#the matching streaks are EVERYTHING to me
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Clay & Kisses | C.Alcaraz
synopsis: in which carlos wins at roland garros and after a grueling match he runs straight to you—and even you get in on the clay action
pairing: carlos alcaraz x f!reader
author’s note: ahhh! firstly i wanna thank the anon for this request, i hope it was to your liking, it’s a super cute idea. also the rg final was what made me a jannik fan but a carlos fan as well so it was no problem to write this for you.
words: 770
The crowd roars like thunder as the final ball zips past his opponent’s racket and thuds into the red clay. Game. Set. Match. Carlos Alcaraz.
The stadium erupts. People leap to their feet. Flashbulbs strobe like lightning across Philippe-Chatrier Court. His opponent slumps in his seat, exhausted and gracious in defeat, but Carlos—Carlos doesn’t drop to his knees or fall onto his back like he usually does.
Instead, the moment that ball lands, he turns. He sprints.
Straight to you.
Your heart feels like it might just burst as you stand up, your white sundress fluttering in the warm Paris breeze. The sun hits him just right—sweat-drenched, chest heaving, shirt streaked with rust-colored clay, his curls messy and damp under the bandana. He looks wild with joy, feral with it, as if he can't bear to be anywhere else but with you.
“Amor!” you cry out as he scales the short barrier between the court and the players' box with the ease of a man who’s done this in his dreams a thousand times. His team erupts behind you—Juan Carlos, Albert, his physio—all yelling and grabbing at him. His mom is crying. His brother is recording with shaking hands. But Carlos only has eyes for you.
Before you can say anything, his arms are around you.
He pulls you in like he’s anchoring himself to reality, and then he kisses you—messy, fervent, full of clay and sweat and sunshine. He cups your face with both hands, and you laugh into his lips because they’re dusted with gritty red. His palms are absolutely covered in it. The moment he wraps them around your waist, you know it’s done for—the white dress is ruined, smeared with the signature red of Roland Garros.
But you don’t care.
Not even a little.
He pulls away just enough to look at you. “Mierda—your dress,” he says breathlessly, eyes wide and guilty as he glances down at the now-orange-streaked fabric clinging to your sides. “I ruined it. Baby, I didn’t even think—”
You just shake your head, beaming up at him. “Carlos, you just won Roland Garros. You can ruin all the dresses you want.”
His grin returns, stretching impossibly wide. “You’re not mad?”
“Are you kidding? You could cover me in clay every day if it means I get to see you win like that.”
Carlos lets out a short, disbelieving laugh and presses his forehead to yours, still breathing hard from the match. “I thought of you every second of that fifth set. Every point, I kept thinking, *You’re here. You’re watching me. Don’t mess this up.*”
You rest your hands on his cheeks, thumbs brushing the sweat and clay away from the sharp lines of his face. “You didn’t mess up. You were unbelievable. That tie-break? Insane.”
His mouth is still curled into a boyish smile, but there’s a glint in his eye, a flicker of something deeper. “I wanted to win for me,” he murmurs, “but I needed to win for you.”
“Carlos…”
“I know tennis is my thing. But you—you’re my calm, my fire, my everything between matches. You’re why I don’t lose myself out there.” He takes your hand and presses a kiss into your knuckles, leaving a clay mark there too. “I love you.”
Your throat tightens, and you nod slowly, blinking against the tears that threaten to spill. “I love you too.”
Behind him, the tournament staff are gathering, the ceremony being prepped, and someone shouts for him to come back to the court. But he stays there for one more beat, one more kiss, this time gentler—his hands still on your waist, the clay forgotten.
As he finally pulls away, jogging back down to the court, you catch the grin he tosses over his shoulder at you. The stadium lights catch his face just as the French anthem begins to play, and he stands there like a warrior, but still that boy from Murcia, clay-stained and barefooted in heart.
You glance down at your dress, utterly wrecked with red smears in the exact shape of his hands.
And you think—this might be my favorite dress now.
•
Later that night, when he’s holding the trophy in one arm and you in the other, still apologizing for “destroying your outfit,” you kiss the corner of his mouth and say:
“If every clay stain means a win like that—and a kiss like that—I’m never wearing black again.”
And Carlos laughs, heart loud and full, because in a world of trophies and titles, nothing glitters quite like the look in your eyes when he wins… and runs to you first.
#carlos alcaraz fluff#carlos alcaraz x reader#carlos alcaraz x you#tennis x reader#tennis imagine#carlos alcaraz#carlos alcaraz imagine
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Quiet in the Dark
Rhea Ripley x Reader
Summary: After a long night at a match, Rhea comes home to find you curled up in bed, quietly crying.
The apartment is still when she comes in.
It’s past midnight.
Her boots are heavy with dried mud, her knuckles scuffed, and the ache of the match still in her spine. But something feels… off.
She steps into the living room, dropping her duffel by the couch. No lights are on. No music playing. And usually, you’d leave a little post-it on the fridge but there’s nothing.
Her chest tightens.
“Babe?” she calls, voice lower than usual, cautious.
No answer.
She pads softly to the bedroom. The door’s half-shut, but the light from the hallway spills through just enough to show the silhouette of you curled up under the blanket. Not asleep. She hears it before she sees it, a broken sound, faint, buried into the pillow.
Crying.
Her breath catches.
“Hey…” she whispers, pushing the door open fully. “Baby?”
You flinch, sitting up too quickly, wiping at your face with the back of your hand. “Sorry. Sorry, I didn’t mean to wake you-I was just…”
She’s at the bed before you can finish, crouching down in front of you.
“Sweetheart,” she says, voice low and warm, “don’t do that. Don’t apologise.”
You try to smile. It trembles and falls apart.
“I don’t even know why I’m crying,” you whisper, eyes glassy. “I just-I felt okay earlier. But then I started thinking about everything. Work. How behind I am. How I’m always tired. And I can’t seem to keep up with life, and everything feels like it’s piling up. And then I felt stupid for crying, so I tried not to, but I couldn’t stop, and now-”
“Shh,” she murmurs gently, climbing onto the bed beside you.
She doesn’t interrupt. Doesn’t give advice. Just opens her arms.
And you fold into her without hesitation.
Her hoodie smells faintly of smoke and sweat, like the arena still clings to her but under it is her scent, something grounded and warm and safe.
She wraps you up in it, cradling your head against her chest, one hand in your hair, the other on your back.
“I’ve got you,” she murmurs.
Your breathing shudders against her. She stays quiet.
Not because she doesn’t know what to say but because she knows this is what you need.
Not solutions. Not platitudes. Just space. Just someone to sit with the storm, to be an anchor while you fall apart.
Minutes pass like that. Her thumb strokes slow circles at the nape of your neck. Her heartbeat is steady beneath your cheek. And when your tears finally begin to slow, you whisper, “I feel so broken sometimes.”
“You’re not,” she says instantly, gently but firmly. “You’re just tired. You’re overwhelmed. You’re human.”
You look up at her eyes puffy, nose red.
And she thinks you’ve never looked more real. More vulnerable. More yours.
“You don’t think I’m too much?” you ask, voice small.
Her brow furrows. “Never. Not once. You don’t have to be okay all the time for me to love you.”
You blink again, more tears brimming but softer this time. Not from despair.
From the way her words wrap around your chest like a blanket.
“You don’t have to carry it all on your own,” she says. “Even when I don’t have answers, I’ll sit here with you. Every time.”
You nod, throat too tight to speak.
Rhea leans in and kisses your forehead, letting her lips linger.
“Let it be heavy,” she whispers. “I’ll hold you through it.”
And that night, you sleep in her arms. Tear-streaked. Raw. But not alone.
Masterlist
/DO NOT TRANSLATE, STEAL OR REPOST ANY OF MY WORKS TO THIS OR OTHER PLATFORMS/
#wwe fanfiction#rhea ripley x reader#rhea ripley fanfiction#rhea ripley imagines#wwe fic#rhea ripley imagine#wwe imagine#wwe raw#rhea ripley#rhea ripley fanfic#rhea ripley wwe#rhea ripley x you#wwe rhea ripley imagine#wwe rhea ripley imagines#rhea ripley x y/n#rhea ripley x female reader#wwe rhea ripley x reader#rhea ripley x fem reader#wwe rhea ripley x female reader#wwe rhea ripley x fem reader#rhea ripley x fem you#wwe rhea ripley x you#wwe rhea ripley#wwe rhea x reader#wwe rhea imagine#wwe rhea imagines#wwe rhea x you#wwe rhea x fem reader#wwe rhea fanfiction
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the odds are never in our favor
act two - velvet death and silver lies
pairing: tribute!gojo x tribute!reader
in district twelve there is not much to be thankful for. somehow the odds are never in your favor, and you end up getting reaped with a boy from your past. the one that haunts your waking days and broke your trust. but is he really what you think he is?
wc: 2.5k
find the series masterlist here!
trope: strangers to enemies to lovers but they didn't have time to love one another
taglist: @ilovehashbrowns1 @the0ishere @lomllino | comment to be added!
a/n: oh yuh. this is a fucking bitch to format i'm crying at the mental strain IT SHOULDNT BE THIS HARD AM I STUPID WHAT THE FUCK. anyways pictures are from pinterest and dividers are by strangergraphics on tumblr!!
find the rest of my works here!!
Your father’s weary face is what greets you first in the velvet setting of the Justice Building, before flurrying footsteps escape the guard’s clutches and long, thin arms wrap around you, tears immediately staining the flimsy fabric of your tunic.
“I’m so sorry, dear,” he whispers to you, and as the twins reluctantly pull away so he can gather you in his arms, embracing you to what, horrifyingly, feels like the last time you’ll inhale his musty, familiar coal scent that lingers everywhere in the house.
“Suguru will bring you food,” you instruct as soon as he meets your eyes, stepping away. “Don’t turn it down. When I get back-”
“When?” he muses, a sad light twinkling in his aged eyes. “You’re this confident?”
“You heard them!” you hiss, exasperated. “I have to come back. They’ll kill you if I don’t.”
“Don’t worry about us,” he insists. “I’ve already planned everything out.”
“What does that even mean?” If it were anyone else, you would’ve missed the subtle flit of his eyes to the Peacekeepers standing to attention behind you, listening in to your conversation. You realize there is something he cannot say with them here.
So you soften your face, cradle the twins into one last hug and use that as an excuse to pull him back in. Your father’s voice is so soft you can barely make out what he’s saying into the shell of your ear over the twins’ sobbing.
“District 13, we’re going to find them.”
“They’re dead,” you murmur.
“If you come back, you know where to find us,” he says, adorning a sweet, solemn smile on his face as he withdraws, adjusting the collar of your tunic where it slants to one side. “Do you understand?”
The way he’s speaking makes it clear that he could be talking about anything now, so you attempt to match his expression, keeping your tone light. “Yes, Father. I’ll try my best.”
He pats your shoulder, nodding. “I know you will, my girl.”
When they call that time’s up, you ignore the twins’ protests and kiss them both on their cheeks, waving goodbye to their tear streaked, chubby faces, trying to imprint the image in your head forever.
The next person that comes in is someone you don’t expect. It’s Shoko, one of Suguru’s old classmates—your hunting partner rarely discusses his life, so you don’t know her aside from seeing her throughout the district.
Shoko offers no meager response, no subtle greeting, only grips your hands tightly, entwining your fingers with her own, pulling you closer. “Well? What’s your strategy?”
“I’m sorry?”
“For the Games?”
“I mean, I have to train hard-”
“No.”
“No?” You frown at her command, raising an eyebrow. “What do you mean?”
“There’s only one thing that you have to do,” she explains. “It’s how Satoru’s brother won the Games way back when.”
“And that is…?” you prompt.
Her eyes are steely, unforgiving. “Keep Satoru alive. The rest will come later.”
You’re frozen into a shock for about a second before you harshly release her hands, rough with years of hard labor, stepping away from her. “Excuse me?”
“You have to fool him into believing that you want an alliance!” she seethes.
“Why not actually have an alliance?”
“Because he’ll be planning to kill you,” she grits. “You have to kill him before he can get to you. You don’t know him like I do. And I don’t think I can take any more of Suguru’s groveling if you die.”
“Suguru doesn’t grovel.” A corner of your lip quirks up.
“Yeah, well, when it comes to you, there’s a lot of things he does,” she retorts, albeit gently. “Listen, don’t get yourself killed out there. You’re a smart girl. I know you can win.”
And she’s grinning and gone, a shitload of emotions dumped onto you, and a new outlook on the Games, and your potential partner. You’ve seen that method multiple times from the Victors, however convincing, and you nod to yourself.
You've got a winning shot if you have him, you know that.
You let a lazy smile overtake your face, aimed right at the glowering Peacekeepers.
Well, at least until you kill him.
Of all the people in the Capitol, your stylist, by far, has been your favorite.
Your hands tremble as Cinna leads you to your prep team. Effie assured you this was his first year as a stylist, and that he had "big ideas" to make an impression.
"Everything will be alright," he says gently, meeting your fearful eyes in the mirror. His deft hands make quick work of transforming you into someone else, someone you don’t recognize.
As your raw nerves are plucked and primed, Cinna talks soothingly of his plans. "The fire theme is glamorized. Fire is not just destruction. It is power. I want to show you not as a beast to fear, but as a symbol of hope that cannot be extinguished."
Looking in the mirror, you gasp - you’re swathed elegantly in a flowing carbon-fiber gown that resembles burning coal embers. Wings of delicate gold wire sprout from your shoulder blades like a phoenix rising.
"Cinna, it's...incredible," you breathe.
He smiles warmly. "Panem will remember you, but not as a killer. You’re going to be our dream."
Your old fear returns as you reach the chariot. But seeing Cinna’s admiring grin from across the stable, you stand tall, finding courage in his vision.
And then Satoru approaches, flanked by his stylist and prep team. They beam at you, drinking in your matching outfits, which you don’t remember agreeing to. But even you can’t disagree that you stand out from the starkly contrasting duos of tributes.
Your heart pounds as the chariot ride nears. Catching you tense up, your panicked expression, Cinna tilts your head up with his finger.
"Chin up, girl on fire.” He exhales. “Own who you are."
You climb up the ivory steps, paintings of flames licking the side of the chariot, spreading onto the horses’ flanks, matching the design on your perfectly trimmed, crescent shaped nails.
“Girl on fire, hm?” Satoru says jokingly, although his voice is quiet. Neither of you have interacted since the Reaping, and it feels strange to be talking to a man that once held your life in his beautiful, beautiful hands.
“I think I’m gonna throw up,” you mutter as the chariot lurches forward, unused to the sudden jolt of movement that doesn’t require you to use your legs.
“Seriously?” You lift your head just enough to catch Satoru giving you a concerned look, just as the new day’s rays hit his face, bathing his skin in an ethereal glow. You don’t expect him to tug you upright as the crowd gets a glimpse of you, entwining your fingers tight with his.
The way he clutches your hand makes you smile, drunk on a feeling you shouldn’t have, so you use your free hand to wave. The roar shakes you to your core - but it's not hatred, it's adoration. You’ve stunned them all. You beam at the cheering colors.
You test out blowing a kiss to one part of the crowd, where you see a little girl jump and scream for your attention, and everyone reaches out as if they can grab it, holding it close to their chests, as if there’s something caught in the space between their fingers and palm.
It gives you a sense of unmatched power, knowing that everyone is looking at you, that the Careers are definitely glaring at you, because they are so used to getting all the attention that now that you are captivating everything with the golden, flaming arches unfurling from your back, they aren’t pleased.
For once, you’re glad that you have Satoru to grip, eyes flickering from the firelight of your wings, dancing down his simple, elegant suit that seems to blend with the darkness and reflect the flames.
You realize that his hand has gone white, drained of blood, so you move to release your grip, but he pulls you back, a pleading look mingling with the fireflies blinking in his waning eyes.
“Please,” he whispers. “I might fall off.”
You laugh softly, but the cameras don’t miss anything. You both have been getting a significant amount of screen time compared to the other tributes, so when you finish your rounds, waving up at President Snow, the distaste curling your tongue disappears when Satoru hops down and offers you his hand.
You accept it gratefully, cameras lingering on you both before switching to another duo. While Cinna gently removes the flaming wings, smiling proudly, Satoru twists to grin at you, so genuine you could fool yourself into thinking that everything that comes out of his mouth is true.
“You’re pretty cute when you’re on fire,” he says simply. “You should wear gold more often.”
“You don’t look too bad yourself,” you say before you can stop yourself. And then you remind yourself of what Shoko said—he’ll be planning to kill you. You have to kill him before he can get to you. You don’t know him like I do.
So because whatever you sow, you must reap, you lean closer, knowing all the tributes are glowering at you, the attention undoubtedly set directly on you, distributed unevenly. You cup his jaw gently, deliberately, enjoying the flash of confusion rushing through his eyes.
And you peck a soft kiss to his cheek.
Just like the opening ceremonies, your training uniforms correlate with one another’s perfectly—looking out of place with everyone else wearing totally different things.
"Remember, these next days will determine your survival," Haymitch says as we enter the Training Center.
You steel yourself, knowing the horrors that await below. But seeing Satoru’s steady, calm gaze as you descend among the other tributes, sizing each other up like prey, you realize that there’s nothing to doubt.
Rather than cower, you both stand tall and match strides, sticking with each other through every station. Of course, there are things that Satoru is better at than you lack in, and vice versa. But instead of tripping you up, he helps you through it, just as you return the favor by explaining how to properly tie a knot, identify edible plants and start a fire.
No one will doubt your alliance. If anything, you wish for people to join your team, however temporary. But there is only a shadow trailing you everywhere, a boy that reminds you of your little brother, with his slanted, soft jawline and wide, innocent eyes.
He can’t be older than nine, so you take pity on him and keep your voice louder so he can overhear. Against all odds, you don’t want him to die.
Just like you don’t want Satoru to die. You catch yourself watching him more and more, oftentimes keeping an eye on him while he stretches, admiring the tight coils of his body, so perfectly sculpted, like a statue from marble.
He must feel you looking, because he cranes his neck to spot you peering at him, then chuckles as you rush to finish your double knot from rope.
Satoru doesn’t miss any chances to make snarky comments, whether it be during spear throwing, or the twenty minutes spared for lunch.
But you never underestimate how dangerous he can be. Shoko made sure of that. Glimmer gives you the barest definition of a sneer, and within moments, with just a flick of his wrist, a knife sails past the tribute's throat.
Her expression, plastered with shock, shows her thoughts.
Message received.
Slowly but surely, day by day, you earn everyone’s respect, however hesitant or however grudgingly, but you never miss the way they whisper as you stroll past, conversing with one another about which activity you’re going to excel at today.
“So, tell me.” Haymitch leans back in the dinner chair, hands resting on his stomach as the hazy look in his eyes fades away, the effects of the wine he had thirty minutes ago wearing off. “What can you do?”
“She’s the hunter.” Satoru shrugs. “I can’t do much.”
“You carry around all that coal,” you point out. You’ve watched him from the forest, where he wheels the barrows filled with heavy, dusty blocks of coal back and forth, a fine layer of coal dust settling over his skin.
You’ve watched him a little too much.
“Of course. My greatest weapon,” he deadpans. “Coal.”
“I meant your strength,” you grumble. “Be optimistic, can you?”
“You’re telling me.” Satoru chuckles.
“Enough bickering,” Haymitch groans. “So, hunter, what’s your special gift?”
“I can… uh… well…”
“You’re not making this easy for me, are you?” Haymitch shakes his head, massaging the bridge of his nose. “Can’t you use a bow?”
You shake your head.
“Knives? Daggers? Spears?”
“Satoru can throw knives,” you offer.
“Real helpful,” Haymitch drones. “Okay, here’s what’s about to happen. Satoru, you’re going to teach her how to use a knife. And she’ll teach you to hunt. Deal?”
You’re pretty sure that’s what you’ve been doing, but for the last day of training, you agree to at least try your mentor’s advice.
Which is how you find yourself in this situation.
You sneak a glance back at Satoru, who seems occupied, so you turn your attention back to the knife, gingerly picking it up and trying to mime a stabbing motion on an invisible target. Your face flushes crimson when you hear some restrained laughter behind you.
"Shut up!" You cross your arms and scowl, turning away from him. "You’re supposed to be teaching me, not laughing at me."
You hear footsteps behind you, and before you can look over your shoulder, he's crossed the room and is standing against you, his arms encasing yours and fingers gracefully planting themselves against the hilt of the knife.
You glance up at him, but he clicks his tongue.
"Eyes down here, birdie," he says, and his low voice in your ear sends flames shooting from where his fingers meet yours and up your spine, straight to your head. Your chest twists as you suddenly have a name for the fire that ignites in the pit of your stomach, unmistakable and blunt against everything else fighting for a spot in your head. "Hold it like this."
"Got it," you mumble, your voice coming out even quieter than expected. Your pulse thrums under his, moon swept hair brushing the side of your cheek, azure eyes darting from you to the knife.
Satoru abruptly pulls away, and you let out a breath you didn't know you were holding. He takes an edged breath, and your heart slows. You palm the knife in your hand, turning to face him and twisting it through your fingers slowly.
"Careful," he murmurs. "You might cut yourself."
“Wouldn’t dream of it,” you attempt dryly.
Neither of you laugh.
a/n: very important that the father is taking the twins to district thirteen... suguru does actually come with them... go rebellion! especially when the daughter dies in the name of it! go team! likes and comments always appreciated! love ya!
#jj writes#jjk#jjk x reader#jujustu kaisen#gojo satoru#jjk gojo#gojo satoru x reader#satoru gojo x reader#jjk satoru#jujutsu satoru#gojo#gojo x reader#jujutsu gojo#satoru gojo
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tanti auguri
for rosy {@roses-without-raindrops} ♥ happy birthday!
The morning of your birthday arrived with the kind of grey, persistent drizzle that seemed designed to match your mood. You'd been looking forward to this day for weeks—dinner with your family tonight, drinks with friends tomorrow, a weekend celebration that had been planned for months. But scheduling conflicts had emerged like dominoes falling and everything had been pushed back by a week, leaving you with nothing but a regular Monday and the hollow feeling of anticlimax.
"I'm terribly sorry, love," Silco had said over coffee that morning. "The board meeting has been moved to this afternoon, and there's simply no avoiding it."
You'd nodded, forcing a smile even as disappointment settled in your chest like a stone. "Of course. Work comes first."
"It does not," he'd corrected gently, one hand finding your jaw, thumb stroking your cheekbone. "But occasionally, it demands precedence. This evening, however, belongs entirely to you."
Now, as you made your way through the entrance of the local botanical gardens, you tried to summon enthusiasm for the solo adventure. You'd mentioned wanting to visit months ago—something about the Victorian greenhouse collection and the rare orchid exhibit—and when Silco had suggested it as a way to spend your afternoon, you'd agreed readily enough. It was thoughtful of him to remember, even if he couldn't accompany you.
The woman at the front desk handed you a folded map with a small smile. "First time visiting?"
"Yes," you replied, tucking it into your bag. "I've been meaning to come for ages."
"Well, you've picked a perfect day for it. Not many visitors in this weather." She gestured toward the misty paths visible through the glass doors. "You'll practically have the place to yourself."
How fitting, you thought, stepping into the cool morning air. The gardens stretched before you, a maze of carefully curated landscapes that would have been breathtaking on any other day. Today, they simply felt empty.
You wandered aimlessly for several minutes, following the winding path past rose gardens and herb spirals, trying to shake the melancholy that had settled over you like the fine mist coating everything.
"I hope you don't mind the company."
You spun around, heart leaping into your throat. There, standing beside a particularly impressive monstera, was Silco. He looked immaculate as always despite the damp weather, the sleeves of his charcoal button-down rolled precisely to the elbow, silver-streaked hair catching what little light filtered through the clouds.
"What are you—" you began, confusion and relief warring in your chest. "Your meeting—"
"Was a fabrication," he admitted, closing the distance between you. "A necessary deception to preserve the element of surprise."
Your breath caught. "You lied to me?"
"I amended the truth in service of a greater purpose," he corrected, his mouth quirking in that almost-smile you knew was reserved for you and Jinx alone. "The gardens have been reserved for our exclusive use for the next two hours. I thought you might appreciate the privacy."
The words took a moment to register fully. "You reserved the entire gardens?"
"The perks of corporate patronage," he replied with studied nonchalance, though you could see the satisfaction in his mismatched eyes as he watched your reaction.
You stared at him, overwhelmed by the magnitude of the gesture. The careful planning it must have required, the strings pulled, the attention to details you'd only mentioned in passing. "Silco, I can't believe you—"
"Happy birthday, my love," he said quietly, leaning down to brush a soft kiss to your lips.
The last of your morning melancholy dissolved as you smiled against his mouth and reached for his hand, interlacing your fingers with his in a gesture that had become as natural as breathing.
You walked together through gardens that seemed to have been painted in watercolors—the soft grey light making everything appear dreamlike and surreal. Without the usual crowds, the space felt almost sacred, as if you were the only two people in the world who existed in this moment.
Inside the greenhouse, humidity immediately embraced you like a warm blanket, the air thick with the scent of earth and growing things. Orchids cascaded from every available surface—some delicate as spun glass, others bold and architectural in their beauty. You wandered between the displays, Silco trailing behind you, seemingly more interested in observing you than any of the surrounding plants.
When you finally emerged back into the grey afternoon, you realized the mist had lifted slightly, revealing glimpses of blue sky between the clouds. "There's one more thing," Silco said, his tone carrying a note of anticipation that made you look at him more closely. "If you're amenable to extending our visit."
"Lead the way," you replied, curious about what other surprises he might have arranged.
He guided you along a path you hadn't noticed before, through a wrought-iron gate that led to what appeared to be a private courtyard. At its center sat a small table set for two, the white cloth fluttering gently in the breeze. Even from a distance, you could see the careful attention to detail—proper linens, ceramic plates adorned with painted roses along the rim, glasses that caught the light like crystal.
"Silco," you breathed, stopping short as the full scope of his planning became clear.
"I thought you might be hungry," he said, giving your hand a small squeeze.
You approached the table slowly, taking in the spread he'd somehow arranged. There was insalata di riso—a family recipe that you'd described to him months ago, complete with the specific proportions of vegetables and herbs. Beside it sat a selection of dishes that spoke to careful consideration of your preferences: herb-crusted focaccia, roasted vegetables with balsamic glaze, a myriad of your favorite beverages.
But it was the dessert that made your breath catch entirely. A perfect strawberry crostata sat on a pedestal plate, the crust golden and flaky, fresh berries gleaming like jewels in their setting.
"You made all of this," you said, catching the slight furrow between his brows as he watched you take it all in.
"I did," he confirmed, moving to pull out your chair. "Though I must confess the insalata di riso required three attempts. I still wouldn't dare serve it to your family, knowing how exacting their standards are, but I believe you'll be slightly more forgiving. Or at least accept effort in place of perfection."
The thought of him in his immaculate kitchen, sleeves rolled up and brow furrowed in concentration as he worked to recreate a family recipe, made your chest swell with such overwhelming affection you could barely speak.
"It is perfect," you managed, settling into your chair and watching as he moved around the table. "Because you made it. I can't believe you did all this." As he sat, you reached across the table to cover his hand with yours, needing the contact to anchor yourself in the reality of this moment. "Thank you."
His expression softened in that way that was reserved entirely for you, lips curving up slightly. "Happy birthday, my love," he murmured, his voice carrying that gentle lilt that never failed to make your heart skip a beat. "May all of your wishes find their way to fulfillment."
"They already have," you told him quietly, your thumb tracing gentle circles against the back of his hand.
And in this private corner of the world he'd created, where nothing existed except the two of you and the boundless possibility of all the birthdays yet to come, you knew with absolute certainty that it was true.
#hbd!!!! :)#beskarsfics#silco x reader#silco#character: silco#roses-without-raindrops#divider by saradika graphics
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Let it burn🔥
Dean Winchester x Fem!Reader
“I would let the world burn, I would let it burn for you”
The sky was an angry bruise—black and red bleeding into one another as flames swallowed the horizon. The world was dying, collapsing beneath Dean’s feet like ash in the wind. Fires raged through broken towns, smoke clawed at the sky, and the screams of the lost echoed in his ears—but none of it touched him anymore. Because nothing mattered except one thing: you.
Years had carved themselves into him like scars. The man standing before you now was a shadow of the Dean you once knew—eyes colder, harder, wild with a fury that had driven him to the edge. He’d lost everything that ever mattered, or so he thought, until a whisper of hope cracked through the chaos. You were alive.
He saw you emerge like a ghost born from the smoke and ruin—your clothes torn, your face streaked with dirt and tears, but unmistakably you. Heart pounding, you took a hesitant step forward.
Dean’s gaze snapped to you, the storm in his eyes flickering with disbelief. For a heartbeat, he looked like he might crumble, but then that dark fire blazed anew—wild, hungry, furious.
