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In the bustling charm of the 1930s, a young woman takes a job with the Moore family as a house helper and nannyâonly to discover that her duties may reach far beyond what she ever expected.
ONE | TWO | THREE | FOUR | FIVE | SIX | SEVEN | SEVEN.2 | EIGHT | NINE | TEN | ELEVEN | ELEVEN.TWO | TWELVE | THIRTEEN | FINALE
POV: You are a young lady in the 1930's who was hired by the Moore family to help around the house and be a nanny...but to your surprise, you may have to do more.
A/N: Okaaaay, I know I haven't wrote any fanfics in a while or just anything on Tumblr but I watched Sinners last night before bed and let's just say...my dream was very vivid. If this goes well, then I will make this a mini series.
Word Count: 3797
Pairing: ...
It was 1934 when young Y/N Carter stepped down from the train, the metal steps warm beneath her shoes from the relentless Mississippi sun. The air was thick with heat and the mingled scents of coal smoke, dust, and the faint sweetness of boiled peanuts from a vendor nearby.
She paused on the platform, eyes sweeping over the crowd â faces of every hue and shade moving with purpose, laughter mingling with the distant whistle of another train. Her hand smoothed the wrinkles from her maroon calf-length dress, the fabric clinging slightly in the damp air.
The worn handle of her suitcase pressed into her palm as she walked slowly forward, gaze darting left and right, searching. She was looking for someone in particular, though the sea of strangers offered no sign of them.
Then â a sharp pinch at her shoulder.
She turned quickly, startled, and her expression softened into a smile the moment her eyes found him.
âLittle Sammie,â she breathed. The preacherâs son.
Only he wasnât so little anymore.
The boy she remembered â all elbows and scraped knees â now stood tall, shoulders broad beneath a crisp white shirt that clung in the heat. His hair was neatly parted, though a few strands curled rebelliously at his forehead.
âY/N Carter,â Sammie said with a grin, his voice deeper now but still carrying that easy warmth she remembered. âAinât thought Iâd see you back here in my lifetime.â
She let out a quiet laugh. âGuess the Lord had other plans.â
Around them, the station platform swirled with noise â porters calling out, wagon wheels rattling over the boards, the faint hum of a blues tune drifting from somewhere down the street.
âYou look different,â she said, studying him with a mix of surprise and nostalgia.
âAnd you look the same,â he replied, though his gaze lingered a little longer than polite.
Before she could speak, he reached for her suitcase. âLet me get that for you. Canât have the preacherâs son lettinâ a lady carry her own burden.â
She hesitated only a moment before handing it over, her fingers brushing against his â a fleeting touch, but it sent a ripple of familiarity and something else⊠something unspoken between them.
âCâmon,â Sammie said, tilting his head toward the road. âTown ainât changed much, but I reckon you have.â
And with that, they stepped off the platform together, the summer heat wrapping around them like an old secret.
Y/N and Sammie had grown up together in the warm, creaky pews of his fatherâs church, whispering during sermons and sneaking molasses candy under the hymnals. When her family moved to New York City, sheâd cried herself to sleep for weeks, missing her old friend dearly. Letters kept them tethered over the years, though miles of rail tracks and city streets stretched between them.
Just last week, her world had tilted â the shop she worked at closed its doors for good, and sheâd been left scrambling for a way to keep food on the table for her father and baby sister. Coming back to Clarksdale hadnât been part of the plan, but desperation had a way of steering a person home.
As they crossed the dusty lot beside the station, Sammie kept glancing at her out of the corner of his eye. When they stopped, she followed his gaze to the gleaming automobile waiting there â polished deep black, chrome catching the sunlight like jewelry.
Her breath caught. Stenciled along the side in fine lettering: C.R. Patterson & Sons, The PG Automobile. Sheâd seen cars in New York, but nothing like this here in Clarksdale.
âNow, Sammie,â she drawled, narrowing her eyes at him, âwho car you done stole?â
That laugh of his â warm and a little mischievous â bubbled up as he swung her suitcase into the backseat. âI ainât stole nothinâ. I borrowed it.â
âBorrowed?â she echoed, raising a brow.
Sammie just grinned wider, stepping around to open the passenger door with a little bow. âMaâam.â
She rolled her eyes, but couldnât keep the smile off her face as she took his offered hand and climbed in. The seat was smooth beneath her fingers, smelling faintly of leather and motor oil. He closed the door firmly before hurrying around to the driverâs side, the sun flashing briefly in his dark eyes.
The car rumbled steadily down the dusty road leading into town, the afternoon sun casting long shadows across the cracked wooden storefronts. Sammie kept one hand steady on the wheel, glancing over at Y/N as they rolled past familiar sights â the old cotton gin, Mrs. Beasleyâs general store, and the faded church steeple rising in the distance.
âSo,â Sammie began, his voice easy but carrying a quiet weight, âhowâs your pa doinâ? And that baby sister of yours?â
Y/Nâs eyes softened as she shifted in her seat. âTheyâre fine, thank the Lord. Paâs still workinâ the fields when he can, and my sisterâs just growinâ like a weed.â
She glanced at him, the smile fading a little. âHowâs your ma and pa?â
Sammieâs hand tightened on the wheel for a moment before he answered, âMy pa⊠he only talks to me on Sundays.â
Y/Nâs breath caught. âOnly Sundays?â
âYeah,â Sammie nodded slowly, eyes on the road. âPa donât approve of the path I chose.â
She frowned, concern knitting her brows. âWhyâs that?â
He shrugged, a flicker of defiance in his gaze. âI took to the guitar, playinâ what folks call the devilâs music.â
Y/N shook her head, regret flashing across her face. âIâm sorry, Sammie.â
âDonât be,â he said, voice firm. âI made the right choice.â
Curious, she leaned closer. âHowâs that?â
Sammie smiled, a slow, proud grin. âIâm workinâ at the juke joint now. Ten dollars a night.â
Y/N blinked, surprised. âTen dollars⊠a night?â
He gave a quick nod, eyes gleaming with a mix of pride and grit.
They rolled into the heart of town, the carâs tires crunching on the packed dirt streets. As Y/N looked out the window, she noticed the townâs quiet but unmistakable division â on one side, a row of modest shops with hand-painted signs advertising goods for âColoredâ customers, and just down the street, a separate stretch of storefronts marked âFor Whites Only.â
Sammie quickly hopped out and opened Y/Nâs door, his easy smile returning as he offered her a steady hand to help her out.
âCome on,â he said. âLet me show you around.â
They stepped toward the grocery store, its faded sign creaking softly overhead. Inside, Y/Nâs eyes caught sight of a young Asian teen behind the counter, neatly dressed and focused as she scribbled on a notepad.
Sammie waved her over with a friendly nod.
âY/N, this hereâs Lisa,â Sammie said, turning to introduce them.
Lisa glanced up, offering a shy smile. âNice to meet you.â
âLikewise,â Y/N replied warmly.
Sammie leaned in a bit and asked, âHey Lisa, is your pa around?â
Before long, a man appeared from the back â the same man from earlier, stepping forward with arms wide open and a welcoming grin.
âWell, well, well. Sammie done brung someone new around,â he said warmly, nodding toward Y/N.
Y/N returned the smile, feeling the warmth despite the hardships etched into the manâs weathered face.
Bo wiped his palms on his apron and came forward, the grin quick and practiced. Y/N offered her hand and he took it, his eyes flicking over her like a man cataloguing a fine thing â wide hips, a slim-thick frame, cocoa skin that caught the light from the front window. For a beat he was plainly taken aback.
Sammie followed his look and laughed, low. âPretty, ainât she?â
Bo cleared his throat, setting the handshake into a businesslike nod. âYes, sir. Sheâs a fine-lookinâ lady.â He blinked, then slid back into seller-mode. âWhat can I do for you, Sammie?â
Sammie leaned on the counter, rattling off the reason. âIâm here for the juke joint order â you said you had that ready to drop off.â He glanced at Y/N, then added, âAnd I gotta pick up some groceries for my cousins â Smoke and Annie.â
âRight,â Bo said, hand already moving toward a ledger behind the counter like heâd expected the question. âI got it all boxed up up back, ready to go.â He gave a quick, warm smile. âLook around while I fetch it â Iâll give yâall a discount, too.â
They thanked him and turned away, moving toward the shelves to spare him the bustle behind the counter. From the corner of his eye, Bo watched Y/N with something like appreciation, his expression softening. He didnât notice at first the way Lisa had gone still behind the counter, brow lifted, lips pressed as if to say something without the voice.
When Bo met his daughterâs look, something like a quick shame â or at least awareness â crossed his face. He set the ledger down and stepped toward the back of the store, hands busy now with crates and boxes, keeping his gaze deliberately to the work.
Y/N picked at the edge of a sack of flour, curiosity getting the better of her. âWhoâs Smoke and Annie, then?â she asked, looking up at Sammie.
Sammie shrugged, slipping his hands into his pockets as if the names were as ordinary as the dust on his shoes. âSmokeâs my older. Real nameâs Elijah, but everybody calls him Smoke. Annieâs his wife.â
Y/N nodded, letting the names settle. Sammieâs mouth tipped in a crooked smile. âSmoke and his twin, Stack, they own the juke joint â runninâ the nights down on Third. Good money if you can stand the hours.â
âAnd Annie?â Y/N prompted.
He hesitated a second, then answered quieter. âAnnieâs⊠into folk work. Folks round here call it voodoo â charms, herbs, things like that. She keeps people right when they need it, anâ some say she donât just stop at poultices.â
Y/N blinked, half-surprised, half-intrigued. âVoodoo?â she repeated, tasting the word like something both foreign and familiar.
Sammie shrugged again, a little defensive and a little proud. âDonât mean nothinâ bad by it. Annie knows what sheâs doinâ. Folks come to her for prayinâ and for fixinâ bad luck. She makes a decent livinâ, same as anybody.â
Lisa hovered nearby with a small stack of tins, listening with that quiet attention that made Y/N think she was taking all of Clarksdale in like a book. Y/N gave a small laugh, folding her hands over her knees. âWell. This town keeps its secrets, donât it?â
Sammie nodded, eyes bright. âThat it does.â
They moved toward the counter as Bo appeared with a crate already labeled for the juke joint, his easy smile back in place. The afternoon hummed around them â gossip and music and dust â and as Sammie settled the groceries into the back of the car, Y/N felt the townâs particular kind of gravity pulling at her: some things were worn on shirtsleeves, others tucked into pockets and whispered about after dark.
They climbed back into the car, the leather seat warm where the sun had pressed on it. Sammie slid behind the wheel and eased the engine to life; the little town hummed around them â a guitar wailing somewhere off in the distance, children playing stickball, the steady slap of a screen door down the block.
âSo â the job?â Y/N asked before the silence could settle. âYou said you got me somethinâ. Is it at the juke joint?â
Sammieâs hand stilled on the wheel for a heartbeat. He shook his head, slow and deliberate, and a hush dropped between them that wasnât quite comfortable and not quite secretive either. Dust motes spun in a stream of sunlight through the windshield.
Y/N leaned her head back against the seat and let the question roll around in her like a stone in a tin cup. She watched Sammie from the corner of her eye as he watched the road, his mouth quirking into a private smile that didnât reach his eyes. She couldnât tell if he was pleased for her, proud of himself, or hiding something that would make her laugh or make her worry. For the moment, the answer stayed with him, folded into the soft rumble of the motor and the slow crawl of town outside.
They rolled down the narrow drive and the house unfolded before them â a two-story colonial, white paint sun-washed to a soft cream, a broad porch wrapped in shadow and supported by tall columns. Live oaks dotted the yard, their limbs knotted and patient, and a scatter of azaleas flanked the walk. The place sat on an acre like it owned the afternoon.
Sammie killed the engine. For a heartbeat, the world narrowed to the low hum of the motor and the whistle of a distant train. Y/N stayed seated a moment longer, the sight of all that space making something small and hungry in her chest beat faster. She stepped out of the car and ambled, fingers trailing the warm metal of the fender as if tracing a map. Sammie watched her go with a soft smile, then ducked back to the rear to grab her suitcase.
Y/N looked up at the home watching curtains blow out the open window, in her train of thought, until the sound of a loud horn made her turn around. Sammie was laughing at her as she rolled her eyes until the sound of the house door swung open. âHey, what if the babyâs catchinâ some shut-eye? You know Smokeâll have us both dangling if he gets wise,â said a tall black man walking out in a dress shirt, pin stripe trousers, and dress shoes. His eyes landed on the cocoa-skinned woman in front of him, tracing her entire frame- he smirked as he played with the toothpick that hung between his lips. He shaded his eyes with one hand, then took a proper look at Y/N, slow as a man reading a good line in a book.
His gaze ran over her â the hips, the slim-thick curve of her waist, the warm cocoa of her skin â and a smirk tugged at one corner of his mouth. Sammie shifted a step forward, hand protective at his side. âThis hereâs Y/N Carter,â he said. âShe just come back into town.â
The tall man cocked an eyebrow, nodding like heâd expected better or worse and found something in between. âNameâs Stack,â he offered, extending a big, work-worn hand. When Y/N took it, his grip was firm but not unkind. âPleasure.â
Y/N lifted her chin and smiled, returning the handshake with the same steady politeness sheâd learned sitting through long church visits. âMiss Carter,â she said. âNice to meet you, Mr. ââ
âStackâs fine.â He tucked the toothpick back between his teeth and tipped his head toward the house. âNow, Miss Carter. What a pretty young thing like you doin' with us folks this afternoon.â His voice held the easy challenge of a man whoâd seen a lot and liked testing new things to see how theyâd hold up.
Sammie came up beside them, breath a little winded from the trunk, and gave the short version. âSheâs come to help âround the place. Figured sheâd fit right in.â Y/N kept lookingâat the yard, the wide porch, the way light fell through the oaksâbut Stack had already tuned everything out except the sight of her. Heâd been to Chicago and back, seen plenty, but something about Y/N stopped him mid-thought. He straightened his tie like a man adjusting a picture to the perfect angle, eyes still tracking her.
âSammie, get that car unloaded,â Stack said, voice smooth as oiled leather. He took a half-step closer to Y/N and allowed himself the kind of grin that said he liked what he saw. âIâmma show Miss Carter âround the place. You cool with that, Miss Doll?â
âI donât mind at all. Thatâd be real nice, but I oughta help my friend, see?â
âAw, nonsense, doll,â Stack added before Sammie could answer, already sliding into the role he liked best. âSammie Boyâs on the job. A sweet thing like you shouldnât be liftinâ a finger, no ways, doll.â Y/N glanced back toward Sammie, who was bent over the trunk, hands working but eyes never leaving them. He watched them like a steer ready to jump, a friendâs caution woven with something sharper.
Before she could step away, Stackâs hand came to rest at the small of her back, guiding more than directing. âHey, I donât bite, doll,â he said with a chuckle that brushed against the air between them. âStick with me and Iâll keep you wrapped up tightâlike youâre royalty.â Y/N smoothed the fold of her dress, finding her composure, and turned to follow where his finger pointed.
Stack fell into step a pace behind her, giving the impression he was leading while still treating her as something to admire. Sammie kept unloading, shoulders tense but patient, and Y/N moved forward with that careful mix of politeness and guarded curiosityâaware of the attention, aware of the promise of safety in Stackâs words, and aware, too, of Sammieâs watchful presence.
They wandered out into the backyard, the sunlight slanting through the oaks and catching on beds of blooms. Y/N drifted close to a row of bright zinnias and hollyhocks, fingers hovering over the petals as if she could memorize their scent by touch. Stack fell in beside her, voice low. âThose thereâs Annieâs flowers. Sheâs got a green thumb now and then â thatâs why the yard stays lookinâ so sharp.â
âTheyâre lovely,â Y/N said, turning to him. âIf you donât mind me askinâ â whatâs your connection to Sammie and Smoke?â
He filled the space between them without ceremony, close enough that she could feel the heat of him. âIâm his baby brother, see? And Sammie â heâs my cousin.â His words landed easy, casual, but there was an edge to the way he watched her when he spoke.
She caught the scent of his cologne â a clean, smoky note with something sweet underneath â and took a quick step back to reclaim air and space. âOh. So youâre in on the juke joint too, huh?â she asked, keeping her tone light.
âSure do,â Stack said, looping slowly around her as if studying a painting. His eyes traveled the length of her, unhidden and unhurried. âYou got any idea what Iâll be doinâ for work, then?â
Before he could answer, a familiar honk rolled over from the drive. Stack smiled, like the sound belonged to him. âIâd rather your boss tell you themselves, doll.â He offered his arm with the soft arrogance of a man who liked leading the way and watched Y/Nâs hips sway in the breeze as she followed.
At the back door he eased it open for her. Inside, the house breathed a quieter life â framed photographs clustered on the mantel and side tables: babies with downy curls, a woman with dark, glowing skin and a laughing mouth, captured in every image as beautiful and fierce. Y/N let her gaze linger on the pictures, the faces folding into the place sheâd come to know.
She watched Sammie unload the groceries until a deep cough startled her. Her eyes drifted toward the living room, where smoke curled lazily around someoneâs head. The man sat in a blue armchair, facing them. When he stood, he adjusted his gray vest and looked directly at the pair. Thatâs when Y/N noticedâStack and Smoke were twins, but she could easily tell them apart. Stack wore a warm, charming smile and was naturally talkative. Smoke, on the other hand, was colder, more serious, never once cracking a smile.
Miss Carter straightened up just as Smoke spoke. âYouâre Y/N Carter, Sammieâs friend. Iâm Elijah Moore,â he said, hands in his pockets, eyes locked on her face.
âYes, Mr. Moore. Itâs a pleasure to meet you,â she replied politely. âI hope Iâm not being rude, but Sammie never mentioned the job, unfortunately.â
Smoke nodded slowly. âGoodâthat means he knows how to follow orders. Come on, while my wifeâs out, weâll go to the study.â
Smoke left Stack and Y/N alone, their eyes meeting for a moment before following him inside. Stack led the way, and Y/N saw the brothers settle side by side at a rectangular tableâSmoke at the head, Stack to his left. She lingered at the opposite end, scanning the chairs. When she reached for the seat opposite Smoke, she caught his raised brow. Clearing her throat, she gently pushed the chair back and paused, noticing his steady gaze. If this was a test, she thought, she was already failing.
Stack stood and motioned to his own seat, silently inviting her to take it. Smiling, she thanked him and slid into the chair. As she settled in, Stack carefully pushed her chair in and took his place behind his twin.
Smoke placed his cigarette carefully into the ashtray beside him before fixing his gaze on Y/Nâs face.
