#were falling in and out falling in and out.........
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(T▽T)
(As always DON’T tag as ship :T)
#gravity falls#stanley pines#stanford pines#stan twins#sea grunks#stan pines#ford pines#my art#sketches#wanted to include sleepy snuggles#but they weren’t working out 🫠#I like to think stan would just lay on ford’s head when they were younger#just casually watching ford writing something or ford reading something aloud#yes i do get emotional about them reverting back to things and habits they did when they were little#queue#edit: now with id#thanks as always jacky-rubou for the image description 🙏
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open up what you got in your mind to me. [pt.2 – saja boys.]
they've never met someone like you — a mortal who almost knew them .. better than they knew themselves. for the boys, it's annoyingly intriguing. for the girls, it's comforting.
paring(s): huntrix & saja boys x demon expert!gn!reader
warning(s:) EVERYTHING IN HERE IS A PART TWO TO THIS !! some movie changes, probably effected lore that makes no sense for the sake of the narrative, a little angst at the beginning
request | tags: @blueberrysquire @akariis4snowball @j0ykill
a/n: this is part 2 !! i had sooo many ideas for huntrix that i had to make another part for the saja boys so that it wasn't so long . this part isn't as good but i liked it so ☆☆☆
that night huntrix defeated gwima was a blur. all you remember was the zombie mob of fans, half of the fight, and the use of your aura vision to raise the saja boys above the honmoon before it glimmered in gold. jinu, who gave his newly found soul for rumi, was practically reincarnated through her sword – standing in front of her post-concert, arms open for her to fall into with tears from the both of them. everyone else? well, they felt lost.
the saja boys weren't sure what to do anymore. jinu was overjoyed, of course, but the boys knew nothing more beyond gwima and their mission. they didn't care much about music, nor their fans – which huntrix still couldn't wrap their minds around – and it's not like they had secret human hobbies. they never had time for that. until now.
post-gwima, they stayed in an apartment near the huntrix penthouse, trying to figure out their new lives. for the most part, they spent most of their time under your watch – to make sure they didn't go cause chaos – but also .. under your study.
you were weird to them
they weren't used to someone other than them.. knowing them
their capabilities, their knowledge, their origins.
actually jinu found your extensive understanding of what he is to be kind of comforting
he noticed how you never really drooled over them
you'd stare, sure, but in the same way an art critic would stare at a painted blue canvas with a smeared red dot in the middle
he felt like that red dot – unexplained but you somehow understood
when he told you about his past, it was a lot for him – talking about his cruel choice
but you.. didn't judge him.
in fact, you wrote it down in your notebook immediately, the one you never let the boys get too close to
he accepted you into his life when he entertained your interest in his history
unlike him, however, the other boys were uninterested
at first anyway
thank jinu for getting them to talk to you btw
it took a little bit of convincing – telling them that you wanted to give them something more than just gwima
even though they didn't want it ...
REGARDLESS they hang out around the penthouse
because they're no longer saja boys (uninterested and unsupported by any demon staff anymore)
they really had nothing to do but mildly annoy your personal space
including being the center of your attention when the girls are out
mira gave you one rule, "living room and bathroom. only." and you've succeeded so far. abby and romance were talking by the large scale windows, mystery was playing some game with baby (and obviously winning), and jinu sat in the middle of the couch, watching whatever movie rumi put on for him. you sat beside him, sketching in your one and only personal researcher book. your pencil drew out what you felt like was the final line in mystery's hair ... before you huffed, erasing it, and trying again.
that was... until the littlest demon startled you.
"mystery, they're drawing you." bored of his game, baby peered over your shoulder, only passively curious and really wanting to mess with you. heads turned at your exposure to the room, especially jinu, who looked over your other shoulder at the sketch you did of him earlier.
"you're.. sketching us?" the direct ask made you a bit nervous, especially being under so many eyes. (kind of. mystery was more just.. generally facing your direction.) "'weakness.. chest?' are you taking notes on us?" you stood up, nearly defensive, turning around to face the couch trio.
"if it weren't for your old friends, i wouldn't have to write it all down again." the boys went quiet, remembering the origin of your knowledge and powers. "i'm just.. tired of keeping it all inside. i need to get it out somewhere."
romance, true to his name, leaned over your shoulder, putting you both in a proximity much closer than you've ever had to experience before.
"then why don't we do something.. a little more fun .. to help you get it all out?"
normally sentences like that from him sound way more suggestive than he means them to be
but this time he came up with an actual solution to release your closed up, ready-to-pop-out-of-your-skin knowledge
they gave you a one way trip to infodump station ! an interview !
they wanted to learn more about you anyways
their fellow demons down below were the ones to wipe out your ancestors
not them
and they make sure you know it too
but they can't help but feel .. a little, tiny bit bad that you're now just a living library
a time capsule, holding onto so much information that you're about to burst 24/7
they had never met a researcher honestly
you intrigued them as much as they did for you
how much did you really know ?? did you know anything or is all this antsy behavior a ploy to make it look like you knew everything when you really knew nothing ??
their disguises were perfectly created to make every little fan fall for their attractiveness the second they looked at the boys
but you never drooled at them or had your eyes pop out of your head
you just always... stared. processing. tracing mindfully.
they didn't know what you were really abut. but they were about to find out. and really test your persona.
romance sat relaced in a chair as you circled him, pencil taking note of everything you noticed. how his markings were sharp, not rounded like rivers, how his skin was cooled, not burning hot. all things you already knew, but you found small comfort in knowing not much changed. you took a deep breath around his hair, nose scrunching up. he smiled, taking your cheek in his hand.
"new cologne." his voice was smooth, gentle. traditionally alluring. "just for you. do you like it?" he turned up his flirtatiousness, pulling you in closely, testing the waters of your focus.. before you turned away to start writing, completely uneffected.
"so many generations and you guys still smell like flames.." you mumbled to yourself.
"would you rather we smell like bubblegum?" baby tried to sass you, but you were too focused on the sharpness of his teeth to care. you stepped towards him, eyes widened.
"can demons still tear apart brick with the force of their canines?" you asked, rather close to his face. for a moment, he almost felt like the flustered one.
"yes..? no? i-i don't know." he crossed his arms, childishly. "i don't go around biting bricks." you jot it down still as you move towards abby. he's deeply relaxed, leaning back on the couch, comfortable shirt riding up to expose his famously toned abs. your eyes trail off of your notebook and they think.. they've got you.
"like what you see?" he teases. "you can touch them, you know." a bold move that brings you closer, nails tracing his skin. they're almost disappointed that abby is the one who stole your attention.. before they realize you're attention isn't stolen at all. you're drawing his markings with careful detail.
"where did yours come from? rumi's started forming on her arm when she was a kid, but they haven't reached her stomach yet. they grow with time, right? how old would that make you then..?" you dissolve into mutters they can barely decipher. "oh!! mystery!" he almost jumps behind the couch when you race over to him, making jinu laugh from the sidelines of their attempts to flirt with you. "i've never seen a demon sparkle! that's new.. is that just you? or is there a whole subspecies of sparkling demons? or is it your human disguise..?" your questions nearly overwhelm him, enough to make him forget how he's supposed to flirt with you, but romance pulls you away, whispering in your ear.
"it's not just him." he smiles, hand on your shoulder. "you're sparkling, too, sweetheart." if anyone could fluster anyone, it'd be him, even if it takes two rounds. his thumb runs against your chin. "you look so cute in this lighting, like a rose."
"speaking of which, what's the flora like down there? are there any? do they eat demons or are they like.. regular flowers? we knew more of demons than of gwima's realm. did they smell? i bet they might have.. would it be nostalgic or torturing?"
the boys share a look, and sigh. you went off into high speed muttering again.
you really were everything you said
uninterested in their flirts and more in knowledge
that almost made them like you more..
in the following times after the interview, they greeted you a bit more casually – sometimes cheerfully, asking if you had any new drawings or trivia you wanted to get off your chest
how did you . tame them !? does the whole hard to get thing actually work !?
it confused the girls wildly
but to see them adjusting to being here through someone who actually understood them instead of lying around, empty and lost, was a pick-me-up in the mornings
one morning, after being delivered a coffee, handsigned by the boys, you felt something click in your head, a sensation you had never felt before, and reached to put it in your notebook immediately
"demons, when properly befriended, like to be understood. they brought me coffee. do demons like coffee??"
#requests#dividers by enchanthings#kpop demon hunters x reader#kpop demon hunters#jinu x reader#mystery x reader#romance x reader#abby x reader#baby x reader#saja boys x reader#x male reader#x female reader#x gender neutral reader
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notes, thank you lovely anon for requesting this.
★ Roommate!Sukuna when an argument goes too far.
It started small, like it always did.
A stupid comment. A little snap. Something about the laundry or the dishes or that damn towel he always left on the floor. And like always, Sukuna didn’t take it well.
“You wanna bitch at me about a towel right now?” he scoffed from the kitchen, arms crossed, half shirtless, steam from his ramen curling around him. “Of all the shit I do around here, it’s the fucking towel that sets you off?”
“You don’t do anything around here,” you said, voice sharp. “You leave a mess, you ignore me, and when I ask you to do the bare minimum—”
“Oh, fuck off,” he cut in, slamming the counter with the heel of his hand. “Don’t start with that martyr crap again. You wanna live with someone perfect? Go move in with one of those boring-ass guys you keep flirting with.”
Your eyes narrowed. “Is that what this is about?”
He barked a bitter laugh. “No. It’s about how you act like I’m some fucking inconvenience in your life. You think I want to tiptoe around your moods every goddamn day?”
“I tell you how I feel and you call it a mood?”
“I call it what it is.”
Your heart clenched — hard. You shook your head, lips trembling. “You know what, forget it. This isn’t working anymore. I can’t keep doing this with you.”
He didn’t flinch. “Then don’t.”
The silence that followed was louder than any slam of a door. Your breath caught in your throat, chest tight.
“I’m staying at Shoko’s tonight,” you said quietly, voice already cracking.
He rolled his eyes, leaning back against the counter. “Yeah, run away. Real mature.”
You looked at him then — really looked — and something in your face must’ve shifted. Because his arrogance cracked just slightly.
But you still turned.
Still walked toward the door.
And just before you could open it—
“Oh come on, don’t start crying now,” he snapped. “You dish it out, but when someone gives it back—”
You turned around with tears spilling down your cheeks.
The words landed hard.
You opened your mouth — then shut it again.
It was like your lungs stopped working. Like everything in your chest just... gave out.
Sukuna watched your face change, and instantly, instantly, something shifted in him. Like a violent crash hitting the wrong building.
“Wait—shit,” he muttered, stepping forward, voice lower now. “Don’t—”
But you were already turning away.
Already wiping your cheeks with the back of your hand.
Already moving toward the door with keys in your hand and your entire body shaking.
That’s when it hit him.
Hard.
“No,” he said quickly, grabbing your wrist — not tight, just urgent. “Hey—no. Don’t. You don’t have to—”
You wrenched free, not cruelly, but enough.
“I’m not doing this anymore,” you said. “You say the nastiest shit just to win.”
“I didn’t mean it!” he shouted, desperation rising. “I just—fuck, I don’t know. You know I don’t think that. I was pissed, I was—fuck.”
You reached for the doorknob.
“Don’t walk out,” he said, voice cracking. “Please.”
You turned, finally — cheeks wet, eyes shining.
“Why not?” you whispered. “You don’t even like me half the time.”
He went still.
Everything about him looked like it hurt — like he’d rather take a blade to the gut than hear that again.
“I’m not good with words. You know that,” he continued, stepping closer. “But seeing you cry? It’s like… like someone scraped me hollow.”
You blinked hard, holding back more tears.
“I’d rather set this whole building on fire than see that again,” he said. “So yeah. I’ll shut the fuck up. I’ll take it all back. You win. Just… don’t cry like that again. Not because of me.”
And when you didn’t move — when you stood there, lip trembling, still too hurt to fall into his arms — Sukuna broke the final wall.
He dropped to his knees, forehead pressed against your stomach, arms wrapping around your waist like it was the only thing keeping him grounded.
“I’m sorry,” he mumbled against your shirt. “I’m so fucking sorry, baby.”
For once, he said it like he meant it.
For once, you believed it.
Taglist, @humeysaga @williamafton26 @aranisbaee @probablynotleahhhh @probablynotleahhhh. @beaniesayshi @levifiance @rinofcike @fushiguroooozzz @gojoscumslut @bellsoftheball @kunascutie.
#jjk#jjk x you#roommate jjk#jujutsu kaisen#jujutsu kaisen x reader#jujutsu kaisen fluff#jjk x reader#sukuna#roommate sukuna#sukuna fluff#sukuna scenario#sukuna imagines#sukuna x reader#sukuna x you#sukuna drabbles#sukuna ff
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— w is for worship
you were spread out across his sheets like a dream. bare, flushed, trembling from the last orgasm he’d coaxed out of you. and sylus… looked like he was in awe. not lust-drunk. not ravenous. reverent.
“you’re too good,” he murmured, dragging the backs of his fingers along your thigh. “too good for me.”
you tried to answer, but all you managed was a soft breath as he kissed your knee, then lower, his mouth trailing over your skin like he was blessing it.
“you always look at me like i’m worth something,” he whispered, hushed against your hip. “like i’m not… whatever the hell i’ve become.”
you lifted your head, dazed but concerned. “sylus…”
he shushed you with a kiss to your belly. “don’t talk, sweetheart. not right now. let me love you a little longer.”
you laid back down and he took that as permission. his hands were slow and sure as they parted your thighs again. he didn’t tease this time, didn’t smirk, didn’t goad. he worshipped.
soft kisses. gentle licks. every touch filled with aching affection as his tongue moved over you, tasting you like you were the only sweetness he’d ever known. he moaned softly into you, hands gripping your waist, but not to control you.
to anchor himself, like he was the one coming undone.
“fuck,” he groaned, breaking away just for a breath. “you’re divine.”
your hand found his hair, fingers slipping through soft strands. he looked up at you from between your legs, lips glistening, eyes dark and full of something close to devotion.
“let me make you feel good, baby,” he whispered. “let me remind you how perfect you are.”
you whimpered, soft and shy, and nodded. so he went back to work. worship wasn’t even the right word. it was deeper than that. sylus adored you. with every kiss, every stroke of his tongue, he gave and gave and gave, until your thighs were trembling, your breath was ragged, your fingers were fisting his sheets.
and still he whispered praise.
“that’s it, sweet girl. just like that.”
“so pretty when you fall apart for me.”
“you’re heaven, you know that? fucking heaven.”
you came with a broken cry. softer this time, more fragile, like your body didn’t know how to hold so much love and pleasure at once. sylus kissed your thighs, your stomach, your chest, crawling up to gather you in his arms. you were still shaking and he held you through it.
“i love you,” he whispered against your temple. “i love you so much with everything i have.”
“i love you too,” you whispered it back, because it was the only truth that mattered.
#sylus#sylus x non mc#sylus x reader#sylus x you#sylus smut#lads x reader#lads x you#lads smut#lads#love and deepspace#love and deepspace x reader#love and deepspace sylus#love and deepspace smut
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satoru is terrible at keeping secrets.
especially when that secret is you finally, after two years of relentless, dramatic, embarrassingly persistent courting, agreeing to be his girlfriend.
he swore up and down he could handle it—“…sure, sure, lowkey, hush-hush, i got you, baby,” he said, practically bouncing in place like the golden retriever he is, his white hair a fluffy mess, bouncing with every nod, bright blue eyes sparkling behind his blindfold—because, yeah, okay, it made sense. things were complicated. it would be messy if people found out too soon.
but also? it was satoru.
it was the lovesick man who has been hopelessly, pathetically down bad for you since the moment he laid eyes on you, and turns out, yeah, he can’t hide shit.
he’s doing the most. failing the most.
he’s staring at you during work like you’re the moon, the stars, the air he breathes, and probably breakfast, lunch, and dinner, too. the kind of gaze that has hearts practically floating out of his head like a bad shoujo manga. his lips tug upward in a soft, lopsided grin every time you so much as sigh. and it doesn’t help that he smiles like an absolute idiot every time you speak—his fingers fiddling with his pen, twirling it with that restless energy, like he’s got nowhere else to look but you. sometimes he props his chin on his hand, elbow on the desk, feet swinging beneath his chair, eyes glimmering with obvious affection. sometimes he kicks his feet, like he’s writing your name in hearts all over his notes.
and when people tease him about it?
“uh…uh…she’s just…” he chokes, rubbing the back of his neck, his white hair falling into his flushed face. his sunglasses slide down his nose as he stammers, his fingers nervously drumming on the table. “she’s cool! yeah! a really… really… cool… coworker!”
uh huh.
people start noticing real fast. the way you bring two drinks into meetings, both his favorite. the way his jacket mysteriously ends up on your chair, like he’s perpetually cold even though he’s not. the way you two walk in separately but somehow always leave together. the way satoru is always hovering two inches behind you like he’s your personal security detail, or maybe just your lovesick guard dog, his long legs struggling to slow his stride to match yours. his glasses slips sometimes, revealing those ridiculously bright eyes trained on you and only you.
and when you whip your head slightly and whisper scoldings under your breath, lips barely moving—"“you’re gonna blow our cover, dumbass”—he just beams, a grin so wide his cheeks push up against his blindfold. his fingers twitch, aching to reach out and tuck a stray hair behind your ear. it’s the kind of smile that could knock the air out of your lungs if you weren’t already holding your breath trying not to combust. he tilts his head like he’s imagining sliding a ring on your finger already, the soft flush on his cheeks betraying how much he’s already too far gone.
it’s not just the staring. it’s the giddiness. the way he forgets to keep his distance when you’re around. the way his shoulders instantly straighten when you walk into the room, like his whole body is magnetized to you. the way his fingers tap against the desk like he can’t wait to talk to you again. the way he fumbles, dropping his pen or knocking over his water bottle, when someone catches him looking at you like you’re his entire universe. it’s the way he instantly brings you snacks he swore were “for everyone” but somehow always end up on your desk, the wrappers piling up as you pretend not to enjoy the attention.
it’s also the way you’re absolutely pissed when you realize he’s blowing the secret wide open. your jaw tightens, your foot taps the floor, your arms cross, and your glare sharpens to a laser beam. you’ve warned him. you’ve scolded him. you’ve threatened to dump him—half-joking, half-very-much-not—if he keeps being so obvious. you press your palm to your temple in frustration as you whisper, "you're killing me here, satoru."
and suddenly, he’s panicking. his hands flail, baby blues orbs widening . his voice cracks, desperate. his fingers clutch the air like he's trying to grab the right words before they scatter.
“no, no, no, babe… please don’t dump me. i’ll do better, i swear. i’ll look less. i’ll… i’ll stare at the wall instead. i’ll wear sunglasses indoors. i’ll look at the floor forever. i’ll… i’ll even switch departments. please, please don’t leave me. i won’t survive it. i’ll just crumble into dust. i’ll haunt you. but like… in a hot way.”
he's clutching his chest dramatically, leaning into the nearest table for support like he’s seconds from collapsing. his bottom lip juts out in a pitiful pout, and his fingers twitch like he wants to reach for you but knows he can’t—not here, not now. his feet shuffle in place like he’s trying to root himself to the ground, but his whole body screams to be closer to you.
“you’re so bad at this,” you deadpan, arms crossed, eyes half-lidded, pretending you’re not melting inside because you’re emotionally constipated and you like to act like you’re not just as whipped. but your ears are pink. you know they are. you can feel the heat blooming across your skin. you shift your weight onto one leg, tapping your finger against your elbow in mock annoyance, but your foot has already inched closer to his.
“but you still love me right?” he pouts, voice softening, tilting his head as he leans closer like a puppy waiting for a treat. his hair flops forward over his blindfold, his grin tentative, hopeful, like he’s staking his entire existence on your next words. his toes point toward you, his shoulders curling in, like you’re his center of gravity.
“you’re lucky you’re cute,” you grumble, rolling your eyes, but you’re already reaching for his hand beneath the table, already letting him lace his fingers with yours, his thumb stroking soft circles into your skin like it’s instinct, like it’s home. he squeezes your hand like he never plans to let go.
he brightens instantly, a soundless laugh puffing from his chest, his white hair bouncing with the force of his excitement. his entire body relaxes, his feet kicking slightly under the table. “i’ll be better! i’ll be so sneaky, baby! like a ninja! you won’t even see me coming! i’ll be a ghost! you’ll be so proud of me!”
spoiler: he does not, in fact, get any sneakier.
he gets worse. because now he’s trying so hard to “be sneaky” that he ends up staring harder. he waves at you across the room with a smile that’s way too fond, his hand flopping in a lazy, unmistakable greeting that lingers just a second too long. he trips over his own feet when you so much as glance in his direction, scrambling to play it cool like his heart didn’t just somersault into his throat. he texts you from three desks away: “do you miss me?” like you’re not in the same building, like he hasn’t seen you in five minutes. he sends you selfies from the next room with captions like, “thinking of you” and “missing my girl.”
he's a terrible liar. but he’s the best boyfriend.
so you let him. you let him slip up. you let him look at you like you’re his whole world. you let him wear that stupid grin. you let him love you loudly, even when he’s supposed to be quiet about it. you let him text you unnecessarily, bring you snacks with your name written on the wrapper, and you let him keep leaving his jacket on your chair.
you’re just as hopeless, aren’t you?
#౨ৎ — gojossip#this has to be the most unrealistic shit i’ve ever written cus i’d be showing him off fr#gojo satoru#gojo fluff#gojo x reader fluff#gojo satoru x reader#gojo satoru x y/n#gojo satoru x you#satoru gojo x reader#satoru gojo x y/n#satoru gojo x you#jjk fluff#jjk x reader
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I've been reading the fanart. You have a natural talent for creating a more distinctive personality for the Saja Boys from the bits and pieces they gave us in the movie!
Ever since that fanart where the Saja sneaked into the reader's room, I couldn't stop imagining what they would be like sleeping alone with her, as if every day of the week except the weekends they will take turns sleeping with the reader or something like that.
And again, I love your writing. I hope you like the idea. Have a nice day!!!
Saja Boys x GN!Reader
a/n; anon thank you so much heheh!!! this one isn't too accurate to your idea, but i love it and i hope it's still okay!
summary; physical touch with the boys and why they wanna go to your bedroom :))) (touch starved. written separately but they all live in the same housing)
warnings; stalking (watching you sleep), body curious, touching w no permission, nothing sexual tho!
— 🍃 [Monday]
Here's the thing, guys. The boys don't actually need sleep. They're demons. Sleep isn't something their bodies need—instead it's something they want. They are still aware and can feel through touch, which is exactly why they'd prefer to sleep with you.
You're warm, so alive, and they don't know it yet.
Surprisingly enough, Jinu is the first one to knock on your door.
"Jinu?" you drawl, voice laced with sleep. He stands awkwardly by the doorway, patiently waiting for you to process what's happening. Glancing idly at your sleepwear and dimlit room.
You yawn, widening the door. "What's up? Need something?" You pause, raising a lazy accusing finger. "Wait. You're not here to suck my blood, are you—?!"
"What? No!" Jinu gasps, almost offended. You sigh out of relief anyway.
"...We're not interested in physical bodies. Anyway, uh, sorry for waking you up. I just need to see how our socials are going," he explains as he steps into your room. "You can power your computer and go back to sleep."
As soon as you heard the word 'social', you were already turning it on. "'kay, buddy. You sure you don't need help, though? I know I taught you a bit but I understand it can get confusing—"
"No, no," Jinu huffs, denial flooding his form. "I can do it."
"You remember how to turn it off?"
"Yes. Don't worry."
Then you fall asleep next to him, your body slightly pressing against his. His eyes slowly drift away from the glow of the computer screen to your sleeping form. He stares for a moment.
Soft, warm. It reminds him of the past on how he couldn't sleep with his own fam—
Jinu pulls the computer plug off and teleports away.
—💐 [Tuesday]
Baby made you piggyback him. A lot. It was sort of your fault.
You saw the Saja Boys taking turns carrying him—it was a pretty funny ordeal. Then you jokingly offered to piggyback him to see what the hype was about.
He accepted it all too eagerly. As soon as his full weight falls on you, you're genuinely surprised at how light he is. It's probably equivalent to a box full of volleyballs.
"You're lighter than I thought," you say, adjusting your arms behind his legs.
Baby suddenly lets his head rest on yours. "Why are you so..." Warm. He buries himself into your shoulder, his arms tightening around you.
"Why am I so what?" you ask, turning your head, only achieving to tickle him more.
He doesn't let you go for the rest of the day.
And by extension, night.
You tried to complain at first. "Didn't we agree to—"
"Just this once, please?"
You folded.
He snuggles all comfortable within your arms, acting as the little spoon, greedily content in your warmth and breathing.
But then you wake up with his mouth on your skin. He wasn't biting, sucking, or anything. It was just.... there.
Still, though, you assumed the worst.
"I thought you said demons don't suck blood, Jinu!?!"
"We don't!!?!"
—🪷 [Wednesday]
Abby wanted you to touch his abs for some mysterious reason. Yapping about how "no one else will have this chance," or "you might not live long enough to feel it!" and "I actually haven't let anyone touch my artificial abs yet" — it was really weird, but you shrugged it off and agreed anyway.
Like hell yeah. Sure, why not?
So he unbuttons his shirt, all giddy, and watches as you reach for his skin.
You make contact with his abs. Caressing it gently, it feels normal in texture — but you suppose it's a little too cold. The fact didn't totally sound weird at the time.
Looking up, you flinch at Abby's expression. You thought he'd be smiling, like he was the whole time, but he looks so serious that it's actually concerning. He's not looking at you; his eyes were down and fixated on your hand.
You notice, pulling your hand away from him, and snapping your fingers. "You okay?"
He blinks. "Uh."
Later that night, Abby welcomes himself into your room.
He stares at you from the corner. From the center. From the edge of your bedframe. On your bed.
Sometimes, he'd gently let his hands roam over your exposed skin. Mostly your warm hands. And your warm face.
You wake up to find his face in front of you.
Screaming, you unintentionally kick him in the abs.
"Ow, my perfectly crafted abs!"
— 🪻 [Thursday]
Mystery almost lost it when you pat his head.
You did it voluntarily. It's a nice, comforting feeling as you pat his shoulder, his arm, and his cheek. He utterly melts under your casual touches without a single word.
He loves it. You leave him demanding for more. So, Mystery decides to linger around you like a guard dog. Who hopes to be spoiled, who wishes to be held.
But, then, night comes.
"You're not exactly allowed in my room," you say, only to pause when he straight up whimpers.
... You folded. With a sigh, you step away from the door and give him space to walk in.
He happily skips into your room, flopping face-first on your bed. You stare at him for a moment, thinking about how despite them not being human — they really love to rest.
You lie down, feeling Mystery move around under your blanket, closing your eyes when he finds himself comfortable against your chest.
Your chest rising and falling with every breath—Mystery simply can't help but feel envious.
— 🌺 [Friday]
Romance is confused.
There's a buzz between his band members — apparently, they visited your bedroom? Didn't they agree to avoid that specific place in this house?
He doesn't realize he's been staring blankly at nowhere. Reality hits him hard when something gentle touches his hair.
"Might wanna style your hair again, Rome," you chuckle, brushing his hair with your fingers. He shivers when your skin grazes his forehead. "You got the bed head. Though I guess you just snap your fingers and it'd be all okay."
You leave right after that, but Romance keeps staring at the last place he saw your figure, his fingers fidgeting with the hair you just touched.
Okay. He gets it now.
Next day, you woke up with him hovering over your head.
You suddenly grab his shoulders, push him back against your bed, breathing heavy from the shock. The bed sinks under both your weight.
Romance stares immensely up at you.
"You guys," you breath, "will be the death of me."
He smirks. "I can only imagine."
— krazy
#kpdh x reader#x reader#kpop demon hunters x reader#saja boys x reader#jinu x reader#baby saja x reader#abby saja x reader#romance saja x reader#mystery saja x reader#jinu saja x reader
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LOVE YOUR ART SM
Had a silly thought, do Narinder's whiskers ever fall off? Does the Lamb stick em on his head like they're antenas like ppl luv doin' on tiktok lmao??
mmmmyeah :D After finding that out, they have been collecting his whiskers to put them in a tiny vase. Nari later on would add any stray whisker he'd find when Lamb wasn't looking.
