#Capsule Making Machine
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allen. that face you make when the bat gives you another task actually fuck that in the middle of writing this my dad called and informed me that our electric kettle died guess we're boiling our water in a pot now
#i'm going home tomorrow and what am i supposed to do now? become american?#how am i gonna make my tea now? we don't have a stove kettle#fucking hell#evillious chronicles#ec doodle#allen avadonia#guess it's all porridge and dumplings and coffee capsule machine now#adding this but please don't take the american joke seriously#i'm just terrified at the idea of boiling water in a microwave
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#1st hero forge photo is of flak flint (square pauldron & side pouch)#3rd photo is Torz tinder (round pauldron & capsules of blasting powder)#flak flint#torz tinder#hero forge#character design#shadow of war#shadow of mordor#digital photography#lotr orcs#uruk hai#lotr#as someone who’s grown up super close to my sibling and also has a burn victim in the family- i can empathize with these two a TON#i did what i could to make accurate looking burns but stay close to the original designs#cw gore#kinda#and yes i gave them eyebrows#just debunked my own conspiracy theory lol#my polls#poll results#part 8#1 dynamic demolision duo#can i just say how much i adore the machine tribe aesthetic?#just loving cobalt/copper as a color combo rn#(random thought i had while making this is that the axe they each have could’ve been one half of the same weapon- cuz twins)#wonder if they designed flint&tinder to sorta incorporate chemistry into their looks- the skin->scar transition is akin to purified copper
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update: after about an hour of attempts, i've managed to get nearly halfway through the knight fight without the shadow mantle and i'm really proud of my progress!!!!! i only have 2 revivemints and a revivedust so it's a struggle but it does feel like i can push through eventually ;w;
#i was really worried but i'm doing a decent job of learning the attacks so far#the worst part is just. keeping susie alive vjdnchsbgn#if i can't make more progress tomorrow i might bite the bullet and redo chapter 3 a third time#that way i can get more revivemints from the capsule machine#my dumbass thought you could only get the gold items once so i did the 1225 thing and made it go bye bye#deltarune#deltarune chapter 3#the roaring knight#deltarune spoilers#chara.txt
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Dopie is Ozy's lil meow meow now I don't make the rules here
Doppie tagging behind Ozy's back bc the crowd has suddenly grown larger and he's now anxious
#ardenssolis#O.ZY'S LIL MEOW MEO W EURHGRIGUIUTROIT IM#IMSOBBINGGGGG#me and the terrifying strong powerful king i pulled by having depression#o.zy's sopping wet pathetic lil meow meow#he comes back home drenched in rain and his shoes make a squeaking sound#WHAT ARE THE CHANCES THAT A PHARAOH AND AN ANXIOUS WHITE-COLLAR SALARY MAN COULD BOND??#something about someone who is incredibly confident about themselves bonding with someone who#has a terribly low opinion about himself#THEY ARE BUDDIES.....!!! COMPANIONS EVEN..#he would know how o.zy likes his bath's water temperature and helps him file his taxes#he'll bring him those lil gachapon capsules from the machines close to the train station where he takes his ride back home#and he brushes his hair in the mornings before work#those are my humble headcanons#its like;; its like a rhyno and those lil birds that perch on their back;; and its such an odd combo but they are vibin#he'll teach him how to use a phone too#when o.zy gets loud and proud he puts a hand over his mouth and tries to lead the conversation elsewhere#so the other person doesn't judge him harshly at a first glance#they should go karaoke together and get drunk i think that would help them both#d.oppie makes great fried shrimp and rolled eggs he should try them too okok
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i had to check to make sure it wasnt fake. this is real
#one for the time capsule#<- is my tag for things that make me go 'wow im putting that in my time machine to show people ten years ago'
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Hhh
#im thinking about capsule and sticker and claw machines. theyre so cool. theyre so fun!!#i was fiddling with my capsule machine's mechanism and it just makes my brain purr
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youtube
Capsule Making Machine
Automatic capsule filling machine, also known as the completely automatic capsule filling machine, fills capsules in an automatic mode. The machine uses a multi-position tamping method with intermittent motion to finish tasks such capsule orientation, separation, filling, closing, and ejection. The machine is appropriate for size #00, #0, #1, #2, #3, #4, and #5 capsules with the aid of various size parts. A variable frequency drive, or VFD, can be used to regulate the speed of production. The machine is built in compliance with cGMP guidelines. Stainless steel 316 is used for all product contact parts, while stainless steel 304 is used to cover the machine. The machine’s innovative design, well-thought-out structure, accurate dosage, safety and dependability, high filling rate, etc. are its advantages.
As a manufacturer of capsule filling machines, we create our designs using the technology at our disposal and our nearly two decades of experience in the field of safe capsule filling and closing. The entire spectrum of cGMP pharmaceutical sanitation is integrated into the machine’s design and construction. It’s interesting to note that on demand, an extra tablet feeding or pellet filling station for capsules is available. In addition, we provide machines for metal detection, sorting, polishing, and inspection of capsules, completing automatic capsule filling lines.
#Automatic capsule filling machine#automatic capsule filling lines#Capsule Making Machines#capsule filling machines#Youtube
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Lodha Machines is the largest manufacturer and exporter of pharmaceutical machinery in Gujarat, India. Offers the best solutions for medicine filling and packaging machines in the pharmaceutical industry. We take pride in providing the highest quality pharma machines, ensuring efficiency, reliability, and compliance with industry standards. We are committed to providing the best quality pharmaceutical machinery, which is designed with precision and meets strong quality control demands. We are also manufacturers of various types of pharmaceutical machinery like Washing & Air jet Cleaning Machines, Autoclaves and Sterilizers, Ampoule Filler Sealer, Liquid Filling Machine, Powder Filling Machine. If you require visit our site: https://www.lodhamachines.com/ or Contact us: +919687731331
#pharmaceutical machinery#capsule filling machine price#pharmaceutical machinery manufacturer#capsule filling machine manufacturer#tablet making machine manufacturer#pharma machine Manufacturer#Washing & Air jet Cleaning Machines#Autoclaves and Sterilizers#Ampoule Filler Sealer#Liquid Filling Machine#Powder Filling Machine
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bakugou keeps your trinkets—pretends they don’t mean anything.
𖦹 content. k.bakugou x gn!reader. fluff

You liked little things.
Tiny seashells, shiny buttons, oddly-shaped rocks, plastic rings from gacha machines—your desk was a chaotic shrine of mismatched trinkets and treasures that you insisted had vibes.
Bakugou didn’t get it. Not at first.
“They’re just junk,” he muttered once, watching you carefully line up a set of glittery frog-shaped pins during lunch.
“They’re not junk,” you said, without looking up. “They’re small and weird and they make me happy.”
He rolled his eyes but didn’t argue again.
A few days later, you handed him something.
It was a keychain. A small rubber chibi of a red-eyed dragon holding a flower.
“For you,” you said, casually. “It reminded me of you.”
Bakugou squinted at it like it had insulted his ancestors. “Why?”
“Looks angry. Still holds flowers.”
He didn’t say anything, just stuffed it in his pocket like it was nothing.
(It ended up on his dorm key later. You noticed.)
Then came a polished black stone shaped like a heart. A silver safety pin with a smiley face bead you’d added yourself. A capsule from a vending machine that popped open to reveal a sparkly sticker with the words “You Tried.”
You’d hand them to him quietly, whenever the mood struck. “For luck.” “You looked annoyed today.” “This one matches your hoodie.”
And each time, he’d huff, shove it in his pocket, and grumble something about you being a weirdo.
But he never gave any of them back.
One night, after a long study session, you spotted something on his desk.
A tiny ceramic turtle you gave him last week.
Sitting right next to his pencil case.
Your eyes flicked to him.
“What?” he snapped.
“You kept it.”
“Yeah, well,” he muttered, face turning red, “they’re… better than junk, I guess.”
You smiled.
And the next day?
You gave him a glow-in-the-dark star sticker.
And he stuck it on his phone. Without a word.

©rosereveries
#⋆˚𝜗 rosereveries 𝜚˚⋆#bnha#bnha bakugo katsuki#bakugou fluff#bakugou katsuki#bakugou katuski x reader#bakugou x reader#bnha bakugou#bnha x reader#fluff#katsuki bakugo mha#mha fluff#mha x reader#mha fanfiction#mha bakugou#mha#bnha fluff#bnha fanfiction#bakugou x you#katsuki bakugou#bakugou x y/n#katsuki fluff#katsuki x you#katsuki bakugo x reader#katsukibakugou#katsuki x y/n#trinkets
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Another aspect of how crappy this is, again, for people who may not be familiar with Infinity Nikki: it's a fashion game. A big part of the fun is collecting clothes from various quests or gacha "pulls" (you know those collectable toy vending machines where you get a little plastic capsule with the toy in it and it's a surprise which one you get? gacha games are based on those), styling ensembles with them, sharing pictures of your style, and for people who can afford it, acquiring the rarer "evolutions" of outfits with different colour schemes. You get the picture.
It's also an open world fantasy game in which players explore Wishfield, a beautiful, Arcadian land full of butterflies and flowers and sometimes chaos monsters. One location in Wishfield is Stoneville, a town whose staple industry is dyeing fabrics. The dye workshop is the biggest building in town. Almost every NPC works there in some capacity, or in a related trade like raising sheep for fibres. The main quest of the game takes you through Stoneville so you learn all about this.
Players also have a compendium which records every type of creature, plant, etc that they encounter around Wishfield. Each entry has a little description of the thing. Many descriptions mention that this plant or insect or whatever is used to make dyes.
Would it not be logical, then, to give Nikki an adventure in Stoneville where she learns all about making dyes and dyeing fabrics so she can begin customising her own clothes (and maybe saves the workshop from chaos monsters or industrial espionage)?
And would it not then be logical for players to make dyes by collecting the dye items mentioned in the compendium, e.g. collect 50 Hare Powder to dye any item pink?
Wouldn't that be satisfying and fun?
Absolutely none of that happens!
Instead the dyeing system is just presented to players as a new function, and you have to "unlock" different colours not by collecting dye items but by collecting a new kind of special crystals, which is free to do but takes a long time unless you buy a package of them (this is how gacha games get you). Also? You don't just unlock a colour and then you can apply it to anything in your wardrobe. You have to unlock colours per piece of clothing, so first you need to unlock red for this shirt (and this shirt only, none of your other shirts are included), then for these shorts, then... By this stage of the game I would bet most regular players' wardrobes have thousands of items. Moreover, you're limited to the colours in several themed palettes, and you don't get a free choice colour picker until you've unlocked everything or something exorbitant like that.
If it were just the crystals I think people would accept it as a grind, but the unlocking each colour per each item of clothing in your wardrobe feels so stingy and unnecessarily complicated (the UI for this is terrible, I can't tell how to unlock a new colour even if I have the crystals for it) that it's pissed them off tremendously.
This is a pretty good summary and explanation of what the hell has been going on in Infinity Nikki, if you have any interest but aren’t in the thick of it.
After a lot of discussion on the IN reddit, I think what happened at Nikki HQ was something like:
Devs: We have a really fun update in the works for 1.5, a new group of stonetree islands to explore with new Esselings to fight and a rich story quest all about the Pieceys. We know players are eager for more about them! Also we’re introducing dyeing and patterns for clothing, plus a special new evolution free to any fully glowed-up outfit!
Suit: What about the Steam launch? This isn’t cool enough for all the new players signing up. We want the wow factor. You know what the kids like? Multiplayer co-op. Doesn’t that Sea of Stars thing you’re working on have that?
Devs: Yes, but it’s not ready for launch yet, it’s still buggy and we haven’t created all the activities we want to offer. We would be really concerned about player experience. Trying to rush this out at the same time as Bubble Season would compromise them both. We’ve made a lot of promises about this patch and we -
Suit: Don’t worry! It’ll be fine! Think positive!
Devs: But Sea of Stars is linked to a major lore event that we’ve planned for the first anniversary and it would really confuse matters to introduce it now. There are events that need to happen in between to lead up to it and —
Suit: Trust me! You know what, just say the whole story up to now was a dream or something! It doesn’t matter! The new players will never know the difference! Everyone will love the new dresses! You do want to work on this game, right? How hard can it be?
Et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
I still want to play Infinity Nikki. Currently I’m in It Never Happened mode. Everything is normal. The version of events that I experienced is still true.
#infinity nikki#nikkiverse#'gacha' is japanese onomatopoeia for the clattering sound the capsule makes coming out of the machine#meanwhile there are of course far more important things in life than video games#expending a lot of anger and sorrow on this is wasted energy and a loss of perspective#I'm bearing that in mind don't you worry#long post
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𝐈’𝐃 𝐋𝐄𝐓 𝐈𝐓 𝐀𝐋𝐋 𝐁𝐔𝐑𝐍
𝐘𝐀𝐍𝐃𝐄𝐑𝐄! 𝐒𝐎𝐋𝐃𝐈𝐄𝐑 𝐗 𝐅! 𝐑𝐄𝐀𝐃𝐄𝐑 . MDNI . gore . blood brought up very often. sexual assault attempt towards reader (not by yandere) . wounds
જ⁀➴ Your legs burned, limbs clearly unprepared as you sprinted out into the field like a wild gazelle. You hadn’t even begun to work, all you could feel was the sting in your chest, your heart brimming with adrenaline.
Your heart thundered in your ears, you could feel the vibrations of the organ in the right of your chest. Sweat dribbled down your back, mixing with the rain sprinkling from above, bullets zipped past your form just narrowly missing you by a silk thread.
You didn’t know where you were running to, you just were. You were quick and lithe, not a single bullet or stray piece of debris grazed you.
You slid to a stop, the muddy ground underneath your combat boots squelching under your weight. A man, clearly a soldier, judging by his camo uniform and badge, clutched his side while crying out in pain, he kicked his feet on the ground in a way to try and release some of the pain.
He got mud and rainwater all over you but that wasn’t important, you had to help this man, somehow. You studied his wound with the focus of a scholar, features taut with anxiety and the slightest hint of foreboding.
This was the hardest part of your job. Not the blood and bodily fluids, not the close monitoring of wounds, not the procedure but this— Knowing that the decision of letting this man live was in your hands, that a single mistake could send this man to his early grave.
You applied pressure with a cloth you had in tucked in your cargo pockets, your palm firmly pressing against the gaping hole in his side.
You watched how the once white fabric turned a murky scarlet color, warmth seeped underneath your palm and soaked your hands.
“Don’t worry. You’re safe, you’re going to be okay.” You reassured the injured fellow, making sure to keep a calm, even tone of voice.
You seemed sure and collected on the outside, like you had everything coldly calculated, almost as if you had already saved this man.
But the truth was far from it. You were a nervous wreck inside, tears pricked your vision, your throat burned and closed in with the need to weep for this man. Your knees were shaking even though you weren’t the one in pain, you allowed him to softly place his hand on your forearm.
“Please stay awake, I need you to stay awake.” You implored, your mind working like a tiny machine, an encyclopedia of methods and practices you had done in the past opening inside your brain.
You carefully planned your next action, his hand tightened on your arm, his dirty nails digging into your skin as he gave a weak cry, you pinched your eyebrows together in deep confusion.
“Sir. Sir? What’s happening?” You asked frantically, finally, panic seeping into your tone. He mouthed something, his whole body shuddering as he tried to muster the last of his strength to point at something behind you.
You read his bloody lips.
‘BEHIND YOU.’
You didn’t even have time to blink, because as soon as you opened your mouth to speak to the soldier, he was already dead.
BANG!
A bullet was planted between his brows, from
how loud the gun sounded it was like someone had shot him almost face to face.
Warm blood sprayed across your face, someone was behind you. Someone was behind you. Someone was behind you.
You breathed in, but you couldn’t move. There was nowhere to go anymore. You were stuck between the sword and the wall. Cornered like a lamb at the mercy of a vicious wolf.
The tears you had been battling against drained out your eyes, and as soon as the first salty droplet could hit the ground a boisterous sound filled your ears.
Before you could formulate your last words pain ripped through you endlessly, with no warning or hesitation. It shot you in the side, you could feel the foreign capsule burying itself in your guts.
The metal felt hot, god. It felt so hot. It felt like you were forced to touch boiling iron, but you weren’t allowed to pull away. There was nowhere way to escape the scalding heat of the bullet because it was inside you.
You had never screamed so loudly in your life, you hit the ground with an ear splitting wail, you curled in on yourself next to the deceased soldier.
IthurtsIthurtsIthurtsIthurtsIthurtsIthurts IthurtsIthurtsIthurtsIthurtsIthurtsIthurts IthurtsIthurtsIthurtsIthurtsIthurtsIthurts IthurtsIthurtsIthurtsIthurtsIthurtsIthurts IthurtsIthurtsIthurtsIthurtsIthurtsIthurts
You let out a choked sob, something between a cry of pain and a scream.
A grand man chuckled at your pain, you could see the vague outline of his body out of the corner of your eye. He was large, built like a ravenous wolf, his teeth were bared, sharp and crooked like daggers as he bent down beside you.
His cold hands took a careless grip on your ankles, a new feeling arose, fear. Raw, primal fear.
His grip was so tight and hurtful that he might have shattered your bones without even noticing— But it wasn’t like he even cared.
What was he going to do to you? You screamed and kicked in desperation, his hands creeped higher up to your knees.
Were you going to die like this? Why? What did you do wrong? You did everything they told you to.
Why me? Why me? Why me? Why me?
Tears didn’t stop, the dam behind your eyes broke. The walls of the well had ruptured, it held years upon years of hate and suffering, and now that it had burst a tidal wave, one with the height of a tsunami had left nothing in its wake.
Your throat felt stuffed with rocks, your vocal cords strained inside you, clawing at the ground, soil settling underneath your nails.
You had tried to fight, you really did but blood was starting to settle in a pool underneath you. Your hair had chunks of dirt and blood, your skin had small cuts and was debauched by debris and flesh that wasn’t yours.
The clouds had parted, a single beam of light pushing through the skies and falling on the burly figure of a soldier with hair as golden as the sun.
Was that an angel? Was he here for you?
Peace at last, why did you feel peace? As soon as you caught a glimpse of those cold, steel blue eyes you felt.. free.
The fight inside had left you.
Like you could rest, maybe it was the blood loss getting to you. The ground underneath suddenly felt warm and comfortable, like the dreamiest of beds, the ones filled with swan feathers that only royals had the luxury of using.
