As this is my secondary blog, Iâve decided to make my writing account my primary platform, so I have created a new account under the same name where all future stories will be posted.
You can continue reading my ongoing (and incomplete) works there at @baethea
This account will remain active, but there will be no further updates. All unfinished stories will now be continued and updated on the new account.
Masterlist
John F. Kennedy Junior
Across Every Universe - JFK Jr.
â Genre: alternate universe, romance, slightly angsty, multiple lifetimes, fluff, open ending, (a very short) oneshot
â Summary: Love that transcends time, space, and reality. Every universe presents a different life, different challenges, but he finds ways to reach her. Sometimes openly, sometimes subtly. Thereâs a thread connecting them: the memories, feelings, or small tokens of his love.
â Genre: contemporary romance, moderate slow burn, angst hurt-comfort, celebrity/public figure romance, psychological, obsessive love, family and media drama, 90s nostalgia, happy ending, yn is unable to feel emotionally
â Summary: She never stayed long enough to belong to anyone, especially not to him. A man the world watches closely, and a man who, for the first time in his life, loses control over exactly one thing: her.
This is not a love story that begins with certainty. It begins with return. Again and again. Until one day, coming back changes what âloveâ even means and neither of them can afford to walk away anymore.
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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â Genre: contemporary romance, slow burn, emotional drama, psychological romance, angst/hurt-comfort, age gap, celebrity/public figure romance, obsessive love (soft, emotional focus), high-society, family & media drama, found-connection, yn is unable to feel emotionally, suggestive
â Summary: She never stayed long enough to belong to anyone, especially not to him. A man the world watches closely, and a man who, for the first time in his life, loses control over exactly one thing: her.
This is not a love story that begins with certainty. It begins with return. Again and again. Until one day, coming back changes what âloveâ even means, and neither of them can afford to walk away anymore.
As this is my secondary blog, I have decided to make my writing account my primary platform, so Iâve created a new account under the same name where all future stories will be posted.
Continue reading my ongoing (and incomplete) works there at @baethea
This account will remain active, but there will be no further updates. All unfinished stories will now be continued and updated on the new account.
Jfk jr Masterlist
The first thing that hits him is the mascara. Smudged. Not dramatically, just enough to betray that she tried to fix it before walking in.
John doesnât look up immediately. Heâs halfway through a conversation, one hand tucked into his pocket, the other holding a glass he hasnât sipped from in ten minutes. The room is dense with familiar noise, politics, publishing, legacy. The kind of room he was born into. But then, a shift. Not loud, not obvious. Just the way the air tilts when she enters. He exhales once, slow.
âExcuse me,â he says, already stepping away before the other man finishes speaking. Because of course itâs you. Itâs always you.
You donât walk like youâre breaking, you never do.
Even now, eyes glossy, lips parted like you forgot to breathe properly, you carry yourself like something curated. Controlled. Untouchable. Except he knows better. He always has.
âJohn,â you say, like it hasnât been months.
Like you didnât vanish again. Like you didnât leave him standing in his own apartment the last time, staring at a door that clicked too softly for something that ended so loudly.
He studies you. Not your face, your posture. The way your fingers curl slightly inward. The tension in your shoulders.
âYouâre crying,â he says quietly.
You give a small shrug. âNot really.â
A lie. A familiar one.
.
Then - Three Months Into Something That Wasnât Supposed to Matter
He met you at a gallery opening.
Not because he wanted to be therebut because someone told him he should. You were standing in front of a piece you clearly werenât looking at. âYou hate it,â he said beside you.
You didnât turn. âI hate the people pretending they understand it.â That was it. No spark, no dramatic pull, just alignment. You didnât ask who he was. Which, for him, was new. For you, it was irrelevant.
.
Back to the Party
Now, months later, years tangled between then and now, youâre standing in front of him like you always do when something goes wrong in your life. Not asking. Just arriving.
âCan I stay with you tonight?â you ask.
No apology. No explanation. Just a quiet, practiced vulnerability. Something in him shifts. Because this, this exact moment has happened too many times. Different dresses, different cities, same eyes, same distance.
âYou donât get to do that anymore,â he says.
You blink, itâs subtle, lmost imperceptible but he catches it.
âYou donât get to disappear for months,â he continues, voice even, âand show up when something hurts and expect me to justââ he stops, because you step closer.
Not dramatically, not seductively, just enough. Your fingers brush his wrist and like always, he stills.
âJohn,â you murmur, softer now. âI didnât know where else to go.â and thatâs the problem. Itâs 'always' him. Never because you want him. Always because you need somewhere to land.
He looks down at your hand on him, then back at your face, and something cracks. Not loudly, not visibly, but internally. Something fractures in a man who has spent his entire life composed.
âCome on,â he says finally.
.
His apartment hasnât changed, you notice it immediately. Same books, same scent, same quiet order. Like time pauses here, waiting for you to either stay or leave again.
You slip off your heels without asking, you always do. He watches you like heâs memorizing something heâs already lost too many times.
âBathroomâs the same,â he says.
âOf course it is,â you reply, already walking away.
Like you belong here, like you never left. He runs a hand through his hair. This is how it starts again. Every time.
.
Flashback - The First Kiss
It wasnât planned. You werenât even looking at him, you were talking, something about fabric, about movement, about how clothes should 'feel' like something even if people donât and then you stopped mid-sentence.
