Hunter Monet | Artist | 18+ MDNILads focused & Slut Emprorium
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a little preview to some xaiver x mc x caleb spice if you would like to partake (。•̀ᴗ-)✧
#love and deepspace#lads xavier#lads caleb#lads mc#my art#xavier x mc x caleb#xaiver x mc#caleb x mc#a sneak peek maybe even!
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a lil smth of my mc treating her good boys ૮ ˶ᵔ ᵕ ᵔ˶ ა૮ • ﻌ - ა
#love and deepspace#lads caleb#lads xavier#my mc#my art#xavier n caleb r very pet coded in a very particular way that i enjoy#they are very good boys /nods/#caleb x mc#xavier x mc#xavier x mc x caleb#caleb x mc x xavier#this is the fluff to the crazy stuff i drew right after this hehehehehehe#lads mc
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ever since i found out how to do this in glint photobooth, my life has never been the same (thank GOODNESS <333)
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mc’s jungle gym…kinda
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Drew @lunareths's MC🍓with Caleb 🍎 ft. his TC22 fit Helped me get out of my artists block watching them get into his arc 🙂↕️
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Tomorrow's Catch-22 Outfits available for download in blender
I finally finished these before the event ended! They are all fully rigged, and Xavier's leash has a separate rig and will pull when you pose it. Unfortunately, I wasn't able to combine them, but if I figure out a way to keep them together and keep the leash attached, I'll update it. Let me know if anything is missing or not working.
Rigged with AutoRig Pro + Faceit.
The meshes belong to Infold Studios and were pulled with RazTools.
All I ask is for a tag @bhaalbaaby for credit
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💋INCIPIENT. KISS


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Spring Water
‧₊˚✩彡 ── ᴘᴀɪʀɪɴɢ: named!MC x Caleb
‧₊˚✩彡 ── sʏɴᴏᴘsɪs: An afternoon of sweeping fallen petals is interrupted by the teasing of one childhood friend until an unexpected injury forces them closer, noticing things about the other they hadn't before.
Giselle isn't a kid anymore and neither is he...
‧₊˚✩彡 ── ᴡᴏʀᴅ ᴄᴏᴜɴᴛ:6,424
‧₊˚✩彡 ── 𝐂𝐎𝐍𝐓𝐄𝐍𝐓 𝐖𝐀𝐑𝐍𝐈𝐍𝐆𝐒: vanilla spice, but still 18+ mdni, cunnilingus, female orgasm.
‧₊˚✩彡 ── 𝐀𝐔𝐓𝐇𝐎𝐑'𝐒 𝐍𝐎𝐓𝐄: This takes place before his 'disappearance' but not so far back that they're in high-school, MC is either almost done with the entrance exam or has just started being a hunter. I also got the idea for this during the scene in the main storyline where Caleb holds her still while treating her wound and tells the cat and the bell story, I wanted this particular event to be on his mind during that, just to make it extra tense.
*Doubly so; this is my first bit of fic for this fandom; so I try not to read too many other fics on the first pass as to not be influenced, so if there's any similarities to another work that you see here it's purely coincidental. With that said please enjoy.



It was late spring, and the first hints of summer clung to the shifting breeze as warm sunlight filtered through the dense canopy, casting flickering patterns across the courtyard. The branches of the surrounding trees sagged under the weight of blossoms, their petals drifting in lazy spirals to the ground. A fusion of floral fragrance and the distant hum of the forest permeated the air, imbuing the space with an almost hypnotic tranquility. Standing amidst the afternoon glow, Giselle Valentine surveyed the mess of scattered petals carpeting the courtyard of her childhood home.
With an audible sigh, she dragged her broom across the stone path, pushing yet another pile of pink and white petals aside. The trees, while undoubtedly breathtaking in their seasonal bloom, left a perpetual mess in their wake—one she was charged with managing.
Just as she cleared a section, another gust of wind swept through, undoing her efforts as fresh petals rained down. Muttering under her breath, she swept a few stray strands of hair from her face, barely suppressing her irritation.
Caleb, her childhood friend, hadn’t initially intended to stop and watch. But there he was, casually leaning against the courtyard gate, arms crossed, his gaze fixed on the determined furrow of her brow as she waged an unwinnable war against nature.
She had been at it for some time, her broom scraping across the stone in rhythmic frustration. Each time she made progress, nature effortlessly countered her efforts, sending another cascade of petals to reclaim the space she had just cleared.
Caleb smirked. Some things never changed.
