froze. Heâd had these before. Bonnieâs way of showing gratitude: quick pecks, always brushed off as daughterly affection, as innocent as her hand on his arm when she laughed. Heâd told himself they meant nothing more. But this one lingered. The corner of her mouth ghosted just near the edge of his own, close enough that he swore he felt the faintest warmth of her breath as she drew back. And the look in her eyes... it wasnât a daughterâs gratitude. Not entirely. His heart thudded, and he cleared his throat, covering the moment by getting to his feet.
âWell, Clover, if youâre finished sleepinâ, we best go scare up some dinner for later.
Bonnie grinned wider, hopping up with her usual quick grace.
âProfessorâs lessons, part two? âProfessorâs lessons, âHe echoed, shaking his head, trying not to smile too much.
But as she slung her rifle over her shoulder and sauntered ahead toward the trees, Hosea pressed his hand to the spot on his cheek where her lips had been, and muttered under his breath:
âDamn fool old man.
The woods had gone quiet in that way Hosea loved: the hush before game revealed itself. Shafts of sunlight dappled through leaves, dust motes swirling as Bonnie crouched low beside him, rifle braced. Her braid slipped forward across her chest as she narrowed those sharp green eyes at the clearing ahead.
âDeer, âShe whispered, voice husky, like the trees themselves carried her soundâ. Two does. There.
Hosea followed her line of sight and nodded. Sheâd spotted them true. His chest swelled, pride cutting through the ache in his lungs.
âGood eye, Little Fox.
Her smile flickered quick before she focused again, bringing the rifle to her shoulder. She steadied it, finger poised on the trigger, but the angle was off, too high. Without thinking, Hosea slid in closer, his chest brushing her back as he wrapped his hand lightly over hers.
âNot like that, âHe murmured, voice low against her earâ. Breathe with it. Let the sight drop with your breath, not your arm.
Bonnie went still beneath his touch, pulse quickening where his palm rested warm over her knuckles. She nodded faintly, then inhaled, exhaled, her body softening in time with his. The barrel steadied.
âThere âHe whispered. Now youâve got it.
She squeezed the trigger. The crack echoed, the doe fell. The other bounded into the brush, but Bonnie was already lowering her rifle, eyes shining as she turned up at him with a grin.
âDid you see that? âShe beamed, cheeks flushedâ Dropped her clean!
Hosea shouldâve been looking at the deer. Instead, he was staring at Bonnie: bright and alive, green eyes blazing with triumph, lips parted in exhilaration. She looked like freedom itself.
âProfessor Matthews, âShe teased, catching the look in his eyesâ you make one hell of a teacher.
He cleared his throat, stepping back too fast, his hands falling away.
âAll you needed was the right guidance.
But she saw it, she felt it. The way his chest had pressed hers, the warmth of his hand over hers. She licked her lips unconsciously, excitement still running hot in her blood, and Hosea swore his knees went weak.
âLetâs fetch her âHe said quickly, moving ahead before he could think better of it.
Bonnie followed, still smiling, but softer now. They moved into the clearing, boots quiet on the damp earth. The doe lay in the grass, breath gone, body still warm. Bonnie knelt beside her, rifle tucked against her shoulder, eyes a little too bright for a kill sheâd made clean. Hosea watched as she reached out, small hand stroking once along the deerâs flank before settling over her eyes.
âIâm sorry, girl âShe murmured, almost too soft for him to hearâ. But we gotta eat.
She slid her hand down, gently closing the doeâs eyes. Hosea stilled. Bonnie glanced up, caught his gaze, and flushed a little.
âPa always made me do it. Said it was about respect. âHer voice dropped, almost shyâ Donât tell the others. Theyâd laugh.
Something in Hoseaâs chest went tight, sharp. He crouched beside her, resting a steadying hand on her shoulder.
âThey wouldnât laugh, Clover. And if they did, theyâre fools.
Her lips curved, soft and small.
âYou donât think itâs silly?
He shook his head.
âNo, sweetheart. I think it shows youâve got more heart than most people I ever knew. Donât lose that.
Her throat bobbed, eyes shining in a way that had nothing to do with the deer. For a moment, she just looked at him, green on gold, like he was the only thing anchoring her there. And Hosea âLord help himâ wanted to kiss her right then, kiss her for being so good in a world that had tried so hard to ruin her. But he didnât. He couldnât. Instead, he gave her shoulder a squeeze, then pulled back with a rough breath.
âCome on, Little Fox. Letâs get her dressed before the sun goes.
She smirked at that, the spell broken, though her cheeks stayed a little pink as she set to work. And Hosea, knife in hand, thought: God forgive me, but Iâm already hers.
The doe was strung on a pole between them, its weight dragging at their shoulders, boots crunching through pine needles as they made their way back toward camp. The sun had swung high now, warm and golden, making the sweat bead at Hoseaâs brow. Bonnie puffed out a breath, her cheeks flushed from the effort, though her grin hadnât dimmed a bit.
âLord, sheâs heavier than she looked. You think Arthur wouldâve carried her himself, showinâ off those pretty-boy arms?
Hosea snorted, shifting his grip on the pole.
âArthur wouldâve carried her, all right, but heâd have been complaininâ about it the whole damn way.
Bonnie laughed, bright and wild.
âTrue enough. Though he does like to play the strong, silent typeââtil you poke him just right.
Hosea smirked sidelong.
âAnd you do poke him just right, donât you?
Her eyes sparkled, teeth flashing.
âSomeoneâs got to. Canât let him brood himself into the grave.
They walked a few more steps in easy silence, the weight between them swaying. Then Bonnie, voice softer now:
âArthurâs good. Heâs been good to me. Taught me near everything about horses. Sometimes I think he donât even realize how much.
Hoseaâs chest tightened, just a little. He forced his tone light.
âArthurâs always had more sense than he lets on. He likes you, Clover. You know that.
She tilted her head at him, curious.
âAnd Dutch?
That one made Hoseaâs mouth twist.
âDutch likes everybody⌠in his way. You? Youâre special to him, sure. You light up something in that black heart of his. But Dutch loves what he sees in people. Arthur, now... Arthur just loves.
Bonnie was quiet for a while after that, chewing on his words. Then she grinned again, swinging her braid back over her shoulder.
âAnd what about you, Old Man? What do you see in me?
Hosea nearly stumbled. He huffed a laugh, buying himself a moment.
âI see trouble, Clover. Trouble with a sharp tongue and quicker eyes.
She beamed at that, pleased as could be, and let the silence fall again, though the air between them hummed hotter than the sun. The trail had narrowed, roots twisting across damp earth where last nightâs rain had left the ground slick. Hosea kept steady footing, years of careful steps guiding him, but Bonnie, light on her feet though she was, hit the wrong patch.
âWoah! âHer boot slid, arms flailing, and down she went with a wet smack, straight into the mudâ Dammit!
She sat up sputtering, hair falling loose from her braid, shirt and trousers smeared brown, the seat of her pants caked thick. Hosea barked a laugh before he could stop himself, leaning on the pole that held the deer.
âWell, well. Looks like the mighty huntressâs got herself tangled in her own forest.
Bonnie shot him a glare, though her lips twitched.
âDonât you dare laugh, Old Fox. âOh, too late for that, Clover. âHe grinned, shaking his head, stepping over to offer her his handâ. Câmon, up you get.
She took it, her grip firm, but instead of pulling herself up clean, she yanked him hard enough that his boots slipped in the muck too. Hosea cursed under his breath as his knee sank into the mud beside her. Bonnie threw her head back and laughed, full-throated and wicked.
âHa! Thatâll teach you to laugh at me.
Hosea groaned, brushing at his knee with a rueful smile.
âLittle fox with her tricks. Youâre not supposed to hunt your teacher, young lady.
She leaned close, green eyes sparkling, lips still curved from her laughter.
âMaybe I like catchinâ you off guard, Professor.
The air stilled between them then, her breath close, her clothes mussed, freckles glowing against her flushed cheeks. Hosea swallowed hard, every nerve in him alight. He cleared his throat, tugging her the rest of the way upright, steadying her by the waist longer than he shouldâve.
âWeâll find the stream up ahead. Wash this mess off.
Bonnie smirked, wiping a streak of mud across his sleeve on purpose. He chuckled, shaking his head, though his thumb lingered just a second more on her hip before he let go.
The river ran clear and cold, the kind of mountain stream that bit the skin but left it fresh. Bonnie crouched at the bank, wringing muddy water from her shirt, her braid falling forward as she scrubbed hard at the fabric. Her trousers floated in the current nearby, tethered to a rock.
âLord above, âShe mutteredâ never thought huntinâ deer would mean near drowninâ myself in laundry.â
From where he sat on a smooth boulder, Hosea chuckled low, cleaning mud from his boots with a stick.
âThatâs what you get for wrestlinâ the ground. River donât care for pride, Clover.
She wrung the shirt out again, water streaming down her arms, droplets catching on her freckled skin. Then she glanced back at him, lips quirking.
âProblem is⌠I canât exactly go marchinâ back into camp like this.
Hoseaâs gaze flicked over her: bare skin beneath the chemise clinging damp to her, outlines of her form showing clearer than heâd like to admit. He tore his eyes away, clearing his throat, and dug into his pack.
âHere âHe tossed a bundle her way.
Bonnie caught it, brows arched. She unfolded a clean cotton shirt âHoseaâs, worn soft with ageâ and a pair of his spare trousers, cinch rope coiled atop.
âYou thought of everything, didnât you? âShe teased, holding up the shirt, smiling wide. âExperience, lass âHe said, keeping his tone dry though his pulse was hammeringâ. Iâve learned trouble follows me, so I plan ahead.
