anniearmitage
anniearmitage
AnnieHolman95
2K posts
29. Female. Sagittarius. New to Tumblr. Ao3 link https://archiveofourown.org/users/antoinettercholman
Last active 60 minutes ago
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
anniearmitage · 1 day ago
Text
Miserable Fate (Prologue)
Tumblr media
Summary: He suddenly wants his soulmate.
Pairing: Billionaire! Bucky Barnes x fem! Reader
Warnings: heavy angst, soulmate AU, world building, time jumps
A/N: This story will contain lots of time jumps/different periods. For this short prologue, we are in the present time.
Tumblr media
Now, …
Your soul is about to be torn apart. One moment in your past led to an endless nightmare filled with pain, rejection, and heartbreak. You don’t know how much more your already fragile heart can take.
He steps closer, his hand reaching out for you for the first time.
Until now—until the truth was revealed-all he ever did was to push you away.
Your soulmate broke you beyond repair. Now he’s standing in front of you, raising his hands in surrender as you uncontrollably sob.
“I love you, Y/N. Never before did I feel so deeply for a woman,” he tries to charm you, but you won’t have it. You slap his hand away when he tries to cup your cheek.
Bucky Barnes had his chance—no, not one.
He had so many chances to see that his soulmate was right in front of him. He never tried to see more in you than a liability and a bug he wants to squish under his shoe.
“No. You don’t love me.” You stare him down. After everything he has done over the years, and especially the last months, to make you feel miserable and unwanted, he won’t get a second chance. “It was never about me, but the fantasy you created in your mind. The girl you adored after I pressed a tissue to your bleeding cheek when we were kids. You love the idea of me—not my true self.”
He flinches when you mention your past. Until four weeks ago, he believed someone else was the sweet and innocent girl helping him after someone tried to hurt him. You wanted to tell him so many times, but Bucky didn’t listen.
“That’s not true! Don’t tell me what I feel near to you!” He yells now, nostrils flaring. “I know my heart better than you!”
“Not weeks ago, you believed my stepsister was your soulmate. Now you are after me?” You huff and shake your head. “I mean nothing to you and never will. You’re living in a fairy tale, and I’m the person you want to use to fulfill your dreams. I’m not having it!”
“Y/N, please,” he pleads now, hand reaching for you once again, but you slap him once more.
“No!” Your voice sounds so different when you say, “I have loved you with all my heart since we were kids. But you…” You scoff when he looks at you in awe. “You chose my sister over me. Every. Single. Time. Just like my mother. Just like my father. Just like the whole fucking world. No more!”
He has the guts to look hurt when he says, “I’m here to make things right, Y/N. I was a fool, blinded by my wish to find my soulmate.”
You step away from him, shaking your head.
“No. You don’t come here and tell me you're going to make things right. Years of hurting taught me one thing—never to trust anyone but myself. Go and be with my sister and forget that I was the kid pressing the tissue to your wound. Just fill the gaps with her face and leave me the fuck alone.”
Part 1
Tumblr media
279 notes · View notes
anniearmitage · 1 day ago
Text
picture you ; robert 'bob' floyd
fandom: top gun
pairing: bob x reader
summary: you met bob back at the academy and fell for him fast—but you never dared risk the friendship... now you're both stationed at north island and for once the timing might be right, until you overhear him say some things that cut deep and make you question everything you thought you knew
notes: okay i'm a little nervous about this one, like i hope it's good??? i hope you like it! the start is a little slow, i struggled there, but it picks up! i promise! again, i had no self-control with the word count, and as always, please let me know what you think!!!
warnings: swearing, alcohol consumption, bit of angst, miscommunication (kinda), italics, bob makes a joke about a stutter, some cheesy moments, reader wears a skimpy dress (but detail is vague and there is no detail about body-type), angry bob, dancing with a guy that isn't bob, very horny, a bit of boob commentary, and SMUT (male masturbation, semi-public sex, unprotected p in v, and a lil titty worship bob floyd) 18+ ONLY MDNI!!!
Tumblr media
word count: 21530
your callsign is lucky
You’ve known Bob Floyd since your second day at the academy. 
You were running late to a classroom session on naval aviation history when you ran into him—tall, sweet, with dark blue eyes and the prettiest smile you’d ever seen. As it turned out, you were both late for the same class, and got chewed out in front of twenty or so of your brand-new flight school classmates. At the time, it was mortifying, but now it’s one of your favourite stories—because that was the moment that bonded you for life. 
You’ve been in love with Bob Floyd ever since he drunkenly told you at flight school graduation—the boy’s a serious lightweight—that you were the most beautiful woman he’d ever known. 
Well, okay. Maybe you were already halfway there, but that was the moment that really sealed the deal. He was so flushed and pretty, stumbling over his words, looking at you like you were the sole reason for his existence on planet Earth. How could you not fall in love with that? 
But he was really drunk, and he didn’t remember a thing the next morning. So you decided not to bring it up. After all, you would soon be deployed to opposite sides of the world. It never would’ve worked. 
Still, over the years and across continents, you managed to stay close. Through separate assignments, long stretches of radio silence, and deployments that kept you off-grid, you never lost touch. You saw each other when you could—once or twice a year, if you were lucky—and every time, it felt like no time had passed at all. 
You tried dating—at least as much as anyone in the Navy can—but no one ever stuck. Not the way Bob Floyd did. 
Then, as fate would have it, Bob got tapped for a special detachment on North Island—your base. And suddenly, years of loving him from afar turned into months of loving him from a now suffocatingly close distance. Because after that detachment, Bob’s new squad—the Dagger Squad—was commissioned as a full-time elite unit under Maverick’s command. 
So here he is, on North Island. And here you are too. Practically living in each other’s pockets, even if you’re not flying on the same team. So what could possibly be stopping you from telling him how you feel? 
Oh, right. Just the tiny, humiliating fact that you’re still way too chickenshit to risk the friendship for something more. 
“Lieutenant,” Maverick says, stepping up beside you and catching you off guard. 
You blink, dragging your eyes away from the squad—his squad—training just outside the hangar up ahead. 
“Captain,” you reply, nodding. 
He smirks. “Thinking of trading in those shiny fifth-gens for something with a little more grit? Or are you just here to watch Hondo torture my pilots?” 
You huff a laugh, adjusting the helmet tucked under your arm. “The Super Hornet’s got plenty of grit, but let’s be honest—she’s no Lightning.” 
Maverick chuckles, nodding slowly. 
“Actually, I was looking for you,” you say. “Cyclone wants me to offer a brief training program on the F-35’s latest software package—maybe even get your team some sim time.” 
His eyebrows lift. “A training program from the Navy’s golden test pilot? Let me guess—does Simpson know how chummy you are with my squad, or was this more of a personal initiative?” 
“It might be a little personal,” you say with s sheepish grin. “But I’ve seen the way you look at my jet. Don’t pretend you wouldn’t kill for a flight.” 
“A joyride?” he asks. “I thought you said simulator time.” 
“For them, yeah.” You nod toward the squad. “But if a decorated captain, such as yourself, wanted to take her for a spin... well, who am I to stand in the way?” 
He laughs again, looking past you at the aircraft you’d just landed. 
“She quick?” he asks. 
“Today? About six hundred knots. But that was a low-level test profile.” You pause, eyes glinting. “Push her right, she’ll break Mach 1 easy. Mach 2 if you’re feeling brave. And willing to eat the paperwork.” 
“Tempting,” he says with a sigh. “But I think I’ve racked up enough disciplinary notes for one career.” 
You smile. “Then fly her like a gentleman.” 
Maverick’s gaze flicks back to the squad as Hondo shouts for twenty more burpees. Then he narrows his eyes at you. “Who put you up to this?” 
You blink. “Sorry?” 
“Phoenix asked me just last week if they’d ever fly anything other than Hornets. Yesterday, Hangman starts asking about Lockheed sim protocols. And now you show up, conveniently volunteering?” 
You press your lips together, wondering how long you might be able to stall—but really, what’s the point? It’s Maverick. He’ll figure it out sooner or later. 
“Okay, fine,” you admit. “They’ve been on my ass about it for weeks. I knew I could get Cyclone on board—and yeah, they said the only way you’d bite was if I offered you stick time.” You smile, just a little. “But to be fair, the F-35’s part of the Navy inventory now. Could be relevant training. And... I wouldn’t mind a few weeks of hanging out with my friends at work. Or their legendary captain, for that matter.” 
Maverick exhales through his nose, shaking his head. “It’s like raising teenagers.” 
“So,” you say, lifting a brow, “that’s a yes?” 
He rolls his eyes, but there’s still a playful spark behind them. “Yeah, fine.” 
You grin. “Excellent. We’ll start Monday. Can’t wait to teach alongside you, Captain.” 
“Don’t make me regret this,” he mutters. 
“Oh, please,” you say. “I know you’re at least a little excited about flying my jet.” 
His gaze flicks back to the F-35 on the flight line, a smile tugging at the corner of his mouth. “I better go break the news to the squad.” 
You laugh. “Good luck with that. Fanboy said he’d kiss you if you said yes.” 
Maverick pauses, grimacing. “Fantastic.” 
Then he flashes you that signature smirk, gives a quick nod, and walks off across the tarmac. You watch for a few minutes as he approaches his squad, stepping up beside Hondo first and—quietly—telling the CWO what he just agreed to. Hondo nods before calling the squad in with a bark, and you stay put, watching with amusement as Maverick delivers the news. 
The reaction is immediate—grins, high-fives, celebratory shouting. You see Natasha step forward to ask a question, and when Maverick gestures in your direction, Mickey turns and yells, “I fucking love you, Lucky!” 
You laugh softly, giving them a lazy salute before turning toward your own building. You’re looking forward to it too—not just the flying, or the teaching, or the excuse to hang out with your friends. But the chance to spend a few weeks working a little closer to Bob. 
And maybe—just maybe—you can figure out what the hell you’re going to do about him. 
“I still can’t believe you got Cyclone and Mav to sign off on the training,” Reuben says, shaking his head despite the smile tugging at his lips. 
You lift your beer, shrugging as you sip. “They don’t call me Lucky for nothing.” 
Mickey squints, tilting his head. “Wait, do you have a history of charming your superiors?” 
Natasha snorts into her drink. “No. That’s not how she got her callsign.” 
Your eyes snap to her, brows raised. “Wait—Bob told you?” 
She presses her lips together, rocking her head side to side. “Not exactly. I saw your contact name in his phone and kind of... figured it out.” 
Your cheeks flush instantly. “Oh my God.” 
“Hold on,” Reuben says, leaning forward. “Bob gave you your callsign?” 
You nod. “Yeah. And I gave him his.” 
That’s all it takes for the three of them to dissolve into laughter. 
“Oh, so you’re the creative genius behind Bob,” Mickey teases, leaning back. “Do tell. How long did that brainstorming session take?” 
You roll your eyes and jab an elbow into his ribs. “You’re such an ass.” 
“No, but seriously,” Reuben says, still grinning. “Why is it just... Bob?” 
You shrug, rolling your beer bottle between your palms. “Because he didn’t like any of the others. There were a bunch of nicknames being thrown around—some dumb, some mean. He told me one day he wished people would just call him Bob. So I made sure they did.” 
“Oh,” Mickey mutters. “That’s kind of boring.” 
Natasha shoots him a look across the table. “I think it’s sweet.” 
Reuben gestures toward you. “Okay, fine. Then how’d he come up with Lucky?” 
You hesitate, trying not to squirm under the weight of their attention. “Because I’m his lucky charm.” 
Reuben blinks. “Seriously? It’s that personal?” 
You nod. “Yeah. Back at the FRS, every time we were paired up—sims, training hops, even written exams—he’d ace it. Said he never did that well without me.” You shrug a little, smiling. “Eventually he started joking that I was his lucky charm. Then it got shortened to Lucky, and everyone assumed it was about good fortune or gambling or whatever. But it was always just… him.” 
Natasha huffs a quiet laugh. “That’s fucking adorable.” 
Mickey leans forward, brows drawing together. “Wait… have you guys ever—” 
“Evening, misfits,” Jake drawls, cutting in with impeccable timing. “Lucky, did I hear you landed yourself a job bossing us around?” 
Bradley, Javy, and Bob fall in behind him, all wearing the same mildly pained expression—no doubt from enduring a ten-minute car ride with Weekend Jake. That’s what the squad have started—affectionately—calling him when he’s at his worst, all smug smiles, cocky one-liners, and shameless flirting. Which, of course, tends to happen every weekend. 
“Just part-time,” you say, matching his smirk. “Try to contain your excitement.” 
Jake’s gaze drops, then climbs back up—slow and deliberate. “Oh, I’m containin’ a lot right now. But you in a flight suit, telling me what to do? That might push me over the edge.” 
Mickey and Reuben chuckle while Natasha groans. 
“I need a drink,” Bradley mutters, turning toward the bar. 
You shake your head, trying not to laugh. “Keep talking, Seresin, and I’ll have you running laps around the tarmac.” 
Jake slides into the booth across from you, still grinning. “And I bet you’d love the view.” 
You roll your eyes and glance at Bob, still standing beside Javy. His eyes are locked on Jake—not quite angry, but definitely not amused. 
“Hey, Floyd,” you say, “wanna sit?” 
Bob’s lips twitch as he slides into the booth beside you, dark blue eyes catching yours. “Think you’re ready to be an instructor?” 
“Oh yeah,” you say, ignoring the flutter in your chest as his thigh brushes yours. “I was born for this.” 
He chuckles under his breath. “Born bossy, maybe.” 
“Hey,” you say, bumping your shoulder against his. “Don't be rude.” 
He turns to face you—really looking at you—and for a moment, the noise of the bar fades just a little. 
“You already telling me what to do?” he asks, voice low, playful. 
You narrow your eyes. “What if I am, Lieutenant? You going to listen?” 
Something flickers at the corner of his mouth—teasing, but quiet. “If I don’t?” 
“Jesus Christ, you two,” Jake cuts in, loud and obnoxious. “Save it for the bedroom.” 
Bob startles slightly, the colour in his cheeks deepening as he tears his eyes away from yours. 
“Fuck off, Seresin,” you mutter, shooting him a glare. “You’re just jealous.” 
Jake leans back, smug. “Jealous of what, sweetheart?” 
“That I don’t flirt with you the way I flirt with—” You stop short, the rest of the sentence stuck in your throat, but it doesn’t matter—the implication is obvious enough. 
Jake’s eyes sparkle like he’s just won the goddamn lottery, and everyone else around the table fights to contain their laughter. 
“Go on,” Jake says, far too pleased with himself. “What were you saying?” 
You shoot him a deadly look. “Fuck you is what I was saying.” 
He tips his head back and chuckles, hand over his chest, and that’s all it takes for the rest of the squad to join in. All but Bob, who’s now focused on picking at the corner of a cardboard coaster, cheeks pink and lips curved into the softest smile. 
It isn’t long before Bradley returns with two beers in one hand and a beer and a coke in the other. He sets the drinks down—coke for Bob—and nods at you to scoot over. You shuffle further into the booth, closer to Mickey, and Bob does the same—closer to you. His arm slides closer, brushing yours, and his knee presses deliberately into your leg, inch by inch stealing your space. The scent of him—sharp, familiar, intoxicating—floods your senses, and your pulse spikes before you can stop it. 
God. You think you’d be used to it after all these years. 
“So,” Bradley says, leaning forward, oblivious to the earlier conversation, “we start Monday?” 
You nod. “Yep. Think you’ll be able to handle a big boy jet?” 
Bradley scoffs. “Please. I’m one of the best pilots in the world.” 
You roll your eyes. 
“God, I can’t wait,” Mickey says from your other side. 
“Why are you excited?” Natasha asks, brow furrowed. “There’s no backseat in the F-35, and you’re definitely not flying it.” 
“Well, not the actual jet, but I still get sim time,” Mickey says, turning his big brown eyes on you. “Right?” 
You shrug. “That’s up to Mav.” 
He groans, dropping his head on the table with a thunk. “Being a WSO sucks.” 
“Your career choice, dude,” Reuben chuckles. 
You spend the next hour or so talking about work—because it’s hard not to when you all work together—but eventually Javy wanders off to chat with a woman who hit on him at the bar, and Natasha challenges Bradley to pool. Jake jumps up too, announcing that he’ll play the winner, leaving you and Bob behind with Mickey and Reuben, who are deep in an argument about whose turn it was to unload the dishwasher this morning. 
You turn to Bob, brows raised. “Think I’m going to need another drink.” 
He nods, laughing softly as he slides out of the booth. You follow and start heading toward the bar, glancing over your shoulder only when he mumbles something about going to the bathroom. You just nod, then turn back and step up to the bar, flashing Penny a wide grin. 
“The usual?” she asks. 
You nod. “I’ll get a round for the whole squad.” 
She nods once and moves to grab the drinks while you fish in your back pocket for the cash you shoved there before leaving your apartment. You’re just about to drop it on the bar when someone slides up beside you and slaps down a credit card instead. 
“It’s on me,” the man says, his smile too confident to be genuine, “if you’ll tell me your name.” 
You blink, brow furrowing as you wonder where the hell men like this get their audacity. 
“And if I don’t?” you ask, sliding his card back toward him. “You still covering eight drinks?” 
His eyes widen just slightly, his fingers hovering over the card. “Eight? Damn. You must be thirsty.” 
You think about saying something snarky, or telling him simply to piss off—but you don’t. You bite your tongue, turning back to Penny with a quiet thanks as she sets the drinks on a tray and you hand her the cash. 
“You Navy?” the guy asks, undeterred. 
“Does it matter?” 
He shrugs. “Just lets me know what I’m in for.” 
You take a deep breath, choosing not to respond as you reach for the tray of drinks. 
“I got it,” Bob says, appearing beside you, his hands brushing yours as he takes the tray from the bar. 
You turn to him with a cheesy grin—not hard to fake when you’re looking at someone like Bob. “Thanks, babe.” 
He pauses, eyes flicking between you and the stranger. 
“I was starting to worry,” you say, sliding an arm around his waist. “You were gone so long.” 
Thankfully, Bob’s not an idiot—and this isn’t your first time pulling this move. 
“Sorry,” he says, falling into it with ease. “There was a line.” He glances at the guy. “Hey, I’m—uh—her boyfriend. Bob.” His cheeks flush lightly. “And you are?” 
The guy hesitates, his eyes darting between the two of you. Then he steps back. “Got it. No worries. Have a good night.” 
As soon as he’s gone, you drop your arm and step away, breath catching—not from the strange guy, but from the heat still lingering between you and Bob. The weight of his body beside yours. The feel of your fingers pressed into his waist. The clean scent of him, warm skin and sharp cologne. It’s dizzying. And familiar. And still somehow too much. 
“Thanks,” you murmur as you fall into step beside him, following him toward the others crowded around the pool table. 
“No worries,” he mutters, eyes focused on the drinks. 
Once you reach the group, everyone takes their drinks and gets back to their conversations—which mostly consists of trash-talking between Bradley and Jake. You and Bob find two stools nearby to occupy while watching the game play out. 
“Why do you do that?” he asks suddenly, turning to you with a slight frown. 
You glance at him. “Do what?” 
“Shut guys down all the time,” he says. “Tell them I’m your boyfriend.” 
“Oh.” You lean back a little, trying—and failing—to read his expression. “I guess I’m just not interested. And it’s easier to say I’ve got a boyfriend than deal with rejecting them outright. Safer, too. You never know what someone might say or do if they feel slighted. Especially after a few drinks. So... I use you. Does it bother you?” 
He shakes his head. “No. Just curious.” 
You nod, then glance back toward the pool table. “Okay.” 
There’s a short pause before he adds, “But why don’t you give any of them a shot?” 
You frown. “What, like... why don’t I date?” 
“Yeah.” He shrugs. “I know you’ve dated before, but I don’t think I’ve seen you go on a single date since I got to North Island.” 
Wow. Shocking insight. Maybe he’s not as observant as you thought. 
You snort softly. “Are you saying I should date more?” 
“I don’t see why not,” he says, eyes dropping to the floor. “You get hit on all the time.” 
You roll your eyes. “I do not get hit on all the—” 
“Yes,” he cuts in, meeting your gaze again. “You do. All the time. You should hear what half these idiots say about you when you’re not around.” 
A smirk tugs at your lips. “All flattering, I hope?” 
He groans and rubs the bridge of his nose, right where his glasses sit. “You really don’t want to know.” 
You laugh into your drink, taking a long swig before glancing over at him. “Alright, Floyd. Since you’re so concerned—who should I date, then?” 