âMiss Carter, Sammie tells us youâve got experience with children. Is that right?â
âYes, it is.â
âAnd youâre able to cook and handle the household duties?â
Y/N glanced at Sammie, who stood silently in the doorway. Then she turned back to the twins and nodded. Before she could say anything, Smoke interrupted sharply, âSpeak up, Miss Carter. We ainât gonna get nowhere if you keep quiet. Understand?â
Taking a deep breath and folding her hands in her lap, she met his eyes. âYes, sir. I understand.â
âVery good, Miss Carter. Now, Annie and I want to hire someone we can trust to watch the house while weâre gone. That means cookinâ, cleaninâ, runninâ errandsâbut most important, watchinâ our ten-month-old upstairs, Angelina.â
Y/N sat straighter, stealing a quick glance at Sammie. This was the opportunity heâd promised. Being a ânannyâ was just a polite way to say help around the house, but it was a chance. She thought briefly of her family back in New York and how much this could mean. Then Smoke spoke again, âWe wanna offer ten dollars a week.â
The offer stunned her. Ten dollars back then was nearly two hundred now. She was about to respond when a cough came from behind Smoke. Stack gave a subtle thumbs-up, silently urging a higher offer. Y/N placed her hands flat on the table and said firmly, âTwenty.â
Stack smirked to himself.
Smoke raised an eyebrow, leaned back, and studied her face. She was serious. Her eyes searched his, unwavering. Quietly, he admitted to himself there was something about her that reminded him of something .
âFifteen.â
She shrugged, tilting her head, âTwenty.â
âSeventeen.â
âTwenty.â
âEighteen.â
Slowly, Smoke rose, standing close enough that their faces nearly touched. He didnât expect Miss Carter to lean in as well.
âTwenty.â
Smoke clicked his teeth, his face unreadable, but if she had to guess, she thought she caught a slight smirk.
âAlright, Miss Carter. Twenty dollars a week it is. Youâll handle the cookinâ, cleaninâ, yard work, and watch over Angelina. Sammieâll get you settled in your room,â Smoke said, nodding to Sammie.
Sammie gestured down the hall, and Y/N followed without hesitation, feeling Smokeâs eyes on her back as she left the room. Stack watched every curve disappear out of sight.
âShe sure is a looker,â Stack said quietly. âYou reckon sheâs up to handle everything??â
Smokeâs gaze remained fixed on the hallway, as if she was still there. He was already thinking.
POV: You are a young lady in the 1930's who was hired by the Moore family to help around the house and be a nanny...but to your surprise, you may have to do more.
A/N: Okaaaaay, so this was gonna to be a small series that was inspired by a dream I had BUT this maybe a tad bit longer than planned.
Warning: Jealousy & Suspense, Tear Jerkers, ROMANTIC SMUT AND FLUFF
Word Count: 12K
Song Recommendation: Seance by James Black (Sinners Soundtrack)
Pairing: Elias 'Stack' Moore x Black Female Reader
After her prayer session, Y/N hurried through making a simple breakfast. Just as she sat down, the phone began to ring and before she could say anything, she heard âafternoon, Doll. Hope I ainât disturbinâ ya noneâbut truth be told, a vision like youâs worth the interruption.â She grinned and said âhello, Mr. Stack. How can I help you today?â
âWell, Miss Doll, the men and I could use a hand. Do you mind cominâ down to the club?â Stackâs voice carried that easy smile of his, the kind that made her heart skip in spite of herself.
Y/N glanced at the clock on the wallâit was already close to one. âIs everything alright?â she asked, brows pinching slightly.
âYeah, nothinâ wrong,â Stack assured, his tone almost playful. âWe just need your help, Doll. Cornbreadâs on his way to pick you up with Theresa and the twins. Make sure you wear somethinâ comfortable.â
She hesitated a beat, still unsure what theyâd want with her. âUh⊠sure. I can come.â
âGood. Very good. Weâll see you soon,â he replied, and she could practically hear the grin in his voice before the line went quiet.
When she set the receiver down, Y/N realized her cheeks were warm. She shook her head at herself, still confused, but hurried upstairs to change.
Not long after, the sound of a car horn drifted in from outside. Before leaving, she slipped into the nursery and leaned over the crib, pressing a gentle kiss to Angelinaâs soft forehead. âIâll be right back, sweet girl. Your papa needs me.â The baby cooed and curled her tiny fingers around Y/Nâs hand, and the gesture made her chest tighten with a fond smile. Carefully, she tucked the blanket back around her before easing out.
Downstairs, Y/N adjusted the straps of her dark denim overalls over a crisp white blouse. Her sturdy boots clicked against the wood as she pinned the last of her hair into a loose bun. She looked practical, ready for work, though she still carried her quiet grace.
Stepping out the front door, she spotted Theresa approaching with the twins in tow. âHello, Miss Thomas. Hello, sweet peas,â Y/N greeted warmly. âAngelinaâs had her breakfast and lunch. She had a little accident earlier, so I bathed her. Sheâs all clean and resting now.â
Theresa smiled, the twins offering a cheerful wave, and Y/N shared one last look with them before heading toward the car where Cornbread waited. With a small breath, she climbed in, still wondering what Stack and the others had up their sleeve.
The ride didnât take long, and before she knew it, Cornbread was pulling the truck up to the front of the club. Y/Nâs eyes widened the moment she stepped outâthere were pickup trucks lined along the dirt lot, men hauling in crates, carrying tools, shouting to one another as they worked. The air smelled of sawdust, oil, and fresh-cut lumber, the promise of change hanging heavy all around.
As she walked beside Cornbread toward the entrance, her boots crunching against gravel, she glanced around in quiet awe. Inside, the place was alive with transformation. Booths now hugged the perimeter of the club, their cushions crisp and new. The woodâoak, she guessedâgleamed in the glow of the afternoon sun filtering through the windows, polished smooth like it had never been touched by years of wear.
Her gaze drifted to the bar, wider and sturdier than before, the oak top catching light like honey. Even the balcony aboveâonce rickety and in danger of collapseânow looked solid and dependable, its railings firm and safe.
She let her eyes trace upward, and then froze.
Three men stood together at the balcony rail, watching her. Bo, Smoke, and Stack.
For a flicker of a second, she was back in her dreamâthe one that had unsettled her so badly. The sight made her throat tighten.
Smoke shifted first, his gaze cutting toward his brother. But Stack⊠Stack never looked away from her. His eyes were steady, locked, the corners of his mouth tugging just slightly as though he already knew what she was thinking.
âMiss Carter,â Stack called, voice smooth as molasses, âdo us a kindness, Doll, and come on up here. Weâre in need of your sweet assistance.â
Her stomach dropped. Oh, dear Lord⊠Her dream was unfolding before her very eyes.
For a moment she glanced at Cornbread, almost as if asking him silently what she ought to do. He only gave a small nod of encouragement.
Drawing in a breath, Y/N smoothed her blouse with a trembling hand and lifted her chin. Then, with her heart thundering in her chest, she set her boots to the staircase and began the slow climb toward the men waiting above.
When Y/N finally reached the top of the steps, she smoothed her palms against her overalls and tried to steady her breath. Bo was the first to greet her, tipping his head with an easy smile, the kind of smile that always seemed to linger a second too long. Smoke gave a curt nod, his expression carved from stone, while Stackâs eyes lingered just a little softerâwarmer, though no less intense.
âFollow us, Miss Carter,â Smoke said, his voice carrying that low command that left little room for questions. Without waiting for her reply, he turned and started down the hall, his coat shifting with his stride.
Bo and Stack fell in behind her, leaving her to walk between them. Y/N felt the weight of their eyesâone measured and cautious, the other shamelessly curious.
Stackâs jaw ticked. He slowed his steps, just enough to glance sideways at his twinâs friend. He caught the way Boâs gaze was trailing over Y/Nâs figure, lingering in a way that set his blood to a slow boil.
Stackâs arm lifted suddenly, the back of his hand pressing against Boâs chest, stopping him cold. Bo frowned, about to protest, until he saw the look in his brotherâs eyes.
Stackâs voice was low, meant only for him. âIf you donât stop lookinâ at Miss Doll like that,â he said, his tone sharp enough to cut glass, âIâll slit your throat clean and have Grace wonder where the hell you wandered off to.â
Boâs eyes widened, a laugh slipping up his throat as though he thought Stack was bluffing. But then he caught the gleam in Stackâs gazeâdark, unflinching, dead serious. His smile faltered.
âOkay, okay. Sorry, Stack,â Bo muttered quickly, lifting his hands in surrender.
Stack let his smirk curve, dangerous and knowing, before dropping his hand. He started walking again, his boots heavy against the polished wood. Bo exhaled hard, shaking his head before hurrying to catch up.
By the time the two men rejoined them, Smoke hadnât even glanced back, but Y/N could feel the weight of something unspoken hanging in the air.
They walked down a narrow hall she couldâve sworn hadnât existed a week ago. The air was cooler there, heavy, and Y/N felt her stomach tighten with every step. Stack, close behind her, noticed the way her fingers fidgeted with the hem of her blouse as they followed Smoke and Boâs lead.
At the end of the corridor stood five closed doors, identical and waiting. âMiss Carter,â Smoke said, turning to her with steel in his eyes, âwe need your help gettinâ these rooms in shape before we open. These are gonâ be the money-makers. But they need a womanâs touch. Whatever you need, weâll fetch it.â
He opened the first door, and inside sat only a bare bedframe with a thin mattress. Y/N let out the breath she hadnât realized she was holding, her chest loosening with relief. At least it wasnât⊠that.
Still, her brow pinched. Since when had she become their decorator? And why, of all things, did a hall like this even exist now?
âYou needed me for this?â Y/N raised her brow, watching Smoke look her up and down before she folded her hands neatly behind her back.
Y/N stepped into the room first, her heels clicking softly against the floor. She paused, looking around at the plain walls, the lone bed, the bare window that poured in too much daylight. Her brow lifted ever so slightly as she turned back toward the men.
âWe need some curtains,â she said finally, scanning the room again. âThe windowâs a good size, but without coverings, ainât nothinâ private. Sheets tooâsomethinâ that donât trap sweat. Maybe a few candles or dimmed lamps. A rug would tie it all together⊠deep, red-wine color. Set the mood.â
She crossed over and pressed her palm into the mattress before easing down to test it. The bed creaked beneath her. âBeds could stand to be softer, but⊠itâll do for now.â She leaned back on her elbows, hair falling a little loose as she looked up at them.
Stack tilted his head, a grin tugging at his lips. âSo, Miss Doll, think we can get that all done in a few hours?â
Her gaze lingered on him through her lashes, heavy and quiet with meaning. It was that same look sheâd given him once beforeâin the stockroom, when the air between them had turned sharp and dangerous. His heart skipped, dimples cutting deep as he smiled back. She sat up more and said âI think we can do it. Donât you, Mr. Stack?â
âBo, go in town and get everything Doll here wants, and add a bunch of roses too. Gotta make sure the room makes people do unholy thangs in front of the Lord,â Stack said, voice low and easy, his eyes refusing to leave her.
Bo cut a glance at Smoke, waiting for permission. Smokeâs sharp nod sent him on his way. The door clicked shut behind him, leaving only the three of them in that dim, unfinished room. Y/N smoothed her hands over the front of her blouse, pretending to busy herself as she looked around. Her gaze traced the bare window, the empty floor, and the lonely bed pressed against the wall. Already, she could imagine how curtains, soft sheets, and a splash of color could make it warmerâless like a trap, more like a place to disappear in.
She didnât have to look at Stack to feel him watching her. His stare clung to her like heat, and the longer she kept her eyes on the walls, the more her skin tingled as though he were already touching her.
Then came the sharp clearing of a throat. Smokeâs voice, hard as iron, cut through the charged silence.
âStack. Hallway. Now,â he muttered.
Stackâs jaw worked, irritation flashing across his features as he finally pulled his eyes off her. He nodded toward Y/N, a silent goodbye, before heading to the door. But just as he was about to step out, he leaned against the frame and glanced back. His dimples showed in a sly grin.
âYou look real good there, doll.â
She rolled her eyes playfully and turned her back to him, hiding the warm berry of her cheeks. The moment the door closed, the air in the hallway shifted. Smoke was already waiting, arms folded across his chest. His eyes cut to his younger brother with a weight that made the narrow space feel smaller.
âYou lettinâ your eyes talk too much, little brother,â Smoke said, voice measured but lined with warning.
Stack stopped in his tracks, his head tilting, hands slipping into his pockets like he had all the time in the world. âSo what? Folks gonâ think what they think, anyways. Donât matter to me none.â He leaned back against the wall, casual, but the glint in his eyes told Smoke he was pushing on purpose. âI like her, Smoke. Ainât no crime in that. We both ainât hitched or tied to anyone so why in the hell I gotta hide it?â
âYou know the life we live. You drag her into it, youâll break her. She donât deserve that kind of trouble.â Stack side eyed his brother and stepped closer to him. âSmoke, we havenât lived that life ever since you started to do right by Ann. I like the damn girl, alrightâ he explained and Smoke looked him up and down. âShe ainât like the others, Stack. She got respect, carries herself different. You start treatinâ her like some side-play, youâll ruin that. Donât do that to herâ, Smoke said and all Stack can do was roll his neck.Â
âFor a nappy nigga that âpposed to be my fuckinâ blood, you sure donât fuckinâ no meâ, Stack said making his brother stand straight up. "That ainât what this is, Smoke," Stack said, his voice low but steady, carrying a weight his brother wasnât used to hearing. "You know me. I donât chase every skirt that walks by smilinâ. Iâve had my fun, sure, but I ainât blind, and I sure as hell ainât foolish. I know the difference between a woman you laugh with for a night, and a woman who makes you stop in your tracks without even tryinâ. Doll ainât like the rest. She carries herself with a kind of grace I donât see often in this world. She looks a man in the eye and makes him feel like he gotta be better just to stand there. Donât go confusinâ me for some fool that canât tell respect when he see it, âcause what I see in her⊠it ainât cheap, and it damn sure ainât a fling.â
Stack paused, jaw tight, as if weighing whether heâd already said too much. His eyes softened, almost against his will. âTruth is, Smoke⊠she makes me think about things I ainât never let myself want before. And if I slip sometimesâif it shows on my faceâmaybe thatâs âcause for once in my life, I donât wanna play it cool. I just⊠I like her. More than I probably should.â
Smoke didnât answer right away. He just stared at his brother, eyes unreadable but sharp enough to cut. The muscles in his jaw ticked once, twice, like he was grinding down something he wanted to say but knew better than to voice. His hands flexed against his sides, fists that never quite closed.
Finally, he let out a short breath through his nose, more of a scoff than a sigh. âYou talk too much, Stack,â he muttered, voice even but lined with heat. âBest keep your head straight. We got work to doâmore important than daydreams.â
He turned then, shoulders stiff as stone, but not before Stack caught the flicker in his brotherâs eyesâthe kind of look a man gives when something precious is slipping out of his grip.
Stack watched him go, lips quirking in the faintest smirk. Heâd pushed Smoke without even trying, and that told him everything he needed to know.
Soon, Bo arrived with everything needed, arms full and a couple of handymen trailing behind him with boxes and tools. Y/N stepped aside as they filed in, her eyes darting from the heavy rolls of fabric to the bundles of roses and the shiny brass rods meant for hanging curtains. The room that had been bare moments ago suddenly came alive with the noise of hammers, menâs voices overlapping, and the scent of sawdust and roses mingling in the air.
Y/N folded her arms, leaning against the wall as she watched. The transformation gave her a strange sense of pride, as though this spaceâthough meant for something she didnât fully approve ofâwas becoming hers too.
Bo carried the flowers in first, setting the buckets of roses on the floor near the bed. âMiss Carter, you sure âbout all this red? Feels like a sin just walkinâ through the door.â
Before she could answer, Stack bent down, plucked one of the roses out of the bucket, and turned to her with that charming grin of his. He held it out, the thorny stem balanced carefully between his fingers. âThatâs the point, Bo. Folks cominâ in here ainât lookinâ to pray.â Then, softer, his eyes never leaving Y/Nâs, âTo show how much they care about on anotha.â
The room seemed to go still. Y/N hesitated before taking it, her fingertips brushing against his as she did. She twirled it once, lips pressing together as though trying to hide the smile tugging at her mouth.
Stackâs grin softened into something genuine. âSee? Already makes the place look better. Especially with that pretty smile of yours.â
Y/N shook her head lightly, amused despite herself. âAinât gotta spell it out, Stack. I know what these rooms are forâ, Bo said but Stack only watched Y/N as she tapped the rose against her palm, eyes flicking toward the window. âAnd if itâs gonâ be done, it should be done right. No sense makinâ it look cheapâ, she said, smooth like honey.
Stack leaned a little closer, lowering his voice. âAnd you the only one who can make it right.â
Before Y/N could respond, the door creaked again. Smoke appeared in the frame, his shadow stretching into the room. His eyes swept over the men working, then settled on Stack⊠before landing on Y/N and the rose in her hand.
Her breath caught. Without a word, she set the flower back down on the table near the bed, as if it burned to keep holding it.
The workers exchanged uneasy looks, their tools suddenly sounding louder in the heavy silence. Bo cleared his throat and rubbed the back of his neck. âWell⊠uh, reckon weâll start with the curtains.â He motioned to the men, and they quickly busied themselves again, pretending not to notice the unspoken tension.
Stackâs smile faltered, but he didnât look away from his brother. He noticed the way Smokeâs jaw twitched. âSomethinâ wrong, brother?â he asked, voice steady.
Smoke held his gaze for a long moment, unreadable, then simply turned his head and looked out into the hall. He didnât answer, just stepped back into the shadows and disappeared.
Y/N exhaled, as if sheâd been holding her breath. She smoothed her shirt and busied herself with pointing at the window. âMake sure they hang high enough so it covers the whole frame,â she told the handymen, her voice carefully even. âDonât want nothinâ peekinâ through.â
Stack watched her a moment longer, dimples tugging faintly at his cheeks, before stepping closer to her side. âWhatever Doll says, we do,â he murmured, loud enough for the others to hear.
By the end of the afternoon, the rooms were finished. The handymen had packed up and gone, leaving behind only the faint smell of polish and the sweet perfume of roses.
Y/N stood near the window, brushing her palms against the front of her blouse as she looked around. The curtains hung just right, the rug softened the floor beneath her boots, and the candles and flowers warmed the space. A small, proud smile tugged at her lips â it actually looked like something she had put herself into.
The door eased open, and when she turned, Smoke stepped inside. He shut it behind him, the sound of the latch falling into place echoing in the quiet room.
âIt looks good in here,â he asked, his voice carrying that slow, heavy tone.
Y/N smoothed her trousers and nodded, her smile still polite. âThank you, sir. You said it needed a womanâs touch. I tried to make it comfortable, but not too soft. Just enough for folks to feel at ease.â
Smokeâs eyes wandered over the curtains, the rug, the roses, and then finally settled back on her. âDidnât figure youâd put this much into it.â
She gave a small laugh and shrugged. âWell, if youâre gonna have me do a thing, I like to do it right. Place like this oughta feel worth the money people spend.â
For a moment, he didnât answer. His jaw shifted like he was holding something back, his stare locked on her a little too long. Y/N tilted her head slightly and added, gentle as ever, âI hope itâs to your liking, Mr. Moore.â
There was a pause, then his voice came rough and low. âYeah⊠you got good taste.â
Y/N smiled at that, warm and unguarded. âThank you. That means a lot.â
He stepped further into the room, slow and steady, his boots dragging slightly against the rug sheâd picked out. Y/N only turned back toward the bedspread, smoothing the fabric with her hand. âI think the red sets the mood without being too loud. It pulls everything together, donât you think?â she asked, glancing back with an open expression.