Bonnie grinned brighter, then ducked behind a cluster of rocks to change. Hosea turned his eyes firmly to the water, forcing himself to focus on the ripple of current, the chatter of birds overhead. But when she stepped back out, swimming in his clothes, he nearly lost his breath. The shirt hung loose, sleeves rolled high but still too long, collar open at her throat. The trousers were tied clumsily at the waist with rope, cuffs rolled up above her boots. And yet âsomehowâ she looked more herself than ever. Feminine without meaning to be, wild without trying. His scent clung to her now, his fabric brushing her skin. Bonnie tugged at the shirt, wrinkling her nose.
âSmells like you âShe said, but her smile softenedâ Not a bad thing.
Hosea swallowed, biting back a reply that wouldâve betrayed far too much.
âYouâll do fine till camp. Donât go stretchinâ my shirt out.
She laughed, spinning once with her arms wide, the too-big fabric billowing around her.
âOld Fox, admit it, I look better in your clothes than you do.
He shook his head, chuckling, but inside? He thought she was damn right. By the time they made it back to their little clearing, the sun was sinking low, drenching the peaks in molten orange and laying long blue shadows across the grass. The firepit theyâd left smoldering earlier still held a glow; Hosea knelt to stir it back to life while Bonnie dropped the bundles of venison nearby.
Her hair was half dry now, loose strands curling around her face, and she still wore his shirt and trousers. The fabric hung awkward and oversized, but against her figure it somehow looked deliberate, almost sinful. Every time she moved, the scent of his clothes wrapped around her, clinging to her skin. Bonnie stretched with a sigh, arms high, shirt riding up just enough to show a strip of her waist.
âThatâs better, âShe said, green eyes catching the firelight as she sank cross-legged onto the blanketâ. Nothinâ like workinâ up an appetite.
Hosea chuckled low, settling beside her with a slow shake of his head.
âYouâve been eatinâ near all day, sweetheart. Iâd think I starved you at camp. âYou do âShe smirked, licking her lips just to tease himâ. Besides, food tastes better when you make it.
The words landed warm and heavy. He busied himself with carving strips of venison, but his eyes kept darting to her: bare toes curling into the blanket, damp braid brushing her collar, his shirt collar hanging open at her throat. She leaned back on her hands, watching the sun melt into the horizon.
âItâs pretty out here, Old Fox. Quiet. Almost feels like the world forgot us.
Hoseaâs chest tightened at that, the longing in her tone.
âWorld could stand to forget us a while âHe said, voice rough.
Her gaze slid to him, soft and shining in the dusk.
âWouldnât mind if it did. Long as Iâve got company like yours.
He swallowed hard, knife stalling against the meat.
âSay things like that, man might start thinkinâ you mean it.
Bonnie tilted her head, a mischievous curve at her lips.
âWhat if I do?
The fire cracked between them, bright and hot, as the sun slipped behind the ridge and left them alone with shadows and the scent of woodsmoke. Hosea stared into the flames a long moment, fighting the storm inside him. Sheâs too good for you, old man. Too good by half. And yet, when she shifted closer, the blanket dipping under her weight, he couldnât move away.
The fire was steady now, flames licking bright as Hosea âbarefootâ propped a skillet over the heat and laid strips of venison to sizzle. The smell rose thick and savory, fat spitting into the flames. Hosea focused on the workâsteady hands, practiced rhythmâanything to keep his mind from wandering to the girl in his clothes. Bonnie, meanwhile, fetched the pail of clean water sheâd hauled earlier and set it down by the blanket. Without a word, she tugged his boots gently toward her lap.
âWhat are you up to now, Clover? âCanât have you sittinâ by the fire lookinâ like some raggedy old coot âShe dipped a cloth into the cool water and wrung it out, leaning close to scrub the mud from the leatherâ Man like you oughta look sharp.
Hosea chuckled, though his throat was dry.
âBootsâll only get dirty again tomorrow. âThen Iâll clean âem again âShe glanced up at him through her lashes, grin curling playfulâ That bother you, Professor?
The word professor hit him low in the gut again, but he forced a smile, shaking his head.
âBother me? No, sweetheart. Just not used to beinâ fussed over.
She hummed at that, bent over his boots with her braid slipping forward, damp strands brushing her cheek. Careful, deliberate strokes worked the mud away until the leather shone again. Hoseaâs hands stilled on the skillet handle, watching her with a heaviness in his chest. Domestic. Thatâs what it felt like. Too much like a wife tending her husband while supper cooked. A picture heâd locked away years ago, now painted fresh before his eyes. Bonnie glanced up again, catching the look he didnât mean to show. Her smile softened, less playful now, more tender. She wrung the cloth again, voice quiet.
âYou spoil me, Iâll spoil you right back.
The fire popped, filling the silence. Hosea cleared his throat, turning back to the venison with shaking restraint.
The dinner was quiet, but not because of awkwardness, quite the opposite in fact. The fire burned low, a steady glow painting the clearing in amber. Crickets droned, an owl called somewhere high in the trees, and the stream nearby whispered over stone. His boots were propped by the fire to dry, her trousers and shirt strung on a low branch where the last heat of the flames might chase away the damp. Hosea leaned back on one elbow, pipe between his lips, smoke curling up in lazy ribbons. His silver hair caught the light, his eyes half-shadowed. Across the fire, Bonnie sat cross-legged, chin in her hand, green eyes fixed on him with a weight that made his chest tight. She didnât look away when he caught her staring.
âWhat is it, Clover? âHe asked, soft, steady.
For a long moment, she just breathed, firelight flickering across her freckles. Then her voice came, quiet but certain.
âBessie was a lucky woman.
The words landed heavy. Hoseaâs pipe stilled in his hand. He glanced at her sharply, but she held his gaze. Bonnie swallowed, voice trembling just enough to betray her.
âI just⌠I think about it sometimes. The way you speak of her. The way you still carry her. Thatâs love. Real love. Not the kind that hurts. Not lies, or fists, or some bastard runninâ off with another woman. Just⌠true love âHer throat worked. She looked down at her hands, fingers worrying the edge of the blanketâ I wish... Lord, Hosea... I wish my husband had loved me half as true as you loved her.
The silence that followed was thick, broken only by the fireâs hiss and pop. Hoseaâs heart twisted, sharp and cruel. He felt every wrinkle in his skin, every hollow breath in his lungs. She deserved a man her age, strong and whole, not some broken old fox whoâd already lived his story. And yet, he wanted to reach across the flames, take her hand, tell her she was wrong. Tell her she was loved, right here, right now. But he only drew a slow breath, setting the pipe aside, and patted her blanket, placed next to his, for her to come closer. Bonnie hesitated for a moment, but finally gave in and sat down next to him by the fire.
âShe was the best part of me, âHe said quietlyâ. Better than I deserved. And truth is, darlinâ⌠most men donât know how to love like that. They ainât patient enough. Ainât humble enough.
Bonnieâs eyes flicked up, wet at the corners, shining green in the firelight.
âBut you are.
Hoseaâs jaw clenched, his chest aching with the force of it. He wanted to tell her the truth, that she was his Bessie all over again, the second chance heâd never dreamed of. That sheâd already slipped her claws into the part of him he thought was long dead. But he bit it back, because she deserved more than his confession under the trees. Instead, he leaned forward, voice low, steady, almost breaking.
âYouâre stronger than you think, Little Fox. Stronger than me. Stronger than any man who ever hurt you âHis hand hovered near hers, close enough to feel the warmthâ Donât you ever doubt your worth.
Bonnie smiled through her tears, shaky but soft, and before she could stop herself, she leaned across the space between them and kissed his cheek. Not playful this time. Not teasing. A kiss that lingered, lips pressed long enough that his heart nearly gave out. When she pulled back, whispering, âGoodnight, Old Fox,â Hosea didnât trust himself to answer.
Shadows stretched long and thin, wrapping the clearing in stillness. Bonnie lay on her blanket, close enough that her shoulder almost brushed his, her face turned toward the fire. Her braid spilled across the wool, her green eyes catching the glow like gemstones. For a long while, neither spoke. The forest whispered around them, the night alive with quiet sound. Hoseaâs chest rose and fell slow, steadyâat least on the outside. Inside, his heart was a hammer. And then her voice came, small but steady, breaking the silence.
âI know you look at me like Iâm her.
Hosea froze. His lungs felt too small for the breath he dragged in. Bonnieâs gaze stayed fixed on the fire, not on him. Her voice trembled just enough to cut him deeper.
âThat hurts, Hosea. Because Iâm not her. I canât be. Iâm Bonnie. Just⌠just a girl who lost everythinâ, and somehow still has a little space in her small heart to fall in love again.
The words landed like a bullet straight to his chest. He turned his head slowly, staring at her profile in the firelight: the freckles across her cheek, the soft set of her mouth, the glimmer of unshed tears in her lashes.
âBonnie⌠âHis voice was rough, ragged. He didnât even know what he meant to say.
She finally turned, meeting his gaze. Her eyes shone fierce and wet, her lips trembling but brave.
âDonât love me âcause I remind you of her. Love me âcause Iâm me. Or donât at all.
The silence that followed was unbearable, heavy with fire and night and truth. Hosea felt the weight of it pressing into every bone, every wrinkle, every crack in his weary body.
She sees me. She sees all of me. And still, she stays.
He wanted to gather her into his arms, press his mouth to hers, swear heâd never let the world break her again. But he was terrified, terrified sheâd see the truth, terrified she wouldnât. So instead, his hand reached, slow and trembling, until his fingers brushed hers where they lay between their blankets. Just a touch, no more.
âI see you, Little Fox âHe whispered, voice breakingâ Not her. You. Always you.
Her breath caught, sharp and soft, and her fingers curled tight around his, clinging like a lifeline. The fire cracked low, painting her eyes molten green and gold. Her fingers were curled around his, tight, desperate, like she could anchor him to her with that single touch.
âI see you âShe whispered again, steadier this timeâ And I want you.
