#Emil's Notes
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Field Notes on Prawia, the Blood Mother

1453, January 14th
Dearest Minister, I write to you today with great excitement, my hands trembling as I commit my findings to paper. The hours have slipped away as I consolidate my notes. I believed you when you told me that Prawia, the earth beneath our feet, is a living god—but believing and seeing are two entirely different things.
I must admit—Before you took me under your wing, Minister, I was a fool. How could I have ever doubted that Prawia is a god? What else could explain the lakes of blood coursing beneath the surface? How can one claim that veins as thick as rivers exist simply for existence’s sake, like the sky or the stars? The skeptics argue that this blood is no different from water, that it is merely another natural element. But how can they compare it to mundane substances when it holds such immense divine properties? Only a fool would fail to see it. But I somewhat understand their aversion to believing the truth, because gods can only live if they are supplied with sacrifice and worship, yet Prawia’s religious influence does not extend beyond a handful of tiny cults. People do not even know of her true name, just referring to her as Prawia or the Blood Mother as they lack a better way to call her.
I too held such a doubt in the back of my mind until I was met face to face with reality.
Now, let me recount my findings. It all began three years ago during a knowledge exchange with the Disciples of Prone, when I found myself locked in debate with a fellow scholar over Prawia’s nature. The fool uttered a question that, despite its simplicity, gave me pause: “If Prawia is truly a living being, where is her flesh?” A fair point, I admit, as we categorize the living from the dead by their beating, fleshy insides.
But rather than concede, I took his foolish words as inspiration—why argue with that idiot if I can simply prove him wrong? Why not dig deep enough to find out if there is flesh or not? It's rather a simple thing really, and I'm a bit ashamed I did not think of such a logical way of bringing an end to this argument earlier.
With this revelation in mind, I sought out a nearby Church and, with the right persuasion (coin, of course), secured a labor force of enslaved criminals. I ordered them to dig straight away; my curiosity could not wait another second. They worked tirelessly, day and night, many collapsing from exhaustion. Normally, I would have had sympathy for them and allowed more rest, but these fellows fell out of reach of my pity—such is the fate of fools who forsake law, morality, and knowledge.
It took eleven months of digging ordinary dirt until we struck something unusual.
The soil turned deep red, reeking of iron. Oddly enough, while the layers above were dry and compact, this new earth was wet, seeping like an open wound. But the most disturbing revelation was its lethal nature—contact with bare skin resulted in instantaneous death. No sound. No struggle. No visible change. One simply ceased “being.” Exposure to Prawia’s blood is known to induce madness, but this… this was something far worse. Stranger still, once brought to the surface, this soil would melt into a black substance before crystallizing into a blackish red crystal. I have sent a sample of this crystal to you, Minister, though my own tests reveal only that it bears a resemblance to iron.
Undeterred, I paused only to procure protective equipment for my men before ordering the excavation to continue. Breathing grew difficult as oxygen waned, and the earth, soft and treacherous, caved in upon itself time and time again but that was not going to stop me. We devised new methods of reinforcing our tunnels, but fear had begun to fester among the workers, slowing their progress. Though I found their cowardice an annoyance, I could not deny that I too felt the weight of dread pressing upon me. Yet my instincts urged me forward—I knew I was on the verge of something great.
And then, we reached it.
A miner’s pickaxe shattered a thin layer beneath us, revealing a pale, glimmering substance. At first, we assumed it to be a mineral formation, but we quickly realized—it was everywhere. A vast layer of tightly woven strands, interlaced like the silk of a cocoon. Each strand was brittle, reminiscent of eggshells. But its properties… were monstrous. We brought some mice down to test its potency and… as soon as the mice came into proximity with the white material, they simply… exploded. When brought to the surface, its potency diminished, though it still claimed the lives of any creature that ventured too close without proper protection. We also had some workers die because of it a few weeks, even months later. The autopsies revealed that despite thick protection, their internal organs had been reduced to paste. How they remained alive even moments after exposure then is a mystery in itself. Concerned something happened to me as well, a doctor friend cut me open and examined my innards—but, not to boast, I am likely powerful enough to have resisted the worst effects. Foolish as it may sound, I feel almost honored to have survived.
Despite the danger, this layer proved the easiest to mine—thin, fragile, stable. But when we pierced through it, disaster struck.
A silent calamity erupted through the shaft. Every single worker—above and below—fell to their knees in silent death, before their bodies disintegrated into bloody puddles. I alone remained unaffected, my will and magic shielding me from death.
With my workforce obliterated, I faced a dilemma. More laborers would only meet the same fate, and I had no plans to seek out a professional workforce as I did not want to put actual innocents on the line for my research. Thus, I had no choice but to seek out him: Garnet, a crimson-armored fool whose mind is ruled by only hunger and fists. His intelligence is so questionable that sometimes I wonder if he is even literate.
Upon my call, he came as usual, seeking to cure his boredom with my “silly projects.” He did not hesitate to agree when I told him we needed to dig, not even asking what horrors lay beneath that caused him to be called in the first place. He just grabbed a pickaxe and asked me when we were getting started. As much as I know his nature, it exasperates me every time I am met face-to-face with it. The gods really have blessed this fool quite a bit for him to have survived to this day with such a simple outlook on life.
Before we went down, of course, I took a few weeks off to enhance our protective gear. And this is incredibly important to mention, but seeing that fool put layers of clothes and protective gear ON TOP of his armor is the stupidest thing I have seen this decade.
More protected than ever, together, we descended once more. And there, beneath it all, we found the final layer—a smooth, pitch-black expanse, glossy like obsidian yet with a deep red shimmer. It was almost like coagulated blood and it looked oddly similar to how the red soil looked when it crystallized. If touched lightly, it flowed like liquid. If struck, it shattered but retained its shape. I would have loved to study it with you, Minister, but its mere exposure had already claimed countless lives above ground, so I dared not bring it to the surface.
And below that—I beheld the truth. That foolish disciple of Prone was an idiot as I suspected.
Flesh. Pulsating. Alive. Prawia was a living entity, without a shadow of a doubt. As awe-inspiring as it was to lay my eyes on it, being in its sheer presence hurt. Even my foolish companion, mighty as he is, faltered beneath its oppressive aura. I think it was the first time I've seen him grimace like that.
Pain was nothing in the face of my curiosity, however. I reached out with my staff, driven by an insatiable need to see if the flesh would react to touch—but before I could make contact, that idiot seized me, dragging me away. I would never forget how fast that battle junkie ran, even collapsing the shaft in his wake as if to try to slow the progress of — something— behind us.
Only once we reached the surface did I realize—my outstretched arm was twisted beyond recognition, its bones seemingly erased. My arm resembled more of a twisted blood bag than the appendage of a living creature. Yet I felt nothing. My sense of pain and touch were gone, it was as if I was thrown into the void. My hearing had vanished as well, and even now, as I write this, it has yet to fully return. Only now do I understand—the workers never realized their insides were liquefying because merely being in Prawia presence stole their senses away. A mercy, in hindsight.
My companion fared no better than me— his prized armor, forged by the world's mightiest smiths, was shattered into smithereens. His limbs were reduced to nothing more than knots of skin and blood. When I went to further check his condition, he was unresponsive as well. The only sign of him being alive being his pupils dilating and focusing, as if trying to remain conscious despite his terrible situation.
After he recovered to the point of speaking, I learned that he took the brunt of what he describes as merely a “confused gaze” of the entity below us. He said he clearly felt no ill intent behind what we experienced, leaving me to question what would have happened if there was any. For us two, especially Garnet, who has the power to rival some gods, to be taken down by a mere “gaze”… how powerful must Prawia be?
But the most fascinating revelation? Prawia can change in response to our actions.
Please be light on the scolding when I get Back, Minister, but I went for another round of digging. I thought that foolish friend of mine would abstain as he was still licking his injuries, but came along as well so I did not need to procure a new workforce. But, we did not get very far. The black layer just above the flesh had risen up almost in response to our previous digging, stopping us from going into even the top red soil layer. It may be a stretch, but I almost felt annoyance from Prawia by such an action, it felt akin to a person shutting a window so flies do not get into the house anymore.
And, it seemed to have also come to the conclusion that this layer was too brittle before, and strengthened it to the point that it was pretty much indestructible. My foolish companion could not breach it, and if he cannot, then truly, nothing can.
May Gamayun’s knowledge be all-consuming. —Signed, your dearest student.
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biggest reason i make so many flop posts on here is because everything i do reeks of the desperation to make a popular tumblr post. this is deliberate, because it is what protects me from ACTUALLY making a popular tumblr post. so long as i crave it, tumblr fame will never find me. it is only when i turn away, and accept my fate of obscurity, that people will lay their eyes upon me. and it WILL be because i tripped and fell on my stupid face while i was turning
#crowfound ramblings#one must remember that icarus was forbidden from flying too low because the sea spray would ruin his wings just as well as the sun#also my proof of this being true is that my highest note count is on the FUCKING SPAGHETTI POST. THANKS SO MUCH EMIL FOR THAT /silly
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Sarah Bernhardt, Émile Tourtin, 19th century
#sarah bernhardt#photography#vintage photography#vintage#black and white photography#emile tourtin#19th century#19th century photography#portrait#celebrity#french#100 notes#250 notes#500 notes
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Writing Notes: World-building Questions
How long has your world existed?
How many major cultures exist in your world? (You can answer the following questions for each of them!)
How did your world originate? Do the people who inhabit this world/culture have a creation myth, or a scientific explanation for how it came to be?
If your world/culture has religion, is there one main religion, or many religions? Are the main religions of your world monotheistic or pantheistic?
What resources are in your world/culture? What are the imports/exports? Which resources are rare and valuable, and which are necessary or common?
What are some important historic events in your world/culture? How did they contribute to the geographic or social structures that exist in your world’s present day?
What holidays does your world/culture celebrate?
What is considered a curse word in your world/culture? What is considered sacred, and what is considered profane?
What is the geography and climate of your world/culture?
What are the distances between important places in your world? Draw a map if you want to!
What is the structure of your world’s/culture’s government? Are they at peace or in conflict with neighboring worlds/cultures?
What language(s) do your characters speak? Is language ever a barrier to communication?
What are some of the main dishes the people in your world/culture eat? Where does the food come from, and how is it prepared?
What are the limitations of power, energy, or magic in your world/culture?
What kinds of objects or ideas are familiar to the people of your world/culture? What kind of objects or ideas are strange or outlandish to them? Note: the answers to this might vary depending on the culture your various characters (and readers) come from! What’s familiar to you or your main character might be wildly unfamiliar to someone else.
What are some details you can use from real-world places that are similar to your story world to make it feel more believable? (Think concrete: Sights, sounds, tastes, smells, textures)
How does your main character feel about the world/culture they grew up in?
What does your main character’s home look like? You can describe their room, their house, their neighborhood, their city.
Does your main character most often interact with people who share their experiences, worldview, and upbringing, or do they most often interact with people from very different cultures and life experiences from themselves? What are some of those similarities or differences?
Where does your main character fit into the class/social status of your world/culture? What are some specific things about their location or appearance that indicate wealth, status, profession, etc.?
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#writing notes#worldbuilding#fiction#writing reference#spilled ink#dark academia#writeblr#literature#writers on tumblr#writing prompt#poetry#template#poets on tumblr#writing#on writing#writing tips#writing advice#writing inspiration#writing ideas#writing inspo#emile friant#art#writing resources
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Experiment
#waketober#waketober24#alan wake#remedyverse#out here drawing—checks notes—emil hartman art in the year 2024#honks clown nose
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Something something new Sinclair ID with his vogels out yeah
#limbus company#emil sinclair#limbus fanart#limbus sinclair#original art#traditional art#sketch#notes
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#Death Note#Limbus Company#Yi Sang#Faust#Don Quixote#Ryoshu#Mersault#Hong Lu#Heathcliff#Ishmael#Rodion#Emil Sinclair#Outis#Gregor
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Sinclair just went through his worst traumas in Canto 3 and now in 3.5 he can't event catch a goddamn break without someone mentioning how short he is
#limbus company#guess who got ahold of the sinner sprites#its me. there's a free accessible google drive of all lcb assets#lcb shitpost#emil sinclair#outis#faust#that scene where outis digs on her entire team and faust becomes utterly speechless when outis told her that her hair's gone gray because o#an unbalanced diet sent me#someone knock this woman off a peg jesus outis#is this why ishmael started making 'lets get you to bed grandma' jokes on that dante's notes segment#as revenge for the coarse hands thing
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A follow up to this post, Here are their individual evaluations:
To start, Outis was surprisingly yet unsurprisingly good with what he was given. I mean, I don't exactly know much about her yet but from what I could tell, she could have had a militaristic background so he carried out the experiment with the most ease out of the others. Yi Sang is extremely unfamiliar with the range of the weapon given to him. I don't exactly make him wear any long ranged IDs either except for Spicebush's and even so, I don't have it on mirro for long. With the little knowledge carried over from said ID, I'd see mirro frequently trying to awkwardly twirl the guandao and failing miserably, often leading to hits taken from the enemies. They didn't die though so that was a huge relief... Though they were severely injured afterwards- Mirr didn't exactly do much either, I.. Made sure to apologize to him and the rest after the fight and the experiment was over... Hong Lu was surprisingly natural with Ryōshū's ōdachi. They explained a good amount when they were out on the field on why this may be, stating how prin had experimented with a few bladed weapons before ending up in Limbus Company but by his own words, they also stated how he was "rusty", even though prins performance was actually pretty good. Ryōshū was also surprisingly fine with what she had, even made use of the book believe it or not... But it's Ryōshū, I don't think I should be that surprised with mare creativity. Despite her good performance, she complained a whole lot during the fight I had mare in and I had the unfortunate pleasure of hearing all of the horrid things she said through Sinclair's translations- Speaking of Sinclair, he did great with the zweihänder. They said that it was a little heavier than what they're used to but they honestly did amazing! I kinda half expected it though because one of the IDs I'd use for him a decent amount is that of the Zwei Association and, of course, their signature weapon is the zweihänder. I don't think I have anything else to note about him other than I did see them try to use the weapon like he would his usual halberd. It didn't really work out but they'd almost always recover quick from it. ... Oh boy, looks like I'll have to cut this up again- I'll bring up the rest of the Sinners soon. ⏰
#limbus company#project moon#dante lcb#outis lcb#yi sang lcb#hong lu lcb#ryoshu lcb#sinclair lcb#emil sinclair#tlcbb tenebris#tlcbb#dante's notes : swapped weapons experiment
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Ugh edvera/edluca royal lavender marriage au (don’t judge 🥲) + alive Ella ‼️‼️‼️‼️
Also random adamil sketch I did for a moot 🤍
#edluca#luca balsa#prisoner idv#edgar valden#identity v#idv#edvera#vera nair#OML THIS HAS BEEN COOKING IN MY MIND SO MUCH#LIKE I MIGHT MAKE A POST WITH ALL MY NOTES#I WAS GANNA MAKE THIS INTO A FAN GAME BUT IDK HOW TO MAKE A GAME#SO I HAVE A BUNCH OF SPRITES AND A DOC#adamil#ada idv#emil idv
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moving observation threads from twitter to here because site's on fire now lmao.
