quick 3am thought!!! this def isn’t polished so don’t expect any literary masterpiece😭 maybe i should elaborate and write something fr about this later
BUT,,,
thinking about old man daryl with a younger reader who is extremely eager and being an absolute brat about it !!
he isn’t exactly as young as he used to be, and his stamina clearly reflects that. so his new method? trying to tucker you out early on so he can finally take his time with you. fingering you, making you ride his thigh, anything to drain some of this energy from you— and boy, was he getting a mouthful for it.
“daryl pleaseeee”
“c’mon gimme your cock already… need it so bad”
“been waiting forever dare…”
“hmph. such an old man… didn’t realize you couldn’t handle me anymore…”
oh. that was enough for him alright. you think he can’t handle you? he’s starting to think getting a head start on wearing you out wasn’t such a bad idea.
—
after getting his cock driven into you at a brutal pace for what felt like forever, you finally begin to plead with him.
“p-please, dare… ‘m sorry… so sorry- mphhh, fuck, i can’t take anymore!”
daryl grips a fistful of your hair— not tight enough to hurt, but enough to pull you back toward him, his warm breath tickling your neck, “oh c’mon, doll. you needa watch your mouth with all that running its been doin’. the least you can do is take my cock real nice for me, yeah? ain’t no one teach you to respect your elders?”
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soo I am a multi-fandom writer and this was supposedddd to be my first post.. but I had it sitting cause i wanted it to be perfect for yall... (╥﹏╥)
This was inspired by me and my love for fun facts!! And I just know Daryl would've gathered them throughout the years. Anyways enjoy, mwah ( ˶˘ ³˘)♡
Carolina Wren
DarylDixon x fem!reader
Summary: A routine hunt in the woods turns into something familiar between two people—where you love sharing fun facts and he’s the one who quietly ends up providing the answers without thinking much of it. But back at the prison, those moments start to stick with more weight than they should, especially to someone who notices the pattern forming before you do.
The woods were alive with sound, even if most people no longer bothered to hear it. Leaves shifted softly in the wind, insects hummed somewhere low in the underbrush, and distant birds called to each other through the canopy like nothing in the world had changed at all.
Most people walked through forests now listening for danger. Walkers. Broken branches. The rustle of something larger than a rabbit. Anything that didn’t belong.
You listened too. But you also listened for everything else.
Birdsong, crickets, frogs, the knock of a woodpecker against a tree.
Daryl had noticed that a long time ago, though he’d never said it out loud. You always seemed to be paying attention to things other people missed—tracks in the mud, the movement of small animals, the way birds shifted before the sky changed.
It made you slower sometimes, but never careless. Just aware.
And somehow, it made the silence between you and him feel less empty.
Silence wasn’t something people really got anymore at the prison. Still, you had a habit of breaking it with your little facts.
“D’you know otters hold hands when they sleep?”
Or—
“Horses can recognize faces.”
Or—
“Crows hold grudges.”
Most people just nodded and moved on. The kids loved it. Carl pretended he didn’t. Beth actually listened. Judith stared at you like every word you said was the most fascinating thing she’d ever heard.
Daryl listened too.
Even if he never said much about it.
Today was one of those quieter days. The prison fences stood strong, the weather held steady, and hunting gave him an excuse to disappear into the woods for a few hours.
Somehow you always ended up tagging along. Not because you were particularly useful at tracking. Not because he asked.
You just… did.
Like the two of you had fallen into some strange orbit around one another. Never quite attached. Never far apart.
The forest stretched around you in soft shades of green as you followed several steps behind him.
No pressure to talk. No need to fill the silence. Just the soft crunch of leaves beneath your boots, easy and familiar.
The prison was already far behind you, swallowed by trees and distance, when a sharp bird call cut through the quiet. You lifted your head almost instantly, eyes scanning the branches above like you expected to find the answer hidden there.
Daryl noticed before you even spoke.
“What’s that one?” you asked.
He didn’t stop walking, just tilted his head slightly as he listened. “Carolina wren.”
The answer came so easily it made you smile without thinking. “How can you tell?”
“Sound.”
That was all he gave you, like it should’ve been obvious.
Another call rang out, a little louder this time, and you squinted upward again as if that might help. After a moment, curiosity got the better of you.
“What’s it saying?”
For the briefest second, something shifted in his expression—barely there, just the corner of his mouth twitching before he answered.
“Tryin’ t’ get lucky.”
You blinked at him, then laughed before you could stop yourself. “What?”
“It’s a mate call,” he added, like that explained everything. “Male’s tellin’ every female bird in the county he’s available.”
That only made you grin harder. “That’s amazing.”
“Hm,” he muttered, already looking away like the conversation meant nothing, even though he’d clearly started it.
You kept walking.
A few minutes later he slowed without warning, not because anything was wrong, but because something above had caught his attention. You followed his gaze instinctively until you saw a flash of yellow bouncing between branches.
“Goldfinch,” he said.
Your eyes lit up immediately. “Oh!”
“The yellow means it’s male,” he added, still watching it like it wasn’t anything special.