Hoseaâs breath shuddered. He shook his head faintly, pain and love carved deep across his face.
âBonnie, you donât know what youâre sayinâ. Iâm...
But she cut him off before the old doubts could spill. She turned, lifted her chin, and pressed her lips to his. It wasnât a hungry kiss, not yet. It was sure, deliberate, and so gentle it undid him completely. Her mouth was soft, warm, trembling a little, but fearless. She lingered there, pouring all the truth of her heart into that touch. When she pulled back, she stayed close, breath mingling with his, her voice barely more than a whisper.
âYouâre not too old. Youâre not too broken. Youâre my Fox⌠and I love you.
Hoseaâs eyes burned hot, his chest near breaking. For a moment he couldnât move, couldnât breathe, couldnât believe. Then, Hoseaâs hand tightened at her cheek, pulling her back in with a groan he couldnât cage. The kiss deepened, slow and desperate, the kind that stole the air right out of his lungs. She pressed closer, fingers sliding into his hair, tugging like she wanted him all to herself, and he let her, let himself drown in her.
âBonnie⌠âHe gasped against her mouth, half-plea, half-prayerâ You donât... âI do âShe cut him off, breathless, fierce, green eyes blazing in the firelightâ I want you. My Fox.
That undid him. Years of restraint, guilt, grief, they all burned away under her touch. He kissed her hard this time, hungry, hands framing her face, sliding down to her shoulders, her back, her waist. Every inch of her set his blood alight. She climbed onto his blanket, knees pressing to either side of his hips, her braid falling forward to brush his cheek. She kissed him with laughter tangled in her breath, little kittenish sounds spilling between them, as if joy itself had set her aflame. Hoseaâs chest heaved, his hands trembling as they slid beneath the edge of his own shirt draped over her, palms meeting the soft, warm skin of her back.
âSweetheart, âHe groaned, breaking the kiss just long enough to press his forehead to hersâ Youâve no idea what youâre doinâ to me. âYes I do âShe whispered, lips brushing hisâ Iâve known for months.
And she kissed him again, surer this time, her tongue brushing his, her body pressing to him with all the love and hunger sheâd been hiding. Her lips were swollen from his kisses, her cheeks flushed, her braid falling loose as she straddled him in the firelight. She was smiling, laughing breathlessly, kittenish and wild, but when his hands began to tug at the hem of his shirt draped over her, that playfulness faltered into something softer: uncertainty flickering in her eyes. Hosea noticed it instantly. His hands slowed, gentled, trembling as he brushed her cheek.
âSweetheart, âHe whispered, voice hoarseâ we can stop. Just say the word.
But Bonnie shook her head, green eyes wide and fierce.
âNo⌠no, Fox. I want this. I want you.
His chest tightened, a sharp ache of love and disbelief. He nodded, lips brushing her temple.
âThen let me see you.
Carefully, reverently, he unbuttoned his shirt and opened it as if it were a book in which he would die to get lost, baring her to the glow of the fire. She shifted nervously under his gaze, arms twitching as if she might cross them over her chest, but she didnât. She let him look. And oh, he looked. Her breasts werenât the full curves of saloon girls, no, but to Hosea, they were perfect, soft and high, tipped with rose. His breath caught, his chest burning with awe and hunger both. His gaze trailed lower, and thereâtwo small moles just above her navel, like some secret constellation painted just for him. His heart stuttered.
âMy God... âHe murmured, reaching with a trembling hand to trace along her waistâ Bonnie⌠youâre beautiful.
She blushed, biting her lip.
âIâm not, not like the other women... âDonât you dare âHis voice cracked, rough and fierce. His hand came up to cup one breast, thumb brushing across its peak with aching careâ. Donât you ever compare yourself to them. Youâre⌠youâre perfect, Clover. Every inch of you. Youâll break me, girl.
Her breath hitched, eyes shining, and she leaned down to kiss him again, soft at first, then deeper, emboldened by the way his hands trembled as they mapped her skin. Bonnieâs breath caught when Hoseaâs mouth left hers, trailing hot kisses down her throat, across the delicate line of her collarbone. His hands, steady now despite their tremor, framed her ribs as if she were carved from glass. Then he lowered his head. His lips closed over one soft breast, tongue circling slow, reverent, until her back arched and a startled little moan slipped from her mouth. He groaned low in his chest, the sound vibrating against her skin as he suckled gently, savoring her like a man starved.
âHosea⌠âShe gasped, fingers diving into his hair, tuggingâ Oh GodâŚ
He switched to the other breast, kissing it first, dragging his teeth lightly across her peak before soothing it with his tongue. Her hips rolled helplessly against him, and he hissed through his teeth at the hard throb in his trousers. She could feel it, pressed hot against her thigh, undeniable proof of what she did to him.
âListen to me, âHe rasped, lifting his head just enough to meet her dazed green eyes. His thumb stroked across her damp nipple, still teasing, still worshippingâ Youâre perfect. Do you feel what you do to me, Bonnie? Do you feel how hard I am for you?
Her blush deepened, but her lips curled into that sly, kittenish smile.
âMmhm⌠I feel it âShe rocked her hips deliberately, grinding against him, and he groaned raggedly, burying his face back against her chest like a man undone. âChrist almighty⌠âHe muttered, kissing, licking, worshipping every inch of her breasts as if he could drink her downâ Youâll kill me, Clover. Sweet, wicked girlâŚ
And Bonnie laughed then, a soft, breathless laugh between her moans, her fingers tugging his hair tighter. The sound made his cock jerk, made him harder still.
âStand up for me, sweetheart âHosea murmured, his voice low, steady, though his chest hammered like a young manâs.
Bonnieâs hands trembled as she pushed to her feet, the fire painting her skin gold, shadows flickering up her body. Hosea rose to his knees before her, fingers He working on his shirt off her shoulders, letting it fall to the floor, then hooking at the waistband of the trousers she wore âhis trousersâ loose around her hips but clinging enough to show the shape of her. He looked up at her, waiting, giving her that last chance to stop him. She nodded, biting her lip, braid slipping forward over one shoulder.
âGo on, Old Fox⌠take âem off.
Christ. He swallowed hard; his hands steady but his heart breaking into a gallop as he eased the fabric down her thighs. Inch by inch, the woman heâd been starving for was revealed to him, and when the trousers fell into the dirt, pooling at her ankles, Hosea forgot how to breathe. Bonnie stood before him utterly bare, every curve and line and scar bared to the firelight. Small breasts heâd already worshipped, a slim waist, hips that flared soft into strong thighs. The small dark triangle of dark hair at her sex drew his gaze low for only a moment before his eyes lifted again, because the sight of her scars caught him harder than anything. A pale line along her ribs. Faint marks on her forearms. Healed, but still there. Reminders of pain, of cruelty, of nights sheâd been broken instead of cherished.
âOh, darlinâ⌠âHis voice cracked, raw and reverent, hands trembling as they reached to trace the healed marks gently, like they were holyâ. Youâre⌠youâre so goddamn beautiful.
Bonnie shifted, self-conscious, trying to look away.
âTheyâre ugly. He⌠he made me ugly... âNo âHoseaâs voice sharpened, fierce. He caught her chin in his hand, made her look at him. His eyes burned, silver and fire all at onceâ He tried. But he failed. You hear me? These donât make you ugly. They make you yours. They make you strong. And Christ help me, Bonnie, they make you the most beautiful woman Iâve ever laid eyes on.
Her lip trembled, green eyes wet, and then she smiled âa small, breaking thingâ and whispered.
âLike Bessie?
The name cut through him, but he didnât flinch. His thumb brushed her jaw, his other hand sliding down her side, feeling every curve like he was mapping her into memory.
âI loved Bessie with all I had, âHe said softly, honestlyâ. But you, Little Fox⌠youâre fire and storm and grace all at once. Youâre mine now. If youâll have me.
Her answer was to step closer, pressing his hand flat against her belly, against those two little moles near her navel.
âAlways âShe whispered, and the heat in her voice nearly undid him.
Hosea bent forward then, pressing his lips reverently to those two tiny marks, kissing her belly like he was worshipping at an altar. His breath shuddered, tasting salt and heat and her.
âSweet girl⌠âHe murmured, kissing lower still, each inch pulling another groan from his chestâ. I donât deserve you.
She was still trembling under his mouth when she pushed gently at his shoulders, urging him back onto the blanket. Hosea looked up at her, hair mussed from her fingers, lips wet from her skin, chest heaving. She was flushed, naked in the firelight, green eyes shy but burning.
âHosea? âShe whispered, biting her lip, fingers tracing down his shirtfrontâ Can I⌠can I ride you?
The words nearly undid him. A groan tore from his throat, low and guttural, his hand clenching in the blanket.
âSweetheart⌠âHis voice was hoarse, brokenâ You donât know what youâre askinâ. âYes I doâShe leaned down, her lips brushing his ear, her breath hotâ I want to feel you. All of you. I want to see your face when I take you inside me. âGod almighty, âHe cursed, his control snapping like dry twigs. She smiled, soft but wicked, and tugged at his belt, her fingers clumsy but determined. He caught her hands, kissed her knuckles, groaned into her skinâ Youâll ruin me, Little Fox. âThen let me.
His head fell back, a laugh broken with desire spilling from his chest.
âChrist help me⌠yes. Yes, darlinâ. You can ride me.
With trembling hands, she worked his trousers open, freeing him, and her eyes widened at the sight. He was thick, heavy, flushed dark, the tip glistening. She swallowed hard, cheeks burning, lips parting.
âOh⌠âShe whispered, cheeks flushing crimson. âSweetheart? âHosea rasped, already undone just by her staring.
Her fingers curled around him again, tentative at first, then with more certainty as she stroked the length. He shuddered, his head tipping back, a groan tearing from his throat.
âGoddamn, BonnieâŚ
She chewed her lip, green eyes darting up to his.