Your eyes fluttered closed, a soft exhale leaving your lips. Blood and rainwater soaked your clothing, you lost consciousness with a small smile.
It was a blessing that you had closed your eyes, because at the least that had protected you from the carnage and absolute inhumane cruelty that would exhibited in front of your unconscious body.
The so called angel was no divine being, but the infamous lieutenant who had his sights set on you, perhaps too closely.
He didn’t hesitate to take the other man from his throat, his thick fingers wrapped around the rugged man’s neck, his nails dug into the thick muscles like the teeth of a bear trap.
The separation of meat from muscle was quick and brutal, Marcelle’s hand ripped the man’s throat out like tearing fat from a chicken leg. It was a disgusting show of force and power, and it was all done for some girl.
Marcelle’s chest heaved, pure rage ran through his veins like adrenaline, his nose was scrunched up like a rabid bear’s would. Someone had hurt you, the light to his darkness, the moon among so many stars.
They tried to tear you from his arms, tried to take advantage of your weak build and gentle heart.
Hate wasn’t an adequate word for what he really felt, it was an understatement of what was going through his twisted head.
The wolf-like man’s larynx dropped on the floor with a wet splat, blood rushed out of the exposed maw that once used to be his throat.
Marcelle was nowhere done with him though.
A tactical knife strapped on his thigh was dislodged, then driven into the wolf’s stomach, the blonde pressed the blade so tight against his flesh that the peritoneum had been torn apart like a bag of candy on the hallow’s eve.
Guts spilled everywhere, slimy sausage shaped innards were the first to go, unfurling from his stomach like climbing rope.
Everything dropped down at his feet, contaminated filth mixed with blood and mud. Marcelle scoffed at how easy it was to kill this one, it wasn’t a big show of strength to pull this guy apart like tender teriyaki.
The mangled one lost his balance, falling onto his knees while choking on carmine, it sprayed everywhere along with chunks of meat, or what was left of it.
The blonde bear grabbed the disfigured man by his hair, then pressed a dirty boot onto the small of his back. He yanked with vigor at the other’s scalp while maintaining hard pressure on his back.
Then a sick crack came from the crumpled’s spine, his eyes rolled to the back of his head, swollen with blood and severed capillaries.
His spine had been severed in two, cleanly snapped like a toothpick.
The man bent backwards in the fashion of an arc, the cadaver looked like it was doing gymnastics, but really his body was so greatly damaged that his spine couldn’t maintain his weight, he was bent at such an unnatural extent it hurt just by looking at him.
Marcelle kicked away the body and its innards, sending what was of a man into a puddle, leaving his organs and blood to mingle with the water.
He saw you, curled up like a kitten. But blood streamed out your side like a river, it wouldn’t stop, he panicked.
He dropped beside you, picking you up with the gentleness of what could only be compared to picking up an injured baby bird. He touched your face with the delicate touch of a feather, your face was dirty, streaked with dirt and crimson.
He pressed his ear against your chest, the soft thump of your heart whispering that you had limited time.
His breath caught in his throat.
He was taught to never cry. That a man should never cry in the presence of anyone, but in this moment, this miserable and unfortunate situation he could do no less than weep.
All he could see was the tiny smile on your lips, your precious visage ruined by destruction of war. You didn’t stop bleeding, you can’t stop. His eyes watered, for the first time in decades he allowed himself to shed a tear.
“No.. No— You can’t.. You won’t leave me!” He yelled to your unconscious form, his dirtied hand grasping your limp one. He squeezed tightly, hoping that if he gripped hard enough you would react, that those pretty (e/c) eyes would look up at him one last time.
His distress was heard, a group of young soldiers trotted over to him, finding their great lieutenant distraught over the soon to be corpse of a nurse.
He hugged the body close to his chest, trying to share warmth to the wounded girl, his chin rested over her head, his thick fingers smoothing over her filthy hair, they weren’t sure if he was trying to soothe the injured woman or himself.
They came up to him, touching his shoulder and trying to reach the nurse in his arms. He didn’t take well to that.
He snapped at them, snarling like a furious bear protecting his young. He clawed at them, finding a discarded gun somewhere, it shook in his hands as he aimed at them. His finger looped into the trigger, only to hear a click.
Blank.
Blank.
Blank.
The gun was empty of bullets, so he took the next alternative, the only thing he knew to do, fight with his fists.
There was no one that could go up against him, they knew that Marcelle could divorce their head from their shoulders clean.
“You are not going to take her.” He rasped, putting himself between you and the men. Now they all looked like enemies, like big red training targets with white swirls.
The cadets glanced at each other, just barely noticing the lifeless bodies surrounding the blonde and the wounded girl in his arms.
“Holy shit..” one of them murmured as he looked around, Marcelle had gone berserk, especially on this man at his feet, completely disemboweled— Where was his throat?
He stared at the human remains on the floor, feeling the urge to vomit his stomach out right here and there.
A new voice pushed through, the head nurse shouldered men away as she jogged towards the pair of bloodied lovers.
“Look. I don’t care who you are or what your rank is—“ she began, walking towards Marcelle with no fear whatsoever.
“But that girl is going to die if you keep hoarding her like an aggressive mutt!” She yelled, beads of sweat collecting on her brow, she plowed through the mud and dirt just to make it to you.
Marcelle stared at her with a vacant look in his eyes, he didn’t have it in him to touch a woman with intent of harm.
His grip tightened as she approached, water dripped now his face, sweat and rain soaked his uniform. He wasn’t about to let her tug you away, over his dead body.
She tried to pull you away, her hands gripping your forearms as hard as she could but Marcelle’s hold was unrelenting and soon she would have to call herself defeated in the strength game.
“Fine. You can carry her.” She said with an edge to her voice, she took the collar of her uniform in her hands and pulled him up how a dog would pick up a puppy by its scruff.
“But she is going to to live and you are going to take her back now.” She demanded it like his first drill sergeant, he listened to that one order, he slowly ascended from the ground and followed the nurse.
He stared at your face the whole way he walked, his finger curved gently, his pad brushing away your hair behind your ear.
You’re going to be okay, you’re going to live.
His jaw tensed as a new wave of emotions ran over him, he couldn’t break down, not yet. He had to be strong for you.
He gently pressed his forehead against yours, his palm gently residing over your chest, feeling the soft thump of your heart under his hand.
He didn’t remember clearly when but he got ushered out of a room, he woke up in a sterile area surrounded by other people in what seemed to be a waiting room.
He vaguely recalled that he had to be restrained by four men, he got stabbed with a tranquilizer and that’s when everything went dark.
Where were you? His heart picked up in his chest, what had happened? Were you alive?
With a sudden movement he got up from his seat, a clipboard fell from his lap onto the ground. It held only a blank paper, with a single room number in it written in blue ink.
Marcelle had never ran faster in his life, he didn’t know or care how many people he knocked down as he sprinted through the halls. Nurses and doctors turned their heads at breakneck speeds as he zipped past them like a wild animal.
He opened your room door with a bang, sweat gathered on his forehead and his body burned, there you rested.
You, covered in bandages, body clean of dirt and blood, your hair looking soft like nothing had ever touched it. Soft morning light entered through the window, you glowed under the sun like a white dove.
You were hooked up to a monitor, constant beeping telling him you were still alive, it seemed you were breathing on your own, judging by the way your chest slowly rose and fell.
He was filthy with grime and sweat, he could never touch you, afraid he would taint you he stood back. He wanted nothing more than to touch your face, to see your smile again.
It wasn’t long until he was unceremoniously kicked out your room by your main caregiver.
Marcelle came back the day after, and the day after and the days following that. He kneeled beside your bed like a puppy nudging his owner’s hand with its muzzle.
His hand gently held yours, he placed it over his head, on his cheek, just to feel your touch again. Just to feel the way your fingers would run through his hair again, to feel your fingers curing his wounds again.
He weeped more in that hospital than he had cried in his whole life. He was sure that he would drown in his own tears if he kept it up, he missed you so much, he wouldn’t leave your side for a moment.
There were times he would refuse to leave your room at all, security was forced to tranquilize him and at one point threatened to place a restraining order if he didn’t abide by their rules.
Then that day came, he sat by your bed, holding your hand to his heart, praying to whatever was up there to bring his baby back to him.
He had never been a faithful man, but if that’s what it took to make you wake up, he would pray all day, everyday no matter the hour or situation.
The slightest twitch from your fingers made him jump, a glimmer in his grey eyes showed that he had hope. He stared at your hand, waiting for that little movement to come back.
Your eyelids moved, your facial muscles twitched, Marcelle stood from his chair abruptly, the furniture scratching the floor and making an unpleasant screech.
You opened your eyes, your beautiful (e/c) hues flitted around the room with confusion, the grogginess of consciousness filling you again.
You looked through your blurry memories, it felt like looking through frosted glass but you remembered a few things, the one that stood out to you most was the blonde angel.
There he was again.
Why was he crying? You wondered, trying to sit up only to give up when the pain was too unbearable, the man pushed you back down, scolding you and forcing you back into the bed.
You recognized him, your first patient ever. Marcelle.
Just when you were about to speak he basically pounced, he hugged you like you would disappear in that moment. He felt warm and comfortable, you could barely bring your hands to wrap around him.
His shoulders shook with silent sobs, he couldn’t stop crying again, but this time it wasn’t out of sorrow but happiness.
You were back. You were alive and in his arms.
He pulled away, looking you in the face as if this was all a dream, he touched your every feature, trying to re assure himself that this was no fantasy.
“I love you.” Were the first words he said when you woke up, that might have sent you to another coma in that moment.
The blood from your wound had rushed up to your cheeks, you searched his face for any trace of a joke but then remembered.
Marcelle doesn’t do jokes.
He kissed your hand softly, tears still streaming down his cheeks. He couldn’t kiss you yet, you were healing and could catch sicknesses especially quickly.
So he would wait, wait until you were ready.
“I think.. I love you too.” You shyly smiled, fingers trembling with embarrassment.
To Marcelle, waiting would prove to be more difficult than he thought.
#Marcelleposting#yandere obsession#smilesyanderes#yandere x reader#yandere#male yandere#smilesanswers#male yandere x reader#fem reader#yandere male#yandere tendencies#yandere oc x reader#yandere oc#yandere x you#yandere drabble#yandere x darling#yandere imagines#yanderecore
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imactually writing a fic for reals and i have to admit its been so long that i forgot how messed up my laptops space baris. those typosare not from me. i am pressing the stupidass space bar normally.
anyway y'all i am ill over yuuta okkotsu again im gonna run him through the wringer <3
#i looove his mix of low selfesteem and self assurance#hisconfidence in his skills mixed with his absolute terror of human interaction and fear of causing someone harm unwillingly is like#ough boy i am going to give you an opportunity and you are going to do your best to refuse but you need it#also im going to get you covered in blood one way or another. as a treat.#his big sad eyes and bigger sadder eyebags have entranced me i need to annihilate him and then make him a sandwich#yknow those fuckin#capsule vending machines with like elementary kids sized rings and shit? likelittle pink plastic heart shaped rings?#well. lets just say its an important part of the fic#also ithink reader wears it on a necklace and seeing it drives yuuta insane <3
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So y’all know how that scary Batgirl who can kick bad guys asses in 5 seconds? Yeah she’s definitely terrifying but she just walked into my job and we have those old capsule toy machines with spin dial thing and she just?? Pulls out quarters from her utility belt?? And buys the toy capsules and opens them on the floor until she gets the one she wanted? (It’s was a bat keychain btw) And then freaking BATMAN comes in and tells her that they have to go home now??? And she’s like ‘no’ and comes up to me and orders a number 5 in sign language, which I took in high school, and then Batman sighs and orders himself a burger and fries and I just stare at the striking resemblance between Batman and Batgirl, like I know people called Batman mother but this is crazy, and just mumble a ‘that’ll be $10.52, would you like to round up for the Thomas and Martha Wayne foundation?’ And Batman pulls out a HUNDRED dollars and says ‘keep the change’ so I’m like, ok??? And since I’m the only one working at butt fuck 4 in the morning I make their food myself and then hand Batman the tray and then Batgirl takes his hand and drags them over to a table and they eat together? Like a really cute father daughter date thing?? And they talk in sign, which most of which I can’t read one because I don’t wanna eavesdrop on this father daughter bonding time and two I’m not fluent in sign, anyway they leave and I swear Batgirl smiled at me through her stitched mouth covering so now I can say I served Batman and Batgirl? Also that Batgirl might be my favorite vigilante now
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falling | joel miller x fem!oc (part ix)
STITCH THEORY—Connection returns, not as it was, but stronger.
summary: Winter rolls into Jackson once more, but things are heating up in the big, white house across the street.
a/n: 18+ MDNI smut, but are you ready for the most wholesome smut you've ever read in your life? also update -> so, heh, I'm not really great at smut per se, this one, I've really tried to capture the luuurv, the physicality of it, and I really hope I've done it justice. also, happy earth day people!
There came a time in Joel’s life when he grew so used to boring bullshit that he actually preferred it. He didn’t know if that was old age creeping up on him, dragging him toward the inevitability of doing absolutely nothing, or if he was just plain tired of a life spent running from one disaster to the next. Either way, he found himself appreciating the small mercies. His own simple pleasures.
Going to bed without whiskey clawing its way down his throat. Waking up without his head feeling like a busted canteen. Fresh, warm socks straight from the laundry. Knuckling down and figuring out how to cook something that wasn’t just oatmeal or meat cooked to leather, not because he had to, but because he wanted to get it right.
At some point, he realized he didn’t care much to keep busy anymore—except for when it came to Leela and Maya. But it was strange how a simple life could still surprise him, could still land a punch straight to the ribs with five little words:
“Why don’t you stay here?”
It had caught him mid-sip, a few days after Leela’s little weed trip, while they were eating dinner. He’d had to set his cup down and stare at her. Make sense of it for three seconds. Even though the answer had already been waiting in his gut, inevitable as sunrise, he had smiled:
“Why not, darlin’?”
And yeah, he loved the big, white house. It was Jackson's history, with old black-and-white pictures lining the walls—Leela’s parents, grandparents, ghosts of people who had walked these halls before him. And maybe, in some small way, he was stitching himself into its bones with his work, care, and name. All the little fond memories in every nook of the home. His hands had worn themselves raw winterizing the garden, keeping the fences up, and scraping, painting, hammering, and patching up Maya’s nursery when she got naughty enough to climb right out of the crib. Light fixtures, floorboards, leaky pipes—he’d wrenched his calf muscle twice trying to fix that goddamn water heater.
Now, as Joel sat at Tommy’s dining table, peeling peas like a goddamn housewife, shoulders hunched, fingers working on autopilot, he continued sneaking glances at them—stuck on them. On all the ways it wasn’t working—on all the ways it was. Why not him?
Maya was perched on Tommy’s arm, fiddling with the salt shaker like it was some great mystery waiting to be solved. Tommy, for all his grumbling about how much of a menace she was, held her tight. That kid had him wrapped around her tiny little finger, and everyone knew it. He’d drive her nuts—hide her favourite toy just to get a rise out of her, tease her until she was practically throwing hands at him—but she’d always come racing back, tossing her arms around his neck, giggling as he swung her up high.
Joel’s hands stilled into peeling the peapod.
It was impossible not to notice how Maria and Tommy moved like two parts of a well-oiled machine. He watched them in the kitchen, just weaving in and out of each other’s space without thinking. Like those buzz magnets Sarah used to stick on the fridge from the capsule toys, repelling, colliding, but always snapping back into place. A hand passed a spoon without looking, a playful bump of the hip, a shared smile that needed no words. Tommy smoothed a hand over Maria’s forehead as she ducked too close to a sharp corner, and she didn’t flinch—just trusted.
Maria smirked at him. “Baby, you hover worse than Joel.”
“Please,” Tommy scoffed, stroking up her back. “Joel’s got me beat by a mile. He’s like a damn watchdog with our kid.” He bounced Maya on his arm, glancing at Joel. “Ain’t that right, big brother?”
Joel rolled his eyes, focusing back on the peas. “She’s one. Anybody with a brain watches a toddler.”
Tommy tsked. “You hear that, Maya? Your mean ol' daddy just called me stupid.”
“I mean, if the shoe fits,” Maria teased, setting a pot on the stove.
Maya giggled, still turning the salt shaker in her hands, getting salt everywhere. “Stew-pid.”
Tommy let out a dramatic gasp, clutching his chest like he’d been wounded. “Et tu, Brute?” He kissed her cheek anyway, undeterred.
Joel shook his head, hiding a smirk. He didn’t say it, but Tommy wasn’t wrong. He was like a watchdog when it came to Maya. Couldn’t help it. That little girl had carved out a place in him that he didn’t even know was still open. His little girl. Maybe not by blood. Maybe not by title. But she was his. Just like Sarah had been. Just like Ellie was.
But maybe that’s why watching Tommy and Maria hurt in a way he wasn’t ready to admit. Because what they had—this effortless, built-in kind of love—wasn’t something he’d dreamt of. Now he wanted it.
It wasn’t even physical, not really. It was just… love. Uncomplicated. Reciprocated. A year ago, he would’ve grunted something about getting a room. Tommy would’ve shot back about owning the whole damn house. But now—
He swallowed, shifting in his chair, wondering. Did he and Leela look like that in their home?
No, hell no. No, he wasn’t the type to put effort into how they were perceived. He barely liked acknowledging it himself, how he softened around her, how he let himself be someone else—someone better—when she was near. But it happened anyway, didn’t it? Without him meaning to. Made him want things.
And ever since he wholly made his home at their big, white house, he was sinking into it.
His love for her wasn’t flashy. He didn’t know how far to go beyond small things. He wasn’t the romantic kind of man, the kind to pick flowers or whisper pretty words. He wasn’t great at it, and wasn’t sure how far to go beyond having her coffee ready by her bedside in the morning. Beyond making sure that when he washed the dishes, hers were the first ones he cleaned, every time. Beyond leaving all the hot water for her and Maya, even if it meant stepping into a freezing shower himself when the temperatures were dropping fast.
She never noticed.
Or maybe she did. Because she had her own ways.
He wasn’t proud of how stupidly fond he got over the little things. The times he’d find his old boots, the ones he refused to part with, sitting by his bed freshly polished, patched up with rubber cement like new. Or how the busted projector in the dusty TV room—the one he’d given up on fixing—suddenly worked one night, humming quietly, waiting for him to indulge in some shitty action flick. She never made a big deal out of it and never expected anything in return. She just did things, because that’s how she loved.