You know he won’t say it. But you want him to. You want him to say me. Right here in the middle of The Hard Deck, with Natasha eavesdropping and Mickey still ranting about how his flight suit is too tight around the biceps. It wouldn’t be romantic, or particularly special—but you don’t care. You’ve waited long enough. You just want to hear him say he’s tired of guys hitting on you. Tired of Jake’s locker room bullshit. That he wants you to date him. That he wants you. 
“I don’t know,” he mutters, cheeks flushing as he looks back toward the pool table. “Rooster, maybe. He seems like your type.” 
Your heart drops, frustration crawling up under your skin. “My type?” 
“Yeah,” he says. “Tall, pretty, a little cocky.” 
You narrow your eyes, watching the side of his face. “You think I go for cocky?” 
He doesn’t answer—just shrugs, eyes locked on the game. 
“You’ve known me this long, and that’s what you think?” 
He cuts you a sidelong glance, brows raised just slightly. “You dated a bunch of assholes at the FRS.” 
You stare at him. “A bunch? What, like... two?” 
He shrugs, eyes flicking to yours. “Maybe it just felt like more. Every second day someone was asking me for your number.” 
You scoff. “Yeah, right.” 
“No, really,” he says, deadpan. “It was ridiculous.” 
You narrow your eyes, fighting a smile. “I don’t believe you, but whatever.” 
Your gaze drifts back to the pool game, watching as Jake leans in for a shot, easily sinking two balls and earning a hard eye-roll from Bradley. 
“Anyway,” you say, glancing back at Bob. “I haven’t exactly seen you dating since you got here.” 
Not that you really want to see him dating. Not unless it’s you. 
He shrugs again. “Wasn’t talking about me. Was talking about you.” 
You roll your eyes. “Okay, fine. You want me to date? I’ll find someone to date.” 
Then you tip back your beer, draining the rest of it in two burning gulps. Bob blinks, the colour in his cheeks deepening as you smack the empty bottle down on a nearby table. You give him a tight smile before turning toward the pool table, stepping up beside Jake and curling your hand around his bicep. 
“Mind if I play next?” 
Jake’s green eyes sparkle as he looks down at you, his gaze devouring every inch of your face now so close to his. 
“Keep touchin’ me like that, darlin’, and I’ll say yes to anything.” 
The rest of the weekend passes in typical fashion. You spend half of it cleaning your apartment and stocking up on groceries for the week, and the other half watching movies with Bob and Natasha. 
Bob doesn’t bring up the whole dating thing again—you’re starting to think he never wanted to bring it up in the first place—and he definitely doesn’t mention how you flirted with Jake for most of Friday night. He does, however, roll his eyes when you laugh at something dumb Jake sends to the group chat. 
By Monday morning, you’re more than ready—and honestly, kind of excited—to start training the squad on F-35s. You even get up extra early, take a little more time with your hair, and spritz on a few extra sprays of perfume. Not for anyone in particular. Definitely not for Bob. 
You’re the first to arrive in the briefing room—of course you are, you’re nearly an hour early—so you start setting up, keeping your hands busy in an attempt to burn off nervous energy. 
Eventually, Maverick and Hondo stroll in, both looking smug with obnoxiously oversized travel mugs full of coffee. 
“Mornin’, Lucky,” Hondo says, dropping into a seat in the front row. 
“Hondo,” you say with a smile. “Mav.” 
“Ready to wrangle a room full of overconfident aviators?” Maverick asks, settling into the chair beside him. 
You take a deep breath and face the room, hands on your hips. “Ready as I’ll ever be. Got any tips?” 
He grins. “Try not to sweat—they can smell fear. Don’t be afraid to pull rank, either. You are technically their superior—Lieutenant Commander.” He pauses, waiting for your reluctant nod, because you do tend to forget that you outrank them. “And don’t look Floyd in the eye, or you’ll get flustered.” 
Your mouth drops open. 
Hondo chuckles. “And that’s not a general rule. That one’s just for you.” 
Your eyes flick to him, heat creeping into your cheeks. 
Maverick laughs. “Uh oh. Maybe we shouldn’t have flustered her right before the children arrive.” 
“Who are you calling children?” Bradley asks, stepping through the doorway with a suspicious frown. 
Maverick and Hondo giggle like schoolkids, clearly thrilled to spend the next few weeks not running the show. 
“Why’s Lucky all red?” Mickey asks, trailing in behind Bradley. 
Reuben’s next, followed by Javy and Jake a few seconds later. 
You shake your head and clear your throat, pretending to shuffle through papers like it’ll somehow erase the mortification of Captain Pete fucking Mitchell knowing about your very inconvenient crush on one of his lieutenants. 
It isn’t long before Natasha and Bob walk through the door, sliding into two front-row seats and making your heartrate ratchet up. But it’s fine. It’s cool. You can easily look past the front row. Just focus on Jake’s stupidly smug face in the second. 
“Alright,” you say as the digital display flickers to life, revealing a clean model of the F-35. “Welcome to your crash course in fifth-gens.” 
Mickey whoops quietly while the others grin and settle in with wide, eager eyes. 
“The F-35s are in the Navy’s rotation now,” you say, gesturing to the display. “And as an elite unit, you never know when you’ll be called to fly one.” You tap your tablet, watching the display zoom into a detailed cockpit layout. “One seat, all teeth, glass cockpit, full stealth. No one’s holding your hand up here—not even your WSO.” 
“Good,” Reuben grins. “Mine’s bossy.” 
Mickey gasps, spinning toward him in mock betrayal. 
“Yours is unemployed,” you reply, laughing under your breath. “These are single-seat jets.” 
Mickey rolls his eyes and crosses his arms, pouting like a three-year-old who just got told no. 
Your eyes flick instinctively to Bob—to the other WSO in the room who might have cause to be annoyed—but he’s not. He looks... entranced. Calm and focused. Brows pinched slightly, lips parted, eyes locked. Like he’s hanging on your every word. 
You clear your throat and turn back to the screen. “You already know how to fly. I’m just here to make sure you don’t fly this like you fly your Rhinos. The rules are different. The feel is different. And the margin for error is a hell of a lot thinner.” 
You swipe on your tablet and the diagram shifts to a wireframe helmet interface. 
“Helmet display system, full 360º situational awareness. You don’t need to flip switches anymore—you think, and it’s there. Feels like a video game... until it doesn’t. You screw up in here, and the jet doesn’t just let you know—it makes sure you remember.” 
You glance up—and have to fight the smile rising at how focused they all are. Every one of them watching you like you’re briefing them for an op. 
“We’ll run through some ground school and system orientation,” you say, “then you’ll hit the sim. I’ll be in the control room, and Mav will be breathing down my neck.” 
Maverick chuckles. “Only if you mess up.” 
“So I’ll be fine,” you reply smoothly, not even sparing him a glance. 
Laughter bubbles from the squad—oohs and chuckles layered over each other. But it’s Bob’s expression that makes your breath hitch. Wide-eyed. Pink-cheeked. Watching you like he’s trying to commit every second—every last detail—to memory. 
You blink, heat flaring in your neck, and glance toward the back of the room. “Questions? Comments? Unsolicited opinions?” 
“Yeah,” Jake pipes up. “You free after this?” 
Hondo snorts. “Sure. Right after she drops her standards by about ten thousand feet.” 
The room breaks into laughter as Jake rolls his eyes and flips Hondo the bird, sinking back in his seat. 
“Alright,” you say, laughter still lacing your voice as you reset the display. “Let’s start with a systems brief.” 
The squad moves in a slow wave, rising from their seats and shoulder-bumping their way to the tablets at the front of the room. But Bob hesitates, his gaze lingering on you a beat too long—warm, steady, and unblinking. It settles on your skin like a gentle pressure, like a whispered touch. You feel your cheeks flush and the hairs on the back of your neck rise. 
All from a look. 
God. Maybe you should listen to Maverick’s advice a little better. 
By the end of the day, your voice is hoarse and your cheeks are aching from smiling so hard. You shouldn’t be surprised, but they were easier to teach than you expected. Of course they were—they’re not idiots. They’re highly trained, elite naval aviators. And just because they’re your friends doesn’t mean they’d dare give you a hard time. At least, not in front of their CO. 
After Maverick asks a few questions—mostly about your training plan—he claps you on the back and dismisses the room. The squad filters out, calling their thanks as they go and muttering to each other about everything you just showed them. 
Bob stays behind, still planted in his seat, brows furrowed as he scrolls through something on his phone. It’s not unusual—he used to wait for you after class almost every day at the academy and during the FRS—but still, your heart kicks up just a little. 
“How’d I do?” you ask, glancing over your shoulder as you collect your papers. 
He looks up, a soft smile on his lips. “Amazing, actually.” 
You turn toward him, tilting your head. “You sound surprised.” 
“I am,” he admits. “You made all that tech-speak sound so... easy. No one would ever guess you used to stutter on t’s and p’s giving presentations back at the academy.” 
Your cheeks flush, eyes going wide as you let out a soft gasp—half scandalised, half amused. “Robert Floyd. How dare you bring that up.” 
He chuckles quietly, ducking his head. “Sorry. It was too easy.” Then he glances up again, dark blue eyes wide and sincere. “But really, you did great. I’m really p-p-proud of you.” 
“Dude!” you exclaim, staring at him in disbelief as he laughs a little harder. 
You can’t help the grin that spreads across your face—especially not with the way Bob is laughing, shoulders curled, cheeks pink, and his smile lighting up his whole face with something stupidly charming. 
“I can’t believe you,” you say, hugging your notebook to your chest. “You’re going to blow my cover as a super cool, incredibly sexy fighter pilot.” 
He shrugs. “You can still be super cool and incredibly sexy with a stutter.” 
Your cheeks burn even hotter, and you quickly turn back to the desk looking for an excuse not to look at him—picking up a pen you’re pretty sure isn't yours. 
“Want to grab dinner?” he asks. 
When you turn back around, he’s standing—tall and adorable in the most infuriatingly delicious way. The kind of way that shouldn’t make your chest ache and your thighs clench... and yet, here you are. 
“Sounds good,” you say, trying to keep your voice light. “What’re you thinking?” 
“Pizza?” 
You nod and move toward the door, stepping into the corridor ahead of him and starting down the hall. A brief stretch of quiet follows, broken only by the soft clunk of your boots against the vinyl floor—not awkward, just a little... tense. Or maybe that’s just you. Because for some reason, Bob smells especially good today. He looks especially good too—hair slightly tousled, cheeks pink, and brows drawn as he clearly gets caught up in whatever’s on his mind. 
Then he glances at you. “The other night—Friday night—at the bar...” 
You raise an eyebrow. “What about it?” 
“Did—” He pauses, breath hitching as he looks away. “Did you go home with him?” 
You stop walking. “With who?” 
He hesitates, stopping one step ahead before turning back to face you. “Hangman.” 
Your eyes go wide. “What the fuck? No.” 
“Oh,” he says quickly, shaking his head. “It’s just... Phoenix said—” 
“Phoenix is messing with you,” you cut in, brow furrowed. “Why the hell would I go home with Hangman?” 
He shrugs. “You two looked pretty friendly. I thought maybe—” 
“Okay, give me some credit,” you say flatly. “I do still value my dignity. And for the record—cocky isn’t really my type.” 
He glances at you, eyes curious beneath a gentle frown. “Then... what is your type?” 
You open your mouth, but hesitate. You know what you want to say—that it’s him. It’s always been him. But you can’t. Because you’re too damn chickenshit, even after all these years. Even with him looking at you like that.  
“I—I don’t know,” you mutter, starting to walk again. “But whatever it is, it isn’t Hangman.” 
There’s a short pause—only brief—before he mumbles, “Okay... good.” 
Good? What the fuck is that supposed to mean? 
The word bounces around in your head all evening. When you’re not talking to Bob about pizza toppings, tomorrow’s lesson plan, or whatever bizarre National Geographic doc he’s just watched, you’re thinking about that damn word. 
Good. 
It’s so maddeningly vague it practically echoes off your apartment walls the second you slam the door shut behind you. 
Good? 
Who does he think he is, trying to validate your taste in men? You don’t need his opinion. You don’t need his approval. You don’t need Bob Floyd acting like he gets a say in who you do or don’t go home with. 
Good. 
Seriously? The fucking audacity. Every time you think maybe—just maybe—Bob isn’t like other men, he says something infuriating like that. 
“Ugh,” you groan, throwing yourself face-first onto your bed. “Fucking good.” 
A minute later, your phone pings. You grope blindly across the duvet until your fingers close around it, then roll your head to the side, squinting at two notifications from Bob. 
BOB FLOYD 
📎 [Image attachment] 
‘Look what I found at the bottom of my drawer… those ridiculous Canada moose boxers.’ 
And there he fucking is. 
Standing in front of his bedroom mirror. Shirtless. Hair still damp from the shower. Wearing nothing but a sweet smile and those goddamn novelty boxers you bought him as a joke two Christmases ago—bright red, with tiny maple leaves and cartoon moose that say eh? across the waistband. 
Holy fuck. 
Your mouth goes dry. Your brain short-circuits. You can’t do anything but stare. Not even breathe. 
His body is glorious—which is something you’ve known, but never been intimate with. And holy shit, if you’re not about to get intimate with this fucking photo. 
He looks like some Greek god carved from alabaster. All smooth muscle and obvious strength, like he moonlights as a Michelangelo sculpture. 
It’s obscene. This photo is ridiculous. He has to know what he’s doing. Surely he’s not that naïve. 
And what the fuck are you supposed to reply with? 
You scramble upright, breathing hard, holding your phone so close to your face the screen fogs up and— 
Oh my God. You’ve got your fucking read receipts on. 
You need to do something. Say something—anything—before he realises what a complete creep you’re being just sitting here, staring at this photo. 
With trembling hands, you type the first thing that comes to mind: ‘Aw! Cute!’ 
“…Cute?” you repeat out loud, staring at your phone. 
A little notification pops up beneath your message. 
Read. Immediately. 
“Cute?!” you say again, more outraged now. “What’s fucking cute about that, you idiot?” 
You scroll up and tap the photo again—the one that is anything but cute. 
Your face is burning. Your brain is mush. You need help. Professional help. 
But first… 
You need an hour alone with your vibrator, eyes squeezed shut, and that image burned into the backs of your eyelids. 
Bob doesn’t send you another photo of his moose boxers. 
The next morning, he just texts to ask if you want him to pick you up a coffee on his way into work—and you say yes. You don’t talk about the photo. Or the boxers. At all. 
But you can’t stop thinking about it. 
You can’t even look at him without picturing those ridiculous boxers and that even more ridiculous bulge—which only gets more obvious the more times you go back to check the photo. You’re honestly thinking about just saving it to your camera roll. Because what if you accidentally double-tap and react to it? You should’ve just done that at the start—but no. No, you said ‘Aw! Cute!’ like some proud mother seeing her son in his soccer jersey for the first time. 
And of course, you and Bob talk every day, so the thread just keeps moving on—but you’re not. You have to scroll all the way back up every time. Then he sends something else and it jumps to the bottom, which means you have to start all over again. 
Honestly, it’s getting a bit ridiculous. You were staring at it the other day in the middle of the goddamn mess hall, like some depraved freak. 
Or maybe you’re just deprived. Maybe you just need to get laid so you can stop ogling your best friend like he’s the finest cut of perfectly cooked steak and you haven’t eaten in a week. 
“Lucky?” Hondo says, interrupting your spiralling thoughts with a quirked brow. “You good?” 
You shake your head, blinking until the data feeds in front of you snap back into focus. 
“Shit, sorry,” you mutter, clearing your throat. 
You hit a few buttons and flip the comms switch. 
“Rooster,” you say, eyes on the external visuals of Bradley’s current sim mission. “Radar contacts at three and seven o’clock. Engage with BVR missiles on my mark. Weapons hot?” 
“Weapons hot, Lucky,” he responds. “AIM-120 locked on three o’clock target.” 
Your gaze flicks to the instrument panel and HUD feed—seeing what he’s seeing. 
“And try not to light up the whole sky this time,” Mav cuts in dryly—his professionalism fading as the day drags on. “Last sim, you nearly cooked Hondo’s coffee with that missile launch.” 
Hondo chuckles. “That was a precision strike. Coffee was inferior.” 
“Copy that, Mav,” Rooster replies, grin audible. “Engaging now. Fox-three.” 
Your eyes bounce between the radar, sensor data, and pilot input feedback, tracking his procedure. Then the simulated missile launch sound fills your headset. 
“Target’s going down,” you say. “Good shot, Rooster. Keep it tight—bandits are manoeuvring fast. Radar lock at five o’clock. High-G turn recommended.” 
“Got it. Pulling seven Gs. Lining up for a guns pass.” 
“Hope you’re smoother than your last attempt,” Mav says. “Remember, trigger discipline.” 
Bradley chuckles. “Roger that. I’m a professional… mostly.” 
Maverick laughs too, lounging back in his chair, thoroughly enjoying not being the one in charge. You roll your eyes and refocus on the data feeds, watching as Bradley successfully finishes the sim. 
“All targets neutralised. Nice run, Rooster.” 
“What was my time?” he asks eagerly. 
“You’ll find out in Monday’s debrief,” you reply. 
“Did I beat Hangman?” 
You roll your eyes. “Sim complete. Control out.” 
You cut the comms and turn to Maverick. “Want to call it a day?” 
He sits forward, resting his elbows on his knees. “It is Friday. We could give them a choice.” 
You arch a brow, silently asking him to elaborate. 
“Go home or let the back-seaters have a go in the hot seat.” 
Your lips curl into a smirk. “Oh, I think I know what the answer is going to be.” 
Ten minutes later, after Hondo retrieves the rest of the squad from the debrief room, Mickey is seated in the pilot’s seat and the others are crammed into the control booth behind you. The excitement is palpable—everyone watching the data feeds with a mix of curiosity and anticipation. 
“Alright, Fanboy,” you say through the control mic, flipping a few switches on your console. “You’re up.” 
“What’s the scenario?” he asks, adjusting the straps like they might protect him from what’s coming. 
“Nothing fancy,” you reply. “Just a soft sim. Basic intercept, two bogeys, no weapons fire. You’re just flying the pattern.” 
“So… a baby sim?” 
“Basically. You’ll be fine.” 
There’s a beat of silence. 
“Which one is go?” he asks, pointing vaguely at the throttle quadrant. 
You slap your forehead. “You’re joking, right?” 
“I’m not a pilot,” he says, almost offended. “My job is to press the red button and whisper sweet nothings to the radar.” 
“That explains so much,” you sigh, rolling your eyes. “It’s the throttle. Left side. The big one.” 
“Oh. Sure. Of course. Totally knew that.” 
He moves it gingerly, like it might explode—and the sim lurches forward, making him let out a sound that’s way too close to a yelp. 
From behind you, Reuben cackles. “Dude’s gonna crash before he clears the runway.” 
“Shut up!” Fanboy shouts from inside the cockpit. “I am a majestic flying machine.” 
You snort. “You are a danger to national security.” 
“Luckyyy,” he whines, tipping his head back against the seat. “Help me. I’m in a metal coffin and I don’t know what I’m doing.” 
You sigh—loudly—and get up, grabbing your headset as you move out of the control booth. 
“I’m coming in,” you mutter. 
You swing the cockpit open and climb inside like you’ve done a thousand times before, stepping up beside him. 
“Okay,” you say, leaning forward. “Feet off the pedals. Hands off everything. Just look at what I’m doing.” 
“Yes, sir,” he says with a little salute. “Watching and learning.” 
You roll your eyes so hard it hurts. “You’re lucky I like you.” 
“I know,” he says, grinning now. 
You flip the right switches, get him levelled, and the sim steadies out. 
He exhales. “Okay. Okay. I’m flying. Right?” 
“You’re flying,” you say. “Barely. But still.” 
He glances up at you. “Am I your worst student ever?” 
“Top three,” you say sweetly. “But I have faith. Now throttle up. We’ve got some baby bogeys to chase.” 
Mickey grips the controls for dear life, knuckles turning white. The sim jerks forward awkwardly as he pushes the throttle, and you can practically hear the panic rising in his voice. “Uh… okay. I think I’m moving? Maybe?” 
You step closer, trying not to crack a smile. “Just keep it steady. You’re flying a jet, not trying to take off in a rocket.” 
He leans forward, squinting at the instruments. “Which one’s the afterburner? The big red button?” 
“Don’t touch the big red button,” you snap, slapping his hand away. “Just keep the nose up. Remember your basic turns—left, right, not a nosedive.” 
The sim bucks suddenly. 
“Oh no! No, no, no!” he exclaims, eyes wide and face pale. 
You bite back a grin, keeping your voice steady. “Relax. You’re doing fine. Just… don’t crash.” 
But it’s too late. 
The simulated alarms start blaring and the screen flashes red: Warning! Critical altitude! 