i think its interesting that don quixote’s current ids are all two sides of an extreme that comes from her current incarnation’s middle ground of deluded, but not mad, yet still deaf to the reality of the city and its fixers.
disclaimer that i haven't finished don quixote yet, i'm still partway through reading, but i have seen and listened to summaries.
first, w corp and shi association
this is the don quixote that has been swung too far and too hard into reality that it breaks her (admittedly, one much harder than the other, but still). much like throwing a child into a whirlpool to teach them how to swim, don quixote is plunged deep headfirst into the innate cruelty and suffering that the city runs on.
w corp don shows us the moment where she breaks. (a note, the way the narrator reads here is quite perfect for the city, no? the truth behind the carriages is something to be abhorred and disgusted by, but because this is the nightmare hypercapitalist hellscape that is the city, it is merely something to take disgust at once and learn to deal with it.)
shi association don quixote is the one that's already far, far too deep in the hole to ever go back to her old self. just took several baseball bat hits to her psyche for years and years. of course, how could this not happen? it takes a maniac to think that assassinating people on the whims of whoever pays you no questions asked is how an idealized hero of justice should act.
she can still act like her usual, jovial self, cracking jokes and being happy, but this mask is much thinner, and is such; just a mask hiding her true, broken self. she cannot unsee what has been seen, and her ideals have to contend with the reality that she is seeing. she can try to abide by those once lofty, knightly ideals, but in these ids, the city will crush it over and over again.
(hey fun fact i did this study/observation because i noticed that w corp don quixote's out of combat passive is called "broken spirit". for a long time i assumed it was n sinclair's until i looked closer lmao)
and now we have n corp don quixote!
this is the delusion cranked to an absolute maximum, uncaring, unhearing, unseeing of everything but whatever justice she deems fit. there is no person more terrifying than one who commits atrocities fully believing that they are in the right.
how don quixote could even end up like this, i think is quite possible. i would think that for someone who idealizes justice, just the right words, the right kind of manipulation can easily sway her into nagel und hammer's fold. i certainly find it a likelihood that the one who grips faust could just go "heyyyy we're good guys trust us we're the true justice :)" but like you know with more tact and manipulation and don quixote would probably fall very hard into that.
ironically, by falling, she betrays the ideals that once guided her, but being fed nagel und hammer's doctrine like this, i imagine that she still wholly believes that this is justice, this is the ideal, not noticing that what she once was is dug so far and deep into her delusion that it is not even by her own will that she walks, it is now the one who shall grip faust that will tell her call her to heel or run or attack.
for a bit of fun symbolism, in the story for nagel und hammer donqui, she still wears rocinante (her sweet sneaks bro!!!) under her armour.
if don quixote states as such, that they are comrades that bring justice together, then she has failed. that justice is long gone and buried under doctrine, and the final remnant of that justice, rocinante, has been covered up in the armour of an inquisitor, never to tread the earth nor see that ideal justice enacted ever again.
with all this, i conclude that i think that what don quixote's story will be about is the balance of seeing reality in front of her for what it is, learning how to accept this and yet still stand strong and sturdy despite it, holding onto those hopeful ideals that guided her so far and continues to guide her without straying from her path.
i think she shall grow into someone who the city can harm her as much as it likes, but no matter what, she will not bow nor break.
#limbus company#don quixote#don quixote lcb#Emile begins casting Coherence.#oh this is. long. i'm uh. im sorry.#lcb#observations#they be uh. they be observing and shit. man. uh.#on a side note i would love to discuss shit like this. like deep character study.#but also i am shy.
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Messengers and the Messenger Agency
>> Compiled (and commented) by Emil, Scholar of Gamayun, Disciple of the Minister of Knowledge.
Ah, the Messengers — perhaps one of the most elegant yet unsettling institutions in operation within the continent of Prawia. Their reach spans from the sun kissed lands of Zoyra to the abyssal sees, and their efficiency was fined tuned to such a degree that it even inspires awe from me.
The Messengers operate under a semi-independent agency technically under the dominion of the Morzana bastion and royalty, through describing it as merely a governmental wing would be laughably reductive at best. In fact, they operate outside the Morzana governmental structures and function as a neutral body, detached from political and religious squabbles. This is mostly due to the person at the Agency's head, arch-necromancer of unspeakable skill and prestige. Equal, in influence and notoriety, to any royal house. Her name is best left unrecorded for… practical reasons, those being the danger of her knocking on the ministry's doors in the middle of the night in order to claim my corpse.
Despite (or perhaps because of) their grim nature, messengers have become the standard method for communication across Prawia. They deliver letters and small parcels with unmatched reliability. Even I use one, though not directly from the Agency.
Why are Messengers so Successful?
Their effectiveness lies in the obvious: as bloodless undead, messengers are utterly immune to the effects of Madness—that chaotic affliction which tears through the minds of the living when crossing certain cursed territories. Likewise, they hold no allure for the beasts or the rabid, who crave blood and flesh, not dried sinew and embalmed bone.
Another stroke of brilliance is their “neutrality”. Standard messengers are utterly harmless—intentionally so. They carry no weapons and possess no combat abilities. Many have no heads, and those that do often lack mouths or eyes, making them quite literally speechless. This mutilation, grotesque as it sounds, helps them pass unnoticed through cities regardless of political alignment. A mute, faceless courier inspires far less suspicion than a heavily-armed one.
Costs are minimal. In fact, for most working-class citizens, the expense is largely symbolic. The Agency gains very little profit from the standard courier services—an intentional decision to ensure widespread usage and trust.
The Agency’s true sources of profit are twofold:
The Corpses. Nations across the continent (even those that loathe Morzana) send fresh bodies to the Agency, ensuring a steady supply of new messengers. This curious alliance is perhaps the most functional collaboration between Pijawki(gods) that the continent has ever seen.
The Elite. High-value clients pay handsomely in magical goods, rare materials, and favors.
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and then came june - part two
emile/leofard 18.4k words [read on ao3] explicit summary: leofard invites emile to spend the fourth of july with him and his friends, surely everything will stay the same between them <3
Chapter Two - Summer
A year from now, Leofard won't know Emile anymore.
From strangers to lovers, to something more but never clear, until the end—there isn't a word to define the way they move into each other's lives, or how the edges blur between them. It's something like chemistry, like connection, like the sound of Emile's laugh still ringing in his ears. It will always be the memory of his brown eyes in the morning, the weight of his body on his, each kiss they steal from a relationship that will never be.
It could be love. It could look a lot like love, but if you asked Leofard right now, all he would say is, He's my friend.
And someday friend won't be enough, but—
—
"Are you going home this summer?"
It's the first thing either of them have said in some time—they're in Leofard's bed, and Emile lays on his chest, warm skin against warm skin. They trade idle touches and soft, relaxed breaths while music plays and the afternoon blurs one hour into the next. The light stretches on as the days get longer, and with the semester over and nowhere to be, Leofard loses track of time.
He's in no rush to get up.
"I'm not sure yet," Emile says in answer to his question, the words half muffled against him. "I usually try to find time to visit, but I'll be busy with football all summer."
Leofard hums in response, and Emile tilts his head back, hair tickling his chest in the process. He looks up with those brown eyes and asks, "What about you?"
Leofard lets out a half-laugh. "This is my home."
It isn't entirely true—Raimille left him her apartment in New York. It's where he lived with her when she adopted him, and for nine years it was the closest thing he’d ever felt to home. He hasn't been back since she passed, but he plans to move there when he graduates and make it his own.
For now it's still hers, and like everything of hers, it's difficult to face.
Emile shifts, getting up onto one elbow, and looks down at him with a question in his eyes. Leofard holds his gaze but doesn't offer him an explanation. What could he say? I have no one to go home to. He doesn't feel sorry for himself, so he doesn't want anyone else’s pity—especially not Emile's.
But whatever Emile sees in him is enough, and he leans down to press a soft kiss to his lips. When he pulls back, he smiles. "So we can keep hanging out this summer?"
Leofard matches his grin, reaching up to brush a lock of his hair behind his ear. "Yeah, baby. Me and you."
—
Stacia gets an internship at a local HR company, so she stays on campus as well. Leofard doesn't see her as much since she leaves early in the morning and is gone until the evening, but they still have weekends together, and sometimes he'll wake up early enough to catch her at breakfast.
This morning he barely restrains a yawn as he pours himself a cup of coffee. He would sleep all morning if he let himself, so he likes having a reason to get up. They don't even talk at first—he pulls out one of his car magazines while she races to finish her cereal.
"By the way," she says, mouth full. "Emmanellain asked us if we want to spend the Fourth with them again."
It's something they've done the past couple years—Emmanellain and his boyfriend rent a house on the beach and invite a whole bunch of their friends down for the Fourth of July. Usually it's just a reason to get drunk together, but there's always music and fireworks, and Leofard likes to lay out in the sun.
"Yeah, definitely," he says. "Will you have the time off?"
She nods. "They said it was okay if we wanted to invite more people, too."
"Who are you inviting?"
"No one," she says. "You are."
He blinks at her. "What?"
"You should invite Emile," she suggests. "It would be fun."
"No," he says immediately, and to make his point, he looks back down at his article. It's just for show—he can barely focus on the words now that the suggestion is out there, but against his better judgment, he hopes that she'll let it go.
She doesn't.
"Why not?"
"Because he's not my boyfriend." He's said it so many times that it's starting to lose all meaning. "I don't know—wouldn't that be weird? Like 'hey everyone, here's the guy I'm sleeping with'!"
She snorts. "Well you don't have to announce it."
"He's probably busy with football stuff anyway."
"There's no harm in asking," she says as she gets up, putting her bowl and mug in the sink. When Leofard doesn't say anything else, she tries: "At least consider it?"
He crosses his arms as he leans back in his seat, all but pouting at her. "Have fun making coffee at the office today."
She rolls her eyes. “Asshole.”
—
The problem is, he lets himself imagine it—the sun shining down on Emile's bare chest, his long legs in a swimsuit, wet hair curving down his jaw, stray water droplets clinging to his freckled skin—and once that thought enters his mind, it's hard to let it go.
He just doesn't know how to ask without making it weird. As much as he likes that they're actually friends, they still only hang out to have sex—that one time during finals being the exception. In the month since then, they've mostly gone back to normal. Emile hasn't stayed the night, he never told Leofard what was going on, and it hasn’t come up again.
The only thing that's changed since they said goodbye that day is that they kiss whenever they want now. They kiss without intent.
They kiss a lot.
Leofard tells himself that it's just because it feels good. It's nice to lean over and press his lips to Emile's when he says something cute, when they greet each other at the door, when they say goodbye. Emile is always so warm, his body so inviting, it makes it hard not to touch him as much as he can. That's the point of this whole thing anyway, so why should he question it?
Unlike Stacia, whose pointed looks only increase in severity. Leofard tries to ignore her.
June passes faster than he thought it would. Summer means longer days, sunshine late into the evenings, it means freedom, sleeping with the windows open, and late night drives. Football practice and workouts take up a lot of Emile's time, but he comes over after, and they order takeout and they fool around and they stay up late talking, just like usual.
Leofard keeps his job at the pizza shop, but it's pretty empty when the campus is quiet. They don't need him as much, and even when they do, he'll give his shifts to his coworkers and hang out with Emile instead—he only really likes to work when he has nothing else going on. It's a miracle that he hasn't been fired.
Most of his days are spent tuning up his car or checking out local thrift stores. His collection of records grows over the weeks, and he finds a vintage Rolling Stones t-shirt that instantly becomes a staple of his wardrobe.
Today he drives across campus with the windows down, the wind blowing at his hair, sunglasses on. The sky is the perfect shade of blue, and big white fluffy clouds drift between the trees. He has his music turned all the way up, so he almost misses Stacia's call.
"What's up?" he answers, putting her on speaker.
“It’s like they just wanted someone to do all the shit they don’t want to," she starts. They're always somewhere in the middle of a conversation. "If someone asked me what I learned this summer, it's that I'm the only one in the office that can use these tiny Ikea wrenches."
He laughs. "Are you building something?"