Giselle, ever persistent, muttered in defiance, refusing to surrender to the inevitability of the elements.
His lips twitched in amusement. He supposed he should make his presence known, but watching her battle the petals was far too entertaining to interrupt.
She let out an exasperated sigh, blowing a loose strand of hair from her face. That was his cue. Pushing off the gate, he strolled into the courtyard with deliberate ease.
"You know," he drawled, tucking his hands into his pockets, "they invented leaf blowers for this very reason."
Giselle startled, whirling around at the unexpected voice. A few petals fluttered loose from her hair, and Caleb fought to suppress his grin.
She narrowed her eyes. "Great. The peanut gallery has arrived. How long have you been standing there?"
"Long enough to see you struggling with inanimate objects," he responded smoothly, nodding at the ever-growing collection of petals swirling around her feet.
A faint flush crept onto her cheeks as she gripped the broom tighter. "I am not struggling. The wind is cheating."
Caleb arched a brow. "Right. And next you'll tell me the petals have formed a conspiracy against you."
“I wouldn’t put it past them," she grumbled, shoving the broom at a particularly stubborn pile. "They look delicate and harmless, but they’re relentless."
Caleb snorted, rocking back on his heels. "So, what you’re saying is, the great huntress-in-training, Giselle, has been bested by springtime flora?"
Giselle pointed the broom at him, her expression dead serious. "Say that again, and I will sweep you into next week."
He grinned, stepping just out of reach. "I’d love to see you try, Gigi."
Her eye twitched. Caleb knew exactly what he was doing.
"You know I hate that name."
"It’s either that or pipsqueak, and I know how much you love that one," he teased, his smirk unrepentant.
Giselle exhaled slowly, clearly choosing restraint—for now. Resuming her sweeping, she muttered, "So, I imagine you finally found time to visit us simple folk, Flyboy?"
Caleb smirked at the retaliatory nickname, slipping his hands into his pockets. "Here to offer moral support… and inhale some good ol childhood nostalgia."
Giselle rolled her eyes. "Yeah? Smell familiar?"
He tilted his head, inhaling dramatically. "Mmm. Smells like hard work… and failure."
She whipped around, aiming the broom at him.
Caleb dodged effortlessly, laughing.
"More like unhelpful commentary," she muttered. "A leaf blower? Seriously? Do you see an outlet anywhere in the countryside, Caleb? Or should I just conjure one from thin air?"
"You could find a battery-powered one if you really wanted to," he quipped.
She scoffed and turned back to her task. "It’s fine. It's just... annoying."
Caleb watched her, the smirk softening on his lips. The scene felt familiar—comfortably so. As if nothing had changed. He liked that.
The way the late afternoon light filtered through the branches, catching in her hair. The way her expression set with the same stubborn determination she’d had as a kid when she insisted she could beat him in races up the tallest tree.
He was struck suddenly by the memory of her younger self—wild, free, scraped knees and bright brown eyes, completely unaware of how she had embedded herself into the foundation of his life.
Now, years later, she was still here. Still stubborn. Still beautiful.
And it was getting harder to pretend that she was still just the girl he grew up with.
He shoved his hands deeper into his pockets, shaking off the thought.
"Hey, so. You’re not even sweeping right," he teased, grasping at something lighthearted to clear his mind.
"Oh, I’m sorry, Mr. Expert Sweeper, would you like to take over?"
"I’m just saying—"
He didn’t get to finish. In that moment, Giselle stepped back, her foot catching on something beneath the petals.
Everything happened so fast.
Her body lurched, the broom slipping from her grasp as she stumbled over a hidden tree root. Caleb moved on instinct, his reflexes sharp. He barely had time to react before she yelped and went down, landing hard on one knee.
Caleb was beside her in an instant.
"Geez—Giselle?" The teasing edge in his voice had vanished, replaced by sharp concern as he crouched beside her.
She grimaced, shifting to sit properly. "I’m fine—" She tried to stand but inhaled sharply, her ankle buckling beneath her weight.
Caleb caught her before she could fall again, one arm looping around her waist. "Yeah, that definitely looks fine," he muttered dryly.
She groaned and sighed in irritation. "Obviously, I didn’t see the root."
"No kidding."
Without waiting for an argument, he hooked his arm under her knees and lifted her effortlessly.
"Caleb—!"
Ignoring her protests, he adjusted her weight. "If you’re going to yell directly into my ear, at least try to sound more grateful."
Carrying her to the porch, he set her down gently.
