#//omg it's darcy...mostly
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kuiinncedes · 2 years ago
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jflfkgjd
#not ppl seeing the one (1) shot of isaac and another guy in the hs trailer and going omg isaac getting himself a boy ?!??!!?#ik not everyone has seen that alice has kind of talked about isaac being aroace i think ??#but it is a little annoying to see that just be the first reaction and assumption ig lmao#mostly bc i also saw one person's reaction going i thought isaac was giong to be aroace what is this shot#like saying he's actually getting a bf or sm like bro it was a shot of them looking at each other#and that just means they're gonna get together and alice saying isaac is aroace is no longer true and she was just lying ?????#like ig part of it is the fact that the entire trailer is ppl in relationships and ppl in love so#i don't completely blame them ig lmfao but like if you know alice said that#why does one shot of two boys looking at each other completely negate what they said#and but also it could absolutely be that they get together and isaac is figuring out his identity#idk lmao it's not a big deal . i think i'm realizing fr how much i'm looking forward to isaac as aroace representation lol#so seeing those things kinda annoyed me a tiny bit lol but is ok c:#the trailer was very cute also i laughed out loud acouple times lmfao#im interested by the kinda flip in tara and darcys storyline like the scene w tara and charlie talking and it's not rly#the same as in the comics idk it's interesting#it's def also interesting going into s1 i was going in completely blind and now going into s2 i'm like#going in knowing the comic super well and knowing that storyline so now i get that experience ig lol#anyway jfngdkgjskd#jeanne talks
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alcyneus · 3 months ago
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SOFT BLOCKED ・ following @.alcyneus
omg did u see? some random college student roasted actor tooru oikawa on twitter and now his fanbase won’t stop flaming her :/ now oikawa’s flirting with her on the tl to rile her up lol talk abt a modern day elizabeth bennet and mr. darcy
 yeesh
12:03 AM ・ 04/07/2025 ↳ 15.4k ♄ 42.3k ↻ 14.2k ılıl 90k ➱ 32.4k
taglist is open @.pmgranate ・3h actor!oikawa, enemies to lovers, one-sided pining turned mutual pining, pathetic oikawa, y/n is a hater, ooc characters, fluff, mostly a crackfic, hurt/comfort, mild angst, slight university!au, y/n dgaf, y/n recieves hate from oikawa’s fanbase
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error 404: pr team not found ・ 3mo ago
doxxed dot com ・ 3mo ago
et tu, brute?・2mo ago
ok but r u single・2mo ago
day 1357; still pathetic・2mo ago
10hr oikawayn compilation・2mo ago
oikawa’s novelist era・1mo ago
yn’s hitman services・1mo ago
mental illness innit・1mo ago
so call me maybe ・30d ago
dsm-5 diagnoses ・29d ago
yn’s gf ・20d ago
ankara messi ・ 15d ago
get a grip ・ 14d ago
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@mayyhaps @thea-herondale @eoniiian @kukkurookkoo @bokutoko @sunarots @renardiererin @lavender-pink-socks @heyhihellowhatsup @sahrberrii @grlcrash @your-mum3000 @kawoala @shozuken @nscuit @angeleilee @captaincyberqueen
đšđ„đœđČ𝐧𝐞𝐼𝐬, 𝟐𝟎𝟐𝟓
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capuccinodoll · 3 months ago
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The boyfriend act, part 11: "The one with the things we shouldn't talk about" Pairing: Frankie Morales x F!reader SERIES MASTERLIST
Chapter summary: You and Frankie get back home, eat cake, watch Notting Hill, and talk about all the things you probably shouldn’t—but do anyway. WC: 15,1k (sorry omg)
TW!!: This chapter touches on sensitive topics including grief, suicide, and substance use. If you are sensitive to any of these topics, please take care while reading <3
A/N: Well, it seems I just can't manage to write short chapters. I'm sorry about that. I write and write, and before I know it, I've gone way overboard. Sometimes, when I go back to edit, I try to cut anything that's not strictly necessary... but everything feels necessary. If I could somehow describe the exact chemical reaction that happens when Frankie looks at Reader, I totally would lol. Anyway, thank you so much for reading and for your lovely comments!!!! If you want to be in the tag list, let me know. Don't forget to follow capuccinodollupdates for notifications!
When you opened the door to your apartment, Mr. Darcy appeared almost instantly, trotting toward you with a dramatic, drawn-out meow, like you’d been gone for days instead of just a few hours.
"Come on, don’t be so dramatic," you murmured, bending down to scratch behind his ears. He accepted the attention begrudgingly, rubbing his face against your leg before stalking toward the couch.
The adrenaline had worn off on the drive back, leaving exhaustion in its place, a pleasant kind of heaviness settling into your limbs. After the jump, Eric had stuck around to chat—mostly with Frankie. He’d asked about Santiago, and when he realized you were his sister, his face had lit up in recognition. Then, with a grin, he’d nudged Frankie and made some joke about dating his best friend’s sister.  
You hadn’t stayed much longer after that. The hunger had hit fast, like a delayed reaction to the morning’s excitement. Frankie had suggested stopping somewhere to eat, but you had countered with a better idea—grabbing food to go and eating in the car. So that’s what you’d done.  
So, instead of the warm scent of coffee and sugar from the drive there, the car smelled like fries and chicken nuggets. You’d taken over the music again with a mix of early 2000s nostalgia—Nelly Furtado, Hole, Jonas Brothers, some Britney, and a rotation of pop hits. Quite a variation, to be honest. Frankie didn't hate it.
Before heading home, you had asked him to make a quick stop at Joe’s Bakery. He had parked outside, unbuckling his seatbelt, but you had stopped him before he could get out.  
"It’ll just take a second," you’d said, already pushing the door open.  
When you came back, you were carrying a pink cardboard box.  
Frankie had glanced at it, a knowing smile tugging at his lips. "What do you have in there?"  
You had only shrugged, feigning disinterest, and closed the door without answering.  
Now, back in your apartment, he stepped inside with the same pink box in his hands while you locked the door behind him.  
You walked over to Darcy, scooping him up and pressing your fingers gently against the soft fur of his throat as you made your way to the kitchen. Frankie set the box down on the counter, then followed you, reaching out to give the little guy a quick, absentminded scratch on the head.  
"Can I use the bathroom?"  
You clicked your tongue. "You don’t have to ask."
"Excuse me, I’m a gentleman," he said, eyebrows raised as he turned and headed down the hall.
You set Mr. Darcy down gently, his soft fur slipping through your fingers as he trotted off, tail flicking. Padding over to the kitchen sink, you turned on the water, letting it run warm over your hands as the morning played back in your head like a reel of sunlit images. The rush of air, the weightlessness, the sheer exhilaration of it all. You still couldn’t believe it. It had been incredible. 
God, Santi would have loved it.  
You could go again with him, maybe. You wondered what he’d say when you told him—if Frankie hadn’t already beaten you to it. You hadn’t mentioned it to your brother, and he hadn’t said anything to you, so
 probably not.  
You’d send him the pictures later, wait for his reaction. He’d definitely find it odd coming from you. But hey, now you were officially the kind of person who went skydiving. Casual. No big deal. Just that cool.  
You laughed softly to yourself.  
And then, like a shift in the wind, your thoughts veered toward Frankie.  
Your hands stilled under the water, fingers pressing against the cool ceramic of the sink. You stared at the tiled wall in front of you, but you weren’t really seeing it.  
Something sat heavy in your chest, dense and unmoving. A feeling you didn’t quite have a name for, but it clung to your ribs like something permanent.  
And the night before—it was still there, between you, thick. Neither of you had mentioned it. Not once.  
And Frankie hadn’t looked uncomfortable, hadn’t acted any differently. As if nothing had happened. As if just hours ago, you hadn’t been in his lap, bare skin against his, his mouth on you in places that still ached with the memory.  
If he wasn’t bringing it up, it was probably because he didn’t want to. Maybe he regretted it. Maybe he saw it as a mistake, something awkward that he was hoping you’d quietly let slip into the past.  
And sure, it had been unexpected for you too. But a mistake? 
No.  
Because no matter how much you tried to shove it down, there were things inside you that were getting harder and harder to ignore. Desires that felt like wildfire, impossible to contain.  
But you were Santi’s sister.  
That’s what he had told you last night. Like it was some kind of rule written in stone, like it was the reason, the boundary, the excuse. And maybe it was. Maybe it was enough to keep you at arm’s length. To reject you.
But the words had sounded weak. And you didn’t know which was worse—the idea that he truly believed it, or the possibility that he was hiding behind it, afraid to say what he really meant.  
Maybe he just didn’t want you. Maybe this was all a mess for him, one he wished he hadn’t gotten into at all. 
“Your bathroom cabinet drawer is broken,” Frankie said, cutting through the thoughts circling in your head.
You blinked, turning off the faucet and glancing at him just as he leaned against the counter beside you, hip pressing into the edge.  
“It doesn’t close all the way,” he added. “Probably just needs the guide replaced.”  
“Oh.” You reached for a towel, only to realize too late there wasn’t one. You wiped your damp hands against your shorts instead.  
“I can fix it if you want,” Frankie offered. “Might just be something stuck in there.”  
You shot him a sideways smile. “Were you snooping through my things, Francisco?”  
His eyebrows lifted, lips parting slightly. “No—no,” he said quickly, straightening just a little, though not enough to actually move away. “I just noticed.”  
“Mm-hm,” you hummed. “Well, if you feel like playing handyman, be my guest.”  
Turning toward the counter, you reached for the pink box you had set down earlier, your fingers running along the ridges of the cardboard before slipping beneath the flaps. Frankie shifted, settling onto one of the stools across from you. His elbows rested against the surface, his gaze fixed on your face.  
But you weren’t looking at him. You were focused on the box, the anticipation of what was inside pulling your attention.  
When you finally lifted the lid, your smile came instantly. You turned the box toward Frankie, giving him a full view of what was inside.  
A small, round cake, covered in smooth white cream. Swirls of frosting curled into delicate peaks around the edges, dotted with soft pink flowers piped with precision. Fresh strawberries were nestled between them, some sliced, others whole, their red brightness standing out against the pale background.  
“To celebrate,” you said, voice quieter than you expected, cheeks growing warm under his gaze.  
Frankie leaned back slightly, his smile widening, eyes creasing at the corners as he took it in.  
“Amazing,” he said. Then, with a teasing tilt of his head, “You sure this isn’t just an excuse to eat cake?”  
You rolled your eyes, nudging the box closer.
“Obviously. It's my favorite," you said, running a fingertip along the edge of the box. "Well, one of my favorites."  
Frankie shifted, rubbing the back of his neck, his gaze dropping to his feet.
“I should probably let you rest, then.” His voice was quieter than usual, lower, like he wasn’t quite sure of the words as he said them. 
“You’re not gonna stay?”  
His head lifted. He stilled. His eyebrows raised just slightly. 
“Oh. You... you want me to stay?”  
“Yeah. I mean—” you hesitated, suddenly second-guessing yourself. “I mean, if you can’t, it’s okay—”  
“No, no—”  
“I get it if you’re tired. I dragged you through a lot between yesterday and today—”  
“It’s not that—”  
“No, I totally understand—”  
“I want to stay.” His hand flattened against the counter as he leaned in, his eyes locked on yours now. “I just thought... well, that maybe you were tired and wanted to be alone. I didn’t want to bother you, that’s all.”  
“You don’t bother me,” you said simply, lifting the small cake from the box and setting it on the marble countertop. “I bought this to share with you. We both jumped, didn’t we?”  
A small smile pulled at the corner of his mouth. “That’s right.”  
You turned toward the cabinets, reaching for plates, pulling open the drawer for silverware.
“Besides, it’s kind of a habit. When I was a kid, every time I did something big, my dad would take me to Delora’s for strawberry shortcake.”  
Frankie didn’t say anything, but you could feel his attention on you, listening.  
“He always picked the one with the most strawberries. It was my favorite,” you continued, setting the plates down. “Then on my birthday, he’d get me a huge one and give me the strawberries from his slice. Santi too.” You reached for the coffee maker. “Do you want coffee?”  
“I always want coffee.” A brief silence, then, “So strawberries are your favorite fruit.”  
You smiled, but he couldn’t see it, not with your back to him. It was in your voice, though.  
“Yeah. And I was kind of obsessed with Strawberry Shortcake when I was a kid, too. My mom made me this beautiful costume for Halloween once. It was amazing—”  
You stopped speaking, you hesitated, your hands stilling, a puzzled smile forming on your lips. Something about the quiet behind you made you turn.  
“Francisco?”
He lifted his eyebrows, tilting his head slightly. But didn't speak.
“Why do I have a feeling you already knew about this?”  
His expression didn’t change, but there was something amused in the way he furrowed his brows.
“Knew about what?”  
“This.” You gestured vaguely, as if that would explain everything. "Um... Shortcake."
“Oh,” he said, nodding as if considering it. “I dunno. That seems unlikely.”  
“Santi told you?” You turned back to the coffee maker, your hand steady as you poured coffee grounds into the filter.  
“No.”  
You glanced at him from the corner of your eye. “Ha. Funny, then.”  
He exhaled a quiet laugh. “Yeah.” A pause. “Do you want me to help with something?”  
Behind you, you heard the scrape of wood against tile as he pushed the stool back and got to his feet.  
“Yeah, um, grab two mugs.”  
You took the plates and carried them to the breakfast bar, setting them down before leaning against the counter again. The coffee maker hummed to life, the rich scent filling the kitchen. You exhaled, watching him as he moved. He reached for the mugs without hesitation, setting them down beside the cake before glancing at you.  
The look was brief, accompanied by a small, lopsided smile before he settled back onto the stool.  
“So, you used to go to Delora’s,” he said. “That’s pretty sweet. We could’ve gone there if you wanted, bought one of those ridiculous big gorgeous cakes filled with cream and strawberries.”  
You shook your head, peeling yourself off the counter and walking toward him.
“No, the place closed a couple of years ago.” You sank onto the stool across from him, resting your elbows on the counter, chin in your palm. “Not long after my dad died.”  
Frankie’s gaze lifted, the easy amusement in his expression dimming.  