"New desk chairs," she answers. "They’re replacing all of them. I've been working for like two hours, and there has to be fifty more. I swear, my hands are going to fall off."
"Do you want me to come help? I just happen to be an engineering student with spare time."
She sighs. "No, it's okay. I just want to complain."
"Those bastards."
"Thank you!" she says. "Anyway—distract me. What are you doing?"
"Um. Well," he says, pulling into a parking lot. He looks up at the enormous building in front of him. "I'm venturing into the sports side of campus. Emile left his phone at the apartment last night."
"And you're bringing it to him?"
He doesn't love the way her voice goes higher with the question.
"Yeah," he says, getting out of his car. He glances around. He doesn't actually know where he'll be—as much as Emile talks about what he does during the day, Leofard has only been to the stadium to watch a few games. The whole complex seems so much bigger and more expensive compared to the rest of campus—the sidewalks are actually clean and the landscaping is carefully manicured between lampposts. He can't help but frown. “This school spends too much money on football.”
"Don't distract me from how cute you’re being right now," Stacia says. "Who would've guessed that you make such a sweet boyfriend?"
"I’m not—," he cuts himself off with a sigh. "I'd do the same for you."
She laughs. "You literally haven't. And you know he'll just be back tonight, you could’ve waited."
"What if he gets a call before then?" he asks. "A very important call that he'll miss because I'm holding his phone hostage."
"If that makes you feel better."
He catches voices calling somewhere in the distance, then a sharp whistle, and he follows the sound around the corner of the building. There's a track filled with dozens of boys, some running steadily, some sprinting ahead, and as he steps closer, he sees Emile among them. His hair is tied up and he's shirtless, sun shining across his sweat slick skin. He wears gym shorts that ride up with each long stride, and he tears across the track with ease.
"I got to go, Stace," he says quickly. "I think I'm having a religious experience."
He hears the echo of her laugh as he shuts his phone and walks up to the chain link fence that surrounds the training fields, stuffing his hands into his pockets. He feels a little out of place—he's never really been interested in sports outside of playing basketball with his friends after school—but he thinks he could get used to a sight like this.
Emile notices him on the next lap, slowing his pace as his head tilts in question, and he jogs over. A stray piece of hair falls from his ponytail, and he tucks it behind his ear before he stops at the fence and puts his hands on his hips, catching his breath.
"Now this is just unfair," Leofard says, gaze sticking for too long on the way his chest rises and falls in a rush.
Emile laughs. "What are you doing here?"
"You left your phone last night," he says, the excuse even weaker the second time around. "I wanted to drop it off."
"You didn't have to," Emile says, but his expression softens. "Now I won't have a reason to come back over tonight."
"Is that what this was?"
"I can't say."
"You better come over." He gestures to Emile's body. "After seeing this? I’m going to bite you."
Emile laughs even harder this time, and his chin dips in that shy way of his before he peeks up at him. He takes a step closer, one hand curving around the fence as he leans over it to kiss him. Something in Leofard's chest eases at the warmth of his mouth, the familiar taste of his sweat, the way he can tell he's still holding back a smile as he kisses him, and Leofard makes a quick attempt to deepen it, his hand on the back of his neck pulling him closer.
Someone whistles behind them, and they break apart as Emile's teammates let out cheers.
"Ignore them," Emile says, face even more flushed than before.
Leofard looks over Emile's shoulder. None of them hide the fact that they're watching, and he laughs, almost embarrassed but mostly proud. When he looks back at Emile, he blurts out, "What are you doing for the Fourth of July?"
Emile’s brows crinkle for a second in thought. “I’m not sure. We have a few days off but I don’t think I have plans yet—why?”
“A few of my friends rent a house on the beach every year,” he says. “You should come with us.”
“You don’t think they'll mind?”
“Nah, there’s always a bunch of us,” he says. “It’ll be fun.”
He smiles. “Okay, I'm in.”
—
Leofard still hasn't finished packing by the time Emile comes over on the third—he hasn't really started, if he's being honest with himself. Emile comes in with a duffle bag over his shoulder and guitar case in his hand, and Leofard takes one look at him and has to hold back a laugh.
"Are you going to perform for us?"
"No," he answers immediately. "I don't know—I thought it could be fun to have around!"
"If I ask nicely, will you play us Wonderwall?"
"Depends on how nicely you ask."
Leofard takes a step closer. "I can be very persuasive."
"Okay, none of that," Stacia cuts in as she enters the room, hauling her giant suitcase behind her. "Hi, Emile."
"Hi," he returns, but his eyes stay on her bag. "I thought we were just going to be there for a couple of days."
She glances behind her. "Oh, yeah, of course! You just never know, right?"
Leofard raises a brow at her stiff laugh, and immediately turns to Emile. "She needs to overthink her outfits because V'kebbe will be there."
"Leo, I swear to god."
Emile's eyes light up. "Who's V'kebbe?"
"Don't answer that," she says, just as Leofard opens his mouth. Her expression pins him in place for a moment before she turns to Emile, "I had a class with her freshman year, and her best friend also happens to be friends with Leo, so we still see each other around. It's not a big deal."
"And Stacia has a huge crush on her," Leofard adds. "Which everyone can tell is mutual, by the way."
"You don't know that," she says. "We're just friends."
"Just friends," he repeats. He should give her more credit, it's fun being on this side of the teasing.
"Yeah, Leo," she says. "Do you really want to go down that road?"
Her gaze travels meaningfully to Emile, who blinks wide eyes at them in confusion. Leofard feels himself smile at him for a moment before he clears his throat. "I should finish packing."
He leaves them in the living room to fish his backpack out of his closet. They're only staying two full days, so it's not like he needs much, especially since he'll probably be in his swimsuit the whole time, anyway. While he packs, he can hear Emile and Stacia talking, just the sound of their voices carrying through the apartment, fragments of a conversation that warms his chest. He loves that his best friend gets along with the guy he—
The guy he's...well.
He's happy they get along.
It only takes him a few minutes to finish packing up, and they finally head out to the driveway, where he and Emile spend too long wedging Stacia's suitcase into his trunk. Emile puts their bags and his guitar in the backseat, and moves to get in beside it when Stacia speaks up.
"Oh no, Emile, take the front."
“I won't make you sit in the back,” he says.
“Do you even fit in the back?”
Leofard snorts. “He sure does."
Stacia stares at him for a moment before rolling her eyes, while Emile sputters out a laugh, his cheeks burning red. Leofard bites down on a satisfied smirk as they get in his car. Emile does end up in the passenger seat, and the three of them argue over what music to play. It isn't until they reach the highway that they settle on a CD that Leofard burned in high school.
There's something nostalgic about it, something like the past sitting alongside the present. He's sixteen again, he's twenty two, singing along to the All American Rejects over the roar of his car. All the while the sun shines down, that empty kind of brightness of July, and he reaches over to rest his hand on Emile’s thigh, fingertips brushing along his skin where his shorts run up. After a few minutes, Emile covers his hand with his own, holding it in place.
He keeps his gaze fixed on the road, but the corners of his lips raise. It's a rare thing for him to feel this content.
They pull into a rest stop about halfway there, and Emile and Stacia head inside while Leofard fills the tank with gas. He follows a moment later, finding the two of them with all the snacks, loading up a basket in Stacia's hand. Emile meets his gaze over his shoulder and immediately smiles, eyes curving into half moons, and Leofard swears he stops breathing whenever he's on the receiving end of that look.
"Do you want anything?" Emile asks.
"I'll just share whatever," he says. "I'm going to grab drinks."
He returns a moment later with three iced teas and a couple packs of beer. Stacia waves him over to a section towards the back, where her and Emile stand in front of brightly colored boxes, odd names all over them. Funky Monkey, Sea Serpent, Dragon's Tears.
"Fireworks?" he asks, a slow grin spreading across his lips.
He laughs as Emile holds up one shaped like a sword, eyes wide. "How does this even work?"
"I think you light this end," Stacia says, pointing to the tip of the sword. "Let's just buy it and see."
And this is why she's Leofard's best friend.
They barely have any room left in the car, but they manage to cram everything in before continuing on. Their excitement has settled, so they hardly make a fuss about the music this time, and soon after they're back on the road, Emile dozes against the window while Leofard and Stacia carry on quiet conversation.
The sun begins to angle a little lower in the sky by the time they get off the highway, warm and golden against the sporadic pine trees. With the windows down, they can smell the salt air of the ocean before they see it, driving through a small town that leads to interwoven gravel roads.
The house they're staying at is right on the water. It's narrow but has two floors, covered in worn shingles that reflect the sun. The ocean sits bright blue behind it, and Jacke and V'kebbe are on the front steps, shoulder to shoulder. Both of them look over at the sound of Leofard's car approaching.
V'kebbe gets up first, throwing her arms around Stacia as soon as she gets out of the car. She hugs Leofard next, and he looks over her shoulder at the blush on Stacia's cheeks as she bites down on a grin. He doesn't know how she doesn't see it.
Jacke comes over a second later, clapping him on the back. "Hey, man, glad you guys could make it.”
"Hey," Leofard returns, and he looks over at Emile, who watches with a small smile on his lips. "This is Emile. Emile, this is Jacke and V'kebbe."
"Thanks for having me."
"We’re all just mooching off of Emmanellain," Jacke says. "He and Sicard are out grabbing a few things for dinner tonight, they should be back soon."
V'kebbe grins. "We can show you around before then!"
"We also have to figure out who's sleeping where," Jacke says. "Someone ripped the air mattress, so we're one bed short. The couch is pretty comfy, but hell if you want to sleep in."
"Oh, Leo and I can share a room," Emile offers, just like that. Like it's easy.
Leofard blinks at him for a second before he nods. "Yeah, no big deal."
He catches the hint of Stacia's smile, but V'kebbe cuts in. "Come on, Emile, you should see the back deck."
The three of them disappear into the house, but Jacke stays behind, turning towards him with a raised brow.
”I know what you’re going to ask,” Leofard says.
He turns back to the car to grab their bags, and Jacke helps him unwedge Stacia’s suitcase from the trunk before he says, “Finally settling down, Leo?”
"We're just friends,” he sighs out. He already knows this is a losing battle.
“Well, Stacia and V’kebbe have the room with separate beds, so you’re about to get a lot closer.”
“I mean, we’ve already slept together,” he explains, grabbing Emile’s guitar and their bags from the back seat. "That's just all it is."
They head inside, which opens to the kitchen and a hall that extends towards the living room and back deck, where Emile, Stacia, and V’kebbe are talking. It’s bright and clean and modern, with little details that scream, Don’t forget that you’re at the beach.
“Listen,” Jacke says as they head upstairs. “I’m not judging—you do you. All I'm saying is that I’ve had friends with benefits before, but I can’t say I’d invite any of them on vacation.”
“Have you seen him?”
Jacke laughs, setting down Stacia’s suitcase at the door of her and V’kebbe’s room. “What does she think?”
Leofard rolls his eyes. “That we’re dating.”
“You know she’s always right.”
“Not this time,” he murmurs.
Jacke gives him a look but doesn’t say anything else. He leaves Leofard to settle in at the room down the hall. It’s bright and faces the water, with a wide window across from the queen sized bed. Leofard puts down their bags as he looks around, letting his hand smooth over the soft blanket folded at the end of the bed.
Emile pops in a moment later.
"Hey," he says. "I hope that was okay."
Leofard nods. "It's fine. I think I can handle a few nights next to you."
He says it, but he has to take a breath at the memory of Emile’s arms around him that one morning. The warmth, the comfort—it’s never far from his mind. Maybe it’s dangerous to tempt that feeling again.
Emile bites down on a grin. "Still—I don't want to make it weird for you in front of your friends."
"I don't think they give a shit, baby."
"Okay," he says. "Well, Stacia said they're going to start grilling soon, but you're not allowed near it."
"What the hell?"
“I don’t know, she said you ruined dinner last year.”
"So what if the burgers were a little well done?" he grumbles. "I cooked those with love! No one in this damn house appreciates me.”
Emile giggles at him. “Come here.”
Leofard watches him for a moment, narrowing his gaze before he steps closer, and he doesn’t stop until they're a breath apart, chest to chest. Emile cups his face in his hands, tilting Leofard's head back to look up at him. Those big brown eyes crinkle at the corners, steady on him for too long, and Leofard's heart picks up a beat when he bends down to place a single kiss against his lips—there and gone again.
"I would eat your burnt burgers, Leo,” he murmurs.
Leofard laughs, pushing him away. "That's not a compliment, you would eat anything."
"I’m just always hungry!” he exclaims. "Which—if they're going to start grilling, I think we should probably go back downstairs."
“Fine,” he returns. It’s hard to stop smiling.
They head downstairs, where everyone has gathered on the deck. Emmanellain and Sicard are back, and Emmanellain wears an apron despite sitting on the railing off to the side, decidedly not cooking.
Jacke stands next to the grill, burgers sizzling over the flame, and he points the spatula at Leofard. "Don't even think about it."
"It wasn't that bad!"
Stacia hands out beers while everyone properly introduces themselves to Emile. There’s a table and chairs but they all stand around eating before they make their way down to the beach, where the sun is just beginning to set, turning the sky pale orange shifting into pink. Jacke has them collect rocks for their makeshift fire pit while he grabs wood, and they set up their beach chairs in a circle around it.
It's just nice to be with his friends, drinking on the beach until the sky turns dark and the stars spin above them. He sits across from Emile, and he keeps stealing glances at him, at the way the fire's glow hovers over his skin, the way he laughs, so easily getting along with his friends.
