Dress.
Buck Cashman x Fisk's niece!reader
Pairing: Buck Cashman x fem!reader
Word count: 12.9K
Warnings and Context: mature themes, intense romantic/sexual tension, emotional vulnerability, explicit intimacy, slow-burn romance, age gapish, self- sabotage, hurt/comfort, minors do not interract, slightly cringe moment.
Summary: Buck Cashman is struggling with his own darkness admits his love and obsession for you, Wilson Fisk's niece, has been trying to stay away from.
Author Note: I hope it fulfills your expectations! I'm thinking about diving more into this couple as they intrigued me further, let's say this is the origin story of them. Sorry if I yapped too much in the story and repeated the same things again and again but I, myself, am a master at self-sabotage and trust me this is nothing AND there's a massive cringing moment on my end... and best believe you'll know what I'm talking about but let's just say character development âš
And do let me know if i missed any of you in the taglist!
Taglist: @itsneversirius @not-the-teen-witch @mahumf9 @itsdynotdaddy @gh0st-quart3t @giuliahowlett @sotragedynut @vcmpirus @avocad0ess @fiiorii @fancyghosttrashhero-blog
gif credits belongs to its owner.
Buck Cashman has never been with a woman out of pure love and no other woman saw him other than the shared lust. Not that it means he saw women as a pure object, no, but because he never prioritized that kind of feeling in his life, never got the chance to, never wanted to. That is, until he met you. Even if it wasnât the second he saw you next to the man heâd been working with in the shadows, it happened in time.
Wilson Fisk, ever so possessive about the things in his life was fond of you ever since you were a little baby. You were about eight years old when he took you under his wing, sharing his home and life with you as a distant father would. So, when he introduced you to Buck years later, fully grown and standing in the dim light of his office in the penthouse you still shared with him, there had been nothing casual about it. He was controlled, quiet, and distant.
âBuck, meet my niece,â Wilson had said evenly, his large hand settling heavily against your shoulder as he turned you toward him.
He was courteous when he shook your hand, his grip firm yet controlled. His gaze held yours with unsettling precision, dark eyes steady and deliberate as though he were looking straight through you and into your soul. The first of many touches to come with both unaware souls.
âSheâs under my protection.â The words that came out of his small lips were calm, controlled, but unmistakably possessive.
Buck was intelligent enough to understand exactly what Fisk meant. You were off-limits. Claimed without needing to be claimed outright. Protected with the same ruthless certainty Wilson reserved for territory he would kill to defend. A line that should never even be approached.
But Buck Cashman did not need Wilson Fiskâs warning to know you were dangerous to him in ways he had never experienced before and had not needed the warning to know he should stay away.
You were already too young for him, too bright.
With your youthful face and sharp eyes that concealed far more than they revealed, your careful choice of words, your restless edge, the constant tension hidden beneath your composure âas though you were always waiting for something to happenâ you existed in complete contrast to the world Buck belonged to. There was something dangerously untouched about you despite the world you had grown up in.
The quick bursts of laughter shared with the kitchen staff as though you were trying to hold onto something soft inside a house built on violence, the easy warmth you carried without realizing it, the kind that softened every room you stepped into. You moved through Fiskâs home like someone both sheltered and caged by it.
And Buck understood, almost immediately, that you were a world entirely separate from his own. Entirely different in a way one he had no right to touch; one he should never have been allowed nearby. One he should never be allowed to step into.
You remained a constant presence in Buckâs life regardless, though never the center of his attention. He was far too meticulous with his work, too careful with the fragile balance he maintained to survive in a world like this one. There was no room for distractions, no matter how quietly tempting they became.
And so, for a long time, you were simply there as you grew into a beautiful young woman. Someone clever. Fierce.
You were far too stubborn to quietly accept the suffocating restrictions your uncle placed around you under the guise of protection. You argued with him constantly, refusing to mistake control for care. Because that was what it truly was in your eyes: not protection, but confinement. And you were far too intelligent to believe otherwise.
To you, it was humiliating in its own way.
To Wilson Fisk, you were reckless.
You fought against rules you did not fully understand, against dangers you had only ever glimpsed from a distance. Fisk had spent years shielding you from the reality of his world, carefully keeping its ugliness beyond your reach. He never wanted you exposed to it, never allowed you to witness the true depth of the violence he carried home with him like a shadow stitched to his back.
But as you grew older, understanding became inevitable.
You began noticing the blood hidden beneath expensive cuffs, the tense silences after late-night phone calls, the way men lowered their eyes around him out of fear rather than respect. Little by little, the illusion cracked. And you truly understood it the night Wilson Fisk was nearly shot.
The memory stayed carved into you afterwardâ the chaos, the shouting, the sudden flood of armed men through the house. The sight of blood soaking through his clothes while he stood there somehow still terrifying despite the injury, one hand pressed against his side as if pain itself offended him. That was the night you realized your uncleâs world was far darker than he had ever allowed you to see.
And in that darkness, while the armed men he always kept around him moved in sharp formation through the halls in their fine tailored suits, you were held tightly against Buckâs chest, cradled securely within his arms as chaos erupted around you. Lately, you had become Buckâs priorityânot because he had intended for it to happen, but because somewhere along the way, it simply had. And deep down, he knew that even if he had been given the choice, nothing about it would have changed.
One arm was wrapped tightly around your midsection, possessive and protective all at once, while his other hand buried itself in your hair, keeping your head pressed firmly against his chest as he hurried you away from the danger. Rapid footsteps echoed through the corridor, voices shouting over one another, but all you could think about was your uncle.
âUncle!â you cried out, twisting slightly in his hold to look back despite the panic flooding your veins, the thought of losing the only person you had ever truly depended on leaving you breathless with fear.
âHeâs fine,â Buck said immediately, his voice rough with restrained emotion as he kept moving. There was urgency in the way he held you, in the way his grip tightened whenever you tried to look behind you again. âHeâs fine.â
But you could barely hear him over the noise in your head.
Buck stopped abruptly in the hallway, realizing he had no other choice if he wanted to keep you safe. He turned you toward him, as his hands came up to cradle your face firmly, forcing your attention onto him and only him.
He said your name a little louder this time, enough to cut through the panic spiraling inside you.
His brown eyes locked onto yours with unwavering intensity, softer than usual nowânot weak, never weak, but undeniably affected by the fierce protective instinct rising within him. His thumbs brushed beneath your teary eyes in slow, grounding motions.
âWe have to get out of here,â he said quietly, maintaining deliberate eye contact so you wouldnât drift back into fear. âI need you to stay with me.â
His voice remained calm and certain, even as tension tightened his jaw.
âIâve got to keep you safe, alright?â he continued softly. âMr. Fisk is fine. Theyâre getting him out now, and Iâm taking you home.â
The certainty in his tone was not only meant to reassure youâit was something he needed to believe himself.
His eyes never left yours, clearly waiting for either a verbal or silent sign of agreement, and all you could manage was a faint, unsteady nod. Your hands were ice-cold, your legs still trembling as the reality of everything settled in too slowly, like it refused to fully land at once.
âCâmon, angel,â he said, already moving.
His arm stayed firm around you as he guided you down the stairs in quick, controlled strides, scanning every corner, every shadow, every possible angle of threat as if the world itself couldnât be trusted to stay still. His head kept turning, eyes flicking across every surface, every doorway, every reflection, as though danger might emerge from anywhere at any second.
