The next day was more of the same - cleaning. Over and over again until your head buzzed and your hands smelled permanently of disinfectant. You were starting to think the fumes might be killing brain cells. Levi didnât let up either. If he saw you miss a corner, he made you do the whole damn station again. Not messy enough to be scolded, just... not perfect. And with him, apparently, it had to be.
Eventually, finally, he let you move on to what you were actually there for, practice.
You were working line work today, basic shapes and crisp lines on fake skin taped to a saddle stand. It wasnât glamorous. Your back already ached from hunching over but you werenât about to complain. Youâd tattoo the soles of your own feet if it meant getting better.
Levi was busier than the day before, mid-way through a full back piece on some gym rat who spent ten full minutes hyping himself up before even taking his shirt off. Now he was face-down on the table, occasionally letting out muffled grunts like he was dying inside but trying to sound tough about it. To his credit, he hadnât tapped out. Yet.
Even with Levi elbow-deep in that dudeâs spine, you still heard his voice bark from across the room.
âYour wrist is too stiff.â
You blinked, pausing. Looked around. How did he even see that?
Another correction came not five minutes later. âWatch your spacing. Bottom left.â
You turned, giving him a slightly wide-eyed, incredulous look. He didnât even glance up from what he was doing. Just jerked his chin toward something behind you.
You turned.
There was a mirror. A huge, wall-mounted thing behind your station. Perfect view of your entire setup from where he was sitting.
He wasnât magic, he was just watching⌠Constantly. Your stomach flipped a little, not unpleasantly. You turned back to your lines and adjusted your wrist angle.
You didnât hear him correct you after that.
At some point, Levi pulled back from the guyâs back and cleared his throat. Just once. Sharp enough to snap the guy out of his pain trance. The dude groaned, lifting his head like it weighed forty pounds, then slowly pushed himself up on his elbows to look over his shoulder at the mirror.
His eyes lit up. âYo! That looks sick, man!â
He grinned, wide and a little delirious, eyes flicking between the mirror and Levi like heâd just won a medal.
Levi just raised one brow. âThatâs just the outline.â
There was a beat of silence. You could see the exact second that registered.
âOh.â
Levi didnât elaborate. Just turned to his tray and held out a juice pouch like this happened every day. Which it probably did. The guy took it with both hands like it was a holy relic, already looking a little green around the edges. He sipped it gingerly, trying very hard not to cry, shoulders hunched and legs slightly shaking as Levi went back to prepping the next round of ink.
You couldnât help it, you were watching the whole thing unfold with a kind of morbid fascination. Then Leviâs eyes slid to yours, deadpan.
He didnât say anything, just jerked his head toward your station.
A silent get back to work.
You jumped a little and turned immediately, hunching back over your fake skin like it owed you money. Linework, focus, no distractions. Even still, you smiled to yourself, Levi was intense, kinda scary. But he paid attention. More than most.
Once the shading was done, the guy left, walking gingerly, like his spine had been replaced with glass. He looked pleased, though, tender and sore but happy. Levi gave a noncommittal nod as the door closed behind him, already peeling off his gloves. Then he came over.
You tried not to tense up, tried to stay cool as he approached your little corner, but the way your fingers fumbled slightly with the stencil in your hand said otherwise. Youâd been setting it down just as he stopped beside you, watching. And, maybe because of that or maybe because you rushed it, you peeled it off too fast. The stencil reveleaed was patchy, uneven and faint at the top edge, like it got stage fright.
Levi tilted his head, not unkindly, just observant, sharp as always.
âLeave it on longer next time,â he said. âAnd take it off slower. You act like youâre trying to give them a wax.â
You laughed under your breath, sheepish. âRight. Got it.â
You grabbed the stencil spray and started wiping it off, careful not to look at him too much. He was still standing there. Still watching. You placed a fresh stencil, slower this time, letting it sit properly before removing it with more care. He didnât say anything right away. Just looked over your lines again, his eyes skimming the fake skin. You suddenly became very aware of every tiny wobble, every place the line dipped just a little, especially that one section where heâd corrected your wrist. It was like every flaw lit up under his gaze.
He hummed.
Then finally, âYouâve got some good weight control.â
You blinked. âOh. Thanks.â
âBut,â he continued, tapping a finger near one of the lines, âkeep an eye on your wrist. On curves you stiffen up a bit.â Your eyes followed his gesture, sure enough there was a little break. Barely noticeable, but yeah, it was there.
âAnd make sure youâre stretching the skin properly,â he added, pointing out another spot where the line had gone a little uneven. âOr thisâll happen everywhere.â
You nodded quickly. âOh, yeah. I thought I was, but it keeps happening.â
âIt's mostly a practice issue.â He shrugged, then reached past you to grab one of the practice sheets you hadnât used yet. âForget the stencil stuff for now. Itâs all well and good to practice placement, but get the basics down first.â
âRight,â you said again, quieter this time. âGot it.â
He gave a brief nod, something almost approving, and turned away just as quickly, back to sorting his station like he hadnât just pointed out your weak spots with surgical precision. You let out a breath you hadnât realized you were holding and leaned back over the skin.