“You’re here,” he growled, voice thick with emotion and the weight of years lost. “After everything… after hell itself, you’re here.”
You swallowed the lump in your throat. “I never left, Dean. I fought through everything just to get back to you.”
His jaw clenched hard, fingers twitching at your arms as if afraid you might slip through his fingers like smoke. Then, almost violently, he closed the gap, gripping you tight enough to leave bruises.
“I’d let the whole goddamn world burn,” he snarled, voice rough like gravel, “if it meant finding you. If it meant holding on to you.”
Your heart shattered in that moment—this wasn’t the Dean who’d smile softly in the Impala’s passenger seat. This was a man broken and raw, haunted by loss, but fiercely, desperately yours.
Your trembling hand lifted, fingertips brushing his cheek—scarred and rough beneath your touch, but warm and alive. Dean’s eyes squeezed shut, leaning into you like you were the only anchor left in a sinking world.
“I thought you were dead,” he whispered, voice cracking with a desperate pain. “I thought I’d lost you forever. It killed me every day.”
A tear slipped down your cheek. “I never stopped fighting. I never stopped needing you.”
Dean’s hands moved down, pulling you flush against him. The heat between you was a wildfire, fierce and consuming. Without warning, his lips crashed onto yours—hard, hungry, demanding—like he was trying to swallow every lost second in one desperate kiss.
You moaned, hands tangling in his hair, matching his fierce urgency with your own hunger. The world outside could burn to ash; in this moment, there was only the two of you—raw, aching, alive.
When you finally pulled apart, his forehead rested against yours, breaths ragged and mingled. His voice dropped low, fierce with a dark promise.
“I’d let hell rise to burn the whole damn world if it meant keeping you safe. You’re mine. Always.”
Tears spilled freely now, but you smiled through the ache, knowing whatever came next, you weren’t alone.
“Then don’t you ever let me go, Dean. Not ever.”
His lips curled into a rough, bruising smile. “I’m not going anywhere.”
For a moment, you both just stood there in the ruins—two broken souls holding onto each other as the world burned around you. The villain Dean had become was still in him, the fire that made him ruthless and wild—but here, with you, that fire was tempered with something fiercer than pain or anger. It was love. Fierce and unyielding.
He pulled you tighter, hands trailing down your back, tracing the curve of your spine like he needed to memorize every inch.
“I missed you more than I thought possible,” he murmured into your hair, voice rough and thick with want. “Every goddamn day felt like hell without you.”
You tilted your head back, eyes searching his, a spark of heat lighting between you. “Then don’t waste a second more.”
Dean’s mouth captured yours again, slower this time but no less intense. Fingers tangled in your hair, holding you captive with every breath. His hunger was desperate, raw—like a man who’d lost everything but found his reason to fight again.
“I swear, if it’s the last thing I do,” he growled against your lips, “I’ll burn this world down for you.”
And as the firestorm raged outside, you knew one thing: no matter how dark the night, no matter how much the world tried to tear you apart, you belonged to each other. Unbreakable, unstoppable.
...
#dean winchester supernatural#supernatural dean#dean winchester#dean winchester imagine#dean winchester x reader#dean winchester angst#angst#supernatural angst#spn#spn imagine#dean x reader#dean x female!reader#dean winchester x female!reader#let the world burn#supernatural#Spotify
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Part 4. 🤒
Word count: 1.9k.
It was quiet when he stepped into the house, and he guessed Cameron was still sleeping. He sniffled, closing the door behind him. If he wanted to sound somewhat healthy when waking her up, he definitely needed to blow his nose… so, he wandered into the kitchen, grabbing some of the napkins left there from the last takeout they’d ordered.
Everything felt heavy, his head ached, and his throat was stinging with every swallow. Chase sighed, making his way into the bedroom. She was curled up under the covers, the curtains were still open. He slowly walked around to the side she was facing, noticing the tearful streaks on her face — another telltale sign she was feverish, if she had been crying.
“Allie,” he whispered softly, reaching out to touch her arm. She felt hot. “Allison?”
Her eyes slowly opened, a quiet groan following. “Robbie?” She sounded worse than this morning, her voice raspier as well as congested.
“Yeah, it’s me.” He sat down on the mattress. “You okay?”
Cameron pushed herself to sit, blinking slow. She still seemed affected by the fever, with two rosy cheeks and a red nose to match. “I think so… what time is it?” She cleared her throat, peering around the room to try and re-gauge her surroundings.
“Uh, almost six.” He recalled, gently pressing the backs of his fingers to her cheek. “You’re definitely still feverish. Do you feel well enough to come eat something?”
She nodded slow. “I bought soup. Well, Dr. Wilson bought soup. I stayed in the car.”
Chase smiled slightly, and stood, offering out his hands to help her up. She took them, and leaned against him as they made their way into the living room.
“Can we have the tomato soup?” Cameron asked quietly, now situated on the couch, cuddling the fluffy blanket that was sitting there from the night before.
“Sure,” he sniffled a little, feeling his nose start to run again. “You chose something to watch, and I’ll be back with tea and soup before you can say cheesy disney movies!”
She frowned slightly, watching him leave. Despite feeling dizzy and spaced out, Cameron listened hard to the noises coming from the kitchen whilst her boyfriend prepared the food. She could hear a few sounds that could have been coughs… perhaps even a stifled set of sneezes?
When he returned, despite having quietly blown his nose in the kitchen, it didn’t take Chase long to start with his sniffles again. The steam from the soup certainly wasn’t helping either.
“Are you sick now, too?” Cameron asked, looking up at him from where she was resting against his arm.
“Hm? No. Allergies, I guess.” He shrugged. “Hey, pay attention to your sappy movie.” He was only teasing. And changing the subject.
“Mean,” Cameron murmured, nudging him gently. She smiled slightly, and it was nice to see her cheer up a little.
The pair were cuddled up properly on the couch after eating the soup together, and by now Chase wasn’t sure how many sneezes he had managed to just about stave off. However, his sniffles were becoming more frequent and he was getting too fatigued to really put energy into anything. It was inevitable, really, that he would have to sneeze sooner rather than later. His sinuses felt clogged, yet his nose was still running and everything felt itchy. His throat. His ears. He was starting to feel pretty awful, despite downing two Tylenol right after work earlier on.
“Sorry,” he mumbled, moving out of Cameron’s grasp just in time to…
‘Hhhh’mmmpchtT, HHHehH’eishh’iew!’ He sat back up, moving from his elbow and sniffling helplessly.
“You’re sick,” Cameron murmured, looking across at him. “I knew it. I knew you were lying.”
“I w… wouldn’t say… lying is a sssssuhh.. strong word.” He held up a finger, and ducked back into his hoodie sleeve.
‘HeH’itTshoo! Huh’eiishoo!’ Blinking away tears when coming up for air, Chase accepted the tissues Cam was holding out for him.
“Bless you,” she said softly. “I’m sorry you caught this.” It seemed to be progressing further in him, which only made her feel more guilty.
He exhaled heavily, and leaned close to her again. “Can we go to bed? It’s probably… it’s nothing. I’m just tired.” He hated how pathetic he sounded, but he had no more energy left to put up a front. It had all crumbled away after the sneezes took over. He shivered, his eyes closing for a moment.
Of course we can,” she whispered, “c’mon.”
They both stood, and Chase stopped for a moment, a slight wave of uneasiness washing over him. Cameron gently took his arm, and he leaned into her. Until, the tickle decided to resurface once again. He just about had time to move aside, and mumble a slightly slurred “‘m gonna—“ before,
‘Hhh’mmptTkKk… heeee…hhh’tshHHH’iew!’ The last one got away from his stifling skills, and he sniffled thickly.
“Bless you. Stop holding them in.” She chided gently, poking his arm.
They went about their bedtime routine slower, and much quieter than normal. She brushed her teeth, while he fetched medicine, tissues and water to place on their bedside tables. Chase brushed his teeth with the fruity toothpaste he had in the cupboard, because if he sneezed anymore he might just get so dizzy he would fall over. Everything was hitting him all at once, and he was sure he had a fever now, too.
Cameron came up behind him, her arms wrapped around his waist. “You’re really warm,” she whispered, before sniffling. He caught onto the fact that it didn’t just sound like a congestion sniffle… she was crying.
“Cam?” The blonde gently removed her arms, and turned to face her. “Why’re you upset?” He brushed some hair from her face, wiping some tears with his thumb.
“I don’t know…” her gaze faced the floor. “I just feel guilty. And, I can’t find the thermometer.” She choked on a sob.
“It’s completely fine, and I’ll go find it. Don’t feel guilty. Hey… c’mere.” His voice was soft, and full of dislodged congestion thanks to his earlier sneeze fit. His accent always seemed to get thicker with fatigue, too.
Cameron buried her face into his chest, arms wrapped around him. Rubbing her back he stayed there until she was the one to pull away. “Breathe, babe. Slower, okay?” He didn’t want her to cry herself into a panic attack.
She nodded, and he rubbed her arms, demonstrating slower breathing until she seemed to calm a little more.
“Perfect,” he hummed, the sound nasal. A kiss was pressed to the top of her head next. “I'll go find the thermometer.”
She spent the time blowing her nose and washing her face whilst he was gone, sitting down in their bed by the time he came back in. The thermometer was safe in his hands, and Cam even managed a small smile at his victory.
“Open,” he murmured, holding the instrument out towards her. But, before he could place it between her lips, he held up one finger and turned away from her.
‘— TSHHiIEW! Hh’itsshh—shhiew!’ A rare harsh sneeze scratched his throat, followed by two rapids. He sniffled thickly, shaking himself off before turning back again.
“Sorry,” his voice was thick with congestion, and starting to rasp.
Cameron blinked slow, watching him, looking like she could cry again. “Bless you.” She whispered, not making direct eye contact.
“Babe,” his voice was even stuffier, “don’t cry just because I’m sneezing.”
“I’m not crying!” She folded her arms, and took the thermometer from him, placing it between her lips.
When the instrument beeped, she took a look at the screen, before holding it out to show her boyfriend. “One oh one point four,” she repeated what the reading told them. “I can take more meds in like… a couple hours, I think. I wrote it down on some paper in the kitchen.” Cameron wiped the thermometer on the sheets, then gave it back to him.
“Your turn,” she instructed, before curling up on the bed.
He walked around to his side, climbing in to join her, and placing the thermometer into his mouth. Theoretically, he shouldn’t be running too high of a temperature, since he only took the meds around an hour ago. Chase took it out once it beeped again, and glanced at the reading.
“Fever?” Cameron asked quietly beside him, rolling over to see.
“Ninety nine point six. So, no, not really.” He cleared his throat, unsure if another sneeze was coming. Nope, it went away. He sighed, and put the thermometer onto the bedside table, sinking down under the covers.
“Kind of a low grade fever,” she sniffled, wrapping her arms around him immediately. “You feel warm. Or… maybe I do?”
“In a couple hours you should take NyQuil,” he murmured, hovering his wrist over his face in ticklly anticipation.
“Bless you?” She murmured, not wanting to let go, but noting his change in position.
When he leaned away, she whined quietly, but he wasn’t about to sneeze whilst cuddling.
‘Hh..hhheHH’tiiSHH’iew! HehH’ishhh’iew… hhhhnnghhh. Huh… hhhuU’tchuh!’ Catching each one, including the surprise third, into his elbow sleeve, Chase sniffled pitifully afterwards and shivered slightly.
“Bless you thrice,” Cameron whispered, waiting for him to join her again. “You don’t have to move so far away from me. It’s not like I can double catch what I already gave you.” She mused, waiting for him to grab some tissues before he finally moved close again.
“I do,” he muttered back, letting her cuddle him again, “I don’t want to sneeze on you.”
She pouted. “You covered. You can still do that and let me hold you.”
“But—“
“Robert,” it wasn’t like her to whine, or even plead in any sense of the word. He, of all people, knew that Allison Cameron was a very strong and confident woman. But, feverish and sickly Cameron was a little bit weepy, and sometimes very quiet and sulky. He kind of loved it.
“Babe,” he tried to argue, but she pressed her hand over his mouth for just a second… since he couldn’t breathe through his nose.
“I like your sneeze.” She blinked up at him innocently, with fever bright eyes. He wouldn’t be surprised if her temperature was rising. Or was she blushing?
“Right. Thanks?” He looked confused, but she was feverish and rambling. Her words didn’t make sense at a time like this.
“You’re welcome,” she hummed softly, leaning against his chest again. “Just don’t move away from me. I need you right here.”
He didn’t say anything else, just gently rubbed her back. But, what was he supposed to do the next time he needed to sneeze… and she was snoring all congested and adorable, still resting against his chest? What if he woke her up?
So, naturally, he tried to stop the sneeze. When that didn’t work, he stifled.
‘Hhh’NXXgtt. Heh’isHMmpptt. Guhh.’ He exhaled shakily afterwards.
Despite trying his hardest to be quiet, the movement of his chest rising and falling and the small noises stirred Cam awake barely a few moments later. He also couldn’t help sniffling, trying not to let his nose run freely.
“Y…. Stifle… no.” She mumbled, still half asleep. “I don’t care if you wake me. I need you close.” Then, she began to snore again.
Chase blinked in slight disbelief, before deciding to be slightly gross and opt for his hoodie sleeve as opposed to moving and reaching for the tissue box. All he wanted was to sleep, and for her to stay comfortable and in slumber, too. But, he was so uncomfortable and stuffed up that he could barely even try to relax.
He sighed, closing his eyes. Hoping for the best was all he could do next.
Sharing is Caring... Right?
Another fic... who is shocked? :0 No one.
Fandom: You guessed it! H/ouse M/D.
Characters: Mostly just R/obert C/hase & A/llison C/ameron, but a lil W/ilson, H/ouse and maybe some others.
Word count: 1.4k in part 1.
Enjoy <3!
There was a new taco truck that had opened up near Chase’s place, and the couple had been hoping for a break from work and as much of a date as possible after a busy time back at the hospital. It was Sunday when they finally got around to going — they both had a day off, which was rare in itself, and they were on their way to the truck hand in hand.
“Do you think taking one of those couples art classes would be a silly date?” Cameron mused, swinging their hands slightly as they walked together. It was a nice day, Spring was starting to bloom and it was looking up to be a pleasant Sunday. Sort of.
She had a mild headache, which had been there since last night. It wasn’t unusual after a late and overwhelming shift, not even too unusual for it to linger. But, there was also a slight achy feeling in the back of her throat now too. Maybe she just needed to have more water, which she could easily do once they got their lunch.
“What, like, painting? I’ve never really tried.” Chase hummed back, using his free hand to swipe under his nose. He sniffled slightly.
“Yeah. Or… cooking classes. I don’t know. Maybe it would be fun.” She glanced sideways, watching him scrunch his nose.
“You didn’t do art in school?” She asked a second later, as they came to a halt at a crossing.
“Well, yeah. But not really since then. Yeah, maybe it could be fun. Can we go to one of the ones where they have fancy food and cheese?”
“Is cheese not a food?” Cameron giggled, tugging his hand gently as the light went green.
“You know what I mean.” He chuckled along with her.
She headed to find a bench to sit at once they were there, and Chase queued up at the truck. It was fairly busy, especially since the weather was picking up, but he still felt chilly. This was probably considered a winter’s day in Australia, and no matter how long he had lived overseas, he still got grumpy at the weather. But, today he was determined to have a good day with Cameron.
After collecting their food, he sought her out on one of the wooden benches nearby. “I hhh—have good news and bad news.” He greeted quickly, rubbing his nose against his shoulder.
Cameron’s expression gently twisted into a frown as she squinted up at her boyfriend. His eyes looked closed from behind his sunglasses, which only confused her more.
“I have the tacos. They look really good. The sun is really bright and Ihhh’mm—“
“Oh!” She hopped up quickly, taking both of the tacos from him before the inevitable.
His eyes fluttered open. He ducked to the side. Two seconds until—
‘Heh’tshhhuh’chuh!’ The blonde spun back on his heel to face Cameron again, sniffling and blinking away a few tears.
“Thanks. Nice save.” He mumbled, rubbing his nose with the back of a palm.
“Bless you,” Cameron tilted her head, watching him as he sat down opposite her. “Allergies? Or just the sun?”
He shrugged, reaching for his drink to take a long sip. “Both?” Chase mused after he swallowed.
“Did you take anything this morning?”
“No… it doesn’t usually start yet.” He frowned, taking a bite of the taco. “Mmm! It’s good!”
She rolled her eyes, reaching into her bag and handing over a blister packet of pills. “Good job I carry meds every day for just this reason.” She smiled, watching his eyebrows raising.
“Thank you,” Chase replied, looking somewhat sheepish as he retrieved one of the antihistamines and popped it on his tongue.
The pair fell into a comfortable quiet after that, eating their lunch and discussing casual things. She told him about work yesterday, and how she met an Australian patient and they talked about her boyfriend. Chase laughed as she mentioned how they’d also discussed how gross she found Vegemite when she first tasted it, and he told her that it’s practically in his blood to love the stuff. They carried on chatting, even after finishing their food.
There was a quiet rustling of the trees around them as the wind blew, and Chase’s nose scrunched up again. Cameron’s head tilted slightly as she watched him, and sure enough, he ducked into his elbow a second or so later.
‘Hhh’nnxXxgt! Hhheh’heiiISHiew. Ugh.’ He sniffled afterwards, the second sneeze following the first with a clear vengeance.
“Bless you,” Cameron pushed the napkins towards him. “Don’t stifle.”
A pause.
“We can take the tacos home, if you want?” She offered, despite quietly enjoying the show.
“Nah,” he used a couple napkins to swipe at his nose, then pocketed them. “I’m fine. It’s just one of the many joys of Spring.”
She smiled at him, before finishing up her last bite. The food was good, but she couldn’t ignore the growing pain in her throat. Not only that, but her own sinuses were starting to feel itchy… a muted tickle somewhere at the back, which she chose to not listen to for now. A few sips of her drink, and she leaned back slightly.
“We could get coffee after this,” Cameron mused, about to continue the suggestion when the tickle decided to make itself much more known.
She frowned slightly, trying to gauge whether it was going to persist into a sneeze. Sure enough, her eyes fluttered close amongst a single hitch, and she brought her elbow closer to her face. ‘Hhh..heh’tTCHoo!’ Blinking a few times afterwards, sniffling.
“Bless you,” Chase’s eyebrows raised, and he offfered her the last few napkins. “What, are you sneezing in sympathy now?” He teased lightly, chewing on the straw of his now empty drink.
“No,” Cameron pocketed the used napkins and rolled her eyes. “Just something in the air.” She shrugged.
“Rain check on the coffee?” Chase suggested, moving to stand. He walked to where the was sitting, and hugged her from behind, peering his head around at hers to steal a kiss.
She giggled at that, leaning up to meet his lips. “Rain check ‘cause I sneezed once?” She chased his lips for another.
“No. ‘Cause we both just drank medium sodas, and I’m tired.” He kissed her nose, before standing up straight again.
“Aw,” Cameron cooed jokingly, turning around but staying seated for now. “We can always do something in the evening.” She reached for his hands to help her up, and stood in front of him.
“Yeah. We could go out? Or other things.” He cast a mischievous smirk at her, eyebrows waggling suggestively.
Immediately, her eyes rolled in response and she playfully hit him in the chest. “Let’s go,” Cam hummed, taking his hand and leading them back to collect their trash.
They were almost back at the house, when she had turned to the side and pitched into her elbow again, with a softer sounding ‘hh’tttchiew!’ Followed by a small round of sniffles.
Chase gave her hand a squeeze, watching her with concern in his blue eyes. “Bless you… you okay?”
She looked sideways a him, pushing her sunglasses up her nose slightly. “Yeah, I think so.” Her smile was genuine, whether or not it was a tool to try and stop him from worrying.
They continued to walk back, with plans to make their way into the bedroom once home, wanting to change from outside clothes to comfortable inside ones.
“Is it boring if I just wanna cuddle on the couch and watch TV?” Cameron questioned, taking off her jacket and hanging it up.
Chase turned to her with a smile, shaking his head. “Only if it’s boring for me to be relieved you asked first.” He chuckled slightly, leaning in for a kiss, but noting how she turned at the last second so that he’d catch her cheek and not her lips.
“What was that?” His eyebrows raised, and hands were now resting upon hips.
“What was… what?” Her expression portrayed innocence, but he frowned.
“You avoided my kiss. You’re coming down with something, aren’t you?” He moved to fold his arms across his chest, observing her sheepish expression.
“My throat hurts,” Cameron admitted quietly, “but, it could be nothing. It’s been a long week. I’m gonna drink some tea.”
“You sneezed earlier.”
“A couple times,” she reminded him, rolling her eyes.
“You, like, never sneeze.” Chase retorted back, moving to feel her forehead. She humoured him. There was no fever.
He sighed softly. “Well, either way let’s get changed and watch stupid movies and drink tea.” A kiss was gently pressed to her forehead. “And, hope you’re not getting sick.”
Cameron’s expression dropped slightly, “yeah.”
#snz#snzfic#snz fic#sickfic#d/r c/ameron#d/r c/hase#part four out of more still to come!!#poor bb cameron :( not feeling good#a lotttt of chase bb sneezes in this#it’s his turn to suffer now#snz thoughts#r/obert c/hase#a/llison c/ameron#c/hameron#h/ouse md#poor bbs#fevers
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Nadja and Laszlo constantly having matching colored streaks in their hair is so important to me
#nadja of antipaxos#nadja and laszlo#laszlo cravensworth#wwdits#what we do in the shadows#the matching streaks are EVERYTHING to me#nadja wwdits#wwdits laszlo#they invented love actually
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A very "this is Wolfgang on the inside" ass skeet (to me)
#project eden's garden#p:eg#wolfgang akire#wolfgrace mention too i guess#i'm sorry but you will never convince me this man's not a freak deep down#mr. wolf in sheep's clothing. mr. fucking cunning with his linguistics#mr. literally the first guy to have had a one night stand in the group 💀#for someone who presents himself as this perfect gentleman with perfect manners with perfect self restraint he's also very... not that XD#he strikes me as someone who is insanely repressed and grace is someone he was very attracted to with how she just matches his freak XD#i'm sorry but wolfie having a bit of a rebellious/scandalous streak is everything to me ngl#momento rambles
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Each and every one of you make writing so incredibly fun and I can’t thank you enough.
I put in time and effort just like everyone else but somedays, I feel as if I don’t deserve such kindness from you all. But what I write makes me feel good and seeing how much you all enjoy it and feel good enough to keep up with my works brings me a sense of gratitude I can’t explain.
So a genuine thank you. In 9 months, I’ve found such a nice community that makes me feel seen and I appreciate you more than words can say.

#today is an emotional day and I can’t stop feeling everything at the same time#but seeing everyone’s kind words on my works today has really sent me on a crying streak#I’m glad I can match your freak over here#🫶🏾🫶🏾🫶🏾🫶🏾🫶🏾
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where did it all go wrong?
#and i sat with you in geo and we walked to the tescos together and my friends got mad because they thougt you were my new bsf#and i kissed you behind the statue in th garden and you let me lean my head on you on music night and we got matching shoes#and i still wear those shoes and i still love you and i like to think that you loved me too#and you didn't mean it when you said i never made you laugh#but ofc i didn't you're everything ever and i'm just me#and i still have the heart next to your name and you're still my longest streak ever evn if it ended
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Backing Voice (Yan! KPDH x Fem! MC) Prologue
Synopsis: Among the Huntrix fandom, there has always been a discussion of theories and ideas about a strange voice in every song from the girls. Something of which they have avoided in every interview. But the one behind it is so much more than they could possibly think. Unraveling her secrets attracts attention she’s yearned yet feared for her life.
Genres: Fluff, Angst, Slow Burn (?), Yandere (?)
CW: Slight anxiety/panic attack
Prologue, Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5
Word Count: 563 A/N: I want to join the fic craze bc I really love this movie and I NEED that sequel. Also I’m only describing MC’s hair style and eye details (plot reasons), everything else in your interpretation!
————————————————————
In the large fandom of the ever popular group HUNTR/X, there has always been a pool of theories and discussions about a certain aspect in there songs.
What is that voice in the background?
Ever since their debut, a haunting yet beautiful voice has always been present in every release down to solos and performances.
Combing through every interview, social media content, and performances, fans have tried to figure out who this voiced belonged to.
Overanalysing each of the girls voices weren’t enough.
Nothing matched to that haunting feeling.
And yet…
It always filled them with a sense of comfort.
————————————————————
”Girls, there is someone I’d like you to meet.”
Curiosity fills the newly formed hunters of the current generation as Celine lead the three of them to the garden. Just at the foot of the tree stands an older women who looked the same age as Celina, though she had a messily tied up bun being held up by a hair pin with noticeable greys along dyed caramel streaks.
Just behind the women was another girl who has a more shaggy appearance judging from the strange uneven cuts of hair around her collarbone and messy fringe covering up her eyes.
The women turns around to meet the other girls with a strange gold rim around her brown eyes.
“Girls, this is (M/N). The previous fourth hunter. And behind her is (Y/N), the new fourth hunter.”
As soon as that was announced, the three girls were filled with shock.
“THERES A FOURTH HUNTER?!”
“For how long?! How come you’ve never trained with us?” Rumi questions. “We’ve had some… complications trying to meet up. The original plan was for Rumi and (Y/N) to meet when they were younger, but things didn’t go to plan.” (M/N) answers with a polite but cold tone. The gold rimmed eyes don’t help them feel better.
”Come on (Y/N), say hi to them.”
Peaking behind her mother that met with the trio of girls, shivering (f/c) eyes with the same intriguing gold rims around. She dressed much more casual, like she just came from lounging on the couch prior.
“Hi… its nice to meet you guys.”
The anticipated softness of her voice struck an unexpected cord in the girls. Something alluring and melodic.
”We’ve decided that (Y/N) will join Huntrix.”
Once those words left Celine’s mouth, the girls swiftly saw the colour drain from (Y/N)’s face.
Slowly turning her head.
”WAIT! WHAT?! YOU SIGNED ME UP FOR THIS?! NO NO NO NO NO! YOU DID NOT CONSULT ME ON THIS MUM! REMEMBER WHAT HAPPENED LAST TIME I TRIED PERFORMING?!”
Her surprising booming voice made the girls take a step back for a bit. Though the three snapped out of their shock when seeing (Y/N). Sweat glistened on her forehead and her breathing was steadily going ragged. She was shaking her mother like her life depended on it.
“No no no. NOT performing. We agreed on that. You’re just taking over my previous position in the Sunlight Sisters, just a backing vocalist.”
(Y/N) froze for a second. Before collapsing onto her mother, looking like she ran a marathon.
“Celine should’ve mentioned that first. Don’t worry honey.”
Rumi could hear (Y/N) muttering inaudible words of gratitude.
But she looked like she was on the verge of tears.
And yet…
Her slowly calming voice struck a nerve of peace in the three hunters.
————————————————————
Edit: just wanna add that I imagine MC’s singing voice either be Leehi or Seori. Also the idea evolved into a yandere story, but its not that bad I swear.
#kpop demon hunters#kpdh#huntrix#saja boys#kpdh x reader#Kpop demon hunters x reader#saja boys x reader#Huntrix x reader#rumi kpdh#mira kpdh#zoey kpdh#jinu kpdh#abs kpdh#romance kpdh#mystery kpdh#baby kpdh#baby saja#yandere kpop demon hunters#Yandere kpdh#Yandere saja boys#Yandere huntrix
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𝐖𝐈𝐍𝐍𝐄𝐑𝐒 𝐊𝐄𝐄𝐏𝐄𝐑𝐒
- sylus x reader
you suspect something’s off when you catch your lover with the hunter girl, so you decide to give him the cold shoulder. his way of winning you back? trapping you in a bet—if he wins this underground fight match, you’re back to being his
genre/warnings: 18+ suggestive content—minors do not interact!—brief smut, comfort, total fluff, assassin!reader (not l&ds mc), based on sylus' card radiant brilliance
note: this has been looong buried in my drafts since before my writer's block started :') again, a part of the assassin!reader that started with strictly (un)professional
Your lover— he is definitely hiding something.
“Mmph!” A moan escaped you mid-kiss as his palm suddenly cupped your right breast, squeezing and stroking it, while two of his left fingers thrusted inside you, getting you wet.
His fevered lips and tongue melded with yours, his wicked fingers driving you to the brink of madness—and oh damn, the devil that possessed them felt so heavenly—as he pressed you against the vanity, bending you over its edge.
A knowing gleam flickered in his eyes. “Mm, you talk too much, woman.”
Your thoughts blurred, teetering on the edge of control, yet deep within, a spark of aggravation incessantly burned, especially when you remembered the person you had caught him manhandling earlier this afternoon—
Miss Hunter.
“Sylus—! Stop!”