Looked at him, really looked and said, âYouâre different than I expected.â
âDisappointed?â he asked. You shook your head. âNo. Curious.â
You kissed him first. Not soft, not hesitant. Just decisive, like testing a theory.
.
Back in the present
You step out of the bathroom, face clean now, his shirt hanging off your frame. You look younger like this. Less untouchable. More dangerous. âWhy now?â he asks.
You lean against the counter, arms crossed loosely. âI messed something up,â you say.
âWhat else is new?â
You smile faintly, not offended. You never are.
âAre you going to ask what?â you tilt your head.
âNo,â he replies. âBecause it doesnât matter. Youâll still leave again.â That lands, not on your heart but somewhere else. A place you donât quite recognize. âYou always say that,â you murmur.
âAnd Iâm always right.â
Silence stretches, different this time, then you walk toward him. Slowly. Measured. Like youâre aware of every inch between you.
âThen why do you let me come back?â you ask.
He lets out a breath, almost a laugh nut thereâs nothing amused about it. âBecause I donât know how not to.â
You stare at him, longer than usual. Long enough that something almost shifts inside you. Almost. Then you kiss him and itâs the same, and not the same. Familiar heat, familiar rhythm. But his hands, they hesitate now. Just for a second. Before pulling you closer, harder. Like heâs trying to prove something or forget something. âLoveâŠâ he murmurs against your lips.
His nickname for you. Soft. Worn. Dangerous.
You pull back just enough to look at him.
âDonât start,â you whisper, because that word, that 'tone', it asks for something you donât have. But he doesnât stop, not this time.
.
Morning comes too quietly, it always does here. You wake before him, not because you sleep lightly, but because you never really sleep 'deeply' beside him. Thereâs always a part of you awake. Observing. Detached.
The sheets are warm, his arm draped over your waist in a way that feels instinctive, not deliberate. Like his body has already decided something his mind is still trying to negotiate. You donât move immediately. Instead, you watch.
John sleeping is different. Softer, younger, almost. The tension in his jaw disappears, his brows smooth out. He looks like someone who doesnât carry a name thatâs constantly being watched, dissected, expected. You study him like you study fabric before a design, texture, structure, weight. Understanding without feeling. Your fingers hover over his face. Not touching, just tracing the air above him.
âAre you going to do that all morning?â His voice is rough with sleep, but steady.
You donât flinch. âI wasnât touching you.â
âYou donât have to.â His eyes open slowly, locking onto yours. Thereâs no confusion in them. No hesitation, just recognition. âYouâre still here,â he says. Not a question, something closer to disbelief.
You tilt your head slightly. âThat bothers you?â
âIt should,â he replies.
His hand tightens slightly at your waist. Not possessive, not yet, just confirming. âYou usually leave before I wake up,â he adds.
You consider that. Not defensively, just factually.
âI didnât feel like getting dressed.â
A corner of his mouth lifts, not quite a smile âOf course.â
He sits up slowly, running a hand through his hair. Thereâs a shift already, subtle but there.
.
Last night was a crack. Morning is structure trying to rebuild.
âYou can stay,â he says after a moment.
You raise an eyebrow. âI already am.â
âThatâs not what I meant.â
You watch him now. Closely, because this, this tone, itâs new.
âI mean,â he continues, slower now, choosing each word, âyou donât have to leave tonight.â
There it is. Not a request, not quite a plea but something 'dangerously close'.
You donât answer immediately. Instead, you slide out of bed, his shirt falling further down your thigh as you move toward the window. The city looks different from up here. Smaller, manageable. âI have work,â you say.
He exhales softly behind you. Of course you do. You always do, you donât exist quietly, not really. Not anymore. In the fashion industry, youâre becoming something. Not famous, not yet but watched, discussed. Your work, structured, restrained, precise, mirrors you too well for people not to notice. You design like someone who understands control better than emotion and lately, there have been whispers. Photos, you and him. Grainy at first, then clearer. More intentional.
âHave you seen it?â he asks from behind you.
You donât turn âI donât look for things I already know exist.â
A quiet huff of breath, half amusement, half frustration.
âTheyâre going to keep following you,â he says.
âThey already do.â
âThatâs not the same.â
Now you turn âIt is to me.â
Thatâs the difference. For him, the public is pressure. For you, itâs just background noise. He studies you for a long moment and something in his expression tightens âYou really donât care,â he says.
You shrug lightly âI care about my work.â
âAnd nothing else?â
You donât answer, because the honest answer is complicated. Not no, not yes, just, not enough.
.
Later that week
The first real fracture doesnât happen in private. Of course it doesnât, nothing with him ever does. It happens at a dinner, not just any dinner, a Kennedy family dinner. You knew what you were walking into, you always do. The room is warm, elegant, filled with people who have known him his entire life. People who look at you and donât just see 'you'. They see context, implication, risk. You donât shrink under it, you never have.
âYou must be the one weâve been hearing about,â a woman says, smiling politely.
You return it perfectly âAnd you must be someone who listens closely.â
Thereâs a flicker, subtle but noticed. Across the table, John watches you. Not intervening, not correcting. Just observing. Because this is where things shift. Not in the way you behave but in how it lands. You donât soften for them, you donât adapt, you donât try and they notice.
Later in the car, silence stretches too long.
âYou couldâve tried,â he says finally.