âIâve thought about this, you know âShe whisperedâ So many times. What youâd feel like. What youâd taste like...
His eyes darkened, silver gone molten.
âDonât... donât tease me, Little Fox. âIâm not teasing âShe murmured, sliding off his lap and onto her knees before he could stop her. Her braid slipped over one shoulder as she settled between his thighs, still stroking him, watching his face as if she wanted to memorize every twitch, every breath. âBonnie⌠âHis voice broke on her name, one hand lifting helplessly, then tangling in her hair when her lips brushed his tipâ Thatâs it, sweetheart. Touch me⌠good girl.
She kissed him softly, reverently, like sheâd kissed his scars before. Then her tongue flicked out, a kittenish lap that made his hips jerk. She laughed breathlessly against him, then parted her lips and took him into her mouth.
âOh, fuck, Christ almighty... âHosea swore, his head falling back, his grip in her hair tighteningâ Sweetheart⌠oh, God.
She hummed around him, the vibration making his cock throb against her tongue. Slowly, she worked more of him into her mouth, her cheeks hollowing, her eyes fixed on his face. His jaw was clenched, chest heaving, every vein in his neck standing out as he fought for control.
âLittle Fox⌠âHe groaned, his hips betraying him with a shallow thrustâ I canât... God help me, youâll make me lose it...
She pulled back just enough to smile up at him, lips wet, green eyes mischievous.
âThatâs the point, Old Fox.
And before he could reply, she slid down again, deeper, taking him until his control shattered and his groans filled the quiet woods. Her mouth was heaven. No, hell, because it was undoing him, stripping him of decades of composure in minutes. Bonnieâs braid brushed his thigh as she worked him deeper, lips stretched, green eyes locked on his face like she was proud of the way he groaned.
âSweetheart⌠stop âHis voice cracked, desperate.
But she only hummed around him, the vibration shooting straight through him. His hips bucked, a rare loss of control, and he cursed, low and ragged.
âChrist, Little Fox⌠if you keep...
Her tongue swirled, her cheeks hollowed, and his control snapped. With a guttural groan he yanked gently at her braid, pulling her off him with a wet pop.
âEnoughâHe rasped, his chest heaving, cock glistening with her spit. His hand trembled as he cupped her flushed faceâ Not like this. Not the first time.
Bonnie licked her swollen lips, still holding him in her hand, her smile wicked and sweet all at once.
âBut you taste so good âShe whispered, kitten-softâ I think Iâm already addicted.
His groan turned into a broken laugh, his forehead pressing to hers.
âYouâll kill me, lass. âMaybe âShe teased, brushing her thumb over his slick tip just to watch him shudderâ But youâd die happy, wouldnât you, Old Fox?
He growled then, kissing her hard, silencing the words with the taste of his own salt still on her tongue. His hands gripped her waist, pulling her up, pulling her close, as if by sheer will he could erase the hunger in her smirk.
âNo more games âHe murmured against her mouth, voice hoarseâ I need all of you, Bonnie. Every damn inch.
Bonnie straddled him again, her thighs braced on either side of his hips, the firelight spilling gold across her bare skin. Her hands slid over his chest, down to his stomach, pausing nervously as she lifted herself, guiding him to her entrance.
âWait! âShe whispered, biting her lipâ What if Iâm too heavy for you? I donât⌠I donât want to hurt you.
Her voice was soft, almost guilty, as though she feared she might break him. Hoseaâs laugh was low, rough, broken by desire. He reached up, brushing his thumb along her jaw, shaking his head in disbelief.
âToo heavy? âHis grin tilted sharp and fond all at onceâ Darlinâ, the only thing heavy about this is the ache Iâve got for you. Youâre light as a feather compared to the kind of trouble Iâve carried in my years.
Bonnie blushed but still bit her lip.
âI just⌠I donât want to hurt you.
That earned her a raised brow and a sly grin. Hosea slid one hand up her side, brushing his thumb beneath her breast, steady and affectionate.
âBonnie Ray Fischer, if you think for one second you could hurt me like this, you donât know me half as well as I thought. Now quit worryinâ, and show an old fox what kind of ride heâs got left in him.
That undid her. She lowered herself slowly, the tip pressing against her, then parting her, slick and tight. Inch by inch she sank down, her nails digging into his chest, her breath catching in her throat. He leaned up, surprising her with a heated kiss that left no room for doubt. His grip on her hips was firm, guiding her, and she realized then, he wasnât fragile at all. He was hungry, determined, and very much alive under her. Her laugh came out nervous, breathless, but as she lowered herself onto him, the last of her doubts melted away under the way he looked at her, not as if she were too much, but as if she were everything. Bonnie lowered herself onto him slowly, still nervous, still testing. Hosea hissed sharply through his teeth, his grip on her hips tightening.
âOhh⌠âShe moaned, shuddering as she took him fully inside her.
Hoseaâs jaw clenched, his head tipping back as a guttural sound tore out of him. His grip on her hips tightened, almost bruising.
âSweet Lord⌠BonnieâŚ
She rocked experimentally, the stretch almost too much, but the sight of him beneath her âthe way his silver hair caught the firelight, the raw hunger in his eyesâ spurred her on. She rolled her hips again, slower this time, and he groaned, his whole body trembling.
âGod almighty⌠âHe groaned, head falling back against the pillow for a momentâ And youâre worried about hurtinâ me? Darlinâ, youâre killinâ me in the best damn way.
Her laugh was breathless, cheeks pink, and she gave the smallest roll of her hips, uncertain but curious. Hoseaâs answering growl, low and rough, made her shiver.
âThere you go⌠âHis voice was a rasp, guiding, coaxing. His hands squeezed her hips, encouraging her to move againâ. Thatâs it. Ride me, Bonnie. Donât you dare hold back âcause of my age. You think Iâm too old to take it? Prove me wrong.
She whimpered, leaning forward, and started a rhythm, timid at first, then stronger as she felt the way his body responded. Hoseaâs eyes locked on her breasts as they bounced with her movements, and he reached up to cup one, thumb circling her nipple.
âYouâre not too heavy, darlinâ, âHe panted, pulling her down for a kissâ Youâre perfect... fuck... you feel perfect. Old man like me doesnât deserve this, but Iâll take every second of it.
Bonnie moaned into his mouth, her insecurities drowned beneath the way he praised her, beneath the urgency of his hands gripping her, guiding her, needing her. And when she finally began to ride him with confidence, the bed creaking beneath them, Hoseaâs laugh turned into a deep, broken groan.
âThatâs it, my Little Fox⌠show me how wild you can beâŚ
Bonnie hovered over him, her thighs trembling with both nerves and arousal as she finally sank down onto him. Her breath hitched halfway, her lips parting in surprise.
âOh... Hosea⌠âShe gasped, nails digging lightly into his chest as she froze for a moment. Her green eyes went wide, stunned, cheeks flushed crimsonâ Itâs⌠itâs bigâŚ
Hoseaâs head fell back with a guttural groan, his fingers biting into her hips at her words. A rough laugh slipped past his lips, somewhere between pride and disbelief.
âBig, hm? âHis voice was hoarse, smug but affectionateâ Darlinâ, youâre gonna make an old manâs ego swell worse than his cockâŚ
Bonnie whimpered, shifting carefully to take more of him, her body adjusting to the stretch. Her hand slid up his thin chest, clutching at him for balance.
âI-I didnât expect⌠âShe whispered, flustered, biting her lip as she tried again to ease herself downâ God, Hosea... it feels so fullâŚ
His eyes darkened at the sound of her voice, at the way she trembled above him. He cupped her cheek, thumb stroking gently even as his other hand clamped hard on her hip to steady her.
âYouâre takinâ me so damn well, honey âHe rasped, breath hot against her lipsâ Donât you worry about my age, donât you worry about your weight. You just focus on feelinâ every inch of me inside you.
Her moan at that nearly undid him. She sank down fully, shuddering, her body clenching around him as she gasped again, overwhelmed.
âSo full, âShe repeated in a broken whisper, like it was the only word she could manage.
Hoseaâs laugh was shaky, guttural, his teeth sinking into the curve of her shoulder.
âRide it, Bonnie⌠let me feel you lose yourself on me. Show me youâre not afraid of how much I fill you.
Bonnie trembled as she finally sank all the way down, Hosea buried deep inside her. The world seemed to vanish: the cicadas, the horses tied nearby, the quiet hum of camp somewhere in the distance... none of it mattered. Only him. Only this. Sheâd imagined it countless nights since meeting him, curled in her bedroll with shameful hands, wondering what it would feel like to give herself to him. But this⌠this was nothing like her lonely dreams. This was fire, heat, love. Her breath hitched, green eyes fluttering shut as she whispered, half in awe, half in disbelief.
âOh, Hosea⌠itâs so much better than I ever dreamed.
His heart lurched at that, his chest tightening beneath her palms. She didnât even realize what sheâd admitted, but he did. All those nights sheâd wanted him, all that longing sheâd buried... it showed in her trembling voice. He stroked her hip with a trembling hand, his other palm cupping the back of her neck to keep her close.
âDarlinâ⌠youâve thought about this? âHe rasped, his voice breaking into a groan as she shifted and clenched around himâ. All those nights⌠and you were dreaminâ of me?
Bonnie nodded, biting her lip hard, ashamed but too desperate to lie. Her voice was ragged, confessional.
âSince the first time I saw you smile at me. I⌠I couldnât help it. I wanted you. Needed you. And now⌠now Iâve got you inside me, and itâs⌠itâs so much more, Hosea. So much more than I ever knew it could be.
The words struck him deeper than any bullet ever could. His hands gripped her tighter, thin but strong, pulling her down harder onto his cock until she whimpered. His voice came rough, dark, overcome.
âGod, Bonnie⌠my Little Fox. You donât know what youâre doinâ to me.