Giselle hissed, her hands gripping the edge of the porch as she tested her weight again.
Caleb exhaled sharply through his nose. “Yeah, okay. Stop moving,” he muttered, already lowering himself into a crouch before her.
She huffed, crossing her arms, but refrained from arguing as he positioned himself between her knees, his gaze narrowing with concentration.
His hands were steady and gentle as he carefully reached for her foot, his fingertips brushing the bare skin of her calf before they curled around her ankle.
"Just let me look at it," he said, his voice quieter now—measured, controlled. Yet something in the way he touched her—so careful, so deliberate—sent a slow, uncertain warmth coiling in her stomach.
Caleb exhaled through his nose and took his time, loosening the laces of her shoe before carefully sliding it off.
Giselle flinched, a sharp inhale slipping past her lips as a fresh wave of pain flared when he inadvertently moved her foot too much.
"Sorry," Caleb murmured, genuine in his apology, his brows knitting together as his jaw tensed slightly. He adjusted his grip with greater care.
He continued, gentler now, his fingertips grazing over her sock before slowly peeling it away, revealing the delicate curve of her ankle—already beginning to swell, the skin tinged red from the strain.
Neither of them spoke as he pressed lightly against the swelling, his touch steady and methodical. The warmth of his fingers against her skin sent a ripple of awareness through her—one she wasn’t sure she was ready to acknowledge.
He gazed over the soft slope of her foot, the warmth of her skin pressing against his palms.
For a fleeting second, he, too, became acutely aware of everything—the way her leg rested against his thigh, the subtle heat radiating from her, and a delicate scent clinging to her. It was faint but unmistakable, a blend of crushed strawberry leaves and something sun-warmed and clean, like ripe fruit kissed by the afternoon air. It lingered in the space between them, deceptively light yet impossible to ignore this close.
He shook himself out of it, forcing his focus back onto her injury.
"Well...It’s not broken," he finally said, his voice lower. "But you’re not walking on it for a while."
She shifted, leaning back slightly. “Thank you, Doctor Caleb, you’re clearly in the wrong profession.” she teased, but her voice was softer, her breathing a little shallower now.
He didn’t answer.
Not right away.
Because his hands were still on her, still resting against her skin, and she wasn’t pulling away.
Caleb exhaled slowly, trying—failing—to ignore how warm her skin felt beneath his hands. His fingers lingered, pressing lightly against the curve of her ankle, feeling the soft thrum of her pulse beneath his thumb.
“I, uh—” He cleared his throat, his hands reluctantly sliding away from her skin.
Giselle raised an eyebrow, a perplexed expression flashing across her face at his sudden hesitation.
Caleb rubbed the back of his neck, forcing out a lopsided smirk to cover whatever the hell that moment had just been. “Let’s, uh—let’s leave that career path to Zayne, shall we?”
Her lips twitched, her eyes glinting. “Caleb? Mr. Popularity, Ace Flyboy is yielding?”
Caleb scoffed, shaking his head. “Please. Patching you up was something I did all the time when we were kids. I’d be a terrible doctor for like... anybody else.”
“Mm, yeah,” she mused, leaning back onto her hands. “You did have a habit of slapping a bandage on me and calling it a day.”
“Worked, didn’t it?” he shot back, regaining his footing, slipping easily into that familiar teasing territory.
“Only because I didn’t know better,” she smirked. “Zayne would’ve had me in a full-body cast if he saw how you handled first aid.”
Caleb rolled his eyes, but the warmth clinging in his chest was undeniable. The teasing, the banter, the way she looked at him just now—it was so them, so effortlessly natural. And yet…
His gaze drifted downward again—to her leg, the faint sheen of sweat on her skin, the way her dress still rode just a little high. He forced himself to refocus.
Clearing his throat, he stood with more purpose than necessary.
“We need to get you inside,” he muttered, extending a hand toward her. “Before you do something else dumb, like try to walk on that.”
Giselle shot him a glare, crossing her arms. “Oh, come on. I’m not that stupid,” she huffed. “I wasn’t about to just stand up and start walking on a busted ankle.”
Caleb lifted his hands in mock surrender, the corner of his mouth twitching. “Okay. Okay.” His voice dripped with sarcasm. “I won’t surprise you this time. Here’s me, officially asking for your consent to carry you inside to the couch, Miss.” He met her gaze, arching a brow. “Do I have it?”
Giselle blinked, momentarily caught off guard. The way he said it—half teasing, half exasperated—shouldn’t have made her stomach do a little flip. And yet, her face was flushing despite herself.