God, the damn dopey grin he let out every time he caught on.
But they didn’t move in sync the way Tommy and Maria did around their home. here were rituals and rhythms, but they were dominoes—Joel would pick up where she left off.
Hell, they didn’t even sleep in the same bed. There was always a line. Physical. Emotional. Always a line, a place where he had to stop, where he had to get off.
He hated that fucking line.
He thought they’d been getting somewhere. That all the careful comforts, the small reassurances, the time—that it had chipped away at whatever was keeping her so guarded. Then there was that night.
That late night played back in his mind like a bad dream.
Leela, pacing back and forth, frustrated noises slipping past her throat, her blackboards covered in endless scribbles, eyes darting too fast, too desperate. Her hands shook as she wrote, erased, and rewrote. Then, suddenly, she just… crumpled. Joel found her there like that at two in the morning. Collapsed to her knees. Silent sobs racked her whole body, hands gripping at her hair, shoulders curling inward like she was trying to disappear into herself. The kind of cry that tore her apart, that was meant to be hidden.
It was like a jagged blade to the ribs, seeing her that way, and trying to ignore it. His Leela. His tireless, self-sufficient, do-everything-alone Leela, folded in on herself like a wounded animal.
He’d been on his knees before he even thought about it, hands reaching for hers.
“Hey, baby—” He cupped her palms, kissed them, trying to soothe her out. “It’s okay, darlin’. It’ll come to you.”
And then—she shoved him away. Like he burned her. Like she couldn’t stand him being there. “You don't know anything.”
“No,” he murmured, setting his palms on his knees, “but, talk me through it. I'm right here.”
And he tried to stroke the back of her head now, just to ground her to him, but before he could touch her, she'd jostled his hand off her.
“Please just leave me alone, please,” she’d choked out, voice small, broken. Final.
She might as well have reached into his chest and crushed his heart with her bare hands. He swallowed everything he wanted to say, everything he wanted to do, and stood up, silent. Left her there like he was the one who had misstepped.
And ever since that fucking breakthrough—the discovery she had been chasing for years on end—it had been like this. Slipping. Slipping deeper into whatever obsession had taken hold of her, staring past her own life's work like there was another world hidden behind it. Like she’d solved the last goddamn piece of the puzzle but couldn’t stop staring past it, searching for something else. A prisoner to her mind, a slave to her intellect—and he had no clue how to save her from herself.
He thought a discovery meant solace. That she’d finally rest. Kick back and focus on raising her perfect kid. Instead, she was spiralling. Faster. Harder. And he was left standing there, watching her slip through his fingers.
And maybe he should just let it happen. Let her go. Let her chase whatever was in her head, let it take her, let it swallow her whole. Ignore it, let it blow up in his face, pick up the pieces, and move on. It seemed like the easier option.
Because he sure as hell wasn’t dragging her on some death trip to L.A. to get a bunch of scholars’ rubber stamp of approval. And for what? To hear a bunch of stuck-up assholes tell her what she already knew? To chase after something that might not even be there anymore, past the patrol trails that promised nothing but death?
It wasn’t happening. Not on his watch.
“Joel, can you take this out to the kids, please?” Maria’s voice cut clean through his thoughts. He blinked, glancing up just as she pushed a bowl of garlic knots toward him. “Don’t want them starving before dinner’s done.”
Kids. How the hell Leela had ended up in that category was beyond him. But she’d started hanging around Ellie and her friends more, all of them messing around with her, out of good heart or the fuck of it, he did not know. They’d even managed to rope her into their little hijinks late into the night, like right now.
He’d seen Ellie dragging her outside earlier, that same oversized stack of star charts that Leela had gifted her tucked under her arm, Dina and Jesse trailing right after her with waves, and practically buzzing with excitement. He’d heard snippets of the invitation—something about mapping the constellations, something about seeing the stars “like they used to be.” And, to his surprise, Leela had actually gone along with them.
From inside, he’d catch the sound of laughter floating through the backyard. It wasn’t much, but hell, it was a little relief, knowing she was out there, around some good spirits, instead of pacing around those goddamn blackboards like she was trying to solve the meaning of life.
He stood to take the bowl out, but before he could even make it past the table—
“Da-da.”
Joel stopped in his tracks. Maya had her hands stretched toward him, little fingers grabbing at the air, grinning mouth already open in expectation.
“Pease gimme,” she demanded.
He snorted, reaching over to pop his finger between her lips instead. “Nice try, baby girl. Dinner first.”
“Pease, pease! Aw, da-da!” she whined, brown eyes big and pleading, nearly changing his heart, wriggling against Tommy’s chest in an attempt to get to him.
He just shook his head, slipping away toward the hallway. “Gotta do better than that.”
Tommy was already distracting her with a spoonful of tomato soup that was bubbling away by the time he stepped out the back door.
Outside, the kids were alright. Dina and Jesse were off to one side by the fences, heads bent together in their own little world. Joel should’ve broken them up, should’ve told them to leave some damn space between them, but—
His eyes flicked to Ellie instead.
She was standing a few feet away, arms crossed, staring at the happy couple long and hard. And the second she felt Joel watching her, she snapped her gaze away, clearing her throat and focusing on Leela instead. He tried not to dwell on it, though his brows shot right up in question.
Leela, on the other hand—she wasn’t paying attention to any of it.
She had her head tilted up, her gaze tracking the sky, that damn star map spread open in her hands. She was muttering under her breath, tracing something invisible in the air, her brows drawn together in deep concentration. That look she got—the one where her whole world shrank down to whatever puzzle was in front of her—alive, glowing.
It was the same look she had when she worked through some problem scrawled across her blackboards. The same look she had when she was fixing something—quiet, focused, all sharp edges and restless movement, pulling things apart just to put them back together again. It was amazing how much Maya looked like her mama, she had that exact same look when she tried to decipher the chords as he played guitar.
And god help him, he loved Leela like this. Loved the way she got lost in things, the way her mind worked like a racecar engine. Loved the way she’d get so caught up in the details that she’d forget the rest of the world existed, forget to eat, forget to sleep—loved it, even when it pissed him off.
Loved her. Jesus, it was amazing how his old ass could still get hooked on a girl like this.
Ellie barely had a second to react before he shoved the bowl into her chest. “Haven’t missed the boat just yet, kiddo,” he teased.
Ellie shot him a glare. “Oh, fuck you, Joel.” She shoved a garlic knot into her mouth. “I know Leela’s only tolerating your ass.”
Joel chuckled, stepping forward.
Leela was still lost in the map, tapping a finger against her temple, muttering under her breath as her eyes darted between the lines and symbols. Joel quietly came up behind her, lowering just enough to brush his lips against her ear.
“Lookin' up at your own kind?” he murmured.
Ellie, mid-chew, made an exaggerated gagging noise.
Joel, grumbling, kicked a lazy leg in her direction. “Get outta here. Go on, git.”
Ellie rolled her eyes, snatching another garlic knot from the bowl before slinking off into the house.
Joel, though—he stayed.
Leela finally glanced up from her map, blinking at him like she’d just realized he was there. The slight furrow of her brow softened, the haze of focus giving way to a quiet, warm smile. “Hi, Joel.”
That smile. His name shaped like a hymn on her lips. Subtle. A thing most people wouldn’t catch if they weren’t looking for it. But Joel was always looking, listening. And God, he loved catching her like this. Unaware, until she wasn’t.
He smiled back, slow and knowing, waiting for her to say something else, maybe acknowledge the way he’d lowered his voice just for her, the way he’d leaned in close enough for his breath to stir a few strands of her hair—
But she didn’t. She just turned back to her damn star chart, completely disregarded his sorry attempt at flirting, as if he was nothing more than a passing shadow.
Joel exhaled sharply through his nose, shaking his head. The only thing worse than flirting with Leela was getting ignored by her.
The air had shifted before he had even noticed. Not by much—just enough that he could feel it. The barely-there stiffness in her shoulders, all the implicit everything sinking in the inches between them.
Because this was the first time he’d properly approached her in two days. He hadn't crossed past the courtesies or bare necessities, this time, he felt like it had soothed over.
The last time being her breakdown. And she was here now—outside, breathing, looking up at the sky like she hadn’t spent days holed up in that house, tangled in her own mind. Like she was okay.
But Joel knew better.
Leela clucked her tongue, rolling up the chart in frustration. “It’s like I’m wasting my potential.” A sigh, thin and frayed at the edges. “I can’t think straight. I can’t find the stupid… star. Something’s wrong with me.”
Joel nudged his shoulder into hers, trying to shake something loose. “There ain't nothin’ wrong with you. You just need to get out of the house a little more.”
She shook her head, already brushing him off. “I’m not teaching at the school, Joel. I told you, it's not for me.”
There was something automatic about the way she said it—premeditated. A flicker of irritation behind her eyes, like she’d already decided where this conversation was going before he even had the chance to take it there.
Joel just lifted a brow. “Not askin' you to.”
Leela blinked, lips parting slightly. Like maybe she’d expected an argument. But he wasn’t Tommy or Maria. He wasn’t anyone else. He wasn’t trying to fix her.
Leela ran a hand down her face, rubbing at her eyes. “I just… it’s so incomplete.” Her voice wavered slightly, barely above a whisper. “I know I’m done, I ran the numbers a hundred times, but I—” She bit her lip, frustration flickering across her face. "I can’t stand the fact that I don’t have anything else to work toward.”
Joel studied her for a long moment.
This wasn’t just about the damn star chart. She needed something. A goal, a project—something to occupy her hands, her mind, something to pour herself into. Because without it, she was stuck in her own head. Stuck waiting.
He reached out, sliding a hand to the back of her head. His fingers traced slow, absentminded strokes before his arm draped heavy around her shoulders, pulling her into his side.
“You need a break, darlin’.”
Leela let herself sink against him, nestling her nose against the worn fabric of his shirt. Her hands slipped against his sides, resting at his ribs, tentative, like she hadn’t touched him in a while and wasn’t sure if she still could.
“And do what?”
“Help me fix up that swing for Maya’s birthday.”
Joel felt the small hitch in her breath before she even lifted her head.
“Maya’s—” She gasped, cupping a hand over her mouth. “Oh my God, her birthday. I completely—” Her voice broke slightly. “How did you know?”
Joel shrugged. “Did some mental math. She was barely a month old when we first met. Figure it’s comin’ up soon.”
Leela closed her eyes. “Yes. Christmas.”
“Holly jolly Christmas baby,” he said, snickering. He didn’t know if it was hard-luck or fortuitous that their baby girl’s birthday overlapped with a holiday.
Leela groaned softly, pressing the heels of her palms against her eyes. “I’m a terrible mother.”
Joel made a derisive noise, picking her hands off her eyes before cupping her cold cheek. “Nah, just a scatterbrained one.”
And when she finally laughed—light, breathy, warm—it was as if he’d struck gold.
He let himself look at her then. Her long hair was a mess, spilling around her face from the loose braid, wild and tangled from where she’d been tugging at it in frustration. The stars flecked in her big, dark eyes, dim and soft, like the whole night sky had been stitched there just for him.
Christ, he loved her. It hit him in strange moments like this. Not in the middle of some grand declaration, not when they were on the brink of tragedy. Just here. Just in the way she folded against him, breathing slow, in the way she trusted him enough to let her guard down.
Joel brushed his thumb against her temple. “You’re alright, you know that?”
Leela blinked. “What?”
“You,” he murmured. “You’re doin' okay. I've got you now.”
A breath. Then she smiled—small, almost imperceptible, but there. And Joel, stupid, old fool that he was—he fucking melted.
Because he’d said nothing special. Just a handful of words, low and gruff and barely above a whisper. And yet—there was something in her eyes now, reassurance, like she needed to hear it, and she hadn’t let herself believe it until now. Until he said it. Until it came from him.
She tiptoed, her forehead leaning into his, her fingers curling lightly into his shirt. He could feel the warmth of her breath, feel the way she hesitated for just a second, like maybe she was unsure—
But then she kissed him.
Slow, soft, uncertain, and God help him, but he could’ve crushed her right into his bones. “Right now?”
“Just a little one,” she whispered against his lips.
“Killin' me.”
Because it had been too fucking long since he had her like this—since she let him have her like this. And for weeks now, ever since that weed trip of hers, he’d been holding himself back, watching her from a distance, all while within their house, twenty-four by seven, just waiting for the right moment.
His large hand found the curve of her throat, his thumb pressing gently beneath her jaw as he tilted her into his smiling lips, deepening the kiss. She tasted of him, of her, a blend of them both, and Joel wanted to drown in it.
She made a soft noise against his lips, barely there, but felt, and he was already stretching for her ass, already—
“Mama!”
Joel flinched, eyes still half-lidded, mind heady with her, with them, but—Leela broke away immediately, her head snapping toward the deck.
And there stood Maya. The little menace herself, gripping the railing for balance, two entire garlic knots stuffed in her tiny fist.
Joel sighed sharply, tilting his head back toward the sky. Just on time, the peanut-butt cockblocker.
Maya’s attention wasn’t on them, though. No, she was too focused on her real struggle—getting herself down the stairs while holding onto both knots, because apparently, letting go was out of the question.
Joel huffed, already moving. “Hey-ey—now, who the heck gave you those?”
Because Maya didn’t just find food. No, that kid knew exactly who to ask and how to ask. A little manipulator before she even hit two years old.
Maya just grinned at him, all teeth and mischief, one cheek puffed out with the stolen bread, and Joel didn’t even have to guess which poor soul had caved under that wide-eyed, baby-faced con job.
He reached for Maya's hand. “Gimme that. Didn’t I tell you no snacks before dinner?”
And because she was, without a doubt, his worst nightmare—she twisted away from him with a high-pitched squeal, shoving another bite into her mouth as she waddled to the other side of the deck.
Joel sighed. “Goddamn it, trouble.”
Behind him, Leela laughed with her daughter, already climbing up onto the deck. “Alright. C’mere, baby.”
Maya didn’t fight her. Just beamed up at her mama, eyes bright and full of adoration. Leela crouched before her, brushing at the curls on her forehead.
“Can you feed Mama one?”
And just like that—without hesitation—Maya held one out. Anything her mother said, she followed. Anything at all. It was Joel she was coming to rebel against with her little cheekiness. And Joel being completely susceptible to her charms, fell for it constantly.
Leela leaned in, mouth open, and Maya giggled before pushing the knot between her lips.
Joel shook his head, arms crossed over his chest, watching them. Leela, the master Maya manipulator, struck once more.
She hummed in approval, chewing theatrically. “Mmm, so good. One more, please?”
And Maya, delighted, shoved the other half-eaten, slobbery garlic knot into her mother’s mouth.
Joel made a noise. “Jesus.”
Leela, struggling through a laugh, wiped her mouth, grinning. “Thank you, baby.”
Maya clapped her hands together, voice piping up—“No-mo.”
Leela licked some garlic butter from her thumb, grunting as lifted Maya onto her hip. “Let’s get something real to eat before your poor dad pops a vein on his head.”
Joel scoffed, following them up the stairs, feeling every damn step in his knees. “Pop a vein—psh, yeah, you wish.”
Dinner with the Millers' was always a big thing nowadays. Joel, finally, had found himself growing used to the way the table felt a little more complete now, moored closer to one of his own.
Back in the old days—hell, even when it was just him and Tess in Boston—meals were quiet, nothing but the clink of cutlery, the scrape of bowls, the occasional grunt of acknowledgement if someone asked for the last bite. Food had been something to get through, not something to enjoy.
But here? This? It was a whole damn production.
It seemed like Leela, Maria, and Tommy were trying to outdo each other on every dinner occasion. Joel never saw them outright say it, but the evidence was all right here—plates filled to the brim with roasted vegetables and some sort of braised meat that smelled damn near decadent. There was even fresh bread, sliced and golden, butter melting into the soft notches. Warmth, everywhere—lamplight spilling golden across the table, the faint crackle of the fireplace, boots nudging against each other under the table.
And noise. So much noise.
Jesse had ducked out early, leaving Dina to make herself at home beside Ellie, and it didn’t take long for them to get into it.
“Okay, but that is not how you use a fuckin' knife,” Ellie was saying, waving her fork in Dina’s face.
Maria sighed. “There's a talking toddler at the table.”
As if on cue, Maya smacked her little hand onto the table. Ellie showed her teeth at her, sheepish. “My bad.”
Dina rolled her eyes, all dramatic. “Well, excuse me for not being a serial killer, Miss ‘Lemme Show You The Proper Stabbing Technique.’”
Joel smirked at that one, chewing on a piece of trout.
It was a different kind of comfort. Something he still wasn’t used to—this abundance after a long time.
And then there was Leela, stealing his heart, piece by piece. The way she’d always scooted her chair a little closer to his. The way her knee brushed his under the table. The way she let him rest a hand over her thigh, stroke it when he was tense like it was all his. The way she’d laugh when someone cracked a joke at his expense—which was often—squeezing his shoulder like he was some goddamn kicked puppy before turning back to her plate.
Didn’t even take long for that to happen. Joel knew Tommy had that look in his eye—that look, the one that meant he was about to open his dumbass mouth. And sure enough...
“So,” Tommy started, all innocent-like. “How's shackin’ up in the big house treatin’ ya, Mensch Miller?”
Joel wanted to put his fork through his brother’s skull. Right between the eyes. So, he barely spared him a glance. “Go to hell.”
Tommy snorted. “C’mon now, ain't no shame in it. We're all real proud of you for finally gettin’ over your fear of commitment. Folks?”
A round of agreements circled the table—Maria, Dina, even Ellie with a smirk and a nod, like they’d all been waiting for this exact moment. Joel sighed through his nose, already regretting every life choice that led him to this.
Dina leaned in, grinning. “Oh my God. Joel, did you finally put a ring on it?”
Ellie snorted. “Yeah, ‘cause there’s so many jewellery stores open these days.”
Joel shot her a flat look. “Could always carve one outta bone.”
Dina sighed with literal heart eyes. “Aww. So metal.”
Ellie recoiled instead. "Dude—what the actual fuck?"
Tommy wheezed at that one. But Leela didn’t react much at all. Just blinked at them, her expression blank, like she had no idea why the hell they were making such a big deal out of it. Then, casually, like it was the most obvious thing in the world—
“We’re partners,” she said simply, reaching up to his jaw, nails scraping at his scruff. “Right, Joel?”
Joel damn near choked on his own tongue.