Smoke was closer now, close enough that the faint scent of his cologne mixed with the roses. His gaze was heavy, but Y/N met it kindly, no guard in her eyes. She had no reason to put one up â her niceness came natural.
âYeah,â he muttered, his jaw twitching again. âIt does pull everything together.â His words werenât just about the room, and for a second his chest ached with it.
Y/N chuckled softly, brushing her blouse flat again, unaware of the weight in his stare. âIâm glad you like it. Thatâs all I wanted.â
Her voice was simple, sweet, and Smoke swallowed hard, wondering if she even knew what she was doing to him just by being herself.
Y/N stepped into the hallway, smoothing down her blouse, her boots clicking steady against the polished floor. She exhaled a breath she didnât realize sheâd been holding and began walking toward the front.
Stack was leaning against the wall a few steps down, arms folded across his chest, watching her with that easy grin that always made her cheeks warm. He pushed off the wall as soon as her eyes met his.
âWell, doll,â he drawled, dimples cutting deep as his gaze lingered on her face, âlooks like you done worked your magic in there. Place damn near glows with you touchinâ it.â
Y/N chuckled softly, shaking her head as she walked closer. âDonât flatter me, Mr. Elias. Just curtains, candles, and a little bit of thought. Anybody couldâve done it.â
âMm,â Stack tilted his head, his eyes never leaving hers. âAnybody maybe, but not like you.â
Her breath hitched, and before she could respond, the sound of heavy footsteps followed her out. Smoke emerged from the room, his broad frame filling the doorway. His eyes fell instantly on Stack and Y/N standing close in the hallway.Â
That twitch came at his jaw again, sharp and quick, before his gaze cut away. Stack noticed it. He always did.
âEverythinâ okay, twin?â Stack asked, his voice smooth but edged, daring.
Smoke didnât answer right away, his eyes narrowing just enough to speak for him. Finally, with a low breath through his nose, he muttered, âIâm good, little brother.â
But Y/N felt it â the weight pressing between the two men, thick as smoke itself. She glanced between them, lips parting, unsure if she should break the tension or walk away.
Y/N cleared her throat, the sound small in the quiet hallway. âMr. Moore, what time should I be back tonight?â Her voice was polite, careful, but there was an undercurrent of nervousness that she couldnât quite hide.
Smokeâs head snapped up, his gaze locking onto hers. It was sharp, unyielding, and she felt it like a physical weight pressing against her chest. âYouâll be ridinâ with us,â he said, each word deliberate, carrying a command she knew she couldnât argue with.
âI⊠I donât think Iâll be ready in time. Maybe I could ride along with Sammie andââ Y/N started, her hands flexing at her sides, but Smokeâs eyes darkened like storm clouds. His presence was sudden, suffocating, and the air between them thickened.
âYou will be ridinâ with me and Annie. You have an hour to get ready. Need to be back here to rehearse with Sammie and the boys,â he said, his tone sharp enough to cut glass. There was no room for negotiation.
âBut sir, it would be easier just toââ Y/N tried again, her voice faltering slightly, the tension in her chest tightening. Smokeâs jaw flexed, his expression hardening, and the faintest shadow of warning passed through his eyes. She swallowed and fell silent, her words trapped in her throat.
He stepped aside, a silent, unspoken sign for her to move. Y/N hesitated, glancing toward Stack, who stood a few steps away. She offered a small wave, a nervous, almost apologetic smile. Stackâs eyes flicked to hers, his expression softening into a faint, encouraging nod. But his gaze quickly shifted as he caught the way Smokeâs dark eyes lingered on him, sharp and unblinking.
Stackâs jaw tightened. He straightened his shoulders, heart racing with a mixture of frustration and desire. He had to figure out how to tell this womanâthis woman who had his heartâthat it was time for her to step out of the nanny role, step into something permanent, something that included him. He clenched his fists briefly, his mind turning over possibilities even as Y/N moved away, obedient but unaware of the storm of thoughts she left in her wake.
Every step she took echoed in Stackâs chest like a warning bell, reminding him that if he didnât act soon, he might lose the chance to have her entirely.
The Packard eased down the narrow road, the evening sun cutting long shadows across the windshield. Smokeâs hand was steady on the wheel, his face unreadable as always, eyes fixed forward. Annie rode in the passenger seat, humming softly under her breath, one arm resting out the open window, her bracelets clinking as she tapped her fingers against the door.
In the back, Y/N sat upright, her hands folded in her lap. The leather seat was cool against her back, but the air between the three of them carried its own kind of heatâsilent, pressing, unspoken. She glanced out the window, trying to keep her thoughts on the scenery rather than the two in front of her.
After a stretch of quiet, Annie turned her head just enough to look over her shoulder, her eyes sweeping over Y/Nâs pressed blouse and pinned-up hair. âYou look different, doll. Not like the girl that showed up on day one.â
Y/N gave a polite smile, unsure if Annie meant it as a compliment or not. âGuess Iâm learninâ my way around.â
Smokeâs fingers flexed once on the wheel, but he said nothing. His jaw shifted, tightening as if he wanted to say something but chose not to.
Annie let out a low laugh, flicking her hair back. âMm. Worldâs full of folks learninâ their way around. Some get lost faster than others.â
The comment hung sharp in the air, and Y/N caught herself straightening her back, her smile fading. She looked toward Smoke, almost expecting him to cut in, but he kept his eyes on the road, expression carved from stone.
Finally, Y/N spoke, voice quiet but steady. âMr. Moore⊠why couldnât I just ride with Sammie? Weâre rehearsing with the boys anyway.â
Smokeâs eyes slid to the rearview mirror, meeting hers. For a heartbeat, it looked like heâd speak plain, maybe even soften. But then he looked away, back to the road. âYouâll be ridinâ with me and Annie. Thatâs how itâs goinâ.â
The rest of the ride carried the weight of words unsaid.
Once the trio made it home, Annie watched the bathroom door click shut upstairs before turning back to her husband. Smoke stood in the living room with his pipe between his teeth, shoulders squared, eyes following the curl of smoke like he was avoiding her gaze. Annie leaned against the post, arms folded, studying him the way only a wife could.
âI ainât stupid, Elijah,â she said, her voice calm but edged, stepping off the post and into the room.
Smoke finally looked her way, but before he could answer, Annie pressed on. âWhy wonât you let Stack be with Y/N? Theyâre both good souls. Itâs plain as day they got feelinâs for one another. So why stop them from even tryinâ?â
Smokeâs jaw flexed as he drew on his pipe, exhaling slow. âAnn, baby⊠I know my twin better than any man breathinâ. Stack loses his head when heâs smitten. He stops thinkinâ sharp, starts actinâ reckless. We canât afford that â not with everything ridinâ on the club, on this family. Y/N around him like that? Heâll lose focus.â He shifted his weight, tone firming. âAnd if it goes bad between âem, it ainât just heartbreak. Itâs bad blood right in this house. I wonât risk it.â
Annie strode up and plucked the pipe clean out of his mouth. Smokeâs eyes cut hard at her, but she met them without a flinch. âLifeâs already messy, Elijah. You think playinâ gatekeeperâs gonna keep trouble out? No, itâll just leave both of âem hatinâ you for standinâ in their way. And that, my love, is its own kind of poison.â Her voice softened just a touch. âSometimes risk is worth it â especially when it means someone we care about gets to be happy.â
Smoke sucked his teeth, hands shoved deep into his pockets, his whole frame humming with a stubbornness Annie knew too well.
âElijah,â she said, planting her hands on her hips, eyes pinning him where he stood. âLet them be happy. You can see it same as I do â the way they look at each other.â
His arms crossed over his chest, cutting a hard figure, but his reply came quieter. âBaby⊠looks can be deceivinâ.â
That was when she caught it â the flicker behind his eyes, a shadow of something more than excuses. Annie tilted her head, the faintest smirk pulling at her mouth. She set the pipe down on the mantle with a deliberate hand, then turned for the stairs.
âSure are,â she murmured over her shoulder, leaving him in the smoke.
Soon, Smoke stood in an all black suit with a matching hat and Annie walked down the steps in her black gown to match her husband, taking her place beside him. Â
They waited another fifteen minutes before the sound of her heels tapped softly against the hardwood. Then she appeared â a glow in the dim hall, radiant as though she carried her own light.
Y/N wore an ivory-cream satin gown that skimmed her calves, the fabric gliding with every step. A tasteful slit traced up her right leg, offering just enough glimpse to make the dress daring without losing its grace. She paired it with delicate heels of the same satin, a shawl draped loose around her arms, and her grandmotherâs gold-and-pearl set â earrings that caught the light, a modest necklace that rested perfectly against her collarbone. Her curls had been coaxed into a deep side part, tucked neatly behind her ear, framing her face in soft, luminous detail.
Annieâs breath caught before a smile broke across her face. She clasped her hands together in delight, eyes brimming with pride. For a moment, she was so swept away she didnât even notice the change in her husbandâs stance.
Smoke looked up â and for once, the stony mask faltered. His gaze traced Y/N slowly, reverently, though he didnât dare move a muscle. His shoulders had eased, his chest paused mid-breath, and for the faintest instant, his heart skipped against his ribs.
âDarlinâ, you look beautiful,â Annie said warmly, pulling her into a hug. âThat dress was made for you⊠and youâre so brave to wear white.â
Y/N flushed, cheeks blooming pink as she murmured her thanks. Annie pulled back, still smiling, and finally cast her glance toward Smoke. His eyes had not left Y/N, steady and unyielding in a way Annie knew too well. That look â the kind that slipped through his armor â told her everything.
She cleared her throat, sharp enough to snap him out of the trance. He blinked once, jaw tightening back into place, and finally moved.
âLadies,â he said flatly, holding the door open for them.
Y/N stepped past him first, the faint scent of her perfume brushing against him as she passed. Annie followed after, but not without one last look at her husband. His face was stone again, but Annieâs eyes caught the truth lingering in his â and she tucked the knowledge away, silent and knowing.
They soon arrived at the juke joint, the car tires crunching against the gravel as the headlights cut through the night. Annie was the first to step out, her wrist flicking gracefully as she reached back to help Y/N from the car. The two women linked arms, laughter soft between them, while Smoke trailed a few paces behind, pipe smoke curling faintly in the air as he exhaled.
Cornbread stood out front in a sharp black suit, his posture tall, eyes scanning the horizon like a watchman. At the sight of the ladies, his face cracked into a grin wide as sunrise.
âWell, well,â Cornbread boomed, his voice warm as molasses. Annie and Smoke nodded as they passed him, but Cornbreadâs gaze lingered on Y/N. With a wink and a low chuckle rolling from his belly, he said, âMiss Carter, you look divine in that dress. I know someone whoâd lose his damn mind seeinâ you in that, suga.â
Y/Nâs cheeks flushed as she gave him a polite thank-you before stepping inside, heels clicking against the wood. The room was quiet still â the band setting up, waiters sliding tables into place, and faint notes from instruments tuning in the background.
On stage, Pearline spotted her and gasped, her eyes lighting up. âWell, well! Look at this angel of a woman,â she called, her voice carrying over the band. âYou came just in time, Y/N. We gotta rehearse your number.â
Before Y/N could answer, Pearline bounded down, took her hand, and whisked her toward the stage with the kind of excitement that brooked no refusal. Y/N stumbled at first, laughing nervously, but quickly fell into step as Pearline pulled her beneath the lights. Slim gave a sharp whistle of approval, and Sammie just shook his head, grinning from ear to ear.
Meanwhile, at the back of the club, Smoke was speaking low and sharp to one of the guards. Stack had just come around the corner, rolling his sleeves.
âAâight, listen close,â Smoke said, jabbing his finger at the manâs chest. âAinât nobody usinâ them rooms upstairs unless they paid, and I mean paid in full. You slip up, you answer to me â and trust, boy, you donât want that smoke.â
âYes, sirââ the man started, but his words cut off as his eyes drifted toward the stage.
âWho is that?â he asked, pointing.
Stack turned, half curious â then froze.
There she was.
Y/N stood at center stage, Pearline and two other women guiding her through the sway of hips and roll of shoulders. Her fingers traced up the microphone stand as she loosened, laughter spilling out of her like music itself. For a moment, the clubâs dim lights seemed made for her alone.
Stackâs grin broke slow, unguarded, his eyes softening until they looked nothing like his usual sharp-edged smirk. His chest tightened, the air sticking in his throat as if sheâd stolen it clean away.
âMy future wife,â he whispered, the words tumbling out before he even thought them.
The club was soon open and folks began to pour in. The ladies and Y/N sang back up for Pearline for a few songs before the last song was done. Bo was being whispered to by Smoke before he looked to the stage and nodded. Right when Y/N and the girls were done, Bo was by the stage. âMiss Carter, Smoke said you have to work the bar until your number is upâ, he said and she thought of why but decided to just not ask. Bo gave her hand to take but she just nodded and began walking to the bar. As she approached the bar, Annie looked in confusion. âDarlinâ, you supposed to be with Sammie right now. Why you over here wit isâ, Annie asked and Y/N replied âBo came on got me. Said Mr. Moore needed me here until I sang.âÂ
Annie looked towards the stage to see her husband talking to a guest and turned to Y/N as she waited on people with a smile.Â
âY/N, darlinâ, come with me. We need to talkâ, Annie said and soon, Y/N and Annie were in the stockroom, door locked. Y/N stood there as Annie smiled and asked âY/N, how do you feel about Elias?â Y/N had her hands folded feeling shy and timid but Annie approached her. Annie lifted her head to look at her and held her hands. âY/N, you are safe here. I wonât tell a soul. I see how you look at Elias. How you blush and smile whenever he looks at you or talks to you. So, sugar, be honest with ya friend, Annie.â
Y/N look in Annieâs she felt her shoulders relax before turning her back and speaking as she paced the floor. âYou ever feel like you been wanderinâ your whole life, Annie? Like no matter where you stand, you donât quite belong? Thatâs been me. Movinâ, bendinâ, shapinâ myself to fit a world that never once felt like mine. But when Stackâs near⊠Lord, it feels different. Itâs like walkinâ through the front door after a long journeyâyou breathe easier, your bones settle, your chest donât feel so heavy. He donât even gotta try, Annie. Just his presence makes me feel⊠home. And I didnât think Iâd ever find that in a person, let alone in him. It scares me, âcause once you know what home feels like, losinâ it⊠thatâs a hurt you donât ever heal fromâ, she turned to Annie and she saw Y/Nâs eyes go glassy.Â
Annie held Y/N in her arms to comfort her and said âh, honey. You just told me right now without sayinâ the wordâyou found your heart in that man. And if beinâ with him makes you feel like you belong, then baby, thatâs worth fightinâ for. Donât let fear or promises keep you from what your soulâs already reachinâ toward.â Y/N felt Annie dab her tears away making her smile, then Y/N spoke more, holding her cry.
âAnnie⊠I canât. Even if every part of me⊠aches for him, I canât let myself. You know the deal we madeâme, you, Smoke. My familyâs future is sittinâ right on the edge, and I canât do nothinâ to tip it. One wrong move, one selfish slip, and everything Iâve been holdinâ together falls apart.
If I reach for Stackâif I let myself want him out loudâwhat happens if it all goes wrong? What happens if Smoke pulls his word back? My folks⊠theyâll be left with nothinâ. No home. No safety. Just more of the same pain weâve been runninâ from.
And Lord help me, Annie⊠the thought of losinâ them terrifies me more than losinâ him. So I swallow it down. I smile when he looks at me, but I lock it all up inside. âCause wantinâ him feels like playinâ with fire, and if I get burned, it wonât just be me who pays the priceâitâll be everyone I love.â
âOh, baby girlâŠâ she reached over, cupping Y/Nâs hands in hers, voice soft but steady ââŠyou donât have to carry that kind of weight alone. You think lovinâ him makes you reckless, but it donâtâit makes you alive. Youâve been sacrificinâ yourself for everybody else for so long, you forgot you got a right to happiness too.
And listenâwhatever happens with that deal, whatever happens with Stackâyou wonât face it alone. Iâm standinâ right beside you. Always. Donât you ever doubt that.â Annie nodded at her and hugged her tightly knowing what she had to do. âY/N, do me favor. Wipe ya face clean, and pretend we ainât spoke, Just go the bar and I will make sure you are well taken care ofâ, Annie told her before she looked around the room, grabbing lemons and placing them in Y/Nâs hand. âGo âhead nowâ, Annie unlocked the door and smacked YâNâs butt to make her start walking. Annie closed to the door behind her and knew it was time for her to start her mission.
She went ahead out and saw how crowded the club was, she noticed that Pearline and the girls were heading back to stage and signaled for Y/N to go up with a wink. She looked over at her husband and noticed that his eyes were on Y/N. The announcer stood on stage, ready for the song to end. âWell now, wasnât that a swell number, folks? A real treat for the ears. But donât go anywhereââcause weâve got somethinâ mighty special lined up. Letâs put our hands together and welcome back the lovely Miss Y/N Carter, bringinâ us another classic I know you all are gonna take a shine to.â The crowd cheered for her and thatâs when Annie heard a whistle. She looked up to see Stack at the balcony watching over as he clapped and she hurried up the stairs. Y/N smiled as the man stood aside and off stage before she spoke into the microphone.Â
âEveninâ, everybody. Last week, I shared a song my parents wrote years ago. But tonight⊠tonightâs different. This oneâs mine. Itâs about love, about passion, and findinâ that one person who feels like they were meant for you. I hope yâall enjoy it.â She looked back at the girls, Sammie and Slim with the full band who all nodded and began. Slim caresses the pianoâs keys, the heart of the arrangement. Upright bass, softly walked in quarter notes, very round and woody. The drums, a slow shuffle beat, whispery, almost like brushing sandpaper. Sammie on his guitar, foot tapping, played soft chord stabs on the backbeat or little bluesy fills and the sax⊠moaning gently.Â
The singers swayed as Y/N did with soft smiles as the music played for a bit. Y/N looked around the crowd, seeing everyone grab their loved one, even Bo and Grace. But her eyes were actually searching for his face. Meanwhile, Stack was swaying gently as Annie stood next to him. âHey, sis. I saw you runninâ up them steps. Everythinâ okayâ, Stack asked looking at her as she placed her hands behind her. âYes, Elias. I just wanted to ask you somethinâ before⊠yâknow who gets in the way. While he is distractedâ, Annie said as she nodded towards the stage, making them both watch Y/N.