The moment you reached the exit, he didnât slow. He ushered you straight into the car, placing you carefully into the backseat before shutting the door with a decisive firmness. Without hesitation, he moved around to the front passenger seat, getting in swiftly as if distance between you and him wasnât an option.
Inside the dim interior, the outside chaos felt muffledâdistant sirens bleeding faintly through the glass, voices swallowed by the carâs closed space. Buck was already on his phone, issuing rapid, clipped calls, his tone low but absolute. You caught fragments of his voice through the speakerâorders, confirmations, locationsâbut nothing fully formed enough to ease the tight knot in your chest.
And still, even while he spoke, his attention kept flicking back toward the rearview mirror. Toward you.
That was the first spark that lit between youâ small, unspoken, and almost impossible to name at the time. It didnât feel like anything significant then, just a moment passing too quietly to question, but it stayed anyway.
There were looks across rooms filled with people who thought they mattered more than they did, across conversations that required his attention but never truly held it. He would find you without meaning to, or maybe he always meant to, and when he did, it was never casual. Never passing. It was still, controlled, anchoredâ everything else in the room blurred except for you.
You would look away eventually â flustered with the feeling you couldnât put a name to it as you never saw him more than just⊠Buckâ but he rarely did. Because there was something in it that unsettled him more than any threat ever had, something quiet and insistent and growing in places he did not give permission to anything to grow. It wasnât desire in the way he understood it. It was worse than that, a familiarity without any resemblance, any history.
As if some part of him had already decided you were important long before he had the right to decide anything at all and the worst part wasâ the part he never allowed himself to linger on for more than a secondâ how carefully he kept himself just shy of crossing any line.
A step held back. A word left unspoken. A touch that stopped just before it became real enough to mean something that could not be undone.
You couldâve been walking ahead of him through a narrow corridor lined with polished stone and low light and heâd moved past you with practiced ease, shoulder brushing yours just barely but not enough to acknowledge your presence that makes you feel troubled after those lingering gaze, but his handâwithout thought, without permission even from himselfâ would caught the edge of your fingers for half a second too long. A pinky brush against yours, soft as your caught breath but the damage it did was always more than the action itself.
Then there was another night where you would have dinner with Wilson Fisk and his acquaintanceâ Vanessa, under the name of bonding together like a family none of you had at all. Buck came into the room and stood beside your uncle without even looking at your way, as he always did these days.
You swallowed, fingers tightening slightly around the fork in your hand. There was something in the restraint of it all that felt like resentmentâ not only toward him, but toward yourself too, for noticing too much, for remembering too easily. It felt like a loop you couldnât step out of, like in another life, another universe, there mightâve been a version of this that made sense but not there.
Buck spoke quietly into Fiskâs ear, nodded once as instructions were given and youâd never look away from the dish in your plate until he brushed past behind your chairâ the lightest brush of his fingers against the ends of your hair where it spilled over the back of the seat that made you think you imagined for a second, but lingered in your memories on days end.
Then these subtle moments grew bolder, not bold enough to arouse suspicion but the lingering looks that made you want to crawl into his skin turned into small conversations here and there.
Then these subtle moments grew bolder, not bold enough to arouse suspicion, but enough that the silence between you no longer felt entirely empty.
The lingering looks that once made you want to crawl out of your own skin to have home under his own slowly shifted into something heavierâ something that stayed, even when neither of you acknowledged it. They turned into small conversations at the edges of rooms, where voices were low enough to be mistaken for necessity rather than intention.
A question about nothing important. A reply that lasted a second too long. A pause that shouldnât have existed at all.
Buck never changed his posture when he spoke to you. He still stood the same way he did with everyone elseâ controlled, measured, always half a step removed from the world around him. But when it was you, there was always a fraction of something different beneath the surface. A delay before he walked away. A glance that returned even after it was already over.
You started noticing it in pieces.
The way heâd position himself just slightly closer than needed when others were in the room, not enough to be questioned, but enough that you could feel him there. The way his attention would drift back to you in the middle of conversations he was supposed to care about more than anything else. The way his voice softened by a degree when it was directed only at you, as if the rest of the world required steel but you did not.
But you would pretend not to notice.
It was one of those evenings, right before the ball that Vanessa arranged, and you were almost ready except mentally. These days, your thoughts felt heavier than they used to, like something had quietly shifted inside you and never shifted back. Ever since the night Wilson Fisk was almost shot, the past had started to rise in pieces you couldnât fully hold onto. Not clear memoriesâ questions. Fragments that didnât settle into answers no matter how long you stared at them.
How had you ended up here, in his house, under his protection, under his name without it ever being spoken aloud that way? What had happened to your parents? Were they part of something like this tooâ something layered and dangerous and carefully hidden behind wealth and silence? And if they wereâŠ, did they pay the price for it the same way others did? The same way Uncle Wes did?
The thought tightened in your chest, sharp and unwelcome. Uncle Wes⊠Oh, how fond of he was of you, when you were just a little girl and how careful and patient around you. More than your own uncle, kinder and sweeter than your uncle. Until the funeral of his changed him.
Wilson Fiskâ
God.
Why did he always refuse to talk about your family? Every time the question hovered near the edge of conversation, it was met with something heavier than avoidance. A shift in tone, a closing of distance, a silence so deliberate it felt like a wall being built in real time, right in front of you.
You stood there in your room, hands barely brushing the fabric of your dress, staring at your reflection like it belonged to someone else entirely. Someone who should have known more than she did. Someone who would have already left this house long ago, if not for the quiet weight of things she didnât yet understand, and the strange pull of obligations that never quite sounded like choices.
A part of you knew that.
The version of you that once believed in freedom without conditions wouldâve already walked out, refusing the suffocating elegance of a life built on silence and unanswered questions. She wouldâve chosen the unknown over this kind of safetyâ if it could even be called that.
But that version felt distant now, blurred at the edges.
Because liberty, the kind you used to be so certain you were meant for, didnât feel as simple anymore when every unanswered question tied itself back to the same name. The same house. The same quiet refusal to explain what had already been decided around you.
Downstairs, the house was already moving toward the night aheadâ preparations, voices, footsteps that carried certainty you didnât feel.
You exhaled slowly, fingers tightening against the fabric of your dress as if grounding yourself to something physical could stop your thoughts from drifting too far when your already open door was knocked on twice.
You saw him through the reflectionâ Buck.
ââMay I?ââ he asked, with that polished accent of his that made your throat tighten with the force of a swallow.
ââPlease.ââ you said, still looking at him through the reflection and he didnât intend to look away either.
âTheyâre almost ready,â he said, his voice low, as if speaking any louder would make it tremble under the weight of what had begun to spill from his chest and weave itself into her veins. With every breath he took, he felt its intensity, like a heavy fog pressing in around him. It was intangibleâsomething he couldnât hold in his bare hands even if he triedâbut oh⊠only he knew how deeply you were entwined with his soul.
You nodded, swallowing softly as he stood behind you. âOkay.â The word left your lips in a quiet acknowledgment.
Then you noticed what he was holding. Curiosity got the better of you, and you turned slightly to look at his handsâa thin silver chain with a small droplet of diamond.
âIs thatââ Your breath caught as you met his eyes, wide with surprise. He shook his head gently, a faint, almost-smile curling his lipsâamused, but also a little apologetic for the brief flicker of hope and the disappointment that followed right after.
âItâs merely a replica,â he said, unclasping the necklace, now holding it between both hands. And you understood right then.
