#FlirtyVibes
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If I were a man I would be voicing all of my thoughts, which means I would be flirting with everyone, no judgement, I would be the biggest flirt, a smooth charmer but alas I am a woman and I can't do that because I can't deal with men. Which is a shame, my thoughts are too good to not be said out loud.
--- M, thought about this on a rainy evening
#thoughts#spilled ink#just girly things#just girly thoughts#girlblogging#girlblog#spilled thoughts#flirting#flirtatious#flirtyvibes#charmer#love#women#girl blogger#quoteoftheday#love quotes#quotes#life quotes#relatable quotes#relatable
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“What’s your love language?”
“Being your home when the world feels cold.”
#romantic#emotions#dark academia#love confessions#intimacy#poetic love#slow burn love#intimate#2 am thoughts#trending#finding love#obsessive love#i love him#love quotes#lovers#love#couples#couple kissing#couple#late night thoughts#flirtyvibes hotgirlvibes dmme singleaf crushvibes sexyenergy tumblrgirl boysoftumblr friendswithvibes youup#flirtyvibes#flirting#trendiest#tumblr trends#trendy#viral trends#possesive love#possessive#kiss
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"Just enjoying a little downtime on the ground, feeling flirty and fabulous! Who’s ready to turn up the heat? 🔥💋 #FeelingCute #FlirtyVibes"
#fashion#legs#dress#blue eyes#smile#blond girl#beauty#beautiful#my face#blonde babe#flirt#flirtatious#flirt with me#flirtyvibes#flirt milk#teasing#shower time#flirting#bi curious#photo sexy#sexy pose#sexy chick#sexy curves#latexfashion#latexdress#latexcatsuit#latexgirl
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1. Repressed Emotions
You’ve had the biggest crush on your brother’s best friend ever since he started coming around. But lately, it’s not just a crush anymore. He’s grown into a man, and what you feel for him now runs deeper—more passionate, more lustful.
You’ve known Hamzah since before you really understood what it meant to want someone. He was your brother’s best friend—the kid who used to steal the last slice of pizza and smirk like it was his right . The boy who used to ruffle your hair like you were some kind of puppy, then laugh when you tried to swat him away. The boy who grew into a man far too quickly, all broad shoulders and low laughs ,eyes that lingered too long when he thought no one was watching.
And now, he was living in your house.
-
-
Your parents had left for Europe, and your brother, had turned your home into a bachelor’s playground.
Hamzah was over every day—scratch that—he was staying over. His duffel bag lived by the couch, his shoes piled next to your brother’s, and every night you’d hear the low murmur of their video games and banter, long past midnight. For a week, you ignored it. You told yourself it was just noise.
But that wasn’t the case.
-
-
⤷ 3:48 AM
The walls were thin. Too thin for whatever chaos was going on behind your brother’s bedroom door. Laughter, thumping bass from some game soundtrack, and that familiar, piney, earthy scent that smoked cannabis leaves behind. A crash—was that a chair?
You threw your blanket off, and started padding down the hallway, barefoot and irritated, your sleep shirt clinging to your thighs. You banged once, sharp and hard, on the wood. Surprisingly, the music volume not even lowering itself.
The door opened almost immediately.
It was Hamzah.
He leaned against the frame, shirtless—of course—and grinning like the devil himself had taught him how.
“Well, well. Sleeping Beauty’s awake.”
You crossed your arms. “Are you guys serious right now?”
He tilted his head, eyes dragging down your frame before flicking back up. “What? Missed us already?” he teased
“Hamzah.”
“Ooh..scary look you got on your face. Pretty hot”
Your cheeks heated. He was joking. He had to be. But there was something different in his tone, just beneath the surface.
“Just—keep it down.”
“Will try” he said, but didn’t move. “You know, you could always join us . Just once. Might be fun.”
You gave him a look that screamed absolutely not and turned on your heel. Behind you, he chuckled low, like he knew something you didn’t
-
-
⤷ Two Days Later
You woke up thirsty. Restless. Again.
The apartment was quiet for once, bathed in that eerie stillness that only came late at night.
The laughter coming from your brother’s room was quieter this time—muffled and broken up with long silences, probably another one of those intense games your brother and Hamzah would get sucked into for hours.
You didn’t even bother putting on pants. Just the same oversized t-shirt. You wouldn’t be staying at the kitchen for long anyways.
No lights were on. Just the silver-blue glow of moonlight seeping through the windows.
The hallway was dark, cool.
You dragged yourself through it barefoot, rubbing at your eyes, not expecting—
“Shit—”
You slammed into someone the second you rounded the corner.
Hands grabbing your waist instantly, steadying you. Firm and familiar
You looked up, and there he was again.
Backlit by the silver glow of the moon pouring in through the kitchen window. His hair was messy—tousled from hours on the couch. Shadows kissing his jaw in just the right places and his eyes, even darker than before under the dim moonlight.
He didn’t let go.
“You always this clumsy,” he asked, “or is it just when I’m around?”
You huffed a breath, trying to sound annoyed—but it came out breathless instead. “It was dark.”
He grinned, low and lazy. “Didn’t seem to stop you from finding me.”
You didn’t respond. Suddenly hyperaware of how warm his hands were. How close you were. “Why are you always in the kitchen anyway?”
He shrugged. “that’s the second time I’m running into you here today” His fingers flexing slightly on your waist. Like he forgot they were there—or even better—didn’t care that they still were.
“I wanted water.”
“Mm,” he said, glancing down at your bare legs, the way your shirt stopped far too early. “Sure it’s not the attention?”
You scowled, trying to pull back, but he didn’t move. Just enough resistance to make you feel like you’d need to really try if you wanted to leave.
“You’re so annoying,” you muttered.
“I’ve been called worse.”
He finally let go, taking a slow step back, and the absence of his hands was somehow worse than the weight of them.
You went to the counter, trying to focus on the glass in your hand, your breathing, anything.
But you could feel him right behind you. His presence leaving the atmosphere heavy.
He leaned on the other side of the counter, watching you carefully.
“You always walk around like that?” he asked casually. His arm sneakily, wrapping around your waist again.
You paused, crossing your arms, more to cover the way your body betrayed you out of modesty. The glass in your hand nearly slipping.
“Like what?” the saliva in your mouth, nearly flooding. “It’s just a T-shirt” You gulped harshly.
The moonlight caught in his eyes, and for a second, you forgot how to breathe properly. His hands still on your waist, his thumb moving—just slightly—dragging along the hem of your t-shirt like he didn’t even realize he was doing it. A whisper of a touch, but it lit you up from the inside out.
You glanced toward the fridge, like it could grow legs any time now and save you.
“Right,” he said. This time there was something in his voice—mocking. Teasing. He let go of your waist slowly, the drag of his fingers intentional, like he wanted you to feel every second of it.
“You should go back to sleep,” you said, voice quieter than you intended.
“You should stop wearing that shirt,” he replied, eyes dragging over it again, this time slower.
“It’s a problem,” he said under his breath. Almost as if he was talking to himself “but hey, your house, right?”
“You’re so—” You turned to snap something back, but he was closer than you thought. Not touching. Just there, admiring. You had to look up at him.
His face was unreadable now—calm, maybe even bored. Like this wasn’t a big deal. Like you weren’t a big deal.
That made it worse.
He then took a small step forward—closing the small remaining space between you. Letting himself almost sink in your body. Carefully, he put his hand out, placing it next to your thigh, to the counter
“W-what are you doing?” you asked quietly, kind of flustered. Sweat drops forming on your forhead.
Hamzah blinked innocently.
Soon, a nasty smirk forming on his face.
“Just getting water.” he said.
Opening the faucet behind you, letting the water forcefully fill his glass
And just like that. He turned his body away, and walked out—laughing—quietly, slow, dark..Like the air wasn’t still charged, like he hadn’t just lit a fuse and walked away from the fire.
Leaving you in the kitchen with your heart pounding and your whole body, already on fire. Your skin remembering the feeling of his big hands, his voice curling around your spine like smoke and your mouth as dry as a dessert.
Still thirsty—But not for water.
You slipped back to your room in silence, but sleep never came.
It was only you, and your thoughts.
-
-
⤷ The next morning.
You came into the kitchen late, half-hoping he wouldn’t be there.
He was.
Of course he was.
Sitting at the table like he owned it, like this wasn’t your house. Shirtless again—because apparently that was his default now—one leg stretched out, the other bouncing lazily. His phone in hand, head tilted slightly, hair a little damp like he’d just come from the shower. A mug of coffee sat untouched in front of him, steam still rising from his body.
He didn’t look up.
But you felt him notice you.
That awareness. That shift in the air. Like gravity shifted.
You ignored it—or at least—tried to.
You walked past him with studied indifference, reached into the cupboard for cereal like you didn’t still feel the echo of last night—his voice behind you, the nearness, the unspoken heat.
“You sleep okay?” he asked casually, like it was a throwaway question.
“Fine.”
“Dream about me?”
You turned slowly, cereal box in hands, giving him the flattest look you could muster. “Are you ever serious?”
Finally, he looked up.
And there it was—that same look that had been driving you crazy for years. Playful on the surface, but underneath? That lazy, low-burning interest he never voiced.
That challenge.
“Not around you,” he said simply.
You stared at him. The tension tightened.
He tilted his head, eyes trailing deliberately down to your collarbone, where the edge of your sleep shirt gaped. Exposing the fact that you were indeed bra-less.
You swiftly turned back to the counter—after only realizing yourself—hands a little too tight on the coffee mug.
“I need caffeine before this conversation,” you muttered.
“Could’ve asked me to make it for you.”
“You’re not that charming.”
“No?” His voice dipped, low and slow. “You seemed pretty charmed last night.”
Your fingers froze around the handle of the coffee pot.
He wasn’t teasing anymore.
You didn’t turn, just stared down at the counter, the silence hanging too thick.
“You like messing with me,” you said finally.
“Not messing.”
His voice was closer now.
Right behind you.
You didn’t even hear him move.
“Just testing limits.”