Because—what the hell? She wasn’t one for casual touches, wasn’t one for public anything, really. Wasn't some joke, not a passing comment—she just said it, plain as anything. Like it was a truth she’d already made peace with.
Partners. Not a maybe. Not a half-measure. A fact. Halves. Two mates. And it knocked the wind right out of him.
Because Joel had spent so damn long waiting—waiting for her to say something, to define this thing between them, to give him even the smallest indication that she saw him as more than just a man passing through her life.
And here she was, not making a big deal out of it. Not afraid of it, simply stating the obvious. Because fuck, she was right. They were partners now. He had a partner now.
A slow sip of his drink was the only thing that kept him from making an absolute fool of himself.
Dina cackled, slapping the table. “Look at his face. I frickin' love you, Leela.”
Ellie groaned, shoving a bite of food into her mouth. “Jesus, you two deserve each other.”
Maria smirked. “So when’s the big day?”
Dina hummed. “Mm-mm, she'll have to wait, Joel promised to make the ring out of bone.”
Ellie gagged. “Oh my God, Dina—could you please stop with the bone talk?”
Tommy snickered, elbowing him. “Never thought I’d see the day. Big brother all wrangled up.”
Joel sighed, pinching the bridge of his nose. “You know I got a gun, right?”
Tommy waved a hand, still grinning. “Yeah, yeah. But you ain't shootin’ me ‘cause our baby girl would be real mad at you.”
And then, of course, there was his baby girl in the midst of all this. It had become second nature by now—the back-and-forth of it all, alternating between holding Maya, fending off his teasing family, and feeding her.
Not that it was much of a competition with her. Most of the time, she quietly ended up in his lap, legs dangling over his thigh, picking curiously at the old scar on his forearm as he spooned food into her mouth.
Leela swore she’d grow out of that habit, but Joel wasn’t so sure. He’d seen that girl study the mark like it held the secrets of the universe since she was a few months old. Tiny fingers tracing the jagged edges, soft and intent, like she was mapping him.
Didn’t matter what he put in front of her—if he ate it, she ate it.
Thank God she wasn’t a picky eater like her mama. He still remembered the first few months of trying to get Leela to eat like a normal person—always picking at her food, losing her appetite, always eating just enough and nothing more.
But Maya? Shit. She was his. His perfect little girl—but nothing like him. Loud, expressive, always moving, always talking. She loved to babble, loved to laugh, loved to feed him right from his own damn plate.
“Da-da, aah.”
He moved his head away. “Nuh-uh. Sit your little butt down.”
“Dinna, da-da.”
“I can eat my own dinner, thanks.”
When her adamant whine pierced through the noise on the table, he gave up. Joel barely glanced at her, already sighing as he opened his mouth.
Sure enough, Maya balanced her pudgy feet on his lap and shoved a forkful of fish into his mouth, giggling like she’d just accomplished something huge.
Joel chewed slowly, unimpressed. “Real nice.”
And then—just to add insult to injury—she reached up and patted his forehead, all delicate and reassuring, just like her mama did to her whenever she did something right.
Ellie snorted. “She's just teaching you manners, old man.”
Dina smirked. “Yeah, ever heard of ‘em?”
He shot them both a look but swallowed the bite anyway. Maya squealed like she knew she was being funny, then reached out for his plate again.
Joel sighed, nudging her grabby fingers away. “Alright, move it, baby girl. Ain’t no way you’re finishing my plate before I do.”
The conversation rolled on around him, blending into laughter and stories. Joel drifted in and out of it, shifting his focus between indulging Maya’s antics and half-listening to Tommy and Maria trade jabs about whose turn it was to cook next.
At some point, the conversation took a turn.
“So,” Tommy started, leaning back in his chair. “What’s next, Lee? The last big thing was that lightning harvester. Then you set up the new water filtration thing.” He gestured vaguely as if the list of things she’d accomplished was casual, nothing major. “You always got somethin’ cookin’. What’s next for Jackson?”
The table quieted just a fraction, all eyes shifting toward Leela with a familiar kind of expectation.
Joel felt her stiffen beside him. She didn’t answer right away, just glanced around at them—Dina, Ellie, Maria, Tommy—all waiting for some brilliant, world-changing answer.
But only Joel knew the sleepless nights, he’d seen her try to redo the math, rework the impossible, just to feel like she had something left to solve. So all he’d been able to do was let her at it, leave her to her circles and theories, and go back to bed, waiting for her to wear herself out. He knew that math of hers had wrecked her—driven her to the edge of exhaustion, of obsession.
And now, sitting here, she looked like she wanted to vanish.
So before the silence could stretch too long before they could push her for something she wasn’t ready to say—Joel spoke for her.
“She actually solved the Riemann hypothesis,” he said, casual as anything, like he was commenting on the weather. A little smug, too.
A beat.
Dina blinked. “The—what?”
Ellie narrowed her eyes. “You just made that up.”
Joel sighed, rubbing a hand over his beard. “Nah. It’s a real thing.” He reached for his water and took a slow sip. “Some math theory. Big deal, apparently. Heck if I knew.”
Tommy, to his credit, pretended like he was just hearing about it for the first time, looking between Joel and Leela with exaggerated surprise.
Dina scoffed. “You don’t know?”
Joel gave her a look. “Do I look like someone who spends his time thinkin’ about math?”
Ellie snorted. “Okay, but you can’t just say it’s a big deal and not even try to explain it.”
Joel sighed again, this time more dramatically, because this truly was exhausting him. “Alright. Uh… somethin’ ‘bout numbers. Division. Shit, I don’t fuckin’ know.” He absently stroked Maya's curls. “S’got a lotta squiggles and letters. But little miss genius figured it out.”
Ellie’s face twisted to a shit-eating grin. “Squiggles?”
Joel turned to Leela, mortified at himself, seeking some reprieve. “Tell ‘em.”
Leela, looking a little like she wanted to shrink into the floor, tucked her hair behind her ear and gave a small nod. “I um, did prove the theory. Took my family a really long time to complete.”
“Wait, actually. I've read about Riemann,” Dina went on, straightening in her seat. “That’s the whole—prime numbers thing—no one’s been able to solve that, right? And if you did, you get like a million dollars or something?”
Leela barely glanced up. “Yes, actually. Millenium Prize problem.”
Joel, watching her carefully, felt the way her fingers curled into the fabric of her pants under the table.
Ellie leaned in. “Okay, but like—now what? You can’t just—sit on that, right? Don’t you have to tell someone?”
Leela exhaled, slowly. “It’s… complicated. Our world isn't the way it was.”
Joel saw it—the way her shoulders went tight, the way her face shut down.
Dina wasn’t getting it. “How? This is, like, huge. You should—”
Maria, sensing the tension, jumped in smoothly. “What about you, honey? You got any idea on this?”
Tommy, still side-eyeing Joel, shrugged. “Nah. Not a clue.” He sipped his drink. “I was more into the rabble-rousin’ with the Fireflies. And these FEDRA shits wouldn't care about all that.”
Joel let out a tense breath.
Dina groaned dramatically, throwing herself back in her chair. “Man. Would’ve been so cool to have your name in a book. Or somewhere. Professor of Mathematics, Leela.”
Leela managed a small smile, but her gaze had gone distant.
And Joel hated it. Hated that look. That quiet, almost-accepting disappointment.
He hated that she knew this world didn’t have room for her name in a book. That she’d spent years solving a problem no one would ever see, ever care about. And that should’ve been fine, right? Should’ve been something she could accept. But it wasn’t, because despite everything, despite how much she pretended not to care, she did.
And Joel, he wished like hell there was something he could do about it. That tiny drop of hope snuffed out in her eyes. Like for half a second, she thought—maybe there was a world where what she’d done actually mattered.
And it did. Just not in a way that’d ever change a damn thing.
Joel clenched his jaw, staring down at his glass like it might hold an answer.
There weren’t any. Not for this.
Because he knew how he could help her. Knew there were people—out west, in LA—who might care, who might listen, who might actually do something with what she’d done. There were still Fireflies, still remnants of old-world thinkers, people scraping together the last bits of science that hadn’t been buried under blood and ruin.
And if he told her—if he let her know they existed—she might go.
Leave him. Leave their perfect baby girl. Leave home. And that—he couldn’t let happen.
He needed her here.
Call him selfish? Monomaniacal? Maybe. But he didn’t give a fuck.
Joel had lived his life losing. Lost Sarah, lost Tess, lost whatever scraps of himself made him good once. And now—now, he had her. Had Maya. Had a reason to come home at the end of the day that wasn’t just the routine of it. He had that little vestige of trust and faith back in him, even if the ghosts lingered. He slept knowing he was going to wake up with purpose that wasn't just behind the flare of a rifle or the scent of blood. He had love, a warm home, all this food, these people.
And if Leela left—No.
He wouldn’t think about that. Not ever. He'd give up his breath before she risked it like a fucking idiot.
So he’d keep his mouth shut. Play dumb. Let the world stay small for her, even when she was meant for something bigger. Even when he saw the ache of it in her eyes. Even when he hated himself for it. But that was fine, he'd grown used to his hate.
So he did the only thing he could do—he raised his damn glass.
“To Leela,” he said, confident, eyes warm when they landed on her. “For doin’ the impossible.”
Her head snapped toward him, eyes widening just a fraction. Under the table, her fingers curled tight around his knee, firm—don’t.
She wasn’t the type to bask in praise, wasn’t one to revel in attention. But Joel wasn’t gonna let her disappear into the silence. So instead of backing down, he just smirked, pried her hand off his knee, and brought it to his lips.
His mouth was rough, the scrape of his beard even rougher, but the way he kissed her knuckles—gentle, slow, promising. A prayer he wouldn’t say out loud.
She froze up, breath catching just enough for him to notice, just enough to make his heart slam against his ribs. This was good. She was okay.
The table had gone quiet.
Then Tommy grinned, lifting his glass. “To Lee.”
Maria followed, then Ellie and Dina, voices echoing the words, raising their drinks. “To Leela.”
And then—clap, clap, clap! Maya, grinning wide, smacked her little hands together, delighted by the sudden chorus of voices, as if she had any clue what was happening.
Joel huffed a laugh, shaking his head. “You like that, baby?”
Maya just kept clapping, giggling as she looked between Joel and Leela, as if she understood this was about her mama, and that meant it was something right.
And Leela—God, she was looking at him now, like he was impossible, like she wasn’t sure whether she wanted to kiss him or kill him. Joel just held her hand tight, letting his thumb trace slow circles into her skin.
“You deserve it,” he murmured in her ear, meant just for her.
Leela let out a soft breath, almost like a sigh. Then, with barely a beat between them, she squeezed his hand right back.
X
Joel knew he had it good because the thought of reality was the only thing keeping him awake. After all, it felt like his dreams had come true.
But of course, nowadays, when Joel slept, he closed his eyes and he fell deeply, just as he did in love and loss, displaced of his path back. When he did ultimately open his eyes once more to the old patterned ceiling, tucked up in a disgustingly comfortable bed, within a house you could hear the wind slide under the eaves, the soft creak of the old floors settling, Maya’s soft little snores down the hall, the occasional rustle of sheets when Leela moved on her bed, he wasn’t sure when life had slowed down like this, when the days stopped being about surviving and started being about living.
Whatever it was, it was all Leela. She had insisted he take the biggest room when he moved in, and she wouldn’t hear a word otherwise. Stubborn as a damn mule, she’d just stared him down when he tried to argue, and—hell. It wasn’t like he minded. The room was ridiculous, the bathroom even more, with more closet space than he’d ever need, but the real saving grace was the football-field-sized bed.
Probably a thousand silky white pillows, freshly washed and dusted, stacked against a plush leather headboard, spilling over a white duvet. Bed to end all beds. Big enough to sink in between. Lonely enough when it got dark. Close enough to Maya’s nursery that when she woke in the middle of the night, whimpering softly in the dark, he was already moving, already lifting her up before she got too lonely.
Outside, winter had crept in slowly. Mornings turned from golden to white, breaths corkscrewing in steam ribbons against the cold. The sky was that sharp, steel-grey that told you snow wasn’t far behind, and Joel had started waking up to a frost-lined world, rooftops silvered, trees edged in ice.
December now, and Jackson was easing into the Christmas season and spirit—garlands strung between shop corners, lights winking from one lamppost to the next, a huge tree going up in the square, handmade ornaments showing up on doors. He had his own big efforts for Maya's first birthday and Christmas.
And then—just like the night before—it hit him.
Maya was turning one soon. The thought still knocked something loose in him. This tiny thing, this impossibly small, impossibly bright piece of his world who barely reached his knee. Who stumbled around in her little boots like she had somewhere really important to be. Who giggled like it could undo every bad thing in the world, cutting straight through the cold, through the ache in his bones, like it was nothing.
His girl. God, that was still a hard thing to wrap his head around. That she belonged to him. That he belonged to her.
He lay back against the pillows, an arm resting behind his head, and let his fingers graze the stack of Polaroids and photographs scattered across his nightstand. He flipped through each one slowly like one of Maya's bedtime stories, but only this one was real.
One of him and Ellie, captured by Leela, sprawled out on the porch swing, their boots propped up against the rail. Ellie mid-laugh, a cup of iced lemonade dangling from her fingers, frozen in time. He could almost hear her voice, thick with dry humour, and see the way her nose scrunched when she got to the best part of whatever story she was telling.
Tommy, Maria and him, once again captured by Leela, arms slung around each other at the hoedown, cowboy hats tilted over their heads, two of them tipsy and flushed. A night of music and good beer and warmth—the kind of warmth that had been rare for too long. The kind they hadn’t thought they’d find again.
And then—his fingers slowed.
One of them. Pretty sure it was Ellie who took this one. Maya, wedged between him and Leela, four little teeth showing, curls and eyes shining, a fork clutched in her fist, attention stolen by something off-camera. Leela, so beautiful under the flash, one hand curled protectively at Maya’s back, the other resting lightly on the table. And Joel, beside them both, his smile unsure, caught between trying to look natural and trying not to think too much about how unnatural it still felt—being in a picture like this.
But when he looked at it now—it looked so real. The family aspect of it.
He held the photo at arm’s length, studying it, the three of them together.
Though he looked apart from them. Incohesive. Hell, anyone would say it. The rougher, older edges of him, the shade of his skin and theirs, the texture of his hair and their black locks, the way his eyes weren’t the same big, almond eyes. Maya had Leela’s delicate features, her wide dark gaze, and her gentle intensity. And him—well, he was just there. An outsider, a man slotted into the frame, but not quite of it.
Except… that wasn’t true, was it?
Because if he looked long enough, he could see it. The shape of familiarity, how lived-in he seemed.
The way Maya leaned toward him in the picture, just slightly, even distracted as she was. The way Leela’s fingers curled gently toward his wrist, even unconsciously. The way he fit there, in the space beside them, not because he forced it, but because—somehow, without realizing it—he belonged there.
It made sense. Anyone who looked at this—anyone who knew—they’d know exactly what they were to each other.
He swallowed thickly, staring at the picture like it might shift in his hands or it might tell him something new. He wanted to keep it that way, within this frame, the three of them, until the time was up. God, how long would that be? Another few years?
A knock at his door pulled him from it, and he blinked, turning his head.
Leela pushed the door open slightly, peering inside. “Sorry. Do you have some time?”
He had his whole life for her, even if it was overkill. Joel cleared his throat, setting the Polaroids aside. “Always.”
She stepped inside, and Christ.
She was barefoot, those thin gold-chain anklets winking at him in the low light. The soft curve of her calves disappeared beneath the loose folds of that goddamn pearl-button nightdress—the one that never failed to drive him insane. It was slipping off her shoulder just enough to make his life miserable, the bare silhouette of her body teasing at the edges of his vision, itching his palms with the worst kind of temptation.
Joel sat up, rubbing a slow hand down his face, across the scruff along his jaw, suddenly feeling a hell of a lot more awake.
She didn’t hesitate, swishing the fabric under her as she perched on the edge of his bed, legs dangling off.
“I was just on the swing set before it started to snow,” she told him, her voice all wistful. “I think I might love it more than Maya does.”
Joel chuckled, dragging a hand through his hair. “I don’t know how baby girl’s gonna feel about sharing.”
It hadn’t taken him long to put together the swing set that stood proudly in the front yard—just a hell of a lot of effort, some cursing under his breath, and more muscle than he cared to admit. Sturdy wood, painted deep green, with painted pink and yellow flowers curling along the edges. The seat hung from two thick ropes, knotted tight, built to last. All safe and ready for his little girl.
Leela had helped, like she promised—though if her irritated grumbling was anything to go by, woodworking sure as hell wasn’t her calling. She hadn’t complained once about the splinters, but he caught her wincing every time she flexed her fingers, scowling down at the stubborn bits of wood lodged in her skin.
Joel, now, watched the way her gaze flicked to the photographs near his pillow, her expression shifting—soft, thoughtful. He didn’t move, just waited, letting her take her time.
Her brows furrowed slightly, a smile tugging at the corner of her lips. “How are your feet?”
Joel smirked, sinking back onto one elbow. “They're toasty, thanks.”
She pulled one knee up to her chest, resting her chin on it, fingers absently picking at a loose thread on her nightdress. “Mine too.” A grin flickered across her face. “I feel like my parents around you nowadays.”
That had him raising an eyebrow. “How's that now?”
Leela hesitated, her fingers stilling. Then, almost cautiously, she said, “You know… a couple. Partners. Married.” That last word barely even made the breath.
Joel stayed quiet, processing that for a moment. Shit, he couldn't. He almost blacked out.
“They were so crazy in love, Joel. Even at eighty.” A fond laugh slipped from her. “Dad would have her coffee ready every morning, help her tie her shoelaces, and open doors for her. Dance with her every night before bed. Never let her raise a finger around the home, even after the whole world came crumbling down around us.”
She smiled to herself, the memory a gentle thing.
“I’m gonna make you the happiest, fattest, laziest wifey in Jackson, sweetheart,” she recited, voice taking on a deep, playful lilt, like she was echoing her father's exact words.
Joel huffed out a laugh. “Sounds like a stand-up fella'.”
Leela nodded, then faltered, her lips parting like there was something else—something she wasn’t sure she should say. Joel waited, his fingers twitching against the blanket, patient.
Then softly, quietly, “He would've liked you.”
Joel looked away, to itch at his temple, hiding a grin. The thought of this man—the man who had made Leela feel safe, loved—looking at him and thinking he’s good enough for my little girl? No, he would've given him a hard time. Especially since no one stood to compare to Leela, much less a man like Joel, hitting sixty and greying. Her father would've come at him with his expensive shotgun.