Back to basics, again.
Still, that âgood weight controlâ was going to sit with you for the rest of the day like a trophy.
For the rest of the day, Levi works on smaller tattoos for different people, and you start to notice a pattern, he gets a lot of attention. Not just for the tattoos, though those are flawless. It's him, too. His face. His whole⌠thing. People flirt, or at least they try. They lean in, laugh a little too hard, ask dumb questions just to keep him talking.
Levi doesnât care.
Doesnât smile, doesnât play along, barely even makes eye contact once the stencilâs on. He finishes the tattoo, wraps them up, and gets them out like heâs allergic to lingering.
Youâre adjusting your grip again, finally starting to get the hang of stretching the skin just right, when the shopâs front door creaks open. You glance up and immediately feel the air shift. A woman walks in, she's tall, blonde. Her hair is so dirty itâs actually caked flat against her scalp, and even from across the room, sheâs setting off your internal alarms. She heads straight for the reception desk where Petra is taking stock, clipboard in hand. You canât hear all of it, but the tone is obvious. Sheâs asking for a walk-in. Petraâs being polite, patient, telling her that walk-ins arenât done here. The woman doesnât seem interested in listening. After a minute, she just pushes right past the desk like Petraâs invisible.
Levi straightens up before she even reaches him. His hands go behind his back like heâs just casually standing, but you see it. The tightness in his shoulders, the way his jaw tenses. Heâs bracing.
She stops in front of him. He barely comes up to her shoulder, but somehow still looks taller.
âI want something under my arm,â she says, already starting to lift it like sheâs about to flash the placement. Levi stops her with a single raised hand.
âI wonât be tattooing you today.â
She freezes, arm half-raised, then slowly crosses them instead.
âAnd why is that?â she asks, unimpressed. Like sheâs waiting for him to backtrack. He doesnât.
âYou donât have an appointment, youâve been disrespectful to my staff, and you do not have the necessary hygiene for me to safely give you a tattoo.â He pauses, then adds, without a flicker of hesitation, âI also donât want to.â
The woman lets out a loud, incredulous guffaw like she canât believe what sheâs hearing. Honestly, neither can you, youâre still trying to figure out if this is really happening. A few more heated words get tossed around, sharp and petty, before she finally storms toward the door, shouting that sheâll never return and theyâve lost a valuable customer. Levi doesnât dignify it with a response.
He just watches her go, arms crossed, shoulders squared, calm in that unnerving way that makes it clear nothing she said touched him at all. Your eyes catch on the set of his posture, the stretch of muscle across his back under the black cotton of his shirt, and you have to blink yourself out of it before you get caught staring.
But the buzz of your machine dies, paused without you even realizing it.
He notices, because of course he does. Turns just enough to side-eye you, one brow twitching like a silent get back to work.
You fumble, hunch back over your fake skin like itâs the most interesting thing in the world. Out of the corner of your eye, you catch him grabbing the mop and a spray bottle. He moves to the exact spot the woman had been standing, running the mop across it with slow, purposeful strokes. Like heâs scrubbing away a stain only he can see.
Itâs weirdly impressive, how seriously he takes it. How he backed Petra up without even blinking. You glance at her, sheâs behind the counter, watching him with her chin in her hand, the softest expression on her face. Honestly, if you werenât terrified of being caught slacking again, youâd probably be watching her watch him.
Instead, you pick up your machine and try to focus. And fail a little.
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You kept staring at the email like it might vanish.
Read it once, then again, and again. Still there.
âCongratulations! Youâve been selected for the Central City Tattoo Apprenticeship ProgramâŚâ
Your breath caught somewhere in your chest. It didnât matter that the rest of the message sounded like a government form - boring fonts, weird formatting, language like ârandomized placementâ and âorientation details attached.â It was real, you were in!
All the hours hunched over practice skins, doodling until your fingers cramped, begging friends to let you ruin them permanently... it paid off.
So obviously, you celebrated the only way that made sense, a new tattoo.
Crowâs Nest Ink had a reputation-one of those places everyoneâs heard of but no one can describe, your best friend described it as haunted - in a cool way. Like, "somewhere a hot vampire might work." As she had told you dreamily.
Outside, it was all matte-black brick and smoky windows with a crow-shaped wrought iron sign hung overhead, creaking softly in the wind.
Inside was clean, sparklingly so. Minimalistic, all polished metal and exposed beams. The air smelled like antiseptic, ink, and - ever so faintly - citrus soap. Machines buzzed quietly, each artist lost in their own little bubble.
Thatâs when you saw him.
Levi.
He looked like he belonged there, his hair neatly undercut, eyes sharp, an expression that didn't waver when he called your name. Just a nod, short and precise, and a gesture to follow him.
He didnât talk much, just asked what you wanted, glanced at your sketch and raised one eyebrow at your placement.