"Tch." He pulled away with a hiss as soon as you pushed his chest away with everything you had. Just like that, you were left high and dry; the emptiness his fingers had left behind made you instinctively cross your legs. "Why are you so uncooperative tonight?"
"You—" Gasping for breath, you clutched your slipping nightgown, glaring sharply at him despite the discomfort of the hard surface beneath you. "You really think you can shut me up... with sex?"
"I'm telling you, nothing happened." Sylus’ lips curled with a smug hint of satisfaction, only fueling your irritation. "Didn’t know my woman had such a jealous streak until now."
If there was one thing you’d learned from years by Sylus' side, it was that everything he did had a purpose. If it had been some random bimbo hanging around the casino or his resorts, you wouldn’t bat even an eye.
But this was the Miss Hunter—the very girl he had spent decades searching for, the one with whom he shared a bond so profound that he had forsaken everything just for the chance to find her again.
And compared to her, you were just his bedwarmer... who just happened to catch his eye.
"You two were kissing," you accused almost spitefully, the words laced with bitter edge.
His grin vanished, replaced by a look of distaste. "We were not."
You knew what you saw—he cornered her in the furthermost corner of the base, far away from even from the prying eyes of Luke and Kieran, and they were definitely just an inch away from each other. "Then what were you two doing?"
"Can't we talk just like acquaintances do?" The lack of viable answer gnawed at you. If there was nothing to hide, why didn’t he just say so and put your suspicions to rest?
"Will you do her like you do me?" The venom in your voice startled even you, slipping out before you could stop it. "Ha. I should’ve known..."
By now, he had this sour yet stern look in his face that made you almost shudder but you stood your ground. His tone was almost mocking, "Insecurity makes you so bitter, sweetie. Get yourself together."
It felt like a prick in the heart. Oh. As heartless as you were in the face of blood and gore, you still had it apparently when faced with your lover's conniving red eyes and sinful lips.
But more than that... as they said, heartbreak is one thing, but your ego is another.
"To hell with you!" you snapped, sitting up straight. Sylus blinked, momentarily caught off guard by the look on your face—was it showing the hurt? Or just plain defiance? Even you weren’t sure as you spun on your heel and stormed out of his room promptly.
Not for the first time, the very idea that he might be getting on with another woman twisted something inside you, the ache sharper than you expected. It suddenly saddened you to a degree that it brought mist to your eyes.
For the next three days, you ignored Sylus almost completely. He tried to get back to your good graces, but you paid him no mind, acting as if he didn't exist.
“Missus, please— just say yes!”
And caught in the crossfire, poor Luke and Kieran had become his reluctant messengers.
You unconsciously shot a sharp glare at the twins. Perhaps it was the mental strain you were putting yourself under, but you truly hadn’t meant to scare them more than they already were.
"Boss is really cranky when he isn't in a good mood," Luke pleaded, clasping his hands together. "Please just help us this time, will you?"
"He promises he’ll make it right!" Kieran chimed in with a hopeful grin. "As soon as he wins his match this weekend, you’ll see—there’s nothing to worry about!"
Sylus and his penchant for boxing. You knew these underground matches were something he indulged in now and then, and you'd let him be.
But this time...
"How are you so sure he's going to win?" You lifted your chin, a taunting smirk curling your lips. "And no, I'm not going. Tell him that."
"Missus, you have to see reason— there is no way Boss is having an affair—" Kieran insisted, shaking his head in frustration.
"Boss is whipped!" Luke cut in, throwing his hands up. "For you! Can't you see?!"
"..." For a solid five seconds, silence blanketed the room. You arched an eyebrow so high it made Luke look like he'd just spilled the world’s best-kept secret, while Kieran slapped a hand over his mask in exasperation.
And things were obviously not getting better—
"Ha. I'm what?"
You could see the twins visibly gulping the very second Sylus' voice boomed across the hall, and you rolled your eyes.
"Pfft," he let out this low chuckle as he made his way towards the three of you. "Hear that, sweetie? Luke isn't wrong."
"..."
"The little kitty's anger hasn't subsided, I see," he murmured, tilting his head to the side with a playful smirk, arms folded across his chest. "Such little trust you have in me."
You sighed. "Don't tempt me to hate you prolifically, Sylus."
"You wound me," he retorted, ruby-red eyes narrowed. "I have been nothing but honest and transparent."
You turned away, pressing your lips into a tight line. Deep down, you knew how childish all of this felt. Maybe it was nothing, after all. Maybe, just like he said, it was your insecurity twisting things.
And why are you so insecure, anyway?
"Keep your eyes on me, kitten."
Suddenly, caught off guard, you almost yelped as he tilted your chin towards him, forcing you to meet his gaze. Your heart raced wildly, but you fought to keep it in check.
"I win, and you’ll do what I say," his eyes flicking from yours to your lips, his voice a velvety whisper in your ear. "But if I lose... you can have your way—however you want."
Your pride took over. A second later, you jerked your face away, refusing to give him the satisfaction. To salvage your dignity, you let out an indignant scoff.
"Best hope you lose then."
You’d never been fond of crowds, let alone sitting in the stands of a boxing match.
And yet here you were, clutching a bouquet of fresh flowers—the twins had practically shoved them into your arms before bolting away—surrounded by the deafening roar of fans.
You would punish them later, you so would. It was humid and you were fuming. There was nothing interesting here, and to top it all off, Sylus’ turn to the ring was taking forever.
Until it didn't.
When he finally stepped into the spotlight, you caught sight of him on the big screen. And in that moment—when that devilish smirk curled his lips—you could’ve sworn he wasn’t aiming it at the crowd.
He was throwing it right at your direction.
And oh, how the rapid and traitorous thump-thump-thump inside your chest drowned out everything else, as if the roar of the crowd gradually faded at the realization.
How is it that he always manages to get your heart in his grasp?
. . .
When they said this sport wasn’t for the weak, they weren’t lying. No matter how tough you thought you were, you still flinched every time the opponent’s fist connected with your lover’s jaw.
Despite all the aggravation you harbored about him, watching him stumble and get knocked back felt like a punch to your own gut. In that moment, all you wanted was for it to end.
And when it finally was—when the referee raised Sylus’ arm and declared his victory—you exhaled a shaky breath you hadn’t realized you were holding. Relief washed over you in a quiet, fleeting wave.
However, reporters and cheers quickly swarmed him, and the distance between you felt even greater then. There he stood, proud as ever, lofty as if standing atop clouds, surveying the world with thinly veiled contempt. Meanwhile, you…
You were still dissatisfied. Sylus had a way of winning everything he set his sights on, while you remained stuck with your own petty grievances and emotional baggage you subjected yourself to.
It was vexing, really. How you wanted him to win and not at the same time. How you wanted his everything and knowing you would never be able to.
“What’s the secret to winning this match?!” one reporter asked, voice brimming with excitement.
Sylus answered with a casual smirk. “I made a bet I absolutely can’t lose,” he said coolly. “So, I won.”
The girls in the stands erupted into deafening cheers at his response, their shrill voices forcing you to cover your ears.
The nerve. You scoffed, irked by his answer and by the crowd’s adoration. You decided you wouldn’t let him have the satisfaction of you lingering here any longer.
Snatching up your bag and that damned bouquet, you marched toward the exit with long, determined strides when—
“Ooh? And who is this special person?!”
“Ah, look, there she is.”
You froze mid-step as the spotlight suddenly pinned you in its beam. Whirling around, your breath caught as you saw Sylus descending from the arena, his gaze locked onto yours.
What the hell?
For a moment, you froze in utter disbelief as he approached you with that effortless grace, as if the crowd around him didn’t exist. Before you could piece together your fragmented thoughts, he was already standing before you.
“Are you mad?!” you murmured in a hiss, your voice barely louder than a breath over the distant roar of cheers, yet pointed enough to pierce the air between you.
Sylus, however, only let out a snort, swiftly snatching the bouquet from your arms, and pulling you by the shoulders— his breath tickled you ear as he whispered:
“Got you.”
—and before you could react, he crashed his lips on yours in a bold kiss that at sent the crowd into an instant uproar of cheers.
“Whoa, whoa! The champion! Look how manly he is!”
“He has a girlfriend?!”
“Oh, my! To be that girl!”
“—!” You almost pushed him away, only to falter when you realized his kiss was anything but forceful. It was deep but disarmingly gentle.
Sylus pulled back just as quickly, his eyes twinkled with mischief as he took in your stunned expression.
“You’re mine now, sweetie,” he said with a smug grin, giving you a light pat in the head.
The way his eyes crinkle as he looks at you... Your cheeks burned, and your heart thundered in your chest, drowning the roars of the swooning crowd—
Because in that moment, you could’ve sworn there was nothing but pure adoration in those mesmerizing garnet eyes of his.
“You've gone and done it... What if anyone recognizes us?”
Later that night, freshly showered and wrapped in silk nightgowns, you sat at the edge of the bed, towel in hand as you dried your wet hair. You cast a glance at Sylus, who had just bathed with you and now lounged nearby with an unbothered grin.
The events from this afternoon still felt like somewhat of a dream to you. You had never been under that much of a spotlight before— too used to a life shrouded in shadows, quietly biding your time, preparing to brandish your blade when the moment came.
But through Sylus, every now and then, you caught a glimpse of what it felt like to stand on the other side of that darkness. And it felt freeing— like you could finally breathe, unburdened by the scent of blood and gunpowder.
"Wouldn't that be fun? Imagine the headlines," he shrugged nonchalantly. "The Onychinus leader and his missus... masquerading as a boxer and his fan for a day."
You huffed, shooting him a stink eye. "That's not even funny."
Despite the public display that Sylus had more or less pulled and made the two of you known as lovers even in underground world, there was still a gnawing curiosity at the back of your mind, feeding your insecurity—
The sight of him and Miss Hunter replayed again in your mind's eye. It was never fun finding them together in such close proximity.
And yet, in the end... he returned to you, still. Unspoken it may be, but Sylus had always taken your side so far.
You let out a long, resigned sigh. That caught his attention as he turned to you. "What is it?"
"Nothing," you quipped, slightly grimacing. "Forget it. I'm going to sleep."
Sylus raised an eyebrow, his gaze lingering on you. Even when you hid it, he knew what you'd wanted to ask and if you asked it now, he would tell you.
The way your face had fallen bothered him more than he'd like to admit. He rose from the recliner and moved to your side. "No, you won't be sleeping."
"What?"
He knelt beside you, gently taking hold of your leg, and pressed a kiss to your calf, his touch warm and unhurried as he met your gaze with a sly smile.
"Sylus..." you eyed him with incredulity, feeling yourself getting warm.
His red eyes crinkled. "Don't you want to ask me something?"
Your hand reached out to caress his face, and he leaned into your touch. That simple act alone brought a small, intrigued smile to your face. "No."
"Hmph. Really?"
"What?" You traced your fingers on his sharp jaw, admiring it. "You think I'll demand you for answers about whether you're two-timing me with Miss Hunter again?"
Sylus tilted his head, relishing the way your fingers cradled his face, staying quiet, however.
You were really great at this pushing and pulling game. It irked him to see how detached you seemed now when he knew a part of you had been fazed by it days ago.
He disliked it when you tried to hide what you were feeling. He hated it even more when you doubted him for anything. But seeing how unhappy you had been lately rattled him.
"Nothing happened," he said in a low voice, catching your hand and locking eyes with you. "Would you feel better if I had told you that since the beginning?"
"Who knows?" you replied with a soft shrug, a wry smile on your lips. "You didn't tell me before."
What a vixen. The thought simmered in his mind. Mine, though.
Like a cat pouncing on its owner, Sylus suddenly moved, going straight for your lips and pinning you to the bed. Intertwining his fingers with yours, he pried your lips open with his tongue.
Yet despite it all, you felt how gentle he was. The Sylus from before would just fuck you senseless and be done with it, but the one with you now... he treated you with an unexpected tenderness, as if savoring every second with you.
He pulled away only when you were breathless, the saliva string between your lips breaking as he gave you a moment to gasp for air. His gaze softened, lingering on your flushed face, a satisfied smile curling on his lips.
"You will see for yourself tomorrow. Tonight, however..." he trailed off, his lips hovering just above yours.
But you placed one hand on his chest and another on his neck, looking up at him with bleary eyes, the vulnerability in your gaze tugging at something within him.
"Actually, I'm a bit exhausted..." You found his intense gaze and blinked slowly. "So, can you be not as rough?"
"Ha." Sylus let out a snicker at your request, taking the hand you had on his chest and pressing a soft kiss on it.
What a precious little thing you are. Your face right now... It was a look he couldn’t resist, one that made him want to protect you and ruin you, all at once.
His smirk lingered. "Of course, sweetie. I'll go easy on you tonight."
And true to his word, he didn't break his promise.
Even as he pinned both your wrists above your head, capturing your lips in a heated kiss—
—as he dived between your legs, his tongue skillfully devouring your clit—
—and as you tangled your fingers in his hair, pulling him impossibly closer.
And later, when he pulled you into his arms and murmured softly until you drifted to sleep.
When you woke up the next morning, it was because of two things.
One— it was freezing. Your thin nightgown was definitely no match against the biting chill of a winter morning.
And two— Sylus wasn't here.
You wondered where he could have gone as it was his bedtime, but as you pulled the comforter closer to keep yourself from shivering, something caught your eye.
It took you a full three seconds to process it.
There was a ring on your finger.
"Huh...?" You were jolted awake by the sight of the glittering ruby. It was intricate, yet strangely nostalgic, reminding you of Sylus' eyes. How? Why?
You immediately turned to the nightstand, your gaze landing on a small jewelry box sitting neatly atop it. You scrambled for it, the name of the jeweler embossed on the lid caught your attention. It wasn’t from anywhere in N109 Zone.
It clicked to you at all once. So, that was why he was with Miss Hunter?
But more than that, what caught your heart was when you flipped it open and found a note inside, with a scrawled handwriting you would never mistake for anyone else's—
Because forever is too long and boring to be spent alone. So, your answer is…?
#sylus x reader#lads sylus x reader#love and deepspace x reader#l&ds x reader#love and deepspace#lads x reader#love and deepspace x you#lads x you#sylus x you#l&ds x you#sylus smut#lads smut#lads sylus#sylus love and deepspace#love and deepspace smut#l&ds smut#love and deepspace sylus
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midnight messes are no match for your husband, nanami ✧
→ afab!reader, period sex, oral f!receiving, nsfw
he wakes you up with a kiss to the shoulder, golden hair strewn about his head and a tired look in his eye. the bedroom is overwhelmingly dark, you're lying on your side, stirred from sleep.
"my dear," he mutters into your naked shoulder, closing his hand around your arm. under the blankets, your legs are tangled together. you smile into the touch.
"mm,"
"i know," he reassures, kissing you once more. "but, we're a bit bloody under here."
your eyes fly open, staring off into dead space at the realization. now that he's mentioning it, your stomach is tighter–back ringing with the most delicate of aches. you rush to sit up, pushing him away as you pull your knees to your loosely covered chest.
"holy shit kento, i'm so sorry.. i don't know what to do." you can't see much in the darkness, but you can feel. it's warm on your thighs–thick, crimson, and sticky. "I'm usually so good about... a-about avoiding this, I'm so sorry."
if you could see him through the darkness, you would see the confused sort of half-dead stare he gives you when he sits up. "it's just blood, baby. you didn't shit the bed."
if you could get any more flustered you would, but you're already burning hot and aching at his side. aching everywhere. sizzling like a vampire when he reaches to flick the bedside lamp on.
then the murder scene is shrouded in light and you're staring at him like a guilty puppy. he thinks it's so damn endearing, you're so pitiful and pretty tangled in your bloody sheets that when he goes in to kiss you, it doesn't stop.
and when he starts to dip his head between your thighs, you don't stop him. not even when he's peeling your soiled panties from your skin, inhaling the pure scent of you when he finally comes face-to-face.
blood is soaked into the mattress, past the sheets and blankets, so kento doesn't care anymore. he'll drag you to the couch after a shower anyway and coddle you to sleep, but right now, this was too tempting a situation to pass up. he licks his lips.
"god, you're such a freak. it's always the quiet ones." you're holding your breath as he situates between your thighs, laying on his stomach, trapping your thighs between his big arms.
kento's in his element, breathing in your essence like a perfume. "are you insulting me?"
"what normal man goes down on his wife during her period? mmf- it's unheard of." you bite your lip, rustling against the soaked sheets as kento's soft lips trail over your leg.
"men who are obsessed with their wives and worship the ground they walk on," he pauses, sinking his teeth into the fleshy, sensitive inside of your thigh. "and everything that comes with being so close to a woman." he's making his way up to your warm, pulsing cunt, nose digging between your slit as his tongue makes its way to your hole.
he breathes you in, then licks you clean in one thick stroke.
and you immediately reach to tangle your hands in his hair, pulling him closer, your breath sucked from your lungs. "m'god, it's so sensitive."
"focus on me, baby." kento breathes, lapping sloppy streaks through your cunt. his face is covered in it, the dull light paints his red-tinged face in holy hues, casting shadows against his most prominent features.
his fingers dig in your thighs like he'd die if you moved, so you don't. you arch your back, moaning his name into the damp midnight air.
kento does a better job at cleaning you up than you ever could in the shower, especially because he just doesn't stop. his eyes drift shut like that, red lips sucking at your sweet cunt, moaning into it when a fresh wave of bloody arousal passes his lips.
#cleanup on aisle flo!!#its the fact that nobody asks for this freaky ish but me#.nanami <3#.the wife guy!! <3#jjk x reader#jjk fanfic#jjk smut#nanami x reader#nanami kento x reader#nanami kento x you#nanami smut
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Glide
Pairing: College AU! Frat Boy!Bob Floyd x Fem!Reader!
Summary: When your friends drag you to a frat house party during spring break you weren’t expecting much, but when you go to seek out a moment of silence and end up accidentally stepping into someone’s room, you end up forming an odd connection with one of the fraternity members. (Sequel is ‘Fantasy’)
Warnings: 18+ Minors DNI! Smut, Fluff, Some Angst, Mentions of Alcohol and Drug Use, Reader gets a little anxious in the crowd and mentions agoraphobia, Swearing, Reader has beef with one of the fraternity members, Reader is a Chemistry Major, Bobs in Aerospace Engineering
Smut Warnings: Unprotected P in V Sex (wrap it up), Fingering, Oral Sex (Female and Male Receiving), Handjob, Bob is Inexperienced (but he’s enthusiastic to try everything), Bob talks a lot during sexual acts, Dirty Talk, Praise/Worship Kink, Breast Play, Making Out and Dry Humping, Bob is super sensitive.
Author’s Note: Frat Boy Bob y’all. This was technically a request, but I dashed away with it and truly came to enjoy this so so much. Also just as a side note lol, Frats aren’t really a huge thing where I am, they’re so subdued it’s not even funny, though if you go to party schools you’re definitely going to get an experience and a half (I did not go to a party school so I’m going off of my friends experiences at this point 😂)
Word Count: 17,352
”Tell me again why the hell we’re going to this party?” Your voice cut through the late evening air, low and flat, edged with irritation as you pulled your windbreaker tighter across your chest. The nylon rasped beneath your fingers, a poor excuse for protection against the sharp spring breeze. The smell of your dorm clung to it–laundry detergent, stale coffee, and whatever perfume your roommate had sprayed on in the vicinity of it.
The sidewalk beneath your sneakers was still damp from a passing rain shower. Faint streaks of moisture glimmered on the concerte, catching the fractured yellow light from the street lamps above. You stepped around a crushed beer can and kept your head down, following the clacking of heels and bare legs that were moving a few paces ahead of you.
Jess, Monica, and Sue, your friends by proximity. You had met them during welcome week and never managed to shake them–even though you didn’t really want to. They existed in a different orbit entirely, but they took you in with open arms and tried to crack the shell that you had built around yourself. They were the people that convinced you that college didn’t have to be all about studying and going to class and that it could also be fun too, despite the hefty tuition bill.
The girls had built a three person wall along the sidewalk, pushing against each other as they chatted and laughed about something you hadn’t heard, keeping balance on their heels, skipping cracks in the pavement. They were dressed like the party was going to be a runway show instead of an absolute chaotic mess. Jess wore a short leather skirt and a cropped corset top under a trench coat she wasn’t planning to keep on. Her hair was up, slick and sharp, gold hoops brushing her jaw. Monica had on a silver halter top that sparkled under every porch light you passed, paired with high-waisted jeans and glossy lipstick that matched the cherry polish on her nails. Sue, as always, looked like she’d stepped out of an editorial spread–draped in a backless silk dress and strappy heels that should’ve been impractical, but somehow weren’t.
You, on the other hand, were the outlier–and it was obvious.
Black low-rise jeans hugged your hips, the waistband dipping just enough to expose a sliver of your stomach where your t-shirt stopped. The top was fitted and a plain navy blue, not short enough to be bold, and not long enough to be considered modest–though it was enough to remind you of the cold every time the wind shifted. Your black sneakers were scuffed at the toes, laces uneven, but they were practical for the walk home.
Technically, you were dressed for the weather, but standing next to your friends made you feel underdressed in a different way. Not because you didn’t look good, but because you just didn’t meet the same standard they had set for the group.
Your question had interrupted whatever conversation they were tangled in. Jess glanced over her shoulder first, her earrings catching the light at the turn.
”Well, Jake personally invited us,” She explained, like that was a valid reason, “And you’ve been holed up in your room almost all of spring break studying. You needed to get out. Breathe some fresh air, get social contact apart from us…Maybe drink something that hits a little better than three iced coffees a day.” You groaned immediately at the name Jake, ignoring the rest of the comments she had made about what you had been doing during the break.
”Not that meathead…If I knew that moron invited you guys, I would’ve locked my door and turned off my phone.” Monica sighed.
”C’mon, Y/N, he’s not that bad.” You let out a short laugh–dry and humorless.
”He’s a douchebag. And he thinks I’m a cockblock because I don’t let him get handsy with you guys when you’re half a drink in. I think he’s exactly that bad.” Jess gave a low laugh.
”He’s just a flirt.” You hummed.
”Right, and I’m just a buzzkill.” You muttered. Sue looked over at you now.
”We appreciate the defense. Really. But tonight…We’ve got a bit of a bet going.” You raised an eyebrow.
“What, like who’s gonna bed him first?” There was a pause, and the silence was telling. It caused you to stop walking.
”Oh god.” You rubbed your fingers into the corners of your eyes like you could physically wipe the idea out of your brain. Monica didn’t even flinch.
”He’s hot! How can you not be curious?! I’ve heard a lot of good things…” You dropped your head, staring at her.
”You better make that guy bathe in hand sanitizer before he touches you. God only knows where he’s been.” That got a laugh–sharp, unapologetic. Jess bit back a grin. Sue let out a quiet, breathy chuckle behind her hand, and even Monica smiled.
They didn’t deny it. They didn’t defend him, either.
The four of you continued to walk, your pace catching up to them so you could get involved in their conversation a little more, as your ears caught a hint of bass echoing through the streets.
Campus was surprisingly crowded for a week that should’ve been quiet. Most students hadn’t gone home–not for lack of desire, but practicality. A three-day visit to your hometown wasn’t worth the bus ticket, the packing, and the return. The majority of people who didn’t travel long distances had quietly agreed to stay put, which caused a social pressure cooker of chaos. Parties bled from one house to the next, yards were flooded with empty kegs and pool floats, and of course people were out till all hours of the night taking in the extracurriculars.
You were one of the people who chose to stay, but it was for different reasons.
You had a chemistry midterm that was going to hit you on the Monday right after break, and you needed peace and quiet to get the thirty five page study guide your professor had emailed. You had been hunched over your laptop, dragging a pen across every other line and downing iced coffee like it counted as fuel. Your residence hall had been silent–peaceful in the way only empty buildings could be. No thumping floors. No bathroom chatter. Just the hum of fluorescent lights and the occasional door shutting down the hall.
And honestly, you liked it that way.
Which was why walking up this street, with the scent of cheap body spray and beer already creeping into the air, made your skin itch.
Jess, Monica, and Sue weren’t wrong–you had wasted half your break studying. But a frat party was a far cry from the kind of break you would’ve chosen. You would’ve taken a quiet bookstore, a blackout curtained room, maybe a hot bath. Instead, you were heading straight into the epicenter of campus chaos.
The house came into view like a rising tide–inevitable and loud.
Theta Rho Alpha Sigma Heta.
TRASH, for short.
It was a reputation as much as a name. It was burned into every party story, every Camus warning, and every early morning regret that started with “so we went to TRASH last night.” Ten fraternity brothers lived inside, and every square foot off the place bore evidence of that fact. It was a massive, century-old house–once regal, now abused. Three floors, five bedrooms, two makeshift attic spaces, a finished basement that doubled as a moldy second living room. The paint on the siding had faded into a blotchy, sun-peeled gray, warped by years of weather and neglect. The porch sagged under the weight of too many bodies. One of the support beams had been duct-taped after someone fell through it last fall.
The front steps were uneven, patched with mismatched bricks and sagging plywood. Two of the railing posts were zip-tied together in a last-ditch effort to pass housing inspection. The fraternity’s letters were bolted crookedly above the door, one hanging loose on a single screw. Half-lit from a porch light that flickered like a dying candle.
Light poured from every window–yellow, blown out, too warm. It cast strange shadows across the lawn, catching in the curls of smoke that drifted from blunts and vapes and burning firewood in the backyard pit. The music pulsed through the siding—more vibration than melody. Heavy bass that flattened everything it touched, beating into your chest like an arrhythmic second heartbeat.
The lawn was packed–shoulder to shoulder, people overflowing onto the sidewalk, the flowerbeds, the hood of someone’s car parked at a bad angle. Plastic cups were everywhere, crushed or half-full or abandoned in the grass. The scent of spilled beer hung in the air, warm and sharp, mixing with sweat, weed, fast food, gasoline from a knocked-over jerry can, and the stale breath of a thousand unwashed Red Solo cups.
Someone was blasting a megaphone from the porch steps–a guy in a backwards cap, red-faced and laughing, trying to shout over the music. You caught pieces of it: something about jello shots, something about the beer pong table being “winner stays,” and something that sounded suspiciously like “naked mile.”
Two guys were wrestling in the grass by the mailbox, one of them missing a shirt, the other holding a can of whipped cream like a weapon. A girl stumbled past them in glitter boots and a bikini top, waving a phone and yelling at someone you couldn’t see. Another was throwing up behind a bush while her friend held her hair and nodded along to the music like it was a shared ritual.
From the second-floor balcony, a makeshift banner drooped crookedly on a frayed bedsheet:
TRASH FEST 2NITE - NO RULES. NO EXCUSES. NO SLEEP.
“Jesus,” Jess muttered under her breath, pausing at the edge of the lawn. “It’s already booming and it’s not even 9:30. We are so late.”
You followed a few paces behind her, stepping carefully around a puddle of cheap beer that had soaked into the grass. “Didn’t know we could be late for a frat party,” You mumbled, eyeing the porch like it might collapse under the weight of the crowd.
But the girls were already in motion, rushing toward the chaos like it was gravity pulling them in. You hung back just slightly, weaving your way around the worst of the lawn–dodging a guy hurling glow sticks into the crowd and stepping over a discarded takeout container that looked like it hadn’t survived the walk from the sidewalk. Your shoes slipped slightly on the wet grass as you moved toward the porch steps, where cigarette butts and crushed cups had collected like driftwood on the edge of a rising tide.
You stepped up, sneakers hitting the warped planets, hand grazing the rickety railing as the music began to rattle your teeth at full force. The door was open, the entryway wide and glowing with overexposed yellow light. You could smell it all before you even crossed the threshold–booze, sweat, pot, deodorant masking body odor, and something burnt that might’ve been food or someone’s hair.
The second your foot crossed the threshold, it hit you all at once–the heat, the crowd, the crush of music and smoke and too many bodies packed into too little space. The entryway smelled like spilled tequila and cheap cologne. Someone’s hoodie brushed your shoulder, sticky with sweat, and you recoiled instinctively, scanning for your friends. Jess’s trench coat disappeared into the living room. Monica’s glitter top flashed once, then vanished into the blur. Sue was already at the bar cart in the corner, snagging plastic cups.
You were still deciding whether to follow–or leave–when he stepped in front of you.
Jake Seresin.
Leaning casually against the wall near the stairs, like he’d been waiting for this exact moment.
He looked the same as always–clean cut and cocky, like a walking recruitment poster that never had to try too hard. His hair was neatly styled, strawberry blonde in colour, and slightly dampened from either sweat or a shower. You didn’t know and quite frankly you didn’t care.
He wore a snug black t-shirt that clung to the curve of his biceps, jeans slung low on his hips, worn-in boots planted like he owned the floorboards. A silver chain peeked from under his collar, catching the glow from the overhead bulb. The smirk on his face arrived before he spoke.