She cleared her throat, rolling her eyes for good measure. “Hmm. You do.”
Without another word, Caleb bent down and effortlessly scooped her up, hooking one arm under her legs and the other behind her back. The movement was smooth, practiced—like it took no effort at all.
Giselle stiffened slightly, caught off guard by just how easily he lifted her. He smelled nice—clean, like fresh linen, and something subtly spiced, warm, and grounding. It was a small detail, but it lingered, distracting her almost as much as the quiet strength in his arms.
She had known he was stronger now—had seen the way his frame had filled out with each visit, the way he moved with more power, more certainty—but feeling it was something else entirely. Had he always been this strong? Or had she just never noticed before?
For a moment, adult emotions complicated the familiar, simplistic image she had of him, shifting the way she saw him in a way she still wasn’t sure she was ready to face.
Before she could dwell on it, he was already lowering her onto the couch, his touch steady but brief, pulling her out of her thoughts as he straightened up.
Caleb lingered for a moment, standing over her, his gaze half-lidded as he took her in.
She was still catching her breath, her chest rising and falling in slow, measured beats. Loose strands of dark hair framed her face, a touch tousled from the movement, her skin still carrying the faintest flush—not just from exertion, but something else. His eyes drifted lower, over the way her dress settled around her thighs, the curve of her leg now resting against the couch.
There was something disarming about seeing her like this—unguarded, caught in the space between irritation and something softer. For a moment, the teasing, the familiarity, the easy banter between them faded into something quieter...heavy.
"I'll, uh, get you some ice to bring the swelling down."
Giselle hummed in acknowledgment, reclining slightly against the couch, her fingers absently toying with the hem of her dress. There was no discernible expression on her face, no teasing remark—just a quiet, unreadable stillness.
Caleb hesitated for a fraction of a second, the odd tension clinging to his skin like static. He wasn’t sure what to make of it—the silence, the way she wasn’t meeting his eyes. Brushing it off, he turned toward the kitchen, willing himself to focus on the task at hand.
As he disappeared around the corner, Giselle exhaled, releasing the breath she hadn’t realized she was holding. The warmth of his hands still lingered on her skin, the ghost of his touch refusing to fade.
She glanced down at her ankle, then at the empty space where he'd stood just moments ago.
The boy she had grown up with was still there, beneath the teasing quips and exasperated sighs. But there was something else now—something unspoken, something neither of them seemed quite prepared to confront.
"Here," he said quietly, his voice steadier than he felt. "Keep this on it for a while."
"Thanks."
Her fingers brushed against his—just a second too long.
The contact was brief but charged, her gaze steady and unreadable. For a moment, something unspoken hovered between them, fragile and uncertain.
Then Caleb stepped back, clearing his throat, shoving his hands into his pockets as if that would somehow ground him.
“You’re lucky I was here,” he said, his usual smirk settling back into place, though there was a stiffness in his posture that hadn’t been there before. “Otherwise, who knows how you’d have gotten inside?”
“I would’ve managed,” Giselle countered, though her voice was softer now, almost teasing.
“Sure you would’ve,” he murmured, leaning against the wall, arms crossed. But even as his smirk remained, the playful glint in his eyes did little to disguise the way his jaw clenched—the way his gaze flickered, just briefly, back to her legs before he forced himself to look away.
Giselle shifted on the couch, reaching forward to adjust the ice pack. The strain from sweeping earlier had left her muscles tense, and even the simple movement felt more cumbersome than expected. As she leaned in, the fabric of her dress slid higher against her thigh, baring just a little more skin to the dim light of the room.
And then—for the briefest moment—Caleb saw the most precious part of her.
The faintest trace of soft, white cotton.
His breath stalled. A flicker of something unsteady passed through him, quick as a spark but impossible to ignore. He snapped his gaze away, jaw tightening as he willed himself to think about anything else—her injury, the ice pack, the fact that he really, really didn’t need to be noticing that.
Heat coiled at the base of his spine, his body betraying him in a way that was both unfamiliar and entirely unwanted. His gaze tore away instantly, his jaw tightening as though sheer willpower alone could erase the image from his memory.
But it was too late.
The imprint lingered. The way her skin looked against the fabric, the sheer intimacy of it.
This was Giselle. His Giselle.
He had no business noticing things like that—but the realization hit him all at once, crashing over him like a wave he hadn’t seen coming. For the first time, he wasn’t just seeing Giselle as his best friend.