âYou want it here?â His gaze dropped to your sternum. Not judging, just curious.
You shrugged. âGo big or go home, right?â
He didnât answer, curiosity not so much sated as it was ignored, and just handed you a clipboard and a pen.
Before you knew it, you were lying back in his booth, shirt off, the cold table to your back. His hands moved with careful efficiency - no hesitation, no fumbling, exactly how you hoped to be after your apprenticeship. You watched him prepare the inks and finish setting up with watchful eyes, drinking in his movement as if you would be able to mimic it immediately.
And then the needle started, pain bloomed fast, sharp, but manageable. Your cheek twitches, drawing your lips wider for a moment before you adjust.
âDonât hold your breath,â he said quietly. âItâll hurt more.â
You exhaled, not having realised you were holding it in the first place.
The session passed in a blur of buzzing, tingling skin, and steady breathing. He didnât say much, just worked - calm, focused, completely in his element.
Somewhere near the end, when your body had fully adjusted to the pain and your brain felt floaty from the adrenaline, you couldnât help yourself.
âGuess I can say Iâve finally got art in my heart now.â
Silence. You almot start to feel embarrassed then, so faint you almost missed it, a smile. Just the smallest twitch at the corner of his mouth.
âYouâre an idiot,â he muttered.
But he was still smiling. Barely.
That was the moment everything shifted, even if you didnât know it yet.
Two days later, you showed up groggy and under-caffeinated to your orientation, half-convinced the email had been a prank.
Everyone sat in clusters, some excited, some nervous. You got your envelope, plain white and heavy then, you opened it.
Read the line once - blinked and read it again.
Studio Placement: Crowâs Nest Ink
Assigned Mentor: Levi Ackerman
You laughed. Actually laughed, right there in the middle of the room.
Fate, apparently, had a sense of humor.
The bell over the studio door jingled as you walked in again, portfolio tucked under your arm. You didnât see Levi at first, then he appeared behind the counter, arms crossed, watching you.
âTook you long enough,â he said.
You tried to play it cool, despite the fluttering of your heart threatening to betray you. âMiss me already?âÂ
He didnât answer. Just turned and walked toward the back of the shop, pausing long enough to look over his shoulder.
âWell? Letâs go. Iâm not here to babysit.â
You followed, heart pounding.
And maybe it was your imagination, but there was that same almost-smile tugging at his mouth again.
You were screwed.
You didnât expect a warm welcome, but youâd sort of assumedâbased on horror stories from other apprenticesâthat your mentor would mostly sit in the back and let you flounder, offering the occasional grunt of disapproval, but Levi didnât flounder.
He pointed at a station and told you to set it up, watched you as you did. Said nothing until you stepped back, thinking you were done.
Then he handed you a fresh pair of gloves.
âAgain.â
You blinked. âWas somethingâ?â
âEverything.â He crouched beside the station, pointing. âCordâs in the way. Tapeâs sloppy. Whereâs your backup ink cap? Your waterâs too far - you think youâll grab that mid-session without twisting your wrist?â
He didnât sound angry, just matter-of-fact, almost bored.
You did it again.
This time, he showed youâwithout commentaryâhow he did it. Every movement smooth, efficient, everything within reach. You watched like it was surgery.
âAlways assume youâre working on someone who might pass out, bleed or panic. If your setup slows you down, it screws you both.â
You nodded, filing the information away.
The next surprise was how hands-on he actually was, no disappearing to the back to scroll on his phone. He hovered, offered corrections, even complimented your stencil placement with a noncommittal nod. You caught the twitch of his brow when you prepped your fake skin without being told. Recognition, the kind that meant more than words would have. But it wasnât all progress, by the time youâd made it to cleaning the station, you were feeling a little proud. Youâd remembered everything he said about positioning, equipment order, cross-contamination, or so you thought.
âYou missed the base of the arm.â His voice was sharp for the first time all day. Not angry, just sharp. âCorners too.â
You turned back, squinted. âI thought Iââ
âYou thought wrong.â He tossed you a spray bottle and fresh towel. âAgain.â
You wiped it down again and he investigated it like a military inspection.
âStill missed the gap under the tray lip.â
You stared at it, then at him. âHow did youâ?â
âThatâs where grime and dirt hide. Fluids pool. You want to risk someoneâs healing for a shortcut?â
ââŚNo.â
âDidnât think so. Again.â
You cleaned that station five times before he said âgood.â
The rest of the afternoon was fake skin. Linework drills. Whip shading. Fill techniques. All while he worked a small tattoo three stations downâa simple forearm piece, something floral and clean. He didnât say anything, but once or twice, you caught him watching you between passes of the needle, just for a second each time.
At the end of the day, your hand was cramped, your back hurt, and you could still smell disinfectant under your nails.
But Levi gave you a nod. That was it.
It meant everything.
You left the studio exhausted and floating.
Still not sure what exactly youâd proven, but knowingâsomehowâyou were a little less screwed than you thought.