Hooold me, baby⊠donâtcha turn me looose tonight đ”
Mmm, hooold me, sugar⊠donâtcha turn me looose tonight đ”
The moonâs up there grinninâ⊠anâ your eyes shininâ soft anâ briiiiightđ”
âElias, I want you to be honest with meâ, Annie started, âhow do you feel about Y/N?â Stackâs eyes flickered before they looked at his sister in law. Stack leaned against the railing, his chest rising and falling like heâd just run a mile. His fingers fidgeted with the edge of the bar, eyes fixed somewhere past Annie as if the words were too heavy to hold in. âAnn⊠I⊠I donât even know how to say it right. Y/N⊠sheâsheâs like⊠like sunlight, Ann. Not just âcause she shines, but⊠she makes things feel alive again. When sheâs around, I⊠I donât feel restless. I donât feel⊠like Iâm always tryinâ to outrun myself. I just⊠I can breathe. And I⊠I want that, with her, all the time.â
When ya handâs in mine, honey, itâs like a gentle rain đ”
Ohhh, when ya handâs in mine, darlinâ, itâs like a gentle rain đ”
Evâry heartbeat Iâm hearinâ⊠itâs whisperinâ your naaaame
He swallowed hard, the raw honesty cracking his voice. âI ainât never cared like this. I ainât never⊠wanted someone the way I want her. And it ainât just want, itâs⊠itâs need, but not in a way thatâs selfish. Itâs⊠like she completes the pieces I didnât even know were missinâ.â The ladies joined into the chorus softly.
Ohhh, baby, Iâm yoâs, body anâ sooooul đ”
Youâs my fire in the night, you make me whole đ”
Donâtcha slip away, sugar, donâtcha make me cry đ”
Hooold me, darlinâ⊠till the morning sky đ”
Annie stepped closer, her hand resting lightly on his forearm. Her eyes softened as she let him feel her calm. âStack⊠baby⊠you canât keep that locked up inside. You feel it so deep because itâs real. Y/N⊠sheâs your heart calling you home. Donât push it away. Donât let fear take whatâs yours. You both deserve to feel thisâhonestly, completely.â
Bandâs playinâ low⊠piano hums like a lullaby đ”
Mmm, bandâs playinâ low⊠piano hums like a lullaby đ”
Iâll sing for you, baby⊠till them stars fall from the sky
Stackâs jaw loosened, a breath he didnât know he was holding slipping out. âI just⊠Iâm scared, Ann. Scared that Iâll mess it up, scared that⊠anything could take it away from me.â
Ohhh, baby, Iâm yoâs, body anâ sooooul đ”
Youâs my sugar in the dark, the one I hold đ”
Donâtcha slip away, sugar⊠stay right heeere with me đ”
Hooold me, darlinâ⊠for all eterrrnity đ”
Annie squeezed his arm gently, a small, reassuring smile tugging at her lips. âThen donât wait. Donât let the fear win. You tell her, Stack. Show her. Let her know what she means. Lifeâs too short for hesitation, baby. You got this. And also, I think she feels the same way.â Annieâs eyes landed on the stage, Stackâs gaze followed and he noticed that her eyes softly met his as she still sang.Â
Mmm⊠thatâs right, baby⊠just you anâ meâŠ
Stack nodded towards her and whispered, âAnn, I need a favor.â Annie smirked and looked up at him. âIâm listening, suga.â
The singing swelled again, filling the club with warmth and rhythm. Annie stood close to Smoke, her smile soft but mischievous. âHoney, may I have this dance?â she asked, extending her hand toward him. Smokeâs lips tugged into a rare smile as he took it, guiding her onto the floor where couples swayed in the glow of the stage lights.
As he kept his eyes on his wife, Annieâs hand slipped behind his back. Two fingers lifted in the airâa silent signal only Stack would understand.
Stack straightened his dress shirt and vest, heart pounding steady but eyes sharp as they tracked Y/N. He moved through the crowd with quiet purpose, the room around him fading until only she remained.
Y/Nâs voice trailed off with the last line of her verse, and instinctively her gaze flicked upward to the balconyâbut Stack wasnât there. He caught Pearlineâs eye and leaned in, whispering something quick. She grinned wide, winking as she cupped her mic. Sliding over to Sammie, she passed the message. A laugh rumbled from him before he nodded at Slim. A single glance was exchanged, then the bandâs tune shifted.
The music melted into a playful, jazzy swing. The joint came alive, feet stomping, heads bobbing, laughter spilling into the air. Y/N blinked in surprise, her brow furrowingâuntil her eyes locked on Stack. He stood at the edge of the stage, hand outstretched, gaze unwavering.
Pearline leaned toward her ear, whispering with a sly grin, âGo on, girl. Weâll cover you.â
Y/Nâs chest tightened. Her heart thudded fast, and before she could think twice, she moved toward him. âStack, what is happeninâ?â she whispered breathlessly, but his only answer was the steady grip of his hand guiding her away.
âStack, what ifâHEY!â she squeaked as he swept her off her feet, cradling her in his arms like she weighed nothing. Laughter bubbled in the crowd as he strode for the back hall with unshaken confidence.
Cornbread, leaning against a doorframe, let out a hearty chuckle. âOne room for two,â he said, swinging the door wide.
The door clicked shut behind them. The sudden hush made Y/Nâs pulse louder in her ears. Stack set her down gently on the bed, but before her words could form, he drew her back up to stand, his hand warm at the small of her back.
For a breath, he just looked at herâhis eyes tracing every line of her face, soft with something unspoken yet undeniable. His thumb brushed her cheek, tender, reverent, as if he were memorizing the shape of her.
Then he leaned in, his lips meeting hers in a kiss that was slow, certain, and impossibly sweet. It wasnât rushed, wasnât stolenâit was a confession, poured into her mouth without a single word. The world seemed to still, the muffled swing of the band outside fading away.
Her knees weakened as his other hand cupped the back of her neck, holding her steady, secure, cherished. The kiss deepened, not with hunger but with warmthâeach movement deliberate, carrying the weight of all the longing theyâd held back.
Y/N melted against him, her fingers curling into his vest as though afraid heâd slip away. But he didnât. He held her close, the kiss lingering like a promise, like home, like the truth he could no longer hide.
Their lips drifted away from one another, making them look into each otherâs eyes. He cupped her face in his hands and smiled softly. âHey, Dollâ. She smiled back. âHello, Stack.â Stack tucked her hair behind ear and said âyâknow, you look awfully good in white.â She smiled at his remark before asking âis that why you pulled me in here, baby. His face softened even more, look into her face. His voice was low at first, trembling just enough to show the weight of his heart. âY/N⊠I ainât never been good with fancy words, but I gotta tell you somethinâ. I canât keep it in no more. Iâve tried. I told myself I could be quiet, play it cool, but every time I see you, every time you laugh, every time you look at me⊠itâs like my chest gonna burst. I ainât never felt like this before, not for anyone. Not like this.â
He swallowed hard, his eyes never leaving hers, and his hands flexed at his sides. âYou⊠you make me want to be better. You make me see things I never noticed before, feel things I thought Iâd never feel. And I⊠I canât stop thinkinâ about you. Not when I wake up, not when I sleep, not when Iâm with anyone else. Youâre always there. Always.â
His voice grew steadier, more urgent. âI donât want no games. I donât want no maybeâs or ifâs. I want youâme and you, honest and real. I want the moments, the fights, the laughs, the quiet nights. I want it all. Y/N, I love you. Ainât no other way to say it. Ainât no hiding it. I love you. And if you let me⊠Iâll spend the rest of my life showinâ you what that means.â
He reached out slowly, almost afraid she might vanish, and whispered, âYouâre my home, Y/N. You always been my home.â
Y/Nâs breath caught, and her hands trembled slightly at her sides. She could feel her heart hammering in her chest, matching the rhythm of his words. She wanted to speak, to say something, anythingâbut the weight of what heâd just confessed pinned her tongue.
Her mind raced. He⊠he loves me? He really loves me? She thought of all the stolen glances, the brief touches, the way heâd been there in moments she couldnât even admit she needed someone. Every moment made sense now, like a puzzle finally falling into place.
âI⊠IâŠâ she started, her voice soft and shaky. Her hands found themselves clutching the hem of her blouse, twisting it as if grounding herself. âStack⊠I donât know what to say. I⊠Iâve felt it too, you know. Every time youâre near⊠itâs like my chest canât hold it all. ButâŠâ Her gaze dropped to the floor, her shoulders tightening. âThereâs so much⊠I canât just⊠I want to be with you so bad, baby. I want us to be happy, not hiding anymore. Not yet. Not withoutâwithout making sure everything else is safe first. My family⊠they gotta come home first. And the deal⊠itâs still hanging over us.â
Her eyes met his again, shimmering with unshed tears, and she gave a small, almost painful smile. âBut⊠hearing you say that? Stack⊠hearing you say you love me like that⊠itâs everything Iâve wanted to hear. And I⊠I donât want to run from it. I still have the deal with ya brother and Annie. I still havenât found house yet for my family and then my daddy would be outta job-â
Stackâs hands tightened gently around hers, his voice low but steady, every word weighted with resolve.
âY/N⊠I know whatâs weighinâ on you. I know youâre carryinâ everybody on your backâyour daddy, little Faith, all of it. But listen to me. You ainât gotta do it alone no more. Iâll help your daddy find work, I swear it. I know folks, I can make sure heâs set, same as any man thatâs worked his whole life deserves to be. And Faith⊠Iâll get her the care she needs, the best there is. Whatever it takes, Iâll see to it. She wonât go without, not while Iâm breathinâ.â
He brought her hand to his chest, pressing it against the steady thrum of his heart.
âAs for Smoke?â He shook his head, jaw firm. âHeâll huff, heâll puff, but heâll get over it. He always does. But me? I canât get over you. I canât keep standinâ by watchinâ you give your whole self to everybody but me. Iâve waited long enough, and my heartâdarlinâ, itâs yours whether I speak it or not.â
His thumb brushed along her knuckles, tender against his rough hand.
âYou ainât meant to spend your days raisinâ somebody elseâs young ones and beinâ my brotherâs ârelieverâ. Youâre meant to be happy, to sing, to laugh, to live. Quit this nanny work, Y/N. Let me be the one to carry that load for you. Let me take care of you, of your family. Iâll put food on the table, roof over your heads, shoes on Faithâs feet. I donât want your daddy worryinâ about a job, I donât want Faith sufferinâ, and I donât want you wastinâ your life takinâ care of everybody else but yourself.â
He leaned closer, his voice breaking just enough to show the depth of it. âI want you. All of you. And Iâll move mountains if thatâs what it takes to prove it. Lemme prove it, baby.âÂ
Y/Nâs lips parted, but no words came. Her heart thudded against her ribs so loud it drowned out the muffled music leaking through the walls. For a moment, she just stared at him, every promise he spoke lingering in the air like something sacred. Her hands trembled, and Stack caught them, his palms warm and calloused as they swallowed hers. He didnât grip tightâjust steady, just enough for her to feel she was safe.
He lifted her knuckles to his mouth, pressing a kiss there, slow and reverent, like she was something to be worshiped. âI mean it, Doll,â he whispered against her skin, his voice low, ragged with truth. âAinât nothinâ I said just words. Iâll do it all, and more, if you just let me.â
Her eyes stung, tears she didnât mean to show brimming as she searched his face for even a flicker of doubt. There wasnât any. He looked at her like a man whoâd already made up his mind, like she was his home, his reason.
Slowly, Y/N stepped forward, closing the small space between them. She let go of the air sheâd been holding and rested her forehead against his chest, her hands sliding up to clutch at the fabric of his vest. She could feel his heartbeat thundering beneath her cheek, steady and sure. âStackâŠâ she whispered, voice trembling, âI donât know how to do thisâŠâ
He wrapped his arms around her, pulling her into him like heâd been waiting a lifetime. One hand slid up to cradle the back of her head, fingers tangling gently in her curls, the other splayed wide across her back as though anchoring her to him. He pressed a kiss to the crown of her head, lingering there, his voice rumbling against her hair.
âYou donât gotta know how. Just trust me. Trust us.â
Her body softened, her breath shuddering as she melted into his hold. And for the first time in a long while, Y/N allowed herself to believe she didnât have to carry everything aloneâthat maybe, just maybe, Stack meant every word with his whole soul.
Her body softened, her breath shuddering as she melted into his hold. And for the first time in a long while, Y/N allowed herself to believe she didnât have to carry everything aloneâthat maybe, just maybe, Stack meant every word with his whole soul.
She lifted her head, eyes glistening, her fingers still clutching his vest like letting go might break the spell. Her gaze searched his, looking for cracks, for any sign that this was a dream sheâd regret. But all she found was the raw steadiness in his eyesâunflinching, patient, burning for her and only her.
Her breath caught. She let go of his vest and instead placed her hand flat against his chest, feeling the weight of his heartbeat beneath her palm. âStack,â she whispered, voice trembling, âif I give you all of me⊠there ainât no turninâ back.â
He leaned down, his forehead brushing hers, his lips so close she could taste the promise in his breath. âGood,â he murmured. ââCause I donât want no half of you, Doll. I want every piece. Every scar, every fear, every damn dream you carry.â
The tears slipped free then, but she didnât shy away. Instead, she tilted her face up and kissed him. It wasnât rushed, wasnât desperateâit was slow, soft, certain. The kind of kiss that spoke of trust more than passion, of surrender more than heat. Her lips lingered on his, trembling at first until she felt him kiss her back with the same gentleness, like he was cradling her heart between them.
Stack cupped her jaw in one hand, his thumb brushing away a tear as it slid down her cheek. The kiss deepened just slightly, enough to tell her he meant forever, but not so much that it demanded anything she wasnât ready to give. When they finally pulled apart, their breaths tangled in the hush of the room, his forehead rested against hers again.
âYou see?â he whispered, brushing his nose against hers. âThat right there⊠thatâs all I ever wanted. You trustinâ me. Us.â
And for the first time in years, Y/N felt her chest ease, the weight sheâd carried lifting just enough to let love settle in its place.
She leaned into his lips again, their kiss deepening with a sweetness that made her whole body hum. Her fingers moved with care, slowly unbuttoning his vest as if savoring each second, while his hand slid along the curve of her back, gently finding the zipper of her gown and easing it down. They paused, lips hovering, eyes lockedâbreathless but certain.
âYou can have all of me, baby,â she whispered, her voice trembling with both fear and freedom.
A smile curved across his lips, soft but sure, and when she mirrored it, it felt like a promise passing between them. He lowered his head, pressing tender kisses along her shoulder as he slipped her strap down, every touch patient, reverent. She eased him out of his vest, letting it fall forgotten to the floor, her hands lingering on him as though reassuring herself he was real.
He caught her gaze again, never looking away as he eased both straps from her arms. The fabric slid down her body, pooling at her feet in silence that felt sacred. She reached up and cupped his face in her hands, thumbs brushing his cheekbones with the kind of trust that made his chest ache.
Stackâs answer came not in words but in the strength of his embraceâhis right arm curling around her, lifting her as though she weighed nothing. She let out a soft gasp as her legs instinctively wrapped around his waist, her arms tightening around his shoulders, holding him close. His mouth found hers once more, slower this time, deliberate, every kiss telling her what he couldnât stop saying in his heart: that she was his, fully, and always.
As they made their way to the bed, Stack lowered her down with a gentleness that stole her breath. She sank into the sheets, her hair fanning against the pillow, and looked up at him through heavy lashes, her gaze soft, almost shy.
His eyes never left her. It was as if by keeping her in sight, he could keep her from slipping away, from being anything less than his in that moment. Slowly, he began to undress, taking his time as though he wanted her to see every part of himânot just his body, but his sincerity. His shirt slid from his shoulders, followed by his undershirt, both discarded carelessly on the floor.
He bent, sliding off his shoes, his hands never faltering, his gaze still tethered to hers. He moved to his belt next, the leather sliding free with a soft hiss before he let it drop beside the rest of his clothes. The sound made her laugh unexpectedly, a sweet, unguarded sound that slipped into a little snort.
Stack froze, surprised, before the corner of his mouth tugged up into a grin. That soundâso natural, so herâbroke whatever tension lingered in the air. His chest shook with a quiet chuckle, and he shook his head, his voice low, warm.
âGod, Doll⊠even now, you still find a way to make me laugh.â
She bit her lip, smiling as he unzipped his pants, and what she saw shocked her. Nine inches, thick, veiny, and cut. She began to think that he was really the baby and if they were even twins. She slowly began to crawl up to him, eyes on his partner in crime and pleasure. When she reached him, she began kissing it from the tip and noticed how it jumped. She smiled as she looked up to him, noticing how soft his was. She kissed from his V-cut down the shaft and began to kiss it until she reached his tip. She looked up at him again, swallowing his dick and making him wince in pleasure. As she began to please him with her mouth, he noticed how her back began to slowly arch, the most perfect arch he had ever seen. He sucked his ring and middle finger to lubricate them and reached behind her, massaging her clit, making her moan softly with his dick in her mouth still. He can feel how quick she had gotten and, boy, wasnât he tempted.
They met eyes, still pleasing one another, and he said, âBaby, the things you do to me, you have no idea. Iâm a patient man, the Lord knows I am, but I gotta feel how that pretty pussy is. Câmere.â He gently removed himself from her mouth and pulled her up, laying her back against the bed, and he crawled up her body, kissing it then her lips. âLet me know if you need some time. No rules, lemme know how I make you feelâ, Stack said, his tip teasing her messy clit. Then she felt it as she grabbed the bed sheets. He slid into her easily and he groaned, feeling how tight she was. âMy looooooooord, Doll. That pretty pussy is grippinâ me alreadyâ, Stack said, slowly stroking her. Y/N felt her nipples hardened, her body shuddering, and a tingling sensation going up her spine.Â
Stack looked into her face, eyes searching hers. âMmm, baby, you feel so damn good. This is what heaven must be likeâ, Stack said, making her smile before kissing one another. The way he kissed her skin made her feel safe. The way he slowly stroked her was so gentle yet so dominating. âHow I make you feel, baby?â
âReal good, babyâ, she moaned as she held his face, and thatâs when she felt it. His pace started to pick up, making the bed scrape against the wooden floor. âI feel you cominâ, doll. Are you gonna come for me, babyâ, he asked, as he groaned and grunted.Â
On the other side of the door, Cornbread sat there smiling to himself, knowing his good friend was going to make that girl fall in love with him and vice versa. Stack and Y/N kissed, moaning into each otherâs mouths. Y/N feeling him stretch her and her pulling him in more, showing how much they really wanted this. She felt that familiar knot in her stomach, and her breathing became heavy; her fingernails began to claw his back.Â
âGo âhead. Come for me. I can feel it. Give it to daddy, babyâ, Stack said, before biting into skin. Her eyes began to cross, and she felt herself coming around him. âAhhhhhhhh shiiiiiiitâ, she moaned, making him smile and bite his own lip. Her body started to shake from the orgasm, but calmed as she felt Stackâs arms around her waist, still inside her, and sitting with her in his lap. She began to slowly move against his body as his hand slid up to her neck softly. âThere you go, doll. I know you have more in you.â She started to bounce on him in a nice rhythm; he followed, and he looked over the side mirror. âDamn, we sho look togetha, doll. Look at you takinâ that dick. Is daddy dick good baby?â
What he saw almost made him come early. The fire in her eyes, burning into his soul, and her voice almost did it for him. âYes, baby.â
âYes, what? Tell daddy, doll. Use your words, baby.â
âDaddyâs dick feel so good.â
âYeah, baby? I wanna hear you say it again.â
âDaddyâs dick is so fuckinâ good.âÂ
âThen show me how good daddyâs dick is, babyâ, Stack said as he felt himself getting his back to the bed. Y/N placed her left hand on his chest, his hands on her hips, and her riding him like she did in her dream. âShit, the prettiest damn cowgirl Iâve seen. Ah fuck.â Y/N moved her hips in circles as she bounced on him as she was moaning, music to his ears.