âBuck, I canâtââ
âYou never let me in.â The look in his eyesâdeep and intense as it bore into yoursâmade you realize his resolve, the heaviness of his scent of sandalwood and eucalyptus surrounding you. âLet me fix things for you, just once.â
The necklace between his fingers looked so much like the one you had lost the night Wilson Fisk was shot. In the panic of the moment, you hadnât realized where youâd dropped it, and you had mourned it longer than you had processed your uncleâs incident. Buck had asked you a week prior why you were so upset over a necklace, and you told himâsomething as clichĂ© as it could getâthat it had belonged to your mother. You couldnât believe it had bothered him this much, enough to get you a similar one.
Your heart burst in your chest so strongly you were sure that, if you were lying on the bed, it would shake with every beat. Your throat tightenedâan effect he had on you so often latelyâand your lips parted with words you couldnât say. So you just nodded once.
He expected you to turn around, and you did. Buckâs pinky brushed your hair aside, leaving your neck exposed, and with a careful, precise movementâas if he were afraid you might crumble under his touchâhe clasped it at your nape. His touch was a breath against your skin as your eyes met through the mirror once again.
âThank you,â you managed in a whisper. He didnât say anything; he only nodded, acting as though it meant nothing. And that made you want to tear him apart just to put him back together with your own hands, keeping anyone else from ever touching him but you.
âI should go see Vanessa,â you said when the silence began to feel heavy on your shoulders, on your poor heart, overexplaining yourself. âShe likes to feel included when I ask her about my choices.â
âI think youâre beautiful,â he said plainly, as you felt a small bob in his throat. It made you stop. He hadnât said you looked beautiful in that dress; he had complimented you as a whole, without promptingâhe had acknowledged the very essence of you. The thoughtful, kind part that wanted everyone to feel included, in response to your earlier words.
The thought of the beauty in your soul deepened the need to be the one who reached it. That possessive, aching part of his mind burned at the idea of having all of you to himself. Not just your bodyâGod, he would lose himself if he were ever allowed more than a fleeting touch of your skinâbut your very soul, your mind, your thoughts, and that intelligent, gentle, tender heart of yours.
The look in his eyes reflected that agony. The way his tightly knitted brows held no trace of anger, yet were carved with inner turmoil. He was looking at youâevery inch of your faceâwith such pure attention that a restless anxiety began to coil in your gut, born from something you couldnât name.
He looked so pained that one might think he was physically hurt, but noâthe longing he felt for you⊠oh, it was worse than any bullet wound, any burn scar.
Buck Cashman had gone hungry and without water for days back in the order, but never in his life had he felt this parched at the marrow of himself. Not until he realized he couldnât have youâbecause even the thought of having you felt like it would never be enough. And he was a selfish, selfish man who wanted to consume you until nothing remained of you, until you became him, knowing even that would never satisfy what he wanted.
Your eyes kept drifting between his browns, feeling trapped, almost bruised by the intensity of his gaze, and you missed the way his fists softly clenched and unclenchedârestraining himself from making a move he so firmly believed he didnât deserve to make.
The second your lips parted, Buck spoke.
âGo,â he said, his voice low as a whisper, but filled with such intensity that the weight of it became almost unbearable. You didnât waste a second. Your fingers grazed the necklace as you turned and left him alone in your room, as if you were escaping. Later, in the room where Vanessa Fisk was getting ready, you realized you had barely even managed a nod in response to his words.
âAre you okay?â Vanessa asked after a few minutes of silence you brought in with you. Vanessa, as soft-spoken as she was, had always given you a faint sense of unease with her composure and grace. That slight lift at the right corner of her lips always made you wonder if she knew thingsâthere was an intelligent spark in her eyes that never shied away from reflecting her own truth⊠and perhaps yours as well.
âJust a little distracted is all,â you said, dismissing it, since there was no point in lying. The dizziness hadnât left you, and you were so disoriented that even a few stolen seconds under that steady, stripped-down gaze had affected you this deeply. There was nothing tangible to hold onto, nothing to explain, nothing to proveâand yet you knew no one would believe what you had felt if you tried to put it into words.
Maybe it was all in your head.
âHappens to the best of us,â said Vanessa, in her white dress that curved around her figure.
You took a deep breath, smiled at her, and stepped closer, trying to ground yourself in the real world you so often lost while living in your head.
âI see youâve found your necklace,â Vanessa murmured, her voice low and faintly playful in a way you couldnât quite place, as your mind drifted for a brief moment. Your fingers lingered on the chain, hesitating as you debated whether or not to tell her the truth.
âYes,â you said, your voice a breathless whisper as you swallowed a smile. âTurns out it was on my nightstand, between the trinkets.â
Vanessa smiled and turned toward the mirror, adjusting her red earringsâframed by tiny white diamondsâthe ones you had gifted her. Then she spoke in the softest voice, one that seemed to settle under your skin and stay there for the rest of the night.
âFunny how the things we spend so long searching for are sometimes right in front of us the entire time.â
ËËË â ËËË
Your hands were cold the rest of the evening.
You were around, having small talks under the big chandelier that gave a soft, yellow glow to the packed room, far away from him and your uncle as both of the men was trapping your soul into your body in two different feelings but with similar manners.
You were quiet and uneasy but no one seemed to notice as no one in here knew you enough that this silence was not like the others. Vanessaâs words lingered in your mind, slithered through the curves of it and touched even the forgotten, undulated places, and made you realize him in different ways.
How attentive he actually was with the careful demeanor he carried himself with that made you think if it was something more, or was it all just because of the title you were buried underneath. But he looked like he wanted to dig deeper to see the layers of you, to see what you were hiding it as if he wanted to unravel you himself with bare hand without having a care in the world if you were covered in dirt and soil.
He looked like heâd take great honour in finding the depths of you, all ugly and timid and hidden away from this polished world that you were living in.
And these thoughts, even if you were avoiding to be in his presence again without a clear mind, made you sought him out. Your gaze lingered with the heavy thoughts in your head as equally as the feelings in your chest. Just the sight of him talking with others, holding a champagne flute in his broad-knuckled fingers as if nothing in the world could tear him down made you loosen your own walls towards him for a second that you thought, you would let him in.
The sudden shift in your thoughts unsettled you. You were doing your best not to interpret his gestures in a way you knew would only hurt you in the end, but the necklace he gave you, the way he looked at you, and Vanessa Fiskâs words inevitably tangled together, trapping you in your own mind. Slowly, you began to lose your grip on the present once again.
That was until you were guided to a table shared with your uncle, his wife, the governorâand right across from you, Buck. The same table he shared with none other than Heather Glenn.
You knew her. You were the one who had introduced your uncle and aunt-in-law to her, hoping they might resolve whatever stood between them. Later, you recognized her from the recent vigilante incident. You werenât surprised that Wilson Fisk kept her close despite her connection to Matt Murdockâ Fisk was a spiteful man who enjoyed control and leverage.
âTheyâve made a great pair, donât you think?â
Vanessaâs quiet voice pulled you from your thoughts. You turned to her, startled, warmth creeping up from your chest to your neck as you realized she had caught you looking his way all night, despite your attempts to ignore him.
âWho?â you asked, though the answer came to you a few seconds later, and the realization settled heavily in your stomach, already tight with unnamed emotions. Vanessa raised her brows slightly, as if checking whether you were even listening, and a sudden wave of nausea hit you.
âYes,â you said anyway, glancing back toward them. âTwo peas in a pod.â
What rose in you was difficult to define.