It wasn’t as though he had never noticed her beauty before. That awareness had crept up on him gradually, in ways that were easy to dismiss—a passing thought, a flicker of admiration, something harmless and fleeting.
But this?
This was different.
This wasn’t distant admiration. It was a gut-punch of attraction, startling and unrelenting, settling somewhere low and dangerous in his stomach.
And he hated it.
He hated how effortless it was, how easily his body reacted before his mind could reason its way out of it.
He had to say something—anything—to shatter the thought before it took root.
“Hold on—let me help. "Geez, Giselle...” he muttered, his tone sharper than necessary, almost scolding.
Not because she had done anything wrong.
But because he needed the distraction.
She blinked, momentarily startled by his abrupt shift in demeanor, her eyes searching his face. If she had noticed why he was suddenly tense, she didn’t say so.
Still, there was that shift again—no matter how many jokes he tried to hide behind, it just kept coming back, creeping between them, demanding to be dealt with.
Before she could respond, he was kneeling before her again, reaching for the ice pack, hyper-focused on the one task that didn’t require acknowledging the torrent of emotions racing through his skull.
His fingers brushed against hers as he adjusted the pack, the cool condensation dripping against his skin, but his own body ran too warm now, his pulse unsteady, uneven.
He forced his grip to remain steady, willing his mind back to neutral territory.
This was just Gigi.
Gigi, who had scraped her knees a hundred times as a kid. Gigi, who had always been just a little reckless, a little too stubborn for her own good.
But she wasn’t just Gigi…
No.
Giselle.
An unfamiliar weight settled in his chest, the realization creeping in before he could stop it and that realization unnerved him more than anything else.
“You don’t have to—” she started.
“Gigi just-” Caleb interrupted, his focus locked onto her ankle as if it were the most critical thing in the world. “Just let me do it.”
Giselle narrowed her eyes, sensing something different in his tone. Instead, she leaned back against the couch, watching him work, noting the quiet tension in his shoulders—tight, deliberate, restrained.
“Thanks...for taking care of me Caleb,” she murmured after a moment, her voice softer now.
Caleb nodded, but he still didn’t look at her. His fingers lingered, adjusting the ice pack with meticulous care; his jaw locked tight, his movements betraying a deliberation that hinted at something simmering beneath the surface.
The room felt smaller, the silence heavier. Outside, the wind rustled faintly, a quiet whisper against the walls. The only sounds between them were the steady rhythm of their breathing; the only light was the fading glow of the setting sun, casting long shadows that stretched across the floor.
Finally, Caleb glanced up, his gaze locking onto hers.
“You’re overdoing it, Gigi,” he said, his voice low, edged with something almost scolding. “All this—pushing yourself, trying to do everything on your own—you’re going to hurt more than just your ankle if you keep this up.”
Giselle arched a brow, a teasing smirk tugging at her lips despite the unspoken tension curling between them. “Why are you wigging out, Caleb? It’s just a little sprain.”
“This time.”
Caleb exhaled sharply, frustration threading through his words. But this wasn’t really about her ankle, and he knew that.
Giselle’s smirk wavered, her expression shifting into something more uncertain.
Caleb shook his head, running a hand through his hair, tousling it further, his mind caught in the dissonance of who he was supposed to be—
The responsible Caleb. The one who looked out for his best friend.
And this Caleb—the one battling emotions that had grown too large, too real, for a friend who, somewhere along the way, had become a woman he could barely think straight around.
"Sorry. Sorry for making it weird," he muttered, his voice gruff, his gaze skittering away as he rubbed the back of his neck. "It’s hard to turn that off." It was a pitiful excuse, but she bought it.
Giselle laughed softly, leaning further into the couch. "You’re the one who came rushing back like I was dying."
"Because you’re hopeless," he shot back, the usual sarcasm returning—though his voice still carried the weight of something unsettled.
It wouldn't be for long, but his walls were back in place, yet he remained kneeling by the couch, fingers absently pressing into the edge of the ice pack, adjusting it once more. He hadn’t moved since placing it there, his hands hovering near her ankle, reluctant to let go.
The silence stretched, fragile, punctuated only by the gentle rustling of petals against the window, the distant hum of the spring breeze.
Then—
“Gigi…?”
The nickname fell from his lips with a gentleness that caught even him off guard, the sharpened edge from moments ago all but vanished. There was something else in his voice now—something hesitant, unguarded. A quiet mix of anxiety and nervousness, like he was teetering on the edge of saying something he wasn’t sure he should.