You look out the window âI did.â
He lets out a quiet, disbelieving breath. âNo, you didnât.â
Now you turn âI showed up,â you say. âThatâs more than trying.â
âThatâs attendance,â he replies. âNot effort.â
There it is, the first real edge. You study him, not hurt, not defensive, just curious.
âWhy does it matter?â you ask.
His jaw tightens. Because the answer is obvious to him but not to you. âBecause they matter,â he says.
âAnd?â
âAnd you matter,â he adds, sharper now. âSo Iâd like the two parts of my life toââ He stops. Recalibrates. âTo coexist,â he finishes.
You look at him for a long moment. You shake your head slightly âI donât fit into your life like that.â
Something in his chest pulls' hard âIâm not asking you to fit,â he says. âIâm asking you to try.â
âAnd Iâm telling you,â you reply calmly, âthat I donât want to.â
Silence, final in a way neither of you fully acknowledges yet.
.
It doesnât explode, it dissolves. Youâre in his apartment again. Same place, same couch, different air.
âYouâre already leaving,â he says quietly.
Youâre standing near the door. Shoes on. Composed. âI think I should,â you reply. No tears, no shaking voice, just clarity.
âWhy?â he asks.
You pause. Because you could lie but you donât âThis is getting too defined,â you say.
He stares at you. Not understanding or maybe understanding too well. âThatâs the point,â he says.
You shake your head slightly âNo, John. Thatâs your point.â
âI donât feel what you feel,â you continue. Not cruel, not apologetic, just honest.
His throat tightens but he doesnât interrupt.
âI like being with you,â you add. âI like how you touch me. I like how easy it is.â
âBut I donât 'miss' you when Iâm gone.â
There it is, the cleanest cut.
He exhales slowly like heâs trying to hold something in place inside himself. âAnd you think thatâs not going to change?â he asks. You hesitate. Just for a second âI donât know,â you admit. Hope. A dangerous, immediate thing. It flickers in his eyes.
"So stay,â he says. âLet it change.â
You look at him. Really look this time and for the first time thereâs something like conflict but, itâs not enough.
âI donât want to promise something I canât give,â you say softly.
His jaw tightens again. âIâm not asking for a promise,â he replies. âIâm asking you not to walk away before it has a chance.â
You pick up your bag âThatâs the only way I know how to do this.â And then, youâre gone.
The door closes too quietly. Again.
John doesnât move immediately. He just stands there. Staring at the space you occupied seconds ago. This time feels different, not because you left but because of 'what you said'.
"I donât miss you."
He lets out a breath. Short. Sharp. For most of his life, heâs been wanted. Desired. Chosen but this, this is something else entirely.
You donât choose him, you 'return' to him and somehow, thatâs worse. He runs a hand over his face then laughs once.
Under his breath. âJesus Christâ because the worst part? He already knows youâll come back and heâll let you.
.
He doesnât call you, thatâs the first change. John has always believed in restraint, timing, distance, control. Itâs how heâs lived most of his adult life and now, for the first time with you, he tries to use it. Days pass then a week, then two. He sees you anyway. Not in person, never that easy. A photograph first. Grainy, taken outside a studio downtown. You, stepping out of a car, oversized sunglasses, your expression unreadable as always.
Then headlines. Not about you, about 'him'.
*âKennedy Junior's New Obsession?â*
*âWho Is the Woman Behind John Jr.âs Sudden Disappearance?â*
*âFrom Playboy to Private. What Changed?â*
He stares at the last one longer than he should because he knows the answer. You. And the fact that you donât even realize it. He tosses the magazine aside, runs a hand through his hair, walks to the window. He could call. He doesnât, because this time, he wants to see what you do without him holding the door open.
.
You notice it. Not emotionally, not in the way he would want but structurally. Your routine shifts slightly. Less interruption, fewer late nights that blur into mornings. No familiar apartment waiting at the end of a long day. Itâs quieter.
You stand in your studio, pinning fabric onto a mannequin, adjusting the fall of a sleeve. Your assistant is talking, something about a client, a deadline. You nod at the right moments, respond when necessary but thereâs a pause, small, almost unnoticeable.
When your phone lights up and itâs not him. You stare at it a second longer than needed then go back to work. Thatâs the thing about you, you donât 'ache'. You 'register' and right now, youâre registering absence.
.
The Second Collision
It happens at an event you werenât supposed to see him at. A magazine launch. High-profile. Predictable.
Youâre there because you have to be. Heâs there because he 'is'.
The room hums with attention. But when he walks in, it shifts. He doesnât look for you, thatâs intentional but he finds you anyway. Standing near the bar, speaking to someone he doesnât recognize. Youâre composed, effortless. Untouched. Like nothing ever happened. Something in his chest tightens. Not sharply, not painfully, just persistently. You feel it too, that shift. Your eyes move before you think about it.
And then, there he is. Across the room. Watching you. Not approaching, not calling you over, just watching.
You excuse yourself mid-conversation, walk toward him. Not rushed, not hesitant. Measured.
âJohn.â
His name on your lips still does something to him.
Annoyingly. Inevitably.
âLove,â he replies automatically, then catches himself just slightly.
You notice
âYou didnât call,â you say.
He tilts his head âAnd you didnât come back.â
âThatâs not how this works,â you reply.
Something in his expression shifts, sharper now. âNo,â he says. âThatâs exactly how it works. You leave. You come back. I stay.â
You study him. Because this tone, you havenât heard before.
