on this blog ill mainly repost someone else's stuff, from art to fanfiction, and sometimes post my own things.
I've created my tumblr account to watch how my drawings slowly improve, and I'm still doing that, but it turned out that being here can be a lot of fun. so yeah, there's gonna be a lot of junk here.
im russian with a skillset in english language of a 9th grader, so sometimes I form my sentences weird.
and not to get soft on y'all, but I love making friends and maybe make stuff together, so if for some reason you would want to ask me anything, I would be ever so happy.
the main tags I'm using on this blog are hidden in the tags for this post below.
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hyperfixation please stay with me long enough to complete the project. hyperfixation do not fade. hyperfixation finish what you started for the love of god
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i'm seeing a lot of people out here headcanoning pete as type 1 diabetic. (which is so so good yes please keep doing this!!) my dad has been type 1 diabetic my entire life, and type 1 diabetes is also one of my special interests. here's a few things that may help my fellow hatchetfield fanfic writers:
first off: type 1 diabetes is NOT the diabetes your uncle probably has. it is both more serious than your average type 2 case and less explainable. (this is not to say type 2 isn't/can't be serious!! they are just Different Things.) type 2 is an insulin resistance, where the insulin your pancreas creates is less effective than it would normally be at lowering your blood sugar, and it has known causes. type 1 is where your pancreas just. stops making insulin. full stop. for seemingly no reason. which means you have to inject it yourself or get an insulin pump.
now that that's out of the way, some other random type 1 diabetes shit:
- EXPENSIVE AS HELL oh my GOD. do you have a transmitter? well that probably cost you $60. sensor? that's $60 every 3 months. insulin pump? that's gonna be $6,000 + $60/month (cartridges) + $120/month (infusion set). if you don't have a sensor, well you're gonna need an analogue monitor and finger strips to go with it. $50, plus another $60 every two weeks or so. insulin itself is finally $30 a month now, but it used to be higher. and all of that is WITH insurance. also you need these things or you'll die within days. welcome to america.
- beeping. constant beeping. the insulin pump is always going to be trying to tell you you're dying, even if you're literally fine. it does this by going BEEDEEDEEEP BEEDEEDEEEP BEEDEEDEEEP every two seconds. you and everyone you live with has learned to tune it out.
- high blood sugar = sluggish, lethargic, gross feeling. low blood sugar = loopy, blurry, shaky. symptoms vary a lot between who you are and how high/low you are, so do some research (or drop an ask!), but that's the oversimplified version. both happen pretty frequently.
- being type 1 means you have to get very okay with needles very fast. this does not translate to the people around you, who may or may not be freaked out about needles on the daily.
- this is a common misconception about diabetes in general but SUGAR IS NOT GOING TO KILL YOU. SUGAR IS VERY FREQUENTLY MEDICINE. my dad keeps gummy bears in his car and they save his life regularly!!!!!!
that's just some basics, but if you have any questions at all (no stupid questions here) PLEASE send me an ask. whether it's for fanfic writing purposes or just because you're curious. happy whumping!!
I wish I took a better pic of this writing in a bar bathroom in toronto bc I think of it so often. Be So Completely Yourself That No One Is Attracted To You Or Wants To Employ You
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simon 'ghost' riley x f!reader | soulmate!au | 18.8k (oops)
Ghost didnāt want a soulmate, and he was sure, if they existed, that they didnāt want him either.
cw; soulmate!au in which soulmates share scars, references to self-harm, lots of talk about scars, angst, fluff, references to domestic abuse and past violence, references to simon's past, descriptions of pain, military inaccuracies, miscommunication, touch aversion, reallllly slow slowburn, ghost being sort of really bad and weird at affection
Simon didnāt remember how he got every scar on his body.Ā
The big ones, the important ones, sure. He remembered them all too well, even through the haze of pain and fatigue that often hung thickly around their reception.Ā
But there were too many to account for. To remember the particulars of each slash and burn and gunshot wound was a losing battle. Heād long since given up on keeping track of them. Little lines on the sides of his fingers, stretchmarks on the backs of his biceps, winged fans of a burn on the side of his thigh, a pale line along the point of his elbow that he might as well have been born with.
There were ones from further back, too. Scars that time and pain had eroded the precision of the memory, but not the feeling. Cigarette burns on his forearms, a necklace of animal teeth on his side, a craggy line across his hip, accompanied by the shadowy memory of hand reaching for him, and not being quick enough to duck out of the way.Ā
They all meshed together into the hard patchwork of scar and muscle his body had wrought itself into.
Almost none of them could be helped, out of his control, out of his hands.
They were a catalogue of his life, a story traced on his skin.
Stamped, more like. Branded.Ā
Survived.Ā
And soulmates shared scars.Ā
Their hurt was his; his hurt was theirs. Literally or metaphorically, he wasnāt quite sure. Simon had so many, spent so much time in pain, it was impossible to know if any of them didnāt belong to him originally.Ā Ā
He didnāt like the thought of someone sharing his scars, having felt what he did. Possessive of them and the pain in a strange way.Ā
Itās ironic, then, that he should be able to find his soulmate more easily than the average unmarred person, and wanted to do nothing of the sort. Simon dismissed the whole thing as drivel a long time ago, anyway. If they did exist, if they werenāt just incredibly rare instances of luck, Simon was sure that he hadnāt been afforded one.Ā
There was guilt, too, settled somewhere deep inside him, that someone had to endure it alongside him. It was easier to believe heād been left out of the whole thing.Ā
Better he was alone.Ā
The likelihood of finding that person was slim. It almost never happened. Eight or so billion people swanning around the planet would do that. A one in eight billion chance.Ā
A grand, cosmic joke. The unfairness of it drove some people crazy, drove them to do insane things to increase a probability that couldnāt be alteredāto know that person probably existed somewhere and yet know that they would probably never run across them.
A trend of self harm cropped up online every few years, healed over self inflected wounds posted in forums of people seeking their other, fated, half. The presumption being that they were being desperately searched for in turn.Ā Ā
Idiotic. Determined. Fallibly human.
And taboo. Most saw it as circumventing fate.Ā
Violently frantic for the thing Ghost had been unwillingly given. A way to find them, or, at least, easily identify them. And he never would.Ā
But, sometimes, he wondered.Ā
He tried to picture the imprint of a person somewhere out in the world wearing his wounds, suffering his losses. The thought would circle his brainstem in an unrelenting loop, a bright fish whispering around the perimeter of its bowl before it dissipated in lieu of something more pressing.Ā
It was always there, though, waiting to be grappled with again.Ā
He always came up blank. Nothing but a shadow in his mind where a person should be. Fitting, typical.Ā Ā
It was a cruelty he couldnāt imagine, somehow. Someone being fatefully, inescapably afflicted with him.Ā
Simon didnāt want a soulmate anyway, and he was sure, if they existed, that they didnāt want him either.Ā
If there was someone out there, someone wandering around with his scars on their skin, he was certain they hated him already.Ā
He didnāt particularly believe in fate; life had taught him not to. He believed in himself, his capabilities, planning and contingencies. And Simon didnāt relish the thought of something he couldnāt control, someone holding the other end of his corded, deformed soul, like a leash they could tighten and use to yank him to his knees. Compromised, vulnerable.Ā
It wouldnāt happen; the margin for discovery was so small it was practically nonexistent.Ā
He blamed Soap, then, for tempting fate.
Ghost listened to Johnny yammer on, the sound of his voice louder than usual in the rattling dark belly of the transport plane home. The glow of green light, the roar of engines, the jangle of gear.Ā
It was an irritating, and sometimes endearing, quirk of Johnnyās that he couldnāt stop talking in the post-op cortisol and adrenaline drop, his words a smeared haze of jumbled thoughts spoken aloud for hours afterward.
The notion of a soulmate was at the front of Soapās mind, not for the first time. Heād always seemed to enjoy the idea of it, and find some comfort in it, particularly after a close call. There was someone waiting for him, somewhere, after all, it couldnāt all come to nothing yet.Ā Ā Ā
Simon glanced out the window, watched the sea below morph into land.Ā
A yellow network of light winked below, a sea of reverse stars swimming in the black.
āLucky that way, Lt,ā Johnny declared with finality, finally winding down, sounding exhausted. āFindinā āem will be easier.āĀ
Ghost glanced over, the first time in nearly an hour that heād acknowledged the conversation beyond a hum and a nod. āWhat do you mean?āĀ
Soap gestured to his scarred chin, then his temple. āKnow āem straight away, wouldnāt I?āĀ Ā
Simonās own thoughts spoken out loud; his hopes to never see his own scars reflected back at him turned on its head.Ā
Johnny made it sound like a good thing, instead of the nightmare it was.Ā
No, he thought for the nth time in his life, not that, not for him.Ā
But heād always had an extraordinary knack for beating the odds.Ā
.
.
.
The base was a constant flurry of activity, a relentlessly buzzing hive of people. There were very few places that skirted away from the general chaos of life on a military base, but Simon had catalogued them allāthe field behind the barracks when drills were not being run, the concrete service walkways beneath the base, crowded with spiderwebs and dust, the cool, sterile medical wing, and, the orderly administration offices.Ā
Each place had caveats.Ā
The service walkways were the most reliably quiet, but Simon hated being underground, hated the claustrophobia of it, like some part of him would always be clawing at black earth, and so usually avoided it.Ā
Soap had found him smoking behind the barracks once and now regularly joined Simon there.Ā
The medical wing could be crowded and frenzied, depending on the day.Ā
The administration offices were practically serene in comparison. Neat file folders, tidy desks, windows that let in the watery, gray English sun. Square offices with their doors propped open, conference rooms bathed in the light of glowing intel reports, data convergences, and map overlays, uniform gray walls and floors.Ā
The admin wing only occasionally spasmed into restless activity if an emergency op was underway or about to be, and if that happened, Ghost was usually already swept up in it himself, probably already long gone.Ā
A spare office stuffed away at the end of the hall with the name plate removed technically belonged to him. A mostly unused space he sometimes finished reports in but, more often than not, sat empty.Ā
He preferred to haunt the corridors, observe the more peaceful, inner workings of the military, breathing in the quiet air for five minutes at a time. It gave his perpetually over taxed nervous system, his forever-in-fight-or-flight-mode body, to relax, if even it was only an increment or two. The lightning was softer, the constant bark of orders and drills, the snap of gunfire, the general loudness of the rest of the place, was muted and far away.
Simon knew of all of the staff and their precuilaritiesānames, ages, birthdates, minor feuds among each other, immediate family members, previous posts, favorite foods, habits, complaints about the buildingās irregular temperatures and the pervasive scent of diesel. It wasnāt information he necessarily collected on purpose. Gleaned over years of half heard conversations, glimpses of photos on desks. They, like the medical staff, didnāt often change, not like the revolving door of soldiers and operators.Ā
It was a regular, routine, quiet place.Ā
So it would be difficult for even the most oblivious person not to notice when the familiar order of the place was interrupted.Ā
Soft, dandelion light flooded the hall from a doorway that had always before been shut tight.
The scent of an unfamiliar perfume lingered in the hall in a feathery streak, oakmoss and lavender. It settled hard in his lungs, made his footsteps slow slightly, caution prickling at the back of his neck.Ā
The click of ceramic being sat on wood, the soft shuffle of files, tapping of computer keys emanated from within the now open office. The faintest notes of bubblegum pop floated by, at odds with the chill, still air.Ā
Inside, you were hidden behind two massive computer monitors, the very top of a pair of lilac headphones just visible over the rim. Plants in colorful painted terracotta pots lined the window to your left absorbing what they could of pale winter light, a thick blanket was thrown over the back of a chair in the corner, a jumble of bright, hand crocheted squares. A brass floor lamp with a circular shade sat behind your desk and drooped forward like the antenna of a giant radio, or a bug, casting a delicate halo of light around you like a protective ward.Ā
There was something. . .lambent that emanated around the room, that had nothing to do with the ridiculous lamp.Ā
Simon hovered in the doorway, in the shadow of the dim hall, just to get a glimpse of your face. Start a mental file on you, begin his careful catalog. Something to match the color and light to.Ā
It was a surprise to you both, then, when you glanced up and caught him at it.Ā
You stood hastily, headphones sliding down your neck when the cord jerked taut, the tinny sound of pop echoing loudly from them until you slammed your fingers down onto the keyboard and silence descended abruptly. āSorry, sir. I didnāt see you there. Can I help you with something?āĀ
Simon could only stare at you, a curl of dread snaking its way between his ribs.Ā
Johnny was right, then, he would know his own scars anywhere.Ā
He would know his own face anywhere.Ā
He would, apparently, know you anywhere.Ā
Your face was a faded mapping of his own, the same scarring traced with a lighter hand. The same crack over your lips, a line drawn across your cheek, a faded check through your brow, the bridge of your nose bisected, the outline of webbed burn scars crosshatched at the edge of your jaw and shoulder. A jagged, thick line crossed your throat.Ā
Despite his legacy marring your face, you were pretty. Beautiful, even, with curious, cautious eyes, one side of your mouth pulled up into a half grin that tugged at the line across your cheek and somehow didnāt ruin the brightness of it.Ā
You were watching him watch you with a tentative gaze, brows drawing slowly together the longer he stood there staring at you, breathing around the newly minted cavern under his lungs.Ā
His eyes met yours again, and as soon as the realization settled in, something clicked violently into place inside his chest, like a missing rib bone had suddenly slotted into the cage around his heart.Ā
Pain bloomed hot and tight across his chest, so acute he covered his side, expecting to find a knife inexplicably lodged there. He grunted mutely. The discomfort receded as quickly as it had come, leaving behind a vast hollow just beneath his breast bone. Cavernous, lurching, undone.Ā
The hollow hardened into a solid brick of pain.Ā
Nausea swept into the back of his throat.Ā
āAre you okay?āĀ
He was frozen in the direct line of fire. Your eyes swept over him, fingers curling around a folder on the edge of your desk which you thumbed nervously. You began to lift your other hand, an aborted half movement toward your face that you dropped at the last second. But you didnāt avert your gaze. You looked past the mask, past him, and into his eyes.Ā
You saw him.Ā
Simon was not to be seen.