“Y/N…I see you’ve decided to come out of your cave.” Jake’s voice cut through the heat and noise like he owned the damn place–which, unfortunately, he sort of did, especially because he was the head of the house. His smirk was smug enough to slap off his face, and the way he looked at you–lazy, head tilted just slightly–made your blood itch.
“Didn’t realize you were doing doorman duty tonight. What’s the matter–couldn’t con a freshman into kissing your boots on the way in?”
Jake laughed, low and amused. He shifted his weight, arms crossing, biceps flexing like it was involuntary. “Cute. But if you really wanted to see me, you could’ve just said so. No need to pretend you’re here for the punch.”
“If I wanted to see you, I’d schedule a lobotomy first,” You said, eyes scanning past him to where the party stretched out like a sweaty nightmare, “You’re like athlete’s foot. Persistent. Itchy. Impossible to get rid of.”
That earned you a flash of teeth, the smirk sharpening. “Damn. Must’ve missed that sparkling charm of yours. Thought maybe you’d chilled out since fall semester.”
“Nah,” You replied, smiling without warmth, “You don’t know me well enough to assume something like that.” He hummed.
”You always this feisty, or do you just save it all for me?”
“I save it for pests,” You shot back, “Like you.” And with that, you pushed past him–your shoulder clipping his lightly–just enough to make it clear you were done. You didn’t wait for a comeback. You didn’t care what his smug ass had to said next. The music hit harder in the next room, and the humidity had already begun to creep under your clothes like steam.
Sue caught up to you almost instantly, already grinning like she’d watched the whole exchange from the sidelines.
“Thanks for buttering him up,” she said, patting your arm. Her tone was teasing, but not mocking. “I’m going in for the first interaction of the night.”
You raised your cup-less hand and gave her a small salute.
“Good luck,” You shouted back over the bass, smirking. She gave you a wink before disappearing into the crowd, swaying through the bodies with ease. You peeled off toward the kitchen, dodging a couple making out near the coat rack and stepping over a few abandoned beer cans. The kitchen was a warzone of overturned shot glasses, and a group of architecture students stacking some of the spare red solo cups in a tower. To your left, a half-empty bowl of lime wedges was slowly withering beside an array of crumpled napkins, and then your eyes found the coolers.
There were three of them, stacked neatly along the wall beneath the fogged kitchen window–white Igloo coolers with duct-tape labels stuck to their lids like someone had planned this out. You paused for a second, brow lifting slightly. It was the first thing you’d seen in this entire house that resembled forethought.
POP / ENERGY / SPORTS DRINKS
It was handwritten in black Sharpie, a little smudged from condensation, but legible. Organized.
You flipped the lid, expecting warm cans swimming in brown ice water and maybe the scent of something that had once been fruit punch. Instead, it was ice cold. There were cans lined up in half-hearted rows–soda, sports drinks, a few scattered energy drinks, and even a rogue seltzer tucked in the corner.
You spotted the ginger ale immediately and grabbed it, the can blessedly cold against your hand. You popped the tab with a low crack, the fizz whispering up as you turned around and leaned back against the counter. The metal felt cool through your jeans, a shock of comfort against your overheated skin.
You brought the can to your lips and took a sip–dry, sweet, clean. The carbonation hit your throat gently, but the cold grounded you.
The nausea that had been curling in your gut since you stepped into the house–maybe even since you left the dorm–began to quiet under the fizzy bite. Not completely. But enough.
Your eyes scanned the room as you sipped. People buzzed in and out like bees. Music bled through the drywall. There were beer pong shouts from the living room, someone screaming off-key to a pop remix from the basement, and a girl in the corner of the kitchen trying to convince her friend that no, taking another shot wouldn’t fix the situation.
You took another sip of your ginger ale, but this time it caught in your throat.
You coughed into your arm, quietly at first—then once more, harder, sharp enough to make your eyes water. The fizz didn’t settle your stomach like before. It turned sour, bubbling too fast. Heat rose under your skin, too much of it. The air felt wrong—like it wasn’t going in properly, like the room had subtly tilted without warning and your lungs were working against it.
Maybe it was the noise. The press of people. The humidity clinging to every surface like a second skin. Or maybe it was you.
You blinked slowly, dragging in another breath through your nose, but it didn’t go deep enough. Your chest tightened instead. Like a pressure band had cinched beneath your ribs, subtle at first, then steady, then sharp.
Shit.
You glanced around again, searching for something—a signal, maybe. A reason to leave. A place to bolt to. But everything looked the same: sticky floors, laughing strangers, red cups tipping on every flat surface. Too much noise. Too much movement. You couldn’t catch your footing in it. Couldn’t ground yourself.
You didn’t know if you were going to throw up or have a panic attack, and honestly, it didn’t matter—because either way, you needed out.
You pushed off the counter. The cold had left your jeans, and your hand trembled slightly as you set your can down, half-full and already forgotten. The kitchen was a blur behind you, the music thudding harder now, bass lines vibrating in your teeth.
You moved fast, weaving through the main floor with quick, shallow breaths. Eyes down. Shoulders tight. The living room passed in a smear of sweat and cheap cologne, someone’s laughter bouncing too loud off the crown molding. You didn’t stop to said anything. Didn’t look for your friends. You didn’t want to worry them–not yet. Not until you figured out what the hell was happening.
Going outside wasn’t an option. Not with the yard full of people. If one of your friends saw you slipping out, they’d follow. Or worse–they’d worry. You didn’t want that either.
So you made for the stairs.
The banister was sticky and warm under your palm as you took the steps two at a time. Your breath hitched halfway up, chest clenching like your ribs were welded shut. You swallowed hard and forced yourself to keep going.
The second floor was marginally quieter, but the walls were still too thin. Bass leaked through every inch. Laughter echoed from behind doors, and the smell of weed hung low like a fog.
You moved fast–hand grazing doorknobs, cracking one open only to find two people already tangled on a futon, backlit by LED strips. You didn’t pause. You just kept going.
Next room: a circle of guys smoking out of a gravity bong made from an Arizona bottle. One lifted his hand in greeting, eyes bloodshot and lazy. You shut the door.
Another: a girl crying on the floor while two of her friends huddled around her with shot glasses. You closed that one a little more gently.
The hallway seemed endless. Your chest was still too tight. Like there wasn’t enough air on this floor either.
Then finally the last door on the left creaked open to a well lit, completely empty room. You stepped in, fast, and shoved it shut behind you, the slam loud in the sudden quiet. Your back hit the wood, hard enough to jolt your spine, and you didn’t care. The silence was immediate, muffled and warm and blessedly still.
Your eyes adjusted to the sight in front of you and almost immediately you were absorbing all the details.
The room was bright in contrast to the rest of the house–lit by a desk lamp angled toward a bulletin board cluttered with index cards and printouts. The overhead light was on too, not dim or tinted like the others downstairs, but clean and soft and yellow, illuminating the space in a way that made everything feel more grounded. Less warped. Less unreal.
Your eyes scanned the details, cataloguing without meaning to.
A twin XL bed sat tucked in the corner, sharply made with a green-and-navy plaid duvet pulled taut at every corner. The sheet edges were squared, the pillows firm and aligned. Not a wrinkle in sight. There was a subtle indent on the right side of the mattress—someone had been sitting there recently. Maybe even within the hour. But whoever it was, they weren’t here now.
You stared at the bed like it might steady you. Like if you focused hard enough, the room would stop spinning entirely.
Beside the bed, a heavy oak bookcase ran nearly the full height of the wall. It was packed with titles, every shelf brimming. Not decorative either–thoroughly read. Dog-eared paperbacks leaned into thick hardcover editions, grouped not by color or aesthetic, but by subject. Biographies. Math. Novels. Non-Fiction. Chemistry and Science. A few textbooks on differential equations, stacked beside a worn copy of Dune and a boxed set of The Lord of the Rings. Your fingers twitched, instinctively wanting to trace the spines.
You blinked slowly. Breathed in through your nose. The room smelled faintly like pine and laundry detergent–clean and muted. No sweat, no beer, no weed. Just detergent, and the faint dry scent of paperback pages.
A corkboard hung above the desk, pinned with exam timetables, lab schedules, a few biology notes, and what looked like a printed-out list of citations in 12-point Times New Roman. The chair tucked neatly beneath was ergonomic, not cheap. Beside it sat a large, dented water bottle and a stack of neatly bound notebooks.
Posters lined the wall–nerdy ones. Retro Star Wars prints. A 2001: A Space Odyssey poster framed in black. There was a NASA diagram of the solar system pinned above the desk, annotated in ballpoint pen like whoever lived here used it to actually study, not just decorate.
You took a step forward, the floor creaking under your weight.
“…Geeky,” You muttered to yourself, voice hoarse, quiet. The sound came out more like a breath than a statement. Your knees nearly gave out when you reached the side of the bed. You sat down slowly, hands braced on the plaid comforter, fingers splayed across the dense fabric.
It gave a little under your palms. Still faintly warm.
You let out another breath–long, uneven, but better than before.
Your heart was still pounding, but it was loosening its grip. Slowly. The walls weren’t closing in anymore. Your lungs weren’t seizing.
You tapped your fingers against the mattress and started listing what you could see.
“Desk lamp. Physics textbooks. Star Wars poster. Clean sheets. Plaid pattern.”
Another breath.
“Water bottle. Books on aerospace…Math. Scent’s clean. No body spray. No beer.”
Another breath.
It wasn’t magic. But it helped. saiding it all aloud gave your mind something to anchor to.
You swallowed, eyes fixed on the corner of the room. “Big bookshelf. Index cards on the corkboard. Neatly folded blanket on the chair.” You paused, blinking. “Shit,” you whispered softly, dragging your hand down your face.
It wasn’t that you were weak. You knew what this was. You’d never been diagnosed, but the signs were hard to ignore. The panic. The way crowds made your body feel like it was misfiring from the inside out. How your throat closed up in packed rooms. How every party ended with your head spinning and your jaw locked in quiet dread.
Agoraphobia. You’d read about it. Dismissed it. Then quietly reconsidered it. And then dismissed it again.
But tonight? Tonight your body had decided to remind you it was real.
You leaned forward, elbows to knees, head in your hands. Not crying. Just breathing. For a long moment, you stayed like that–drinking in the quiet, letting the static in your limbs slowly begin to fade.
The sound of the door handle turning ripped through the quiet like a thunderclap.
You jolted upright–spine snapping straight, fingers braced against the mattress, breath catching mid-inhale.
The door creaked open slowly, a rectangle of warm hallway light spilling across the floor, cutting a golden line through the carpet and up your jeans. And then he stepped inside.
You blinked hard.
He froze halfway through the threshold. One foot in, one out, like he hadn’t meant to walk in on anyone–and certainly hadn’t expected to find a stranger perched on his bed.
He looked about your age, maybe slightly older. Tall but not imposing, lean in the kind of way that came from long hours of running or lifting–not bulking. His face was unmistakable even in the soft light: gentle features, tousled light brown hair that curled slightly at the ends from where it had dried naturally, no product. A strong jaw softened by the faintest dusting of stubble. He had a pair of glasses perched on his nose–simple, silver rimmed, they looked similar to aviator glasses, just a little more rounded off in the lenses. They were crooked but he didn’t reach up to fix them.
And those eyes…Wide, bright, and startlingly blue.
Like the ocean under a cold sky. The colour made your stomach turn, and the way they reflected in the light made your head spin.
He wore a navy crew neck sweater with the university crest stitched over the chest, sleeves pushed halfway up his forearms, revealing ink stains and a faint red pressure mark on his wrist where a watch probably used to be. Grey sweatpants hung low on his hips, worn at the knees, soft enough that they must’ve been his go-to. A can of sprite was in his hand, dripping from the ice that had melted over it.
“Oh. Oh god–I’m sorry.” The words rushed out of your mouth quickly, breathless, “I didn’t mean to–I wasn’t…” His brows lifted slightly, but there was no alarm on his face. Just surprise. His voice was low, quiet, and careful.
“It’s okay…I–uh–it’s alright.” He hesitated, eyes flicking across the room, landing briefly on your curled posture, your flushed face, the slight tremble in your hand as you pushed back from the bed. “Are you…Okay?” You blinked. Your heart was still hammering. Not from fear anymore–but embarrassment. Humiliation. He didn’t look like he thought you were stealing. He didn’t even glance toward the desk or the bookshelf. He was looking at you. Really looking. Reading the panic that hadn’t quite drained from your body yet.
You felt your shoulders curl in instinctively, defensive. But there was no judgment in his expression–just a quiet, earnest concern that felt way too soft for someone who’d just found a stranger in his room.
“I–” You swallowed, hand hovering mid-air like you weren’t sure whether to stand or bolt. “I didn’t know anyone was here. I just–I needed out. I was–I had to get out of the kitchen.” He nodded once, like he understood completely. He stepped the rest of the way into the room and closed the door behind him–not all the way, but enough to soften the noise from the hallway. It was strange how quickly the room felt like a bubble again. A barrier. A pause from everything that came before it.
“I figured…” He said quietly, “The parties here get pretty loud and overcrowded, so I don’t blame you for wanting to get some peace for a minute.” You swallowed thickly, your throat still tight with leftover nerves, and exhaled through your nose.
“Yeah,” you murmured, voice quieter now, “I can’t imagine living here, to be honest.” He smiled—not cocky like Jake, not smug or practiced. Just a small, self-deprecating curl of his lips, as if he agreed with you more than he was willing to admit.
“Noise-cancelling headphones really come in handy.” That earned a low breath of amusement from you.
“I guess you’re right with that one…”
He took a sip of his Sprite, the faint crackle of carbonation filling the small silence that followed. It wasn’t uncomfortable exactly–just heavy with all the things neither of you were sure how to said yet. He stayed near the door, not wanting to hover or crowd you in any way. You watched him for a second, and then another, noting the way his shoulders shifted under the weight of the conversation–or maybe just the attention.
Then, softly, like he was testing the waters:
“I’ve seen you around before…In the science building. You’re in Chem 241, right?”
Your brows lifted slightly, caught between surprise and guarded curiosity. “Yeah… it’s my major.” You tilted your head. “How do you know what class I’m in?” He gave a sheepish, quiet laugh, the kind that curled at the corners of his mouth without ever really reaching full confidence. He ran a hand through his hair, the motion making it stick up slightly in the front.
“You’re in the class before mine. You’ve got kind of a familiar face.”
You paused, eyes still on him, your heart starting to settle into something else–less fight-or-flight, more puzzled curiosity. He didn’t look embarrassed exactly, but there was a warmth in his cheeks now, visible even in the soft lighting. A flicker of nervous energy vibrated at the tips of his fingers as he shifted his Sprite to the other hand.
Then, like the thought had only just occurred to him:
“Oh–Jesus, sorry. I’m Bob, by the way. Bob Floyd.” He grimaced slightly at the awkwardness of it, wiping his damp palm against the thigh of his sweatpants before offering it out to you, fingers curled slightly.
You hesitated for only half a second before reaching out and slipping your hand into his. His palm was warm, slightly chilled from the condensation of the can but dry now. The grip was gentle, just enough to be firm without overcompensating.
“Y/N,” You said quietly. Your name sounded softer in this room than it had downstairs-like the sound itself respected the quiet.
He smiled again. “Y/N,” He repeated, a little slower this time, like he was filing it away in some meticulous corner of his brain. “Nice name,” Bob said, quiet and genuine. The words weren’t perfunctory–they landed with a softness that didn’t feel like filler. More like a real compliment, shaped by how he said it. You blinked once, caught off guard by how sincere it sounded.
Before either of you could speak again, a sudden crash reverberated through the floorboards beneath you–so loud and forceful that your feet actually lifted a half inch from the mattress. Something heavy had toppled on the first floor. Maybe furniture. Maybe a person. Followed by a cascade of laughter that barely muffled the groaning bass still pounding through the walls.
You flinched, eyes widening, then looked toward Bob with a raised brow.
“What’s a guy like you doing in a frat house, by the way?” You asked, your voice dry but curious, brushing your palms down the front of your jeans. “You seem too…Sane.” Bob took another slow sip of his Sprite, his glasses catching the overhead light as he tilted his head slightly.
“It’s pretty good to have on a résumé,” He said mildly. “Minus the parties, of course.”
You hummed, the sound low in your throat as your eyes flicked toward the ceiling like you were scanning for divine confirmation. “Yeah…I think if any future employer found out the type of parties TRASH throws, I’m pretty sure you’d be hired immediately. Just for surviving them.” That earned an actual laugh from him–low and warm, the kind that started in his chest and curled up into his mouth like it surprised even him. It settled something inside you. Not the panic entirely, but the vulnerability that had followed it. His laugh made the room feel a little more human. Less clinical. More like a moment you weren’t intruding on, but sharing.
“I don’t participate in them, evidently,” He claimed, gesturing lightly toward his desk. “So I’d be lying.”
You followed the motion with your eyes–the papers, the water bottle, a perfectly aligned mechanical pencil, and what looked like a cracked-open packet filled with printed slides and diagrams.
“Evidently,” you echoed softly, tilting your head a little as you looked around again. “What were you doing?” Bob exhaled–half sigh, half breath of frustration–and stepped toward the desk. He reached for the study packet, flipping the top corner up between his fingers to show you the first page. It was already heavily marked–some in black pen, some in red. Diagrams had been annotated, circled, dissected line by line. Across the top margin, written in neat, even letters, was the course title: Space Systems Design – Midterm Review Packet.
“Studying,” He said. “I have the test on Monday, and I’m nowhere near done with this thing.” His tone was tired but not bitter, just resigned in the way that only students deeply familiar with academic despair could be.
You gave a quiet, knowing laugh–one that felt more like release than amusement. “Of course. I guess every professor gets off on torturing science and engineering students,” You muttered, stretching your arms briefly. “Because I’ve got a very similar packet sitting on my desk right now for my Chem Midterm.” He placed the packet back on the desk with a soft tap.
”Misery loves company, I guess.” He offered.
“More like intellectual suffering,” You replied dryly, crossing one ankle over the other where you sat at the edge of his bed. There was a beat of silence, the kind that settled into the warmth between two people who hadn’t yet decided if they were strangers or acquaintances.
Bob leaned slightly against his desk, fingers still resting on the edge of the study packet. He tilted his head just enough for his glasses to slip down his nose for a moment, then asked softly, “So…Who dragged you out of your studying and brought you here?”
You huffed out a breath, half a laugh. “My friends got personally invited by your frat brother Jake,” you said, tone flat and unamused. “I’m assuming you know him well.”
That pulled a low, genuine laugh from Bob–his shoulders lifted slightly, the sound soft and disbelieving. “Well… I guess he’s trying to expand his roster again.”
You smirked, leaning back just a little on your palms. “Guess one of my friends is getting lucky tonight then, if he’s looking to score.”
Bob let out a hum, lips twitching toward a grin. “As long as they have a pulse, they’re fair game.”
You groaned. “Figured that…”
Another crash exploded beneath your feet–some combination of broken glass and furniture legs giving out–followed by a howling cheer from the crowd downstairs. You both winced slightly, shoulders tensing at the same time.
Bob exhaled a sharp breath, then straightened. He looked at you carefully–not with pity, but consideration–and then asked, quiet and steady:
“You wanna maybe…Get out of here?”
You blinked.
He shrugged one shoulder, casual but sincere. “Denny’s is 24 hours. We could sit there for a bit, get something to eat. And I’m sure if we stay long enough, the party’ll start to die down. Then you can get your friends when they’re all done here…” It was such a simple offer. No pressure. No weird edge. Just a safe, open hand held out toward the exit sign.
And god, it was tempting.
“Yeah…” you said almost immediately, your fingers already moving to unlock your phone. “Yeah, that sounds great, actually. I’ll just text them and let them know I’m going.”
Bob smiled–wide this time, soft and relieved. “Great.”
You glanced back up at him, still a little breathless from the past hour, still not sure if this was all a fever dream or the best part of your spring break. But you smiled back.
And maybe, just maybe, your night was finally starting to turn around.
———————————
The walk to Denny’s wasn’t long, but it was everything you needed.
The fresh air hit your lungs like a blessing–not sharp, not cold, just crisp enough to wash the smoke and sweat from your senses. Each breath cleared your head a little more. The bass from TRASH still thudded faintly in the distance, but the further you got from the house, the more it faded into the background noise of a quiet college town on a restless spring break night.
The streets were mostly empty, save for the occasional burst of laughter echoing down from a distant porch or a cluster of bikes propped against a lamppost. The rain from earlier had left the sidewalks glistening, catching the glow from streetlights and shop signs like scattered glass. Bob walked beside you, not too close, not too far–just an easy, steady presence. Every now and then, his shoulder would sway slightly toward yours, like gravity had its own opinion on the distance.
Denny’s sat at the edge of campus like a low-lit promise. The sign flickered faintly overhead, buzzing with the tired hum of fluorescent tubes, casting a pale glow on the nearly empty parking lot. It was a local staple–open all night, slightly grimy, and universally understood to be the unofficial overflow space for students who couldn’t sleep, didn’t want to go home, or just needed somewhere to exist without judgment. You’d studied here before. So had everyone. It smelled like syrup and fry oil and burnt coffee, and for some reason, it always felt safe.
Inside, the place was quieter than usual. A couple of booths were filled–one with a pair of students whispering over open textbooks, another with two guys splitting a plate of mozzarella sticks and arguing over a March Madness bracket. But the energy was muted. Dimmed. Like the whole place had taken a collective breath and decided to chill.
You and Bob slid into a booth by the window, vinyl seats squeaking under your weight. The table was slightly sticky with syrup residue–standard–but the lighting overhead was warm and soft. You could actually hear yourselves talk. You could actually think.
The waitress–a woman with tired eyes and a pen stuck behind her ear–dropped off two mugs and a full pot of coffee without asking. She must’ve pegged you both as regulars, or at least as students. Bob gave her a soft “thank you,” and you echoed it before she disappeared behind the counter.
Bob poured the coffee first, filling your mug before his. The gesture was small, automatic, but it made you pause for just a second.
“I think breakfast is one of the only meals I actually enjoy at any time of day,” he said as he handed you the sugar packet holder.
You hummed softly, stirring a little cream into your cup. “Pancakes, waffles, French toast–all sweet things,” You replied, voice a little lighter now, “But I do agree…Breakfast foods are definitely better than most.”
Bob nodded, pushing his glasses up the bridge of his nose as he reached for a menu. “Haven’t eaten much today, so I’m probably going to order a lot,” He said, deadpan but with a flicker of a smile. “Just warning you now.”
You laughed, slouching into your seat as you wrapped your hands around the warmth of the mug. “I won’t judge. As long as you don’t judge me for ordering an extra order of bacon. And possibly ham…And maybe another round of home fries.”
He looked up at that, a glint in his eyes beneath the lens glare. “Definitely won’t.”
Then, leaning forward just a little, voice conspiratorial and soft, he added, “But I will probably steal some of those home fries though, so…By all means, order away.”
You grinned, lifting your coffee to your lips. “Fair trade.”
And just like that, the tension that had wrapped itself around your ribs for hours began to unravel–for real this time.
It took a few minutes for both of you to confirm your orders–too many good, greasy options, too little brainpower left to commit. You squinted at the menu through the soft overhead glow, half your focus still caught in the feeling of warm coffee and the unexpected calm of the moment. Bob, meanwhile, flipped his menu once, then again, lips twitching like every option looked equally dangerous.
The waitress returned, pad in hand, looking only marginally more awake than when you walked in.
“I’ll have the fruit-topped pancakes,” You said, “With a side of bacon, ham…And an extra order of home fries…For the table of course…” You offered a small smile, like you were trying to excuse your own hunger, but she didn’t blink.
Bob, on the other hand, cleared his throat like he was preparing to read an oath. “Ultimate omelette, please. A side of pancakes, just the normal ones…And…A side of French toast, with bacon.”
She paused. Just slightly.
Her gaze slid over him like she was doing mental math on how someone built like a straight-laced study boy could possibly demolish what would equate to three breakfasts at once. Her brow lifted–just for a second–but she didn’t say anything. Just jotted it all down with a faint scribble of pen on paper, nodded, and disappeared with both menus in hand.
As soon as she was out of earshot, Bob let out a short, quiet laugh, leaning back in his seat. “I think I freaked her out a bit with all the food.”
You stifled your own laugh behind the rim of your mug. “Yeah, maybe a little. She’s probably wondering how you’re going to eat all of it.”
He shrugged, lifting his coffee. “We’ve got a bit of time. I think I can manage.”
That earned a proper laugh from you, low and genuine. You settled back against the booth as the hum of Denny’s buzzed softly in the background—silverware clinking, someone flipping a page from the next table over, a soft beep from the kitchen.
Bob took another sip of his coffee and set the mug down, fingers tracing the rim absently. “So…” He began, voice still gentle, “what’re you doing on campus during spring break?”
You exhaled slowly, watching the light catch the small glint of moisture still clinging to the window beside you. “My parents’ house is… A little chaotic,” You admitted. “And I really wouldn’t be able to study if I went back. So I just figured I’d stay in my dorm. Easier to focus. Cheaper, too.”
Bob nodded, listening like he really meant to. “Do you work?”
You reached up to scratch the back of your neck, sheepish. “Yeah. I work at Beans To You. Part-time barista. It gives me some extra spending money–enough to keep me caffeinated through exam season, anyway.”
That pulled another smile from him. “Do you like it?”
You lifted your hand and made a so-so motion in the air. “It’s fine. Tips are decent. My manager’s a nightmare, but I like the regulars.”
He nodded like he got it, then said, “I don’t really work…Not officially, anyway. Sometimes I write essays for a few of the frat guys and they pay me.” He gave a small shrug. “So I don’t know if you’d count that as a job or just…An Academic crime.”
You gasped dramatically, placing a hand over your chest like you’d just been personally betrayed. “You? Violating academic integrity? I’m shocked.”
Bob laughed, tipping his head down in mock shame. “Yeah, well…I can’t really keep a normal job while studying. Too much going on up here.” He tapped the side of his temple with a finger. “But I commend you for being able to juggle it.” You can feel your face heat up slightly.
“Thanks…” The silence between you and Bob stretches for a few seconds–comfortable, not strained. Outside the Denny’s window, a streetlight flickers, casting faint gold shadows across the table. The warmth of your coffee mug seeps into your palms, grounding you even as your thoughts turn over the night like a loose coin.
You glance over at him, chin tilted slightly, voice soft. “So why are you still on campus during spring break? Since you asked me…”
Bob’s hand curls around the coffee pot again. The ceramic glugs quietly as he refills his mug, steam rising faintly into the warm air between you. He doesn’t speak right away–just watches the dark liquid settle.
“Same as you, pretty much,” He replied after a beat, setting the pot back down. “But… I also don’t have a lock on my door, and the guys go into my room pretty often to steal things, so…” He shrugs one shoulder, faintly sheepish. “I figured it was better to be there. Y’know–stand guard.”
You smirk and lean forward slightly, grabbing a little plastic creamer cup from the holder and rolling it between your fingers. It clicks softly as it spins. “Interesting that you have a bunch of thieves in your presence.”
That earns a laugh from him–low and rough with amusement. “Well… they’ll always give the stuff back, of course. But only if I remind them.” He lifts his mug, lips quirking slightly as he takes a sip.
You hum, raising a brow. “Still sounds like thievery to me.”
His cheeks tint pink as he glances down into his cup, swirling it once before replying under his breath, “Touché I guess…” The silence slips in again—brief, like a shared breath—and you let your gaze settle on his hands for a moment. They’re long-fingered, a little ink-stained around the knuckles. Gentle, despite the size. His nails are clean but bitten at the edges. Tired hands. Capable ones.
Your voice cuts through the quiet again, this time softer, almost curious: “Your girlfriend must not like the guys coming in and out of your room, though.”
Bob pauses mid-sip. His lips part like he’s going to reply quickly, then he stops. A flicker of surprise crosses his face. He sets the mug down gently.
“No girlfriend,” He confirmed finally. His voice is steady, but there’s a faint guardedness behind it. “Kinda stopped trying with the whole dating thing. It was a bit… much.”
You blink at that. “Too much of a line-up?”
That draws a real laugh from him–quiet, exasperated, a hand lifting to rub at the back of his neck. His glasses slide slightly down his nose again.
“Oh, please…” He chuckles. “No. No line-up for me. I mean—look at me.”
You do, pointedly. “I am.”
He goes redder. You smirk.
“It’s just…” He exhales, shoulders relaxing as his fingers stir the coffee absentmindedly. “It’s complicated, y’know? I’m not very good at the whole–putting yourself out there thing. And I think people expect something when you show up to a date all prepared and polished. It gets weird. You have this whole pressure to perform. To be ‘on.’”
You tilt your head slightly. “Well, you seem to be outgoing. You’re doing pretty good with this conversation. I don’t know how it could be complicated.”
Bob stirs the sugar in his mug, the spoon clinking gently. He looks down at it, not quite meeting your eyes, but not avoiding them either.