“Fuck! Uh, do I pull up? Or…” 
“You eject,” you say dryly. 
“Eject?!” Mickey’s voice cracks as he looks frantically across the controls. “How do I do that?” 
You point at the eject handle. “That thing right there. Pull it now before you break the simulator.” 
With a loud mechanical whoosh, the sim jolts violently as Mickey’s ‘ejection’ sequence initiates. 
You laugh softly, shaking your head. “Well, that was impressive. The quickest crash I’ve ever seen. But hey—points for dramatic exit.” 
Mickey groans, covering his face with his hands. “Can we try again? But with less dying?” 
You pat his shoulder. “Maybe next week. I think you need a little more ground school.” 
He sighs and stands up, hanging his head as he exits the cockpit. You can only imagine the scene waiting for him in the control booth, a small part of you actually feeling a little sorry for him. Because if these pilots are anything, it’s cocky—and the last thing they need is someone, especially a squadmate, proving that what they do is kind of legendary. 
“Alright, Floyd,” you say into your headset, feeling heat curl behind your ribs. “You’re up.” 
A few minutes later, Bob climbs into the cockpit, adjusting his headset as he awkwardly manoeuvres into the pilot’s seat.  
“Do you want me in or out?” you ask, trying not to sound like you want to stay in the cramped space with him. 
His eyes are wide as they scan the control panel. “Uh, in. Please. If that’s okay.” 
You nod, biting your bottom lip to hide a stupid grin. “Of course.” 
He settles in, straps up, and lets his hands hover hesitantly over the controls. 
“Mav,” you say, “is the sim reset?” 
“Confirming sim reset. You’re good to go,” he replies. 
“Okay, Bobby.” You lean in beside him, ignoring how his warmth wraps around you—his scent filling your nose and making your head spin. “You ready?” 
He nods, jaw tight, eyes locked on the instruments in front of him. 
“Alright, relax. You’ve got this,” you mutter, shifting just a little bit closer. “Feet on the pedals. Throttle up slowly.” 
He moves cautiously, brows drawn, and the sim lurches forward—but not violently—before steadying under his grip. 
“See,” you say with a soft smile. “Already doing better than Fanboy.” 
He chuckles quietly, almost breathless. 
“Now keep her steady.” 
“Trying,” he mutters, eyes flicking between the HUD and display screens like he’s done this a hundred times—except for the white-knuckled grip giving him away. “This is a lot harder in practice.” 
You laugh softly. “This is the fun part.” 
He exhales hard through his nose, adjusting his grip. “Are they supposed to be this sensitive?” 
“They’re not sensitive. You’re just heavy-handed,” you say, nudging his wrist lightly. “Small movements. Gentle.” 
He hums like he’s not sure he believes you, but follows the instruction anyway. 
You lean a little closer, pointing to a flashing radar contact. “You’ve got one on your left—easy turn, then line up a missile lock.” 
Bob squints at the data, then at you. “Define easy.” 
“You know, not what Fanboy did.” 
He huffs another quiet laugh, fingers moving more confidently now as he banks slightly left and steadies his line. 
“There we go,” you say. “See? Not so bad.” 
His eyes flick toward you, only for a second. “Only ‘cause you’re here.” 
You glance at him—but his focus is already back on the screens, tongue caught between his lips in concentration. Your heart thuds a little harder, breath catching as the cockpit suddenly feels a whole lot smaller. 
You’re crouched beside him—arm pressed against his, knee nudging his thigh—and all you can think about is that goddamn image of him in those stupid little boxers and everything it did to your insides. 
If it weren’t for the cameras, live feeds, and multi-million-dollar equipment in here, you might be seriously considering jumping his bones right now. 
“Uh, Lucky,” Bob says, clearing his throat. “Noise.” 
You shake your head, refocusing. “Alright, you’ve got tone. Fire.” 
“Fox three,” he says, flicking the switch—and the target explodes a beat later. 
You grin. “Nice shot.” 
He looks over at you again, eyes wide and shining, cheeks pink, and chest rising a little too quickly. “What’s next?” 
“Bring her around. Evasive manoeuvre. You’ve got a bogey on your six.” 
He shifts quickly, throttle pulling back. 
“Flaps down. Come into a right bank,” you instruct, watching him move a little smoother this time. 
“Yes, ma’am,” he says under his breath, completely focused. 
It shouldn’t make your pulse spike. Or have you shifting your weight, pressing your thighs together, suddenly too aware of your own skin. It shouldn’t mean a damn thing. 
Yet those few words, coming out of his mouth, tighten that knot behind your hipbones until it aches. 
“Jesus Christ,” you mutter. 
“What?” he snaps, panic lacing his tone. 
“No—Nothing. Just pull up five degrees, you’re drifting.” 
He does so without hesitation. 
Your eyes flick across the data feeds, checking everything like it’s second nature—because for you, it is. It’s as easy as breathing. 
“I’m impressed, Floyd,” you say, offering a small smile. “With a little more practice, you could probably swap seats with Phoenix.” 
Natasha’s voice crackles in your headset a second later: “No way he’d be flying this well without his lucky charm. So unless you’re planning to ride on his lap, I think I’ll stay on the stick.” 
Bob’s eyes go wide, and the sim shudders as he struggles to maintain control. An alarm blares, but you’re already moving, one hand wrapping around his to keep the sim steady—and avoid another Mickey-style disaster. 
“You told them?” he asks, not angry—just flustered. 
You glance sideways at him, still holding steady, a sheepish smile pulling at your lips. “Phoenix saw my name in your phone. She guessed.” 
He shuts his eyes with a sigh, cheeks flushing. 
“Hey!” you nudge him with your knee. “Pilots don’t get to fly with their eyes closed. Focus.” 
He huffs a breath, straightening in his seat, brow furrowed again. “Right. Sorry. I got it.” 
“You sure?” 
He nods, firm, and you slowly let go, easing back into position beside him. 
The sim levels out, alarms silenced, radar clear—and Bob exhales like he’s been holding his breath the whole time. 
“Okay,” you say. “Let’s bring her in. Easy descent. Keep your nose up just a touch—perfect. Throttle back.” 
He moves with steady hands now, more confident than when he started, guiding the simulated jet toward the landing zone with practiced care. The wheels touch down on virtual tarmac, and the whole simulator gives a soft jolt before going still. 
The screen flashes: MISSION COMPLETE. 
You blink, a little stunned. “Holy shit.” 
Bob whips off the headset, hair mussed, cheeks flushed. “Did I actually—?” 
“That was amazing,” you say, grinning at him. “You nailed that.” 
He scrambles out of the seat, turning toward you, half-tripping over a strap—and— 
He falls forward. 
You try to dodge, but it’s no use. He crashes down on top of you, sending you flat onto your back on the simulator floor, your head knocking against something on the way down. 
“I—sorry—oh, God—” he stammers, eyes wide. 
He braces a hand on either side of your head, face hovering just inches above yours. 
“Are you okay? Your head—” 
Your giggles cut him off, laughter spilling out as you lay beneath him, one hand rubbing your head and the other caught somewhere on his waist. 
“I—I’m okay,” you manage, breathless and blushing, if slightly concussed. “Guess I’m a good luck charm and a crash mat.” 
He lets out a quiet, unsteady laugh, chest pressed flush to yours, breath ghosting over your cheek. 
“Phoenix is right, you know?” he says, voice soft. “I couldn’t have done it without you here.” 
Your laughter fades, breath catching. 
There’s a beat—just one long, tight heartbeat where he leans in, eyes darting between yours and your lips like he might actually do it. Like he’s about to close that distance. 
And then— 
The sim door yanks open with a loud clang. 
“BOBBY!” Mickey exclaims, his grin upside down from where you’re lying. “Oh, shit, are you two making out?” 
Bob scrambles to his feet, very awkwardly given the severe lack of space. “No! I wasn’t—I didn’t—” 
“Technically, he tackled me,” you say, sitting up and holding out a hand for Bob to help you. 
Once you’re both upright, you climb out of the sim and into the chaos of the squad, all cheering and clapping like he just landed an actual carrier op. 
“Hell yeah, Floyd!” Javy says, clapping him on the back hard enough to make him stumble. 
Reuben chuckles. “I thought you were gonna puke, but that was clean as hell!” 
Natasha smirks, arms folded as she steps up. “Guess that lucky charm really works.” 
You roll your eyes, trying to play it cool—but your skin is still humming, your heart still racing. And Bob? 
Bob won’t stop glancing your way. Because the mission might be over, but whatever just happened between you two is still very much mid-flight. 
After everything calms down, Maverick congratulates Bob on not crashing—giving Mickey a very pointed look—and dismisses the squad. They gather their things from the briefing room and file out slowly, leaving you to finish filing the post-sim report. 
“We’ll meet you outside?” Natasha asks, hesitating at the door. 
You nod. “Yep. Won’t be long.” 
“Good. We’re going to the bar to celebrate Bob’s success and Mickey’s disaster.” 
You snort softly, eyes dropping back to the tablet in your hand. “Sounds good.” 
Her footsteps fade down the hall, and you type through the report with quick, practiced fingers. 
Your heart still feels like it’s in your throat, beating too fast and too hard. Your cheeks are hot, your lungs are tight, and you swear you can still feel every inch of where Bob’s body had been pressed against yours. And God—it was a lot. 
If you’re honest, you don’t really want to go to the bar. Not just because you’re there too often already—but because you’d rather go home and get off to that stupid picture of Bob in his moose boxers while thinking about his body on top of yours. 
You shake your head, exhale hard, and tap ‘submit’ on the report. Then you tuck the tablet into your bag, throw it over your shoulder, and flick the lights off on your way out. 
The corridor is dim, lit only by the glow of late-evening sun spilling through the high windows, washing the vinyl floor in hazy orange. You can hear chatter up ahead—probably the squad, waiting—and you pick up your pace. 
But then you hear your name. Not your callsign—your name. 
“As in Lucky?” a voice says, incredulous. “She flies F-35s now?” 
“Yeah,” Bob replies, his voice unmistakable. “She’s really good. A great teacher, too. She—” 
“She’s fucking hot,” the other guy interrupts. 
You frown, slowing your steps as you edge closer to the wall. The voice is familiar—but you just can’t place it. 
“I was always jealous of you, man,” the guy says. “Back in flight school you and her were close. And at the FRS. Don’t tell me nothing ever happened.” 
“No,” Bob says quickly. “We’re just friends.” 
“Shame. Still hot though, right?” 
“Um... I guess.” Bob’s voice tightens—strained and uncomfortable. 
“C’mon, man, relax. She’s a smoke show.” 
There’s a brief pause. Then Bob clears his throat. 
“I don’t really like talking about people that way. Especially not her.” 
“What, you’re not into her?” 
“She’s my friend,” Bob says, like that answers everything. 
“Not what I asked,” the guy chuckles. “You into her or not? Because I’m not stepping on your toes, but if she’s fair game—” 
Your heart thuds, heavy and fast, caught high in your throat. 
“No,” Bob says. “I’m not into her. She’s a friend. I wouldn’t go there.” 
That stings—but what comes next carves the breath right out of your lungs. 
“She’s too intense,” he says, a sharp edge to his voice. “She’s reckless, and she can be selfish. She—She's not worth the trouble. There’s too much baggage.” 
Your stomach drops. Hard. 
Each word hits you square in the chest, knocking you breathless. Your head swims. Your vision blurs—not just from tears, but from that unmoored, disoriented rush that hits when the floor drops out from under you. 
“Who cares about baggage?” the guy asks with a low laugh. “As long as she’s not selfish in bed—” 
You turn fast, bracing a hand against the wall to steady yourself. You can’t listen anymore. 
Tears fall freely now, and you don’t even care. You walk—back the other way, toward the far door, away from the voices. Away from him. You’ll take the long way around base if you have to. It doesn’t matter. You just need to get home. 
Your ears ring. Your skin prickles. The sting in your eyes sharpens into something meaner, hotter—like your tears are trying to scald their way out. 
His voice replays in your head, cold and clinical, like you’re a job hazard or some inconvenient mess he has to manage. Not worth the trouble? Too intense? Baggage? 
Fuck. That. 
Your hands are fists before you even realise it, nails biting your palms, jaw clenched so tight it hurts. He doesn’t get to talk about you like that. Not after everything. Not like you’re just some reckless, selfish… thing. 
Not when he knows you. Not when he was just hovering over you, whispering soft words, looking at you like maybe you meant something. 
The heat builds behind your ribs, under your skin, in the back of your throat. You want to yell. To throw something. To go back and make him say it to your face. But you don’t. 
You wipe your cheeks with the heel of your hand, set your shoulders, and walk faster—like you’re chasing down a storm, or maybe just trying to outrun it. 
That night, your phone doesn’t stop. Messages pour in from the squad—asking where you are, if you’re okay, when you’re coming to the bar. Bob even calls. Four times. But you don’t answer. Instead, you send a single text to the group chat saying you felt sick and had to go home. Technically, not a lie. 
You barely sleep. You toss and turn for hours, drafting messages you’ll never send and crying into your pillow until you’re too exhausted to cry anymore. By four a.m., you give up. You pull on your gym clothes, lace up your sneakers, and run to the beach like you’re trying to outrun years of friendship. 
You spend the whole weekend in self-imposed exile, licking your wounds like a cornered animal. No music. No TV. No calls. You just want to sit in it—the heartbreak, the fury, the raw, awful ache of it all—because for once, you don’t want to get over it. 
Because it was Bob. 
Bob Floyd, who’s been sweet and steady and quietly wonderful since the day you first met him—always looking at you like you’re the only thing that really matters. He knows you, sometimes even better than you know yourself. 
Or at least, you thought he did. And maybe that’s what hurts the most. 
Because you’ve loved him, in one way or another, for a long time. And now he’s the one who broke your heart. 
Sweet, considerate, doe-eyed Bob Floyd. 
Fuck that guy. 
By Monday morning, you’re feeling a lot less dramatic and a lot more focused on work. You just want to get this little program done, get the squad up to date with fifth-gens, and then you can go about avoiding Bob Floyd until one of you inevitably gets restationed. But until then, you have to at least be civil. You don’t have a choice. 
The squad is already half-settled when you walk into the briefing room, just a couple of minutes late—intentionally. If you arrived any earlier, someone might’ve tried to talk to you. Joke around. Ask where you’ve been. And you’re not really in the mood for chit-chat. 
So you walk in with a neutral expression, eyes trained forward, coffee in one hand and tablet in the other. 
From the corner of your eye, you can see Bob sitting in his usual spot at the front, hands folded tight in his lap. He glances up the second the door opens—and breathes. It’s so visible it’s almost a shudder, like he’s been holding it in all weekend. 
“Oh, she’s alive,” Jake says, elbowing Javy beside him. 
You don’t answer. You just keep walking until you reach the desk, setting your coffee down before turning to face the room. 
“Let’s talk about Friday,” you say, tapping your tablet to wake it up. “Three out of five of you got tagged within the first five minutes of simulated contact. That’s a problem.” 
There’s a long beat of silence. A few glances are exchanged, but no one calls attention to the fact that you’re clearly skipping over the usual ‘good morning’ or any of the soft lead-ins you normally give. No one dares. 
Bob’s eyes stay locked on you, his brow drawn in quiet worry. He doesn’t look away all morning. Not once. 
And you don’t look at him at all. 
After going through BVR refresh and radar discipline, you give Maverick a nod and he calls lunch. You keep your head down, eyes on your tablet, fussing with it as the soft shuffle of feet out the door fills the room. 
Maverick walks up to you, says something about a meeting he’s being forced to attend this afternoon, and you give him a nod. Then he walks out and the room goes quiet. Until— 
“Hey,” Bob mutters, still sitting in his seat. 
You turn your back on him, placing your tablet on the desk and picking up your phone. “Hi.” 
“That thing work?” he asks. 
“What thing?” 
“Your phone.” 
“Oh,” you say flatly. “Funny.” 
Silence stretches between you—thick and heavy—full of words left unsaid, and a few that never should’ve been heard. 
“So,” he finally says, pushing to stand, “you feeling okay?” 
“Yeah,” you mutter, opening your email like it’s suddenly the most interesting thing in the world. “Just an upset stomach. I’m fine now.” 
“Really?” he presses, stepping closer. 
You sigh heavily and look up—not at him, just at the back of the room. “Really, Bob. I’m fine. Sorry I didn’t answer your calls, I felt like shit. Just wanted to sleep and watch movies.” 
“What’d you watch?” 
“Back to the Future,” you say—too quickly, without thinking. 
And shit. Why would you admit to spending the whole weekend watching one of his favourite movies? 
“Without me?” he asks, full of mock-offense. 
Your lips twitch, and you hate that they do. So you take a deep, steadying breath and turn to face him—eyes locking with his, your expression dangerously neutral. 
“Do you need something?” 
He frowns. “What do you—” 
“Like do you have a question about what we just debriefed or...?” 
“Oh.” He blinks. “Um, no.” 
You nod. “Okay, good. Then you should go to lunch.” 
He stares at you for a moment, eyes darting across your face, trying to decode what you’re very carefully hiding. But he can’t, because you’ve been perfecting this cool, practiced nonchalance for the past forty-eight hours and you know you have it down pat. 
“Okay,” he mutters. “Lunch. Are—Are you coming too?” 
You shake your head and turn back to the desk. “No, sorry. I’m going to be selfish and spend my break reviewing the sim footage I didn’t get to over the weekend.” 
“That’s not—” he hesitates, clearly confused. “That’s not selfish.” 
You whip back around, brows raised. “Isn’t it?” 
There’s another beat—just a brief pause where he looks at you like you’re suddenly some complete stranger. 
“You sure you’re okay?” he asks, voice soft. 
You nod once. “Yep.” 
Then you turn around, step behind the desk, and drop into the chair, opening your tablet. He stands there for a moment longer, watching you with a furrowed brow, eyes narrowed. But you don’t look at him. You just start pulling up the footage and flipping open your notebook. 
Eventually, he leaves, but not without casting one last glance over his shoulder—looking like a damn kicked puppy. 
You sit in the briefing room trying to focus on sim footage until ten minutes before the end of lunch. Then you sigh, stretch out your limbs, and start packing up your things for the afternoon’s training. You’re halfway to the sim building when your phone buzzes with a text from Maverick: 
‘Hondo got pulled into this meeting. Use the WSOs in the booth.’ 
Great. More time with Bob. And this time, the room’s even smaller. 
With another heavy sigh, you continue making your way toward the building—dragging your feet through hallways and up the stairs until you reach the tech staff for the usual system readiness checks. Once everything’s good to go, you sign on as controller and head into the prep room where the squad is waiting. 
“No time to waste,” you say, skipping any kind of greeting. “Hangman, you’re up first. Bob, Fanboy—you’re in the booth with me. Let’s move. 
Then you turn and walk out, the only sign they’re following you the quiet shuffle of boots behind you. 
You get Jake set up in the sim, then slip into the control booth, taking the farthest seat and pulling your headset on without a word. Mickey settles hesitantly beside you, and Bob takes the last seat—now one person too far away to read whatever expression is on your face. 
“I’ll handle comms,” you say without looking up. “Monitor the readouts, call out any anomalies. Stay focused, watch what I do, and you can run one of the later sessions.” 
“Copy,” Mickey replies. 
“Copy,” Bob mutters. 
You can feel his eyes on you, boring into the side of your face. He’s leaning forward—very unsubtly—watching you with a creased brow as Mickey pretends not to notice the suffocating tension in the booth. 
“Hangman, you ready?” 
“When you are, boss.” 
You tap the screen, starting the sequence. “Simulation beginning. Weapons hot in thirty seconds.” 
Your eyes stay locked on the data feeds, one hand adjusting the sim’s tracking overlay, the other scribbling notes into your tablet. Everything is running clean—Jake’s flying sharp, you’re locked in, and for a moment, it almost feels easy. Peaceful. 
But still, you feel Bob’s gaze. Heavy. Relentless. You don’t look at him, but you know he’s watching—trying to read between your words, between your silences, between the way you didn’t so much as glance in his direction when you walked in. 
“Hangman, confirm radar lock,” you say, fingers flying over the controls with practiced ease. 
“Confirmed. Two-band lock at forty-five miles. Tracking steady.” 
“Maintain altitude for another thirty seconds, then begin a slow descent to angels eighteen. Push to intercept on bandit two.” 
“Copy that. Repositioning.” 
A beat later, Mickey pipes up, “Hey, I’m seeing a drift on the right bank—check pitch trim, two percent off.” 
“Good catch,” you say, glancing at the readout to confirm. “Hangman, adjust pitch trim two percent to port. You’re drifting wide.” 
“On it. Thanks, Fanboy.” 