Ghost didnāt get caught, didnāt freeze.Ā
Didnāt feel like an animal trapped in a cage, pinned and weak and panicked.Ā
Not anymore.Ā
He was a ghost, a shadow, a silentā
The silence unspooled, thin and fragile as unraveling lace.Ā
Your smile widened, a slow, confident thing that stretched across your face crookedly, pulled at your scarred skin as you tilted your head. It was, maybe, the most beautiful thing heād ever seen.Ā
āSir?ā
Amusement threaded your voice; a laugh curled like a sleeping animal in your throat.Ā
Instead of answering, he faded back into the hall.
As he retreated an uncertain realization prodded at the back of his mind. One wonderful contingency.Ā
You had not felt the shift, the world turning horribly on its axis, the pain that radiated hot as a wildfire.Ā
You hadnāt recognized what he was.Ā
And he was going to keep it that way.Ā
.
.
.
It felt like there was a hook in his chest, slipped right between his ribs, a constant painful tearing that landed him again and again outside your office door. Like he was a fish on a line, and you held the reel in your fist, totally oblivious to it.Ā
He didnāt love you, thatās not how the soulmate bond worked. You were tied together, for some reason, though that reason remained to be seen. Resentment was all he felt, a burning desire to chew his leg out of this trap, to grip the line that bound you and run a knife through it.Ā
Better yet, through you.Ā
Sever the tie as cleanly as a blade through an artery.Ā
One sure way to free himself was your death.Ā
It was unusual, but it happenedāheadlines of a soulmate killing their pair because they couldnāt tolerate the connection. It was taboo, considering how rare the bond was. The link suffocated them, instead of comforting them.Ā
Simon understood the urge.
He thought of your office, the way your back was angled half toward the door, how easily he could slip in and slice your throat open. He had seen and done worse, but the thought of you lying in a pool of blood, let alone at his hands, was so abhorrent and wrong that he doubled over as an acute, sharp pain pinched between his ribs, like someone wriggling their fingers between the bars to claw at his insides.Ā
Which irritated him. Things like that didnāt bother him, not anymore. At the very least, he was better at handling discomfort than this.Ā
It did start him thinking about someone else doing it, though. Slipping quietly into your office and nudging a knife between your ribs, pressing a silenced pistol against your temple, Ghost left to find your cold corpse.Ā
It was wrong.Ā
He could feel your life wrapped around his fingers, tangled in little ribbons around his wrists. A pulsing, glowing, bright thing.Ā Ā
The resentment doubled because he should not care. He didnāt know you, trust you; your death should mean nothing. You should mean nothing.Ā Ā
Still, he found himself walking the administration wing again the following day, even though the sun was out and itād be nice to sit behind the barracks and smoke and listen to Johnny rattle on about something or the other when he inevitably showed up.Ā
Your door was open again, gold light spilling into the corridor, the low flutter of too loud music in your headphones accompanying it.Ā
Simon would never admit it to himself, but he also needed to know that he could remain hidden from you. The shock of your eyes finding his still hadnāt left him. It had never happened beforeānot on an op, not about the base, not out among civilians. He blended in, he remained invisible, but you saw him, sensed him, and he needed to know if that was something he had to adjust to. Planning was survival, and you were an unknown factor he needed a method for handling.Ā Ā
Simon stepped close to your door, out of the beam of light.Ā
Your office was bathed in soft, cream light but not from your antenna bug lamp.Ā
Your back was fully turned toward the door, face tilted into the scarce winter sun streaming in the window as you leaned back in your chair. Your eyes were closed, headphones over your ears as he suspected they were.Ā
Fuuucking hell.Ā
Couldnāt see, couldnāt hear, back toward the entry point of the room.Ā
Your life hung there, trusting, fragile as spun crystal.Ā
He waited, but you didnāt turn, didnāt seem to know he was there. Something in his shoulders uncoiled, tension slowly replaced with an odd sense of calm. The pain in his chest eased for the first time in twenty-four hours, fading to a tender ache.Ā
Your lunch, half eaten, laid abandoned on your desk. The blanket that had been on the chair in the corner was swaddled around your shoulders.Ā
You yawned, eyes still closed.Ā
He waited for you to sense him, glance up, but you seemed unaware of him. He wouldnāt admit it then, but he half hoped you would.Ā
Ghost backed away, left you to your peace.Ā
The weight in his chest intensified again.
He hated you for it.Ā
He went back the next day.Ā
And the day after that.
.
.
.
Anchor might be a better descriptor.Ā
Hook was too violent.
Simon knew what it felt like to have a hook between his ribs, and this feeling was not that.Ā
He was satisfied, after weeks of observation as late winter turned to a wet spring, that you did not have a preternatural sense of his presence. In the process, he learned other things.Ā
You hated the cold, and your office always seemed to be chillier than you would prefer, blanket perpetually tucked around your shoulders. He watched you fiddle with the radiator one morning, bottom lip caught between your teeth, sigh, and resign yourself to it. He waited for you to complain to your coworkers like everyone else did, to call maintenance to fix it, but you didnāt.Ā
You liked to sit in the sun, however you could, squinting against the glare of it against your computer screens just to have it on your skin.Ā
You hunched over your desk, and clearly had pain in your neck and back because of it.Ā
You often stayed later on base than many of the staff and walked out of the building alone late at night.Ā
You didnāt drink tea, but politely accepted the tea several different coworkers made for you with the very good intention of showing you a proper cup. You drank every drop as you chatted with them, even though you clearly detested it. It didnāt show, but Simon could tell. He didnāt like that he could, that it was instinctual and nothing else.Ā
They were also plying you with shit tea, of course you werenāt going to like it. He watched as one bloke let it steep for a full fifteen minutes and then presented you with what must have been the bitterest lukewarm tea to ever pass through the base. An older secretary took the opposite approach and handed you a cup of barely brewed tea with approximately four tablespoons of sugar in.Ā
Absolutely bloody foul.Ā
Horrific crimes committed in your name, and you swallowed them with a smile.Ā
And you smiled a lot. From the tiniest twitch of your lips when you were alone, to a grin so big he could see all your teeth, that your eyes squinched closed.Ā
You nearly always had headphones onāwired earbuds dangling from the collar of your shirt as you walked down the hall, or over ear headphones looped around your neck at your desk, usually pop, occasionally 70s rock or alternative spitting from the speakers.Ā
You talked a lot, and your voice carried. One of those truisms about Americans, you could be heard long before you were seen even if you werenāt being particularly loud. He didnāt need to be close to hear you, and he found himself thinking one afternoon good. It would be easier to keep track of you.Ā
He liked your voice, anyway, liked your laugh, liked to hear you say English phrases in that accent of yours that made them sound ridiculous.Ā
You could likely give Soap a run for a world record of useless chatter. Anyone who walked into your office was subject to your stream of consciousness if they lingered long enough.Ā
Lonely, he might have called it. But you were new, to the base, and to the country. Your only connections were those you were attempting to craft with stuffy intelligence officers who sometimes seemed to regard you as below them.Ā
He found his thoughts drifting to the sound of your voice once heād left you for the day, replaying things heād heard you say in the period of observation he allowed himself, like the tune of a lullaby. It calmed him.Ā
The resentment in his chest festered like a badly healed wound. You were nothing but a distraction, a thorn stabbed into his side, stealing his focus from nearly everything that was more important.Ā
That used to be more important.Ā
Now his every thought was asterisked by you.Ā
Distracted.Ā
He didnāt do well with it.Ā
He didnāt like that he could feel the newly rended hole in his chest corroding and throbbing when he wasnāt near you, suffocating him. Heād felt worse in his life, so he could mostly ignore it.Ā
Simon decided that the nature of the bond was at least neutral. You were not a threat.Ā Ā
He was tired, anyway, of constantly thinking about your back to the door, your headphones playing too loudly.Ā
After you left one evening in mid spring, he moved your desk.Ā
Simon sat in your dark office for longer than he should have, letting the pain ease out of his chest.Ā
It was enough to be where you had once been.Ā
That was as close as he cared to be.Ā
He fixed the radiator before he closed the door again.Ā
.
.
.Ā
He went by Ghost, you learned eventually.Ā
His was a redacted, blacked out name in the files on your computer, so Ghost seemed less a name than a description. You briefly scanned the ops he had been on. It was a horrifyingly long list, most of them totally classified or excised beyond comprehensibility. And those were only the missions you could see, likely his involvement in many ops had been scrubbed entirely.Ā
It was clear that he was good at his job, though it left you to wonder what he had been doing in the administration wing of the base, let alone peering into your office like a silent wraith.Ā
It should have been terrifying to find him looming in your doorway. His massive frame had blotted out the corridor behind him. Mostly in black, a skull mask covering his face. You hadnāt been able to see his eyes in the low lighting. But you had only felt curiosity, apprehension, a delicate wrenching in your gut.Ā
Something that a different person might liken to butterflies. Absolutely absurd, but nonetheless true.Ā
Fear, afterward, of course, that youād missed some kind of order or request.Ā
It had also been a while since someone stared so openly at you, since youād felt the urge to duck your head, obscure the scars littered across your skin. You never had before, and you wouldnāt have started then. You wore them proudly. Most bore their soulmateās scars better than their own, and you were no exception.Ā
It had become a rarity, really, in recent years that anyone spared you more than a glance. Being surrounded by military personnel who had seen worse, might have had worse on their own skin, meant you didnāt stand out.
When you mentioned the incident to Laswell, worried that some kind of disciplinary report, during your first month at this post no less, was headed your way, she had only shook her head. āThatās just Ghost. He probably didnāt say anything. You get used to it.āĀ
The base, especially among the operators, was filled with odd personalities with even odder quirks, so you decided not to question it. You had only nodded, and said, āOkay.āĀ
Laswell had smiled. āYouāll do well here.āĀ
You suspected you were being watched in the weeks following the incident, though you couldnāt say why at first. The suspicion was confirmed when you arrived one blissfully sunny spring morning to find your office warm and your desk moved. Your other furniture was rearranged neatly around it. You rounded it, dropping your bag as you went, half expecting to find a note.Ā
There was nothing, and you started to rotate it back, a bit irritated, when you paused and sat. The new angle gave you a clear view of the door and window. The sun hit your face without causing a glare on your screens. The monitors had been lowered ever so slightly so you could easily see over them.
You left your desk in its new position. It was better that way.Ā
Ghost appeared in your office that afternoon as suddenly as he had left it.Ā
You sensed that heād been there for a long time when you finally noticed him in the doorway, that you were only seeing him because he wanted you to.
You smiled and turned away from a report. A welcome reprieve for your strained eyes and hunched back.Ā
āHi. Something I can help you with, Lieutenant?āĀ
This time, he stepped into your office, grasped your offer with both hands.Ā
The room seemed to shrink and adjust to his size. He was more massive than you remembered, in height and breadth. His eyes didnāt leave yours, a deep blackened honey brown half hidden by skull. Neither of you looked away.