His hands went up to her full, slightly sagging breasts and massaged her hard nipples, making him cream on his dick. âAhhhh, shit. Look at you. Pretty pussy just gushinâ, ainât it doll? Give me all of it. Donât hold back now.â Her moans began to echo through the room along with his groaning. âCâmere.â
Meanwhile, downstairs, the club was still thumping with life. The band kept the floor hot, folks laughing, dancing, glasses clinking. Smoke leaned back at the bar with Annie by his side, but something tugged at himâsomething off. His eyes drifted up to the stage. Empty.
Y/N was gone.
He frowned, scanning the room. The crowd was thick, but he caught sight of Grace pouring drinks, a couple of other girls running trays. No Y/N.
âWhere the hell she at?â he muttered under his breath, low but sharp enough for Annie to catch. She followed the way his eyes darted, saw the tension building in his jaw.
Smoke pushed off the bar, cutting through the crowd until he reached Sammie and Pearline near the side. He grabbed Sammie by the arm, pulling him close, his voice tight.
âWhereâs Miss Carter?â
Sammieâs face twitched, caught off guard. âIâI ainât sure, Smoke. Think she mightâve gone to the bathroom.â
Before Smoke could press, Pearline slid in quick, a too-bright smile on her lips. âMm, no, I think I saw her headinâ toward the stock room.â
Annie stepped up beside her, folding her arms, steady but watchful. âSlim told me she slipped out back a minute ago.â
Smokeâs eyes cut between the three of themâSammieâs nervous swallow, Pearlineâs quick grin, Annieâs cool mask. He didnât like it. Not one damn bit.
Without another word, he shoved past, marching toward the back, the weight of his suspicion heavy in every step. The three of them trailed behind, exchanging glances, each praying Stack had already moved Y/N far enough out of reach.
Meanwhile, upstairs, Stack had Y/N in a deep arch, them both looking in the mirror as he pounded into her. âDoll, you just donât know what you do to me, womanâ, Stack groaned, smacking her ass repeatedly. âI donât know what sounds better, ya laugh, your voice, you singinâ or how you sound when I make you come over and over again.â He pulled her arms back to make her body raise up, kissing her neck and making moan and grin. Y/N was about to come and he looked at her face in the mirror, eyes on one another and Stack said "go 'head, baby. Everythin' gon' be all right now."
Smoke stormed down the hall, boots heavy against the floor, and flung open the bathroom door without hesitation. The harsh swing of it smacked against the wall.
âMiss Carter,â he barked, his voice echoing off the tile.
Silence.
His nostrils flared. He grabbed Sammie by the arm and shoved him inside. âLook under every stall.â
Sammie froze, blinking. âSmoke, Iââ
Before he could finish, Annieâs sharp shake of her head cut him off, her eyes telling him clearâdonât fight it.
Sammie swallowed hard and crouched, glancing under each stall one by one. The tension thickened with every empty space. Finally, he straightened, wiping his palms on his trousers.
âNo one, Smoke.â
Smokeâs jaw ticked, that muscle in his cheek jumping. He brushed past Sammie and Annie without another word, his eyes dark as he headed down the hall toward the stock room, each step heavier than the last.
Back upstairs, Y/N and Stack were in sixty-nine, his hard penis deep in her throat and her pretty womanhood on his mouth. As she rode his mouth, he was thrusting up into hers. Both moaning and pleasing one another. She started to use her saliva to massage his balls, making him smack her behind, her jolting and squirting in his mouth softly. He smiled to himself before latching on to her clit, fingering her and making her weak.
Smoke stopped in front of the stock room, his gaze sharp and calculating. He glanced at Pearline, who instinctively met his eyes.
âWhat?â she asked, wary.
âOpen the door,â Smoke said, his tone clipped.
âSmoke, this isââ Pearline started, raising her hands, but froze when she saw him level a revolver at her.
Annieâs eyes went wide, disbelief written across her face. Sammie stepped forward. âWhat theââ
A sharp smack from the butt of Smokeâs gun cut him off. He leveled it back at Pearline. âOpen the door, now, woman. Donât make me ask again.â
Pearlineâs eyes flicked to Sammie, then reluctantly swung the door open, keeping a careful eye on Smoke. The group peered insideâbut the room was empty, just the usual stock and neatly arranged supplies.
âOops,â Pearline muttered, folding her arms and leaning against the wall, a faint smirk betraying her amusement.
Smokeâs jaw clicked audibly. He slipped the revolver back into its holster and pushed past her, his steps heavy with tension, the silence following him like a shadow.
Upstairs, Y/N lied her chest on the bed, Stack thrusting in her kissing her shoulder, listening to her moan. âUgh, Y/N. You about to make me comeâ, he said biting in her skin, their sweat combining and all. His hand wrapped around her neck and he began kissing her. âI wanna feel it, baby. I wonât waste a drop, I promise, baby. Give it to me, please. Shiiiiiitâ, Y/N said and smiled when she heard him grunt in response.
Outside, Smoke stalked ahead, Annie and Pearline at his sides, Sammie trailing behind. His eyes swept over the alley and the shadows, searching, restless. The longer he found nothing, the hotter his blood boiled.
He spun on them, jaw tight, voice sharp. âYâall got me runninâ on some damn goose hunt. Where the hell is she?!â
Annie folded her arms, chin tilted with that usual sass. âHoney, she been workinâ all night. Thatâs why she here anyway, right?â
Smoke sucked his teeth, his patience razor-thin. Just then, footsteps scuffed against the ground behind them. The group turned.
âBo,â Annie sighed, exasperated. âWhat you need, suga? We a little busy.â
Bo glanced at them all, hesitant, before squaring his shoulders. âI know where Y/N is.â
The words hit the air heavy, pulling every eye his way. Shock flickered across Annie and Pearlineâs faces. Sammie stiffened. Smokeâs eye twitched, a slow, dangerous smile tugging at his lips.
âWhere?â he asked, voice low, deadly calm.
Upstairs, Y/N was on her back, Stack on top. They were almost there, feeling that certain feeling. Y/N moaned, softly biting his lip before they kissed. âI love you, Y/N.â
Bo,â Smoke growled, his voice like gravel, âshe better be up here with that negro or I swearââ
Bo swallowed hard but kept climbing the steps, the others trailing behind. âI saw him pull her up here an hour ago,â he said quickly, eyes darting toward Smoke.
Smoke cut him a side-eye sharp enough to slice. Pearline arched a brow, smirking despite the tension. âAn hour⊠hmmm. Impressive.â
Sammie shifted uncomfortably, glancing at Annie, but no one dared speak further. The wooden steps creaked under their weight as the group marched up, the silence thick with Smokeâs simmering rage.
At the top of the stairs, the hallway stretched before themâdimly lit, lined with doors leading to the private sex rooms. The air was heavy, carrying the faint perfume and musk of what went on behind those doors. Smokeâs boots struck the floor hard, each step like a warning, as he led them down the narrow hall toward the truth he was dead set on finding.
âI love you, Stack.â And that was it, he grabbed her throat, making them both came together. Even with his release inside her, he gave a few quick thrusts before fully pulling out. He looked down at her sweaty body, seeing how tired. He kissed her skin, pulling her into a soft hug, kissing her lips as her eyes looked at him. âHeyâ, she said, and he replied, âHey, baby,â before kissing her lips.
Smoke stormed down the hall, blood pounding in his ears, until he spotted Cornbread leaned lazy against a closed door, arms crossed like he had no care in the world.
Cornbreadâs head lifted at the sight of them, and his hand slipped behind him to rap three soft knocks against the wall. A signal. A warning.
âSmoke, whatâs goinâ on ?â Cornbread asked, his tone calm but his eyes too alert.
âWho in there, Cornbread?â Smokeâs voice was low, dangerous, his jaw flexing like steel about to snap.
Cornbread shifted, glancing at the group crowding the hall. âCanât say, boss. Ainât nobodyâs business.â
âItâs mine now.â Smokeâs words came out like a growl. âBo says someone who ainât supposed to be here dragged somebody else up here.â
Cornbreadâs gaze cut sharp toward Bo, slow and menacing. âDamn⊠Bo, you snitchinâ summa beech.â
Before the air could settle, Smoke shoved Cornbread aside and gripped the handle. For a heartbeat, the hallway went still. Annieâs breath caught. Pearline leaned forward. Sammieâs eyes darted, wide as saucers.
Then Smoke flung the door wide open.
InsideâSlim. Butt-naked, tangled with his old lady in sweaty chaos. Her shriek ripped through the room as she snatched the sheets, Slim spinning around with wild eyes.
Pearlineâs hand flew to her mouth, eyes near bursting. Sammie slapped his palms over his face. Annie snapped her head away. Bo froze. Cornbread bit back a laugh.
âWHAT THE HELL YâALL DOINâ?!â Slim roared, chest heaving, manhood swaying bold in the lamplight. âCORNBREAD, I TOLD YOâ SORRY ASS TO COVER ME!â
Annie snapped the door shut so hard it rattled. âThatâs enough. Everyone downstairsâNOW.â
The group scattered fast, shame and shock tangling their feet as Slimâs curses echoed behind the door. Smoke stayed frozen, muscles rigid, the fury in his chest boiling hotter with every second wasted.
âSee what happens when you go huntinâ ghosts?â Annie hissed low at him, eyes sharp. âNow move.â
Reluctantly, Smoke stormed off, boots stomping the boards, Annie close at his heels. She glanced back once, throwing Cornbread a quick wink.
Cornbread tilted his hat slow, waiting until the hallway emptied. Then, calm as ever, he turned and rapped twice on the wall beside himâthe signal meant for another door.
A door Smoke hadnât even checked.
Silence hung, thick as smoke. Then a voice inside stirred.
Inside, Stackâs head lifted. He glanced at Y/N sprawled in the sheets, breathless, glowing. âWell, Doll,â he murmured, a crooked grin tugging his lips, âlooks like Smokeâs sniffinâ us out. Letâs get you washed up âfore he tears this whole place down.â
He pushed up from the bed, muscles aching, and looked down at her.
âBaby⊠I canât feel my legs,â she pouted, lips quivering like she meant it.
Stack chuckled low, shaking his head. âThatâs âcause I laid claim to âem.â
Bending down, he scooped her up into his arms like she weighed nothinâ, her arms instinctively wrapping around his neck. He carried her toward the bathroom, her laughter soft against his ear, the sound almost enough to drown out the storm brewing just outside the door.
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POV: You are a young lady in the 1930's who was hired by the Moore family to help around the house and be a nanny...but to your surprise, you may have to do more.
A/N: Okaaaay, I know I haven't wrote any fanfics in a while or just anything on Tumblr but I watched Sinners last night before bed and let's just say...my dream was very vivid. If this goes well, then I will make this a mini series.
Warning: Sexual Situations
Word Count: 3335
Pairing: Elijah 'Smoke" Moore X Annie (feat. Elias "Stack" Moore and Black Female Reader
Y/N hurried down the hall to catch up to her friend, giving Sammie a sharp church pinch on the arm.
âOw! Whatâd you go and do that for, woman?â he yelped.
She pressed a finger to her lips as they slowed their pace. âNow, why on Earth would you go tellinâ your family Iâm gonna be the maid?â
âNanny,â he corrected.
Y/N folded her arms, one brow arched. âNanny whoâs also cookinâ, cleaninâ, and doinâ all the dang housework.â
Sammie tilted his head. She wasnât wrong.
âIf I was lookinâ to run myself ragged, Sammie, I wouldnât have left home.â
âAnd all that without a dime to help your family, huh?â
That made her look away, arms still folded, thoughts heavy. Y/N had told Sammie about her sisterâs worsening condition and how they needed the best treatment money could buy. Her father was already worn down from three jobs, too tired to enjoy even two, and Y/Nârecently unemployedâhad been feeling useless. Sheâd asked if there was any work back in Mississippi she could take on. Sammie had delivered.
âY/N, you know any Negro in townâd give their right arm to work with my cousins. They donât trust manyâjust a select fewâand even then, they keep a close watch. So you oughta take it as a good sign Smoke saw somethinâ in you he didnât see in any of the other girls he interviewed.â
Her head snapped toward him. âHold onâyou mean there were gals before me?â
Sammie didnât answer, just smirked and nodded before stopping at a room with the door wide open. He stepped inside while she lingered in the hall, taking it in.
It was bigger than her room back homeâcream-colored walls, polished oak floors, and not just a twin bed but a tall dresser, a bookshelf, and a desk by the window. Sammie set her bags down beneath it and looked back as she stepped in.
âYouâll be just fine, Y/N. Iâll let you settle in, but you may wanna freshen up and change into your uniform.â
âUniform?â she repeated, but he was already heading out the door.
She turned toward the dresser, curiosity piqued, and opened it. Her expression shifted immediately at what she saw inside.
Moments later
Freshly washed, Y/N was pinning her kinky curls into a low bun when she heard a baby coo downstairs, followed by Smokeâs warm drawl: âMy girls are back home,â and the soft sound of a kiss.
She smoothed her new clothes, took a steadying breath, and made her way to the stairs. A womanâs voice floated up to meet herâgentle, nurturing. Y/N had a feeling this was the lady of the house, and that maybe working for her would feel⊠less like servitude.
By the third step, she rolled her shoulders back, folded her hands neatly in front of her, and descended the last few steps. The chatter in the living room faded to silence.
Stepping in, she found every set of eyes fixed on her. She couldnât yet tell if the looks were good⊠or bad. The air felt heavy, like a cold blanket.
Y/N decided to cut through it. âHi, Miss Annie Moore. Iâm Y/N CarterâŠâ
âOur new nanny, huh? Well, itâs real nice to finally meet you, darling. Come on inâdonât be shy now.â
Y/N stepped inside slowly, feeling every pair of eyes fixed on her. Stack lingered by the archway, chewing on a toothpick, lips caught in a thoughtful bite. Sammieâs gaze was warm, steadyâcomforting. Annie and Smoke stood side by side; Annieâs lips curved gently, while Smokeâs face remained a stony mask.
Annie wore a long white lace gown, the kind befitting the 1930s, her hair adorned with sprigs of babyâs breath. Cradled in her arms was a baby girl, swaddled in white, peacefully sleeping.
âY/N, this here is Angelina Moore.â Annie lifted the cloth to reveal the babyâs chubby cheeks and angelic faceâone of the most beautiful little ones Y/N had ever seen.
âSheâs just like a little doll, so precious.â
âThanks, dear. When she smiles, sheâs the spittinâ image of Elijah.â
A quiet snicker came from behind her. Annie and Smokeâs eyes flicked to Stack, who shrugged innocently. Y/N bit her lip to keep from laughing.
Annieâs gaze returned to Y/N, who stood quietly. âSo, Y/N darling, I hear you and my husband have already gone over the terms.â
âYes, maâam.â
âAnd you got him to put more money on the table as well, huh?â
Y/N felt a flicker of nervousness as Annieâs brow rose, her eyes narrowing slightly. Smokeâs gaze swept her up and down, taking in the uniform she wore. Y/N glanced at a nearby picture frame and spotted Stack still watching from across the room.
She met Annieâs eyes again. âYes, maâam. My father taught me to negotiateâsaid thatâs how real folks handle business, especially when theyâre servinâ others. If I was just watchinâ your child, the last offer wouldâve been fine. But since it sounds like Iâll be doinâ plenty more âround the house, I figured better compensation was fair. I donât mind the workâI can handle whatever comes my way.â
The room seemed to heat up with tension as she finished. Y/N braced herself, expecting dismissal, but Annieâs face softened.
âGoodâcouldnât agree more.â
Relief washed over her, and she exhaled quietly. Annie continued, âIâm glad you made him sweeten the offer. With a house this big, what he offered before was way too little.â
âSweetheart, I truly believed it was enough,â Smoke said, trying to plead his case.
Annie smiled knowingly at her husband, then turned back to Y/N and stepped closer. âPlease, would you mind placing Angelina in her crib now? Weâve had a long day.â
Annie gently set the baby into Y/Nâs arms. Entranced by the sleeping childâs face, Y/N began heading up the stairs, unaware of the eyes tracking her every moveâor the whispers behind her back.
âThe uniformâs sittinâ on her just right, donât it?â Stack murmured, adjusting his pants.
Annie approached Sammie by the piano. âSammie, why didnât you say she was a bit of a thicker gal? That uniformâs lookinâ a little tight on her.â
Sammie tipped his hat respectfully. âSorry, Ann. I ainât seen her in a whileâI didnât know sheâd be that⊠shapely.â
âItâs fine. She looks alright, but if she wants to get more comfy, Iâm here to lend a hand,â Annie said with a knowing smile, taking her place beside her husband again.
âElijah, ease up on that tough mug. Youâll have the poor girl jumpinâ outta her skin.â
Smokeâs face stayed stone as he glanced at his wife, then around the room. Annie smiled and said, âYeah, thatâs better.â
It was Y/Nâs first night in the Moore home, and she lay staring at the ceiling in the dark. From the right, she could hear the deep, rumbling snores drifting out of Annie and Smokeâs master suite.
Slipping out of bed, she tied her satin robe over matching pajamas and padded quietly to the kitchen. She poured herself a glass of water and sat at the small table under the window, the moonlight washing silver over the surface. Her thoughts drifted to her father, to her sisterâwas she doing any better? She missed them so much that she barely noticed the tear that slid down her cheek, landing on the tabletop.
The kitchen light snapped on.
Annie stood in the doorway, her long robe cinched at the waist, concern softening her face. âMiss Carter, youâre awake. Everything alright?â
âOh, Iâm fine. Just couldnât seem to fall asleep.â Y/N sipped her water.
Annie chuckled gently. âElijahâs got a snore on himâkeeps me up half the night. Like sharinâ a bed with a bear.â
Y/N smiled, trying not to laugh outright, idly circling her finger around the rim of her glass. Annie crossed to the stove, setting a kettle on the burner and reaching for a jar from the cupboard.
Bondye beni ou, she murmured in Creole, spooning herbs into two mugs. She sat beside Y/N, the kettle beginning to hum softly between them.