“The last time we went together was a few weeks before that,” you continued, your voice softer now. “When I graduated college.”
“Oh. I’m sorry,” he said, his voice careful, though the way he looked at you didn’t shift at all. His dark eyes were fixed on your face like he was trying to memorize something, and maybe a part of him was. He didn’t blink. Didn’t fidget. It was like he’d settled into the discomfort on purpose.
You smiled automatically, but it didn’t quite hold. “It’s fine. There are a lot of good bakeries in Austin. I think I’ve visited almost all of them by now. I could pretend I was on a serious mission, you know? Like some noble quest to find the perfect replacement cake. But really
” You let out a breath, not quite a laugh. “I think I just wanted an excuse to keep eating things that reminded me of something that doesn’t exist anymore.”
You paused. There was a tightness behind your ribs, a pressure that had nothing to do with the conversation and everything to do with who you used to be when the tradition still made sense.
“But honestly,” you added, your voice quieter now, “the cake wasn’t the point. Not really. It was
 the moment. Sitting there, sharing it with him. That’s what I keep trying to recreate. Not the flavor or the frosting or whatever. Just that.”
Your eyes dropped to a spot on the counter, something nondescript—like a coffee stain or a scratch—something easier to look at than him. But when you finally glanced up again, he was still watching you, as if the movement of his body had frozen sometime between your first word and now. There was something on his mouth that might have been a smile, but it didn’t reach beyond the corners of his lips. His eyes held none of it.
“Shit,” you said quickly. “Sorry. I didn’t mean for to get all heavy.”
“Don’t apologize,” he said, almost immediately. “It’s—” He exhaled, the corner of his mouth twitching as if he wasn’t sure what expression to land on.  “Really. It’s a beautiful thing, the way you’ve kept that tradition alive. I’m just
 sorry you’re stuck sharing it with me.”
He laughed then, quietly, and lifted his hand to his own face, dragging it across his jaw in a kind of nervous gesture.
“I just... I just know I’m not really a worthy replacement for something that meant so much to you.”
There was something in the way he said it—that quiet, self-deprecating remark—that landed in your chest like a weight. You felt it settle under your collarbone, a low, aching pressure, and you hated that it made you feel anything at all.
Because once again, you’d done too much. Said too much. Given him access to a part of you that wasn’t his responsibility to hold. And it wasn’t fair—he hadn’t asked for this, for any of it. He just kept getting pulled into the orbit of things you didn’t know how to carry alone. Maybe because he still felt guilty. Maybe because he hadn’t figured out how to tell you no.
And the thought that he might only be here because of that—because of some unspoken sense of duty or debt—it made your stomach twist. You didn’t understand him.
“Well,” you said, your voice lighter than you felt, “it’s just cake.”
You shook your head once, not to dismiss the conversation exactly, but to pull yourself out of it. You stood from your stool, picking up both mugs and walking over to the counter, where the coffee machine murmured softly, still working.
With your back to him, you added, “I’m just being sentimental. You don’t have to stay for that.”
There was a beat of silence.
“What?” he said eventually.
You turned partway, just enough to catch his expression for a second—something unreadable flashing across his face. You gave him a faint smile. One of those practiced ones. 
“I’m saying you don’t have to stay if you don’t want to. It’s okay,” you said, shrugging. “You must be tired.”
He didn’t answer right away, and you didn’t push. You stayed where you were, facing the cupboard, your fingers brushing the edge of the sugar jar without really picking it up.
Then, from behind you, came his voice again. 
“Is something wrong?”
You blinked. Your eyelids felt heavier than they should’ve.
“No. Noïżœïżœïżœwhy?”
You turned around this time, leaned back against the counter with your hands on your hips like it would make you look more composed than you felt.
Frankie was watching you. Then he stood. Crossed the space between you in a few quiet steps, until he was directly in front of you. For one strange second, you thought he might say something else, but he didn’t. He just stepped past you, the warmth of his body brushing yours briefly, picked up the coffee jar, and poured the dark liquid into one of the mugs. Still without meeting your eyes.
You looked at him. His profile was steady in the muted sunlight bleeding through the kitchen window. Everything about him seemed calm, measured.
He moved the full mug aside, then filled the second one. Both of you stood in the silence like it had been placed carefully between you.
“I can leave,” he said finally. Still looking ahead. “If I wanted to, I would. But I don’t. So I’m staying. You’re not forcing anything on me.”
Your gaze dropped to the mug in his hands. The way his fingers wrapped around it made it seem small. Fragile, even. 
“Do you want me to leave?” he asked then.
You shook your head.
“No. But I don’t want to make you uncomfortable with
 all my stuff. It’s personal. Too personal?” You tilted your head, brows pulling together. “Is it too much?”
Frankie let out a low, quiet laugh. Not dismissive, just... surprised. He shook his head.
“You’ve met my whole family,” he said, turning to look at you fully now. “You’ve been in my childhood bedroom. Pretty sure you went through my drawers, remember?” He raised an eyebrow. “If we’re drawing lines around intimacy, I think we passed them miles ago. Don’t you?”
And for a second, you didn’t know what to say. Because he was right.
“I didn’t go through your drawers.”
He looked at you sideways, one eyebrow lifted. “But the rest of it is true, isn’t it?”
You shrugged, the corner of your mouth curling into a half-smile you didn’t bother to hide. There wasn’t much use pretending at this point.
Because yes—of course it was true. All of it. You knew his siblings’ names, the sound of his mother’s voice on speakerphone, the way he liked his coffee, and how he looked when he thought no one was paying attention. He knew how you grieved, who you missed, how your voice cracked when you talked about things you thought you'd long buried.
It was intimate. Too much, maybe. But also too late.
And then, of course, there was the fact that he’d seen you nearly naked, which you weren’t going to bring up now, obviously. That belonged to another moment, another kind of tension neither of you had fully acknowledged.
He carried both mugs back to the counter without saying anything more, setting one down in front of your seat and the other at his own.
You followed, settling onto the stool again. The cake sat between you, small and delicious. You picked up the knife, sliced a clean piece, and gently placed it on Frankie’s plate. Then you did the same for yourself, aware of the quiet ease moving between you, how different it felt from a few minutes ago.
As you reached for your fork, Frankie lifted his coffee and took a sip, his eyes flicking toward Mr. Darcy, who was strutting past on his way to the hallway like he owned the entire block.
“Okay,” you said, watching Frankie’s face as you settled your chin in your palm. “Tell me what you think.”
He glanced at you once before picking up his fork, cutting a generous bite from his slice, and shoveling it into his mouth without ceremony.
You waited, eyes on him, noting the way he chewed, the way his brows pinched slightly as if he were actually concentrating. Then his eyes fluttered shut briefly, and when they opened, you caught the faintest smile breaking through.
“Awesome,” he mumbled, fork pointing toward the filling like it had personally impressed him. “Cream. And whatever that chocolate thing is.”
“Ganache,” you said, amused. “You’re eating cream and chocolate ganache.”
He nodded, entirely unbothered by the details. After a pause, he lifted his coffee again, raising it in your direction.
“Here’s to you. For, you know
 jumping out of a plane and doing the whole thing.”
You were mid-bite, but your eyes found his. You swallowed, then raised your own mug in return.
“Here’s to us, for jumping,” you echoed, lips quirking. 
The mugs clinked together with a quiet thunk. 
By the time the clock edged past four-thirty, you'd already gone back for seconds. Your stomach felt full, your heart happy. Or whatever the saying goes.
You’d been talking for a while. That part came easily, almost naturally now, even if it still surprised you when it did. Frankie had ended up telling you how he met Eric, which spiraled—obviously, because stories didn’t stay in neat boxes. One memory tugged on another. Before long, he was telling you about his teenage years, those messy, uneven years that no one ever really talks about unless they’re asked.
You hadn’t asked directly. Not really. But you had wanted to know. What had he been like when he was a teen? What music did he listen to? Did he get nervous around girls? Did he cry when things didn’t go his way?
He told you about his first kiss—how awkward it was, how he’d knocked teeth with the girl. Then his first real girlfriend, a swedish exchange student named Alida, who liked heavy eyeliner and drawing tiny stars on her notebooks. He said her accent made everything sound like poetry. And then the first heartbreak. A girl he’d been seeing for a couple of months, who left him for someone three years older. Frankie rolled his eyes like he’d long made peace with it, but you could still hear something there.
“He had a black sports car,” he said, stabbing his fork into the last bit of cake. “Beautiful thing. I had a bike.”
You laughed into your cup. “Yeah, you didn’t stand a chance, buddy.”
“I mean,” he continued, holding the fork like a pointer, “I would’ve taken her everywhere on that bike. Literally everywhere. Him? Probably didn’t even let her change the radio station.”
There was cream on the corner of his mouth, caught in his mustache, and you thought—without warning—what a soft, ridiculous man.
“A true romantic. I totally believe you.”
You kept picturing him younger—less solid, less tired maybe. What did fifteen, sixteen or seventeen-year-old Frankie look like before the years started layering over him? You’d seen one or two childhood photos before, but those didn’t count. He was a baby there. That was another version of him entirely, before anything really happened.
So you asked.
He didn’t even flinch at the question. Just pulled out his phone, thumbed through the gallery for a bit, then handed it over without ceremony.
The photo lit up the screen.
Frankie at seventeen, shoulder-to-shoulder with another kid you didn’t recognize, both of them squinting into the sun. His face was leaner then, clean-shaven and impossibly young, but the eyes were the same. Dark, serious, a little too knowing for someone who probably hadn’t learned how to file taxes yet. His hair was shorter, neatly combed like he was trying to impress someone’s dad. He wore a black N.W.A t-shirt over a white long sleeve, and his grin was wide enough to make you ache a little.
“Oh, you were handsome,” you said, a small, genuine smile tugging at your lips as you zoomed in on the photo, studying the lines of his younger face like you were trying to map something familiar.
Frankie laughed and you noticed the way a faint flush crept over his cheeks.
“You think so? I dunno. I wasn’t doing so great around then.”
“You’re being modest,” you said, glancing up at him. “Your sisters told me otherwise, actually.”
He lifted one shoulder like it didn’t matter.
“I wouldn’t know, wasn’t paying attention, I guess.”
There was a beat of quiet between you—comfortable, maybe even necessary. He took another sip of his coffee, watching the steam curl off the rim like he had something else on his mind.
“Now, show me a picture of you,” he said, eyes flicking to yours.
“Me?”
“No, the other person hiding in the kitchen. Yes, you.”
You clicked your tongue at his teasing but reached for your phone anyway, handing his back as you scrolled. It didn’t take you long. You had a folder set aside for these moments—old photos, scanned birthday cards, old screenshots. Call yourself melancholic.
You picked one and passed it to him, resisting the sudden, fluttering urge to pull it back.
In the photo, you were sixteen. Your hair was different, your baby face present. You were sitting cross-legged on the couch with a small white kitten curled against your chest, your smile wide and unguarded.
“Look at you,” he said quietly, his mouth curling. “Those cheeks. Bright eyes.”
You felt your face warm under the weight of his attention, but he didn’t see it—he was still absorbed in the screen.
“It was my birthday,” you said. “My parents went to pick up Kylo that morning. He meowed so loudly from their room I figured it out before they could even pretend to surprise me.”
Frankie huffed a laugh, still looking at the picture. “So you’ve been a cat lady from the beginning, huh?”
You grinned. “Yeah, I’m destined to become that woman from The Simpsons, the one who screams and throws cats at people on the street.”
He laughed. “Yeah? I’ll be walking down the sidewalk one day and a kitten will hit me in the chest. I’ll know it’s you.”
“Probably.” You shrugged. “Sorry in advance.”
He looked at you then, not the photo. And with a kind of absent-minded softness, he said, “You were cute. If I’d met you in high school, I probably would’ve had a crush on you or something.”
It was so casual, the way he said it. Like he didn’t even think twice. Just followed the thought to its natural end and let it fall into the space between you.
But the effect it had on you wasn’t casual at all. You felt it right away—a quick, dizzy thrum behind your ribs, like your body was catching up to the weight of the words before your mind could.
And he didn’t even notice.
“That would’ve been weird though, don’t you think?” you said, squinting at him. “You’re like—what? Six years older than me? How old would you have been then?”
You did the math in your head, not really waiting for him to answer. “Twenty-two.”
Frankie rolled his eyes like that wasn’t the point at all.
“Hypothetically,” he said, waving his hand through the air like it could clear the timeline. “If we’d gone to school together—same year, same time—then yeah, you would’ve been my crush or whatever. That’s what I meant.”
“Right,” you said, nodding, trying not to smile. “Well, mine probably would’ve been the guy with the black sports car.”
He let out a disbelieving laugh.
“Fuck you,” he said, playful but mildly wounded. “You would’ve missed out. I’d have taken you everywhere on my bike.”
You laughed, your fingertips grazing the side of your cheek like that might hide the warmth rising there. You were blushing. You could feel it and knew he probably could too, even if he didn’t mention it.
After a pause, you stood up and walked to the bathroom. The mirror reflected your face in unfamiliar light—warm cheeks, slightly mussed hair, something about your expression that looked both too young and too aware. You adjusted a few strands near your temples, tucked one behind your ear.
From down the hall, you could hear the muffled clink of ceramic, the rush of tap water. The sound of him, still moving through your space like he belonged there, or at least wasn’t trying to rush his way out of it. It startled you how much you liked that.
Back in your room, you slipped off your shoes and put on a pair of worn, fuzzy slippers and padded back toward the kitchen. But he wasn’t there anymore, and the mugs were rinsed and left to dry by the sink, stacked neatly like someone had been careful with them.
You found him on the couch, sitting, hunched slightly over his phone. His brow was furrowed in concentration, thumbs moving across the screen. The glow from the phone lit up his face in soft strokes, catching on the edge of his stubble.
You sat down beside him, not saying anything. Your hip brushed his, barely, just enough to register it. You leaned back against the cushions, your head turned slightly toward him.
Your gaze drifted to the curve of his spine, to the way his shoulders rose and fell with his breath, then to the soft skin of his neck where it met his hairline. That little patch of curls there, the way they clung faintly to his skin—something you had no right to want to touch, but your hand warmed with the urge anyway. To reach out, gently, not to make a point or start anything, but just to feel what was already so close.