“Maybe it’s because you’re pretty easy to talk to,” He explained. “It’s different when there’s no pressure. No expectations. You didn’t show up tonight wanting something from me. We just…Met. You don’t have a picture in your head of who I’m supposed to be.”
That strikes something in you–a truth you hadn’t quite realized was sitting at the edge of your own thoughts. You nod slowly, leaning a little further into the table.
“That makes sense,” You said softly. Your hand brushes the edge of the sugar packet holder again, fingertips tapping faintly. “I also think you walking in on me having a bit of an anxiety attack probably helped. With you staying calm, I mean.”
Bob’s head lifts slightly. His blue eyes catch yours again–bright, steady, warm. “That too,” he said, with a small smile. “It kind of cut through the usual noise. I knew what it was the second I saw you.”
You raise a brow gently. “Do you have experience with that kind of thing?”
He nods once. “I’ve had my moments. I’m…Pretty familiar with what it looks like. What it feels like.”
You feel your chest loosen–just slightly. There’s something in the quiet way he said it that wraps around you like a thread. Honest. Matter-of-fact. Not dramatic. Just shared.
You sip your coffee again, letting the silence settle in a way that feels companionable now, like you’ve both earned it.
Then Bob lifts his head a little more, his glasses catching the light as he looks at you across the table. His voice is lower now. “You’re okay now though, right?” You could feel your heart catch–not in that suffocating, chaotic way from earlier, but in a softer, almost stunned kind of ache. Because here he was: Bob, a stranger only hours ago, asking with quiet sincerity if you were okay. Not out of obligation. Not to get something from you. Just… because he cared. And somehow, that mattered more than you were prepared to admit.
“Yeah,” You replied, your voice light, but genuine. “I’m definitely feeling much better. I think it was just…How cramped the house was, to be honest.” You gave a soft, sheepish smile, pushing your hair behind your ear. “Wasn’t really a fan, I guess.”
Bob nodded, the corners of his mouth curling faintly. “That makes sense,” He murmured. “I think TRASH is like… the physical embodiment of a migraine.”
You snorted, and it broke the last of the lingering tension between you.
Before either of you could respond, the clatter of ceramic and the faint shuffle of sneakers announced the return of your waitress. She placed your food down with the weary grace of someone who’d balanced plates through hundreds of midnight shifts.
“Alright,” She said, eyeing the table, “Round one.”
She set down your fruit-topped pancakes–stacked high, glistening with syrup and dotted with blueberries and strawberries. The bacon was curled and crispy, the ham thick-cut and slightly charred at the edges. A steaming mountain of home fries followed, golden and peppered with bits of caramelized onion.
Bob’s first plate came next: a monstrous omelette, folded tight and stuffed with peppers, ham, cheese, and something else that looked like it might have once been alive and screaming. French toast followed, dusted with powdered sugar and still steaming, then the final plate of classic pancakes–plain, but perfectly browned and stacked like they belonged in a diner commercial.
“Damn,” You muttered as she walked away to grab another pot of coffee. “You weren’t kidding.”
Bob gave a faux-serious nod. “I take breakfast very seriously.”
Conversation flowed easily now, spilling over between bites and swipes of syrup, the low hum of the diner cocooning you in soft sounds: the hiss of the kitchen, the occasional ding of a timer, and the quiet scrape of forks over ceramic.
You talked about everything and nothing. Favorite professors. Weirdest drink orders you’d ever made at work. Other times, he said things you hadn’t expected: like how he wanted to work in aerospace design someday, or how he didn’t sleep well unless there was white noise playing somewhere nearby.
Somewhere between your second helping of home fries and Bob’s last piece of French toast, your phone buzzed. You picked it up mid-chew and glanced at the screen.
Jess: we’re heading back. dorms are too far but jake’s breath is worse. I’m tapping out.
Monica: don’t wait up <3
Sue: text when you’re home safe pls 🫶
You thumbed a quick reply, a warm smile tugging at your lips.
You: i’ll be good. i’ll text when i get back to the residence so you know i got home safe <3
When you set the phone down again, Bob was watching you–not in a weird way, just casually, curiously, like he could tell something in your expression had shifted.
“Friends bailing on you?” He asked, reaching for the last bite of his pancakes.
You nodded. “Yeah. Party must’ve worn them out.”
“Probably for the best,” He started, “It starts getting rowdy at around this time.” You snorted.
”What’s new? It’s like y’all don’t sleep, I’ve heard enough stories that it literally feels like when I don’t go to one of your parties I still attended.”
Bob laughed so hard he almost choked on his coffee.
By the time your plates were mostly empty and the coffee pot had been drained down to lukewarm remnants, you realized just how late it had gotten. The booths had began to thin out even more–there was just one table of students left, dozing over half-finished pancake stacks. The quiet was deeper now, but not uncomfortable.
The waitress returned to your table just as you were lifting your mug for one final sip, now half-cold and slightly bitter. Her pen was already poised, her notepad loose in one hand, her face unreadable behind the faint sheen of a night shift glaze.
“It’ll be one bill,” Bob said before she could even ask, his voice smooth but casual.
Your head jerked slightly in surprise, a protest already rising in your throat. “Wait, no–Bob, come on, you don’t have to–”
He shook his head gently, cutting you off with nothing more than a glance and a small smile. “It’s all good,” He murmured, already pulling out his wallet. “You got me out of the house for the first time this week. I owe you.” Your cheeks warmed, a slow bloom of heat rising into your ears. You blinked down at your mug, then back at him, and that’s when the sky opened.
A sudden roar of rain crashed against the diner’s roof, pounding like a thousand thrown pebbles. The windows misted almost instantly, a sheet of water streaming down the glass and distorting the world outside into a watercolor blur.
Bob flinched slightly, twisting in his seat to look outside. His shoulders hunched on instinct, and a low, resigned sound escaped from his throat. “Well…” he said, squinting past the droplets, “That doesn’t look good.”
You turned your gaze to the window and let out a dry laugh, exhaling softly as you looked down at the windbreaker you had draped over your lap. The nylon was thin and practically useless, more aesthetic than functional, and the idea of stepping into a monsoon in it was laughable at best.
“Guess I’m gonna be taking a second shower tonight,” you muttered.
Bob laughed—a soft, tired huff that carried the warmth of shared annoyance. He reached for the debit machine the waitress had just placed down, brows furrowing slightly at the glowing screen.
“I mean…” he began, eyes still on the numbers as he typed in a 20% tip with practiced ease, “TRASH is closer than your residence, I’m assuming…”
You stilled, your fingers lightly tapping the rim of your coffee cup. You raised an eyebrow and tilted your head toward him, a smirk flickering at the corner of your mouth. “Are you asking me to stay over at the frat house for the night?”
The question hung in the air, playful but open-ended, wrapped in something more vulnerable beneath the teasing. Bob’s fingers hesitated only a second on the keypad. Then he cleared his throat, his jaw flexing faintly as he focused a little too intently on the screen.
A tinge of pink crept into his cheeks, barely visible in the soft overhead glow, “Well,” He started, still looking at the machine, ““I don’t think it’ll be as chaotic as it was when we first left. It’s…”
He pulled his phone out of his hoodie pocket, thumb swiping the screen quickly before glancing at the time. His voice was slightly rough when he spoke again. “1:58…So most of the party crowd’s probably passed out or Ubered home.” You let the moment linger, your gaze resting on him as you traced the edge of your mug with your fingertip. The rain was still coming down hard, a near-constant shushing against the glass. You could feel the chill creeping in from the windowpane behind you, but your fingers were warm.
Your tongue flicked out to dampen your upper lip–an unconscious movement. “Okay,” you said quietly, meeting his eyes as he finally looked up. “You’re right.”
Something flickered behind his glasses–relief, maybe. Or hope.
“So…” He asked, voice gentler now, “Is that a yes?”
You tilted your head, pretending to consider it for dramatic effect. Then you nodded, slow and sure, your smile small but certain. “Definitely.”
———————————
By the time you reached the frat house again, your windbreaker had clung to your frame like a second skin–useless, soaked through, plastered to your arms and back. Bob hadn’t fared much better; his sweatshirt was darkened with rain, sweatpants sticking to his legs, curls dripping water down the sides of his face. You both half-jogged the final stretch of the walk, laughing breathlessly as puddles splashed beneath your sneakers, your jeans growing heavier with every step.
The porch light still flickered above the sagging steps of TRASH, casting its usual jaundiced glow across the warped wood and the crowd that lingered despite the downpour. The music inside had dulled to a murmur now–more background hum than bassline. A few people still lounged on the porch and by the windows, some wrapped in borrowed blankets or wearing half-soaked hoodies, clearly unwilling to brave the rain to get home.
You and Bob didn’t say anything as you stepped back inside. You didn’t need to.
The shift in temperature was immediate. Warmth hit you like a wall–sticky and musty from the remains of the party, but comforting after the rain. Your wet clothes clung to your skin, and you blinked against the fog that immediately fogged up Bob’s glasses.
He muttered something under his breath and took them off, reaching blindly for the nearest surface. A tissue box sat crookedly on the edge of a table cluttered with empty bottles and a half-eaten slice of pizza. He snagged one with a quiet “thanks,” as if the house had done him a favor, and carefully wiped the raindrops from the lenses.
You stood beside him, dripping gently onto the floorboards, ignoring the damp squish of your socks in your shoes.
“This is your fault,” You murmured dryly, nudging him with your elbow, pointing down at your shoes.
Bob smiled behind the tissue, his glasses still in hand. “Can’t control the way I splashed the puddles, it’s not my fault.”
You rolled your eyes, but the warmth of the exchange settled between you like steam, softening the cold still clinging to your back.
The climb to the second floor was quieter than before–no bodies spilling down the stairs, no screams from behind doors. The hallway was dim, lit only by the faint blue glow of a nightlight near the bathroom and the soft hum of a TV still playing somewhere behind a closed door. You padded side by side, shoes squelching softly, until you reached the door at the very end.
Bob stopped and looked down at the wet prints you’d both left on the wood floor. “Wait,” He said, hooking a finger into the heel of his sneaker. “Let’s not trash the room on the way in.”
You mimicked him without question, tugging your own shoes off and stepping gingerly onto the dry patch of carpet just outside his door. Your barefeet were cold against the wood, but you followed his lead as he opened the door and ushered you inside.
The warmth of the room embraced you immediately–soft light still glowing from the desk lamp, books undisturbed, bed still neatly made. It looked exactly as you’d left it, like the universe had paused while you were gone. A pocket of calm in the storm.
Bob shut the door behind you with a quiet click, and you both stood there for a second, wet and shivering, taking in the familiar scent of detergent and paper and pine.
You turned to him, wringing out the bottom hem of your shirt slightly. “So…What’s the protocol here?” You asked, gesturing vaguely to your soaked clothes. Bob cleared his throat, the sound soft but a little strained as he shifted in place. His hair was damp and sticking to his forehead from the humidity of the rain and the faint warmth of the room.
“Um… I have some spare clothes you can wear,” He said, gesturing vaguely toward the small closet on the far side of the room. “They might be a little big, but…”
You shook your head immediately, brushing a few wet strands of hair back from your face as water dripped quietly from your sleeves. “I don’t mind,” You murmured. “Not really trying to impress anyone.”
That earned the faintest smirk from him, quick and crooked–just a twitch of amusement at the corner of his mouth. He turned away and opened his closet, the wooden door creaking faintly on old hinges. Inside, everything was neatly stacked or hung: flannel shirts, hoodies, folded sweats, a few plastic hangers twisting slightly from where they’d been jostled. It wasn’t much, but it was organized–just like the rest of him.
After a second of deliberation, Bob pulled out a pair of flannel pajama bottoms–soft-looking, forest green and navy plaid–and a white t-shirt with faded navy lettering stretched across the front.
You tilted your head, brows lifting slightly. “‘The All-State Mathletes’?”
He sighed. “Yeah…It was a math team I was on in my first year. Don’t ask.”
You grinned and took the bundle from his hands, brushing your thumb across the worn fabric of the shirt. “I’ll take anything at this point.”
“I figured,” He muttered with a low huff of a laugh. Then, with a tilt of his head, “Bathroom’s two doors down. Towels are in the top drawer if you need one.”
“Got it.” You nodded, stepping back into the hallway barefoot, flannel bundle tucked under your arm and your wet clothes slapping faintly against your side with every step.
The bathroom was empty–thank god–and you wasted no time peeling off your drenched clothes. The fabric clung stubbornly, cold and limp against your skin, your jeans making that awful suction sound as you dragged them down your legs. The windbreaker hit the floor with a wet slap, your socks not far behind.
The dry fabric of the borrowed clothes was a godsend.
The pajama pants were big, predictably, and you had to roll the waistband twice just to get them to sit above your hips. The t-shirt hung past your thighs, thin and worn soft with age, the letters cracked and faded from a thousand washes. You caught your reflection in the mirror briefly as you towel-dried your hair–still damp–but a little steadier now.
You bundled your soaked clothes into a loose pile in your arms and padded back down the hall, feet cool against the hardwood. The party had dulled into something sleepy and distant. A door creaked open somewhere behind you, but you ignored it, your focus set entirely on the quiet golden glow spilling from the crack beneath Bob’s door.
When you opened it, your hand halfway full of damp denim, you froze in the doorway.
Bob was halfway through pulling on a clean shirt, the fabric bunched in his hands as it hovered just below his collarbone. His back was to you, bare and still slightly damp, pale under the soft overhead light. And god–he was lean, sure, but he was defined. His shoulders tapered into the strong slope of his spine, the muscles along his back pulling tight with every breath as he raised his arms. His skin was smooth, but the planes of him were lined with quiet strength–faint dips and ridges casting gentle shadows across his shoulder blades and the curve of his waist. You hadn’t expected him to be built like that.
Your throat went dry.
You coughed–a soft, involuntary sound that slipped from your chest before you could stop it.
Bob startled slightly and turned, shirt still bunched in his hands. His glasses were back on, fogged faintly from the warmth of the room. His cheeks went pink almost instantly, like the realization had only just hit him. “Oh Jesus,” he muttered, yanking the shirt over his head in a single, awkward movement. “I didn’t know you’d be back already.”
You took a cautious step in, one hand tightening around the bundle of wet clothes clutched to your chest. “Sorry. I didn’t mean to just walk in–didn’t really expect you to be…Changing.”
Bob shook his head as he adjusted the hem of the shirt, tugging it into place at his hips, smoothing it over the faint damp patches on his new pair of navy sweatpants. “No–it’s fine. Really. Uh…Let me get you a towel for your pillow…And I can throw your clothes in the dryer so they’ll be good by morning.” He moved quickly, brushing past you with careful steps, warm air trailing in his wake. You caught the scent of him as he passed–faint detergent, piney body wash, something subtle and clean that clung to the soft cotton of his shirt.
He opened a small drawer near the dresser, pulling out a thick grey towel and handing it to you without making eye contact. Then he glanced down at the soaked bundle in your arms and gently reached for it.
“I’ll toss these downstairs now,” He offered. “Give me five minutes and they’ll be spinning.”
You nodded, lips parting slightly. “Thanks. Really.”
Bob’s expression softened as he looked up at you–his blue eyes still wide behind the lenses, but a little calmer now. “Do you want a drink or anything?” He asked as he backed toward the door. “I’m probably gonna grab some water before…Sleep.”
You hesitated, then gave a small, grateful smile. “Yeah. Water is fine…Thank you.”
He nodded once and slipped out the door, leaving you alone again in the soft glow of his bedroom. The sound of his footsteps faded down the stairs, and you sat slowly at the edge of the bed again, towel draped across your shoulders, the smell of his room slowly working its way deeper into your skin.
You thumbed open your group chat as you sat at the edge of Bob’s bed, the thick towel still draped over your shoulders like a shield. Your wet clothes were gone–already clunking softly in the dryer downstairs–and the cold had mostly left your skin, replaced by the slow radiating warmth of his room.
The group chat lit up under your fingers:
You: made it back to the frat house safe. staying here tonight—will explain tmrw. love you guys. <3
A second later, Sue reacted with a heart. Jess sent a gif of someone raising an eyebrow dramatically, and Monica just wrote: “knew it 😉”
You rolled your eyes and let out a soft breath of amusement, then set the phone down on Bob’s desk, the screen glowing faintly for another second before fading to black. You turned back toward the bed and let yourself sink into the mattress, exhaling slowly as your shoulders dropped. The towel slipped from your frame, and you folded it carefully, placing it over the pillow before lying back, arms stretched loosely at your sides.
The room hummed around you. Softly. Comfortably. A distant thump of music still pulsed from the floors below–muted now, a sleepy echo of chaos already starting to dissolve into morning fog. Somewhere, a door clicked shut. Pipes murmured in the walls. And the desk lamp bathed the room in a low, golden glow, casting soft shadows against the bookshelves and the edge of the closet.
Then, the door opened again.
Bob entered quietly, closing it behind him with the same practiced care he’d used all night. His hair was slightly less damp, the ends curling gently around his ears. A bottle of water was tucked in each hand, condensation trailing slow rivulets down his fingers.
“Here,” He said, holding one out to you.
You sat up slightly, taking the bottle with a soft “Thanks,” and cracking it open. The cap clicked beneath your fingers, the cool water a sharp contrast against your warm skin. Bob twisted the top off his own and took a quick sip, his Adam’s apple bobbing with the motion. Then he lowered it and glanced toward the bookshelf with an unreadable expression.
“I’m just going to grab a blanket,” he said casually, “and take the spare room.”
You paused mid-sip, brows lifting. “What?” you said, letting the cap snap gently back in place. “You don’t want to share a bed?”
Bob’s eyes darted to yours, surprised. His lips parted faintly. “You…want to share a bed?”
You shrugged, voice light but steady. “Well…yeah. I don’t really mind. There’s enough room, isn’t there?”
His gaze flicked to the mattress like it needed to be double-checked. “Yeah, there is,” He admitted, the corner of his mouth twitching. “Just thought you wouldn’t want to be sleeping in a bed with a stranger.”
You tilted your head, the edge of a smirk tugging at your lips. “Hey now,” You teased softly, “Come on. We aren’t strangers.”
Bob huffed out a breath–a laugh, almost. “We met less than twelve hours ago and we’re already sleeping in the same bed. Seems fast.”
You stood slowly, the blanket falling back in soft folds behind your legs. “I’m fine with fast if you are,” you said, tone flirtier than before, the words curling at the edge like steam rising from pavement.
Bob looked at you for a long moment. His eyes flicked down your frame briefly–respectfully–but you caught it. Just the faintest breath of a glance at the oversized shirt, the rolled waistband of his pajama pants on your hips. Then he swallowed, the movement subtle but visible.
You climbed under the covers, placing your towel-topped pillow against the headboard and leaning back into it. The sheets were soft–cotton, a little warm from the dryer, carrying the faint scent of his detergent. Your body sank into the mattress like it remembered the panic you’d felt hours ago and wanted to nestle into something still, something safe.
You patted the empty space beside you, eyebrows raised in invitation. “Well?”
Bob didn’t answer right away. He just smiled–shy and a little stunned–and shuffled toward the bed like he didn’t quite believe this was real. The mattress dipped slightly under his weight as he climbed in beside you, his long legs folding under the blanket, which he pulled up to his shoulders like muscle memory.
His shoulder brushed yours–barely–but the heat of it lingered.
You reached across your chest and handed him your water bottle without a word. He blinked once, took it with a murmur of thanks, and leaned over to place it gently on the nightstand beside his own. The lamp clicked off a second later, plunging the room into darkness, save for the faint sliver of moonlight that slipped through the small window of his room. A silver-blue sheen spread softly across the edge of the comforter.
The quiet pressed in, not heavy or stifling, but thick with awareness.
Your bodies didn’t touch, but the heat between them curled like smoke.
You could hear the shift of the covers when Bob adjusted his legs, the soft whisper of fabric against skin as he rolled slightly toward you on instinct–then seemed to catch himself and settle again on his back. The bed creaked faintly beneath the motion, and then stillness returned.
The air smelled like clean cotton, pine body wash, the faintest trace of rainwater clinging to the ends of your hair. You turned your head on the pillow slightly, voice just above a whisper.
“Still awake?”
“…Yeah,” He said quietly. “You?”
You nodded in the dark. “Mm-hm.”
The quiet stillness wrapped around you like a weighted blanket, warm but buzzing with something new. It had shifted—gently, imperceptibly—but it was there now. Not the panic. Not the awkwardness. Something softer. Something waiting.
You turned over slowly, your arm sliding across the blanket as you rolled onto your side, the mattress giving slightly under your weight. The movement made a faint rustle, just enough for him to hear.
Bob shifted too.
His silhouette turned toward you, quiet and careful, until you could make out the soft rise of his chest beneath the covers, the faint slope of his shoulder, and the curve of his jaw in the pale wash of moonlight. His glasses were gone, probably folded on the nightstand with your water bottles, but even in the dim light you could see the glassy reflection of his eyes.
Blue. Gentle. Wide. Fixed on yours.
“Do you maybe want to maybe…Do something?” You asked, voice soft, watching as he swallowed hard.
”…What…What do you have in mind?” You didn’t answer right away. Just let the silence stretch between you like silk. Then your gaze dipped, slow and deliberate, to the shape of his mouth.
Soft, parted slightly. Waiting.
His breath caught–just the faintest hitch–and you saw his eyes flick down to your lips, mirroring you. Like instinct. Like gravity.
You leaned in.
It was tentative at first–your chest barely grazing his, your hand resting lightly on the edge of the pillow as you crossed the final few inches. Bob didn’t move, but his breath deepened, a quiet exhale drifting over your cheek as your nose brushed his. Then you closed the distance.
Your lips met his, soft and feather-light.
He froze for half a second, as if stunned–but then he kissed you back. His lips were warm, slightly chapped, but so gentle it almost made your ribs ache. He moved like he was afraid to shatter you, like this moment was too fragile to claim outright.
His hand came up slowly–hesitant at first, then steady. His palm cupped the side of your face, thumb brushing the curve of your cheekbone. The contact lit a slow-burning warmth across your skin. He let out a breath–long and unsteady against your lips, like the kind you exhale when you’ve been holding it too long.
He pulled back just a little, the tip of his nose brushing yours as he hovered, eyes open now, close enough that you could feel the faint tremble of his breath. You opened your eyes too.
And then you leaned forward again.
This time it wasn’t tentative. Still soft, still slow–but heavier now. More certain. You kissed him with your full mouth, with the weight of everything the night had built. Your lips parted slightly and so did his. The kiss deepened, quiet but lingering, the kind of kiss that said I see you. I feel this too.
Bob responded with a quiet sound in the back of his throat, like the breath had been pulled from him again. His hand shifted from your cheek to the base of your skull, fingers slipping into your damp hair, holding you with a gentleness that made your stomach flutter.
Your other hand found his forearm beneath the blanket, the heat of his skin a slow thrum against your fingertips. He tilted his head slightly to meet your mouth more fully, deepening the kiss just enough that you felt your body lean in instinctively. His lips moved against yours with the kind of reverence that made your breath catch–slow, aching, as if he didn’t want to stop.
When he finally pulled back, it was only by an inch. Just enough for air. Just enough to look at you.
The moonlight caught in his lashes, his irises shining like sea glass. His lips were redder now, parted slightly, the corner of his mouth trembling faintly from restraint or disbelief. His thumb brushed along your jaw as he studied you, breath still coming a little faster than before.
“Is this okay?” He whispered.
Your heart twisted at the softness in his voice. You nodded–barely a motion–but it was enough.
“Yeah,” You whispered back. “It’s perfect.” Bob stared at you for a breath longer, like he couldn’t believe you were real. Like this whole thing might vanish if he blinked too fast.
Then he leaned in again.
The kiss that followed was deeper–hungrier. Less tentative. His hand was still cradling the side of your face, thumb brushing under your eye, but there was a new weight behind the way he kissed you now. A heat that curled up from the pit of your stomach, spreading like honey beneath your skin. His lips parted a little faster, like he was giving in to something he’d been holding back.
You pressed in with him, lips slotting together again and again, and then you moved–your body shifting under the blanket as you brought one leg over his hip, slowly, testing.
Bob froze for half a second–just long enough for you to hesitate–but then his hand moved. The one on your cheek slid down, dragging lightly along your jaw, your neck, the curve of your shoulder, until it found your thigh. His fingers curled around the back of it, firm and warm, and pulled you gently closer.
You moved instinctively, hips settling into the cradle of his body, your leg draped loosely over his, pressing in. The blanket bunched around your waists, forgotten. The worn cotton of his borrowed flannel pants brushed against your skin as you rocked forward, just enough to feel the heat between your bodies catch.
His breath hitched.
The kiss deepened again, your lips parting just slightly, just enough to taste his breath. And then you felt it–his tongue, tentative but sure, slipping past your lips to meet yours. It wasn’t sloppy or rushed. It was slow and searching, like he wanted to memorize the shape of your mouth from the inside out. You responded in kind, your fingers curling lightly into his shirt, gripping the soft cotton as you rolled your hips again–just once.
Bob gasped against your lips.
It wasn’t loud, but it was raw–half breath, half sound, the air from his lungs catching in his throat. You felt the heat of him through the fabric, the slow, aching tension building there. His fingers dug into your thigh just slightly, not enough to hurt–just enough to pull.
You did it again. Slower this time. Your hips moved in a slow, steady circle, the friction sweet and hot even through the layers of borrowed clothes. Bob broke the kiss suddenly, his lips parting with a soft huff of air as his head tilted back against the pillow.
“Fuck–” He breathed, almost inaudible, as though it had been dragged from him by accident.
You pulled back slightly, brushing your nose along his cheek before pressing a slow kiss to the corner of his mouth. “Get on top?” he asked, voice rough, uncertain but yearning.
You nodded, lips still brushing his.
He shifted beneath you, back arching slightly as he rolled onto his back, adjusting the blanket so it slipped lower across his hips. You followed the motion, moving carefully, straddling him with slow, deliberate movements. The oversized shirt you wore fell forward slightly, hanging off your shoulders as you adjusted your weight over him.
His hands settled instinctively on your thighs, fingertips flexing gently as you leaned down to kiss him again–this time firmer, more desperate. It was less polished now, more honest. You kissed like people who hadn’t had something like this in a long time. Like this was a secret you weren’t supposed to be sharing but needed anyway.
You began to move again, hips rocking gently against him in a slow rhythm that made his jaw slacken beneath your mouth.
Bob groaned–quiet, tight–and his hands moved to your waist, holding you just a little more firmly now. His breath was hot against your mouth as he kissed you harder, sloppier now, letting go of some invisible restraint. Your thighs squeezed around his hips, the pressure sending heat curling down your spine. You could feel how hard he was through his sweatpants now, the heat of him pressed up between your legs with every slow drag of your hips.
His moan broke the rhythm.
Soft and helpless. It slipped into your mouth like a secret.
You pulled back, barely, kissing the line of his jaw and the soft, exposed skin of his neck. He tilted his head just enough to give you more space. His throat flexed when you kissed him there–gently, again and again–before murmuring softly:
“Are you okay?”
His fingers tightened just slightly where they rested on your hips. His breath came a little faster now, chest rising against yours in shallow waves. And then, softly, almost embarrassed:
“I…I’m a bit sensitive…”
You paused, still straddling him, your hand smoothing lightly over his chest. The thump of his heart was rapid beneath your palm.
You looked down at him, eyes searching in the dark. “Are you…A virgin?”
He shook his head quickly, cheeks flushed red even in the faint light.
“No…No, not a virgin. But it’s…It’s kind of been a while. And I haven’t… I haven’t had sex with many people.”
Your heart softened at the honesty. The way he said it, not ashamed–just cautious. Like he wanted you to know what you were working with. What you were holding in your hands.
You leaned down, brushing your lips gently against his jaw.
“We can stop if you want,” You murmured. “I don’t mind just doing this. You don’t have to prove anything.”
Bob shook his head immediately, voice quiet but steady. “No…No, we can keep going. I want to. I really want to.”
You smiled, slow and reassuring. A gentle hand slid down to his chest again, your thumb brushing the fabric of his shirt as you spoke.
“If you want to stop, just tell me, okay?”
He nodded, eyes wide and warm. “Okay.” You leaned down again, your lips brushing the corner of his jaw, then trailing lower, slow and coaxing. Bob tilted his head back, just enough to expose his throat to you, and you took the invitation without hesitation–pressing soft, lingering kisses to the curve of his neck, the warm hollow beneath his jaw. You let your tongue flick out lightly, tasting the salt of his skin, the faint tang of piney body wash and rainwater still clinging to him.
His breath hitched again when your lips ghosted over the edge of his collarbone.
You kept moving downward, slow and deliberate, your hips still rocking gently against his as your kisses followed the slope of his body. The heat between your legs pulsed against the firmness beneath his sweatpants with each subtle shift, each teasing grind of pressure. You could feel him trembling slightly under you–barely noticeable, but there.