You glance over at Mickey, a small smile tugging at the corner of your lips. “Nice eyes.” 
He throws you a cheeky wink before turning back to the screen. You try not to look at Bob—but you can’t help it. His cheeks are redder now, his eyes wider, and he looks… indignant. 
After Jake, Javy jumps in the sim, then Bradley, then Reuben—and for him, you have Mickey run the comms. They work well together, and you only have to jump in once or twice to adjust an instruction. 
Then finally, it’s Natasha’s turn. 
“Bob, comms are yours,” you say. “Mickey, stay on readouts.” 
Bob hesitates just a fraction too long before replying, “Copy.” 
Once Natasha is strapped in and the system’s reloaded, you settle back in your chair beside Mickey. Bob shifts awkwardly two seats down, headset on, posture a little too tight to be comfortable. 
“Pilot ready?” you ask. 
He glances at his monitor. “Ready.” 
You nod. “Run it.” 
The sim lights up again, and Natasha’s voice crackles through the speakers—calm and clipped as she begins her sequence. 
You fold your arms across your chest, eyes on the screen—eyes on Bob. He’s steady at first, brow furrowed in concentration, tongue caught between his lips as he tries to remember the training. But you can feel it—the edge in him. Every call he makes lands a half-second late. Every glance your way lingers too long. 
He’s nervous. And you almost feel bad. Almost. 
But then those words ring through your head—and if he’s going to call you intense like it’s a bad thing, then fine. You’ll stare at him—intensely—until he either screws up or helps Natasha fly this sim clean. 
Your gaze flicks to a warning light, brow furrowing as you sit up straighter. 
“She’s pulling too hard,” Bob says. “She should dump speed before—” 
“That’s not going to cut it in the F-35,” you cut in. “You’ve got to lead the roll differently. Weight’s distributed rearward—she floats differently.” Then you glance at him, eyes narrowed. “You know… all that baggage.” 
There’s a beat of silence. Bob shifts. His eyes flick between you and the screen, nerves creeping higher. 
“We’ll adjust the parameters,” you say, turning back to the screen. 
Your hands move across the controls as you focus on Natasha, reassuring her that she’s flying fine. Bob tries to refocus too—to keep his eyes on the feed and talk her through the next manoeuvre. 
But he can’t. His gaze keeps drifting—toward you, confusion drawn tight across his brow. 
You can see the frustration rising. He doesn’t get it. 
But he knows something’s wrong. 
- Bob - 
After Natasha’s successful sim, you give the squad a quick debrief before mumbling something about catching Maverick before he heads home. Bob wants to stop you—to say something, anything, just to get you to talk to him—but you don’t give him the chance. You slip out while he’s stuck in conversation with Reuben and Mickey, too polite to cut them off. 
Eventually, everyone leaves the debrief room and starts walking across base—to their cars, the barracks, or in Javy’s case, the pharmacy, because he’s now convinced he got mono from the girl he hooked up with over the weekend. 
“Coyote, if you go to medical one more time this month, they’re going to assign you your own parking spot,” Natasha says, watching him split away from the group. 
“My lymph nodes are, like, throbbing, dude,” Javy replies. “It’s definitely mono.” 
Jake snorts. “Or maybe it’s rabies and you’re on the countdown clock. We’ve got—what—forty-eight hours till you start foaming at the mouth?” 
“My bet’s on mono,” Reuben says. “That girl was way too hot to have rabies.” 
“Exactly!” Javy calls, now walking backwards. “And I’m exhausted. It’s definitely mono.” 
“You’re always exhausted,” Mickey says, rolling his eyes. 
“That’s ‘cause his standards are low and his stamina’s even lower,” Natasha mutters with a smirk. 
“What was that, Phoenix?” Javy asks, already halfway down the path. 
“Nothing!” she calls back. “Good luck! Maybe you’ll finally get that cute receptionist’s number!” 
The group laughs, because everyone knows Javy has been trying—and failing—for months to get her number. 
“Doubt it,” Jake says, veering off toward the parking lot. “Dude’s got no game.” 
One by one, they all drop off—until it’s just Bob and Natasha. The two of them walk in silence for a few minutes. An easy, companionable kind of quiet while Bob loses himself in his own gnawing thoughts. 
“Okay,” Natasha says, stopping suddenly. “What’s wrong? You look like someone just cancelled Christmas.” 
Bob glances up. “Hm?” 
“Don’t hm me,” she says, propping a hand on her hip. “You’ve been weird all day. What’s going on?” 
“I don’t know, I just—” 
“Is this about Lucky?” 
His stomach drops, nausea creeping up his throat until he’s pretty sure he can taste what he ate for lunch. He hesitates, meeting Natasha’s stare—keen eyes narrowed, brows raised. She’s not letting up anytime soon, so he might as well spill. 
He sighs. “Yeah. Don’t you think she’s acting… off?” 
Nat shrugs. “Maybe. A little. But everyone’s allowed to have a bad day. What makes you think it’s personal?” 
“She ignored me all weekend, and she hasn’t smiled at me once today.” 
Natasha rolls her eyes. “So? She doesn’t owe you a smile every day, Floyd. And she said she was sick. Maybe something happened that you don’t know about.” 
“But she tells me everything,” he mutters. 
“Oh my God,” Natasha groans. “You sound so entitled right now. Just because you’ve been friends forever doesn’t mean she owes you constant access. If she’s having a hard time, maybe stop thinking about yourself and just give her some space.” 
Bob knows she’s right—at least partly. But he also knows you, and whatever this is, it isn’t just a bad day. 
“Fine,” he mumbles. “Space. Got it.” 
“Good.” She nods. “And then when things go back to normal, you two can go back to pretending you’re not stupidly in love with each other.” 
Bob’s breath hitches. His heart kicks in his chest, stuttering into an uneven rhythm as he looks at her, eyes wide. 
She meets his gaze, unflinching—smug and all too knowing. 
“Please,” she says with a laugh. “It’s so obvious. Don’t even try to deny it.” 
He doesn’t. He can’t. His thoughts are spiralling too fast to land anywhere solid. 
He’s not stupid—he knows he’s in love with you. But the idea of you being in love with him? That feels impossible. 
You’re so passionate, so driven—maybe a little intense, but that’s what makes people follow you. It’s why he trusts you with his life. And, sure, you’re reckless sometimes, but never thoughtless. You lead with your whole heart, and Bob wouldn’t be who he is today without you. 
He knows you—your stories, your scars. He’s kept your secrets, walked with you through fire. Everything you carry—all the history, the experience, the baggage—you’ve never carried it alone. 
He’s been carrying it too. Willingly. 
Because you’ve always been the brightest thing in his life. And that’s exactly why he can’t imagine a world where someone like you could ever love someone like him. 
“Have you stopped breathing?” Natasha asks, brows drawn. 
Bob clears his throat, blinking until his vision refocuses. “Yeah—um, no. I’m okay.” 
She narrows her eyes. “You sure? You look pale.” 
“I am pale,” he says dryly, eyes dropping to his boots. 
She snorts softly as they keep walking, heading in the general direction of the base’s front offices. 
“You coming this weekend?” she asks after a beat. 
Bob frowns. “Where?” 
“Hangman’s birthday.” 
Right. Jake’s birthday party. At a club. Not exactly Bob’s scene. 
“I don’t know, it—” 
“You can’t bail just because you hate clubbing,” she cuts in. “It’s not just another weekend—it’s his birthday. You don’t have to drink, just show up for a couple hours.” 
Bob sighs, still watching his boots move with each step. He knows he’s going. He hates it, but he’ll go. He’s too polite, too well-raised—and Jake is his friend. 
“Yeah,” he mutters. “I’ll come for a bit.” 
“Great,” Nat grins. “Then at least I’ll have you, if Lucky’s still in her mood.” She pauses, tipping her head thoughtfully. “That’s if she even comes.” 
After swinging by base office to pick up the squad mail—since Maverick was too busy today—Natasha drives Bob home. The car ride is quieter than usual, and Nat knows Bob is still trapped in his own head, but she doesn’t press. 
Once home, Bob goes through the usual motions. He strips off his uniform, showers, changes into sweats, and starts making himself dinner. The only step missing is the one where he usually gets off with your name on his lips. 
God, he knows it’s depraved, but he can’t help it. Especially now that you’re stationed on the same damn base. 
Well, except today. Today he can help it, because the guilt weighs heavier than usual. He knows something’s wrong—and he has a sinking feeling it’s something he did. He just can’t figure out what. 
His first thought was that stupid photo he sent—the one with him in moose boxers. He wishes he could say he had no clue what he was thinking, but God, he did. He was thinking that maybe you wouldn’t realise he was sending a damn thirst trap if it carried some other meaning. Some nostalgic, almost innocent meaning. Maybe you’d see it as a joke but still catch the way he was tensing—so fucking hard—in the mirror. Maybe there’d be a moment where he wasn’t just your best friend, but someone you could want for something more. 
“Fuck,” Bob mutters, pressing his forehead against the cold fridge door. “What is wrong with me?” 
Embarrassed doesn’t even begin to cover it. That photo was a lapse in judgment—a desperate Hangman move to get you to look at him differently. And God, did it backfire. 
Cute? You called him cute. 
He shakes his head. Sure, the boxers weren’t exactly sexy, but cute?! 
He wishes he could rewind and stop himself before he became that much of an idiot. But that’s just what you do to him. You make him stupid. That’s been the story since the day he first met you. 
Back at the academy, he was smitten—instantly, though shy at first, a little guarded. Until you wore him down. It didn’t take long before he was snorting at your stupid jokes, grinning like an idiot every time you caught his eye, and spending countless nights in the study hall with you and your secret snacks, sharing headphones. 
Then came flight school. Different tracks—him training as an NFO, you training to be a pilot—meant less time together. But still, you stayed close. You found ways to sneak off, to steal moments, naïvely planning futures that felt just within reach. 
Almost everyone assumed you were a thing, but whenever Bob corrected them, it turned into a whole different game. 
He got so sick of being asked for your number that he started making up ridiculous excuses. 
‘Sorry, she doesn’t have a phone.’ 
‘I would, but it’s encrypted.’ 
‘She only uses Morse code.’ 
‘Do you have any carrier pigeons?’ 
When you both deployed after the FRS, he felt almost relieved. Almost. Until he realised that with him halfway across the world, there was nothing but the relentless demands of military life standing between you and finding a boyfriend—or worse, a husband. 
But as fate would have it—or perhaps dumb luck—you both ended up stationed on North Island together. Single. Very single, as you’d told Jake before shutting him down completely. 
And God, Bob wants nothing more than to make you very un-single, very fucking attached to him. But he just can’t find the guts to do it—not when it might blow up in his face and ruin years of friendship, a bond so precious he’d do anything to protect it. 
If there’s even a bond left to protect. Because right now, Bob Floyd is pretty damn sure you hate him. For something he can’t even remember doing. 
The chime of the oven timer startles him out of his thoughts. He spins around, turns off the heat, grabs a dish towel, and carefully pulls the tray of lasagna out. He lets it cool while cueing up the next Nat Geo doc he’s been wanting to watch, making a little nest of pillows on the couch before settling in with the lasagna in his lap. 
He eats quickly, eyes flicking between the screen, his dinner, and his phone buzzing incessantly on the coffee table. He can tell it’s the group chat, but the messages are popping up too fast to follow. From what he can gather, you’re all talking about Jake’s birthday party. 
When he’s finished eating, he takes his plate to the kitchen, rinses it half-heartedly, and returns to the lounge. He grabs his phone off the table and flops forward onto the cushions, sprawled across the couch, propped up on his elbows as he scrolls through the chat. 
It’s mostly Jake and Javy arguing about their big birthday plans, broken up by Mickey and Reuben’s commentary, Natasha’s sharp little quips, and Bradley just reacting to every second message like he’s not even reading. 
And then... there’s you. 
It started when Nat made some snarky remark about Jake wearing a sparkly suit so no one forgets it’s his birthday. You replied with an innocent comment about not knowing what to wear, and Natasha—naturally—told you to send options. 
So you did. 
The first photo is a mirror selfie in a deep red satin slip dress that barely hits mid-thigh. The fabric clings to your hips and gapes at the chest—like it was designed to slip off a shoulder. One hand holds your phone, the other casually throwing up a peace sign, as if you’re not standing there wrapped in something that could pass for a napkin. 
Bob’s mouth goes dry. His eyes go wide. And he stares for just a little too long. 
The second photo isn’t a selfie—it’s been taken by someone else. Probably on the night you last wore the glittery silver dress. The flash is on and the image is a little blurry, catching you from behind, turning with a smile thrown over your shoulder. There’s a glimpse of thigh, the bare slope of your back, and a glint in your eye that knocks the air out of him. 
He exhales so hard it turns into a groan. With a slight wince, he shifts and adjusts his sweatpants, already regretting every choice that’s led him to this moment. 
The next one is back in the mirror. You’re leaning against your dresser—just out of frame, but Bob knows exactly what your room looks like. The dress is little, black, and absolutely criminal. It fits like sin and leaves absolutely nothing to the imagination. 
If Bob were standing, he’d need to sit down. But he’s already on the couch, lying down with his now painfully hard dick pressed into the cushions. How the hell do you do this to him with just a few photos? 
The last one is a close-up selfie in your bathroom mirror. The flash is on and you’re standing close, angling the camera low to catch the way the fabric dips between your breasts and hugs your waist like a secret. There’s hardly any of your face in frame—just the hint of a smirk. 
“God,” Bob growls, dropping his head—and his phone—as his hips begin to grind into the cushions. 
This is insane. You are dangerous. Surely you know what you’re doing. You can’t be that naïve. 
He almost hates that the whole squad is watching too—seeing you like this, picturing you in the ways Bob has been picturing you for years. 
With another low groan, he shifts onto his back and stares at the ceiling. After a moment, he shuts his eyes—and instead of pushing them away, he lets every perverted thought he’s ever had of you wash over him. 
Your body draped in that silky red dress. Your lips curled into that sinful little smirk. Your legs, on full display in those ridiculously short skirts. 
He pictures you as he slips his hand beneath his sweats, fingers wrapping around his painfully hard, leaking length—stroking once, then twice. His breath stutters. His free hand grips the cushion beside him, trying to ground himself as his hips lift ever so slightly, chasing more friction. 
He imagines you climbing into his lap, all warm skin and wicked intent, whispering some teasing little comment that sends blood rushing so hard through his body he thinks he might actually lose it. 
His cheeks burn and his heart races, desire and need building in his chest until it’s almost too hard to breathe. 
His breath catches when he pictures you arching into him—skin slick with sweat, hands tangled in his hair, whispering his name like a prayer. 
He ruts up into his hand again, faster this time, lips parted and eyes still shut tight. 
His movements grow faster. Rougher. Desperate. 
God, he knows he shouldn’t—he knows even now—but he can’t stop. 
He pictures your body beneath his—soft gasps filling the air, lips parted, eyes fluttering closed. His hands on your tits, your hips, your ass—anywhere he can reach. Everywhere. Branding you like you’re his to keep. And— 
His body seizes, muscles going tight as pleasure crashes over him in hot, dizzying waves. He spills into his sweats, hips still moving, rutting up and down, chasing the fading heat until all that’s left is a breathless ache. 
“Fuck,” he rasps, collapsing onto the cushions, skin flushed, heart hammering. 
He lies there for a few minutes—sticky and spent—as guilt creeps in... but so does a sharp, undeniable hunger for more. 
Eventually, the insistent buzzing of his phone cuts through the post-orgasm haze, and he reaches for it with his free hand, grabbing it from where it fell beside him on the couch. 
The group chat is still alive with a flood of inappropriate comments and ridiculous emojis from Mickey—all thanks to your photos. Everyone’s got an opinion on which dress you should wear, most leaning toward the last one with the low neckline. 
Then, at the bottom of the thread, Natasha’s name pops up again: ‘Bob, your opinion?’ 
Bob huffs a small, humourless laugh. 
Yeah. His opinion is painted on the inside of his fucking sweatpants. 
- You - 
You only agreed to go to Jake’s birthday because you were pretty sure Bob wouldn’t. 
Okay, that’s not the only reason—Jake’s your friend, and you’re not about to bail on his birthday just because you’re emotionally fragile. But knowing Bob probably wouldn’t show? Yeah, that made it a lot easier to say yes. 
Bob’s never enjoyed clubbing—not that you can blame him—but on top of that, it’s been a weird week. You’ve softened a little, but not much. You stopped shooting him scathing looks or cutting him off mid-sentence, but you’ve still been avoiding him 
You remembered how to laugh with the others—how to joke around—because the squad didn’t do anything wrong. They didn’t deserve to suffer just because Bob said the wrong thing and you’re too hurt to deal with it. 
But Bob? You refuse to be left alone with him. You don’t speak to him unless you absolutely have to. You don’t ask him questions. You don’t meet his gaze—no matter how many times he tries to catch yours. 
Not that he’s trying all that hard anymore. If anything, he seems… quiet. Sad. Distant in a way that twists something sharp in your chest. Like he’s pulling back. Giving you space. Like he’s trying not to upset you. 
And maybe that should make you feel better. Or worse. You’re not sure. 
Either way, you know it’s childish. The guilt’s been gnawing at you all week. But every time you start to feel too bad, you remember what he said. How he really sees you. The way he talked about you like you were a problem. Like you were too much. And then the guilt dies out. 
Because why should you feel bad when he’s the one who decided you were too intense? Too reckless? Just… baggage? 
He doesn’t care about you—not the way you care about him. He doesn’t even like you. Not really. 
You’re not even sure why he’s sulking so much. If he never really liked you, why does it matter? 
“Holy shit, Lucky,” Jake drawls the second you step out of the cab. “All this for me?” 
The dress you settled on isn’t tight, but it moves like liquid when you walk—clinging here, skimming there, draping in all the right places. It’s black, sleek, and cut low at the front, dipping between your breasts just enough to make anyone looking forget what they were saying. 
The fabric is soft and slinky, catching the light in subtle waves as it shifts around your body. The hem flirts with the tops of your thighs—high enough to turn heads, low enough to play innocent if you really wanted to. There’s a slit up one side, just enough to show off a teasing flash of leg when you walk—or more, if you’re not careful. Paired with your favourite boots and a gold choker around your neck, the whole look whispers danger and dares someone to ask what you’re doing later. 
“Not just for you, Seresin,” you smirk. “But since it’s your birthday, I’ll let you look all you want.” 
You step up and give him a hug, mumbling ‘Happy Birthday’ against his chest as his hand drops just a little lower than it should. 
“You look fucking hot,” Nat says when you turn to her. 
“All for you, baby.” 
She grins. “I knew you’d be mine tonight. Wanna get out of here?” 
“Show me the way.” 
You both start giggling, linking hands as you make your way down the little footpath toward the club’s front entrance. 
“Wait, nobody move,” Mickey calls from behind. “If this is a dream, I don’t want to wake up.” 
There’s a soft thump, followed by a little whine—probably Reuben or Bradley smacking him over the head. 
“We couldn’t all fit in the cab,” Nat says. “So Bob’s picking up Coyote. Might be a little late, though.” 
Your heart stutters. “Bob—Bob’s coming?” 
She nods, brow furrowing. “Of course. It’s Hangman's birthday.” 
“Oh.” You swallow hard, suddenly hyperaware of every inch of skin—which is a lot—on display. “Cool. Cool. That’s cool.” 
“Is it?” she asks, laughter creeping into her voice. 
You give her a tight smile and nod a little too quickly—not at all panicked. 
“Oh, boy,” she sighs, slowing to a stop in front of the club doors. “This is going to be a fun night.” 
The club is busy, but not overcrowded. There are two bars and two dancefloors, one on either side of an open-roof courtyard scattered with tall bar tables and several large booths along the back wall. Out here, the music isn’t too loud—which must be the point. 
Javy has managed to reserve one of the booths for the squad, while the rest of Jake’s friends—who make up most of the bar crowd—hover around the high tables, some already drifting onto the dancefloors. It’s not early, but it’s not quite late either. The DJs—one for each floor—haven’t started dropping bangers yet, but from the vibe so far, it’s clear this place gets wild. 
“My first birthday request,” Jake says as you all settle into the booth, “is a round of shots. No pussies.” 
There’s a round of laughter, a groan from Natasha, and a cheer from Mickey. You, meanwhile, are more than happy to get some liquid courage into your system as soon as possible. Ideally, you’ll be halfway to shit-faced by the time Bob shows up—just enough to shut your goddamn nerves up. 
A few minutes later, Jake returns with a tray of tiny glasses, each filled with that golden liquid you know is going to burn. Jake Seresin and his fucking Fireball. 
“To Bagman,” Natasha says, raising her shot. 