ID text above and below as always. :)
[ID: A six page fan-comic of The Lamb and Narinder from the game Cult of the Lamb. Image 1: The Lamb is seen folding laundry before something catches their eye. They gasp in shock as they look down at Narinder's whisker. Image 2: They pick up the whisker with a joyful expression on their face. "Nari's whisker! I didn't think his were able to detach like this! I gotta start a collection." The Lamb then cuts themselves off, a lightbulb floats in front of them as they think of an idea. Then they look to the side, grazing Narinder's whisker on top of their nose as they smile big and say, "or." Image 3: Somewhere else, Narinder is seen in front of a tree whittling. His face is expressionless and content. The Lamb speaks to him off screen, "Narinder, do you have a moment?" He growls angrily and snaps his wooden project in half. He then points his whittling knife at them with his eyebrow raised. "Why do you haunt me with your presence today, Lamb? Image 4: The Lamb grins with their eyes squinted, looking up at him. "Oh I just wanted to see you. Nothing crazy." Narinder stares at the Lamb with sharp cat eyes before taking a step back. "That face. Why are you making that face?" He squints at them as he holds up his whittling knife. The Lamb tells him to "Stay still" before Narinder cuts them off saying, "Back demon!". Image 5: The Lamb places Narinder's whisker on top of his head while saying "Bloop!" The sudden gesture makes him flinch and tense up before he looks up at his detached whisker now on his head. The Lamb begins to hold back their laughter before asking, "What's wrong? You should keep the look!" And then nudges him. Narinder is silent as he grips onto his whittling knife while glaring at them. Image 6: Narinder fully turns his head towards the Lamb and grits his teeth, holding his knife up higher as he grumbles, "I hate you." The Lamb has tears in their eyes as they let out a long wheeze. End ID.]
#i am SO SORRY for answering you so late.#you've been in my inbox for MONTHS#it felt right to do a comic as a response#thank you for your patience!!!#deadlocked au#cult of the lamb#cotl#cult of the lamb lamb#cult of the lamb narinder#narilamb#cult of the lamb fanart#cotl fanart#fanart#nudibro's art#fan comic#ask#still gotta figure out how to do comics lol
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💭 thinking about rafe who uses sex as a replacement for his coke addiction…
rafe has known you forever. you’ve stuck by him through some of his hardest times, through wards death, his coke addiction… so consequently, it’s no surprise when you two start dating.
and shockingly, for once in his life, rafe realizes he wants to be better. for you. for himself. so, with a lot of support from you, he quits doing drugs. coke specifically.
and it’s not easy. obviously. there are nights where he wakes up in a cold sweat, body trembling and his heart racing like he just did a couple lines, but he knows it’s just the withdrawals. and luckily for him, you’re always there for him.
in more ways than one.
sex. rafe found it was the only thing that distracted him from his once drug addled mind, the warm comfort of you wrapped around him enough to flood out any thoughts of needing coke.
in the mornings, in the afternoons. sometimes even when you were both asleep. he’d wake up, badly trembling, gasp escaping his lips and when he was sure that nothing could soothe the ache in his chest, you were right there.
soft, warm, the smell of your perfume lingering on your skin. the one rafe loved, the one you wore because you knew he loved it.
“baby,” he murmured, his voice a raspy, gruff murmur, still not yet shaken from the confines of sleep. you hummed in response, body shifting, like you already knew what he needed. it was wordless permission in itself—the way you scooted your ass a little further so it nestled into his crotch, your mind still fuzzy with sleep, but awake enough to know what he needed.
and he’d oblige everytime, a soft breath of content leaving his lips, large hands massaging your hips gently as he toyed with the edges of your panties. he mouthed at your neck, warm soft kisses, hands easing your panties down to your mid thigh.
he was already flushed, leaking at the tip, his body begging for that sweet warmth only you could provide him.
and when he finally eased himself in, when both of your lips parted to release the softest of breaths, he felt safe. his nerves relaxed, his heart beat slowed. it felt safe. content.
he didn’t move for a bit, just savored the warmth around his, pressing soft kisses to the side of your neck, murmured sweet nothings.
“so perfect,” he whispered in your ear, his kiss bitten lips brushing the cartilage of your earlobe, easing his hips a little higher, starting a steady rhythm that sent sparks of pleasure up both of your spines, yours fuzzy, and dull, his more consuming.
“y’feel so good, baby.. ah, fuck..” he groaned low, hands holding your hips like a vice, the softest of whines escaping you, a symphony of noises filling the once silent space.
his orgasm always came fast, a tightening in his stomach, his hand wrapping around your torso, thumb rubbing circles onto your clit. and when you both were on your peak, about to fall off, he’d grab your jaw, pulling you into a messy kiss that was all teeth and tongue, spit mixing and making a lewd noise in the night.
it was later when he finally pulled out of you with a soft hiss, his body sensitive from his high, your breathing evening out as you rolled over, meeting rafe face first.
“feel better?” you murmured, soft and comforting, hand reaching out to stroke his head, eyes half lidded and blurry with sleep.
he leant into your touch, arms wrapped around your body like he was afraid to let go, like if he did, he’d wake up from the same withdrawals and realize this was all a dream.
“when i’m with you?” he pressed a soft kiss to your shoulder, holding back a smile when your eyes fully shut. “always, baby.”
rafe cameron masterlist ♡ want to join my taglist?
© 𝐄𝐒𝐎𝐓𝐄𝐑𝐈𝐂𝐂𝐀𝐍𝐆𝐄𝐋 𝐞𝐬𝐭 𝟐𝟎𝟐𝟓 please refrain from copying, translating or claiming my work as yours .ᐟ
🏷️: @winnie1emon @drewswife @urcoolgf @browniepop62 @angvl3tears
#𐔌 . ⋮ emerson writes .ᐟ ֹ ₊ ꒱#rafe cameron x you#rafe obx#rafe cameron smut#rafe cameron x reader#rafe outer banks#rafe cameron#rafe x you#rafe fanfiction#outer banks#rafe smut#rafe x reader#rafe cameron angst#rafe cameron fluff
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ᴺᴼᵂ ᴾᴸᴬᵞᴵᴺᴳ : My type
...by VOILA
❥ Nanami Kento x ex emo!Reader
Or how Nanami Kento knew you were really his type.
Made for Angels Birthday Event!
"I didn't know you were emo." You hummed, a poorly hidden smile covered by a mug of coffee. Leaning against the kitchen counter, you carefully watch as your husband freezes mid-stride, almost flinching, before continuing his way to the coffee pot.
"Emo? I don't know what you mean." Came his unnervingly calm reply, but there was a shake to his voice. Just barely there. The way his voice pitched up just a few notes too high for a thursday morning.
You shrugged casually, setting your mug down. But there was a smile in your voice, Nanami could feel it even with his back turned. “I found a photo album while cleaning out your office."
Nanami Kento never had his heart fall out of his ass any faster. "You were so cute as a freshman~" You twisted the pretty little knife so kindly stabbed into his back.
A soft, tired groan escaped him as he covered his face with one hand. “God.”
“Oh, come on,” you laughed. “It was adorable! You had the full look! It was adorable!"
“I didn’t know what I was doing,” he muttered from behind his hand.
"Clearly, but its cute!" You giggle into his shoulder, wrapping your arms as best you could around his waist. "What were you listening to? Evanescence? My chemical romance? Some other obscure band or -"
"Please." Nanami sighed, dejected as his shoulders slump.
"I'm just asking!"
If I say no, will you stop?”
“No.”
Nanami lets out another tired groan, he needed more coffee already. Remembering all those pictures - oh, shivers crawled up his spine at the memory. Which didn't go unnoticed by you.
"If it helps," You lean your head on his shoulder, looking up at him as best you could at this uncomfortable angle. "You'd totally be my type."
"Oh shush," Nanami shoved you off of him, cup of coffee in his other hand as he leaves you in the kitchen, laughing from the bottom of your heart.
A few days, maybe even weeks later, you made sure Nanami never lived it down. Still, it got a little better as time passed by, you mentioned it less - that was a win he would take.
While also cleaning out the bedroom, he had come across your own photobook. His eyes originally glanced over it, having to do a double take when he realized he had never really seen any picture of you when you were younger.
Calloused hands trace the cover of the book, carefully peeling it open.
“Oh my god,” he whispered, a twitch of a smile tugging at his lips.
There you were - in full middle school emo regalia. He flipped page after page, smile growing wider with every picture with you with sideswept hair, every dark hoodie and every line of thick eyeliner.
When you had gotten home that evening, you didn't live anything down, either.
#jujutsu kaisen#jujutsu kaisen x reader#jjk x reader#jjk scenarios#jjk drabbles#jjk fluff#nanami x reader#nanami kento x reader#kento nanami x reader#nanami x reader fluff#nanami fluff#nanami kento fluff#nanami kento x reader fluff#angels drabbles •°. *࿐#༊*·˚angels b-day event༉‧₊˚.
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Imagine being Zayne’s non-mc significant other. Red String of Fate AU
Imagine being born with the ability to see the red strings of fate. The ones that tied people together. Lovers, soulmates, the people meant to find each other.
Imagine some were strong. Some were gentle. Some were ugly and sharp. And you... you could cut them. Not to play with people's lives, but to help. You only ever cut the ones that hurt. Obsession, possession and the pain pretending to be love.
Imagine never once had a string pointed at you. Never. Not once.
but Imagine you tried to love anyway. Quiet, careful tries. But each time, they were already tied to someone else. So you let them go. You always let them go. You told yourself it was enough to help others. That not everyone gets a string. That maybe you weren't meant to belong.
Imagine then came Zayne. He didn't have a string at all. Nothing pulling him toward anyone. Not even the hint of one waiting to appear. Just stillness.
Imagine the way he looks at you was like you weren't anything. Like you weren't broken or forgotten. You didn't fall fast. You didn't rush. You built something slow and steady. And for the first time, you wondered if maybe love didn't need fate. Maybe it just needed someone to stay.
Imagine he knew what you could do. What you could see. So one night while you were sitting beside him, your head on his shoulder, he asked gently.
"If I ever get a string and it's not for you. I want you to cut it." You hesitated. Just for a second. "Alright." And he nodded. He trusted you.
Imagine weeks have passed then months. Still no string. Still just the two of you. Happy in the quiet way. The kind of happy that doesn’t shout or shine. It just lives in the little things. His sleepy voice in the morning. Your laughter when he made tea wrong again it was super sweet like what in world-. His hand finding yours under the table. Yours holding on, always. Until tonight.
Imagine you were visiting him at the hospital. The two of you were heading to a restaurant after his shift when you saw him come out. And there you saw it. A faint glow. Scarlet and soft. Spinning from his ring finger like a whisper, like a promise. And it wasn't pointing at you.
Imagine it heads down the hall. Past the sterilized white walls of the hospital. To Room 212.
Imagine you have seen her before. A patient. Someone Zayne has cared for, carefully, gently. A kind girl with a tired laugh and too many paper cranes tucked under her pillow. You never sensed anything romantic. You never even worried. But the string doesn't lie.
and Imagine its there now. Shimmering. Real. And for the first time in your life, your heart aches not just for someone else but for you.
Imagine, strange enough. Your heart didn't drop. It didn't crash. It just stilled. Like everything inside you went quiet at once. And you stood there staring at the string that wasn't yours.
Imagine the way he saw your face change. He stepped closer. His voice softened. As if he was trying to figure out what's wrong.
"What's wrong?" He asked, holding you gently by the arm. "Nothing." You smile at him. He did not buy it. "Did it happen?" He asked. "Do I have a string?"
Imagine the way you looked at him. The man you loved. The man who had been yours. Not because fate said so, but because he chose you. Every day. Again and again. And you said. "No. Not yet."
Imagine you lied. Because if this was fate choosing for him. If this string led him to happiness. You wouldn't take that from him. You loved him too much.
so Imagine you smiled. Let him pull you into his arms. Let him hold you like nothing had changed. You let him, the way he kiss the crown of your head. You savour it.
Imagine you close your eyes. Then you blink. But you could still see the string. Bright. Alive. Stretching toward someone else. And you didn't say a word.
because Imagine, love isn't always holding on. Sometimes, it's letting go quietly. Even when no one sees the breaking. Just loving someone enough to lie, so they never have to feel the weight of goodbye.
[ⓒdark-night-hero] 2025°
: karma's a bitch cuz I literally was about to passout at the local market. I'm so embarrassed. Thou shall not set foot on the market for at least a month XD
: also if you know my reference for this one and the last one. I see you're a people of culture;)
#dark night hero#live laugh love lads#zayne imagines#zayne x reader#lads zayne#zayne love and deepspace#lnds zayne#l&ds zayne#love and deepspace x reader#love and deepspace imagine#lads x reader#lads imagine#lads#lads x you#lads x non!mc reader#lads x y/n#zayne angst#zayne x you#zayne x y/n#zayne x non mc#lads red string of fate au#goodgame#love and deepspace x you#love and deepspace au
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BASIC TRAINING — CHAPTER THREE
WARNINGS — invasion of privacy, diary-reading without consent, possessive male POV, inner obsession, implied virginity, age gap dynamics, inappropriate fantasies, minor delusion/grooming-adjacent thoughts, manipulation (anything italicized is what’s written in the diary!)



You didn’t even realize you’d dropped it.
That’s the funniest part. Funniest to him, at least.
You were walking too fast across the courtyard. Flustered again. Maybe it was because Rafe had called you sweetheart with that slow drawl, lingering on the “s,” right in front of three privates. You stammered through a hello, eyes darting everywhere but him, clutching your bag like a shield.
He watched you walk off.
And then he saw it — a slim pink notebook, barely thicker than a pamphlet, slipped from your tote and dropped behind you like a breadcrumb.
You didn’t hear it. Didn’t turn around.
Just kept walking.
So now it’s his.
He finds it ten seconds later, thumb brushing the soft cover like it might burn. You’d doodled a little sun in the corner. One of the loops is dotted with a heart. The name you wrote inside?
First name only. Bubbly handwriting. Like a schoolgirl.
He flips to the first page and grins.
“Summer Goals ☀️💕”
— swim more
— read 5 books
— learn how to french braid my hair
— kiss someone (REAL kiss!)
— fall in love
— try wine or beer!
— say no without feeling bad
— be brave
Rafe lets out a low breath. One part humor. One part something else.
God, you’re even softer than he thought.
You want to fall in love. Kiss someone. Try wine or beer.
He wonders if you think all those things will happen in one night. If you still believe in movie endings and fireworks and a guy showing up with flowers.
You’re doomed.
He flips further.
You’ve used it like a diary. You don’t date the pages. Just talk to yourself. Or maybe talk to someone. The kind of someone you wish existed. The kind of man who listens. The kind of man who stays.
“Saw him again today.
He called me sweetheart. I shouldn’t like it, but I do.
He looks at me like he knows things I don’t. It makes me feel dumb. But also kind of… not dumb? Like I want to know what he knows?”
Rafe shifts on the bench.
His grip tightens.
You’re writing about him.
Not a crush. Not a passing observation. You feel something. He’s getting in your head already and you don’t even know it.
You’re still so fucking clueless.
He turns the page.
“My dad would kill me. If he knew what I was thinking…
It’s not even bad! I just. I don’t know.
I want someone to touch me.
Not like that!! I mean. Okay maybe like that. But not gross. Like… soft. Gentle.
I want to know what it feels like to be wanted.”
He leans back against the wall. The notebook drops into his lap.
It takes a full sixty seconds before he even breathes.
You’ve never even been touched. Not really.
You’re writing about your own fantasies like they’re foreign concepts. You don’t even know how it works. You’re scared of it. Confused. Hoping someone will take the guesswork out of it.
And Rafe? He’d do it without a fucking second thought.
But not soft. Not gentle.
He wants you ruined.
Wants you to forget every boy you ever dreamed about because he made you come harder than any of them ever could.
He wants to be your first. And only.
The next page pushes it further.
“I think he’s older. He must be. He looks like he’s seen a lot.
But I like that. I think I want that. Someone who can take care of me. Who already knows what he’s doing.
Someone who knows how to tell me what to do.”
He closes the notebook, fast. Like it’ll melt his palms if he doesn’t.
This isn’t about teasing anymore.
This isn’t even about baiting you.
This is about possession.
You already want the thing he planned to take.
He slides the book into his pocket. He’ll return it. Eventually. Maybe tomorrow.
Maybe after he reads it again.
Maybe after he’s jacked off to the words “tell me what to do” while moaning your name into his fist.
You knock on his office door the next morning.
He’s not surprised. You’re flustered. Lip bitten. Crimson on your cheeks.
“Sweetheart,” he drawls, opening the door wider. “You look like you lost a puppy.”
You blink up at him, embarrassed. “I—I think I dropped my notebook yesterday. I was just wondering if…”
“Notebook, huh?”
He moves slowly to the desk. Opens a drawer.
Pulls it out with a casual shrug.
“This one?”
Your eyes light up. You nod, stepping forward to take it—but he doesn’t let go.
He watches you.
Tilts his head. Then slowly, very deliberately, presses it into your hands. His fingers brush your wrists.
“You should be more careful with your private thoughts, sweetheart,” he says low. “Never know who might be reading.”
You freeze.
He smiles.
And then he walks away.
You flip through it later. Nothing’s changed. Nothing missing.
But somehow… something feels different.
You can’t explain it.
The pages feel heavier. The air between your fingers charged. You catch yourself wondering—just for a second—if he meant something else. If he read—
No. No, he wouldn’t.
Would he?
That night, Rafe sits outside on the barrack steps.
His boots are dusty. His knuckles bruised. He smells like gasoline and aftershave and heat.
And he’s smiling.
Because you’re so, so clueless.
And he’s so, so patient.
But not for much longer.
#cameronsbabydoll ⋆. 𐙚 ˚#military!rafe#rafe cameron#rafe cameron headcanons#rafe cameron fluff#rafe cameron x yn#rafe cameron x reader#rafe cameron blurb#rafe cameron fanfic#rafe obx#rafe fluff#rafe cameron fic#pervy!rafe#perv!rafe#rafe cameron fanfiction#rafe cameron obx#rafe cameron smut#rafe cameron imagine#rafe cameron x you#rafe cameron prompt#rafe cameron series#rafe cameron x female reader#rafe cameron x shy!reader#rafe cameron x innocent reader#rafe cameron x innocent!reader#rafe cameron comfort#rafe cameron x kook!reader#drew starkey x female reader#drew starkey angst#drew starkey x y/n
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en español ; joaquín torres
fandom: marvel
pairing: joaquín x reader
summary: after joaquín returns from a two-week-long mission things feel different, then he convinces you to go undercover with him where tensions rise—only for him to leaving you wanting more... until he stops by your office for a very intimate spanish lesson
notes: danny ramirez, the man that you are, holy fuck... like this dude has me in a chokehold??? what i wouldn't do for him (there's nothing, absolutely nothing)... i really hope y'all enjoy this! it was inspired by few different things and i had a blast writing it, so please let me know what you think! (p.s. i highly recommend watching the papasito music video and anthony vs. danny hot ones before reading)
warnings: swearing, alcohol, sexual tension, probably some very incorrect spanish (i'm apologising in advance), mention of guns / weapons, italics, lots of pet names / nicknames, SMUT (dirty talk, f oral receiving, unprotected p in v, semi-public-ish sex) 18+ ONLY MDNI!!!
word count: 19998
You fall into your desk chair, careful not to spill your fresh mug of coffee as you fumble for your headset. You’re late—just barely—but if you’re lucky, Sam won’t notice.
You slide the headset on and quickly sort through the programs running on your computer, eyes flicking across several screens. Then you take a deep breath, adjust your mic, and open the comms line.
“How’s my favourite flyboy today? Still got all your limbs attached and your pretty face unscathed?”
“Careful, hermosa,” Joaquín says, his voice smooth in your ear. “Sam’s on the channel. He might get jealous.”
You smile to yourself, tracking their positions on your middle monitor. “Please. Sam knows who my favourite is. He’s come to terms with it.”
Joaquín chuckles. “You trying to make me blush?”
You roll your eyes despite the smile tugging at your lips. “If I wanted to make you blush, Torres, I’d be using more than just my voice.”
There’s a beat of silence, the soft crackle of the open frequency filling your ears.
Then Joaquín clears his throat, loudly. “Mission. Flying. No dying. Need to focus.”
You laugh quietly, watching his heartrate spike on a screen to the left. “You better be careful, pretty boy. Can’t show you how much I’ve missed you if you don’t make it home.”
“Show me?” Joaquín echoes, grin audible. “How?”
“Come home in one piece and you’ll find out,” you say, voice low, teasing.
His heartrate spikes even higher, and you have to bite your lip to keep from giggling.
“Jesus Christ,” Sam sighs. “Can you two at least try to be professional?”
There’s another beat of quiet—only brief—before, at the same time, both you and Joaquín say, “No.”
You can practically hear Sam roll his eyes. “Why the hell did I let him convince me to hire you?”
You grin to yourself, eyes still flickering across your screens. “Because unfortunately for you, Cap, you’ve never met a more skilled analyst who’d rather work seven days a week than have a social life.”
“Joaquín is your social life,” Sam mutters. “I unknowingly hired the two most annoying best friends in the world.”
“You forgot talented,” Joaquín pipes up. “Two of the most annoying and talented best friends in the world.”
Sam groans—loud, frustrated—but he doesn’t argue. Because unfortunately, you’re both right. You’re two of the best people he could’ve found for the job, and despite the never-ending banter and insufferable tension, he’d be lost without either of you.
You met Joaquín in the Air Force. You were first stationed together at Ramstein Air Base in Germany, and it didn’t take long for the two of you to get close. At the time, you were both lower rank, training in field surveillance, comms, and tactical ops before choosing your respective career paths. But even across continents and during off-grid missions, you stayed close.
Joaquín contacted you a little while after he first met Sam, asking for help tracking a super-soldier anti-nationalist group in Munich. You didn’t ask questions—you just helped—and after it all came to a head, Joaquín couldn’t wait to introduce you to Sam.
Long story short, you were quickly recruited, given an office and a ton of cool tech, and now you’re their guy in the chair. Sam probably only regrets it a little, considering you’re actually very good at being in the chair—which makes up for all the unprofessional banter between you and Joaquín.
“Eyes up, Torres,” you murmur, watching the live feed on your main monitor. “Two heat signatures ahead. Could be guards. Could be raccoons. Either way, I’d keep your pretty face out of sight.”
Joaquín exhales, amused. “You must really miss me, hermosa—the way you keep callin’ me pretty.”
Your cheeks flush, heat crawling up your spine, because yeah—you miss him. Like crazy. They’ve been halfway across the world for two weeks now, and it’s the longest you’ve gone without seeing him since you started working for Sam.
To say you miss him is a gross understatement. But he can’t know that—not really—because whatever this thing is between you two, it’s fun. Playful. It isn’t serious or deep. It’s not soul-crushing or gut-wrenching like the paralysing crush you’ve been nursing for years.
And there’s no way Joaquín needs to find out about that. It could ruin everything.
“Can you blame me?” you ask, keeping your voice light. “I haven’t seen you in two weeks. What else is a girl supposed to do besides fantasise?”
You can almost hear his grin. “You fantasising about me now, baby? Damn. This suit just got a whole lot hotter.”
Then Sam’s voice cuts in, low and sharp. “Can we please focus? The place is crawling with armed hostiles and I’m not dying in a building that smells like asbestos and cat piss.”
“Noted, Cap,” you say, eyes flicking to his heat signature on your screen. “But for the record, Torres—you’re my favourite fantasy.”
It’s not a lie—and it makes his heartrate jump again.
“Oh my God,” Sam groans. “Why do I even talk?”
“You love us,” Joaquín says, voice low and breathless as he inches toward a door, slowly cracking it open.
“No, I tolerate you. There’s a difference.”
You watch the hallway clear, two red dots vanishing from the drone feed. “All clear ahead. Turn left at the next hall. Intel says the artifact is in the records room—bottom floor, east wing.”
“Copy,” Joaquín says, his voice dropping as he reins in his focus.
You lock in too—eyes fixed on the screen, breath held, fingers hovering over your keyboard. As much as you love your job, it’s stressful. Especially when the people in the field are the ones you care about most. So you’ve made it your personal mission not to let anything go unseen.
You watch closely as Joaquín moves down the hall, turns left, and starts down the fire stairs. Sam is still working the perimeter, keeping out of sight and watching for any hostiles that might be closing in on Joaquín.
It’s taken them two full weeks to find this place—after a discouraging series of dud leads. The artefact isn’t even being hunted, just protected. And for what? None of you know. But from everything you’ve gathered, it’s intel that could open the door to disaster.
So Sam made the call to find it before it became a hot item—before someone could sell it on the dark web and hand a new villain the keys to world domination.
What he hadn’t expected was for the mission to take two whole weeks. Fortunately, things have been quiet enough lately that they could afford the time—but that doesn’t mean it’s been fun. You’re pretty sure Sam is one more questionable pizza topping away from leaving Joaquín in Jakarta.
A heat signature two floors above the records room catches your attention. Your eyes track it, nerves creeping up the back of your neck. You’re just about to say something when—
“Holy shit,” Joaquín says, voice low and a little breathless. “It’s actually here.”
You lean in, fingers poised over your keyboard. “Confirmed visual?”
“Uh… yeah. Package secure?”
Sam’s voice cuts in, flat. “Seriously?”
“Dead serious, man. It’s just… sitting here. It’s actually here.”
You let out a slow breath, tension easing from your shoulders as you watch the heat signature double back—moving away.
“No traps, no alarms…” you say, scanning the feeds. “Someone’s either cocky or stupid.”
“Or both,” Sam mutters. “Let’s wrap this up. I’m ready to never think about this city again.”
Joaquín chuckles softly, his smirk practically audible. “Bet you’re smiling right now, hermosa.”
“Maybe,” you reply, despite the very obvious grin on your face. “But you’re not out of the woods yet, pretty boy. Stay focused.”
Joaquín laughs again under his breath. “Focused. Right. That’s what I am.”
Your eyes flick to his vitals. “I can tell. Your heartrate’s through the roof again.”
“Can you blame me?” he says. “Your voice in my ear, calling me pretty and saying all this smart stuff… this whole situation’s a little distracting.”
You roll your eyes. “You forgetting the part where Sam’s one bad mood away from killing you?”
“No. Just ignoring it.” He pauses at a corner, scans, then moves. “How mad do you think he’d be if I said I’m only doing this to impress you?”
You lean back slightly, grinning to yourself. “He’d pretend to be annoyed. But secretly? I think he’s just relieved you deal with me so he doesn’t have to.”
“Deal with you?” Joaquín echoes, voice soft and teasing. “Baby, you’re the reason I get out of bed every day.”
Your heart lurches, but you keep your voice steady. “Keep talking like that and I might start hacking into your home security system.”
“Do it,” he says. “I’d sleep better with your voice in my ear.”
Your cheeks flush, breath catching.
“Still here,” Sam cuts in. “Still sweating. Still regretting every life choice that led me to this team.”
You glance at his vitals and smirk. “Vitals are solid, Cap. No cardiac distress.”
“Yeah, well, if Torres drops anything on the way out, I’m blaming both of you.”
Joaquín chuckles as he heads toward the extraction point. “Relax. We’re good. We’re almost out.”
“God,” Sam sighs. “I cannot wait to get home.”
“Hope you’ve got a hero’s welcome planned, cariño,” Joaquín says.
You roll your eyes, smirking. “You want a medal or a kiss?”
“Definitely the kiss,” he replies. “Medals are nice, but they wouldn’t taste as good as you.”
You choke on nothing, face burning, pulse thrumming as you watch him move through the building toward where Sam is waiting.
There’s a beat of silence—a loud, charged pause as you scramble for a comeback.
“Wow,” Sam chuckles. “Think you broke her, Torres.”
“Nah,” Joaquín says, smug as ever. “She’s just thinking about all the ways she’s gonna show me she missed me.”
You draw a sharp breath, one hand gripping the edge of your desk, the other white-knuckling your coffee mug.
“Alright, flyboy,” you mutter, trying not to smile. “That’s enough. Just get home safe.”
“See you soon, princesa,” he says, voice low and warm in your ear.
-
The next twenty-four hours are the longest of your life—you’re sure of it.
You try to distract yourself with work while Joaquín sends updates on their journey home, but you just can’t sit still. You’re too excited. You feel like a kid on Christmas Eve, except the presents aren’t going to be there when you wake up. No—you have to wait until six p.m. for Joaquín to be back.
Once you finish work, you head home to your studio apartment—the one you spend less time in than your office—and put on a movie. Then another. And another. Because you’re too anxious to feel tired. Eventually, you drag yourself to bed and lie awake for a few hours before giving up at four a.m. and jumping in the shower.
You take your time getting ready for work—doing your hair, a little makeup, picking your clothes, having a long breakfast. Then at six a.m., you’re out the door and on your way back to the office.
Only twelve more hours to go.
You settle in at your desk and try to review data from Sam and Joaquín’s mission, double-checking every log, every report—anything to keep your mind occupied. It feels like hours pass, but when you glance at the clock, it’s barely been one.
So at seven a.m., you get up for a coffee, moving through the motions slowly and deliberately.
By now, the office is starting to fill up. It’s never packed—Sam keeps the staff lean—but a few government liaisons, data crunchers, IT specialists, and engineers have started drifting in for the day. You know them all, and usually you’d be happy to have a little chat in the kitchenette while your coffee brews. But not today.
Today, you’re stuck in your head—counting down the minutes until Joaquín walks through the door with that stupidly handsome grin on his face.
God. You feel ridiculous. Missing him this much when he’s just a friend.
Except, he’s not. Not to you—hasn’t been since the day you thought you lost him on a mission in Seoul. That was the moment it hit you. The moment you realised how much he meant to you—how in love with him you really were.
He turned up hours later, a little battered and bruised but very much alive. And you wanted to tell him how you felt. Wanted to just blurt it out. But you didn’t. You couldn’t. Because it wasn’t worth risking what you already had. So you kept quiet, buried the feelings, and went on being his best friend.