It felt as though every thought youâd built around a single, vulnerable moment had been something you inventedâsomething born from your refusal to fully face reality. And yet, you were certain. Absolutely certain. The way he looked at you couldnât have been imagined. It couldnât have been your mind filling in the gaps.
And still, you refused to believe that the best thing your imagination could create⊠was him.
But all those yearsâhe had never once looked at you the way he looked at her. And that thought left something bitter in your chest, something you hated admitting even to yourself. It wasnât just jealousy. It couldnât be that simple. You werenât the kind of person who reduced things to something so small. At least, that was what you told yourself, trying to keep your mind steadyâeven as it refused to cooperate.
Maybe it really was your own need of belonging to somewhere, someone that played with your thoughts and made you believe that his accidental touches were something more. Maybe he really was a kind person, trying to cheer you up by gifting something you keep it close to your heart to make you happy and not because he wanted to be there.
Maybe he really wasnât the one that you could have just because he was around.
Trying to live in the moment was no longer something you were attempting from that point onward. The glances you kept stealing in that directionâand the fact that not once did he catch youâleft a quiet, irredeemable disappointment settling somewhere deep in you. And the way your uncle made no effort to hide his own disappointment only made it worse, like salt pressed into the same wound carved by two different men.
But was it really Buckâs fault?
You found yourself blaming it on you again and again, convincing yourself that you should never have misread those moments in the first place, because you already knew what the outcome would be.
The night blurred together after thatâmoving too quickly as you endured it, yet dragging on far too slowly for your liking. And when you finally excused yourself from the crowd and headed toward the door, you were stopped mid-step by Wilson Fisk calling your name.
There they wereâ Mr. and Mrs. Fisk, Buck Cashman, andâ
âMiss Glenn, I havenât had the chance to introduce you to my niece,â he said, gesturing for you to come closer with an arm extended.
You obliged.
Strangely enough, you felt nothing when you saw the woman again. She wore a polite, composed smile as she offered her hand.
âIâm glad I finally get to meet you, Miss Fisk,â she said. âI heard Mr. and Mrs. Fisk met me through your introduction.â
âIndeed,â you replied, shaking her hand with a polite smile of your ownânothing more than a careful curve of the lips. âItâs nice to see you welcomed into the family.â
The words carried a bitterness only you could truly hear. Heather Glenn remained poised and courteous, her expression never faltering.
âMiss Glenn has been considering working with an architect,â Wilson Fisk said, a note of pride in his voice as he turned slightly toward you.
âYes,â Heather Glenn added, holding her purse with both hands now that the greeting had passed. âMr. Fisk spoke very highly of you.â
âMy uncle is very affectionate when it comes to the people he likes,â you said lightly, brushing off the compliment with a small wave of your hand. âHe tends to exaggerate.â
âIâm sure youâre just being modest,â she replied.
Soft, polite laughter rippled around the gathering and your heart began to beat fasterânot from surprise, but from the familiar certainty of what always came next when you spoke too freely, too sharply, too honestly for a room like this.
ââNo, not really. Iâve been lacking lots of inspiration lately.ââ you said, tilting your head slightly to the side as your hair fell onto your skin, framing your face like a curtain.
ââYou may say Iâm in desperate need of muse.ââ
ËËË â ËËË
âFuck me,â you groaned into your palms, your hands pressed over your face as the warm air from the carâs ventilation stopped brushing against your skin. You had left the ballroom quickly, almost abruptlyâdriven out by the sting of your own pettiness, which had curdled into something like internal shame. Just because of what? A man?
The realization that you were slippingâbecoming less and less like yourself in such a short amount of timeâmade something in your stomach turn over. A sick, rising nausea you couldnât quite settle.
You refused to go back to the penthouse. You found yourself questioning, once again, why you were still living with your uncle and his wife at all. Your whole life felt like a pretense, and the real problems you avoided kept pushing you toward thoughts you didnât want, toward interpretations you didnât trust in yourself. And that only created more complications you didnât need.
Sinking into the backseat, you told the driver to take you to the country houseâthe one nearly an hour away. One of the many properties Wilson Fisk owned. Even now, even when you were trying to escape everything connected to him, it still unsettled you to seek refuge in a place that belonged to him.
How ironic.
At this time of year, there were only one or two housekeepers there, along with the usual security detail. But beyond that, it was the closest thing you had to solitudeâif you could even call it that.
Still, you needed to be alone. Properly alone.
When you arrived, the familiar staff greeted you with surprise, quickly asking if you needed anything, if you had warned them, if they should prepare somethingâanything at all. You simply told them you wanted to be left alone. Not unkindly. Just clearly.
A small request for space.
You went upstairs to your room, unprepared as always. Some old clothes still lingered there, along with childhood toys tucked away in the wardrobe you once used. You had never been fond of empty closets or carefully arranged space. You preferred things that filled the room, that pressed into it, that made themselves knownârather than order that left everything too clean, too open, too easy to breathe in.
You spent an hour or so in that room, laid down on the bed as you looked at the popcorn ceiling. The room was dark as you didnât bother to turn the lights on, even if it thrilled you a little. The dark curtains were open, letting the distant city lights in not enough to see but enough to feel like she wasnât lonely.
You thought about your own words, how petty you were to bring up one word that could trigger the poor womanâs trauma and for what? Because you couldnât have something you wanted to, as if it was your right to own a person let alone Buck Cashman.
It was not a self-pity, but you had to be realistic in order to survive whatever this feeling was. Crush, love or obsession. You name it.
He was way older than you and even if you were sharing similar aspects of the world, you didnât belong together. He was just doing his job all this time, being the reliable person that your uncle needed and fulfilling what was required. And just because there was a moment of vulnerability on your end, it made you believe in faux hopes when everything was just your wrong interpretation.
It wasnât the ache in your chest whenever you taught him with someone else, it was uglier. Making you wish you never knew the name of Heather Glenn, even if it could end the marriage of your uncle. Making you wish you were older, wiser, more independent, more hard-working, more real instead of believing in the delusions in your head because it was never about the looks. It was the things you chased and wanted your whole life and she already had those things; maybe soon enough heâll have him either.
The sound of the car that made you turn your head towards floor to ceiling window, the mass in your chest still prominent. At first, as you were so used to the sound of cars passing by all the time, you didnât notice that this one was oddâ near the only building in this side of the country. The nearest house was miles away and you waited for car to pass by, not stop.
You got up from your bed with haste; your heart was beating so fast inside your chest that you heard it in your ears. At this age, you were still afraid to face the wrath of your uncle, knowing how upset he would be that you didnât bother to tell him yourself that you were not coming back home.
But when you looked down from the window, it wasnât the big, tall, broad-shouldered man you expected to see.
With a gasp you withdraw yourself away from the window and as if he could hear, Buck looked up at the same time instinctively, like he could have known youâd be on that floor, in that room.
You cursed at yourself, obviously Wilson Fisk didnât bother to come here himself but would send someone with as much as impact he had. With your feet bare from the high-heels you wore whole evening, your dress that was now wrinkled on the back and your makeup that probably was half smudged from palming your face through the whole car ride you stepped down the stairs and head towards the back door of the house.
You knew he would find you and face you eventually, but you were not ready to share the atmosphere of your own bedroom once again.