You didn’t, obviously. Why would you?
You straightened your spine, subtly shifting the weight of your body as you reached for the remote. The screen lit up with a blue glow that bled softly into the room. Frankie was still absorbed in whatever conversation he was having on his phone while the television filled the quiet with the abrupt noise of whatever channel it had last been on—a sitcom rerun, maybe, or the end of some home renovation show. You weren’t really paying attention.
You heard the gentle click of his phone locking before he set it down on the coffee table. The sound felt small but final. He leaned back into the couch cushion, his shoulder falling so near yours that the space between you felt thinner, like it could be crossed by a thought.
“What are you going to put on?”
“I dunno,” you murmured, your thumb hovering above the remote’s arrow key. “What do you feel like watching?”
“Ah, I'm not sure. Show me one of your movies.”
You glanced at him, frowning just a little, not out of annoyance but curiosity. “One of mine?”
He nodded, barely—a simple lift of his shoulders. “Yeah. Pick anything.”
You didn’t answer right away. Instead, your gaze flicked across the rows of streaming apps, trying to calculate what felt the least embarrassing and the most you at the same time. Not an easy combination.
“Okay,” you said, drawing out the word as you clicked into one of the apps. “Pick a decade. Seventies, eighties, nineties, two-thousands. Or we could go by era—there are some excellent literary adaptations if you’re into that.”
You caught his smile in your peripheral vision—quick, not mocking.
“Jesus, I don’t know. Just show me your favorite one.”
“Well, that’s a hard one. I’ve got, like, categories of favorites. But I’ll go with the first one that popped into my head.”
Your fingers danced across the remote as you typed the title into the search bar. A few seconds later, the soft piano of Notting Hill began to play, the opening credits painting the screen with flashes of glossy magazine covers and Julia Robert's bright eyes.
Frankie said nothing, but he shifted slightly closer, knees brushing for a second before settling apart again. You glanced sideways at him, wondering if he’d like it, if he was already regretting giving up control of the remote. But he looked comfortable. Or maybe just quiet. His eyes were on the screen. You let yourself watch the beginning with him, letting the room fall into the rhythm of a shared silence. 
“It’s so obvious she likes him,” Frankie said after a while, just as Anna Scott agreed to go home and change out of the clothes William had accidentally ruined with orange juice.
“Careful, Sherlock.”
Somewhere along the way—somewhere between Hugh Grant’s nervous rambling and Julia Roberts’s tight-lipped smiles—you had leaned closer to him. You weren’t sure who had moved first. Your arm was pressed flush against his now, and the side of your head hovered near his shoulder, close enough to catch the faint scent of his soap, something clean and warm.
Onscreen, Anna kissed William out of nowhere. Frankie tilted his head slightly, not enough to turn toward you but enough to signal something—confirmation, perhaps, of what he’d just said.
“Told you,” he mumbled.
The movie continued. Will is invited to the Ritz under false pretenses, mistaken for someone else, pulled along into the strange orbit of press events and polished smiles. You watched him stumble through it all, never quite fitting, never quite backing out either. She goes to his sister's birthday, everyone loves her, everything's good. Blah, blah, blah. Later, they kiss again.
After that, when Will stepped into her hotel room and saw the man—her boyfriend, tall and self-assured and inconvenient, a prick—Frankie made a sound like someone had nudged him in the ribs.
“Oh, man,” he muttered, as if it had happened to him.
You laughed under your breath. You turned your head to look at him for a second, but he didn’t notice. He was too busy frowning at the screen.
The film moved on. Will’s friends—well-meaning, exasperated—tried to set him up with someone else, anyone else. But he's heartbroken and he walks home as if he'd forgotten how to want something new.
“I’ve been there,” Frankie said, a slight edge of humor softening the weight of his words. He didn’t look away from the screen.
“Oh, you have to tell me. How bad were the dates? Scale of one to tragic.”
He lifted one shoulder in a shrug. “There was only one. It wasn’t terrible. But it wasn’t anything either. She was... a case.”
“Oh,” you said, glancing at him out of the corner of your eye. But he didn’t answer. His attention returned to the film, or at least that’s where he placed it. 
Onscreen, Anna appeared at Will’s door. Unannounced, the kind of entrance that only works in movies. She was forced into hiding, scandalized in headlines, hunted by photographers with telescopic lenses and no boundaries. Her voice was soft as she apologized—about the boyfriend, about the confusion, about choosing to disappear.
She stayed. Of course she did. And that night, they made love. Obviously. They moved toward each other like it was inevitable.
The next morning, Anna said, lightly, “What is it about men and nudity? Particularly breasts? How can you be so interested in them?”
Will hesitated, unsure how to answer. “Well
”
But you didn’t hear the rest of his response.
Because the image on screen, the quiet intimacy of the bed, the question itself—all of it cracked open something in your memory. We're not talking about this. Frankie’s mouth against your collarbone. The way he’d lowered the strap of your dress with such focused tenderness. His lips against your skin, reverent and hungry at once. His hand curving beneath your rib cage, as if he could read something there.
And beside you, you felt it—his body shift slightly, shoulders pulling in, his breath catching just faintly at the top of his chest. The change was small, but unmistakable. Like heat rising under a closed door.
You knew he was remembering, too. Or at least, it felt that way. That same scene, or the feeling of it. The weight of something you both hadn’t said. Not really.
Your fingers twitched in your lap. You adjusted your position, but the movement didn’t help. It only stirred the feeling that had been creeping steadily higher inside your chest.
“Francisco,” you said suddenly, the name leaping from your mouth before your brain could stop it. It felt like a damn confession just to say it.
He turned toward you, face unreadable, like he already knew what was coming. And your eyes searched his profile—his cheekbone, the gentle furrow in his brow, the way his mouth pressed into a faint line like he was bracing for something.
You reached for the remote and pressed pause. The room fell into quiet again, not peaceful. It sat between you like a held breath. Your pulse thudded hard in your ears. The air felt stretched, suspended.
“Why didn’t you say anything about last night?” you asked.
A few seconds passed. He didn’t respond. He didn’t even flinch, as far as you could tell—his body still, his eyes locked somewhere on you like he hadn’t even registered you’d spoken.
You sighed and dropped your gaze to his feet, which were crossed neatly at the ankle.
“I’m not trying to ruin the moment,” you said. “I just—please. Say something.”
His eyes moved then. Across your face. His eyebrows lifted almost imperceptibly.
“I wasn’t
” he started, then stopped. He looked at the coffee table, then back at you. “I wasn’t sure you wanted to talk about it.”
“You didn’t say anything.”
“I mean, when we woke up, you didn’t bring it up either. I thought maybe
 maybe you’d forgotten.”
“Forgotten?” 
“I don’t know. Maybe.”
You didn’t respond right away. Something inside you had stiffened, like a thread pulling tight. Frankie shifted his weight slightly, leaned back into the couch again and reached for the back of his neck—something you’d already learned he did when he was nervous, or unsure, or both.
“I didn’t forget. In case you were wondering.” You ran a hand down your thigh, grounding yourself. “In fact, I spent the entire day wondering when you would say something.”
He shook his head, his gaze lowering.
“I didn’t want to risk it,” he admitted. “If I brought it up, maybe you’d regret it. Or feel uncomfortable. And today was—today was nice. I didn’t want to ruin that.”
You nodded, even though the words didn’t settle easily inside you. Your eyes dropped to where your fingers were brushing together on your lap.
“Well, I’d like to talk about it now. If you’re willing.”
He looked at you. And in that look, there was hesitation—not out of malice, not even out of guilt, but out of the discomfort of being emotionally cornered.
“Okay,” he said, his voice low. “I’m
 I’m sorry. I should’ve gone home last night.”
You stared at him, stunned for a second. Your eyebrows lifted slightly. That was the conclusion he had come to?
He must have registered your expression, because his lips parted, like he was about to try again. But you didn’t give him the chance.
“I don’t want to talk about what we should’ve done,” you said, and your voice sounded firmer than you expected. “I want to talk about what we actually did. I don’t want to pretend it was just some mistake, or that we were two idiots acting on impulse. It wasn’t like that. You know that.”
“I know what you mean but—”
“You said you wouldn’t regret it in the morning.”
He closed his eyes for a beat, and when he opened them, he stared down at the floor like it could give him an answer he didn’t have. His hand moved through his hair. He exhaled sharply, frustration passing over his face.
“I know what I said, and I know what I did. I’m just
 I’m not sure it was the right thing.”
You turned your face away, biting the inside of your cheek hard enough to feel the sting.
This was the version of him you hated most. Closed off, unreadable. The version that retreated just when you needed him to be honest. To open up, even a little. You knew there was more. You could feel it humming under his skin like static. So why wasn’t he saying it?
Frustration curled up inside you, hot and messy and full of disappointment.
“Please stop trying to frame this around what’s right or wrong,” you said, your voice steady in a way that surprised you. “Just be honest with me. You said it yourself, we’ve already crossed whatever intimacy boundaries we thought we had. We’re way past that. Something happened last night and I can’t sit here and let you fold the entire conversation back on me again, Frankie. I can’t do it.”
He didn’t interrupt, but his jaw moved, like he was grinding something down behind his teeth.
“Because things don’t just happen,” you went on. “They don’t fall out of the sky without meaning. They happen because someone chooses them. Because something leads to them. And maybe it’s messy or confusing or difficult to name, but there’s always intention. Even if you’re trying to ignore it.”
He was staring at you now, unmoving.
“I don’t want to pretend it could’ve been anyone else in that room,” you said, your voice softer now, but just as sure. “It wasn’t arbitrary. It wasn’t random. It wasn’t just a moment. It was us. You and me.”
Frankie shifted. Shook his head. “It’s not that simple.”
“It is, actually.”
He let out a breath and laughed once, bitterly. “Yeah, well. Maybe that’s what makes it so fucking hard.”
You watched the way his hands dragged over his face, the way he tipped his head back like the ceiling might offer relief. He stayed like that for a second, breathing through it, before letting his arms fall back to his sides. His eyes were fixed somewhere above, refusing to meet yours.
“It’s hard,” he said again, more quietly now. “Isn’t that what you’re feeling too?”
“Because I’m Santi’s sister,” you said. Not a question. A fact.
Frankie dropped his gaze, finally looking at you. “Partly.”
“Partly,” you echoed, hollow. “And the rest?”
He hesitated. A long breath left his chest. He stared at the floor like it might organize his thoughts for him.
“The rest is... A lot of things. Things that have nothing to do with you. Just me.”
There it was again—that instinct of his to fold inward, to keep the most important part just out of reach. The door always half-closed.
You wanted to shout. You wanted to shake him or grab his shoulders and pull the words out of his throat. You wanted a pharmaceutical solution to his emotional repression. Something you could slip into his coffee that would force him to talk.
Instead, you sat there. Waiting.
You inhaled deeply, pressing your palm to your cheek in a vague, grounding gesture. Your fingers dragged across your skin like they were trying to wipe away whatever expression you were wearing. Then you looked at him again.
You weren’t going to be able to hold it in. It was there in your chest, heavy and urgent, like a question clawing its way up your throat.
“Do you like me?”
He blinked, visibly startled, like he wasn’t sure he’d heard you correctly.
“What?”
“Just that. If you like me.” You felt your pulse in your ears. “If you think I’m attractive. If you’re attracted to me. I’m not asking for poetry, Frankie, I’m not even talking about anything complicated, sentimental—just
 physically. Simple.”
His eyes moved, quick and uncertain, across your face, like he was trying to locate the safest place to land.
“I... I mean
” he faltered, then let out a breath. “Isn’t it obvious at this point?”
“Don’t do that.” 
He frowned. “Do what?”
“Be vague. Just answer me. Yes or no.”
There was a pause, a beat suspended in the space between you. Then—
“Yeah.”
“Yes, what?”
“Yes,” he repeated, and this time his voice sounded a little harsher, like you were tugging something out of him he hadn’t intended to give. “Yeah, I’m attracted—you're atractive. I think you’re beautiful. I don’t know—what do you want me to say?”
You felt a flicker of satisfaction, something warm curling in your stomach, but it was quickly flattened by the weight of everything else. The tension hadn’t broken. Not really.
“Just that.”
He gave a tired nod.
“Okay. Just that.” His gaze settled on you—open now, unflinching. “It doesn’t change anything.”
“Yes, it does,” you said, leaning slightly toward him, your arms crossing in front of your chest like a shield. “Because all day I’ve been wondering if this—us, whatever happened—if it was just guilt. If you almost slept with me because you felt sorry for me. Or because you were bored. Or because I happened to be there in a dress that made it easier for you to forget that I’m Santi’s sister. I’ve been sitting with that version of the story in my head and convincing myself not to ask. But I couldn’t do it anymore.”
Frankie’s eyes closed, his face tightening like your words had physically hit him.
“You’ve got it wrong.”
“No,” you said, the frustration slipping into your tone, “I actually haven’t misunderstood anything. That’s why I’m asking you now, to give—”
“We shouldn’t be sleeping together,” he cut in suddenly, like the sentence had been waiting in his mouth all along. “You and I. We shouldn’t. You don’t want that. It’s not what’s good for you. We got carried away, all the teasing and the wine and the lines getting blurry—”
“You have no idea what I want,” your arms tightening around your body. “Or what’s good for me.”
“Not me,” he said.
It landed like a closing door.
You exhaled so deeply it almost sounded theatrical, but it wasn’t. It was exhaustion. You dragged your hands over your face like you were trying to erase yourself entirely.
“God, you’re so incredibly stubborn.”
“Then say everything, tell me what you want to say.”
You dropped your hands from your face, fingers brushing your lap.
“What’s the point? You’re not going to believe me anyway. You’ll twist it around somehow, like you always do—turn it into something I didn’t mean or shouldn’t feel or should apologize for. That’s your whole thing, Frankie.”
“That’s not—”
“It is,” you cut him off, your voice sharper now. “It is. If I told you right now that I wanted to do it last night—genuinely wanted to—you’d probably tell me I was drunk or confused or emotionally unstable. Or maybe you’d suggest I was possessed by a demon. Something else was making my decisions for me.”