āHave I passed?āĀ
His head tilted ever so slightly. When he spoke his voice was like an iron rod shoved down your spine. Deep and jagged and rough, it settled between your ribs, in the pit of your stomach. āPassed?āĀ
āYour test?āĀ
āThink Iām testinā you?āĀ
āYou moved my desk.āĀ
He didnāt answer for a long moment, still not dropping your gaze. The silence lasted so long you began to think he wouldnāt answer at all. āPractically had your back to the door,ā he said eventually, as though that explained it.Ā
It conjured the image of Ghost creeping around the base in the dead of night to adjust offices into more tactical configurations and you had to bite the inside of your cheek to keep the giggle in your throat from bubbling out.Ā Ā Ā
You nodded and then shrugged instead. āI guess I donāt think about things like that.āĀ
āShould.ā
āMaybe.āĀ
āEspecially in the field.āĀ
āI donāt do field work.āĀ
He nodded slowly and finally took his eyes off yours, glancing around the room again. When his lashes caught the light, you saw that they were a light blond.Ā
āWelcome to sit,ā you offered, taking up a pen and a pad of yellow paper. āGhost.āĀ Ā
He didnāt sit, but he didn't leave either. When he remained mute and motionless, you looked back at your report and continued working, resigned to the new addition to your office.Ā
Minutes passed in silence, with only the scratch of your pencil over paper, the tapping of computer keys, for company.Ā
All at once, the room sighed, and when you looked up, he was gone.Ā
Ghost was strange, slightly off putting.Ā
You liked him.
Maybe, you thought, heād come back.Ā
.
.
.
Ghost visited regularly after that.Ā
Sometimes he simply stood at the door and watched you work.Ā
His boots were so silent that you often didnāt know he was there until he was leaving again. It felt as though he often melted into nothing but shadow, but it wasnāt an uncomfortable feeling.Ā
You didnāt feel watched, so much as observed, minded.
But the lengthy silences began to wear thin, so you started talking to him.Ā Ā
Talked at him, more like, about anything that came to mind.Ā
The shit weather and how cold you always were. Recounted phone calls with your sister and noted things youād seen on your commute. You told him of your slightly creepy neighbor who would follow you occasionally down high street when you did your weekly shopping trip, but that was probably harmless.
You were sure he wasnāt actually listening, his eyes focused somewhere in the middle distance as he stood statuesque in the middle of your office.Ā Ā
The visits were occasionally broken up by operations that could last days or weeks, once up to a month. Time passed either way, but you found it passed more easily when you could reliably count on a visit from Ghost. Hearing his voice in staticky communications wasnāt the same. A blinking green dot on a map that you tracked just a little more closely than the others.Ā
Ghost sat down for the first time toward the middle of a particularly miserable and cold spring afternoon. He sighed as he did, the only sign of any feeling. Almost a resignation in the soft cut of it.Ā
You didnāt comment on it, just chatted as you usually did, buoyed in a way that you could not explain.Ā
He started to bring you coffee, done up to your preference, always when you were hitting the midday lag.Ā
In exchange, you left offerings at the edge of your desk. Baked goods, protein bars, chips, sweetsā which disappeared when you looked away from him. You noted what went first so you could invest in it. Chocolate went more frequently.Ā
But Ghost, whether he was listening or not, made you feel less alone. The ache of loneliness in your heart eased, and maybe that said more about you than him.Ā
If he was around, he usually slipped in while you ate lunch. He didnāt eat with you, the mask never moved, but you began cooking extra in the evenings, leaving tupperware containers at the edge of your desk in addition to brownies wrapped in waxpaper, chocolate chip cookies sprinkled with sea salt. āDonāt have to,ā he always said.Ā
āWant to,ā you answered, and then received the empty, clean container from the day before as though it were an offering.
Your office always smelled like tobacco and tea for hours after he left, a comforting combination that you began to wish you could bottle.Ā
He didnāt appear one day at his usual allotted, precise time. You figured something came up or he finally got tired of you, but he turned up instead late in the afternoon.Ā Ā
āSorry,ā he said as he sat, without explanation, a paper cup of coffee steaming at the edge of your desk like it appeared there by his will alone.Ā Ā
āOh,ā you answered. āYou didnāt have toāā
āDid,ā he said simply. āāave you eaten?ā
āYep. Got something for you, too.āĀ
He settled back. āNeighbor still botherinā you?āĀ
You blinked in surprise, the slightly creepy neighbor had not spoken to you in a few days. āOh. . .IāYou were listening.ā
He tilted his head. āāCourse I was, bird.ā He leveled you with a look. āSo?ā
āNot recently. Not in a couple days.ā
āGood. Let us know if he does, yeah?ā
Then he sat back and waited, shoulders relaxed as though attending a sermon, but content with silence anyway.Ā
When you glanced up from a report a while later, for clarification on a mission detail that he happened to be on, his eyes were closed.Ā
It felt akin to having a wolf willingly curl up in your lap, blood wet maw dripping peacefully onto the floor.
.
.
.
When you turned from watering your plants one innocuous spring day, you found Ghost entering your office with a different mask on. A soft black balaclava. You could see his eyes and brows, the bridge of his nose and the thin, bruised skin beneath his eyes.
You froze and then smiled at him, tried hard not to stare. His eyes were always pretty but now you felt you could actually see him. Blond brows and lashes, his irises were lighter, amber honey in the yellow light of your bug lamp, as Ghost had called it one afternoon without a shred of humor.Ā
It was raining, and the dim light made the small space cozier than usual. The patchwork blanket was around your shoulders, a ward against the chill bleeding beneath the window.Ā
In his usual chair, youād laid a gift.Ā
He pointed to the blanket you had carefully folded there earlier.Ā
āItās for you. I knitted it.āĀ
He froze, hand half extended toward it. You swept past him around your desk again, inundated with the scent of black tea and cigarettes as you went. His was alternating black and dark blue squares to your brightly colored purple and teal. āJust in case you were cold. Youāre always so buttoned up after all,ā you joked. āAnd you fixed my radiator this winter. So itās a thank you, too.ā
Ghost only moved it to the back of the chair. You hadnāt expected him to take it, really, but his gloved fingers lingered on it for a moment, rubbing the fabric gently. āHow dāyou know it was me that fixed it?āĀ
āWho else would have?āĀ
He grunted. āYou knit?āĀ
āWhen I canāt sleep,ā you answered. āKeeps my hands and brain busy.ā
His brows furrowed, and seeing even that small movement felt like seeing him naked, like seeing something he didnāt want you to. You averted your eyes, heat crawling up your neck.Ā
āCanāt sleep?ā His fingers slid off the blanket and he sat.
You shrugged. āMust seem silly to you. You see it with your own eyes. But some of the reports. . . stick with me.āĀ
Ghost considered this for a long moment. āItās not.āĀ
āWhat?āĀ
āSilly.āĀ
The way he grunted the word made you laugh.Ā
āCould I ask you something, Ghost?ā
āReckon you just did.āĀ
You rolled your eyes. āAm I allotted only one question?āĀ
āJust two.āĀ
It was. . . funny. You giggled and shrugged. āGuess Iām shit out of luck.āĀ
āAnd out of questions.ā
You laughed again.Ā
He surprised you by laughing too. If a low, graveled grunt counted as a laugh. You certainly counted it, a cache of swollen pride bubbling in your stomach. āGo on, then.āĀ
āWhere are you from?āĀ
The levity vanished. His brows lowered. āWhy?āĀ
You shrugged. āJust curious. Iām not good with all the accents yet. Just canāt place you.āĀ
He relaxed back into the chair again, but didn't answer.Ā
The pinch of his brows, the tense line of his jaw, remained, his expression considering as he tilted his head back.Ā
āWhy do you come here?ā You asked instead.Ā
This question he answered readily. āItās quiet.āĀ
āThatās one way to tell me to shut up.āĀ
He blinked and lowered his chin to meet your eyes. āNot the kind of noise I mean.āĀ
You decided not to take offense at being called noise.Ā
You snorted and reached beneath your desk, taking some pride in the fact that Ghost did not tense anymore than usual when you did, withdrawing your lunch.Ā
āHungry?ā You asked.Ā Ā
āTryinā to see my face?āĀ
You smiled. āNever,ā you answered, āNot sure I want to see what youāre hiding under there.āĀ
The rain tapped against the window as you popped the thermal lid off.Ā Ā
āWhy are you here?ā He asked as you folded your legs beneath you on the chair and tucked the blanket around them. Ghost rose without asking and twisted the knob of the radiator beneath the window a bit higher.
You waved your fork, indicating the office. āFairly positive I work here. But perhaps base security is more lax than I thought.āĀ
He sighed, a long suffering sound. āEngland, smartarse.āĀ
You smile and dig your fork into last nightās spaghetti bolognese. The steam caressed your face in a warm puff as you lifted a bite. āIām on loan to Laswell.āĀ
āOn loan?ā He asked as he settled back into the chair, broad shoulders pressed to the wall behind him, against the blanket. It slid over his elbow a little, curled over his forearm. He didnāt move it.Ā
When you lifted your gaze to his, his stare was piercing, brows lowered, furrowed. You imagined he must be frowning.Ā Ā
āTemporary replacement for whoever used to be in this office,ā you explained. āShe needed someone quickly, who she could trust.āĀ
Ghost folded his arms across his chest, something more tense than usual in the movement. āHow long are you on loan for, then?āĀ
You shrugged, twisted your fork into the noodles. āItās unclear. So, for now, indefinitely.ā You smiled, āHopefully not through another winter, though, I donāt think Iām cut out for the rain and cold.ā
His shoulders eased, but only marginally. If it werenāt for all the hours heād passed in your office, you werenāt sure you would have caught it at all.Ā
āFrom somewhere warm?ā
āWarmer than here. Especially in the winter.āĀ
āMust be nice, that.āĀ
āHas its perks. But the summer is its own kind of hell.āĀ
āOne you enjoy.āĀ
āBut of course. I like feeling like Iām baking alive.āĀ
He snorted again.
You ate in silence for a bit. The quiet had become comfortable between you somewhere along the way, silken and gentle.Ā
When you were scraping the last bit of sauce from the bottom of the container, Ghost said, āManchester.āĀ
āHm?ā
āWhere Iām from.ā
His voice was low; he wasnāt looking at you, eyes trained on the door instead.Ā
āManchester,ā you repeated, trying to place it on the map of the UK in your mind. āAnd do you all sound sort of likeāā
You were about to say like you have gravel in your mouth but he makes an affected noise, that stiff grunt again. āAre you laughing at me?ā
āItās your fucking accent.ā
āMy accent?ā You asked incredulously. āHave you heard yourself?āĀ
āGot a thick one, bird.ā He imitated your voice. āManchester.ā The sharp rhotic r sound was like a gunshot in his mouth, each letter enunciated to the point of being butchered.Ā
You scoffed, not bothering to fight your smile. āTakes one to know one, I guess.āĀ
āSuppose it does.āĀ
āFucking Brits,ā you said, without any venom. āI canāt do anything right according to you all.āĀ
He tilted his head, something predatory in it. It made your heart flutter a little. āWhoās tellinā you you canāt do something?āĀ
You sighed, long suffering. āMy coworkers. Canāt make tea, apparently. I donāt care for it and everyone keeps insisting I just make it wrong.ā
āThey make it wrong too.āĀ
You groaned. āNot you too.āĀ
Ghost rose to take his leave as you snapped the lid back onto the now empty container.Ā
āIāll show you how to make a proper cup sometime.āĀ
You paused, a warm surprise sweeping into your chest, and decided not to linger on this solitary acknowledgement that Ghost would return to your office. āBig fan?āĀ
āI love tea.āĀ
It made you laugh. āOf course, English afterall.āĀ
He nodded, just once, and started toward the door. āGhost?ā You called.Ā
Ghost turned and you slid another tupperware container across your desk. āFor you.āĀ
He stared at it, for a moment too long, as he always did, like he was telling himself to leave it. āDidnāt have to.āĀ
āI know.ā You nodded at it again and then then ducked behind your computer screens. āI always want to.āĀ
Ghost moved so silently that you didnāt hear or see him take it, but when you looked up again he and the container at the edge of your desk were gone.Ā
.
.
.
It should be a good thing.Ā
You would be gone soon enough, none the wiser of who Ghost was. Of what you were to each other.Ā
But it didnāt sit well. It was a new thing to nag at the back of his mind, finding your office empty, you becoming a ghost in your own right. He hated the ache in his chest, the thought of you so far away. He could only assume youād be stationed back in the US.
The thought festered, burrowed.Ā
āLaswell.ā
She jumped, hand going beneath her desk before she spotted Ghost in the corner ofĀ her office. She sighed and closed her eyes, fingertips rubbing her eyes instead.Ā
āGhost,ā she sighed, āDonāt do that.āĀ
Simon said your name, and Laswell lowered her hands to look at him. āHow long has she got?āĀ
āWhat do you mean?ā
āSaid sheās on loan. I want to know how long.ā
Laswell considered him; Ghost waited. He wouldnāt explain himself, and Laswell knew that.Ā
āMaybe as long as a year.ā She tilted back in her chair and asked anyway. āWhy?āĀ
Ghost didnāt answer, slipping back out of her office and down the hall.Ā
You were still in your office, hunched over the desk, lavender headphones pulled down around your neck. He watched you for a long moment, eyes tracing over scars that belonged to him. It was jarring each time to see pain he experienced threaded over your skin. It made him feel exposed by proxy.