They play truth or dare. It's stupid, and they're all a little tipsy, but it’s funny. Leofard ends up attempting a handstand that's only possible because Jacke and Emile hold his ankles up, Emmanellain tells a particularly compelling story about the time he got into a fistfight, and V'kebbe has to do an interpretive dance in silence, which she does with more flair than expected.
When it's her turn to ask, she looks to Emile. "Truth or dare."
Emile glances around everyone with wide eyes before he settles on, "Truth."
"Okay," V'kebbe says, and a long moment passes as she purses her lips in thought. The light reflects across her face, how she blinks a little slowly from the alcohol, but then she glances at Stacia and her lips curve into a grin as she asks Emile, "What’s your favorite thing about Leo?"
Everyone around the fire makes a low sound.
“Shit, why is this about me?” Leofard asks.
“Hmm,” Emile starts, and Leofard's stomach flips when he looks over, considering. “Let me think.”
Leofard digs his toes in the sand, cool and damp against his skin, against the fire's warmth, and beat after beat of silence passes. He huffs. “It can’t be that hard!”
“Well give me a second!”
“Obviously it’s my sexy car, right?”
“Obviously,” Emile echoes, and he shakes his head, turning to V’kebbe. “No—I like how funny he is. He‘s always making me laugh.”
Leofard has to bite his tongue to stop himself from smiling, but he still feels his lips pull at the corners as he tucks his chin down.
He hears Stacia snort. “He doesn't need to hear that."
"Hey!" He glares at her for a moment before looking back at Emile, who watches him softly. "Can you please make Stacia do something embarrassing?"
"I have a better idea," she says. "Why doesn’t Emile play his guitar?”
"Oh, no," Emile says immediately. "That's okay. I don't—"
"You brought a guitar?” Emmanellain asks, perking up. “You have to play for us!”
"I only brought it just in case, I'm not trying to perform for you or anything."
"Don't listen to him, he's literally a music major," Leofard says.
Everyone’s voices overlap as they all try to convince him to play for them, and Emile glances around the fire with wide eyes, his protests getting weaker and weaker.
He looks to Leofard.
Leofard just tilts his head towards the house. "Come on, baby, we want to hear Wonderwall."
He laughs. "Alright, but feel free to talk over me, please."
Leofard watches as he carefully gets up and maneuvers around their chairs back towards the house, keeping his eyes on him until his silhouette disappears into the dark. When he looks back, everyone is staring at him.
"What?"
"Oh my god, Leofard," V'kebbe starts. "I can't believe you just showed up with a boyfriend without telling any of us. You guys are so cute, I'm going to be sick."
His brows shoot up, and he tries to laugh it off. "Oh, it’s not like that between us."
But he should know that this will only raise more questions.
What does that even mean?
You literally called him baby.
How long have you been together?
Where did you meet?
Couldn't you find someone taller?
Do you love him?
"Hey!" Stacia's voice cuts in, and everyone quiets down. "Leave him alone. Even though we can all agree he’s being very dumb about the situation, it's my job to annoy him about it.”
Leofard offers her a grateful smile.
“Okay everyone shut up, he’s coming back,” he says, just loud enough to be heard. The yellow light of the back deck outlines Emile's silhouette as he closes the door behind him, and they're all way too quiet as he makes his way back over.
Emile doesn't seem to notice, he just smiles nervously at them as he settles back into his chair. His guitar is a darker stain of wood, and its gloss shines in the fire's light. He plucks idly at the strings with his long fingers, the sound clear and bright, and a moment later he forms a chord and begins to strum.
Leofard laughs when he recognizes the progression.
Today is gonna be the day that they're gonna throw it back to you.
Emile immediately looks up at him with a wide smile that leaves him breathless. Leofard can’t look away.
"Okay," Emile says as he lets the sound ring out. "I'll play one song, but then you have to sing along."
It's a classical piece—one that Leofard doesn't recognize, but it's intricate and pretty. He likes watching Emile's hands move over the strings, the way his brows pinch together as the song grows more intense, the way he relaxes at it softens. The music flows through him, an extension of the guitar, each note felt before it's heard.
Leofard is too aware of each beat of his own heart, the breath he holds in his chest. Stacia catches his eye across the fire, and she watches him watch. He just shrugs a shoulder at her, keeping his face neutral despite the knowing look in her eyes.
If he could, he would hide this desire even from himself.
They clap when the song is over, and Leofard swears Emile’s cheeks burn red as he waves them all off. He plays a few songs after, ones that are easy to sing along to, and they're tipsy enough to get into it. Leofard doesn't really sing, but watching them settles something in his chest—this is his kind of home.
And after, they put out the fire as they pack up for the night. Leofard's body feels heavy as he moves through the loose sand, stopping at the outdoor shower to rinse off his feet before heading inside. They all murmur soft good nights to each other and slip away to their rooms.
Emile and Leofard wordlessly get ready for bed. They take turns brushing their teeth, and Leofard watches Emile strip down to his boxers, eyes lingering too long on his bare chest, the stretch of his thighs in the low light. He clears his throat. “Which side of the bed do you want?”
“Either side is fine,” Emile says. “Sorry if I end up in the middle anyway.”
“As long as you don’t snore.”
He smiles. “Just kick me if I do.”
Leofard opens the window, letting in the sound of the ocean with the cool night air, and he gets in bed first, pulling the thin blanket up to his chin as he curls up on his side. Emile turns off the lights before joining him, and his long legs knock into his as he settles in, facing him in the dark. Neither of them shift apart.
"Hey," Leofard says as his eyes adjust to the dark, blinking until he recognizes the shape of Emile beside him. "If you stretched out, would the blankets cover your feet?"
"No," he says with an exasperated laugh. "My grandma actually crocheted me an extra long blanket in high school. I thought it was really embarrassing at first, but now it's my favorite."
Leofard thinks about Emile in his special blanket and bites down on a smile—he’s glad he’s that loved. "That's really fucking cute."
Emile just turns his face into the pillow for a moment before he says, "You know, I get that question a lot. Or if I have to get an extra long bed. Which I don't, even if it's a little cramped sometimes."
"To be fair, baby, I can't picture you fitting in those beds at the dorms."
"Do you picture me in bed a lot?"
"Yeah, actually," Leofard says. "That's one of my favorite things to do.”
A rush of warmth runs through him at the sound of Emile giggling into the dark. It makes Emile's knee press a little further into his thigh, and the only thought in his mind is, Stay there.
"I like V'kebbe, by the way," Emile says. "I think you were right about her and Stacia."
"It makes sense, right?"
Emile nods, quiet for a moment, and then, "You really do care about her."
"I just want her to be happy," he says, and it's such a small admission, something assumed already, but it still makes him itch. He focuses on Emile's hand resting in the space in front of him instead, and with just the sound of the rolling waves between them, he lets his fingertips trace across his knuckles. "Hey."
"Yeah?"
“You’re pretty good at the guitar.”
"Thanks," Emile says, his voice whisper soft. He turns his hand over, letting Leofard's fingers drop to his palm, and Leofard lets them slide up until their hands align. His sits so much smaller against Emile’s, but they fit together just right as their fingers intertwine. Emile looks back up at him. "Hey."
"Yeah?"
“There was something else I wanted to say earlier, when V’kebbe asked me what my favorite thing is about you. I didn’t want to embarrass you, though.”
Leofard raises a brow. "I'm listening."
Emile’s smile echoes in the dark before he admits, “I love your eyes, Leo. They're so pretty.”
It isn't often that something catches him so off guard, but Leofard's heart immediately begins to pound in his chest, and for a moment, he doesn't know what to say. In his panic he only has one choice—he laughs. "Too bad they don't work too well."
“Yeah, well, your glasses are cute, too.”
He should say thank you. He should just say thank you, roll over, and go to sleep. Instead he squeezes Emile's hand and leans in to kiss him, lips soft against his. It lingers, something warm and comforting, and they stay close after, just breathing against each other as Leofard's heart calms.
They don’t say anything else. He lets his eyes fall closed, listening to the distant sound of the ocean. Usually it would lull him to sleep, but his stomach flips again and again as he repeats Emile's words in his head, embarrassed only by the way it makes his chest warm, his fingertips warm, his whole body warm all over.
He can't help it.
I love your eyes.
I love—
—
In the morning, Leofard stirs at the touch of a hand on his wrist, and he frowns as he blinks his eyes open to the still dark bedroom. It takes a moment for him to register Emile carefully pulling his arms off of him, not until cool air brushes along his body where he was so warm against him. Their eyes meet.
“Sorry,” Emile whispers.
Leofard takes a deep breath, fighting the pull of sleep. His body feels so, so heavy, and everything moves so slow. He reaches towards him without thought. “Where are you going?”
“Just for a run, I’ll be back.”
“Why do you have to have such a hot body,” he mumbles, pulling the blanket over him and rolling into the warm space Emile left behind. He's too sleepy to do anything other than curl up and close his eyes, already beginning to drift off again.
He doesn't see the way Emile smiles as he leaves.
—
Leofard dozes for a while longer, finally dragging himself out of bed when the room grows too warm. He throws on a swimsuit and t-shirt before he wanders downstairs, where Jacke and V'kebbe are still cooking in the kitchen. He chats with them while he makes a cup of coffee, and he takes it to the back deck to sit beside Stacia overlooking the water.
“Good morning, how’d you sleep?” he asks.
“Just fine,” she returns. “How was sharing a bed with your not-boyfriend?”
“Downright platonic,” he says, which is only mostly true. He can’t help but ask, “Where is he?”
She grins, nodding towards the beach. “Right there.”
There's the distant shape of Emile’s figure jogging along the shore, barefoot and kicking up sand as he effortlessly strides down the beach, hair loose and flowing behind him. He looks like something out of a movie with the morning sun along his skin, and Leofard takes a breath at the familiar thrum of desire that starts in his stomach, hot and wanting.
It's been too long since he's properly touched him.
“Leo,” Stacia says, but he can’t turn his attention away. “Word of advice? If you want people to believe that you’re just friends, you have to stop looking at him like that.”
He finally blinks and glances over at her. “Like what?”
“Like you’re going to fuck him the second he comes back.”
He just laughs. “Look at him. Can you blame me?”
Emile stops at the outdoor shower, chest heaving as he pulls the chain. The water runs a river down his body, and he ducks his head under the spray, running his hands through his hair before slicking it back. As he steps out, he stretches his arms into the sun. Leofard has to hold back a moan.
“You realize you’re allowed to like him, right?”
Stacia's voice is too gentle, too cautious. His attention snaps towards her, because he isn’t allowed to like Emile like that. That isn’t what either of them want.
He shakes his head. “Why are we always talking about this?”
“Because I want you to be happy, Leo,” she says, and something in him softens as she repeats what he’d said about her last night. “And I think this is the closest you’ve ever been to a real relationship.”
“I don’t want to date anyone,” he says absently, ignoring all the reasons why churning in his stomach. “The real question is when are you going to ask out V’kebbe?”
She glares at him. “It’s not the same.”
“It is, though,” he says. “Forget the way I look at Emile—you should see the way she looks at you.”
"Please," she says, but her gaze shifts back towards the house, and Leofard sees the moment her eyes land on V'kebbe. The smallest smile pulls at the corners of her lips and her head tilts to the side, her whole expression open and vulnerable. She sighs. "We stayed up way too late talking last night. I don't even remember saying goodnight—I think we just fell asleep in the middle of our conversation."
“That’s…” he starts, shaking his head. “You have nothing to worry about, Stace.”
She doesn't look convinced, but before she can say anything, Jacke walks over and pokes his head outside. “Hey, we’re going to head down to the beach in a few minutes to set up.”
“We’ll be right there.”
As soon as he's out of earshot, she turns back to Leofard. "How about this: I'll ask out V'kebbe when you tell Emile how you feel."
"There’s nothing to tell."
"Then I guess we'll both be single forever."
He laughs. "You'll always have me, babe."
"God help me."
She goes upstairs to change into her swimsuit while Leofard heads down to the beach. It's a clear day, the sky bright is blue and completely free of clouds, with only the echo of the half moon on the horizon. Emile is already helping Jacke dig the umbrella into the sand, and they lay out a wide beach blanket and some extra towels around it. Emmanellain and Sicard join soon after, carrying a cooler between the two of them.
"How was your run?" Leofard asks Emile while the others are distracted.
"Really good,” he says with a grin. “I forgot how much I love running on the beach."
"Sure looked good."
Emile waves him off. "Did you fall back asleep?"
"Still waking up, actually."
"You should go for a swim, the water is nice and cold."
"I think," he starts, blinking at him, "that would kill me."
Emile laughs. "It's refreshing!"
"Yeah, I'm not taking outdoors advice from someone from Maine."
"Hey!" he starts, but he's still laughing. "Actually, I grew up by a lake, and my mom would get so mad at me for swimming in like, March. I promise it's fine as long as you don't stay in for too long."
"See, I love that for you. However," he says, hand on his chest, "I am a city boy, and I am much happier looking pretty on the beach."
He punctuates the statement by pulling his shirt off, the sun's warmth already trickling along his skin. He notes with satisfaction the way Emile's eyes cast down along his chest, snapping back up to meet his gaze again. It's only fair, after all.
Stacia and V'kebbe are the last to come down from the house, and Stacia holds up a football in her hands. "Who wants to play?" Everyone looks at Emile.
Leofard clears his throat. "Dibs on being on the professional quarterback's team."
"No, that's not fun," Emile says with a giggle. "I want to be on Stacia's team."
"Hell yeah."
"You just want to kick my ass," Leofard grumbles.
Emile has the audacity to smirk. "Maybe."
They try to split up evenly, and it ends with Emile, Stacia, and Sicard versus Leofard, Jacke, V'kebbe, and Emmanellain. It starts out serious enough—since the beach is still relatively quiet, they mark each end zone far apart in the sand, and spend at least ten minutes deciding on the rules, which essentially narrows down to no tackling or yelling.