That was years ago. And now you’re so deep in the friendzone—so used to the playful flirting and easy banter—you couldn’t climb out if you tried. You’ve come to terms with it, of course. Accepted it. And decided that having even a small piece of him is better than not having him at all.
You spend the next few hours sorting through analytics and going over maintenance logs from the mission—nothing major. Just a few software bugs and one broken ‘feather’ because Joaquín clipped a wing trying some fancy manoeuvre Sam explicitly refuses to teach him.
By lunchtime, you’ve fielded a few queries from the engineers and booked in a meeting with one of the legal advisors about Sam’s passport renewal. It never fails to amuse you how superheroes still have to deal with the same boring admin as everyone else.
The afternoon slips by faster than the morning, hours ticking past as you lose track of time in a haze of meetings and emails. You’re finally heading back to your office when your stomach grumbles—loudly—reminding you that it’s probably well past your five p.m. snack break.
You swing the door open, mentally halfway to your snack drawer, when—
“Look who finally decided to show up,” Joaquín says, sitting in your desk chair with that stupidly handsome grin. “And here I thought you actually missed me. Was it all a lie?”
Your heart lurches. Your lungs seize. And instead of flashing him a smile or a snappy comeback, you just freeze. Everything in your arms hits the floor—your tablet, your phone, a folder you don’t even remember picking up—all crashing down with a clatter that makes you flinch.
Because it’s not just that he’s handsome. No—he’s unfairly handsome. Criminal, even. Dangerous to your health, your peace of mind, and your goddamn ovaries. Joaquín Torres, sitting in your desk chair like he owns the place—with a freshly grown moustache and goatee—is nothing short of lethal.
“You okay, hermosa?” he asks, grin fading as he leans forward a little.
“I told him to shave it off,” Sam says dryly, stepping in behind you. “He looks like an Antonio Banderas knockoff.”
Joaquín scoffs. “Please. I’ve got way more charm than that guy.”
“Than Antonio Banderas?” Sam says, incredulous. “You’re delusional, you know that?”
“I prefer endearing,” Joaquín grins.
You still haven’t stopped staring at him—at the facial hair that’s apparently capable of triggering a full-blown hormonal crisis.
“Delusional and endearing are not synonyms,” Sam adds, seemingly oblivious to said crisis.
Joaquín’s eyes flick back to you, brows drawing slightly together. “You breathing, baby?”
Your heart kicks again at the nickname you should be used to by now—and somehow, that’s what snaps you out of it.
“Yeah—uh,” you clear your throat, “I’m breathing. I’m good. I—welcome back! But isn’t it early?” You glance at your wrist, searching for a watch that isn’t there. “Shit. Where’s my phone? Oh.” You crouch down and grab it from the floor. “Oh. It’s past six. Huh. That meeting must’ve run long. I didn’t even realise. I—”
“Breathe,” Sam says, laughing softly as he drops a hand on your shoulder. “Just breathe.”
You inhale deeply, cheeks burning, and glance back at Joaquín’s stupidly gorgeous face again.
“So,” he says, mouth curling into a smirk that should be illegal, “you like it?”
You shrug, trying to play it cool. “It’s… okay. Looks good, I guess.”
Sam snorts. “Oh, she likes it, alright.”
You turn around and smack him in the chest, shooting him a look that could kill—but he doesn’t flinch.
“Alright, then,” he chuckles, stepping back. “I’ll let you two get caught up.”
You roll your eyes and duck your head as you start gathering everything you dropped. You keep your gaze down, even when you hear footsteps and see Joaquín’s hands join yours, collecting papers that spilled from the folder.
When you’ve finally got it all, you stand and hug the pile to your chest, letting your eyes meet his again.
“So,” he says, still grinning as he holds out what he gathered, “about that kiss.”
You shake your head, fighting the smile tugging at your lips. “Forget it. You’re dreaming.”
He shrugs one shoulder. “Maybe. But hey, I’m coming over tonight anyway.”
You arch a brow. “Oh? And why’s that?”
He leans in slightly, eyes sparkling. “Because my place has no food… and yours has food. And you.”
Your cheeks heat, but your voice doesn’t waver. “You’re impossible, you know that?”
“Maybe,” he says again, that grin going a little soft. “But you love it.”
You struggle to focus on wrapping up your work with Joaquín hovering around your office—ranting about the mission, touching your stuff, looking at you with that goddamn moustache on his face. What would normally take five minutes takes almost twenty, but by seven o’clock, you’re both in a cab on the way back to your apartment.
When you open the door and step inside, Joaquín walks in like he lives there too. He drops his duffel by the lounge and heads straight for the fridge, pulling it open to inspect the contents. You know him well enough by now to know exactly what’s coming next—he’s going to complain about your lack of ingredients, then insist on cooking anyway. And somehow, it’ll still be delicious.
“You know, cariño,” he calls, leaning deeper into the fridge, “most people throw milk out when it starts to smell bad. Let alone when it’s chunky.”
“I haven’t been home much lately,” you say, a little defensive. “My best friend was on a mission and I was busy making sure he didn’t die.”
“So you could kill me yourself with expired dairy products?” he asks, still wearing that ridiculous grin.
You roll your eyes and bite back a smile, choosing to ignore him while you kick off your boots. He keeps rummaging through the fridge while you make your way through the small apartment, closing blinds, turning on lamps, and queuing up the show you haven’t touched in the two weeks he’s been away.
“I’m going to shower,” you say, pausing at the edge of the kitchen.
He glances over his shoulder, smirk firmly in place, brows raised. “That an offer?”
Your eyes widen, cheeks burning. “God. What was in the water over there? You’ve come back even worse than when you left.”
“Maybe I just missed you,” he says, stepping toward you.
The kitchen isn’t big—much like the rest of the apartment—but with Joaquín standing barely a foot away, it feels downright claustrophobic in a very specific, very dangerous way.
“You still haven’t given me my hero’s welcome,” he adds, eyes sparkling.
You tip your head, ignoring the way your pulse spikes. “Didn’t have time to get the medal minted.”
His grin turns wicked. “Guess you owe me a kiss, then.”
You don’t answer. You just step forward, slow and deliberate, closing the space between you like it doesn’t matter at all—even though your pulse is in your throat. His brows twitch, surprise flickering across his face, but he doesn’t move. He holds his ground.
You tilt your chin up, rising onto your toes until your lips are just a breath from his.
His breath stutters, and you catch the sharp rise of his chest—like he forgot how to breathe. That cocky smirk slips away as your eyes linger on his mouth, then drop to that stupid goatee. Because of course he found a way to be even more ridiculously attractive.
You could kiss him. Right now. You could close that tiny gap and change everything.
But instead, your voice drops low—steady despite the way your nerves are buzzing. “You sure you’re ready for that, Torres?”
His pupils blow wide, cheeks flushing. You see it. You feel it—the flicker of nerves under all that swagger.
You drag your fingers lightly down the front of his shirt, watching him go still, revelling in the thrill that rattles up your spine.
His throat bobs with a swallow, and you know you’ve got him. For once, he has no comeback.
You smirk, dropping back onto your heels. “Didn’t think so.”
Then you turn and walk into your room, heart pounding, head spinning, but your steps still steady. You shut the door and fall back against it, covering your face with your hands to keep from screaming out loud because God, that was hot. And holy shit did it take every ounce of self-control not to just kiss him.
Eventually, you push off the door, strip out of your clothes, and step into the ensuite bathroom. You turn the shower on hot and wait while the water heats, wondering if Joaquín would notice if you took a little longer than usual.
Which... you do. Because that ache behind your hipbones is insistent, and if Joaquín is going to be here all night, you can’t just be sitting beside him horny as hell or you might end up doing something stupid.
So after a long, hot shower—and some quality time with the detachable head—you change into your pyjamas and emerge from your bedroom. The rest of the apartment smells like butter and garlic, and Joaquín is standing in front of the stove with a little crease between his brows as he flips what you assume is a grilled cheese sandwich.
“Grilled cheese?” you ask, leaning a hip against the counter.
He shoots you a sideways glare. “It’s the only thing I could think of with your serious lack of food. But it’s not just grilled cheese—it’s gourmet. With mozzarella—that I’m pretty sure isn’t off—garlic, caramelised onion, and basil.”
You lift a brow, nodding slowly. “I’m impressed. And hungry.”
He smirks. “And the tomatoes you had were too soft to put in the sandwiches, so I made a sauce.”
“Wow,” you say, turning toward the cupboard. “Sounds like I had plenty of ingredients for you.”
You can almost hear him rolling his eyes as you get out a couple of plates and wine glasses, knowing full well that you might not have much food in the house, but you definitely have wine.
He finishes grilling the sandwiches and flips them onto the plates, garnishing them with something green that you hope is a herb and not something wildly out of date he found in the fridge. Then you pour each of you a glass of wine before taking your plate into the lounge room.
“Hopefully you won’t be able to tell how stale the bread is,” Joaquín says as he sits beside you, his knee knocking yours as he shoots you another pointed look.
You roll your eyes. “Please, sourdough doesn’t go off. Just gets chewier.”
He frowns at you, eyes wide in disbelief. “That’s literally the definition of stale bread.”
You just shrug, taking a generous sip of wine before biting into your sandwich. And God, it’s almost inhuman how this man can make some of the best food out of the crappy ingredients you have.
“That good?” he asks, watching you with a smirk.
“It’s alright,” you mutter, mouth still full.
He chuckles. “That moan you just made says otherwise.”
Your eyes widen. “I moaned?”
He laughs a little harder, the corners of his eyes crinkling as he watches your cheeks turn pink. “Don’t be embarrassed, hermosa. I love the little noises you make.”
Your heart lurches and your eyes snap down to your plate.
“Wonder what other noises I could get out of you,” he mutters, low but just loud enough to catch your attention.
You swallow hard on the half-chewed bite, wincing as it catches on the way down your throat. You cough and reach for your wine, taking a long, burning gulp that only fans the heat spreading through your chest.
You cough again into your hand, struggling to catch your breath.
“You okay, cariño?” Joaquín asks, light laughter in his voice.
“Fine,” you choke out. “I’m good.”
He laughs softly, clearly amused but too hungry to press you any further. You watch his profile as he takes a bite of grilled cheese, chews, and swallows—and damn if that doesn’t just deepen the wildfire of nerves and heat roiling through you.
Two weeks away from Joaquín, and every ounce of resistance you’ve spent years building up is gone. Shattered. Nowhere to be found. You feel like some virginal schoolgirl, wide-eyed and helpless, just watching his throat move as he swallows another bite.
His eyes flick toward you, brows drawn, and you quickly drop your gaze back to your plate. You stuff the sandwich into your mouth and take a big bite to stop yourself from blurting out something dumb—like how insanely hot he looks when he eats, or how badly you want to know what that facial hair would feel like between your legs.
“Hear anything from the lab?” he asks, snapping you out of your spiralling thoughts.
You shake your head. “Not yet.”
He nods slowly. “Sam’s probably bugging.”
“Why?”
“Reckons it’s something big,” he says. “Something dangerous.”
You tilt your head. “Like what?”
He shrugs. “Dunno. Maybe something alien.”
“Nah.” You take another sip of wine. “It’s probably old data from some collapsed organisation. Looked more like a hard drive than an explosive.”
As if on cue, your phone lights up, buzzing on the coffee table beside your wine glass. You drop your sandwich and reach for it, tapping the answer button and pressing it to your ear.
“Doctor Chen,” you greet. “How’s it going?”
“The captain was right,” Maya—one of Sam’s lab techs—says. “This is dangerous.”
Your brows pull together as you lift the phone away from your ear and put it on speaker so Joaquín can hear too.
“What is it?”
“Old Stark tech. Data, to be precise,” Maya replies.
“Have you told Sam yet?”
“Not yet. You were my first call. I figured Joaquín was with you.”
Your cheeks flush. “Oh. Uh, yeah. He’s here.”
Joaquín meets your eyes and gives you a cheeky little wink, lips curving into a smirk.
“I’ll see you both first thing in the morning,” Maya says. “I’ll call Sam now.”
“Okay,” you reply, shoving Joaquín’s thigh with your knee. “Thanks, Doctor Chen.”
The line goes dead, the soft disconnect tone buzzing through the quiet room—Joaquín having paused the TV without you noticing.
“What kind of data do you think it is?” he asks, brow furrowed.
You shrug. “Who knows. Maybe something that’ll finally tell us how to shut you up.”
He scoffs, leaning in just a little. “Or maybe something that tells me exactly how to get you to kiss me.”
Your heart stutters, breath catching just loud enough for him to hear.
“Or,” he adds, eyes dancing, “I just keep saying shit like that until your brain short-circuits and you snap.”
You suck in a slow breath, trying not to smile. Trying not to give him the satisfaction.
“God,” you mutter, nudging him with your shoulder, “you’re so fucking annoying tonight.”
He just grins wider and takes another bite of grilled cheese—completely unbothered, maddeningly smug. And of course, your traitorous eyes fall to the line of his jaw as he chews, which does nothing to help your situation.
-
“It’s not just old Stark data,” Sam says, standing at the head of the small conference table. “This hard drive contains preliminary code for the foundational architecture of Stark’s first AI.”
“As in J.A.R.V.I.S.?” Joaquín asks. “The computer that ran his house?”
“J.A.R.V.I.S. didn’t just run his house,” you cut in. “He was integrated into the Iron Man suits, and he was part of Ultron and Vision. In the wrong hands, this data could be... catastrophic.”
“Right,” Joaquín nods. “So... we destroy it?”
“We can’t destroy it,” Milton—one of Sam’s more insufferable government liaisons—says. “Per federal protocol, all recovered Stark-origin assets are to be logged, quarantined, and transferred to a Level Four secure facility for presidential review and Congressional oversight.”
Sam sighs, visibly holding back an eye-roll.
“Quarantined for review?” you echo, incredulous. “Graves, this kind of data in the wrong hands could—”
“And what authority do you have to decide that?” Milton cuts in with his usual sneer. “Who’s to say you won’t use it to recreate this... jervis?”
Milton is easily your least favourite person in the office. He’s a stickler for rules, an arrogant idiot, and completely insufferable—but he does make a good target for your and Joaquín’s boredom-induced pranks. Like the time you rearranged his keyboard to spell something wildly inappropriate and watched him struggle to fix it for thirty minutes. Or when you convinced him that ‘Camo Friday’ was an official dress code.
Needless to say, he’s not your biggest fan. Or Joaquín’s. But unfortunately for him, you’re both basically Sam’s second-in-command.
“It’s Jarvis,” Joaquín says flatly. “J-A-R-V-I-S. Want help with the alphabet, or are you still stuck on the letter J?”
Milton’s lips curl, eyes narrowing—ready to fire back—when Sam steps in.
“We haven’t made a final decision about the drive,” he says firmly, glancing between Joaquín and Milton. “I’ll speak with the Department of Damage Control myself. Until then, it stays here, under full-time protection.”
Joaquín sighs. “Don’t tell me—”
“You’re not on protection,” Sam cuts him off. “I’ve got others for that. I need you somewhere else.”
Joaquín sits up straighter, head tilted. “Where?”
Sam glances at you and nods. You quickly plug your tablet into the display, and a second later, the intel you and the logistics team pulled together flickers up on the screen.
“Matías Navarro,” you say, zooming in on the mugshot of a stern-faced, middle-aged man. “Clean on paper, but deeply embedded in tech smuggling rings. Works through proxies, keeps his hands clean. No one knows where he gets the tech, and none of his buyers care. He’s been arrested a dozen times, but he always walks.”
You switch to a series of ledgers. “His name is tied to the building we found the hard drive in—not currently, but previously. He either sold it or abandoned it. Either way, he’s the last known owner.”
“So,” Joaquín says, “we find Navarro and… question him?”
You nod. “Exactly. He’s mostly dealt in weapons and arms. He might not have known what was on the drive—but if he did, or if he made a copy, we could be in serious shit.”
“Right.” Joaquín nods. “Where do we find him?”
“Club Calavera,” you reply, tapping your tablet until a picture of a dark brick building fills the screen. “It used to be a Latin dance club. Now it’s more like a networking spot for arms dealers and petty crime lords who like to salsa.”
“Navarro’s a regular,” Sam adds. “Every Saturday. Like clockwork.”
“Club Skull,” Joaquín snorts. “Subtle.”
“You should fit right in, then,” you say with a smirk. “You’ve got all the subtlety of a brick through a window.”
His eyes go wide. “Fit in? I’m going in? Like… undercover?”
You nod. “That’s right, pretty boy. You’re our distraction.”
“Distraction?” he echoes, brows shooting up.
“I need to talk to Navarro,” Sam says, “but I can’t just walk in—not with all the high-profile thugs that frequent the place. I’d be too easily noticed.”
“Hence,” you say, grinning at Joaquín, “our distraction.”
He shifts in his seat, eyes flicking between you and Sam. “Alright. What kind of distraction?”
Sam folds his arms, smirking. “It’s a Latin dance club, Torres. What do you think?”
“You want me to dance?” Joaquín asks, voice cracking.
“Oh, no, flyboy.” You lean forward, grin turning wicked. “We don’t just want you to dance, we need you to cause a whole damn scene.”
He swallows hard. “How?”
Sam chuckles. “Ever seen The Mask?”
“That movie with Jim Carrey?”
Sam nods.
“You want me to cause a scene in the middle of a club full of criminals big enough to distract every single one of them?” Joaquín asks, brows drawing tight. “I—I can’t. No one could. It’s impossible.”
“Oh, come on,” you sigh. “You’re Joaquín fucking Torres. If anyone can cause a scene that big, it’s you. Plus, you won’t be alone.”
He frowns. “What do you mean?”
“You need a dance partner,” you reply simply, tapping your tablet.
The screen flickers before bringing up three headshots of three different women, each with a brief bio beside the names—abilities and all.
“Kate Bishop,” you say, enlarging the first photo. “Hawkeye-in-training. She worked with Clint for a while. Definitely has the social skills to work the room, plus charm and skill.”
Joaquín shakes his head. “No, she won’t blend in. Not in a Latin crowd, at least.”
“Okay,” you nod, moving to the next photo. “Ava Ayala, a.k.a. White Tiger. Fluent in Spanish and has the physicality to back us up if things go south.”
Joaquín considers it, tipping his head before shaking it again. “No, it won’t work. I’ve heard she prefers solo missions—might not adapt well to a cover role that requires dancing and mingling.”
You take a deep breath and move to the last photo. “Alright. Elena ‘Yo-Yo’ Rodriguez. She’s great at going undercover and knows how to stay cool under pressure. Plus, she can get you out fast if needed.”
Joaquín’s eyes flick from the screen to you, then to Sam, back to you, and then the screen again.
“I don’t doubt her skills,” he says. “But have you seen her operate in this kind of scene? Nightclubs and criminal networks require a certain… finesse.”
Sam sighs and pulls out a chair, dropping into it. “Well, you can’t dance alone.”
“I know,” Joaquín says firmly. “But I can’t walk into a club full of criminals and half-ass it with someone I don’t know or trust.”
“That’s the whole point,” you say, setting your tablet down with a sigh. “You’re supposed to go in, pick someone from the crowd, and make it look spontaneous. A big, passionate moment. If it’s too polished, too rehearsed, they’ll sniff it out.”
He leans forward, bracing his forearms on the table. “I get that. But it still has to be someone I’ve got chemistry with. Someone I’m actually attracted to.”
You frown, glancing at the screen full of attractive women, then back at him—feeling your stomach twist, even if you don’t want to admit why.
“They’re all attractive. I don’t see the—”
“Sure,” he interrupts. “But what if there's no chemistry? This is a club full of Latinos. They’ll smell fake passion from across the dance floor, cariño.”
You cross your arms and lean back in your chair. “So what are you saying? You won’t do it?”
“Of course I'll do it,” he says, smirking now. “But I’ve got one condition.”
You look at Sam, deadpan. “He’s got conditions now.”
Sam chuckles. “This guy.”
You turn back to Joaquín. “Alright, pretty boy. What’s your condition?”
“You dance with me.”
The room falls silent.
You freeze, breath catching. “M–Me?”
He grins. “You, hermosa. It makes sense. We’ve got chemistry, and all you have to do is follow my lead.”
You glance at Sam, half-panicked. “I’m not a field agent. I’m not—”
“Actually,” Sam says, thoughtful, “it does makes sense. The two of you could sell it. No extra variables, no risk of another agent blowing the op.”
Your eyes widen. “You’re not serious. I—I can’t even dance.”
“You don’t need to,” Joaquín says. “You just have to let me lead.”
Your heart is pounding now, nerves sparking like live wires, sweat prickling at the back of your neck. You’re not built for this. You’re the guy in the chair. The one locked behind bulletproof glass and a million firewalls.
“Joaquín, I—”
“It’s the only way this works,” he says, his smile infuriatingly smug.
“Kid’s got a point,” Sam adds.
Your eyes bounce between them, wide and overwhelmed. “I’m barely trained for combat. If something goes wrong, I—”
“That’s why I’m there, cariño,” Joaquín cuts in, voice low. “You don’t have to do anything except look pretty—which you already do—and follow my lead.”
You’re running out of excuses. And Joaquín is looking at you with those big, stupidly pretty brown eyes that always get him his way. You don’t want to say yes. But you really don’t want to say no. Not to that face. Not to Sam’s, either—especially when he’s looking this hopeful and just a little smug.
“Fine,” you mutter, glaring at Joaquín. “But if either of us die, I’m going to kill you.”
He just grins—impossibly smug, unfairly hot. A walking wet dream with tight sleeves and a killer smile, practically glowing with anticipation.
The next few days are a whirlwind of intel, training, and—to your immense displeasure—costume fittings. Because you can’t just wear jeans and a top. No. You have to look like a part-time salsa dancer and full-time prison groupie, which apparently means a sparkly dress with a hemline that barely covers your ass.
But that’s not even the worst part.
The worst part is that Joaquín refuses to practice with you. He won’t even show you a few steps. Because, like you said, it has to look spontaneous. It can’t be rehearsed or choreographed, or someone might clock it for the distraction that it is.
So he won’t dance with you at all—which is not exactly something you ever thought you’d be begging him for. Not unless you’re talking about the horizontal tango—because in that case, yeah, you could definitely see yourself begging.
“Ouch,” Sam mutters, freezing mid-step. “That was my foot.”
You scowl up at him, arms stiff where they rest on his shoulder and in his hand. “I told you, I don’t fucking know how to dance.”
“Relax,” he chuckles. “You’re not auditioning for Dancing with the Stars. You just need to get through one song without crushing Joaquín’s toes.”
“If he doesn’t want his feet stomped on,” you snap, glaring across the room, “then he should be the one teaching me.”
Joaquín rolls his eyes and pushes off the wall, tapping something on his phone to lower the music blaring through the overhead speakers. You’ve taken up residence in Isaiah Bradley’s gym for the past few days, using the open space—and the crash mats—as Sam attempts to teach you the basics of salsa dancing.
It’s not going great.
“You need to move your hips more,” Joaquín says. “Feel the music. Don’t fight it.”
“‘M gonna fight you in a minute,” you mutter.
Sam laughs again, clearly amused, as Joaquín steps in behind you—close—his hands landing firmly on your hips.
Your eyes go wide. Your spine snaps straight. Your fingers dig into Sam’s shoulder.
“Ouch,” he murmurs, wincing.
“Shut up,” you hiss.
He bites back a laugh.
“Okay,” Joaquín says. “Let’s move through the steps slowly.”
Sam nods and starts moving. You follow, trying to count through the steps you’ve half-memorised. Then—
Joaquín steps in even closer, chest almost brushing your back, and without a word, he guides your hips into the right position. Your feet falter. Your heart stutters. His hands are big, steady—thumbs pressing lightly into the small of your back as he shifts your weight, encouraging a more natural sway from your hips.
“Too stiff,” he murmurs, voice low. “You’ve gotta loosen up, cariño.”
Then his hands trail—slow and deliberate—up the curve of your waist, just high enough for his thumbs to graze the underside of your ribs. It’s a fleeting touch, but it leaves a trail of fire in its wake. And then, like it was nothing, he steps back—cool, casual, unaffected.
Your breath catches. Heat rushes up your neck and into your cheeks, your brain short-circuiting as your body fights to stay upright and not melt into a puddle of incoherent desire. Sam watches the whole thing unfold with an amused grin, clearly not missing the way your knees nearly buckle.
“You okay?” he asks. “You’re lookin’ a little pink there.”
“I’m fine,” you snap.
Behind you, Joaquín turns the music back up and says, far too casually, “She’s just tense.”
Sam snorts. “Oh, I don’t think that’s the problem.”
You grit your teeth and take a deep breath through your nose, summoning every ounce of self-control you have to not to completely lose it.
“Okay,” you mutter, “let’s go again.”
You take it from the top twice more before Sam’s phone rings and he’s called away for a meeting with logistics. By that point, you’re tired, sweaty, and still wishing you’d said no, but according to Joaquín, your hips are moving much more naturally.
You try not to think too hard about him watching your hips while you dance.
While you stretch and cool off—which mostly just means lying on the floor scrolling through your phone—Joaquín starts boxing with Isaiah. And holy hell if that isn’t making you thirstier than two straight hours of salsa dancing did.
You try to focus on the video of a puppy eating raspberries currently playing on your phone, but your eyes keep drifting to the other side of the gym. To him.
Joaquín’s in the ring—gloves on, shirt off, moving like a goddamn dream. His skin gleams with sweat, muscles flexing with every jab and pivot, the line of his back carved like something out of a museum. Even his hair is damp, dark curls falling over his forehead—and God, you want to run your fingers through it, tug it just a little to see what kind of noises he’d make.
You swallow hard, watching the way he bounces on the balls of his feet, light and fast. Isaiah swings, Joaquín dodges, and you’re embarrassingly close to moaning when he ducks and throws a clean uppercut that lands with a satisfying smack.
Your imagination fills in the blanks way too fast. What those hands would feel like dragging down your body. What that mouth could do if it wasn’t behind a mouthguard. You’re picturing him pinning you up against the ropes for a very different kind of workout when—
“Enjoying the show?”
You startle, eyes flying up to find Joaquín leaning on the ropes, gloves resting on the top strand, smirk wide and knowing. His chest is rising and falling, skin glistening, and there’s a wicked gleam in his eye that says he’s seen every second of you ogling him.
You blink. “Nope.”
He laughs. “You’re a terrible liar. Come here.”
“What? Why?”
He grins, pushing open the ropes. “Get in the ring.”
You frown. “Absolutely not.”
“Come on,” he says, stepping aside so you can climb through. “You’re going undercover. You should know how to throw a punch in case something goes south.”
“I did a combat course,” you say, slowly climbing up and stopping in the middle of the ring. “A few years ago."
“And I haven’t eaten a donut since Tuesday. Doesn’t mean I’m in peak condition.”
Isaiah laughs from the corner, tossing Joaquín a towel. “Have fun, lovebirds,” he calls, hopping down from the ring. “Try not to injure each other.”
“I make no promises,” Joaquín says with a wink, then turns back to you, holding out a pair of gloves. “Hands up, cariño.”
You roll your eyes, sighing, but slide your hands into the gloves anyway. “If I get hurt, I’m suing.”
He steps closer to tighten the straps on your gloves, and you try—really try—not to stare. But his chest is right there, slick with sweat, rising and falling with every breath. Your eyes flick to the constellation of tiny moles scattered across his collarbone and up the side of his neck, and your brain starts wandering where it definitely shouldn’t.
Like how warm his skin would feel under your mouth.
How he'd taste.
Whether that facial hair would scrape or tickle.
“You spacing out on me already?” he asks, smug.
You blink hard and force your eyes back to his. “No. Just visualising how hard I’m going to hit you.”
His smile grows. “Hot.”
You scowl, cheeks burning. “I hate you.”
“No, you don’t,” he says easily, stepping back and raising his hands. “Alright, let’s start with a jab. Front foot forward, hands up, aim for my shoulder.”
You shuffle your feet and throw the first punch. It’s not awful, but it’s definitely not impressive.
And he dodges it with infuriating ease. “Again.”
You go again—harder this time—and his face lights up.
“There we go,” he says, circling you. “Now try a cross. Pivot your back foot a little. Twist at the hips.”
He moves around you slowly, correcting your stance, touching your elbow here, your shoulder there. Every brush of his fingers lights you up like a fuse. You try to focus on your footwork, your form, anything other than the way he’s watching you—like he’s memorising every move.
And when you land a solid hit against his open palm, his smile turns molten. “Damn. Maybe I should be worried.”
“You should always be worried,” you mutter, blowing a lock of hair out of your eyes.
He steps in close, lowering his voice. “You’re better than you think.”
You swallow. Hard. Because now he’s too close, and you can smell him—sweat mixed with something warm and spicy, like cinnamon, cedar, and something darker, something dangerous. His eyes flick down from your face to your body, not even trying to pretend he isn’t checking you out.
“You’re staring,” you say, a little breathless.
He smirks. “So are you.”
The space between you shrinks, and suddenly the air feels thick—too warm, too charged.
“You’re dangerously close,” you tease, trying to keep your voice steady while your heart beats like a war drum.