The heat was taking all over your body, despite the cold night air. Something blossomed and bloomed with every breath you took that caused your heart to beat. Your breath was frantic, tight and rapid in a way that it still couldnât keep up with the beat of your heart. Your ears were ringing, the blood flow causing ocean-like voices in the shell of your ear as your palm covered your chest just for you to feel the necklace, the one he put around your delicate neck earlier.
Your palm wrapped around the small diamond, a mere replica he said but the diamond you wore was not real, our parents couldnât afford something like that as much as you knew butâ did you ever really know anythingâ, and you shouldnât accept it in the first place even just from this reason.
But you were so deprived from that feeling of being cherished, you didnât realize how foolish you were the whole night. You wanted to tear the chain off of your neck, give back to him as if it could change anything. As if you could un-feel, undo, unlive.
ââThat was a low blow back there.ââ
You looked straight ahead, the heavy accent of his was ringing in your ear as you took a look around the garden that surrounding you instead of turning back at the owner of the voice.
The garden was lit from the floor, small garden spot lights hidden in between the grass could paint everywhere green if it wasnât for the white light inside the blue pool. The tall trees in front of the picket fences that you couldnât see behind, the sound of the leaves with every wind blow and the cold, tingling feeling of the grass you were stepping on bare-foot.
Your fingers fiddled with the small diamond, rubbing the underside of it with the pad of your thumb as you took a deep breath into your chest. Your lips trembled as if it was a sign.
You turned around and saw him there, a few steps ahead of you with his head tilted to the side. The same intensity in his eyes that you so wanted to believe was your own interpretation, a reflect of something you want to see and not what he actually meant. His tie was long gone; his jacket was hanging from the tip of his fingers as it was hanging behind his shoulder. There was something else in his expression either, something he didnât have back in your room, as if he was puzzled by you.
You didnât answer him and definitely didnât expect him to shove your actions to your face. Your tongue darted out for a second and wet your lower lip, your hands on either side of your body now as you held your chin up higher than you usually do.
His gaze lingered on the necklace you were holding a second ago and swallowed down thickly as he wanted to feel the warmth you left on the gem.
ââWhy are you here?ââ he asked, eyebrows knitted together.
ââI could ask you the same thing.ââ you answered, throat tightening softly.
ââYou know why Iâm here.ââ
ââCause God forbid if I want something for myself.ââ
He said your name, the taste of it lingering on his tongue as he realized once again that he wasnât using your name as much as heâd wanted to.
ââDid I do something to offend you?ââ he asked, taking a step further as he put the jacket on the wicker chair near him, then focusing back on you. He wanted to be closer, God knows, but he didnât want you to feel trapped as it was obvious you were feeling uneasy in his presence.
If only he knew.
ââWhat?ââ you asked back, it was your turn to be confused as you frowned upon his words.
ââIf I did, you should let me know so I wonât repeat.ââ
You looked at him with a rapid beat of your heart banging onto your chest as if it wanted to leave your body and reach out to its owner, deep breaths you took heaved your chest enough for your chest to feel like it was going to spill out of your dress which wasnât something you felt so often.
ââI donât understandâââ
ââIs it the necklace?ââ
ââNo, whyâââ you let out a harsh breath out of your nose, frustrated with the way he was not acting as you expected him to. ââWhatâs wrong with you?ââ you said, voice a little strained as your hands trembled from standing up to him.
Before he could open his mouth, you continued.
ââOne moment youâre acting as if I donât exist, youâre not even looking at my way! And the next second you seek out ways to touch me that makes me feel like Iâm imagining things!ââ
The brunette man has never seen you raise your voice before and it intrigued him in ways he shouldnât be thinking at that moment.
ââYou do things that requires attention, but then the next second youâââ you stopped abruptly, the feelings in your chest became so heavy that it started to overflow your skin in ways you didnât want, making your vision blurry slightly and it wasnât because of the light drizzle started to pour down both on you, making small dots in his white button up shirt.
ââYouâre looking at me as if Iâm everything,ââ you said, your voice trembling on the edges with restriction, with frustration. ââthen you go and speak with others in ways you never speak to me. You laugh with them whereas you donât even speak my name.ââ
His breath hitched in his chest, shaking his head to the sides softly as he took the smallest step towards you in hopes of you wonât back up, and spoke your name in the softest way possible that made the sky growl as if it felt the weight of the feelings inside his own chest.
ââDonât say my name now,ââ you said, chuckling with tears in your eyes that you were discontent with. âânot when youâre making me feel like Iâm imagining things or yesâ maybeâ maybe thatâs the truth.ââ ââDonât.ââ ââMaybe Iâm imagining thingsâ ââ ââThatâs not the truth.ââ ââ âand maybe I donât even like you the way I believe I do. Maybe Iâm just so deprived of attention in my life and Iâm obsessing over the first person whoâs nice and kind and maybe you should just leaveâ ââ ââI wonât.ââ ââ âand never look in my way because maybe you were justâ ââ
The roll of thunder lightened up your surroundings, the trees, the house, the skyâ But it wasnât as bright as your heart when Buck kissed you, interrupting your words.
You saw him getting closer with every sentence, every trembling gesture that followed your words and how he tried to interrupt them with his own but you were so caught up in yourself as always that he thought he couldnât find any better excuse than pressing his lips against yours. Especially not after you confessed that you liked him. Him. The real thunder, he thought, was the one that he was trying to suppress as he cupped your cheeks and pulled you closer.
A soft muffle came from your side was swallowed by him gladly, taking your lips in between his as his hands shook. The cold skin of your cheeks was pressed against his wide, calloused palms. The mere thought of touching you was enough to undo him, and now, he was kissing you.
Buck didnât insist for more, not until you shook the bewilderment off from yourself and held onto his wrists. Thatâs when he deepened the kiss by tilting his head to the side, grabbing the back of your neck above your hair that started to stick to your own skin from the drizzle of rain that fell on both of you.
His other hand touched your shoulder first, not sure where to hold, then moved to your back and rested on your waist as your own arms wrapped around his neck, fingers founding the fine line on his nape.
Everything was burning.
Your skin was crawling like a playful touch of a feather caressing your skin but it was so intense that you were bordering between overstimulation and pure joy. Your breath couldnât keep up with the rhythm of your heart and the kiss was so clumsy on your side that you were keep pulling away with heavy breaths.
Buck gave you space and time, every time you pulled away and muttered words of soft curses, his name and soft whimpers and heh welcomed you back every single time with more enthusiasm than before.
He kissed you with quiet devotion. No rush, no hunger beyond the simple act of sharing breath and warmth. His lips moved over yours in slow exploration, learning the shape of them, how you responded to each gentle press, trying to understand what was right and good. His chest rose and fell steadily; a man whoâd been trained to control every muscle could now let this single point of contact speak for him without words that he was so eager to whisper against your skin.
His fingers tightened slightly in your hair, a quiet possessiveness blooming beneath his usual restraint. The kiss deepened further, not with reckless passion but something more deliberate. A slow unraveling of the discipline heâd worn like armor for years. Every shared breath felt like an exchange; every press of mouths a silent confession.
It was Buck who broke the kiss first, completely, apart from your quick breaks. It was gentle, careful, like peeling back something fragile rather than ending it abruptlyâ but he didnât pull away entirely, just an inch of space between you now as his breathing evened out slightly.
âFor a long moment, he simply looked at you; studying the softness of your face after kissing, how your lashes fluttered when you blinked.