âAnd this time?â you ask.
He takes a slow breath. Steps just a fraction closer âThis time I wanted to see if youâd choose to come back,â he says.
You donât answer immediately, not because youâre conflicted but because youâre thinking. âIâm here,â you say finally.
His jaw tightens. âThatâs not the same.â
You tilt your head. âWhy not?â
Because to you, presence is presence but to him, itâs never been that simple.
âBecause you didnât come for me,â he says quietly.
You blink once. âI donât think like that,â you reply.
âI know,â he says. And that hurts more than if he didnât.
.
The second break
You donât go home with him that night, thatâs the shift. Instead, you sit in his car. Engine off, city noise bleeding in through the windows.
âYouâre doing it again,â he says.
You look straight ahead. âIâm sitting here.â
âNo,â he replies. âYouâre keeping distance without leaving.â
You donât deny it because itâs true.
âI donât want things to get like before,â you say.
He lets out a quiet laugh. Not amused.
âBefore?â he repeats. âYou mean when I cared too much?â
You turn to him now. âYes."
The honesty lands harder this time.
âAnd thatâs a problem for you?â he asks.
You nod slightly. âIt complicates things.â
âThings like what?â he presses.
You hesitate because putting it into words makes it clearer. âExpectations,â you say. âFeelings I canât return. Pressure to be something Iâm not.â
He stares at you, longer this time. âAnd what am I to you?â he asks.
You donât answer immediately because you 'do' have an answer but itâs not one heâll like. âYouâreâŠâ you start, then pause.
He waits. Doesnât interrupt, doesnât push.
âEasy,â you finish. That does it.
He leans back in his seat, runs a hand over his mouth. âEasy,â he repeats quietly.
You nod. âI donât have to feel anything I donât understand with you,â you explain. âI donât have to try.â
âAnd you think thatâs a good thing?â he asks.
You shrug. âIt works.â
He looks at you like heâs seeing something clearly for the first time. âNo,â he says. âIt works for you."
âItâs ruining me.â he adds
That lands differently. Not emotionally, not yet but structurally. Again. You watch him carefully. âYouâll be fine,â you say and you mean it. Thatâs the problem.
He shakes his head slowly. âNo,â he says. âI wonât. Not if I keep letting you do this.â You donât argue. Because part of you, a small, quiet part, knows heâs right. âSo donât,â you say simply. Thatâs your solution, always has been.
He lets out a breath. Long. Controlled. âGet out,â he says.
You look at him, not hurt but surprised. âJohnââ
âGet out,â he repeats. Quieter this time and you do because thatâs what you do best. Leave.
.
This time he doesnât stand at the door. He doesnât wait, he doesnât replay your words immediately. He grips the steering wheel, hard. âEasy,â he mutters to himself and something in him, something controlled for years, starts to twist because itâs not just that you donât love him. Itâs that you 'experience him without consequence' and heâs drowning in something you barely register. That imbalance? It doesnât fade, it deepens.
You walk away like you always do, steady, composed, untouched but later, much later youâre alone and you think about something he said. "Itâs ruining me." You donât feel guilt. Not exactly but something lingers. Unfamiliar, unlabeled. You sit with it for a moment then stand up and go back to work like always.
You donât plan to come back, thatâs the first truth.
Thereâs no moment of longing, no sleepless night, no sudden realization, itâs practical. Your show is in three weeks. Everything is moving too fast fabric delays, investors asking questions, press starting to circle. Your name is appearing in articles now. Not just industry ones, lifestyle columns, society pages and sometimes right next to his.
You stare at one headline longer than necessary:
*âKennedyâs Cold Flame Returns to the Spotlight Aloneâ*
Cold.
You donât react but you donât look away immediately either.
.
John doesnât read everything written about him, he never has but he reads anything with your name in it not obsessively, not outwardly, just consistently. He knows your schedule without trying. Show dates. Studio hours. Which events you attend, and which you avoid, not because heâs following you but because he notices patterns , youâre predictable in ways you donât realize and nd right now youâre about to break one.
.
The Third Return
Itâs late. Not too late. Just late enough that it means something. You stand outside his building, looking up. Thereâs no hesitation in your posture, only in your stillness then you walk in.
He opens the door before you knock. That stops you, just slightly.
âYou always come back around this time,â he says.
Not accusing, not welcoming, just stating.
You study him because something is different.
âYou were waiting?â you ask.
âNo,â he replies. âI expected it.â he adds
You step inside anyway. The apartment feels the same but he doesnât. Thereâs distance in him now, not absence but distance.
âI have a show,â you say. Straight to the point.
His gaze flickers slightly, not surprised.
âI know,â he replies.
You walk further in, set your bag down like before, like always.
âI needâŠâ you start, then pause.
He waits, doesnât help you finish.
You try again. âI need things to be uncomplicated right now.â
Silence. A quiet exhale.
âYou mean you need me to be easy again,â he says.
You donât deny it. âYes.â
That word, it lands heavier now because this time he understands exactly what youâre asking.
He walks closer, slowly. Not pulled, not reactive, deliberate. âYou donât get to decide that anymore,â he says.
You nod âThatâs what this has always been,â you reply.
He shakes his head. âNo,â he says. âThatâs what you made it.â
âAnd you let me,â you add.