He leans in just a little more, hot breath ghosting over your damp skin. “Close enough to hear your heartbeat,” he murmurs, voice low. “It’s fast.”
Your breath hitches, and you force yourself to look anywhere but at his lips.
“Careful,” you murmur. “I might start thinking you want to spar for real.”
He grins wickedly. “Oh, I’ve got moves that don’t involve gloves.”
You laugh, but it’s shaky. “That a challenge?”
“More like a promise,” he says, eyes darkening with mischief.
He steps even closer, just enough for your bodies to almost touch, the heat radiating off him setting your skin alight. Your hands twitch, itching to reach out, to feel the solid strength beneath those muscles. But instead, you bite back the impulse, take a breath, and jab forward, aiming a quick punch at his bicep.
He’s faster—too fast—and his hand catches your wrist, grip firm. “Not bad,” he says, voice rougher now. “But you’re getting distracted.”
You glance down at his fingers wrapped around your wrist—strong and warm—then back up at him. “Maybe I like being distracted.”
He chuckles, low and throaty. “You have no idea what you do to me, cariño.”
Your cheeks flush, and suddenly the gym feels smaller, the world reduced to just the two of you—the thud of your hearts, the quick intake of breath, the heat humming beneath your skin.
He leans in again, his breath warm against your lips. “One more round? Winner gets to decide what happens next.”
You bite your bottom lip, eyes flicking down to his mouth, then back to his gaze. “You’re on.”
You throw yourself into the next round, fists flying, breath ragged—but he’s relentless, every move calculated to push you harder, closer. He’s not holding back anymore; his feet are quick, his hands even quicker. You feel like you’re flailing, only landing punches when he lets you.
Then, without warning, he ducks a blow and catches you from behind, one arm wrapping tight around your neck. Not enough to choke—just to claim. His other hand finds your hip, fingers digging in, pressing bruises into your flesh. Your pulse spikes as your body freezes, caught between wanting to fight and drowning in the heat of him pressed against you.
Your breath hitches as you recognise the undeniable length of him digging into your ass—heavy and hard. His mouth hovers just at your neck, warm breath teasing, lips barely brushing. “Careful, nena,” he whispers, voice thick with something dark and urgent. “You’re playing with fire.”
Your hands tremble, heart pounding in your throat. Every second, every shallow breath drips with desperate hunger. His fingertips dig into your skin, pulling you impossibly close—his hips grinding slow and deliberate against your ass.
You want to say something, anything, but the only sounds are your uneven inhales and the thump of your racing heart. Then—just as your resolve begins to crack—
The gym door swings open, and Sam bursts in. “Alright, what’s the verdict? Lunch or more sparring?” he calls out, completely oblivious to the heat hanging thick between you two.
Joaquín straightens, sliding his arms away with a slow, wicked grin, eyes sparkling with amusement and something more primal. He moves off to the side of the ring, turning away from Sam—no doubt hiding the bulge in his gym shorts.
You’re burning up, cheeks flushed crimson, every nerve screaming as you struggle to breathe normally.
Sam quirks his head, brows furrowed. “You alright? Is he pushing you too hard?”
God. Something is too hard.
You shake your head. “N-No. Just... sparring.”
“Right,” Sam says, not sounding fully convinced. “Well, go clean up. I’m starving.”
-
After a shower—a very cold shower—a quick lunch, and several meetings, you’re back in your office combing through security tapes from Club Calavera, scanning for any familiar faces that might compromise tomorrow night’s mission.
You’re midway through last Saturday’s tape when Joaquín pops his head in the door, grinning like he hadn’t pressed his hard dick against you just a few hours ago.
“Sam’s hungry,” he says. “Again.”
You clear your throat. “Already? It’s—” You glance at the clock, brows lifting. “Oh. It’s nearly seven.”
“Yeah,” he says, stepping in and closing the door behind him. “He wants wings.”
There’s nothing overtly threatening about the way he stands in front of your only exit—but it still feels dangerous. Being alone with him in this tight little four-by-four office, with nothing between you but a desk and a couple monitors, feels very dangerous.
You’re not sure what changed while he was away on that last mission—all you know is that something did. And now, the tension between you is almost impossible to ignore.
“Wings,” you echo, dragging your eyes back to your screens. “Got it. The usual?”
“Yep,” he nods. “Extra ranch.”
You smirk as you open a new tab—typing in only a few letters before the URL auto-fills.
Joaquín frowns. “What’s that look for?”
“Nothing,” you say quickly, shaking your head.
His eyes narrow, but he doesn’t press. He just stands there, back against the door, watching you order the food with his bottom lip caught between his perfect teeth.
“There,” you say, clicking submit order. “Death wings for Captain America, and a baby batch for The Falcon.”
His eyes widen as he tries—and fails—to fight another grin. “I knew you were laughing at me. It’s not my fault I was born with a spice intolerance.”
You lean back in your chair, rolling your lips to suppress a giggle. “I wasn’t. I swear.”
“I’m brave in other ways,” he mutters, folding his arms across his chest.
“I know.”
You stare at each other for a beat too long. The air thickens, tension crawling over your skin, heavy and charged. Your eyes trace the line of his jaw, the sharp slope of his nose, the curve of his cupid’s bow beneath that maddeningly hot little moustache.
Your fingers twitch over your keyboard, itching to touch him. To grip his shoulders. Tug his hair. Wrap around his hot, hard—
Bang, bang, bang.
Joaquín startles as Sam shoves at your office door from the other side.
“Move your ass, Torres,” he calls, voice muffled.
Joaquín exhales a shaky breath and steps aside—and you swear you see him subtly adjust himself in his jeans.
“Wings ordered?” Sam asks, pushing the door open.
You nod. “Death by buffalo coming right up.”
He grins. “Good. Now get your asses to the conference room. Tactical support wants to run one last debrief.”
“Ooh,” you say, jumping to your feet. “Do I get any weapons?”
Both men whip toward you—eyes wide, brows drawn—and in perfect unison say, “No.”
You sit in the meeting, pretending to listen, while mostly ogling the way Joaquín is testing out his gear. Without the wings, he’s going to be packing an assortment of easily concealed weapons, and something about the way he handles everything with practiced ease has you squeezing your thighs beneath the table.
His hands are sure and precise—strong fingers wrapping around grips, forearms flexing subtly with each flick and pop. There’s a quiet confidence in the way he inspects every piece, the kind of focused intensity that makes your pulse quicken.
His jaw tightens slightly, eyes narrowing in concentration, brows drawing together just enough to highlight the sharp line of his cheekbones. It’s like watching a master at work—every subtle motion deliberate, effortless. The way his muscles tense and relax, the small, almost imperceptible shifts in his stance… it all speaks of someone who knows exactly what they’re doing, and how much power he wields beneath that calm exterior.
You can’t help but admire the rhythm, the flow, the way he seems to command the weapons almost as if they’re extensions of his own body. Your gaze lingers longer than it should, tracing the sinew in his forearms, the curve of his wrists, imagining what it would feel like to be touched by those hands—steady, confident, and undeniably capable.
“You need a napkin, or are you just gonna keep drooling on the table?” Sam asks, startling you out of your daydream.
You whip toward him, brow furrowed, one hand swiping instinctively at the corner of your mouth while the other smacks his bicep.
He chuckles. “Wow. I could call HR, you know.”
You roll your eyes. “Do it.”
“Actually,” he says, tilting his head, “I think Joaquín should call HR, with the way you were eye-fucking him across the table. But the boy’s too stupid to notice.”
Your eyes snap to the front of the room, expecting Joaquín to still be there—but he’s not. In fact, it’s just you and Sam left in the conference room. Even the weapons have been packed up and hauled off.
“Oh,” you blink. “Is it over?”
“Been over for a while,” he says with another soft chuckle. “My wings here yet?”
Your eyes go wide. “Shit. The wings.”
You jump up and dart out of the room, jogging down the hall to the front reception where you told the delivery driver to leave the food. Thankfully, it’s still there—and when you pick up the bag, it’s warm enough that Sam won’t kill you.
With a relieved sigh, you carry the wings back through the building, past the now-empty conference room, and straight to Sam and Joaquín’s office at the very back—the one with the giant, obnoxious Captain America symbol frosted onto the window glass.
“Special delivery,” you say, walking straight toward the table surrounded by low blue lounges.
You pull out the Styrofoam containers and start sniffing each one to determine which is which. Sam appears beside you with three cans of beer, and Joaquín flops onto one of the lounges, grabbing the bag to pull out a wad of napkins—because you always ask for extra.
“Shit. They forgot the wet ones,” he says, glancing up at you.
“Don’t worry,” you mutter, “we’ve got enough wet wipes to stock a preschool.”
Joaquín chuckles as you cross the room toward Sam’s desk, opening the middle drawer of the cabinet and pulling a fistful of wipes.
“God, I’m starving,” Joaquín groans.
You turn back just in time to see him sliding one of the containers toward himself. Your brow furrows, eyes narrowing, and just before realisation hits—before you can say anything—he opens it and lifts a wing to his lips.
“Joaquín—!” you yelp, eyes wide.
His gaze flicks to you, confusion creasing his brow—then it hits.
His cheeks flush immediately, sweat prickling at his hairline and sliding down the side of his face. His eyes go wide, his body locking up—the wing still caught between his teeth.
“That’s Sam’s!” you exclaim, rushing over. “Spit it out, you idiot. You’re gonna go into cardiac arrest.”
“Wait,” Sam leans forward, eyes bright. “Did he just—?”
You nod. “Yeah.”
“One of mine?”
“Yep.”
“Holy shit.”
“Joaquín,” you say firmly. “Spit the goddamn wing out.”
He does, letting it drop back into the container with a wet plop.
“Gross,” Sam groans, sliding the container away from Joaquín.
“You okay?” you ask, biting back a grin.
He looks like he’s been pepper-sprayed. Face red, eyes watery, lips puffy, breath coming and going in shallow gasps.
“Uh uh,” he groans, shaking his head slowly. “Burns.”
“I know, baby,” you giggle, unable to stop yourself. “I’ll go get some milk.”
He nods slowly, tears slipping from the corners of his eyes.
You let out another laugh—louder this time—as you run out of the room and jog down the hall, pivoting into the kitchen. You yank the fridge open, pull out the bottle of milk, and retrace your steps.
By the time you return, Sam is grinning like a demon, face smeared with sauce, and Joaquín is full-on wheezing, fanning his mouth with his hand.
“What happened?”
“He drank the beer,” Sam says, clearly very entertained. “Made it worse.”
“My god, Joaquín,” you sigh, dropping the milk in front of him. “Didn’t you smell the hot sauce?”
He shakes his head, already chugging from the bottle. Milk dribbles from his lips and down his jaw, sliding down the column of his neck—and suddenly, you’re having thoughts. Filthy ones.
You drag your eyes away, cheeks hot.
Jesus Christ. Even watching him drink milk is hot now?
“I just don’t understand how your tolerance for spice is so bad,” you mutter. “You’re half-Mexican for crying out loud.”
He stops long enough to gasp for air—then burps like a frat boy. “That’s racist.”
“It’s not racist,” you say, rolling your eyes. “I’ve been to your house. Your mama’s tamales are hot. And delicious.”
“Ooh,” Sam smirks. “Tell me more about his mom’s tamales.”
Joaquín shoots him a slow, deadly look over the milk carton as he continues drinking.
“His mom makes the best food,” you say, finally opening your own container of wings. “The rest of his family can handle heat just fine—but this pretty boy always gets a custom serving. Mild.”
“Wow,” Sam snorts. “Way to let the ancestors down, Torres.”
Joaquín finishes the entire bottle of milk—though it was only half full—before he’s finally able to breathe normally again. His cheeks are still flushed, his hair a little damp, but at least he no longer looks like he’s about to explode.
“Better?” you ask, smirking behind a half-eaten wing.
“You know,” he says, leaning forward, that stupid, smug grin back in place, “might help if you kiss it better.”
You raise your brows. “Your mouth?”
He shrugs, eyes sparkling. “Probably a couple of places you could kiss that’d help.”
Your eyes go wide, pulse spiking. Across from you, Sam chokes on a mouthful of chicken.
“No,” he says between coughs. “Stop it. Both of you. I am not sitting here while you do your weird flirting shit. Leave me out of it.”
Joaquín just grins, completely unaffected, and opens his container of mild buffalo wings. It shouldn’t be sexy, the way he sinks his teeth in and tears the meat off the bone. Or how his tongue flicks out to catch a drop of sauce at the corner of his mouth. Or the low, satisfied groan he lets out, like it’s the best thing he’s tasted all week.
But God, when it comes to Joaquín Torres, you are well and truly screwed—just not in the way you want to be.
-
Your heart is in your throat. Your hands are trembling. Your back is sweating.
Every step you take deeper into Club Calavera brings you one step closer to puking.
The inside of the club is soaked in red light and velvet, thick with smoke and perfume. Velvet booths line the walls, half-hidden in shadow, crowded with people who look like they have knives in their boots and secrets in their smiles. The bar glows low and warm on one side of the room, casting amber light across bottles arranged like trophies.
The music is bass-heavy, slow and deliberate, and the dance floor pulses with bodies moving close—too close. Everything sparkles—sequins, sweat, the occasional flash of a watch or the glint of a gun tucked just out of sight.
It’s the kind of place where everyone’s watching, everyone’s working an angle, and no one’s here by accident.
You feel completely exposed without so much as a headset or earpiece, but Sam insisted—strictly no comms. It’s too risky in a place like this.
Teddy from logistics is ‘in the chair’ tonight, doing what you’d usually be doing—watching live feeds, monitoring heat signatures, keeping an eye out for trouble. You all know the signals. The procedures. Where to meet if it all goes sideways. But none of that is making you feel even remotely safe in this den of criminals.
You take a slow, deep breath and continue weaving your way through the crowd, keeping your chin up—confident, not cocky. Your movements are measured. Deliberate.
You know where you’re going. You’re not nervous. You fit in.
“Hey, gorgeous,” someone murmurs beside you.
You offer a small, coy smile, then duck away, putting several bodies between you and whoever that was—for good measure.
The club is crowded enough to disappear in. You just have to make sure you don’t move too fast. Don’t draw too much attention.
Not that this goddamn dress is making it easy not to draw attention.
It’s gold and slinky, catching the light with every step, made from a breathable stretch-knit lamé mesh—fine metallic threads woven into silky, weightless fabric. The outer layer is a sheer gold sparkle mesh, densely packed with glittering micro-sequins that flash like fire under the club lights.
It’s cut obscenely short—the hem grazing your upper thighs—with a scooped neckline just low enough to tease, and long flared sleeves that shimmer from shoulder to wrist. It doesn’t cling—but it follows your shape with a sleek, deliberate grace that leaves no doubt it was tailor-made for you.
Beneath all that glitter, the bodice is reinforced with a discreet layer of ballistic fabric—a Kevlar-knit that’s thin and flexible enough to contour to your body, but strong enough to slow a small-calibre round or deflect a blade. So, as long as any would-be attackers aim for the dress and not your legs, you might just have a shot at making it out alive if things go sideways.
“Excuse me,” you murmur, voice low as you squeeze between two people who were definitely not excusing you.
You pop out of the crowd at the edge of the dancefloor just as the music shifts. It pulses low and slow at first, a sensual rhythm driven by a deep reggaeton beat. Then a plucked guitar winds through the bassline—sharp, teasing, almost flirtatious—while maracas and other percussion add a soft shimmer beneath it all, like heat rising off pavement.
There’s a slinky sway to it, like hips rolling in time with every beat. The tempo is deliberate, confident, impossible to ignore—each note coaxing movement, inviting bodies closer. It’s the kind of music that wraps around you like smoke, warm and heady, and refuses to let go.
You don’t see him at first—just feel it. That ripple in the air. A subtle shift in energy that tells you someone is watching.
And then you spot him.
Joaquín steps through the crowd like it’s parting just for him. He’s traded his usual tactical black for loose tan trousers that hang low on his hips, a gold chain draped from the belt loops. A crisp white shirt is thrown over a fitted tank, sleeves rolled up like he’s halfway between saint and sin. His hair’s slicked just enough to look intentional, a single curl falling over his brow, and there’s a glint of gold at his throat that catches the light every time he moves.
He doesn’t just look good—he looks dangerous. Not in the gunmetal, locked-and-loaded way you’re used to. This is softer. Smouldering. The kind of danger that tempts instead of threatens. The kind that makes your breath hitch and your knees weaken.
And he’s looking at you.
Head tilted, tongue grazing the inside of his cheek like he knows exactly what he’s doing to you. Like he’s been thinking about this all night. All week. About you in that barely-there dress. About what’s underneath it. About how many people are in this room—and how little he cares.
Your stomach flips.
Your whole body hums with anticipation. And you haven’t even touched him yet.
You're still catching your breath when he reaches you.
No words. No warning.
His hand slides around your waist, the other catching your wrist, fingers brushing the underside of your arm like a question. Your body answers before your mouth can—yes. Whatever this is, yes.
The music throbs through the soles of your feet as you move deeper onto the dancefloor. His hand drops lower, finding the curve of your hip. He steps in—chest to chest—warm breath grazing your cheek.
You take a deep breath, reminding yourself that you’re working. This is work. Just a distraction so that Sam can get to Navarro.
But right now, with Joaquín’s fingers splayed across your lower back, guiding you into the sway of the beat, your focus is wrecked.
And this doesn’t feel like work.
His body moves against yours with practiced ease—hips rolling slow and sweet. The rhythm is deep, deliberate, and he follows it like it’s stitched into his bones. His thigh slides between yours as he guides you, hand firm at your waist as you pivot together—tight, fluid, seamless.
You loop your arms around his shoulders, fingertips grazing the back of his neck, and his mouth is suddenly very close to your ear.
“Hola, mi vida,” he murmurs, “estás espectacular.”
You might not know much Spanish, but you’ve spent enough time around Joaquín to know exactly what he just said.
You tilt your head just enough to meet his gaze. “So do you.”
He laughs under his breath—low, dangerous—and dips you. Hard. Your spine arches, body bending back over his arm, one hand clutching his shirt for balance. His mouth drops to your chest. Breath ghosting over your skin—warm, damp, too much.
He lingers there. Like he's waiting for permission.
Then—
His tongue darts out. Wet heat against your chest.
You yelp—then freeze.
The crowd around you stills. Heads turn. All eyes on you.
“Showtime, cariño,” he mutters, low and smooth, just for you.
He pulls you up again—slowly. His hand drags from your spine to your waist, fingertips digging in like he knows exactly what he’s doing to you. And if it weren’t for his grip, you’re not sure your knees would hold.
He doesn’t even glance at the crowd. He just smirks.
Because this was his plan all along. This is why he hasn’t practiced with you all week. Why he refused to rehearse.
Because Joaquín Torres knew exactly how he was going to play you—just like he’s about to play this entire room full of criminals.
The music builds again, deeper, filthier. That slinky reggaeton rhythm thickens with every beat, and Joaquín takes the cue. His hands slide down your waist, anchoring you as he rolls his hips into yours, slow and smooth—grinding to the beat like he’s got all the time in the world. Like no one else is here. Like the two of you don’t have an entire operation riding on this moment.
Your hands grip his shoulders, then slide up to the back of his neck. The world narrows to the heat between your bodies, to the heavy pulse of the music, to the way he leans in close and breathes against your skin.
“You’re doing so good, baby,” he murmurs, lips brushing your ear. “Just like we practiced.”
You snort—soft, breathless. “We didn’t practice.”
“Exactly,” he smirks.
He spins you suddenly, one arm looping around your middle to keep you close as your back hits his chest. His hand splays across your stomach, pulling you flush against him, and he starts to move again—grinding up behind you in slow, rhythmic thrusts. Filthy. Hypnotic. Perfect.
Someone in the crowd whistles.
You tilt your head just enough to meet Joaquín’s eyes over your shoulder. He’s looking down at you with heat, with purpose. Selling it for the crowd—but that look doesn’t feel like an act.
Your gaze flickers past him, scanning the shadows—and there. You spot Sam slipping through the crowd, unnoticed, just as planned.
Good.
You drag your eyes back to Joaquín and grind back into him, slow and intentional. He groans—quiet, but real—and dips his head to the crook of your neck. His lips skim your skin, his breath hot and shallow.
“Still working?” he murmurs.
You bite your lip.
“Because if this is just a mission…” He trails off, tongue flicking just beneath your jaw. “You’re the best actress I’ve ever met.”
You laugh—shaky, hushed, raw. “Shut up and dance.”
So he does.
He drags one hand down your thigh, slipping briefly beneath the hem of your dress, just high enough to make your breath catch. Then he spins you again, facing him, and pulls you back into his chest with a practiced flourish—showy enough to earn a cheer from the sidelines. The lights flicker like heat lightning across his face, casting gold in his eyes, sweat glinting at his hairline.
The air between you crackles.
Then—he leans in, voice low, mouth ghosting yours. “Tell me when this stops being a game.”
You don’t answer. You can’t.
Because you’re not sure it ever was.
“Confía en mí, mi amor,” he murmurs—trust me, my love—and you barely have time to register the words before he spins you out with a flick of the wrist, one hand still gripping yours.
Your body twirls away from him, dress shimmering beneath the lights, the crowd around you gasping at the drama of it—and then you’re pulled back in just as fast.
He catches you tight.
One hand at your back, the other sliding low as he grabs your thigh and lifts—hitching it high against his hip, his fingers digging into your flesh. Holding you there. Staking a claim.
Your breath punches out of you, caught between the sudden closeness and the weight of his grip. His eyes are dark, gleaming with heat and purpose, and you’re not sure which part of this is still the performance.
His lips are inches from yours, breath warm, tension thick between you as the music pulses around your locked bodies—sweat, sequins, heat, and hands, everything glittering under low crimson light. And still, the crowd watches. Spellbound.
So you decide to give them something to watch.
You swallow hard, gather what’s left of your composure, and let your hand slide slowly down his chest—fingertips tracing the line of his sternum, dragging over warm fabric, feeling the beat of his heart beneath your palm. You sway your hips with the music, then pivot—smooth and deliberate—until your back is flush to his chest again.
His breath catches. You feel it.
You roll your hips back into him, slow and sinful, and his grip tightens on your hips.
Your hand snakes up behind you, into his hair, curling tight just enough to make him tilt his head. Then, with a smirk tugging at your lips, you twist to whisper against his jaw—soft, breathy, just for him.
“Papacito… ay, qué rico tú.”
You feel the way his whole body reacts—his inhale sharp, his fingers flexing against your skin, his composure cracking for just a second. Just long enough for you to feel victorious.
But then—he snaps.
He grabs your hand and spins you back around to face him, hard and fast. His grip is sure, his eyes burning. He’s flushed now, lips parted, chest rising with every breath like he’s trying to get a grip—but losing it. On you.
And then he drops.
Not suddenly—deliberately.
His hands trail down your sides as he lowers himself, eyes never leaving yours. Not until his breath hits your chest, lips ghosting over your damp skin.
His mouth moves lower—hot, open, dragging over the glittering fabric until it settles just below your navel. The pressure is maddening. More suggestion than kiss, but it sets your nerves on fire.
He rests on one knee. His breath is hot through your dress. His grip, searing.
You feel his nose graze along the line of your panties, the heat of him soaking through the fabric. He lingers—mouth parted, exhale shaky—and you know that if he moves even half an inch lower, you’re going to moan out loud.
Your knees almost buckle.
So you do the only thing you can—you throw your arms up, eyes fluttering closed, and let the music carry you. You sway to the rhythm, pulse thudding in your ears, hips shifting just enough to brush against his mouth again.
And when you dare to look down…
He’s still there. On one knee. A hand branding the back of each thigh.
Looking up at you like you’re the only thing in the world worth getting on the floor for.
And God help you—you want him to stay there forever.
But after a few beats, Joaquín lifts his head slowly, mouth brushing over your dress on the way up, trailing heat with every inch. His hands slide up your thighs, over your hips, gripping tight as he rises.
You meet him halfway.
Your fingers sink into his hair. Your body moulds to his. Breath mingling. Lips so close—so heartbreakingly close—you could count the seconds before they meet. You can feel the heat of him, taste the want on his breath.
His mouth hovers over yours, a whisper away. The music fades. The crowd vanishes. It’s just him. Just you. Just this.
Then—he pauses.
His eyes flicker. Something cracks beneath the surface—heat, hesitation, hunger.
And he pulls back.
Not far. Not fast. Just enough to tear the moment in half. His gaze locks on yours, sharp and steady, full of something unspoken. A promise, maybe. Or a warning. You’re not sure which—only that it leaves you aching.
Your breath catches. Your chest tightens. You blink up at him, dizzy, throat thick, trying to smile like it hasn’t cost you something.
He leans in again, lips grazing your cheek—not your mouth—and whispers, “Sam’s clear.”
You nod—barely, heart pounding so loud it drowns out the music.
Then he steps back, slow and sure, every muscle coiled like he’s holding something back.
You follow his lead, putting just enough distance between you to play the part. You sway with the rhythm—two agents, two dancers, nothing more.
But your body still burns.
And the ghost of his mouth still lingers, like a secret you’ll never know.
Eventually, Joaquín leads you off the dancefloor and toward the bar, his hand warm and steady at your lower back.
Eyes follow you—hungry, speculative. You feel them trailing over your thighs, your back, the glitter of your dress. Men watch like they’re waiting for their turn, like they saw the performance and think it was an invitation. But you don’t care. You’re too distracted by the phantom of Joaquín’s mouth, the ache of something unfinished still pulsing behind your ribs.
At the bar, he flags the bartender down with a subtle nod and orders for both of you—something cold and sharp that might steady your nerves. You rest your hands on the counter, trying to slow your breathing, trying not to look at him, trying not to feel too much.
“Pretty bold dance out there,” a voice says beside you, too close.
You turn your head to find a stranger leaning in, all confidence and cologne, eyes skimming your neckline like he owns it.
“How about a private encore?”
Before you can respond, Joaquín shifts. Not aggressively. Not even visibly angry. But his body angles between you and the guy with a quiet finality, one arm draping casually across the bar behind you.
“She’s not available,” he says, voice low but pointed.
The stranger laughs like he’s not threatened—like he hasn’t realised the mistake he's made. “Didn’t look like that a minute ago. Looked like she was auditioning.”
You barely see Joaquín move. Just the way his jaw tenses, the slight twitch of his fingers curling at the bar, the heat rolling off him in waves. But it’s enough.
You touch his arm gently. “We should go.”
He doesn’t look at you right away, not until the guy finally backs off, muttering something under his breath as he fades back into the crowd. Then Joaquín turns, his gaze softer now—but his hand is still tight on your waist.
“Yeah,” he murmurs, voice thick. “Let’s go.”
Getting out of the club, into the night, and down the street is all a blur. Your feet move, but your mind is still back on that dancefloor—on Joaquín’s wandering hands, his breath hot against your skin, his eyes burning.
Your chest aches at the memory of his mouth hovering over yours. Close enough to taste. Close enough to make you believe. He could’ve kissed you. He should have. He was going to. But he didn’t.
And you can’t stop asking yourself why.
By the time you reach the van parked a few blocks away in a shadowy side street, you’re grateful one of you is paying attention, because you don’t even remember the walk.
Joaquín opens the passenger door and helps you in like you’re breakable—like you’re something valuable that needs securing. He reaches across and buckles you in, knuckles brushing your thigh in the process, lingering just a second too long.
Then he’s gone again—door shut, around the van, into the driver's seat. He jams the key in, turns the engine, and starts reversing slowly out of the alley. Like nothing ever happened. Like you didn’t just nearly shatter years of friendship in a single, heated moment.
You stare out the window while he drives, lost in your thoughts and the lingering warmth of him on your skin—sweat, spice, and something that feels specifically made for you. Something that makes your heart race and your knees weak.
“Where did you learn that?” he asks suddenly, voice low and rough.
You frown, turning to face him. And God, is it a sight. Flushed cheeks, sweat-damp skin, eyes glittering even in the dark.
You clear your throat. “Learn what?”
“What you said to me,” he says, glancing at you before turning back to the road. “When we were dancing.”
“Oh.” You shift in your seat, dragging your gaze away from him. “Just one of those songs you always play.”
“Right,” he mutters. “Do… do you know what it means?”
There’s a beat. Only the soft hum of tires on asphalt fills the silence.
Then you murmur, “Daddy, oh, how delicious you are.”
His breath hitches. His knuckles go white around the steering wheel.
You wait another beat before adding, “That’s right, yeah?”
He nods. “Right.”
He shifts in his seat—subtle, but telling—and you don’t dare let your eyes drop to his lap.
He clears his throat. “The—uh—the pronunciation was good. Accent could use some work.”
You snort—sharp and dry. “Thanks for the feedback. I’ll be sure to pencil in some extra Spanish practice.”
“Let me know if you need a tutor,” he says, smirking now.
Your heart thuds—heavy, too hard. You want to tease back. You want to slip into the familiar rhythm, the easy banter. But you can’t. Because now you’re confused, and a little wrecked, and everything feels off.
“Oh, you don’t have time for that these days, Falcon,” you say, forcing a lightness you don’t feel. “I’m sure Gabe or Ceilia would be happy to give me lessons.”