âMiss Carter,â Annie began, âwhat brought you back to Mississippi? Samuel says you havenât been here since yâall were twelve.â
Y/N hesitated. âI⊠was looking for work. My fatherâs grown weary, and to let him rest, I reached out to Sammie for a favor.â
Annie studied her, her gaze following Y/Nâs down to the table. âYou seem sad. You miss âem?â
Y/N nodded. âI do. But Iâm a big girlâI can take care of myself.â
Annieâs lips curved. âI can sense thatâand it ainât the voodoo, either. Youâve got an energy we want around here. Elijahâs noticed it too, even if he wonât say. Trust donât come easy for him, but heâll warm up to you. You twoâll be spendinâ plenty of time togetherâwhen heâs got his poker nights, when Iâm tied up at the store, or whatever else comes along. Elijah likes to be a happy man, and if heâs happy, weâre all happy. You just make sure you help him any way you can. Understood?â
Annieâs hand rested over hers, the touch warm. Y/N smiled back.
The kettle hissed. Annie rose to pour the hot water over the herbs. Y/Nâs gaze wandered to a shadow in the cornerâand froze. Annie noticed but kept pouring.
âElijah, you can come in, honey.â
He stepped into the light, pajama shirt unbuttoned, gaze locked on Y/N. âWhy are you up? You both have an early morning.â
âMiss Carter couldnât sleep,â Annie answered easily. âYou know how it is in a new home, Elijah.â
Still, his eyes never left her. She found herself glancing away, uneasy under the weight of it, as though he could read more than she wanted him to.
âHere you go, darlinâ,â Annie said, setting a steaming mug in front of her. âLavender and chamomile. Should help you sleep.â
âThank you, Mrs. Moore.â
âHoney, call me Ann. Youâre family now. Go on and get some rest.â
âGood night, Ann.â
âGood night, honey.â
As Y/N moved toward the archway, Elijah stepped aside but kept his gaze fixed on her.
âGood night, Mr. Moore,â she said quietly.
He watched until she disappeared upstairs and shut her door. Annieâs voice broke the silence. âElijah, give her a chance. Sheâs a good girl.â
âI reckon she can manage⊠though I do wonder if the galâs ready for whatâs cominâ her way.â He held out his hand to her. âCâmon now, sweetheartâletâs get on back to bed.â
It was the next morning, and Y/N was dressed in her gardening clothes, a wide shady hat perched on her head. She knelt beside Annieâs garden, humming softly as she pulled weeds, her gloved hands gently working the earth around the flowers. She was so focused, so in the zone, that she didnât even notice the sound of a car pulling up behind her.
A man stepped out, tipped his brimmed fedora, and smiled as he watched her work.
âWell now⊠if Iâd known the garden could grow a blossom like you, Iâd have been out here tendinâ it every day.â
Y/N looked up and smiled to see Stack standing there. âMorning, Stack. Whenâd you get in?â
âJust rolled in to see you were keepinâ well. Is Smoke âround?â
âNah, just me and the baby.â
She stood, slipping off her gloves and dropping them into her bucket. Stack looked her over and grinned, making her wonder what he saw.
âYou sure like to smile a lot, huh?â
âOnly when I got a fine-lookinâ lady like you in front of me, Miss Doll.â
Y/N couldnât lieâStack was smooth, but all the men back in New York knew their way with words. âYou gotta be sayinâ that to every pretty lady in town, donât ya?â
Stack just smiled and shook his head. âCould be, but the only one catchinâ my eye these days⊠is you, ainât it?â
Heat crept up Y/Nâs cheeks as they stood there in the sun.
âItâs kinda hot out. How âbout we take it inside for a spell?â Stack asked. She nodded. âIâll fix us some lemonade, if you like.â
âIâd like that mighty fine. Thank you, Miss Doll.â
He watched her lead the way inside. Y/N slipped off her gardening shoes by the door and swapped them for slippers before hanging her hat on the coatrack.
As she began squeezing lemons for the lemonade, Stack leaned against the kitchen archway, looking around.
âSo, Stack. What do you do besides beinâ a smooth talker and runninâ the juke joint?â
âNot much. Just around to help when Iâm needed.â
âI see. So itâs just you and Mr. Moore âround here?â
âSure is, Doll.â
Y/N reached into the freezer for some ice but dropped a cube on the floor.
âAh, shoot.â
As she bent to retrieve it, Stackâs mouth went slightly agape, his head tilting. The curve of her behind caught his eye, and though he felt a rush to pull her close, he held back. There was something delicate about her he didnât want to disturb.
Suddenly, Stack felt a presence behind him and glanced back to see Smoke stepping in, taking his usual spot to Stackâs left. His eyes quickly found Y/N, and Stack, reading his brotherâs body language like a book, watched quietly. Smokeâs hand rested casually in his pocket, cigarette balanced between his fingers, as he observed Y/N bending down to retrieve the dropped ice cube. She tossed it into the sink, then washed and dried the pot with careful, practiced movements.
Still facing away, Y/N flinched when a voice cut through the quiet.
âWhy ainât you out in the garden, Miss Carter?â
Startled, she turned sharply, clutching her pearls. âGood morning, Mr. Moore. Iââ
Stack jumped in before she could falter. âI asked her to fix some lemonade for when you got back, seeinâ as itâs hot out.â
Smoke didnât look away from Y/N; instead, he gave his brother a sharp side-eye. Then, taking a few steps forward, he stood directly in front of her, eyes locked on hers.
Y/N felt the urge to look away but held her gazeâsomething told her sheâd regret it if she did.
Smoke appraised her silently, then reached for a glass filled with ice and mint, pouring lemonade slowly as their eyes stayed locked. He raised the cup and took a deliberate sip.
Y/N noticed his lids drooping slightly as he savored the drink, the lemonade dripping softly down his mouth. For a brief moment, his usual stern expression softened.
He finished the glass and set it gently on the counter, never breaking eye contact.
âThat lemonadeâs sweeter than usual. Whatâd you put in it, Miss Carter?â
âI boiled some honey and stirred a little in. Mama used to make it that way.â
Y/N wasnât sure if he liked it. Stack poured himself a glass, sipping slowly while watching her.
âMiss Carter, that lemonadeâs real good, doll. Just what I needed,â he said with a grin, trying to ease the tension.
Y/N returned his smile warmly, about to reply when Smoke cleared his throat, preparing to speakâonly to be interrupted by a faint baby coo.
Seizing the moment, Y/N excused herself and slipped quietly upstairs.
Smoke looked over at his brother, clicking his teeth and leaning on the counter.
âElias, I know what youâre up to.â
âJust makinâ the girl feel welcomed.â
âYou look desperate.â
âYou look like a real putz, if you ask me.â
Smoke stepped around the counter, standing close enough to stare down his brother.
âLook here, Iâm just tryinâ to run my house like I should, and you go and start sweet talkinâ my nanny.â
Stack cracked his neck and poured himself another glass.
âSmoke, if you donât put some effort into Doll, she might up and quit. Then what? Youâll be back at square one, tryinâ to keep things runninâ âround hereâand with yourself.â
Smoke sighed and rolled his eyes. He knew Stack was rightâbut heâd never admit it out loud.
Upstairs, Y/N placed the baby back in her crib as she fell asleep. âYou love ya beauty sleep, huh, sweetheart? Well, while you sleep, I am gonna take a nice shower and change into my uniform.â She left Angelinaâs room, opened the linen cabinet, and made her way to the bathroom to draw a shower. Once the water warmed up, Y/N pinned her hair up tighter and closed the door to undress. Once she was done, she hopped in the shower and began bathing, but she had no clue what would happen next.
The steam began to cloud the mirror, wrapping the bathroom in a soft haze. Warm water cascaded over her shoulders, tracing slow paths down her back as she worked the soap over her skin. Her eyes were closed, lost in the comfort of the heat, when the faintest sound crept into her ears â the creak of a stair, drawn-out and deliberate.
She froze, the rhythm of her hands pausing mid-lather. Maybe it was the house settling⊠or maybe it wasnât. The sound came again, this time followed by the faint scuff of leather on wood. Someone was moving upstairs.
A manâs loafers made their way up the steps of the home, and he noticed that the door was cracked enough to get a clear view of the mirror. When he peeked in, he could see the light sag of Y/Nâs breasts, the unique shape of her areolas. Her nipples were hardened under the warm water and the soap, kissing each part of her body. He began to caress the hard print in his pants as he watched her touch her body, hearing her softly moan at the feel of the water. How can something so sweet-looking make him want her even more than he already did?
He began to unzip his pants, letting his manhood free, and placed himself inside his hand. He started slowly stroking himself, watching Y/N wash her womanhood and breasts gently. The way he wished he was inside her drove him insane. The urges were getting to him, and he placed his hand softly on the door to open slowly until he heard a car pull up and shut the door instead, making Y/Nâs eyes open. âHello? Anyone there?â she asked, but no one answered.
A few minutes later, Y/N was finished and dressed in her nanny attire. When she was about to head to the babyâs room to check on her, she remembered that it was almost her feeding time. She began to make her way down the stairs when she could hear a loud smack in the air. She slowly made her way down when she could now hear moaning and grunting from a man and a woman.Â
Y/N stood on the second step, peeking around the area when she heard the noise getting louder. She then looked into the living room and saw nothing. She started to think before heading down the rest of the stairs, and thatâs when she saw them. Miss Annie and Mr. Moore were in the kitchen. Annieâs breasts rubbed against the kitchen table as Smoke stood behind her, shirt unbuttoned and wide open, thrusting into her. Y/N could see the sweat dripping down from their bodies. Y/N didnât know if she should run back upstairs, but her feet wouldnât let her move. All she could feel was shock, fear⊠and arousal. She could feel her heart beat through her chest as she slowly backed away to not cause any noise until the loud cry of a baby not only caught her attention but the couple as well. Annie panted as did Smoke as Miss Moore said âY/Nâ...
A/N: Okay, sweet babies. This short series is inspired by @spaceprincess04 who wondered if our favorite bad boy turned vampire was either a man of the night or the man who supplies ladies of the night. With her permission, not only am I giving y'all Sex Toy!Stack Moore but also Big Daddy or Pimp!Stack Moore- yes, TWO new short series!!! Ya welcome, HOODLEMS !!!!
POV: Elias âStackâ Moore runs on rulesâwho he protects, what he allows, and what he never touches.
When he offers you safety, structure, and work without lies, you know the choice isnât simple. He promises protection, not ownership. Control, not affection.
But Stack watches too closely. Steps in too fast. Cares in ways that break his own rules.
Because in a world built on survival, protection is easy. Want is the dangerous part.
Under His Protection is a slow-burn, morally gray series where safety becomes temptationâand the man who knows better might be the one thing you canât afford.
Warning: Soft prostitution. Domination and Submission.
Word Count: 6428
Pairing: Big!Daddy Elias 'Stack' Moore x Thick!Black Reader
Stack checked his watch once. Then again. Fifteen minutes passed with the patience of a man who understood that showing up was its own kind of test.
He didnât pace. He leaned against the hood of his car, arms folded, eyes on the streetânot searching, just watching. The city moved the way it always did, careless of people making decisions that could reroute their lives. When she appeared at the corner, breath a little fast, coat buttoned wrong, he didnât smile like heâd won something.
âYou came,â he said. Not relief. Recognition.
âTraffic,â she replied, lifting her chin like an apology wasnât owed.
He opened the passenger door for her without ceremony and drove.
They didnât talk much on the way. The city thinned, streetlights stretching farther apart, houses growing larger and quieter. When the gates opened, she noticed the absence of noise firstâthe way sound seemed to stop at the iron bars. The house rose from the grounds wide and deliberate, not flashy, not hidden. It looked⊠established.
Inside, warmth greeted them before anything else. Soft lighting. Polished floors. Voicesâwomenâs voicesâlaughter drifting from somewhere deeper in the house. Women of different races and builds moved through the space dressed in silk, lace, satin robes that caught the light like confidence. None of them looked afraid. None of them looked owned.
âBig Daddy Stack,â one of them called as she passed, grinning wide.
Another brushed his shoulder. âYou're late today, Big Daddy Stack.â
âBusiness, honey,â he replied, approving, unbothered. The name stuck to him easily. He didnât correct it. He never had.
They noticed her immediatelyânot circling, not measuring like competitors. One woman smiled softly. Another nodded like she understood what it meant to walk into a place like this for the first time. No judgment. Just awareness.
âThis is home,â Stack said quietly, as if that mattered. âRules apply here most of all.â
He led her upstairs, past open doors and low music, to a room at the end of the hall. He opened it and stepped aside.
It was simple and clean. A large bed with crisp sheets. A dresser. A mirror that didnât distort. Fresh flowers on the nightstand like someone remembered softness mattered.
âThis is yours,â he said. âNo one comes in without your say. Lock works. Use it.â
She ran her fingers over the dresser like she was checking for traps. Found none.
âMake yourself comfortable,â he added. âWeâll talk downstairs when youâre ready.â
And he left.
She didnât come back nervous.
That surprised him.
Most people returned with jitter in their hands, eyes darting like they were already apologizing for wanting something better. She came back quiet, deliberate. Comfortable in the way people get when theyâve already made the decision and are simply stepping into it.
The coat was still wrapped around her when she crossed the threshold downstairs. The building had a hush to itâthick walls, old money energy, a place that had learned how to keep secrets without swallowing them. Stack stood in his study, not pacing, not looming. Just waiting.
He looked up when he heard her boots stop.
âDoor locks behind you,â he said evenly. âAlways does.â
She nodded. No flinch. That registered.
She slid the coat from her shoulders slowly, not as a reveal, not as performance. Underneath, there was nothing but the silk gown sheâd worn beneath itâdeep-toned, liquid against her skin, clinging to her curves without apology. It wasnât lingerie. It wasnât armor. It was just her, honest and unadorned, the fabric whispering when she moved.
Stack did not let his gaze linger where it didnât belong.
That mattered.
âGood,â he said instead, voice steady. âYou dressed for yourself.â
She met his eyes, something curious passing between them. âYou said not to be pretty.â
âI said be yourself,â he corrected gently. âThose arenât the same thing.â
He gestured to the chair across from his desk. Solid wood. No wheels. No trap. Positioned so her back wasnât to the door. That was on purpose.
âSit,â he said. Not a command. An invitation with structure.
She sat. Crossed one leg over the other. Relaxed into the space like she was testing whether it would betray her. It didnât.
Stack didnât sit behind the desk. He leaned against it, arms folded loosely, giving her his full attention without crowding. The light was low but intentionalâno shadows on faces, nothing obscured.
âThis isnât a test,â he began. âAnd itâs not a lesson you pass or fail. Itâs information. What you do with it is yours.â
She nodded once. Listening.
âFirst,â he said, âI teach you how to read men.â
He paused, making sure she understood what he didnât mean.
âNot how to flatter them. Not how to tempt them. Thatâs noise. I mean how to see what they want before they say itâand what theyâre lying to themselves about.â
He stepped closerânot into her space, just near enough for gravity.
âMen tell you everything with their bodies. Their mouths lie. Their posture doesnât.â
He gestured with his chin. âTell me what Iâm doing right now.â
She studied him. Took her time. He didnât interrupt.
âYouâre relaxed,â she said finally. âBut not casual. Your weightâs on your heels, not your toes. Youâre ready to move if you need to, but youâre not expecting trouble.â
A corner of his mouth lifted. Approval, not praise.
âGood. Nowâmen who lean forward too fast want control. Men who wonât sit want escape. Men who talk about money early are afraid they donât deserve you. Men who talk about respect too much donât practice it.â
He let that sink in.
âYou donât argue with any of that,â he continued. âYou clock it. You decide what youâre willing to deal with. And if the answer is noneââ
âI leave,â she finished quietly.
âYes,â Stack said. âBefore it turns.â
That was the second lesson.
âControl,â he said, shifting topics smoothly, âis not force. Force is loud. Control is quiet. Control is choosing the pace and making them think it was their idea.â
He picked up a glass from the desk, rolled it between his palms. âYou donât raise your voice. You donât threaten. You donât bargain your safety. You control the frame.â
She frowned slightly. âFrame?â
âThe story they think theyâre in,â he explained. âIf they believe theyâre being evaluated, they behave. If they believe theyâre lucky to be here, they listen. If they believe theyâre losing youââ
âThey panic,â she said.
âExactly.â
He set the glass down. âYou donât owe anyone reassurance. You donât chase comfort. You offer presence and remove it the moment itâs disrespected.â
Her shoulders loosened as if something heavy had been named.
âAnd if they test me?â she asked.
âThey will,â Stack said calmly. âThatâs not personal. Thatâs men checking the edges.â
He met her eyes. âYour job is not to pass their test. Itâs to end the conversation if the test costs you anything.â
Silence stretchedânot awkward, but weighty. He let it breathe.
âNow,â he said, softer, âthe most important part.â
She leaned forward without realizing it.
âHow to leave,â Stack said. âBefore things turn.â
He walked to the door and opened it a crack, then closed it again. Demonstration, not drama.
âYou never wait for a situation to get bad enough to justify leaving,â he said. âThatâs how people get hurt. You leave when your body notices firstâtight chest, heat behind the eyes, the feeling that your laughter isnât yours anymore.â
She swallowed. Recognition flickered.
âYou donât explain,â he went on. âYou donât apologize. You donât let anyone follow you into a hallway to âtalk it out.â You say one sentence and you move.â
âWhat sentence?â she asked.
âWhatever sounds natural to you,â he replied. âThatâs why I donât script you. But it ends the moment. âIâm done for tonight.â âThis doesnât work for me.â âIâm leaving.ââ
He stepped back into place, grounding the room again.
âAnd if someone ignores that?â
Her voice was steady. âThen itâs already over.â
âYes,â Stack said quietly. âAnd you wonât be alone.â
That landed. Not as a promise. As a system.
He finally sat across from her, same level, no hierarchy. âYou came back because you wanted structure,â he said. âThis is it. Knowledge. Boundaries. Exit routes.â
She looked down at her hands, then back up. âAnd you?â
âWhat about me?â
âWhat do you want out of this?â
Stack didnât answer immediately. He respected the question too much for that.
âI want you safe,â he said at last. âI want you paid. I want you informed enough to walk away from me if you ever choose to.â
She searched his face for the catch. Found none.
The silk of her gown whispered as she shifted, settling deeper into the chairânot trapped, not owned. Present.
âGood,â she said softly. âBecause Iâm not here to be controlled.â
âThen youâre exactly where you should be,â he replied.
The lesson wasnât over.
But the foundation had been laidâslowly, deliberatelyâlike something meant to last.
He didnât call it sex.
That was the first thing he made clear.
Stack shifted his weight, lowering his voiceânot to hush it, but to narrow the room around them. What he was about to teach wasnât performance. It was survival layered with dignity.
âThis part,â he said, tapping the desk once, âis about permission. Yours. Always yours.â
She didnât move. Didnât look away. That told him she could handle truth without spectacle.
âWhat you allow,â he continued, âis decided before youâre ever touched.â
He didnât describe acts. He described lines.
âYou decide whatâs on the table when youâre calm, not when someoneâs breathing too close or trying to rush the moment. If you wait until then, youâve already given up ground.â
He watched her face carefully. She nodded once, slow.