As he watched, you lifted a hand and rubbed your neck with a wince, fingers lingering on the long scar slashed at the base of your throat. The grimace faded from your face and your expression receded into the impassive, blank, focused slate it always settled into as you continued working.Ā
When he sat down in your office, you just shot him a tired smile and continued working.Ā
He walked you to your car around midnight.Ā
āTell us if youāre here this late again,ā he said, not looking at you.Ā
āGhost,ā you said. āItās almost enough to make me think you like me.āĀ
āDonāt get ahead of yourself,ā he answered.Ā
You just laughed.Ā
.
.
.
āTea?āĀ
You jumped, just as Laswell had, only your hand didnāt go beneath the desk. Nothing there to reach for, he knew, your vulnerability like a beacon, or a stain.Ā
It would need remedied.Ā
But first, this.Ā
It was the sixth time in two weeks that you were at your desk well past when everyone else had gone home.Ā Ā
āJesus Christ.āĀ
āUnfortunately not.āĀ
You laughed; his shoulders eased. āGhost,ā you said. āTo what do I owe the pleasure?ā You tilted your head. āIām starting to think youāre spying on me.āĀ
āWhatāre you still doing āere?āĀ
āWhat are you doing wandering around our wing after hours?āĀ
Not a line of questioning he was keen on following. That just being near a place you had been earlier in the day was enough to loosen that fucking tether in his chest. That he was worried incessantly about you being alone at night.
āOfferinā to make you a tea,ā he answered. āObviously.āĀ Ā
āObviously,ā you echoed. āOf course.āĀ
āYouāre supposed to tell me when youāre stayinā late.āĀ
āGhost,ā you said seriously, lifting your brows, āIām here late again today.āĀ
āHilarious, you are.āĀ
You giggled again. āAre you really offering to make me tea?āĀ
He nodded. āCāmon then.ā
You smiled and shrugged the blanket off your shoulders. He waited while you locked your computer and stood.
Simon allowed you to lead toward the breakroom where heād observed the many cups of tea youād politely swallowed from well meaning coworkers, who left it to steep for too long or too short, added too much sugar and milk, or left it totally plain.Ā
The overhead lights were too bright, a blue-white glare that made you frown and squint. Your nose scrunched up in distaste. There were circles beneath your eyes, exhausted loops that matched his own.Ā Ā
āSo,ā you prompted, leaning against the counter, āHow does one make a proper cuppa?ā
āNot bad,ā he said of your accent, lifting the electric kettle from the hook to fill with water. āLittle posh.āĀ
āIāve been practicing.ā
He grunted, and put the kettle on, before rooting through the cabinet above the sink for tea bags. A grim selection awaited him, but heād make due with what was available.
āAh, so you boil the water. I was under the impression you could just stick it all in the microwave.āĀ
He involuntarily made a pained sound. āFucking hell,ā he muttered, āThat your usual method?āĀ
You bit the inside of your cheek, poorly concealing a laugh. āI scandalized a data analyst with that joke.ā You cup your chin in your hand, peer up at him from beneath a thick fringe of lashes. āI do know how to boil water, Iāll have you know.ā
āGot a head start then.āĀ
You laughed again, shoulders shaking. Simon watched the corner of your mouth curl, and it eased something in his chest. You were painfully close, the woodsy, floral scent of your perfume curled in the air. Your elbow brushed his. He didnāt know how you could be unaware of the bond at that moment, when being that close to you felt like being lit on fire. He wanted to reach for you so badly that he had to clench his fist closed to avoid it.Ā
If someone were to ask him to move away from you right then, it would end badly. Bloody.Ā
The thin, needle sharp connection ached, begged.Ā
Simon ignored it.Ā Ā
When you glanced up, he looked away. He could feel your eyes on his face, and didnāt mind the scrutiny in it. He didnāt mind you watching him, and wondered what you saw.Ā
āI like being able to see your eyes,ā you said, just as the kettle clicked off.Ā
He met your gaze, disarmed by the declaration. Your features had softened, melted into a dangerous fondness. āWhy?āĀ
āYou have pretty eyes,ā you shrugged. āAnd itās hard to see you with the other mask.ā You shifted, watching him lift the kettle, pour the hot water into a mug and over the teabag heād dropped into it.Ā
āYou can tell me to fuck off, if you want,ā you began carefully, fingertips drumming nervously against the counter. āWhy do you wear it?āĀ
Simon watched the teabag bob on the surface of the water, thin amber trails unfurling, coloring the water slowly brown. āFive minutes,ā he nodded at the tea. āDonāt touch it. None of that dunking shite.āĀ
āYes, sir,ā you agreed. āFive minutes, no touching.āĀ
He huffed, and your smile widened. You bumped your shoulder against his. The contact only lasted a second or two, but the relief it provided was so intense that he nearly choked on it.Ā
The pain, softened by your proximity, returned immediately, crept down into the soft ligaments between his bones. He felt the loss in the roots of his teeth, the middle of his chest; it was like losing his breath in a different way, being suckerpunched in the solar plexus, knocked on his ass.
āTo hide my face.āĀ
āYour identity, you mean.āĀ
āMy identity,ā he agreed.
āWhy?āĀ
He released a long, slow breath, and thought about telling you to piss off, maybe even just to see how youād take it. Were you as good as your word? Would you let the subject drop?Ā
Instead, he said, āThere are a lot of bad people in the world, bird.āĀ
You pursed your lips, fingers toying with the teabag string, flicking the tab at the end with your nail. There was another question swimming in your eyes, but you let it go unasked, dropping your eyes from his instead.Ā
āYouāve seen more of them than most,ā you said. āI would guess.āĀ
āPart of the job.āĀ
Your mouth curled a little, lashes fluttering against your cheek. āHm. But yāknow something? I think Iād know you anywhere,ā you said, without a hint of shame or irony. āItās all in your eyes.āĀ
Before Simon could respond, you hid a yawn in your sleeve and rubbed your hand over your face, exhaustion layered in thick rings beneath your eyes. āEven if this is gross,ā you indicate the tea, āAt least it will keep me awake.āĀ
āI take offense to that.āĀ
You laughed again. āHm. Sorry, Lieutenant.ā You leaned in, āIt smells so nice, so why does it taste like shit?āĀ
He rolled his eyes. āIāll make you a coffee if itās shit.āĀ
āYouāre kind.ā This time when you leaned your shoulder against his, you left it there. The empty soreness like a bruise inside his ribs loosened again. For the first time in a while, he was left with the absence of pain.Ā Ā
When the tea was done steeping, he did yours with a bit of honey. There was no way youād take it plain and like it, but he drew the line at milk. Especially the blasphemy that was the military issued powdered milk in a canister that sat on the counter. Abso-fucking-lutely not.Ā
āThere you are,ā he said, āCup of tea.āĀ
āA proper cuppa,ā you tried again. It was a little less posh this time.Ā
He huffed. āBetter all the time.āĀ
āAnd I have you to thank.āĀ
Your face creased as you took the cup between your palms, an unreadable expression flitting across your features. Then your mouth twisted to the side, a sure sign you were attempting to keep some emotion or thought in check.Ā
Your shoulder was still pressed heavily against his.Ā
āThanks, Ghost.āĀ
āāS just tea.āĀ
You shook your head and lifted the cup, blowing gently on the surface before you took a tiny sip. He watched your face, watched your throat move as you swallowed, the flickering web of your lashes. A step up, at least, from all the shit tea from your coworkers that make your brows tense in an effort to conceal a grimace. āOne good thing has come of this,ā you said after a moment of contemplation.Ā
āWhatās thaā?āĀ
āI know how to make tea for you now.āĀ
āLike it?āĀ
āI love it.āĀ
You briefly tilted your head onto his shoulder, then pulled away entirely. The flood of discomfort was worse than before. His muscles spasmed around it in a violent convulsion. āI mean that really.āĀ
He breathed out, through it. āI donāt take honey.āĀ
You studied the contents of the cup, tilting it one way and then the other, like something important laid at the bottom of the porcelain well.Ā
āNoted.āĀ
Sure enough, the next day, a hot cup was waiting for him, which he drank as you chatted from behind your computer, decidedly, pointedly, giving him the privacy to do so.Ā
.
.
.
Things settled into a pleasant rhythm.Ā
A regimented, regular existence that you had long ago learned to embrace. The base became home more than the tiny apartment you rented and spent only enough time to sleep, bathe, and cook in.Ā
You timed your days to the ebb and flow of the base, to visits to your office, debriefings and conference rooms, the restless energy of so many people in one place moving. You breathed around absences, the pockets of emptiness that sometimes cropped up. The loneliness that felt like an unfillable pit in your stomach.Ā
People often saw your scars and thought not to bother. Why would fate have marked you so heavily if you werenāt meant to find your pair? The scars meant nothing, really. They were no more significant than anyone elseās. Your chances of running into your soulmate was no higher than someone who had accrued no scars from their bond.Ā
You were a stopping off point, a bit of fun, but not someone to invest time and effort into, not when the reminder that someone else might come along and render it all moot was so visible, so literally in their face. To look at you was to be reminded of that bond waiting in the wings, for them and for you, and that you could only ever be temporary.Ā
It made friendships hard too. Some were jealous, others thought there couldnāt be room for anyone else in your life. You were important to no one.
It had been proven to you time and again, and you werenāt sure what kept you hopeful that someone would one day see past it. So when Sergeant Davies stuck his head in your office one Friday afternoon long after Ghost had departed your office for the day, and asked you out, you found yourself saying yes.Ā
āWould you like to go out sometime?ā He asked, hand rubbing the back of his neck. āJust round the pub for drinks?āĀ
āOh,ā you said. āIāāĀ
It had been a long time since anyone took interest in you. Youād only talked to him a few times before, but Davies was handsome in a boyish way and sweet and you liked him well enough, you found yourself hesitating for half a second. To your horror, your mind flashed to Ghost, stomach lurching painfully, a knot of tension fisting itself in your chest.Ā
You looked at his usual chair, empty now, seeing his large frame sprawled there anyway, thighs spread wide, arms crossed over his chest, eyes steady and focused, locked onto you with an intensity and constancy you still werenāt used to.
Heat bloomed in your lungs, crept up your neck. You glanced away, back at Davies waiting at the door.Ā
āYeah,ā you answered firmly. āSure.āĀ
āBrilliant,ā he grinned. āHow about tonight?āĀ
Your belly gave another sour squirm that you ignored; it had just been a long time, that was all. āIām free.āĀ
āBrilliant,ā he said again. āIāll text you.āĀ
āOkay.āĀ
His grin was crooked and self satisfied as he exited your office.Ā
So you found yourself walking off the base with Davies later that evening. You found yourself laughing and hopeful in a local pub that you hadnāt gotten the chance to explore yet, busy as you were, the base a tide that tugged you back again and again. Like a magnet, you wanted to be there.Ā
And all of it came to nothing, the moment Davies saw the extent of the scarring when you took him home. It wasnāt just your face, it was your hands and arms and chest and belly. Your whole body was marked, dogeared for someone else. He looked down at you in your bed, his head framed by your ceiling fan and you saw the moment it clicked. The moment it wouldnāt work.Ā
āSomeone out there is really looking for you,ā he said. āYouāre lucky.āĀ
āNo more than anyone else,ā you countered. āYou know thatās not how it works.āĀ
āI know,ā he said, pulling on his shirt. āIām sorry.āĀ
āItās okay,ā you said before he kissed your cheek and retreated.Ā
Still, you didnāt sleep, just laid on your side, half undressed, staring out at a sky that slowly lightened, stars fading, wondering if perhaps your truest fate was to be lonely for your whole life.Ā
You didnāt hate your scars, or your soulmate. But sometimes you thought it would be easier if you didnāt have one at all.Ā
.
.
.
Monday.Ā
There was a knife in Simonās pocket.Ā
Not unusual in and of itself, he carried several at all times, slipped into his sleeves and belt and boot.Ā
The one in his pocket, though, was for you.