It starts with Emile throwing the ball to Stacia for one point, and then chaos promptly ensues. Leofard quickly forgets who is even on his team, throwing the ball to Sicard, who scores for the other team, but then Emmanellain steals it from V'kebbe, who loses them a point by yelling at him.
After a while, it just turns into keepaway, and Emmanellain and Sicard start bickering, so no one throws them the ball. They've stopped keeping track of points by the time it makes it back to Leofard. He's taken to standing on the side, but he’s the closest to the end zone and no one’s guarding it, so he runs. Only as he’s kicking up loose sand does he realize someone’s chasing after him.
"No!" he yells when he realizes it’s Emile. He makes it past the end zone but neither of them stop, and he lets the ball go somewhere behind him as a laugh escapes his throat. He feels like a kid again, silly and free, but Emile is mere inches behind him, so he winces as he prepares himself to be tackled.
Only that isn't what happens.
One moment he's running, the next, Emile's arms catch him around his waist, and he's hauled into the air with a yelp. Emile throws him over his shoulder like he weighs nothing at all, strong arms wrapped around his legs, and carries him across the beach. Leofard's too busy admiring Emile's ass from this angle to realize where he's taking him, not until he steps into the water.
"Emile," he warns. "Don't you dare."
"What do you mean?" he asks innocently, each step slower as he wades further out.
"I know you want to see me wet and glistening, but this isn't the way."
He hears him laugh, and then everything goes fuzzy as Emile lets him go. Cool water surrounds him, disorienting him for just a moment before he rights himself and breaks through the surface, catching his breath.
"You're so dead!" he yells as he throws his arms around Emile to try and drag him down with him. Their bodies crash together with the waves, skin against skin, but Emile catches him and holds him against his chest. Leofard fights a shiver, but he finds that he doesn’t mind, wrapping his legs around Emile's waist, his arms around his neck. They're nose to nose, and Leofard tilts his head to the side to glance at the beach before leaning in to kiss him, tasting the salt water on his lips.
Emile smiles at him when they part. "You're pretty like this too, you know."
"Sweet talker," he murmurs, fingers playing at the ends of Emile’s hair. He brushes it aside to press his lips to his shoulder, trailing kisses along wet skin, up the side of his neck, lingering just below his ear. Emile’s grip tightens on him.
"Leo," he breathes out. "We should stop."
Leofard's lips curl up in a grin. "What—is this turning you on, baby?"
He pulls back enough to catch the flush on Emile’s face as he looks away. “Shut up.”
Leofard holds back a laugh as he relents, letting go completely and putting a few inches between them. Pride swells in his chest as they swim back to shore, and he drifts along his back, face to the sun with the cool water surrounding him, Emile beside him. Everything, for a moment, is absolutely perfect.
They have hot dogs for lunch, loading up on potato chips and ice cold beers. The day is hot and sticky and Leofard stretches out on his towel, chatting with the girls while Emile, Jacke, Emmanellain, and Sicard go back in the water to body surf the low waves.
He ends up dozing, only half awake when Emile comes over and lays next to him. Emile closes his eyes against the afternoon sun, allowing Leofard to steal the smallest pieces of him: the bridge of his nose, the freckles scattered across his cheeks, each little grain of sand clinging to his still damp skin. Leofard watches the steady rise and fall of his chest, and he curls his hands into fists.
He could laugh at himself—at this same recurring thought, which sometimes just sounds like Emile's name.
Taking a deep breath, the rest of the beach comes back into focus, but when he looks over again, Emile's eyes are open and he's watching him back. His eyes look lighter in this light, golden and warm, and for a long moment all they can do is stare at each other.
"What are you thinking about?" Emile asks, and this time Leofard does laugh, just the echo of it on an exhale.
He makes himself look away. "Don't worry about it."
As afternoon stretches into evening, Leofard finds himself a little buzzed. They build another fire as it begins to get dark, and this time Emile sits next to him, shoulder to shoulder. They make s'mores, and Leofard can't even pretend to hide the way he watches Emile lick at his sticky thumb after he pulls his marshmallow off the stick.
Leofard's promptly falls into the fire.
And later, fireworks fill the sky, so close that the sound resonates along the beach. Just for a few moments, sharp color cuts through the dark, igniting the area around them. Leofard watches each tiny explosion, and then he looks over to Emile. He is there a moment and then gone the next—Emile in red, Emile in blue, Emile in sparkling white light.
He turns to meet Leofard’s gaze, a smile spreading across his lips before he leans in to kiss his cheek. Leofard closes his eyes against the feeling, which lingers in his chest even as Emile pulls away to murmur, “I’m really glad you invited me.”
"Me too," he returns, just as quiet, and before he can think better of it, he presses his lips to his, a marshmallow sweet kiss as the fireworks echo around them.
They're out of beer by the time the fireworks end, and Leofard offers to go back to the house to get some more, having to steady himself against Emile's shoulder as he stands up. He only sways a little as he walks through the dark, giggling to himself as he fumbles through the kitchen. When he looks out the window, he can see the distant shape of his friends gathered around the fire, and a different kind of warmth fill his chest.
When he walks back, he looks at his empty seat for a moment before he looks at Emile. Why shouldn't I? is the only thought on his mind before he plops down in Emile's lap, scooching back along his broad chest. He hears Emile laugh, but then his arms come around Leofard's middle, hands settling against his stomach and resting so close to the waistband of his swimsuit. Everyone just continues to talk around them, but Leofard finds it hard to concentrate as Emile traces tiny patterns into his skin.
He doesn’t care about the glances his friends give them, doesn’t let anything bother him, drunk enough that when Emile tucks his chin down onto his shoulder, he just turns to press his nose to his hair. Eventually they go back to the house, Emmanellain and Sicard first, then Jacke, V'kebbe, and Stacia, and then it’s just Leofard and Emile left at the dying fire.
He extracts himself from Emile, slow to stand before he lowers a hand to help him up, and their bodies knock into each other from the momentum.
"Hi," Emile says as he steadies himself against him, head bent low.
"Hi baby," he returns, sliding his hands along his arms. He pulls him closer, finally kissing him the way he's wanted to all day, sliding his tongue along his as his fingers dig into his skin.
They part to breathe, too close to do anything other than keep their eyes closed when Emile asks, "What do you want?"
The words are half hidden against his lips. Leofard’s head spins.
“I want to touch you,” he mumbles, and he mouths at his jaw, down to his neck. His hands tighten around Emile’s arms. “I want you to suck me off…I want you to pick me up again.” He breaks off with a giggle. “That was so hot.”
Emile pulls back, and Leofard wishes he could see the way he looks at him in the dark. His thoughts sit above the sound of the ocean waves, and it's always too much, too much, too much, but Emile bends down to pick him up, setting him easily against his chest as Leofard wraps his legs around his waist, his arms around his neck. He pulls at Emile's ponytail until his hair spills loose, and he kisses him again, mouth warm like alcohol, like salt air, like desire.
Then he's laughing into Emile's neck while he carries him back to the house, and as the door closes behind them, Emile turns and presses him against it. Their lips find each other again, and Leofard sighs into the kiss, hands curling into his hair as Emile parts his mouth against his.
Someone clears their throat.
They both look to the kitchen, where Stacia and V’kebbe watch them with wide eyes. Leofard isn’t drunk enough to miss how close they are—V'kebbe sits on the counter while Stacia practically stands between her legs, and they're both holding a spoon for the open tub of ice cream between them.
"Can you maybe not do that right here?" Stacia asks while V'kebbe raises a hand to cover her laugh.
“Sorry,” they both say at the same time. Emile lets Leofard down, but his hand finds his as they go upstairs. They leave the lights off in their room, fumbling through the dark for the bed.
“Sit,” Emile says, his voice soft—not a command, but Leofard still listens, letting his thighs part as Emile kneels between them.
He cups Emile’s chin with his hand, raising his head to look at him. It’s there—in the small smile Emile gives him before he parts his mouth, eyes wide as he watches him in the echoed light.
What do you want? he’d asked.
Leofard touches his thumb to his bottom lip, heart racing in his chest. How could he want anything else?
—
He stirs again while it’s still dark.
Blinking his eyes open, he tries to squint through the blurry shadows of the room. He can hear Emile’s deep, even breaths across the bed, and he turns towards the sound, only able to make out the bulky shape of him in the dark. They aren’t touching, but something still settles in him just knowing that he’s there as he takes stock of his still fuzzy head, his dry mouth, and he reaches for the nightstand to put his glasses on, glancing at the clock.
Three in the morning.
With one more look at Emile, he carefully pulls back the blanket and gets up, tip-toeing to the other side of the room to put on a pair of shorts before heading downstairs. The house is silent save for the distant sound of the ocean, and he moves slowly through the dark while his eyes adjust. It's easier in the kitchen, with moonlight spilling in through the window above the sink, and he takes a moment to fill a glass of water before he slips onto the back deck.
The crashing waves are so much louder out here, rolling onto the empty beach, everything washed in grey. The wind feels cool against his warm skin, strong enough to push his hair out of his face. He just sips at his water, his mind sleep slow, his body relaxed, and he takes a deep breath.
He lets his thoughts wander, not really thinking about anything except for the strange, content feeling in his chest.
Maybe he'll want this for real someday—not only someone to share his bed with, but to share the day to day, someone who will make his friends laugh, who will have their own little life with him. Maybe someday he'll move past all this fear tangled up in his chest and let someone in. Maybe he won't always need a way out.
The words roll through his mind with the waves.
Maybe.
Someday.
He finishes his water and slips back into the house, easier now in the dark. He moves slowly to stay quiet, but Emile still stirs when he gets back to their room, just the shift of his body beneath the covers—enough for Leofard to know that he's awake. He opens his eyes for only a moment, and once Leofard gets back in bed, he reaches out to pull him into his side.
Leofard lets him, curling up against him under the weight of his arm. He presses his cheek to his chest and breathes him in, a combination of his flowery body wash and smoke from the campfire. It's more comforting than Leofard would ever admit, just like the steady sound of Emile's heart beating, the way he smooths his thumb against his back, his chin against the top of his head.
Leofard closes his eyes, and those same words carry in through the window.
Maybe.
Someday.
—
In the morning, he’s alone again.
He only dozes for a little bit before he heads downstairs, where he finds Stacia in the kitchen, pouring a cup of coffee. When she looks over at him, she automatically reaches for a second mug and pours one for him.
"You're the best," he murmurs.
"I know."
He should be nicer to her, but he can't help but say, “You and V’kebbe looked cozy last night.”
“Please,” she says, waving him off. “I’m still trying to forget what I saw.”
He laughs. "We might have been a little drunk."
It's the closest he'll get to an apology for it, but if there's one thing he can always trust with Stacia, it's that she understands. As much as she teases him, she's never judged him for any of his antics. So it's with a grin that she hands him the mug. "Will you be okay to go out tonight? We were thinking of going to the bar up the street."
Leofard is very familiar with that bar. He went last year with a girl he met on the beach, and his hangover was so bad that he could barely move the next day. It sounds like a fun idea, except— "Emile can't. He's only twenty."
"I love how that was your first thought," she says. "Don't worry, I asked. Your boy has a fake ID."
"Does he really?" He can't help the grin that follows, glancing over to the back deck, where Emile talks to Jacke. His expression is bright as he explains something, his hands giving him away, but then, as if sensing him watching, Emile looks over. When his gaze lands on Leofard, his lips pull into a smile—something small, secretive, knowing.
Leofard has butterflies.
"Oh, you're so done for," Stacia says with a soft laugh.
He glances at her before he takes a sip of his coffee, but the bitter taste isn't enough to distract him. "Shit."
—
The day starts the same as yesterday, and as they head down to the beach, Leofard catches up to Emile, walking side by side down the steps behind the rest of the group. They don't say anything at first, not past the initial good morning they pass between each other, but it's nice. Their arms keep brushing as they walk towards their spot on the beach, and that feeling in his stomach doesn't go away.
Funny how he can have Emile and still want him so much.
But he doesn't know if it counts, if what they’re doing means that he has him at all.
They join the others, setting up the umbrella again and laying out their towels. Leofard shakes the sand loose from his and spreads it out next to Emile's.
"Hey, Leo?"
He looks up at Emile towering over him, holding a bottle of sunscreen. He doesn't even need to ask, Leofard just reaches for the bottle as he turns around.
He has to take a deep breath at the sight of Emile's broad back—something has to be wrong with him today. It’s the only explanation for the way he feels his heart in his chest as he spreads the sunscreen into his skin. He works slowly, across his shoulders and then down to the taper of his waist, holding his breath as the thing inside him that feels too soft, too fragile and tender, begs to be let out.
When he finishes, he leans forward to press his lips to Emile's shoulder. "All set."
"Thank you," he says softly, and Leofard catches the tiny smile on his lips when he turns to take the sunscreen back. "Do you need some?"
He never really bothers, but he looks at Emile's hands and finds himself nodding. He must be tired, or maybe he's hungover. Why else would he stare at the sand in a daze, keeping his breathing steady as Emile's touch works into his skin? He closes his eyes for a moment, certain that his friends are nearby, that Stacia will probably say something later, but he finds that he just…doesn’t care.
Something's definitely wrong with him.
It doesn't get any better when they lay out beside each other on their towels, chatting the morning away. Leofard teases him about his fake ID, and Emile talks about his schedule once they go home tomorrow, how practice starts to pick up in earnest as the season approaches. He's nervous, especially with so many eyes on him after the Heisman rumors last season.