ââNothing you ever felt was wrong,ââ he whispered, resting his forehead against yours as his nose caressed your cheek to take your scent in deeper. ââIt was me whoâs stupid enough to assume you wouldnât notice but coward enough to make a move.ââ
He pushed the damp strands of hair from your face, tucked it behind your ear and tasted your name on his tongue once again with a sigh.
ââI shouldâve never crossed your mind,ââ he said, disappointed at himself as the restrain slowly slipped from his body.
ââBuckâŠââ you whispered his name and he groaned, soft, before kissing you deeply as he took your scent in just as deeply.
ââGod, I love you.ââ he said, closing his eyes tightly as he tried to get his mind together. ââI love you enough to stay away from you.ââ
ââPlease, donâtâŠââ you said, heart trembling in your chest in fear and he get what you mean in instant. He pulled back at the same time he opened his eyes, looking down at you with that look in there. Deep as a black hole. His throat bobbed once again as he shook his head.
ââI need you to be the sane one right now.ââ he said.
ââI just want to know the truth.ââ you said.
Your fingers wrapped around his thick wrist, the one that was holding your face, and the last piece of patience snapped inside of him. He thought love would feel cleaner than this. Something sharp and immediate, something he could survive but instead, it felt like standing outside your door long after midnight with blood drying beneath his knuckles, listening to the silence on the other side and thanking God you were asleep enough not to hear what kind of man had come to you.
Buck had spent most of his life around fear. He knew the smell of it, knew how it sat inside peopleâs throats and made them quieter, smaller, obedient. He had inflicted it often enough to recognize it instantly but loving you frightened him in ways violence never had.
Because violence was easy. Violence obeyed him.
You did not.
You smiled at him gently sometimes, and he would feel his entire body tense like something wounded waiting for the blow that never came. You touched his arm once while thanking him for something insignificant and he spent the rest of the evening unable to unclench his jaw because the warmth of your hand lingered like a threat.
Not a threat to his life but to his restraint, and God, his restraint was the only thing keeping him from ruining this. Ruining you.
There were nights Buck stood outside your room with every intention of knocking, only to stare at the brass handle until the wanting inside him became unbearable. His hand would hover there for a second too long before dropping back to his side because once he crossed that threshold, he wasnât sure he would ever leave again.
You were dangerous to him that way, not because you were cruel nor you tempted him intentionally but because you looked at him like there was still something human left worth saving and Buck had never known what to do with mercy when it was offered freely.
So, he loved you carefully. In fragments and in swallowed words. In the brutal discipline of keeping himself standing three steps farther away from you than he wanted to be.
Sometimes you would laugh beside him and Buck would have to look away because the feeling that rose in his chest was too enormous to survive intact. It did not feel gentle. It felt catastrophic. Like standing beneath something holy and realizing it could destroy you simply by being beautiful. And you only rooted yourself deeper but the cruelest part was that he could never tell you, or as he thought once.
Because Buck knew what loving him meant. It meant blood on expensive floors. Men with guns watching every doorway. It meant sleepless nights and fear disguised as protection. It meant becoming attached to someone the world would eventually try to punish simply for existing beside him. As if he already didnât know you were already in this world just simply being as Wilson Fiskâs niece, he still wanted to keep you out of it.
So, his silence became its own kind of devotion.
He loved you in every conversation he cut short before it became too honest, in every doorway he lingered near just to make sure you were safe, in every glance dragged away before you noticed how long heâd been staring.
Sometimes he thought cowardice might actually be the purest form of love he had left to offer. Because wanting you was easy; keeping you safe from himself was the part that nearly killed him.
And stillâ still, every time you smiled at him like he was something worth softening for, Buck felt that terrible ache split open inside his ribs all over again. The kind that begged and made a violent man stand perfectly still just so he would not reach for something sacred with bloodstained hands.
But he it was already too late for that as his hand tightened around your jaw just enough to tilt your face up further, and the look on his face turned almost painfulâ as if the truth was something alive trying to claw its way out of his throat.
His breathing had gone uneven now, warm against your mouth, and you could feel the war inside him in every second he delayed touching you again. His thumb dragged slowly beneath your eye, rough skin against delicate flesh, like he was memorizing you through contact alone.
Your breath caught.
âI knew it was bad when I started looking for you in rooms before I even realized I was doing it.â His eyes searched yours desperately, almost angry at himself for continuing. âWorse when your voice became the only thing that could calm me down after a bloody night enough to make other men sick.â
âBuckâŠâ
âNo.â His forehead pressed harder against yours. âYou said you wanted the truth, sweetheart, so listen to me.â
The pet name came out wrecked.
âI think about you constantly.â The confession left him like something torn open. âI think about you when I wake up, when Iâm working, when thereâs blood on my hands and Iâm trying to convince myself, I shouldnât come near you afterward.â His jaw tightened. âAnd God, the worst part is that none of it feels temporary. It feelsâŠâ He swallowed harshly. âReal. You feel real.â
Your fingers tightened instinctively around his wrist as Buck closed his eyes for a second like even that small touch nearly undid him.
âYou donât understand what youâve done to me.â His voice softened then, becoming something almost vulnerable. âYou made me careful.â
That seemed to hurt him most of all.
âIâve spent my whole life taking what I wanted without hesitating. Then you came along and suddenly Iâm standing outside your door at two in the morning arguing with myself because I want to hear your voice so badly it makes me feel insane.â
Your heart stuttered painfully in your chest.
âAnd every time you smiled at me,â he continued quietly, âevery time you touched me like I wasnât something dangerous, it just got worse.â His nose brushed yours again unconsciously, like he couldnât stop seeking you out even while trying to push you away.
âI stayed away because I knew what this would become if I didnât.â His eyes finally lifted fully to yours again, dark and helpless. âI knew one day Iâd touch you once and never be satisfied with it again.â
The honesty in his voice stole the air from your lungs when Buck looked at you like he hated himself for loving you this much.
âYou want to know the truth?â he whispered again.
âI wanted you when you looked at me across crowded rooms like you already knew.â His thumb slid against your cheek slowly. âWanted you when you laughed at something stupid, I said and looked at me too long afterward. Wanted you every damn time you stood close enough for me to smell you because then Iâd spend the rest of the night thinking about what it would be like to bury my face against your skin and stay there until I forgot my own name.â
A shaky breath left you, his restraint visibly splintered at the sound.
âAnd I love you,â he admitted finally, the words rough with something devastating. âNot in a clean way. Not in a safe way.â His gaze dropped briefly to your lips before returning to your eyes. âI love you like a man has never seen a day of light before, like something violent trying to learn how to be gentle for the first time in its life.â
His hand slid into your hair then, holding you carefully despite the confession unraveling him.
âAnd that terrifies me,â he whispered. âBecause the only thing worse than wanting you this muchâŠâ His lips brushed yours once, barely as he wanted to torture himself from wanting you, from confessing. ââŠis knowing that this will burn both of us.ââ
Your breath broke against his mouth not because of the threat hidden inside the confessionâbut because of how honest and helpless he sounded. Buck stared at you afterward like he regretted every word and meant every single one. The hand tangled in your hair tightened slightly when you leaned into him instead of away and that nearly destroyed him.
His eyes shut hard for a brief second, jaw flexing beneath the pressure of restraint fighting a losing battle inside him. You could feel it in the way he breathed nowâ deeper, rougher, like every inhale hurt.
âDonât do that,â he whispered.
âDo what?â
âLook at me like you still want me after hearing all that.â
Your chest ached.