âAnything you allow,â Stack said, âhas to meet three conditions: youâre sober enough to choose, you feel respected before it happens, and you can stop it without punishment.â
Her brow furrowed. âPunishment?â
âSulking. Pressure. Anger. The sudden cold shoulder,â he said evenly. âThose are penalties people use when they think access is owed.â
He let that settle.
âNowâwhat you never allow,â he said, voice firming, âis anything that costs you your voice.â
He stepped closer, still not invading her space.
âNo pain you didnât ask for. No isolation. No being told to ârelaxâ when your body is saying no. No jokes about your size, your color, or your worthâever.â
Her jaw tightened. He noticed. Logged it.
âAnd you donât negotiate those lines in the moment,â Stack added. âYou donât soften them to keep peace. Peace that requires you to disappear isnât peace.â
She exhaled slowly, like sheâd been holding that truth in her chest for years.
âAnd if something starts to cross?â she asked quietly.
âThatâs the last lesson,â he said. âHow to stop something without causing a scene.â
He didnât smile. This wasnât clever. It was precise.
âYou donât explain your history. You donât justify your discomfort. You donât apologize for changing your mind.â
He raised one finger. âOne sentence. Calm voice. Direct.â
He gave examples, not scriptsâshapes she could fill with her own language.
âThis isnât working for me.â
âIâm done.â
âStop.â
âNo anger,â he said. âAnger invites argument. Calm shuts doors.â
She tilted her head. âAnd if they push?â
âThey donât get a second sentence,â Stack replied. âThey get distance.â
He gestured to the door again. Exit. Always visible.
âYou stand up. You move away. You leave. You do not stay to manage their feelings.â
Silence stretched between them again, thick but steady.
âThis work,â Stack said finally, softer now, âisnât about what you give. Itâs about what you keep.â
She looked at him thenâreally looked.
âAnd if I decide I donât want any of this anymore?â she asked.
He met her gaze without hesitation. âThen you walk. Clean. No debt. No consequences.â
That, more than anything, told her the truth of him.
He straightened, signaling the end of the lesson for tonight.
âGo upstairs,â he said. âRest. Tomorrow we talk about money and movement.â
She stood, silk whispering again, more grounded now than when sheâd arrived.
At the door, she paused. âStack?â
âYes.â
âThis,â she said carefully, âthis doesnât feel like being sold.â
âItâs not,â he replied. âItâs being prepared.â
She left with her shoulders squaredânot owned, not exposed.
Just informed.
And that was exactly how he intended to keep her.
Morning came slow and warm, like the house itself was stretching awake.
The kitchen was already aliveâbare feet on cool tile, the hiss of grease, laughter layered over clinking plates. Women moved around one another with easy familiarity, silk robes and oversized tees brushing hips and shoulders. Someone hummed. Someone else argued about seasoning. Coffee steamed near the window.
Y/N stood at the counter cracking eggs, her body relaxed in a way it hadnât been the night before. Still alertâbut not braced. Comfortable didnât mean careless. She was learning the difference.
The door to the study opened behind them.
âMorning, Big Daddy Stack,â one voice called sing-song.
âGood morninâ, Big Daddy,â another chimed, followed by a chorus of greetings, playful and warm.
Stack stepped into the kitchen like he always didâunhurried, observant, already taking inventory. He nodded once, murmured acknowledgments, his presence settling the room instead of dominating it.
Then Y/N glanced over her shoulder.
âMorning, Elias.â
Just his name. Clean. Undecorated.
It shouldnât have done anything. But it did.
The corner of his mouth twitched before he could stop it. A small, private smirkâgone almost as soon as it appeared.
He clocked it immediately. The way she said it. Not challenging. Not deferential. Just⊠honest.
He took a seat at the table, accepting a mug someone slid his way. And thatâs when he noticed the things he shouldnât have been noticing.
The way her laugh caught when someone teased herâlow, surprised, like she hadnât expected joy to find her so easily.
The way she looked at himânot hungry, not fearful. Measuring. Curious. Like she was deciding something instead of waiting to be chosen.
Stack was strict. Everyone knew that. But strict didnât mean cold.
âEat,â he said to the room. âNobody works on an empty stomach.â
They listened. They always did.
When the bustle softened and plates were mostly full, he turned his attention to herânot singling her out, not raising his voice.
âY/N,â he said calmly, âthereâs something you need to know.â
She met his gaze immediately.
âI step in once.â
The room quietedânot tense, just attentive.
âIf a client overreaches, disrespects your boundary, tries to make you smaller than the agreementâyou donât fight him,â Stack continued. âYou donât fix it. You signal me.â
She nodded. âAnd after once?â
âAfter once,â he said evenly, âyou already know how to leave.â
That landed. Not as threat. As trust.
He stood then, motioning subtly for her to follow. Not awayâjust closer. Instruction, not isolation.
âReading a man,â Stack said, lowering his voice just enough, âstarts before he opens his mouth.â
He gestured with his chin toward the front room. âPosture. Pace. Where his eyes go when he thinks no oneâs watching.â
She listened closely.
âSome men want softness,â he went on. âThey respond to calm, quiet confidence. You let them feel like theyâre choosingâeven when you already know the outcome.â
His eyes met hers again.
âAnd some men,â he said, âneed to feel contained.â
Her brow lifted slightly.
âDominance isnât volume,â Stack explained. âItâs certainty. Itâs moving first. Speaking once. Not shrinking when they test you.â
He paused. Let her absorb it.
âYou donât become submissive or dominant because they ask,â he finished. âYou choose what keeps you in control.â
There it was againâthat look. Thoughtful. Grounded. Fully present.
Breakfast resumed around them, but something had shifted. Not danger. Not desire.
Recognition.
Stack straightened, already stepping back into his role, his rules, his distance.
But as he passed her, his voice dropped just enough for only her to hear.
âYouâre doing fine,â he said. âDonât rush learning who you are in this house.â
She watched him leaveânot with longing.
With understanding.
And for the first time since sheâd walked up those boarding house steps, she didnât feel like she was surviving something.
She felt like she was being trained to stay whole.
After lunch, the house settled into a quieter rhythm.
Plates were cleared. Laughter drifted off into other rooms. The afternoon sun slanted through tall windows, dust motes floating like they had nowhere better to be.
Y/N found herself standing outside the study door again.
It wasnât an order this time. It wasnât even an invitation. Just a knowing look from Stack as heâd passed her in the hall, a slight tilt of his headâif you want to learn, come see how this actually works.
She knocked once.
âCome in.â
The study smelled like leather, paper, and something darkerâink, maybe, or old wood. Stack sat behind the desk, sleeves rolled, watch loose at his wrist. Stacks of bills were spread out in clean, disciplined rows. No rush. No mess. Control in physical form.
He didnât look up right away.
âClose the door,â he said calmly.
She did.
âYou eat enough?â he asked, still counting.
âYes.â
âGood.â
Silence stretchedânot awkward, just present. The soft thup-thup of bills being aligned. The scratch of a pen marking totals. Y/N leaned against the wall at first, watching. Learning without being told to.
After a while, Stack spoke again.
âSit.â
Not sharp. Not commanding. Just matter-of-fact.
She took the chair across from him, folding her hands in her lap. He finally looked at her then, really lookedâhow she held herself, how her eyes tracked the room, how she didnât fidget even when the quiet got thick.
âMost people think this is the job,â he said, gesturing to the money. âIt ainât.â
He slid a stack into a drawer and locked it.
âThis is just the receipt.â
She tilted her head slightly. âThen whatâs the job?â
Stack leaned back, considering her like the question mattered.
âAttention,â he said. âListening. Knowing when to stay and when to disappear.â
He pulled another bundle toward him, slower now. More deliberate.
âYou ever notice how men talk more when they think theyâre being admired?â he asked.
âYes,â she said immediately. âThey fill the space.â
A pause.
Stackâs eyes flicked up, sharpânot surprised, but impressed.
âExactly,â he said. âAnd the more they talk, the more they tell you what theyâre afraid of.â
The lesson unfolded like that. No lectures. Just conversation that circled deeper each time.
They talked about tellsâhands tightening on glasses, voices lowering when pride got touched. About how silence could be a boundary just as strong as a no. About how leaving first wasnât weaknessâit was leverage.
âWhat you allow,â Stack said quietly, âteaches people how to treat you.â
âAnd what you never allow?â she asked.
He met her gaze steadily.
âYou donât negotiate that,â he said. âYou remove yourself.â
No bravado. No threat. Just truth.
The afternoon faded into evening almost unnoticed. Someone knocked once to say dinner was ready. Neither of them moved right away.
âGo eat,â Stack said finally. âWeâll finish later.â
Later turned into night.
The house dimmed. Lamps replaced overhead lights. The study became its own pocket of timeâjust the soft glow, the smell of paper and coffee now, the steady rhythm of counting.
Y/N sat beside him this time, close enough to pass stacks back and forth. Their shoulders didnât touchâbut they could have. That was the difference. Choice.
They talked while they worked.
About nothing. About everything.
Where she grew up. Why she learned to watch people instead of trusting them. How he built this place rule by rule, mistake by mistake, loss by loss.
He didnât soften when he spokeâbut he didnât hide either.
Somewhere after midnight, he noticed it againâthe way she leaned in when she laughed quietly. The way she looked at him when she thought he wasnât paying attention. Not flirtation. Recognition.
It unsettled him more than he liked.
âTime,â Stack said eventually, pushing his chair back. âThatâs enough for today.â
She stood with him.
At the door, he stoppedânot blocking her, just grounding the moment.
âYouâre learning fast,â he said. âThat donât mean you rush.â
âI wonât,â she replied.
He studied her a beat longer, then nodded.
âGood. We build this slow.â
She left the study feeling something unfamiliar settle in her chestânot excitement. Not fear.
Stability.
And Stack, alone again with the locked drawers and quiet room, realized something he hadnât planned for at all:
This wasnât attraction growing between them.
It was trust.
And that was far more dangerous.
Night settled deep into the house, the kind of quiet that pressed against the walls and made every thought louder.
Y/N lay awake for a long time, staring at the ceiling, listening to the distant hum of the building breathing around her. Sleep wouldnât come. Her mind kept circlingâmoney, tomorrow, rules she was learning, the weight of being seen without being touched.
Finally, she pushed the covers back.
She slipped from the bed and pulled on her silk robe, tying it loosely at the waist. The fabric cooled her skin as she stepped into the hallway. Her hair, blown out and softly curled, was tucked behind her right ear out of habit, like she needed something familiar to hold onto.
The house lights were low. Not darkâjust dim enough to feel private.
She padded toward the kitchen, intending only to pour a glass of water.
She didnât expect to see him.
Stack came down the opposite end of the hall, bare feet quiet against the floor, pajama pants hanging low on his hips, robe loose and open at the chest. He stopped when he saw her, brows lifting just slightly.
âCouldnât sleep?â he asked.
She shook her head. âYou either?â
He gave a low huff of a laugh. âHavenât slept right in years.â
Neither of them moved for a second. No tensionâjust recognition. Two insomniacs meeting in the middle of the night.
âKitchen?â he asked.
She nodded.
They sat at the table instead of the counter, across from each other, the way people sat when they planned to talk longer than they meant to. Stack poured water for both of them without asking.
For a while, they drank in silence.
Then he leaned back slightly, studying herânot her body, not the robe, but her face. The tiredness behind her eyes.
âWhyâd you get into this?â he asked, voice low, even. No judgment. Just curiosity.
She swallowed.
âNo family,â she said plainly. âNo money. No safety net.â A pause. âI got tired of pretending hustle was the same thing as stability.â
Stack nodded slowly, like heâd already known the answer but needed to hear it anyway.
âThat makes sense,â he said. âYou ainât running toward chaos. Youâre running away from it.â
She looked down at her hands. âI donât want to be disposable.â
Something in his expression shiftedânot soft, but focused.
âThatâs why youâre here,â he said. âAnd why I donât rush shit.â
He glanced toward the hallway that led back to the rooms. âNext lesson was supposed to be in the morning.â
She looked up. âBut?â
âBut Iâm awake. Youâre awake.â A faint smirk tugged at his mouth. âAnd this one donât need daylight.â
Her brow furrowed slightly. âWhat is it?â
Stack leaned forward, forearms resting on the table, lowering his voice like the walls themselves might listen.
âWhat keeps men coming back,â he said.
As the door clicked shut behind them, Stack turned to face Y/N, his eyes dark with desire. Without a word, he grabbed her by the shoulders and pushed her back against the wall, pinning her there with his body.
"On your knees," he growled, his voice rough with barely restrained hunger.
Y/N's heart raced as she slowly sank to the floor, her silk robe slipping off one shoulder. She looked up at Stack through her lashes, her breath coming fast and shallow.
"Good girl," he purised, his hand coming to rest on the back of her head. "Now, open your mouth."
Y/N parted her lips, her tongue darting out to moisten them. Stack took advantage, pushing two fingers into her mouth and tracing the curve of her lower lip.
"Get them nice and wet," he commanded. "You're going to need it."
Y/N obeyed, sucking on his fingers, her tongue swirling around them as if they were his dick. The taste of his skin, the salty tang of his sweat, the way he groaned softly above herâit all combined to make her dizzy with need.
"Fuck," Stack hissed, pulling his fingers from her mouth with a wet pop. "You're a natural at this, aren't you? Born to be on your knees, serving a man's dick."
Y/N flushed at his words, a rush of heat flooding her core. She'd never been spoken to like this before, never been so utterly dominated. But there was something intoxicating about it, something that made her ache to submit further.
"Please," she whimpered, looking up at him with pleading eyes. "Please, sir. I need your dick."
A dark chuckle rumbled in Stack's chest. "You think you deserve my dick? You think you've earned it?"
Y/N shook her head frantically, tears of desperation pricking at the corners of her eyes. "No, sir. I don't deserve it. I'm just a dirty little slut who needs to be punished for being so greedy."
"Exactly," Stack growled. He gripped her hair tighter and forced her head back. "And punishment is what you're going to get."
With that, he undid his pajama pants and pulled out his massive, throbbing dick. It bobbed in front of Y/N's face, the tip already glistening with pre-cum. She licked her lips in anticipation, her mouth watering at the sight of it.
"Open wide," Stack commanded, and without waiting for her response, he shoved his dick deep into her mouth, hitting the back of her throat.
Y/N gagged and choked around him, tears streaming down her face as he fucked her mouth with brutal intensity. She could feel his dick throbbing against her tongue, could taste the salty musk of his skin. She relaxed her throat, taking him deeper, wanting to prove that she could handle whatever he gave her.
"Fuck yes," Stack groaned above her. "Take it, you little whore. Take my dick like you were made for it."
He thrust harder, faster, his balls slapping against her chin with each stroke. Y/N could feel herself growing wetter with every second, her pussy clenching around nothing as he used her mouth for his pleasure.
Just as she thought she couldn't take anymore, Stack pulled out abruptly, leaving her gasping and shaking on the floor. He stared down at her, his chest heaving, his dick still hard and dripping.
"You've done well," he said roughly. "But the night's just getting started."
With a strong hand, Stack hauled Y/N up from the plush carpet of his master bedroom, his iron grip bruising her arm as he yanked her flush against his broad chest. His massive dick throbbed against her belly through the thin silk robe, the heat searing into her skin like a brand. The room's dim lamplight cast shadows over the king-sized bed with its rumpled black sheets, the air thick with the scent of his musk and her arousal.
âBig Daddy Stack,â she whimpered, craning her neck to meet his piercing gaze, her voice trembling with desperate need. âI need you inside me. Fuck me hard.â
His lips curled into a wicked smirk, and he ripped the robe's tie free, the fabric parting to bare her trembling body. Rough palms mauled her tits, kneading the soft flesh until it spilled between his fingers, then he latched onto her nipples, twisting and pulling them viciously until she arched and yelped in pain-laced pleasure.
âSuch a desperate whore,â he snarled, his voice a gravelly rumble that vibrated through her. One hand shot between her thighs, shoving past the slick lips of her pussy to ram two fingers deep inside. She was soaked, her juices coating his digits instantly as he curled them against her inner walls, pumping with brutal force. âDripping like a faucet for my dick. I love that nasty shit.â
Y/N bucked against his hand, moaning like an animal in heat, her hips grinding shamelessly for more. Stack's laugh was dark and mocking as he withdrew his fingers, only to slap her clit sharply, making her jolt and cry out. He spun her roughly, shoving her face-down onto the bed, her knees hitting the mattress as he forced her ass up high. The silk sheets whispered against her skin, cool against the fire building in her core.
âPresent that wet ass pussy to me,â he ordered, his large hands spreading her cheeks wide, thumbs digging into the sensitive flesh. Y/N arched her back deeper, pushing her dripping pussy toward him, exposed and vulnerable under his hungry stare. The head of his dick nudged her entrance, thick and insistent, smearing her wetness along her folds but not entering yet.
âPlease, Big Daddy,â she begged, twisting to glance back at him, her eyes glassy with lust. âShove your dick in me. Stretch me wide and own this pussy.â
With a guttural grunt, Stack slammed forward, his entire length spearing into her in one merciless thrust. Y/N's scream echoed off the bedroom walls, her tight walls clamping down around his girth as it bottomed out, hitting her cervix with a jolt of agony and ecstasy. He didn't pauseâhis hips pistoned immediately, fucking her with savage depth, the bedframe groaning under the assault. Each drive slapped his heavy balls against her clit, sending shocks through her body.
âYour pussy's gripping me like a vice, slut,â he growled, tangling his fist in her hair and yanking her head back, arching her spine painfully. âMade to take my dick, huh? Say it while I wreck this muthafucka.â
âYes! Made for your huge dick!â she wailed, pushing back to meet his punishing rhythm, her tits bouncing wildly against the sheets. The friction built fast, her first orgasm crashing over her without warningâher pussy spasming, squirting around his shaft as she sobbed his name. But Stack didn't relent; he kept pounding through it, his free hand cracking down on her ass cheek, leaving a purple handprint that burned.
He pulled out abruptly, her hole clenching at the emptiness, and flipped her onto her back like she weighed nothing. Spreading her legs wide, he hooked them over his shoulders and plunged back in, folding her in half. The new angle let him grind deeper, his pubic bone crushing her clit with every thrust. 'Cum again, fucktoy. Soak my balls.' His fingers found her nipples again, pinching and rolling them until tears pricked her eyes.
The pressure coiled tighter, and she shattered a second time, her nails raking down his back as her pussy milked him, juices flooding out around his pistoning dick. Stack's breath grew ragged, but he held off, sweat dripping from his brow onto her heaving chest. He wanted her utterly destroyed.
Yanking free once more, he manhandled her onto her side, lifting one leg high. His slick dick pressed against her asshole, the tight pucker resisting for a heartbeat before he forced the tip in. âNo mercy for this hole,â he hissed, inching forward relentlessly, her ring stretching around his thickness until he was buried balls-deep in her ass. The burn was intense, tearing a raw scream from her throat, but it melted into filthy moans as he started thrusting, slow at first, then building to a frenzy.