He stayed exactly where he was, elbows digging into his knees, hands clasped tight like he was trying not to react.
“Try me.”
“Okay,” you said. Your hands folded in your lap. “Something happened last night. And for me, it wasn’t a mistake. I didn’t wake up regretting it. If I had, you’d know. Believe me, you’d know.”
He didn’t move, but something shifted in his expression—barely noticeable, but there.
“I wanted to do it,” you continued, searching his face for some hint that he was listening, really listening. “And you act like you can just erase it. Like it’s possible to touch someone the way you touched me and then pretend it was nothing. That there was no intention behind it, no reason.”
He still hadn’t said anything, but he was watching you. Closely. Too closely.
You swallowed. “I’m a person,” you said, like you needed him to understand it in the most basic, physical sense. “In case you hadn’t noticed.” 
“That much I’ve noticed.”
You furrowed your brow, jaw tightening. “I’m a person. You’re a person. And you can play pretend for so long before the lines blur. Before one kiss starts to feel like something else entirely.”
He nodded once. “That’s one way to put it.”
“Fuck you,” you muttered—not in the playful, flirtatious way he might’ve expected. Your voice was flatter than that. Sharper.
Then you looked away from him, your gaze landing on the frozen frame of the paused television, like maybe the fictional people on screen could offer some kind of clarity you weren’t finding in the room.
You didn’t speak. Not immediately. The silence sat heavy in your throat, thick and stifling like humidity. You could feel Frankie watching you, not just glancing your way but really looking. Like his gaze had weight. Like it was pulling you downward, as if you were stuck beneath the surface of something vast and crushing and liquid. Something you hadn’t meant to step into. Something you didn’t know how to get out of.
“I know what you mean,” he said eventually. “And I get that, I get what you’re saying. But I don’t think that’s how it happened. Not for me.”
You turned your head slightly, just enough to meet his eyes, to let him see the sharpness there.
“What do you mean?” 
“I mean
 I don’t think it started because we were playing house. Or because of a wedding, or a dress, or wine, or a bed that happened to be close enough.”
You stared at him, waiting. Daring him to continue.
He sighed. “What I’m saying is—this didn’t start because we were pretending. It didn’t start with the flirting or the teasing or some night where we got too close on the couch. That’s not what this is.”
Your heart beat louder in your ears.
"You say all these things but somehow it still feels like you're not saying anything at all. Like you’re stacking words together just enough to form a sentence, but it never—I don't—I mean, I get it. I do. But—God—”
You stood up too quickly, like your body had decided to abandon the conversation before your mind had caught up. A rush of heat crawled up your chest as you moved away, needing space, air, anything that wasn’t him sitting there looking at you like that. You headed to the kitchen, pressing your palm to your forehead, half to ground yourself, half to stop the thoughts from multiplying.
There was a glass on the counter—a red one, translucent. You filled it with water as the sound of his sigh drifted into the room, followed by the quiet pattern of his footsteps. You didn’t need to turn around to know he was getting closer. Still, when you did, the proximity startled you. He was right there, standing like he'd been pulled in by gravity. One hand rested on his hip. The other hovered, then dropped.
"I'm not—" He paused. Swallowed. "I can't do this the way you want me to. Alright? I know that. Talking about this, about us, whatever it is you want me to say, it’s not easy for me. But I’m trying. I’m trying to answer your questions.”
“So—”
“Just—don’t walk away from me like that.”
“What?”
“Don’t leave me sitting in there by myself like, like you can't stand my incompetence.”
“Now, that’s never come out of my mouth, not even close. I don’t think you’re incompetent. What are you even talking about?”
He didn’t answer right away. His mouth closed, his jaw shifted, and he exhaled a breath through his nose, long and heavy like it had been building for hours. He rubbed his face with the palm of his hand, dragging it across his eyes, his hair already a mess from the way he kept pushing it back. It made him look younger, somehow, but also more exhausted.
“I’m just—” he said, finally. His hand dropped. His eyes met yours. “I’m not good at this. You are. You’re quick, you're smart. You're good with words. You always know what to say, how to say it. I’ve got all these things in my head, but when I try to speak them out loud, they don’t come out right. They never sound the way they do in here.” He tapped lightly at his temple.
You leaned against the counter, arms folded.
“I don’t know what to say most of the time either.”
He gave you a look—tilted his head slightly, a half-smile playing on his lips that didn’t reach his eyes.
“That’s not true, and you know it.”
You sighed. “I don’t think you’re incompetent. That word doesn’t even belong in the same room as you. You just
” You looked away for a moment. “You make me feel desperate sometimes. And that’s not news. We both know that.”
“No, it’s not,” he said, then crossed his arms, standing there like a reflection of you.
You didn’t move. Neither did he. For a moment, the two of you stood in complete silence, the room so still it felt staged. The hum of the refrigerator filled the space between you, the only sign the world was still ticking on. Frankie was staring at you like he was trying to understand something and the way his eyes caught the faint orange light pouring through the window made your stomach shift.
Then he exhaled, the breath long and quiet, and let his arms drop to his sides. One hand came to rest flat on the counter beside him, and he leaned into it just slightly, the angle of his shoulders more resigned than confrontational.
“Look,” he started, his voice a little rough around the edges. “There are plenty of reasons why last night shouldn’t have happened. Real reasons. Logical ones. I know that’s not the kind of thing you put a lot of weight on.”
“Maybe not. But they’re usually your favorite.”
“Yeah,” he muttered, eyes dropping to the floor. He stayed like that for a few seconds, staring at some invisible point near his feet. Then he breathed out again and lifted his gaze. “Okay. I’m gonna try to say this right. Just
 let me talk. Then ask me whatever you want, tear me apart if you need to, I don’t care.”
The softness in his tone took you slightly off guard, but you nodded.
“Alright.”
His eyes moved slowly across your face and then they stopped on your eyes—as if that was the safest place to land.
“Okay. Logical reasons. You’re Santi’s sister. That changes everything. Maybe not for you, maybe it feels separate, but for me
 he’s not just some guy. He’s my best friend. Closer than that, even. He’s like family. He’s always been that.”
You didn’t say anything, just watched him. His hand was still on the counter.
“And he cares about you. I know he doesn’t show it in some loud, overprotective way, but it’s there. I see it. And I get it, because I have sisters too. I know what that kind of care feels like. I know what it means to watch someone from a distance and hope no one fucks them up worse than the world already will.” He laughed once, under his breath. “You and I—we’ve had years of bad timing and bad chemistry and bad communication. Years of giving each other a hard time. You think that didn’t wear on him? You think he didn’t tell me to back off more times than I can count?”
“He told me the same,” you said, quietly. “He loves you too, a lot, you know.”
Frankie nodded, the corners of his mouth tugging up slightly in acknowledgment, like it hurt to agree.
“Then maybe you get what I’m saying. I’ve already let him down enough by making things complicated between us. Pushing this further—it feels like crossing a line we never actually talked about but both knew was there.”
He took a step forward, just one, but it made the distance between you feel different. Smaller. More dangerous.
“And the thing with us, you and I,” he continued, “is that nothing ever seems to come easy. It never has.”
You glanced down, suddenly very aware of the floor under your feet, the tension in your arms, your chest. The way it all felt suspended.
“I guess,” he said, voice softer now, “I guess there’s this kind of unspoken rule in our group, you know? Some built-in boundary. You’re his sister. His only sister. I think, at some point, Santi gave some kind of warning to all of us.”
You raised your head slowly, frowning.
“Seriously? Like I’m a teenager he’s trying to keep out of trouble? That’s ridiculous.”
Frankie smiled faintly. “Not like that. He’s not
 he’s not possessive. He’s not trying to control your life. I think he just didn’t want things to get messy in a way we couldn’t clean up.”
“Well, it’s not his decision to make. But you’re right. It makes sense.”
“Yeah. It does. It’s a code. One we’ve all followed. And I crossed it.”
You let out a breath, more from habit than necessity, and glanced away—not dramatically, just enough to collect yourself. There was too much in the air, too many things being left unsaid or half-said, which sometimes felt worse. When you looked back, Frankie was scratching at the edge of his jaw, then resting his hand on his hip like he didn’t quite know where to put it.
“Logically speaking,” he said, “that’s one reason. But then what? What comes after that? We’d have to keep seeing each other. It’s not like we’re strangers passing through. So what then? Do we go back to pretending we don’t see each other? Faking that weird politeness again?”
You didn’t answer right away. Mostly because you weren’t sure what the answer was. You wouldn’t ignore him, that much you knew. You couldn’t. But the fact that he’d even asked—had brought it up like a real possibility—meant maybe he would. Maybe he was already preparing for it. And the idea made something cold and familiar stir in your chest, something that reminded you too much of the way he used to look past you like you were just another part of the scenery.
He tilted his head slightly. His voice had gone gentler, like he didn’t want to hurt you but didn’t know how else to say what he was saying.
“You know it took us forever to start getting along. That night—we fought, and then you told me you wanted to hit reset. Just be civil. Start over.”
You’d meant it when you said it.
“And we did,” he continued. “We’ve done that. And then this thing that happened... almost happened last night, it would’ve rewritten everything.” He turned his gaze to the far corner of the kitchen, like he couldn’t quite hold your eyes while he said it. “It wouldn’t have been a good decision.”
There was a pause—short—where neither of you moved or breathed too loud.
“I get what you’re saying,” you said eventually. “I do. But what I don’t understand is why, if something did happen between us, the only outcome you can imagine is pulling away. Like... walking away is some automatic consequence.”
You watched his face as you spoke. He didn’t look away this time.
“I don’t see what’s so wrong with liking someone, with being attracted to them, and choosing not to ignore it. Choosing to... respond to it. That’s not some scandalous thing. We’re adults, Frankie. You’d think we’d have other tools by now—better ways of handling complicated feelings than just pretending they don’t exist.”
He nodded. Not quickly. Like he was still figuring out what to say even as he agreed.
“I know. I get it,” he said. “And yeah, that would apply in any other situation. But this... you’re not just anyone.” He took a step toward you. “I’ve done the casual thing. Hookups, whatever. Friends with benefits. I know how to do that. I know how to let that go. But with you... I'm sorry but It wouldn’t be casual. It couldn’t be. That’s the whole point.”
Your stupid little heart jumped, reckless and uninvited. And you hated how easily it did that—how quickly it read into things, how quickly it believed. Even though you knew better. 
“What do you mean?” you asked, your voice barely above a whisper.
He didn’t answer immediately. Instead, he looked at you with this unreadable expression—some mix of regret and restraint, like he was already backing away from what he’d started to say.
“I mean it’s complicated,” he said. “Nothing we’ve done so far has been easy, has it? I mean—we’re pretending to be in a relationship. A whole fake story. What even is that?” His hand moved as he spoke, gesturing vaguely to the side like the road between Dallas and Austin might reappear there, the moment where it all began. “It started with you seeing your ex on some highway, like a joke from the universe. And me... I wasn’t exactly thriving either.”
You did know that. But you said nothing.
“I was broken. You were, too. And we both had our reasons. And on top of that—” he looked directly at you now, and there it was again, the line he always returned to. “You’re Santi’s sister.”
Of course. There it was. You wanted to roll your eyes, but you didn’t. 
“I haven’t been okay,” he said, quieter now. “Not in a general bad day kind of way. Not just tired or burned out. I mean... really not okay. For a long time. There were days where I didn’t think I’d come back from it. I didn’t want to. Silence made me itch, I couldn’t sit in it—I needed noise, distraction, anything to drown out the way things felt. I made choices that didn’t help. Those years
” He trailed off, pressing his thumb along his jaw in a familiar, grounding motion. He didn’t meet your eyes now. “They were dark.”
You didn’t speak. So you waited.
Then he looked at you again, something tentative in his expression.
“You said you wanted me to tell you about the thing with the dates. The setups. My mom, my sisters.”
“I did.”
He nodded, as if gathering the nerve to keep going. “Well, they’ve been pushing it for a while. Because they think I’m ready again. Or maybe because they think I should be ready. But the truth is, my last relationship—” He stopped for a moment, swallowing whatever emotion had climbed into his throat. “It wasn’t good. Not for a long time. There were good days, yeah. But the bad ones were louder. And it ended ugly. She left me. And not long after, I found out she’d been seeing someone else. A guy she worked with.”
You stood there, completely still. You already knew that, at least part of it. But hearing it like this, directly from him, stripped of all defense... it landed differently.
There was something about the way he said it—the way the memory lived in his voice, raw but not self-pitying—that made your chest tighten. Like you were seeing him more clearly than he wanted to be seen.
And still, you couldn’t look away.
“It broke my fucking heart,” he said, his voice scraping a little. “And I think—God—I think it wouldn’t have hurt so much if my dad hadn’t died at the same time.”
You lowered your gaze. The floor suddenly seemed like the safest thing to look at. You could feel the shape of his grief pressing into the space, something dense and old and still sharp around the edges. When you finally looked up again, he hadn’t moved.
You didn’t say anything. You didn’t know what words would help, if any.
“That was it,” he continued, almost as if your silence gave him permission. “The absolute worst moment of my life. Everything collapsed at once. I stopped talking to people. Just
 cut myself off. From my friends, my mom, my sisters. I didn’t want to be part of anything anymore. I didn’t want to explain myself. I couldn’t even explain it to me.”
He paused, eyes distant now. “I’d already been carrying this weight
 for years, really. Since Nico died.” He glanced at you, as if expecting that name to mean something. “He was one of my closest friends in the CAG. And he died out of nowhere. And I—I didn’t know what to do with that. I didn’t process it, I just shoved it down somewhere, kept moving, like we’re trained to do. And then when everything else hit—my dad, the breakup—I didn’t have anywhere else to put it. It just came up. All of it.”
You didn’t move. Your chest had started to ache quietly.
“I couldn’t see anything ahead,” he said. “No light, no reason. Nothing to hold onto. I’d wake up and every breath felt like I was sinking deeper. Like breathing was actually taking something away from me.”
His face stayed composed, calm even—but his eyes betrayed him. They were filled with something you could only describe as haunted. A kind of pain that wasn’t fresh, but hadn’t healed, either. Something that lived with him still.