âBuckââ
âIâm serious.â His forehead fell back against yours again, voice fraying at the edges. âYou should be running from me right now.â
âBut Iâm not.â
The silence after that felt enormous, Buck opened his eyes slowly.
ââI donât know what I feel,ââ you confessed, your whispered voice lingering around hesitation. ââI donât know if itâs you whom I love or just your affectionâ but BuckâŠââ
Your breath trembled; the soft drizzle of rain already turned into something more.
ââI want it.ââ you whispered and his shaky breath hit your skin.
ââIf you let me have this âhave youâ Iâm never going to stop.ââ
The words hung between you like the final warning before a fall and somehow that did not frighten you half as much as the thought of him leaving this room and taking all that aching devotion with him to share with someone else. God, the thought of him with someone else, the resemblance of the earlier evening turned your stomach upside down.
Your hands found his face again instinctively, cradling it with a tenderness that seemed to undo him more than desperation ever could. Buck exhaled shakily against your mouth, eyes slipping shut for half a second as he leaned into the touch before catching himself. That hesitation was still there, even now and after every confession dragged bleeding from his chest.
âYou still have time to change your mind,â he whispered, though his hand at your waist betrayed him completely, holding you like he already couldnât bear distance anymore.
You shook your head immediately. Buck stared at you after that like you had just handed him something sacred and dangerous at once then he kissed you again, slower but deep enough to feel the emotion inside it.
Every restrained feeling, every sleepless night, every moment spent standing too close to your door trying to convince himself to walk away seemed to pour into the kiss until your lungs burned with it. His hand slid up your spine carefully, possessively, pulling you closer against his chest while your fingers tangled into the fabric of his damp shirt. The soft sound you made against his lips nearly shattered what little control he had left.
âJesus Christ,â he breathed hoarsely, forehead dropping briefly against yours as if he needed the second to survive you but the pause didnât last.
Nothing did anymore.
You kissed him first this time, and Buck groaned quietly into your mouth like the feeling of being wanted back was still unbelievable to him. His hands tightened around you instantly, urgent now, the restraint unraveling thread by thread beneath your touch and suddenly standing still became impossible.
He backed you toward the door without fully breaking the kiss, one hand firm at your waist while the other found yours instinctively, fingers locking together tightly as though he needed the contact anchored there. Your breaths came quick between kisses, uneven laughter escaping softly once when you nearly stumbled against him in your hurry as Buck caught you immediately.
Always.
His forehead rested against yours for the briefest second as he opened the door, eyes dark and completely ruined now.
âYouâre killing me,â he murmured, and the way he said it sounded almost reverent. Then he pulled you into the hallway with him.
The walk to your room happened in a blur of hurried footsteps and tangled fingers. Neither of you cared who might seeâthe stolen glances from passing staff, the possibility of Fiskâs men somewhere down the hall, none of it mattered now. Not when Buck held your hand so tightly, not when both of you were breathing like you had been running from something far more dangerous than being caught.
The door barely had time to shut before he was kissing you again.
Buck guided you backward carefully until the backs of your knees hit the mattress, and even in his desperation, there was something unbearably gentle in the way he laid you down. Like he was handling something precious despite the storm unraveling inside him. The warm glow of the bedside lamp spilled across the room after he switched it on, soft gold settling over tangled sheets, flushed skin, and the dark silhouette of him hovering above you.
His hand slid beneath your head, gathering your damp hair carefully and spreading it across the pillow. The gesture felt strangely intimate compared to the hunger in his eyes.
And God, the way he looked at youâ
His gaze dragged slowly over your face as though he still couldnât believe this was real. Your swollen lips, your uneven breathing, the warmth blooming beneath your skin from his touch alone. You watched something soften inside him at the sight.
âYouâre beautiful,â he murmured quietly, the words sounded almost involuntary.
Buck leaned down again, kissing you slower this time, like he wanted to savor every second now that he finally had permission to. His fingertips ghosted over your skin with maddening restraint, barely there touches that still managed to leave goosebumps trailing in their wake. He seemed fascinated by every reaction he pulled from youâthe quiet sighs, the way your body leaned instinctively into his touch, the soft hitch in your breathing when his fingers skimmed your waist.
You wrapped your arms around his neck and pulled yourself upright against him, lips still brushing lazily together as your hand found the zipper of your dress and Buck immediately noticed. His breath caught sharply as the fabric loosened inch by inch beneath your fingers. There was nothing subtle about the look on his face now.
He watched you with an intensity so raw it bordered on reverence, like every glimpse of newly bared skin struck something deep and devastating inside him. Heat flashed behind his eyes, dark and consuming, and for a second, he simply stared, motionless, as though he genuinely did not know what to do with the fact that you were choosing to let him see you like this.
Then restraint abandoned him all over again.
He rose quickly from the bed just long enough to shove off his polished shoes in impatient haste before sinking back down in front of you, directly between your knees. The sight alone nearly unraveled him further.
His large hands slid slowly up your bare arms, rough callouses against soft skin, until his fingers curled around the delicate straps resting on your shoulders. There was impatience in the movement, but beneath it lingered something far more dangerousâ wonder.
Like he had spent so long denying himself this that now he didnât know how to breathe through it. The discarded fabric disappeared somewhere onto the floor without a second thought as Buckâs eyes lifted back to you instantly afterward, and the expression on his face made your chest tighten.
He looked ruined. Completely, devastatingly ruined by you.
A sharp breath left him as his gaze traveled over your body, his throat working hard once as though even swallowing had become difficult. His hands flexed against your thighs before settling there carefully, almost afraid despite everything. Like a starving man seated before a feast he never believed he deserved and suddenly the confidence he carried so effortlessly everywhere else was gone. You could actually see it happenâ the moment awe overtook hunger.
Buck stared at you in stunned silence, breathing unevenly, eyes darkened with want but softened by something dangerously close to worship. He looked almost overwhelmed by the sight of you, like he couldnât decide whether to touch you again or fall apart first.
âShitâŠâ he whispered under his breath, voice rough with disbelief.
Then quieter, more vulnerable:
âYou have no idea what you do to me.â
He kissed you again before either of you could think too hard about what came next. This one was deeper immediately and hungrier.
Buck pushed you gently back against the mattress as his mouth moved against yours with growing desperation, his tongue catching every soft sound that escaped you as though he couldnât bear letting even your breaths go unheard. The kiss swallowed you whole, all heat and restraint finally collapsing into something reckless. His hands roamed your body heavily, possessively, yet every touch still carried that same unbearable reverence, like he was terrified of handling you too roughly even while losing himself to you.
The black dress that had haunted him the entire evening became unbearable suddenly. His fingers slid down your sides impatiently before tugging the fabric lower, slowly peeling it from your skin. Buckâs breathing roughened the more he uncovered, his gaze constantly flickering downward like he physically could not stop looking at you. Then the dress was gone entirely, discarded somewhere onto the floor without care.
For a second, he simply stared, not with lust alone but with something softer and more devastating as if he was overwhelmed by the reality of you beneath him.
Then, almost abruptly, he reached for the buttons of his own shirt. His movements lacked their usual composure now âslightly hurried, uneven at the edgesâ as he tugged it open and pulled it over his head before tossing it aside beside your dress and the gesture made your chest ache unexpectedly because even now, Buck was thinking about you first. About not leaving you feeling vulnerable alone.
Your eyes dragged instinctively over him, and the reaction was immediate when the heat bloomed across your cheeks as you took him in properly for the first time.