That hits because itâs true, but this time, he doesnât deflect it. âNot anymore,â he says quietly.
You step closer because thatâs what you do when things get complicated, you simplify them physically. Your fingers touch his wrist, slide up his arm. He doesnât stop you but he doesnât melt into it either. Thatâs new.
âJohn,â you murmur his name soft, familiar.
You lean in and kiss him, and for a second itâs the same then it isnât.
His hand moves to your jaw. Firm. Still controlled but not yielding. He pulls back just enough to look at you. âDonât do that to fix it,â he says. Your breath catches. Not emotionally but physically because that, that interrupts your pattern. âIâm not fixing anything,â you reply softly.
âYes, you are,â he says. âYou always do.â
Your fingers tighten slightly against his shirt.
âAnd it works,â you say.
He studies you carefully then he kisses you again.
But this time itâs not easy. Itâs slower. Intentional. Almost searching. Like heâs trying to find something in you, something that might not exist. His forehead rests against yours briefly.
âStay tonight,â he says.
Not a question, not a plea. Something else.
You stay but it doesnât feel like before.
Thereâs less lightness, less instinctive rhythm, more pauses, more moments where he looks at you like heâs trying to understand something deeper than your body. You respond the same way you always do. Touch. Closeness. Precision.
You know exactly what he likes, exactly how to satisfy him and you do but this time, he notices something. Not what youâre doing but what youâre 'not'. Thereâs no loss in you, no surrender, no emotional slip, youâre present perfectly but untouched and for the first time, that doesnât comfort him. It unsettles him.
.
The Third Break
Morning again but this one, feels heavier. Youâre getting dressed. Back to routine. He watches from the bed. Silent.
âYouâre leaving,â he says.
You nod. âI told you,â you reply. âI have work.â
âThatâs not what I meant.â
You donât respond because you know what he meant. He sits up. âThis doesnât work for me anymore,â he says.
You turn âLast night seemed fine,â you reply.
There it is again, surface-level truth. He lets out a breath. âThatâs exactly the problem,â he says.
You study him. âI donât understand what you want me to do differently,â you admit. Thatâs the most honest thing youâve said.
He softens slightly. Just slightly. âI want you to feel something,â he says.
You hold his gaze. âI donât know how,â you reply.
Thereâs no manipulation in it, no evasion. Just truth and that breaks something in him more than anything else so far. He looks away, runs a hand through his hair.
âThen I canât keep doing this,â he says quietly
âBecause I do.â he adds
You donât move, donât interrupt, donât soften it âOkay,â you say and thatâs it. No fight, no pull, no attempt to stay. You leave.
Again.
This time he doesnât try to stop you but he doesnât let go either, because now, he understands something clearly. Youâre not withholding. Youâre incapable and somehow that makes him want you more, not less, because now itâs not just about being loved. Itâs about being the one who finally makes you 'feel' and thatâs where it stops being simple.
You go back to your life, like always but something is different, not inside your chest, not in your heart but in your thoughts. You replay something he said. 'I want you to feel something.'
You donât understand it. Not fully but for the first time, you 'notice' that you donât and that awareness? It stays.
.
You donât go back to him immediately, thatâs the first difference. Days pass then weeks. Your show gets closer, and with it, attention. Not just industry attention, public attention.
Your name starts appearing more frequently beside his again, even without recent photos.
Speculation fills the gaps, it always does.
*âOn-again, off-again?â*
*âThe woman who wonât commit.â*
*âIs she using him or is he chasing her?â*
You donât read most of it but people around you do and they start behaving differently. More careful with their words, more curious with their silence.
.
Family Pressure
John is used to scrutiny. He was born into it.
But this feels different because now itâs not just about him. Itâs about you too.
âShe doesnât seem invested.â The comment is light, casual, over dinner by his sister but it lands.
He doesnât respond immediately, just sets his glass down carefully. âYouâve only met her once,â he says.
A small smile across the table. Knowing.
âAnd that was enough to notice.â
Heâs not defensive, not outwardly but something in him tightens because she's not wrong.
.
Pressure Without Penetration
Your mother calls. She doesnât ask directly but she circles it. âYouâve been photographed again.â
You hum softly, adjusting a seam with precise fingers.
âHeâs visible,â she continues.
âSo am I,â you reply.
âThatâs not the same.â
You donât argue because it isnât but it doesnât change anything either.
âYouâre getting more attention than your work,â she adds.
That you register. Your hand stills slightly. âIâll fix that,â you say and you mean it.
.
The Fourth Return
You go to him this time with intention. Not emotional, not impulsive. Strategic. He opens the door slower this time.
Takes you in, fully. âYou look like youâve made a decision,â he says.
You step inside. âI have,â you reply.
That immediately shifts the air.
He closes the door, leans against it.
âShould I be concerned?â he asks.
You shake your head slightly âNo. You should listen.â
That almost makes him smile because youâve never positioned yourself like this before. Controlled. Directed.
âAlright,â he says. âIâm listening.â
You donât sit. You donât soften. âMy show is in two weeks,â you begin. âThereâs too much attention right now. Itâs affecting how people see my work.â
He watches you carefully. âAnd?â he prompts.
âAnd I need distance from you publicly,â you say.
A quiet, almost amused exhale âPublicly,â he repeats.
You nod. âYes.â
âAnd privately?â he asks.
You meet his gaze directly. âUncomplicated.â The word again but this time it lands differently.