Then, without a word, he shifted.
He leaned up just enough to grab the hem of his shirt and peel it over his head in one fluid, unhurried motion. His hair stuck up in damp little curls as he tossed the shirt aside, chest rising and falling more quickly now, bare and flushed under the faint light.
You paused.
Your gaze swept over him–up close now. Every inch of him laid out before you. His chest was broad, lined with soft muscle, not overworked but strong. The subtle lines of his ribs shifted with each breath. A faint trail of hair disappeared beneath the waistband of his sweats, and your mouth went dry again.
“Jesus,” You murmured, almost to yourself, your fingers ghosting over his sternum. He shivered under your touch. Your hands traced down slowly–past his chest, over his stomach, feeling the flutter of his abs tensing beneath your palm. You kissed each inch as you moved, warm and open-mouthed, pushing the comforter lower as you went.
He was breathing harder now, lips parted, one hand fisting the sheets beside him as he fought to stay still.
When you reached the waistband of his sweatpants, you looked up.
“Can I take these off?” You asked softly, fingers already hooked into the fabric.
Bob looked down at you, eyes glassy with heat, and nodded. “Yes… Please.”
You pulled them down slowly, dragging them past his hips, down his thighs, then off entirely. Your breath caught as he was finally exposed to you–fully, completely. He was big. Thick and flushed and already twitching under your stare, the head glossy with arousal, a vein pulsing visibly along the underside.
Your eyes widened just a little.
He saw it.
His face went red immediately, arms twitching like he wasn’t sure whether to cover himself or not. “Is…Everything okay?”
You nodded quickly–so quickly it made your hair shift. “Yes. Oh my god…Yes.” You reached up, wrapping your hand around him carefully. His whole body reacted–his hips stuttered and his eyes fluttered shut, a choked gasp leaving his lips. His thighs tensed beneath your knees.
“Still okay?” You asked gently, your hand already stroking him in slow, reverent pulls.
He opened his eyes, dazed and breathless, and nodded. “Yeah. Fuck–yeah.”
You leaned forward then, dragging your mouth along the sensitive skin of his lower abdomen, kissing just above the base of him. His hips jerked slightly under you. And then you took him into your mouth.
The reaction was immediate.
Bob let out a sound–high and broken, something between a moan and a whimper–and his hand flew up, grabbing at the pillow behind his head like he needed something to hold on to. You started slow, letting your lips stretch around him, your tongue tracing every inch you could reach, eyes flicking up to watch the way he unraveled.
It was messy. Your lips were already slick, your breath hot against him as you took him in deeper, your hand stroking what your mouth couldn’t manage. You let spit slide down your chin, let your tongue swirl at the sensitive underside of the head, and when you pulled back just enough to suck softly–he whimpered again.
“Fuck–Fuck, you’re–” He didn’t finish.
His chest was heaving now, one hand clenching the sheets, the other twitching at his side like he wanted to touch you but didn’t dare. You glanced up again, your eyes meeting his as you took him back into your mouth, deeper this time. His head fell back.
He tried to warn you. “I–I’m gonna–shit–”
You didn’t stop.
You kept going, messy and steady, humming softly around him. That was what pushed him over.
He came hard.
It hit like a jolt–his thighs tensed, a full-body tremble ran through him, and his hips jerked once, deep and involuntary. You swallowed everything, kept your mouth on him, letting him ride everything out with soft, wet pulls until he was gasping, his voice broken and breathless.
“Holy shit…” He whispered, “Holy shit.” You pulled off slowly, wiping your mouth with the back of your hand, then kissed the inside of his thigh gently. He twitched under the touch, already so sensitive.
You looked up at him.
His hair was wild against the pillow. His chest was still rising and falling fast. He looked wrecked–in the best way. Flushed and dazed and entirely undone.
“…You okay?” You asked softly, your voice a little hoarse. He nods. His chest rose and fell in shallow waves, a light sheen of sweat just beginning to bead at his collarbones. His voice was rough when he finally spoke.
“You’re…” He swallowed, almost like he didn’t believe it himself. “You’re so good at that.”
You smiled–lazy, warm, lips still glistening from where you’d had him in your mouth. “Glad I didn’t disappoint.”
Then you began kissing your way back up, slow and teasing, your mouth trailing over his thigh, the curve of his hip, the faint dip of his navel. His body tensed in small waves under you, his hands twitching like he wasn’t sure whether to grab you or ground himself.
By the time you reached his chest again, your lips hovered above his, your palms pressed flat against his ribcage as you straddled him once more. The moment your mouths met again–softer now, slower–he kissed you like he could still taste himself on your tongue. Like he didn’t care. Like it made him hungrier.
Then, without a word, he shifted beneath you.
His core tightened–subtle but strong–and his hands slid firmly up your sides. And in one smooth, steady motion, he turned you both. Rolled you right onto your back, his body pressing down over yours, careful but deliberate. The mattress dipped beneath the change in weight, the blanket twisting around your waists as he settled on top of you.
You gasped, then laughed, the sound half-breathless. “Oh, okay,” You whispered, grinning up at him in the moonlight. “You’ve got muscles after all.”
Bob smirked–still shy, still pink in the cheeks, but he liked that reaction. You could tell.
His hands skimmed up beneath the oversized shirt, fingers warm and reverent as they rested just below your ribs. His thumbs rubbed slow, uncertain circles into your skin.
“Is this okay?” He murmured, already breathless again, eyes locked on yours like he’d stop the world if you flinched.
You nodded slowly, voice quiet but steady. “Yeah. Let me take it off for you.”
Bob leaned back just enough to let you sit up, his hands sliding down to brace your waist. You grabbed the hem of the shirt and peeled it up and over your head in one swift motion, the cotton catching briefly at your wrists before falling in a heap beside the bed.
The second you were bare to him, Bob’s eyes darkened. Not with anything aggressive–just wonder. Awe.
Then his mouth was on you immediately.
He leaned down, lips brushing the curve of your breast, then the center of it, then closing over your nipple with a gentleness that made your breath stutter. His mouth was hot–wet and reverent–and when he sucked, slow and careful, your back arched instinctively off the bed.
You heard him moan against you.
It was low and quiet, but you felt the vibration hum through your skin, straight down your spine. One of his hands came up to cup the other breast, thumb flicking across the nipple, just barely grazing it–testing your reaction. You gasped, thighs shifting beneath him, and his fingers twitched in response.
He liked that. He really liked that.
Bob switched sides without warning–his lips moving from one breast to the other, leaving a trail of kisses behind. He sucked more firmly this time, tongue circling your nipple before pulling it into the warmth of his mouth. You couldn’t help it–you let out a soft, broken moan, your fingers threading into his hair.
You tugged. Not hard, but enough.
His breath hitched again, and he groaned into your skin.
The sounds he was making were softer than you’d expected–gentle and desperate all at once. As if pleasuring you was more overwhelming than being pleasured himself. He took his time with your chest, letting each kiss linger, letting each flick of his tongue draw another gasp from you. He alternated pressure, learning what made your back arch, what made you squirm, what made your thighs tremble against his hips.
You tightened your fingers in his curls and whispered, “Bob…Fuck.”
He pulled back, lips red and wet, his breath warm against your breast. His eyes flicked up to yours.
“Can I go down on you?”
The question hit low in your stomach–immediate, electric.
Your lips parted before you even thought. “Yes…” A breath. “Yes, please.”
His smile broke through slow and stunned, like it had just dawned on him that he’d get to do this–that this was real. He kissed your sternum once, then lower, reverent as he worked his way down your body. His hands slid beneath the waistband of your pajama pants, fingers brushing your hips gently.
You lifted your hips in silent offering.
The flannel was untied with fumbling fingers–more eager than graceful–and he tugged it down with care, eyes glued to your body like he couldn’t believe how lucky he was. You helped him, pushing the fabric past your thighs, letting it fall in a heap somewhere at the end of the bed.
Bob shifted between your legs, hands bracing your thighs as he kissed the inside of one, then the other. His short strands of hair brushed your skin, his breath hot and unsteady against the most sensitive part of you, and when he glanced up–eyes wide, lips parted–you thought you might actually combust.
He settled lower. Breathed deep. And then tasted you.
The sound he made was immediate—a choked, guttural moan that vibrated through your entire pelvis.
“Jesus Christ,” he whispered, voice wrecked already. “You taste so good…”
Then his mouth was back on you.
Hot, open, eager.
He didn’t know what he was doing at first—at least not perfectly—but he learned fast. Every whimper, every shift of your hips, every breathless moan was something he studied. His tongue flicked, then flattened. Lapped broad and slow, then circled tight and precise, adjusting to your reactions like he was memorizing you.
The warmth of his mouth was overwhelming. It was everywhere. Wet and insistent and so good.
Your back arched and your hips rolled forward on instinct, chasing the pressure, and he groaned into you again—into you—like the weight of your pleasure was his. His hands gripped your thighs tighter, spreading you open for him, holding you steady like he needed to stay here, buried here, like he couldn’t risk missing anything.
“Bob–oh my god–”
You felt him moan at the sound of his name, his tongue dragging slow and deep, lips sucking just enough to make your breath catch and stutter. It was dirty and worshipful all at once. Sloppy and reverent. It had you squirming against his mouth, your legs trembling on either side of his shoulders.
Then he paused.
Pulled back just barely–just enough to catch his breath and speak. His voice was thick and panting, his lips shiny, chin wet.
“I’m gonna…” He swallowed. “Add fingers.”
You let out a breathy, desperate moan, hips twitching up toward him involuntarily.
“Fuck, Bob…Please.”
He dipped his head again, kissing your clit once–soft and wet–before trailing lower with his tongue as his hand slid between your thighs. You felt the first press of his fingertips at your entrance–tentative, reverent–and then one slipped inside, slow and gentle, curling just enough to make you cry out.
“God,” He breathed, kissing your thigh as he moved. “You’re so wet…”
He added the second without warning–easing it in slowly, stretching you around his knuckles, and you swore the breath left your body in a rush. His fingers filled you, thick and warm and so good, and he started moving them–slow and firm, curling upward just right, just right–and then his mouth was back.
This time, he devoured you.
Messy, hungry, moaning against your clit as his fingers worked inside you, finding a rhythm that had your entire body going taut. You were writhing now–hips lifting, thighs clenching, voice catching in your throat as you tried to stay grounded, stay still, but he was relentless. Determined.
Like he’d waited years to do this and he was making up for lost time.
You felt it building–hot and sharp and inevitable–and your hands found his hair, pulling tight, holding on for dear life as your body surged forward.
“I–I’m gonna–fuck, Bob, don’t stop–”
And he didn’t. He just moaned into you, tongue flicking faster, fingers pumping deeper, curling as he groaned in response to your tightening around him.
You shattered.
Your thighs clamped around his head, heels digging into the mattress, your hips twitching against his face as you came with a full-body spasm, mouth open in a silent cry. You heard yourself babble his name, hips bucking helplessly as the orgasm tore through you, hard and fast and blinding.
Bob kept going. Gentle but steady. Lapping you through it, moaning into you like your pleasure was the best thing he’d ever tasted.
You finally collapsed back into the sheets, breathing ragged, hair clinging to your forehead. You laughed–soft and winded–still twitching every time he brushed too close.
He lifted his head slowly, face flushed, lips slick, chin glistening in the low light. His pupils were blown, chest rising and falling like he’d just run a marathon.
“You okay?” He asked, voice hoarse.
You blinked up at him, dazed and completely blissed out.
“You’ve been blessed…” You dragged in a breath. “With such raw talent.”
Bob blinked–then laughed. Hard. Giddy. His smile broke wide across his face, messy and flushed and so proud. “Yeah?”
You nodded, still catching your breath. “Definitely. You were so good… So, so good.”
His cheeks turned red. “Like, uh… Good enough for a second round?” He teased, voice low. Your smile widened, slow and a little wicked, still flushed and catching your breath. “I think…” You murmured, voice soft but laced with heat, “I want to feel you. Actually.”
Bob’s breath caught. His eyebrows rose just slightly, like the words had short-circuited his brain. “Yeah?” he asked, half-disbelieving.
You nodded, lifting your hand to trace a lazy finger along the line of his jaw. “If you want to, of course.”
His eyes softened instantly. “I want to.” His voice was rough again, thick with desire, but gentled by the way he looked at you. With care. With hunger. With awe.
He crawled slowly up your body, his hands braced beside your ribs, his chest brushing softly against yours. His lips found your collarbone first–featherlight and reverent. Then your neck, where he pressed an open-mouthed kiss just below your ear, tongue flicking briefly against your skin.
You could feel him, hard and hot, dragging against your inner thigh as he moved. It made your hips roll on instinct.
“Going down on you really got me going…” He breathed into your skin, voice low and desperate, hips twitching slightly. His body was shaking with restraint.
You giggled–a breathy, warm sound that made him smile as you turned your face toward him. Your mouths met again, lips pressing together, and you tasted yourself on him–your own slickness still clinging faintly to his lips, his tongue. You kissed him deeper, your hand sliding along his spine.
He pulled back just enough to look at you. “You really want to?”
You nodded, brushing your nose against his. “Do I need a condom?”
You watched his pupils dilate at the question, a harsh breath catching in his throat. “I’m on the pill, and I haven’t had sex in a bit but my recent STD test was clean.” You added, voice even softer now.
“Fuck…” He breathed, voice cracking a little. “Okay.”
He kissed you again, deeper this time–urgent but not rushed. Like he needed to feel you everywhere before he could push in. One of his hands slid down between your bodies, finding the heat between your thighs with instinctive precision. He nudged the tip of himself against your folds, dragging it up and down–slick and hot–through your wetness.
You both groaned.
Your hands gripped his arms, fingers curling into his skin as he slowly began to push in. His body trembled above you, the pace careful but steady, like he wanted to feel every second of it. The stretch burned in the best way–deep, hot, slow.
“Jesus Christ,” Bob whispered, his voice completely wrecked. “You feel so good… You’re so fucking warm…”
You gasped when he bottomed out, hips flush against yours, every inch of him buried deep inside. The fullness made your toes curl, your whole body responding with an involuntary tremble.
He didn’t move right away. Just hovered above you, his breath ragged, his eyes searching your face. He kissed you–softly–his mouth trembling slightly as he whispered:
“You’re perfect. You’re so fucking perfect.”
You moaned at that, your thighs tightening around his waist, your hands sliding up his back and digging in just enough to make him gasp. His hips drew back and rolled forward again–deep, grinding, slow. Each thrust pressed his pubic bone against your clit, and the sensation made your breath stutter.
“Oh–fuck–“ You gasped, your voice catching.
Bob stilled immediately, looking down at you through glassy, blown eyes. “You okay?”
You nodded frantically, hand gripping his bicep. “Yeah. Do it again.”
He did.
Again. And again. A slow, sensual grind that hit exactly right every time. Your hips began to twitch under him, your breath breaking in little gasps as you chased the rhythm with your body.
He moaned into your mouth as he kissed you–lips sloppy now, too lost in the moment to care. Every sound he made was raw: gasps, whimpers, soft broken curses whispered against your lips and skin.
“Fuck… You feel so good, so good around me, sweetheart,” He rasped. “You’re squeezing me—God, you’re… You’re perfect…”
The praise was relentless. You could barely breathe from how hot it made you.
You tightened around him, fluttering involuntarily with every thrust. You were close again–dangerously close–and the next roll of his hips sent a bolt of heat straight through you.
Your orgasm hit with a choked moan, your nails digging into his back, your body clenching tight around him as your hips bucked helplessly. Bob groaned as your walls squeezed him, loud and unfiltered.
“Fuck–I’m gonna–” He gasped, hips stuttering.
Then he buried himself deep, letting out a ragged, whimpering moan as he came inside you, face pressed into your neck. You felt his teeth graze your skin, his whole body trembling with the force of it.
For a moment, you both just lay there–panting, gasping, covered in sweat and warmth and each other.
Then he slowly lifted his head, eyes dazed but bright, cheeks flushed, lips kiss-bruised.
“…Do you,” He began, breathless, “Do you want to go out to dinner with me tomorrow?”
You blinked, and then started laughing–a soft, disbelieving, breathless laugh.
“That would be really great,” You murmured, your voice thick with affection.
Bob grinned, wide and flushed, before collapsing gently beside you on the mattress. Your legs tangled. Your breath slowed. The room hummed in the quiet aftermath, soft and safe and one with the both of you.
#bob floyd x y/n#bob floyd smut#bob floyd x female reader#bob floyd fluff#bob floyd x reader#robert bob floyd#bob floyd#top gun maverick smut#top gun maverick#top gun fandom#top gun fanfiction#robert floyd#lewis pullman the man you are#lewis pullman characters#lewis pullman#hell yeaaaaaaah#Spotify
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ᴛʜᴇ ᴡᴇᴀʀʏ ʙʟᴜᴇꜱ
ʀᴇᴍᴍɪᴄᴋ x ʙʟᴀᴄᴋ!ꜰᴇᴍ!ʙᴏᴏᴋꜱᴇʟʟᴇʀ!ʀᴇᴀᴅᴇʀ
ꜱᴜᴍᴍᴀʀʏ: The bell over your bookshop door rings at midnight, and a stranger steps through. Tired eyes, old voice, and a hunger he tries to hide. He says little, but lingers like he's waiting for permission to need you. You should send him away, but something in you wants to see what he'll do if you don't.
ᴡᴄ: 12.8k
ᴀ/ᴄ: firstly, thank you so much to everyone who enjoyed and interacted with let the wrong one in! i am so proud and so disappointed to be posting this because it's so shameless. if the fbi showed up to my door i'd let them take me to whatever white padded room they had waiting. i was up past midnight multiple times writing this out and it shows. just a completely unhinged self-indulgent mess. do not read without a rose toy (/j). as always, white girls i promise you can have your fun with this too! i don't do taglists personally, so just follow me if you want to be updated when i post c:
ᴡᴀʀɴɪɴɢꜱ: SLOWburn, remmick is truly a fucking loser (pathetic!remmick supremacy), remmick will not leave the reader alone, reader is a know-it-all manipulative ass thought daughter, she's lowkey evil actually, don't read unless you support womens rights and wrongs, mutual yearning and obsession, vampirism, dacryphillia, overstimulation, blink-and-you'll-miss-it exhibitionism, sub!remmick, dom!reader, cunnilingus, p in v, ride 'em cowgirl, spit kink, praise kink, matching each other's freak, offscreen but confirmed stalking, excessive divider usage, probable excessive usage of "ain't" because i got worried about my accent skills, amateur knowledge of 1930s literature and bookstores, religious undertones if you squint, i think y'all know what to expect i'm not writing out everything
fanart!
You were one of the lucky ones.
That’s what folks said when they stepped through the little wood-framed door, brushing snow from their shoulders or sweat from their brows, depending on the season. They always paused in the entryway. Like the air was thicker inside. Warmer, gentler, laced with something that asked them to hush their voices and unshoulder their weariness. Most folks did. They’d glance around slow, wide-eyed and awestruck, like they’d just wandered into a place stitched together by warmth and paper. Because they had.
Your daddy built it like that.
He opened the shop before you were tall enough to reach the counter, when your shoes still lit up when you walked and your teeth were missing in the front. A modest space, more narrow than wide, with walls that sometimes whispered when the wind pressed in. It was tucked between a shoe repair, where the scent of leather and oil clung to the brick, and a bakery that changed hands too often to name. But the bookstore never changed. It stayed.
He fought for it with every drop of charm he had and a stubborn streak the size of a mule. The bank didn’t make it easy. Nor the city. Nor the neighbors. But he didn’t flinch. Just smiled, signed the lease, and started sanding old shelves he bought for cheap from a shut-down place across town.
It wasn’t grand, but it had room to breathe.
The shelves didn’t match. The floors creaked. The ceiling had water stains shaped like cloud spirits. But the space had rhythm. Light pooled in through the front windows in the early afternoon, catching the golden flecks in the pine wood counter he carved by hand. You watched him do it over the course of a summer. His shirt clinging to his back with sweat, sawdust settling in his hair like snow. That counter had curves in it, places smoothed by a thousand passing fingers, elbows leaned, coins slid, mugs thunked down in thought. It remembered everyone who ever stood there.
The aisles were just wide enough for two people to pass without brushing shoulders, if one of them turned slightly. In winter, the windows fogged from the warmth of breath and the hiss of the radiator under the front table. In summer, he cracked the front door and the back one just right so the breeze cut clean through, carrying with it the scent of magnolia and newsprint. When the light hit right, the dust in the air sparkled, like it was carrying secrets you could almost read if you squinted hard enough.
He dreamed of it since he was a boy, back when books came secondhand and beat-up, passed along like contraband. Borrowed if you were lucky. Bought if you were white. His eyes always got faraway when he talked about those days, like he was watching some other version of himself hiding from the world with a paperback gripped tight like a life vest.
“There’s magic,” he always said, tapping your chest lightly with one thick finger, “in knowin’ a story nobody else does.”
So he painted the sign himself and hung it crooked on purpose, because he said perfection made folks nervous. He sold trinkets and newspapers and penny candy at first, just to keep the lights on. He let local kids read in the back for hours so long as they didn’t dog-ear the pages. And when folks started to drift in off the street, curious, then charmed, he opened the door wider.
People noticed.
Not all approved.
But he smiled at the right times, kept his voice low when he had to, and stayed on his side of town like they told him to.
But inside those walls?
He was king.
You took it over after he passed.
Not because you wanted to. You hadn’t planned for that. You thought you’d leave, travel, study something big with a title hard to pronounce. But when he died, sudden, quiet, the way only the kindest men seem to go, it was like the shop exhaled. And no one was there to breathe it back in.
So you stayed.
Not because you had his gift for conversation. You didn’t. Your voice didn’t carry like his. You didn’t know how to make strangers feel like they’d known you all their lives. But you had his steadiness. His eyes. His love of ink.
And the shop had raised you.
You’d spent your childhood curled between the shelves with your knees pulled tight to your chest, the pages of books flaring open like wings in your lap. You used to fall asleep in the window nook under stacks of fairy tales, the glow of the streetlamp outside pooling on your shoulders. You learned to read by tracing the letters with your fingertip, mouthing the words like spells.
You grew up there. Quiet, clever, a little too serious for your age, and always full of questions. The kind of questions books were made for. You learned the world in chapters, one page at a time, growing taller alongside the stacks.
Even now, the shop holds you like a memory refusing to fade.
The floorboards creak the same way when you step heavy by the register. The bell above the door still dings off-key. There’s a worn spot in the paint where the heels of his boots used to rest, and you never painted over it. The walls know your heartbeat. The ceiling hums with it.
The place smells of paper, cedar, and something floral you still can’t place. Not perfume. Not fresh. More like dried petals tucked in a forgotten book. There are candles flickering low behind the counter, their flames soft and steady, casting halos of gold on the spines of the hardbacks lining the shelves.
Outside, the windows are tinted now. Reflective. You can see yourself in the glass, wrapped in lamplight like a ghost caught in the pane.
It’s not strange for you to be up this late.
You have a habit of rereading old favorites until the pages feel like skin. You like the quiet. The familiar shuffle of turning pages. The low creak of the chair under your legs. The steady tick of the clock in the corner, marking time nobody’s watching.
The radio went quiet an hour ago, the static fading to silence when the last gospel track drifted away. Now there’s only the sound of night outside. The rustle of trees, the distant hum of a train slicing through the dark, far beyond the city line.
But tonight, something feels off.
You don’t know why. Not yet.
But your candle’s flame flutters suddenly, like it’s caught a breath. Not a wind. A breath.
You look toward the door.
There’s no bell. No sound.
But the air feels... thick. Like it’s waiting.
You don’t move right away. You sit there with your thumb hovering over the page, caught between the lines of a sentence and the prickle on the back of your neck.
You don’t want to turn it.
Not yet.
Then the door creaked.
A sound so small it barely pulled your eyes from the page. Your heart didn’t jump. Not right away. It didn’t need to.
The bell rang just after. Clear, bright, and true. Same one you fixed the summer it snapped off in a storm so thick the trees bowed like they were praying.
So that bell was yours. It knew what time it was. It didn’t ring wrong.
That’s what made the sound feel off now. Just a shade too sharp, too clean, like a voice cutting into a dream you didn’t know you were having.
The sign still said “Come In.” Your fault. You’d meant to flip it hours ago but got lost in the pages, lulled by the rhythm of ink and stillness. Still, no one ever actually came this late. Not really. Not unless they were meant to be here.
You closed the book. Not slammed. Just firm. A quiet full stop.
And there he stood.
Tall. Pale.
A white man.
Out of place in every way that mattered.
He filled the doorway like he didn’t know whether he wanted to be let in or turned away. Light from the streetlamps slanted behind him, casting his face in half-shadow, like the world couldn’t decide how much of him to reveal.
You didn’t move.
Your fingers curled around the spine of the book, thumb against the front cover, the weight of it grounding. The silence stretched between you.
He just stood there, breathing slow like he didn’t want to startle anything. His eyes swept the room, not lazily, but searching. Hungry. And when they landed on you, they stayed.
His voice came quiet. Almost careful. “Evenin’.”
You stared.
“We’re closed.”
Your tone was even. Flat. Not rude. Not kind, either.
Still, he didn’t leave.
Didn’t blink.
Didn’t move at all, not really. Just shifted the weight of his stare, like he was trying to remember a script. Like he’d played this scene in his head a dozen ways and still didn’t know which one this was. His smile was a flicker. Half-done. It twitched and died on his lips before it could mean anything. But under it, something desperate. Thin and frayed, like he was holding on to a thread he couldn’t name.
“Apologies,” he said with a shaky drawl, dipping his head toward the window, where the sign still swung faintly in the breeze. The porchlight caught the paint in the glass. “Saw the sign.”
You didn’t believe that for a second.
Nobody came here by accident. Not after midnight. Not across town lines like these. Everyone knew where they were supposed to be. Supposed to go.
He was tall, yes, but not in a way that meant anything. His frame was lean, his movements all hesitation and nerves. His coat didn’t fit right, like it had belonged to someone stronger once, someone he was still pretending to be.
You stood slowly.
The book stayed on the chair. Your skirt brushed the floor as you crossed barefoot to the counter, each step deliberate. No rush. No fear. Just weight.
You weren’t afraid of the man. You were afraid of what kind of story this was turning into.
He watched the whole way, his eyes flicking between your face and your hands, trying to read the space between your breaths. Like he expected you to call for someone. To yell. To throw something. To raise your voice.
You didn’t.
You let the silence answer.
“What can I do for you.”
No question mark. A line drawn in the sand.
He flinched, barely, but you saw it. Like a thread pulled too tight.
“I wasn’t tryin’ to cause any trouble,” he said, voice thinning out at the edges. “Just… seemed like a place a man might find a bit of quiet.”
You raised a brow, not moved.
“You always find quiet in closed shops?”
He scratched the back of his neck. A nervous tic, maybe. Or maybe it was just something to do with his hands, which kept twitching like they missed holding something heavier than a coat hem.
“Only the ones still lit up inside.”
He tried for a smile again. It trembled. Didn’t hold.
“Then I’d suggest you pass through quick,” you said. “I need to lock up.”
“Right,” he said, nodding too fast. “Of course. Sorry. I just-”
But he didn’t leave.
He stepped forward, just an inch, like something was pulling him. Then stopped himself and stalled in place, weight shifting foot to foot like the floor might open up if he stood still too long.
“I… don’t suppose you’ve got anything by Hughes?” he asked suddenly. Then, without pause, “Or Hurston?” His voice cracked a little on Hurston, like the name had caught on something inside his throat.
You blinked.
That was new.
You didn’t say anything right away. Just studied him.
A white man. Midnight. The wrong side of town. Asking for Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston.
It didn’t make sense.
It didn’t fit.
Men like him didn’t read voices like theirs. Not unless they had something to prove. Or something to steal.
He met your stare but his hands betrayed him, fidgeting at his sides again, tugging at the seams of his coat like he could pull himself together if he just gripped hard enough.
“You from around here?”
He laughed. Short, sharp, like he didn’t mean it. “Not anymore.”
Then quieter, “Ain’t got much left to be from.”
That silence stretched again. Wider this time. You didn’t try to fill it. You let it grow heavy.
He looked down at the floor like it might offer him a script.
You should’ve told him again to leave. Should’ve flicked the light off and locked the door and gone back to your chair and the soft, safe pages waiting there.
But you didn’t.
You said, “Hughes is second shelf, left of the register. Zora’s in the back, top shelf”
You paused. Watched him.
“And they ain’t alphabetical. You’ll have to look.”
He blinked.
Lit up like you’d handed him something holy.
“Right. Thank you. I- thank you.”
He stepped into the shop like the floor might vanish beneath him. Light. Careful. Fingertips trailing along the spines of the books nearest him, like the wood might spark or whisper if he touched it wrong.
And you watched him the whole way.
You didn’t trust him. Not even a little.