Everyone follows. “To Bagman!” 
You wince as the cinnamon heat scorches down your throat, hitting your empty stomach like a lick of flame. Jake slams his glass down with a grin, Mickey gags, Reuben grimaces, and Bradley and Natasha sink their liquor with concerningly straight faces. 
Bradley disappears then to get the first round of proper drinks while Jake launches into a story about his wild thirtieth—offering more detail than anyone asked for, and definitely more than anyone needed. 
You laugh along with the others, chiming in here and there, but your eyes keep drifting to the door. Every time it swings open, your heart gives a stupid little jolt—only to sink again when it’s not him. 
You try not to let it show. Try stay present, sipping your drink and throwing in the occasional sarcastic comment, but your thoughts keep circling. 
Is he still coming? Did he change his mind because of you? What’s he going to think of this ridiculous little dress? 
You shake off the spiralling questions, turning your attention back to the table just as Mickey launches into a story about his own latest birthday—which involved more tequila, less pants, and at least one stolen golf cart. 
After finishing your first drink, you excuse yourself to the bathroom—partly because you sculled a litre of water before coming, and partly because you want to check yourself before Bob arrives. It’s dumb, but you don’t care. You might be mad at him, but you still want to make his jaw drop. 
And if this dress does anything right, it’s making jaws hit the floor. 
You walk down the short hall, passing one of the dancefloors. There are two large doors marked as accessible toilets, then the men’s, and finally the women’s. You slip inside, duck into a stall, pee quickly, and wash your hands. 
The mirrors in the women’s room, though, are annoyingly small and set far too high. You can barely see below your collarbones—even when you jump, which is definitely not recommended in this dress. With a frustrated huff, you step back out and slip into one of the accessible toilets—surely that’ll have a mirror a little lower? 
The accessible bathroom is spacious and way nicer than the regular stalls. There’s a black marble vanity bathed in soft, glowing light, plenty of grab rails lining the walls, and—best of all—a full-length mirror stretching from floor to ceiling, perfect for a proper once-over. 
You check your dress, adjusting how it sits on your shoulders and hips, then give a little twirl. You push your boobs up just a touch, swipe beneath your eye for any smudged mascara, and slip back out into the club. 
You weave your way through the crowd, the bass humming beneath your feet. There are more people now—hovering near the bars, drifting between dancefloors. You try to ignore the looks you’re getting, but a little shiver still rattles down your spine. You feel seen. Too seen. 
Maybe this dress wasn’t the best idea. 
You step into the courtyard and glance up, spotting the booth where your friends are and— 
Bob. 
He’s standing just in front of it, half-turned away, arms folded as he talks to someone inside the booth. And thank God for the distraction, because holy shit—you can’t stop staring. 
He looks... different. You’ve seen him in civilian clothes plenty of times before, but tonight? Tonight, those dark blue jeans cling just right to his long legs and criminally good ass. And that black long-sleeve button-up—jet black, just like your dress—looks like it’s seconds from bursting at the seams across his shoulders and arms. It’s sharp, clean, and a devastating contrast to the flight suit you’re so used to seeing him in. 
And then there are those dorky cowboy boots. Always the boots. Somehow they just make it worse. Make him more him. And that makes your thighs clench. 
Then, slowly, he turns. It’s casual at first… until he sees you. 
His jaw drops. Literally. His eyes go wide. 
He looks like a deer in headlights. No—worse. He looks like someone just hit him in the chest with a defibrillator. You’re not even sure he’s breathing. 
It takes everything in you to keep your pace steady, your expression neutral—to walk across the courtyard like your knees aren’t about to give out. 
Not that he’s looking at your face. Not until you’re standing right in front of him. 
“Bob,” you say, voice tight, before turning sharply toward Javy. “Coyote!” 
Javy’s eyes go wide as he takes you in—then flick toward poor, frozen, shell-shocked Bob—before his mouth splits into a hesitant grin. 
“Lucky,” he says, wrapping an arm around you. “You look—I mean, that dress—” 
“Save it, big fella,” you laugh. “I’m sure Hangman will make up for it with a dozen inappropriate comments once he’s had a few more drinks.” 
Javy chuckles, shaking his head. “I’m sure he will.” 
You slip into the booth and settle beside Natasha, taking a sip from the straw of the drink she slides your way. 
Bob is still standing there. He hasn’t said a word. You’re still not sure he’s breathing. He’s just staring—eyes wide, dark, and so full of something you can practically feel them dragging over your skin. 
Okay—maybe this dress was a good idea. 
After another round of drinks—and another of shots—everyone’s feeling a lot looser. Except Bob. 
He’s nursing his coke with a tight jaw, his eyes flicking between you and whoever’s currently taking their turn staring at your boobs. It’s usually Jake. 
And as much as you’d love to enjoy making him suffer, you’re not entirely sure what’s going on with him. You can’t tell if he’s pissed that you’ve been cold all week or feeling—undeservingly—protective because you’re wearing more birthday suit than dress. Either way, the way he’s looking at you is… unnerving. Almost feral. 
His attention makes your skin prickle, your pulse jump. Because behind his eyes is something dark. Something dangerous. Something you’re not used to seeing in Bob. 
So, like any emotionally well-adjusted person, you do the obvious thing and suggest another round of shots. 
You’ve just swallowed your third nip of Fireball when you hear a frighteningly familiar voice rise over the thrum of music. 
“Hangman!” he exclaims. “Happy birthday, bro!” 
Your stomach drops. It’s him. The guy Bob was talking to that night. 
Your eyes snap up, wide, landing on a familiar face you’ve known since flight school. 
Bob’s eyes are wide too—but not with surprise. No, his are flat, dark, brimming with something else entirely. Something heavy. Tense. Possessive. 
Something that doesn’t look like Bob at all. 
“Harvard!” Jake grins, standing and leaning across the table to shake the guy’s hand. 
They greet each other with loud enthusiasm before Brigham turns to the rest of the group—saying hello, smiling, working his way around. 
He saves you for last. And you’re not nearly naïve enough to pretend you don’t know why. 
“Lucky,” he says, drawing out the last syllable as his gaze drops straight to your chest. “Lookin’ good, darlin’.” 
“Thanks,” you reply, plastering on your sweetest smile. “Wanna sit?” 
Brigham has the choice of sitting beside either you or Bob, and with the way Bob’s trying to telepathically murder him—and the way your tits are sitting—it’s no surprise he chooses you. 
“You know,” he says as he settles in, “I was just talking to Bobby about you the other day.” 
Your heart lurches, but you keep your expression steady. 
“Really?” you ask, voice thick with faux shock. “Bobby didn’t tell me that.” 
Brigham chuckles. “Yeah, I bet. I think Bob’s been tryin’ to keep you all to himself.” 
Bob’s scowl falters, a flicker of something—maybe worry—flashing across his face. Your heart stutters again. But then those words echo in your head, and with a sly smile, you shift a little closer to Brigham. 
Okay, sure, you’re not attracted to the man—like, at all. In fact, you’re not attracted to anyone whose name doesn’t start with Robert, end in Floyd, and come with a pair of wide, dark blue eyes in the middle. But if it’s going to get under Bob’s skin? A little flirting can’t hurt. 
After all, he’s the one who called you reckless. 
“Well, Harvard,” you say, leaning in. “Fortunately for you, I don’t belong to anyone. And if you’re feelin’ lucky… maybe later I’ll let you feel real lucky.” 
Javy, sitting across from you, chokes on his drink—coughing and spluttering into his hand as everyone turns toward him with confused eyes. 
Except Bob. Bob’s stare doesn’t move from where your hand rests on Brigham’s arm. 
You spend the next hour pressed against Brigham, nodding along as he talks about his latest deployment. Apparently, he’s just returned to North Island. After the special detachment—the one with the Dagger Squad—he was sent back to his original squadron, then reassigned here and there before finally landing back in San Diego. 
You couldn’t repeat a single detail if your life depended on it. Because all you’ve been able to focus on is Bob. 
The way he keeps glancing over, the way his posture shifts every time Brigham leans closer, the sharp tick in his jaw. His knuckles are white around a lukewarm bottle of coke, and he hasn’t said more than a few words since Brigham sat down. 
The more you drink, the bolder you feel. You start meeting Bob’s gaze when you catch it—at least, when it’s not locked on Brigham—and every time you do, your pulse jumps. And with each slow, alcohol-fuelled beat, the urge to confront him grows. To finally ask what the hell he meant that night. To find out if your friendship actually means anything to him—if it ever meant anything at all. 
But just as you part your lips to speak, Jake jumps up and declares it’s time to hit the dancefloor. 
You cling to that interruption like a lifeline. 
Because as you slide out of the booth and watch Bob disappear into the crowd—heading toward the bathrooms, not the dancefloor—you realise confronting him now, like this, is only going to end badly. 
The music shifts as you step onto the dancefloor—heavier bass, deeper tempo, something slow enough to roll your hips to and fast enough to forget why you’re here. Lights flicker overhead, casting streaks of colour as you melt into the crowd. Brigham finds you in the haze, hands landing low on your hips like it’s second nature, and you don’t bother correcting him. Even if it feels… wrong. 
You sway with the rhythm, arms draped loosely around his shoulders, fingertips grazing the hair at his nape. You laugh at something he says—not that you heard it—but the sound slips easily enough from your lips. 
For a moment, it’s easy to pretend—until you see him. 
Bob. 
He’s leaning against the far wall just beyond the edge of the dancefloor, half-turned toward Bradley like he’s part of the conversation—but he’s not. His posture’s easy, arms folded, one boot crossed over the other. But even from across the room, he doesn’t quite fit. 
Sweet, awkward Bob. All long limbs and stormy eyes in a neon-drenched club that makes no sense around him. His body’s turned toward his friend, but his eyes? 
They’re on you. Locked. Unmoving. 
There’s something electric in his stare. Not soft, not sweet—hungry. It holds you there, stills your breath, makes the air around you feel thicker. He’s not blinking. He’s not smiling. He’s just watching, like you’re the only thing in the room. 
And you feel it. 
The heat rising up your neck. The low, tight pull in your belly. That wild, reckless urge that’s been coiled in your chest since he walked in. 
So you play it up. You let your head tip back, let your body roll with the bass, just a little slower, a little deeper. You lean closer to Brigham, letting your fingers trail down the front of his chest like you’re having fun—like you’re not thinking about Bob at all. 
But you can still feel that stare. Like it’s touching you. Burning through you. 
When your eyes find his again, he still hasn’t moved. 
The beat throbs under your heels. Brigham’s hands stay loose on your hips. The lights flash, the alcohol hums in your blood—but none of it matters. One song blends into the next. Bob never looks away. 
You try not to keep looking. But you do. Because the longer you stay on that dancefloor with a man you don’t care about, the longer Bob stares. 
Still against the wall. Still pretending to talk. Still watching you. 
So—after three boring songs—you smile, tilt your head, and let your hand trail down Brigham’s chest again, moving slower, closer. 
You catch a flicker of movement in your periphery. And when you glance over again, Bob is gone. Your heart skips, but before you can even fully turn, fingers wrap around your wrist—warm, firm, unrelenting. 
Then he’s there. Beside you. 
He moves quickly, taking you with him as he strides across the dancefloor with dark eyes and a clenched jaw, weaving through the crowd like it isn’t there. He looks out of place—so out of place—but he doesn’t care. Not now. Not with purpose in every step and his hand on you like he’s never letting go. 
He doesn’t say a word. Just pulls. 
Past dancing strangers, through the heavy heat of the club, and into the dim hallway outside the bathrooms—where the music dulls just enough, the air shifts, and suddenly there’s only the two of you. 
He lets go of your wrist like it burns him. “What the hell are you doing?” 
You blink. “Excuse me?” 
Bob’s chest rises and falls, his eyes wild. “What—What are you doing?” 
“What’s your problem?” you bite back. 
“My—? My problem?!” His voice pitches up as he drags a hand through his hair. He laughs once—dry and disbelieving. “I—I don’t know. I wish I knew. But you’ve iced me out all week, and now you’re doing this?” 
“Doing what?” you demand. 
“This! This isn’t you! This is—it’s—I don’t know, it’s—” 
“Reckless?” you cut in. “Intense? Oh—sorry. Is my baggage showing?” 
He flinches. You see it—clear as day. Like the words punched him in the gut. 
You’ve never seen Bob like this—so worked up, so flustered, like he’s been holding something back for too long and it’s finally starting to slip. His jaw is tight, his cheeks are flushed, and there’s a fire in his eyes that doesn’t quite fit the Bob you know. 
He looks tense. Frustrated. On edge. Not at all like someone who doesn’t care. 
And that’s the most confusing part.  
“Why would you say that?” he asks, voice dropping, shoulders sagging. 
“I didn’t,” you reply. “You did. Last week.” 
He takes a deep breath and tips his head back, realisation settling heavy and hard. “God. Lucky,” he sighs. “I didn’t—” 
“Save it, Floyd,” you cut in, voice rising over the music. “I don’t want excuses. Or lies. If that’s how you really felt about me, you should have just said so. I wouldn’t have burdened you with my friendship all these years.” 
He shakes his head. “No. That’s not how I really feel. I—I didn’t mean those things, I just—” 
“Then why would you say it?” 
He hesitates, brow furrowing. “Why didn’t you tell me you overheard?” 
You huff, disbelieving, throwing your hands up. “Seriously? What would you have done if you heard me talking shit about you?” 
“I—” His breath catches, his eyes dropping to your chest, just for a second, before snapping back to your face. “I don’t know. But you should have said something. God. Lucky, you don’t understand.” 
You fold your arms—very aware of what that does to your breasts. “Understand what?” 
“That I’m in love with you,” he blurts out, each word sharp and undeniable. “I’ve been in love with you for years. Since the first day I met you. And I said those things because—because that’s what I do. I keep you to myself. I tell guys you don’t have a phone. Or that you’re gay. Or—or that you only communicate with fucking carrier pigeons.” 
Your breath catches sharp in your throat. Emotion rises in your chest, wild and fierce. The world feels unsteady, like you’re caught in a dream—sounds blur, lights twist and shimmer at the edges of your vision—and Bob fucking Floyd just told you he loves you.  
“I’m sorry I said those things,” he says, stepping forward, voice lower now. “But I’m also sorry I’ve lied to you for years. Because I love you more than you know. And—and I’ve cockblocked you more times than you know too.” 
His lips twitch into a nervous, watery smile—half proud, half terrified. His eyes are still wide, still a little dark, but now so full of hesitation it makes your heart ache. 
He’s never told you because he doesn’t think you love him back. Even now, he’s bracing for the blow. Waiting for the laugh, or the ‘let’s just be friends’ speech. 
God. He looks so sweet. So nervous. So heartbreakingly Bob Floyd—even in the middle of this stupid club with its stupid lights and its stupid music. 
Without a word, you grab his wrist and shove open the door to one of the accessible bathrooms. You step inside, drag him in after you, and let the door fall shut—sliding the lock into place with a sharp click that echoes like a gunshot. 
“What are you doing?” Bob asks, voice low, unsteady. 
He’s backed up near the vanity, caught in the soft overhead light. It sharpens the lines of his jaw, glints off his glasses, and makes his eyes look lighter—more exposed. He looks completely out of place here. Nervous. Overwhelmed. Already unravelling. 
“Making sure you can hear me,” you say, your voice softer now as you take a slow step forward. 
The room doesn’t feel nearly as spacious as it did earlier. The air is thick—charged and humming with everything unspoken, everything the two of you have been holding in. 
Bob nods. Barely. His hands twitch at his sides, his eyes glued to the floor—like he’s bracing for impact, waiting for the moment you let him down gently, tell him he’s just your friend and nothing more. 
You close the distance, lift a hand to his jaw, and tilt his face up—until he has no choice but to look at you. 
“I want you to hear me when I tell you that I’m in love with you too, Bob Floyd.” 
His eyes go wide. A breath escapes him in a soft, stunned gasp, his cheeks flushing even deeper. “You what?” 
“I love you,” you say, steadier now, lips curving into a soft, slow smile. “I always have. I don’t know how we both got so stupid, but God… I was wrecked when I heard you say those things. I love you so much I was ready to ask for reassignment just to get away. I love you so much I haven’t even thought about loving anyone else since the day I met you.” 
He blinks hard. His chest rises and falls like he’s forgotten how to breathe. 
“You love me?” 
“Yes, you idiot,” you say, fingers curling into the collar of his shirt. “Now fucking kiss me.” 
You pull him down—and he doesn’t hesitate. 
One hand grabs your waist, the other tangles in your hair as he crashes into you, mouth on yours like he’s been holding back for years. It’s not gentle. Not careful. It’s messy and breathless and full of all the things he never said. His lips are hot, desperate, a little clumsy at first—but God, he learns fast. 
You gasp against him, and he takes it like a reward, deepening the kiss as he walks you backward until your tailbone bumps the edge of the vanity. Then he’s lifting you—strong hands beneath your thighs, gripping like he’s afraid you’ll vanish—until you’re perched on the counter, legs parting to pull him in. 
The marble is cold beneath your bare skin, but his body is warm between your thighs. 
He kisses like he means it. Like he’s starved. Like he’s been on fire from the moment he saw you in that dress and now he’s finally letting himself burn. His hands are everywhere—your hips, your waist, your jaw. His mouth barely leaves yours, just enough to breathe before he’s right there again, hungrier this time. 
You twist your fingers in his hair and pull, and he groans—deep and low, like the sound was dragged straight from his chest. His glasses slip crookedly down his nose, but he doesn’t bother fixing them. You catch the way his eyes darken even further behind the askew lenses, wild and hungry. 
“This stupid dress,” he breathes against your lips, voice thick with want. 
His hands roam possessively beneath the fabric, fingers digging into your waist as he grinds his cock against you with a needy roll of his hips. You feel the thick, hard press of him right where you need it, and the heat between you sharpens—filthy, hungry, and impossible to ignore. 
“God, Lucky...” he rasps, voice rough as gravel, lips nipping at your neck. 
Your fingers find the collar of his shirt, fumbling with the buttons as his wet mouth trails along your collarbone. When he finally looks up, his glasses catch the light—glinting at a wild, crooked angle. 
“You look ridiculous,” you tease with a smirk. 
He flushes, just the slightest hint of insecurity flickering through his fierce gaze. 
“Ridiculously fucking sexy,” you whisper, leaning in, lips brushing his jaw. 
His hands explore with increasing urgency, and you arch into him, breathless and burning. 
“Lucky...” he growls, voice low and ragged. “I need you.” 
You pull him closer, heart pounding. “Then take me.” 
That’s all it takes. His hands are moving instantly, pushing your dress down over your shoulders in one fluid motion. Your bra follows—tugged down and discarded with zero ceremony—because he’s not wasting a second. 
Then he’s on you. Everywhere. 
His mouth is hot and open against your skin, dragging across your chest in feverish, reverent kisses. He palms your breasts like he’s dreamt about this—like he’s memorised them in his sleep—and he’s not shy about it either. His thumbs roll over your nipples, teasing until they’re tight and aching, and when you gasp, he hums like he’s pleased with himself. 
He nips your collarbone, teeth just shy of cruel, then licks away the sting as he trails lower—lips, tongue, breath—until he closes his mouth over your left nipple. 
Your hips jerk. You don’t mean to, but you can’t help it. Desperation coils hot and deep in your core, tightening with every flick of his tongue. 
His hand finds your other breast again, rougher now, pinching lightly at your nipple as he sucks, and you can feel his smirk even as his mouth stays latched to your skin 
“Bob—fuck,” you breathe, eyes fluttering shut. “Your mouth—” 
He pulls back just enough to blow cool air over your wet nipple, and your back arches, involuntary, like he’s got a string tied to your spine. 
“What was that?” he murmurs, lips brushing your skin. “You wanna fuck my mouth?” 
You groan again—louder, needier—as he shifts to your right breast and sucks hard, deep, slow, like he’s trying to ruin you one perfect kiss at a time. Your thighs clamp tight around his hips, grounding yourself against the pressure of his body, the friction of his jeans against your bare legs, the delicious hardness pressing between them. 
He moans into your skin, and the sound vibrates straight through you. 
“Bob—” you gasp, voice thin, shaky. “N-Need you. Now.” 
He finishes with a soft bite to your nipple that makes you jolt, then drags his mouth back up to yours—kissing you hard, deep, claiming. Your fingers tangle in his hair, tugging, rougher than you mean to. He groans again, like he likes the sting. 
Then he grinds against you. 
His hips roll forward, dragging the full, thick length of him right against your soaked core, and you gasp into his mouth. There’s too much friction, too much heat, not nearly enough relief. Your thighs twitch around him, clenching on instinct. 