“Really?” you asked.
“Females ain’t as colorful.”
“Why?”
“Gotta stand out somehow.”
You laughed softly, watching the bird hop higher into the trees until it disappeared into leaves and sunlight. “So birds are just showing off all the time?”
“Pretty much.”
That earned a quiet sound from him—almost a laugh, but not quite.
You watched the empty branches for a moment longer than necessary, like you were storing it away.
Daryl noticed that too.
Another bird called out deeper in the woods, and he shifted his attention immediately, pointing slightly ahead. “Red-winged blackbird.”
You stepped closer, watching the dark shape perched near the marsh edge as a flash of red appeared on its wing when it moved.
“See the red?” he asked.
“Yeah.”
“Male.”
You smiled. “Showing off again?”
“Showin’ off again.”
This time you laughed first.
The walk continued like that. Birds appearing and disappearing. Daryl pointing them out like it was nothing, like he hadn’t been waiting for the chance without realizing it.
And you listened like every detail mattered.
Not because you needed the information.
Because it was him giving it.
Daryl didn’t give things away easily. So every small fact felt like something chosen.
Something offered.
Somewhere along the way a squirrel darted across the path, and Daryl’s body moved on instinct, crossbow rising and firing in one clean motion. The animal dropped, and just like that, the moment passed.
“Got ’em,” he said flatly.
“Poor guy,” you replied.
He scoffed faintly. “You feel bad for every animal.”
“I do.”
“It’s a squirrel.”
“It had dreams.”
That got him—an actual laugh, short and rough, like it caught him off guard.
“Shut up,” he said, but there was no bite in it.
You smiled to yourself.
Later, when the sun dipped lower and the forest turned gold at the edges, you tried mimicking a bird call you’d just heard. The result was… questionable.
Daryl stopped walking, then let out a quiet sound that turned into a laugh before he could stop it.
“What?” you demanded immediately.
“Nothin’.”
“No. What?”
“It sounded like somethin’ dyin’.”
Your mouth dropped open. “It did not.”
“It did.”
“I was close.”
“You weren’t.”
That made him laugh again, properly this time, and you looked entirely too proud of yourself anyway.
You tried again. Better this time.
His eyebrows lifted slightly. “There y’go.”
You straightened instantly, grin making way on your face. “Praise from the Daryl Dixon.”
“There it is,” he muttered, looking away like he regretted everything.
By the time the prison came back into view, you were quietly repeating things under your breath as you walked.
“Male goldfinch…”
“Carolina wren…”
“Red-winged blackbird…”
Daryl caught fragments of it, and something in him shifted—small, quiet, unspoken—but it stayed.
You were actually remembering.
The gates opened, and just like that, you were gone, heading straight for Beth, Carl, and Judith.
Daryl watched as you dropped into their space like you belonged there. Judith reached for you immediately. Carl pretended not to care while clearly listening. Beth smiled like she already knew what was coming.
“Okay, listen to this,” you said, taking a moment to grab Judith into your arms and then you were off—talking, gesturing, alive with it.
Daryl sat down at a nearby table and pulled out his knife. The squirrels needed skinning.
But somewhere between cuts, his attention drifted.
“And male goldfinches are brighter because they’re trying to attract mates,” you were saying.
“No way,” Beth said.
“It's true!”
Carl asked something. You answered immediately. Another fact followed. Then another.
You never once said where you got any of it.
You just shared it.
Like the world was still worth noticing.
Daryl kept watching anyway, longer than he meant to.
It wasn't intentional at first. Just a glance that didn’t quite move away when it should’ve. Then another. Then suddenly he was aware of the fact that he hadn’t touched the squirrel in front of him in a while.
The knife sat idle in his hand, pressed lightly against the animal’s fur, completely forgotten.
Across the yard, your voice carried easily over the noise of the prison settling into evening. You were still talking, hands moving as you explained something to Carl and Beth, Judith tucked safely in your arms like she belonged there.
Carl looked half-annoyed, half-invested. Beth was smiling like she always did when you got going. Judith was clapping for no reason anyone else understood.
Daryl didn’t realize he’d stopped listening to anything else.
“Daryl.”
Carol’s voice cut in somewhere beside him.
Nothing. His eyes still stayed on you.
“Daryl.”
Still nothing.
A longer pause this time. Then Carol leaned slightly forward, closer to his line of sight, voice sharper just to break through whatever hold you had on him.
“Daryl Dixon.”
That finally got him.
He blinked once, slow, like surfacing from somewhere else entirely. “Huh?”
Carol didn’t even look surprised anymore. She just tilted her head toward the table in front of him, pointing at the untouched squirrel. “You planning on skinning that thing today?”
Only then did his eyes drop. He frowned slightly, like he’d forgotten it was there.
“Oh.”
That one word was enough for Carol.
She followed his gaze across the yard almost immediately. Saw you. Saw the way he’d been looking. Saw the entire situation in about half a second flat.
She leaned back slightly in her chair now, completely entertained. “You’ve been staring at her for five straight minutes.”
“I wasn’t.”
“You were.”