She gasped, nails dragging across his chest, then steadied herself against him and began to move, slow at first, experimental, letting her body adjust. Her ex-husband had never touched her like this, never made her feel full, worshiped, desired. This was not duty. This was hers. Her eyes flew open, green fire locking on his storm-grey gaze.
âIt feels⌠it feels like love âShe breathed, voice shaking as her thighs burned and she sank down on him againâ Iâve never felt that before, Hosea.
That undid him. His hand shot to the back of her head, pulling her down into a searing kiss, desperate and consuming. Between their mouths, their gasps, their muffled cries, he groaned against her lips.
âThen let me show you, darlinâ⌠let me show you how a man loves a woman. Ride me, Bonnie. Ride your Silver Fox like youâve been dreaminâ of.
And she did. She moved against him with growing confidence, each drop of her hips pulling a guttural moan from his chest. Her breasts bounced with every rise and fall, her hair falling into her face, sweat beading along her collarbone as she lost herself in the rhythm. Hosea was undone beneath her, every ounce of his control shattered as he gripped her hips and guided her faster, harder, with a strength that belied his years. His voice was hoarse, broken with praise and disbelief.
âBeautiful girl⌠my good girl⌠takinâ me so perfect⌠God above, you feel like you were made for me.
Bonnie cried out at his words, at the heat of him, at the raw passion in his eyes. She rode him like sheâd dreamed for so long, but this... this was real. Every thrust, every kiss, every whispered praise from her silver fox proved it.
âBonnie⌠âHe rasped, and his voice cracked. His hands, already trembling, slid from her hips to her waist, then up her spine, pulling her against him.
He couldnât let her ride him anymore. Not like this. Not when the truth was spilling out of both of them. He needed her closer, needed her all. With a sudden, desperate strength, he rolled them, laying her back on the blankets, the firelight painting her skin in gold and shadow. She gasped, legs falling open for him without hesitation, green eyes wide with surprise and raw desire. His weight pressed her into the earth, not crushing, but claiming. He kissed down her throat, over her breasts again, licking and sucking until she whimpered, then lower, kissing those two little moles by her navel as if they were holy.
âI canât... âHis voice broke, low and rough, as if he was confessing a sinâ I canât just lie back and let you do all the work, darlinâ. Not when Iâve wanted this as much as you. Iâve dreamed about you, Bonnie⌠more nights than I can count. And now youâre here, beneath me, and it feels too damned real.
Bonnie trembled under him, her hands in his hair, her thighs spreading wider.
âHosea⌠âShe whispered, half a plea, half worship of her own.
He positioned himself, tip sliding against her wetness, and for a moment he paused, looking down at her, green eyes blazing, her lips parted, chest heaving. His Bonnie. His Clover.
âSweetheart, âHe murmured, voice shakingâ You sure?
She lifted her chin, cupped his face with her hand.
âIâve never been more sure of anything.
That undid him. He lowered himself, pressing his forehead to hers, then kissed her slow, deep, hungry, pouring years of longing into the lock of their mouths. His hips shifted and he slid into her again, this time facing her, holding her, every inch of him trembling as her body welcomed him back in. Bonnie gasped into his kiss, arms winding tight around his shoulders. She could feel every ragged breath, every shudder, every bit of restraint he was trying to hold onto. His voice was hoarse, whispering against her lips as he began to move.
âGod above, youâre perfect. My Little Fox⌠you feel like heaven.
Every thrust was slow but deep, measured, worshipful, his gaze never leaving hers. Hosea couldnât look away. He needed to see the way her lips parted, the way her eyes fluttered, the way her body arched for him. He wanted to burn the sight into memory, into bone. Bonnie moaned beneath him, her nails dragging along his back, her thighs clenching around his waist.
âHosea⌠oh, itâs so much better... so much better than my dreams âShe cried, her voice raw.
His control shattered. His rhythm grew desperate, hips rocking harder, deeper, though still tender, still loving. His lips brushed her temple, her cheek, her mouth between ragged breaths.
âMine, Bonnie⌠mine. Youâve been in my head for too long, darlinâ. Now Iâve got you, Iâm not lettinâ go.
Bonnieâs head tipped back, her braid coming undone against the blankets, her mouth falling open on a cry as he sank deeper into her. Her arms wrapped around his shoulders at first, clutching, but then slid down to his hands, fumbling until she caught them.
âHosea âShe gasped, eyes bright with more than firelightâ. Oh God, I⌠Itâs the first timeâŚfirst time Iâve ever felt this loved⌠âHer voice broke, tears glimmering on her lashes.
Her confession tore through him like a bullet and healed him all the same. He lifted his head, eyes glassy, chest heaving. For a heartbeat his thrusts falteredânot from lack of strength, but from the sheer force of emotion crashing over him.
âSweet girl âHe rasped, voice breaking as he cupped her face in his hand, brushing her tears away with his thumb even as his hips drove into her againâ. Donât cry, darlinâ⌠unless itâs for me. Unless itâs âcause Iâm makinâ you feel good.
Her tears glistened in the moonlight as she smiled through them, pulling him back down to kiss her fiercely.
âIt is. Itâs all for you, old man. My Silver Fox.
A groan tore out of him, half agony, half devotion. He slid his fingers between hers, lacing them tight, pressing her hands into the blankets above her head as he leaned down to kiss her.
âYouâll undo me, Little Fox âHe whispered against her lips, voice raw, shakingâ God help me, youâll undo me.
His hips rocked deeper, slower, savoring her shudder, her gasp, the way her legs clung around him.
She wants me, he thought wildly, disbelieving, reverent. Me. A sick old bastard, and sheâs crying with joy to have me inside her. He pressed his forehead to hers, thrusting steady, measured, as if carving this truth into his bones.
âTake me, Old Fox âShe breathed, eyes blazing through her tearsâ Make me yours.
And with their fingers bound tight, his heart hammering against hers, Hosea moved with her, every stroke both prayer and sin, desperate to prove that she was his and he was hers. His thrusts grew deeper, slow at first, then angled until he found that spot inside her that made her back arch and her nails clutch at the blankets. She gasped, crying out his name, and he nearly lost his mind at the sound.
âThere, âHe breathed, adjusting his hips, watching her face transform into pleasure so sharp it bordered on painâ There, sweetheart⌠you feel that?
Her eyes fluttered, mouth trembling open after her orgasm.
âY-yes... My Old Fox. My man...
The words gutted him. He thrust deep once more, shuddering, but at the very last second he tore himself out with a growl of frustration, spilling hot across her belly, streaking her soft skin and the faint moles by her navel.
âBonnie... âHis voice was wrecked, hoarse, almost pleading as thick ropes of seed covered her stomach, dripping down her side. He stroked himself through the last spurts, gasping her name like a prayerâ God⌠my girl⌠my Little Fox⌠Never seen a thing more beautiful in all my years.
She arched under him, moaning as if even being marked by him this way was bliss enough. Her hand drifted down, smearing some of him across her skin as if to keep him there, to make it part of her. And then, as the fire crackled and their breaths slowed, tears welled up in her bright green eyes. Not sad, no, overwhelming. They spilled down her temples into her hair as she laughed through a sob, covering her mouth with one trembling hand. Hoseaâs heart lurched.
âSweetheart? Did I hurt you?
She shook her head hard, messy braid falling loose around her face.
âNo⌠no. I just... âHer voice brokeâ Nobodyâs ever⌠made love to me like that.
He cupped her face instantly, thumbs brushing her wet cheeks, his own chest aching with the sight.
âOh, Bonnie⌠âHis lips pressed to her forehead, soft and reverentâ Thatâs because no one ever loved you like I do.
Her sob turned into a chuckle, shaky and sweet, as she leaned up to kiss him.
âI believe you âShe whispered against his lipsâ Youâre my man.
Hosea closed his eyes, pressing their foreheads together, feeling the weight of her words brand themselves into him deeper than any scar. He didnât deserve it, not her, not this, but God help him, he wasnât letting go.
âGood girl⌠my Little Fox⌠my darlinâ⌠âHis words wrapped around her as surely as his arms did, turning every filthy thrust into something sacred.
His seed still glistened across her stomach, the firelight making her look like some wild goddess, messy and radiant, tears still wet on her cheeks. He kissed her again, softer this time, promising himself heâd never let her feel unloved again.
Bonnie lay trembling beneath him, her cheeks damp with tears and flushed with heat. Her body was aliveâevery nerve singing, every inch of her skin so sensitive it felt like even the air could undo her. Her chest rose and fell in shaky gasps, little whimpers escaping her lips as if her body didnât know how to calm down. Hosea noticed it instantly. The ragged edge of his breathing softened, and his movements stilled. His hand, big and calloused, slid gently from her cheek down to her throat, not to grip, but to cradle, thumb caressing her racing pulse.
âEasy now, Little Fox âHe murmured, his voice low and soothing, though he was still shaking himselfâ Youâre safe. Youâre with me. Thatâs all that matters.
Her lips quivered into a fragile smile.
âI⌠I canât stop crying âShe whispered, almost embarrassed, brushing at her wet cheeks.
Hosea kissed the tears instead, slow and reverent.
âThen cry. Let me have your tears. Every one of âem means I did somethinâ right âHe shifted, careful not to pull out yet, wanting to keep her grounded in the closeness, in the warmth of him. His silver hair brushed against her temple as he whisperedâ Youâre so sensitive, darlinâ. Thatâs my fault. I pushed you too far.
She shook her head, clutching at his shoulders.
âNo. Please donât stop saying those things. Donât stop looking at me like that. Iâve never⌠âHer voice broke again, overwhelmedâ âŚnever felt this way before.
His heart ached, full to bursting. He kissed her lips, then her jaw, then trailed down her neck, his touch feather-light now, no roughness left in him.
âYou hear me, Bonnie? âHe whispered against her skinâ You are loved. You are wanted. By me. Always.