He was lean rather than broad; all defined muscle stretched beneath sun kissed skin marked faintly by old scars and years harder lived than spoken about. Dark hair dusted his chest lightly before trailing downward beneath the waistband of his boxers, and the sight alone sent warmth curling low in your stomach.
Buck noticed the way you looked at him, the way your breathing changed and a quiet, impatient sigh escaped him as he leaned down again, pressing a kiss against your cheek almost as if he needed grounding.
âPlease donât regret me,â he whispered softly.
And suddenly he sounded nothing like the composed man people feared, the vulnerability in his voice cut through you instantly. You shook your head without hesitation before pulling him back into another kiss.
âI wonât.â
Your fingers slid against the warm skin of his back while the other tangled into the thick strands of his hair, and Buck made a rough sound against your mouth at the feeling. His lips parted beneath yours willingly, greedily, kissing you deeper as his hand cradled the side of your neck and tilted your head just enough for him to lose himself in it properly.
He kissed like a man who had imagined this too many times, slow in some moments, desperate in others. His breathing grew uneven against your skin, sharp exhales slipping through his nose whenever your hands wandered over him. There was something almost boyishly overwhelmed hidden beneath all that intensity now, like even he hadnât expected this to feel so consuming.
His hands drifted lower and lower along your body, fingertips tracing your skin carefully before settling against your hips. Then, with one firm pull, he drew you flush against him. The movement stole the breath from both of you as no space remained between your bodies now and definitely no pretending either of you wanted distance anymore.
Buckâs forehead dropped briefly against yours afterward, eyes half-lidded and dark with emotion as he triedâand failedâto steady himself. âGod,â he murmured shakily, thumb brushing over your waist almost absentmindedly. âYou feel too good against me.â
You felt the tremor in him the moment the words left his mouth. The realization that this was real nowâ that you were beneath him, touching him back, looking at him with the same hunger he had spent months trying to bury inside himself. Buck kissed you again before the silence could swallow him whole.
His mouth moved against yours with a kind of aching devotion that made your chest tighten painfully, his hand sliding from your waist up your side as though he needed to memorize every inch he touched. The roughness of his palm against your skin sent another shiver through you, and he noticed instantly.
He noticed everything.
A soft exhale escaped him against your lips as goosebumps rose beneath his fingertips again.
âThere,â he murmured quietly, almost to himself. âYou do that every time I touch you.â
Your cheeks burned hotter at the tenderness hidden inside the observation and Buck looked ruined by it, completely captivated in you. He shifted slightly between your legs, pressing closer without thinking, and the sudden contact pulled a breath from both of you at once. His eyes shut briefly, jaw tightening hard enough for you to see the muscle flicker beneath his skin.
âFuck,â he whispered under his breath, then said your name as one of your hands slid down his chest slowly, feeling the rapid heartbeat beneath warm skin, and Buckâs reaction was immediate. His head dropped forward against your shoulder as a rough breath left him, like even the gentlest touch from you struck somewhere unbearably sensitive.
âYou donât even know what youâre doing to me,â he confessed quietly, once again, but there was no accusation in it, only awe.
His lips brushed along your jaw afterward, lingering kisses pressed against warm skin while his hands continued wandering carefully over you, unable to stay still for long. Every touch carried curiosity alongside desire, like he was trying to learn you through his fingertips alone and despite all the hunger between you, Buck still paused constantly to look at you as if he needed reassurance this wasnât some cruel hallucination. His thumb stroked slowly across your hip while his gaze searched your face.
âYou alright?â he asked softly.
The concern in his voice nearly undid you more than the kisses had. You nodded immediately, fingers brushing through the hair at the nape of his neck.
âMore than alright.â
Buck laughed quietly at that, though the sound came strained around the edges.
âYou keep saying things like that and Iâm going to lose whatever control I have left.â
âYou still have control?â
That finally pulled a genuine smile from him, something small and brief but beautiful regardless as your thumb caressed the deep curve of his dimple.
âBarely.â
The honesty of it made warmth curl through you again. Buck leaned back just enough to look at you properly where you lay beneath him, his expression softening into something almost disbelieving. His knuckles brushed gently against your cheek before he bent to kiss you once moreâ slow enough this time that it felt less like desperation and more like surrender. Like a man finally allowing himself something heâd denied for far too long.
The room grew quieter after that. Not silentânever silent with the way both of you breathed and moaned nowâbut softened, as if the world beyond the bedroom had finally drifted far enough away to stop existing for a while. Buck stayed above you a moment longer, simply looking as you adjusted to him and he curved every edge of him to fit right with you.
His hand moved slowly over your waist, your ribs, your shoulderâeach touch lingering, uncertain, as though he still couldnât quite believe he was allowed to do this. There was something almost reverent in the way he held you, despite the hunger still burning beneath his restraint, like he was afraid one wrong movement might fracture whatever fragile thing had just begun between you. His thrusts deep, caressing just right to draw gasps from your lips that he wanted to drown in.
You touched his face again instinctively; the rough line of his jaw softened instantly beneath your fingertips. Your look returned to his eyes, that unbearable mixture of devotion and ache that always surfaced when you touched him gently.
âYouâre going to make this impossible,â he murmured, breathless as a sheen sweat covered his forehead and hairline.
âYou already said you lost control.â you said, head thrown back against the pillow as you pulled his face against your neck, trying to be as close as possible when a quiet laugh slipped out of him at your words, warm against your skin.
âYeah,â he admitted softly. âI did.â
But even now, Buck moved like someone trying to earn the right to stay. Every kiss eventually slowed into something deeper than want alone. The urgency that had brought him into your room unraveled piece by piece beneath tenderness, beneath the quiet realization that this wasnât fleeting.
This mattered.
You felt it in the way he guided your hand to his chest for a moment, letting you feel the force of his heartbeat beneath your palm, felt it in the way he kept pausing just to look at you, each time slightly overwhelmed, as if the sight of you still didnât feel real and when he pressed his face into the curve of your neck, again and again, the breath he let out wasnât just desire anymoreâ it was release.
Like something heavy in him had finally been set down, something he had been carrying loneliness for far too long.
Your fingers threaded through his hair slowly, steadying him, and Buck closed his eyes at the feeling. The tension in him eased little by little beneath your touch until he allowed himself to sink fully into youânot just physically, but completely. No walls, no distance, no pretending this meant anything less than everything.
That honesty seemed to scare him more than anything else as you could feel it in the faint tremor of his hands and in the way his forehead pressed to yours, eyes closed tightly, as if he was trying to memorize you before the moment slipped away.
âHey,â you whispered.
Buck opened his eyes at once and the way he looked at you then was not like a man consumed but like a man undone.
You kissed him gently, and something in him finally gave way. His shoulders loosened beneath your hands, his expression softening into something unguarded as he pulled you closer, like distance itself had become unbearable. Outside the house, the city that you escaped kept moving. Lights flickered against the dark, distant sounds threading through the night.
But inside that room, time had thinned into warmth and tangled sheets and quiet touches, into whispered names against skin, into a kind of stillness that felt almost dangerous in how much it meant and long after the urgency had faded into something quieter, Buck still held you like he feared you might disappear the moment he loosened his grip.
His fingers traced absent patterns against your back while your breathing slowly found its rhythm with his and neither of you spoke for a while as there was no need because something unspoken had already settled between you. It was quiet, certain and irreversible.
Whatever this was, neither of you were walking away from it again.