A gift, a contingency, and an offer all wrapped in one.Ā
The knowledge that it was yours was an uncomfortable weight in his chest. It meant admitting he cared enough to procure it, test it, hand it over.Ā
It wasnāt quite your typical lunch hour, but Ghost was headed to your office anyway. It was sunny, for once, and he expected to find you taking an early break anyway, leaning back in your chair with your headphones on, absorbing the rare rays.Ā
And, he wanted to be done with it, to stop tapping his pocket repeatedly, checking the blade was still there, like it might have run away.Ā
Soap had noticed his fidgeting as they all sat through a briefing on intelligence reports with Laswell that morning. Ghost had forced his hand still, exuded a forced calm, but Johnnyās eyes hadnāt turned away.Ā
When he arrived at your office, deliberately rustling against the doorjamb so as not to startle you, you glanced up and smiled tightly and his plan vanished.Ā
Something was wrong. The blinds were closed, your office an unusual sea of gray air. Your shoulders were caved inward protectively, your expression wan and closed. Your smile didnāt reach your eyes, your voice was rough when you said, āHey, Ghost.āĀ Ā
Simon took his usual seat, watching you type something, decidedly not looking at him. He watched you, the set of your mouth and eyes. He waited for your chatter to begin but it didn't.Ā
āAll right?āĀ
āHm?ā
āYouāre quiet.āĀ
āOh, only one of us is allowed to be quiet?ā You joked, but it came out a bit brittle, and worn.
There were, he noticed as he looked at you, circles beneath your eyes. āWhat āappened?āĀ
You looked up again, and shook your head. āIām just tired.āĀ
āTry again.āĀ
Frustration crept into your features. āWho said I want to tell you?ā With that, you ducked behind your monitors.
Simon waited, but you did not reemerge.Ā
He stood, and rounded your desk. You glanced up then, leaning back when you found him so close. āJesus, GhostāāĀ
āNice weather.āĀ
āI can see that.āĀ
āAnd you arenāt out there sunninā yourself? Something horrible must have happened.āĀ
Your mouth twisted to the side and you glanced away. āI. . .Iām just being dramatic.ā
āCāmon, then.āĀ
You blinked up at him. āWhere are we going?āĀ
He didnāt answer, but you rose anyway when he tilted his head toward the door. Simon snagged the blanket youād knitted for him months ago from its place along the back of his chair, finally with a proper purpose, and carried it over his arm.Ā
āLunch.āĀ
You grabbed it and followed him down the hall. Simon shouldered open an external door and held it open for you, the scent of your skin, the warm brush of your body so close to his as you ducked under his arm like a beacon, a light he wanted to follow.Ā
Carefully, you nudged your shoulder against his as you walked. The familiar sharp, sweet pang whenever you brushed too close together settled in his chest. He wondered if you felt it too, if you felt that sickly flutter in your chest, or if his suspicion that he was holding one end of an untethered bond in his hand was right.Ā
Just his luck.Ā
Didnāt matter though.Ā
He ticked his elbow out a little, and after a moment, you pushed your hand against the inside of his arm. His shoulders loosened; his jaw unclenched. The pain in his chest settled.Ā
The absence of the ache was intense; he was so used to being in near constant pain.Ā
āSo, what are we doing?āĀ
āWalking.āĀ
āI can see that.āĀ
āWhyāre you askinā, then, bird?āĀ
You huffed but didnāt ask anymore questions as he led you down one concrete pathway.Ā
The sky was a flawless robinās egg blue, only a wispy, thin line of cloud on the very distant horizon. The distant shouts of drill instructors snapped in the warm summer air. Your shoulders drooped as you walked, eyes fluttering closed for a few seconds at a time as you tilted your face to the sun, inhaling deeply.Ā
He led you around the last building in a long line of barracks and brought you to a halt. The only thing beyond was a chainlink fence that marked the edge of the base. A faint breeze coated him in the smell of your skin, settled deep in the well of his lungs. He took a breath, watched your lashes flutter.Ā
Your thumb stroked a pattern against the inside of his arm, lazy and slow. āYouāve got a soft spot for me, Ghost.āĀ
He didnāt deny it.Ā
āWhat are we doing back here?āĀ
Ghost pulled away from you with some effort and spread the blanket over the grass. He sat on the concrete steps that led to the back door of the unused barracks.
You sat on the blanket, started to open your lunch and then flopped back in the sun instead. āA usual haunt?āĀ
āSometimes.āĀ
āSecretās safe with me.āĀ
āMind if I smoke?āĀ
āNo.ā Then, āI wonāt look.āĀ Ā
He grunted in acknowledgement, rolled the bottom of his mask up, carton of cigarettes and lighter pulled from the depths of a trouser pocket. Simon watched the rise and fall of your chest, tracing the latticework of scars over your face. They looked better on you, he decided. Not as noticeable as his own, faded and light, pencil through wax paper instead of the thick groves of his own.Ā
They glinted a little in the sun, like the scales of an iridescent fish.Ā
Your eyes remained peacefully closed, soaking up the sun like a long deprived plant. Sweat beaded along your forehead, and when you pushed up your sleeves, Ghost was reminded that all of you matched all of him.
He recognized a burn mark on your forearm that belonged to him, a cut that wrapped halfway around your wrist. He was pretty sure the burn mark was from a mishandled flare, the wrist scar from a rope that had gotten tangled and burned him.Ā
Simon wanted to reach down and cup the side of your throat, feel the soft, sun warmed skin beneath his fingers. He wondered if your scars felt the same as his own, rough and grooved.Ā
Probably not, they were imitations, ungenerous sketchings of his own.Ā
Heād like to map them all against his own, find out if he bore any of yours. He wouldnāt have noticed something small that you might have collected yourself. A childhood fall, a careless burn while cooking.Ā
He watched the delicate flex of muscle in your forearms. Your shirt was a little askew, more faded marks left like a tracery of veins on your chest and collarbone and shoulder. It was fucking awful, a wrenching feeling in his chest, to know all that had been inflicted on him, had fallen on you too.Ā
He wondered about the pain again, imagined you writhing with terror and agony and confusion, every gunshot wound and burn and slash he received an echo inside you. Cigarette burns dotting your arms and wrists when you were just a child, months of pain without end when he was captured and tortured and his life was irrevocably changed.Ā
Simon wanted to ask, needed to know just how much damage heād inflicted. But the words stuck in his throat. A fear of knowing, if he asked about the pain, maybe heād hear other things too, how much you must hate him and didnāt know it was the man in front of you your hate should be directed at.
When he stubbed out his cigarette on the heel of his boot and rolled his mask back down, you blinked into the sun and exhaled, long and slow, and then sat up, leaning back on your palms.Ā
āWhat āappened?ā He asked.
Your mouth twitched into your usual, if a bit more sheepish, smile. āYouāre like a dog with a bone, you know that?āĀ
āAffirmative,ā he said.Ā
You rolled your eyes and set up straight, brushing your palms together before reaching for your lunch. āI brought something for you.āĀ
āStalling.āĀ
āPushy,ā you countered, giggling, rummaging around in your bag. Your smile faded as you pulled free one of the usual containers, what looked like lasagne within. He watched the edge of your mouth curl, the scar slitted along one side pulling at your expression. āI went on a date this weekend.āĀ
Ice slid down his spine, curled in a viscous circle in his gut. āBad date?āĀ
āNo,ā you said, shaking your head adamantly, staring down at the container in your lap. āNo, it went really well.ā You glanced up at him and then dug in your bag again, passing another one to him along with a fork. āUntil he saw myāā You fidgeted with your sleeve and then yanked it down. The other followed suit. āMy marks. My scars.āĀ
āHeās a prick.āĀ
āNo, he wasnāt,ā you shook your head. āItās happened before. They see the extent of it, and itās like something biological clicks. Iām off limits.ā You sat your food to the side and wrapped your arms around your knees. āEven though Iām no more likely to find mine than anyone else.āĀ
You looked very small, and alone at that moment.Ā
āI know itās not my soulmateās fault,ā you said quietly. āI know that. I know that. And I donāt blame them for it. But sometimes I get so lonely I justāI wishāI wish I didnāt have one. Sometimes I wish I could hate them.ā
The chill spreads outward.Ā Ā
It was confirmation enough. If you knew, you would hate him. All that repressed, sentimentalized resentment would come bubbling up the moment you were actually faced with the person who so fundamentally changed the course of your life.Ā
He looked at his scars winking in the sun on your skin and felt a self hatred so intense it nearly made him flinch. He wished he could crawl out of that grave and kill them all over again, slower, just for this.Ā
You glanced up and smiled tightly. āBut Iām a hopeless romantic, and dramatic. It was just disappointing. I always have hope someone will see past it.ā You ran your hand over the blanket and unfolded yourself to finally begin eating. āThis helped, though,ā you said. āThank you, Ghost.ā You nodded at the food in his hands, averted your gaze again.Ā
And even though you could easily glance at him, Simon pushed up his mask and popped open the lid of the lasagne still warm between his hands.Ā
You ate together for the first time, in silence in the sun. You closed your eyes, kept your face pointed up and away, a cool breeze ruffling your shirt sleeves.Ā
āHave you found yours?āĀ
Simon looked at you, the edge of your jaw, the soft shadows your lashes cast over your ruined cheek. āDonāt think someone like me is meant for one.āĀ
You nodded. āMe either.ā
.
.
.
He walked you back to your office.Ā
You felt better, settled, but he sort of just had that affect on you, you were coming to find.Ā
Ghost smelled like sun and freshly mowed grass and cigarette smoke. His shoulder kept touching yours, something in your chest lurching each time, like a rib bone had come loose and was knocking against your heart and lungs.Ā
Ghost carried the blanket back, folded it and set it carefully along the back of what had become his chair.Ā
You sat and turned, expecting to find him already silently gone as was his way.Ā
Instead, he was very close and depositing something on your desk.Ā
Matte black, compact, deadly, cold to the touch.Ā
A folded pocket knife sat at the edge of your desk. Ghost loomed over you, his shadow curling around your edges.Ā
He slid it toward you, watched you fold your fingers around it. For a long moment, each of you was holding it. āWhatās this?ā You asked when he released it, gloved fingers sliding across your desk, back to his side.Ā Ā
āA knife.āĀ
āOh, really? I've never seen one before.āĀ
He rolled his eyes. āItās for you. Iāll teach you how to use it.āĀ
āWhy?āĀ
āIn case you need to.ā
āIs this about me staying late?āĀ
āNo.ā He did not elaborate.Ā
āYou know I received firearm training. I can shoot a gun. Isnāt a knife a littleāāĀ
āBut you donāt carry a gun.āĀ
āNo,ā you agreed. āI donāt.āĀ Ā
He nodded as though that explained it. āRight.āĀ
You considered it, flipped it open. Deadly, shiny blade newly sharpened and oiled and well cared for. It was odd to be given a weapon, and yet unsurprising where Ghost was concerned. You glanced up, watched his dark, intense eyes flick over your face. You werenāt sure what he was looking for, but his brows knitted the longer you stared at each other. Concern, weariness.
āOkay.ā
His shoulders loosened. āTomorrow.āĀ
āTomorrow,ā you agreed.Ā
.
.
.
If you thought you would receive one lesson in knifework and be done with it, you didnāt know Ghost very well.Ā
You only ran drills first, as though Ghost were making sure the physical fitness exam you had to pass once a year was up to scratch. You proved again and again that you could run without getting too winded, disassemble, load, and fire a service weapon. When he was satisfied with that, the real training began.Ā
You practiced with a rubber blade that bruised when stuck into your ribs. He did not go easy on you. You left the gym battered and bruised, sweaty and just a little bit resentful. But you could break a wrist lock hold, grapple and use your body and size to your advantage. The goal he repeatedly told you, was not to turn you into a fighter or a soldier, but give you an opportunity to get away, to run away.Ā Ā
What kind of danger he imagined you getting into between the base and your apartment you couldnāt begin to imagine. But you enjoyed spending time with him, enjoyed being in the gym. You found yourself laughing when you were repeatedly slammed into the mat, knife wrested from your fingers. It was fun. And, it was good for you, you decided, even if you thought his intense insistence was a tad dramatic.Ā
Ghost was a bit dramatic about certain things, you were coming to learn.