Her tears came harder at that, but softer too, no longer sharp sobs, but trembling release. She nodded, burying her face against his neck, clinging to him as if letting go would break her. Hosea rocked her gently, staying deep inside, holding her like something precious. His hands stroked her back, her hair, his voice a steady hum in her ear.
âShh⌠thatâs my good girl. Just breathe. Just let me hold you. Iâve got you. Always will.
And when she finally calmed, when her tears ebbed into soft hiccups, Hosea pulled back Hosea and reached for the cloth and the small basin of water theyâd brought, wrung it out, and returned to her side.
âLook at you âHe murmured softly smiling at her tender and proudat the same timeâ Strongest little fox Iâve ever known. And still the sweetest thing Iâve ever had in my arms.
Bonnie blinked at him through tear-heavy lashes as he carefully cleaned her belly, wiping away every trace of himself, though a wicked little part of him wanted to leave it there forever, to see her glisten with his seed. He caught himself lingering over those moles near her navel, brushing them with the edge of the cloth, then his fingers, as though memorizing them. When he was done, he pressed a kiss to her stomach, reverent, as though heâd just touched something holy. Then he set the cloth aside, slipped under the blanket with her, and pulled her against his chest. Her cheek pressed right over his heart, still hammering far too fast for a man his age. He stroked her hair back, braid messy and half-unraveled now, and let his hand rest on her shoulder, keeping her close.
For a long time, neither of them spoke. The fire cracked. The forest hummed. His lungs pulled in shaky breaths he hoped she couldnât hear. Finally, Hosea whispered into her hair, so soft it was almost a prayer.
âI canât believe youâre here. With me. That youâd⌠choose me.
Her hand slid up to his chest, pressing gently over his heart.
âI didnât choose you tonight âShe said with a sleepy little smileâ I chose you months ago. Maybe the day you found me.
He shut his eyes tight, his throat burning. He had to bite the inside of his cheek to keep from crying outright. Instead, he kissed her crown, whispering.
âMy Clover. My miracle.
Bonnie burrowed closer, her lips brushing his neck.
âMy man, âShe said again, quietly but firmly, as though sealing it.
Hosea exhaled shakily, his arms tightening around her. He knew he was on borrowed time, hell, he could feel it in every ragged cough, every ache in his chest, but tonight, with her small body curled against him, he could almost believe heâd been given a second life. And he swore to God, with every bit of outlaw blood in his veins, that he would spend what little time he had left loving her so fully sheâd never doubt a single word he said. Bonnieâs voice was soft, husky with sleep, her lashes fluttering heavy over her green eyes.
 âYou know⌠my husband never held me like this.
Hosea froze, the words cutting through him sharper than any knife. He tilted his head down toward her, but she kept her gaze lowered, fingers absentmindedly clutching at his shirt.
âHe hardly ever slept at home âShe continued, her voice breaking just slightlyâ And when he did, he never⌠cuddled. Not once. I always wondered if he was with someone else, in some other bed.
Her admission was so quiet, so raw, Hosea felt his throat close up. His hand, resting on her back, began to move in gentle circles, trying to soothe her, though inside he was in shambles. How could any man âany manâ ignore her warmth, her tenderness? How could he not treasure the way she glowed, even after everything, even with her scars? She had endured grief, loss, cruelty, and yet here she was⌠still able to press close, to give her trust, to find comfort in anotherâs arms. Still innocent in her need for something so simple.
âBonnie⌠âHis voice cracked, and he cleared his throat, pressing his lips to her hairlineâ You deserved better. You deserve the world, little fox. âHe exhaled heavily, a deep ache in his chest, and hugged her closer, so close he almost crushed her against himâ And I swear to you, darlinâ⌠as long as Iâve got breath in me, youâll never go without this again.
She tilted her head, finally daring to meet his eyes, and in them he saw a flicker of relief, of trust, of quiet gratitude.
âPromise? âShe whispered, timid and fragile, as if she thought even now he might vanish. âPromise âHis answer came quick, firm, unwavering. He kissed her gently, slow and reverent, then settled them back into the blanket, his arms still wrapped around her.
She gave him the sound that unstrung him completely: purring, low and content, as she curled tighter into him, small and warm like the happiest little creature, safe in her den. Hoseaâs throat worked as he held her, staring into the fire. Heâd dreamt this so many times, too many times for a man whoâd sworn heâd never cross that line. Dreamt of her weight against him, her breath on his chest, her hands trusting enough to cling to him even in sleep. And now here she was, real, fragile, radiant.
His hand stroked slow down her back, over the dip of her waist, resting against the curve of her hip. He could feel her heartbeat, quick but steady, matching the faint rumble of her purr. How could anyone⌠His mind hissed it like a curse. How could any man lay hands on her in cruelty? How could any bastard cheat, betray, beat the girl who laughed like sunlight and fought like fire? No woman deserved that, but her? His Clover? His miracle? Rage and love twisted together inside him, sharp and unbearable. God, if that bastard were still alive, Hosea wouldâve shot him dead and danced on his grave. And yet, in the same breath, he thanked every twisted turn of fate that had led her here, into his arms. He kissed her temple, long and lingering, and whispered against her hair.
âSleep, Little Fox. Iâve got you.
Bonnie hummed, the purr softening into a sigh as her body went limp with trust, her hand still fisted in the fabric of his shirt like she never meant to let go. Hosea stared into the dark beyond the firelight, holding her closer, and thought: God forgive me, but I donât deserve her. And God help me, because Iâll never let her go.
Hosea lay there in the dark, the fire dying to embers, her breath steady and warm against his chest. His arm was curled around her waist, thumb brushing absent little circles over her hipbone, and though his body begged for sleep, his mind refused to still. It wasnât discomfort keeping him awakeâno, Christ, he hadnât felt this comfortable in⌠he couldnât even remember when. Not since Bessieâs arms, not since her hair tickled his jaw and her laugh warmed the bed. But even then, there was something different about this. This wasnât memory or habit. This was new. Alive.
What he couldnât stop thinking about âwhat wouldnât let him goâ was the way Bonnie had worshipped him. The way she sank to her knees like it wasnât sin but devotion, the way she looked up at him as though he wasnât old or worn, but handsome, desirable. Her lips around him, her eyes on himâit had stripped him down bare. Heâd felt desired, truly desired, for the first time since Bessie. Every tumble in the years after had been nothing but empty releaseâcoin tossed on the nightstand, some painted saloon girl saying pretty things she didnât mean. Heâd known it, felt it in his bones. Empty words, empty eyes. But Bonnieâhis Little Foxâevery gasp, every praise, every âmy manâ came from the marrow of her soul. He saw it in her eyes. She meant it. She adored him.
And he knew, heâd known it from the start, hadnât he? The moment she smiled up at him that first day, trembling but alive, when he coaxed her down from that stairwell. The first time she called him Silver Fox, teasing, but not cruel. The night she slipped into his blanket instead of Arthurâs or Charlesâ, choosing the old manâs arms over any of the young blood in camp. It hit him hard now, with her curled so small against him. There would be no looking at another woman. No saloon girl, no passing flirt, no shadow of Bessieâs ghost. There was only her. He bent and kissed her hair, breathing her in, wild grass and campfire smoke.
âGod bless you, Little Fox âHe whispered, voice breaking as his chest tightenedâ You deserve the whole damn world.
She stirred a little at his voice, nuzzled deeper against him, then sighed like she was the happiest creature alive. And Hosea⌠Hosea knew in that moment that heâd tear heaven and hell apart to keep her that way.
The birds were up before them, chatter spilling through the branches overhead, and the fire had burned down to ash and the faintest glow of coals. Hosea had stoked it once in the night, careful not to wake her, but now he just lay there, one arm under his head, the other stretched across Bonnieâs waist. She was still asleep, and Christ, he wanted to hold the clock still. Her breath was soft, warm against his chest, her braid half unravelled so strands of hair curled across her cheek and lips. In the pale light her freckles were sharp as constellations, and the faintest smile tugged her mouth like she was dreaming something sweet.
Hosea couldnât remember the last time heâd woken this comfortable. He couldnât remember the last time he wanted to. Most mornings he roused before anyone else, brewed coffee, tended horses, planned the damn day. Duty. Habit. Survival. But now? Now he just watched. His gaze trailed the curve of her bare shoulder where the blanket slipped low, the smooth line of her collarbone, the soft swell of her breasts rising with every breath. His Little Fox. His Clover. He still couldnât believe it. That she was here. That she wanted him. His chest ached with it, so fierce it hurt. And then, without warning, her lashes fluttered. Green eyes blinked open, heavy with sleep, and found him staring. For a second she just looked at him âsoft, hazy, unguardedâ then the corner of her mouth curved into that sly, kittenish smile.
âWere you watching me, Old Fox?â her voice was husky, still tangled in dreams.
He cleared his throat, caught like a boy with his hand in the sugar tin.
âGuilty, âHe murmured, thumb brushing her hip beneath the blanketâ Couldnât help myself.
Bonnie stretched slow, catlike, pressing closer until her leg draped across his.
âMm... âShe purred, eyes glittering now, teasing but warmâ. Reckon I donât mind being watched⌠by you âShe tucked her face under his jaw, lips brushing his throat, and whisperedâ. Best morning I ever woke to.
Hosea shut his eyes, heart pounding like he was twenty again. And he thought, If this is sin, then damn me gladly. Bonnie shifted against him, stretching like a cat, and that sly smile curved higher when she felt the press of him under the blanket. Her green eyes glinted, mischief and tenderness all tangled together.
âWell now, âShe whispered, biting her lower lip like she was trying not to laughâ guess Iâm not the only one had sweet dreams.
Hosea groaned low in his chest, covering his face with one hand, as if that would hide the flush creeping into his cheeks.
âYouâre gonna be the death of me, Little Fox.