He doesnât respond right away, he walks past you. Slow. Runs a hand along the back of the couch. Thinking.
âYou want me hidden,â he says finally.
âNo,â you correct. âI want control over how Iâm perceived.â
âAnd I interfere with that.â
You donât answer because you donât need to.
He lets out a quiet laugh âOf course I do.â
Thereâs no anger in it, not yet but something colder is forming.
You step closer because again this is where you know how to navigate.
âJohn,â you say softly.
He turns to you and for a moment thereâs something unreadable in his eyes. You kiss him and this time he lets you but only for a second. Then his hand moves firm on your waist, stopping you. âNo,â he says quietly.
âWhat?â you ask.
âYou donât get to negotiate me like this,â he says.
Your expression doesnât change much. âIâm not negotiating you,â you reply. âIâm setting boundaries.â
He steps closer âNo,â he repeats. âYouâre setting conditions where you get everything you want and I disappear when itâs inconvenient.â
âThatâs not happening anymore"
.
The Fourth Break - The First Time He Walks Away First
Silence stretches, you study him. Adjusting. Recalculating.
âThis is temporary,â you say. âAfter the showââ
âNo,â he cuts in. Not loud, not sharp, just final.
âYou donât get to schedule me into your life when it suits you,â he continues
Your jaw tightens slightly âIâm not asking you to disappear,â you say.
âYou are,â he replies âAnd the worst part?â he adds quietly âYou donât even see it.â
That lands, not emotionally but cognitively.
âFine,â you say no argument, no persuasion.
âIf thatâs how you feel.â and there it is again.
That distance. That ease of exit.
This time, he doesnât ask you to leave. He just steps aside and lets you go.
The door closes and this time, he doesnât stay still. He moves. Pacing. Running a hand through his hair because something just changed. Before you left, and he reacted.
Now, He 'anticipated' you. He saw it coming and still it hit harder because now he understands something else: You donât just avoid feelings. You restructure reality to avoid ever needing them and heâs trying to exist inside that structure. Which means heâs either going to break it or break himself.
You walk away like you always do but this time smething doesnât settle. Not in your chest, not in your heart but in your mind. He said no. Thatâs new. You replay it not emotionally but analytically.
Why did it feel different? Why did it disrupt your rhythm?
You sit in your car. Hands resting lightly on the steering wheel and for the first time you donât start the engine immediately. You just sit. Thinking.
.
The night of your show arrives with precision. Nothing about it is chaotic. Everything is controlled, curated, exact.
Backstage hums with quiet urgency, fabric being adjusted, heels clicking, voices low but fast. You move through it like you always do: calm, composed, untouched by the pressure pressing in from every direction. This is your world and here, you donât falter but outside? Itâs different tonight.
The press turnout is larger than expected.
Not because of your collection but because of you and because of him. Even though heâs not there. That doesnât stop them.
*âIs Kennedy Junior attending tonight?â*
*âAre you still seeing him?â*
*âIs the relationship over?â*
You donât answer, you never do but the absence, it speaks anyway.
.
John isnât there. Not physically but heâs watching.
The coverage is everywhere, live updates, photos, commentary.
And then, a name appears. Not his, another man. A known investor. Well-dressed. Well-positioned. Standing beside you in multiple shots. Close, too close.
His jaw tightens, he knows how this works. Heâs lived in this world long enough to understand implication is everything. Still that doesnât stop the reaction.
You didnât plan for it. The proximity. The photos.
It just happened. He was there, he spoke, you responded and when cameras flashed, you didnât step away because you didnât see a reason to. Thatâs always been the difference.
You donât calculate emotional consequences, only practical ones and right now this benefits you.
Visibility.
Connections.
Funding. It makes sense, so you allow it.
.
The Return
You go to him that same night, not because you miss him but because it feels correct. Like closing a loop. He opens the door slower than usual and this time, he doesnât step aside immediately. His eyes move over you. Your dress. Your hair.
The faint traces of makeup left after hours under lights.
âYou look like you had a successful night,â he says.
âI did,â you reply.
âAnd?â he asks.
You tilt your head slightly. âAnd I wanted to see you.â
Because thatâs new phrasing. Not 'needed', not 'convenient'. Wanted. He notices but he doesnât soften.
âWho was he?â John asks.
You donât pretend not to understand. âAn investor,â you say.
âLooked closer than that.â
Your expression doesnât shift. âIt wasnât.â
He studies you, long enough because he believes you. Thatâs not the problem.
The problem is, you didnât think it mattered.
âYou didnât move away,â he says.
âNo,â you reply simply.
âWhy?â
You pause. Because the answer is obvious to you.
âIt didnât require a reaction.â
There it is again. That gap. That space where something should exist and doesnât.
He steps closer. Slower this time.
âYou donât think things matter unless you feel them,â he says quietly.
You hold his gaze âYes.â
That honesty, itâs starting to affect him differently now. Not just frustration, something darker.
His hand lifts, brushes a strand of hair from your face then lingers.
âYou let people get close to you like it means nothing,â he continues.
âIt does mean nothing,â you reply.
That does something to him. His hand moves to your jaw. Firm.
âNot to me,â he says.
And then he kisses you, not like before. Thereâs no hesitation now, no searching, just intensity. Something close to restraint breaking but not fully. You respond the same way. Precise. Controlled. But this time, he deepens it, pulls you closer.