You turned, and there he was—again. Always there. Close enough that the space between you practically suffocating. Close enough to feel the heat off his skin.
“What kind of limits?” you asked, your voice barely above a whisper.
His eyes dropped to your lips.
Then back up.
“You tell me.” he leaned in.
You didn’t move. Didn’t stop him.
His hand brushed your hip—just a whisper of contact, but it made your stomach twist. His other hand came up, slow, like he was waiting for you to pull away. To push him off of you.
But you didn’t.
Fingers grazed your jaw, tilted your chin up.
It was soft. Way too soft for how sharp the tension had been.
And then—he kissed you.
Fucking finally.
It was warm and unhurried, but not sweet. There was heat behind it—coiled, restrained. Like he’d been thinking about this just as long as you had. His fingers stayed gentle on your face—his mouth was anything but that. It was possessive. Raw
And you—
You kissed him back.
Harder than you meant to.
You stepped forward without thinking, backing him into the table. He let out a soft grunt of surprise, smiling against your mouth. His hand dropped from your jaw to your waist, pulling you flush against him like he wanted more, like this was just the start—
CREAK.
You both froze.
The sound was faint, but unmistakable—the creak of a bedroom door upstairs.
Your brother.
Your eyes widened. Hamzah pulled back a fraction of an inch, breathing shallow, eyes still on you.
Neither of you said a word.
You stepped back, fast. Heart racing.
His lips were swollen. His hair was a mess. And he was still looking at you. A look like, you’d just slapped him across the face
You grabbed your coffee mug, turning on your heel without another word.
“Morning,” your brother’s voice called down from the stairs.
You didn’t answer. You just walked off, head high, coffee clutched tight, hoping he couldn’t hear your pulse in your throat.
Behind you, you heard the scrape of a chair, the clink of Hamzah picking up his coffee.
“Yo,” he said to your brother, calm as ever. “You sleep okay?”
But his eyes never left the hallway where you’d disappeared.
Not once.
And the smirk he wore while sipping his coffee?
Smug. Possessive. Like he knew something your brother didn’t.
And he was enjoying it.
-
-
4:16 AM
The house was dead quiet. The kind of silence that presses against your skin.
You’d woken up in a cold sweat again. Your shirt clung to your back, your heart pounding like it was still trying to outrun the nightmare. You blinked into the darkness, disoriented, the weight of the dream still sitting heavy in your chest.
Then—a knock.
Sharp. Twice. Muffled against the wood of your door.
You flinched.
Your brother?
Unlikely. He could sleep through a fire alarm.
You sat up slowly, dread giving way to confusion—until you heard it:
“Take your time, sweetheart.”
That voice.
Low, cocky. Half amusement, half challenge.
It was Hamzah.
You stilled. Your heart started a different kind of race now.
Did he wake up because of the noise? Or… was he already awake?
Your mind flashed back to the morning—his mouth, his hands, the heat in his eyes right before your brother’s door creaked and shattered the moment. You hadn’t spoken since. You’d avoided him, like the coward you are.
But now he was here. At your door. At your worst hour. Not being able to escape him.
Something about that made your stomach twist.
Would opening the door be giving in?
Maybe. But was that such a bad thing?
Surrendering didn’t sound half as bad now.
You didn’t give yourself time to hesitate. Fingers curled around the knob, and you pulled.
Hamzah stood there, shirt wrinkled, revealing his happy trail. Sweat drops riding low on his hips and his blonde tips messy, like he’d run a hand through them a thousand times. He looked like he belonged in every bad decision you’d ever made.
Stepping forward, his eyes swept over you, slow and deliberate. Down your bare legs, the same oversized shirt hanging off your shoulder, the faint flush on your cheeks—He didn’t bother hiding it.
The door clicked shut behind him
He didn’t say a word.
No smirks. No jokes.
Just a slow, deliberate turn to face you, eyes darker than you’d ever seen them.
He moved toward you without speaking—silent, intense, like a predator that had finally cornered something it had been hunting for years. Every step felt heavier than the last, until he was standing right in front of you again.
Your breath caught in your throat.
“Say something,” you whispered, voice barely there.
“I warned you,” he said. Calm. Even. Dead serious. “Told you I wasn’t messing around tonight.”
Your pulse spiked. You wanted to look away, but you couldn’t—not when he was looking at you like that. Like he owned you already and was just giving you a head start before claiming what was his.
He reached for your jaw, fingers tilting your face up—not gently, not rough either. Just enough to remind you that you were his to move. His thumb brushed along your bottom lip, and his gaze dropped there for a second, fixated.
“You opened the door like you were ready” he muttered. “So don’t look at me like that now.”
“I am.” you said—too fast maybe.
Too honest.
His mouth twitched at the corners, forming into a smile—subtly showing off of his sharp canines.
But there was nothing kind in it. Just hunger.
“Then show me.”
You didn’t even get the chance to answer.
His hands were on your waist, dragging you into him, lips crashing onto yours again—harder this time. It was different now. No more teasing, no testing limits. This was full control, no hesitation.
You gasped, and he took that opening like an invitation—tongue claiming your mouth with brutal precision. He kissed like he had something to prove. Like he knew exactly what you wanted and had no plans to let you leave without getting it.
You barely noticed when he started walking you backwards—until the back of your knees hit the bed, and he shoved you down with one hand, still standing above you.
You blinked up at him, dazed, panting, lips red and swollen.
He looked at you like you were the best mistake he’d ever made.
“Stay there.”
You didn’t move.
He reached for the hem of his shirt���like he’d even needed it in the first place—and yanked it off in one motion, tossing it somewhere behind him. Every inch of him was lean, carved muscle and sharp lines. Not too perfect. Just real. Solid. Like he was built to ruin someone.
And right now, that someone was you.
He climbed over you slowly, knees framing your hips, hands planted beside your head.
“You scared?” he murmured, face inches from yours.
“No,” you breathed, even though your heart was pounding like it was trying to escape your chest.
His eyes flicked down to your neck, your chest rising and falling too fast beneath the thin fabric of your shirt. He leaned in, lips brushing your jaw—barely—his voice low. Brutal.
“You should be.”
His mouth finally found your throat, kissing a slow, long, bruising path downward. His hands skimmed along your thighs, parting them with no hesitation, settling between them like he belonged there. You felt his weight press into you, anchoring you in place, and god—it was too much and not enough at the same time.
“Look at you,” he said against your skin. “Acting all shy now. After provoking me all this time.”
You whined, fingers clutching at his shoulders. He caught your wrists, roughly placing them above your head with one hand.
“Hands stay here.”
You obeyed. Instinctively.
He smiled. That same wicked grin, but darker now. More possessive.
“You’re learning.”
His other hand slid under your shirt, dragging upward, slow and torturous. He took his time, watching your reactions the entire time, soaking in every little twitch, every breath you tried—and failed—to steady.
You didn’t know where to look—his eyes, his mouth, the flex of muscle every time he moved, like he was built to do this.
“Tell me you want this,” he said, voice hoarse now, like he was hanging on by a thread.
“I want this,” you whispered, lips parted, flushed.
He hovered just over your mouth, not kissing you yet.
“Say my name.”
You whimpered. “Hamzah…please”
That was it.
That was all it took.
He kissed you again, rough and passionate, like he needed to stamp himself into your memory. Your hands stayed above your head like he told you, even when your whole body was trembling beneath his.
And when he finally let go of your wrist, his hand didn’t leave—it slid down your arm, slowly, deliberately, until his fingers laced with yours.
The softest touch he’d given you all night.
His forehead pressed to yours, breath ragged.
“Too late to change your mind now,” he muttered.
You smiled, “was never gonna.”
His other hand slowly reaching for the waistband of your shorts—not taking them off—only sliding it under, making you go insane, more and more by seconds.
A soft whine escaped your lips—quickly covering them with your hand—as he teasingly rubbed your clothed clit in a slow circular motion.
“Sensitive,” he murmured, tongue brushing over the marks he’d just left. “Didn’t think I’d get you like this so fast.”
Your eyes fluttered closed. “You’re cocky.”
“You love it.”
He was right. You did.
It was maddening.
He slipped your panties to the side, dragging his fingers, painfully slow along the line of your wet folds. Restrained, soft moans leaving your mouth.
Hamzah seemed to get more fascinated by the fact that you were trying so hard to remain calm and silent. He wanted to hear your voice. Even if that meant getting caught
He slid one finger inside you, slowly pumping it in and out, doing that one circular motion every time—searching for your g-spot while also making sure not to hurt you.
“Oh- fuck Hamzah” a moan slipped. Your high forming rapidly. Your head falling deeper onto your pillow as your hands met with his, desperately trying to slow him down
And then he knew.
He knew that was it—your sweet spot.
Purposely picking up the pace, he added another finger. Making a mess out of you as he hit the same. exact. spot. every time
“At this point, you’re going to cut my fingers off.” he teased. Pointing how hard you were wrapping your walls around his fingers.
Instinctively you bit back the noise rising in your throat as the knot on your stomach was sluggishly untying itself. Him teasing you even when you’re about to orgasm definitely was the cherry on top of the cake.
You clenched your fists into the sheets beneath you. Silently moaning—as much as you could. Your whole body shivered, soon enough, your cum dripping on his fingers.
Hamzah let out a soft, low, laugh
He was enjoying this.
Too much.
“I hate you,” you breathed.
He smiled against your cheek. “You’ll hate me more tomorrow.”
He kissed you once more—lazy, lingering, cruel in how good it felt—and then finally pulled away. Slow. Reluctant. Like it physically pained him to stop.
And maybe it did.
He sat on the edge of the bed now, back to you, running a hand through his outgrown buzz, chest rising and falling with restraint. You sat up behind him, dazed, hair a mess, lips bruised, body aching for more.
He glanced back over his shoulder.
“T-shirt looks better off of you than I thought it would.”
You threw a pillow at him.
He caught it without looking.Smirking.
“Get some sleep, princess,” he said as he stood, already backing toward the door, shirt still forgotten somewhere on your floor. “I’ll see you in the morning.”