Leela’s gaze lifted to his, eyes foolproof. She took a breath. “I feel like that with you.”
Joel's throat worked tough. His body had already moved before his mind caught up, his hand reaching out, fingers trailing along her temple, dipping into the thick waves of her hair.
“Like a fat, lazy wifey?” he murmured.
Leela let out a tiny, breathless laugh and immediately covered her face with both hands, her shoulders curling in. “Yeah. Is that bad?”
Joel’s grin pulled at his mouth, satisfaction sitting right on his bones. His thumb brushed over the curve of her cheek, a little more deliberate now, a little more his. “That’s the goal, sweetheart.”
Leela peeked at him through her fingers, then, as if gathering herself, slowly reached out and took his hand from her face. She held it in her lap, turning it over, tracing the rough lines of his palm. The callouses, the broken skin, the deep grooves time had worn into him.
She ran her thumb along the ridge of a scar, a flash of quiet passing through her expression. Not pity—Leela never looked at him like that. Just knowing. Understanding.
“Do you remember what you told me?” she murmured, still studying his hand, watching the way her fingers disappeared against the breadth of his palm. “That night after the bar?”
Joel exhaled, a deep thing, pulse hammering up his veins. “Do you?”
She squinted, like she was trying to piece a puzzle together, like it lived just at the edges of her memory.
“I don’t remember much. It's hazy.” Her voice dipped even quieter. “You told me you love me.”
Joel swallowed. His fingers flexed against hers before curling, his palm pressing lightly to her own like she might slip away if he didn’t hold onto her properly.
“And I’ll say it again,” he assured.
Leela finally looked up, meeting his gaze fully. Her fingers curled tighter around his hand, holding him there.
“I want to feel you now, Joel,” she said, soft but sure, like it was something she had already decided. “Loving all of me.”
A deep and molten flame uncoiled in him at her words, cracked something wide open.
Because she remembered. And he remembered the way she had trembled under him that night, high and reckless and desperate for something he wouldn’t give her. And he had whispered the only inevitable promise that he had ever felt—
“One day, when I’m deep inside you, I am all you're gonna be thinkin' of. Just me, loving all of you.”
And now—now Leela was here, in front of him, sober and clear-eyed and asking him for the very thing he had promised her.
Joel didn’t rush. He just reached for her, wanting and calm, his fingers trailing from her wrist, up the length of her arm, to her chin. He tilted her face toward him, waiting. Giving her the space to change her mind.
Leela stared at him, eyes, lips, eyes, lips, and it had him in agony. A prolonged soon enough, she simply lifted her lips to his like an offering.
And he took.
He kissed her like a man who had gone without for too long, hands crushing her closer to him, like a man afraid to break the very thing he craved. Worshipping her was softer than before because now he knew she wanted this. He knew she was choosing this. Choosing him. Out of all the sick, sorry bastards in this world, she picked him. Him.
“Gonna make you feel good,” he promised between kisses, hungering forward for more. “I'll make you feel like a queen, baby. I'll give you everything.”
Her fingers trailed up, skimming the scruff at his neck before splaying over his chest. The warmth of her touch shot straight through him, and he exhaled against her mouth, pressing closer. Mad, so mad for this.
Then, gently, he guided her hands to his shirt buttons.
He wasn’t in any hurry. This wasn’t about taking—this was about letting. Letting her have control, letting her set the pace, letting her know she could stop whenever she wanted.
Leela pulled away just enough to glance down at his shirt, her breath catching.
“Go on then, help me out,” he urged.
That’s when he saw it—the hesitation. The clear-cut hysteria that hadn’t been there last time, numbed to the effects of weed. With her clarity came everything else. Every dread, every old wound, every aching recollection, every scar she carried in places he couldn’t see.
Joel stayed still, barely breathing, watching the way her fingers hovered over the buttons, how they trembled as she carefully popped the first one open. Then the next and next.
She pushed the fabric from his shoulders, her hands mapping him quietly, tracing it all. She touched everything—the pale scars left by unseen blades, the sealed bullet wounds, the old burns, the places where life had carved him up and forced him to heal around the damage. Her dark gaze lingered on the fine scruff dusting his chest, palms gliding lower, following the path where dark hair thinned down his stomach before vanishing beneath his waistband.
She wasn’t just looking. She was memorizing. Good, let her. This was all hers anyway.
“Ruined,” he mumbled.
“Survived,” she corrected.
He slid the sleeves off his arms, balling his shirt up in his hands before tossing it aside. Joel leaned back against the headboard like a king waiting on a feast, his legs spreading slightly, the muscles in his stomach flexing as he breathed. His gaze was heavy-lidded, thick, deep and everything unspoken.
Then, slowly, he stroked a palm over his thigh. “Come sit, darlin’.”
Leela hesitated. He could see it in the way her fingers curled and uncurled on the duvet, like she was feeling her way through the moment. But she followed, just like he knew she would, crawling over until she was straddling him, the seam of her legs spread over his zipper, knees sinking into the mattress on either side of his hips.
Joel felt the warmth of her, the light press of her thighs against him, the way her breath hitched when her hands came to his shoulders, fingers curling lightly over muscle and scar.
“Good girl,” he murmured. “You're just perfect, aren't you?”
She nodded. Then blinked in realization, then shook her head, sighing. “Shut up.”
“Psh. Look at you. I ain't gonna.”
His own hands found her waist, steadying her, tracing slow circles over the fabric of her nightdress. This girl was made to be loved.
Then his fingers slid up, tracing her figure, until he was right over those goddamn pearl buttons.
He wanted to take them apart with his teeth, but that wasn’t the way to do this—not tonight. So he traced the cool surface of each one before carefully slipping them free, one by one, big fingers graceless over the little buttons.
The moment the last one came undone, he leaned forward, his eyes never leaving hers, watching every flicker of emotion cross her face. The anxiety, the confusion... the curiosity way beneath it. Observing him.
And then he sank his teeth into the delicate skin on her sternum.
Leela sucked in a sharp breath, her fingers tightening on his biceps.
Joel groaned against her, dragging his lips over the mark, spreading slow, open-mouthed kisses over the same spot, soothing it, claiming it.
He let the thin sleeves slide off her shoulders, watching the way the fabric slipped down her arms, pooling at her midriff.
Joel exhaled sharply, his grip tightening just a fraction before smoothing over her skin again like he couldn’t quite believe she was real.
Because Christ, how was she real? Where had that lonely, grey fart upstairs been hiding her all this time?
She was all honey-warm skin and soft, dusky curves. Her breasts rose and fell with each uneven breath, her ribs tautening, beneath the subtle dip of her waist. His gaze traced the gentle flare of her hips, the little softness at her love handles, the way her toned stomach tensed as she held herself still, waiting—watching him with those deep, knowing eyes.
“Joel?” she whispered.
“You're...” He blinked twice. “You're so beautiful.”
For a terrible lack of words, he wasn't exactly a fucking poet. He really wanted to tell her that she was the Powerball lottery in his life, that even her smartass brain was sexy, and that when she breathed, he was pretty sure a flower bloomed right under her damn feet.
But she managed a quiet laugh. “Oh-kay.”
And Joel had never believed in God much, but if there was one, he’d have to offer up a damn prayer of thanks. Only took thirty whole years.
He let his hands roam, rough fingertips skating over the curve of her waist, following the soft lines of her body. She was delicate, strong, warm, and hesitant, all at once, and beneath the tension in her shoulders, he could feel the slight tremble in her limbs.
She trusted him with this. With herself.
Joel wasn’t about to fuck that up. So he took his time.
He smoothed his palms over her ribs, feeling the way her bones flexed beneath his touch. His thumbs brushed over her perfect nipples, the peaks stiffening, drawing the softest sound from her throat—a breathy little whimper that damn near destroyed him.
His control hung by a thread as he ducked his head, finally taking her into his mouth.
His lips closed over her, hot and slow, his tongue flicking, tasting, teasing. He lavished her with attention, spreading kisses across the swell of one, then the other, loving them equally, thoroughly.
“Fuckin' don't deserve any of this,” he said through his teeth, clutched on a nipple.
“What are you...” she whispered.
He was surrounded by Leela, arching into him, encouraging his lips where she wanted him, and he didn't spare a thought to her instincts. If she wanted him, she'd have it. Her fingers trembled before they slid into his hair, sweeping back through the silver-streaked strands, holding him there like she was trying to commit the sight of him—eyes half-closed, mouth on her, glorifying her—to memory.
Then, without thinking, Joel bit down—just enough to pull a sound from her throat, her grip on his hair tightening, nails scraping against his scalp.
Didn’t think she’d like that. But she did. Nice.
“Joel,” she whispered.
His smirk was slow, lazy, drawn out against her flushed skin as he let his tongue wander over the reddening mark he’d left before sealing it with a leisurely, possessive suck.
“Shit, baby,” he muttered, voice gone husky. “If this is what you taste like here, can’t imagine what you taste like down there.”
Leela’s breath hitched hard. “Down what…?”
The way she said it—uncertain, like the thought had never fully occurred to her—lit a fire in his gut. Primal, claiming, wanting. Frantic.
She wouldn’t know. Of course, she wouldn’t.
It wasn’t like there had been time for teenage exploration when the world had gone to hell. No fumbling hands in the dark, no stolen kisses at parties, no whispered giggles between sheets. Sex was a free-for-all in QZs obviously, and he sure as hell doubted porn had been a practicality when she’d been at that wonderful age of curiosity.
Which meant this—the way she looked at him, the way her breaths stared back up when he so much as hinted at what he wanted to do—was something else entirely.
Yeah, Joel had never been more careful in his damn life.
“Christ,” he rasped, dragging his hands slowly down her back, fingers tracing the dip of her spine, the delicate lines of her body. "Well, at least a little touch. Lemme feel you.”
“Feel,” she murmured, confused.
He showed her his hand. Then two fingers. Then his thumb. Hoping that was enough for her to get the message across. “Feel.”
She hesitated for only a moment, but then—God help him—she nodded. That was all the permission he needed.
“Let's get this off you,” he muttered. “Wanna see you.”
He eased the night dress up and over her head, watching the fabric pool around her before slipping off completely. Her thick braid slapped softly against her back, and then—there she was.
All herself. Just Leela.
She sat before him in nothing but those little white linen panties, tied into thick knots at her hips—ruffled edges, sweet, soft, so goddamn cute—and his. Yeah, his. All mine.
And then his hands were on her again, slow, reverent, like he had the luxury of time. Because he did. Because this was about her, about her knowing she was safe, knowing she was loved, knowing he'd go wherever she liked him to.
His longest finger wandered closer and closer from her hips, and brushed beneath the edge of her panties, a featherlight bump against that warm, soft groove. Just to let her know.
His jaw clenched, muscles locking as he willed himself to go slow, to savour every second of this, to feel her breathe against his cheek as he did it.
Her eyes flickered up to his, eyes locking. Wide. Waiting. Knowing this wasn't over.
He held her gaze as he pushed further in between her folds, just enough to feel the heat of her, the damp silk of her against his fingertips—aching, perfect, warm.
Her lips parted. A little gasp, barely a sound.
And then her eyes fluttered shut.
He felt it the second she let go, the second she allowed herself to slip into it, to trust what he was doing to her.
His coarse fingers carefully traced, explored, and learned. A decade out of practice, but instincts were instincts. And he knew how to listen—how to really listen. The way her breaths stuttered when he circled just right with the pad of his thumb at the little bud of nerves, the way her body clenched when he curled deeper inside where he needed to. When his fingers worked her low and slow, in loving accuracy, how she completely arched into him, warm walls pressuring around his fingers.
Then, a tiny sound. Soft. Desperate. “Joel, please.”
Fuck. Every person needs to hear that once in their lifetime. Their whole other half just falling apart while clinging to your name.
His stomach tensed, heat surging through him so sudden and hard he had to close his eyes, had to bite down hard on his own restraint before he did something stupid—like buck against her like a goddamn teen and blow a load into his jeans.
Because of the way she moved into his palm, the way her hips found the rhythm like instinct, like something she’d always known but never had the chance to learn—Jesus Christ, his frail heart was going to fail him.
“I know,” he breathed, voice gruff. “I know. Goddamn it, you’re so beautiful. So perfect f'me.”
How unoriginal. Cliché as a bitch. But what the hell else was he supposed to say? Write haikus? Sing praises? He would, if he had any sanity left. She was carved from silent fire and untouchable grace, delicate and untamed, something that had no damn business ending up here, in his ruined hands.
Her fingers dug into his back, ravaged by sensation, nails sinking in, breaking the skin, drawing blood—maybe. Didn’t fucking matter. Even that was sexy. That pain was welcome, something he'd carry with him like a brand, a scar he’d look at in the mirror tomorrow with a lazy smirk and think, yeah, my girl did that.
And then—he felt it. That old familiar twitch against his fingers, the way her body tensed, breath shuddering, forehead dropping against his.
She was close.
And if she was going to come, it wasn’t going to be on his marred hands. No way in hell. He needed to feel her come on him everywhere. Needed it to hit him so deep he felt pinpricks behind his goddamn eyes.
“Baby, hang on. Fuck, honey, gimme a second,” he rasped, voice wrecked, dragging his fingers out from her, savouring the heat, the slick. He popped them into his mouth, groaning low at the taste, the perfection of her. Wasn’t about to waste a single drop.
Leela only watched him, unusual, confused. “So strange.”
He wiped his mouth. “Unreal, baby. Taste so good.”
Then, shifting back against the headboard, he pulled her closer onto his lap. His hands slid up her thighs, thumbs stroking slow circles, coaxing, calming.
He nodded at his pants. “Wanna help me out of this?”
She nodded, still flushed, and reached down. Soft, slender, long hands worked the button loose, nudged the zipper down, knuckles grazing his stomach, fingers tracing down the happy trail, lower, lower—
She sucked in a breath when she laid eyes on the good stuff that sprang free.
He saw the flicker in her eyes, and he prayed to whatever was looking over him that he was in all right proportions, that he was to her liking, that he was good enough for her. But the way she seemed to assess, hesitating... Curiosity? Oh, good—anything other than disgust.
Then she glanced up at him, brow pinched. “You’re not wearing...”
He blinked, momentarily lost in his own haze, until he realized. Oh, for fuck’s sake.
He rolled his eyes. “Yeah, yeah. God bless America.”
The laugh that burst out of her was sudden, real, pure, like she hadn't expected it. She did a double-take, covering her mouth, her shoulders shaking.
“Omigod, Joel. You’ve been walking around without underwear this whole time?”
He smirked, gathering her back into his arms, hands already working at the ties of her little knotted panties. “Alright, get your judgy ass over here.”
Two tugs, and they were gone, joining the mess of discarded clothes on the floor. He gave her tight behind a nice squeeze. “Y'know, you've got the perkiest butt I've ever seen. All that lifting and stretching—you drive me crazy with those teeny little shorts.”
She twisted his ear playfully. “So that's why you're always messing up with the tools.”
“Oh, yeah. Prettiest pussy, too,” he whispered, winking.
“Joel!” she hissed.
And then—finally—she was straddling his lap, stripped, all soft thighs and tough calves, muscles flexing as she adjusted, aligned over him, and found her balance, fingers curled into the headboard for support.
A little smile tugged at her lips. And it killed him. “Hi.”
“Hi, honey,” he murmured.
She was stunning—lean, strong, effortless. A goddamn supermodel. That hair, those muscles, those striking eyes, she had him by the balls and he wasn't complaining.
He held her hips, warm, smooth skin beneath his rough palms, a thumb tracing the soft, wet seam at her legs. He pushed a testing finger in, and she shivered.
“You ready for me?” he murmured.
She exhaled softly, before her hand came down, sliding into his hair, down his ear, his cheek—thumb brushing over his lips like she was memorizing him like he was something sacred.
And then, so quiet, so sure—“I want to feel all of you.”
Jesus fucking Christ. Not fair. Not fucking fair. That should’ve given him a second, a moment to react, to curse, to do something—
But then she moved. And finally, finally, she took him inside her. Right where he’d been aching for her.
Heat. Tight. Unreal.
“Fuuuck.” A deep groan ripped out of his chest as she plunged down onto him, enveloping him in pressure so impossibly hot, impossibly incredible, that his head kicked back against the headboard.
Strain. Resistance. So much love.
Her body rebelled, not used to this stretch, this fullness, and when a sharp, quiet cry slipped from her, she buried it against his cheek. “Please.”
His breath stilled. Instinct flared hot in his veins—not desire, but protection, care, a tethered restraint that warred with the desperate need to move, to feel her completely.
His arms circled around her, strong. His lips found the edge of her eye, feeling the trail of tears, murmuring against her skin, “I'm right here, baby. You're doin’ so good. Take me so well.”
“It hurts,” she cried out sharply.
“I know, sweetheart, I know. You want to take a breath for me?”
And she did. A nice, long, deep one into his neck. The hot air ghosted around his nape. Then two more, until it felt like her breaths were finally stuttering back into her.
He kissed her eye. “That's a good girl. You got this. Eyes on me.”
She nodded shakily, holding his gaze.
“Only me, alright?”
He tightened his hold on her hips, not to force, not to move—just to be there, to keep her close as he raised up, his back protesting with a pricking ache, meeting her halfway, easing her down inch by inch, a motion as old as time, gentle, ready, his.
“Feel like a dream, darlin’,” he whispered against her skin, voice barely holding together.
A shiver. A squeeze around him, tight and sweet, like a pulse, a welcome. This was his home.
And he felt it—this wasn’t just physical, wasn’t just something done to her, wasn’t something she was just letting happen.
She wanted every inch of him. And Joel was going to move fucking mountains to give it to her.
Joel moved with her, for her, matching the slow, hesitant rhythm she set. Each slide into her was deep, measured—he wasn’t chasing anything except her, wasn’t losing himself in the feeling of her wrapped around him, not yet. No, this was about letting her take what she needed. About making sure she knew, in her bones, that this was hers. He was hers.
“Joel, is this okay?” she panted.
He looked up at her and sighed from numb lips, “Baby, how the hell are you real?”
Because Jesus, if she wasn’t the sexiest goddamn thing he’d ever seen—the way her brows pinched, the way her pretty mouth parted, the way her breath hitched when he hit that spot.
The way her body crashed above him, her hands clung to the headboard, his shoulders, nails gripping, grounding—she was giving him everything without even realizing it. A little gasp left her lips each time he lifted his hips, rocking against hers, pushing her just a little bit further, testing the limits of what she could take.