But something about the way he stood there, asking for voices not his, trying not to tremble. Something about his need made you pause.
It intrigued you.
You tried not to listen.
Tried to stay still behind the counter, eyes fixed on the book you’d set aside, though your finger hadn’t moved past the corner of the page. You heard the soft drag of his coat brushing the shelves, the sound of someone trying to move quietly without knowing how. The occasional squeak of a shoe sole. The low shuffle of indecision.
Then his voice floated back.
“Sorry to bother, miss. You said left of the register?”
You closed your eyes.
He’d been in the aisle all of sixty seconds.
“Second shelf,” you called, sharper than you meant it. “You’ll know it when you see it.”
A pause.
“It’s just, uh… the labels are all faded.”
You exhaled through your nose. Not quite a sigh. Not quite not one.
You pushed off the counter and stepped out from behind it, your skirt catching the air as you moved. He was standing a little too close to the shelf, squinting at the bindings like the titles might blink first. His coat hung open now, revealing a loose button-down tucked half-heartedly into worn slacks, belt twisted like he’d dressed in a hurry. His hair was still damp at the edges from the relentless humidity outside. It made you wonder why he was wearing something so warm in the first place.
He looked up when he heard you.
Not just looked. Jumped.
Shoulders startled up an inch, like you’d crept up behind him with a switchblade instead of bare feet and a mild expression. His eyes flicked to your hands again. You noticed that. Clocked it.
“Ain't mean to pull ya from your reading,” he said quickly. “Just didn’t wanna grab the wrong thing.”
You said nothing.
You crouched low instead, running your fingers along the lower shelf until they stopped on the slim spine of The Weary Blues. You tugged it free, checked the inside cover, and stood.
Then you crossed past him, just enough to brush by the nervous way he lingered too close to the wood. At the back shelf, your hand found the worn copy of Their Eyes Were Watching God with the creased corners and sun-faded cover. You held both out to him.
He hesitated.
Not out of disrespect. Out of something else. Like touching them would make it real.
When his hand reached for them, it touched yours first.
Only for a second. Less than. But it landed like heat.
You watched his fingers twitch at the contact. Watched him pull back slightly, then steady himself like a man who’d stepped into unexpected water. His skin was cold, lonely. Like someone who hadn’t had cause to brush against kindness in a while.
You gave him the books anyway.
He took them with both hands, careful not to touch you again. His eyes met yours briefly. Then dropped.
That should’ve been it.
But something in the way he flinched, not in fear, but in startled awareness, left a strange twist in your stomach. Not danger. Not quite.
You narrowed your eyes at him. Watched how he shifted. How he clutched the books like they were lifelines. How still he got under your gaze.
And maybe you should’ve gone back to the counter. Maybe you should’ve left it there.
But you didn’t.
You leaned just slightly closer, voice low. Baiting.
“You always get jumpy when someone tries to help you?”
He looked up again, tongue wetting his bottom lip like he was about to speak, then thought better of it. Instead, he nodded, too fast, like agreeing might save him from saying the wrong thing.
And that, that, made you want to keep going.
Just to see what else he’d do.
You led him back to the front in silence.
He didn’t try to fill it this time. Just followed, books clutched against his chest like they might steady his breath. You could feel his gaze brush the curve of your shoulder, your hands, the soft glow of the lamps pooling on the floorboards.
You stepped behind the counter, but didn't fill the space.
You stayed close. Leaning forward in a way that was probably too obvious.
The register clicked open with a metallic sigh. Your fingers moved slow over the worn buttons, each press deliberate. He laid the books down gently, almost mechanically, their spines aligning like he'd meant to do it. Like he’d practiced.
The light caught his face now, full on.
He looked younger in the shadows. But here, beneath the gold of your lamp, he was something else entirely.
His face was long and wide, covered in stubble that somehow looked neat and unkempt at the same time. Hollowed cheeks. A narrow nose that sloped like it had been broken once and never quite healed right. His mouth was set in a line that kept trying not to tremble. But his eyes...
They were wrong.
Not in a way you could name, not in any way you’d heard told, but wrong just the same. Too dark, too deep. And old. Old. You didn’t know how you knew it, but it pulled at the back of your neck. Some instinct deeper than language whispering that those weren’t eyes meant for a man that looked barely thirty.
Then there were his teeth.
You saw them when he smiled, faint and soft, like he didn’t mean for it to happen. A little too sharp. Animalistic, almost. Pointed just enough to make you question how close you wanted to stand.
And still, you didn’t move away.
“That’ll be four even,” you said, and held out your hand.
He blinked. Fumbled in his pockets. Fingers pulling out a crumpled bill like he hadn’t checked how much he had. When he offered it, your hand met his again, and this time you didn’t let go too quick.
Your touch lingered.
Not an accident.
Your fingers brushed his palm, smooth and dry and colder than before. You watched his throat shift like he’d swallowed something wrong. The money crinkled between you, forgotten.
You dropped it in the drawer without looking down.
Counted back the change slow. One coin at a time. Let your fingertips ghost over his as you pressed each one into his hand, watched how he tried not to flinch, not to twitch, not to breathe too fast.
There was something in his mouth now. A hitch. A tension.
You tilted your head.
His accent. It hadn’t struck you before. Too quiet. But now, with him this close, you could hear the undercurrents. Southern, yes. That lazy hush to his vowels, that slant that curled around the ends of his words like smoke. But buried beneath it was something else.
Not from here.
A roll that didn’t come from any county near yours. A roundness to the vowels that didn’t quite match the cadence of Mississippi. It had weight to it. History. Like old hills and cold winters. European, maybe. English, Scottish, Irish? Or something older still.
But the twang was real, too. Earnest. Like he’d worn it long enough to convince even himself.
You watched him shift under your gaze, trying to shrink inside that too-big coat.
“What’s your name?” you asked.
Simple.
But your voice dropped half a note, low and steady like it was loaded.
His eyes flicked up again. Held yours.
“Remmick, miss.”
Just that. No last name. With an unusual politeness in tow.
You didn’t smile. Nor did you give your name. You wanted him to work for that.
“Right,” you said. “Remmick.”
He shifted the books under one arm, his free hand ghosting over the edge of the counter like he wanted to say more, ask more, be more, but didn’t dare.
“Well… good evenin' to ya,” he said softly. The words caught at the edges, like they didn’t quite belong in his mouth.
You didn’t answer at first. Just watched him take a step back, then another, boots creaking against the old wood floor.
Then, finally, you raised your hand.
Not a wave, exactly. Just a slow lift of your fingers in something halfway between farewell and warning.
He seemed to understand.
The bell over the door chimed once as he slipped through, swallowed by the dark.
You didn’t move.
Not until the sound of his footsteps vanished completely.
The next night came heavy with quiet. Midnight again. And you were sitting in the same chair, same blanket folded over your knees, same book splayed in your lap. Different pages, but you hadn’t turned one in ten minutes.
The lamp cast its familiar pool of amber over the counter, the window, the shelves. Everything was still. Too still.
You hadn’t flipped the sign.
You told yourself it didn’t matter. That it was habit, that your mind had simply been elsewhere. The story had you hooked, maybe. Maybe you were chasing some lost line between chapters, maybe that’s why you kept glancing at the door without realizing it.
The “Come In” flickered faintly in the glass, reversed in the dark like a whisper only the street could read.
You licked your thumb, turned the page. Tried to focus on the words. You didn’t remember them, even though you read them yesterday. Or maybe it was last week. Or maybe it didn’t matter at all.
It wasn’t like you were waiting.
You just hadn’t gone to bed yet.
You shifted. Crossed your legs under the blanket. Then uncrossed them. Stared at the “Come In” again. Just a sign. Just a little slanted piece of painted wood that always tilted left because the hinge was loose and you never bothered to fix it.
The wind slipped through a crack in the front window. Barely there, just enough to nudge the edge of the lace curtain and carry in a scent from the dark. Not smoke, not rain, something earthbound. Loamy. Cold.
You turned another page. Didn’t read a word.
Your candle’s flame danced sharp again, almost gleeful. You rubbed your thumb over your palm without thinking, the way you did when something was close. Some old habit from childhood, back when your parents told you to trust your instincts, even when they made no sense.
The bell rang.
Not loud. Not rushed. Just a single chime, clear as a knock to the chest.
He stepped through like he’d been summoned.
No coat this time. His shirt was pressed, collar sharp. Sleeves rolled just past the wrists in that careful way that said he’d redone them three, maybe four times. His hair was a little less wild, tamed with pomade and willpower. His boots were clean. Like he’d stood outside brushing dust from them just to make a better second impression.
And yet, nothing about him looked natural. Not the tidiness. Not the polish. He wore it like a child wore Sunday shoes. Tight across the toes, heavy on the ankles, stiff enough to slow him down.
His eyes, still dark, still glinting, scanned the room like he already knew you’d be there. They landed on you. Lingered. Not just in greeting, not just in recognition, but in reverence. Like he was taking inventory of you. The slope of your nose, the fullness of your lips, the tight, coiled crown of your hair haloed in the light. Like he was memorizing every feature he'd never had the right to admire this openly before.
And when they did, he smiled. A small, practiced thing. One that almost reached his eyes.
Like he was proud of himself for coming back.
And like some shameful, stubborn part of you was glad he had.
“Evenin’.”
Same greeting, but not quite the same voice. Still quiet, still that drawl sugar-coated in something older, something foreign, but this time with the faintest edge of self-assurance. Like he’d practiced it on the way over. Maybe even out loud. Like he hoped it’d sound natural if he said it just right.
You didn’t answer.
Not with words.
You rose instead, slow and smooth, letting the silence stretch as you crossed the shop in bare feet. Your skirt brushed the floor again, soft as a whisper, trailing you like smoke.
He stood straighter when you neared. Or tried to. You watched the twitch in his shoulder when your fingers reached toward him, the way his breath caught behind his ribs. The little gold chain around his neck winked against his shirtfront, barely there, nearly hidden beneath the buttons.
You reached for it without asking.
“It’s crooked,” you murmured.
It wasn’t.
Your thumb grazed the thin line of metal, adjusting it ever so slightly, letting your knuckles drift down the hollow of his chest. Just enough to feel the warmth beneath the cloth. Just enough to make sure he noticed.
He noticed.
Froze like someone struck dumb. Not like he didn’t want the touch. No, not that. Definitely not that. But like he didn’t know what to do with it. His lips parted on a soundless breath, his eyes locked somewhere over your shoulder like he was staring down a spectre only he could see.
The pulse under your fingers thudded once. Hard. Then again, faster.
You watched it.
You leaned in, just slightly, letting your hand linger longer than it needed to. He didn’t flinch. Didn’t pull away. But you could feel the tension ripple through him. Tight. Brittle. Wired.
When you finally let go, he exhaled like he’d been holding air since last night.
“There,” you said softly. “Better.”
He didn’t answer right away. His throat moved as he swallowed, mouth opening like he might say something, then closing again when nothing came. His eyes met yours, flicked down to your mouth, then jerked back up with a flicker of something like guilt.
It was a touch.
That’s all it was.
But the way he looked at you now...
It had unmade him.
You let the silence sit for a beat longer, watching how he stood there like he didn’t dare take a full breath without permission. Then you spoke, softly, like an idea you hadn’t quite finished shaping.
“I’ve got a thought,” you said, turning back toward the shelves. “Wait here.”
But you didn’t mean that.
Because you paused, half-turned, eyes sliding back to him, that little hook in your voice coiled just so, and added, “Actually… no. Come with me.”
He obeyed without hesitation.
No question, no protest. Just a nod, and then his steps fell in behind yours like they were always meant to. You didn’t look back to see if he was following. You already knew he was.
You smirked before you even realized you were doing it.
He’s learning.
The rows of shelves narrowed the deeper you went, books stacked tall and mismatched. Some still had penciled notes in the margins. Others bore names and stamps from a dozen different hands. You moved with practiced ease, fingers gliding along the spines, then stopped sharp in front of a little patch of well-loved paperbacks with sun-faded covers and creased corners.
You didn’t say a word. Just stepped aside and gestured.
His brow knit faintly. Then he reached out, tentative at first, letting his fingertips hover above the titles before settling on one with a cracked pink spine and a watercolor couple leaning too close beneath an umbrella.
You raised your brows but didn’t speak.
Interesting.
He held it up like he was asking permission.
You nodded. “Good. Take that. Go sit by the window.”
Again, no hesitation.
He moved, soft steps, book clutched in his hand like it might disappear if he wasn’t careful. He didn’t glance back once as he settled into the reading nook. A curved wooden bench carved into the front window’s alcove, piled with cushions in muted tones, threadbare but clean.
The light from the lamp behind the counter cast the glass in warm gold, bouncing off his hair and skin in a way that made him look more real than he had last night. Less ghost. More man.
You watched him a moment longer, then followed.
Your feet made no sound on the floorboards. You crossed the space and sank onto the bench beside him. Not too close, but not far. Not far at all. The cushions dipped with your weight, the fabric between you folding with tension that hadn’t been there seconds ago.
He sat stiffly, book unopened in his lap, hands folded atop it. Like he didn’t quite know what to do now that he was here. Like he was waiting for something. Or someone.
You.
Your gaze lingered on the side of his face.
The light revealed the fine things. His lashes, full and surprisingly long. The faint lines around his mouth that didn’t come from smiling, but from pressing his lips together too tight for too many years. His skin was fair in a way that didn’t come from the sun but from time, the kind of pallor that hinted at long shadows and colder places. Places you couldn’t name.
His hair had been combed, too. Not just finger-swept like last time, but deliberately styled, though it curled stubborn at the ends like it wanted to fight back. That little gold chain still gleamed at his throat, straighter this time. Not crooked, like you convinced yourself it was.
Still, he hadn’t changed enough to fool you.
Not with those eyes.
Ancient, heavy, and out of place in a face that didn’t look old enough to carry them. They flicked toward you briefly, then darted back to the book in his lap, as if afraid to hold your gaze too long.
“You gonna read it?” you asked, tone soft but edged with amusement.
He blinked like he’d forgotten that was the point.
“Right,” he said quickly. “Yes ma'am.”
You watched him flip it open with care, thumbs brushing the pages like they might bruise. The moment hung quiet, thick with unsaid things and the scent of paper and dusk. His breath was steady but shallow, as if he were still adjusting to the shape of this closeness.
You didn’t move.
You didn’t speak.
You just leaned back into the cushions, eyes on him, letting him pretend he was focused on the words.
When both of you knew damn well he wasn’t.
It was the way he held the book that told you first. Not the usual adulation you got from the diehards who lived and breathed these novels. No, this was different. His hands didn’t cradle it like treasure. They held it like a bomb. Like one wrong shift in pressure might set the whole thing off and scatter the pieces between you.
His thumbs rested too gently on the pages, barely pressing enough to keep them open. Like he was worried his fingerprints might offend the paper. As if the book itself might recognize him as an intruder. He wasn’t turning pages so much as he was coaxing them along, seemingly afraid they’d snap if he asked too much.
He read strangely.
Slow.
Stilted.
Each word passed through his lips like it needed permission. Like it carried weight. His lips parted with the occasional word, mouthed in silence, and then closed again just as quickly, like he hadn’t meant to let them slip. There was something priestly about it. Ritualistic. A prayer offered in secret.
His eyes, those impossibly ancient eyes, scanned line after line not with hunger but with hesitation. A wary sort of awe. Like he hadn’t held a romance novel in centuries. As if the softness written into the pages was a dialect he’d nearly forgotten how to understand.
And every time you moved, even just a flicker of a shift, a breath caught a second longer than usual, he looked up.
Not startled. Not afraid.
Attentive.
You scratched your cheek, his head lifted.
You smoothed your skirt, his eyes snapped upward.
You uncrossed your legs, then crossed them again, he swallowed, too loudly.
At first, you thought he was just skittish. Just someone not used to sitting this close. But then the rhythm set in.
He matched you.
Without realizing it.
Without even trying.
You leaned back in your seat, slowly. Felt the cushion press against your spine.
A second later, he leaned back. One beat behind you, stiff at first, then settling.
You tilted your head, absently, the way you always did when thinking.
He mirrored it. Not perfectly, but close enough to notice.
You shifted your breathing, let it slow. Long inhale through your nose. Shorter exhale.
So did he.
So precisely that it didn’t feel like coincidence.
It felt like mimicry.
Like you were the song, and he was trying to follow along without missing a note.
You frowned slightly, gaze narrowing. Maybe you were imagining it. Maybe you were reading too much into the silence, into the soft rhythm shared between bodies in the same room.
So you changed it.
Inhaled twice quick, then held the third.
Exhaled through pursed lips like you were cooling tea.
He matched it. Exactly. No hesitation. No thought.
Your pulse gave a slow thump. Not fear. Not quite delight.
You did it again, even stranger this time. Shallow breaths, uneven tempo, a stutter at the end.
He copied it like he’d been waiting for instruction.
Not a second too soon, not a second too late.
Not even pretending he wasn’t. As if he couldn't fake it if he tried.
It was eerie.
Unnerving.
You’d had admirers before. You’d had men try to get close. Men with charm and swagger, who leaned too close too fast, who spoke in low voices like they were offering you a secret. Men who wanted something.
But Remmick didn’t want.
He ached.
He ached to stay.
To keep.
To not mess it up.
It wasn’t that he feared you.
It was that he feared what being with you might require of him.
He feared being found unworthy.
And something in you, something cold and clever and mean, maybe, was curious enough to let it keep going.
You watched his knuckles flex where they held the spine. Watched his breath stutter when you shifted forward ever so slightly. Watched his gaze flick to your lips before darting away, embarrassed.
There was devotion in the way he sat.
There was hunger too, yes, but buried under layers of control so tight they might as well have been prison bars.
He wasn’t scared of you.
He was scared of doing anything that might make you not want him here anymore.
He was scared of disappointing you. Of offending you. Of being sent away.
Like he’d never had the chance to be with a woman like this. Not just someone beautiful, Not just someone sharp, but someone who saw him and hadn’t yet told him to go.
Someone who let him sit.
Let him read.
Let him exist.
You leaned back, let your fingers curl loosely around the edges of the cushions. Not looking at him this time. Just listening.
His breathing matched yours again.
You heard it.
Felt it.
Let it echo in your ribcage like a second heartbeat.
He hadn’t read more than five pages. Probably hadn’t retained a single one. But he was trying. Oh, he was trying.
Trying not to ruin the moment.
Trying not to ruin you.
Trying not to ruin himself.
And you watched it all. Watched him struggle to be small, to be quiet, to be acceptable, and something in your chest twisted. Not out of pity. Not even out of care.
Just fascination.
You wanted to see how far this would go.
How far he’d go.
And more than anything, you wanted to see if he could keep it up.
He hadn’t turned a page in three minutes.
You timed it without meaning to. Just sat there, letting your own gaze blur against the shape of his fingers still resting on the edge of the paper, and noted how still they’d gone. How he stared not at the next sentence, but straight through it. Breathing shallow. Body gone tense in the shoulders, like he was bracing.
Then he blinked. Once. Twice.
“Ya always light the window candles,” he said softly, not looking up.
The words were nothing at first. Just air. Noise.
But your stomach still curled.
You didn’t respond right away. Didn’t move. Just let the silence soak it in.
“Every night,” he added, quieter now. “Right ‘round eleven. Even if ya ain’t got customers.”
Still, you said nothing.
He turned another page, finally, but you watched his eyes. They didn’t scan. They didn’t read.
“You notice that just now?” you asked calmly.
He hesitated.
You leaned forward, hands steepled under your chin. “Or’ve you been noticin’ for a while?”
His lips parted. Closed. He looked over at you now. The air between you suddenly sharper.
“I-” he started, then tried to smile. “It’s just… somethin’ I seen. That’s all.”
You cocked your head. “From where?”
He faltered.
“That little inn down the road don’t got a view of this side.”
He tried to laugh, but it came out cracked. “I walk at night. Helps me think.”
“Does it?”
He nodded too fast. “Y-yeah. Sometimes I pass by. That’s all.”
You didn’t blink. Didn’t smile.
“Funny. You said yesterday you just stumbled in here.”
His jaw twitched.
A beat passed. You let it stretch like taffy, long and slow, until it thinned to almost nothing.
“I... did,” he said eventually, voice paper-thin. “Didn’t plan to come in that night. But I-I'd seen the place before. So I guess it felt familiar.”
“Familiar.”
“Mhm.”
“You been watchin’ me?”
His whole frame stiffened. A flicker of shame, or panic, or both, ghosted across his face. But it wasn’t the embarrassment of being caught in a lie. It was older than that. Worn. Like being cornered in a truth he thought he could keep buried.
His mouth opened, but no words came out.
You shifted in your seat, leaned in just slightly.
He didn’t move away.
“You been starin’ at my windows from across the street, Remmick?” you asked softly. “That it?”
He flinched. Not from your tone, which stayed silky smooth, but from the shape of your words. The accuracy of them.
“I ain’t mean no harm,” he whispered. “It weren’t… like that.”
You gave him a long, thoughtful look. “Then tell me how it was.”
His eyes dropped to his hands. You could see the effort it took not to wring them.
“I just… I saw ya. Few nights in a row. Sometimes through the window, sometimes outside closin’ up. You’d have your book in one hand, your keys in the other. Didn’t even know your name. Just-”
His throat moved as he swallowed.
“Ya looked steady,” he said. “A place that don’t change. Like you’d always be here if I needed to come back.”
That should’ve sounded sweet.
But it didn’t.
It sounded like a confession. A possession waiting to take root.
And for reasons you weren’t yet ready to name, you didn’t shut it down.
Didn’t throw him out.
Didn’t call it wrong.
Instead, you asked, poised and deliberate...
“How long you been watchin’, Remmick?”
He looked like you’d just asked him to open his ribs and let you see inside.
But you didn’t repeat the question.
You didn’t need to.
The pause spoke louder than anything he could’ve said.
Then, finally, his lips parted. “Few months.”
Your brow twitched, just slightly. Enough for him to see it.
“I-I ain't mean to,” he said quickly, eyes wide, hands lifted like he was surrendering. “I just- I saw you one night and then… it was easy to keep passin’ by.”
You leaned back slow, fingers dragging along the wood between you.
“You been lurkin’ outside my shop for months?”
His face crumpled like the word hurt. Lurkin’.
“I wasn’t-” He stopped. Started again. “I wasn’t tryna frighten you. Weren’t like that. I ain't know how to come in. Ain't think I should. Thought maybe if I stayed far enough back, you wouldn’t see me.”
“I didn’t.”
He winced.
You could’ve pushed. Could’ve watched him stammer his way deeper into the hole he’d already dug with his own too-honest mouth.
But you didn’t. Not yet.
You tilted your head, voice softer now. “So why now?”
His mouth opened. No sound came. Then...
“I got tired of bein’ scared.”
You stilled.
He didn’t look up. Just stared at the woodgrain of the table, like it might open up and swallow him if he wished hard enough.
“I been scared so long, I don’t know how not to be. But I kept watchin’, and you kept bein’ here. Kept leavin’ that light on. And I thought… maybe that meant somethin’.”
He finally looked at you.
And the way he looked at you, like you were the last fire in a dead city, made your breath catch.
He wasn’t lying.
And that was the strangest part.
You were used to men who talked. Who wrapped their hunger in charm, or cleverness, or teeth. But Remmick… he was bare. He didn’t even try to be anything else.
“You think I leave that light on for you?”
“No.” He shook his head, fast. “I- no. I ain't mean that. Just that… I hoped it meant I was allowed to come in.”
That did something to your chest you didn’t expect.
And suddenly, you didn’t want him to look at the table.
You wanted him to keep looking at you.
Only at you.
You leaned forward again, chin resting in your palm. “Well. You’re in now.”
He blinked. Almost like he didn’t believe it.
“Don’t mess it up,” you added, slow and sweet.
And Lord help you, he nodded like it was a commandment.
You watched his eyes. Watched how they clung to you like a lifeline, like the mere sight of your face was the only thing anchoring him to the moment. You could see it, plain as anything. The panic winding tighter beneath his skin, the quiet horror that he’d said too much. And maybe he had. Maybe he hadn’t said enough.
And then you smiled.
Not warm. Not cruel. Just knowing.
“Well,” you said, slow as molasses, “that still makes you a liar, don’t it?”
His shoulders tensed.
“I ain’t-”
You raised a hand.
He stopped.
“Watchin’ me for months and pretendin' you just stumbled in? That’s dishonesty, Remmick.”
His mouth opened again, then shut.
He looked like he wanted to explain. Wanted to pour out the right words, dig his way out of the pit he’d slipped into. But the silence between you left no room for excuses. And you didn’t fill it for him. You just stood, smooth and sure, brushing imaginary dust from your skirt like you were done with the whole performance.
The way his breath hitched…
You almost felt bad.
Almost.
His voice cracked, desperate before he could tuck it down. “I ain't mean no harm. I swear it.”
You walked to the door.
Unlatched it.
The bell above gave a soft jingle as you pushed it wide, letting the warm night air curl inside like smoke. The light spilled out into the dark, carving a golden archway he didn’t dare cross.
“You can go now.”
He flinched like you’d slapped him.
“I- what?” He stood too fast, nearly knocked himself over. “I ain't mean nothin’ bad. I just- don’t send me off like that. Please.”
You turned, hand still on the doorknob, gaze calm.
His breath was coming faster now, eyes darting like he was trying to find the version of you that wouldn’t be doing this. “I’ll sit quiet, won’t say a word. You won’t even know I’m here. Just don’t make me go.”
He took a step forward.
You didn’t move.
“Please,” he said again, voice ragged now. “Please don’t make me leave you.”
Leave you.
Not the shop. You.
And wasn’t that just the most pathetic thing you’d ever heard.
You tilted your head, quiet.
“I said you could go,” you repeated, soft this time.
That made him stumble.
But not back.
Forward.
Toward you.
But not close enough to touch.
Just close enough to be seen.
And you let him sit in it. That want. That begging.
The humiliation of it.
You could see how tightly his hands were balled at his sides. How his throat bobbed with every failed swallow. How badly he wanted to collapse to his knees and sob at your feet.
“You can come back tomorrow,” you said lightly. “If you behave.”
He swallowed so hard you heard it. Loud in the hush of the room.
Then he nodded.
Not like a man, but like a child handed a punishment he knew he deserved.
He didn’t say anything at first.
Didn’t move.
You gave him time.
Let him make the choice.
And when he did, it was with slow, aching reluctance. Every step backward like a string snapping off of him one by one.
“Evenin’, Remmick,” you said, voice sugar-sweet now, hand still resting on the open door.
He stood there a moment longer. Still. Wrung out.
Then, quietly: “G’night, ma’am.”
You didn’t answer.
You just watched him go.
Watched the dark swallow him.
And made no move to close the door until long after his shadow disappeared.
You knew he’d come back.
There was no need to check the sign. No reason to glance toward the door, or listen for the bell. You didn’t need to do anything at all. The air had already shifted, thickened with the weight of what was inevitable.
You were curled into your chair like you’d been there all night, though you hadn’t been able to concentrate for more than five minutes at a time. You told yourself it was the book. It was always the book. But your eyes traced the same paragraph for the third time, and your fingers tightened just slightly at the edges of the page.
Still, you didn’t look up.
You wouldn’t.
The clock ticked. Somewhere, a train whistled. The candlelight wavered once, then stilled.
And then you heard it.
The bell.
Soft. Perfect. Like a cue whispered by the world itself. The clock chimed midnight.
You didn’t lift your gaze, but you heard him. Felt him. The uneven shuffle of his steps. The small hitch in his breath.
He was back.
You turned the page.
The scent hit you first. Not bad. Just weary. Tired. Like sleep had refused him all night, and he’d wandered instead. Rain-damp clothes. Paper. Something earthy, mineral-like, maybe even metallic. Like he hadn’t meant to be anywhere but had found himself out in the wild with only his thoughts for warmth.
He didn’t speak at first. Didn’t dare.
The sound of the door shut behind him.
“I been good,” he blurted out.
Your lips twitched before you could stop them.
Still, your eyes didn’t leave the book.
“Real good,” he continued, voice cracking slightly with the rush of words. “Ain’t even come near the shop. Walked past it, but that don’t count. That’s just the sidewalk, right? Just pavement. I didn’t linger. Ain’t even look in the window. Well, I peeked, but only ‘cause I missed the smell of it. Missed you.”
That earned a slow blink from you.
He stepped further inside. His boots dragged slightly on the floor like they were too heavy to lift. Like his shame lived in his heels.
“I sat still all morning,” he said. “Didn’t wander, didn’t do nothin’. I thought ‘bout what you said. Over and over. Thought about why it was wrong. What I did. Even wrote it out. I did. Wrote it out.”
You closed the book softly.
Still, you didn’t rise.
Remmick stood in front of you now.
And good Lord, he looked a mess.