And just like that—
He was gone.
Leaving you hot, breathless, and completely wrecked—without ever taking anything at all.
────୨ৎ────
✎ a/n: gotta love me a power top 😙
Originally this was supposed to be smaller but i just wanted to add more and more tension. Bear with me ❤️ HOPE YOU ENJOYED THAT!
#hamzah angst#hamzah fic#hamzah imagines#hamzah x reader#hamzah x y/n#hamzahsmut#hamzahthefanatasticxreader#hamzahthefantastic#martin and hamzah#slushie#slushy virus#slushy noobz#hamzah fluff#smut#Spotify#fanfic#booklr#tension#teasing#flirtyvibes#flirt
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hey there 😚😏
#flirtyvibes#where your eyes linger#great legs#legs#feetpics#feetcurves#older women do it better#older beauty#older ladies
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You wanna have fun ? Send a dm now ❤️🥰
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I love my pretty nipples.
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We all love a little dirty talk and learning to flirt with our partners 😉!!
Another commission I ordered!! ENJOY MY LOVELY SHIPPERS!!
#transformers whirl#transformers#transformers rung#rung#maccadam#otp!#my otp forever#fight me#the power of love#cyclonus#flirtyvibes#flirt#CUMINMYEYE
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Heeeyyy! Would you write one of where Zayne gets jealous over reader? They are married ofc and let’s say another handsome man flirts with reader who is oblivious to it cuz ofc she only has her heart on Zayne. Zayne gets protective and jealous like in that card with Dr. Carter who gave mc flowers. Zayne takes reader to a quieter spot or home. Reader ask if he’s ok and he denies he was jealous. It makes reader sappy and blushing cuz zayne loves her a lot she teases him and he kisses her passionately to shut her up and says he was worried. OFC reader reassures him she only loves her snowman. You can write the location and event however you want. Thanks.
I took quite a different angle for this one, hopefully it still hit the vibes you're looking for! I play it off more, so it come off more playful the rest is a bit more subtle 👀 too subtle perhaps? 😭 Let me know what you think! 💕
Actually yk what, I'll make another one later per asks order! But let's say this is a treat also from the req before! 🥳 (But still let me know what you think ahaha)
I already rant about Dr. Carter before so I won't do it again here ahahahaha and yes this is the merge prompt with In Sickness and In Health!
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Jealousy, Revisited
Summary
A teasing spiral of jealousy, hormones, and chaos leads to one very pregnant woman and her maddeningly patient husband bantering their way back to soft, steady love.
Ao3 link
My Masterlist ✨
Notes
Pairing: Zayne x MC/Reader Mutual jealous, flashbacks, silly, banter, flirty, married couple!
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By the time Rose and Caleb leave your home, it’s already late—well past the kids’ bedtime. Serena's been asleep in her room for hours now, worn out from playing with Willow and Jace until her little legs could barely carry her.
The dishes are done, toys picked up, and you're finally curled up on the couch, legs tucked awkwardly under you the best they can with your belly in the way. The twins have been making their presence known all evening, kicking and shifting, and you’re sure at least one of them is practicing acrobatics.
Your hand rests absently on the curve of your stomach, and your hair still smells faintly of garlic from the stir-fry you made earlier, and the scent clings to your sweater like the memory of a full house.
Zayne joins you a moment later, easing down beside you with his usual quiet grace. He drapes a blanket over you, then slides an arm behind your back, hand settling low at your waist and gently curving to support the slight swell of your belly—something he does without thinking, as if his touch belongs there.
“That was quite a gathering, huh?” you murmur, leaning into him.
“Four adults with three kids,” he says. “Felt like a ten-person gathering.”
You huff a quiet laugh. “Speaking of kids, I still can’t believe what Rose told us.”
“I definitely can,” he replies, voice still neutral.
You shoot him a look and pinch at his side, but he only catches your hand in his, thumb brushing gently over your knuckles. “It’s an expression, darling.” Your roll your 'r' a bit more, smiling but still glaring at him. He hums at you, a quiet nudge to keep going.
“Well, I was gonna bring up how Caleb got all jealous when someone complimented Rose’s scarf, but now that we’re talking about this... it reminded me of a certain someone at a certain photo shoot.”
He blinks at you slowly, composed as ever. “That was a normal reaction.”
“Normal, huh?” You raise an eyebrow, but the slight twitch at the corner of his mouth gives him away.
And yeah—you can feel the memory blooming between you again, ridiculous and fond. Back when you’d just started dating—Tara’s dramatic plea, that chaotic photo shoot, the poor student photographer caught in the silent wrath of a very composed, very territorial Zayne Li—
You’re barely halfway through reheating leftovers at Zayne’s apartment—still standing in front of the stove with one socked foot tapping the floor—when your phone lights up with Tara’s name.
You answer with a suspicious, “What did you do?”
“Emergency!” she bursts out.
You blink, already pulling the phone slightly away from your ear. “Didn’t you just get home like... twenty minutes ago?”
“Yeah, but I need you. Come to this studio downtown—my friend’s doing a shoot and one of his models bailed last minute.”
“…Why me?”
“Because you’re symmetrical and mildly photogenic,” she says with the smug confidence of someone who knows you can’t say no. “And also because there’s no way Rose or Lara would agree to this. Come on, I’ll owe you forever. Pleaseeeeee?”
You sigh with all the drama you can muster. “Fine. But you’re buying my coffee tomorrow. And I’m talking fancy coffee. Foam art and ethically sourced beans.”
“Deal!”
You hang up, shutting off the stove with a grumble, then wander down the hall to Zayne’s office. He’s sitting at his desk, posture relaxed, typing something you know is probably more important than it looks.
He glances up the second you knock at the open door.
“Hey, so... change of plan. I’ll be back in an hour. Tara needs help with something.”
He tilts his head, curious. “And that is?”
“I’ve been conscripted into a photography crisis.”
He raises one brow. “Do you need backup?”
You give a small laugh. “Well, if you’re up for it.”
“I am.” He powers off his computer without hesitation, standing smoothly. “Let’s go.”
When you both arrive at the studio, it is a cozy mess, full of soft lighting rigs and mismatched props piled in corners. Fabric-draped chairs, vintage suitcases, fake plants that look real until you touch them. Tara waves you in like she owns the place, already halfway through a neon-pink drink and wielding a clipboard like a sword.
You breeze through the solo shots first—casual poses, exaggerated laughter, dramatic hair flips Tara keeps coaching you through with, “More joy! Less corporate headshot!” She takes a few turns in front of the lens herself, striking mock-model poses with a loud “Yasss” every time the shutter clicks.
It’s not half bad. Honestly? It’s kind of fun.
Until the photographer—a lanky guy with a lemon wedge tattoo on his wrist and a camera lens that looks older than the building—decides the set needs couple shots to balance out the gallery.
He gestures to a standby model. Someone tall, cologne-heavy, and definitely overconfident. He steps forward like he’s auditioning for a cologne commercial, eyes flicking to you, then down to your waist. His hand starts to hover in that awkward, polite way—unsure if he’s supposed to touch.
Then, from behind the lights, Zayne’s voice cuts in.
“Actually, she’s not free.”
The room freezes. The photographer pauses. The cologne guy blinks.
Zayne steps into frame with that quiet, composed stride, like this is just a meeting he’s joining. “I mean—I’m free. She’s dating me. So… using both of us would be better.”
You try to keep the smile off your face. No use. It spreads before you can stop it. “You’re volunteering for photos?”
Zayne meets your eyes without missing a beat. “They’ll look more authentic this way.”
Tara lets out a muffled snrrk from behind her clipboard, clearly thrilled.
The photographer looks between the two of you, then nods. “Right. Yeah, sure. Chemistry’s important, right?”
Zayne’s hand finds your waist with ease, fingers come to rest at your waist like they’ve always belonged there. The first shot is stiff. The second, a little more natural. But the third—when he leans in and brushes his lips against your temple—you feel your whole expression soften without even trying.
Because he’s not acting. Not for a second.
The shutter clicks.
And clicks again.
By the time you’re back in the car, the night folding quiet around you, you can’t help poking at him.
“So… I’m not free, huh?”
He glances at you, one hand resting lazily on the wheel. “You’re still going on about that?”
“You practically growled at that poor guy,” you tease. “I think Tara’s friend was seconds away from reaching for a fire extinguisher.”
“I was being practical.”
“Oh, sure,” you say, leaning your head back against the seat with a grin. “Territorial and practical. Must be a doctor thing.”
He huffs softly, but you catch the way his mouth lifts at the corner. “You’re exaggerating.”
You’re really not—but you let him have that one.
Because that look he gave you when he stepped into the frame? You’ll be thinking about that for days.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
You wiggle your eyebrows at him, feeling the slow, aimless motion of his fingers brushing along the curve of your stomach—familiar and gentle, like he’s memorizing it again for the hundredth time. “So practical of you, dear.”
He snorts softly, voice close against your temple. “It was practical. I was already present.”
“Mmhmm. Definitely not territorial at all,” you murmur, letting your tone drip with sarcasm.
Zayne leans in just enough for his breath to cool your ear. “If you’re talking about what we did after we got home… then yes. That was territorial.”
You laugh and squish his cheeks with both hands, tilting his face toward you before giving him a deliberately exaggerated, wet kiss that leaves him blinking. “Mmm. You’ve come a long way, husband.”
He chuckles, the sound deep in his chest. “Come a long way,” he echoes, then tilts his head, thoughtful. “That reminds me—the lab assistant.”
You raise a brow instantly, suspicious. “Yeah? What about her? Are you finally admitting that you explained things slower because she’s special?”
Zayne’s arm shifts behind you, and he leans into your side with effort, trying to wrap himself around you as much as the baby bump between you will allow. It takes some maneuvering, but eventually, his hand curves gently beneath yours over the swell of your belly.
“Look who’s being territorial now,” he murmurs, far too pleased.