Two of the engineers you’ve often heard Joaquín arguing with in lightning-fast Spanish.
“Gabe or Ceilia?” he repeats, tone unreadable, eyes fixed on the road.
You don’t answer. You’re not sure what you could say.
So you just turn your head back to the window, watching the quiet city blur by, willing yourself not to cry. Not yet.
Not until you’re alone.
-
You wake up to a bright streak of sun slashing across your face.
Your eyes are sticky—thanks to all the tears—and your body aches. You stretch your legs out and roll onto your back, careful not to slip off the couch cushions you curled up on last night.
After regrouping at the office, both Sam and Joaquín offered to drive you home. You declined them separately—telling each you’d already agreed to leave with the other. It took some careful phrasing and a few weirdly timed trips out the front door, but it worked. And eventually, you were left alone.
You stripped out of your dress and showered—because of course Sam has a shower at the office—before changing into a spare set of clothes you keep in case of emergency. Which, as it turned out, meant an old pair of loose gym shorts and one of Joaquín’s worn Air Force shirts.
Then you settled in front of your computer and worked until it felt like your eyes were bleeding. You filed mission reports, checked maintenance logs, combed through security footage, and even tried digging deeper into Matías Navarro. But by four a.m., you were in Sam and Joaquín’s office, curled up on the low blue lounges and crying yourself to sleep.
Partly from exhaustion.
Partly from heartbreak.
Mostly because you have no idea what to do about Joaquín Torres now.
The sound of your phone vibrating against the table forces you to sit up. You rub at your eyes, yawn widely, and reach for it, flipping it over to see Joaquín’s goofy caller ID photo lighting up the screen.
You stare at it, gnawing on lower lip until the call ends. Then a notification pops up—missed call from Joaquín—followed by a flurry of texts asking how you are, where you are, and if you want to hang out today.
It’s Sunday. Which means usually, you’d be dragging him to a market or a movie—something sickeningly wholesome, the kind of thing real couples do on their days off. But you’re not a real couple. You never were. And you really need to remember that.
So you slip the phone into your pocket without replying, deciding to do it later—when you’re less raw.
With a heavy sigh, you push off the couch and head for your own office, pausing only to start up the coffee machine on the way. You wake your computer, rubbing at your temples as the screen flickers to life. While you slept, it’s been classifying intel, parsing Navarro’s comms for patterns, links, anything actionable. And surprisingly, it’s found some.
Good. Now you have something to show Sam so he doesn’t kill you for working all weekend.
You skim the new data for a few minutes before deciding that no amount of international weapons trafficking can be dealt with without caffeine. You’re halfway out your office door when—
The alarm blares.
You flinch. “Fuck!”
Then you jog down the hall, push through the doors into reception, and swing around the desk. You punch your code into the alarm panel and silence the sirens—leaving only the sound of your pulse hammering in your ears.
The system has been glitching for weeks—tripping randomly, resetting itself, spamming your phones with false alerts. But still, you drop into the chair and run a security check just in case, scanning for any open doors or tripped sensors.
Once you get the all clear, you sigh and head back to the kitchen—now in desperate need of that goddamn coffee.
You spend the next half hour glued to your screens, sipping coffee like it’s oxygen and stretching your sore back every five minutes. You’re so deep in the data that you don’t even hear your office door open.
Not until—
“Did you sleep here, cariño?”
You jump, knocking your chair back a couple inches and sending your coffee mug clattering across your desk.
“Shit, Joaquín,” you mutter, reaching for the tissues.
“Sorry,” he chuckles, stepping in and snatching the box before you can.
Luckily, the mug was nearly empty. There’s only a small puddle to mop up—which he does for you, dabbing at the spill with a clump of tissues, careful not to let anything touch your electronics.
“There,” he says, tossing the wad into the bin. “Now, are you gonna answer me?”
You frown. “Answer what?”
He rolls his eyes and sits on the edge of your desk, invading your space and flooding your senses with the sharp, fresh scent of his cologne. He’s clearly just showered, and God, it’s almost rude how good he smells.
“Did you sleep here?”
Your cheeks burn. “Maybe.”
His smile fades, eyes narrowing. “You told me Sam was taking you home.”
“And I told Sam you were taking me home.”
“So you lied.”
You shrug. “Embellished.”
He groans, tipping his head back. “Por Dios, me vas a matar algún día.”
You squint up at him, lips pursed. “Something about God and dying?”
He looks back at you, amused now. “You really need those Spanish lessons, mi amor.”
“Well,” you sigh, dragging your eyes back to your screen, “I’ll try to squeeze it in, but I’m a field agent now. My time is valuable.”
He chuckles again, low and warm, and shifts on the desk—just enough for his body to inch closer. Close enough to feel. Close enough to make your skin heat and your heart race.
“What are you doing here, anyway?” you ask, forcing yourself not to look at him.
“The alarm went off,” he says, holding up his phone. “Then I checked whose code turned it off and saw that you’re working. On a Sunday. You know Sam’s going to kill you, right?”
You frown at your screen. “So if you figured I was working… why are you here? To watch me type?”
He pauses, eyes fixed on you. You feel the weight of it, even as you refuse to meet his gaze. He knows something is off. He’s not stupid. He probably knows you better than you know yourself—and this? This isn’t normal. Not your usual rhythm. Not your usual banter.
“Actually,” he says, sliding off the desk. “I’m here for your Spanish lesson.”
That gets your attention.
You glance up, brows pinched. “What are you talking about?”
He moves toward the small whiteboard on the wall beside your desk and plucks the marker from the tray.
“Joaquín,” you sigh, spinning in your chair to face him. “I don’t want a Spanish—”
“Ah,” he cuts in, brow raised. “En español.”
You give him a deadpan look. “I don’t know it en español.”
He smirks. “Then it sounds like you really do need a lesson.”
You exhale hard and lean back in your chair, crossing your arms and then your legs. “Go on, then. Maestro.”
His eyes light up. “Muy buena, cariño. Now you’re getting it.”
You don’t reply. You just stare at him, lips pressed into a flat, unimpressed line.
He turns to the whiteboard and scribbles a phrase. You try not to look at his forearm as it flexes with each stroke of the marker—but God, it’s hard not to.
“Alright,” he says, turning back with a smirk. “Go on.”
You squint at the words, digging through years of memories—listening to Joaquín talk, watching him text his mother, the cheeky little notes he used to write in your birthday cards.
“Estás... muy... guapo... hoy,” you say slowly.
He chuckles, stepping closer. “It’s not ‘ess-tass.’ Loosen your tongue, cariño. Eh-stás. More breath. Less bite.”
You roll your eyes, but try again. “Estás muy... guapo... hoy.”
“Don’t chew it,” he says, folding his arms—and Jesus, do his biceps have to be so distracting? “It’s not gwaah-po. It’s cleaner. Crisper. Guapo. Let the ‘g’ glide. The ‘o’ is round. Like your mouth when you—”
He stops—and laughs quietly, eyes gleaming.
“Never mind. Try again.”
You scowl at the board, determined not to let his arms—or his mouth—throw you off.
“Estás muy guapo hoy.”
He doesn’t say anything at first—just looks at you. Then that slow, dangerous grin spreads across his face.
“Eso, mi amor,” he says. “You’re getting it.”
Your lips twitch, but you don’t let him see it. You roll them together and raise your brows instead—quietly daring him to give you the next one.
He turns back to the board and quietly writes out three more phrases. Each scribbled letter winds the tension tighter, threading the air with heat and anticipation—but you don’t know why. Not yet. You recognise some words, sure, but you can’t piece together the full sentences.
“Me vuelves loco,” he says, overpronouncing it like a smug high school Spanish teacher.
You sit up a little straighter, arms still folded tight across your chest, and echo, “Me vuelves loco.”
He quirks an eyebrow. “Bien. De nuevo.”
You know he’s just told you to say it again—more from the look on his face than his words.
“Tell me what I’m saying first.”
He grins, eyes darkening with something dangerous. “You drive me crazy.”
Your breath hitches, pulse spiking—but you manage to keep your cool.
“Me vuelves loco,” you repeat.
He nods. “Very good, cariño. Next one?”
You drag your gaze away from his stupidly handsome face—ridiculous facial hair still perfectly intact—and squint at the next phrase. You don’t recognise it.
“Ponte… de… rodillas?”
He chuckles—low, throaty—and steps forward, stopping directly in front of you. “It’s not a question, mi amor. Say it like you mean it.”
Your brow furrows as you look past him at the board.
“Ponte… de rodillas.”
He moves closer, voice dropping. “The ‘r’—you’re swallowing it. It should roll. Just a little. Ro-dí-llas. You’re saying it too flat.”
You try again. “Ponte de… rodillas.”
He tsks. “Softer on the ‘ll’. It’s not rod-ee-yas, it’s ro-dee-yas. Let it melt. Let it glide off your tongue.”
You give him a look. “If you think I’m going to get turned on by grammar—”
“Not grammar,” he smirks. “Just me.”
You roll your eyes—but he’s stepping even closer now, towering over you, eyes gleaming with that same reckless hunger he wore last night.
“Say it right,” he murmurs, “and maybe I’ll listen.”
“Listen?”
He nods once. “Maybe I’ll do what you’re telling me to do.”
You’re breathing harder now, your chest rising and falling beneath crossed arms. Your legs feel heavy, unsteady—too tense to stay crossed—so you shift in your chair, uncrossing them as Joaquín watches every movement like a predator tracking prey.
“Look me in the eye,” he says softly. “Say it again. And mean it.”
You clear your throat and meet his gaze. “Ponte de rodillas.”
There’s a beat—one, long charged second where he just stares.
Then—he sinks to his knees.
His hands slide up your thighs as he settles between them, a wicked smirk curling his lips. He looks entirely too pleased with himself—and something else. Something darker.
“See?” he murmurs. “Estoy de rodillas por ti, mi amor.”
Your heart is in your throat, pulse pounding like a war drum. It fills your ears, thrums beneath your skin. Every nerve ending burns where his hands rest—just above your knees—like he's branding you.
“Next one,” he murmurs, leaning in.
Your voice catches before you can speak. You’re frozen, eyes locked on him as he lowers his face between your thighs, gaze fixed at the apex.
You force yourself to look away—back to the board—blinking until the letters come into focus.
“I… I don’t know.”
“Just try it, baby,” he says, breath hot against the tender skin inside your thigh.
You swallow, voice shaking. “N-Necesito… sentirte… adentro.”
He draws a sharp breath, jaw tightening like he’s barely holding himself together. His hands slide higher, fingers slipping beneath the hem of your shorts.
Your whole body tenses.
“Joaquín, I—”
“Uh uh.” He pulls back slightly, just enough to make you ache. “Dilo de nuevo.”
You blink down at him. “What?”
“Say it again,” he murmurs, dark eyes dragging up to meet yours. “And I’ll reward you.”
Your head spins. He’s still there, between your legs, looking at you like you’re something holy and wreckable all at once. This has to be a dream. There’s no way this is real.
But the heat is real. The ache. The want.
“Necesito,” you say slowly, breath shaky, “se—sentirte adentro.”
He groans low, sliding his hands higher, fingertips brushing the edge of your panties.
“Better,” he mutters. “But I know you can do it right, cariño.”
You clutch the arms of your desk chair, grounding yourself, trying not to move. Trying not to beg.
“Necesito sentirte… adentro.”
His hands move again—slow and sure—one hand pushing your shorts aside, the other tracing down your centre, teasing along the fabric of your panties. He lets out a deep sigh before pressing slow, open-mouthed kisses to the inside of your thighs, moving higher with each wet press of his lips.
“Better,” he mutters against you. “But it’s not ‘sen-teer-teh’—you’re flattening the ‘i’. It’s sentir—longer. Feel it in your throat. Let it roll.”
His thumb drags gently along the crease between your thigh and your core, teasing the elastic.
“You want it?” he whispers. “Say it right.”
Your grip tightens on the arms of your chair. You close your eyes, suck in a breath, and try again—voice lower now, weighted with need.
“Necesito… sentirte adentro.”
A sound escapes him—almost a growl—and he dips lower, mouthing you through the fabric. You gasp, hips twitching. The heat of his breath, the shape of his mouth—it’s overwhelming.
“Good girl,” he says softly, lips dragging over you. “Almost perfect.”
You whimper, your body arching involuntarily. “Tell me,” you whisper. “Tell me how to say it.”
He chuckles against you, the vibration sharp and sinful. “You’re rushing it. Slow down. Let me hear you want it.”
His hands are steady on your thighs now, anchoring you open as his mouth hovers just above your pussy. Breath hot, cheeks flushed, dark eyes locked with yours—waiting.
You draw a breath, forcing your voice to steady, and say, “Necesito sentirte adentro.”
“Sí,” he groans. “Eso es todo, mi amor.”
Then his fingers hook around the fabric of your panties and shove it aside. His mouth is on you just as quick, tongue hot and slick and merciless as he finally rewards you—lapping at your wetness like a man starved.
You break—letting out a broken cry. One hand flies to his hair, threading through the curls, while the other grips the edge of your desk. Your hips lift into him as his broad tongue licks a slow stripe from entrance to clit. He groans into you, the vibration sending sparks shooting up your spine.
Your thighs shake, breath coming hard and fast, but Joaquín doesn’t let up. He works his tongue in slow, devastating circles around your clit—just light enough to drive you insane, just heavy enough to make you twitch with every pass. Then he flattens it and licks up again, long and firm, before closing his mouth around your clit and sucking—slow, purposeful, obscene.
“Así,” he growls into you, voice low and ruined. “Así me gusta verte.”
Your hips buck. Your fingers tighten in his curls.
“Joaquín—”
He slides one hand higher, fingertips trailing over your inner thigh before gliding straight to your entrance. He drags two fingers through your folds—slow, deliberate, torturous—coating them in your slick, collecting the wetness, then finally pushes in. One knuckle, then two, sinking deep into your heat, his breath catching as he feels how ready you are.
You gasp—sharp and high-pitched—and he groans into you like the taste is making him drunk.
“You’re so wet,” he murmurs against your cunt. “Mierda.”
You whimper something incoherent, every nerve in your body screaming, and he curls his fingers just right—hooking them inside you, hitting that spongey spot that makes your thighs spasm and your mouth fall open.
And still, his tongue doesn’t stop. He licks and sucks and flicks, lips wrapped around your clit like a prayer, and when he groans into you—low and wrecked—it sends a full-body shudder straight through you.
“Say it again,” he pants, fingers pumping deep and slow. “Say it. Dímelo otra vez.”
You’re half gone—hips jerking forward, body sliding closer to the edge with every wet, filthy sound echoing between your thighs.
You choke on your breath, trembling as you manage to say, “Necesito sentirte adentro.”
He growls—honest-to-God growls—and his fingers speed up, curling faster, thumb brushing your clit just as his lips close around it again.
“Buena chica,” he rasps. “I’m going to make you cum with my mouth, with my fingers—todo lo que me pidas.”
Then he sucks—hard. One long, deep pull with tongue and fingers working in tandem, filthy and focused and fucking lethal.
You cry out, hips bucking, the hand on his hair holding him against you as you grind on his mouth.
He groans into the mess he’s made, lapping it up like it’s sweetest thing he’s ever tasted, fucking you with his fingers while his tongue traces lazy, hungry circles.
Your body shakes. You grip his hair like a lifeline, breath shattered.
“Joaquín,” you pant, tugging on his curls. “Joaquín, I need—I need—”
“Gonna cum, baby?” he murmurs, curling his fingers again. “Gonna cum on my tongue?”
You let out a strangled moan as he licks you again, the tip of his tongue swirling around your clit as his fingers pump in and out with an obscene squelching sound.
“Joaquín,” you say again, firmer this time.
His eyes flick up, meeting yours.
“Necesito sentirte adentro.”
He freezes. Everything stops. His fingers stop mid-thrust and he just stares at you, lips glistening, eyes wide.
“Joaquín Torres,” you say, breathless, chest heaving. “I need you inside me. Right fucking now.”
For a moment, he doesn’t move. Doesn’t breathe. Just stares up at you like you’ve broken something in him—something sacred.
Then, slowly—deliberately—he pulls his fingers from your body and rises to his full height.
You whimper, aching at the loss, feeling hollow.
His face is flushed. His lips are swollen and slick. He looks wrecked, staring down at you now with wide eyes and an expression so raw it makes your chest tighten.
“Are you sure, cariño?” he asks, voice quieter now. “We don’t have to. I—”
“I’m in love with you,” you say, rising from your chair to stand in front of him, a small, sheepish smile tugging at your lips. “And I’d really like it if you fucked me right now.”
He just stares. Lips parted. Eyes wide. Brows drawn like he’s trying not to cry or laugh or do both at once.
Then, slowly, his lips curl into that familiar grin. The one you know too well. The one you love more than anything else on Earth.
“I knew it,” he says. “I fucking knew it.”
You roll your eyes, biting back a grin. “Oh, did you now?”
He nods, arms sliding around your waist, pulling your body flush to his. “Why do you think I just gave you the best head of your life?”
Your brows lift, and a laugh bubbles from your throat despite yourself. “Of my life?”
He nods again, grinning like a kid on Christmas morning.
“I don’t know,” you murmur, gaze dipping to that stupid moustache—still glistening with your slick, making your thighs clench. “I didn’t even cum…”
His grin drops, and he growls. A deep, guttural sound—low in his throat and hot on your skin—as his hands flex around your waist. Then in one fast, fluid motion, he twists your bodies and slams you back against the desk.
You gasp, hands flying to grip the edge for balance. But before you can speak, his mouth is on yours.
And fuck.
It’s not sweet. It’s not soft. It’s not careful.
It’s years of holding back, years of wanting, all pouring out in one searing, breath-stealing kiss. His lips crash against yours, tongue demanding entry, teeth nipping at your lower lip like he’s angry he waited this long.
Your arms wind around his neck, pulling him closer, tighter, until there’s nothing between you but heat and desperation. He kisses like he wants to devour you—like he’s trying to rewrite every second you spent not doing this.
His hands fumble at your waist, tugging at your shorts, pulling them down as you shift your hips to help. Once they fall to the floor, he starts yanking at his belt with shaking fingers.
“Fuck,” he mutters against your lips, breath ragged. “Fuck, I’ve wanted this—I’ve wanted you—for so long—”
You reach down to help, fingers brushing his as you undo his fly and push his pants and briefs down just far enough. His cock springs free, thick and flushed and already leaking against his stomach.
Your hand wraps around him on instinct—hot, hard, pulsing in your grip—and he curses again, burying his face in your neck.
You stroke once. Twice. Just enough to hear him moan against your throat.
Then—he pulls back, eyes wild, teeth clenched as he grabs the base and drags himself over your still-covered core. Nothing but the soaking wet scrap of lace left between you.
“Feel that?” he rasps. “That’s what you do to me.”
He pushes again, the thick head of his cock dragging over your clit through the soaked fabric, the pressure maddening. Your hips jerk, mouth falling open.
“Fuck, baby,” he mutters, dragging the tip down your slit again. “You’re so fucking wet.”
Your hand grips the desk, the other tangled in his curls as you breathe out, “Joaquín—please—”
He looks at you like a man on the verge of losing control. Then he nudges your nose with his, resting his forehead against yours, breath mingling, eyes blazing.
“Say it again,” he breathes. “One more time. Necesito sentirte adentro.”
Your breath shudders as your eyes lock on his, your voice barely more than a whisper—raw, pleading. “Necesito sentirte adentro.”
He groans—low, filthy, possessive—and grabs your thighs, lifting you onto the edge of the desk so fast it knocks the breath from your lungs. Then his hands are under your shirt—palms searing as they skim your stomach, over your ribs, until they find your bra.
Without hesitation, he shoves it up—then your shirt—baring your breasts. He groans, deep and guttural, eyes locking on you. “Fucking perfect,” he mutters, voice reverent and wrecked.
His mouth latches to your chest, hot tongue flicking over your nipple before his lips wrap around it and suck—hard. His other hand is already at your soaked panties, pulling them to the side again, and you feel the head of his cock notch against your entrance.
“Please,” you gasp, one hand tangled in his hair, the other clawing at his bare back. “Joaquín—now.”
He lifts his head, eyes burning, forehead resting against yours again.
“You want me?” he asks, cock dragging along your folds. “You want every inch?”
You nod, breathless, trembling. “Yes. I want you to fill me up. I need to feel you inside.”
He curses under his breath, grips your waist, and thrusts forward.
All the air leaves your lungs in a strangled cry as he slides inside—slow, thick, relentless. He doesn’t stop until he’s buried to the hilt, your bodies pressed tight, his mouth open against your throat.
“Jesus, baby,” he groans, “you feel so fucking good. So warm. So tight. So perfect around me.”
You whimper, legs wrapping around his hips, pulling him deeper—closer. He starts to move, hips rolling forward, dragging his cock nearly all the way out before driving back in with a filthy, wet sound that echoes in the office.
“Fuck,” you gasp, nails raking down his back. “Just like that—don’t stop.”
“I’m not stopping,” he growls, thrusting harder now. “Not until you scream my name. Not until everyone in this damn city knows you’re mine.”
His hand slides up again, squeezing your breast, thumb flicking your nipple as he pistons into you—faster, deeper, every stroke hitting that spot that makes your vision go white at the edges.
“You’re gonna cum for me now,” he pants, “and I’m gonna feel every second of it. You hear me?”
You nod—wild, breathless—but it’s not enough.
He thrusts hard, dragging a moan from your throat. Again. And again. Every push deeper, rougher, angling just right. Your head tips back, your hands scrambling for purchase—on the desk, on his shoulders, anywhere.
“Fuck, Joaquín—” you gasp, already so close.
But suddenly, he stops.
Buried to the hilt and breathing like he ran a marathon, he stills, chest heaving.
“Look at me,” he growls, his hand catching your chin and forcing your gaze to his. “I said look at me.”
Your eyes snap open, dazed and wide, vision blurred.
“I fucking love you, cariño,” he says—raw, desperate. “So fucking much. You feel that?” He rolls his hips, just once, dragging a broken sob from your lips. “That’s what love feels like. Me, inside you, losing my fucking mind.”
You whimper, thighs trembling around his waist, and he doesn’t wait. He starts to move again—deep and punishing, hitting every spot that makes you see stars.
“Tell me you love me,” he growls, one hand sliding up under your shirt again to squeeze your breast, fingers pinching your nipple until you're writhing. “Tell me, baby. Say it.”
“I love you,” you gasp, voice breaking as he thrusts deeper, harder. “Fuck, Joaquín—I love you—I love you—”
“That’s it,” he mutters, pressing his forehead to yours, fucking you like he means it—like he needs it. “Say it again.”
“I love you.”
His mouth crashes to yours mid-moan, swallowing the sound as he pounds into you, the desk rattling beneath your ass, every stroke sending shocks of heat down your spine. You can feel it building—tight and dangerous—coiling deep in your core like a spring about to snap.
“You gonna cum for me, mi amor?” he rasps, lips dragging along your jaw as his thrusts start to stutter. “Gonna cum on my cock like a good girl?”
Your entire body is shaking, one hand in his curls, the other clawing down his back as you choke out, “Yes—yes, I’m so close—don’t stop—”
“I won’t,” he promises, voice wrecked. “Not until I feel you lose it. I want it all, baby. Cada maldita gota.”
His hand slides down your torso, fingers finding your clit and rubbing tight, filthy circles in perfect rhythm with his hips. The pressure hits you like lightning—sharp, electric, blinding.
“Oh my God, Joaquín—"
You break.
You fall apart.
Your orgasm hits with devastating force, tearing through you in waves, pulsing around him as he groans—loud, low, carnal. He thrusts once, twice more, then stills inside you with a harsh, broken shout of your name, spilling deep as he holds you close like he’ll never let you go.
You’re both panting, chests heaving, grinding slowly to ride out the high and clinging to each other in the aftershock—sweat-slicked, breathless, totally undone.
He doesn’t pull out. Doesn’t move. Just presses a soft kiss to your temple and stays buried deep inside you.
“I’m so fucking in love with you, it hurts,” he whispers.
You let out a breathless laugh—half delirious, half disbelieving—and tip your head up to look at him. His hair is a mess, his face flushed, his lips swollen from kissing you stupid. He looks wrecked. Ruined. Beautiful.
“I can’t feel my legs,” you murmur.
He grins, still inside you, still pressed so close you can feel his heartbeat hammering through his chest.
“Good,” he says, smug and a little dazed. “Means I did my job.”
You smack his shoulder, giggling now, and he catches your wrist—pressing a kiss to your palm, then the inside of your elbow, then the curve of your jaw.
“You’re such an idiot,” you say, fingers carding through his curls while his lips assault your neck.
His nose nuzzles into your skin. “Yeah,” he whispers, “but I’m your idiot.”
“God help me,” you mumble, smiling into his shoulder.
He pulls back just enough to look at you, his expression so open it makes your stomach flip. “You okay?” he asks, voice low and sincere. “Not just physically—I mean, really.”
You nod, heart suddenly so full you feel like it might burst. “Yeah. I’m better than okay.”
His smile softens. “Good. Because I’m not pulling out until I get at least one more necesito sentirte adentro.”
You bark a laugh, head falling back. “You’re insatiable.”
He shrugs, hips shifting just enough to make you gasp. “And you’re going to be fluent soon.”
You tip your head forward, looking at him through your lashes, voice dropping to a sultry murmur. “Necesito sentirte adentro.”
“God,” he groans, dropping his forehead to yours. “Vas a ser mi muerte.”
He rolls his hips again, and you suck in a breath—he’s still hard, still thick and hot, dragging through your slick with maddening pressure. Your fingers twist tighter in his hair as you lift your chin and kiss him—hard and soft all at once, pouring everything into it.
But then—
You stop. And pull back.
That sharp little ache flares behind your ribs, reminding you why you were in this office on a Sunday in the first place. Why you cried yourself to sleep. Why you weren’t even sure you could look at Joaquín today, let alone fuck him.
He blinks, brow creasing. “What’s wrong, mi vida?”
“Last night,” you murmur, eyes dropping to where your hand is fisted in his shirt. “Why didn’t you kiss me?”
He gently hooks a finger beneath your chin, guiding your gaze back to his. “On the dancefloor?”
You nod slowly.
“I didn’t kiss you on that dancefloor in front of a hundred criminals because I didn’t want our first kiss to be undercover,” he says softly. “Didn’t want you thinking it was just for show.”
“Oh.” Your lips twitch into a smile.
He chuckles, soft and low. “Is that why you were upset? Because I almost kissed you and didn’t?”
You nod again, slower this time. Cheeks burning, heart thudding.
“Oh, mi amor,” he sighs, voice warm with laughter. “What am I going to do with you?”
“Well,” you murmur, fingers curling tighter in his hair, “you could start by fucking me again.”
That’s all the encouragement he needs. His lips are back on yours in a second, hips rolling forward, his hard length pushing into you with the most delicious stretch. You moan against his mouth, hiking your legs up higher around his waist to feel him deeper.
His hands grip your hips with bruising intensity, searing fingerprints into your skin—marks you know will make you squeeze your thighs every time you see them.
And then—
Ping!
The sound of your phone cuts through the soft whisper of skin on skin. Neither of you can help but glance at it, sitting screen-up on the desk right beside where Joaquín is fucking you slowly.
“What’s that?” he asks, eyes narrowing.
“Just a motion alert,” you reply. “I set it up a while ago when I was working a lot of weekends because Sam would come in and scare the crap out of me.” You look back at him, eyes trailing over his face so close to yours. “Doesn’t help though. I didn’t see the notification when you came in.”
He frowns. “So it alerts you when someone enters the building?”
“Yep.”
“Right.” His eyes flick to the phone, then back to you. “So... someone just entered the building?”
Your eyes go wide. “Fuck.”
You grab the phone and unlock it with shaky fingers, bringing up the security system app and quickly flicking through the camera feeds until you find movement.
Your breath catches. “It’s Sam.”
“Shit,” Joaquín hisses, pulling out so quickly it leaves you winded.
You let out a pathetic little whine, and he can’t help but chuckle as he fumbles with his pants.
“Later, baby. I promise,” he says, stealing one last kiss. “But Sam is going to be here in a few seconds, and he’s going to know what just happened in here if we don’t—”
Knock, knock, knock.
“You in there, kid?”
You both whip toward the door, seeing Sam’s blurred silhouette through the frosted glass.
“Quick, cariño,” Joaquín whispers, helping you off the desk.
You scramble into your shorts, yank your bra and shirt into place, then turn to Joaquín, raking your fingers through his wild curls—both of you stifling laughter like love-drunk fools trying to clean up a crime scene.
Knock, knock, knock.
“I can hear you.”
You clear your throat, nod at Joaquín, and step around the desk toward the door. As you grab the handle, you glance back—and spot a little pool of evidence on the desk.
“Joaquín,” you hiss, pointing at it.
His eyes go wide, and he quickly sits on it, trying to look casual—as if he hadn’t just been buried inside you right there thirty seconds ago.
Then you yank the door open, plastering on your most innocent smile.
“Hey, Sam!” you say, probably a little too brightly.
His hand was poised to knock again, but he drops it slowly, eyes narrowing as they bounce between you and Joaquín.
“Hi,” he says, slow and suspicious, stepping into the room.