This was one of them. You were, you thought with warmth, one of the things he was a bit dramatic about. For whatever reason, youāve been tucked under his wing, into his shadow.Ā
On the third week of relentlessly brutal training, you arrived at the base gym, empty as it always was, to find him holding a length of rope.Ā
You eyed it warily and shifted from foot to foot, amused despite the discomfort. āWhat do you imagine is going to happen to me?āĀ
Ghost didnāt answer as you set your bag down and pulled off your sweatshirt. The room was warm, close and humid, the scent of left over dregs of soldiers clogging the room for most of the day. The scent of plastic, lemon disinfectant, and sweat is thick on the air, but when you stepped toward Ghost, his familiar comforting smell of tea and cigarettes washed over you in a vacuous, orbital cloud.Ā
You looked up just as his eyes slid away from you, blond lashes catching the light, skin pink around his eyes. Youād swear it was a blush if you didnāt know better. āGhost?āĀ
āBetter to be prepared, yeah?āĀ
āFor what?ā All the same, you turned with a sigh.Ā
After a painfully long moment he stepped close and pressed the dark material around your wrists. His body was warm behind yours for that brief moment even without touching you, like the glow of a heat lamp that made the rest of the room feel cold by comparison.Ā
His gloved fingers were carefully delicate against your skin. It sent sparks skittering up your arms. What would his bare skin feel like against yours?Ā
Rough, warm. Safe.Ā Ā
Itās a thought that had curled its roots into your mind the first time you fell to the mat together and you felt his weight against yours, brief and heavy, but comforting somehow. It wasnāt supposed to be, he was playing predator, it should have been panic inducing.Ā
Stupid, silly.Ā
If your most recently failed date had shown you anything, it was that feeling anything for anyone that had seen your scars was a failing venture. And Ghost had seen more of them now, than most. Maybe you should start wearing a mask.Ā
āWhatās the goal today?ā You asked, feeling a little like you couldnāt breathe. His warmth and scent and the weight of his presence was overwhelming in a way that made you want to curl into him, gladly suffocate.Ā
āSame as always,ā he answered drolly. āTo get away.ā
āHm. I keep thinking youāll challenge me,ā you teased.Ā Ā
āNot a game, bird.āĀ
āBut what am I meant to do? I canāt fight.āĀ
āGet out of the bindings. Get to the door.āĀ
āIs that it?āĀ
You would swear heās smirking. āSimple enough, aye.āĀ
It wasnāt easy.Ā
For the third time in a row, you landed hard on your back.Ā
Ghostās weight was heavy against you, before it lifted away. Your sweaty skin stuck to his hoodie.
Your breath comes in hard, deep pants. Your wrists ached and panic had begun to set in.Ā
āOn your feet.āĀ
Clumsy as a newborn deer, you stumble to your feet. You had to be faster than him, incapacitate him. āYou wonāt be getting away from me,ā heād said once, āso youād have a chance.ā It was a compliment; one that said you were doing good.Ā
It didnāt feel like you were doing good now.Ā
By the sixth time, you felt raw and helpless, wrists caught at an odd angle beneath you. It wasnāt fun; it wasnāt sparring. You couldnāt manage to wriggle out of the bindings and you were useless at anything heād taught you without your hands.Ā
āYouāre hurting me,ā you gasped.Ā
He released you immediately and the pressure in your wrists eased. It hadnāt been pain, not really, just panic, just exhaustion.Ā
But you knew instantly that youād made a mistake, that he would not take it that way.Ā
āShit.āĀ
.
.
.
The window was open and you were not in your office.Ā
Simon paused in the doorway, noted your bag on the chair in the corner, the patchwork quilt trailing over the arm of your desk chair and spilling onto the floor. His was gone from the chair. Youād been wandering off without him recently.Ā
He turned and marched back down the hall. An administrative assistant pointed toward the external door. āGetting sun, she said,ā he said. āSir.āĀ
Ghost nodded and shouldered the door open. He found you behind the barracks, lying on his blanket, staring up at a patchy sky, slices of blue peaking from between low hanging gray clouds.Ā
When his shadow fell over you, you opened your eyes and squinted up at him. āGhost, youāre blocking my sun.āĀ
āNot much sun to speak of.ā You grimace and frown at the sky. āYou werenāt in your office.āĀ
āSorry, should have left a note.ā You patted the blanket next to you. āSit.āĀ
Simon sat on the concrete steps. āWhereās your lunch?ā
āForgot it.āĀ
Worry sprouted, blossomed along his veins, ubiquitous as the pain that accompanies it.Ā
āCanteen,ā he said. āLetās go.āĀ
āItās okayāā
āWasnāt a suggestion.āĀ
āYouāre bossy,ā you said but didnāt move, chin tilted up, eyes flitting shut again. āIāll have a big dinner.āĀ
He sighed and pulled a pack of cigarettes from his pocket, content enough to wait you out and smoke. The clouds continued to gather, putting your beloved sun to rest for the moment. The air grew steadily thicker with humidity.Ā
āGonna rain,ā he commented.Ā
You ignored him, eyes squinching closed harder, like you could will the sun to return. He watched you, made himself look at the bruises on your wrists and forearms, he knew there were matching ones on your ribs. They were harmless, just the usual consequence of sparring, but the ones around your wristsāthatās a mistake he wonāt soon forget.Ā
When a fat raindrop landed on your arm, you sat up with a grumble. āReady now?ā He asked, pulling down his mask again.Ā
āI can see you wonāt leave it alone.āĀ
āAffirmative,ā he said.Ā
You rolled your eyes and started to get to your feet, pausing when he held out a hand to you. You stared for a beat too long before gripping his hand in yours.Ā
Even through his gloves, it was like being electrocuted.Ā
You released his hand as soon as you could, eyes skirting his. āYour lead,ā you said. āI havenāt had the privilege.āĀ
He grunted, followed you closely back inside.Ā
As Simonās misfortune would have it, Johnny was still in the canteen.Ā
He lasered in on the pair of you immediately, a grin growing across his face as he approached. āAch so this is where youāve been off to LT.ā
Ghost herded you into line, a raucous group of new recruits halting their conversation to ogle you before their eyes flicked to his and away, conversation continued at a more subdued level. He shifted closer, between you and them, though you didnāt seem to notice.
āHavenāt been off anywhere,ā he grumbled.Ā
āWhoās this then?āĀ
You smiled and offered your hand and name. āItās nice to see that Ghost has bad manners with everyone.āĀ
āJohn MacTavish,ā Soap said, all charm as he practically bowed. āCall me Soap.ā
āSoap,ā you giggled. āIāve seen you in my reports.āĀ
Soapās gaze flicked over your face, sharp eyes making the quick calculations that had made Simon hope he wouldnāt be in the canteen. āAre they yours?āĀ
āSergeantā,ā Ghost said sharply, a warning in his voice.Ā
But you only laughed and touched your cheek with obvious pride as the line moved up. āNo. None of them belong to me. Theyāre nice though, right?āĀ
Simon went very still, swore his heart rate slowed. You held out your arm, showed off a sliver flash.
āVery becoming, lass.āĀ
You smiled again and gestured to your own chin, the side of your head. āYours?āĀ
āAye, all mine.ā
āAh, luck.āĀ
āLucky indeed.ā
Johnnyās eyes shifted to Simonās, brows raised, with a look that said he knew. Simon glanced away, gritting his jaw so hard it ached.
Ā āAm I going to get food poisoning from this?ā You asked as a tray was handed over, eying warily what was ostensibly mash, peas and carrots, mystery meat.Ā
āProbably not,ā Johnny answered cheerfully. āBeen mostly fine.āĀ
āYes, but I think you military people might have tolerance to low levels of poison.āĀ
āThatās for sure, bonnie.āĀ
āBonnie,ā you said, giggling. āAre you calling me pretty?āĀ
Soap covered his heart, balancing his tray with one hand. āYou wound me. Simon only keeps us good looking bastards around.ā
āSimon,ā you said softly, glancing up at him. āI didnāt think anyone knew your name.āĀ
Ghost didnāt answer for a moment, glaring daggers into the side of Johnnyās head, ignoring the way his heart was clenched so tight it felt like it was in a vise. Simon, his name on your tongueāĀ Ā
āItās need to know,ā he snapped.Ā
Your expression folded and you glanced away. āRight, of course. Sorry.ā
Simon clenched his jaw so hard it clicked as Johnny shot him a look. āThis way, lass,ā he said, leading you toward a spot in the corner of the mess.Ā
āOh,ā you said weakly, āThatās all right. You donāt have toāā
Ghost couldnāt help but notice the anxious look you threw him, the thin line your voice had transformed into.Ā
Soap wasnāt listening, already talking your ear off, pulling out a chair for you. You smiled and sat and Simon was left to silently watch it unfold.Ā
.
.
.
āFuckinā hell,ā Soap muttered when theyād safely returned you to your office where a contingent of lesser analysts awaited you. The corridor leading away from the now closed door seemed impossibly long. āDāya know how many people would kill to meet their soulmate? Youāve got yours right under your fuckinā nose and havenāt even told her yer name!āĀ
āShe doesnāt need to know.āĀ
āYer name?āĀ
Ghost leveled Soap with a stare.Ā
Soap gaped at him. āSteaminā Jesus. You arenāt planninā to tell the lass at all?āĀ
āStay out of it, MacTavish.āĀ
Johnny followed him down the hall, outside into a bleak, gray drizzle. āYou know it can kill you?ā Simon kept walking. āSimon.āĀ
He stopped, glanced at Soap with a warning in his eyes. āDo ya?ā
āIt wonāt.ā
Johnny continues anyway, urgently. āThereās a pain, they say, under the ribs whenāā
āStay out of it, Sergeant,ā Ghost growled, that very pain growing as it always did as he moved further and further away from you. āItās nothing.āĀ
āItāll corrode,ā Johnny said to his retreating back. āSheāll feel it eventually.ā
Simon ignored him.Ā
But he wondered as he walked away, if he died, if youād feel the corded snap of his life floating away from yours.Ā Ā
Somehow, being that sort of ghost, didnāt sit well with him.Ā
.
.
.
Johnny, predictably, did not stay out of it.Ā
He regularly and reliably began to show up in your office. More than once, he looped Garrick into accompanying him. Ghost had watched as the same realization Soap had snapped into place on Gazās face, and knew it was only a matter of time before Price knew too.Ā
Luckily, they were the only three on the entire base that could make the connection, that had seen his face, so at least it was done with. None of them said anything to him about it, but there were a lot of worried glances being exchanged.Ā
Ghost felt the edge of his sanity begin to wear thin the longer it went on, not that there was much left of it in the first place.
The disruption, the infiltration, the distraction grated until his insides felt raw with irritation. He hadnāt wanted anyone else to know, not because he was ashamed, but because you were his, and you didnāt deserve to be burdened by that. He would shoulder that horrible belonging for both of you.Ā
But the way youād tenderly touched your cheek remains burned into his memory. The soft look in your eye. The gentle way you and Soap always spoke of soulmates whenever they came up, reverent and tender.Ā
You enjoyed their company, Johnny and Kyle, and seemed all the better for it. It was clear immediately how much you liked both of them. How much you desperately needed friends.Ā
Ghost was loath to admit there was a seed of jealousy wriggling in his belly. The easy way you got on with them proof enough that a wire had gotten crossed somewhere, that you were more cursed by him than anchored by.
Then, the gifts left at the edge of your desk began to extend to the lads and not just himself, and it felt vaguely as though he were losing a vital piece of himself to it.Ā
Then, you stopped coming to the gym. You were gone, office dark, before he could walk you to your car. You went on another date.Ā
He didnāt know what to do with any of it.
One Tuesday at the end of July you were in your office, but Soap was there before him, tearing into a packet of crisps, lounging in Simonās chair, patchwork quilt flattened beneath him in a heap. It was hot, and humid, a fan in the corner working overtime, window propped open.
You were happily listening to Johnny explain the ins and outs of football. A match was playing on your computer screen which youād turned back so both of you could see.Ā
Your eyes found Simonās when he paused in the doorway, and you waved him inside, an unsure smile twitching at the corners of your mouth. āHi, Ghost. Do you keep up with soccer, too?āĀ
A groan from Soap. āBloody Americans.āĀ
āSorry, sorry. You keep up with footie too, mate?āĀ
āHorrendous,ā Ghost said flatly.
Your smile faltered then brightened again. It didnāt quite reach your eyes. āYou should hear my Scottish accent. Soap said I offended every one of his ancestors.āĀ
āAye and you did lass,ā he said solemnly. āYehāāĀ
āSergeant,ā Ghost interrupted loudly. āArenāt you due for PT?āĀ Ā
āAch, right,ā he muttered, getting to his feet, āThanks for the reminder, LT.āĀ
āOh, Soap,ā you said, āHold on.ā You rummaged beneath your desk for a long moment, then passed him a brown paper bag full of cookies. āYour favorite, as requested.āĀ
āYou sweet on me or something, bon?ā
You rolled your eyes and said, āOut of my office.āĀ
āYes, maāam.āĀ
Ghost took Soapās vacated seat, watched you avoid looking at him as you moved things needlessly around your desk, twisted your monitor back around and muted the match.Ā
The silence was suffocating.Ā
āAll right?āĀ
You froze, then shuffled the papers together and slid them to a corner of your desk. āI wanted to apologize.ā Your voice hitched a little.Ā
He blinked, taken aback. He didnāt like that you could surprise him. āFor what?āĀ
You bit your lip, fidgeted again. āYour name, I guess. You didnāt want me to know.ā Your mouth twisted to the side. āAnd your team bothering you hereāāĀ
āYouāre apologizing for Soap?āĀ
Your brow furrowed. āWell I encourage itāā
āNo.āĀ
āNo?ā You shook your head, āand that day in the gymāā You opened and closed your hands anxiously. āI think I upset you.āĀ
He stared across the room, toward your big, sunny window, all those little potted plants that have flourished through the summer months. Your bug lamp seemed to droop in the heat, sad and watchful. Heād hurt you, and youād taken the blame. Something horrible lurched in his belly, heavy and unforgiving. āDidnāt. I should have been more careful.āĀ
āRight,ā you said carefully. āSo if itās not that, why are youāāĀ
He shrugged, watched one of the emerald leaves sway in the warm breeze. āI like you to myself,ā he admitted. āNot the best at sharing.āĀ Ā
āOh,ā you said, voice tender. āOh.āĀ
āMm.āĀ
āIāll make space.āĀ
He didnāt quite understand what you meant by that, but he liked the way it sounded. Space for him.Ā
āYouāll come to the gym later, yeah?āĀ
āYes.āĀ
āGood.ā He stood, deposited your knife, which heād snagged early in the morning to clean and sharpen, back onto your desk, along with the new box of tea because he noticed you were out the night before. āAnd donāt tell bloody Soap.āĀ
āAye, LT.āĀ
He chuckled. āTake care of that.āĀ
āTeach me how?āĀ
He nodded.Ā
āThanks for the tea. I used the last bag yesterday afternoon.āĀ
āI know.āĀ
Your smile was soft, your fingers touched his. He breathed a little easier.Ā
āāCourse you do.āĀ
.