You felt your throat begin to tighten, and a sting rose in your eyes. You blinked fast, willing it away, but it didn’t quite leave. It clung there, just beneath the surface.
And then, after a silence so fragile it felt like it could break with a breath, he said, “I overdosed.”
He didn’t look at you when he said it. His eyes dropped to the floor, like he couldn’t bear to see your reaction.
There was something unbearable in that, too. In the shame he carried around what had happened to him. You wanted to cross the space between you, to place your hands on his face, to tell him he didn’t need to be ashamed—that you understood more than he thought. That what he’d survived didn’t make him weak, it made him something else entirely. But you didn’t move. You stayed still. In your space. And he in his.
He looked at you again.
“Opioids,” he said simply. “I got them with a fake prescription. It wasn’t like I was using regularly or anything, it wasn’t some habit I’d built. I just—” he paused, dragging a hand over his face, as if the act of remembering cost him something physical. “One day I called a guy I knew, someone with connections. A few hours later I was home with a bottle of oxycodone in my hand.”
He exhaled through his nose. His voice was almost absentminded, like he was walking through a version of events he’d kept sealed away for years.
“I don’t remember how many I took. I didn’t count. I just wanted to stop thinking. Stop feeling like I was sinking in my own skin. It was enough. Enough that I didn’t think I’d wake up.” His jaw tightened. “Mai found me.” He said her name like a prayer and a curse in one. There was a quiet, palpable ache in the syllables.
“She came over because I hadn’t answered her calls for days. She was pissed off, thought I was being a dick. She got there and I didn’t answer the door, obviously. She looked through my bedroom window and—” he winced. “She broke the glass. Climbed in. She thought I was dead.”
He stopped speaking for a moment, pressing his lips together. His voice, when it returned, was rough around the edges.
“I will never, ever forgive myself for doing that to her. To my family.” His voice cracked—barely, but enough. “Mai had a happy life. Good friends. Good memories. No big traumas. And now she has that. That image of me unconscious on the floor, almost dying.”
You felt a kind of quiet horror fill your chest—not at him, not at his story, but at the pain he carried and the way he clearly believed he deserved to carry it forever.
“She saved your life,” you said, your voice barely above a whisper.
Frankie shook his head. “It wasn’t her job to keep me alive. It wasn’t anyone’s job but mine. I let everyone down. My mom
 I shattered her. And the guys—I didn’t even have the guts to talk to them about it. I told them it was an accident. That I just wanted to try it. Begged them not to ask questions.”
There was a long pause. You felt your pulse in your throat.
“Was it?” you asked. You didn’t mean to. It just slipped out.
He looked at you then, really looked, and there was so much in his eyes you almost flinched. 
“No.”
Your breath caught mid-inhale, like your body had finally registered the depth of everything he’d just said. The burn behind your eyes came fast, and this time you didn’t fight it. You didn’t blink the tears away or pretend you weren’t unraveling.
Instead, you stepped away from the counter, the distance between you collapsing with your movement. Your arms looped around his neck in a single motion, and you pulled him in so fiercely it almost knocked the air out of you. The embrace felt messy, urgent, like no amount of holding him could be enough.
You wanted to fold yourself around him completely. To shield him. To divert the pain from his chest to yours and tell him he doesn't have to carry it all alone. You wanted to press your palms to his face and erase the years that hurt him.
Frankie didn’t hesitate. His arms came around your waist like they’d been waiting to do so for years. His face pressed into the hollow of your neck, the scratch of his stubble brushing your skin like an apology. He held you like he didn’t want there to be a single inch between you.
Your heartbeat knocked against his chest, two separate rhythms trying to find a shared beat. You could feel him breathing—deep, shaky breaths like he wasn’t sure if he deserved to be here, in your arms, still alive, still wanted. Your tears soaked quietly into his shirt, and neither of you said a word.
But it was all there. In the way he clung to you. In the way he exhaled against your collarbone like it was the first time he’d been allowed to rest.
There was so much guilt in him. It lived in the corners of his eyes, in the way he held himself even now. But you could feel—just barely—that some of it had loosened. Not gone, not yet. But softened, maybe.
"I'm sorry," you whispered, the words barely brushing his skin as you pressed your face into the curve of his neck. His arms tightened around you in response with a kind of quiet insistence.
He didn’t answer. He just held you there, his breath uneven, shallow. There were sounds—faint, fractured—coming from deep in his chest that might’ve been tears. But you didn’t ask. You didn’t shift or pull back to look.
Instead, your hand moved up to his hair, your fingers finding the soft curls at the nape of his neck. You stroked them gently, the way you might soothe a frightened child, or yourself.
And somewhere in the quiet your own sorrow began to stir. It rose in your chest like something old and stubborn. As if his grief had called to yours, and yours had answered. You let a little of it out, not all at once, just enough.
There was comfort in the way his arms wrapped around you, like he’d done this before, held you like this in some parallel world. You weren’t sure how much time passed—it could’ve been seconds, it could’ve been an hour—until you felt something soft brush against your calf. Frankie shifted slightly, loosening his hold just enough to glance downward. Mr. Darcy was weaving between your legs, then his, his tail curling with entitlement.
When you looked back at him, you finally saw his face. His eyes were rimmed red and glassy, and the curve of his cheek was streaked with tears. There was something so bare in the way he looked then, like all the shields he usually kept up had been set aside, if only for a moment. You didn’t look away.
He gave a small, almost disbelieving smile at the cat before his gaze flicked up to meet yours. You lifted your hand and brushed the tears from his cheek with your thumb.
“It wasn’t your fault,” you said.
He shook his head slowly. “It was.”
“No. You did everything you could, until you couldn’t anymore. You were hurting, Frankie. You were in pain.”
“But I could’ve done it differently. I should’ve asked for help.” His voice caught. “But I didn’t.” A heavy breath escaped him. “I made everything worse. My family
 my mom was already breaking after my dad died. And I—” His lips trembled. He stopped. Collected himself like it was a habit. Like falling apart had a time limit.
“And what about you?” you asked, your thumb brushing over his skin again. “What about your grief? Your heartbreak? You lost a friend. You lost your dad. You lost yourself for a while. None of that is easy.”
“I know.” His voice was almost inaudible now. His eyes dropped, as if ashamed of his own softness.
"You deserve to be cared for too."
After a moment, his eyes lifted to meet yours.
“I’m sure Mai was scared,” you went on, “and Iïżœïżœm sure what she saw stayed with her. But I think—no, I really believe—that saving your life meant more to her than anything else could have.”
He didn’t react right away. His features were still, composed.
“I’m her older brother,” he said finally, voice taut. “It was supposed to be me taking care of her. Not the other way around.”
You exhaled, something like a laugh escaping with it.
“Well, as a younger sister, I have to disagree,” you said. “Santi and I—it's not one-way. We look out for each other. Always. I’d do anything for him, and I know he’d do anything for me. And I know your sisters, your mom—they love you. They’d do anything for you too. It doesn’t have to be you carrying it all.”
He didn’t respond. Just looked at you. His eyes caught the light and held it, and for a second, you saw yourself reflected there.
You hesitated, just for a beat. Then: “It’s okay to need help, you know. It’s okay to fall apart sometimes. I do it all the time. And lately, you’re here. You show up. You help. Every time. So why shouldn’t you deserve the same?”
Your hand moved from his face to his chest—without really thinking, without any reason other than instinct. Your palm settled just above his heart, where you could feel the faint, steady rhythm beneath your skin.
His expression changed. Just slightly, but it did.
You wanted to ask him what he was thinking. You wanted to understand whatever quiet storm was passing behind his gaze.
And—God—you wanted to kiss him. The thought arrived like a spark and immediately, instinctively, you pushed it away. But it lingered. It always lingered.
He nodded, almost imperceptibly. "Yeah, I know."
And you eased back just enough to let him breathe, to offer him that space he seemed to need. But the second you did, the warmth between you began to cool.
You looked at him for a moment longer before speaking, your tone shifting slightly, lighter, in an attempt to steer the conversation somewhere safer.
“So that’s what the arranged dates were about,” you said, raising an eyebrow. “Let me guess—the candidates were carefully selected and wildly unsuitable.”
He glanced up, the faintest curve tugging at one corner of his mouth.
“Oh, yeah. It was a whole operation. Imagine this—my mom, using me as bait. Honestly, I have to admire her optimism.”
You smiled. “Okay, but how bad was it, really? The date you went on—what happened?”
He shifted his weight, leaning back against the counter with a casualness that didn’t quite disguise the fact that he was relieved by the change of subject.
“She was cute. Smart. It started off alright—twenty minutes of solid small talk before she pivoted, without warning, into a monologue about her ex.”
You tilted your head. “Wait, did you go on a date with past me? Sounds familiar.”
He laughed then, a real one. “No, no. This was
 a different level. Her ex was married. Had been the whole time they were together.”
“Oh, shit.”
“Right?” he said, eyes wide in mock horror. “Apparently he told her he was going to leave his wife. But he didn’t. And then he went and told her they were having another kid, and—” he paused, raising his eyebrows—“that he wouldn’t be leaving her. For now.”
“For now? That’s cruel.”
“I know. I didn’t even know how to react. Honestly, the whole thing made me want to take her out for a drink and also maybe stage an intervention.”
“So
 why’d she go out with you?”
He gave you a look, that boyish half-smile. “I dunno. Why did I go out with her?”
You laughed, eyes narrowing. “So you didn’t see her again.”
That smile tugged deeper, and he looked down for a second.
“Did you?” you asked, already knowing the answer from the look on his face.
He lifted his eyes again, smirk firmly in place. “A couple of times.”
“Oh my god, you slept with her.”
He stood perfectly still, his mouth twitching like he was trying to suppress a grin. Guilty. Caught.
“Unbelievable,” you said, head tilted, trying not to smile but failing a little.
He straightened, putting on a mock-defensive tone.
“In my defense, she was honest. She told me she was still in love with him and didn’t want anything serious. I respected that. We both knew what it was.”
“How many times?”
“Um, I dunno. Three? Three, tops.”
You folded your arms across your chest. “Uh-huh. You don't even remember? You're such a slut.”
He looked at you, something playful and warm behind his eyes. “Don't be like that. It was before you.”
You rolled your eyes, mostly because you needed something to do with your face, and a laugh slipped out. Frankie was still smiling, then he reached out, his fingers curling gently around your arm, tugging you closer with no real force.
“I just—” he began, and then paused, like the words weren’t cooperating with the pace of his thoughts. “I need to say this, even if it comes out wrong.”
You stayed quiet, watching him. You could feel the shift in the air between you again.
“I have
 a lot of things still sitting in my head. Some days it feels like I’ve made progress, and others it’s like I haven’t moved at all. But lately, for the first time in a long while, I’ve started feeling okay. Like I can breathe. Like I’m not dragging myself through every minute.” He laughed softly, but there was no humor in it. Just tiredness. A kind of resignation. “I'm not sure if I can get involved with someone like this. And that doesn't mean that I don’t want it. Or that I don’t think about it, imagine it. Crave it. I do.” He glanced up at you, eyes briefly searching yours before dropping again. “But I just
 can’t. I can't.”
You listened carefully, reading the edges of his words just as much as their core. His tone, the pauses, the way he looked down. And you understood.
You hadn’t before, not fully. You’d been asking something of him without knowing the shape of what he was carrying, and now that he’d offered it to you—just a piece of it—you saw it more clearly. You didn’t blame yourself for not knowing. But you still felt a quiet ache in your chest.
He glanced away, then back. “When I went out with this woman—it wasn’t anything. It was empty, if I’m being honest. I think I was looking for
 I don’t know, some kind of release. A break from my own brain. Or maybe just proof that I could still feel something good, even briefly. But it didn’t work. It made everything worse, actually.”
He gave a humorless smile, but there was no cruelty in it. “The most depressing sex of my life. I don’t even think she noticed.”
You felt your mouth curve slightly, but you didn’t speak.
“Please don’t think I’m using it as an excuse,” he said, suddenly earnest.
“I don’t,” you said, and you meant it.
He nodded, exhaling through his nose. Then, almost absently, he added, “I don’t even know when things shifted between us. I didn’t see it coming. One day it just
” He looked sideways, like he wasn’t talking to you but rather trying to say something out loud just to make sense of it himself. “It’s different now. And I don’t know what that means.”
You looked away too, not because you wanted to, but because it felt safer that way. 
“I don’t know either,” you admitted, voice low. “I... I’m sorry.”
His brow furrowed immediately. “Why?”
You lifted your shoulders in a shrug, trying to swallow past the tightness in your throat. You hated how exposed you felt in that second.
“Because I think like you and I don't know what to do with that,” you said, barely above a whisper. 
There was a pause. Then, a single tear slipped quietly down your cheek, and still, you didn’t look away.
You weren’t sure whether saying it had been the right thing to do. Maybe it wasn’t about right or wrong at all—maybe it was just something that needed to be said, like naming a feeling makes it real. Like choosing not to say it would’ve been a kind of denial. Of yourself. Of the truth. Of what Emma had been gently insisting with the stubborn confidence of someone who has known you forever.
And Emma was always right. Annoyingly, unfailingly right.
Frankie didn’t move. It was like your words had frozen him in place, his posture still, his gaze locked on yours as if you’d accidentally pressed pause on him. But there was nothing cold about the way he looked at you. If anything, there was warmth. 
“I’m sorry,” you said. “I think I might be... inconvenient.”
You tried to smile, but it didn’t land. 
Still, he didn’t say anything. Didn’t blink.
“I didn’t know you felt that way,” you went on. “And I don’t want to make this uncomfortable. I’ll keep some distance, if that’s what you need.”
But then Frankie shifted. A sudden, visible movement, like he was shaking something off.
“You don’t have to do that,” he said, quickly. Too quickly, maybe. “I mean—unless you want to. But if it’s for my sake... Don’t. You don’t make me uncomfortable.”
He shook his head, once.
Your heart stuttered. “So what... What do we do about this, then?”
His sigh was quiet but heavy. He looked at the floor, then back at you.
“I don’t want to pretend it didn’t happen,” he said finally. “And I don’t think you do either.” He paused. “But what I said about starting fresh, I meant it. If that’s still something you want. If you’re okay with that... I don’t want you to pull away from me.”