“Mine is justified!” you protest, jabbing a finger lightly into his chest. “Don’t even pretend you didn’t notice how close she was leaning. I’ve seen microbe samples that maintained more personal space.”
He hums like he’s genuinely considering your words, eyes flicking up toward the ceiling in mock thought. “Why do you think I was leaning away from my computer?”
And just like that, the memory sparks back into clarity—sharp, ridiculous, and so vivid that both of you can’t help snorting aloud—
You stop by the hospital one late afternoon—your day off, the weather too nice to waste holed up in your apartment, Rose of course visiting Caleb at Skyhaven—so you think, why not drop by to see Zayne?
You’re still in your casual clothes, hair a little wind-tossed, lunch bag in hand—though let’s be real, it’s mostly dessert. You round the familiar hallway corner, smiling without thinking.
And then you see it.
There’s someone new standing beside Zayne’s desk, angled just enough to invade what should be neutral ground. You’ve never seen her before—probably an intern, maybe new staff—but what gets you isn’t her badge or the tablet in her hand. It’s the way she’s leaning in just a bit too close, blinking up at the screen like she’s never seen a rib cage in her life.
Zayne’s voice is even, professional, explaining some patient form or scan, pointing something out with his pen. But your eyes narrow immediately the moment her shoulder brushes against his.
From the way she’s deferring to him, she’s likely assigned to assist Greyson. Which raises the real question: where the hell is Greyson?
You don’t say anything. Not yet.
Instead, you stroll in like you belong—which you do—and round the desk casually, then lean in from the other side. Your arm wraps lazily around Zayne’s shoulders, lightly nudging the woman’s shoulder—which is barely there to begin with, your chin nearly brushing his temple.
“Do you always explain things this slowly,” you say, voice all sugar and silk, “or is she special?”
Zayne pauses—not startled, not flustered. He simply glances toward you, reading the humor beneath your tone. Then he exhales the faintest breath of a laugh.
“She was asking about patient chart formatting,” he says mildly. “I assumed she wanted the complete explanation.”
You raise a brow at him, just a touch dramatic. “You assumed wrong.”
The assistant stiffens. “Oh—I didn’t know you had a—”
“Girlfriend,” Zayne finishes, calm as anything—like it’s just another line in a report. “She brings me lunch.”
You can feel the ripple of awkwardness roll through the intern, and your smile only grows as you set the bag on his desk. “That’s right,” you say brightly. “I also pick him up sometimes. So he doesn’t get hit on by interns with no sense of personal space.”
The poor girl looks utterly mortified. “I—I just thought… um. He should eat first! I can ask Dr. Greyson later—sorry—”
And then she’s gone, heels clicking as she practically speed-walks toward the hallway.
You glance back at Zayne, who watches her leave with a perfectly neutral expression, then reaches for your hand.
“She was new,” he says after a beat. “I think this was her third day.”
“Mmm-hmm,” you murmur, leaning in to press an exaggerated kiss to his cheek, leaving a faint imprint of your gloss. “Be honest. You liked me jealous.”
His hand turns in yours, lacing your fingers together. “I like that you showed up.”
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
“Damn Greyson! Why is he eating lunch at that time?” you grumble, gesturing vaguely like your words could summon the man to defend himself.
Beside you, Zayne lets out a quiet chuckle, the kind that makes your chest warm. He doesn’t argue—though from the look on his face, he probably knows Greyson wasn’t even on break yet at the time. But because Serena adores Greyson and you’re currently on a blame-streak, Zayne lets it go. Probably even enjoying it.
His thumb grazing gently along your side. You glance over at him, narrowing your eyes. “You did like me jealous.”
He doesn’t deny it.
Instead, his lips press softly to the crown of your head, a quiet affection in the gesture. “You’re more expressive than I am,” he murmurs. “It was… reassuring.”
You snort. “You mean hot.”
“Also that.” His fingers trace a lazy circle against the curve of your stomach—
When both of you feel it. A sudden, firm kick.
You both still.
Zayne’s eyes go wide for half a second, a startled laugh escaping him before he glances at you, equal parts amazed and amused.
“They're definitely on your side,” you mutter, hand instinctively covering his like you’re both trying to catch the moment again.
He smiles, quieter now, thumb brushing just beneath your navel. “They got your timing.”
There’s a beat. A shared breath. Then he shifts, his voice going warm with that teasing clarity that always finds the softest spots.
“Well, what I was gonna say before… you get this look when you’re jealous. Composed, but pointed. Like you’re sharpening your words before you even speak.”
Your head lifts slowly, just enough to give him a look. “You find that hot?”
He meets your eyes, deadpan, not even a flicker of hesitation. “Decidedly.”
You groan, flopping your very pregnant self down onto the couch in what you intend to be a dramatic collapse, except… it’s more like a slow-motion descent. Your body is doing its best. “Ugh. I enable you.”
“You encourage me,” Zayne says smoothly.
“Same thing,” you mutter, slumped sideways now, rubbing a palm along your belly like you’re checking whose side the twins are still on.
He hums again, hands adjusting the cushion behind you. And then, like it just came to him. “Like that time with the nurse.”
You gasp. “Oh my god. The one with the laugh?”
Zayne shakes his head, mouth flattening. “She laughed at everything. Even when I told her someone coded last shift.”
You sit up again—well, technically you haven’t fully hit the cushions yet, so it’s not as hard as it could’ve been. But you do it with a triumphant kind of energy, grinning like it’s still fresh. “Okay, that one was definitely your fault. You were not leaving.”
“I was trying,” he says, completely sincere, “and being polite.”
“She touched your arm.”
He gives you a look, calm as ever. “I pulled back right away.”
You raise a brow, mimicking his deadpan tone. “You pulled back politely.”
His fingers slide up to brush under your chin, tilting your face toward his with ridiculous delicacy. “Would you have preferred impolite?”
And your brain suddenly time-warps. The smell of antiseptic. The low drone of machines. The memory hits fast—
You arrive at the hospital to pick Zayne up—technically early, but that is half the fun. His shift has an hour left, and sure, he hasn’t texted yet, but he won’t mind
You like talking to Yvonne while you wait anyway. She runs the front desk for the cardiology wing like it is her personal kingdom—knows every patient by name and every doctor’s bad habit. She spots you walking in and greets you with a wink. “He’s not out yet, but I bet you’ll lure him off the floor like usual.”
That’s the plan. Until you hear it.
Laughter. Not Yvonne’s signature cackle, and obviously you just passed her—not Greyson’s chaotic snort. No, this one is… breathy. Too polished. Too practiced.
You slow your pace, following the sound down the corridor, heels echoing soft clicks on the linoleum. The nurse’s laugh rings again, light and almost sing-song, followed by Zayne’s voice. Calm. Polite. Controlled, like always. He’s probably responding to whatever she said with a quiet nod or an actual answer, depending on how much patience he has left today.
You find them near the nurse’s station, bent over the same file. She stands too close—one manicured hand on the back of his chair, the other drumming polished nails against the counter like she couldn’t wait for an excuse to lean in again.
Your jaw twitches. But you smile.
Two more steps and you are there. No words, just a hand on Zayne’s shoulder, a slow kiss to his cheek—sweet, theatrical, and clearly. This seat’s taken.
“Can’t believe I have to share you with this whole building,” you murmur, voice dipped in velvet steel.
Your gaze slid to her. Brief. Pointed. Like a scalpel left out on the tray.
Zayne doesn’t miss a beat. “I’ll be off shift in an hour.”
You smile at him like he hangs the moon. “Make it thirty minutes.”
The nurse falters. “Oh—I… I should check the supply cart.”
Of course you should, you think.
She vanishes faster than she showed up, file in hand and laugh tucked away like it is never there.
You don’t even get the chance to figure out what is supposedly so hilarious in the paperwork.
Zayne glances up at you, expression unreadable as ever, but his hand finds yours under the desk. “I wasn’t laughing.”
“I noticed,” you say, your tone softer now as you squeeze his fingers. “But she was practically hanging off your stethoscope.”
He tilts his head like he’s about to argue, but just then, Yvonne calls from the receptionist's desk. “You chasing off nurses again, sweetheart?”
You turn toward her, unapologetic. “Just the persistent ones.”
She grins. “Might want to give Greyson a warning. One of the surgical interns has been asking if he’s single.”
Behind you, Zayne exhales a quiet sigh, and you feel him tug your hand a little closer.
“Make it twenty minutes,” you murmur—because honestly, you’re already more than halfway to dragging him out yourself.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Your voice is smug. “You liked that one too, didn’t you?”
Zayne exhales through a quiet laugh, his hand still tracing easy, lazy circles against your side. “I liked knowing you wanted me visibly.”
You bump his knee gently, playful. “You act so calm, but you eat it up.”
He tilts his head just slightly, eyes glinting. “It’s mutual, isn’t it?”
“…Maybe.” You say it like it’s not obvious—like you’re not halfway ready to start a fight over a giggle. Then you pause. Something clicks.
Your body shifts in his arms, careful but suddenly full of energy, and you sit up straighter, barely suppressing your grin. “Wait—wait. Oh my god, that reminds me.”
Zayne hums, patient, amused. “There’s too much, if we list them all tonight.”
“Not mine!” You jab a finger lightly at his chest. “Your moment. Like—okay. Remember when we were dating and you were always too polite to admit you were jealous? All that, ‘she’s allowed to have friends’ nonsense?”
“It wasn’t nonsense,” he says, dry as ever.
You wave that away like it's air. “But then the moment we got married? Subtlety? Gone. Evaporated. Poof. Like with that barista.”
Zayne goes still. And you know he remembers.
You do too.
The memory hits in color and taste. Warm light, the smell of croissants, and the hiss of milk steaming behind the counter—
It’s a lazy mid-morning on your day off—the kind that feels rare lately, with both of you back in rotation, juggling reports, late calls, and the unpredictability of your jobs.
But today clicks into place. No emergencies, no shift swaps. Just you, Zayne, and your favorite little café tucked between buildings like a secret.