.
.
Simon couldnāt stop thinking about pain.Ā
His body functioned at a constant low level of pain, had for years. Maybe it had his whole life, so he tended not to notice it. But the ache you caused had only seemed to grow over time, tendrils spreading to the furthest reaches of his body, the tips of his fingers, the backs of his knees, places he didnāt think could hold pain.Ā
The intensity increased too, until he could no longer ignore it. It was like a whine, like a child begging to be seen to.Ā
He kept thinking of your voice, too, dreaming of it. Youāre hurting me. Panic ridden, laced with fear.
You said he didnāt, after,Ā but he didnāt relish the thought of the possibility. Accidentally hurting you, hurting you on purpose. He thought of his mother, doing her best with a brutal man. He was afraid of unknowingly stepping into a cycle, to find himself standing above you one day, drunk, mean, angry.Ā
Youāre hurting me.Ā Ā
It echoed like a heartbeat. Inevitable.Ā
You might collect his scars, but he would not add to them with his own hands. Heād rather die; heād rather be burned alive; heād rather crawl out of a grave a hundred times over.Ā
He was afraid of it. Afraid that every terrible aspect of this bond between you could only bring you pain.Ā
His father loomed in the recesses of his mind, all the violent men heād ever known, every bloody fist. Simonās scalp ached, the memories swam behind his eyes. Long nights, wild animals, dead girls.Ā
There was one person who had a preoccupation with soulmates who was likely to know, who badgered him regularly about eroding the bond, about bond tears and pain. Simon could know, once and for all, if he was the cause of the indirect pain, at least. His own imposed on you, pushed into your skin like a punishment. He could cross that off his long list of sins.Ā
Johnny, when Simon finally tracked him down, was sat in the armory cleaning a rifle. He watched over his Sergeant's shoulder for a long moment. The methodical movement soothed him, brought his heartrate down a little.Ā
āJohnny.āĀ
Soap jumped and glanced around. āSpooky fucker. Should put a bell on yeāāĀ
āDoes she feel it?ā
āWhatāā
He exhaled long and slow. āMy pain. If Iām shot tomorrow, would she feel it?ā
āNo, the lass doesnāt feel it.ā Soap turned his wrist, pointed to a scar that was lighter than some of the others, a pale tracery that slipped from the inside of his elbow to mid forearm. āNot mine. Watched it fade in one morninā. Didnāt feel a thing.āĀ
Ghost looks at the scar, and Soap lets him. āThaā why you havenātāā
āNo.āĀ
āWhy?āĀ
āDeserves better.āĀ
Johnny nodded, continued cleaning the rifle. āThing is, LT. She doesnāt. Thatās the point.āĀ
Well, at least he only had to worry about becoming his father.Ā
Fucking perfect.Ā
.
.
.
Two months deployment.Ā Ā
The pain in Simonās chest was agonizing, a constant fire. He couldnāt sleep, pain meds did nothing for it.Ā
He could only wait it out, wait until he was back on base and hope you were in your office, that the solace of your presence in that warm yellow light would be waiting for him. The pain would recede. He needed a plan, though. Clearly it wasnāt fucking viable to just let it go on. It was too distracting and only getting worse. It was no longer something he could ignore.Ā
Maybe, he didnāt really want to.
Maybe, Johnny was right.Ā
He half convinced himself that the lancing ache was so bad because youād been posted somewhere else the last two months and you were further away than ever. Your office would be empty. This was just an agony he would have to learn to live with.Ā
Finally, though, they were going home. Intel secure. One last building to sweep. Empty. A loaded silence that made the back of his neck prickle.Ā
Not as empty as they thought.Ā
Soap steps quickly into the last room ahead of him, gaze sweeping from one side to another before he lowered his weapon and stepped forward.Ā
Ghost followed quickly, lowered his gun when he saw what Johnny had. Civilians. One curled around the other, sobbing so hard she made no noise.Ā
When she lifted her face, Simon sucked in a startled breath. She looked like you, only without his scars. There was a mark slowly bleeding into place on her temple, one that matched the gunshot wound of the woman beneath her.Ā
The wail that suddenly pierced the air was distraught, horrible, a lurch and a bang.Ā
Soap was there, kneeling, looking for wounds that Ghost knew didnāt exist. Horror froze him for the second time in his life, your face swimming behind his eyes.Ā
āI thought you said they couldnāt feel it,ā he barked.Ā
āWhat?āĀ
āSoulmates.āĀ
Soap looked at the pair with fresh eyes.Ā
āThey canāt, LT,ā Soap said without glancing at him. āItās noā that. Itās justāāĀ
Grief. The unbearable snapping of a fated cord. The tether in his own chest pulsed, ached. He thought of it breaking cleanly in two, as though it never existed, your light snuffed out, leaving him in total darkness again.Ā
It wasnāt pain she was feeling, it was the absence.Ā
āGhost,ā Johnny said sharply and Simon finally snapped out of it, went to his side.Ā
It wasn't worth it, he thought. None of this could be fucking worth it. He was left with the sinking sense that all he could ever do was hurt you.Ā
All the same, he felt an urgency to go home. To return to your side. To feel your pulse under his fingers.Ā
Just to be sure.Ā
It took them a long time to get her to leave the body.Ā
.
.
.
Task Force 141 was deployed for nearly two months.Ā
September and October passed slowly, in starts and fits that seemed to drag.Ā
You developed a pain in your side, a stitch from taking it too hard in the gym you assumed. But nothing seemed to help it. The pang became a prick became a small misery that the base medical staff couldnāt pinpoint the origins of.Ā
You missed Ghost, and Kyle and Johnny, tolerated the terrible tea your coworkers made for you, went on another series of failed dates, and finally became friends with your cross-hall apartment neighbor. Months of baked goods and hellos finally coming to fruition. Pieces of a life were falling together.Ā
Finally, they were coming home. You left your offer that night with the assurance that they were uninjured, that Ghost, and likely Soap, would be in your office by noon the next day.Ā
But Simon still managed to reappear as he always did, silently and without warning. A shadow crossed your back as you were locking your office near midnight, a hand grazed your back. You followed the series of steps youād been taught months ago. Foot back, elbow out, knife in hand, open, turnā
Your wrist was caught by the flat of his palm, fingers of the opposite hand yanking it from your grip.Ā Ā
You blinked and breathed out heavily, relieved. The tight tenderness in your side leveled off for the first time in a month. āGhost,ā you murmured, lowering your now empty hand, āYou arenāt supposed to be back until tomorrow morning.āĀ
āThat disappointed to see me?āĀ
No. Never. But he was still in full tactical gear. The skin around his eyes was still layered with eyeblack, exhaustion and an acid tension rolling off him in a thick wave. His gaze was heavy, but steady, assessing you in turn. He smelled like diesel and cigarettes and gun powder. You lifted your chin. āSurprised to see you. Glad to see you.āĀ
He only flipped the knife around and held it out to you. āNice work.āĀ
You smiled as you took the blade and stored it again. āYouāre making me paranoid, I think.āĀ
āGood. Paranoid keeps you alive.āĀ
His eyes flicked over you, looking long and hard, though for what you couldnāt be sure. He stepped closer, until you were forced back against the door. He towered over you, corralled you back against the cool wood. Soft, dark eyes like wells of ink in the shadow of the hood pulled over his head, searched long enough that you began to worry something was wrong.Ā
You reached out and rested your hand on his forearm. His body was so taut you could feel the tremble of exhausted, overwrought muscle. āGhost,ā you said gently, carefully. āAre you okay?āĀ
He inhaled deeply, so hard and fast it sounded pained.Ā
He looked at you again, eyes sliding over you slowly, like he was orienting himself, finding steady ground on which to stand.Ā
āWhy donāt you cover āem?ā
Your belly clenched. āCover what?ā you queried, silently begging him not to ask that question.Ā
āScars.āĀ
You went still, looking down at your skin. You had rolled up your sleeves earlier in the evening when furious typing had required it. They glinted silver in the low light of the hall. Pretty and delicate as dragon scales.Ā
It wasnāt anything he hadnāt seen before.Ā
Still, you fought the urge to cross your arms. You hated when he stared at them.Ā
āWhy would I?ā You rubbed your wrist. āI donāt want to. They belong to my soulmate.ā
He glanced away from you, his jaw tight beneath the mask. āYou actually believe in that shite?ā His voice was harsh, aggressive in a way he had never spoken to you before. āItās a bloody childrenās tale.āĀ Ā
You bristled, felt something hard and mean well behind your breastbone in a tight knot. The pain that had been kicking you in the ribs lately reared again, made you wince and cover your side. āWell,ā you snapped, gesturing to yourself with your free hand, āthese arenāt mine, so I guess I have to.āĀ Ā
He scoffed and you felt your heart lurch, hurt settling in your gut, twisting an invisible knife that much deeper. You tried to side step him but he didnāt move, a terrible, solid wall of muscle andāanger? Irritation? You couldnāt tell. āWhat the fuck do you care? Maybe youāre ashamed of yours,ā you said roughly, āBut not all of us are.āĀ
His brows furrowed and he shook his head again. āOh, come off it.āĀ
āWhat?āĀ
āYouāre tellinā me that if you came face to face with the bastard that did this to you, you wouldnāt hate him?āĀ
Indignation burned a righteous path up your throat. āYou donāt get to do that,ā you said lowly.Ā
āYou didnāt deny it,ā he said. āYou would.āĀ
āNo,ā you interrupted vehemently, swallowing around the word like gravel in your throat. āNo, of course I wouldnāt. It wasnāt done to me, itāāĀ
But Simon was determined, his mind set.Ā
āHe hurt you, changed the course of your bloody life, whether you want to admit it or not. Youāll hate him for it, love.āĀ
āFor something he went through?ā You asked incredulously, defensively. āDo you know how scared I was?āĀ
Ghostās eyes went blank, his stare suddenly flat and far away. His gaze drifted from yours, the weight of flinty amber lifted. āOf him,ā he said viciously, like something terrible heād always known had been confirmed.Ā
āNo,ā you snarled again, not sure why Ghost was fighting you, not sure why he cared about your scars suddenly. āYou arenāt listening. For him.ā Your ribs ached, your breath came in short bursts. He was too close, the clashing sensations of safety and agitation calcifying the tension between you into a solid, immutable wall.Ā
You inhaled shakily through the sudden distress. Your lungs hitched and spasmed before you could suck in a proper breath, feeling faint, glad for the wall behind you.Ā
He blinked, looked down at you again. āHeyāāĀ
āI was so scared I would lose him before I ever got to meet him. Ever since I was a kid Iāve had scars. Cigarette burns and scratches, bite marks. I used to hope he was older than me, so it wouldnāt have meant that heāso that he wouldnāt have beenāā Agitation rises like a tide, all the nights youād sat awake watching scars bleed into your skin. Your parents had been unable to look at you in the morning, wondering what the future held for you. What kind of person that child would grow up to be.Ā
The same fear Simon seemed to be holding onto so tightly.Ā
You stumbled over his concern, something prickling at the base of your neck.Ā
āOnce,ā you continued shakily, āthey just kept showing up, day after day, for months. I didnāt know what was happening and there was nothing I could do. I thought he was going to die and I couldnāt help him. I was so worried and all I could do was watch.āĀ
You met his eyes, saw something so raw and wretched there that you flinched back, closed your eyes, breath caught.Ā
You arenāt sure when you transitioned to using he instead of they.Ā
It suddenly didnāt feel like you were talking about someone you hadnāt met yet.Ā
You thought of how strangely intense he was about you. How you had felt so strongly about him immediately. How the only bit of his skin youāve ever seen has been around his eyes; the delicate veins at his wrists.