You tilted your head. “No?”
“No.”
You inhaled, staring down at your shoes. You didn’t want to distance yourself either.
Because even beneath the mess of feelings, Frankie had become your friend. Somehow. Unexpectedly. And maybe that surprised everyone, including you, but it didn’t make it less true.
And you weren’t ready to lose that.
“Okay,” you said, looking back at him. Your lips curved into something softer. “But only because you promised me a night out and a New Year’s kiss.”
His expression shifted,eyes crinkling as he smiled.
“Oh, and When Harry Met Sally,” you added, pointing a finger at him. “Don’t think I’ve forgotten.”
“Never,” he said, shaking his head solemnly.
“Good.”
“Good,” he echoed. “Perfect.”
“But a couple of boundaries, buddy,” you said, raising a finger and tapping it gently beneath his chin, like you were drawing a line there with invisible ink. “You don’t get too flirty with me, and I won’t get too flirty with you.”
“Boundaries,” he tilted his head. “I actually know a thing or two about those.”
“Great,” you said. “Then prove it.”
Frankie pretended to consider this very seriously, his eyes glancing upward like he was trying to recall something important. Then he looked back at you.
“Okay. Starting tomorrow, no unnecessary flirting. Only if it’s vital. Absolutely essential. Then it’s permitted.”
You squinted at him. “Why tomorrow?”
“Because today’s saturday,” he said, with a shrug. “Doesn’t feel like a boundary-setting day. Too casual.”
You huffed out a quiet laugh. “And sunday is... what, sacred?”
“Sunday has structure,” he said, completely serious now, as if he genuinely believed it. “It’s a reset day.”
“Fine. Tomorrow it is.”
“Good,” he said, nodding once, like a contract had just been signed.
“Perfect.”
There was a beat of silence, not awkward.
You cleared your throat. “Okay, can we go back to the movie now? One of the best parts is coming up.”
You pointed toward the living room with a casual flick of your hand, already turning your body in that direction like nothing had just happened. Frankie nodded, a crooked smile lingering at the corner of his mouth.
You both stayed on the couch, watching the last stretch of the film, but you'd instinctively shifted just far enough apart to notice the distance. Not uncomfortable, just different from earlier.
The room had grown darker as the sun sank behind the buildings outside. The only light now came from the soft, flickering glow of the tv. You sat back, your legs tucked under you, arms crossed lightly over your stomach, trying to focus on the screen, though you couldn't say what scene you were watching. It all felt peripheral—dialogue, motion, soundtrack.
Still, the story carried on, as stories do. Anna stood in front of William. "I'm also just a girl standing in front of a boy..."—the line you’d heard a dozen times but still felt something for. And in the end, of course, they ended up together, as people do in movies.
The credits began to roll. Frankie stretched beside you, arms lifting above his head, fingers threading together as he arched his back just slightly. The movement made his t-shirt rise a little, revealing a line of skin at his waist before he relaxed again.
“What did you think?” you asked.
“I liked it,” he said after a beat. “Especially that scene with the seasons changing. When he's walking through the market.”
You lit up a little. “That’s one of my favorite parts. They actually filmed it all in one day. They built this camera rig on a track and timed the light and everything. It was specially designed just for that scene.”
He blinked, impressed. “Seriously?”
You nodded. “Wild, right?”
He squinted slightly, as if trying to picture it in his mind, then let his gaze drift back to the television, now dim with the last names fading off the screen.
“I think I should head home,” he said finally, quiet and careful with his tone. Then, with a glance at you, “Did you have a good time today? Even with... you know. Everything after.”
“I had an amazing time, really. Thank you so much. I mean that.”
He smiled back. “It’s nothing. If you ever want to do it again, just tell me.”
“I will,” you said. And you meant it.
Frankie was gathering his things—wallet, keys, phone—as you followed him to the door. It was quiet in the apartment. You walked a step behind him as he moved down the stairs, watching the shape of him in motion—his shoulders as they rolled forward with each step, the back of his neck where his hair curled slightly at the edge, the way he carried himself.
It struck you how strange it was, in a quiet sort of way, that everything between you felt so oddly comfortable now. Even after everything. Even after you’d said what you said—put it out there like a raw nerve. There was no tightness in your chest, no embarrassment, no urgency to undo it. Just this lightness. He had this calmness about him. You didn’t understand it, especially considering that only a few weeks ago, a single glance from him was enough to set you off, twist your stomach into a knot of irritation or something dangerously close to it.
You opened the door, stepping aside to let him out. He moved through the frame but didn’t walk away immediately. He lingered, standing just beyond the doorway, his body angled toward you but unmoving.
“Text me when you get home,” you said.
“I will,” he replied, though he didn’t move. He was oddly still, as if something in him was caught mid-thought.
You tilted your head, narrowing your eyes slightly. He was watching you with this vaguely suspicious expression.
“What?” you asked, smiling without meaning to.
“It’s not even tomorrow yet.”
The words were quiet, almost incidental. And then, in the same breath, he stepped toward you. His hands found your face, fingers curling along your jaw with a kind of practiced gentleness, and then he kissed you.
It wasn’t hesitant or testing. It was firm. Certain. There was hunger in it, yes, but it was contained—like he was holding himself back just enough to keep it from tipping into recklessness.
You melted into it. Let him kiss you like that. Let his mouth part yours, let his tongue find yours, let him take whatever he came for. And then, just as suddenly as he’d kissed you, he pulled back—not far, just enough to press a brief kiss to the corner of your mouth, a gesture so tender it almost broke you in half.
You smiled, breathless. “You’re such a bastard.”
He grinned, apologetic. “I'm sorry. You’ve said worse things to me.”
You watched him as he walked off, his hand already fishing in his pocket for the car key, his back retreating into the night.
“See you after tomorrow,” he called over his shoulder.
And then he was gone.
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midnightmayhem13 · 1 year ago
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Hey bby! Can I request in general headcanons for dating the marvel girls?
You Know I Adore You
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trying to get back into it but here's more general headcanons for the girls! (scroll down my profile if u haven't seen the og onesđŸ€«)
Carol Danvers
-she loves to give you soft pecks any time you walk past or say hi or bye to her
-its smt so simple but she loves it, letting everyone know you're both taken
-she loves wrapping her hand around ur shoulder and pulling u into her as she bows her head to kiss you
-when you show her new clothes you bought (dresses, tops, skirts, lingerie) she literally kicks her feet and starts giggling like a toddler
-she puts her hands on her face and smiles so big when you look good in smt/ doing smt
-when ppl hit on you she starts laughing bc she knows ur incredibly loyal, but she does have her moments when she gets insecure
-she'll talk to you about it later if it won't leave her alone. and it usually ends in her sleeping on your tit
-she leaves a drool stain on ur boob but she won't ever admit it's drool
-when ppl hit on her and you get angry it turns her ONNN. like her super sweet and calm gf getting possessive does smt to her
-she loves to call you her sweet girl
-anytime she gets, she'll just stare into ur eyes as she caresses ur cheek, whispering stuff like 'i love you so much pretty girl'
-its mostly to herself but it slips her mind and it's audible
-she loves giving you long tight hugs out of nowhere. like nothing makes her day better then when you wrap ur arms around her so tight and all her problems dissipate
-if you like to cook, she's constantly behind you holding ur waist. she tries to help if she can but usually js ur taste tester
-when ur the one the takes her out on a date and makes her feel so pretty she's literally blushing the whole time. and she'll literally js tell random ppl 'look how beautiful she is!"
-ill say it again GOLDEN RETRIEVER LESBIAN
-she's so obsessed with you it's crazy, she follows you like a lost puppy.
-and omg when she or you propose she will NEVER skip a chance to call you her wife
-"my wife bought it for me!" "it's for my wife" no thank you, i have a wife" "i love my wife" "i miss my wife" "my wife uses that!" ANY CHANCE
- its gets to the point where nat, bc she's a tease, buys her a shirt that says i love my wife and it's her favorite shirt
-you're her favorite person ever and and if she had to spend every second of her life by your side she'd do it in a heartbeat
Darcy Lewis
-i can't fathom how much darcy loves to leave kiss marks ALL over you!!
-she'll leave them on ur neck, cheek, forehead, and on ur lip so everyone knows to stay away from what's hers
-she'll leave them and say "all mineee" as she grabs ur cheeks with her hands and squishes them together to kiss you
-you guys sleep so intertwined. it's so comfortable for both of you but you've been asked by some ppl how the hell you two get any sleep like that
-darcy likes her girl obsessed. js plain and simple. she KNOWS she had you wrapped around her fingers bc she's aware you'll literally move the moon for her
-you love to spoil her and take her everywhere she can, you want her to live her dream and explore the world
-i imagine darcy dating a big, tall, buff, hot ass avenger chick. she always flaunts how hot you are to anyone
-she gives a lot of dirty looks to girls who stare at you a little to long.
-usually she tugs ur pinky and you'll give her a kiss on the lips or pull her close
-when you two walk, it's impossibly close to eachother.
-you both need to be touching the others skin when ur together.
-she melts in ur arms when you call her pretty.
-it doesn't matter how many times you say it in a day (which is a lot) she's always gonna feel so giddy and nervous when you say it
-looking in ur eyes calms her down. when she's stressed abt work or school you give her a warm hug and tell her everything is gonna be alright and that she's got this
-when you put ur hand on her cheek she grabs it and kisses ur palm and you do the same
-you hate ian. even if he didn't do much to her ur get jelly that he got to kiss her. she finds it funny bc he was not it
-she loves when you lay on top of her and just hold her. even tho she struggles to breath sometimes, she's never felt warmer
-omg imagine darcy with an asguardian gf and she's just so obsessed with ur accent and skills. it drives her up the wall
-she always feels so safe when she's with you and you do wtv you can to make sure she's safe and happy
-darcy loves her scary gf very much and loves when you intimidate ppl bc you're actually a very soft a sweet person
MarĂ­a Hill
-i feel like you and maria have a soft and mature ass relationship
-when you have fights they're usually small. but you two can make up by talking it out or yk smt else
-sometimes you'll stroll into her office, sit on her lap, give her a few kisses then walk out.
-when you two walk around her arms around ur waist and when ur sitting around ur shoulder. js making sure she marks her territory
-whenever you two are js chatting she'll hold ur waist. it could be a conversation about a mission or literally her favorite burger but she's holding ur waist.
-she likes when you call her commander, not even in like a kinky way (she does like it like that too) but she feels so happy knowing ur able to keep it professional and respect her
-you both know how you like ur coffee by heart. and you memorized all her favorite foods and she's shocked
-maria is a jealous girllll. she trusts you 100% but God forbid and stranger touches you. she'll give them hell for it
-when u guys get engaged/married she loves to stare at the ring and wears it all. the. time.
-smt about it is just so you and her as if it was tied to her soul and she loves that you found the most perfect ring ever.
-you make her lunch for work. either packing it in her very cute lunch bag or stopping by her office to drop it off. you make sure she eats
-its also a secret but ur thumbprint opens her office doors. after years of dating ofc.
-i feel like you guys could have an age gap relationship but it's never been an issue
-she has a polaroid picture of you in her wallet and desk. she labeled it "forever my pretty girl" and the date.
-nat is very protective of you when maria's now around. they both know u are more than capable of protecting yourself and very loyal. but mats js making sure
-you have a necklace with her name on it and/or a locket with a picture of her
-you guys are meant to be together and everyone knows that
Sharon Carter
-sharon is so public about ur relationship but also extremely private about it
-like she flaunts her hot beautiful ass gf everywhere. but know one knows as many details about you as her or any of ur guys' anniversaries
- anytime you guys sit down sharon has her arm around ur shoulder, ur leg on her thigh, and her hand on ur thigh
-she's a big fan of whisky but makes sure she doesn't stink of it so you'll let her kiss you. she has a collection of it and you find it cute
-she also likes to tease you by putting the cold glass ur thigh when you sit
-she's actually so clingy and needy. from a distance she may seem as a badass chick who loves her gf, but she's actually like clingy lil thang.
-she always needs to have her hands in you, she's told you she'll die if she's not touching you.
-she will shamelessly stare at ur tits and touch/poke them any chance she gets.
-she also claims she can't sleep if her face isn't in between ur boobs. she swears the scent of ur skin there is better than the rest of ur body.
-she loves to nuzzle her nose into ur neck/chest
-she loves when you wrap ur arms around her neck when she's sitting at her desk
-she loves when u hug her around her neck in general
-after a long night (wink wink) she loves to see you wake up and put her button up/blazer on as you go to the bathroom
-she actually goes feral when she sees you in smt revealing or tight. like it drives her crazy nd she starts craving you so bad
-but she'll literally drool over u in ur lil mom type outfits or pajamas. you js always looks so gorgeous and splendid to her
-she'll let you do her hair sometimes, she perfers it just down and neat but she can never say no to you.
-she loves to buy you jewelry and you guys have a lot of matching pieces
-her heart aches when she sees you being you. ur just so unique and flawless in her eyes
-your her dream girl and she's yours
Nebula
-your literally her most prized possession. like ofc ofc she doesn't treat you like an object or prize to be on but you're the most important thing in her life
-she's a touch starved baby so when you two get more comfortable with eachother she loves when you affection.
-after she's had a rough day or in general she loves to js sit as you stand between her legs and hug her neck and stroke her head.
-she'll hold ur waist and put her head on ur chest to hear ur heartbeat and feel ur boobs
-don't get me wrong, she's obsessed with ur tits but feeling ur squishy and warm flesh helps her feel less dehumanized, it's not always sexual
-literally no one can disrespect you bc nebula is gonna appear out of the shadows to murder them
-nebula would totally have a soft girlfriend. you're so sweet and kind, the opposite of nebula. but you see and bring out the best in her. nebula and her soft girl<3
-THE black cat and golden retriever gf duo. moon and her star.
-nebula has no shame at all, anytime you guys sit she's gonna pull you on her lap. it doesn't matter if there's plenty of room she wants to be near you at all times
-she loves to give you soft pecks on ur head, cheek and neck. whenever you hug her and she likes to do it when you're sitting next to her.