The place is quiet at this hour, filled with the soft hiss of espresso machines and low conversation. The usual barista isn’t there, though. Instead, a new guy stands behind the counter, fresh-faced and clearly too eager. He straightens up the moment you step forward.
“Good morning,” he said, grinning wide. “What can I get for you?”
You give your usual order, tone polite but relaxed. Before you can even pull out your card, he’s already waving it off.
“On the house,” he says smoothly, eyes flicking to the name you’ve given. “For someone with such a lovely name.”
You blink, caught off guard. “Oh, um… thanks?”
He leaned slightly over the counter. “Do you come here often?”
And that’s when you feel it—the familiar presence at your side, quiet but solid. Zayne steps up beside you, the move casual but practiced, like his body knows exactly where to be. One arm slid around your waist, anchoring you against him in a way that didn’t look aggressive but definitely sent a message.
“We’re married,” he said, voice even. “And we’d like to eat before the lunchtime passes.. Please get our order ready.”
No inflection. No visible emotion. But somehow, it had the same weight as a slammed door.
The barista blinked, his confidence faltering. “R-right. Uh, coming right up.”
Zayne didn’t look away until the guy turned to prep your drinks. Only then does he guide you toward your favorite spot by the window, his hand still resting on your back.
You sit down, trying to suppress the laugh that’s already building. The second the croissant touches your lips, it slips out anyway.
“Someone’s jealous,” you teased, nudging his knee under the table.
Zayne doesn’t miss a beat. “You’re my wife. It’s my right.”
You nearly choke. You stare at him, stunned, then snort-laugh with half a croissant still in your mouth. “Oh my god—Zayne.”
He lifts his cup, sipping without so much as a flicker of amusement. “I was polite.”
You are grinning despite yourself. “You were terrifying.”
He arches an eyebrow, finally meeting your gaze. “He was about to pay for you.”
“Which I didn’t even ask for.”
Zayne doesn’t respond, but the faintest tug at the corner of his mouth betrays him. Just a little.
You reach across the table, brushing your fingers over his. “You know you don’t have to get territorial, right?” And wiggling your finger that clearly has your wedding ring on.
“I know,” he said quietly. “But I want to.”
That made you pause.
There was something almost reverent in his tone—not possessive in the shallow sense, but protective in a way that made your chest ache a little. Like he was always just waiting for the chance to stake his quiet claim.
You squeezed his hand. “You’re lucky I like it.”
He gives you a look that says that’s another reason why he did it. He laces his fingers through yours, as if he never planned on letting go.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
You’re laughing into his shoulder again, your voice muffled and warm against the fabric of his shirt. “You really said that. Zero hesitation.”
Zayne doesn’t even pretend to deny it. He just shrugs, utterly composed. “We are married.”
You pull back enough to look at him, amusement still bubbling under your breath. “Oh, so now it’s legalized jealousy?”
“I call it efficient communication.”
You snort, threading your fingers through his, letting your thumb trace absent circles over his knuckles. His hand is cool, like always, but familiar. Grounding. “You used to pretend you didn’t care.”
He shifts, just enough to tilt his head your way, lips curving ever so faintly. “I still don’t,” he says smoothly. “Unless I do.”
You give him a flat look, stifling a snort. “That’s not a real sentence.”
“It is if you understand me.”
And the worst part is—you do.
You sigh, letting your head fall lightly against his shoulder again. “You’re so smug with your logic.”
“I’m consistent.”
“That’s the same thing,” you grumble.
His fingers tighten gently around yours, silent in his agreement.
You nudge his leg, casual and easy, but your grin is sly now. “Well, since we’re already deep in the jealousy chronicles, might as well air everything, right?”
Zayne lifts a brow, just slightly. “Yours or mine?”
You tap your chin with mock thoughtfulness. “Yours, of course.”
His expression doesn’t change, but his grip on your hand shifts just slightly—like he already knows which story you’re about to bring up.
And he’s bracing for it—
It���s some formal alumni gathering—an evening reception at a rented hall near your old high school, complete with dim lighting, hors d'oeuvres, and a lot of people pretending not to be comparing paychecks and hairlines.
Rose and Caleb guilt-trip you into going, insisting it’ll be fun, a reunion, just a quick drop-in before dinner. Of course, they disappear into the crowd the second you arrive, catching up with old teammates and classmates like they’d never left.
You wouldn't be here at all if Zayne weren’t with you right now. He doesn’t know anyone here except the three of you, but he shows up in a tailored black suit and lets you lead the way in, no complaints. Just quiet presence, fingers brushing the small of your back as you moved through the crowd.
You’re not even halfway through the evening when you run into him.
That classmate—the one who used to flirt with you in that annoying way that always bordered on too much. He hadn’t changed. Same cocky smile, same over-familiar tone, like the years since high school were just a brief intermission. He spots you across the room and makes a beeline over, arms already open before you can brace for it.
His hug lasted a second too long. The kind that wasn’t exactly inappropriate, but lingered. Like he thought he still had some unspoken claim.
And when he pulled back, his eyes did a slow sweep down your dress with a grin that said he liked what he saw—and he didn’t care how obvious he was being about it.
“Wow,” he said, all teeth. “You look amazing. Didn’t think I’d get lucky running into you tonight.”
Zayne is at your side the whole time, calm and unreadable. You introduce them, a little stiffly. The classmate offered his hand, and Zayne took it without hesitation, his grip polite, firm. Nothing dramatic. No cold stare. Just the picture of poised indifference.
But partway through the guy’s rambling attempt at flirtation disguised as nostalgia, Zayne’s hand finds yours. Effortless. Natural. His fingers laced through yours, warm and steady, like he’d been planning it all evening.
And then, without breaking eye contact with the guy, his thumb started brushing slowly across the surface of your wedding ring—over and over, like he was rediscovering the shine, polishing it just so.
You didn’t say anything. You didn’t need to.
The guy keeps talking a little longer, but there is a shift. His smile dims a shade, that false confidence faltering. And eventually—finally—he made some excuse about needing another drink and walked off with a tighter jaw than before.
Zayne’s expression doesn’t change. He just stands there for a moment, looking in the direction the guy disappeared.
Then, quiet as ever, he murmured, “Interesting choice of cologne.”
You glanced up at him, trying not to smile.
“Pity about the attitude,” he added, like it was an afterthought. Like he was reviewing wine.
You snorted. “Zayne.”
“He was being presumptuous.”
“You didn’t say anything.”
“I didn’t need to.”
You kissed him later that night. Half-laughing, half-pressed-up-against-the-door, telling him how annoyingly hot he was when he got like that. The way he didn’t need to raise his voice to make a point. The way his thumb moved over your ring like he could remind the world it existed without ever having to say the words.
He only said, “I know,” before kissing you again—slow, deep, deliberate.
And the thing was, he did know.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
You sigh with dramatic satisfaction as you sink deeper into his chest. “What a night.”
Zayne raises an eyebrow without turning his head. “The reunion?”
You tug gently at his cheek, just enough to make him glance down at you. “You know I’m talking about after the reunion. The reunion itself was… fine. Would’ve been better if we hadn’t run into that guy, but hey—the ending? Flawless.”
You wink at him. His mouth doesn’t curve, but his arm shifts around your waist, pulling you just a little closer—like a quiet confirmation that, yes, he remembers exactly how the night ended too.
“Marriage definitely has its advantages,” he says, voice low, almost amused. He lifts your hand with ease and presses a kiss to your knuckles, then to the band on your ring finger. Slow. Purposeful. Like he’s sealing something.
Heat flickers up your neck—ridiculous, really, considering how long you’ve been together. But when he acts like this, all calm devotion wrapped in subtle possessiveness? Yeah, it still does things to you.
“You’re so annoying,” you mumble, which only earns you a second kiss against your palm to your fingers, as if to say he knows.
Which reminds you—another story, another memory you’re still not over. “And ohhh, remember that nurse?”
Zayne’s brows pinch slightly, thoughtful. “Which one?”
“There’s too many nurses,” you snort, already laughing. You’re about to tease him for being smug when another memory slips in—uninvited, but impossible to forget.
You remember white coats, antiseptic lighting, and a nurse with a clipboard and too much charm—
You tell yourself you’re just dropping by the hospital. Totally normal thing to do. Casual, innocent. Maybe you even threw in a “since I’m already in the area” excuse just to make yourself feel more justified. Not that anyone was buying it—including yourself. But hey, you missed him. Sue you. He’s your husband. You’re allowed to.
Zayne texts that he’s finishing up a case and will meet you in a few minutes, so you linger near the nurses’ station, catching up with Yvonne until she’s paged away.
Left to your own devices, you lean against the counter, scrolling aimlessly through your phone. A few familiar faces pass by, waving or stopping to say hi. At this point, you’re basically a regular—if not by role, then by reputation. Everyone in the cardiology wing knows exactly who you are.
Which is probably why it catches you a little off guard when a nurse you don’t recognize sidles up beside you, clipboard tucked to her chest and a mischievous spark in her eye.
She gives you a once-over—not unfriendly, just… curious. Measuring. “You must be Mrs. Doctor Li,” she says, with the kind of grin that suggests she’s been waiting to use that line.
You blink, smiling politely. “That’s me.”
She sighs dramatically. “Well, now I’m jealous. Visiting your husband again? You sure you don’t wanna switch places for the day?” Her tone is playful, but there’s a tilt to her voice, a nudge to the clipboard, that gives it a little edge. Half-joking, half… not.
You open your mouth to offer some equally light reply, maybe something about how he didn’t do the dishes this morning, so really she’s dodging a bullet—but you don’t get the chance.
Zayne’s presence slides into the scene without warning. He appears at your side with the kind of quiet precision that makes you wonder just how long he’s been standing there. No irritation on his face. No tension in his posture. Just calm, composed Zayne, standing like he’d always been there.
“There’s only one Mrs. Li,” he says, voice smooth and steady. Not sharp. Not cold. Just final.
Then, after a deliberate pause, he added, “No substitutions accepted.”