She blinked, tilting her head to look at him. “Hmm?”
He didn’t respond right away.
Instead, his hand moved—trailing up, fingers brushing lightly along her calf as he turned to face her. His movements were slow and deliberate, as though he wasn’t entirely aware of what he was doing, his hand warm on her leg, his thumb tracing soft circles just above her knee. The weight of his gaze on her made Giselle’s pulse quicken, the charged silence between them thick enough to drown in.
“Can I…” His fingers flexed against her thigh, the words catching in his throat. For the first time in a long time, his nerves got the better of him. “Let me…”
He trailed off again, and Giselle’s breath hitched. She had never seen him fumble for words like this.
"Let me make you feel better."
His tone was steady now—completely fixed—but the way his fingers trembled, just slightly against her skin betrayed him. Not hesitation. Not doubt. Just the weight of this moment.
She blinked, startled by the low, almost pleading quality in his voice. “Caleb, you’ve already—”
“Just… let me,” he interrupted, his hand sliding just a little higher, his grip still sure, still confident, even as the faintest quiver ran through his fingertips. His thumb brushed along the sensitive skin above her knee, his focus utterly locked onto her, his own nerves an afterthought compared to the anticipation thrumming between them.
“You’re always trying to do everything yourself, Gigi,” he murmured. “You never let anyone… me, take care of you.”
Her heart pounded, heat curling deep in her chest at the weight of his words—the care behind them. This wasn’t about her ankle anymore.
And still, he wasn’t rushing, wasn’t pushing.
He was just waiting.
“Caleb…” she started, but the hesitation in her voice melted away when he leaned forward, pressing a soft kiss just above her knee.
Her breath stilled, her body tensing slightly at the unexpected sensation. But his touch was so gentle, so deliberate, that she couldn’t bring herself to pull away.
“Say yes,” he murmured, his lips brushing against her skin as he kissed higher, slow and reverent. “That’s all you have to do.”
She stared down at him, her chest tightening with emotion. The boy she had grown up with, the one who had teased her endlessly, climbed trees with her, and always made her feel safe, was now kneeling in front of her like she was the center of his world.
Despite the surge of so many different emotions welling inside her, one feeling cut through the rest—her trust in him.
Caleb did make her feel safe. He always had.
And though she was stumbling through this, awkward and uncertain, there was a quiet, steady comfort in the fact that it was him.
Her hand slid down to rest lightly on his shoulder, her fingers trembling just slightly as she nodded, meekly, the weight of the moment stealing her voice.
A tinge of coyness bloomed in her chest, warm and unfamiliar, leaving her unable to say yes—so instead, she let the simple movement speak for her.
Caleb exhaled, a shaky breath of relief, and for a moment, he paused, his forehead resting lightly against her thigh. Then he looked up at her, his eyes filled with a mixture of nervousness and longing.
“I’ll take care of you,” he murmured, his voice soft but sure.
Caleb exhaled, a shaky breath of relief, and for a moment, he paused, his forehead resting lightly against her thigh. The weight of her silent consent settled over him, grounding him, steadying him.
Then he looked up at her, his eyes filled with a mixture of nervousness and longing
"I'll take care of you," he murmured, his voice soft but sure.
Giselle nodded again, unable to meet his gaze. She wouldn’t dare. A blush burned high on her cheeks now, making it painfully clear how out of her depth she was. And yet, her body relaxed under his touch, tension melting away with every slow, deliberate press of his lips against her skin.
He moved carefully, patiently, his warmth lingering with each reverent kiss. There was no rush, no urgency—only quiet devotion, a silent reassurance that she had every opportunity to stop him.
But she didn’t.
Because she trusted him.
His hands slid gently along her legs, parting them slightly as he shifted closer, his movements careful and deliberate. There was no urgency, no demand—just quiet intent.
Each kiss he placed on her skin felt like a promise, like something deeper than words could ever convey. Devotion. Reverence. A quiet, unspoken need. The tenderness of it made her heart ache in the best way, warmth pooling deep in her chest.
"Caleb…" she whispered, her voice trembling. She wasn’t sure what to do with it—what to do with herself.
Every sensation was new and unfamiliar in a way that left her breathless.
He paused, glancing up at her, searching her face for any sign of doubt.
"I'm okay," she breathed, her voice unsteady, laced with something soft and aching.
A stifled moan caught in her throat as her fingers—delicate, uncertain—instinctively found their way into his hair, threading through the strands as if seeking something to hold onto.