-idk if i should say she's big on pda bc she just does it yk? she doesn't like being in public but she's so possessive and obsessed with you that she just needs to be touching you all the time.
-her favorite position to take a nap in is hugging ur thigh as she's between them while you stroke her head.
-i've said it before but she's obsessed with how squishy and warm you are.
-when you guys sleep she holds u super close by ur waist, and u put ur hands on her chest
-she thinks you don't hear but she'll silently praise you and tell you how much she loves you when you sleep
-you love ur blue girlfriend and she's so happy you chose her
kate bishop
-PUPPY GF KATEEEE
-she's so obsessed with you it's actually so cute
-she has the biggest pout when she comes home from difficult missions or days
-all she wants to do is lay between her gfs legs and breath in ur scent
-you have an arrow necklace, like nat, but it's for kate
-yelena always makes fun of you bc she says kate is cupid and shot her love bow at you
-she also bugs kate bc of how flustered she gets around , even after you guys start dating. and she'll ALWAYS remind kate of how embarrassing her confession to you was
-you guys go on picnics a lot. you like to braid kate's hair as she's throwing lucky his favorite tennis ball around
-you get so overheated when you sleep bc kate usually sleeps with all her lumps around you and lucky on top of you
-she SNORESS. you think it's adorable but she's gonna refuse it when you tell her about it. she's also drooled on you plenty of times but when u love someone sm it rlly doesn't matter
-if ur an avengers, she falls in love you when ur first introduced to her. clint and nat noticed immediately, and nats like ur instructor. (BC NAT NEVER DIES) and they both just watch as this love story is written in front of them
-if you meet her mom she likes you but doesn't respect you very much. she's very invasive with her questions and makes crude jokes that only she finds funny.
-kate loves to go on cute scenic dates with you. one of the most memorable as when she asked you to be her gf. it one on a hill overlooking the sea with lucky by her side
- she twirls her hair and stubbles over her words a lot when she's with you. she just gets so nervous around you it's crazy
-nat was ur hypewomen and clint was her hypeman. they both love you sm and they want you to be happy. so when you tell nat about ur first date she gets so happy and helps you get ready
-they're both rooting for you. nat also helps kate by telling you ur favorite flowers, snacks, places, movies. and clint helps you by her archery related gifts and stuff for lucky
-you're so obsessed with her as well. you draw K's with a heart anytime you have paper, take pictures of her all the time and so much more. she's so lucky to have you
-you guys are always the best looking at a gala. she'll wear her favorite suit and you wear a long dress with a slit in the color of her tie. she cannot take her hands off of you and she's pure eye candy to you
-she wouldn't rather spend her life with anyone else, she loves you with her whole heart and will do anything to prove it to you
a/n this was SO FUNNNđŸ€ please send more requests guys bc im lowk running out of ideas!! ty for reading stay safe hoes
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cr0ftisprocrastinating · 8 days ago
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(apologies in advance for the sycophantic screed you are about to read)
I have just binged your fics and feel compelled to tell you that they made me laugh out loud, kick my feet in glee, and weep uncontrollably. I loved them all but Nowhere Else To Go is my favourite bc I’m an absolute glutton for punishment and the agony of angst was particularly delicious (and obviously the cause of my weeping).
Anyway, I mostly want to thank you because, one PhD candidate to another (I know you’re doing a DPhil but, yknow, tomato tomato), I want to thank you for providing me with a much-needed escape from all of the theory that is constantly threatening to completely colonise my brain. I’m such a snob when it comes to FF and romance, so it’s so refreshing to find fic that makes me FEEL something for once in my goddamn life while also having beautiful prose AND correct grammar.
Also, massive props for somehow finding time to write fic while studying?! I am incapable of pretty much anything but getting stoned at the end of every day so my hypothetical hat goes off to you. I can’t wait for whatever your brilliant brain cooks up next.
So that this isn’t just me gushing I suppose I should ask a question: what are some of your favourite romance novels? I am constantly chasing the feeling of reading Conversations With Friends for the first time (which I saw is also a fav of yours), so I trust that any rec of yours will be a good one.
Oooh my god what lovely words!!! Ackkk!! Thank you!!!!!! You are both extremely kind but also extremely generous in coming here to say this after enjoying them - so thank you very much :’)
Also: solidarity! I hate theory. I said at the beginning that my thesis was going to be ‘vibes based’ and now I’m near the end and it KEEPS SNEAKING IN (like
obviously) and it makes my brain melt so yeah. Ugh. I hope you are doing well and all your friends and family are telling you regularly how clever and brave you are for pursuing this. At this point compliments are my only coping mechanism 😭
Please also share your recs bc you sound like my kind of reader!!! My FAVOURITE things in a romance are: really good characterisation, yearning, men who do not know what to do with their feelings. Like, I need that man to be suffering and longing. With that in mind it will come as no surprise that I truly love Pride and Prejudice so, so much. There’s also a fic version! Universal Truths by @scullymurphy is a delight and does yearning very well. There is also a published fan fic esque novel about their marriage which I really enjoyed (this made me feel very sad at points so fyi if you want pure fluff: Mr Darcy Takes a Wife by Linda Berdoll) (this might not actually have been sad but it really put me in a melancholy yearning mood for some reason).
I was raised, perhaps slightly too young, on Philippa Gregory novels. The Other Boleyn Girl still has a special place in my heart. (There was also a really dirty one with a young girl who was a witch who was drugging the man she wanted to marry, sleeping with him and having threesomes with his wife?? Definitely lower on the romance list but in terms of smut
. The Wise Woman). (That one obvs was my actual favourite, lol).
For the classics Georgette Heyer is very good, but sometimes I want a quick read and one with smut, so for more contemporary, ‘fill the void and gobble them up in the evenings’: Scarlett Scott for regency, Annika Martin for billionaire romance, Ursa Dax for alien stuff, especially the Alien God series omg they’re so good, and then Kimberley Lemming for genuine fluff and jokes in a fantasy setting.
I actually really love alien romance as a sub genre and find it fascinating and could talk for hours about why, but it is high risk high reward, in that sometimes they are not good. But hey! Such is life.
Anyway v invested if you have any recommendations to share. I feel I am missing like a major major romance series that I adore but I can’t think of it at all, alas. Very much in the market for some good ones though, I’m currently reading Connie Willis’ novels and oh my good god. If you haven’t read To Say Nothing of the Dog you must, it is perfect and exquisite in every way!!
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birdhousemp3 · 4 months ago
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youre so right about p&p vs persuasion and controversial opinion perhaps but i've reread p&p multiple times and i seriously don't get how it's considered romantic at all, it's so clearly dripping in satire/sarcasm and even darcy/elizabeth is so practical and dispassionate a pairing that the shippers come across as like... people who would watch it's always sunny and start waxing poetic about how it's peak romance somehow. also i know elizabeth rejecting darcy's first proposal and mr collins is considered peak feminism by the internet but i actually find p&p deeply conservative compared to persuasion, which makes since considering the latter was written toward the very end of austen's life when she had become even more conscious of women's rights, class, and empire. like persuasion is straight up saying "there's nothing admirable about the gentry as a class, the only things that measure your worth are your actions and character, also i hate slavery and napoleon sucks because empires are all bad" like it makes me wish she had lived longer so i could read her inevitable criticism of future british imperialism.
and of course anne is the only one with a straight up wollstonecraft-like viewpoint, she's the embodiment of women's unseen uncompensated labor and it's so touching that her love interest is the man who NOT ONLY sees and appreciates what she's doing ("no one so proper, so capable as anne!") but also directly shares the labor himself - like doing childcare through taking care of the toddler for anne? noticing when she's exhausted and getting her help without asking? even performing emotional labor by consoling mrs musgrove over the death of her worthless son despite having literally no reason to? peak.
also i think it's not a coincidence that austen described wentworth as a "brilliant," competent sea captain in the midst of the napoleonic wars (epitome of masculinity in those times, and honestly fair like just watch master and commander to see the shit those sailors had to deal with) and yet still emphasized these altruistic "feminine" traits of his, bc navy men were extremely self-sufficient compared to men of the gentry class so they all knew how to cook and sew their own clothes etc with no traditional division of men vs women's labor - when youre at sea you have to do your own laundry! - so together anne and wentworth also kind of transcend gender because they're such perfect equals on every level, whether it be in intellectual ability or their character or even their likes/dislikes (the fact that they even share the same music taste is so crazy to me. "no two hearts so open, no tastes so similar, no feelings so in unison, no countenances so beloved...") so to me persuasion is definitely austen's most radical, compelling, rich, AND romantic novel with an incredible cast of characters that exemplify all those themes (the crofts are literary couple goals). this has been a PSA
omg thank u for this
. ur much more articulate and thoughtful than i could ever be abt persuasion
i feel like the p&p obsession comes mostly from the 2005 film which.. honestly i don’t think is a true or faithful adaptation of the novel. paired also with the new desire to define every piece of media in terms of tropes (ie enemies to lovers that p&p gets reductively described as) that just serve to generalize complex stories especially with austen’s which work so much with subtlety and subtext
anyway ur right and i love you 👍
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fanhackers · 2 years ago
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#writtenbyawoman
A couple of years ago, BookTok and BookTube - the literary subcultures of TikTok and YouTube - started a meme, #writtenbyawoman.  The idea of the meme was that men, as written by women authors, were–well, terrific! Wonderful! Kind, gentle, considerate! To say a man was “written by a woman” was to give him the ultimate compliment: to put him in a category with men like Mr. Darcy, or Laurie from Little Women, or the Hot Priest from Fleabag. This complement has moved past fictional characters to be applied to real men (as in, “OMG he’s amazing, it’s like he’s written by a woman”), as well as to celebrities (e.g. Harry Styles, Timothee Chalamet. Hozier.) 
This is one of those cases where fandom’s hit on an idea that academia has also explored. In the introduction to her 2017 book, Heartthrobs: A History of Women and Desire, historian Carol Dyhouse notes that: 
“The icons of romantic literature — Mr Darcy, Mr Rochester, Heathcliff, or Rhett Butler — were mostly, in the first instance, products of the female imagination. Movie stars and rock musicians acquire and cultivate images that in many cases have little to do with their ‘ real ’ selves. Many of the most successful ‘ romantic leads ’ in the past — Montgomery Clift, Rock Hudson, Dirk Bogarde, Richard Chamberlain, for instance — have been gay. Their performances nevertheless conjured visions of maleness which had women weak at the knees: how do we make sense of this?” 
Dyhouse continues:
What we now refer to as the ‘alpha male’ hero, rugged, square-built with a strong jawline, has never held indomitable sway over feminine emotions. Sensitive types, moody aesthetes, and men exuding androgynous charm have featured equally prominently in the cultural landscape of desire. (1-2)
Even early heartthrob’s like Rudolph Valentino’s character of “The Sheik” were #writtenbyawoman - did you know that he comes from a bestselling novel, The Sheik (1919), written by E.M. Hul (that is, my girl Edith Maud. :D  You go, Edith!) 
Dyhouse’s purview extends from soulmates to vampires to pop stars and of course to David Bowie as the Goblin King. Not a fandom book per se but well worth checking out if your areas of interest include, say, pirates, Adam Ant, or Lord Byron.  
References:
Dyhouse, Carol. Heartthrobs : A History of Women and Desire, OUP Oxford, 2017 
–Francesca Coppa, Fanhackers volunteer
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dragonflylady77 · 10 months ago
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Questions for fanfic authors
I was tagged by @xthelastknownsurvivorx
How many works do you have on AO3? 47 (holy shit!)
What's your total AO3 word count? 80,885
What fandoms do you write for? Mostly Stranger Things (harringrove), then a tiny bit of Red, White & Royal Blue (firstprince), a Spuffy one shot, and a Power Rangers 2017 one shot.
Do you respond to comments? I try to, yes. Then I find some I forgot to respond to and I feel really bad.
Have you ever had a fic stolen? not that I know of.
Have you ever co-written a fic before? yes, a long time ago. I was beta-ing a Spuffy fic for my bestie Kitty and I kinda wrote the 3rd (and last) chapter of that fic. I read it again a couple of years ago and OMG the head-hopping was bad and the smut was kinda cringe.
What's your all-time favourite ship? harringrove!!!! Even if I've been reading a ton of firstprince (and some tarlos, and also Lizzie/Darcy), my heart belongs to Billy and Steve.
What are your writing strengths? dialogue, banter, happy endings, fluff (just ask @shieldofiron.
What are your writing weaknesses? actions scenes, full on MM smut (still scares me a bit).
First fandom you wrote for? um, does NKOTB RPF when I was in my late teens count? Otherwise, Spuffy.
no pressure tags @ihni @onthewaytosomewhere @lalazeewrites @biillyhargroves @spaceofentropy @thissortofsorcery @shieldofiron @robthegoodfellow @fizzigigsimmer @adelacreations @forever-fixating @kiwiana-writes @anincompletelist @billyharringson @camaro-and-smokes
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sluggintub · 2 years ago
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Omg!!!!!!
Haiii!!!! Elloo!!!
Im back with your semi annual Robo Mace wip :0000
Finally was able to expand upon an idea cooking in my mind for a good bit which was a kinda battle mask (Basically whenever conflict is engaged their “human” mouth would be covered with this extravagant layer o’ metal to protect em!)
Practical considering they’re mostly made up of metal?
Absolutely not
Cool?
ABSOLUTELY
Anyways thats literally the whole wip.
Ive redrawn that same pose like five million times on different canvases with every attempt so ive made like zero progress 💀
But now that I have your attention I wanted to expand on Mace’s lore cuz I feel like it and I think i promised to make a post about it
So.
I dont know about any of you you guys-
I personally feel like Darcy the core and Alderitch coulda be so much cooler!
Like dont get me wrong. I like Darcy design wise! They’ve literally been living in my head rent free ever since their first teaser! (It’s a blessing and a curse please send help hshshHahabbfnsuaha)
But I personally feel like plot wise they were kinda lacking :(
And the idea of a bucha a n c i e n t newts consciousnesses invading a 13/14 year old kids mind forcefully is kinda
gross.
So.
I was brainstorming and came up with this:
When the core was first teased. Back in the ye olde days in the pre True colors when the fandom called it the Night-
Im not the only one that thought it was some sorta god right?