The nurse’s laugh comes a second too late. “Right, right. Just teasing,” she says as she politely excuses herself.
Zayne didn’t acknowledge that part. His gaze had already shifted fully to you, and though his expression barely changed, there was a slight lift at the corner of his mouth—barely noticeable to anyone else, but you caught it immediately.
You bit back your grin, elbowing him lightly. “Smooth.”
He tilted his head slightly, brushing his knuckles against your back like it was just another ordinary motion. “I’m married,” he said again, quieter this time.
Like it explained everything.
And the thing was—it did. Your stomach did a ridiculous little flip. God, he was good at this.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
“Why are you so popular?” you complain, settling into the couch with a dramatic flop that your current state of pregnancy doesn’t fully allow. This time, Zayne actually helps you lay down slowly, so you successfully lay down.
After that, he’s right back again, still leaning toward you, currently rubbing slow circles into your lower back, glancing down at you with a patient look.
“Actually, don’t answer that,” you add before he can say anything, waving a hand in the air. “Of course my husband’s popular. But.” You let out a long, theatrical sigh. “It’s hard work out here. I’m trying, okay? Being subtle.”
Zayne shifts a little, adjusting the throw blanket over your lap. “You,” he says evenly, “and subtle is not really…”
He tilts his head slightly, searching for the right word, then settles on a diplomatic. “Correct.”
You gasp, swatting weakly at his chest. “Hey! I can be subtle. I’ve done subtle.”
The way he looks at you makes it clear he’s flipping through his internal memory log and finding no evidence to support your claim.
You squint at him. “I have! I think having Serena definitely helped increasing my subtlety.”
Zayne’s hand stills against your back. He gives you a very specific look. A knowing look. One that makes you narrow your eyes right back.
“What?” you say, suspicious.
“The hospital event,” he says, voice smooth. “Not long after Serena was born.”
You blink. “Ah…” you murmur, sinking further into the cushions as the memory catches up—
It’s supposed to be one of those harmless little holiday things—string lights hung too high for anyone to fix properly, half-hearted holiday music looping from a speaker no one could find, and tables covered in everything from fruitcake to suspiciously undercooked mini quiches. The pediatric wing outdoes itself in decorations, and someone even sticks paper antlers on the automatic doors.
You arrive with Serena balanced comfortably on your hip, her winter hat already sliding sideways. Zayne’s fingers lace with yours, his free hand tugging the tiny hat back into place with the same quiet precision he uses for stitching incisions. You’re not technically invited, but no one ever questions you showing up anymore—not when most of the cardiology staff knows Serena by name and you by association.
It’s cozy. Festive. Fine.
Until it isn’t.
She’s young. Polished. One of the newer nurses you haven’t seen before. The kind who probably brings her own hand-poured coffee in every morning and keeps pens organized by color. She drifts over just as Zayne finishes recounting how Serena discovers snow for the first time—specifically by licking a half-buried garden light.
“Oh my God,” she laughs, lightly tapping his arm like she’s known him forever. “You’re such a natural. I mean—look at her.”
You stiffen, just slightly. Zayne, as always, remains composed. Serena stares back at the nurse with the unimpressed expression of a child who’s recently tried to eat a pinecone and been stopped.
The nurse crouches, eyes on Serena, her voice taking on that high-pitched baby-talk edge. “You’re such a daddy’s girl, aren’t you?”
Your smile is immediate. Controlled. Just a little too sharp around the edges. “She is,” you say, your tone smooth as silk.
Then, sweetly—just a beat too slow—
“Just like I am.”
The pause hits like a dropped ornament.
Zayne doesn’t say anything. He doesn’t have to. His fingers tighten around yours—not harsh, not even particularly firm. Just a subtle squeeze. A silent, not here. Not in front of the inflatable Santa.
The nurse blinks. Straightens. Her smile doesn’t falter, but the light behind it dims a notch. “Right,” she says with a laugh, already half-stepping away. “Well—happy Holidays!”
Zayne offers a polite nod.
You watch her walk off with a sip of your lukewarm cocoa, pretending you didn’t just drop a bomb in front of the holiday trees.
Zayne leans in, brushing a kiss to Serena’s temple. Then, quietly, near your ear. “You’re subtle like a sledgehammer.”
You hum. “I don’t know what you’re talking about. That is subtle.”
He gives a small chuckle, a smile playing at the corner of his mouth. “Subtle or not, you do have a way of clearing a room.”
You tilt your head slightly, just enough to catch his eyes. “And yet you’re always the one standing next to me when the dust settles.”
There’s a flicker in his expression—barely a breath of a smile, but unmistakably fond. His hand finds your back again, calm and warm.
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“I mean—that was subtle!” you insist, gesturing dramatically like you’re presenting undeniable evidence.
Zayne’s gaze drifts to you with that same unreadable calm, one brow ticking upward—just enough to make his opinion known without a word. The exact same look he gets when you insist that cookies count as a balanced breakfast.
You narrow your eyes at him, already seeing through his silence. “Don’t give me that face.”
His lips press together in that polite, I’m not saying anything expression, which only makes you groan.
“She deserved it!” you declare, throwing your hands up.
“I didn’t say she didn’t,” he replies smoothly, not missing a beat.
“Exactly!” You jab a finger at him, triumphant. “Just like that preschool teacher!”
That earns you a faint flicker of amusement in his eyes—subtle, but you catch it. "Now that you mention it, the one before is definitely subtle."
Just like you both remember it—
It happens the first week of Serena’s new preschool.
Zayne has been picking up Serena for the whole week. He’s been getting night shifts, and he says he likes being the one she sees first when class lets out, as long as he can for now.
You haven’t argued—why would you? Seeing your husband so excited is very cute. So today, you tagged along, half for the company, half to see for yourself where your daughter’s been spending her days.
The building itself is warm and cheerful, the kind of place with sunlight filtering through paper cutout leaves and tiny rain boots lined up like soldiers beneath name-tagged cubbies. You find Serena’s cubby easily—her name spelled in glitter glue above what looks like a drawing of a rabbit. Or a potato. Possibly both.
Then the teacher approaches.
Young. Bright-eyed. The kind of person who always sounds like she’s narrating a children’s book. Which is probably good for preschool, but you’ve been in a mood lately, so you try to rein it in. Try.
“Oh! You must be Serena’s parents,” she chirps, clasping her hands in front of her chest like she’s been waiting all day to greet you. “She’s an absolute sweetheart—so independent! And Dr. Li, we just love when you stop by. It’s so refreshing to see a dad who’s so involved.”
Your smile curls automatically. “He’s very involved.”
She giggles, like that’s the best news she’s heard all week. “You’d be surprised how rare that is. He even helped her get her shoes on last time! I thought that was just the cutest—”
You tilt your head, letting your smile widen by a millimeter. Just enough to shift the air between you.
“Yes,” you say, syrup-thick. “He’s the best. Hands-on dad, great cook, folds laundry without being asked. Fantastic memory. Always remembers everything.”
The teacher blinks, her expression still sunny—but maybe a little confused by the turn of the conversation.
“And,” you add, voice still as warm as a cup of freshly brewed tea, “he’s mine.”
You let that hang a beat before tacking on, casually.
“Want me to say it slower?”
The smile on her face doesn’t quite reach her eyes anymore. You can see her trying to figure out whether you’re joking—and more importantly, whether it’s safe to laugh.
Zayne clears his throat beside you. “I’ll just… get Serena’s bag.”
And off he goes, calm as ever, not even pretending to hurry.
You watch him go with the slow, deliberate blink of a woman who knows exactly what she just did—and would do it again without hesitation.
The teacher stands there, fingers twisting slightly in the hem of her cardigan. “He’s, um. Very lucky.”
You nod, voice breezy. “He is.”
She moves on—quickly.
And that’s the end of that.
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“I know when someone’s being nice and when they’re being flirty, alright!”
“Yes, darling.”
You narrow your eyes at him. “Are you making fun of me right now?”
Zayne raises both hands in a show of innocence, his voice all polite calm as usual. “Me? Making fun my pregnant wife? That’s just harsh.”
You shove him lightly with a scoff, which really only makes him lean into it more. When you push yourself up from the couch, it’s slow going—your hand pressing to the small of your back, a little grunt escaping before you can stop it.
Zayne’s hand is already there to steady you. Of course it is.
You swat him off with a fussy flick of your wrist. “I’m fine.”
“I never said you weren’t.”
“I want to sleep,” you grumble, shuffling toward the hallway. “You can leave your pregnant wife alone.”
Behind you, you hear the slight panic in his voice. “Love—”
You turn around, walking backward now with one hand cradling your belly. “Don’t ‘love’ me. You’re popular. Go flirt with someone else.”
His lips twitches—just slightly. “You started this.”
“Oh, please. You got weirdly quiet about that nurse.”
“I was being polite,” he says smoothly. “And strategic. Unlike some people, I don’t threaten strangers in front of the holiday trees.”
You stop your walk and narrow your eyes at him.
Slowly he says, “I mean… I should’ve told them first.”
You huff, “Don’t patronize me!”
Zayne’s mouth opens and closes, like he’s trying to think of a way to reply to his very pregnant, very hormonal wife. You just cross your arms waiting for his reply.
Then finally he settles with. “I’m not patronizing. I’m… negotiating.”
“With who?” Raising your eyebrow at him.
He gestures vaguely between you. “The situation.”
You snort. “Oh, so now I’m a situation?”
“You’re always a situation.”
“You take that back.” You gape at him, half-offended, half-delighted.
He leans in a little. “Make me.”
Your mouth opens again—primed for another dramatic comeback—but instead you let out a laugh that bubbles up before you can stop it. You hate that he’s funny when you’re trying to be serious. You love that he’s funny when you’re trying to be serious.
“Ugh,” you mutter, defeated, and turn to waddle away again. “I should make you go sleep with that inflatable Santa.”
Zayne catches your wrist gently before you can get too far, and this time he doesn’t say anything right away. Just pulls you in with that quiet, careful steadiness of his until your foreheads bump softly together.