His fingers smoothed down her spine, following the curve of her back, his lips finding her throat, the little hollow just beneath her ear.
“That's my good girl,” he encouraged, voice rough, rasping into her ear. “Feels nice, don’t it? Feels real nice.”
She shuddered, a little whimper catching at the back of her throat. Her thighs tensed around him, gripping tight around his neck, but her movements faltered. A stutter. A hesitation.
Joel slowed. Just enough to feel her, to see her, to be sure.
And that’s when he knew. That she wasn’t quite there. No matter how wet she was, how ready and tight she was around him, something in her body held back.
But it wasn’t fear or pain or shyness or any of that bullshit. It was just unfamiliar. A wariness just under her skin, something holding her back, keeping her from letting go.
And Joel understood.
His gut tightened, hurt pulling at his chest, but this—this wasn’t just about fucking. It wasn’t just about getting her to some peak, some finish line, some goal he had to chase.
It was about unlearning. It was being with her. It was about replacing whatever fucked-up pain in her, whatever taking had come before, with something soft, small and theirs.
And if she didn’t come or if she didn’t even know what that felt like—hell, that didn’t change a goddamn thing. Didn’t change the way he was making love to her, how much he loved her, loved feeling her move on top of him, for him.
It also didn’t change the fact that he was already hanging by a thread, already wound too tight, already gritting his teeth to keep himself from losing it, because she felt too good, too right, like she was made to be wrapped around him, to take him this deep.
He wasn't going to last very long, he was pushing his limit here, his prime of life was to blame for that. He squeezed his eyes shut, trying to hold onto the moment, hold onto her—but it was too much, too perfect, too fucking good.
His hands flexed at her hips, gripping, steadying her, his own control unravelling fast.
“Jesus—Leela, I'm—!”
“Joel?” she called, concerned almost.
He wanted to wait as long as he could. Wanted to hold off, wanted to take her there with him, to let her feel all of it, but this old fucking desperate body—
But then she moved, sinking down, rolling her hips against him in just the right way, and he broke.
“Oh, shit!”
A deep, guttural sound tore from his throat, his arms snapping tight around her waist, pulling her flush against him as he spilled deep inside her, every muscle in his body seizing up. His forehead dropped to her shoulder, breath ragged, fingers flexing against her slick skin.
He stayed like that for a moment, ears ringing, buried in her, completely wrung out, slumping into her, breathing her in, feeling her heartbeat pound against his own. Oh, but he was currently in orbit, in fucking space.
And then—when his thoughts returned back to planet Earth, back to Jackson, back to this home, when the haze started to clear—he pulled back, just enough to see her.
She looked… confused. Like she'd gone wrong somewhere. Lips parted, eyes hazy, looking between them, like she was waiting for something, like she wasn’t sure if this was it.
She blinked. “I...”
Joel watched her, studied the soft rise and fall of her chest, the way her body still trembled around him, the way her fingers curled gently against his throat.
She didn’t know, of course. Didn’t realize. That she hadn’t come.
And he didn’t feel bad about it—not in the way a man might, not in the way that turned it into some failure, something to gnaw on, to carry like a weight. Shit, she'd gone as far as to relive this for him.
But still—he wanted to give that to her. Wanted her to feel it, to know what it meant to be shattered and held together all at once.
“One more try, okay?” he rasped, barely breathing it into her skin. He kissed her shoulder, collar and throat. “Gimme one more. You can do it. Just hold onto me.”
A small smile came alive on her lips. “Okay.”
Joel bore down again, gripping her hips tighter, pulling her closer, pushing deeper—trying this time, rather than feeling.
His breath came wild, strained, body shaking with the force of it, sweat splashing lazily onto her breasts, in the effort of making her feel it. His heart was hammering, his arms flexing, his thighs burning as he surged up into her, chasing that high for her, something he needed to give her.
And still—still—Leela just watched him. Soft, quiet, moving with him, letting him take her, feeling his strength beneath her, stroking his cheek, his hair, her fingertips whisper-light against his damp skin.
No gasping desperation, no frantic, uncontrolled unravelling. Just… this.
And Joel—fuck—he didn’t know what to do with that. She wasn’t pretending. Would be nice if she did. She wouldn’t know how to fake it, would she? Wouldn’t know the right way to move, the right way to sound, the right way to let a man know he was making her come undone and get this over with.
And the realization punched him in the gut. Blindsided him completely.
It wasn't about to happen. He'd just have to let go.
But Joel couldn’t stop. Not now, not when he was this close. When he was teetering on the fucking edge. When his body was demanding release with an intensity he hadn’t felt in years.
“I'm sorry,” he murmured, shaking his head. “Sorry, I can't. I can't.”
“Joel, it's okay, it's okay,” she coaxed.
So he held her down, his grip firm, desperate. Feeling so fucking selfish as he pushed and pushed harder. Broke a sweat. Gave it everything he had left in him, one last time—until his muscles locked, until heat ripped through him once more, until he spilled deep inside her again with another ragged, shuddering groan.
And Leela—sweet, accepting Leela—just cradled him through it. Breathed against his cheek, kissed his ear, smoothed her hands over his hair, and ran her fingers along the tense lines of his back, comforting him.
Because Joel had never felt more fucking helpless in his life. He buried his face in her neck, his arms locking tight around her, his body wracked with aftershocks, his chest rising and falling hard against hers.
“Joel,” she said, a softness behind his name.
His throat was tight. He swallowed. “You have to—you haven't—”
“I feel really good,” she whispered. “Really good.”
Joel breathed in deep, exhaled slow. She meant it. She felt good. It wasn’t some half-truth, some lie to spare his feelings. Leela didn’t lie to him—she didn’t know how to, not in a way that mattered.
So he let it go. Let himself believe her. However difficult and excruciating it was.
“Do you wanna lie down?” he murmured, brushing the backs of his fingers over her jaw. “Lemme clean up and hurry back to you, alright?”
“Okay.”
She nodded, watching as he rolled out of bed, buckled up his pants, and stretched his sore back with a quiet grunt. That pleasant ache in his muscles, he could get used to this. He ran a hand through his sweat-damp hair, then disappeared into the bathroom.
The second he flicked on the light, he set both hands over the sink, bracing himself. His reflection stared back at him, every line on his face a little deeper, slick with sweat, his greying scruff a little rougher, hair a Leela-made mess. His body was still running hot, his ears still rung, still a little shaky in the aftermath.
But under all that? Confusion. Loathing. Every i had been dotted, every t crossed. So what the hell went wrong?
His fingers turned the tap on, ran cool water over his palms. He splashed some onto his face and neck and chest, let it dribble down to his throat, rinsed his mouth and took another breath.
“You goddamn dud,” he muttered to himself.
Maybe it was him. All those years of nothing. Years of his body belonging to no one but himself. Years of only touching for a release. A ferocious protector, sure, but it made him an incapable lover. He never knew a damn thing about the female body, how to work it, how to please her. Should've let her come on his hand when he had the chance. Stupid, greedy asshole.
With a final splash of water to his face, he scrubbed a wet hand through his hair and stepped back into the bedroom. Time to face the music.
Leela had already slipped her nightdress back on, the straps falling just slightly off her shoulder, her hair combed back a little neater. She was curled up against the pillows, drowsy, waiting for him.
Joel didn’t hesitate to slide into bed beside her, sinking into the warmth of her body like he belonged there. Like they’d been doing this forever.
She nestled in closer automatically, her breath soft against his cheek. His fingers trailed down her face with a slow, lazy kind of affection, committing the shape of her in this light to memory..
“You’re so beautiful,” he murmured.
She smiled sleepily, amusement tugging at the corner of her lips. “You said that a lot.”
“Mean it every time,” he said, voice rough. “You’re my dreamgirl.”
She huffed a quiet laugh, low and teasing, but her fingers curled into his chest, holding onto him like she didn’t quite believe it.
“So I’m supposed to come, is that it?” she mused, drawing out the words.
Joel had spent most of his life keeping things simple. Straightforward. No fuss, no questions, no goddamn talking about it.
He let out a long, suffering sigh, pressing his forehead to hers. Jesus, he could just roll over and fix this. He would—happily. But for once, he didn’t want to rush, didn’t want to miss the quiet, golden stretch of time between basking in the afterglow and sleep.
“It amazes me that you don’t know that,” he muttered.
She shrugged, unbothered. “I did feel nice.”
He shook his head. “I'm sorry, I couldn't give it to you.”
Her eyes softened. She turned her face into his hand, pressing a deep, lingering kiss into his palm. He swallowed around it, around the way it made him feel—too big, too much, too good.
“Don't be. I had a lot of fun,” she admitted.
Fun. Sex had never been fun. Not for him, Not in his whole goddamn lifetime. It had been a release, a need, a way to forget or feel an ounce of freedom. But fun? Especially from someone who'd been through hell on this?
He looked at her like she’d just rewritten the entire world in front of him.
“I could get used to this with you. Just... slowly.”
His brain short-circuited. “Used to this with me?”
She nodded, pushing half her face shyly into the pillow, a single, shining brown eye peering up at him.
Jesus Christ. He really was about a pop a vein in his forehead. “Right back at you,” he managed.
Then she lifted onto her elbow, hovering over him, her fingers trailing slow, aimless patterns over the fuzz on his chest. Her touch wasn’t meant to start something—to tease or demand. It was just her, touching him because she wanted to. Because she could.
“Don’t look at me like that, darlin’,” he grumbled, already feeling the heat creep back into his body. “I can barely see straight anymore. There’s three of you in front of me.”
She grinned, leaning in so close her lips almost brushed his. “It’s usually the one in the middle.”
He let out a hoarse laugh, shaking his head. “I ain’t one of your damn machines either. If I am, well—I need big repairs. Gotta oil my gears, tighten some screws.”
She kissed his cheek with a soft giggle, once, twice—then a third time to his lips, slow and sweet. A silent promise. A quiet goodnight.
“I’ll take twenty years off you in no time,” she murmured, nuzzling her nose against his. “You’ll be living till you’re a hundred. Goodnight, Joel.”
She nestled back into the cold pillows, wrapping her arms around his shoulders, guiding him close until his face was tucked between her neck and the soft swell of her chest.
Joel breathed out, letting himself sink into her. His arms slung over her waist, pulling her close until there was nothing between them, his leg tangling with hers.
“Till I’m a hundred, my ass,” he muttered, already halfway asleep. “You keep ridin’ me like that, I’m kickin’ rocks at sixty.”
She gasped, appalled. “Joel!”
He grinned against her skin, pressing a kiss to her throat. “G'night.”
X
Joel felt that night in his bones for three days straight.
The delicious ache, the lingering burn, the way his body still hummed like it was catching up to itself—he felt every damn bit of it. Like walking about with a brand on his chest, her name in big, fat capitals, burned into his skin that wasn't ever going to fade. If he let his mind wander, he swore he could still feel the imprint of her nails on his shoulders, the scratch of her breathy moans against his throat.
It had been a long, long time since he'd felt this kind of soreness, since he'd let himself have anything that good. And now that he had—Christ, it was all he could think about.
Sure, his stamina wasn’t what it used to be. He wasn’t some young buck anymore, wasn’t out here trying to prove anything. That kind of energy belonged to a different lifetime. A life where survival meant running, fighting, bleeding, and losing.
But now?
Now, his life was slow. Lazy. Boring. And fuck, if it wasn’t the best goddamn thing in the world.
Every morning, he woke up in what he could only rightfully call the bed to end all beds—wrapped up in a too-soft duvet, which made it near impossible to leave. Sheets tangled around his legs, pillows propped just right. But the best part?
Leela. His girl. Partner. Whatever the fuck. Just call her his.
Sleeping right beside him, fingers still loosely twisted around his from sometime in the night.
He wasn’t a man prone to sentiment. But every single morning, without fail, he’d lie there for a minute, blinking slowly at the ceiling, feeling her warmth beside him, and he’d think: what the hell evil did I destroy to deserve this?
Because he didn’t deserve this. He didn’t deserve to wake up slow, wrapped in her warmth. Didn’t deserve the way she just let him have this—her body, her trust, her time. But she gave it anyway.
And if he was weak, if he was pathetic, well—he wasn’t strong enough to just lie there and not touch her.
So he’d roll onto his side, push his face into her shoulder, into her hair, breathe her in, feel the strength of her long legs beneath his palms. Because, deep down, some stupid, aching part of him needed to make sure she was still real. That she hadn’t just vanished into steam.
“Mornin’,” he’d murmur, voice gravelly with sleep, lips brushing over the soft skin of her neck.
And she’d hum, still mostly asleep, shifting closer without thinking, tucking herself against him like she knew. Like she knew she was his, and he was hers, and they had time—all the time in the world to wake up slow and warm in each other’s arms.
Joel didn’t know how to handle that. Didn’t know what the hell to do with the way it made him feel, all thick and too much in his chest.
So he did what he did know how to do. He kissed her. Once. Twice. Again. And again.
Unhurried and soft, against her shoulder, her arm, her cheek, wherever he could. Until she grumbled, barely audible, something along the lines of Joel, let me sleep, swatting at him half-heartedly.
He never listened. Not when he had her like this. Not when she was somewhat awake, turning over onto her back, peeking up at him with those bleary, half-lidded eyes.
“Last one before I get your coffee,” he’d lie, pressing a slow, lingering kiss behind her ear.
And it was never just one. Soon enough, Joel would drag himself up, forcing himself to leave the warmth of their bed, of her, if only for one thing.
His next favourite part of the morning.
His little girl. Maya.
The second Joel stepped into the nursery, flicking on the dim light, the world felt right. Scented in warm linens and baby powder, as the soft morning glow bled through the curtains, it painted everything in muted greens and pink.
And there she was. His baby girl curled in her little nest of blankets, fists rubbing at her groggy eyes, her dark curls sticking out every which way like she’d been fighting sleep all night.
Then she saw him. And the second she did—
“Da-da-da-da-da!”
Joel barely had time to brace before she shot straight up, balancing on the tips of her toes against the crib bars, hands clapping, a little bouncing bean of excitement.
And that damn sweetheart grin. All toothy and wide, like she’d been waiting her whole life to see him again. It got him every time, that overwhelming sense of sweet defeat. He'd take a knife in the heart for her.
He let out a breathy chuckle, shaking his head at her, at the way her tiny face was all lit up with him simply showing up.
“There’s my baby girl,” he rumbled, stepping forward, and scooping her up into his arms in one smooth motion, raining kisses on her cheeks.
Maya let out a squealing little giggle, tiny hands immediately going for his face, his beard, her favourite thing to grab early in the morning. She clutched two greedy handfuls, tugging at the scruff like it was hers.
He brushed a hand down her curls. “Did you sleep well?”
“Sleeeepy,” she said around her fist.
She babbled against his shoulder—nonsense, tiny sounds he swore had some kind of meaning only she knew—her chubby little arms tightening around his neck in a hug that damn near melted him.
Then—of course—she went right back to attacking his beard, tugging with all her tiny might.
Joel winced, letting out a mock grumble, “Yeah, alright. You just want Daddy for the whiskers, huh?”
Maya let out a high-pitched giggle, and he felt her breath, warm against his neck, little fingers wandering up to pat his cheeks.
Joel, of course, pretended to eat her fingers instead, lips smacking, making exaggerated chomping sounds. Maya screeched, all wiggly and squirming, kicking in his arms with laughter so wild and free, it made his whole day before it even started.
He sighed, pressing his nose against her cheek, breathing her in. Baby powder. Warmth. His baby girl.
“Alright, trouble. Let’s get you cleaned up.”
He carried her over to the little bathroom by the nursery, got her washed up, and changed into one of the tiny little sweaters that had once belonged to her mama. Maya, of course, made it an ordeal—wiggling, talking to him, playing with her own toes.
Joel took his time. Didn’t rush a damn thing.
A normal, mundane morning—waking up next to the woman he loved, starting the day with his baby girl. That was his whole rhythm now.
Some days their mornings went quick—too quick for his liking. Early in the morning, shovelling down his breakfast alone, yelling goodbye to his girls, and heading out for patrol, only to spend every second waiting until he could get back to them. Waiting for that first breath of home, that happy squeal he would hear from Maya ten yards out, that first kiss again.
The house was still half-asleep when Joel clattered his plate into the sink. Maya let out a soft whimper from her mother's arms, travelling across the kitchen, getting his attention first, and Leela—half-awake, hair mussed, sweater slipping off one shoulder—murmured, “You’re being loud.”
Joel grabbed his jacket off the chair, shoving an arm through one sleeve. “Ain’t got time to be quiet. Tommy's gonna blow a fuse.”
Leela huffed, rubbing a hand over her face. “You ever think about waking up ten minutes earlier?”
Joel snorted, already at the door. “You ever think about wakin’ up with me?”
That earned him a half-hearted glare over her shoulder. “I'm a night owl. I need the dark to think.”
Maya stirred, a tiny, bleary-eyed thing, her hands stretching toward him. Joel hesitated, foot already over the threshold.
Leela, catching the way his shoulders pulled tight, sighed. “Go, Joel.”
“Don't work yourself too hard while I'm gone,” he warned.
Leela just hummed in accord, adjusting Maya against her shoulder.
Joel hesitated. Then, before he could think twice, he ducked back in, pressing a long, deep kiss to her lips, holding her chin tight between his palm, just until he fought for breath.
She startled when he pulled away, blinking up at him. Then playfully shoved at his chest to get him out the door. “Go already.”
But some days—the best days—mornings were slow. Breakfast on the island or out on the porch, the intense scent of coffee thick in the cold air, his hand curled around the mug that curled out steaming ribbons into his face, while Leela sat beside him, legs tucked up under herself, grinning at him over the rim of her cup.
Joel tipped his mug toward his lips, letting the heat of the coffee melt into him. Watching her.
She tilted her head, nudging his thigh with her knee. “Are you always this quiet in the mornings? I never noticed.”
Joel glanced at her. “Ain’t got much to say with you around.”
She raised a brow, taking a small sip of her own coffee. “That so?”
Joel smirked, sipping slowly. “Just like listenin’ to you talk.”
Leela scoffed. “That’s funny. ‘Cause last time I checked, you like cutting me off halfway.”
Joel pursed his lips, considering. “Only when you’re talkin’ nonsense. Y'know, your little nerdspeak thing you do.”
Her mouth parted in excessive offence. “Oh, so my technicalities are nonsense?”