You shuffle back toward the desk, sliding in beside Joaquín, praying to any god that might listen that Sam can’t read the Spanish on the goddamn whiteboard.
“What are you two doing?” Sam asks, brows raised.
“Working,” you both say, in perfect unison.
Sam cocks his head, clearly unconvinced. “Really? On a Sunday?”
You nod. “Yep. I was running data on Navarro all night and found a few leads. He frequents this deli in Washington Heights, owned by—”
“Why does it smell weird in here?” Sam interrupts, sniffing the air like a police dog.
“Weird how?” Joaquín asks. “I came straight from the gym, so if it’s sweat, that’s probably—”
“Did you two have sex in here?” Sam exclaims, eyes wide—locked on that fucking whiteboard.
“No,” you say quickly. “I was learning Spanish. Joaquín was teaching me—”
“I know what that says,” he cuts in, pointing at it, brows drawn and lips pursed like he’s trying not to gag.
“I was just being funny,” Joaquín says, tone light. “Nothing happened.”
Sam raises a brow. “Oh, okay. So if I check the security footage, it’s not going to show anything?”
Your heart lurches, your cheeks burn, and you turn toward Joaquín, burying your face in his chest with a groan.
You hadn’t even thought about that stupid little security camera in the corner of your office.
“I knew it!” Sam cries. “I can’t believe you two. This is a place of work,” he goes on, already climbing onto his high horse. “You just violated my trust—and the trust of everyone on this team. This is an environment for professionalism, not sex. I can’t believe you’d do something so reckless, so—”
“Didn’t you bring a date back here the weekend after we started operating?” Joaquín asks suddenly, brows raised.
You lift your head, blinking. “Oh my God. You did! What was her name—Kylie? Casey?”
Sam freezes. His expression drops.
“You know,” Joaquín continues, turning to you, “we could probably find the footage from that night. I think I remember the date.”
“Wouldn’t take long,” you add, grinning now. “Could scrub through it before we erase ours.”
“Okay!” Sam blurts, throwing up a hand. “Okay. You heathens win.”
Joaquín grins, wide and smug, wrapping an arm around your shoulder and pulling you closer.
“Go through the cameras,” Sam instructs, already backing toward the door. “Delete the footage. Both incidents.”
“No offense, Sam,” you mutter, grimacing, “I really don’t want to see that.”
“I’ll do it,” Joaquín says cheerfully. “I’m actually a little curious about how Captain America—”
“Enough,” Sam snaps, pointing at Joaquín—but the twitch in his lips betrays him. “Do it. Go home. Take tomorrow off. Hell, take the whole week if you’re going to be all over each other like this. Just don’t defile any more government property.”
Then he’s gone. Out the door and down the hall, muttering something about kids these days.
Joaquín hops off the desk and wraps his arms around you, smiling like a sinner who just got a free pass to heaven.
“You think we should keep a copy?” he asks, eyes gleaming. “I bet it’s hot.”
Your thighs clench instinctively, and you wrap your arms around his neck.
“Oh, definitely. And Sam’s too—for blackmail. Just in case.”
Joaquín laughs. “God. Could you imagine if Captain America’s sex tape got leaked?”
“Might boost his approval rating,” you snort, moving to slide into your chair.
He stands behind you while you pull up the security system app, his arms around your shoulders, lips brushing over your hair again and again.
He murmurs it at first—I love you, I love you, I love you—until the words melt into Spanish, growing filthier, hungrier. You can’t understand all of it, but it doesn’t matter.
Because you’ll make him teach you.
Slowly. Thoroughly.
Between your legs. All fucking night.
END.
#joaquin torres#joaquin torres x reader#danny ramirez#danny ramirez x reader#joaquin x reader#captain america: brave new word#fanfic#fanfiction#one shot#oneshot#marvel#ca:bnw#the falcon#falcon#falcon x reader#imagine
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A House In Nebraska
Pairing: Bob/Robert Reynolds/The Sentry/The Void x (Ex?)Thunderbolts!Fem!Reader!
Summary: After considering it for a long time, you have decided that it is time to leave the Thunderbolts and pursue a normal life after being passed from team to team for years. When you make the announcement it is met with a mix of emotions, but nobody is taking it harder than Bob.
Warnings: Angst and more Angst (with an ending that everyone will like hopefully), Hurt/Comfort (technically), Bob is going through it kinda, Unspoken Feelings Between Reader and Bob.
Author’s Note: I’ve been wanting to write this scenario for a while and I was finally able to get an ending that I truly loved and adored, and I am so glad that I was able to finish this and get this out to you guys, and I hope you guys enjoy it <3
Word Count: 8,336
”I’m leaving…”
The words felt foreign as they left your mouth. Soft. Like they didn’t quite belong to you. Like someone else had said them first, quietly, in some dream you didn’t remember waking from. They drifted into the room like smoke–barely there, but impossible to ignore. They were the kind of words that rearranged the air, and twisted it up into something totally different and new.
It was supposed to be a normal night.
Everyone was tucked into their usual spots around the low table in the compound’s common room–takeout containers open, steam curling toward the ceiling, the hum of the base’s heating vents filling the quiet between bites. You had ordered everything–from the popular Chinese takeout place down the road that somehow knew everyone’s preferences better than they knew each other’s. Spicy drunken noodles for Yelena. Chicken, Duck and Pork with extra rice for Alexei. Garlic dumplings with extra garlic and extra chili oil sauce for Bucky. Sweet-and-sour chicken for Walker. Tom Yum Soup and Spring Rolls for Ava. And Bob’s quiet favourite–plain lo mein with shredded pork, no veggies, extra sauce–which was nestled in front of him barely touched.
He had known something was off the moment you said dinner was on you. Everyone did actually. They had racked their brains trying to think if they somehow missed a birthday, or if a holiday passed and somehow they didn’t realize it, but after hours of thinking they had said to themselves that it was just a regular Thursday…Which raised their suspicions and their worries. But nobody could’ve ever expected this.
You were sitting between Bob and Yelena, your knees pulled up under you on the worn-down couch, your tray balanced on your lap. Bob’s thigh was pressed lightly against yours, as it always was–casual, comforting, and familiar, something he always did because it was second nature for him to be close to you. But the second your words hit the air, it was as if that contact felt electric, like a shock went through his body. You could feel him go stiff, and you didn’t even have to turn your head to know he was looking at you.
So was Yelena.
Both their heads had twisted toward you almost simultaneously, disbelief etched into the sharp lines of their profiles. It wasn’t often that they mirrored one another. But tonight, confusion and a quiet thread of betrayal lit up both their expressions like a crack of lightning.
You didn’t dare to look at either of them. You didn’t want to. You didn’t trust yourself not to fall apart. Not when you had already made the impossible decision.
So you kept your eyes on your food instead, though your appetites had vanished hours ago when you made the choice to tell the team tonight about what your plans were.
The silence that overtook the room was instant, not even the low tapping of chopsticks could be heard. Nobody moved, and no one dared to speak.
Except Bucky. Or rather–not Bucky. He was the only one who didn’t react. He stayed perfectly still at the far end of the couch, arms braced on his knees, jaw flexed like he was trying not to wince at how tense the room was at the moment. He blinked slowly, lifted his beer and took a long sip.
He was playing his part well, because he was the only one who knew–the only one you had told. You didn’t want the others trying to stop you. You didn’t want soft glances or hands on your arm or late-night conversations asking if this was about a mission, a memory or a nightmare you couldn’t shake. You didn’t want to be the problem they tried to fix.
You were done being that.
And the only person who you knew would understand where you were coming from was Bucky.
When you had told him, he had looked at you like you were speaking a different language. You had cornered him in the weapons bay a week ago, in the quiet lull between missions. He was restocking tranquilizers, and you just stood there until he looked up.
”I’m leaving,” You had said then. His brow furrowed at the announcement.
”Is everything alright?” You hadn’t hesitated to respond.
”Everything’s fine…I’ve never felt more sure about a decision actually.” That was when he stilled.
He didn’t argue. Didn’t scold you for even thinking about it. He just watched you like he knew how much it cost you to finally say it out loud. He let you speak for what felt like the first time in months. You told him about the way the noise was finally too much. The walls. The walls in your mind and the ones around this compound. You told him about waking up every morning with a part of yourself missing, hollowed out by years of being someone else’s weapon.
Bucky had listened in silence. Because he understood.
He knew what it was like to be built for the battlefield. To want to come home and realize you didn’t even know what home meant.
By the end, he nodded. Not in resignation–but in understanding. He didn’t try to convince you to stay. He promised to keep your secret.
And now, watching him at the edge of the couch–quiet, still, unreadable–you were genuinely impressed. He was playing the part like a professional. Eyes neutral. Shoulders stiff. Not a single twitch of his mouth betrayed what he knew. What only he knew.
Before anyone could speak–before the team could do what you were dreading—you jumped in again.
“I told Val a few days ago,” you said, your voice calm but low. “She’s aware of it. And… She’s actually helping me relocate.” A sharp scoff broke the tension like a blade.
“Bullshit,” Walker muttered, dropping his chopsticks onto his plate with a dull clatter, “Is hell frozen over or something? She would never do that.” You gave him a long look, steady but not unkind.
“I thought the same thing too. Trust me. But Mel followed up with a bunch of housing options…And that’s when I realized she actually meant it. She’s…Allowing me to go.” There was a pause–one of those unnatural ones where it felt like the whole room was holding its breath.
And in that silence, you noticed it.
Bob was rubbing his knees. His hands were pressing down on the fabric of his black sweatpants, fists tightening over and over like he didn’t know what to do with them. He hadn’t spoken. He hadn’t moved. But something was coming undone beneath the surface, and it was almost unbearable to watch.
Your jaw clenched as you leaned the slightest bit toward him, fingers moving gently to rest over his wrist. You didn’t grip, you just placed your hand there–soft, grounding. It was something small, but he flinched like the contact had burned him. Ava’s voice broke through next, sharp and direct.
“Why the hell are you leaving?” She asked, eyes locked on yours. Her tone was level, but there was something trembling behind it. Something brittle. “You’re one of us. This team–we’ve been through hell together. Why now?” You didn’t answer right away.
You breathed in through your nose. Let it fill your lungs like it might soften the blow. Then you met her gaze.
“I was born into an environment where I was trained to fight. Kill. Infiltrate. Deceive,” you said, each word measured, not cold–but tired. “I never saw the sun until I was sixteen. I was kept in rooms without windows. I was…Catalogued. Modified. Passed around like I was inhuman.”
You swallowed hard.
“I’ve never had a home. Never had a normal day. Never been able to choose anything for myself. I’ve spent my whole life being used–over and over again–and all I want now…Is to live in peace, and to have a normal life. I don’t want to travel and go after people anymore…I don’t want to harm people and fight them to the death. I want to wake up in a house I could call mine, and exist without being needed.” You looked around the table, eyes landing on each of them in turn, “I’m not built for this life anymore…And I know you might hate me for it and think I’m selfish…But my task here is done…” You added.
There was a long pause, thick enough to choke you–and maybe that’s what you wanted.
And then–
“…S-So you can’t live a no–normal life with us?” Bob’s voice was barely a whisper. Barely even a sound. But it shattered something deep in your chest.
You turned your head slowly to look at him.
His face was twisted into something small. Vulnerable. His eyes, wide and watery. He wasn’t angry. He wasn’t furious. He was just…Breaking.
“Bob…” You said gently, your voice catching. “You know it’s not like that.”
But he was already pulling his arm away from your touch.
“Sure se–seems like it,” He said, and his voice cracked halfway through the sentence. Then he stood abruptly–too fast, too sharp–and walked out of the room.
His food remained untouched.
The only trace he had even been there was the imprint left in the cushion beside you. It felt like the air had been sucked out of the room, and your lungs were compressing and begging for air.
Yelena let out a slow, frustrated sigh, shifting in her spot, her knuckles turning white around her chopsticks, jaw set tight, clenching so hard it seemed like her teeth made a sharp grinding noise.
“When are you going?” She asked, not looking at you, not daring to even make eye contact. You licked your lips, feeling your throat tighten from the dryness that you were suddenly aware of in the air.
”Next Wednesday.” Yelena let out a low, bitter laugh. One that didn’t quite reach her eyes.
“Well,” She muttered, getting up from her spot slowly, “I hope it’s peaceful for you.” And without another word she walked away too. The remaining warmth of the room had left with her, and in its place was an empty, brittle kind of quiet that came after an argument no one wanted to admit had just happened.
“Wow,” Walker muttered, low and sardonic, shoving a piece of checking into his mouth without looking at anyone, “You really know how to thin out a crowd.” Bucky shot him a sharp look. A warning.
”Walker.” But he turned towards him, fork pausing halfway to his mouth, eyes narrowing with that familiar glint of provocation.
”What?” He snapped, “Are we seriously supposed to be okay with this? Just sit here and clap for her while she walks out? We all have fucking baggage here. We all bleed for this team. You were the one that was brainwashed for seventy years, Bucky. If anyone deserves a normal life, it’s you.” His jaw tightened at the comment.
”This is where I want to be, John,” He said firmly, “She doesn’t want to be here anymore…She’s burned out and exhausted. She’s done. Do you understand? Or do I need to get out the whiteboard and draw it out for you like you’re a fucking child?” That shut Walker up for a beat.
You bit the inside of your cheek, the metallic tang of blood blooming faintly on your tongue. Your stomach turned with the weight of being discussed like you weren’t even there, like you were some walking existential crisis just dropped into the center of dinner.
“Can we not act like I’m not sitting right here?” You asked, voice tight and edged.
Walker looked like he wanted to say something back, but Alexei shifted heavily in his chair, making the wood groan under his weight. He leaned forward on his elbows–his plate long forgotten in his lap–and looked at you with something gentle in his eyes.
”I support…Whatever you do,” He started slowly, his accent heavy but words carefully chosen, “You must do what you feel. Think for yourself. Not for team. Not for mission. That is not weakness. That is freedom.” His massive hand reached over and patted your shoulder—solid and warm, like he was trying to anchor you to something. His expression was soft in a way that felt rare. Earnest.
Your eyes stung.
”Thank you Alexei.” You said quietly, throat already tightening from the tears that were threatening to escape. Alexei just nodded and leaned back again, folding his arms over his chest as if he’d said all he needed to.
Walker blew out a sigh and rubbed a hand over his face, muttering something under his breath that sounded vaguely like “Still think it’s bullshit”, but he didn’t continue to push the subject–he knew it was no use.
As you stared down at your hands–at the faint tremble in your fingers, at the spot where Bob had sat, now empty–you realized something painful and true.
You weren’t just leaving a team…You were breaking a family.
And even though it was the right decision for yourself…That didn’t make it hurt any less.
———————————
You were in your bedroom, surrounded by half-filled boxes–some sealed, some still yawning open with uncertainty. The floor was a mess of folded sweaters, books, tangled cords, and scraps of your life that had clung to the corners of the compound without you realizing it. A permanent layer of dust had formed beneath the bed, now exposed, and a lone sock had somehow ended up behind your nightstand. The hum of the ventilation system buzzed quietly above you, low and steady, the only constant sound in an otherwise hollow space.
There were labels on each box–Clothes, Gear, Kitchen Stuff, Important Docs, To Val–but one sat alone at the edge of your bed.
A box labeled simply: Bob.
Polaroids, mostly. Ones you’d snapped at odd hours, between missions, at safe houses and gas stations and rooftops during sunset. There was one of him half-asleep with his hoodie pulled over his face, slumped sideways on a bench in Prague. One where he was squinting into the camera because you’d caught him mid-chew during a ramen run in Oslo. A few blurry ones he’d taken of you without asking, and you hadn’t even realized until weeks later when you found them in the stack.
You added one last thing–a keychain.
It was dumb. A glittery, over-the-top crescent moon trinket you’d won from a claw machine on a mission in Atlantic City. Bob had said it looked like something a seven-year-old would clip to their backpack. And then later, quietly, he’d asked if you could win him one too.
He’d kept it on him for months before it broke. You’d found the spare in your drawer last week, still sealed in its plastic, and tucked it into the tissue beside the photos.
The ache in your chest hadn’t stopped since that night in the common room. Not once. It hadn’t dulled. If anything, it had grown sharper with every day Bob avoided you. Every time he turned down a hallway the moment he saw you coming. Every time he shut the door a little too fast behind him. You’d tried–three separate times–to catch him when he was alone. To talk. To explain. But each time he shut you down with silence. His eyes flickered, his hands clenched, and he walked away.
He didn’t hate you.
You knew that much.
But something in him had closed off. Locked down. Like if he said a single word, the rest of it–all that golden, aching softness–would pour out and ruin everything.
Yelena, on the other hand, had surprised you.
She gave you a chance.
A few nights after the dinner fallout, she found you in the training bay–sitting against the wall with your knees drawn up, water bottle dripping condensation between your palms. She didn’t ask questions at first. Just sat beside you in silence. For nearly ten minutes, neither of you spoke.
Then she muttered, “I’m here if you want to talk.”
And this time…You did.
You told her everything. Not all at once, not easily, but enough. Enough for her to understand that you weren’t running from the team–you were running toward something you had never been allowed to have. Peace. Quiet. Your own name, your own morning, your own walls that didn’t have reinforced steel embedded in them.
Yelena didn’t say anything when you finished. Not at first.
She just sat beside you, her shoulder barely brushing yours, her eyes fixed on the far wall of the training bay like maybe she was trying to memorize every crack in the concrete. Her jaw was tense. You could hear the way she was breathing through her nose–slow, controlled. Not angry. Just…Processing.
The silence stretched. But it wasn’t the suffocating kind. It was careful. Heavy with meaning. Like the two of you were both sitting in the aftermath of something important.
You didn’t expect her to speak. You didn’t need her to.
Because she stayed.
She didn’t storm off or call you a coward. She didn’t try to talk you out of it. She didn’t even ask you to stay for her. She just sat there with you in the grief of it. Like someone holding vigil beside a wound that couldn’t be stitched.
When she finally did speak, her voice was low. Rough.
“Felt like we were finally building something here,” She murmured. “Like maybe… we were gonna be okay.”
Your throat tightened. “We are gonna be okay.”
She turned to look at you. Not cold. Not bitter. Just…Wounded.
“It won’t be the same.”
You didn’t argue. You didn’t lie. You didn’t try to sugarcoat it or cushion the fall with reassurances you couldn’t promise.
Instead, you nodded.
“I know,” You said softly. “It really won’t.”
Yelena blinked slowly, like that answer hurt more than anything you could have said. But there was a kind of respect in it, too. The way she held your gaze. The way she didn’t look away.
You offered her the only thing you could.
“I’ll FaceTime you. Anytime you want. Doesn’t matter what hour it is. If I’m free, I’ll answer.”
She gave a soft, humorless snort and rolled her eyes–but the corner of her mouth twitched. “You say that now. Wait until I call you at three a.m.”
“I’ll still be there…Even if I’m half asleep.” You replied, nudging her shoulder with yours. She looked down at her hands for a moment, then looked back at you, her eyes glossy.
”I’m still mad at you.” You nod.
”I know.”
”And I still think you’re abandoning me…”
You nodded again, “I know that too.” Yelena’s jaw twitched. She looked like she was going to say something else, but then she just reached down, picked up your water bottle, and twisted the cap off. She took a sip and handed it back like nothing had happened. Like the training bay wasn’t holding the fractured pieces of your friendship in its concrete walls.
“Doesn’t mean I’m not gonna miss you,” she muttered.
You smiled, soft and aching. “I’d be worried if you didn’t.”
She glanced at you again—this time longer. The look in her eyes was weighted, but steadier now. Not entirely okay, but… accepting. Like the fight had drained out of her and what was left was only the sharp sting of goodbye.
“You better not disappear,” she said quietly. “Or I will come find you. And I’ll drag your sorry ass back here kicking and screaming.”
You laughed–really laughed, even as tears burned behind your eyes. “Okay. Deal.” She stood then, brushing her hands on her sweats, and offered you one last look before she walked off.
It was simple. Wordless.
But it said everything.
And after the door clicked shut behind her, you exhaled a breath you hadn’t realized you were holding.
The ache in your chest was still there. Still raw. Still full of Bob’s silence and Yelena’s resignation and the ghost of the team you were leaving behind.
But somewhere beneath it all…Was the first glimmer of peace.
———————————
That night, sleep didn’t come—it hovered just out of reach, like a memory you couldn’t hold onto. Every time you closed your eyes, your mind filled with static. Movement. Noise. A hundred moments pressing down on your chest all at once.
So you gave up trying.
The clock read 2:47 a.m. when you finally swung your legs over the edge of the bed, the floor cool beneath your bare feet. You pulled on a robe, soft and worn from too many laundry cycles, and padded quietly across the room. The boxes seemed to watch you as you passed—silent witnesses to the pieces of yourself you were leaving behind.
You didn’t bother with shoes. It was spring, and the air was warm enough to touch your skin without biting.
The elevator ride up to the roof was quiet, but your stomach twisted tighter with every passing floor. You weren’t sure what you were hoping to find up there–maybe just some air. Maybe some stillness.
But when the doors slid open with a soft ding, your breath caught in your throat.
Bob was there.
He was lying back on one of the outdoor couches, head tilted up toward the stars, arms folded across his chest. The glow of the rooftop lights had dimmed to their nighttime setting–just enough to paint the space in soft gold. You could see the outline of his shoulders rising and falling, slow and deep.
At the sound of the elevator, he lifted his head slightly. His eyes met yours for only a second before he turned away again and let his head drop back down with a quiet thud against the cushions.
You stepped out onto the roof, swallowing the lump that was already forming in your throat.
“Bob…” You called softly, moving toward him, “I’m leaving tomorrow morning.”
He didn’t answer.
“You can’t just let me go without saying goodbye.”
Still nothing.
You moved closer, your steps careful, hesitant. When you reached the couch, you saw he had rolled halfway onto his side–facing away from you now, his back rigid, spine curved like he was holding the weight of something that wouldn’t let go. There was just enough space behind him on the cushions. You lowered yourself gently, wedging into the curve his body didn’t fill. Close, but not pressing. Not yet at least.
“C’mon, Bob…” You murmured. “Can you please just talk to me?”
You heard it first. A soft, quiet sniffle.
Then a voice, broken in half:
“Am I not wo–worth staying for?”
The question hit you like a punch to the ribs. You blinked hard, reaching toward him before you could stop yourself. Your hand rested on his chest, over the thin cotton of his t-shirt—his heartbeat thudding unevenly beneath your palm.
“Bob…” You said, your voice catching. “Of course you are. Of course you are. But I can’t stay. I can’t be a Thunderbolt anymore.”
He didn’t look at you.
But you saw the tears glistening on the bridge of his nose, catching in the faint rooftop light as they slid down into the fabric of the pillow.
“So why don’t you ju–just quit the te–team and stay?” He asked, his voice barely above a whisper, thick and shaking. “Stay with me?” You closed your eyes, your thumb brushing gently back and forth against his chest.
“Because I need a clean slate,” You whispered. “I love you guys so much…But I can’t surround myself with these things anymore. I’m so tired of it.”
His hand rose shakily and settled over yours. His fingers curled around yours like he needed to hold onto something before it slipped away.
And his chest shook beneath your hand as he cried.
“I have been owned by people my entire life,” You said, your voice low and slow, every word weighted. “I never got to make decisions for myself. I never got the choice to be… who I am now. I was born into it. I didn’t get a say. I was punished for things I couldn’t control, and I had to pick up the pieces of myself that I never knew existed.”
Bob was silent, but his grip tightened slightly.
“I have never had a sense of normalcy,” You continued. “I’ve never experienced being on my own–really on my own–and being in control of my own life without the strict schedules of missions or handlers or daily combat briefings. I’ve been surviving for so long, Bob… And I want to live.”
You shifted closer, forehead resting gently between his shoulder blades, your breath warming the fabric of his shirt.
“I’m trying to find who I am outside of a weapon, outside of what I was raised to be. I need to know who that person is. Do you understand?” For a long time, he didn’t say anything. The only sound was the soft hum of the wind brushing across the roof, and the quiet, unsteady rhythm of Bob’s breathing.
Then, finally–so softly you almost didn’t hear it:
“I understand.” He turned his head slightly, just enough for you to see the side of his face. His eyes were rimmed red, lashes damp. “…But…” He whispered, voice cracking like a fault line beneath the surface, “I ca–can’t imagine living my life without you in it…”
The words struck something so deep inside you, you almost didn’t breathe.
Your heart seized.
A slow, aching twist that started in your chest and moved outward like a ripple through still water. Your eyes filled instantly, no warning, just heat behind your lashes and the sudden blurring of everything around him.
“Bob…” You breathed. The name didn’t even feel like a word–it was just grief in a single exhale. Heavy and fragile all at once.
But before you could say anything else, he moved.
His hand found yours, and with trembling fingers, he brought it to his mouth.
You felt his breath first–hot, unsteady. It fanned across your knuckles like the flicker of a flame. His lips hovered, trembling, and then your fingertips accidentally grazed the curve of his bottom lip. You flinched–barely–but the touch set your pulse reeling.
“Yo–You can’t say that,” You whispered, voice unsteady. “You can’t…”
He nodded, his eyes closed now, like he was bracing for impact.
“I kn–know,” He said, his voice thudding low in his throat. “But I need you to also understand the truth from my eyes as well… I ca–can’t keep that bottled in.”
A single tear broke free from your lashes and slipped down your cheek. You felt it trace your jaw, warm and cold all at once. You didn’t wipe it away.
And then–
His lips pressed to the tips of your fingers.
It wasn’t a kiss, not really.
It was something else.
Like a confession made in silence. A truth laid bare in skin and breath and trembling restraint. You felt the warmth of his mouth wetting your fingertips slightly, felt the tremor in his body as he held you there like he was hoping time might pause.
Like maybe if he just held on long enough, the rest of the world might forget to take you away.
The moment stretched, thick and reverent, until all you could do was whisper into it.
“I never wanted to hurt you.”
“I know,” Bob murmured, mouth still brushing your skin.
“I think I love you.” The words tumbled out before you could catch them–raw and stripped down and full of everything that had gone unsaid for too long.
You felt him still beneath your touch.
Then he exhaled–shaky, wrecked.
“I do lo–love you,” He whispered, broken and sure and barely there.
Your throat closed around the sound.
He finally turned to face you fully then–his eyes red and glassy, the soft streetlight glow catching his hair. And the way he looked at you…God. You’d never been looked at like that before. Like you were everywhere in his world. Like you had taken root in the hollow behind his ribs and nothing–not even the grief–could pull you out.
You leaned forward, forehead brushing his, and for a second the two of you just breathed the same air. Sharing silence like it was the only language that wouldn’t break you. Bob wrapped his arms around you like he didn’t know how else to stay whole.
There was no hesitation anymore. He just pulled you into him–tightly, fully–like he was trying to memorize the way you fit against his body. His hand slid up your back and cupped the base of your skull, his fingers trembling slightly in your hair. You buried yourself in his chest, the soft fabric of his shirt warm from his skin, damp from his tears.
“I sh–should’ve said it sooner…” He whispered, voice frayed at the edges. “And I know it’s too late no–now… But I wanted you to know before you le–left…”
You pressed your face harder against him, your forehead nudging the hollow of his collarbone. His scent wrapped around you like a balm–soft and warm and impossibly sweet. He smelled like vanilla bean and the faintest trace of brown sugar, like the last page of a well-read book and fresh sheets on a summer night. There was a lingering note of coffee in there too–familiar, comforting, so Bob.
“I wa–want you to be happy,” He murmured, his lips brushing the crown of your head. “And if th–this is the way you’ll be happy…Do what you need to do…”
A fresh wave of tears slipped down your cheeks, warm against his shirt, soaking into the cotton like ink into paper. You felt the rise and fall of his chest match your own–uneven and trembling, the both of you wrapped in grief you couldn’t outrun. Not this kind.
Neither of you spoke after that.
You just held each other, clinging to the fading moment, to the ache of what was about to be lost. The silence was thick, but not empty. It was shared. Like the pause between heartbeats before something new begins.
You didn’t know how long you sat there.
But eventually, when your sobs had softened to slow, silent exhales, you shifted your weight just slightly. Your hand moved to rest over his heart, and you tilted your head to look up at him, chin resting lightly on his chest.
“Did I ever tell you about the first time I was able to go outside?” you asked softly.
Bob blinked down at you, his eyes still red and rimmed with salt. He shook his head gently, brushing your cheek with the back of his hand in a way that made your throat clench.
“I was in a lab in Nebraska,” you began, voice distant, like it was echoing down a hallway of memory. “I’d just been transferred there. One of the lab assistants was going through my records…Noticed how often I got sick, how reactive my skin was. All my charts said the same thing–chronic immune issues, recurrent infections, photophobia–but no one ever questioned why.”
You swallowed.
“They asked if I’d ever been outside. And I told them no. I didn’t even know what ‘outside’ really meant.”
Bob’s brow furrowed, his fingers curling around your waist, pulling you in closer.