A beat.
“I wasn’t.”
“You absolutely were.”
Daryl let out a quiet, frustrated breath through his nose and looked away like the conversation itself was the problem.
Across the yard, your laughter rang out again.
Daryl looked before he could stop himself.
Carol noticed immediately.
“There it is,” she said, almost amused.
“Jesus Christ,” Daryl muttered under his breath, like he regretted having eyes.
Carol rested her elbows on the table now, watching him instead of the yard. “You got it bad.”
Daryl finally dragged his attention away from you just long enough to glare at her. “I don’t.”
Carol exhaled through a smile, like she was trying not to laugh outright at him. “You spent the entire hunting trip collecting bird facts for her.”
That made him stop.
Not dramatically.
Just… still.
The knife in his hand pressed a little too hard into the table for a second before he eased off.
His jaw worked slightly like he was considering arguing it.
But nothing came out.
Carol didn’t push. She just watched him sit there for a moment, quiet in a way that wasn’t defensive anymore.
Finally, she spoke again—but softer this time, less teasing and more certain.
"It's not the bird facts she's listening for" she said, glancing briefly toward the yard where you were still talking. “You’re the part she’s tuned into.”
Daryl didn’t answer.
But his eyes went back anyway.
And stayed there longer than before.
Across the yard, you were still smiling. Still explaining. Still lighting up like the world hadn’t ended and somehow still had room for things like bird calls and facts and wonder.
Something in his expression shifted—a fondness too soft to name making way to the surface.
Carol noticed that too.
Her grin came back, smaller this time.
“Thought so,” she murmured.
Daryl finally picked up the knife again, but it didn’t move right away. His hand hovered for a second too long, like his attention was split between the work in front of him and the sound of your voice carrying across the yard.
He exhaled quietly through his nose.
“Shut up,” he said again.
But this time it didn’t carry any weight at all.
Just habit.
Carol only hummed in response, satisfied, and left him to it.
And when Daryl finally did look back down at the squirrel, his focus returned in pieces—fractured, incomplete—because part of him was still across the yard where you were, laughing like the world still made sense.
Somewhere beyond the fences, a Carolina wren called into the evening like it had all the time in the world.
Daryl rolled his eyes.
Then smiled anyway.
I just love daryl sm (◞‸ ◟) Please let me know if you enjoyed it !
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6. “After everything we’ve been through, you still don’t think that I love you?”
9. “Will you just accept that I'm hopelessly in love with you, and there’s nothing you can do to that will change that”
This was requested by @twdeadfanfic
I hope you like this!!!
You and Daryl had been through a lot since you met each other, you never thought you’d find love at the end of the world, but you did, and so did Daryl, even though he didn’t believe it sometimes.
Daryl had a habit that when things were going, in his eyes, too good, he started to back away, you knew it was because he was scared. You knew all about his past and his family and you understood it, but you must admit it frustrated you sometimes.
Sometimes you didn’t know what to do to prove it to him.
So, when he started pulling away again you decided to confront him, to make him see that you loved him.
“Hey,” you walked up to Daryl, you had just come back to your home from watch duty.
“Hey, can’t stop, I got some things that I need ta do” Daryl responded starting to head to the door.
“Don’t you dare,” you almost growled.
Daryl turned back to you, confused at your sudden outburst, but before he could respond you started to talk.
“Don’t you dare push me away Daryl, you forget, I know you, you can’t keep doing this,” you told him, looking at Daryl who seemed to be a little bit in shock.
Deciding to take a little bit of a softer approach you walked up to him.
“Come here,” you said, gently taking hold of his hand and leading him to the couch and sat him down, sitting on the table opposite.
“Look, I know this scares you, us scares you, but I won’t let you pull away again, please don’t keep doing this,” you softly spoke, sadness in your voice.
“It’s jus’, I don’ get it, why me?” Daryl asked, confusion and sadness laced in his voice.
“After everything we’ve been through, you still don’t think that I love you?” you asked Daryl, he responded by shaking his head.
“I love you because, Daryl, you’re everything to me. You’re brave, you’re smart, but you’re kind, and gentle, and most of all you have so much love in your heart, you’re a wonderful human being Daryl, and I know this is hard to believe because no one had ever talked to you like this before, but I want you to try.”
You got down on your knees to kneel in front of Daryl, placing a hand on each cheek looking deeply into his eyes.
“Just accept that I’m hopelessly in love with you, and there’s nothing you can do to that will change that,” you confessed.
Daryl sat there, unable to say anything, dumbstruck at your words, you were right, no one had ever spoken to him the way you were right now, and he didn’t know what to do.
A tear slipped from his eye; he didn’t realise it until you wiped it away.
“I love you Daryl Dixon,” you reiterated.
“I love you (Y/N), I love you more than anythin’ in this world, I’m so blessed to have you in my life.”
Daryl tried to put into words what he was feeling, but he always struggled with the right words, he was always an `action speaks louder than words` kind of guy, so he slid down off the couch, now on his knees before you as he pulled you in for a loving passionate kiss that expressed all the words he’d ever want to say.