“Bob,” you say again—this time low, warning, wrecked. 
“‘S okay,” he murmurs, lips brushing your cheek, your jaw, your throat. “I got you.” 
His hands slide down your body, slow and possessive, until they find your hips. He squeezes, hard—fingers digging in like he’s trying to anchor himself—and then pushes your dress up, bunching the soft fabric around your waist. And now there’s almost nothing between you. 
His breath catches. He pulls back just enough to look—and groans, deep and guttural. 
“You’re perfect,” he says, reverent and hungry all at once. Then his mouth is back on yours, more desperate this time, like he’s seconds from losing control. 
Your hands fumble at his shirt, yanking buttons through holes until you reach his belt. Your fingers work quickly, sliding the leather free, popping the button, lowering the zip. His hips buck forward when your hand brushes against him, thick and hot beneath his boxers. 
“Are you sure?” he rasps, voice barely holding together. 
You nod, breathless. “I’m sure.” 
His lips crash back to yours, and then his hands leave you for just a second—long enough to shove his jeans and briefs down past his hips—before they’re back, gripping your thighs, pulling you closer to the edge of the vanity. 
His thumbs dig into your skin, like he needs to feel you everywhere. And God, the bruises are going to kill you tomorrow—but you want every single one. 
You reach between your bodies, sliding your hand into the space between his low-slung jeans and your bare thighs. He jerks at the first touch—his breath catching, hips stuttering forward. 
“Fuck,” he chokes, voice ragged. His forehead drops to yours, like it’s the only thing keeping him upright. 
You wrap your fingers around him—hard, hot, thick—and stroke once, slow and firm. 
He groans, deep and broken. “Jesus, Lucky—don’t… don’t tease.” 
You bite back a grin, stroking again just to feel him twitch in your hand. “Then hurry up and fuck me.” 
That shatters whatever was left of his restraint. His hand finds the thin scrap of fabric between your legs and pushes it aside, fingers grazing through the wetness there. His breath hitches again. 
“You’re already—” He swallows hard. “God, you’re so wet.” 
He grips your hip, braces his other hand behind you on the counter, and meets your eyes—searching, asking—before he thrusts forward. 
Slow at first. Deliberate. Like he wants to feel every second of you stretching around him. 
You gasp, spine arching, mouth falling open. He’s thick, the stretch almost too much, but your body gives way like it’s been waiting for this. For him. 
“Holy shit,” he groans, jaw slack as he sinks into you. “You feel—fuck. So good. So good.” 
You clutch at his shoulders, nails digging in, and he starts to move—deep, rolling thrusts that drag moans from your throat before you can stop them. His glasses are still askew, fogging with heat, and you’re obsessed with how he looks like this—wrecked, gorgeous, utterly undone. 
His hands find your waist again, yanking you flush as he grinds into you with a frantic, desperate rhythm that makes your knees tremble. One hand drags up your side, fingertips blazing a slow path over your ribs before curling over the swell of your breast. 
He palms it—rough, reverent—thumb circling your nipple, making your back arch and pulling a gasp from your throat that turns into a whimper. 
“I love you,” he growls, voice low and wrecked, like the words are being dragged out of him. “So fucking much.” 
Your chest clenches, aching with it, echoing the coil twisting tighter and tighter low in your belly. 
“I love you,” you breathe, broken and shaky. 
He groans deep in his chest and starts moving faster, hips snapping into yours with relentless force. Each thrust drags a ragged moan from your lips, each one pulling you closer to the edge. The air is thick with sweat and sex and everything you’ve both kept buried for years. 
His glasses slip lower down his nose, his hair damp with sweat, his face flushed and wild—completely wrecked. He looks at you like he can’t believe you’re real. Like he’s never going to let you go. 
You tilt your head back and moan—loud, shameless—the sound echoing through the bathroom with the obscene slap of skin on skin. Then your eyes lock again, and it’s too much—too hot, too filthy, too intimate. You're cock-drunk and completely gone for him, mouth parted, breath hitching as you fall apart in real time. 
He crashes his mouth to yours again, slower now—deeper—like he wants to kiss you into the fucking walls. One hand still works your breast, kneading, tugging, pinching, while the other dips low, his fingers finding your clit and rubbing fast, messy circles that have you shuddering. 
“Fuck,” you gasp, choking on the word. “Bob—I’m gonna—” 
“Yeah?” he pants, voice ragged. “You—you gonna cum? I’ve got you.” 
His thrusts grow harder, deeper, rougher—like he’s pounding the words into you, like he wants you to feel them everywhere. You’re soaked and stretched and it’s so good you almost sob. 
The noises are filthy—wet and desperate, breathless moans and frantic grunts—and neither of you care. Not here. Not now. Not when this is everything you’ve both been craving for years. 
“Oh God,” he groans, breath hot against your throat. “You feel so fucking good. You’re gonna ruin me.” 
You’re both panting, chasing the edge, clinging to each other like you’ll fall apart without it. He pulls back just enough to see your face, and that look—wrecked, awe-struck, completely fucking gone—undoes you. 
Your orgasm hits like a wave crashing through your spine, your vision going white, your legs locking around him as your whole body shakes. 
Bob’s right behind you—one, two more thrusts—and then he’s groaning low, spilling inside you as he buries his face in your neck, thrusting through it, riding the high with you. You're both shaking, bodies slick, hearts pounding, still grinding, still desperate, still needing to be closer. 
For a long moment, neither of you moves. You just breathe—ragged, uneven, hot against each other’s skin. 
His arms are locked around you, like he’s afraid you might vanish if he lets go. You’re wrapped around him just as tight, hands curled into the back of his shirt, legs still trembling around his waist. The air is thick with sweat and heat and the fading pulse of music beyond the walls. 
He lifts his head just enough to press his forehead to yours, his glasses askew, his cheeks flushed. You brush damp hair from his face and lean in to kiss him—slow this time, warm and open and sweet. He kisses you back like it’s all he’s ever known. 
“I love you,” you whisper again, holding him like you mean it. Because you do. God, you do. 
He presses a kiss to your temple, then your cheek, then your jaw. Slower now. Softer. Like he’s memorising you. 
Eventually, you both start to move—reluctantly, lazily—helping each other straighten up, clean up. His hands are gentle as he eases your dress back down over your hips, as he finds your bra and helps you put it back on. You button his shirt for him, laughing quietly at the wrinkled fabric and the way his belt is still half-undone. 
It’s domestic. Intimate. Something about it makes your chest ache. 
You smooth your palms over his chest. He tucks a strand of hair behind your ear. And even though you’re dressed again, neither of you can stop touching—little brushes, lingering hands, kisses that start slow and deepen fast. 
You’re trying to leave when his back hits the bathroom door with a soft thud, and you lean into him, mouth pressed to his. It’s messy again—smiling, hungry, all teeth and tongue and breathless sounds you wouldn’t dare make for anyone else. 
He laughs into your mouth. “If we don’t leave now,” he murmurs, “we’re never leaving.” 
You kiss the corner of his smile. “Fine by me.” 
But then—he stills. Just slightly. And he looks at you like he’s falling all over again. 
His chest rises against yours, breathless still, and then— 
“Marry me,” he says. Low. Unfiltered. Like he couldn’t hold it in if he tried. 
Your heart stumbles. Your breath catches. 
You pull back just far enough to look at him—really look at him. He doesn’t look nervous this time. Just… open. Sure. Like it’s the most natural thing in the world to ask. 
“Bob…” 
“I’m serious,” he says, cupping your jaw. “Marry me.” 
You blink, the world slowly tilting off-axis. 
“I want you—no, fuck that,” he leans closer, voice rough with feeling, “I need you. Forever. And if we can’t have forever, then just give me this lifetime. I want to marry you. I want everyone to know that you’re mine, and I’m yours.” 
He’s so honest, so sure, that for a second you forget how to breathe. You’ve never felt this much love in your life. You didn’t even know this much love existed. And the craziest part is... it doesn’t even feel that crazy. You’ve known Bob for so long that the only missing piece of the puzzle was this. Now you’re whole. You’re perfect—together. It's always been Bob, and it always will be. 
So what’s the point in waiting? What’s the point in dragging it out? You already know him. You need him. You… want to marry him too. 
You step in closer, holding his face between your hands. “I am yours, Bob Floyd. In this lifetime and every lifetime.” 
He swallows, hard. “Is—is that—?” 
“That’s a yes,” you say, grinning, before pushing up onto your toes and crashing your mouth against his. 
He kisses you back with wild, joyful fervour, his arms locking around your waist as he lifts you clean off the ground, making you yelp into his mouth. If this is a dream, you don’t want to wake up. Not ever. Because in this moment, you have everything—everything—you’ve ever wanted. Everything you’ll ever need. 
When he finally sets you down, you pull back just enough to catch your breath—both of you panting, grinning like idiots, completely wrecked and radiant. 
“Can’t believe you just proposed to me in a club bathroom,” you say, smirking. 
Bob rolls his eyes, bashful smile tugging at his lips. “Can’t believe you just said yes.” 
You’re just about to kiss him again when— 
Bang, bang, bang. 
“Bob!” Jake’s voice cuts through the door. “Lucky! Are you two in there?” 
Bob freezes. His smile drops. His cheeks flush a deep, immediate red. “Oh no.” 
“We heard… noises,” Javy adds, barely holding back a laugh. “Are you okay?” 
Your eyes go wide, mortified and gleeful all at once, your hand already moving to the lock. 
“What are you doing?” Bob hisses, catching your wrist. 
You glance at him, lips twitching. “What are we supposed to do? Live in here now?” 
“Yes?” he says, eyes wide. “Or wait at least twenty more minutes?” 
You snort, then gently pry his hand from yours and lace your fingers through his. “Relax, Bob,” you murmur. “At least now they’ll know what a woman sounds like when she’s getting properly fucked.” 
Bob makes a strangled noise somewhere between a cough and a gasp, his face flushing bright crimson. And with that, you unlock the door and swing it open to reveal the entire squad loitering just outside, trying very badly to look casual and not like they’ve been eavesdropping at all. 
Jake’s eyebrows shoot up, eyes sparkling. “Well, damn. Guess that answers that.” 
Bradley whistles low, laughter threading through it. Phoenix raises a single eyebrow. Javy coughs awkwardly into his hand. Mickey and Reuben just stare, jaws practically on the floor. 
Bob inches behind you, as if hiding could protect him from the coming torrent of teasing. 
You just smile sweetly and squeeze his fingers. “Hey, pervs. Get a good show?” 
Jake chuckles. “Only caught the second act, unfortunately. But damn, Bobby, didn’t know you had it in you to make a woman moan like that.” 
Bob closes his eyes, breathing deep as his free hand squeezes your waist. 
“What was all that murmuring before you opened the door?” Javy asks, brow furrowed. “We couldn’t make it out.” 
You lift a brow. “Oh, you didn’t have a cup pressed to the door?” 
Mickey chuckles sheepishly, holding up an empty glass. 
“God,” you gasp, laughing softly. “Do any of you know the meaning of boundaries?” 
“Lucky, you just fucked Floyd in a club bathroom,” Reuben says, smirking. “And you’re going to lecture us about boundaries?” 
Your cheeks flush, heart pounding hard against your throat. “Actually, I just got engaged to Floyd in a club bathroom. And it was very romantic. Including the sex. So, if you’ll excuse us, I’d like to go home and let this man properly ruin me until I can’t remember how to fly a goddamn jet.” 
You hear Bob choke behind you—on nothing but air—and you don’t even have to look to know his whole face is flaming red. 
But it works. The squad goes quiet, all of them staring—wide-eyed, slack-jawed, somewhere between stunned and delighted. 
You give them one last cheeky grin before pulling Bob away. 
“But it’s my birthday!” Jake calls after you, smirk audible in his voice. “I was supposed to get fucked in the bathroom!” 
1K notes · View notes
anniearmitage · 1 day ago
Text
ᯓ ☁︎ tyler owens
masterlist • glen powell • 06/23/25
˚‧⁺ ・ ˖ · ୨ৎ recs
Tumblr media
𑣲 photos I @geminiwritten
you’re in a perpetually bad mood because you're in love with tyler and he's clueless, but what happens when you 'accidentally' send him some scandalous photos?
𑣲 all yours I @/geminiwritten
after being best friends and chasing storms with tyler for years, one night changes everything... now you're staring at a pregnancy test with two pink lines—and just as you're working up the nerve to tell him, tyler announces to the world that he never wants to settle down or have kids
𑣲 king of possibilities I @the-shedevil-writes
Tyler Owens was your best friend once, until he left for college and broke the promise to keep in touch. By the time he tried, your world had already fallen apart, and you weren’t interested in picking up the pieces with him. Years later, fate strands him on your porch with a busted truck and nowhere else to go.
𑣲 please don’t cry I @lulunothulu
Tyler raises his voice in an arguement and you shut down, he immediately feels bad.
𑣲 some things are worth it pt2 I @thyme-in-a-bubble
𑣲 death wish love I @fireinmoonshot
As members of rival storm chasing groups, you and Tyler Owens have hated each other since the start – well, you were supposed to. Little do you know, Tyler has been head over heels for you for months, and it's only when he nearly loses you that he realises he's done with pretending to hate you.
𑣲 unpredictable I @/fireinmoonshot
When you meet Tyler Owens, you have no intention of getting to know him – you know what kind of reputation he has in town. Tyler, on the other hand, has only one plan: win you over in any way he possibly can.
𑣲 the hard way I @/fireinmoonshot
You and Tyler Owens have a bad habit of butting heads, but all it takes is one hint of jealousy and things change in the blink of an eye.
𑣲 so much love in oklahoma I @sehnsuchts-trunken
Tyler saves you from a tornado one day. The next, he shows up at your doorstep.
𑣲 scared half to death I @the-sunflower-room
tyler owens is not easily angered, but when the love of his life runs into an incoming tornado without a second thought, his emotions get the better of him.
𑣲 tornados aren’t more important than you I @cassidyandonlycassidy
𑣲 fearless I @bright-molina
tyler comes home to find you not pleased whatsoever with his latest tornado wrangling trip
𑣲 death wish love I @ahsokaismyqueen
You wake up in a hospital with no recollection of how you got there, only that you are now in pain. Thankfully, the presence of your boyfriend makes it a little better.
𑣲 orange juice I @/ahsokaismyqueen
When it's time to interview a group of storm chasers for your new book, you get sent back to your hometown. You never would have guessed one of the people you'd be interviewing would be your ex boyfriend. And you might still be a little in love with him.
𑣲 where you belong I @briefinquiries
you're caught in the middle of a tornado, tyler's there in the aftermath.
𑣲 no hesitation I @/briefinquiries
Tyler would be the type of guy that if a girl came up to him and said ‘this guy is creepy, pls pretend to be my bf’ he would be like ‘hell ya’
𑣲 say don’t go I @/briefinquiries
𑣲 chase your fears I @/briefinquiries
You and your younger brother are roadtripping across the US when you encounter a tornado. Luckily, the tornado wrangler himself shows up to help.
𑣲 jealous!tyler I @cowboybeepboop
𑣲 playing pretend I @alisonsfics
you’ve had a crush on javi for a while, so it stings when he invites you on a chase and is flirting with other girls. tyler offers to help you make javi jealous, helping you realize maybe the cowboy isn’t so bad after all.
𑣲 heartbeat I @ddejavvu
𑣲 mayberry I @bartxnhood
𑣲 about time I @seresinhangmanjake
You’ve been Tyler’s best friend since childhood, but a near-death experience makes him realize he feels much more for you than friendship and he shouldn’t have allowed himself to deny it for so long. 
𑣲 a little lie I @roanofarcc
when a storm tyler is chasing changes course, putting you and your daughter in the direct line of danger, tyler drops everything to reach you. 
𑣲 through the wreckage I @rootedinrevisions
When a devastating tornado tears through town, Tyler Owens faces his worst nightmare: the woman he loves is missing. Tyler is thrust into a desperate search through the wreckage to find her. As the storm's aftermath unfolds, it forces him to confront his fears, regrets, and hopes for the future.
𑣲 you’re losing me I @mickandmusings
when tyler, yet again, forgets an important date while he's caught up in chasing, y/n is at her wits end. their relationship feels like it's dying, and he just might have dealt the final blow. after a series of rather unfortunate happenings, it's up to the rest of the wranglers to set them free from the disaster they created.
𑣲 tiny tornado I @marvelwitchergilmore
When a tornado rips through a rodeo, you save a life you weren't expecting to have to save. Upon taking them home, Tyler comes to find out they're a Tiny Tornado.
𑣲 sweetheart I @/marvelwitchergilmore
Times when you told Tyler to not call you 'Sweetheart' and the one time you did.
𑣲 tornado shelter I @/marvelwitchergilmore
Whilst you're staying at a motel, you meet Tyler Owens. His work just so happens to chase him.
Tumblr media
185 notes · View notes
anniearmitage · 1 day ago
Text
Mav: My expectations were low but holy fuck.
131 notes · View notes
anniearmitage · 1 day ago
Text
Mav: Why does everyone want to kill me? Slider: I have a list under my bed. Would you like me to fetch it?
163 notes · View notes
anniearmitage · 1 day ago
Text
Mav: Yes, but you know what they say, “Broken bones may break my bones, but they will never hurt me.” Ice: They don't say that because it's not true and it doesn't make sense.
187 notes · View notes
anniearmitage · 1 day ago
Text
Mav: Sorry if I'm not your cup of tea. I'm not even my cup of tea. I'm more like a rusty bucket of haunted bog water. Sorry if I'm not your rusty bucket of haunted bog water Ice: But you are my rusty buc- can we change the metaphor, please?
284 notes · View notes
anniearmitage · 1 day ago
Text
Bradley: You know how people won't let their foot hang off the bed because they're afraid that a demon would eat it? Ice: Yeah? Bradley: So, if I leave my ass hanging off the bed, will the demon also eat it? Mav, sighing: I'm calling social services.
184 notes · View notes
anniearmitage · 1 day ago
Text
Bradley: anyone know any good books that make you cry? Ice: Mav's medical records
369 notes · View notes
anniearmitage · 1 day ago
Text
easy silence
When a car accident leaves you with custody of your three younger siblings, your world crumbles. Navigating your own grief, funeral arrangements, and the children depending on you - it feels like there's no way out. But if there's one thing Bradley Bradshaw knows about, it's loss. A new position brings him back to San Diego, and back into your life right when you need it most.
COMING SOON. (from this anon)
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
He wonders how you're getting on today. If Adam's talent show went well, or if the twins are still teething.
They'll be fourteen months by the time he gets back. Not much older, in the grand scheme of things, but he'll know.
At that age, consistency is everything. Adam's old enough to know Bradley, understand that he's going away for a little while - but Olivia and Luna? He might return a complete stranger.
Sitting in the barracks, head in his hands, he wonders if this is how his dad felt every time he left him and his mom behind.
He knows what Jake would say if he were here. Something snarky, probably. A comment about how they aren't even your kids, nevermind his. That Bradley Bradshaw must be the only bastard on earth who can land himself with diaper duties before first base.
He slips the picture out of his wallet. The one at the picnic. Nat had taken it, the five of you all crammed onto one blanket. Adam's clambering over Bradley's shoulders, and Olivia sits on his lap, reaching up for her brother. You've got Luna, smile wide as you watch the scene before you. Your eyes are on the kids, but his are very much on you.
"Bradshaw," A voice greets, knocking him out of his trance. "How's it going?"
Seeing the picture clasped in Bradley's hand, Reuben steps forward to take a look. "Cute kids. This your first deployment since having them?"
They're not mine. They're my childhood best friend's siblings, but I'm pretty sure I'm in love with her, and I think it would kill me if I never saw those kids again.
"Uh, yeah. It is."
823 notes · View notes
anniearmitage · 2 days ago
Text
Brown eyed boy!
Tumblr media
Paring:Nick Clark x GrimesFem!Reader. Rick Grimes x BabySister!Reader
Summary: When Morgan sends 2 people to Alexandria y/n Grimes had no idea the handsome brown eyed boy she met would become the most important person in her life
Warnings: fluff, smut, soft smut,unprotected sex, oral(both f&m) multiple orgasms, squirting, talk of drug use, walkers. Let me know if I miss anything.
A/n: I love love love Nick Clark from fear the walking dead and wanted to do a bit of a crossover thought it would be fun. I am tweeking the time line just a little bit. I know Morgan finds Nick and Alicia in Louisiana or Texas (I forget) but in here he finds them around Charlottesville VA just to make it closer to Alexandria. Probably spelling mistake bc it's late and I'm to lazy to go over it.
@anniearmitage
The day Nick and Alicia arrived was a crazy one to say the least the war with the Saviors had just ended and you were all still dealing with the aftermath(and Negan) But it was also the day your life changed!