She giggled soft, a sound halfway between laughter and a moan, and slipped her hand over his wrist to pull his hand away so she could see him blush properly. Her touch was feather-light, but her gaze darted back down to that thick ridge tenting the blanket.
âMm. Donât look much like dying to me âShe teased, voice husky nowâ Looks more like livinâ.
He tried to muster some scolding, some restraint, but the heat of her pressed against him, her eyes on him... God, it was undoing.
âBehave, young lady âHe rasped, silver tongue failing him for once. âOr what, Mr. Matthews? âShe whispered, leaning close enough that her lips brushed his earâ Youâll teach me a lesson?
Her hand didnât move under the blanket. She didnât touch him. She just looked, lips parted in that wicked smile, savoring the way his chest rose faster, the way his eyes darkened. And Hosea, poor bastard, realized he was harder from her looking than from anything sheâd actually done.
He couldâve grabbed her hand. He couldâve rolled her beneath him, shown her exactly what she did to him. God knows he wanted to. The blanket was tight as a tent-pole between them, his cock straining against the thin fabric of his drawers, aching for her. But instead he caught her chin with two fingers, gentle but firm, and tilted her face up to meet his.
âYouâre playinâ a dangerous game, Clover âHe murmured, voice rough with restraintâ Man my age⌠you keep looking at me like that, youâre liable to break me clean in half.
She only grinned wider, all wicked innocence, green eyes glowing in the dawn light.
âThen Iâll just have to put you back together, wonât I?
That undid him. Hosea leaned in and kissed her: hungry, lingering, morning-slow but deep enough to make her whimper against his mouth. His thumb stroked her cheek, his other hand gripping her hip through the blanket, holding her close but not dragging her further. When they finally broke for breath, Bonnieâs lips were swollen, her smile dreamy. She pressed her forehead to his chest, still giggling softly. Hosea exhaled like heâd been holding his breath for years.
âChrist almighty, girl⌠what you do to me.
He lay back, staring at the smoke curling from the fire, and forced himself to breathe steady. She nestled against him, clearly pleased with herself, clearly not about to behave. His cock still throbbed under the blanket, but he wasnât about to let it rule the morning. Not their first morning. So, he rubbed her back, pressed another kiss to her temple, and whispered.
âGo on, troublemaker. Letâs have some coffee before you tempt me into sin right here in the dirt.
But his eyes betrayed him. Dark, hungry, flicking down to the blanket where sheâd noticed his arousal. She could see it plain as day: he wasnât done, not by a damn sight. He was just holding the leash tight. And Bonnie, mischievous kitten, curled against him and purred low in her throat, satisfied to know that leash was fraying fast. She didnât rush. She never did, not when it was something that mattered. She started with his face, pressing small, kittenish kisses to his cheekbones, the corner of his jaw, the lines by his eyes that deepened when he laughed.
âHandsome âShe whispered between kisses, her breath warm against his skin.
She moved to his mouth, brushing once, twice, before claiming him properly: slow, deep, lips moving like she wanted to taste every word heâd ever spoken. Her kisses wandered lower, down the column of his throat. She lingered there, mouth open, tongue flicking just enough to make him groan.
âMy Silver Fox âShe murmured, lips brushing the hollow where his pulse throbbedâ My man.
His chest heaved under her, the blanket slipping as she pushed it down, baring more of him to her mouth. She kissed the hollow of his collarbone, the wiry hair of his chest, the hard plane of muscle he carried even at his age.
âStronger than any young man âShe breathed, scattering kisses down the middle of himâ Smells so goodâŚ
Every word broke his restraint a little more, his fingers twitching at her hair but not pulling her back. He let her lead. Bonnie trailed kisses lower still, worship in every touch of her lips: his ribs, his stomach, the rough lines of scars earned over decades. And then, God help him, her lips brushed the band of his drawers, just the lightest tease. She looked up then, green eyes glowing like lantern-light, mouth curved in that tender, mischievous smile.
âLet me âShe whisperedâ Let me show you how much I love you.
Her fingers hooked his waistband, slow, deliberate, tugging the fabric down inch by inch. Hosea propped himself on his elbows, breath caught in his chest, watching her. The dawn light poured over her hair, glinting gold and chestnut, as though even the sun wanted to see what she was about to do. When she freed him, Hosea groaned low in his throat, shame and desire knotted tight in his gut.
âChrist, BonnieâŚ
She only smiled, reverent, eyes drinking him in like he was the most beautiful thing sheâd ever seen. Her lips parted with a soft intake of breath, cheeks flushed.
âGod... âShe whispered, voice trembling with awe and hungerâ So damn perfect.
And then âslowly, as though savouring the momentâ she bent her head and kissed him. Just the tip first, sweet and playful, like a promise. Hoseaâs hips jerked despite himself, a hiss breaking from between his teeth.
âEasy.... âShe teased, green eyes flicking up to meet hisâ Iâll take care of you, Old Fox.
Her lips slid lower, open now, tongue circling him, tasting him like sheâd waited her whole life for it. She moaned âsoft and kittenishâ like he was delicious, and the sound nearly undid him.
âSweet Jesus âHe rasped, head tipping back, one trembling hand fisting in her braid. He didnât guide her, didnât push, just held on, overwhelmed by the vision of her between his thighs. His Clover. His Little Fox. Worshipping him like he was worth it.
She worked him slow, careful, her mouth warm silk around him, every bob of her head punctuated with little hums of pleasure. She pulled back once, licking him with a long, deliberate stroke, and whispered against his length:
âMy man. My Silver Fox. Strong⌠beautiful⌠mine.
Hosea groaned ragged, his voice breaking. Heâd never been so undone, not in all his fifty-five years. Watching her, hearing her⌠God, it was pure sin, and he wouldâve gone to hell smiling if it meant this was his. He couldnât hold out any longer. Watching her like that, feeling her mouth worship him, hearing her purr his name like a prayer. It was too much. With a ragged groan he pulled her up, his hands firm but trembling as he guided her to lie on her side, back against his chest.
âEnough, Clover âHe rasped, voice rough and brokenâ Youâll ruin me if I let you.
She laughed breathlessly, lips swollen, green eyes glowing with pride at what sheâd done to him.
âMaybe thatâs what I want âShe teased, but she melted into his arms as he lined himself up against her, the thick head of him nudging at her slick entrance.
Hosea kissed her shoulder, her neck, his voice a whisper against her ear.
âYouâre so damn beautiful. My Little Fox⌠my good girl.
And then he slid into her from behind, slow, deep, inch by inch. Bonnie gasped, arching back into him, her hand flying to grip his arm tight where it wrapped around her belly.
âOhhh⌠my man⌠âShe moaned, tears pricking her eyes again from the sheer stretch, the fullness.
Hosea groaned low in her ear; forehead pressed to her temple.
âGod above⌠you feel like heaven. You were made for me.
They moved together gently at first, his hips rocking against her backside, his arm holding her flush to him so she could take every bit of him. His free hand slid up, cupping her breast, thumb brushing over the stiff peak until she whimpered.
âPerfect âHe breathed, kissing her jawâ Every inch of you, perfect. Donât you ever doubt that.
Bonnie keened softly, rolling her hips back, her voice breaking with each thrust.
âOh, Hosea⌠feels so good⌠you make me feel so goodâŚ
He changed the angle, pulling her thigh over his so he could drive deeper, and her cry nearly undid him. He buried his face in her hair, groaning.
âThatâs it, sweetheart, take me⌠thatâs my lassâŚ
The fire cracked low, their tangled blankets smelling of smoke and skin, her breath coming quicker with every deep stroke he gave her. Hosea had her leg hooked over his thigh now, spreading her open just enough to let him sink into her again and again, the wet sounds of their joining filling the quiet morning. Bonnie was gone, head thrown back into his shoulder, hair sticking to her damp cheeks. She moaned through her laughter, that kittenish sound that made him lose his rhythm every time.
âMmm.... oh, Hosea...feels so good... âSweetheart âHe rasped, voice breaking as he kissed the corner of her mouthâ youâre drivinâ me crazyâŚ
His hand worked her breast, his other hand pressing flat to her belly, feeling the way his cock filled her. He was losing control, his pace stuttering into rougher thrusts, groaning raggedly in her ear. She clutched his wrist, crying out when he drove a little deeper.
âGod, youâre... so big... âHer voice hitched, and then she gasped, her whole body shuddering against him as pleasure tore through her, soaking him with her release. She whimpered his name like a prayer, clinging to his hand like sheâd drown without him.
That was it. That was all it took.
Hosea groaned like heâd been gutted, pulling free at the last second with every ounce of strength left in him. His hand still held her belly as he spilled across it in hot, heavy pulses, streaking her soft skin, his seed dripping down to her navel.
âBonnie... Christ, Bonnie...
She whimpered at the heat of him, looking down through bleary eyes, watching his spend cover her belly. Then she turned her head to catch his mouth, kissing him hungrily even as he spilled the last of himself on her skin. When it was done, she giggled through her panting, her fingers slipping into the mess on her stomach and smearing it playfully.
âMy Old Fox made me a mess âShe teased, voice wrecked but mischievous, kissing his jaw.
Hosea groaned, utterly undone, clutching her to him.
âYouâll kill me, Clover. Christ, youâll kill me...
But God help him, with his seed glistening on her belly and her laughter tangled with her moans, heâd never wanted to live more.
He lingered a moment, chest heaving against her back, lips pressed to her shoulder. Then, with a quiet sigh, Hosea reached for the clean rag heâd left near the blankets âalways thinking ahead, always preparedâ and wiped her gently, slow and careful. She giggled when the cloth grazed her sensitive skin, smacked his chest with the back of her hand.
âQuit fussinâ, Old Fox âShe teased, though her voice was warm, fond. âYou hush âHe muttered, kissing her temple as he workedâ A manâs got his pride. Canât leave his girl in a mess.