"Do you ever think about stopping?" Leofard asks. He's on his back beside him, Emile up on one elbow and covering him in his shadow.
"I don't know what else I would do."
It isn’t an answer, and the emptiness of the statement hits him so strongly that he almost regrets asking. He offers him a small smile. "You could do something with your music."
The sunshine lines Emile's face, highlighting along his nose as he considers it. It's an odd expression for him, something not quite settled, but all he says is, "Maybe."
Someone brought the football out with them, but no one seems interested in playing today. After lunch, Leofard grabs it and holds it out towards Emile. "Show me."
Emile raises a brow. "Show you what?"
"How to throw a football."
There's a spark of amusement through his expression as he takes it from him and positions it against his palm. "There's a few ways, but I always hold it like this."
He rotates it slowly to show Leofard, but Leofard just blinks at it.
"Here," Emile says, and he takes him by the wrist and presses the football into his hand.
"Ring finger to the second seam," he murmurs, voice soft, and he guides Leofard's fingers, moving them for him as he speaks. "Put your index finger here, then your pinky to the edge here. Leave a little bit of room for your thumb underneath."
But Leofard stops watching their hands and looks up at Emile, at the focus in his eyes, the thought that he puts into helping him. Emile must feel his gaze, because he lifts his head a moment later.
Their faces are so close, just a breath apart, and he's reminded of that feeling he had the night they met, that same draw to him. It pulses in his blood, always hungry for him, and he yields first, letting his gaze cast down to his lips. Emile leans in just a little closer, noses nearly touching, and Leofard closes his eyes—
Emile lets go.
"I think," he says, pausing to take a breath as he pulls back and looks away. "I'm going to shower before we go out tonight."
"Okay," Leofard returns. "I might do the same when you're done."
Emile nods, blinking at him a few times before he gets up and heads back to the house. Leofard watches him go, turning to meet Stacia and V'kebbe's gazes. There isn't a hint of teasing in either of their eyes, just something curious. Stacia raises a brow at him, a silent question. Are you good?
He nods absently before he gets up.
All he wants to do is follow Emile back into the house. He wants to trail after him, step into the shower behind him, and let his hands wander over his slick skin. He wants Emile's touch on him—anywhere. Absolutely anywhere. But instead, he makes himself walk down the beach, focusing on the heat of the sand beneath his feet, picking his way over the rocky shore to the water until he's ankle deep.
It isn't as distracting as he thought it would be, and he doesn't know how long he walks for, trailing along the water's edge away from the house, but after a while he finally turns back.
The bathroom is empty at the top of the stairs, and he goes straight in. He lets his thoughts blank out when he steps into the shower, staring at the white tiled wall in front of him. Water pours like a storm down his back, slowly soaking through his hair and dripping along his cheeks, steady down to his chin. Its warmth numbs the heaviness inside him, the burning desire that sometimes doesn't even look like desire—just this aching space that wants to be filled.
When he's done, he wraps himself up in a big fluffy towel, blinking at his blurry reflection in the mirror. He feels like it should be so obvious, like there should be a neon sign hanging over him, but it's just him on the other side. His eyes look even paler in this light—the eyes that Emile said he loves.
He looks away.
Don't be stupid, he tells himself, but he can’t help it, can he?
He goes back to their room, where Emile lays diagonally across the bed, wearing just a pair of boxers. His eyes are closed but they open at the sound of Leofard closing the door behind him, and he blinks at him before a smile stretches across his lips.
Leofard crosses the room to kneel on the bed, letting his towel drop as he straddles his waist, bare skin brushing along bare skin. There's a square of reflected sunlight from the window that lays across Emile, and it highlights the gold in his eyes, scattering over the freckles that have only increased with the summer. His damp hair lays spread around him, and he watches Leofard openly, hands idly tracing up his thighs.
Leofard shifts into his touch, breath trembling on an exhale as he settles his hands on Emile's stomach, fingertips ghosting over muscle, up his long torso, brushing across his chest hair. He finds himself smiling, just the edges of it, as he looks back up to meet Emile's gaze.
Brown eyes steady on him.
“Hi, gorgeous,” Leofard murmurs, watching the blush creep along Emile’s cheeks. He reaches up to tuck a piece of hair behind his ear, and he lets his touch linger, dropping to his chin as he leans down to kiss him, guiding their mouths together.
Emile’s hands skim further up his thighs, over his hips and up to his waist, pulling him closer as his body shifts beneath him. Leofard kisses him softly despite the way his heart pounds in his chest, despite the growing heat within him, and he licks at his bottom lip, letting out a soft sound when Emile parts his mouth for him.
He never wants to get used to this feeling, never wants anything more than Emile’s body against his. Satisfaction grows with each hitch of Emile’s breath, with the way he tightens his grip on Leofard’s waist, their kisses turning messy and desperate. Each little thing is reassurance that he isn't alone in this desire.
He pulls away just enough to breathe out, “Fuck me."
“Like this,” Emile groans, and Leofard doesn’t realize it’s a question until he adds, “Please.”
Leofard bites down on the first thing that comes to mind—anything you want—and instead he sits back, grinding down against him as he smirks. “You want to watch me, baby?”
A sharp feeling jolts through him as Emile lifts his hips in response, and Leofard can't wait anymore, can't take the time to tease him like he usually does. His head is a mess of need and now and that feeling that claws its way up his throat when they're this close—something unrecognizable.
But when Emile's inside him, nothing else matters.
The world is only this bedroom, this golden light surrounding them, this boy beneath him, with his brows pushed together, watching him so intently. Neither of them look away, and Emile lets out soft little gasps and groans as Leofard moves over him, rolling his hips slowly at first.
It’s an impossible pace to keep, not with Emile watching him like that, not with his burning heat, so full inside him. Emile’s fingers press down against his waist, nails digging into his skin, and Leofard can't help the sound that he chokes out as his eyes slam shut. He moves faster, blindly chasing more until Emile sits up and wraps his arms around him, crushing him against his chest as he takes over with a dizzying strength.
"Emile," he whines, winding his hands into his hair. He tries to breathe through it but he can’t, overwhelmed by the warmth of their bodies in the afternoon sunshine, each moan muffled and hidden into his neck, the drag of his cock against Emile's belly as he rocks up into him again and again.
A gasp leaves his lips as he spills between them. He swears under his breath—for a moment, there is only the frantic beat of his heart, but then Emile's grip tightens around him as he hurries his pace, and Leofard feels his mouth at his neck, teeth scraping against skin. He finally opens his eyes to blink in and out of the gold room, giving in to the pleasure of it, and he holds back a yelp when Emile bites down on his shoulder, hips falling out of rhythm as he shudders and stills beneath him.
A breath passes. Then another, and another, slowly evening out. Emile licks across the sensitive spot on his shoulder, pressing his lips to it as Leofard loosens his hands from his hair. When he does, Emile tilts his head back to look at him, eyes half lidded, his face flushed. A hazy smile tugs at the edges of his lips before Leofard bends down to kiss him, sighing at the easiness of it, the sweetness.
Emile lays back, pulling him with him. They part carefully, using Leofard’s towel to clean up, and Emile grabs one of the pillows, shifting over to make room for him. Cuddling is the worst temptation of all, a comfort that removes all distance, but still Leofard curls into his side, laying his head on his chest as Emile wraps an arm around his waist.
Just for a moment, he tells himself, but he closes his eyes against the afternoon light, and it only takes the span of a couple deep breaths for him to drift off.
—
Someone knocks on the door.
Leofard stirs. Their room is twilight dark—made up of empty shades of light that takes a few seconds for him to recognize. He swallows hard, then looks over to see that Emile is still wrapped around him, snoring softly against his shoulder. Their legs are intertwined, and they’re both still naked and so, so warm.
Oh, he's not about to move.
Another knock comes.
"Leo, Emile, come on." It's Stacia. “We’re leaving in fifteen minutes, with or without you."
Is it that late already? He lets himself breathe in against Emile's chest for a moment before he sits up, dropping a hand to Emile's shoulder to nudge him awake. Emile shifts slowly, big eyes blinking open and then closed again as the arm slung over Leofard's waist tightens its grip.
Leofard tries not to laugh. "We need to get up."
"Why?" Emile groans, voice a little deeper from sleep. "I'm comfy."
"We're running late," he returns, prying Emile's arm off of him. He ignores the way his body aches when he gets up, stretching out his sore back before fumbling through the shadows of the room for jeans and a t-shirt. When he looks over, he has to laugh at Emile sitting at the edge of the bed. "Your hair, babe."
Emile's brows raise as reaches up to pat down the nest of his hair, which dried in every which direction. Leofard doesn't even pretend not to watch him get up and dress, not until Emile giggles at himself in the mirror.
"I look like a mess," he says, brushing his hair back into a ponytail. “They're all going to know what we were doing.”
Leofard laughs, but he's right. Everyone's waiting for them in the kitchen, knowing looks on their faces as they go downstairs. Still, Leofard raises a brow at the cups strewn across the table. "You started without us?"
"And what," V'kebbe says with a laugh, "were you guys busy doing?"
He exchanges a look with Emile.
“Napping,” he says innocently.
The bar is close enough for them to walk there, only taking a few minutes along the sandy sidewalk. Leofard is quiet, still waking up, but he's happy to be beside Emile in the blue dark, listening to the sounds of his friends' voices growing louder as they talk over each other.
They can hear the music before they see it—a small one storey building made to look like a tiki hut, with a thatched awning over the door and torches lining the walkway. This time of year guarantees a line at the door as a man in a black t-shirt checks everyone's IDs.
The seven of them join the end of the line, and Leofard leans against Emile's chest, tilting his head back to look at him. "Let me see your fake."
"Don't say that too loud," Emile hushes. "And no, it's embarrassing."
“What’s embarrassing about it?”
He pats Leofard's curls down as he sighs. “My picture is old and I have short hair and I don’t look good at all.”
Leofard holds back a laugh. It's hard to imagine that Emile has ever looked bad in his life. Much easier to imagine a younger Emile with his big eyes and short hair. He must've been so cute.
The thought feels traitorous. He shakes his head. “You realize that I already think you’re hot, right?”
“Is that what that was earlier?”
This time Leofard sputters out a laugh, glancing ahead to where the line begins to move. "Come on, just show me."
“Let me see yours first.”
"You giant child," he mutters, but he fishes his wallet out of his back pocket and hands his license over to Emile, who happily takes it. Only as Emile looks it over, a small smile crossing his lips, does Leofard realize how vulnerable of a thing it is.
New York State.
Raimille’s address.
"Look at you, you're so cute," Emile says, and Leofard’s stomach flips at the way his expression softens. "How do you pronounce your last name?"
He clears his throat. “Roulchambord.”
“Is that French?”
He just shrugs. It’s not mine.
“Our birthdays are two months apart, by the way,” Emile murmurs.
“Really?” Leofard asks. “When’s yours?”
“January twenty sixth.”
“No—let me see.”
"I would, but it’s about to be our turn,” he says, handing him his license back. The guy at the door looks over their IDs quickly, and Leofard watches Emile play it cool, not even blinking an eye when it’s his turn. They’re all waved inside.
“Alright, everyone gather around,” Jacke says. “We’ll do a round of shots and then you’re all free.”
As they toast, everything feels right. Leofard lets his gaze pass over his friends' faces, committing the moment to memory. This is its own kind of home. He lets his hand linger next to Emile's, winking at him before he throws back his shot.
Emile is quickly pulled away by Emmanellain and Sicard, and Stacia catches his eye before she nods her head towards the bar. He joins her, and as they wait for their drinks, she knocks her arm into his.
"What?" he asks.
"Did you and Emile have fun?"
He isn't usually embarrassed about this kind of thing, but something in him itches. “You didn't hear anything, did you?”
"No, don't worry," she says. "You just, um...your shoulder."
Leofard angles his head to look. A deep red mark spills out from the collar of his shirt, blotchy and bruised. His mind instantly flashes to Emile biting down as he came, and he makes himself breathe in, looking away as he takes a sip of his drink. "We're just very...compatible."
She snorts. "Meaning?"
"Meaning things are kind of perfect," he says, and he shakes his head at the way her brows raise. "Which is why it works out that we're just friends—there's no risk of ruining this."
"I'll be nice tonight, since you already know what I think. Besides—," she looks over her shoulder at the dance floor, where V'kebbe sways to the music. When she notices them, a giant grin steals across her lips as she waves Stacia over.
Something in his stomach twists at the softness on Stacia’s face, but he won’t call it jealousy. When she turns back to him, he just shakes his head with a smile. “Go get her.”
Stacia leaves her drink, letting out a laugh as V’kebbe takes both of her hands in hers, and the two of them dance together, free and easy and so, so happy.
That’s all Leofard wants for her.
He can’t help the way his gaze travels to the other end of the bar. Emile is waiting on a drink, and there's a woman beside him leaning into his space, talking animatedly as he watches with wide eyes. Leofard just laughs to himself before he joins the others on the dance floor.
One song, he tells himself, but that turns into another, which turns into another. They take shots in between, and the bar begins to pulse with the music, the lights glancing off the fake palm trees and twinkling in the corners of his vision. He's lost count of how many songs he's danced to, but he finds himself out of breath, and Jacke joins him as he goes to get some water.
Jacke elbows him in the side, nodding to the other end of the bar. "That doesn't bother you?"
Emile is still talking to that same woman, only they're joined by another woman who sits on Emile's other side. Shot glasses sit empty on the bar around them, and one of them leans in to murmur something in his ear. Leofard watches the way Emile smiles, and he wants to say that he isn't jealous, because he gets it.