Morgan found the siblings just outside Charlottesville VA which is just about a 2 day walk from Alexandria and sent them yalls way. You just happened to be on gate duty when the pair arrived.
"Who are you two and how did you find this place" you ask your gun pointed at them from above
"Ummm I'm Alicia and this is my bother Nick Morgan sent us, said you all were good people and could help us"
"You know Morgan? Where is he?" You asked lowering your gun
"We left him new Charlottesville but he gave us these letters told us to give them Rick and Y/n, do you know where we can find them" Alicia ask holding up the letters
"I'm y/n, Ricks my older brother I'll get him give me minute" you say grabbing your walkie
"Ummm Rick I need you at the gate now" you radio to your brother
"Can it wait" he asked
"No, Morgan sent a couple people our way and they have a letter for me and you"
"I'm on my way, let them in and take any weapons they have and wait for me be there in 5" your brother says
"Copy that"
You climb down and pull open the gate, it's the first time getting a real good look at them. Alicia was beautiful and looked to be about 20 with long light brown hair. But her brother made you do a double take! He looked to be around your age maybe a bit older tall with dark brown hair and slicked back, and big brown eyes...a triple threat in your book.
"Yall come in but Rick wants me to take any weapons yall may have" you said opening the gate making them nod. You and Nick lock eyes and he smiles and you swear the earth stopped moving.
They had no problems handing over what they had...that's a good sign you think. Just as you placed their weapons off to the side Rick and Daryl come around the corner.
"These them?" Daryl ask making you roll your eyes at his his obvious question "no Daryl it's the other people behind them" you say making him push your arm
"Not now you two" Rick said before turning his attention to the 2 people in front yall "yall say you know Morgan and he gave you letters"
"Yes here they are" Alicia says handing Rick the letters. He hands you yours and you open it right away...
Dear little warrior,
Hope this letter finds you and you are doing well. Before you even think it I'm doing fine just trying my best to get my head on straight so don't worry about me! But I am asking you and Rick to please take Nick and Alicia in, they are good people you have my word and they deserve a place to call home and there is no better or safer place then Alexandria with you and Rick in my book. I'm sure things are still a bit of a mess there if anyone can take care of them it's my little warrior! I hope to make it back some day I sure do miss you kiddo but til that day keep your head up and your brother out of trouble and you stay out of trouble too no more sneaking out of the gates after dark(yeah i knew about that who do you think followed you to make sure you were safe)! I love you kid! Til we meet again Morgan
P.S Nick is your age do with that as you wish
You smile and wipe your eyes then fold up your letter putting it in your pocket. You and Morgan had a father/daughter bond from the day you met him. He taught you to use a stick to fight and kill walkers almost as good as him and since that day he called you his little warrior.
"What do you think sis" Rick ask
"I think other then yours and Daryls judgment I trust Morgans the most in the world probably even more, since Negan is in a cell not a grave" you say with tight lipped smile
"Don't start with that shit y/n" he said in his stern voice making you roll your eyes
"Morgan said they were good people and they didn't have a problem giving up their weapons if Morgan sent them I say we let them stay. They can stay with me I have the extra room and pullout"
"How many walkers you kill" Rick ask looking at them
"To many to count" Nick says still looking at you
"How many people you killed" you ask
"Again to many" he says this time looking down probably thinking he just blew their chances "why" you ask
"To survive" Alicia says
You Rick and Daryl look at each other and nod "yall can stay with my sister. Y/n is right if Morgan sent you we trust him me and we don't trust alot of people. But we will be watching you two" he says looking at them a little more at Nick.
"I'm y/n Grimes by the way, this my brother Rick and this is my pain in the ass Daryl" you smirk
"I'm Alicia Clark and this is my older Nick" she says sticking out her hand for you and the other to shake. "Thank you all so much for letting us stay we can't thank you enough" she says
"Yes thank you all" Nick says holding his hand to you for you to shake. And when you do you feel a spark and the 2 of you hold each other's gaze only breaking out of it when you hear Rick clear his throat.
"Ummm yall get your things and follow me" you say not missing the Ricks 'big brother' look and Daryls amused look.
You Rick and Daryl show them around Alexandria before taking them to your house.
"I'll stop by in the morning to go over a few things but for tonight my sister can tell yall anything you wanna know and get you settled" Rick says before giving you a hug good bye "you best behave" he whispers just a little to loud making Daryl laugh and you hit "Yeah yeah give Judith a kiss for me"
"Don't listen t' ya brother git ya sum" Daryl whispers in your ear while giving you a hug and laughing making you hit him thankfully only you heard what he said.
When you walk into your little house you start showing Nick and Alicia around "so kitchen in there and there is food please help yourself, I was gonna make some dinner in a bit yall like spaghetti" you ask making them look in shock
"Like real spaghetti? With meat and tomatoe sauce, not from a can that's expired" Nick ask making you laugh "yes real spaghetti, one of our sister communities raise live stock so we got meat eggs milk butter all that stuff they also make our flour so we can make breads and pastas,we have our own gardens here so vegetables fruits and herbs are fresh. We also have 2 other communities we trade with I'll tell you more about those later" you tell them looking at their socked faces "before we found Alexandria we were on the road too so I know what it's like"
You walk them further into the house and show them the livingroom and dinning room and even the pool table you were able to snag "up stairs is the bedrooms and the bathroom shower works plenty of hot water and I have plenty of soaps and shampoos it's all kinda girly so before you shower Nick I'll go to Ricks or Daryls and get something a bit more guy smelling the only other thing i have is some coconut shit" you say smirking
"That's fine really you are already doing more then enough for us. I'm just happy to have a hot shower and something not from a can" he says making you smile "Well if you change your mind let me know"
"There are 2 room upstairs yall can take those I'll clean my things out of the closet in my room tomorrow ill take the livingroom"
"Give Alicia the other room and you stay in yours I will be fine on the couch really I wouldn't feel right taking your room and bed making you sleep on a couch this is your house" Nick says
"Its yalls house too now" you say with a smile "and the couch pulls out I'll be just fine I promise I've slept on worse"
"Still please let me take the couch" he says
"How bout this you take a hot shower have a good meal and at least tonight take my bed, I can tell you haven't slept good in awhile, deal" you say sticking out your hand making him smirk and nod "deal"
Nick and Alicia went to shower and settle in while you got started in dinner. Then after they were done you all sat down and they had their first real meal in a long time.
"Oh my God this is amazing! You are a great cook" Nick says with his mouth full making you laugh
"I'm ok but thank you"
"No really this is the best spaghetti I have ever had" he says
"So where are yall from" You ask
"Los Angeles" Alicia says
"Wow that's far"
"Are you originally from Virginia" she asked
"Oh no I'm a little town about an hour from Atlanta GA, that's where I was when everything started, after living at a rock quarry, a farm, a prison and on the road and awhole lot of close calls we found out way here."
The 3 of you enjoyed dinner and got to know each other better hearing a little more of their story which was alot like yours. After dinner they both helped you clean up.
🩷🩶🩷🩶🩷🩶🩷🩶🩷🩶🩷🩶🩷🩶🩷🩶🩷
Later that night after Nick and Alicia were in bed you sat on the couch a glass of wine and opened your book when you heard footsteps. Out of pure instinct you grab your gun and slowly and quietly take the safety off then jump to your feet pointing it towards the noise.
"Woah just me" he says his hands in the air
"Oh my gosh Nick I am so sorry I am not use to having people in the house I'm gonna have to get use to it" you say lowering the gun.
Once you set the gun down you finally really notice Nick and you have to stop yourself from staring. He's in just some pajama pants hanging low on his hips showing his V-line and happy trail, hair went a little slicked back.
Once you break yourself out of your gazing at the man in front of you, you take your seat back on the couch offering him the seat beside you.
"Its ok I understand" he laughs then sits down.
"Everything ok up there I can turn the heat on if your cold" you tell him
"Oh no no no I'm fine it's warm up there just couldn't sleep, to be honest I don't sleep much anymore" he says
"It took me awhile to be able to sleep too, the first week here our group crammed into one house even tho we were given 2, 15 of us plus a baby in livingroom a little bigger then this all in sleeping bags a few of us actually slept in the hall way" you say laughing at the memories of that first week
"Wow all of you came from Georgia" he asked
"Technically yes but only a few of us have been together since the beginning and we lost people since we got here" you say sadly looking over at the picture of Carl and Judith "most recent my nephew" you say handing him the picture Carl left you
"What happened? I mean of you don't mind me asking"
"He was bit helping someone" you say softly
"I'm sorry I know it's hard we've lost people too" he tells you grabbing your hand making you feel those sparks again. You both sit there looking at each other before you break the silence "so enough with the sad shit tell me about your life before the world went to shit"
Nick told you he struggled with drugs before the fall and even a little after, you also learned he played baseball in high-school, loved cars, and was in school going to school to be a mechanic before his involvement with drugs and how he met Morgan. He told you about what it was like growing up in L.A and you told him about growing up in a small southern town. That you were a cheerleader in high school and you were going to college for your nursing degree and about your party girl days, which he couldnt believe.
"So what kind of movies do you like? I found alot of DVDS and VHS tapes on my runs with Rick and Daryl even snagged players for them" yell him
"Horror movies mostly the old school slasher ones you know Freddy, Jason, Michael all of them. But love comedys too. What about you?"
"I love rom-coms mostly those were the movies I looked for first but I love me a good horror movie got quite a few but I can't watch them alone I'm to jumpy and big baby so I haven't watched one in along time. Rick and Daryl refuse to watch them with me i also end of in their lap" you laugh
"Well I'm here let's watch one" he says
"Is this your way of getting me to cuddle up to you" you tease making him smirk "it may be" he says making you blush
"Well go pick one or two out. I'm gonna get another glass of wine. You want one"
"Sure"
"And left over spaghetti for a snack" you ask
"Wine,spaghetti, horror movies, and a beautiful girl sounds like a great night" he say
Nick was like a breath of fresh air for you. You haven't had this kind of connection with a guy since before the fall. You and Nick watched movies til you both fellsleep on the couch you cuddled up against him. And that's how Rick Daryl and Alicia found you both the following morning.
🩷🩶🩷🩶🩷🩶🩷🩶🩷🩶🩷🩶🩷🩶🩷🩶🩷
Over the next couple months you and Nick became closer always attached at the hip and best friends, much to your brothers dismay and Alicia's approval.
"So whats up woth you and my brother" she says one night after dinner
"I swear you and brother" you say shaking your head "we are just friends"
"Just friends? The two of you might have others fooled but I live with the two of you. You both sleep on the couch together most nights unless the other is on gate duty, always touching and hugging, he gives you piggy back rides thru town the flirting the movie nights the little looks you two give each other"
"Even if I did have a small crush on your brother he doesn't have one on me. He has a thing for Haley at the pantry i can tell" you say sadly
"He doesnt have a thing for her trust me. I know my brother and Nick has had heart eyes for you since they we walked through those gates" she says
"You're crazy but I love you anyways. Now if you will excuse me I'm gonna take a shower and get to bed I have to leave on that run in morning" you say walking upstairs
"Yeah with my brother don't forget that part" she yells
"And my brother" you yell back
The next morning you and Nick meet Rick Daryl Aaron and Carol at the gate. The plan was to go into a little town Rosita told yall about that looked like it hadn't been touched and get all the things you could. You and Nick would take one car while your brother and Aaron took the box truck and Daryl and Carol on his bike.
The town was about a 5 hour drive and the whole way you and Nick talked and jamned out to the old CDs you had found.
"So most embarrassing moment" he asked
"Oh God let me think ummmm...ok one day during my junior after gym we were all waiting for the showers well some of the girls were taking to long and I couldn't be late to class again so I decided to go in the boys locker room since they they have gym the same pierod welllllll the boys football team came in for an extra practice and I didn't hear them and they walked in on me naked washing my hair"
"Well lucky them" he says in a flirty voice making you roll his eyes
"Oh stop you perv, plus I didn't have the body I do no I was a late bloomer" you laugh
"I'm sure you still loved great" he says
"OK your turn..." you say
When you get to the town it looks just like Rosita said "it looks like nothing has been touched. How have we never found this place" you ask
"We have never gone this far north never had the fuel for it" Aaron says
"OK let's split up into 3 groups, Aaron you're with Nick, Y/n you and Me and Daryl go with Carol-"
"I'm going with Nick" you say cutting your brother off
"Whats wrong with going with me you know your big brother" he ask
"I'd rather go with my best friend" you tell him making him roll his eyes
Fine whatever I dont feel like arguing with your ass today, Aaron youll be with me. Everyone got enough ammo and their walkies" Rick ask making you all nod "ok we'll be on channel 5 only fire if have to don't wanna draw more walkers or anybody that may be near by and prop all the doors opens when you go in we can hear each other. Ok yall be safe"
You all break off into your groups and start getting anything you can find. You all make several trips back and forth to the truck. You all found weapons, ammo,clothing, baby items for Judith and Hershel, medical supplies/medicine, and enough to last a good 6 months.
You and Nick were currently in a little shop when he calls your name.
"What did you find" you ask
"Something you are really gonna like" he smiles and pulls out the full DVD set of F•R•I•E•N•D•S
"You're sitting me" you say wrapping your arms around him then taking it from him "I have been looking for this since my first run it was my favorite show, oh we are so bendging this"
"That's not the only show I found come look" he says
You look on the shelf and he was right, there were tons of shows on DVD, there were even shows and movies for kids you thought Judith and the other kids would like. You go find a box and start loading up making Nick smile at you.
"You have fun I'm gonna go look over there" he says making you nod your head.
You were able to get 3 boxes of movies even a few more DVD players and VCRs and had Nick help you take them out to the truck before you start on a different building this time it was a clothing store. You all had already grabbed alot of clothes but you can never have enough these days.
"I'm gonna go over to the women's section you go to the men's and we'll meet in the middle in the kids section sound good" you say and he nods "be careful" he tells you.
You start boxing up anything and everything for the women back home, while stuffing a few things in your bag just for you. You are so lost in your search you almost miss the footsteps behind you.
"Hey I thought we were-" you begin to say but when you around it's not Nick's dark chocolate eyes and handsome face you are met me it's the dead eyes and decaying face of a walker.
"AHHHHHHHH NICK WALKER" you yell
You reach for your knife but right as you pull it out the walker stumbles to you sending you both to the ground and your knife across the floor and the walking snapping it's jaws at you.
"NICK! PLEASE HELP ME NICK!" You yell trying your best to keep the walker at bay but it's getting harder and harder "NICK! PLEASE PLEASE HELP ME! NICK!" you yell again
"Y/N! Y/N!" you hear Nick yell then you hear a gunshot and the walker falls on you and you push it away.
Nick rushes over to you drops to the floor and looks your over "are you ok? Are you bit" he ask and you shake your head then he pulls you into his arms where you break down.
"Hey shhhhh I got you sweetheart I'm here" he says holding you close "I got you I got you"
You lift your head to thank him but he takes you by surprise when she crashes his lips onto yours. You are taken aback at first but then when your mind and body catch up to each other you begin to kiss him back.
His lips are soft against yours and the kiss is a mix of desperation and relief. He deepens the kiss and you open your mouth letting his tonge slip inside. The two of you continue to kiss until you hear a throat clear behind you. You break apart and see Rick and the others.
Rick stares at you confused and a little bit of his big brother look while the other 3 smile.
"Bout damn time" Daryl says making Rick look at him
"Daryl not now what the hell happen" he asked looking from you to the walker back to you, so you tell the group everything that happened.
"OK well it's getting late and I'm sure that shot is gonna draw more walkers or worse I think we have enough" Rick say
Nick helps you up and you grab your bag while the others grab the boxes you had packed and you make your way outside. When everyone is outside and the truck is loaded you head over to the car you and Nick came in, but before Nick can follow you Rick pulls him aside.
"Nick thank you for saving my sister I don't think I can handle losing her" Rick tells him
"To be honest I don't think I could either" Nick says looking your way seeing you talking to Carol
"That brings me to my next thing...she's my baby sister I've always looked out for her and her and Judith are the most important things I have left if you break her heart or hurt her in anyway ill kill you" Rick says "and ill help em that girl is like m' sister one tear comes from 'er eyes ill feed ya t' walkers got me" Daryl says
"I understand both of you and i promise if she gives me a chance I'd never hurt her in anyway" Nick says
🩷🩶🩷🩶🩷🩶🩷🩶🩷🩶🩷🩶🩷🩶🩷🩶🩷
When you and Nick get home it's after midnight. Nothing was said about the kiss you shared in the store. Did he just kiss you because he thought he had to? Does he regret it? It sure felt like did why else wouldn't he talk to you about it. And the thought of him regretting what was the best kiss of your life broke your heart.
You went straight upstairs to take a shower just waiting to wash off the dirt sweat and blood from today. You didn't say a word when you walked past Alicia and she didn't say a word to you just looked at her brother.
About an hour later you are laying in bed trying to focus on reading when there's a knock on your door "Hey y/n can I come in" Nick's voice says from the other side
"Yeah of course" you say putting your book as he opens the door in only his pajama pants looking like he just got out of the shower. "everything ok" you ask
"Yeah I was actually about to ask you that" he says shutting the door
"Yeah why wouldn't I be ok" you lied
"Everything that happened today" he says
"Oh that, that wasn't my first close call with a walker thanks for saving me the way" you say getting up and going to your desser trying to make yourself look busy
"Of course i would never let anything happen to you but I wasn't just talking about the walker it was more our kiss" he says
"It was a good kiss" you say mentally slapping yourself making him smile
"Yeah it was but I wanted to talk to you-"
"Nick" you tell say cutting him off "it's ok if you regret it I get it heat of the moment you were happy I was ok I get it" you say not looking at him
"No you don't get it y/n, because I don't regret it the only thing I regret is that it took you getting attacked by a walker for me to do it" he says making you look at him
"You don't regret kissing me" you ask Turing to finally look at him
"Not at all it was the best kiss of my life. Y/n I've been crazy about you since I first saw you, I think you are the most beautiful woman I have ever laid my eyes on I'm in love you Y/n Grimes and I'm sorry it took what happened today for me to say it" he says stepping closer to you "you love me" you ask
"More then I have ever loved anyone in my life"
You don't say anything, you just grab him by the back of the neck and bring him down into a heated kiss. The kiss last until you both need air "I love you too Nick" you say your foreheads pressed against each other's.
"Nick I want you" you whisper and run your hands down his tone bare chest making him smirk
"I'm all yours" he says wrapping his hand lightly around your throat pulling your lips to him. The kiss is heated and deep every emotion you feel for one other in it. You run your hands up his chest and into his hair tugging it just a enough to make him groan and when his lips part from yours you take his bottom lip between your teeth.
Nick starts to undress you, first pulling off shirt then helping you out of your sleep shorts leaving you in only your pink lace thong "fuck your beautiful" he says finally breaking the kiss "bed now" he says making you get even more wet.
You crawl on the bed as he takes his pajama pants off leaving him in nothing about his boxers. You see how hard he already is making you even more excited. Nick crawls up your body til his lips meet yours again. Then he begins to kiss and suck down your neck, leaving marks you know that are gonna last for days.
You let out a moan when he hits a spot between your neck and collarbone making him smirk "think I found the sweet spot"
He's kisses down to your breast giving them both equal attention smirking everytime he hears you let out a moan. Then kisses licks and sucks his way down til he's right at your panty line "I've always wanted to taste you baby" he says
"What are you want waiting for I'm all yours Nick" you say and he waste no time sliding your panties down your leg throwing them somewhere in your room leaving you completely bare in front of him.
He runs a finger through your wet pussy smirking when he feels how wet you are and hearing you moan. After that he doesn't waste another second before he is between your legs licking a long strip from your hole to your clit "ahh Nick"
He throws your legs over his shoulders and dives in eating you like a starved man. The groans, growls and slurps turn you are and make you even wetter.
"You taste so fucking good baby best fucking thing ive ever had" he says right before sticking in tongue as far as it will go inside you making you arch your back and almost scream.
"Nick oh my God" you moan
Nick then moves his tongue out of you and replaces them with his fingers while he sucks your clit not letting up "I want you to cum all over me, all over my face, in my mouth"
"Nick don't stop please don't stop" you moan. Your voice and moans only make him go harder and faster and soon you feel the band in your stomach about to snap
"NICK FUCK DONT STOP AHHHHH NICK" you scream as your first orgasm hits you making you squirt all over Nick's face and fingers and you pull his hair making him moan into you.
"Nick t-t-to much" you moan but he just keeps going and in record time another orgasm hot you making you scream his name again "NICK IM CUMMING AGAIN OH GOD DONT STOP".