A giant mass of orange eyes that a powerful King that ruled for thousands of years kneels down to and calls “Master?”
Idk about you but that gives off omnipotent eldritch horror vibes to me.
So I basically took that concept and expanded upon that and incorporated bits of the lore that Andrias dropped about his kind.
Specifically about how he said that his kind were conquerers.
Why?
Sure. It could purely be a generational trauma thing.
His father did it. His father’s father did it. And his father’s father’s father did it as well.
That could be the end of it.
No one really knows why they conquer and enslave races other than “tradition.”
Maybe Andrias only mentions it all is so he can bask in his triumph. To feel a deluded sense of pride in his lineage for finally being able to continue the work of his forefathers after thousands of years of resentment and regret planted in his mind by his own father that twisted and corrupted his perception on reality.
Maybe Matt just thought those sequences up on the spot and they sorta made sense.
Theres alotta maybes and to my knowledge thats about the extent of it
But im not satisfied with that
So I took that concept. The conquering inter dimensional newts and elevated it.
The core was never a series of Newtopia’s “greatest minds.”
It was always an omnipotent being.
An all seeing all knowing all powerful elderitch horror that is always hungry.
Thats why Andrias’ ancestors invaded other worlds!
Whether it was out of fear or necessity or a deal made with the devil
The reason they invaded is because the core is always hungry. And it needed to feed. So they sacrificed whole worlds to the core just to satiate its ravenous appetite.
And it would explain why in the last season Amphibia was being siphoned for all its resources
Not only was it for the factories, the frobo army, and the mind control devices
It was to stave off the cores hunger until the invasion of earth could surpass
And I didnt forget about all those newts that died and had their brain transferred to the core originally oh nonono
They still sacrificed themselves. But not to join the core or become anything greater. Despite what they believed or what they were promised by the core, Alderitch and all those newts who made up the canon core were nothing more than willing sacrifices to the cores endless hunger. They realistically died for nothing.
So. With this concept/au/rewrite/whatever solves alot of the inconsistencies in the plot and also gets rid of the gross old newts in 13 year olds brain plot
Lemme know what you think of this concept! Im open to criticism and any ideas anyone is willing to share and will do my best to respond to em!
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iamdarcylewis · 6 months ago
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theres a lot of reasons why i havent been active, mostly bc i've been p busy, and the other one is bc i really dont know what to do with darcy rn, u could say its a lil ✹block✹
so idk
merry xmas, happy new year! i'd say feliz dĂ­a de los inocentes but 1) its not the day yet, and 2) not a joke omg im not doing that joke anymore
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thatringboy · 1 year ago
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Now I’m so curious as to the Paths of the rwby characters omg. You said they’re gonna be mostly The Hunt, but that some are gonna change?
Yeah they’re all almost entirely The Hunt/the Path of their home nation with some exceptions.
For reference, Atlas follows Erudition, Mistral follows Harmony, Vale and Vacuo follow Hunt, White Fang follow Nihility, and the Grimm come from Propagation and Finality
Each character and their Path is what they are as of their most recent appearance in RWBY canon, whether that’s time of death, last scene, or as of the v9 epilogue. Some minor characters have not been included as I don’t believe they are necessarily Pathwalkers/forgot about them when this list was made. It’s safe to assume that any non-mentioned Huntsmen follow the Path of The Hunt
Additional note, the line in my post about there only being 4 Emanators in Remnant outside of Ozpin and Salem is still technically true as of the information that Ozpin knows. All other Emanators are mysteries to him and were not intentional. The wills of the Aeons is strange

Team RWBY
Ruby Rose, The Hunt, wind
Weiss Schnee, The Erudition, ice
Blake Belladonna, The Harmony, formally Nihility, quantum 
Yang Xiao-Long, The Preservation, fire
Team JNPR -> ORNJ
Jaune Arc, The Preservation, physical 
Nora Valkyrie, The Destruction, lightning 
Pyrrha Nikos, The Hunt, physical 
Lie Ren, The Harmony, formerly The Hunt, physical
Oscar Pine, The Trailblaze, imaginary
Beacon Teachers
Ozpin, The Hunt, Emanator, formerly Permanence, Emanator, imaginary
Glynda Goodwitch, The Erudition, quantum
Bartholomew Oobleck, The Erudition, fire
Peter Port, The Erudition, physical 
Beacon Alumni
Qrow Branwen, The Preservation, quantum 
Raven Branwen, The Nihility, Emanator, quantum
Taiyang Xiao-Long, The Abundance, physical
Coco Adel, The Beauty, physical
Fox Alistair, The Hunt, physical
Velvet Scarlatina, The Hunt, imaginary
Yatsuhashi Daichi, The Hunt, formerly Remembrance, physical
Salem’s Circle
Salem, The Finality, Emanator, formerly The Propagation, Emanator, quantum 
Cinder, The Destruction, Emanator, fire
Leonardo Lionheart, The Finality, formally Harmony, physical
Mercury Black, The Finality, formerly Nihility, physical
Emerald Sustrai, The Nihility, imaginary
Hazel Rainhart, The Nihility, formerly Preservation, lightning 
Arthur Watts, The Finality, formerly Erudition, quantum
Tyrian Callows, The Finality, wind
Tock, The Finality, imaginary 
Atlas Citizens
James Ironwood, The Abundance, Emanator, formally Preservation, physical 
Winter Schnee, The Erudition, Emanator, ice
Clover Ebi, The Equilibrium, physical
Harriet Bree, The Equilibrium, physical 
Vine Zeki, The Equilibrium, imaginary
Elm Ederne, The Equilibrium, imaginary 
Marrow Amin, The Equilibrium, quantum
Robyn Hill, The Preservation, imaginary
May Marigold, The Preservation, quantum 
Fiona Thyme, The Preservation, imaginary 
Joanna Greenleaf, The Preservation, physical
Jacques Schnee, ew.
Willow Schnee, The Erudition, ice
Penny Polendina, The Erudition, Emanator, ice, formerly physical
The White Fang
Adam Taurus, The Nihility, fire
Ghira Belladonna, The Harmony, physical
Kali Belladonna, mother of Blake
Illia Amitola, The Trailblaze, formerly The Nihility, lightning
Fennec and Corsac Albain, The Nihility, fire & wind
These Two
Roman Torchwick, The Elation, physical 
Neo Politan, The Elation, Emanator, quantum 
Team SSSN -> SSSNN
Sun Wukong, The Trailblaze, imaginary
Scarlet David, The Hunt, wind
Sage Ayana, The Hunt, physical
Neptune Vasilias, The Preservation, lightning 
Nolan Porfirio, The Hunt, lightning
Other Huntsmen
Arslan Atlan, The Hunt, physical 
Bolin Hori, The Hunt, physical
Reese Chloris, The Hunt, quantum
Nadir Shiko, The Hunt, physical 
Brawnz Ni, The Hunt, physical 
Roy Stallion, The Hunt, physical 
May Zedong, The Hunt, physical 
Nebula Violette, The Hunt, physical 
Dew Gayle, The Hunt, wind 
Gwen Darcy, The Hunt, physical 
Octavia Ember, The Hunt, fire
Maria Calavera, The Hunt, Emanator, quantum
Book Only
Carmine Esclados, The Beauty, wind
Bertilak Celadon, The Nihility, physical
If you’ve got any further questions about this AU, feel free to send them my way!!
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ltsaradharkness · 10 months ago
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Spoilers. Deadpool and wolverine.
Mostly just thoughts. So super random.
What hot ones with Ryan and Hugh it's hilarious.
Gambit is hilarious. Weirdly I'm glad he was never in the live action that way. He did the voice well and Channing is having so much fun the last couple movies. His spot in bullet train gets me every time.
I cringed a lot at some of what Deadpool would say like omg stop.
Laura was perfect. Same character but grown, a little closer to the books plus she needed more screen time. Like I would have loved to have seen her reactions to watching Logan drink and piss on Deadpool's parade. But otherwise perfect.
Them at the end was chefs kiss.
Blade and Electra. Perfect epic. So funny.
Baby pool was weird. So was kid pool. Loved seeing all the different pools. Omg I just realized his arms were growing back ew. Hehheh nice pools hair and then him tonguing the dog. Ew.
Peter!
(fix your zipper)
Little too far with all the nut shoots like ok but đŸ˜Č 😳 we get it craws to nuts got it.
I love the two fight scenes with them. Great music choice. The coexist was hilarious. That is more seat belts than are in that van. Aw flash back to picking up the picture.
Um question for Hugh what is in the bottles. I figured the clear is water. But what's the whiskey and do you have a preference.
Omg I don't know how much of it was prop and how much was cg but Logan skeleton when he was taking to it at the beginning too good.
Speaking of props, Happy's office. All the little props from all the different places. Like epic.
Omg me darcy is the sharming tva bad guy, like lol.
Nova's hands are the worst CGI in the movie and whatever practical they did to the actors hands the rest of the time why. Just made it worse.
Nova is a good character, I actually felt bad for her for a second and then she put her hand out of people's nose and I was done. Also epic walk.
I dug all the cameos actual or just fourth wall breaks, nice.
I have the soundtrack stuck in my head. Yay.
She only has like three lines, and I'm not sure what he voice really sounds like since I've only seen like two things with her, but the credits say that ladypool is Blake. Which duh, ts is too short. Love ya but short.
Shawarma. Yeah saw that. Blind al wishing she was deaf. Them literally being outside his apartment the whole time. Tva lady being hot for Peter over topless Hugh, hilarious. I need a short with them.
All the very male gaze of Hugh shirtless with the mask. Woof. That was not female gaze. Nope full male gaze. Which even if he does more as wolverine is probably like a fair well to that level of muscle since Hugh has said its part of why he was getting out, that level of work out and etc to look like that is bad and not fun. So understandable.
Marvel h christ.
I'll probably have more but I'm getting tried of typing. Probably schedule another post when I see it next.
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seancamerons · 1 year ago
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If you had to pick just three favorite Degrassi:TNG seasons, what would they be? I have such a soft spot for S2, and not purely because I relate all too well to what happened to Emma's "White Wedding" hair :) I'm sending this to a few people because it's always fun to see different perspectives!
omg, are we the same person? it just so happens season 2 of dtng is actually my favorite. it felt like light mixed with drama like degrassi high but with an edge over season 1 which is also cute and i am fond of. omg white wedding is my favorite episode of the series, for obvious reasons. i'm so glad you mentioned that, I'd love to see how that picture of your hair that you can relate to!
and i know people love to dote on season 3. still, instead, i liked season 4 because it had a darkness and flair for the dramatics between the arc before and aftermath of the shooting which I think was compelling at the time and still holds up coupled with craig's mental illness coming to a breaking point and relationships and alliances being tested along the way.
if you asked me a few years ago i used to think season 6 was good (yikes!) but when i rewatch i recall really in my feelings during season 7 because like season 4 it was very dark too by comparison, we had lost jt, lakehurst moved into degrassi so we got that kind of drama after that, spinner with cancer, darcy's sa and depression after that it was a pretty bad time but it made up for it in good storylines for most of the central characters. Also the graduation in the season finale was worth it with the tassel for jt. even then he was honored with his memorial which lingered in zen garden for seasons to come.
in closing, i think there's good and bad with almost all seasons but i think i mostly like these seasons of next generation the most for rewatchability and entertaining, and not to mention comfort because i feel like i grew up with those kids in the best possible way. thank-you for the asks! i appreciate them all! 💌✹
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yukkoislost · 1 year ago
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Some random headcanons
. Darcy actually can notice small details and can analyze situations
. She actually has her own notebook
. She some people assume she’s dumb do to her mostly positive nature , her naive nature, and how overly friendly she can be
. J and Darcy in most universes don’t get along in one universe Darcy even bit j
. J and sixy tend to not get along and she sometimes berates sixy for not acting like usual murder drone and will often tie sixys tail
. Sixy ( aka drone Darcy ) often has trouble controlling her tail and will often accidentally stab things , people , other drones , herself
:oo darcy drone form omg
aint tying the tail straight up abuse 😭
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oonajaeadira · 2 years ago
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so many of my bb pero i can't choose 😭😭 i'm gonna pick regency!pero because i just HAVE to know omg!!!
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Oh, lovely Erin.
I have exactly one-million ideas for Pero; I do so love to put him in all of the situations. He's SO much fun to write.
This is a story I've actually dragged in from a previous celeb crush (who shall remain unnamed) before I started writing fic. It's one of the many stories I'd fall asleep to in my brain, and I played it so many times that I know it intimately.
It's not what you think....he's not a Mr. Darcy. He's a clergyman. And he's kind. But dour. And a bit of an outsider and gossip-magnet, on account of him being foreign...and scarred.
TBH, I go back and forth regularly whether it should be Pero or Ezra for this story, but I figure the time period is actually kinder to Pero, since he's at least European. Although, there's nothing that says I can't set it in a small hamlet in colonial New England a la Sleepy Hollow...just, not spooky like SH.
The location isn't as important as the time period, since the reader is a governess and there are class issues at play.... It's mostly just a romance piece, nothing flashy.
But if I do end up giving it to Ezra, just know that Pero definitely gets the Pioneer fic, because I sometimes consider giving that one to Frankie.
AND!
Since you love the Pero so much, here's a bonus. I accidentally left a title off my wip list: The Riddle of the Sphinx, in which Pero's mercenary-for-hire duties sends him on a mission to free an important woman from a deadly monster. Problem is, he isn't strong enough to kill it, and isn't clever enough to figure out how to outsmart it. Until he is.
.
pile-o-the-wips
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thatoneandlonelyemo2005 · 2 years ago
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Okay so the story is splasher is young enough theyd been waiting for a chance to introduce him and crutchie has been kept from the public because of his health and the scandal of it and mush is mute (what's a little more lying ?) Mush is quiet and shy anyhow only mouthing pr talking in whispers to darcy or one of the others so its believeable. The parties are alot less dull now the newsies behave mostly eating alot of food and play around with their 'brothers' which causes a few whispers 'mr reid may have kept them isolated too long acting like poor folk'
Krskfkrkrkr omg I love this so much, I'm shaking hello, this is just ahhhhh
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