That word âhisâ made her shiver, and he saw it. She tried to hide the smile by biting her lip, but the green of her eyes gave her away. Hosea set the rag aside, tucked her against him for a moment longer, then forced himself up.
âStay put, lass. Iâll get the fire goinâ.
She curled under the blanket, watching him with that same lazy smile sheâd worn after moaning his name into the dawn. Hosea stoked the coals, set the skillet, moved with the easy rhythm of a man whoâd cooked more breakfasts under the sky than he could count. Bacon hissed, bread toasted, and soon the camp filled with that rich smell.
Bonnie padded over, still wrapped in her blanket, hair a tangle, cheeks pink. She leaned on his shoulder as he plated the food, and when she stole a piece of bacon right from the pan, he gave her a sharp look that melted instantly into a smirk.
âHungry little fox âHe muttered. âMmm... âShe hummed around the bite, eyes glinting with mischiefâ Always hungry for you, professor.
His jaw clenched at that damned word, but he only slid her plate into her hands and sat beside her. They ate together in easy silence at first: her making those soft sounds he tried not to dwell on, him sipping coffee like it might steady the rush in his chest. And then Bonnie set her plate aside, curled her knees under her chin, and looked at him in that way, nothing playful, nothing teasing, just bare and earnest.
âFunny, isnât it? âShe murmuredâ Feels like every word we say now means somethinâ else. Nothinâ casual anymore.
Hosea felt that like a knife, sharp and true. He looked at her: her lips still glistening from the coffee, her freckles glowing in the morning light, his seed already a memory wiped clean, and he thought of all the years heâd wasted, all the nights heâd spent cold beside women who never touched his heart.
âYouâre right âHe said, voice low, almost reverentâ Nothinâ casual about you, Bonnie Ray. Nothinâ at all.
She beamed then, soft and wild all at once, and slid closer under the blanket to press herself against him. For once, Hosea didnât fight it. He wrapped her up, kissed her hair, and let himself believe âjust for this morningâ that maybe miracles did happen.
The horsesâ hooves thudded in rhythm on the dirt trail, the air warm now, carrying the scent of pine and dust. Bonnie rode a little ahead, sitting straight in the saddle, her braid swinging with each stride. Hosea watched her, his reins loose in his hands, heart heavier than heâd admit. She glanced back, that mischievous smile tugging at her lips.
âYouâre awful quiet, Silver Fox. Did I wear you out?
He gave her one of those long, squinting looks, all mock-serious, but the corner of his mouth betrayed him.
âLass, you keep talkinâ like that and Iâll find a way to remind you I ainât nearly as tired as I look.
She laughed, the sound echoing through the trees, bright and free. He loved that laugh, loved knowing now what it sounded like when it cracked apart into moans. He shook the thought off with a cough, tried to keep his eyes on the trail. For a while, they rode in easy silence, until Bonnie slowed her horse to fall in beside him. She fiddled with her reins, bit her lip, then finally said it:
âDo we⌠have to pretend?
Her voice was softer than usual, stripped of teasing. She didnât look at him, just down at her gloved hands, as if the question itself might vanish if she didnât meet his eyes. Hoseaâs throat tightened. Heâd known this was comingâhell, heâd asked himself the same a hundred times since dawn. He exhaled through his nose, slow, buying himself a second before answering.
âDepends what you mean, Clover âHe said gently.
She finally turned her face toward him, green eyes sharp but vulnerable.
âI mean back there. With the gang. Are we supposed to act like nothinâ happened? Like I didnât⌠âShe trailed off, cheeks warming, but forced the words out anywayâ âŚlike I didnât love you last night?
His chest squeezed tight. He wanted to reach across, take her hand, tell her no, never, not for a second should she think she had to hide her love. But Hosea Matthews was nothing if not cautious, and the weight of years sat heavy on him. He settled for meeting her gaze, voice low and serious.
âIâll never pretend with you, darlinâ. Not when itâs just us. But the rest of âem⌠âHe glanced ahead, jaw tightâ Theyâll talk. Theyâll judge. And I wonât have them makinâ you feel small for choosinâ me.â
Bonnieâs lips parted, surprise flashing in her eyes. Then she gave him a crooked, tender smile, almost a whisper.
âIâd choose you a thousand times, old man.
The words nearly unseated him. He had to look away, clear his throat, mask it with a dry chuckle.
âI might believe you, Little Fox.
She nudged her horse closer until her knee brushed his.
âYouâd better believe it, old man âShe teased softlyâ Or Iâll make you believe it again tonight.
Hosea groaned under his breath, shaking his head, but the grin he tried to hid was helpless.
The trail dipped, curving through the trees where the first hints of smoke from campfires laced the air. They were close now, too close. Hosea could already feel the weight of eyes, the pressure of voices, the suffocating presence of the gang. He shouldâve kept his distance. He shouldâve stayed steady in the saddle, played the wise old fox, kept his feelings wrapped tight in his chest. But then Bonnie looked at him: just a glance, soft and unguarded, her lips parted, the green of her eyes blazing in the afternoon light. And he broke. He leaned across the narrow space between their horses, caught her by the back of her neck, and kissed her. Harder than he meant to, needier, but God help him, he couldnât stop. She made a little noise against his mouth, surprised but melting, clutching at his coat with her reins tangled in her fingers. When he finally pulled back, breath ragged, her lips were kiss-bruised, eyes wide and bright.
âHosea⌠âShe whispered, and the way she said his name it was enough to undo him all over again. âIâm sorry, sweetheart âHe rasped, though his hand was still on her cheek, thumb brushing her skin like he couldnât let goâ I justâŚ
She shook her head quickly, cutting him off.
âDonât you dare apologize âHer horse shifted closer until their knees pressed. She leaned in, forehead to his, voice low and achingâ But what about tonight? Youâll be in your bedroll, Iâll be in mine⌠and Iâll feel so damn lonely.
The words gutted him. She wasnât teasing now. She meant it, every trembling syllable. Hosea closed his eyes, swallowed hard, tried to steady the storm in his chest.
âYou think I wonât feel the same? âHe murmuredâ That I wonât lie awake wishinâ you were in my arms?
Her lip quivered, just a hint, but she smiled through it.
âSo⌠what do we do, Mr. Matthews?
For once, Hosea Matthews had no answer. He kissed her again instead, softer this time, desperate and tender all at once. When he pulled back, camp was only a bend away. He straightened in his saddle, adjusted his hat, cleared his throat like nothing had happened. But Bonnie? She sat taller, chin high, freckles glowing, her smile secret and dangerous. Like sheâd just claimed him in front of the whole world, even if the world didnât know it yet.
âââââă NAVI ă
credits: white lace and bows divider by @uzmacchiato main m.list â§ arthur m.list â§ dutch m.list â§ hosea m.list â§ bonnie m.list

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ââââ Ý hosea matthews x bonnie ray (fem!oc)
a/n: ficlet linked to this post
wc: -1k warnings/tags: fluff & soft angst ⢠mention of death ⢠mention of past love (bessie)
The night was still except for the wind through the trees and the soft crackle of the dying fire. Hosea was half-reading one of his books when he noticed Bonnie staring into the flames instead of the pages sheâd been pretending to read.
âLittle Fox? âHe askedâ Whatâs got that head of yours spinning?
She blinked, coming back from far away, and shook her head.
âJust thinking again. About when you go...
He closed the book, set it aside.
âGo where? âWhen you die âShe said softlyâ Youâll find Bessie. I know you will. Youâll go to her and Iâll be here again, waitinâ for someone who ainât cominâ back. I donât wanna be alone again, Hosea. Please⌠wait for me. Donât abandon me.
Hoseaâs heart clenched. He reached across the space between them and took her hands: cool, trembling, familiar.
âBonnie âHe said, his voice rougher than he meant it to beâ I donât reckon thereâs a heaven that would take me if it meant leaving you behind. And if there is, Iâll wait at the gate until I see those green eyes. Thatâs a promise.
She tried to smile but a tear slipped free anyway. He wiped it away with his thumb.
âYouâve still got a whole lot of livinâ to do, Little Fox âHe murmuredâ More than me. You stay here, raise hell, keep them all in line. When your time comes⌠Iâll be there. Always.
She leaned forward then, resting her forehead against his chest. He wrapped his arms around her and felt the small shake of her breath, the warmth of her tears soaking into his shirt.
âOld Fox âShe whispered, voice muffledâ you promise? âI promise âHe said again, pressing a kiss to her hairâ You just keep runninâ, darlinâ. Iâll be right behind you when itâs time.
Her eyes filled, and she swallowed hard, shaking her head.
âThen you listen to me âShe said, trying to steady her voiceâ If I go first⌠Iâll wait for you. Youâll find me, Old Fox. Iâll be there. No matter how long it takes.
That undid him. His chest tightened, throat aching with something he couldnât name. He pulled her into him, arms wrapping around her as if he could anchor her to the earth.
âYou hear me? âShe whispered against his vestâ Iâll wait.
He pressed a kiss into her hair, breathing her in:smoke, pine, and something sweet that was only her.
âI hear you, Little Fox âHe murmuredâ But I ainât lettinâ you go first. Not if I can help it.
They stayed like that for a long while, the fire crackling low, the world holding its breath around them. And though neither spoke it aloud, both knew: if love could bridge the distance between life and death, theyâd never truly be apart.
âââââă NAVI ă
main m.list â§ arthur m.list â§ dutch m.list â§ hosea m.list â§ bonnie m.list
Waking up with Hosea must be the warmest thing in the world, full of affection, sweet words, holding you close to keep you warm and spoil you rotten.
I don't know if I got his face right, I haven't drawn in a long, long time.
Silver fox âĄ
(This is my very first time drawing Hosea, and I'm not sure if I got his face right.)