Nick works you through your high before sitting up smirking and wipping his mouth.
"Th-that was amazing" you say breathless "I've never squirted before"
"You tasted so amazing I just couldn't stop" he says
"My turn" you wink making him lay down
You kiss his lips still tasting yourself then kiss down his chest. You rub him over his boxers making him his then pull his boxers down his legs.
His hard cock springs forward hitting his stomach. He's a good 7in and wider then anyone you had ever been with pick tip glistening with pre-cum.
You lick from the base to the tip making him moan. You lick the precum and slowly take him into your mouth your eyes never leaving his.
"Shit" he kisses and grabs your hair
You take him almost all the way in your mouth before bobbing your head making him a moan mess above you.
"Holy fuck your mouth is amazing" he says throwing his head back. You continue to bob your head til he pulls you up "Baby as amazing as your mouth feel I wanna feel that pussy about me"
You lays you back on your bed and climbs on top of you looking into your eyes with so much love.
"You ready" he ask stroking his dick
"Yes" you say with a nod
Nick runs his cock through your folds a few times before slowly pushing in making you both moan.
"Fuck you are so tight" he says
You haven't had sex since before the fall you hold on to him as he pushes in.
"Am I hurting you" he ask seeing your face
"No it's just been along time, keep going it feels good"
Once Nick bottoms out he gives you a few minutes to adjust.
"You can move"
"I'm gonna take it slow I want this to last I'm not fuck you tonight I'm gonna show you just how much I love you" he says before crashing his lips onto yours and slowly starts moving.
You wrap your legs around him and start moving in perfect harmony. You feel more loved then you ever have in your life.
"I'd let the world end a hundred times over if it meant I found you" he says pressing his forehead to your never slowing is pace
"I love you Nick" you moan
"I love you too y/n" he says kissing you "you fit me perfect your heart and your body was made for me, I'm never letting you go baby you're mine forever" he says
"You're mine too Nick" you whispers pushing some fallen hair out of his face so you can see his brown eyes.
"I don't think I'm gonna last much longer if you keep squeezing me like that baby" he says
"I'm so close cum with me" you tell him
"Where"
"Inside me I need to feel all of you" you moan
Nick picks up the pace making your moans get louder "Nick don't stop please I'm bout to cum"
"Cum for me baby cum all over my dick" he says and his words push you over the edge. You cum screaming his name and scratching down his back triggering his own orgasm he cums deep I side your name falling from his lips.
You stay connected while you both come down from your high and try to catch your breath before he falls beside you pulling you into his chest.
"That was the best sex of my life" he says
"Yeah me too i don't think I've ever been so loud" you laugh
"I didn't mind" he says smirking
You lay in silence for a few minutes "did you mean what you said" you ask
"I meant every word. I love you y/n and I'm never letting you go" he says kissing your lips making you smile. But before you can say anything back there is a banging at your door.
"I'm glad you two idiots are together now but can you please keep it down some of us are trying to sleep and don't want to hear her brother screwing her best friends brains out" Alicia says making you laugh
"Yeah sorry" Nick yells
"So round 2 or sleep" you ask
"I say round 2 3 and 4 then sleep" Nick says rolling on top of you making you laugh.
Tumblr media
This is what I pictured when Nick grabs reader throat.
3 notes · View notes
anniearmitage · 2 days ago
Text
i feel like Mav is like the proudest dad in the world and talks about the Daggers all the time but rarely uses their actual names which often results in people thinking he has wayyy less kids then he actually does
like people will talk to him and he mentions his “darling baby boy, his oldest son, his baby bird” (Rooster) and tell stories about him and stuff, but he also tells stories about his “little spitfire, the troublemaker,” (Hangman) and somewhere along the way it gets misinterpreted that these are the same people
this happens with several of the daggers until everyone is a mixture of everyone and the only idenifiers are that sometimes Mav says his daughter instead of his son and general age range.
there’s probably a debate/bet between a lot of the people who have heard the stories but dont know who the Daggers are about how many kids Mav actually has
The general consensus is that he has 4, but guesses range anywhere between 3-9 (3 as the min because his oldest who is assumed to be boy, at least 1 girl, and a youngest boy. 9 because theres so many damn stories that theres no way its just three kids)
Mav also conviently forgets to mention that he didnt actually raise any of them but Bradley, leading to further confusion.
There isnt even any indication that he didnt raise them, because with the stories he tells, you can apply pretty much any age between 8-35 to them and it would still make decent sense.
This all comes to head in one of 2 ways
first one is a random officer or something noticing the picture of the whole squad on Mavs desk.
officer: Oh, what’s that, sir?
mav, absolutely beaming: oh! those are my kids!
officer: oh, thats so sweet! which ones are yours?
mav: all of them!!
officer: *shocked pikachu*
Or, alternatively, the scuttlebutt makes its way back to one of the daggers
another random officer: Oh hey, Fanboy, you’ve worked with Maverick, right?
Fanboy: yeah, why?
officer: do you know how many kids he has? we’re debating it
Fanboy: uh… none, i guess? i mean maybe 1 but Rooster isnt technically his kid
officer: okay ur either lying or insane
Fanboy: ?????
115 notes · View notes
anniearmitage · 3 days ago
Text
Hangman: *walks into debrief late* sorry I was doing stuff
Rooster: *running in after him panting* he pushed me down the fucking stairs
179 notes · View notes
anniearmitage · 3 days ago
Text
Hard Deck, Soft Heart
Series Summary:
Jake "Hangman" Seresin is a Top Gun legend — sharp in the cockpit, sharper with his words, and always flying like he’s got something to prove. But the one thing he's never had to prove is his love for Claire, the woman who saw past the bravado and into the heart of the man behind the callsign.
Now married and raising two kids — a bold, curious daughter and a gentle, observant son — Jake and Claire are building a life full of warmth, resilience, and deep love. Their home is filled with morning pancakes, bedtime giggles, and the steady rhythm of deployment goodbyes and sweet homecomings.
Surrounding them is the Dagger Squad — not just fellow aviators, but family. From Maverick’s steady guidance to Rooster’s loyal friendship, Phoenix’s fierce support, Bob’s quiet strength, and Fanboy and Payback’s constant humor, the Daggers form the kind of chosen family that shows up for holidays, babysits in a pinch, and never lets you go through life’s storms alone.
Together, they navigate the highs and lows of Navy life — the adrenaline of flight missions, the weight of responsibility, and the beauty of having a village to raise their kids in. Through it all, Jake finds that the real mission isn't just flying at Mach speed — it's being the man Claire believes in, and the dad his kids will always look up to.
★・・・・★・・・・★・・・★・・・・★
MEET THE SERESIN FAMILY
Meeting Jake Seresin
Wedding day
Surprise for the Dagger squad
Dinner with the Seresins
★・・・・★・・・・★・・・★・・・・★
Blurbs-
8 notes · View notes
anniearmitage · 3 days ago
Text
Imagine after Carole dies, icemav gets full custody of Bradley and one day, baby Goose pulls Ice aside and asks if they can draw moustaches on themselves to honour Goose’s birthday...“so dad doesn’t think we forgot him.”
Ice is like sure. The kid’s only nine. it’s the first thing that made him smile in weeks. He's not going to fight the idea and hey, maybe Maverick would laugh about it. Unfortunately Ice gets deployed.
Cut to months later, Goose’s birthday long gone, and Mav and Bradley are at the hangar to pick Ice and Slider up, both finally home.
Ice walks off the carrier with a full moustache.
Bradley screams in joy, "Is that REAL?!"
While Mav's just 👁️👄👁️ …then 👁️🫦👁️
Slider is like please. Not right now. I just want my bed
345 notes · View notes
anniearmitage · 4 days ago
Text
Mrs. Weasley's howler but it's just Carole yelling at Maverick
"Peter Mitchell! How dare you steal that plane! I am absolutely disgusted! Your husband is facing an inquiry at work and it's entirely your fault! If you put another toe out of line I'll have Ice ground you! Oh and Bradley dear, great job on making dagger two, your father and I are so proud."
288 notes · View notes
anniearmitage · 4 days ago
Note
oh no yeah you right i thought you meant it was a friend of his or something. i would say bradley and toots then. my fav when they overhear it from a conversation with their friends or something and they start to pull away and the boyfriend notices. but any way you spin it i will appreciate 😫😫😫
-🧚‍♀️
merry Christmas, bestie!! I am very grateful to have met you and gotten to know you so I hope you enjoy your little gift of Bradley angst with a happy ending <3
Tumblr media
warnings: language, insecurities, Bradley having the emotional intelligence of a grapefruit, I'm back on my "Bradley's pet name is bear" bullshit and what about it, this has absolutely nothing to do with Christmas I'm sorry
“She’s just kind of clingy.”
It was a word you’d always been somewhat familiar with. Clingy. And you knew that sometimes you hugged people too tightly, or said you loved them too often. You could be overbearing, throwing all of your focus into strengthening a relationship with someone until your presence was cemented in every part of them. You understood that you did that. You understood that most people didn’t like when you did that. And so you’re clingy.
Really, you try not to be. You stare at your phone in anticipation instead of texting Natasha every 30 seconds about every thought that's popped into your head. You no longer have brunch every Saturday with your mom, but only when she asks if you're up for it. And instead of begging him for updates frantically every time he leaves the apartment, you give Bradley enough space to do his own thing. Or, at least, you thought you did.
“She’s just kind of clingy.”
It’s not that you wanted to be clingy. It wasn’t some choice that you made because you liked it. It was this compulsive, obsessive thing. It was this feeling that, if you didn’t actively make yourself present for every moment, people would leave you. No one can forget about you if you’re there all the time. 
And so you insert yourself into everything, staying glued to the people you love because you can’t stand the itch. You can’t stand the voice in your head that tells you that you’re alone. Because bad things happen when you’re alone. You don’t want to be alone. You can’t be alone.
“She’s just kind of clingy.”
You love your life with Bradley. He makes you feel happy and safe — protected. He wipes your tears with his calloused thumbs and guides you to his heartbeat, his hand covering your other ear, when a noise gets too loud. He always asks for your input, he listens to you. You love him so much it almost hurts, like this ache in your chest that doesn’t soothe until you’re near him.
Bradley’s perfect. And you want to be perfect for him too. You want to be someone that makes him feel happy and safe. You want to make him laugh and play with his hair when he can’t sleep. You want to take all the dark, hurt parts of him and protect them. You want to make him feel loved. And you thought you were. But, instead, you made him feel—
“—Smothered?” Bob holds the punching bag steady as Bradley lands a few more hits. “What do you mean?”
Bradley keeps his eyes on the synthetic material of the bag, sweat accumulating above his brow. “I don’t know. I’m not used to it, I guess. Her being there all the time.”
“You don’t like it?” Bob’s brows raise.
He braces for another punch but it never comes, Bradley’s gloves dropped at his sides as he regulates his breaths.
“Not really. She’s always touchin’ me or wanting to do shit together. I love her, but—” Bradley sighs, “she’s just kind of clingy.”
Standing a fair ways behind him, you’re trying not to cry. It’s proving unsuccessful though, tears already beginning to roll down your cheeks anyway, and you wipe at them quickly. It’s a wonder that Bob hasn’t seen you yet, standing pitifully in the middle of the gym with a paper bag in your hand because you’d been hit with the thought that Bradley might get hungry and want lunch.
You feel foolish now though. Bradley’s a grown man, of course he didn’t need you making lunch for him. Of course he doesn’t want to be around you all the time. Or be smothered by you.
You turn towards the door quickly, not wanting Bradley to catch you here and have another thing to be annoyed about. Nobody stops you thankfully, you didn’t think you could handle that right now. Bradley’s lunch feels like a heavy weight in your hand and you throw it away bitterly.
Clingy.
Bradley needed his space, and that was fine, but maybe he needed more space than you originally thought. Maybe he was already starting to resent you for it. Maybe he’d leave you because he just couldn’t take it anymore.
You suck in a breath as you get into your car. You needed lots of reassurance, you knew that, but if getting that reassurance meant losing Bradley in the process, it wasn’t worth it. So you’d fix it. You’d fix it and Bradley would think that you love him instead of thinking that you smother him.
You’d fix it.
Tumblr media
You were acting weird. 
And not your usual type of weird — like talking to the fish tank and assigning all your friends to what dog breed you thought suited them best — no, you were a different type of weird. Like keeping a cushion of space between yourself and Bradley during movie nights and no longer sitting on the countertops chatting about your day as he did the dishes.
At first, Bradley was relieved. All of this stuff with you was so new and he’d never been that much of a relationship guy. Once women realized that his very limited way of emoting was not something that got better with time, they usually didn’t stick around long. Not if they wanted something serious. He was used to living alone — being alone. And you felt like the opposite of that.
Bradley didn’t particularly enjoy things like holding hands or cuddling. Sometimes he was tired and didn’t really want to listen to people talk about their day or the new show they’re watching. He put up with it because it was you and it wasn’t like he hated it, he just didn’t like it all the time.
So when you stopped suddenly, when you started to talk to him from the bed instead of right in the bathroom next to him, when you didn’t ask him what time he’d be home every time he left, Bradley felt like he could breathe again.
But then it seemed to hit him that you’d stopped.
Bradley couldn’t remember the last time you initiated affection. The last time you held his hand when you were walking or climbed into his lap because you wanted to take a nap. Or kissed him.
No, it was Bradley who pressed a kiss to your temple when he got home. It was Bradley who asked if you wanted to do something. He’d even got desperate enough that it was Bradley telling you about his fucking day. He felt like he was going crazy.
Because in response to all of those things, you would only smile, or shrug, or say “That’s great, bear. I’m glad you had a good day”. And Bradley would wait for you to drag him to the couch to cuddle, or bring up that it might be nice to go to the aquarium, or tell him about the new dog that just arrived at the shelter.
(Bradley knew because he’d been checking the animal shelter’s website every day to see when you posted new animals. That morning, there had been a new listing for a Great Dane puppy named Scooby Doo and there was no doubt in his mind that the name had been your idea. But you hadn’t said a word about it yet.)
At first, he thought you might be mad at him. It seemed like a logical conclusion — though he was unsure what he actually did — that explained your sudden personality change. But you didn’t seem mad. You still let him touch you and there wasn’t anything resentful in the way you spoke to him. You just refused to touch him.
“My god, you look like shit!” Jake laughs, taking in Bradley’s appearance with amusement when he walks through the gym doors.
Bradley grunts, not in the mood to deal with Jake’s playful ribbing. Because he did look like shit. You’d stopped cuddling in bed with him — you’d let him fall asleep with you in his arms, but he woke up once in the middle of the night to realize that you were all the way at the edge of the bed and then he forced himself to stay awake every night after that only to learn you hardly let him hold you for more than two hours. You didn’t cheekily try to join him in the shower anymore or wear his clothes and this morning you’d left without even saying “I love you”. 
Truly Bradley was losing his mind. 
“Hello?” Jake snaps his fingers in front of him. “Dude, when was the last time you slept?”
Bradley grunts again. Had Jake’s voice always been this grating? He sets down his bag, squeezing his eyes shut for a moment before unzipping it. As pointed out by Jake, he hadn’t been sleeping, his body forcing its own sort of alarm clock on him whenever you left his arms. Which, he learned, was a lot. 
Adler only needed one look to come to the same conclusion as Jake. “Go home, Rooster.”
“Coach—”
“Nope,” Adler shakes his head resolutely. “You look like I stole you from the fucking morgue. Go to bed or I’m pulling you from your next fight.”
With the threat as punishment — and the fact that Adler was already walking away — Bradley could only let out a heavy sigh and collect his things.
You’re sitting on the couch when he gets home, something that in and of itself isn’t unusual, but Bradley feels so deprived of you that it genuinely excites him. You look up when the door closes and furrow your brows slightly.
“What are you doing home so early?” He waits for you to run to him and jump into his arms, but you don’t.
Bradley shrugs, slightly soured from your constant rejection, and slides off his shoes. “Your dad sent me home. Said I look like I’m dead.”
You get up from the couch worriedly, making your way over to the front door. Bradley’s heart jumps to his throat at the realization that you’re coming closer to him.
“Are you okay? Are you sick?” Bradley watches in anticipation as the back of your hand reaches up to press against his forehead. He doesn’t even have a chance to revel in the excitement before you’re pulling it back like he burned you.
“Toots, please baby. I can’t do this anymore.” Bradley’s desperate, this moment being his final straw, and he's ready to get down on his knees and beg if that’s what it takes. He just needs you to touch him.
Your head cocks in confusion, your hand still hanging awkwardly in the air between the two of you. “What do you mean?”
Bradley hesitates. Because he’s never had to do this before. He’s never needed someone to cuddle so he could fall asleep. He’s never had to ask for someone to just hold his fucking hand, please! He’s never wanted affection. 
You’re still looking up at him, waiting, and Bradley is so sick of this day and everything and everyone who isn’t you. He’s picking you up before either of you can realize, holding your thighs around his hips as he carries you to the bedroom. Without even setting you down first, he lies down on the bed.
“Bradley?” You hesitantly lift your head from where it was on his chest.
He grunts, breathing in your shampoo and conditioner and sliding his hands under the waistband of your leggings so they can rest on your ass. Your breath hitches at the action and Bradley’s relieved to confirm that your sudden touch aversion isn’t because you’re no longer attracted to him.
You try again when he doesn’t reply. “What’s wrong?”
“Why are you avoiding me?”
He feels you freeze in his arms.
“I’m not—”
“You are,” he interrupts you, a bit more harshly than intended. “You’re avoiding me like the fucking plague and I want to know why.”
His words distract him, loosening his grip on you, and you’re able to break away and sit up. You’re getting off his lap before he can stop you, moving to your side of the bed defensively. 
“I don’t know what you want from me,” your lip starts to wobble and your eyes turn glassy as you hold your knees to your chest. “You hate when I give you attention, but when I try to give you space you hate that too.”
Bradley pauses, furrowing his brows. “What? When did I say that I hate when you give me attention?”
You’re fully crying now and Bradley wants to hold you. But you won’t let him. And he has no idea what’s even going on anymore. And he’s tired and confused and hasn’t been able to function properly since you started pulling away from him—
“I heard you,” your voice is small, broken, but Bradley hears it. “When you were talking to Bob about me. I heard you.”
“She’s just kind of clingy.”
The memory strikes Bradley suddenly and he winces. “Fuck. Toots—”
You wipe at the tears on your cheek with the back of your hand. “I’m sorry for being so clingy, I didn’t mean to be. I’m trying to be better.”
Bradley feels sick. Like he just got punched in the gut. Because you’re crying, and scared, and insecure, and it’s his fault. It was his careless words that made you feel this way, his inability to love you properly. He's unsure how to fix. Worried he might just make it all worse. And he really doesn't want to make it worse.
“Can I please hold you?” He whispers hoarsely.
You look up at him, surprise evident in your features, before you nod wearily. Bradley’s slow to reach for you, like you’re some kind of wounded animal, and he places you into his lap. His hands move under your shirt so he can touch your skin, his fingers tracing various patterns. For a moment all he can do is feel you. Your hair against his nose, your weight against his chest. Bradley finally feels like he can breathe again.
“I’m sorry.”
You don’t say anything, but he feels something wet against his neck and he moves a hand to cup the back of your head tenderly.
“I’ve never been good with shit like this. It was all so new to me that I wasn't used to it, I thought I didn’t like it. But this past week and a half? God, toots, I was losing my fucking mind,” Bradley swallows, still rubbing your back as your sniffles die down. “I guess— I guess, I do hate shit like that, but never when you're the one doing it.”
You lift your head from his neck, your eyes puffy and red, and you study Bradley for any traces of deceit. “You mean it?”
Bradley nods, sitting up so he can kiss you softly. You reciprocate, gaining more confidence as he deepens it, your lips moving against his and your fingers get lost in the base of his curls. Though you’re completely on top of him, you’re still not close enough for Bradley, his hand moving from the back of your head to your jaw to holding your throat loosely.
When you pull away to breathe, Bradley grumbles, chasing your lips, and you giggle softly. You're staring at him, lips slightly swollen from kissing and eyes looking sweetly from behind your lashes. Bradley groans, bumping his forehead against your collarbone.
“I’m so fucking stupid,” his hands run up your thighs. “Thinkin’ I didn’t want this. Don’t want anything but this.”
You still seem hesitant, biting your lip as you look down at your fingers. “What if I get too clingy?”
“You’re not clingy, tootsie,” and Bradley has this way of saying things that make them always sound like they're true. “You just love people with everything you’ve got and we’re all lucky enough to experience it.”
And when your face lights up and your arms wrap around his neck and you’re kissing him again, Bradley decides that he’s going to love you with everything he’s got too.
1K notes · View notes