His shirt was wrinkled at the collar, sleeves rolled and uneven. His hair had a wild, raked-through look like he’d been dragging his fingers through it for hours. The shadow beneath his eyes was sharp, and the line of his jaw was clenched in barely-held desperation. Not even his chain looked presentable. He didn’t smell unclean, but there was a wildness to him now. Like if you stood too close, you’d hear the hum of his blood vibrating beneath his skin, frantic and restless.
“I didn’t lie, not really,” he said. “Just… held it. In. ‘Cause I didn’t wanna scare you off. Ain’t had someone like you before. Not in a long time. Maybe not ever.”
His accent pulled at the words, thinner now, stretched tight with pleading. That strange, syrupy Southern lilt gave way to something raw beneath. Sharper, guttural, not quite human in the way it frayed at the ends. It slipped, like his mask was crumbling, revealing a voice that hadn’t begged in centuries. Not just a borrowed twang anymore, but a whisper of whatever place had taught him that hunger in the first place.
You finally looked up.
He froze.
Then, slowly, like the world trembled beneath him, he knelt.
He didn’t say another word. Just lowered himself to the floor like it was natural. Like the hardwood was the only place he deserved to be.
Your legs were crossed, the hem of your skirt brushing his boots. He didn’t touch you, not yet. Just sat with his hands in his lap, chest rising and falling in quick, shallow breaths.
You studied him.
He tried not to move under your gaze. Failed.
You tilted your head slightly.
He flinched.
“I ain’t sleep,” he admitted. “Couldn’t. Just kept seein’ your face. Thinkin’ of how soft your hands were. How still your voice is. You’re not like other folk. You look right through me, and it-”
He broke off, jaw flexing.
“I want to do right,” he said, softer. “Tell me how. Please. I’ll listen. I’m yours.”
You leaned forward.
He didn’t dare meet your eyes, not at first. Not until your fingers brushed the side of his face.
His head snapped up slightly.
You cradled his cheek in your palm, watching as he leaned into the touch. Like the heat of your skin might be the first kindness he’d felt in years.
He was trembling.
Not from fear.
From want.
His eyes closed, lashes fluttering like moth wings. You stroked your thumb along his cheekbone. Cooler than expected, but not cold. Never cold. Not with you.
His hands rose without thinking, resting on your legs. Then his shoulders followed, and soon, most of his weight was against you, folding like a supplicant at an altar.
You didn’t stop him.
Didn’t move.
Let him rest there.
Let him need.
Because that’s what this was. Not desire, not lust.
Need.
He was breathing in sync with you again, like your rhythm had become his only truth.
You didn’t speak.
You didn’t need to.
His mouth moved against your knee.
Not in a kiss.
Not yet.
Just a whisper.
A plea.
You cupped the other side of his face, anchoring him.
He let out a sound. Quiet, fractured, grateful.
And stayed right there.
The weight of him on your legs wasn’t light. But it wasn’t heavy, either. It felt like gravity doing what it was always meant to. Like he had been built to collapse right here, in the hollows of your thighs, the shape of him fitted to the shape of your waiting.
You ran your thumb along the corner of his mouth, picking up a string of saliva along the way. Drool, thick and abundant. His lips parted. A breath spilled out.
He didn’t dare look up.
So you said it.
“Kiss me.”
Not a whisper.
Not a barked command.
It landed like a fact. Like dusk falling, like snow melting into earth. A truth that didn’t ask to be believed. It just was.
He didn’t move at first. Didn’t blink. Didn’t even breathe.
He lifted his head like a man surfacing from deep water. His eyes, those beautiful, imperiled, bloodshot eyes, searched your face for any sign that you might take it back. That it might be a test.
It wasn’t.
You didn’t flinch.
And that was all it took.
He surged forward, and his mouth met yours with a force that stole the breath from your lungs.
It wasn’t careful. It wasn’t sweet. It wasn’t the kind of kiss you read about in the first chapter of a romance novel. It was the kind that belonged in the final act. The kind that felt like something was ending just as something else began.
His hands fumbled for your waist, your back, your shoulders. Any part of you he could grab to prove you were real. He held you like he was scared you’d vanish between blinks. Like you were smoke and he’d never had lungs strong enough to keep you in.
He moaned into your mouth. Low and wounded and starved. Not loud. Not filthy.
Desperate.
And grateful.
Like this was more than he thought he’d ever be allowed to have.
You clutched the fabric of his shirt, fingers curling tight in the rumpled linen, and he gasped against your lips like the pressure burned. He kissed like someone who hadn’t touched another soul in a hundred years. Thousands, maybe. Not properly. Not intimately.
Like every part of this might be the last.
He pulled you closer, though there was nowhere left to pull. His teeth caught against your bottom lip, breaking skin. Not intentional. Just too much, too fast, too hungry.
He pulled back immediately, breath hitching in horror.
“I’m-” he started, but your hand curled in his collar and you kissed him again, harder this time, and it unraveled something in him so completely that he made a noise against your mouth, something guttural and ruined.
Your hand tangled in his hair.
His arms caged you in, trembling with restraint, with fervor, with some old broken thing inside him that was only now waking up.
You pulled back just enough to breathe. His mouth chased yours, like instinct, like starvation.
He was panting.
You were panting.
And his forehead dropped to yours.
“I didn’t mean to-” he started again, but you shook your head. Barely a gesture.
He was still gripping your waist like the floor was about to give out.
He pressed his lips to your cheek. Then your jaw. Then your mouth again. Softer now, but still with the same unbearable urgency.
“I dreamt of this,” he whispered, voice all but crumbling. “Every night. Since I saw ya.”
You believed him.
How could you not?
He kissed like this moment was the dream. And he was scared of waking.
His breath shuddered against your cheek as he pulled back, just enough to look at you. His eyes were wide, dark, feral. Stripped down to the fundamentals of human existence.
“Please,” he begged. “I need to- can I-”
His hands were already moving, slow and reverent, like he was scared you'd vanish beneath his touch. They skimmed the sides of your waist, your ribs, the curve of your spine. Like he was learning you through touch alone.
He swallowed hard, throat working. “I wanna see ya. All of ya. Been dreamin’ ‘bout it. Wakin’ up in a sweat, reaching for something that ain’t there.”
His fingers found the hem of your shirt, toying with it. Not lifting. Not yet.
“Please,” he said again, softer. “Lemme see ya. Lemme-”
He cut off with a sharp inhale, like the words hurt coming out. Like they'd been buried in some deep, untouchable place inside him.
“I won't touch,” he sounded so earnest. So wrecked. “Not ‘less you want me to. But I swear, if you lemme, I'll worship every inch. I'll-”
He broke off again, jaw flexing. His eyes were pleading, desperate, broken.
“I'll do anything,” he breathed. “Just... please. Lemme look at ya.”
Your heart was beating too hard, too fast. Like it was trying to reach for him through your ribs.
“Yes,” you whispered. “You can look.”
And that was all it took. The floodgates opened. He surged forward, hands suddenly urgent, suddenly everywhere. He was mapping your skin like it was the only geography he'd ever need. Like you were the only country left to explore.
He peeled off your shirt, slow and cautious, like he expected you to change your mind. Like he expected you to pull the rug from under his feet, again.
But he didn't linger. Didn't stop. Shaking but determined, tugging at fabric, pulling at buttons, dragging clothing aside until there was nothing left between his gaze and your skin.
And then he just froze. Stared. Took you in like a dying man taking his last breath.
“God,” he whispered, voice sapped. “You're...”
He didn't finish the thought. Couldn't. Just looked at you like you were the answer to a question he'd been asking all his life. The beginning and end of every prayer he'd ever whispered.
And you smiled, being looked at like that. Like a God. A deity that commanded his unwavering, exclusive devotion. And like any God, you demanded more.
“Undress for me,” you said softly.
It wasn't a question.
His breath shuddered out unevenly, and he nodded. Not a hesitation in sight.
He stood slowly, like his body was weighed down by the gravity of what was happening. Like he could feel the significance of this moment in every bone.
His hands went to the buttons of his shirt first, trembling just slightly. He fumbled once, twice, then let out a soft, frustrated noise and just tore the fabric open. Buttons scattered.
You didn't flinch.
He shrugged the ruined shirt off his shoulders, letting it fall to the floor. His undershirt followed, tugged over his head in one fluid motion.
And then he just stood there, chest bare, skin seeming to tighten under your gaze. Like your eyes were a physical touch.
His boots were next, kicked off with barely a thought. Then he went to his belt.
He paused for just a second, looking to you for confirmation.
You nodded.
He exhaled shakily and fumbled with the buckle. It came undone easily, the leather sliding out of the loops with a soft hiss.
He toed off his socks, then shoved his pants and underwear down in one motion, kicking them aside.
And then he was bare. Completely. Not just in body. In everything.
He stood before you, chest heaving.
His cock was hard, achingly so. Thick veins wound up the shaft, pulsing with each shudder of his heart. The head was swollen and pink. Glistening. A bead of precum pooled at the tip before spilling over, tracing a slow path down his length. He twitched, but made no move to touch himself. As if he didn't consider it a possibility until you allowed him to.
And you wouldn't. You had him exactly how you wanted him.
Slowly, he lowered himself back to his knees, hands resting lightly on your thighs, his touch gentle yet possessive. He looked up at you, his eyes laced with desire and something more profound. Veneration is the word that came to your mind.
“Please,” he pressed, as if trying to convince himself that he deserved it more than convincing you to relent. “Lemme taste ya. Just a taste. I swear I'll make it good for ya.”
His lips brushed against your thigh. A soft, tentative kiss that sent shivers down your spine. He lingered there, his breath hot against your skin. He squeezed your thighs gently, urging them to part.
You could feel his desperation, his need for your permission. He was squirming, his body aching for more, but he held back, waiting for your consent.
“Please,” he begged again, sounding tortured. “Need to taste ya. Need to feel ya on my tongue. Need to-”
You cut him off with a nod, a small smile playing on your lips. “Yes. You can taste me.”
The words were barely out of your mouth before he was moving, hands urgent and eager as he pushed your thighs apart, his body leaning in, his mouth already seeking your core.
He started at your knees, kissing his way up your inner thighs, his lips soft but his touch urgent. He was a man possessed. Gripping your thighs. Worshipping your skin. You could feel his hunger, his need, his desperation to please you.
When he reached the apex of your thighs, he paused for a moment, his breath hot against your most intimate place. Then, with a slow, deliberate lick, he tasted you. His tongue slid through your folds, a long, slow lick that made you gasp, your back arching off the surface beneath you.
And then he dove in, his hunger relentless. His tongue explored every inch of you, hands gripping your hips, holding you in place as he feasted. He sucked and licked and nibbled, his movements desperate and urgent, like a man starved and finally given a meal.
His groans of pleasure vibrated against your sensitive flesh, sending waves of sensation through your body. You could feel his enjoyment, his pleasure in pleasing you, and it only served to heighten your own.
He looked up at you, his eyes dark and feral, mouth glistening with your wetness. “Ya taste like heaven,” he growled against your skin. “Even better than my fuckin' dreams.”
And with that, he redoubled his efforts, his tongue delving deeper, his sucks more insistent, his fingers digging into your flesh, holding you to him as he devoured you.
Remmick didn't slow, didn't pause, didn't come up for air. His tongue was a relentless force, moving from your folds to your clit and back again at a breakneck pace. Each flick, each suck, each lick was a testament to his insatiable hunger for you.
You could feel the tension building in your body, a coiled spring ready to snap. Your hips bucked against his mouth, meeting his movements with your own desperate rhythm. Your hands found his hair, gripping tightly, holding him to you as if he might try to escape the torrent of pleasure he was creating.
His groans vibrated against your sensitive flesh, sending shockwaves of sensation through your body. He was as lost in this as you were, his actions fueled by a primal need to satisfy, to please, to devour.
“Remmick,” you gasped, pleading. “Don't stop. Please, don't stop.”
As if to answer, his tongue moved faster, his sucks more insistent. He pulled your hips tighter against his mouth, gripping your waist, holding you to him as he feasted.
You could feel yourself falling apart, your body tightening, your breath coming in short, sharp gasps. The world around you narrowed to the point of his tongue, the suck of his mouth, the grip of fingers
And then, with a cry that tore from your throat, you shattered. Your orgasm crashed over you, a wave of pleasure so intense it was almost painful. Your body convulsed, your hips bucking wildly against his mouth as he rode out the storm with you, his tongue never ceasing its relentless assault.
But Remmick didn't stop. Even as your body began to relax, he continued, his pace slowing but his hunger undiminished. You were overwhelmed, your nerves on fire, every touch sending jolts of pleasure coursing through your body. The sensation was almost too much to bear, your skin hypersensitive, your mind a blur of ecstasy. He looked up at you, his eyes wild, mouth soaked, a sinful smile giving you another look at his predatory canines.
“Again,” he was near unintelligible, now. “I wanna feel ya come again.”
“No,” you whispered, hoarse from your cries of pleasure. “Remmick, no more.”
He froze, his body tensing, his eyes widening in alarm. The fog of lust cleared from his eyes. Replaced by a look of concern and uncertainty. “Did I hurt ya? Did I do somethin’ wrong?” That tone of genuine, unabashed fear returned. As if he was standing in front of that open door again, begging you not to send him away.
You smiled gingerly, your hand still cupping his cheek. “You were perfect, Remmick,” you assured him, gentle yet firm. “Now, I want you to move to the reading nook. I want to see you there.”
He nodded immediately, a mix of relief and eagerness in his eyes. He stood up hastily, his body still glowing with a sheen of sweat and desire. But before you could even think about moving, he was there, offering his hand to help you up. You took it, appreciating the strength and support he provided as you stood on legs that felt like liquid.
He didn't just lead you to the nook. He made sure you were steady on your feet the entire way. His arm wrapped around your waist, holding you close as he guided you to the cozy corner by the window. The nook where he read to you. Mimicked you. Begged you.
His body was still tense with anticipation, his breath slowly returning to normal. You could see the mix of emotions in his gaze. Desire, fear, hope. Something deeper, too.
“Remmick,” you said softly, your voice a soothing balm to his frayed nerves. “I'm not goin' anywhere. Not tonight.”
He let out a shaky breath, a deeply insecure smile playing on his lips. “I wanna make sure you're happy. That I'm doin' this right.”
You leaned in, pressing a soft kiss to his lips. “You are. Now, just relax and enjoy this. Enjoy us.”
He nodded, a small, content smile playing on his lips as he leaned back, though not fully. You followed, straddling his hips as you positioned yourself above him.
“Lay down,” you commanded softly, and he complied without hesitation, his body molding to the contours of the nook as he stretched out beneath you. Those prismarine eyes bore into you, filled with nothing but adoration.
You could feel the length of him, hard and ready, pressing against your entrance. You took a moment to admire the sight of him, his chest heaving with each ragged breath, his muscles taut and defined.
“Hold my hips,” you instructed, and his large hands immediately gripped your waist, his fingers digging into your flesh, holding you with a possessive, desperate strength.
You began to lower yourself onto him, inch by slow, agonizing inch. You could feel every vein, every ridge, as he filled you completely. His eyes rolled back, a guttural, incoherent moan escaping his lips, a sound so primal and raw it sent shivers down your spine.
You bottomed out, your body flush against his, your breasts pressing into his chest. He let out a shaky breath, body trembling beneath you. “Please, move, please,” he begged, hoarse with need. “I need to feel you move.”
You smiled, a slow, sensual curve of your lips, and began to ride him. You started slow, a gentle rocking of your hips, feeling him slide in and out of you, the friction building with each movement. But it wasn't enough. Not for either of you.
You picked up the pace, your hips slamming down onto his, taking him deeper, harder, faster. Each impact sent a jolt of pleasure through your body, your nerves alight with sensation. You could feel his hands on your hips, guiding you, urging you on. His fingers digging into your flesh, leaving marks that would fade but never be forgotten.
He chanted in an old language you weren't familiar with, likely the mother tongue of the faraway place you guessed he came from. His head thrashed from side to side, eyes squeezed shut,
You leaned down, your lips capturing his in a fierce, hungry kiss, your tongues dueling as your bodies moved in sync. You could taste his desperation, his need, his sheer, unadulterated ecstasy. You pulled back, looking down at him, his face a portrait of pure bliss and agony.
“Open your mouth,” you commanded, and he complied without question, his lips parting, tongue resting heavily in his mouth. You spit, a slow, deliberate stream of saliva that dribbled down his tongue, pooling at the back of his throat. He swallowed reflexively, his Adam's apple bobbing, his eyes never leaving yours.
You could feel his body coiling tight, his muscles tensing, his breath hitching. You changed the angle, your body leaning back slightly, giving him a new depth to explore. He let out a low, guttural groan, his body quaking beneath you as he found his release, his hot seed spilling into you, filling you completely.
But you didn't stop. You kept moving, your hips slamming down onto his, riding out his orgasm, drawing it out, milking every last drop of pleasure from his body. His cries turned to whimpers, body shaking and trembling beneath you, hands gripping your hips with a desperate, almost painful strength.
And then, the tears came. Silent, shuddering sobs that wracked his body, tears streaming down his temples, disappearing into his hair. You leaned down, your lips pressing soft, gentle kisses to his cheeks, tasting the salt of his tears.
“Shh, it's okay,” you cooed, almost taunting. “Let it out, baby. I've got you.”
He looked up at you, his eyes filled with unshed tears, body still shaking with sobs. “You're so f-fuckin' beautiful,” he managed to choke out, completely spent. “So fuckin' p-perfect. I can't… I can't even…”
You smiled, merely shushing his whines. You had never seen anything so beautiful, so raw, so real.
You could feel your own orgasm building, nerves on fire as your muscles instinctively clenched. You changed the pace again, your hips moving in a slow, deliberate grind, feeling every inch of him, the way he filled you, the way he completed you.
“I'm close, Remmick,” you gasped, raggedly so. A far cry from the steely demeanor you always carried.
He looked up at you, his eyes wide and intense, body still trembling with exertion. “I know, darlin’. I-I can feel it. You're somethin’ else when you're like this,”
His hands gripped your hips tighter, his fingers digging into your flesh, holding you to him as you moved, as you chased your release. He was still hard, still pulsing inside you, but you could feel the tension, the strain, the sheer effort it was taking for him to hold on. To be there for you in this moment.
“You're doin’ so good,” he encouraged. “Just let it go. I'm right here with you. Ain't goin’ nowhere.”
And with that, you shattered. Your orgasm crashed over you, body trembling, hips bucking, nails digging into his chest. He let out a low, guttural cry. A sound of pure, selfless pleasure. His body tensed as he rode out your orgasm with you, hips moving in sync with yours, giving you everything he had left to give.
The world outside the window was still black.
Not the kind of black that came with sleep or stillness, but that deep, oceanic kind that pressed against the glass like it might swallow the shop whole. A cold wind tapped once, then again, against the panes, but the sound was too soft to pull your focus. The only thing you could hear was Remmick’s breathing. Still ragged, still uneven, like he hadn’t quite landed back in his body yet.
Your own chest was rising slower now.
The adrenaline had drained out of your limbs, leaving only warmth behind. Thick and heavy and strange. The cushions beneath you were slightly askew, the throw blanket hanging off one edge like it had tried and failed to cover something uncontainable. The air still smelled like him.
You weren’t sure you could breathe without pulling him deeper into your lungs.
Your hand rested low on his abdomen, where the tremors hadn’t stopped yet. He was flushed, head tilted back, mouth parted slightly as if waiting for something. Maybe breath, maybe words. The slick between you had cooled slightly in the open air, but neither of you moved.
The moment didn’t ask for motion.
Outside, the wind howled once. Higher this time, almost mournful. But no lights flickered. No car passed. No one knocked.
You were still alone.
Still unseen.
Still safe.
There was a thrill in that. Not just privacy, but secrecy. The knowledge that the two of you had made something here, something raw and holy and utterly indecent in a world that would never, ever be able to comprehend it. No one would guess. No one would imagine it.
You leaned forward slowly.
His eyes fluttered open. Glazed, desperate. Still begging, but quieter now. Not for forgiveness. Just for the chance to stay.
You kissed him.
Gently, firmly, like sealing a letter before sending it somewhere far away. He melted into it. Helpless again, the way he always was with you. And you tasted the salt at the edge of his mouth, not knowing if it was his tears or your sweat, and not caring either way.
When you pulled back, he followed instinctively, chasing the kiss without knowing he was doing it.
His breath hitched.
“I…” he started, but couldn’t finish.
You rested your forehead against his.
He let out something between a sigh and a sob.
“I wanna be better,” he whispered.
“I know.”
“I wanna deserve this.”
“You don’t.”
He froze. Just for a moment. Then his throat worked, and his whole body shuddered.
But you weren’t cruel about it.
You reached up, brushed your fingers through his hair, and let your voice drop to a hush. “You don’t need to earn me, Remmick. That’s not how this works.”
He blinked at you like that didn’t make sense.
But he didn’t argue.
Didn’t say another word.
You let him stay there. Small and grateful and unraveling against you. One hand resting at your hip, the other fisted weakly in the blanket like he might drift off if he didn’t anchor himself to something.
You stared past him, at the darkness beyond the window.
There was no morning yet. No birdsong. No hint of light. The world hadn’t returned.
And you liked it that way.
His breathing was steadier now. Shallower. Slower.
His lips moved once, not quite forming a word. He was trying to stay awake. You could tell. Trying not to miss anything.
“Hey,” you said softly, pulling his attention back.
His eyes opened again.
You traced a slow line across his jaw, following the path of stubble like it meant something. He watched you like it did.
Then, finally, you said your name.
Quiet.
Careful.
Deliberate.
Just that.
Just your name.
His eyes went wide, and then impossibly soft. His mouth parted in disbelief.
You’d never told him before.
You weren’t sure why. It had always seemed too personal, too final. Like once he had it, he’d have a piece of you no one else did. But now that you’d said it, now that it was in the air between you.
You didn’t regret it.
He mouthed it back to you.
Once. Twice.
Then again, this time with sound. Reverent. Fragile. Yours.
You smiled.
Not the kind you gave to strangers or ghosts.
The real one.
And in that tiny, echoing silence, while the window fogged from the heat of your bodies, and the shadows stayed long and untouched, and the world outside forgot to turn, Remmick finally let himself exhale. Finally let himself rest.
You held him through it.
And didn’t let go.
#remmick#sinners movie#remmick sinners#sinners 2025#remmick x you#remmick x reader#smut#jack o'connell#remmick smut#remmick x black!reader#black!reader#black!fem!reader#sinners#lock me up and throw away the key#gnawing at the bars of my enclosure#here she comes world please be kind to her#do you think god stays in heaven because he too lives in fear of what he created#1k!!!!!
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f1 grid | learning a language



୨ৎ : featuring : all drivers on the grid ୨ৎ : synopsis (requested by anon) : learning a language for your f1 boyfriend
୨ৎ : word count : 938
୨ৎ masterlist ୨ৎ 10k event | masterlist ୨ৎ
ᡣ𐭩 a/n : im like a day behind in stories... dw chat im LOCKING IN i think... sideye? this infact mondays post but tuesdays post will be out a little later today T-T
ʚ・red bull
max verstappen
nearly chokes on his water when you say "ik hou van jou" without warning.
pretends he's unimpressed, but secretly changes his phone's language to dutch to test you.
teaches you all the ridiculous dutch racing slang. you repeat it wrong and he laughs like a schoolboy.
corrects your accent with exaggerated seriousness: "it’s not how, it’s hauw — you’re making me sound german."
yuki tsunoda
shocked, then immediately makes you repeat everything so he can rate your pronunciation out of 10.
only teaches you curse words and food names. absolutely no grammar help.
laughs his head off when you accidentally call ramen "grandmother."
says you're his "nihongo no sensei" (japanese teacher) just to mess with you.
ʚ・mercedes
george russell
you thought learning british slang was simple. george decides to mess with you: "say 'peng ting' in front of lewis."
corrects you with a raised eyebrow when you misuse "fit" or "innit."
secretly impressed when you call him "my gee." tries not to smile.
forces you to watch love island as cultural immersion.
kimi antonelli
beams when you greet him with a "ciao amore."
teaches you romantic phrases then turns red when you use them casually.
you mispronounce "macchina" (car) and he goes, "nooo, now you're calling me pasta."
gets competitive: "you learn italian. i learn your language. we race."
ʚ・ferrari
charles leclerc
his face goes bright red when you say something soft in french.
corrects your grammar and pronunciation in the gentlest voice.
you call him "mon coeur" and he nearly drops his espresso.
sends you voice notes saying the same phrase over and over just to "help you practice."
lewis hamilton
loves that you picked it up to bond with the fans, not just him.
talks to you in half-italian, half-english during post-race dinners.
teaches you "grazie mille" and "sei bellissima," then says them to you in front of the team.
buys matching italian textbooks for fun, calls it "date night studying."
ʚ・mclaren
lando norris
immediately regrets you learning british slang when you say "bruv" unironically.
teaches you nonsense like "that's peak," "allow it," and "bare mad."
pretends to cringe every time you say something right. secretly adores it.
forces you to play cod with him and his friends to practice "real london lingo."
oscar piastri
you try to say "arvo" and "no worries," and he just dies.
laughs when you accidentally say something offensive without knowing.
makes you use aussie slang in every conversation: "that sentence didn't have 'mate' in it, try again."
very proud when you use "reckon" correctly. posts it to his story.
ʚ・aston martin
fernando alonso
nods very seriously as you practice, corrects your conjugations with professor energy.
when you say "te quiero," he goes completely silent and blushes.
teaches you how to shout at other drivers in spanish, just in case.
introduces you to his family and makes you speak only spanish all dinner.
lance stroll
you both struggle through duolingo together and compare scores.
gets competitive about streaks. "i’m on day 12, what about you?"
says phrases like "hola papi" and then loses it laughing.
brags about you to fernando: "she speaks better than i do now."
ʚ・williams
alex albon
surprised but deeply touched.
helps you practice but keeps distracting you with kisses.
teaches you sweet pet names in thai and says them back every time.
when you pronounce something wrong, he just hugs you and goes "close enough."
carlos sainz
absolutely melts when you roll your r's right.
you say something simple like "hola mi amor" and he lights up like a christmas tree.
spends whole evenings just having slow convos with you in spanish.
teases you for being "muy guapa y muy lista" (very pretty and very smart).
ʚ・haas
ollie bearman
you call him "my bloke" and he turns the color of a tomato.
laughs hysterically every time you say "oi bruv" like you mean it.
tries to teach you more but ends up wheezing: "that's not even how we use it!"
buys you a tracksuit and says it's "for authenticity."
esteban ocon
thinks it's the most romantic thing ever.
you struggle to say "rendezvous" and he gently corrects you with a kiss.
whispers french phrases in your ear just to fluster you.
leaves sticky notes around the house with words of the day.
ʚ・racing bulls
liam lawson
you try to say "sweet as" and he stops what he's doing to laugh.
pretends to be offended when you mix aussie and kiwi slang: "excuse me, i'm not piastri."
calls you his "missus" in return and grins.
buys you a nz flag for your language streak celebration.
isack hadjar
absolutely charmed the second he hears you try.
says something flirty in french and dares you to figure it out.
makes you speak only french to him for a day. smirks every time you mess up.
shows you off to his friends like, "she speaks french for me. just for me."
ʚ・alpine
pierre gasly
pretends he’s too cool to care but absolutely melts when you call him "mon chéri."
leaves flirty messages in your duolingo inbox.
sends you obscure french memes and makes you decode them.
you say something romantic and he just whispers, "say it again."
franco colapinto
you pronounce his name the spanish way once and he's gone.
corrects your slang like a patient tutor, but teases you mercilessly too.
buys you alfajores as "study fuel."
gets emotional when you say something sweet in his dialect.
ʚ・kick sauber
nico hulkenberg
amused at first, but turns into your grammar coach real fast.
"nein, nein—this is the wrong case. we do not say it like that."
gives you german tongue-twisters and giggles when you fumble.
very proud when you say "ich liebe dich" the right way.
gabriel bortoleto
excitedly helps you with pronunciation, even if he gets distracted.
calls his mom so you can practice together.
when you say "meu amor," he completely melts.
writes you little love notes in portuguese and hides them in your books.
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#f1#f1 fanfiction#f1 x reader#formula 1#formula one fanfic#f1 imagine#f1 grid x reader#max verstappen x reader#yuki tsunoda x reader#george russell x reader#kimi antonelli x reader#charles leclerc x reader#lewis hamilton x reader#lando norris x reader#oscar piastri x reader#fernando alonso x reader#lance stroll x reader#alex albon x reader#carlos sainz x reader#ollie bearman x reader#esteban ocon x reader#liam lawson x reader#isack hadjar x reader#pierre gasly x reader#nico hulkenberg x reader#gabriel bortoleto x reader#f1 fluff#f1 headcanons#𐐪♡︎₊˚ ― jungwnies#franco colapinto x reader
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