“They brought me out the next day. Just behind the facility, this patch of open field surrounded by chain-link and barbed wire. It wasn’t much, but it was sky. Real sky. And sunlight.” You exhaled slowly, remembering. “I stayed out there until my skin burned. My arms, my face, the back of my neck. I couldn’t stop shaking. But I didn’t care. I was sixteen. I had spent every day of my life inside a room with no windows. I wasn’t going to waste it. I wanted the full experience.”
Bob gave the smallest, broken smirk. It was laced with so much hurt, but also wonder. He was listening with his whole body.
And then you said, voice softer still:
“…When I first saw you in the Vault… I thought I was having the same experience.”
He blinked.
“You did?”
You nodded. “When you looked at me…I swear Bob, it was like I was seeing the sun for the first time…The awe…The ache in my chest…I knew from the moment I saw you…You were going to be someone special to me…Just like the sun.” His mouth opened slightly, as if he wanted to say something–but he didn’t have the words. He just stared at you like the world had stopped moving for a moment. Like you’d just told him something too big to hold.
Then–
Ding.
The soft mechanical chime of the elevator broke the stillness, and both your heads turned.
Bucky stepped onto the rooftop, eyes adjusting quickly. His brows raised when he saw you tangled in Bob’s arms, cheeks flushed, eyes swollen from crying.
He froze.
“…Sorry,” He said quietly. “Hope I’m not interrupting.”
You sat up slowly, gently pulling away from Bob–but not far. You looked at Bucky and gave a faint shake of your head.
“No,” You said softly. “You’re not.”
And that was where the conversation ended.
——————————
The quinjet loomed like a shadow against the early morning sky, sleek and still beneath the soft haze of sunrise. The compound’s landing pad was bathed in gold light, long shadows stretching beneath your feet as the team worked in quiet rhythm, hauling your boxes up the ramp one by one.
Everyone was there.
Except Bob.
You scanned the area again–half-hoping, half-desperate–but his tall frame was nowhere in sight. Not lingering by the cargo bay. Not leaning against the railing like he always did. Not even watching from a distance the way you knew he sometimes did when he thought you wouldn’t notice.
Gone.
After everything you shared on the roof last night, part of you had believed–naively, maybe–that he’d come. That he’d meet your eyes one last time. That you’d have a goodbye that felt like something final and full and whole. Something sacred. But the empty space where he should’ve been said everything you didn’t want to hear.
And your heart cracked. Quietly. With no fanfare. Just a hollow snap beneath your ribs.
The last box clunked into place in the cargo hold. You stood at the foot of the ramp, hands hanging uselessly at your sides, watching the team slowly gather near you, one by one.
Alexei came first. He was cradling your coffee machine under one arm–comically oversized in his grip–and he set it down gently before reaching for you. His hug was firm. Solid. The kind of hug that wrapped you in safety without words.
His arms enveloped you fully, a wall of warmth and steady breath as he muttered gruffly, “Is always place for you at my table. No matter where that table is.” He squeezed once, hard, then stepped back like anything more would undo him.
Ava followed. Her hug was briefer, more reserved, but no less sincere. She touched your upper arms and rested her forehead lightly against yours. “You come visit when you can…We’ll miss you a lot.” You nodded, throat tight, and she offered a faint smile before stepping aside.
Walker surprised you.
He stood awkwardly for a moment, scratching the back of his neck like he was unsure whether a goodbye was earned between you. Then he stepped forward, arms spreading almost defensively like he expected to be swatted away. But when you let him hug you, he pulled you in–not hard, but secure. Not rigid, but genuine. His hand patted your back once, and he muttered under his breath, “It was fun working with you…And I hope you find what you’re looking for…”
You smiled, and let out a small breath, “Thanks, Walker.” Bucky was last before Yelena. He stood a little off to the side, arms crossed, jaw set. But when he stepped forward, it wasn’t with the stoic air he wore in the field—it was something softer. Tired. Human. He looked at you like he wanted to say more, but all he did was pull you into a single-armed hug, metal arm staying at his side.
“When you figure out what ‘home’ really means…Let me know…Maybe I’ll find mine too.” He murmured.
Your throat closed up. “You can visit anytime. Seriously.”
He nodded, releasing you gently, his lips twitching into something almost like a smile. “One day. I will.”
Then it was just Yelena.
And everything in you stilled.
She didn’t rush. She walked to you like she was measuring every step. Then she opened her arms without a word, and you crashed into them.
Her hug was everything.
Tight. Unyielding. Unapologetically emotional. Her fingers curled into the back of your shirt, and her breath hitched against your shoulder.
“I don’t forgive you yet,” She whispered shakily, “but I’m trying.”
You nodded, arms squeezing her just as tight. “I know.”
She sniffled, pulled back just enough to look you in the eye. Her mascara was smudged.
“I’ll call you once I land and get everything sorted,” You said, voice trembling.
“You better,” she said, and tried to blink away the tears. “Or I will track you down.”
You nodded again, unable to say anything else without falling apart.
And then–it was time.
You turned, climbing the ramp slowly. Every step away from them felt like it dragged a little piece of your heart behind. You didn’t look back. You couldn’t. If you did, you weren’t sure you’d be able to leave at all.
Inside the cockpit, you slipped into the seat, fingers shaking slightly as you ran through launch protocol. The quinjet hummed around you. Systems came online. The ramp sealed shut behind you. You typed in the coordinates for your new house, and pressed enter.
You stared out at the horizon, waiting for the weight in your chest to lessen.
But it didn’t, and as the jet lifted off–smooth, steady, rising into the quiet morning–you pressed your forehead against the glass and whispered so low only the sky could hear:
“Goodbye, Bob.”
And the clouds swallowed you whole.
———————————
The quinjet touched down in a slow, whisper-soft descent, the grass parting gently beneath it as though the land had been expecting you. You powered down the systems one by one, the low hum of machinery giving way to stillness–pure and uninterrupted. There were no voices. No distant alarms. No radio chatter or metal doors hissing open in the background.
Just silence.
When the ramp hissed open, the world met you with a breath of spring.
The air was cool–cooler than it had been at the compound–but not cold. It wrapped around your skin like a clean sheet pulled fresh from the line. There was a weight to it, not heavy, but full. Damp with dew. Sweet with the scent of tilled soil, blooming clover, and the soft tang of wild lilacs carried from somewhere far down the slope.
You stepped onto the grass, and the earth gave a little beneath your feet. The field rolled out around you like a green sea, golden in the sunlight. The quinjet stood in the middle of it like some strange, sleeping bird. A few feet away, tucked against a thicket of trees and set back from the gravel path, was your house.
Your house.
Your throat tightened as you looked at it.
It wasn’t grand. Wasn’t sleek or modern or fortified with anything but wood and love.
But it was everything.
A one-story farmhouse with soft grey-blue siding and white trim that had weathered seasons of wind and sun. The porch stretched across the front like open arms, its columns uneven and chipped but sturdy. A rickety wooden swing hung on rusted chains from one corner, moving slightly in the breeze. The railing was scuffed in places, like someone had leaned against it a hundred times to watch the sun go down. Ivy had started to creep along one edge.
There were windows everywhere.
Tall ones. Bare ones. Not a single one had bars. They were thrown open to the wind like someone had once opened them and never thought to close them again. Light poured from the inside, golden and warm, dancing over the warped floorboards of the porch.
You took a step forward.
And then another.
The mailbox stood on a crooked wooden post, its red flag bent sideways like a tired elbow. You popped it open and found the envelope tucked inside. Your name was written across the front in soft cursive. Inside: one brass key.
Your fingers curled around it.
It was heavier than you thought it would be. Not physically. Just…Symbolically. Tangibly. Like something final.
You climbed the porch steps slowly, savoring the sound of each creak under your feet. They weren’t sharp or alarming–just lived in. Familiar. You reached the front door and slid the key into the lock.
It turned with a quiet, satisfying click.
And then you stepped inside.
The warmth hit you first.
It wasn’t the kind of warmth that came from heat or sunlight. It was the kind that came from home. From a place that had been touched, loved, settled in–even if only by someone preparing it for you.
The floor beneath your feet was hardwood–old, slightly warped, but recently cleaned. A wide area rug stretched across the living room, woven in soft tones of sage, clay, and wheat. A couch was tucked beneath a large window, throw blankets tossed lazily over one arm. There were mismatched pillows, soft and frayed at the seams, like they had been used to prop up lazy Sunday afternoons.
To the right, the kitchen opened up–warm wood counters, a farmhouse sink with a deep basin, and cabinets painted buttercream yellow. A cast iron kettle sat on the stove. The window above the sink looked out into the field, and the breeze was gently lifting the gauzy curtains.
There was a small dining table tucked into the corner, set with two chairs. One of the seats had a tiny chip in the backrest. It didn’t look lonely. It looked like someone had pulled it out and sat there for hours, sipping coffee while the wind spoke against the windows.
You moved forward and set your keys in the ceramic dish that waited on the entryway table.
They landed with a soft clink.
You smiled.
It was the first real smile you’d felt in weeks. Maybe longer. A smile that didn’t ask anything from you. A smile that came from a chest slowly, slowly uncoiling.
You walked further into the house. Past the fireplace. Past the faded print on the wall of rolling hills and prairie skies. Past the stack of firewood and the tiny woven basket someone had left on the coffee table filled with lavender sachets and a handwritten note: Welcome home.
And that’s when you heard it.
A voice–low and familiar, carved with hesitation, but laced with that gentle brand of humor only one man ever used on you.
“You’re going to ha–have to get a better security system…” You stopped mid-step. Every hair on your body stood up. The air shifted around you–suddenly warmer, suddenly sharper. You turned slowly, your feet rooted to the hardwood, your breath caught somewhere between your lungs and your ribs.
The voice had come from the back hallway.
From the open doorway at the far end.
And when you stepped into the frame and followed it with your eyes–you saw him.
Bob.
Leaning casually against the bedroom door frame like he belonged there. Like he’d always been there. He was wearing grey sweatpants and a navy blue crewneck, the sleeves pushed up to his forearms, exposing the lines of his hands–familiar, scarred, warm. His hair was tousled, and wind-tangled. And his mouth–God, that soft, crooked smile was already stretched across his face.
His eyes flicked over your expression, and something about the way he looked at you made the shock in your chest soften. Melt. Like the earth had tilted just slightly under your feet but settled in a better position.
“I th–thought,” He started, his voice cracking slightly, “Instead of saying goodbye…I’d be the fi–first to say hello.” Your mouth opened, but no sound came out at first.
You blinked in shock.
And then–your smile broke through, wide and disbelieving, laced with something just this side of laughter. “How did you… How did you know? And how the hell did you get here?”
He pushed off the doorway with one shoulder and walked toward you slowly, like he didn’t want to spook you. His hands were tucked into the pockets of his sweats, and his eyes never left your face.
“Well…” He said, shrugging, “I as–asked Val.”
You raised your brows, still trying to catch up. “You asked Val?”
“She’s still ki–kind of scared of me snapping, so she…” He gave you a sheepish, apologetic glance. “Gave me the information pretty fast.”
That made you huff out a laugh.
He paused a few feet away, then looked down for a second. “Then I just…Fl–Flew here.”
You stared at him. “You used Sentry?”
He nodded once. No shame. “Of co–course I did.”
Your hand rose to your mouth, trying to hide the slow, surprised grin spreading across your face. “Jesus, Bob.”
He shrugged again. Like it wasn’t a big deal. Like flying to you was as natural as taking the subway. There was a pause. Just the two of you standing there in the middle of your new living room, the breeze moving through the open windows, the quiet pulse of shared history hanging between you.
Then Bob added, voice softening:
“Af–After you told me about that story yesterday…I thought you were go–going to be moving here.”
You tilted your head at him, warmth blooming slow and thick in your chest.
He smiled again, smaller this time. “Glad I caught on and that you didn’t just ra-randomly tell me that story about Nebraska for the hell of it.”
You laughed under your breath, a sheepish little sound, and rolled your eyes. “Even though it was still relevant…”
“Mhm,” He hummed, and then his gaze drifted past you, scanning the space like he was seeing it all for the first time–the porch swing, the chipped paint, the breeze in the curtains, the scent of lavender and old wood. “It’s ni–nice.”
You nodded. “It is.”
He looked back at you. His eyes were soft, and gentle, glistening in the lighting.
“Is it okay…If I st–stay for a little?” He asked.
Your breath hitched–just for a second–but the answer was already in your chest before he’d finished the question. You nodded once, slow and sure, the weight of your breath caught just beneath your ribs.
“Of course…” you murmured, voice soft. Then–after a beat, after a shift in the air that felt impossibly delicate–you added, “But I need to do something that I should’ve done last night.”
Bob blinked. His eyes searched yours—gentle, uncertain, wide like he hadn’t dared to hope for this exact thing. His hands slid a little deeper into his pockets, like he didn’t trust them not to reach for you on instinct.
You stepped forward. Just one step. Then another.
And when you were close enough to feel his breath on your face, you looked at him–really looked at him.
At the soft barely–there freckles scattered across his cheeks, at the faint lines beneath his eyes from sleepless nights, at the way his bottom lip trembled just slightly, as if bracing for something too good to be true.
“I should’ve kissed you last night,” You whispered.
His breath caught.
The seconds that passed between you then were slow and golden and suspended in something you couldn’t name. Something like awe. Something like gravity giving you mercy.
And when you rose onto the balls of your feet and brought your hand to the side of his face–fingertips ghosting along his cheekbone–he leaned into it like it was instinct. Like he didn’t remember how to breathe without you.
Your noses brushed.
His lashes fluttered.
And then, finally–
You kissed him.
It was slow. Soft. Barely a breath at first.
But God, it was everything.
It was months of unsaid words, of near-misses and held-back glances and aching silence pressed into a single point of contact. It was the exhale of something sacred. The kind of kiss you only get once in a lifetime. The kind that feels like a promise made in a language no one else will ever speak.
Bob’s lips were warm–tentative at first, trembling slightly against yours like he couldn’t quite believe it was happening. But then he sank into you, deepening it just a little. One hand lifted–hesitant, reverent–and cradled your jaw like you were something precious. His thumb brushed the edge of your cheekbone. His nose bumped yours gently.
You sighed against his mouth. A sound that was equal parts relief and wonder.
When you finally pulled back, your foreheads stayed pressed together, your noses still brushing, breath shared in the quiet space between your mouths.
His voice was barely a whisper.
“…Wo–Worth the wait.”
You smiled–soft, a little wrecked, fully his. “Yeah,” you breathed. “It was…And I’m glad you came…”
#marvel fanfiction#lewis pullman#spotify#bob reynolds#bob reynolds imagines#bob reynolds x reader#bob x reader#robert reynolds#robert reynolds fanfic#robert reynolds x reader#bob reynolds blurb#bob reynolds angst#bob reynolds fluff#bob reynolds x you#bob reynolds x y/n#bob reynolds fanfic#robert reynolds blurb#robert reynolds angst#robert reynolds x you#robert reynolds fluff#lewis pullman the man you are#lewis pullman characters#thunderbolts fan fiction#bob thunderbolts#thunderbolts*#thunderbolts fanfic#x reader angst#x reader fluff#the sentry#the void
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notes, I think I just opened opportunities for yall's horny ass.
genre. smut, MINORS DNI!
★ Roommate!Sukuna the end of the beginning.
The apartment was dark when Sukuna walked in.
Only the soft flicker of the TV lit the living room, casting sleepy colors across your face as you dozed on the couch. Legs tucked under a blanket, big old t-shirt hanging off your shoulder — his shirt, actually. You didn’t even notice it still had the faint bleach stains near the hem.
But he did.
He was halfway through kicking off his boots when he saw it — the way the oversized collar drooped, how your bra strap had slipped down, barely hanging on your shoulder. The neckline was so wide it might as well not exist. Just skin. Bare skin. Your chest rising and falling under soft cotton that definitely wasn’t doing shit to hide anything.
He scoffed under his breath, jaw tightening.
You had no idea what you were doing to him. Or maybe you did. That was worse.
You stirred, blinking blearily as you sat up. “Oh. You’re home?”
He dropped his keys. “Obviously.”
You yawned, stretching. One arm above your head. The shirt lifted. That tiny glimpse of skin above your shorts made something inside him go dead quiet.
“You gonna keep dressing like that,” he muttered, stepping closer, “or are you just fuckin’ with me now?”
You blinked, confused, still half-asleep. “Huh?”
Sukuna tilted his head, voice sharp. “You think I haven’t noticed?”
You sat up straighter, cheeks warm. “I wasn’t—”
He laughed once, bitter. “Yeah, you were.”
He was standing in front of you now, towering, eyes dark. His voice dropped lower.
“You’ve been doing this for months.”
You swallowed. The air was too hot. “...And?”
He didn’t answer with words. Just reached out, slowly, fingers slipping under your jaw, tilting your face up to him.
Then he kissed you.
Hard.
Messy.
All that tension — the near-touches, the stolen glances, the biting insults that never really meant go away — it poured out through his mouth on yours. Tongues sliding, breath catching, hands gripping. His teeth tugged your bottom lip just to hear you whimper.
He pulled back, eyes heavy.
“Get on your knees.”
Your breath hitched.
You slid off the couch and dropped to the floor in front of him, hands already tugging his sweatpants down. He was already hard — thick, heavy, leaking — and shit, you couldn’t help but lick your lips.
Sukuna spread his legs slightly, slouching into the cushions like he owned the whole damn world. “Go on,” he rasped. “Been teasing for months. Show me what that mouth’s good for.”
You wrapped your lips around him, slowly, tongue circling the tip as your hand stroked what you couldn’t take right away. Sukuna hissed above you, hand sliding into your hair, not pushing — just holding. Anchoring.
“Fuck,” he muttered when you hollowed your cheeks. “Knew you’d be good at this.”
You moaned around him, and he twitched in your mouth.
His hips flexed, shallow thrusts into your throat as you found a rhythm, spit dripping down your chin, eyes glassy from the stretch. He watched you like a starving animal, thumb brushing over your cheekbone every time you looked up.
“You like this?” he growled. “Like being on your knees for me?”
You nodded, mouth still full of him.
When he came, it was with a sharp groan, hips stuttering, his grip tightening in your hair. You swallowed every drop, breathing hard when he finally let go.
You wiped your mouth with the back of your hand, still kneeling. He looked down at you — flushed, chest rising, the corner of his mouth twitching.
Then he leaned forward, brushing your hair back gently, and pressed a soft kiss to your temple.
A single, quiet peck.
Then he stood, pulling his sweats back up.
“You know what this is now,” he said, voice low but final.
And just before he walked to his room, he smirked over his shoulder.
“Try not to fall in love, princess.”
Door shut.
Your heart didn’t.
Welcome to roommates with benefits.
Taglist, @humeysaga @williamafton26 @aranisbaee @probablynotleahhhh @probablynotleahhhh. @beaniesayshi @levifiance @rinofcike @fushiguroooozzz @gojoscumslut @bellsoftheball @kunascutie. @after-laughter-come-tears. @minasuniverse, @chewiebee @ilovebeansya @drowsysausagedog
#jjk#jjk x you#roommate jjk#jujutsu kaisen#jujutsu kaisen x reader#jujutsu kaisen fluff#jjk x reader#sukuna#roommate sukuna#sukuna fluff#sukuna scenario#sukuna imagines#sukuna x reader#sukuna x you#sukuna drabbles#sukuna ff#sukuna smutt#jjk smut#jujutsu kaisen smut
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WAY OUT THERE 𖠰 ⋆☾𓃦☽⋆⁺₊✧🪵𓇢𓆸



volume five — todo a su tiempo
✦ ── pairing: lumberjack!sukuna x citygirl!reader
✦ ── synopsis: taking a hike, alone, in a massive forest to escape your mundane life may not have been the greatest idea you'd conjured up—a realization you'd come to soon after you managed to lose your map miles inland. but when a lumberjack who knows the land like the back of his hand offers you a place to stay, you think maybe your life isn't so tragic after all. besides, for the sake of your safety, who knows what lingers in the shadows after nightfall?
✦ ── contents: lost in the forest au, forced proximity, bantering, angst, trauma/torture aspects, minor injuries, eventual romance, eventual smut, no use of y/n, more tags to be added.
✦ ── a/n: all of the comments and feedback i've received so far has been absolutely amazing, it always encourages me to plow through volumes! i appreciate and love all of you <3
✦ ── word count: 4.9k
archive ─ playlist
series masterlist - previous volume - volume six
art by outdmilk on twt
The following days you could only describe were bliss.
Sukuna and you had established a set—yet, unspoken—routine. You’d wake up, hop to the kitchen, and get breakfast started.
He’d disappear into the bathroom, hacking up a storm with his toothbrush and shuffle into work clothes.
You’d learned how he’d dress his eggs, that he only drank his coffee black which you scowled at upon discovery, and which mug he liked to sip from.
You even started packing him a lunch—which he called unnecessary every single time despite never turning it down.
You got comfortable in the clothing he’d bought you, despite having no sensitivity for fashion outside of red flannels and blue jeans.
If he wasn’t going to accept payment in the form of a wire transfer, you were going to ensure that you were going to pay him back through duties despite still being incredibly indebted to him.
He was a jerk, but a jerk who saved your life.
You dusted off his entire CD collection, reorganized his dining sets after polishing them, and scrubbed his tiles until they shined.
Twice.
From what you could puzzle together, it seemed that he worked down at a sawmill and treaded down the hill to reach his pick-up before heading into work. The extra lumber he’d chop on occasion, he’d leave in a lump come winter time when it’d be too cold to stand outside for long periods of time.
You’d bothered him quite a bit the next day about putting up a clothesline out back, which he found irksome but completed nonetheless that evening, along with fixing the dryer.
You thus called the clothesline useless if he was just going to fix the dryer and he flicked your forehead.
He’d hammer you about checking your bandages and curse you out when you’d forget, and you’d raid his book collection and sit beneath a tree to pass time.
Uraume was quite the companion—plopping on you to rub their mud-covered mane to which you’d giggle at.
You’d both fall asleep beneath the haze of the afternoon heat that hung sweetly in the air. Days were old, nights were young. You’d tan your shoulders, haunted by the melancholy of youth. The sky felt bigger than everything.
You’d scoop yourself three helpings of ice cream that’d dribble down your hand, Uraume lapping it up when it’d muddled around your palm.
The rusted windchimes on the patio became your favorite noise.
Nothing made sense except your virtue for stillness. You knew nothing was okay, but it felt otherwise.
You occasionally found yourself lurking near the shed, toying with the lock and peering between the slivers of cracked wood, but it was completely black inside—further frustrating your curiosity.
You’d argue with Sukuna every here and then—bickering about who’d tracked dirt in, when you’d use all the hot water before he had the chance to shower, or Sukuna telling you that you’d talked too much when you’d feel restless after being cooped up all day, your only friend Uraume who wasn’t of much help since they couldn’t actually speak back to you.
Sukuna was mean but he was sufferable.
“You ever try a root beer float?”
You had your hand resting on the side of his TV, giving it a couple of smacks to get rid of the static. Thankfully he had cable but you could tell he rarely used the old box. “Who hasn’t?”
He grunted at your bluntness, pulling a beer can from the fridge along with a pint of vanilla ice cream. “How about a root beer float with beer?”
You turned to frown at him, obviously not excited at the mixture of ale and milk. “That sounds disgusting.”
“Don’t knock it ‘till you try it, city girl.”
𖠰 ⋆☾𓃦☽⋆⁺₊✧🪵𓇢𓆸
“Where on Earth did you learn this?”
You shoved an orange plastic straw into your mason jar that was both foamy from the sprite and beer can you’d dumped in along with a hefty scoop of ice cream.
You were yet to be sick of ice cream.
You swirled your straw, eyeing it suspiciously as Sukuna had already spooned half of it down.
“Lots of free time,” he smirked, a line of frothy ice cream above his upper lip.
You grimaced, tossing a napkin at him and taking a sip.
You were a little pissed off that you liked it.
“Aren’t these called dirty root beer floats?” You quirked with an emphasis, metal spoon churning the thick cream. You pulled your knee up to your chest, resting your chin against the cap.
He shrugged, adjusting in his seat and reaching a long armover to the fridge. He propped it open, grabbing himself yet another can of beer to guzzle down.
You could only watch in awe at his bottomless pit of a stomach.
Pushing away your glass, you folded your arms over your knee and leaned forward. “Are you an orphan?”
He side-eyed you mid-sip, surprised at your sudden and blunt inquiry, bringing the can down just to crush it with his hand. “What’s it to you?”
You tilted your head, before retreating. “Nothing. Just curious.”
“Stop poking your nose where it ain’t belong,” he scoffed, pushing up from his seat and tossing the mutilated can into the sink.
Your nose scrunched, knowing you’d yet again managed to cross unmarked territory. Your time here was short, and though Sukuna simply seemed to be a hostile and reticent guy, you felt like there was more to him somehow. It was naive to think he’d care to express it, though. You don’t think you’ve ever met anyone more closed off than him.
There was something stewing beneath the surface of his hardened demeanor you couldn’t place.
But that was coming from a woman with forever bubbling emotions that seemed to simmer indefinitely.
You hated small talk—you’d never been able to stomach it. The feigned smiles and comments about weather or formal confabulation. You’d sworn against it after your divorce, severing most ties with a family that indulged in table talk and pleasantries.
His footfalls disappeared into his room and you huffed, peering out the window and feeling a sense of frustration, a moon-struck madness cast upon you.
Until he returned to the kitchen just moments later, a box in his hand that you’d become quite familiar with.
He got to one knee before you, resting your foot atop his muscled thigh as he undressed your ankle.
You pretended not to twitch when his calloused fingers grazed your bare skin, his touch sending shivers down your spine. You didn’t know an ankle could be so ticklish.
“My parents,” he started, nearly mumbling under his breath. “Killed a real long time ago.”
You quirked a brow, something you couldn’t decipher lurching in your chest as you shuffled in your seat.
“Joined the army with my brother. Half-brother. We got into some argument, way back, n’ I haven’t seen him since. Just left him on some mission and never turned back.”
You stayed quiet for a moment, watching Sukuna’s hands still near your ankle as those tightly etched lines on his face only dug deeper, as if the only expression he could reserve was a scowl.
You inhaled sharply, worried that you were treading on thin ice already. “What’s he like? Your brother.”
Sukuna scoffed. “My brother? Real arrogant bastard.” He placed an antiseptic wipe into his mouth just to tear it open with his canines. “Aggressive, unhinged.”
“Like you,” you quickly added with a tug of your lip.
Sukuna glanced up, a sarcastic grin coloring him before he leaned forward to flick your forehead, a gesture he’d gotten incredibly comfortable with executing.
“Ouch!” You yelped, hands flying to shield your forehead as Sukuna snickered under his breath. “The hell was that for?”
“For being a lil brat,” he jeered back, finishing up the dressing.
You slowly lowered your hands, resting them on your thighs and frowning.
“Been quite a few days now,” he started, effectively changing the subject, lowering your leg and peering up at you. “I’ll walk you down the main trail first thing. Had someone pick up my shift.”
You could feel your heart skip a beat, shuffling in your seat as you averted eye contact. “Well, I’m not sure if I’m totally healed and—.”
“If you complain too much, I'll just drag you by the ankle.”
Or in normal, non-Sukuna terms, he’ll carry you on his back like he did up the hill.
“But I-I,” you began to fumble over your words, perturbation spiking. “I haven’t completed my fill yet and cleaned enough—.”
He spoke your name curtly, a volume slightly raised above your own that it had you come to a halt in your rambles, heat warming your cheeks discomfitingly. “Tomorrow morning. Won’t say it again.”
A rock of desperation sat thick in your throat, feeling yourself develop a case of cottonmouth in real time as Sukuna retreated to his room for the evening. You fidgeted with the hem of your shirt, biting the inside of your cheek.
To put it plainly—you didn’t want to leave.
You liked it here compared to your real life in the city. It was stupid to think that you could continue to mooch off of Sukuna by sleeping on his wearing and scruffy couch and cook him two meals and think he’d allowed you to stay.
But he’d done far more than enough. Opened his home to you and fed you and allowed you autonomy with nothing in return.
You didn’t like being indebted, but you did like Sukuna’s shabby little nook in the forest.
Lamentably, your little vacation and respite had come to an end.
In all honesty, you probably could’ve walked down by day three. But you ignored your near-healed injury and deluded yourself into thinking this newfound peace was something you could continue to indulge in.
You plopped down on the couch, crossing your arms over your chest, eyes dialed in on his popcorn ceiling marked with water stains and dust.
It’d only been a few days, and though you hated how abrasive and standoffish Sukuna was, he was possibly the first person to really notice you.
His eyes didn’t rake over you and allow you to blend into the crowd. He treated you like a nuisance at times and your banter was practically never-ending, but you’d oddly found a sense of mutual understanding between each other.
Two people who felt abandoned by the real world.
You shut your eyes, dragging your hands over your face as you pulled the thin sheet over your head, attempting to shake off your plethora of emotions you didn’t have the energy to sort out.
𖠰 ⋆☾𓃦☽⋆⁺₊✧🪵𓇢𓆸
“Don’t even think about forgettin’ nothin’. I’m not coming all the way back up.”
You rolled your eyes, adjusting the rucksack on your back as you shuffled down the wooden steps. “I won’t. You got a switchblade I can borrow?”