Joel blew into his coffee cup. “Mm.”
She gave him a slow, evaluating look, then nudged him hard enough that coffee nearly sloshed over the rim of his cup.
“Goddammit, girl.” He shot her a glare, but it was ruined by the way his lips were twitching.
The mornings when snow blanketed the whole town, and he’d bundle Maya up like a little marshmallow, watching her waddle out into the white, her excitement vibrating through every inch of her tiny body. He’d stand there on the porch, arms crossed, watching her vigilantly as she threw herself into the snow, chubby hands slapping the ground, kicking her little legs while Leela laughed beside him.
Sometimes, mornings like this used to feel like a chore. Errands. Town. A list scrawled on his palm, running through daily tasks that he used to do alone—back when it had just been him and Sarah, back when Saturday mornings meant grocery runs, when her tiny hands would have been in his, tugging him toward whatever caught her eye.
Now, it was Maya, and she was a whole different kind of trouble.
Leela had gone off to meet Maria at the dam—something about some loose wiring, an issue that she was insisting she could fix, even though Joel had very strong feelings about her doing anything that required standing near running water with electrical tools. But that left him here, alone with Maya, tackling grocery shopping.
Joel let her wander, let her explore at her own level, tiny squeaky boots padding against the wooden floorboards of the trading post, soft little oohs and ahs slipping from her lips whenever she spotted something that intrigued her. He kept one eye on the list, the other on her, reaching out every so often to keep her from knocking into someone’s knees or tugging on a coat that didn’t belong to her.
But the second she drifted too far—too quick, too small, lost too easy in the crowd—he was on her.
A sigh deep in his chest, scooping her up, tucking her under his arm while she squealed and huffed, little hands batting at him in protest. Little gremlin.
“Don't gimme that, baby girl,” he muttered, setting her down just long enough to grab the last thing on his list.
Potatoes. Should’ve been easy. Joel let go of her hand for two damn seconds to grab the bag from the shelf—and when he turned back, she was gone.
His stomach dropped.
“Christ, not again,” he muttered under his breath, shifting his basket to his hip. “Maya?”
No answer. Just the quiet squeak of her boots, quick little steps padding away.
“Maya!”
Joel pushed past people, scanning, breath already working too hard through his nose. It wasn’t panic—not exactly—but it was something close. He had to remind himself that she wasn't made of glass and this was Jackson, yet that was still his baby.
His eyes locked on her in an instant. “Fast fuckin' menace,” he muttered.
She was standing a few feet away, tiny and oblivious, playing with the tab of a can of beans, flicking it up and down with rapt fascination. Didn't even bother looking at him.
Someone was crouched in front of her, blocking her from view. “Where’s your mother, sweetheart?”
Joel already knew who it was before he even reached them.
“Eugene,” he called.
The man glanced up at him, eyes narrowing for a beat before recognition settled in, mouth stretching into a knowing grin. “Miller.” He stood with a grunt, rolling out his shoulders. “Hey, help me out here. This kid’s parent—”
“Is me,” Joel muttered, already reaching for Maya, plucking her up onto his hip like she belonged nowhere else. “C'mere, trouble,” and a firm kiss to the top of her head, his fingers pressing into her tiny back.
“You?” Eugene questioned, thrown off balance.
What, had he been living under a rock? Maya had been the talk of the town since she'd been born. Who speaking off, squealed, giggling, smacking a hand against his cheek—some little game she’d apparently decided was hilarious.
“Me,” Joel confirmed, levelling Eugene with a look. “We got a problem?”
Eugene made a low sound in his throat, eyes flicking between them, like he was sizing up a damn prize mule. Then his mouth curled up once more.
“Oh yeah, I see it,” he said, nodding. “She’s got your big-ass nose.”
“Fuck off.”
“Calmeth thy tits,” Eugene grinned, “I’m tryna be polite.”
“Don’t need it.”
Eugene raised his hands in mock surrender, chuckling under his breath. “So this is why you’ve been copping out of patrol a lot lately. Got Tommy's panties in a twist.”
He nodded toward Maya, who had now taken to tugging on Joel’s beard, testing its durability like she had every right in the world to grab at her old man’s face.
Joel sighed, prying her fingers free one by one. “Yeah,” he admitted quietly. “Guess it is.”
“Yeah, by the looks of it, she's a handful. Cute as shit, though.”
And Eugene—he just stood there a second. Looking at Joel, smelling strongly of weed, basket in his grip, a box of food from the canteen and a bottle of whiskey sitting inside.
Joel saw it then. The difference between them. An old ghost of himself.
Eugene—the kind of man he might’ve been had it not been his instinct to quiet a baby's cries from next door. A year ago, maybe even less, he would’ve been the one with the bottle of whiskey in his cart, the one picking up meals from the canteen instead of making them. The one going home alone.
Eugene exhaled through his nose, shaking his head. “Huh,” he muttered. Then, a nod, a flash of grudging pride behind his eyes. “You came through. Good for you, Miller.”
Joel didn’t have the words for it. Didn’t know how to put into words what this was, what it felt like to have this, to have them—after years of nothing.
So he just cleared his throat and adjusted Maya in his arms. Eugene just chuckled, slapping a hand on his shoulder before stepping past him, humming under his breath.
Eugene didn’t walk off right away.
Joel could feel him there—still standing at his side, still weighing the words on his tongue. It set his teeth on edge, the way Eugene hesitated. Like he was debating whether to say what was already burning behind his lips.
Then, finally—
“You wanna tell me why Ellie and Dina are so interested in the Fireflies all of a sudden?”
Joel went winded. The Maya's little weight in his arms was suddenly the only thing keeping him upright, keeping him tethered. He barely blinked. Barely breathed.
His voice bit out dangerously low. “The hell are you talkin’ about?”
Eugene tightened the basket in his grip. Shrugged, like it wasn’t a big deal. But his eyes were sharp when they cut to Joel, measuring.
“She’s been askin’ these ex-Firefly folks like me and Tommy,” he told him. “Came to me couple nights back—askin’ if I knew anything. If I’d heard anything about ‘em regrouping.”
Joel swallowed, throat dry as dust.
His grip on Maya didn’t tighten—he made sure of that. Kept his hands gentle, careful, even as the rest of him braced. But inside—inside, he clenched up like a fist.
Ellie. Asking about the Fireflies.
It wasn’t panic curling up his spine. Worse.
Because she’d known. She’d gone back to that hospital. She’d walked through the bloodstains, the echoes of gunfire, the remnants of what he’d done. She’d seen the truth laid bare, stripped of all the justifications he’d tried to wrap around it. And she’d spent months—years—dragging herself through the wreckage, trying to make sense of it.
Trying to make peace with him.
He’d watched her try. Seen it in the way she forced herself to stay, even when the silence stretched too long between them. In the way she looked at him sometimes, like she was still searching for something, still waiting for an answer he could never give. He thought—he hoped—that with time, she’d let it rest. That the scars would settle, and they could leave that part of their lives buried where it belonged.
But now—now they were here again.
And Joel didn’t know if they could come back from it this time.
The walls of the room felt like they were creeping in closer, like if he stood still too long, he’d get swallowed whole, but Joel forced his breath steady. In. Out. In. Out. Kept his shoulders loose even as something behind his ribs coiled tight, wound like a spring.
“And?” He made his voice even, ironing out the edges. “You tell her anythin’?”
Eugene huffed, shaking his head. “Nothin’ worth tellin’. Just old stories, y’know? Old bases, old rumours, old movement. And about that research base over at Caltech. I don’t know what she’s lookin’ for, but maybe keep an eye out for your other little girl, too, yeah?”
Joel stared at nothing. His heart pounded heavy, like a fist banging against a locked door. Ellie had stopped asking a long time ago. Or at least, he’d thought she had. Maybe she’d just stopped asking him.
But why now? After all this time?
Not unless—
His mind snagged on the past few weeks. The time Ellie had been spending across the way. The quiet conversations, the way she lingered at their porch, shifting her weight like she was waiting on something. He hadn’t thought much of it at first. Leela kept to herself, and Ellie wasn’t exactly a social butterfly. Two closed-off people drifting toward each other, not expecting much in return.
But that wasn’t it.
Ellie was digging.
And Leela had handed her the shovel.
Of course she had.
Joel’s stomach twisted, that sourness settling deep. He should’ve seen it sooner. Should’ve recognized the signs.
Leela—the girl with something ripped from her before she ever had the chance to claim it. A name that couldn’t be rooted in history. A life that had been rewritten for her before she could write it herself.
Ellie had always been drawn to ghosts. The lost, the forgotten, the ones who didn’t get a choice. She saw herself in them. Clung to them. And Leela—she was another reflection in the glass.
Another kid who could’ve been something more.
Another wasted potential.
Another shot at redemption.
Joel clenched his teeth. He should’ve seen this coming. Should’ve stopped it before it got this far. Because this wasn’t just curiosity—not for Ellie. It never was. She was always looking for meaning in the wreckage. Always chasing the answers that would rip her open in the end.
And now she was looking again.
For the Fireflies. For Leela. For something she thought she’d lost. For something Joel had taken from her. Taken from them.
His chest tightened, breath coming sharp through his nose. He hadn’t just lied to Ellie all those years ago. He’d tried to close the door. To bury it, deep enough that she’d never claw it back to the surface. But maybe that was never the way it was going to go. Maybe it had just been a matter of time.
Eugene must’ve caught something in his expression, because he turned fully then, brows knitting together.
“You alright, Miller?”
Joel blinked. Swallowed. Got a hold of himself
“Yeah.” His voice was rough, scraped raw. “M’fine.”
Eugene didn’t look convinced. “You take care now.”
And maybe—for the first time in a long time—Joel wasn’t either.
But Eugene didn’t push. Just cleared his throat, nodded once, winked at Maya, and finally stepped away, boots heavy against the floorboards.
Joel stood there a second longer, the world shifting around him. It was a feeling he despised. The sensation of something slipping just beyond his grasp.
Then he looked down at Maya, small and soft in his arms, her tiny hand curled into the fabric of his coat, trusting. “Da-da, go. Go.”
The only part of his world that still made sense. He focused on that. On her warmth.
He pressed a kiss to her temple, breathing her in. “Yeah, baby. Let's go.”
Then turned, stepping toward the door, already knowing—
He needed to find Ellie. Now.
X
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Hi, hi, hi!
I know he's not from Honkai but I saw that a long while ago you did a Neuvillette post. So I was wondering if I could get a Neuvillette Lucky Egg?
LUCKY EGG
Yandere!Neuvillette x Reader

You had never believed in luck. If you did, your life wouldn’t be what it was now—stuck in a tiny apartment with your childhood friend, Melis, who made sure to remind you of every single bad decision you’d ever made. She wasn’t cruel, exactly, but she had a way of making you feel like an idiot.
So when you saw the Lucky Egg Dispenser at the back of a convenience store, promising "A once-in-a-lifetime blessing!", you almost walked past it.
But something about it made you stop.
It looked old, the paint chipped around the edges, but the golden lettering still shimmered under the fluorescent lights. A sign above it read:
"One egg per person. No refunds. Your fate awaits."
It was probably a scam. A cheap plastic trinket inside, or some useless charm. But before you could talk yourself out of it, you fed a few coins into the slot and turned the crank.
Clunk.
A round capsule tumbled into your waiting hands. The plastic casing snapped open, revealing—
An egg?
It was smooth, cool to the touch, and a pale blue color, almost pearlescent. Strange, but… oddly pretty. You turned it over in your hands, half-expecting a hidden button or compartment, but it was just an egg.
Three Days Later
The egg sat on your nightstand for days, untouched. Melis had scoffed when she saw it.
"Really? You wasted money on that?"
You ignored her.
Something in you didn’t want to throw it away.
Then, on the third night, you woke to a soft crack.
Blinking the sleep from your eyes, you turned toward the sound and saw the egg trembling, thin fractures spreading across its surface. You barely had time to react before the shell split apart, breaking open like a delicate flower and something small tumbled out, landing in the nest of blankets you’d unknowingly made around it.
A child.
No—a dragon.
He looked human, mostly, but too otherworldly to be mistaken for one. His silver hair curled softly around his face, and from his head sprouted two smooth, curved horns. A long, sinuous tail flicked behind him, twitching as he adjusted to his new surroundings.
Then, slowly, he lifted his head—his purple eyes locking onto yours.
"You" he murmured, his voice like distant thunder.
The little dragon boy—because that’s what he was—blinked up at you, his eyes filled with something… old. Too knowing for a child. And yet, he was small, barely bigger than a toddler, his limbs still weak from hatching.
His tail flicked, curling slightly around your wrist where your hand had instinctively moved forward. His warmth seeped into your skin, gentle but noticeable.
"You’re the one who called me here" he said.
"I… I just got an egg from a machine. I didn’t—"
Your heart pounded. This was insane. But the weight of him, the warmth of his tiny body, the way his delicate claws curled into the fabric of your shirt—
He was real. And cute? Extremely cute.
And now he was your responsibility.
The First Day
By morning, you had accepted two things:
You had somehow acquired a baby dragon.
Melis could never find out.
So far, you were lucky. She had left early for work, grumbling about her awful manager, and you had time to figure things out.
Your new… companion had been surprisingly quiet. He sat on your bed, watching you with eerie patience as you gathered whatever food you had—some bread, a few leftover scraps from last night’s dinner.
"Do you eat?" you asked awkwardly, holding out a piece of toast.
He stared at it, then at you. Then, very deliberately, he leaned forward and bit your wrist.
"Ow—!" You yanked your hand back, but he barely broke the skin. It wasn’t an attack, more like… an experiment. His small fangs left the faintest indentations before he pulled away, licking his lips.
"Strange" he murmured. "Your energy tastes different than before."
Your what? You stared at him, but he only blinked, as if you were the one being weird.
"I require no food," he finally said. "I only need you."
The Second Day
By the next morning, he was taller.
Noticeably so.
The clothes you had scrounged together for him—a too-big hoodie and some old shorts—fit better now. His limbs were longer, more proportional. His horns had grown slightly, and his tail swayed behind him with more control.
"You… grew."
"Yes." He looked at you, unbothered. "I told you. I only need you."
What did that mean?
The Third Day
You had a problem.
Not just because your mysterious dragon child was now nearly a teenager overnight, his voice deepening slightly, his presence too much for your small apartment—
But because Melis was starting to notice.
"You’ve been acting weird," she said over dinner, narrowing her eyes. "And why is the place so damn warm? Are you messing with the thermostat again?"
"I haven’t touched it" you lied smoothly, forcing a smile.
Neuvillette—he had given you his name the night before—was hidden in your room. But even then, you swore you could feel him listening.
Melis huffed. "And where’s all the food going? I just bought groceries, and half of it’s gone! I swear, if you’re sneaking in some loser boyfriend—"
"I’m not."
She leaned forward, glaring. "Then what the hell are you hiding?"
Before you could answer, a faint sound came from your bedroom.
Melis’s eyes snapped toward the door.
And then—she stood up.
Your heart stopped.
"What was that?"
She took a step forward.
"Nothing," you blurted out, moving to block her. "Just the wind. Or—"
Melis reached for the doorknob and it swung open on its own.
Neuvillette stood there.
Not as a child. Not even as a teenager.
But taller now. Older.
His horns had grown sharper. His eyes glowed faintly in the dim light, his pupils slit like a predator’s. He tilted his head, looking at Melis like she was something insignificant.
Something inhuman curled in his voice when he spoke:
"You should not be here."
Melis froze.
And for the first time since you had known her—
She looked afraid.
The morning felt strange.
You had woken up groggy, expecting to hear Melis grumbling about the bills, the temperature, or whatever new complaint she had for the day. But instead—silence.
It wasn’t until you shuffled into the kitchen that you noticed the note on the counter.
I’m leaving. Don’t bother looking for me.
The handwriting was hers.
It wasn’t that you’d miss her exactly. She had been exhausting, always watching you like you were one bad decision away from ruining your life. But… leaving without even saying anything? Without fighting first? That wasn’t like her.
You stared at the note a little longer. Something felt off.
But you had work. You didn’t have time to dwell on it.
The moment you left, Neuvillette stirred from where he had been lounging on the couch.
You had grown more comfortable with him—enough that you no longer questioned how much he had changed, or rather, how fast he had changed.
Your strange little friend was gone. It had been easy to remove them, even easier to mimic their writing. You hadn’t suspected a thing.
But… there was something missing.
Even as he sat there, waiting for your return, he felt restless. Hunger, but not for food.
For strength.
Something called to him beyond the walls of your home, something old and brimming with power. He followed it.
He hadn’t expected to find a dungeon.
The entrance was tucked away in the city, hidden beneath the ruins of an abandoned building. The air shimmered with faint, magical energy—ancient, untouched.
The moment he stepped inside, something stirred in the darkness.
A goblin—small, filthy, and sneering.
It laughed when it saw him.
"Hah! A lost little human?" It bared its crooked teeth. "You won’t last a second, boy—"
His claws tore through the creature’s throat before it could finish its sentence.
Warmth flooded his body, like a surge of raw energy. The moment the goblin died, something deep within him awakened. His strength sharpened, his magic expanded, and for the first time—
He understood.
This place was meant to be his.
One by one, the creatures fell.
They thought him weak. Human-like.
They were wrong.
Each battle only made him stronger. Magic pulsed beneath his skin, ancient and limitless. The dungeon itself seemed to acknowledge his strength, bending to his will as he carved his way to the top.
And when he reached the end, when the last beast knelt before him, trembling—
Neuvillette smiled.
He was no longer just an intruder here.
He was the ruler.
And when he returned to you, stepping through your front door like nothing had changed, he was stronger than you could ever imagine.
Dinner felt… strange.
You weren’t sure when it had started, but something about Neuvillette was different now.
It wasn’t just his appearance—though that was the most obvious. He looked fully grown, his body lean and strong, his movements refined. His silver hair was longer now, and his once-uncontrolled tail was nowhere to be seen, no horns, either.
If you hadn’t known better, you would’ve thought he was entirely human.
You swallowed another bite of food, trying not to stare. He wasn’t looking at you anyway—just calmly sipping his drink, completely at ease.
"You work every day" he said suddenly.
"Yeah? That’s normal."
"And what do you do?"
That was an odd question. You had talked about work before, but maybe he was just curious.
"Nothing exciting. Just a regular office job." You shrugged. "It pays the bills."
"I see." His gaze lingered on you, thoughtful. "And the machine? Where did you find it?"
"Machine?"