His voice is low when it comes. “You know it’s only ever you, right?”
You try—really try—not to melt at that. You fail.
You stare at him, unblinking. “That’s cheating. You can’t just go soft and sweet after arguing your case.”
Zayne’s mouth curves—barely. “I thought you liked it when I went soft and sweet.”
You squint. “Not when it makes me lose.”
He hums, the sound low and amused as he brushes his thumb lightly along your wrist. “You never lose.”
You open your mouth. Pause. Then close it again with a huff because… yeah, okay. That was good. And unfair.
Closing your eyes for a second. Just a second. you finally murmur, “And yeah,” softer now. “I know, it’s the same for me—you’re the only one, too. Then and now.”
He leans in, brushing a kiss just under your brow, the barest hint of a smile in his voice when he says, “Even when you’re being ridiculous.”
You sigh dramatically. “That’s your favorite version of me.”
“It’s the only one I get.”
You try not to smile. Fail again. With a long-suffering sigh that doesn't quite hide your fondness, you mutter, “You’re lucky I’m too much in a need of cuddles to make you sleep on the couch.”
“My wife does say I give best cuddles,” he murmurs, presses a kiss to your temple again—soft and steady, like the kind of promise that doesn't need to be spoken out loud.
You lean into it without meaning to. Maybe you’re a little tired. Maybe you're just too in love to keep pretending you're mad.
“…Fine,” you mutter. “You can come to bed.”
“Thank you for your mercy.”
“Don’t make me change my mind.”
He doesn’t. He just smiles—barely there, but warm—and shifts his hand to your back again, that familiar pressure you’ve come to depend on more than you’d ever admit out loud.
And so you let him guide you, quiet and close, down the hallway and into the hush of your shared space. Feet aching. Belly heavy. Heart annoyingly full.
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Notes
My stubborn ass make me finish this today even though I should be sleeping, so if there's any typo excuses me and please point it out 😵💕 Also this is way shorter I suppose, I mean in term of snippet it feel shorter, or that might just be me ;-; Anyway! Hope y'all enjoy! Let me know actually, this is also a new angle...
I was editing to add the rest of the series part but it was too long ahahaha so here's just the whole list: Parenthood AU Masterlist ✨
Although if you missed the Newlyweds series! Here How it all happen And also the Pregnancy series, starting with Try For Baby
#love and deepspace#love and deep space#loveanddeepspace#lads zayne#lads#zayne love and deepspace#lads mc#lads fanfic#li shen#jealousy#jealous#banter#silly#playful#flirtyvibes#feeling flirty#lads x reader#lads au#married couple#married life#established relationship#flashback#reminiscing#zayne li#lnds zayne#zayne x reader#zayne x mc#zayne fluff#fluff
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If I am flirting back with you, then yes, I am also interested in fucking you.
#mine#ted talks#mutuals#flirty girl#flirtatious#flirting#flirt with me#flirtyvibes#fuck me already#fyp#tumblr fyp#fypシ
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Selfie 😽
#big tiddy gf#feeling naughty#big tiddy wife#big breasted women#big tiddy committee#im bored#selfie 🤳#flirty girl#self love#flirtyvibes
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Too Chicken?
Tension simmers between two stubborn souls who speak fluent sarcasm and hide too much behind sharp words. One supply room. One poorly placed box. And maybe—finally—something they’ve both been avoiding.
Pairing: Floyd Talbert x Reader
Prompt: “That’s a dangerous look you’re giving me.”
Word Count: ~2,700
Genre: Enemies to Lovers (ish), fluff and A LOT of sexual tension
Setting: Carentan post-liberation, supply quarters
Warning: Contains unresolved sexual tension that finally gets resolved, Floyd Talbert being dangerously hot, sarcastic flirt wars, a Joe Liebgott jump scare, and 1 shelf that almost caused a war. Proceed with caution and a fan.
Note || Look, I tried to write slow burn. I swear I did. But Floyd Talbert opened his mouth, started smirking, and suddenly there was unresolved sexual tension flying through the air like shrapnel in Normandy. Shoutout to Lieb for playing Cupid and third wheel. He’s thriving.
gotxpenny's masterlist band of brothers masterlist
The mud was ankle-deep and the sky hung low like it hadn’t breathed in days.
Floyd Talbert trudged along the patrol line, boots soaked, rifle slung, eyes scanning the fields like something might actually happen today. It wouldn’t. Nothing ever did lately. But he supposed going through the motions gave everyone a sense of purpose, of control. Some version of normal.
Joe Liebgott walked beside him, chewing his gum like he was trying to kill it. They hadn't said much. Didn’t need to. Not until Joe side-eyed Floyd for the third time that morning so Talbert decided to break the ice, “Don’t look at me like that,” Floyd had muttered that morning, trudging through half-frozen mud on patrol.
Joe had just grinned, “I’m not the one mooning over the company’s flirt.”
“I’m not mooning,” Floyd snapped, “She’s just—she’s just mouthy. That’s all.”
“You always get real quiet after she talks to you.”
Floyd didn’t look at him, “No I don’t," Joe gave him a look. Floyd sighed, “She talks to everyone, Joe. That’s what she does.”
“Not like she talks to you.”
Floyd Talbert would never admit he had a thing for her. Absolutely not. Not to himself. Not to the guys. And especially not to Joe Liebgott, who was entirely too smug for his own good and had already sniffed him out.
“She gives me shit.”
“She gives you attention,” Joe corrected, “And you eat it up like a starved dog.”
Floyd stopped, turned toward him, “Jesus, you’re annoying.”
Joe grinned, “You’re smitten for the woman. Admit it.”
“Go to hell.”
The truth? Joe wasn’t wrong. She was mouthy. And sharp. And too damn good at pushing every single button he had.
She flirted, sure. But it wasn’t sweet or soft. It was like sparring—fast, mean, and meant to draw blood. She’d throw a wink like it was a knife and leave him wondering if she wanted to kiss him or knock his teeth out.
And Floyd? He kept throwing it right back. Because if he didn’t, he might just show her how much he actually gave a damn.
Floyd scoffed and kept walking, “I’m not smitten. She just likes to play games, that’s all.”
“You sure you’re not the one playing pretend?” Joe called after him, “She’s got you wrapped around her finger and you don’t even know it,” Floyd didn’t answer, but the way his jaw clenched said enough.
He hated that Joe had a point.
She was the only woman in Easy, and somehow, the least delicate person in the entire damn company. No softness. No apologies. She’d earned her spot ten times over, through blood, bruises, and the kind of sharp-tongued defiance that made seasoned soldiers take a step back.
Floyd had seen guys from other units try her—testing, pushing, underestimating. They didn’t make that mistake twice.
But with him?
She flirted. In that mean, sparring way that made it hard to tell if she wanted to kiss him or knock his teeth in. And Floyd—God help him—he flirted back. Not because he knew what he was doing. Not because he thought he could win. But because it was the only way he knew how to keep her close.
She was trouble.
That’s what Floyd Talbert decided the first time he laid eyes on her—half-covered in grease, barking orders at some poor replacement who’d crossed a line she hadn’t even drawn. She didn’t take shit. Not from the men, not from the officers, not from the war. Hell, Floyd wasn’t even sure if she could take a compliment without twisting it into something sharp and biting.
And that? That was the first hook in his chest.
Because she flirted the way soldiers fought—reckless, defensive, all fire and teeth.
Especially with him.
“You’re staring, Talbert,” she’d muttered once while patching a cracked helmet in the corner of a barn.
“You’re just easy to look at, Y/L/N,” he’d shot back, not missing a beat.
She snorted, “Easy isn’t a word I’d use for me.”
“I didn’t say easy to get,” he added with a smirk, “Just easy on the eyes,” she tossed a rag at his face. And smiled.
That was their rhythm. Banter like bullets, sarcasm like armour. If either of them ever meant anything deeper, neither would admit it out loud. Not in front of the others. Not when things were this uncertain.
Not when people were dying.
Later that afternoon, they were assigned to supply duty.
Crates, inventory, packing—mindless shit, perfect for staying out of trouble. Which was probably why Winters paired them together. Keep your enemies close, right?
The storage tent was cramped, half-dark, and smelled faintly of antiseptic and damp canvas. She was already there when Floyd ducked inside, lifting a box of ampoules above her head, trying to shove it onto the top shelf.
Her shirt tugged up slightly as she stretched—bare skin peeking just above her belt.
Floyd watched for a minute.
The line of her waist caught his eye first—lean, all tension and quiet strength, like she was built for surviving rather than softening. The kind of body shaped by war and stubborn will, not delicacy. He could see the muscle in her arms flex as she tried to lift the box, the taut pull of her back through the thin fabric. She wasn’t soft like the girls he used to chase before the war—she was solid. Grit and edge and fire wrapped in skin.
And Christ, it did something to him.
The stretch of her shirt. The way her jaw clenched. The soft little grunt of frustration—and Floyd had to look away before his brain short-circuited.
The box slipped. She cursed, “You just gonna watch or are you gonna help?” she snapped.
Floyd smirked, stepping in, “You looked like you had it.”
“And you looked like a goddamn scarecrow standing there,” she glared at him over her shoulder.
But truthfully? He didn’t look like a scarecrow. He looked good. Always did, damn him.
All swagger and trouble, leaning in with that lazy grin like he had every right to take up space next to her. Floyd Talbert had that stupid kind of charm that worked even when it shouldn’t. Rough around the edges, cocky without trying, and he knew exactly how to get under her skin.
And the worst part? She let him.
Because even when he pissed her off, she noticed the way his eyes softened around the edges when he was tired. The way his voice lowered when he wasn’t trying to impress anyone. The way he looked at her like he saw through every wall she put up and wasn’t afraid of what lived behind them.
Floyd Talbert was dangerous.
Not because he flirted back like it was second nature, but because some stupid part of her wanted it to mean something.
And that scared the hell out of her.
He just chuckled, stepping in and grabbing the box with ease, sliding it onto the shelf like it weighed nothing.
And then—they turned at the same time.