His lips curved into the faintest smile before he leaned in again, his kisses trailing higher until they reached the hem of her dress. He hesitated there, his breath warm against her skin, his fingers hovering at the edge of the fabric as if giving her a final moment to stop him.
When she didn’t, his hands moved with quiet reverence, gently sliding the fabric up just enough to continue.
What followed wasn’t rushed or clumsy. Caleb’s touch was careful, deliberate. His movements unpracticed but instinctive, guided more by the overwhelming need to make her feel good than any kind of experience.
His heart pounded in his chest, nerves fraying with every second. This wasn’t something he’d ever done before.
Wasn’t something he’d even imagined he would be doing—especially not like this.
Not with Giselle.
Not on some lazy spring afternoon, with sunlight spilling across her skin, her scent—warm, faintly sweet—wrapping around him, making it impossible to think straight.
But now that he was here, so close to her, his focus narrowed—drawn to the small, tender details he hadn’t noticed before.
The faint tremble in her thighs as his hands brushed against them. The soft, nervous rhythm of her breaths. The warmth of her skin beneath his lips.
He tilted his head slightly, the somewhat rough denim of her dress grazing his cheek as he pressed another kiss higher up her thigh. Her scent—something faintly floral, something undeniably hers—wrapped around him, pulling him deeper into the moment.
And then, just like that, the same shyness that had enveloped Giselle crept into him.
The weight of the moment settled in his chest, filling it with the flutter of something unfamiliar. Something delicate. Something real.
But it didn’t feel overwhelming.
It felt right.
He was exactly where he wanted to be.
He pressed a kiss to the soft curve of her inner thigh, his lips lingering there as he let himself breathe her in.
There was something intoxicating about the way she enveloped his senses—like warmth and something delicate, mixed with the faintest trace of spring air from being outside. It was subtle, but it wrapped around him like a thread, drawing him closer.
Then, as his lips brushed against the edge of her underwear, the cotton soft against his mouth, a breath caught in his chest.
He hesitated.
His fingers tightened slightly on her legs as he glanced up at her, something deep and searching in his gaze.
Her eyes—half-lidded, flickering, uncertain yet steady—met his. Her cheeks were flushed, warmth rising to the surface, but there was no fear there.
Only trust.
And then—her fingers, which had been hovering uncertainly at her sides, found their way into his hair again, tangling lightly as if to tell him, wordlessly, that it was okay.
That was all he needed.
Caleb slid her underwear aside carefully, his breathing going ragged despite himself. The sight of her—bare and vulnerable before him—was almost enough to make him stop, not because he didn’t want this, but because it felt like too much. Too intimate. Too important.
He took a steadying breath, his lips slowly brushing against her again, this time lower. The heat of her skin, the faint taste of her—salty, sweet, utterly unique—sent a shiver through him.
His grip on her thighs tightened slightly as he leaned in further, his tongue darting out tentatively at first, unsure but curious. The texture of her, the softness of her, the warmth—it was intense in the best way.
She gasped softly above him, her fingers tightening in his hair, and the sound sent a thrill down his spine.
He closed his eyes, focusing on the way she felt beneath him, the way her body responded to his touch. Each sigh, each subtle shift of her hips, guided him, building his confidence as he moved with more fervor.
Pulling back a bit tentatively, a deft finger slid into her wetness, yielding an arch to her back, his tongue drawing towards the bundle of nerves at her apex.
He pressed his lips against her again, this time more firmly, his tongue moving with slow, deliberate strokes that earned him another soft, breathless moan.
"Gigi... you taste so good…"
He’d whispered it, almost to himself, unsure if she’d even heard him. But it didn’t matter—this moment had consumed him, like a man lost in something he had no desire to escape from.
Just like he always had when it came to her, he subconsciously committed everything to memory—the motions that made her tremble, the rhythms that had her gasping, the way she writhed beneath him, utterly undone.
The way his fingers came away slick, drenched in her, it was hypnotically visceral.
This is Giselle, he thought, the realization hitting him with a force that almost made him falter. The girl he’d grown up with. The person he’d always cared about, always looked out for. The one he could never seem to get out of his head, no matter how hard he tried.
And now, she was here, her body trembling beneath his, her trust in him so complete that it made his heart flutter.
He lifted his gaze for a moment, watching the way her head tilted back, her lips parted as she breathed heavily. The sight of her—flushed, utterly unguarded—threatened to unravel him, the blood rushing away from his good common sense.