âFuck, why you tight, baby?â he groaned, reaching around to shove three fingers into her abandoned pussy, stretching both entrances simultaneously. He matched the rhythms, fucking her ass while finger-banging her cunt, the dual invasion overwhelming her senses. Y/N's body quaked, a third orgasm ripping through her like lightningâher ass clenching rhythmically around his dick, pussy gushing over his hand as she thrashed on the bed.
Only then did Stack unleash, his thrusts erratic as he buried himself deep in her ass and erupted. Hot ropes of cum flooded her, spilling out around his shaft as he ground against her, marking her completely. He collapsed over her for a moment, both panting, before pulling out with an obscene squelch, watching his seed drip from her gaping ass onto the sheets.
They didnât speak right away.
The room was dim, lit only by the low lamp on the far side of the bed, casting shadows that moved with their breathing. The sheets were tangled, warm, damp with sweat, clinging to skin that hadnât yet cooled. Stack lay on his back, one arm bent beneath his head, chest rising and falling slow but heavy. Y/N was beside him, turned slightly toward him, her shoulder brushing his, her breath still uneven.
Nothing needed to be explained. Nothing needed to be named.
The air between them was thickânot with heat anymore, but with the quiet aftermath of it. The kind that made your body feel boneless, your thoughts slow and honest. Stack reached out without looking, his fingers grazing her wrist, resting there like he was grounding himself. Not possessive. Just present.
âYou okay?â he asked quietly.
She nodded, then realized he couldnât see it and murmured, âYeah.â
Her voice sounded different to her own earsâsofter, stripped of the armor she usually wore. She stared up at the ceiling, watching the light shift with the fanâs lazy spin, feeling the echo of him everywhere without needing him to touch her again.
Minutes passed like that. Long ones. Comfortable ones.
Stack turned his head just enough to look at her. He took in details he hadnât let himself notice beforeâthe curve of her cheek, the way her lashes rested against her skin, the calm settling into her after something that had clearly shaken them both.
âYou donât rush,â he said, more to the room than to her.
She huffed a quiet laugh. âNeither do you. Not really.â
That earned a small smile from him. Brief. Unguarded.
They lay there, shoulders touching now, heat slowly fading into something steadier. Something that felt dangerous in a different way. Stack knew it. So did she. Feelings were messier than desire. Harder to control. Harder to walk away from.
He shifted slightly, careful not to crowd her, and she didnât move away.
Instead, she rolled onto her side, resting her head against his chest like it was the most natural thing in the world. His arm came around her automatically, settling at her back. No squeezing. No claiming. Just holding.
Their breathing synced without effort.
If either of them noticed the way it felt too rightâhow the silence didnât itch, how the closeness didnât demand moreâthey didnât say it.
They stayed there, listening to each other exist.
And for now, that was enough.
He didnât move right away.
Stack stayed where he was, back against the pillows, chest still rising slow and heavy, eyes fixed on the ceiling like he was memorizing it. When he finally spoke, his voice was low againâsteady, back under control.
âGo shower,â he said. âThen get some rest.â
Y/N nodded, already halfway somewhere else in her head. She reached for her silk robe, sliding it over her skin, the fabric whisper-soft against a body that hadnât fully stopped humming yet. She tied it loosely at her waist, fingers trembling just a little before she smoothed them out, reclaiming herself piece by piece.
At the door, she paused.
She turned back just enough to look at himâstill stretched out, still watching her like he was trying not to. Her voice dropped, gentle, almost shy.
âGood night, Big Daddy Stack.â
The words werenât teasing. They were intimate in a way that caught him off guard.
He didnât smile. Didnât speak.
He just dipped his chin once, eyes never leaving her as she slipped out and closed the door behind her.
Alone again, the quiet pressed in fast.
Stack exhaled through his nose and dragged a hand down his face.
This is business.
This is temporary.
He repeated it like a rule, like something written in stone. But the problem wasâhis mind didnât listen. It kept circling back to the way sheâd looked at him before she left. The way she hadnât asked for anything. The way she trusted him enough to sleep under his roof.
That was the dangerous part.
Morning came loud and warm, sunlight spilling through tall windows in the dining room. The long table was already crowdedâwomen laughing, plates clinking, coffee being passed down. It felt lived-in, almost domestic in a way the house rarely allowed itself to be.
Stack sat at the head of the table, posture straight, presence grounding the room without effort. Conversation softened whenever he spoke, resumed when he didnât. Beside him was an empty chair.
Y/N came in a few minutes late.
She moved slower than usual, careful with each step, schooling her face into calm even as her body protested. The room noticed anywayâsmall pauses, quick glancesâbut no one said a word.
She reached the table, eyes flicking briefly to Stack before she took the seat beside him. Lowering herself took time. She masked it well, but he saw it. His jaw tightened almost imperceptibly.
âYou good?â he asked quietly, leaning just enough that only she could hear.
She nodded. âYeah. Just⊠sore.â
Something unreadable crossed his faceâconcern edged with restraint. He poured her a cup of coffee without asking and slid it toward her.
âEat,â he murmured. âSlow.â
Around them, the table buzzed on, none of them catching the exchange meant only for two people. Stack reached for his own mug, then spoke again, softer still.
âTonightâs your first job,â he said. No drama. No buildup. Just the truth. âIâll be close. You wonât be alone.â
Her fingers tightened around the mug. She looked at him then, really looked at him, searching his face for somethingâfear, reassurance, permission.
What she found was certainty.
He met her gaze, steady and serious.
âRemember,â he said, voice low but firm, words meant to anchor her. âYou donât owe anyone your body. Only your timeâand even thatâs borrowed.â
She swallowed, nodding once.
And for just a secondâbefore the noise of the room swallowed them againâit felt like the world narrowed down to that space between their shoulders, charged and careful and dangerously close to something neither of them was ready to name.
Under His Protection | (3 - FINALE) Terms & Consequences
A/N: Okay, sweet babies. This short series is inspired by @spaceprincess04 who wondered if our favorite bad boy turned vampire was either a man of the night or the man who supplies ladies of the night. With her permission, not only am I giving y'all Sex Toy!Stack Moore but also Big Daddy or Pimp!Stack Moore- yes, TWO new short series!!! Ya welcome, HOODLEMS !!!!
POV: Elias âStackâ Moore runs on rulesâwho he protects, what he allows, and what he never touches.
When he offers you safety, structure, and work without lies, you know the choice isnât simple. He promises protection, not ownership. Control, not affection.
But Stack watches too closely. Steps in too fast. Cares in ways that break his own rules.
Because in a world built on survival, protection is easy. Want is the dangerous part.
Under His Protection is a slow-burn, morally gray series where safety becomes temptationâand the man who knows better might be the one thing you canât afford.
Warning: Execution, jealousy, realization.
Word Count: 2371
Pairing: Big!Daddy Elias 'Stack' Moore x Thick!Black Reader
The first time she came back, Stack knew before she even stepped through the front door.
Not because of the envelope tucked beneath her arm.
Not because of the money.
Because she'd changed.
Only a little.
Enough that someone else would've missed it.
She walked straighter.
Her shoulders weren't as tense.
She'd learned how to command a room without raising her voice.
She wasn't pretending anymore.
She was working.
The women in the house greeted her with quiet smiles, some teasing her about finally "earning her stripes." She laughed, slipping off her coat before placing her envelope on the dining table where Stack always counted the night's earnings.
He looked at it.
Then at her.
"You eat?"
She nodded.
"You?"
"I'm askin' you."
"I did."
"Good."
That was all.
He never asked about the client.
Never asked what happened behind closed doors.
Never asked if she cried.
Or laughed.
Or hated it.
Those weren't his questions to ask.
And she respected him for that.
Weeks settled into routine.
She learned names.
Faces.
How to read a man before he opened his mouth.
Who tipped well.
Who lied.
Who drank too much.
Who wasn't worth the trouble.
She adapted quicker than anyone expected.
Sometimes she'd come home exhausted.
Sometimes amused.
Sometimes carrying stories she never shared.
Stack never pressed.
Instead, he'd count the money.
Slide her cut across the table.
"Good work."
Simple.
Professional.
Exactly the way he'd designed it.
Until one night...
He found himself wondering.
He hated wondering.
He hated wondering what some rich businessman had said to make her laugh.
He hated wondering if she'd smiled because she wanted to...
...or because she'd learned smiles were profitable.
He hated imagining another man's hand lingering too long on hers.
He hated it most because she always came home untouched in spirit.
She never looked broken.
She looked...
stronger.
That should've made him proud.
Insteadâ
It made something ugly bloom beneath his ribs.
Jealousy.
Quiet.
Embarrassing.
Possessive in ways he despised.
He caught himself watching her from across rooms.
Listening for her laugh.
Checking the clock whenever she was running late.
He'd built this business on discipline.
Now he couldn't keep his own mind in line.
"You've been starin'."
Her voice startled him.
She stood in the kitchen doorway, mug of tea warming her hands.
He looked away.
"I wasn't."
She smiled knowingly.
"Liar."
He chuckled despite himself.
"You countin' how many times I blink?"
"Nah."
She leaned against the doorway.
"I'm countin' how many times you forget I notice things."
Silence.
Thenâ
"You been hovering."
"I've been managing."
"You been checking every room I walk into."
"I'm checking everybody."
"No."
She smiled softly.
"Just me."
That landed.
He had no answer.
Because she was right.
He didn't understand it.
He'd met beautiful women.
Confident women.
Dangerous women.
He'd worked beside them.
Protected them.
Buried some of them.
He never crossed the line.
Never even looked at it.
So why...
Why did the thought of someone else looking at her too long make his jaw tighten?
Why did every successful night feel like victory...
...and loss?
He couldn't explain it.
He only knew that somewhere between teaching her the rules...
She'd quietly rewritten his.
It happened on a Thursday.
The client had been vetted.
Old money.
Regular.
Never caused trouble.
Until he did.
Stack had barely made it down the hallway before he heard furniture scrape across hardwood.
Thenâ
"No."
Her voice.
Firm.
Againâ
"I said no."
The sound changed.
A struggle.
A crash.
Stack didn't think.
The door burst inward so hard it slammed against the wall.
The man barely had time to turn before Stack crossed the room.
One punch.
Another.
The client stumbled backward, cursing, reaching for anything he could grab.
Wrong choice.
Stack caught him by the collar and drove him against the wall.
"You forgot the first rule."
The man's eyes widened.
"W-what ruleâ"
"When she says no..."
His grip tightened.
"...the conversation's over."
The room fell silent except for the man's ragged breathing.
Stack's voice never rose.
It didn't have to.
"You don't touch what's unwilling."
The client swung wildly.
Stack stepped aside.
The punch missed.
His answer didn't.
The man collapsed to the floor, groaning.
Security, alerted by the commotion, rushed in.
Stack looked at them once.
"Get him out."
No one argued.
Only then did he remember she was still there.
She'd backed herself into the far corner of the room, wrapped around herself, breathing hard.
Fear lingered in her eyesânot because of him.
Because she'd been reminded how quickly safety could disappear.
Stack looked away first.
He removed his suit jacket from the coat rack by the door.
Walked over slowly.
Held it out.
No sudden movements.
No assumptions.
She looked from the jacket...
...to him.
"You alright?"
She nodded once.
A lie.
He draped the jacket over her shoulders anyway, careful not to touch more than necessary.
"It ain't your fault," he said quietly.
Her fingers clutched the lapels of his coat.
For a brief second...
She looked at him as though she'd never truly seen him before.
Not as the man with rules.
Not as the man with money.
But as the man who stepped between her and danger without asking what it might cost him.
"Let's go home."
She nodded.
The house had gone quiet by midnight.
The other women slept upstairs.
Rain tapped softly against the windows.
Stack sat in the living room with a glass of untouched whiskey.
He hadn't taken a sip.
She found him there.
"You mind?"
He gestured toward the opposite end of the leather couch.
She sat.
Neither spoke for a while.
The silence wasn't uncomfortable.
Just tired.
"You okay?" he finally asked.
She looked down at the sleeves of his jacket, still wrapped around her.
"I will be."
He nodded.
"I'm glad."
She looked over.
Only then did she notice the split in his lip.
"You got hit."
"It's nothin'."
"It doesn't look like nothin'."
Before he could protest again, she stood and crossed to the bookshelf, retrieving the small first-aid kit tucked behind a row of worn novels.
Stack sighed.
"I said I'm fine."
"You say that too much."
She returned and sat beside him.
Closer this time.
She opened the kit, dampened a cloth, and gently lifted his chin.
He stayed still.
Not because he had to.
Because he wanted to.
Her touch was careful.
Unhurried.
She dabbed away the dried blood, apologizing quietly whenever he winced.
"You don't have to apologize," he murmured.
"I know."
"Then why do it?"
"'Cause I don't like seeing people I care about hurt."
The words settled between them.
Neither of them moved.
Neither of them looked away.
For a fleeting moment, the room felt impossibly small.
He reached up instinctively, covering her hand with his.
Their eyes met.
He leaned forward just enough to brush a gentle kiss against her forehead.
It lingered for only a heartbeat.
Then reality rushed back in.
Stack stood abruptly.
Too fast.
He cleared his throat, straightening the front of his vest as though fixing the wrinkles might somehow settle the storm inside him.
"You should get some sleep."
She blinked.
"What?"
"It's late."
"Stack..."
He couldn't look at her.
"Goodnight."
She rose halfway from the couch, confused.
"Did I do something?"
"No."
His answer came immediately.
Too immediately.
"You didn't do a damn thing."
He walked toward the hallway.
Each step felt heavier than the last.
She watched him disappear behind the corner, questions lingering in the silence he'd left behind.
Sleep never came.
Stack stood alone in his office, looking over the ledger he'd read three times without seeing a single number.
He'd built rules for a reason.
Rules protected everyone.
Rules kept business clean.
Rules kept hearts out of places they had no business being.
He looked toward the hallway where her room sat in the darkness.
For the first time in years...
He questioned his own system.
Keeping her close meant she stayed under his protection.
Letting her stay meant every feeling he refused to name would keep growing.
And feelings...
Feelings got people hurt.
He stared out the rain-speckled window as dawn threatened the horizon.
He had built every rule to keep his heart out of it.
He never imagined she would become the one thing capable of breaking every last one.
Morning came slow.
Not brightânot cleanâjust a gray kind of daylight that pressed itself through the curtains like it wasnât fully sure it belonged there.
The house was quieter than usual.
Even the floorboards felt like they were trying not to speak too loudly.
Stack was already awake.
Had been for hours.
He stood in the kitchen in a white undershirt and slacks, sleeves pushed up, coffee going cold in his hand. He hadnât touched it in a while. Just held it like it gave him something to do with his thoughts.
Sleep hadnât come.
Not really.
Just fragments of it. Half-dreams. Half-regret.
Every time he closed his eyes, he saw her in corners of rooms she didnât belong inâuntil she did.
That was the part that bothered him most.
Not that she was there.
That she was adapting.
Becoming familiar with a world that was never supposed to feel familiar.
He set the mug down.
Then picked it back up.
Then set it down again, like he couldnât decide whether stillness meant peace⊠or consequence.
From upstairs came the soft sound of movement.
A door opening.
Light footsteps.
Barely there.
He didnât turn around right away.
He already knew.
She came down the stairs slowly, wrapped in one of his jackets againâdifferent one this time. Hair slightly undone, face bare, no performance, no armor. Just her. The version of her that existed before the world asked her to be anything else.
She paused when she saw him.
âYou been up all night,â she said softly.
It wasnât a question.
He finally looked at her.
âI been thinkinâ.â
That made her stop on the last step.
âThat donât sound like you.â
A faint breath left him that almost resembled a laugh.
âYeah. Thatâs the problem.â
Silence stretched between them again, but it wasnât empty.
It was full of everything neither of them had said the night before.
She walked into the kitchen slowly, like she was giving him space to change his mind about whatever version of him was standing there.
âYou still mad?â she asked.
âNo.â
âThen what?â
He looked at her for a long moment.
Like he was weighing something he couldnât afford to drop.
âI donât like what Iâm startinâ to feel,â he admitted finally.
Her expression shiftedâjust slightly. Not fear. Not surprise.
Understanding.
âThat why you been actinâ funny?â
He nodded once.
âI built this whole thing so I wouldnât get attached to it.â
She leaned against the counter across from him.
âAnd now?â
His jaw tightened.
âNow I canât tell if Iâm protectinâ you⊠or keepinâ you close âcause I want to.â
That honesty sat heavy in the room.
Neither of them rushed to fill it.
She studied him for a while.
Not the way clients did.
Not the way the world did.
But like she was reading the parts of him he didnât present on purpose.
Then she spoke, calm as ever.
âYou know Iâm still me, right?â
He looked up.
âIâm not yours, Stack.â
That wordâyoursâdidnât land like a warning.
It landed like a boundary drawn carefully, without anger.
âI know,â he said immediately.
âIâm still leavinâ when I want to.â
âI know that too.â
âI still got choices.â
âI never took âem from you.â
A pause.
Then she nodded once.
âGood.â
Another silence.
But this one was different.
Less tension.
More truth.
She stepped closerânot enough to close the space fully, just enough that the air between them changed.
âI ainât scared of you,â she said quietly.
His eyes held hers.
âI know.â
âBut I am scared of what you think you gotta be to keep me safe.â
That hit deeper than anything else that night.
His gaze dropped for a second.
Because she was right.
He didnât trust softness.
Didnât trust wanting.
Didnât trust the way something in him had started to shift without permission.
When he looked back up, his voice was quieter.
âI donât know how to do this part.â
âThen donât overthink it,â she said simply. âJust donât lie to me. And donât turn me into somethinâ you think you gotta control to keep me alive.â
That word againâcontrol.
He exhaled through his nose, slow.
âI never wanted that.â
âI know.â
She reached for his mug, took it, and finally drank it herself like it belonged in her hands just as much as his.
âYou just scared,â she added.
He didnât argue.
Because she wasnât wrong.
Somewhere upstairs, a door opened again.
A woman called out sleepily.
Life moving forward around them like nothing had changed.
But something had.
It just hadnât fully decided what shape it would take yet.
Stack watched her set his mug back down carefully.
âYou still cominâ back?â he asked.
She smiled faintly.
âDepends if you still runninâ things like a man or startinâ to feel like one.â
A beat.
Thenâ
âIâll be back,â she said. âOn my terms.â
He nodded.
âI wouldnât have it any other way.â
She headed toward the door.
Then paused.
Looked back at him.
âStack?â
âYeah?â
âYou donât gotta choose between protectinâ me and feelinâ somethinâ.â
That lingered.
Then she was gone.
The door clicked shut softly behind her.
Stack stayed where he was.
Still.
Quiet.
The house breathed around him again, same as always.
But nothing in him did.
Because for the first time since this whole thing startedâŠ
He understood the real risk wasnât losing control of the business.
It was realizing he never had control of himself to begin with.
And now that heâd felt itâ
He couldnât unfeel it.
He looked down at the empty mug in his hand.
Then toward the door sheâd just walked through.
And for the first timeâŠ
he didnât know if keeping her safe meant keeping her closeâŠ