"The one that brought me to you."
Oh. That machine.
You leaned back in your chair, thinking. "It was at a small convenience store near my office. It looked kind of old, like no one had used it in years. Why?"
"No reason."
You were deep asleep when he left.
The world outside was quiet, the streets bathed in the dim glow of streetlights.
Neuvillette moved silently, his presence blending seamlessly with the shadows as he arrived at the convenience store. The Lucky Egg Dispenser sat in the corner, just as you described.
From a glance, it seemed ordinary.
But when he raised a hand to feel its power, he felt nothing.
No energy. No magic. Just cold, lifeless metal.
His brows furrowed. But then-
A system board flickered to life in front of him, glowing with strange, shifting symbols.
[NAME: NEUVILLETTE] [RANK: ???] [LEVEL: 62] [TITLES: DUNGEON RULER, ???, ???]
So this was the truth behind his existence.
This machine wasn’t just luck. It was something more—something that had brought him to you for a reason.
But what was that reason?
The board flickered again, shifting—
And then, a new line of text appeared.
[NO ADDITIONAL EGGS AVAILABLE]
So… there wouldn’t be another.
There wouldn’t be another like him.
That meant one thing.
You were his.
And there would be no one else.
----
The whispers echoed.
"Hydro Dragon, Hydro Dragon, don’t cry."
The voice was distant, layered with something ancient, something aching. It wasn’t just words—it was a feeling. A pull deep within his very being, like something forgotten was trying to resurface.
The darkness in his dream twisted—
He woke up. His body jolted upright, breath uneven, sweat clinging to his skin. His heart pounded, the lingering sensation of the voice still curling around his mind.
"Neuvillette?"
His head snapped toward you. You were sitting beside him, your brows furrowed in concern.
"Are you okay?"
You were here. That was all that mattered.
Forcing a smile, he wiped the sweat from his brow. "It was just a dream."
But deep down—he knew it was more than that.
----
Neuvillette had grown stronger, but it still wasn’t enough.
The moment you left for work, he sought more. More power, more understanding—more of what he was meant to become. He followed instinct, the same strange pull that had led him to the dungeon before.
But this time, it led him to water.
A large, secluded lake, untouched by the city's influence. The air here was heavier, richer with something old.
A creature surfaced. A strange otter, sleek and dark-eyed, watching him intently. The creature did not flee. It did not fear him. Instead, it gave a small chuff and turned, swimming toward the center of the lake.
Then—it dived and vanished.
Neuvillette stepped forward, the water lapping at his ankles. Then his knees. Then his waist—
Then, with a final step, he let himself sink.
The water welcomed him.
He found the ruins at the lake’s bottom, hidden beneath the shifting currents. Stone pillars jutted from the depths, covered in carvings that glowed faintly when his fingers traced them.
The moment he touched them, something awakened.
A pulse—deep, rushing power.
And then the water moved. It bent at his will, swirling around his arms, surging through his veins. He lifted a hand, and the currents obeyed. He pushed outward, and the lake trembled.
The sheer force of his ability sent a wave rolling across the surface—too large, too noticeable.
Figures stood on the shore now. He had revealed too much.
It was time to leave.
The house was quiet. Neuvillette sat, fresh from his bath, dressed in a loose white shirt and dark slacks. His hair was still damp, strands falling over his shoulders as he leaned back against the couch.
He was waiting. But the night stretched on, and you did not return.
Not until much later, the door creaked open.
You stumbled inside, your movements slow and unsteady, the unmistakable scent of alcohol clinging to you. Your pupils were blown, your gaze unfocused. Behind you, a man lingered in the doorway.
"Who—"
The man’s smile faltered. "Oh, uh—hey, didn’t know you had a roommate."
His hand was still on your waist.
"I’ll take them now."
The man hesitated, then forced a chuckle. "Come on, I was just—"
Neuvillette moved. Faster than the man could react, he wrenched you from his grasp, pulling you into his arms.
The man stepped back, startled. "Whoa—relax, man. I was just making sure they got home safe—"
"Leave."
"Tch. Whatever, dude." He turned, muttering under his breath as he left.
Neuvillette watched him go.
Then, once you were settled, breathing softly against his chest—
He followed.
The man was still muttering when Neuvillette found him.
He hadn’t gone far—only to the lake’s edge, kicking at the dirt, grumbling about “weird possessive freaks” and “wasted effort.”
He didn’t notice the water stirring.
Didn’t see the way the waves rose.
A sudden wave surging forward. The man barely had time to scream before it dragged him under.
Neuvillette stood at the shore, watching, his eyes glinting in the moonlight.
The man thrashed.
Neuvillette lifted a hand.
The water tightened.
Bubbles surfaced, erratic at first—then fewer. Slower. Until, finally—
Nothing.
With a flick of his wrist, the water carried the body further—deep into the lake’s heart, where no one would find it.
At least, not until it was too late.
Three Days Later
"Did you hear?"
You paused mid-sip, blinking. "Hear what?"
Your coworker leaned in, lowering her voice. "They found a body. In the lake. Some guy—totally eaten up. They think he drowned a few days ago."
You set your cup down carefully. "That’s… awful."
"Yeah." She made a face. "I mean, what kind of freaking fish do we have in there?"
----
The weekend arrived with an unbearable heatwave. You had spent the afternoon outside, running errands beneath the scorching sun. By the time you got home, you were practically melting.
"Neuvillette, I’m back!" You called out as you kicked off your shoes, holding up the bag in your hands.
He emerged from the other room, his expression unreadable as always, but his gaze immediately flicked to what you were holding.
"Ice cream?"
You grinned, pulling out one of the containers. "Figured you'd like something cold. Want to try?"
Neuvillette took it carefully, staring at it as if it were something foreign. But after a small, experimental bite—his pupils dilated slightly.
"…It’s pleasant."
"That’s it? Just ‘pleasant’?"
He hummed, taking another bite, letting it melt slowly on his tongue. His expression remained composed, but you noticed the way he leaned ever so slightly into the sensation, as if savoring it more than he let on.
A rare sight.
You chuckled, opening your own and sitting beside him.
"Guess I’ll take that as a win."
It was later in the day when it happened.
You were standing. Walking. Moving through the house with no real thought, no resistance, as if it were the most natural thing in the world.
There was something you needed to do.
Something important.
The bathroom door was open. Steam curled from within, the scent of fresh water pulling at you.
You stepped inside.
The moment your foot hit the tile— The trance broke.
You blinked, the haze lifting from your mind. Your breath hitched slightly as you realized you were standing in the doorway, fully clothed, about to step into a warm bath—with Neuvillette sitting in the tub.
His sleeves were rolled up, his silver hair cascading over his shoulders. He was waiting.
And he looked surprisingly unfazed.
"…What am I doing?" you muttered, shaking your head.
Neuvillette tilted his head slightly. "You wanted to shampoo my hair."
What?
"I… wanted to—" You stopped yourself.
That didn’t sound right. That didn��t even feel like something you had decided. But there was no sign of deception in his gaze, no indication that he was lying.
It was weird.
The heat had left you sluggish, and thinking too hard about it made your head hurt.
You exhaled, rubbing your temples. "…Whatever. Just—move over."
Neuvillette did, watching in quiet satisfaction as you stepped forward, kneeling beside the tub.
Your fingers combed through his hair, lathering the shampoo, your nails scraping lightly against his scalp. His lashes fluttered at the sensation.
You didn’t see the slight curve of his lips. Didn’t notice the way his fingers twitched—resisting the urge to pull you in completely.
----
Your office was always a mess of rushed deadlines and overworked employees. The company thrived on exploitation, squeezing everything it could from its workforce before discarding them like broken tools.
Today was no different.
"Did you see the latest report?" One of your coworkers, Kael, whispered as he slid into the seat beside you. His hands trembled slightly, holding a file.
You sighed, not even bothering to look up from your screen. "Which one? They dump a new crisis on us every hour."
"The dungeon." His voice lowered further. "The one that just appeared."
That caught your attention. You finally glanced at the report in his hands.
A massive fluctuation had been recorded at a previously empty lot on the outskirts of the city. A dungeon had emerged overnight, far more dangerous than expected. The first wave of hunters and warriors sent to clear it had suffered heavy casualties. The survivors reported unusual conditions—monsters that grew stronger after each battle, as if they were learning.
But the company didn't care. They just sent in more people.
"How many deaths so far?" you asked quietly.
Kael hesitated. "Too many."
You stared at the screen, unease curling in your stomach.
Something about this didn’t feel right.
Far beneath the dungeon’s surface, Neuvillette stood in the heart of his domain.
His gaze swept over the carnage left behind—the remnants of another failed attempt. Weapons lay shattered, armor broken, bodies scattered across the cold stone.
He stepped forward.
The air hummed around him, the essence of the fallen swirling into his being.
Another level gained.
"Foolish," he murmured. "They send their people to die… yet they do not realize they are only feeding me."
He exhaled slowly, his body adjusting to the newfound strength.
He was still growing.
And soon—
He would be unstoppable.
----
You barely made it through the front door.
Every muscle in your body ached, exhaustion settling into your bones like lead. You dropped your bag, kicking off your shoes with little care as you stumbled further inside.
The damn company had kept you overnight. Again.
Piling up more work, more pressure, more demands—until you were left wrung out and barely functioning. You were too tired to even be angry. All you wanted was sleep.
"You're late."
You managed a weak chuckle. "Tell that to my boss."
He stood near the couch, arms crossed, gaze sweeping over your disheveled form. You could feel his displeasure—palpable, simmering. But before you could say anything, he stepped forward, placing a hand on your forehead.
Warmth—no, energy—seeped into you, flowing through every aching limb, easing the tension in your body. It was like stepping into cool water after burning under the sun.
You barely had time to register what he’d done before sleep pulled you under.
Neuvillette watched as you finally rested. Your breathing was slow, steady, free of the exhaustion that had plagued you moments ago.
How many times had they done this to you?
How many times had you come home like this—drained, miserable, struggling just to stay upright?
"This world does not deserve you"
If it was unworthy of your existence—if it continued to break you down—
Then he would rebuild it.
Piece by piece.
A second dungeon appeared—then a third, then dozens more, blooming across the city like festering wounds. What was once a rare phenomenon became unstoppable, warping the landscape into a nightmarish battleground.
From the depths of each dungeon, Neuvillette’s forces emerged.
Creatures of the abyss—twisted beasts, eldritch horrors, dragons that roared with primordial fury. They poured into the streets, overwhelming police, military, and the so-called “heroes” who thought they could reclaim what had already been lost.
The city fell apart within days.
And through it all—Neuvillette watched from above, his eyes as cold and endless as the ocean’s depths.
The world had tried to break you.
Now it was his turn to break the world.
---
You woke up in a different place.
The suffocating weight of exhaustion was gone, but something felt off. The air smelled of rain, fresh and crisp, yet there was an eerie silence outside.
You sat up.
The room was luxurious, but unfamiliar. You swung your legs over the bed—only for the door to open before you could take a step.
"You're awake."
"Where… are we?"
"The outside world is no longer of concern to you. This is our home."
No longer of concern?
You moved toward the window—only to feel an invisible force halt you mid-step.
"There’s no need to leave," Neuvillette murmured. "Everything out there is beneath you now. You only need me."
His fingers brushed against your cheek.
"And I will never let them take you from me again."
"Neuvillette, stop this."
Your voice was firm, but your hands trembled as you pushed against his chest.
"I don’t need protection. I don’t need you to tear everything apart for me. I’m okay."
"Okay?" he echoed, as if the word was foreign to him. His hands trailed up your arms, "You were never okay. They drained you. Used you. You just didn’t realize it."
You shook your head, frustration building. "Even if that’s true, it doesn’t mean you get to decide for me!"
He sighed.
"You don’t have to decide anymore."
Before you could react, his hand cupped the side of your neck—then he bit down.
A sharp sting bloomed where his teeth sank into your skin. You gasped out of pain, but he didn’t let go—not until he was certain his mark was there to stay.
When he pulled back, his lips were tinted red.
"Now, even if you run…" He brushed a thumb over the wound, smearing the blood. "I will always find you."
Your vision swam, the pain dulling into something hazy, sluggish. He was doing something.
"Sleep" he whispered. "It’ll hurt less that way."
Your body betrayed you before your mind could protest, the exhaustion swallowing you whole.
Even in sleep, you weren’t safe.
Soft lips traced the curve of your throat, pressing lingering kisses against your skin. The warmth of his mouth sent shivers through your unconscious body, his breath hot against each fresh mark he left.
His hands moved with deliberate reverence, tracing the shape of your collarbone, your shoulders, the delicate lines of your pulse.
"Mine" he murmured between each press of his lips.
#yandere x reader#yandere#yandere genshin impact#genshin impact#genshin fanfic#genshin x reader#neuvilette genshin#neuvilette x reader#neuvilette x you#heliosluckyegg
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PLEASE MORE OF CHILDHOOD BEST FRIEND KAISER 🙏🙏
childhood bestfriend!kaiser who, at age nine, manages to find a spare coin on the ground and decides, for the fun of it, to use it on a nearby capsule machine as he waits for you to finish up inside the convenience store. it contains mini capsules of what seems to be cheap jewelry, and though kaiser cannot be bothered to wear any himself, he decides for the fun of it to just give it a spin since the other machines don't seem worth his money.
he ends up with what looks like a cheap nickel ring with a plastic deep blue gem glued onto its little divot. it's... actually not bad for something so cheap, but it's still cheap enough to notice some flawed intricacies and some irregularities in its pattern surrounding the band of the ring. he attempts to try it on some of his fingers, but it refuses to budge past half of most of them.
you manage to finally finish up paying for your stuff at the register, meeting him outside where you find him squatting down in front of a couple of capsule machines arranging from some quick candy to disposable toys. he holds something shiny between his two fingers as he examines it closely, his concentration on the item making you giggle lightly. that's when he notices you and you ask him what he's holding as you shuffle up next to him.
"a ring," he states simply, letting you hold it between your fingers to let you analyze the toy. "i think it's a little small for me though."
you hum lightly before gently trying it on your left ring finger. to yours and kaiser's mild surprise, it fits quite snugly. "hey, look at that!"
you show off your hand to him, where the ocean blue gem glimmers along the silver band. kaiser stares at it for a minute, taking a liking to how well it goes together with your hand—like it's meant to be there.
he tucks his head away from you, the tips of his ears blushing a light pink. quietly, he mumbles, "... you can have it, then... if you want."
"really?!" you exclaim, clearly delighted. you grin widely, clenching and unclenching your fist when he nods shyly again in affirmation.
he watches you from the corner of his eye, witnessing you glimmer in admiration at the cheap ring, as if it was an actually well-crafted piece made with love and care and thought and not some mass-produced, cheap toy that would most likely break in a couple of days.
so it's surprising how long the little toy has lasted after all these years. there eventually came an age where it could no longer fit any of your fingers without it getting stuck, so you had opted for creating it into a necklace with a matching silver chain. when you had proudly showed off your creation to kaiser at age twelve, his lips purse in bashfulness fronted as confusion. he knew you had worn it for quite a while after he gave it to you, given how he always would steal a glance at your hand to see if you were still wearing it, but to see you go to a length to preserve such a small gift made kaiser feel like he was on top of the world.
you wore the simple necklace for a long time—essentially every day and never took it off unless you were showering or going to bed. even despite the strict "no jewelry" rule at your school, you always had tucked it inside your shirt in secret, feeling like you were carrying a piece of kaiser every where you went since you and him went to different schools (what institution he went to, you didn't know. every time you asked him what school to see if it sounded familiar, he'd just simply reply, "school.")
so when kaiser disappeared from your life for three years, after he had gotten arrested at thirteen for apparently robbing a store (you would shout at the others who rumored about the subject that he'd do no such thing), the piece of metal felt heavier around your neck at times. it felt sore at times, but you still insisted on wearing it every day in hopes that he'd still be somewhere nearby, waiting for you to hand him spare pieces of your dad's bread rolls behind his bakery.
you'd fiddle with it at times while waiting at his bus stop, while you waited on the swings at the nearby park, while you sat on the stairs of your father's bakery... just waiting in hopes of seeing a familiar blonde to hopefully appear before you. you don't know how much time you had wasted in the first year and a half attempting to continue a routine that you didn't know ended without your knowledge... just simply waiting and staring into the open distance while your fingers fiddled with the toy ring strung around your neck.
you stopped waiting for the figment of someone you used to know after the seventeenth month. winter was upon you now and you knew it was getting harder to withstand the chilled air as you waited, waited, and waited. as you swung lightly on the swings that you and kaiser used to eat too much candy with bought with your dad's spare cash, you eventually let the sugar dissolve on your tongue one last time before heading home as the snow began to fall.
you were eighteen, visiting home from the big city on a holiday weekend when you saw him for the first time in years. just shy of the end of your first semester at university, you saw a familiar head of blonde (with now blue tips) hair descending down to the shared tunnel of the subway, face just barely visible from the scarf he wore. you were on the opposite side and had just gotten off at the same platform, and the whiplash you had given yourself at the moment to double check if the person wrapped in a dark blue scarf was actually someone that had disappeared from your life years ago was truly there could've snapped your neck.
suitcase trailing behind you, you had forgotten all about your connecting train and swiftly trailed down the stairs in desperation to see a familiar face you yearned to see for the past few years. you probably looked like a psychopath, but you didn't care, not when you spotted the familiar choppy locks of white gold just a few meters away.
when you called out his name, you proved yourself right given how the figure in front of you freezes when you shout his last name.
kaiser remembers stiffening up at the sound of a melody all too familiar to him just before he transferred through the turnstile to the other station. he slowly turned around to see a face he had spent a good portion of the beginning of his life around, a face that unlike most people in his life, he didn't dread to see with a flow of contempt. but he still felt the apprehension fill his nerves, similar in the way that it did just before a big match.
and it felt nearly impossible to control such a feeling—especially when he spots the shrewd ring still hanging around your neck on a thin, silver chain, its dark plastic gem still glistening at him with a knowing wink in its glimmer.
a/n ; some more of childhood bestfriend!kaiser here, here, and here (yandere warning for the last one). comments and reblogs always noticed and endlessly appreciated :]
#blue lock#bllk#michael kaiser#kaiser#michael kaiser x reader#kaiser x reader#michael kaiser x you#kaiser x you#blue lock x reader#bllk x reader#blue lock fluff#bllk fluff#blue lock ; michael kaiser#mini-series ; cbf!kaiser
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