If he saw Emile for the first time here, he'd be in the same place. If Emile wasn't his already, then he'd be right there at the bar, sitting close enough for their shoulders to touch. He’d graze his hand along his, say whatever he could to make him blush, anything to kiss him, to take him home.
He isn't yours, a voice in the back of his head says, and he holds his breath at the familiar ache.
But he thinks about the sun in his brown eyes, the flush of his skin as Leofard moved over him, the way he held him so tightly, teeth digging this mark into his shoulder, and he shakes his head. “Doesn't bother me at all."
It isn't much later that Emile finds him, bracing himself with a hand on his shoulder as he leans down close to his ear. They've been here before. Emile lets his nose brush against Leofard's temple, moving to press his lips to the shell of his ear, and he murmurs, "Dance with me."
"I thought you didn't dance."
“Well I like how you dance.” He wraps his arms around Leofard, letting all of his weight rest against him. "I've been watching you."
“Damn,” he says, and he has to take a step to support him. “You’re kind of too heavy for me, baby.”
Emile just giggles against his neck. “I’m really—I’m—”
“Drunk?” Leofard offers. He can feel Emile nod, his breath warm against his skin. Something loosens in Leofard’s chest, something like affection, and it feels dangerous. He still smiles even as he nudges Emile back to standing on his own. “Come on, let’s go back to the house.”
Emile nods again, and Leofard waves Stacia down to let her know that they're leaving. Outside, the cool air clears his head from the crowded bar, and he attempts to guide Emile towards the sidewalk, a hand on his bicep to grab or push him as necessary. Headlights pass over them like waves, and the sound of tires grinding over the sandy road competes with the ocean rolling in the distance.
And above it all, there's Emile's soft voice asking, "Why don't you ever talk about New York?"
He resists the urge to shrug. “Not much to say about it.”
“You’re always—,” he starts, voice breaking off. Leofard’s brows push together as Emile leans on him a little more, but he doesn’t say anything else.
“Always what?”
“Always so—,” he tries again. “Always Leo.”
Leofard laughs. “What does that mean?”
“I don’t know.” The words kind of slur together, and he reaches over to wind his arm around Leofard’s. Their height difference makes it a bit awkward as they keep bumping into each other, but neither of them let go. “You don’t talk about real stuff.”
He can feel his smile waver. "Of course I do. I talk about my car all the time.”
Emile breathes out a half-laugh. “Is that all that’s important to you?”
“That's all I have left,” he admits. “From New York.”
”Oh.”
Emile doesn’t say anything else, and there’s a question in the back of Leofard’s mind that he doesn't give a voice to. They stumble through the dark house when they get back, letting go of each other only for Emile to stop and grip the railing of the stairs. Leofard tries not to laugh at him as he urges him to keep going, and he has to hold his hand to get him to move the rest of the way, only letting go when Emile sits at the edge of the bed.
“Wait here, I’ll get you some water,” Leofard says, and he hurries back downstairs. When he comes back, Emile is still sitting in the same spot, and he looks up at him with those big eyes, murmuring his thanks when Leofard hands him the glass.
He drinks the whole thing, and Leofard takes it back from him and sets it on the nightstand. “Lift your arms.”
Emile watches him for a moment before he does, and Leofard pulls his shirt over his head, leaving him swaying in place.
“You’re taking my clothes off,” Emile mumbles.
“Just getting you comfy for bed,” he says, his voice soothing. He bends before him to take off his shoes next, and Emile nearly tips to the side before he braces himself against the mattress. Leofard shakes his head, keeping his breath steady as he unbuttons his jeans and has Emile lift his hips, tugging them down. “You should sleep this off, baby.”
“Baby,” he repeats. “You’re always calling me baby.”
Leofard sits on the bed beside him. “Do you like it when I do?”
He nods. “It makes me feel like you actually want me.”
“I want you very much,” he says, raising his hand to brush the hair from Emile’s brow. After everything he’s admitted tonight, maybe he’s a little more drunk than he thought. “Who wouldn’t?”
A bitter smile crosses Emile's lips before he mutters, “Estinien.”
Leofard pulls his hand back, blinking at him in the dark.
"What?"
“He never wanted me,” Emile says, and he lays back on the bed, staring at the ceiling with his brows pushed together. "I was so stupid."
"You're not stupid."
“I am, though. He didn't even come to my concert. He—he knew how much it meant to me, and he still...”
There’s a pain in his voice that Leofard has never heard before, and it makes it so hard to think clearly. Who’s Estinien?, is all he wants to ask, but Emile still just stares at the ceiling with his lips pressed together.
“Then he’s an asshole,” Leofard offers.
“No, he’s not,” Emile says, and the defense comes so quickly. “No, he's—I miss him. I just really miss him.”
Leofard looks away, taking a deep breath. "Let's go to bed, okay? We'll feel better in the morning."
After a moment, he hears Emile shift over, then the rustle of the blankets. Leofard stays where he is, chest heavy, stomach turning. He glances at the empty glass on the nightstand, wishing he'd gotten one for himself too.
"Leo," Emile murmurs. "Come cuddle me."
He looks over at him, at his face squished against the pillow, one arm laying across the bed in an attempt to reach for him. He's just drunk, he doesn't mean any of it. Leofard makes himself let go of his thoughts and crawls across the bed. Emile immediately pulls him close, arms tight around him as he tucks him against his chest.
It doesn't take long for Emile to fall asleep, but Leofard stays awake, blinking into the dark room as he listens to his heart beat, calm and even.
Who wouldn't want you?
He pulls the blanket into his fist. He wasn’t expecting Emile to have an answer to that.
—
The sound of rain wakes him the next morning.
It beats at the window with its own kind of rhythm, wavering as it comes down harder before it softens again. It almost lulls him back to sleep, but he turns his head to look over at Emile beside him. They aren't touching, but Emile faces him, eyes closed, chest rising and falling in a slow rhythm. Leofard's hand automatically inches towards him, his gaze focused on that piece of hair that always falls in his face, but—
I miss him.
It's so stupid. Leofard knows there's no attachment between them, he knows that Emile could have feelings for anyone else, and that just because they sleep together doesn't mean he could see this as something more. It's not—that's not what Leofard wants either.
Things are kind of perfect, he’d said to Stacia last night, and nothing has changed since then, so why does it suddenly feel like a lie?
Emile stirs, stretching out his legs. He opens his eyes, blinking at Leofard for a moment before closing them again, a low groan in the back of his throat.
“Good morning,” Leofard murmurs. He can't help an exhale of a laugh. "How do you feel?"
"Amazing," Emile answers. He inches closer to Leofard, wrapping an arm around him as he tucks his head into his shoulder. His lips brush against Leofard's neck, just resting there, each exhale ghosting against him.
Leofard skims his hand between his shoulder blades, running along the smooth skin down his back. “Do you remember last night?”
“Most of it, I think." The words are half muffled against him. “Why? Did I do something embarrassing?”
I miss him.
Leofard shakes his head. “No, it was just funny dragging your big ass back here.”
“Hey,” he says, drawing the sound out. He rolls onto Leofard, leaning back so he can look in his eyes. There's a smile playing at his lips. “I happen to know that you like my ass.”
“Why would you think that?” Leofard asks, but he lets his hand slide lower, just beneath the waistband of his boxers. Emile's hips shift into his touch.
“Leo,” he breathes out, more of a warning than pleasure.
“This is why you should sleep in, baby.”
He laughs as he rolls off of him. “You’re so annoying.”
And maybe Leofard wouldn’t have questioned that yesterday, but now he finds himself watching Emile for any truth in his expression. Emile merely closes his eyes again, snuggling back down under the blanket. The morning light washes over him, highlighting his messy hair, the fan of his eyelashes, the tiny bit of stubble along his jaw, and Leofard lets himself stare, gaze lingering the longest on the curve of his lips.
He supposes nothing can be wrong if he still wants to kiss him this much.
They doze a while longer, the sound of rain filling the quiet between them, and Emile's thumb wears a small circle into his side, the touch grounding him from his wandering thoughts.
Eventually they get up to dress and head downstairs. Everyone is quiet after last night, but Leofard’s gaze lingers on Stacia and V’kebbe, who sit shoulder to shoulder at the kitchen table, drinking coffee and speaking softly to each other.
They pack up after breakfast, and Emile watches with an amused grin as Leofard just shoves everything back into his bag without thought. He helps him load up the car, and then it's hugs all around before they go.
"We'll do this again next year," Emmanellain says. "Emile, you have to come too."
Emile just smiles. "Thanks for having me."
They kick up puddles as they run out to the car, and the three of them are quiet as Leofard puts on music and navigates back to the highway. The world is blurry through the rain, a mess of headlights and taillights blinking through the windshield wipers, and all his mind repeats is next year.
He won't be doing this, will he?
He'll be back in New York, so far away from his friends, trying to figure out what he's supposed to do with his life. He'll be starting over again, and he doesn't know what he'll lose this time. The thought is too much, but thankfully Stacia clears her throat, cutting through the quiet car. Leofard glances at her through the rearview mirror, but she keeps her attention on the rain splattered window as she admits, "I asked her out last night."
He feels himself grin. "And?"
"We're going to try," she says. She doesn't smile but there's such a soft happiness on her expression that he feels his chest pull at the sight.
"Happy for you, Stace."
He glances at Emile beside him. What did she say? I'll ask out V'kebbe when you tell Emile how you feel.
Sometimes it feels like that's all Leofard ever does.
The rain lets up the closer they get to campus, and they stop at another gas station on the way, getting more coffee and some donuts for the road. Leofard finds himself leaning against Emile's arm while they wait, but he's too tired to move away like he should.
And when they get back to Emile's dorm, he foolishly gets out of the car to help him with his bags while Stacia moves to the front seat. He ends up just standing by the trunk, watching him with an unexpected heaviness in his chest.
"I think that's everything," Emile says, and a smile crosses his lips. "I had a lot of fun."
Leofard matches his smile. "I'm glad you came with us."
He already knows what's coming before it happens. He should just get in that car and drive home, but he stays rooted where he is, watching as Emile sets his bags down and reaches for him. Leofard stands on his tip toes to hug him, wrapping his arms around his shoulders, and he closes his eyes as Emile holds him tight against his chest
They kiss, and Leofard lets out a sound as he parts his mouth, soft but always wanting. They kiss for too long, given where they are, but with Emile's hands on his lower back and knowing that he won't see him for a little bit, he can't help it.
And then he watches him walk back to his dorm, holding his breath until he's gone.
Thankfully, Stacia doesn't say a word about it when he gets back in the car.
—
That night, Leofard lays awake.
He only judges the passing of time by the streetlight echoing through his blinds, shifting over his walls so imperceptibly until it reaches the other side of the room. He rolls over again and again but his mind is too busy and he can't get comfortable. Each point of contact with the blanket makes his skin itch, and his pillow is too—flat? Soft? Too wrong.
He sighs, reaching out his arm to lay across the empty space beside him, and he glances at his phone on the nightstand. Is he awake too?
Leofard's fingers twitch towards it, but he closes his hand in a fist and rolls over.
He would rather lay awake all night than admit that he misses him.
—
Four long, restless nights pass before Emile comes over again.
Relief surpasses any doubt, and Leofard is too happy to see him to feel embarrassed about the way he jumps into his arms. They're home alone anyway, and they barely say a word to each other before Emile is carrying him to his room, laying him across the bed and settling in the space between his legs.
Leofard sighs against his mouth, tugging at Emile’s hair with one hand while his other seeks the touch of his skin beneath his shirt. Emile just kisses him again and again, both of them grinning into it until that hazy kind of pleasure turns into something needy.
They pause to breathe, and Emile pulls back enough to look up at him. Leofard smooths his thumb across his cheek, pressing his mouth to his one more time. "How are you, baby?"
Emile's smile is so broad that his eyes squint into half moons. "Happy."
They finally give in, letting their hips roll against each other, and Leofard curls his hand around the back of Emile's neck, pulling him closer just to breathe him in. It feels so good to have his weight over him, the weight of his desire pressing down on him, covering him so completely. This is all he wants from Emile, he can forget everything else.
He has to forget everything else.
It's easier when it's like this, when it's simple, when it's just touch, when it's what they've done since they first met. It's more difficult after, when he goes to the bathroom to grab a washcloth and he catches his reflection in the mirror. His eyes look darker as he stares back at himself, and he notes the flush of his cheeks, the mess of his hair, the beginning of another hickey at the base of his neck.
Obvious.
It's even more difficult when he goes back to his room, and Emile has curled up on his side with his eyes closed, his chest rising and falling in slow, even movements. Leofard cannot avoid what he wants, not when it's right here, not when the pull of temptation is this strong.
He goes back to the bed and fits himself beside Emile, carefully pulling the blanket over them both. Foolish, he tells himself, but he hasn't slept well in days and he's tired of more than just being tired. He doesn't even sleep, he just lets the afternoon drift beside him, more comfortable than he would ever admit.
It’s a while before Emile stirs again, the shift between asleep and awake now familiar. He groans softly as he opens his eyes, looking at him in question.
“Did I fall asleep?”
“Within minutes,” Leofard answers with a laugh. “Did I tire you out that much?”
Emile covers his face with his hand for a moment. “Sorry, I’ve just barely slept the past few nights.”
Do you miss me too?
"Is everything okay?"
“The AC at the dorms isn’t working,” he answers. “It’s literally too hot to sleep. Between that and football practice, I’ve been exhausted.”
Leofard blinks at him for a moment. “You can hang out here, if you want.”
His mouth snaps shut. Raimille always used to tell him that he was too quick, that he could benefit from thinking before speaking. As a teenager, he hated it. At twenty two, he realizes she was kind of right about everything.
“What do you mean?” Emile asks.