Like heâs trying to erase the space that exists in you.
âJohnââ you murmur softly against him.
He doesnât stop immediately.
Then, he does. Pulls back. Breathing slower than he should be.
.
The Fifth Break
âThis isnât working,â he says.
Youâve heard that before but this time, it sounds different.
âHow?â you ask.
He lets out a quiet breath.
âI donât trust how little you feel,â he says.
You donât react to that emotionally but you process it.
âI didnât do anything wrong,â you reply.
âI know,â he says âThatâs the problem.â
You step back slightly, not retreating, just adjusting.
âWhat do you want from me?â you ask.
His jaw tightens. âSomething real,â he says.
You hold his gaze âThis is real,â you reply and you mean it.
Thatâs what makes it worse.
He shakes his head slowly. âNo,â he says. âThis is controlled.â
âAnd Iâm losing control of myself in it.â
That lands. Because now, it's not about you. Itâs about what youâre doing to him.
You go quiet. Thinking. And that silence, that pause, it stretches too long.
âSay something,â he says.
You look at him. âI donât know what to say that would fix this,â you admit. And again, truth.
He exhales. âThen donât fix it,â he says.
âJust stop coming back.â
You look at him, not hurt but something shifts.
âYou donât mean that,â you say.
He holds your gaze âI do.â
And for the first time, you hesitate. Not long but long enough to notice. Then, you nod. âOkay.â and you leave.
.
This time, neither of you believes itâs temporary.
He doesnât move after the door closes, because he meant it. He has to or heâll disappear completely into something he doesnât recognize anymore.
You get into your car, start the engine. Drive. But something, something is off. You replay the night.
The show.
The cameras.
The investor.
Him.
'Just stop coming back.'
You tighten your grip on the wheel slightly.
Why did that feel, different? Not painful, but wrong. You donât understand it but you donât ignore it either.
And that, thatâs new.
Part 2 (to be continued) @baethea
As this is my secondary blog, I have decided to make my writing account my primary platform, so Iâve created a new account under the same name where all future stories will be posted.
Continue reading my ongoing (and incomplete) works there at @baethea
This account will remain active, but there will be no further updates. All unfinished stories will now be continued and updated on the new account.
: ÌÌâ Genre: alternate universe, romance, slightly angsty, multiple lifetimes, fluff, open ending, (a very short) oneshot
: ÌÌâ Summary: Love that transcends time, space, and reality. Every universe presents a different life, different challenges, but he finds ways to reach her. Sometimes openly, sometimes subtly. Thereâs a thread connecting them: the memories, feelings, or small tokens of his love.
: ÌÌâ no warnings
As this is my secondary blog, I have decided to make my writing account my primary platform, so Iâve created a new account under the same name where all future stories will be posted. Continue reading my ongoing (and incomplete) works there at @baethea
This account will remain active, but there will be no further updates. All unfinished stories will now be continued and updated on the new account.
He had seen her before, in fleeting moments: a glance at a press conference, a shadow crossing a hotel lobby, or a smile exchanged at a charity gala he couldnât attend. But tonight, the city had conspired to bring them together under the same roof.
YN was oblivious. She ordered her usual black coffee, no sugar and slid into the booth opposite his, her umbrella dripping water onto the floor. She looked exactly the same, yet everything had changed. He had waited years for this, surviving headlines, scrutiny, and whispers, always keeping his heart tethered to a memory that refused to fade.
He watched her stir her coffee, a subtle nervous gesture he remembered from long ago. His pen hovered over the page. *How do you tell someone they are the story of your entire life without sounding like a headline?*
The courage that had taken him decades to muster condensed into a single action. He slid a folded note across the table.
YN glanced down, curious, eyebrows knitting together. The note read:
"Iâve loved you in every story Iâve ever told. Always, J."
Outside, the rain continued to fall, a relentless chorus. Inside, a moment of possibility unfolded, a lifetime of unspoken words finally touching the light.
The Social Media Ghost
The city hummed with neon lights and the constant thrum of traffic, but YN didnât notice any of it. She was focused on the screen in front of her, reviewing a presentation for her tech startup. Innovation, investors, deadlines it consumed her.
She didnât see him.
Not in the office, not in the crowded streets, not even in her social media notifications. But he saw her. Every post she made, every photo, every tweet he was there. Anonymous, careful, always one step behind, always one step closer.
John, known online only as âthe Archivist,â had built a life of shadows. Nobody knew his face, his voice, or the history that bound him to hers. But he left traces: a like here, a comment there, a message that seemed accidental but wasnât.
Today, she had posted a photo of a street muralâa quote about second chances. He stared at it, fingers hovering over the keyboard.
âSome things are worth finding, even across lifetimes.â
He didnât send it. Not yet. Instead, he arranged their worlds to collide in a way that seemed random. A coffee shop she hadnât been to in months. A table by the window, rain streaking the glass. And there he was her favorite barista, though she didnât recognize him yet.
âYour coffee,â he said softly, sliding a cup across the counter. Their fingers brushed for a fleeting second.
YN looked up. For a heartbeat, everything felt familiar, like a memory she couldnât place.
Who is this? she wondered. But something in his eyes an echo of recognition, of history made her heart skip.