Sukuna eyed you as you leaned over to tie your boots, your face shielded from him as your unnecessarily wide-brimmed hat flopped in the early morning haze. “Uh. No. You’re outta luck,” he murmured, shoving a hand into his jean pockets and glancing down the hill.
You looked up at him from the ground, unable to hide your blatant surprise. “You’re kidding. A lumberjack doesn’t own a blade?”
He just shrugged, averting his gaze and narrowing his eyes. “We gonna get goin’ or what?”
You scowled, hopping to your feet and dusting your knees off. “Wow. You really have mastered the art of deflection,” you taunted, walking past him just to nudge his arm.
He flinched at the contact, watching you pad down the trail with a permanent scowl, the ink on his face contorting with each antagonized expression.
“So,” you called out minutes later, only a few feet behind him as he’d overtaken your slow pace easily. You didn’t even try to keep up with his long strides, as if he couldn’t get rid of you any quicker. “What’s the plan if we’re cornered by a pack of mutts again?”
Sukuna only ignored you, but you could see his irritation light up in the way his fingers flexed at his sides.
Just the sound of your voice seemed to infuriate him sometimes.
You jogged up towards him, craning your head up and squinting against the harsh rays of the sun tethered high in the sky, her light filtered through flitting leaves. “No plan? Because a switch blade would be of some real relief—“
“Do you ever stop talking?”
You shrugged, undeterred. “You’ve asked me that before. You should know the answer.”
𖠰 ⋆☾𓃦☽⋆⁺₊✧🪵𓇢𓆸
“Are we almost thereeeee,” you whined out, hands hanging limp at your sides as you dragged your feet.
It felt like your muscles were on fire, tensing with each movement and flaring as your exhaustion only roared on.
“Nope.”
Sukuna was at your side now, irritated that you kept falling too far behind and resigning to your slow tempo.
You continued to huff and puff and bitch and moan, but as much as Sukuna hated to hear your grievances, he also enjoyed seeing you suffer in the afternoon heat.
Sweat beaded across your browline and down your spine, your top clinging to the perspiration. Your eyes hung low, as if you could pass out any moment from heat stroke and your throat had gone dry after chugging all of your water.
Sukuna on the other hand? The guy was in tip-top shape. And it drove you mad. His stamina was one to rival a wolf with.
“C-can’t we take a break?” You groaned out of breath.
Sukuna let out consecutive tsks, watching as your rucksack made you hunch over like you were about to topple a stack of dominoes. “Now how could we when we’re so close.”
You shot him a glare. “You literally just said we weren’t close.”
“Heats’ got me hallucinating,” he sarcastically defended, arching a brow at you with a sharp grin.
You opened your mouth to call him a slew of curses that equated him as crass and crazy, when your foot stalled.
You gasped, effectively tripping over your own foot as you stepped on your undrawn shoe lace, arms flying forward.
Sukuna’s eyes bulged, arms instinctively reaching forward and stepping in front of you.
And as clumsy as you were, your foot caught the back of his, pushing him backwards, your hands smacking against his chest.
You both fell with a timber-like thud, crashing into a pile of brush. You could hear Sukuna wince and grunt as he broke your fall.
His massive hands were around your waist, your face stuffed into the crook of his neck and accidentally taking in his scent—cigarettes and a woody musk so undeniably him.
The two of you were still for a moment—could’ve been mere seconds, could’ve been minutes—until you inhaled sharply and pushed off of him, falling to the side with an unceremonious thunk!
Sukuna stared at the sky, arms flopped to his sides lazily as you scrambled over words, heat rising from your nape all the way to the crown of your ears. “I- Sorry I didn’t mean to—,” you stopped yourself, eyes fixing on his palm.
He seemed to have sliced it open against brush, a bleeding wound the size of your pinky across the front of his hand.
“Oh my god, your hand,” you gasped, fingers reaching out to smooth a finger near the broken skin, but Sukuna seemed to beat you to the punch.
He sat up quickly, tugging his hand away from you like you’d burn him if you came into contact and getting to his feet. “Christ, woman. I’m fine.”
You furrowed your brows, swallowing a thick lump of contrite lodged in your throat. “Are you sure? Your hand looked—.”
“We going or what?” He interrupted, a deep contempt and frustration brewing on his face, like he’d tasted coffee somehow even more bitter than his regular order.
He scoffed at your momentary silence and picked up his pace down the path, fingers flexing at his side again.
You bit your lip, scrambling to your feet and hurrying after him.
Though, you made sure to never fall too far behind this time, just a few paces behind him.
𖠰 ⋆☾𓃦☽⋆⁺₊✧🪵𓇢𓆸
For the duration of what was left, you kept your gaze lowered on the floor before you, occasionally kicking a pebble and watching it scurry away.
Sukuna kept his pace manageable. But he didn’t utter a word to you.
The tension was more than palpable—like a thick, tempestuous cloud hanging over the both of you that neither of you dared to acknowledge.
Your heart never really slowed to a resting pace—whether that be from another unbridled argument with Sukuna or the exertion of the walk. You didn’t dare attempt to decipher which possibility it may be.
You picked at the skin around your nails, feeling like a little kid who’d gotten in trouble and blindly followed their parents around.
Thankfully, this was the last you’d be seeing of him. No more stifling arguments that left your skin flaring.
“My truck is just down the road.” Sukuna suddenly broke the silence, his pace coming to a stop.
“What?” You squeaked out immediately, peering up at him from the rim of your hat.
He gave you a strange look, cocking his head to the side reluctantly. “Uh, we’re here. I wouldn’t mind giving you a lift back to—.”
“No!” You interrupted, shaking your hands in front of you. You hadn’t even noticed how long the two of you had been walking, the rushing sound of cars from a nearby freeway augmenting your senses.
Sukuna narrowed his eyes, gaze dancing across you. If you were any less lucid, you could’ve sworn you’d seen remorse coloring him.
“I’ve got it figured out from here. Thanks, Sukuna,” you breathed out slowly, a wide smile across your cheeks that pinched the skin uncomfortably.
He couldn’t shake off the odd feeling churning in his chest, coughing it away and averting his gaze with his hands planted on his hips. “Suit yourself.”
You glanced at the open road, just past it was a gas station where you’d be able to rest before calling for a ride.
“I’d say see you around but we both know how unlikely that is,” you admitted with a dry laugh, goosebumps littering your body in a cold sweat.
He side-eyed you, jaw clenched as he mulled over something in silence.
But you could barely take it anymore.
“Goodbye, Sukuna,” you whispered, any louder and it wouldn’t be a promise.
He brought a hand over his hat, before bowing his head, real lumberjack-like.
“Bye, city girl.”
𖠰 ⋆☾𓃦☽⋆⁺₊✧🪵𓇢𓆸
You nearly passed out at the rest stop, chugging three bottles of water and splashing your face in the restroom before plopping on one of those window seats.
The cup of ramen you downed had your head lolling, belly satiated and brain fuzzy as you waited for your phone to charge up.
Halfway through day three with Sukuna, your phone had died and you didn’t care to charge it.
Not like you could anyway. You didn’t bring a charger and Sukuna had a phone at least several generations behind with a cracked screen. You wondered if he even cared to use it.
Your phone buzzed on and, lo and behold, fifteen missed calls and twenty texts ranging from your boss to your colleagues.
And one missed call from your mother.
Great.
You skimmed your fingers through your hair, ordering an uber. Truthfully, you didn’t want to deal with any of this until you slept for ten hours minimum but you didn’t have the luxury to ignore all of your issues as much as you’d like to.
So you hopped from your seat and rolled your shoulder, dragging your feet to your rideshare.
𖠰 ⋆☾𓃦☽⋆⁺₊✧🪵𓇢𓆸
“Look who decided to show up.”
You rolled your eyes at your peach-skinned boss, stepping into the shabby building with flickering neon logo lights nestled between a 24-hour convenience shop and a hole-in-the-wall bar and karaoke.
“I already texted you and called to apologize. Please don’t make my migraine worse,” you shot back, rolling your neck as exhaustion still seemed to plague you. You plopped down on the weathered couch, the familiar sinking feeling having you toss your head back and groan. “Is Shoko out on a run?”
She padded over to you, half of her face shielded from the milky braid she was so adamant on wearing all of the time. To be quite frank, you didn’t know what the other side of her face even looked like. Which was odd for the duration you’d worked under her. “She’ll be back in a few. You do understand these are grounds to fire you, yes?”
“My god, Mei Mei. We both know you’re not going to do that,” you sighed, feeling like there were bare canines skimming over your nape, any harder and they make break your irritated skin. “Take three days out of my pay. Happy?”
She bristled, turning on her heel and leaning against her desk. “She was worried sick,” she started, tone flat and monotonous. “Filed a missing persons report and everything.”
You bit your lip, eyes dialed in on the chipped rim across the room beside the grey and lifeless metal lockers. “You sure you weren’t worried sick?” You attempted to break the tension, though you knew the answer.
She scoffed incredulously. “I was. Worried that I’d somehow have to find someone as competent as you looking to be a modern day scullery maid,” she sighed out, peeling documents from her desk to skim over.
You huffed, grabbing your bag and shoving up from your seat to rake through your locker. “When’s the next service?”
“45 minutes from now. Rest up, it’ll be some back breaking work.”
𖠰 ⋆☾𓃦☽⋆⁺₊✧🪵𓇢𓆸
She wasn’t kidding.
Your first day back on the job after your accidental get-away was to some dilapidated house on the edge of town. Some affluent couple with too much free time decided to delve into flipping-culture, enter your cleaning company to fix up the place before they got to work on the infrastructure and furnishing.
For the following five hours, you scrubbed, brushed, mopped, sponged, wiped, squeegeed, buffed, shined, and polished the place until every limb of yours nearly gave out.
Shoko didn’t mind keeping close company the entire time, scolding your ear off and pinching you.
“Do you know how awkward it was to call your mother? Do you?” She huffed between scrapes of the bathroom tub, removing the age old grime. “She said you’d probably gone on some bender after—.” She halted herself mid-conversation, worrying her lip between her teeth.
You glanced over your shoulder with knitted brows, hand stilling against the mirror. “After what?”
Shoko bit the inside of her cheek, slowly continuing her movements like she was inconspicuous, regretting ever uttering a word.
“Sho. What are you talking about?”
She slowly turned to meet your gaze, a sheepish smile on her lips. “Naoya sent her an invitation, too.”
Your mouth hung open, the rag in your hand effectively falling into the sink. “Fuck. Fuck fuck fuck,” you cursed under your breath, snapping your gloves off. “Of course he fucking did.”
You pulled your phone from your pocket and hurried out of the bathroom, striding into some empty bedroom littered with old couches draped in plastic, heavy drapes shielding any source of light.
The only illumination in the room was your phone, lighting up your face as you frantically searched for her extremely buried contact and hit the call button.
You folded your arms, leg bouncing as you heard the line buzz, before it clicked on.
“Mom! Hi, I just saw your message—.”
“Where on Earth have you been?”
You froze, nails digging into your biceps. “Let me explain, o-over dinner. Tonight?”
You could hear her sigh on the other side, voice nothing but crestfallen. You could imagine her lounging in the living room, legs folded while she perused whatever tabloid she could find around the house resting in her lap, phone pressed to her ear.
All while wondering what she’d done to deserve a daughter like you.
“I have plans. I’m just trying to understand why I could not reach you.”
You swallowed thickly. “I went for a hike, mom. I got lost and—.”
“Is it because of Naoya? Did the wedding invite bother you?”
And God, did you hate how she just knew these things. How could she be so certain and understanding but lacking any sort of sympathy for you?
”No one wants to see a wedding invite from their ex-husband,” you tersely stated, knuckles whitening against the tight grip on your device. “It doesn’t matter anymore. I’m not going.”
You couldn’t mask your dejection.
“Like hell you aren’t. The Zenin’s invited us, and so God help me if we aren’t in attendance. Especially after all they’ve done for us,” she firmly spoke, skimming her fingers through her wiry hair.
Even after your divorce, the Zenins still offered to take care of your family. You’d turned down their hush money since the start, ensuring you wouldn’t spread the fine details of your muddled relationship, but your mother enjoyed her early retirement and stuffing her pockets.
You gritted your teeth, your discomfort only manifesting into blinding anger. Your lips tightened upwards and curled inwards, wrinkles littering the crease in your forehead. You wanted to scream at your mother, incoherent and inconsolable until you couldn’t anymore.
The relationship you held with your mother was too violent for tears. A woman who’d clipped the wings of her offspring and watched her stumble clumsily, never offering a hand to ground her. Built upon your own wreckage. Swallowing the words you so wished you could utter.
She hadn’t been your mother in a long time, really.
You don’t know when it happened. Maybe when she’d haggled you for your too-short skirt when you were thirteen and barely growing into yourself.
Maybe it was when you’d gotten accepted into your dream college and she could barely display an ounce of pride.
Maybe it was before you’d walked down the aisle, expressing your worries of having a small wedding that she only silenced you with a tut of her tongue.
Maybe it was after your father passed. Her blinded by grief and rage brought upon you like a monsoon, shoving you and gutting you beneath the tide.
Maybe it was when you told her you couldn’t bear children, not after trying for months and your husband's tone only becoming more and more clipped with each passing moment.
Maybe it was when you’d come to her at four in the morning, crying when you’d found evidence of his infidelity and she’d only given you that same blank stare she wore, telling you that every man slips up and to turn a blind eye.
You hadn’t understood the severity of the situation you were in until it was too late. Marrying a man who so desperately wanted to continue his lineage.
And when he couldn’t? He’d just find it elsewhere.
Who said you didn’t want that as well? A child to call your own. A pathetic part of you thought this marriage would save you—sweep you out from under your feet and carry you to a higher standing.
You thought that after all those years of gutted self-esteem, that a lavish white wedding would slap a bandaid on it.
It was pitiful.
But what hurt the most was that you had no one on your side. Not your mother, not your father, not even a lover. No one to stand beside you when it all felt like it was tumbling down.
You wiped the vain tears from your cheeks, clearing your throat as you chose not to resign to your emotions, a tactic you’d taught yourself. “Okay, mom.”
You hung up, ignoring her calls of protest on the other line.
There was really no arguing with her, you saw no point in it.
You still had time before the wedding, enough time to build yourself up to someone untouchable by their comments. Comments not just from the Zenin family, but from your own kin.
You shoved your phone into your pocket, sniffling and blinking back the last of your tears.
No use in crying over it now.
Padding back into the bathroom, you watched Shoko spray away the suds she’d worked up. “Hey, I was gonna ask. What was the name of the guy you stayed with?” She queried, wiping her forearm against her forehead.
You averted her gaze, focusing on the sink you needed to bleach. “Sukuna.”
She chuckled to herself, making an ‘ouhhhh’ sound that you smacked her for, drawing a cigarette from her pocket and thumbing the sparkwheel.
No matter your protests, she assumed that this mystery man was your secret lover.
You snagged the lighter from her before she could get a chance to light it.
“Hey! I was using that,” she pouted, lower lip jutting as she frowned.
“Uh huh. No smoking indoors and on the job. Do you want to lose your job?”
She scoffed, snagging the lighter back. “Funny coming from you. Smoke detectors were turned off for cleaning and repairs.”
You huffed, snapping a new set of gloves on.
The sound of fire kindling had your stomach lurching, sent into a volley of somersaults.
The smell was even worse.
Of course she had to be smoking Marlboro Reds.
#✦ bisque tracklist#way out there#jujustsu kaisen x reader#jujutsu kaisen smut#jujutsu kaisen#jujutsu sukuna#jujutsu kaisen fic#jujutsu kaisen sukuna#sukuna#sukuna ryomen x reader#sukuna ryomen#sukuna x reader#sukuna x you#sukuna smut#ryomen sukuna#jjk smut#jjk x reader#sukuna ryomen smut#jujutsu kaisen ryomen#ryomen x reader#jjk ryomen
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Winner Takes It All
The one in which they're too late.
Characters: Ace - Deuce, Leona - Vil, Jamil - Kalim
Angst no comfort!
divider credits to @chocolatebearstrawberry i love you <3
Ace - Deuce
"So, uh..." Deuce's face is redder than Riddle's hair as he fidgets with the hem of his uniform jacket. "We wanted to tell you something."
Ace glances up from his phone, sprawled across his bed in their shared dorm room. "Yeah? Did you finally figure out that two plus two equals four, Juice?"
You elbow him lightly, but you're smiling—that soft, fond smile that makes something warm unfurl in Ace's chest every single time. The same smile he's been hoarding like treasure for months, telling himself he has all the time in the world to make it his.
"Be nice," you chide, and God, he loves when you do that. Loves the way you defend Deuce but still laugh at his jokes. Loves how you've somehow managed to make your chaotic trio work when by all rights, it should have fallen apart ages ago.
"We're dating now," Deuce blurts out, and the words hang in the air like a death sentence.
Ace's phone slips from his fingers.
For a moment, the room is so quiet he can hear his own heartbeat thundering in his ears. Can hear the way his breath catches in his throat like he's been sucker-punched. Can hear the world reshuffling itself around him, rearranging into a configuration where you belong to someone else.
Where you belong to Deuce.
"Oh," he says, and his voice sounds strange and distant even to his own ears. "Oh, cool."
You're watching him carefully, your expression uncertain. "Ace? Are you okay?"
And that—that breaks something in him. Because of course you'd be worried about him. Of course you'd care about his reaction even in your moment of happiness. You've always been like that, always putting everyone else first, always making sure no one gets left behind.
He should have known you'd fall for someone who does the same thing.
The laugh that bubbles up from his chest tastes like blood and sounds like broken glass. "Okay? I'm great! This is hilarious." He sits up, forcing that familiar cocky grin onto his face even though it feels like wearing a mask made of knives. "Deuce actually managed to get a partner before me? Man, I really am losing my touch."
Deuce flushes darker. "It's not a competition, Ace."
"Isn't it though?" The words slip out sharper than he intended, and he sees you flinch. Sees the hurt flash across your face, and he wants to take it back, wants to swallow the poison before it can spread. But it's too late. It's always too late with him.
"I mean," he continues, dialing back the venom and cranking up the trademark Ace Trappola charm, "someone had to win eventually, right? And hey, at least it wasn't some random guy from another dorm. That would've been embarrassing."
You and Deuce exchange a look—one of those silent conversations that couples have, and isn't that just perfect? You're already developing your own language, your own secret world that doesn't include him.
"We were worried about telling you," you admit quietly. "We didn't want things to be weird between us."
Things are already weird, he wants to scream. Things have been weird since the day I realized I was in love with my best friend and did absolutely nothing about it.
Instead, he shrugs. "Why would it be weird? You're both my friends. I'm happy for you."
The lies taste like ash in his mouth.
"Really?" Deuce asks, and there's something fragile in his voice. Something that makes Ace remember they're supposed to be best friends too. That he's supposed to care about Deuce's happiness.
And he does. That's the worst part. Even through the jealousy and the pain and the way his chest feels like it's caving in on itself, he genuinely cares about Deuce. Loves him like a brother. Which makes this whole situation feel like a betrayal and a tragedy all rolled into one.
"Really," Ace says, and this time he almost means it. "You're good for each other. Deuce needs someone who'll keep him from running headfirst into traffic, and you need someone who actually listens when you talk."
Unlike me. The words hang unspoken in the air.
You beam at him, relief written all over your face, and lean over to hug him. For a moment, you're in his arms again—warm and familiar and perfect—and he lets himself pretend. Lets himself imagine this is you telling him you love him back, not you saying goodbye to whatever chance he never took.
"Thank you," you whisper against his shoulder. "This means everything."
You mean everything, he doesn't say. You meant everything, and I was too much of a coward to tell you.
Instead, he pats your back and grins when you pull away. "Yeah, yeah, don't get all sappy on me. Save that for lover boy over here."
Deuce groans and covers his face with his hands. "Please don't call me that."
"Oh, I'm absolutely calling you that. And Juicy. And honey bun. And—"
"Ace!" you and Deuce protest in unison, and the sound of your laughter mixing together is beautiful and terrible and everything he'll never have.
Later, after you've both left to go celebrate or whatever it is new couples do, Ace lies on his bed and stares at the ceiling. His phone buzzes with notifications—probably Cater posting something stupid on Magicam, or Grim demanding tuna.
He ignores it all.
The thing is, he'd always just assumed. Assumed you'd be there when he was ready. Assumed that someday, when he'd gotten his act together, when he'd figured out how to be the kind of guy who deserves someone like you—someday, you'd still be waiting.
He'd been building himself a fence, thinking he was being smart. Playing it cool. Not wanting to ruin the friendship if you didn't feel the same way. Too scared of rejection to risk it all.
But while he was busy protecting himself, Deuce was being brave. Deuce was showing up. Deuce was becoming everything Ace was too much of a coward to be.
And now Deuce gets to hold your hand in public. Gets to kiss you goodnight. Gets to wake up every day knowing he's the one you chose.
The winner takes it all.
Ace rolls over and buries his face in his pillow, finally letting the mask slip. Finally letting himself feel the full weight of what he's lost, what he never even tried to win.
His phone buzzes again. A text from you: Thanks for being so cool about this. Love you, Ace.
He stares at those three words until his vision blurs, knowing you'll never mean them the way he does when he types back: Love you too, loser.
The gods threw their dice, and someone way down here lost someone dear.
And all Ace can do is smile and pretend his heart isn't breaking.
Leona - Vil
The words hit him like a physical blow.
"Did you hear? They're dating now—officially."
Leona's grip tightens around his phone, knuckles going white as Ruggie's voice continues on the other end, oblivious to the way his housewarden's world just tilted off its axis.
"Vil and—"
He hangs up before he can hear your name spoken in the same breath as his. The phone clatters onto his desk, and Leona stares at it like it's personally offended him. Like it's the messenger he wants to shoot.
But the damage is done. The words are already echoing in his skull, bouncing around like shards of glass.
You're with him now.
Leona sinks back into his chair, one hand dragging down his face as something hot and vicious claws at his chest. It burns—Sevens, it burns like he's swallowed fire, like there's molten metal pooling in his lungs. He can't breathe around it.
He should have seen this coming. Should have known that someone like you wouldn't stay single forever. Should have known that when he let his pride and his fears drive you away, someone else would be there to catch what he'd been too much of a coward to hold onto.
And of course it had to be Vil.
Perfect, untouchable Vil Schoenheit. Everything Leona isn't and never will be. Where Leona is rough edges and lazy afternoons, Vil is polished perfection and ambition that burns brighter than the sun. Where Leona pushes people away with his sharp tongue and sharper truths, Vil draws them in with charm and grace.
The worst part? He can see it. Can see exactly why you'd choose Vil over the memory of what you had together. Vil won't make you feel like you're asking for too much when you want to hold his hand in public. Won't make you question if he actually cares when he gets distant and cold. Won't make you cry in empty hallways because he's too proud to say the words you needed to hear.
Leona's jaw clenches so hard it aches.
He wants you in his arms instead. And that's the thing that's killing him—you had belonged there. In his arms, in his space, in his life. You'd fit against him like you were made for it, like the universe had crafted you specifically to fill the hollow spaces he'd carried around his whole life. And for a while, a brief, shining while, he'd let himself believe it could last.
But he'd been a fool. Playing by rules he'd never understood, building walls when he should have been building bridges. Every time you'd reached for him, he'd pulled back. Every time you'd needed reassurance, he'd given you silence. Every time you'd tried to make it work, he'd found a new way to sabotage it.
Because that's what second sons are good for, right? Destroying things. Being the one who doesn't get the crown, doesn't get the happy ending.
The chair groans as he pushes back from his desk, stalking to the window. The sun is setting over the garden, painting everything gold and orange, and he wonders if you're watching it too. If you're watching it with him.
His reflection stares back at him from the glass—tired eyes, bitter smile, the face of someone who's lost everything that mattered and knows it's his own damn fault.
"The winner takes it all," he murmurs to his reflection, voice rough with something that might be tears if he were anyone else. If he were the kind of person who got to cry over lost love instead of just... enduring it.
But he's not. He's Leona Kingscholar, second prince of the Sunset Savanna, and he doesn't get to fall apart just because the best thing in his life chose someone better.
Even if it's ripping him apart from the inside out.
Even if he'd give anything—his pride, his title, his very soul—for one more chance to hold you and do it right this time.
Even if the thought of Vil's hands where his used to be makes him want to scream until his throat bleeds.
The sun disappears behind the horizon, and Leona closes his eyes.
Why should I complain?
Jamil - Kalim
"Jamil! Jamil, you'll never guess what happened!"
Kalim bursts through the door of Scarabia's lounge like a miniature sun, all bright smiles and boundless energy. He's practically vibrating with excitement, and Jamil doesn't need to guess what's put that particular glow in his eyes.
He already knows. Has known since he saw you and Kalim dancing together at last night's party, saw the way you laughed at something Kalim whispered in your ear, saw the way Kalim looked at you like you hung the stars in the sky.
"Let me guess," Jamil says, not looking up from the paperwork spread across the coffee table. His voice is perfectly level, perfectly controlled. Years of practice have made him an expert at hiding the cracks in his composure. "You asked them out."
"Yes! And they said yes!" Kalim spins around, arms spread wide like he wants to embrace the whole world. "Can you believe it? I was so nervous, but you know how you always tell me to just be honest about my feelings? So I did, and—Jamil, I think I'm in love."
The pen in Jamil's hand stops moving.
Be honest about your feelings.
Of course. Of course that's the advice that would come back to haunt him. How many times has he told Kalim exactly that? How many times has he watched him succeed simply by wearing his heart on his sleeve, by being brave in all the ways Jamil has never allowed himself to be?
Jamil clears his throat, forces the words out.
"I'm happy for you."
And the truly devastating part is that he means it. Even as his own heart is crumbling to dust in his chest, even as every breath feels like swallowing glass, he genuinely wants Kalim to be happy. Because that's what he's been trained to do his entire life—put Kalim's happiness above his own.
Even when it destroys him.
"I have to plan the perfect date," Kalim continues, oblivious to the way Jamil's world has just collapsed. "Maybe a carpet ride at sunset? Or we could have a picnic by the oasis! Oh, or—"
"The carpet ride," Jamil interrupts quietly. "They mentioned once that they'd always wanted to try flying."
You'd mentioned it to him. During one of those late-night conversations when it was just the two of them in the kitchen, when you'd help him prep for the next day's meals and talk about everything and nothing. You'd looked so wistful when you said it, so quietly longing, and Jamil had filed it away in his heart like every other precious detail about you.
He'd planned to take you himself. Had been working up the courage for weeks, crafting the perfect moment in his mind. After the next exam, he'd told himself. After Kalim's birthday celebration. After the inter-dorm tournament. Always after, always waiting for the perfect moment that would never come.
"Really?" Kalim's face lights up even brighter, if that's possible. "You always know exactly what people want, Jamil. You're the best!"
The praise feels like a knife between his ribs.
"I should go tell them now!" Kalim heads for the door, then pauses and turns back. "Actually, wait. You don't mind, do you? I know you two are friends, and I don't want things to be weird..."
Mind? Jamil wants to laugh, wants to scream, wants to grab Kalim by the shoulders and shake him until he understands that this isn't just friendship, that Jamil has been desperately, hopelessly in love with you for months.
But he can't. Because Kalim is looking at him with such genuine concern, such innocent worry about disrupting a friendship, and it's clear that Kalim has no idea. No clue that Jamil's feelings run deeper than casual companionship.
And why would he? Jamil has spent so long hiding, so long keeping every emotion locked behind layers of duty and propriety and fear. So long being the perfect servant who wants for nothing, who exists only to facilitate his master's happiness.
"Of course not," Jamil says, and his voice doesn't even waver. "Why would I mind? You're perfect for each other."
More perfect than we could ever be.
The thought tastes bitter as poison. Because it's true, isn't it? Kalim can offer you everything Jamil can't. Freedom. Adventure. A future without the weight of servitude hanging over every moment. Kalim can love you openly, publicly, without having to hide behind carefully constructed walls.
Kalim can give you the world. Jamil can barely give you an honest conversation about his feelings.
"Thanks, Jamil!" Kalim beams and rushes out, leaving Jamil alone with the wreckage of his carefully guarded heart.
The paperwork blurs in front of him. The numbers don't make sense anymore, each figure dissolving into meaningless shapes as something hot and desperate claws at his throat.
He'd been so careful. So cautious. Waiting for the right moment, the right words, the right everything. Terrified of rejection, yes, but more terrified of what acceptance might mean. How could he ask you to tie yourself to someone who isn't even free? Someone who can't promise you anything beyond stolen moments and hidden affection?
But while he was busy protecting himself, protecting you from the complications his feelings would bring, Kalim was simply... being Kalim. Open. Honest. Brave in the way that only someone who's never had to hide can be.
The winner takes it all, and the loser has to fall.
Jamil sets down his pen and buries his face in his hands, finally allowing himself this one moment of weakness. This one moment to mourn what never was and never could have been.
Tomorrow, he'll smile and congratulate you both. He'll help plan the perfect dates and give the perfect advice and be the perfect friend, because that's what's expected of him. That's what he's good at.
But tonight, in the silence of his own failure, Jamil lets himself grieve for the love he was too afraid to fight for.
Masterlist
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