“Just sleep here until it's fixed,” he offers, too late to take it back. "It's not a big deal."
Emile doesn't say anything at first, but then, "Are you sure you wouldn't mind?"
"Emile," he says, his name sticking in his mouth. “Of course not.”
They head out to grab dinner once Emile wakes up a little more, then they stop at the dorms so Emile can grab a few things. Somehow in the four months they’ve spent together, Leofard has never been inside his room. He's been to this building before, but it's different in the summer, quiet and empty.
Emile wasn't lying about the AC—it's stifling, and he feels a drop of sweat trickle down his neck as he follows Emile up the carpeted stairs. They turn down a hall, and Emile pauses at the door, throwing a shy look over his shoulder. "It's kind of messy."
"Please. You've seen my room," he offers, and Emile smiles before he lets him inside.
The space is cramped, as all dorm rooms are, with a twin bed on each side and a window inbetween. One half is completely bare and empty—Emile mentioned that his roommate went home for the summer—and the other side is perfectly lived in, perfectly Emile.
The bed is unmade but that's about the extent of any messiness, and he feels his lips curve up at the corners at the sight of a handmade blanket bunched up at the end. He glances at his desk, at the gym bag on the floor, but his attention is mostly drawn to the wall above his bed, covered in photos. He steps closer to look at them while Emile grabs his duffle bag and begins to pack.
The first one he sees is a photo of Emile with two girls. He's in the middle, and he looks so much younger. He smiles broadly with his arms around both of the girls, and all three of them have the same brown hair, the same nose, and the one on the left has his brown eyes, while the other's are bright blue.
"Your sisters?" Leofard asks.
Emile looks over his shoulder and smiles. "Yeah, that was from Ren's graduation party. The one next to that is me and my mom."
It must've been taken the same day. She barely reaches Emile's chest, her smile more subdued. Her hair is a little darker, her eyes a little lighter, and Leofard wants to ask if he looks more like his dad, but Emile never talks about him despite the way he's gone on about his family.
"You're not allowed to say you look bad with short hair anymore," Leofard murmurs. "You were so cute."
“Thank you.” There's a slight blush on his cheeks as he goes back to packing, and Leofard bites his lip before his attention shifts to a magazine cutout pinned to the wall.
It’s a closeup of two football players, their teammates rushing towards them in the distance. One of them is Emile, his back is to the camera but his last name sits across his shoulders, and he’s in the arms of the other. They’re helmet to helmet, jerseys tight in each other's fists, and the other guy’s face is visible, his smile blinding as he looks up at Emile.
"Big win?" Leofard asks.
Emile looks over again, but this time his expression doesn’t change. "Yeah. That was when Estinien threw that hail mary—probably the best game of either of our careers."
Estinien.
Leofard breathes in carefully in an attempt to slow his heart—why is it beating so fast? He looks back at the picture. It’s hard to tell what Estinien really looks like with his helmet on, but he has a nice smile, and he must be strong given the way he holds Emile. Leofard clears his throat. "Does he still play?"
"I don't think so. His injury happened right at the end of the season," Emile answers, and he turns to look at the picture one more time. Something flashes in his eyes. "But I haven't seen him since he graduated, so I don’t know."
“Oh. Were you guys close?”
Emile just lifts a shoulder, going back to his bag. “Hey, can I borrow your toothpaste or should I bring my own?”
Leofard stares after him, all too aware of the seconds passing, but Emile just keeps moving, keeps packing. It’s the most he’s ever dismissed him. Leofard presses his lips together. “Yeah, of course you can borrow mine.”
He just lets his gaze travel across the rest of the photos while Emile finishes up. It's the smallest glimpse into his life, faces and stories he'll probably never know about. He's standing at the edge of intimacy but there's nowhere else to go. He's gone, he tells himself, glancing at the photo of Emile and Estinien one more time. He's gone, and he's going home with Leofard. That has to be enough.
There isn't any lingering strangeness as they go back to the car. The fresh air feels good, and he rolls down the windows for the short drive, playing the CD he burned as soon as he got home from the beach. Stacia's at the apartment when they get back, and she raises a brow at them from her spot on the couch. There's a question in her eyes that he knows she won't ask, but still he offers, "Emile's going to stay with us for a little bit."
"Okay," is all she says.
Emile shifts beside him. "My AC is broken."
“Okay,” she repeats. She just looks between the two of them, gaze lingering the longest on Leofard.
He turns to Emile. "Come on."
They settle into his room, and Leofard tries not to think too hard about Emile unpacking his things. It's just for a few days, he tells himself, but he likes the sight of Emile in his bed, likes the way they curl up around each other as he puts on a movie. He tries to hold back from talking through the whole thing, but Emile doesn't complain when he does, he just answers him, his thumb tracing small circles against his side.
Leofard is barely awake when it's over, eyes closed and already half asleep when Emile murmurs, "I should warn you that I get up even earlier for football."
Leofard cracks an eye open. "How early?"
He’s quiet for a moment. “Five?”
“Oh my god, baby,” he says, and he nips at his shoulder. “You really need to work on that.”
“I’ll try not to wake you up," he says with a soft laugh, but Leofard already knows how well that will go. It's just for a few days, he tells himself again, but something in him says that he would gladly deal with Emile slipping from bed early if it means he gets to fall asleep with his arms around him.
They murmur goodnight to each other, and Emile presses his lips to the top of Leofard's head before snuggling down against him.
It's the best he’s slept since the beach.
—
A few days turns into a week, then another. Leofard doesn't ask Emile if his AC is fixed, and Emile never brings it up. Stacia certainly does, whenever Emile is out of the apartment, but Leofard always shrugs it off—who knows how long these things take?
They find a routine in this.
Emile does wake him up each morning—it's impossible not to with the way they sleep so close, always jostling him as he extracts himself from the bed. They both know it, but Emile still tries to be careful each time, and Leofard finds the effort cute. He doesn't mind, considering he gets to move into the warm space Emile leaves behind before he falls back asleep, breathing in the smell of him on his pillow.
It’s just so nice to have someone next to him every night, especially as solid and secure as he is. Leofard would never admit it to anyone, but sometimes he really loves how small Emile makes him feel. The weight of his arm around him is so comforting, and sometimes if he wakes up in the middle of the night, he’ll curl up against Emile’s broad back, his warmth guarding him from his thoughts.
But Leofard’s favorite mornings are the ones when Emile doesn’t any obligation to get up, and they doze late into the morning and share soft, sleepy touches.
The funny thing is, they don’t have sex any more often just because they're spending more time together. It starts to feel like something else after a while, when they catch up about their day over supper, when they go on drives at night, when they come home and fall asleep with a movie on.
If Leofard could tell himself five months ago that this would happen, he’d think something was wrong with him.
He’d be right, too.
There's one night where neither of them can sleep, both of them turning over uselessly, fitting themselves together in different ways until Leofard suggests they go on a walk. They don't say anything as they wander the quiet campus, but halfway through, Emile wraps his hand around his, and despite all the ways they've touched, it's the closest Leofard has ever felt to him.
Emile gets home early from practice one afternoon. Leofard hears the front door open but he's comfy where he's sprawled out on his bed, music playing way too loud. Emile just drops his gym bag on the floor and looks at him with an amused grin.
"What are you doing?" he asks, coming closer. His hair is damp and Leofard can smell his body spray from here.
"Chilling," he says with half a shrug. "Come join me."
He sits up to make room on the bed, but Emile just raises a brow. He lets his hip move to one side, then the other, picking up the pace until he matches the beat of the song. His shoulders follow as he begins to dance in earnest, and Leofard can't help the bark of laughter that comes out. Emile laughs too as he turns around to shake his ass.
"Come here," Leofard manages, breathless. "You're ridiculous—I need you."
Emile does come closer, stepping around his legs to dance down against his lap, but as soon as Leofard reaches out to touch him, Emile takes his hands in his own.
"Dance with me," he says, pulling him to his feet. Leofard goes reluctantly, but after a long look at him, he joins in. It's silly and stupid, but he can't stop laughing, He realizes, as he spins and shakes his hips and sings along, that Emile's probably the only person that he would do this with.
And in that, the freedom from any self-consciousness, that energy that always stirs within him feels a little more settled.
They dance to a few songs before Emile picks him up, both of them out of breath as they slot their lips together, and they kiss the afternoon away.
They kiss, and July passes into August.
—
August is a hard month for Leofard.
August is a reminder of what it was like three years ago, of Raimille's final days. She'd insisted again and again that he go to school despite her worsening health, but he swore he wouldn't leave her, that he'd take another year off—he'd do anything for her after all that she'd done for him.
Then she died.
The anniversary of that awful day finds him with an unshakeable ache in his chest. He sleeps fitfully, but he doesn't say anything to Emile, who slips away early for practice, or Stacia. She knows about Raimille, but this is just something he wants to face alone.
It's tempting to stay in bed with his grief weighing him in place, but that's not what she would’ve wanted for him. If there's one thing he can count on in his life, even now that she's gone, it's that he will always try to make her proud.
She's buried on the other side of the country, so there's nowhere he can go, but he still gets in his car and drives, his mind spinning through memories.
Twelve years ago, he visited her apartment for the first time. As loud and confident as he was in his foster home, he suddenly felt nervous and shy. He'd never been to the city before, and he remembers standing at the window, looking out at the vertical lines of all the surrounding buildings, feeling every bit as small as his ten year old frame, so uncertain about everything in his life.
But she knew, and she never pushed. That day, she smiled at him warmly and suggested that they go out, walking with him to Central Park, where it was a little easier to breathe. As they navigated the winding paths, she asked him question after question, and actually listened as he began to open up, soon chattering away—asking if she knew anything about skateboarding.
She bought them each a root beer, and they sat on a bench as the sun began to dip a little lower in the sky, gold light reflecting off all the windows on the buildings.
He knew then, that even though he didn't have a family, he wanted to be part of hers.
But he is no longer that little boy, or the reckless teenager that she put up with. He is a man with a heart that always aches, who can't let himself want anything because he always loses what he gets. Despite everything, he knows that he'll be okay.
He drives on and on, the day slipping away with each road he passes, until he stops at a convenience store and picks up a couple of root beers. He goes to a park next, and sets one of the drinks on the other side of a bench while he sips at his and looks up at the cloudless sky.
She'll always be with him.
The sun begins to set by the time he returns to the apartment. His brows dip as he kicks his shoes off—there's music coming from his room, but not a song he recognizes. He walks in a daze towards the sound until he realizes it's Emile's guitar. From the doorway, he watches him play at the end of his bed, head bent low as his fingers work across the frets in complicated patterns.
Emile keeps playing, unaware of his presence for a few heartbeats, but when he looks up, his hands still as a smile crosses his lips.
Leofard just shakes his head.
"No, keep playing," he says distantly. "Please."
The smile slips from his expression as he looks at Leofard with a question in his eyes, but he doesn't ask, and as he begins to play another song, something quiet and sweet, he thinks some part of him must understand.
Leofard lets the sound wash over him as he draws closer, and he lays beside him on the bed, watching his profile in the lamp's light. His hair falls loose around his chin, his brows push together in concentration, and Leofard pays attention to the fan of his lashes as he looks down, the crook of his nose. He's so, so beautiful.
Years of grief catch in Leofard's throat, but he swallows it back down. The ache lingers, never out of reach, but—
He just keeps his eyes on Emile, and he doesn't feel alone.
#directors commentary will come later because i have literally so much to say about this#but the important note is one im including on ao3 as well#in which estinien DOES go to emile's concert#but realizes he's in love with him. sneaks out. and lies and tells emile he couldn't make it#feels like very important context that only exists in my head#ANYWAY this is so much and im so sorry#but alas. it is my whole heart#ffxiv#my writing#oc: emile jenidaut#leofard myste#emile/leofard#modern au
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Writing Notes: Scenes
A great scene generally strives to achieve at least 1 of 5 objectives:
Advance the plot
Create or show conflict
Develop a character
Establish or build upon the setting
Lay the groundwork for later events
Each scene should have at least 1 of the above checked, but the first two are probably the most important.
If there aren’t enough scenes that push the plot forward, the audience may feel like nothing is happening. If there’s not enough conflict, the story can get boring.
If you’re not sure if your scene is doing enough, try to write down a goal for it. Every scene has one, whether you made it consciously or not. Then identify which objectives align with your goal.
Explicitly stating what you want to do with the scene and focusing on the objectives will help you craft it with purpose. Approaching the story this way will help you get a better sense of how the scene functions in the overarching plot.
Also keep in mind that even though you might have a clear sense of the scene’s goal, your audience may not. There’s a fine line between over- and under-explaining. See if you can get somebody else to read your story and see if their interpretation aligns with your intent.
Scenes are closely tied to the characters in them, so another great question to ask yourself about a scene is: “what are those characters trying to accomplish right now,” and “why does it have to happen now?”
Finally, if you’re still having trouble finding the scene’s goal, maybe you don’t need the scene? Or maybe you need to try to approach it another way. Much of writing is in the editing and re-writing of a story. Or, do you really need that scene?
Source ⚜ More: Writing Notes & References Writing References: Plot ⚜ Character ⚜ Worldbuilding
#writing notes#scenes#fiction#plot#writeblr#on writing#writing tips#writing advice#writers on tumblr#literature#spilled ink#dark academia#writing reference#writing prompt#poetry#poets on tumblr#writing inspiration#writing ideas#creative writing#emile claus#art#nature#writing resources
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I drew Ryuk and me as in the painting "An amorous couple picking cherries" (1869) by Emile Pierre Metzmacher
#death note#ryuk#dn#shinigami#my art#self insert#an amorous couple picking cherries#Emile Pierre Metzmacher
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