And in the quiet hum of the city, the game continued. A love persistent, patient, hidden in plain sight digital footprints that whispered, âI am here, always.â
The Eternal Reincarnation
In a realm where the sky shimmered with colors that did not exist on Earth, John knelt in the forest clearing, sword in hand, watching YN as she spoke to the council of elders. She was radiant, unafraid, every movement a blend of grace and strength.
He had lived many lives, always meeting her in different forms: as a knight defending kingdoms, a bard singing songs that only she could hear, a traveler guiding lost souls. Every lifetime, the world shifted, but she remained the constant the center of a gravity his heart could never escape.
Yet every lifetime ended before he could speak the words he longed to say. Every curse, every battle, every twist of fate conspired to keep his love just beyond reach.
Today was no different.
âSir,â a fellow knight whispered. âThe council will not wait.â
John exhaled, feeling the familiar ache. But this time, he left something behindâa silver pendant, engraved with a single letter: Y.
Later, YN would find it. She would wonder who left it, who had been watching over her, who had loved her without end. And though she might never know the full truth in this life, the magic of the pendant carried a whisper across realms:
âAcross worlds, I will find you.â
He rose, eyes following her as she moved through the clearing. One lifetime, one world, one chance. And yet, he knew: there would be another. And another. And in each one, his heart would never forget.
The sky shimmered brighter, almost as if acknowledging the vow he had made in lifetimes past. And somewhere, deep in the threads of reality, YN felt a fleeting warmth, a connection she couldnât explain, a presence she couldnât see.
Parallel Universe Explorer
YN adjusted the controls on the multiverse scanner, the hum of the machine echoing in the lab. She had spent years perfecting it, chasing theories that others called impossible. Worlds beyond worlds, realities branching endlessly. And yet, she hadnât expected to see him.
Not here. Not like this.
John appeared in the holographic projection a version of him from a parallel universe, older, wearier, but with the same eyes that had haunted her dreams for as long as she could remember.
He smiled faintly. âIâve been waiting.â
YNâs heart skipped. There was something eerily familiar in his voice, a resonance that went beyond memory or recognition. âWhoâhowâ?â she stammered, reaching out to the glass of the projection.
âAcross universes, Iâve been looking for you,â he said. âEvery version of me, every reality⊠it always ends the same. I find you. And I never stop loving you.â
Her hand trembled. The machine whirred, reality bending slightly as timelines overlapped. In one, he was a professor lecturing on quantum physics; in another, a pilot navigating a stormy sky; in another still, a stranger passing on the street but the eyes, always the eyes, always searching.
âWhy now?â she whispered.
âBecause now, maybe, we can finally meet,â he said. The projection flickered, then solidified. The labâs air crackled with energy as the boundaries between universes thinned. And for the first time, she felt him real, tangible, impossible yet undeniable.
Across infinite realities, across countless lifetimes, one truth remained: he would find her. Always.
Historical AU â Hidden Glances
The summer sun hung low over the Kennedy compound, casting long shadows across manicured lawns. John, young and impossibly charming, leaned against a marble pillar, scanning the crowd of reporters and politicians. Duty bound him, family expectations constrained him but his thoughts were elsewhere.
YN was there, notebook in hand, interviewing officials with quiet authority. Her hair caught the sunlight just right, her laughter soft yet bright enough to cut through the summer heat. Every gesture, every smile, felt like it had been carved into his memory decades ago.
He wanted to run to her, speak the words that had filled every quiet night of his youth: "Iâve loved you since the first moment I saw you." But protocol, family, and circumstance demanded silence.
Instead, he left small traces of himself, secret notes folded into her press materials, a careful âaccidentalâ brush of hands as she passed, a fleeting glance that lasted just a heartbeat too long.
One evening, under the cover of twilight, he found her in the garden, away from prying eyes.
âYN,â he murmured, voice low.
She turned, startled, yet something in her eyes softened as she recognized him. âJâŠ?â
He smiled, a mixture of longing and restraint. âIâve waited⊠always.â
She swallowed, caught between duty and desire, history and heart. Words remained unspoken, but in that fleeting twilight, they shared a connection stronger than any family obligation, stronger than circumstance.
Even if the world would never allow them to be together, he knew: his love would endure. Across decades, across universes, across lifetimes, it would always find a way back to her.
And as they parted that evening, the air heavy with unfulfilled promises, John carried with him the same vow he had whispered in countless other worlds: " I will always find you."
Epilogue: Across Every Universe
Somewhere, beyond the limits of time, space, and reality, a single truth pulsed through all existence: he would always find her.
Across infinite worlds, across shifting timelines, across the fabric of the multiverse itself, he sought her. And in every reality, she felt him. A glance, a touch, a fleeting smile, small echoes that reminded her of something she could never fully name.
Even in the past, under the golden sun of a 1960s summer, he left secret messages and hidden glances, constrained by history but bound by a devotion that could never be erased. Every life, every timeline, every incarnation was different, but the heart remained the same.
And somewhere always he waited, hoping that in some universe, some lifetime, some stolen moment, their paths would cross fully, and nothing would stand in the way of what had been destined since the first heartbeat of his love.
Because love like his did not die, did not fade, and did not end. It stretched across realities, defied time, and found its way back to her, always, in every universe.
And in that endless thread of fate, one thought remained clear: "No matter the world, no matter the life, I will always find you."
There will be no further updates. All unfinished stories will now be continued and updated on the new account.
Continue reading my ongoing (and incomplete) works there at @baethea