You thought of him making you tea and teaching you to defend yourself. You thought of him walking you to your car and pulling you into sunny days. You thought of all the cups of coffee and boxes of tea, the gentle way he handled the blanket you made him from cheap cotton like it was spun gold.Ā
You thought of Johnny asking after your scars the first time you met him. How not long after youād been personally introduced to the rest of the 141 for no discernable reason. How they checked on you. How they were probably the only people that knew what Ghostās face looked like.Ā
āNo,ā you whispered, pieces of a terrible puzzle sliding together in your mind.Ā
You opened your eyes.Ā Ā
āGhost?ā you asked softly, tentatively lifting your hand.Ā
He jerked back. āDonāt do that,ā he warned.Ā Ā
You stepped closer, knowing you were playing with fire, that he might burn you, lash out like a dog with its leg in a trap.Ā
But if he was yoursā
If he was yours, you would not be the one to inflict more hurt on him.Ā
He did not want this, he did not want you, that much was clear.Ā
You closed your hand and let it fall, pushed your fist against your heart instead. āI see you,ā you said gently. āThatās all Iāve ever wanted.āĀ
āYou donāt understand,ā he rasped.Ā Ā
āYou survived.ā You backed away. āThatās enough. To know youāre okay.āĀ
The empty spot in your chest ached, seemed to grow tendrils that wrapped around your heart. A bond so close and not latched. Because you havenāt seen him. He has to let you in.
āWhen youāre ready. If youāre ever ready. I'm here.ā
He finally returned his gaze to yours.Ā
āDid it hurt?āĀ
āDid what hurt?ā You tilted your head but he didnāt answer, just stared at you with big, moon dark eyes, brows pinched inward, eyeblack creating a tiny white line there. āOh, you wouldnāt know, I guess.ā You shook your head, āNo I was just scared. Just worried. It didnāt hurt. Youāve never hurt me.āĀ
He moved so quickly and silently that you jumped when his hand curled around your wrist. Light enough that you could pull away if you wanted.Ā Ā
āYou donāt have to. You never have to. I donāt want to take anything else from you.āĀ
Ghost hesitated, his chest rising and falling quickly. āDo I have any of yours?ā The question was quiet, almost reverent.Ā Ā
You nodded, āāCourse you do. I fell out of a tree when I was a kid. Gave me a nasty scar on the back of my elbow. I landed on a rock.āĀ
His eyes flicked away, like he was trying to imagine it. You twisted your arm, showed him the thick line of scar there, totally different than the lighter version of his on your skin. āSee? Youāll have that one in the same spot but lighter. Maybe not even visible, since youāre so pale.āĀ
Your breath caught when he stepped closer, the pain in your chest was so intense it made breathing difficult.
āItās not fair to you.āĀ
āWhat isnāt?āĀ
āTo bloody leave it. Hurts, yeah?āĀ
You didnāt admit to the spasming in your chest; it wouldnāt help anything. āWhen have you ever cared about fair?āĀ
He made a pained sound. āDonāt.āĀ
āIām okay. I donāt need anything from you. I donāt want anything from you.ā
āYouāre supposed to need things from me.āĀ Ā
He peeled his gloves off, tucked them into his back pocket. The hall was still and silent aside from your combined ragged breathing. It sounded like youād been running a marathon. āGhostāāĀ
āSimon,ā he said. āPlease, call me Simon.āĀ
You closed your eyes, felt his hands graze your collarbone, your throat, before anchoring on your jaw, tilting your face up. āLook at me, sweetāeart.āĀ
āI canāt.ā Your voice trembled, tears clogging your throat.Ā
āCan.āĀ
Very gently, he leaned down and pushed his forehead against yours.Ā
You shuddered and swallowed and stepped closer. Simon curled his arms around you, pulled you into his chest. He was so broad and tall, you felt swaddled against him, warm and secure. His scent wrapped around you like ribbons holding you together. āNo point dragging it on, yeah? No point you being in pain.āĀ
āHow long?āĀ
āThe whole time,ā he admitted after a moment. His voice rumbled against your cheek. It felt like home. āFirst time I saw you.āĀ
āYou have had this pain for almost a whole yearāāĀ
āNot your fault,ā he interrupted, one massive hand sliding down your spine. āNot your fault.āĀ
You huffed, hooked your fingers beneath his tac vest. āIām sorry anyway.ā You pulled back, felt his arms tighten around you for a moment. He didnāt want to let you go. āIs there anything you need to take care of? Reports or debriefing or something?āĀ
āNo.āĀ
āWould. . . would you want to come to mineāāĀ
He reached under your arm and plucked your keys out of the lock before you could finish, guiding you down the hall, his hand never leaving your skin.Ā
You had never seen Simon outside the base, you realized suddenly, and everything felt vastly more fragile. It also felt as though that hollow pulse in your chest would tear if you were asked to walk away at that moment, something real and physical would tear and drop out of you, an irreparable part of your soul.Ā
You werenāt sure how you drove home, Ghost huge in your passenger seat, your hands shaking each time he shifted his grip on you.Ā
In your apartment, you hesitated, not sure where you belonged in your own space anymore. Simon looked strange in your tiny living room, among soft blankets and years of collected books and knicknacks. An all consuming shadow. You wondered if this would end like all those dates, just another failure, another loss.Ā
When you started to step toward the lamp, Simonās fingers curled around your wrist to keep you by his side. āNo.āĀ
āJust turning on the lamp.āĀ
He released you.
As you stepped away, a hollow pulse in your chest retched with pain that made you gasp and clutch the edge of the sofa. It felt real, like something was breaking, jagged edges clawing at the inside of your skin. You wondered what Ghostās self imposed distance might have done to the bond. There were stories, albeit few, of corrosion. The bond literally rusting out, slowly poisoning the soulmate and their pair.Ā
āCome āere,ā he muttered. āSit down.ā
When his palm cupped your elbow, the world became softer. Like purr instead of a shriek. He guided you onto the sofa.Ā
Your hands shook when he released you, making quick work of the lamp. The room flooded with soft yellow light. He glanced around. Art on the walls, forest green rug over hardwood floor, molding you had painted a delicate gold. You felt embarrassed of it all suddenly.Ā
āGod,ā you muttered. He didnāt seem to feel the pain at all, which made your chest ache in a different way and guilt pool heavily between your bones for it. You didnāt want him to be in pain, but you felt as though you were breathing water, choking on your own lungs. āHow have you dealt with this?āĀ
āWorse now,ā he said, though you felt it was his version of a kind untruth.Ā
He sat next to you, reached for you, then faltered, unsure. You closed the space, folded your fingers between his. The scars made a fucked up little mirror when you looked down at your hands. They matched exactly. āIām sorry.āĀ
Simon didnāt answer, but stayed close to you, letting you hold his hand. Even the smallest amount of space between you seemed to burn, a brazier that flared hot and demanded attention. But it was better; just having his bare hand in yours helped.Ā
āNothinā tābe sorry for.ā He said after a few minutes of uneven breathing, eyes trained on your hands, thumb running over the back of your fingers.Ā
āYou donāt want me.āĀ
It wasnāt a question.Ā
He glanced up, something razor sharp in his eyes. You flinched a little, but his hand tightened on yours.Ā
āYou donāt have toāWe donāt have to bond,ā you tripped over the last word. āItās okay.āĀ
āObviously itās not, bird.āĀ
Your heart sunk and you glanced away. A one in eight billion chance was sitting under your nose for months, and he wanted nothing to do with you. He was being forced into it.
āIām sorry,ā you murmured again. āGhost, Iāmāā
āSimon,ā he corrected.Ā Ā
āSimon,ā you echoed.Ā
He curled his hands around your wrists, lifted your palms to the bottom of his mask. He let your hands settle at the base of his throat, eyes never leaving yours. āI didnāt want you,ā he said plainly. āI never wanted you to know.āĀ
You swallowed and nodded. āIām sāāĀ
āNo.ā
You closed your mouth with a click of your jaw. You donāt expect a speech and he doesnāt give you one. āYou deserve better,ā he said. āBut Iām all you get.āĀ
His knee touched yours. Your faces were tilted together, so close that the only thing you could see were the soft depths of his eyes reflecting the gold light.
It didnāt feel close enough.Ā
You wished it were all different.Ā
That he didnāt feel forced, that you were what he wanted.Ā
āI deserve you. Isnāt that the point?āĀ
He watched you for a long moment, an unreadable expression on his face, then nodded.Ā
āGo on, then.āĀ
Your throat felt tight as you tugged the mask upwards, heart lurching when you recognized the same scar on your throat on his. You pushed the fabric over his chin and mouth, up until you could pull it over his head.Ā
You looked at him, the same scar over his mouth, along his cheek, the bridge of his nose was nicked, the outline of burn scarring crossed the edge of his jaw and neck. When you looked past that, you saw him. Crooked nose, thick, furrowed brows, dark eyes youād loved for a long time cast darker by the black around them, light eyelashes and hair, longer on top and curling.Ā
Something seemed to. . .snap then. A warmth broke between you, filled that awful, dark, pained well in your chest. It hurt, but the pain was brief, like stitches done by a seasoned medic.Ā
Breathing was easier. You could feel the pulse of him without the threat of imminent pain. It was a warm, comforting, safe thing in your lungs. You inhaled, attempted to stand, to give him a bit of space. āShould be able to separate now. Shall we test itāāĀ
You didnāt get a chance to move away, tugged suddenly from your seat and into his lap. You fell heavily against his chest, wrapped tightly in his arms, foreheads slanted together.Ā
āNo,ā he said, sounding, for the first time since youāve known him, breathless. āNo.āĀ
āI donāt want to.āĀ
āGood.āĀ
āCan I touch you?āĀ
āCan do anything you like to me, bird.āĀ
You stroked the side of his throat, felt him shiver. āWell, I wonāt. Not anything.āĀ
He made a content noise of agreement.Ā
You touched his jaw, his cheek, the tail of his brow, the faded check through it that youād never noticed matched your own. His arms tightened around you in increments until the pressure forced you to take shallow breaths. āYouāre beautiful.āĀ
āLookinā in a mirror, are you?āĀ
āSort of,ā you answered. āA little.āĀ
His hands shifted, anchored on your hips, and pushed you back a little.Ā
Disappointment that it was over so soon pinched at your throat but you backed off, attempting to slide from his lap. His hand caught at your hip. āStop trying to bloody move.āĀ
āWhatāāĀ
He was only taking off the vest, which probably should have been left at the base. It dropped heavily to the floor as he pulled you against his chest. It was warmer, softer like that, thick muscle coiled beneath your cheek when you rested it against his shoulder, heartbeat hard against yours. Ā
āNo more pain?āĀ
āNone.āĀ
āGood.āĀ
You pushed your face against his throat, felt him tense and then uncoil. One large hand cupped the back of your neck, holding you there. You brushed your lips against his pulse point, felt a scarred flutter against your mouth, a muted grunt.
āYouāre all I want,ā you admitted quietly. āI think I knew. I think everyone knew. Iām sorry,ā you finally said, āthat Iām not who you need.āĀ Ā
His hand squeezes your neck and then heās pushing you down against the cushions, pressing one massive thigh between your legs, hauling you closer like it could never be close enough. The space between your bodies would always be too large, because you couldnāt climb into his chest, nest among his veins.Ā
It would have to do then, his hand tilting your jaw up, his eyes searching yours as you part your lips.Ā
āYou are, sweetāeart,ā he said simply, mouth brushing yours before he kissed you properly.Ā
He tasted of black tea; his eyeblack rubs off on your temples.Ā
Already, he was leaving pieces of himself behind with you to mark safe.
āSimon,ā you murmured against his mouth. Just to say it, just to be rewarded with a shudder.
The kiss slipped into something more desperate, your hands felt the skin of his back, your own scar on his elbow, and you thought, maybe, you could become what he needed. Ā
if you made it this far thank you for reading! I'd love to know what you thought!
today I turned off my headphones to be able to listen to the sounds of a nice summer rain and thunder that was ripping sky apart somewhere far away in the clouds. looking outside of my window to see birds darting around, not bothered by the drizzle, I noticed four girls running around on the grass-covered playground, hugging each other and enjoying the rain. I enjoy the rain too.
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thanks a bunch for the tag @ifuhaveghost, even though I reblogged you, I'll still tag you here!
I admit that for a few of those I picked the second picture, and not the first - but for the majority it is kinda my vibe. fully haven't ever watched "psycho gothic lolita", but sounds like a vibe.
"search each prompt in pinterest and use the first pic that cones up! animal, aesthetic, background, character, food, show, movie"
no pressure tags: @hyperfixationsgobrr @yudol-skorbi @mumbito