Then she whispered his name, her voice trembling, and something inside him shifted.
This wasn’t just about her body, her taste, her response—this was about her, about showing her how much she meant to him, even if he couldn’t quite put it into words.
His movements softened, his kisses slower, more deliberate, as if he were trying to tell her everything he couldn’t say aloud, and when she gasped again, her fingers tugging at his hair, he knew—he would give her everything.
A searing white heat tore through her.
Her body reacted instinctively, an involuntary push downward as a rhythmic climax built, crashing over her in waves.
She hadn’t known it before, had never felt anything like it, but in that moment, everything around her shut off.
Caleb followed her through it, riding each pulse, each tremor, not certain if he was doing the right thing—only knowing that he never wanted to stop.
When her body stilled, Caleb exhaled, his breath unsteady, his body still thrumming with residual heat. His pulse hadn’t quite settled, and neither had his thoughts. The familiar tension that had plagued him the whole afternoon began to rear its ugly head again now—charged with something deeper.
Giselle's chest rose and fell in slow, steady breaths, her skin flushed, dewy in the fading light. The tension that had once gripped her was gone, however, replaced by an almost ethereal softness. She looked utterly at peace, and for a moment, Caleb just watched her.
His gaze drifted downward, lingering over the gentle curve of her thighs, the way the last traces of her pleasure still clung to her skin. His throat tightened, that familiar trance-like state still clinging to his mind like a persistent fog. She was beautiful like this—unguarded, undone, and something deep within him ached.
He forced himself to move, to shift his focus. Slowly, with a quiet reverence, he reached for the hem of her dress, carefully pulling it back down, covering her with the same care one might handle something fragile. There was no urgency now, no teasing quip to fill the silence—only the quiet weight of the moment settling into his bones.
She needed rest.
With a reluctant sigh, Caleb pushed himself to his feet and disappeared for a moment, returning with a blanket. By the time he'd come back, she was already asleep.
His eyes welled slightly at the sight—the way she had curled into herself, her fingers lightly grazing the couch, her expression soft, peaceful.
A quiet chuckle barely left his lips as he shook his head.
“Not fair, Gigi. You’re always wandering off on your own,” he murmured, though the words held no bite. Maybe it was for the best.
Carefully, he crouched down and draped the blanket over her, his fingers brushing against her arm in the process. She barely stirred, only shifting slightly, nestling deeper into the warmth.
For what felt like an eternity, he simply stayed there, crouched beside her, taking her in.
Then, finally, he let out an exhale, rubbing a hand over his face as exhaustion began to creep into his own limbs. With a quiet sigh, he shifted back, settling onto the floor a small distance away.
Caleb exhaled slowly, leaning against the couch, but even as his eyes threatened to close, his mind refused to settle.
The weight of what had just happened began setting over him like a second skin—clinging, inescapable.
So what now? he mused inwardly.
Would they talk about this? Would they even acknowledge it?
A part of him—the part still intoxicated by the feel of her, by the way she had trusted him so completely—wanted to believe this meant something more. That it wasn’t just a passing moment, a fleeting indulgence, but something real. Something that changed things between them in a way he wasn’t sure he could come back from.
But that was selfish.
He had offered her this, and she had accepted—but she owed him nothing in return. No promises, no confessions, no neatly wrapped resolution. He wouldn’t let himself expect anything from her.
And then, there was the other part.
The rational part. The one that reminded him who they were to one another.
Giselle was still his best friend.
They had spent a lifetime in easy companionship, in teasing, in trust. They had never—not once—crossed this line before.
And now, they couldn’t uncross it.
Would she regret it? Would she pretend it never happened?
Would she want him to?
His fingers curled slightly against his knee, tension creeping back into his jaw. If she wanted to forget this, he wouldn’t fight her on it. He wouldn’t push, wouldn’t hold onto something she didn’t want to keep.
Even if he already knew—deep down—that forgetting was impossible.
But if that was what she wanted, she would have it.
And he would still be there for her.
No matter what.
Leaning his head against the couch, he let his eyes drift shut.
His resolve was absolute, as steady as the rhythmic rise and fall of his breath.
Outside, the lazy spring afternoon carried on with no care for the weight in his chest, no concern for the quiet war waging in his mind. The wind whispered against the walls, the golden light of the setting sun stretched across the floor, and beside him, Giselle slept—peaceful, untouched by the turmoil threading through him.
And so, with only the sound of their breathing and the faint rustling of the wind outside, he let himself doze off, too.
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