Close. Too close. The space between them? Gone.
She hadn’t backed up. And he wasn’t about to.
His chest nearly brushed hers. Her hand still half-lifted. His eyes catching on her mouth before he could stop himself. Neither of them moved.
Her gaze locked on his—slow, dangerous, and deliberate. She tilted her head, slow, eyes glinting with something unreadable, “That’s a dangerous look you’re giving me, Talbert.”
Floyd didn’t answer. He didn’t need to.
His gaze just deepened—smoldering, unblinking, the kind of look that felt like it was peeling her apart layer by layer. It wasn’t just heat—it was intention. Like he was already thinking about what it would feel like to close the distance, to press his mouth to hers, to push her up against the shelves until she forgot whatever smart-ass thing she was about to say next.
Y/N’s breath caught—damn him—because that look was worse than anything he could’ve said.
And then came the smirk. Slow. Crooked. Dangerous in its own right.
Like he knew exactly what he was doing to her. And wasn’t sorry in the slightest. Floyd swallowed, “You’re the one giving it first, Y/L/N.”
“You were staring.”
“You let me,” the silence that followed wasn’t awkward. It was charged. Like something was hanging in the air between them, trembling, waiting to snap.
She didn't step back. And he didn’t move away.
It hit him then—not just the tension, not just the flirtation—but the way she looked at him like she was waiting. Like she had been for a while. For him to stop playing. For one of them to do something about the fire constantly crackling between them.
“You always flirt like this?” he asked, voice low now, rougher, “Or am I just the lucky one?”
She shrugged a shoulder, but there was a smile tugging at the corner of her mouth, “You haven’t died of flirting yet, so maybe you are.”
He leaned in—just an inch. Just enough, “You want me to kiss you?”
She raised a brow, “You always ask first?”
Floyd grinned, “Only when I give a damn.”
And that—that softened something in her eyes. She didn’t say anything. Just stood there, looking at him like she was daring him to cross the line. The one they’d been dancing around since Normandy.
But beneath his grin, his heart was pounding. Because this wasn’t just some throwaway flirtation. Not anymore. Maybe it never had been.
He hadn’t meant to fall for her. Not the woman who met every insult with one of her own. Who pushed and shoved and snarled when the world tried to tame her. She was chaos in boots and a uniform, and Floyd—Floyd who was always the first to laugh, the first to charm—had no idea what to do with someone who didn’t melt under that grin.
Except he did.
Because over time, it wasn’t just the fire in her that caught him. It was the quiet things.
The way she sat up at night, eyes scanning the treeline long after everyone else had crashed. The way she knew when to speak and when silence would do more. The way she carried herself like she’d learned not to expect anything soft from this world—but still, she gave it. In rare glances. In fierce loyalty. In little things she probably didn’t think he noticed.
He noticed all of it.
She wasn’t easy to love—but Floyd never wanted easy. He wanted her.
And now, standing this close, that truth felt heavy in his chest. Terrifying, maybe. But also the most certain thing in a world where everything else felt like it could be blown to hell in a second.
He looked at her like she might disappear if he blinked.
And she looked back like she just might let him kiss her after all.
But this wasn’t the first time they’d stood toe-to-toe like this.
He remembered Holland—early morning fog, boots soaked through, and her leaning against a crate of rations like she didn’t have a care in the world.
“You ever stop running your mouth, Talbert?” she’d asked, flicking her cigarette ash without looking at him.
“Only when you walk into the room,” he fired back, smirking, “Figure I oughta let you take over. Keep the attention where it belongs.”
She snorted, “Bold talk for a man who got knocked into a ditch last week.”
“I let Malarkey hit me. Needed a nap.”
“You’re pathetic.”
“You’re gorgeous.”
That made her blink. Just once. A flash of something in her eyes. And then, smoothly, she leaned closer, her voice low.
“Flirt with me again, Talbert, and I’ll knock your teeth down your throat.”
Floyd had just grinned, unbothered, “Worth it.”
He still swore she smiled a little as she walked off.
“Are you too chicken?”
Floyd’s jaw flexed. She was pushing. And he loved it. And hated it.
Because if he kissed her now, it wouldn’t be a game. It wouldn’t be playful, or casual, or anything he could brush off the next day.
It’d be real.
And real? Real mattered.
He leaned in slowly, letting the moment stretch, waiting for her to pull away.
She didn’t.
Her breath hitched, just once, and that was enough. His voice dropped, “You keep looking at me like that, sweetheart, and I’m gonna do something stupid.”
She exhaled slowly, “Then don’t stop.”
But he didn’t kiss her. Not yet. Because if he did, it wouldn’t be a quick, heat-of-the-moment thing. It’d be everything.
And Floyd Talbert knew one thing with absolute certainty: He wasn’t just smitten.
He was gone.
His hand moved before he could stop it.
Slow. Sure. Almost reverent.
Floyd’s fingers slid beneath the hem of her shirt—calloused and warm against the bare skin of her waist. She didn’t flinch. Didn’t stop him. Her breath just hitched, subtle and sharp, like she’d been holding it in for far too long. She just stood there, breathing in tandem with him, eyes flicking between his and his mouth—like she was daring him to stop pretending this wasn’t everything they’d both been trying to ignore.
He lifted the fabric gently, the backs of his fingers grazing upward until his hand settled just beneath her bra. His palm was flat over her ribs—feeling the way her heart stuttered under his touch. His other hand ghosted up, brushing the line of her jaw with the back of his fingers.
And then he pulled her in. Not rough. Not desperate. Just…close. Until their chests brushed. Until their noses touched. Until there was no air left between them but the breath they shared.
He stared at her like she was the first thing he’d ever wanted and the last thing he’d ever deserve. And she looked back like she’d been bracing for this moment the entire war.
This wasn’t just lust.
This was what came after months of pushing and pulling. Of bruised banter and sidelong glances. Of pretending not to feel something so goddamn obvious it hurt.
And now?
Now they were here.
“I thought,” she whispered, eyes locked to his, “If you ever touched me like this…it’d be because you were trying to win.”
His brow furrowed slightly, confused, “Win what?”
Her mouth twitched into the faintest, saddest smile.
“Me.”
And that—that—made Floyd fumble.
His lips parted like he might answer, but no words came. Just a sound. A quiet, broken sound in the back of his throat. He hadn’t expected her to say it—hadn’t expected her to be honest. Not when both of them were better at hiding behind sarcasm and smartass comments.
But now it was real.
And he couldn’t hold back anymore.
He leaned in, eyes fluttering shut, nose brushing hers, and kissed her—slow and certain—like he’d been waiting for permission his whole damn life.
And this time?
She kissed him back like she was just as tired of pretending.
Their mouths met like a match striking tinder—hot, fast, inevitable. Floyd kissed her like he’d been holding his breath since Normandy and finally let it all go. Her hands gripped his shirt, pulling him closer, grounding herself as the tension that had stretched between them for months finally snapped.
It wasn’t gentle. It was fireworks behind the eyelids. A dizzy, breathless kind of want that tasted like gunpowder and unsaid things. Like every quip and flirtation had led them here—and now, finally, the weight of waiting was gone.
Her fingers threaded into the hair at the nape of his neck, and Floyd made a low sound in his throat—like he couldn’t believe she was real. Like touching her wasn’t enough, not nearly enough. It felt like stepping off a ledge and realising you wanted to fall.
And then—
A cough.
A loud, pointed cough.
They broke apart, flushed, lips kiss-bitten, breath still shallow.
Standing a few feet away, arms crossed and smug as hell, was Joe Liebgott.
With the biggest goddamn smile on his face.
“Well, well, well,” Joe drawled, absolutely beaming, “Took you long enough, Tab. I was starting to think you’d chicken out for real.”
Floyd let out a breath, dragging a hand down his face, “Jesus, Joe.”
Y/N didn’t say a word—just narrowed her eyes and muttered, “You ever hear of privacy, Liebgott?”
“Not in the airborne, Y/N/N,” Joe said cheerfully, “But hey—at least now I know I was right.”
Floyd groaned. Y/N just smirked.
And despite the embarrassment creeping up his neck, Floyd couldn’t stop the stupid grin tugging at his lips.
Because even with Liebgott’s interruption—especially with it—it all felt real now.
Undeniably, gloriously real.
#Floyd Talbert x Reader#Band of Brothers Fanfiction#Spicy Tension#Slow Burn#Hidden Feelings#Flirty Banter#Enemies to Lovers Vibes#Rough Flirting#Reader Insert#Emotional Angst Lite#Joe Liebgott Wingman Agenda#band of brothers#bobedit#bofb#joe liebgott#long reads#looking for moots#tension#feeling spicy#flirtyvibes#floyd talbert#easy company#bob#band of brothers series#band of brothers war#band of brothers hbo#matthew leitch#Mutual Pining#Wartime Romance#Interruptions & Confessions
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I have to show my titties. I just can't help it.
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I think about this clip often. This only proves not just women love this man, but other men do too 🤣 whether they want to admit it or not. And I LOVE how Austin loves love and attention from anyone who will give it to him 😂😏. The eye contact, the smirk, and flirty vibe he is giving 😍🥰. A true Leo man he is😉
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I’m writing a Wandanat fanfic rn where Wanda is just ridiculously confident and always flirting with Nat before they get together. She has major top energy and they will be fighting over who’s topping who. I need some head cannons for this type of Wanda specifically because everyone always has her in a more shy and awkward role. Give me some flirty lines too, it’s hard flirting with yourself while writing lmao
#g!p wanda maximoff#wanda maximoff#natasha romanoff x wanda maximoff#wanda maximoff fanfiction#wanda maximoff x natasha romanoff#wanda x natasha#wandanat#wandanat fanfiction#wandanat incorrect quotes#wlw fanfic#marvel#marvel mcu#mcu marvel#mcu fandom#mcu#mcu fanfiction#natasha romanoff#natasha romanov#flirtyvibes#flirting#flirtatious#pick up lines#confident#confidence#flirty#switch!wandanat
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